“Good Samaritan contributors” to Wikipedia found as reliable as the regulars
October 19th, 2007

One of the questions about commons-based peer production of public goods like Wikipedia is whether the “altruistic” contributors who aren’t regular enough to depend on their reputation provide contributions of sufficiently high quality. This recent study seems to confirm that they do:

ScienceDaily (Oct. 19, 2007) — The beauty of open-source applications is that they are continually improved and updated by those who use them and care about them. Dartmouth researchers looked at the online encyclopedia Wikipedia to determine if the anonymous, infrequent contributors, the Good Samaritans, are as reliable as the people who update constantly and have a reputation to maintain.

The answer is, surprisingly, yes. The researchers discovered that Good Samaritans contribute high-quality content, as do the active, registered users. They examined Wikipedia authors and the quality of Wikipedia content as measured by how long and how much of it persisted before being changed or corrected.

“This finding was both novel and unexpected,” says Denise Anthony, associate professor of sociology. “In traditional laboratory studies of collective goods, we don’t include Good Samaritans, those people who just happen to pass by and contribute, because those carefully designed studies don’t allow for outside actors. It took a real-life situation for us to recognize and appreciate the contributions of Good Samaritans to web content.”

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Comments

It took some days for this information for travelling to Germany but now this really nice study is also spread in German technology blogs and news aggregators like http://www.heise.de. We are also studying the dynamics of wikis, e.g. in http://beamtenherrschaft.blogspot.com/2007/10/beauty-of-wiki-graphs.html

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