How well is the face book supreme court going to work? I don't know how that's going to work out. i'd like to know more about the structure of it, and what actual power they have. If you had a hundred million dollars to give away, putting aside your own enterprises, what would you do with it? There you are, then, an expert on education. For me, i'm not opposed to having standards for schools and tests or good way of measuring that. But i think we need to really focus a lot on creativity,. because if we look forward, the world faces a lot of problems, and were to need a lot of innovation to solve some of these
Jimmy Wales used to joke that choosing to build Wikipedia on a non-profit, non-advertising model was either the best or worst decision he ever made—but he doesn’t joke about that anymore. “If you think about advertising-driven social media…it's driven them in many cases to prioritize agitation and argumentation in a negative sense over education and learning and thoughtfulness.” In his now ceremonial role, Jimmy spends a lot of time thinking about how to structure incentives so that the Wikipedia community stays aligned on values and focused on building an ever-improving encyclopedia.
Jimmy joined Tyler to discuss what happens when content moderation goes wrong, why certain articles are inherently biased, the threat that repealing section 230 poses to Wikipedia, whether he believes in Conquest’s Law, the difference between “paid editing” and “paid advocacy editing,” how Wikipedia handles alternative accounts, the right to be forgotten, his unusual education in Huntsville, Alabama, why Ayn Rand is under- and over-rated, the continual struggle to balance good rules and procedures against impenetrable bureaucracy, how Wikipedia is responding to mobile use, his attempt to build a non-toxic social media platform, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video.
Recorded October 21st, 2020 Other ways to connect