(link)Jason Lanier wrote: The hive mind is for the most part stupid and boring. Why pay attention to it?
The problem is in the way the Wikipedia has come to be regarded and used; how it's been elevated to such importance so quickly. And that is part of the larger pattern of the appeal of a new online collectivism that is nothing less than a resurgence of the idea that the collective is all-wise, that it is desirable to have influence concentrated in a bottleneck that can channel the collective with the most verity and force. This is different from representative democracy, or meritocracy. This idea has had dreadful consequences when thrust upon us from the extreme Right or the extreme Left in various historical periods. The fact that it's now being re-introduced today by prominent technologists and futurists, people who in many cases I know and like, doesn't make it any less dangerous.
This is a subject I've been idly following for a while, and The Register has also published a number of articles on this fad:
Junk science - the oil of the new web
Nature mag cooked Wikipedia studyAndrew Orlowski wrote: "People are fascinated by ways in which data-mining seems to represent some sort of over-mind. But sometimes there's no deep meaning at all. Dartboards are competitive with individual money managers - but nobody talks about the 'wisdom of darts'", he writes.
And today, Canadian hockey fans are rejoicing in the return of Maggie the Macaque. The simian (on the right) out-performed the experts in predicting the results of key games during the 2003 season. Could it be Maggie's diet of crabs, or could it be - "The Wisdom of Monkeys"?
One need only look at the composition of the internet to understand why the "Wisdom of Crowds" will never apply: the internet isn't representative of society, and even amongst this whiter-than-white sample, only a self-selecting few have any interest in participating in a given pseudo-market.
Six startups from the Web 2.0 swampAndrew Orlowski wrote: Hundreds of publications pounced on the Nature story, and echoed the spin that Wikipedia was as good as Britannica - downplaying or omitting to mention the quality gap. The press loves an upbeat story, and what can be more uplifting than the utopian idea that we're all experts - at whatever subject we choose?
For my part, I started reading Digg shortly after first hearing about how superior its open, collective story selection process was to Slashdot's editorial staff. At first, those claims seemed justified: the site was updated far faster than Slashdot was, and it featured an eclectic mix of links to articles I wouldn't have found elsewhere. However, after a few months the site's quality seemed to plummet, with the front page being plagued by links to fluff blog posts obviously written solely in the hopes of a Digg link, and by obvious hoaxes such as doctored screenshots of a supposed "GoogleOS" and the story of a teenager claiming to have been hired by Google. It seemed to me that the site must have started with a smaller and more intelligent set of users who selected decent articles, but was shortly inundated with a horde of morons who uncritically accepted the most sensationalist stories. Slashdot's editorial staff may have been slower to update the site than Digg's automatically aggregated votes, and it may not have been au courant with all the latest buzzwords like "emergent" and "collective", but its quality was consistently higher.Ashlee Vance wrote: Can the "market" really tell where a hurricane will hit? We wouldn't bet New Orleans on it, but Inkling insists that the market is right about 75 to 80 per cent of the time, and claims to have data to support the premise. [ Chimps produce similar results - but you don't hear about the Wisdom of Chimps - ed ]. Veterans also have their doubts.
Finally, I'm worried that the current popularity of the notion of "collective intelligence" may be linked to the ongoing erosion of trust in expertise. We already have politicians pushing the notion that schools should give "equal time" to science and pseudo-science in biology classes, proposals to predict future terrorist attacks using "the wisdom of the market", and the motto "the surest way to smartness is through massive dumbness" being promoted as a "rule of the new economy"; now we have fanboys who think Wikipedia is better than a university:
(from here)"Old World is under attack. The authority of the book, authority of the journalist, authority of the teacher, is under direct assault by Wikipedia and other online efforts," claims the poster, 'Stephen'.
"It should come as no suprise [sic] a journalist and teacher ganged up on Wikipedia. Both have much to loose [sic]. Their claim? Authority. We will see much more of this backlash by the old guard in the future," he continues, confidently.
"The education system its self [sic] will come into question eventually. Universities are formed around libraries and libraries are physical things that require physical campuses. Take away the library, provide full access to every book ever writen [sic] online, imagine the consequences."
I'd highly recommend reading all of the Lanier article. What problems do you think "collective intelligence" can really be applied to solve? Do you also think that this fad represents another source of the notion that truth is a matter of consensus rather than evidence?