As far as Mahitgar's comment is concerned, I am not sure why any of us should lose any sleep over the practices or standards of newspapers :-)

::Can some one ask this question to  Amol Palekar ji  ?  This was a bit funny but a true story remained un/under-reported  from Pune Wikimedian community. Amol Palekar was annoyed with non-factual reporting by media and he wanted to show case it to them. A journalist of a reknowned national daily called him up, Amol Palekarji gave knowingly gave him incorrect information and those newspaper guys realy printed the news story without cross-confirmation.Probably Amol Palekarji also forgot about the instance. That news story got reffered on en wikipedia as it is. In simmiller way Shruti Sadolikarji complained  people started reffering Amol Palekarji with wrong information , He enquired where the information is coming from ? and was answered the info is coming from  wikipedia. Without reffering to all thsese rather than critcising wikipedia he praised wikipedia in a fuction .Marathi News papers picked up that line and reported.Pune marathi wikipedians happily aproached him with an invitation for an inaugaral function .He accepted the invitation    but made his dipleasure known about incorrect info on wikipedia. We corrected some of the facts on his insistance before the fuction.As you rightly said I left one edit to be edited for furter confirmation from him during the meet.  Incidently the main audiance of wiki meet was all pune journalists and journalism students and Journalism Dept HODs from University of Pune and all.During the speech when he comlained about mis-information I corrected info in a live demo at the same time brought to notice that info is coming from a national credible daily news paper.And then  he lectured the audiance  for their lapses and importance  of cross confirmation of the facts.  That is not all ask media seniors themselves how good the situation on the count we are discussing. What happens to India does it affect to wikipedia ? specially to Indian wikipedians ? What percentage of resources we reffer from online news papers and what percentage from the books ? For  Indic  wikipedians who are working to build wikipedia with a cause, without their fault a wrong information getting displayed on  wikipedia ,   How much a sincere wikipedian would love that? All the Indians do not get opportunity to explain a journnalist importance of factual reporting after due cross-confirmation. If a wikipedian explains them that this affects credibility  of the knowledge base a journalist may take it seriously , but if we dont ? Our own hardwork suffers ! 










On Wednesday, 8 January 2014 12:49 PM, Vickram Crishna <vvcrishna@radiophony.com> wrote:
The Tribune link (http://www.tribuneindia.com/2000/20001107/cth2.htm|accessdate=5%20April%202009) was wrong, it needs the extension deleted. I note that there is another unreachable or unlisted reference - [7] - which needs updating.
On 8 Jan 2014 11:03, "Mahitgar from Marathi Wikipedia" <mahitgar@yahoo.co.in> wrote:
The problem is with Indian Media and newspaper industry.Earlier times Cheif editors and Subeditors used to insist and guide for crossconfirmation of the information being collected and that is part and parcle of journalists primary responsibility.

As far as Mahitgar's comment is concerned, I am not sure why any of us should lose any sleep over the practices or standards of newspapers :-)

No doubt even wiki editors can make mistakes but atleast on wiki one can make corrections.How one will make corrections in newspaper report ?  If journalist of a news paper has made a mistake,people need to ask the media editors first.Wikipedia is just a seondary source of info.As much a journalist has made a mistake , it is equally mistaken to blame internet and wikipedia blindly.I suppose.

Why are we discussing this 'in the air'? It should just have been corrected right away. If the opportunity (ie Internet access) was available, it could have been corrected right in front of her. What better way to demonstrate the participatory power of the world's best and most accessible source of information to a sceptic? I think that this lady, or some of her students, might have become Wikipedians themselves!
 
Once I read the original Tribune report, the reason for the error became obvious. The original English is poor usage and could be misinterpreted, which is clearly what happened in this case: [She belongs to the well-known family of Kolhapur, which apart from its sugar mills, is also famous for its sweet music.] actually means that Kolhapur is famous for sugar mills and sweet music). Please let us assign blame where blame lies, or else hold our peace (always the better option).




On Wednesday, 8 January 2014 6:06 AM, jayant kirtane <j_kirtane@hotmail.com> wrote:
Hello,  

Yesterday I met Smt Shruti Sadolikar, musician, in the Music Department of Mumbai University located in the rear of Churchgate station.  In a discussion with PhD students, a question was raised regarding the reliability of citing internet references.  Some of us gave examples about how Wikipedia was used all over the world for all kinds of reasons.  Smt Sadolikar, who was present, gave an instance of wrong information in Wikipedia: 

"Sadolikar was born 1951 into a family from Kolhapur which was known for its musical tradition and owning sugar mills.[3][4] "  in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shruti_Sadolikar.  She said that "a hundred people" had mentioned the bit about owning sugar mills.  This was factually incorrect, and gave the wrong impression that she came from an affluent family. 

Now [4] is a newspaper article: Tandon, Aditi, "Three days of rich musical treat", The Tribune, 6 November 2000.  I looked up the source, and sure enough, it mentions the sugar mills.  So it seems that whoever wrote the article merely repeated a factual error in the source (which has been properly cited as [4] ).

Smt Sadolikar's father and guru was a musician, Marathi stage artist, music director, etc.  His Wikipedia entry  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wamanrao_Sadolikar makes no mention of sugar mills.

Smt Sadolikar had  a point to make: if Wikipedia is to put information about her in the public domain, is it not their  responsibility to inform her about it and confirm that the information is factual?  Some of us had said that Wikipedia was not organized along the principles of, say, a newspaper, but if a factual error was brought to its notice, it would be corrected.  In that spirit I am sending this mail to your mailing list. 

Like the rest of the world I am a grateful user and great fan of Wikipedia.  

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