The free multilingual online encyclopedia Wikipedia has created a new AI tool that will concurrently scan thousands of citations to assist assess and validating the material they contain.
A database with more than 4 million citations is used by Wikipedia. In order to be satisfied, users request citations in order to obtain proof for the assertions. For instance, according to a Wikipedia article, President Obama visited Europe before going to Kenya to meet his paternal ancestors for the first time.
Citations and hyperlinks are required to demonstrate that the material presented above is accurate and has been taken from a reliable source.
Although hyperlinks don’t often provide full explanations, they are nevertheless useful in bolstering the content. The issue is that hyperlinks frequently point to irrelevant pages that lack important information. Either they give up reading the topic or they switch to another one, abandoning the first.
Wikipedia has a page dedicated to Joe Hipp, the first American heavyweight boxer to compete in the WBA competition. Joe Hipp and boxing were not mentioned in the article; instead, it was explained how he was the first Native American boxer to challenge the WBA.
According to Joe Hipp, Wikipedia allows people to accept something even when the citations are false. Misinformation might be disseminated all across the world with this. Because of this, Facebook owner Meta began employing Meta AI to collaborate with the Wikimedia Foundation (a development research lab for the social media giant).
They said that it is the first machine learning model to automatically scan a large number of citations simultaneously. This will save time because it would take too long to hand examine each citation.
According to Fabio Petroni, the Meta AI team’s research tech lead manager, to Digital Trends:
“I think we were driven by curiosity at the end of the day. We wanted to see what the limit of this technology was. We were absolutely not sure if this AI could do anything meaningful in this context. No one had ever tried to do something similar before.”
To read our blog on “Google consents to pay for writing on Wikipedia,” click here.