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Larousse Starts Its Own Wikipedia

Larousse Starts Its Own Wikipedia

French encyclopedia Larousse has been around for a century and a half in print. But now they’re trying a new venture – an online version of its encyclopedia that would be akin to Wikipedia – but with a difference, according to The Independent.

Like its model it would be free-access, and would encourage contributions. But whereas Wikipedia’s writers are anonymous, and sometimes unreliable, Larousse’s writers would have their names on the articles, which would then be protected.

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The company plans to have 10,000 images and 150,000 articles from its print version available, and plans to uses sources like National Geographic for video clips.
Isabelle Jeuge-Maynart, Larousse’s managing director, told the newspaper:

"By becoming a contributor to Larousse, you become associated with a publisher of prestige, recognized for the seriousness and reliability of its content. 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."

It’s an interesting turnabout. Just as Larousse heads online, Wikipedia is making a move in the opposite direction, having signed a deal to produce a print version.

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