← Back to context Comment by BrtByte 10 months ago Wikipedia's value isn't that it's perfect, it's that it shows its work 2 comments BrtByte Reply 20after4 10 months ago On articles that are either controversial or cover some kind of current events, I often find more value from reading the edit history and the discussions than from the article itself. BrtByte 10 months ago It's messy, but honestly, that mess teaches you way more about how information is shaped than a polished "final" version ever could
20after4 10 months ago On articles that are either controversial or cover some kind of current events, I often find more value from reading the edit history and the discussions than from the article itself. BrtByte 10 months ago It's messy, but honestly, that mess teaches you way more about how information is shaped than a polished "final" version ever could
BrtByte 10 months ago It's messy, but honestly, that mess teaches you way more about how information is shaped than a polished "final" version ever could
On articles that are either controversial or cover some kind of current events, I often find more value from reading the edit history and the discussions than from the article itself.
It's messy, but honestly, that mess teaches you way more about how information is shaped than a polished "final" version ever could