The first edit in Misplaced Pages's database, to HomePage, was made on January 15, 2001, and states in its entirety "This is the new WikiPedia!" In December 2021, co-founder Jimmy Wales announced that he would sell a website containing a re-creation of an earlier edit that he said he made and then later deleted, which contained the text "Hello, World!", to the highest bidder as a non-fungible token (NFT).
Background
Main article: History of Misplaced PagesThe concept of a collaboratively written, freely licensed hypertext encyclopedia was first posited in the 1990s; Richard Stallman proposed a "Free Universal Encyclopedia and Learning Resource" in 1998. In 2001, Larry Sanger conceived of Misplaced Pages as a source of volunteer entries from the general public that could then be "fed into" Nupedia, a collaborative encyclopedia founded by Jimmy Wales and written by "qualified volunteer contributors" with a multi-step peer review process. A message sent by Sanger to the Nupedia mailing list said "Humor me go there and add a little article. It will take all of five or ten minutes". On January 13, 2001, Misplaced Pages's domain name was registered, and on January 15, 2001, Misplaced Pages was launched.
First edit
"UuU" redirects here. For other uses, see UUU (disambiguation).Historically, the earliest surviving edit on Misplaced Pages's database was a January 16, 2001, revision of the page UuU, created as a list of countries starting with the letter U and oddly titled due to software considerations of the time. However, page histories during that time were unreliably stored by the UseModWiki software; in 2010, previously inaccessible records of early UseModWiki revisions were found in archives by Wikimedia developer Tim Starling. When these edits were imported into Misplaced Pages's database at 02:28, July 30, 2019 (UTC), its earliest recorded edit became the January 15, 2001, creation of HomePage with the text "This is the new WikiPedia!" by an anonymous person using the office.bomis.com server. On being informed of the importation of these edits, Wales said:
For the record, these are the earliest edits that have been found, but not the earliest edits. In the early days of Usemod wiki, I did a lot of deleting things *on the hard drive* (as this was the only way to really do that). Those will never be found of course. The first words, soon deleted, were "Hello, World!"
Non-fungible token sale
On December 3, 2021, Wales announced that he would be selling, through auction house Christie's, a non-fungible token (NFT) of a re-creation of what he claimed to be the first Misplaced Pages edit, made earlier than the "This is the new WikiPedia!" edit. Wales' edit, whose timestamp was listed as 18:29 UTC on January 15, 2001, was on the page HomePage. It consisted of the text "Hello, World!"; it was made as a test and subsequently erased. Previously, other tokens referencing " of internet history" had been turned into "wildly expensive NFTs" – in June 2021, Sotheby's auctioned off a token referencing an animated GIF made from a text file of Tim Berners-Lee's original source code for some features of the World Wide Web; it sold for $5,434,500 USD.
The product being sold was not actual ownership of the edit (as Misplaced Pages content is released under a copyleft license), but rather a "digital item" that records the purchaser's name alongside a URL of the edit and by itself confers the owner no special rights. However, plans were made to set up a website, "Edit This NFT", mirroring only the original page; the purchaser would be allowed to edit it. It sold for US$750,000. Numerous Misplaced Pages editors objected to the sale on various grounds. Some editors, including administrators, argued that Wales' use of his own user profile page to advertise the sale was a violation of Misplaced Pages guidelines against self-promotion. Other editors criticized the sale on the grounds that the artificial scarcity of NFTs is incompatible with Misplaced Pages's open-source free knowledge principles. They were broadly not opposed to Wales selling the iMac he used at the time, but objected to the NFT for representing what they perceived as monetization encroaching onto the platform.
References
- Stallman, Richard (1998). "The Free Universal Encyclopedia and Learning Resource (1998 Draft)". GNU.org. Archived from the original on January 24, 2021. Retrieved December 3, 2021.
- ^ Poe, Marshall (September 2006). "The Hive". TheAtlantic.com. Archived from the original on December 23, 2006. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
- ^ Singh, Shubhranshu (April 25, 2021). "Misplaced Pages–The Utopia that Survived and Thrived". BW Businessworld.in. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
Misplaced Pages began with its first edit on 15 January 2001, two days after the domain was registered by Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger.
- ^ Wodinsky, Shoshana (December 3, 2021). "The First Edit to Misplaced Pages Is Being Auctioned as an NFT". Gizmodo.com. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
That edit… was originally penned… shortly after the site first rolled out to the public in mid-January, 2001.
- The Telegraph Staff (September 24, 2009). "The Oldest Surviving Web Pages". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
- Murray, Janet H. (2011). Inventing the Medium: Principles of Interaction Design as a Cultural Practice. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. pp. 89–90. ISBN 9780262016148. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
Figure 3.2 The earliest still-extant Misplaced Pages editing entry.
- Starling, Tim (December 14, 2010). "[Foundation-l] Old Misplaced Pages Backups Discovered". Lists.Wikimedia.org.
I was looking through some old files in our SourceForge project. I opened a file called wiki.tar.gz, and inside were three complete backups of the text of Misplaced Pages, from February, March and August 2001! / This is exciting, because there is lots of article history in here which was assumed to be lost forever.
- ^ Bluerasberry; Pythoncoder; Smallbones (August 30, 2019). "Documenting Wikimania and our beginnings". The Signpost. Retrieved December 5, 2021.
- "Import log entry by User:Graham87 for HomePage". Misplaced Pages. Retrieved November 26, 2022.
- "HomePage". January 15, 2001 – via Misplaced Pages.
- Moen, Matt (December 3, 2021). "Misplaced Pages Is Selling a Slice of Internet History". PAPER.
- Fowler, Bree (December 3, 2021). "Christie's auctioning off NFT of first Misplaced Pages edit". CNET.
- ^ Pauly, Alexandra (December 3, 2021). "Christie's & Jimmy Wales Sell Misplaced Pages's First Entry as an NFT". Highsnobiety.
- Jimmy Wales. "Misplaced Pages: HomePage: re-creation of early edit". Retrieved December 4, 2021.
- ^ Gault, Matthew (December 3, 2021). "Jimmy Wales Is Auctioning His First Misplaced Pages Edit As an NFT". Vice.
- "Source Code for the WWW". Sotheby's.
- Robertson, Adi (December 3, 2021). "Jimmy Wales is selling his first Misplaced Pages edit as an NFT". The Verge.
- "Misplaced Pages: HomePage". Editthisnft.com.
- Bonifacic, Igor (December 3, 2021). "Jimmy Wales is auctioning off an NFT of his first Misplaced Pages edit". Engadget.
- "The Birth of Misplaced Pages". Christie's. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
- ^ Gault, Matthew (December 8, 2021). "Misplaced Pages Editors Very Mad About Jimmy Wales' NFT of a Misplaced Pages Edit". Vice Motherboard. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
- ^ Harrison, Stephen (December 9, 2021). "Jimmy Wales Is Auctioning the "Birth of Misplaced Pages" as an NFT". Slate. Retrieved February 1, 2022.