I was amused by a recent story in The New Yorker about the power of Wikipedia and the laziness of newspaper reporters. In a nutshell, a kid visited Brazil in 2008 and saw a species of raccoon that resembled an aardvark. Looking it up on Wikipedia he edited the page about that species of raccoon and added "also known as the Brazilian aardvark." Several British newspapers published something about the "aardvark", which someone else used as a citation on the bogus entry.
So now that species of raccoon is known world-wide as a
"Brazilian aardvark" not by biologists, but by everyone else. I found it amusing. Remember, kids, Wikipedia is not a valid citation!
See also: circular reporting, malamanteau, and wikiality. What other examples of this have you encountered? Have you authored any? Which one(s)?
(Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 23 2014, @03:20PM
Roy Fielding, the inventor of REST (an architecture used in software) always screams that people get REST wrong, and that wikipedia has never gotten it right so people need to stop reading wikipedia and read the ACTUAL documentation (mostly his Ph.D. thesis) to understand REST applications so they can start using the term correctly. For example (among many):- be-hypertext-driven [gbiv.com]
http://roy.gbiv.com/untangled/2008/rest-apis-must
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 23 2014, @07:07PM
I feel his pain. Nobody has really read my Ph.D. thesis either.