Published by nick on 07 Jul 2008 at 11:06 pm
Wikia and Wikia Search in a nutshell
So what is Wikia? What are they up to? Here’s my perspective and opinion as an employee. Wikia was founded a couple of years ago by Jimmy Wales, the founder of Wikipedia. Wikia is a separate company from Wikipedia, even though the name is close and they share a founder.
Wikia’s core business model is to build community sites based on the Wiki concept. We all know Wikipedia - Wikipedia focuses on encyclopedic level knowledge of a subject, Wikia goes further and gives the community a place for detailed information about each subject.
For example, I love the TV show Family Guy. It’s great. Now from Wikipedia’s perspective, the information on the Family Guy Wikipedia page should include:
- Characters and descriptions
- What network the show is on
- How long it’s been running
- Brief Staff credits (important actors, director, creator, etc)
- Any cultural impacts the show has had
- Criticisms
You know, encyclopedia worthy stuff. However, Wikipedia doesn’t want it to become a fan page. Wikipedia discourages the use of trivia on their articles, and they don’t want detailed accountings of every Family Guy episode. This is where Wikia steps in. When there is a community around a particular concept, and it exceeds what is worthy of Encyclopedic content, Wikia provides that community with a way to share all of this information very thoroughly, with a site that is themed appropriately. End users are encouraged to provide in-depth information about the topic for the world to see.
Some notable examples:
- familyguy.wikia.com - Gather around Spooner Street for the best collection of useless information on Family Guy
- muppet.wikia.com - a wiki dedicate to every thing Muppets. This particular wiki is co-maintained by one of the dedicated Wikia product folks. Go Danny!
- www.wowwiki.com - a thorough World of Warcraft wiki - this is the 2nd largest Wiki in the world, after Wikipedia.
Now Wikia is also working on Wikia Search.
As a preface - I think that the idea of closed source ranking algorithms are destined for extinction. See a previous post on why I think the community will replace Google– Note: I wrote this before I worked for Wikia, and before I knew they had a search. We need an open and transparent solution for web search. I don’t know about you guys, but whenever one company grows too powerful and omnipotent, I have these visions of a Big Brother slapping me on the shoulder and telling me what I do and don’t like. I’m not going to name names. *Cough* Microsoft *Cough*, but let’s just say no one likes Big Brother.
On the flip side, the trend we’re seeing with successful web companies is openness, and this will continue. One of the best and most obvious example is Facebook and their API. Facebook has successfully distanced itself from the competition by enabling users to build applications on top of their platform. Hats off to them.
Psst. Rumor is that Yahoo is working on something similar to enable developers to use Yahoo data and infrastructure to build applications. Shh.
Good companies are open companies. Jimmy Wales likes to say that Wikia Search is a political statement, and in some ways it is. Wikia is saying that search should be an open, transparent effort that that is controlled and managed by the community.
For example, on Wikia Search, if I do a search and the results don’t make sense, I can change them. If their is spam, I can remove it. We’ve all done searches where we get back a page that is a link farm. With Wikia, you just remove the result.
For a great demo of this, watch this video:
Often times the 1st result in Google is a good result. But sometimes it’s the 2nd, 3rd, or even 20th result that is the best for a particular query. If you find this, shouldn’t you be able to make this the first result for someone else? Wikia thinks so.
I’ll wrap it up with this — Organizing the Web’s information should not be controlled by one company, but it should be controlled by the community as a whole, and Wikia is looking to enable developers and users to do that through their platform — and in a nutshell, that’s what Wikia is up to.
Tom on 08 Jul 2008 at 11:42 am #
I find the value in Social (well, really, I’m referring to Open) Search is the potential to re-factor or re-purpose in how it applies to different contexts (reasons for search).
I find that people might search for something for the purpose of generating a result and then gather information to eventually perform a "more correct" search.
An examples might be when we search for an error message to later learn that this is triggered by a problem in a package that we are not familiar with. You were searching for an error in YOUR package. Re-factored content might make the leap to merge that issue with the other package in your results.
New collections of existing information are also quite useful. An example of that would be the "List of Acquisition" pages for both Yahoo! and Google on Wikipedia. With an ability to "Mash-Up" search data users could contribute back to the world and make context searching better for us all.
Bookmarks about Guy on 11 Jul 2008 at 11:30 pm #
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