TheDEA.org said:
Wikis are a terrible format for discussions; the software just isn't user-friendly. One solution would be to tie in a proper bulletin board system akin to bluelight as a replacement for the wiki discussion functionality.
Indeed. A great thing about this is that wiki functionality can be tied into a forum situation fairly easily, making interlinking forum posts to wiki articles a simple matter. Obviously I don't want to start up a TCCWiki forum just yet, as we already have enough of those, but bluelight itself could incorporate such functionality and become the "official" forum for the wiki. The name, by the way, by no means needs to stay the same once more people are involved.
I'm not trying to rain on your parade, but I just don't see any shortage of communities out there. What makes your site BETTER than the competition? Give us one good, simple reason why we should come to your site instead of just sticking to Erowid, Wikipedia, etc.
It's not the shortage but the lack of scope. Communities don't database their info effectively. Sites that database info don't have community. I'm simply trying to bridge the two. It's not about better or worse in my mind, simply a place for people to come contribute to something unique and important to the greater drug community.
I don't hate it; I just see significant flaws in it. Wikipedia is astonishingly broad, but it's also shallow. The format favors stripped-down, even trivial content. The lack of control and lack of author credit discourages major creative/research efforts. Yes, there's a wikipedia entry for just about anything you can think of...but few of them are professional-quality, and virtually none of them are that extensive. That's the trade-off; the collaborative nature of wikis trends towards creating short, somewhat unorganized generic articles. Wikipedia is a great place to get a quick sense of what a thing is; a starting point if you will. But it's usually a lousy place to try to master a subject.
I think there's a danger in generalizing
everything about wikis from Wikipedia (although I certainly have pointed out some important correlations myself). Wikis are capable of many different levels of excellence and detail. The scope of our wiki is very focused. I don't imagine ever going much beyond 1000 articles, and even that would be pretty impressive. Imagine a hundred people, all drug experts, working on 1000 articles together (maybe 2000 at most). Wikipedia has nearly a
million articles. I think you can see where this goes. In addition, as you say, the people who work on Wikipedia are often just doing it for fun and aren't particularly interested in excellence. One thing I have learned about this community (internet&drugs) is that there are hundreds of people out there who are literally experts on one facet of the world or another. Precisely
because this information is so difficult to obtain the general level of intelligence, knowledge, and openness among the "acadamic" personalities in this community is really pretty high. People understand that clarity and veracity are of the utmost importance. Sure there are people who will make bad articles, but then that gives me and you the inspiration to make it better.
I'm not so sure of that. Experience reports? Erowid does it better than you can from a wiki. Discussion groups?
At its most basic it's just a community discussing and working on articles together. Erowid offers articles, forums offer disccusion. Wikipedia offers wiki functionality but isn't geared toward drug people and lacks subjective/unofficial articles about drugs.
but a wiki doesn't have a grand vision of what it's supposed to be.
I disagree. I think it can have a vision defined by its members. I've already laid out a preliminary purpose for the site. With the help of several other people dedicated to the project I think we could turn out a pretty beautiful and pointed vision. Again, due to the large contributor:article ratio that I envision we are talking about a much tighter and more focused community than what Wikipedia offers.
Because it's free and kicks the crap out of Britannica when it comes to the range of entries. Would the honorable Britannica have given
man-Faye an entry? I think not.

(Go ahead; click the first link to his photo at the bottom of the entry.)
Free versus pay I can't speak to (although the Britannica offers some free online services). Range of entries? That's hitting the nail on the head my friend. With people from all different forums, different backgrounds etc. we could end up with articles on every single little topic that had ever popped up in a forum thread. Erowid does not possibly have the man power to catalog every bit of esoteric information, nor do they offer the editability which would make sure it was actually good (some of the Ask Erowid answers are pretty subpar or incomplete imo). Does this make sense? Yes it requires a certain amount of work by people like you and me. It would require responsible admins watching the recent changes and making sure that crap or bad information gets dealt with in a timely way, but that is no challenge for a dedicated community.
I'm not convinced that wikis reliably produce excellence. In my opinion what the world needs isn't so much more data as a gatekeeper; somebody that can tell readers what's most worth their time. "Signal to noise ratio" matters.
It's my opinion that in this day and age we need both "big mind" community information and "experts" to house it responsibly. Just look around. Wikis are popping up all over the place, often in the least expected places. I believe this is like what html forums were to usenet once they became practical. Wikis aren't going to replace good old fashion community by any means, but having one is proving to be increasingly important to the spread of any kind of information. If you haven't yet, I invite you to take a look around at some more focused wikis like perhaps the one on Shroomery, or on some small tech-related site. There is a huge difference between a dedicated wiki community and Wikipedia in the areas of excellence. The scale and possibilities are of a very different degree. Does that make sense?