The Wikipedia Haters Club
Count as one member Examiner.com personal finance columnist Steve Juetten, who writes in a review comparing Microsoft's newly launched search engine, Bing, with old standby Google:
Before I started the search, I set two rules. First, I was looking for information from reliable sources. As a result, if a search placed information from Wikipedia high on the list, the search engine sank in my review. As with information from any source (human, web or book), trust but verify and Wikipedia is not trustworthy when it comes to your money.
Anyone who spends much time around Wikipedia is pretty familiar with complaints such as these, and to this end the Wikipedia community maintains a page called Replies to common objections. Juetten isn't quite specific enough for me to highlight a particular section, but I'm pretty sure he will find some answers in the answers to "Wikipedia can never be high quality".
Meanwhile, a few objections to his objection do occur to me. For one thing, who is to say that other sources will be more trustworthy? Juetten undoubtedly singles out Wikipedia for its high profile, but it's difficult to see why it should be placed at a disadvantage to About.com, Answers.com or NNDB, all of which can rank well for certain terms.*
Are these other information resources likely to be more reliable? I know of no reason why they should be. And if About.com or NNDB does happen to be wrong, there's not a thing you can do about it.
Lastly, I agree with Juetten that "trust but verify" is a good personal rule and a sound approach to research, but I don't understand why he doesn't extend it to Wikipedia when this is an area in which Wikipedia often shines. One of the site's core content policies is in fact Verifiability, that articles need references. But Juetten's objection becomes even more ironic when you consider that said references are required to meet another core policy: Reliable sources.
Juetten's worldly cynicism is understandable but, in this case, selectively applied and ultimately misplaced. It is true that Wikipedia is not completely reliable, but it shouldn't be penalized for being one of the few reference websites that actually admits the fact.
_____ *For example, try searching for Alan Greenspan on Google and Alan Greenspan on Bing. As of this morning, the top three results for each are: Wikipedia, Answers.com and NNDB.