On 10/21/05, Poor, Edmund W Edmund.W.Poor@abc.com wrote:
Alphax wrote:
Well, as of July 2005, all of the different language editions of Wikipedia came to 491 M words: it must be _considerably_
greater than
that now. At a journalist's rate of $1/word, that would
make Wikipedia
worth in excess of $500,000,000.
-- Neil
They get about 50 billion hits a year, right? So at $2 CPM that's $100 million a year, and at a P/E of 20 that's $2 billion. Of course, that's more than just the value of the content, and it ignores the expenses to run the site, which isn't much compared to $100 million a year.
It's too bad non-profits can't IPO. :)
I think you've over-rated the value of Wikipedia articles. Our article on the [[Atom]] (you know, what chemical elements are made of?) is a case in point.
I would pay a writer $1.00 per word for Britannica's 60-word intro ($60) sooner than I'd pay the same rate for Wikipedia's 2,000 word article. Ours is not worth $2,000.
Ed, Next time you want to respond to someone's post, respond to *their* post, not to someone who was responding to them. It's confusing when you say "you" and you're referring to someone other than the person you're replying to. Anthony (not a list admin)