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Wikipedia is a multilingual " copyleft" encyclopedia designed to be read and edited by anyone. It is collaboratively edited and maintained by thousands of users via wiki software, and is hosted and supported by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation. In addition to typical encyclopedia entries, Wikipedia includes information more often associated with almanacs, gazetteers, and specialist magazines, as well as coverage of current events.

1 Overview

There are three essential characteristics of the Wikipedia project, which together define its niche on the World Wide Web:

  1. It is, or aims to become, primarily an encyclopedia.
  2. It is a wiki, in that it can be edited by anyone (except for blocked users, and excluding protected pages).
  3. It is open content, and uses the copyleft GNU Free Documentation License.


1.1 Free content license

All original material contributed to Wikipedia is deemed to be free content under the GNU Free Documentation License, meaning that it may be freely used, freely edited, freely copied and freely redistributed subject to the restrictions of that license.

1.2 Downloadable database

Anyone who wishes to use Wikipedia's open content may at any time download a nearly-current version of the entire article database to use for any purpose, within the terms of the GFDL. [1]

A number of sites, such as WikinfoWikinfo formerly known as Internet-Encyclopedia (renamed in January 2004), is a fork of Wikipedia initiated by Fred Bauder in July 2003. It is hosted by ibiblio. Wikinfo makes no attempt to be multilingual, although existing links to Wikipedia articles in, wordiq [2], thefreedictionary.com [3], 4reference [4] and nationmaster [5] have used this to mirrorA mirror in computing is a direct copy of a data set. On the Internet, a mirror site is an exact copy of another Internet site (often a web site). Mirror sites are most commonly used to provide multiple sources of the same information, and are of particul or forkIn software, a project fork or branch happens when a developer (or a group of them) takes code from a project and starts to develop independently of the rest. The term is also used more loosely to represent a similar branching of any work (for example, th Wikipedia's content.

1.3 Editable by everyone

Wikipedia's content is created by its users. Any visitor to Wikipedia can edit its articles, and many do. Pages are always subject to editing, so no article is ever finished. As such, Wikipedia is subject to some unique "hardships" [6]. It has "self-healing" systems in place to deal with these challenges, and even a page designed to explain them [7].



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