French launching Wikipedia rival
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
France has long battled against the Anglophone cultural invasion and now it
has thrown down a virtual gauntlet. Larousse, the French encyclopaedia
created more than 150 years ago, is launching its own – it would say
improved – version of Wikipedia.
Its first, free-access, online encyclopaedia will have the same contributor
function but, to try to surmount the inherent problem of unreliability of
articles, which can be modified by anyone at any time, Larousse has
introduced some constraints.
Users who want to contribute have to sign up and their names will then
appear on the article they submit. Unlike on Wikipedia, anonymous
contributions are not allowed, and once written, contributions become
protected.
Alongside the user-written pieces, Larousse will be making available 150,000
articles from its universal encyclopaedia, plus 10,000 images. Larousse is
promising more in the future, along with the inclusion later this year of
hundreds of video clips from channels such as National Geographic.
The Wikipedia "community" is made up of nearly 390,000 volunteer
contributors and it is those that Larousse sees as one of the vital
ingredients in Wikipedia's success story. It is hoping to rival this with
its own online community and is drawing on its long-established print
reputation to encourage people to join in.
"By becoming a contributor to Larousse, you become associated with a
publisher of prestige, recognised for the seriousness and reliability of its
content," says Isabelle Jeuge-Maynart, the Larousse's managing director.
"Respect for an author is central to our concept. That should reassure...
experts who are at the moment hesitant to publish their work on the
internet."
As for Wikipedia, it appears to be moving in the reverse direction. A print
version of the encyclopaedia, featuring 250,000 of its 10 million online
articles, is due to be published in September by the German media group
Bertelsmann.