I have to say this strikes me as re-inventing the wheel. There are already several collaborative projects out there. My personal preference is for
WeRelate.org, which was the first of note. (I've been involved with them from the beginning and I'm a volunteer admin there.) They're co-sponsored by the Foundation for On-Line Genealogy (a 501c3) and the Allen County Library, they're totally free (and always will be), and they currently have pages for 2.8 million people. It's one of the 20 most-visited genealogical websites. The Advisory Board incoudes people like Curt Wicher and Fick Eastman, and also Brad Patrick from the Wikimedia Foundation. Like WP, they use WikiMedia, so you all know already how to do everything there. WeRelate isn't the largest project of its kind, but we go to considerable lengths to avoid "drive-by GEDCOMs," where people register, dump a lot of junk, and disappear forever. In addition to uploading GEDCOMs, you can create and modify pages by hand. Most important, the fundamental point behind WeRelate is a single, universal shared family tree. Anything posted there is available for everyone to see and modify (though you have to register). There are no "private" trees, as at Ancestry and Geni, and no one "owns" what's posted.
Michael K. Smith