I don't believe David had to show him the edit button. What in fact that piece of the audio is about is, as shown by the history of the given article, Clive used section editing and was checking the edit link of that section was the right one.
On 25/07/07, Fred Bauder fredbaud@waterwiki.info wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: Thomas Dalton [mailto:thomas.dalton@gmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2007 07:20 AM To: 'English Wikipedia' Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] BBC
On 25/07/07, David Goodman dgoodmanny@gmail.com wrote:
Journals are professionals, with specialized training and supervised experience. They are taught how to work with things they do not necessarily understand--in a sense, the very profession is the the ability to go in and make sense out of something that is not understood. Some but not many WP editors have that skill also. A very few as actual journalists, a few from related training (such as we librarians), some from innate ability, but generally from experience and attention.
That's the theory. Go and read a few science articles in mainstream media and you'll soon realise that in practice things are very different. Journalists think they can write about things they don't understand and are generally wrong. Sound familiar?
It isn't so much that he's wrong, but how much can you learn about WIKIPEDIA by interviewing Larry Sanders and the management of Britannica? David Gerard had to show him the edit button... The piece reflects more on the reliability and integrity of the BBC than on that of Wikipedia. It was amateurish. However a nice note at the end encouraging people to edit, "It's your encyclopedia".
Fred
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