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Dad Delivers Baby Using Wiki

sonamchauhan writes "A Londoner helped his wife deliver their baby by Googling 'how to deliver a baby' on his mobile phone. From the article: 'Today proud Mr Smith said: "The midwife had checked Emma earlier in the day but contractions started up again at about 8pm so we called the midwife to come back. But then everything happened so quickly I realized Emma was going to give birth. I wasn't sure what I was going to do so I just looked up the instructions on the internet using my BlackBerry."'"

2 of 249 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I recently needed to learn how to set a live tr by iamacat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I previously challenged anyone to link to a wikipedia article which is provably wrong in a key fact presented and hasn't been corrected for more than a week. The best people came up with are spelling errors and questionable references. So as far as I am concerned, peer review system makes Wikipedia more reliable than an average printed manual or guidebook where any mistakes couldn't have been corrected since I bought it.

  2. Re:I recently needed to learn how to set a live tr by Antaeus+Feldspar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well, you could try wiggling out of this one on a technicality, insisting on an article that is provably wrong in key facts and has been for more than a week, rather than one where that exact situation occurred but the article was later corrected after more than a week. But I'm sure you wouldn't do that, since that would be an artificial limitation.

    So perhaps you should look at this version of an article about Colin Pitchfork, a convicted child killer: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Colin_Pitchfork&oldid=141669223 . Among the other false key facts presented in the article for twenty-five days (over three weeks):

    * the city and the county where the murders occurred;
    * the years where they occurred;
    * the existence of a third murder;
    * the year of Pitchfork's confession;
    * the date and year of Pitchfork's sentencing;
    * the name of the initial incorrect suspect;
    * the affiliation of the scientist who developed the technique that identified Pitchfork;
    * how Pitchfork's ruse to defeat forensic testing failed.

    That's a bit more than "spelling errors and questionable references."

    --
    If people are to respect the law, perhaps the law should begin by respecting the people.