PostHole
Compose Login
You are browsing eu.zone1 in read-only mode. Log in to participate.
rss-bridge 2025-06-28T23:00:00+00:00

Wikipedia: The Power and the Pitfalls Part One with Dr. Heather Ford (434)

I'm joined by Dr. Heather Ford, ARC Future Fellow and Professor in the School of Communications at UTS, to explore the fascinating world of Wikipedia. Inspired by her article "We analysed 35,000 Wikipedia entries about Australian places. Some of them sanitise history" in The Conversation, we dive deep into the strengths and shortcomings of one of the internet's most beloved resources.

We unpack how Wikipedia works behind the scenes: who edits it, how "edit wars" break out, and why it remains such a radical platform — a place where history can be written in real time, sometimes even before events unfold.

Together, we question whether Wikipedia offers an honest account of Australia's past, particularly when it comes to Indigenous history.

This is a two-parter so be sure to tune in next week for part 2.

Connect with Dr. Heather Ford on Linkedin
https://hblog.org/


Preview Mode Links will not work in preview mode

Shirtloads of Science

####


  • All Episodes
  • Wikipedia: The Power and the Pitfalls Part One with Dr. Heather Ford (434)

Wikipedia: The Power and the Pitfalls Part One with Dr. Heather Ford (434)

Jun 28, 2025

I'm joined by Dr. Heather Ford, ARC Future Fellow and
Professor in the School of Communications at UTS, to explore the
fascinating world of Wikipedia. Inspired by her article *“We
analysed 35,000 Wikipedia entries about Australian places. Some of
them sanitise history” in The Conversation*, we
dive deep into the strengths and shortcomings of one of the
internet’s most beloved resources.

We unpack how Wikipedia works behind the scenes: who
edits it, how “edit wars” break out, and why it remains such a
radical platform — a place where history can be written in real
time, sometimes even before events unfold.

Together, we question whether Wikipedia offers an
honest account of Australia’s past, particularly when it comes to
Indigenous history.

This is a two-parter so be sure to tune in next week
for part 2.

Connect with Dr. Heather Ford on Linkedin

https://hblog.org/


About the Podcast

Dr Karl’s a curious optimist – a great combination for a science lover. Join him and his guests for weird facts, amazing conversation and remember, it’s never too late for a happy childhood.
https://drkarl.com/

**** Private Premium Login**


Original source

Reply