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	<title>Comments on: Twitter Packs or Are you on the list?</title>
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	<link>http://www.toddrjordan.com/thebroadbrush/2008/01/twitter-packs-or-are-you-on-the-list/</link>
	<description>Demystifying the web and more. Come join me.</description>
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		<title>By: chrisbrogan</title>
		<link>http://www.toddrjordan.com/thebroadbrush/2008/01/twitter-packs-or-are-you-on-the-list/comment-page-1/#comment-69</link>
		<dc:creator>chrisbrogan</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jan 2008 05:14:20 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>But are wikis leaving things off, or are they places where everyone is empowered to add. There wasn&#039;t a they. It was everyone. And when I started, there was only Boston and San Francisco listed. I checked back 40 minutes later, and there was a whole page for geography.

That&#039;s how wikis work. The thing is, our only typical example is Wikipedia, which has been built out for years.

You saw, in one day, several hundred acts of self-organization rarely touched by me, and not yet backed out by anyone, as far as I know. When someone broke something, someone else came in and fixed it.

The lesson wasn&#039;t the packs page. The lesson was the humans and what they did with it.

Biggest concern: someone puts someone in a box they don&#039;t deserve to be in. I&#039;m gay or I&#039;m a Baptist or I&#039;m from Missouri (show me!). My thought on this: change it to what&#039;s right.

However, I *do* know that on wikipedia, there are sections that are just uneditable now, because it&#039;s just a forever loop of controversy. Mostly? Religion pages.

Will it last? *.deity knows. Did I learn from it? Volumes. Only, not the lesson that the naysayers-come-lately think I should&#039;ve learned.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>But are wikis leaving things off, or are they places where everyone is empowered to add. There wasn&#8217;t a they. It was everyone. And when I started, there was only Boston and San Francisco listed. I checked back 40 minutes later, and there was a whole page for geography.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s how wikis work. The thing is, our only typical example is Wikipedia, which has been built out for years.</p>
<p>You saw, in one day, several hundred acts of self-organization rarely touched by me, and not yet backed out by anyone, as far as I know. When someone broke something, someone else came in and fixed it.</p>
<p>The lesson wasn&#8217;t the packs page. The lesson was the humans and what they did with it.</p>
<p>Biggest concern: someone puts someone in a box they don&#8217;t deserve to be in. I&#8217;m gay or I&#8217;m a Baptist or I&#8217;m from Missouri (show me!). My thought on this: change it to what&#8217;s right.</p>
<p>However, I *do* know that on wikipedia, there are sections that are just uneditable now, because it&#8217;s just a forever loop of controversy. Mostly? Religion pages.</p>
<p>Will it last? *.deity knows. Did I learn from it? Volumes. Only, not the lesson that the naysayers-come-lately think I should&#8217;ve learned.</p>
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