Due to its use of free content licenses, and a culture which includes a "right to fork", a number of content forks of the open-source encyclopedia Misplaced Pages have been created.
- Citizendium, a 2006 fork of English Misplaced Pages, founded by Misplaced Pages co-founder Larry Sanger, which was unforked in 2007.
- Enciclopedia Libre, a 2002 fork of the Spanish Misplaced Pages created in opposition to perceived plans to add advertising to Misplaced Pages.
- Everipedia, launched as a 2015 fork of English Misplaced Pages, and later unforked.
- Qiuwen Baike, a 2023 fork of the Chinese Misplaced Pages that aims to be compliant with Chinese government policies.
- Ruwiki (Misplaced Pages fork), a 2023 fork of the Russian Misplaced Pages that aims to be compliant with Russian government policies.
- WikiPilipinas, a 2007 fork of a set Philippine-related articles from English Misplaced Pages
References
- Lund, Arwid (2017). "3 Misplaced Pages". Misplaced Pages, Work and Capitalism. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 49. Retrieved 25 November 2024.
- Famiglietti, Andrew (2011). "The Right to Fork: A Historical Survey of De/centraliztion in Misplaced Pages". In Lovink, Geert; Tkacz, Nathaniel (eds.). Critical point of view: a Misplaced Pages reader. Amsterdam: Institute of Network Cultures. pp. 296–308. ISBN 978-90-78146-13-1.
- ^ Jankowski, Steve (2 October 2023). "The Misplaced Pages imaginaire: a new media history beyond Misplaced Pages.org (2001–2022)". Internet Histories. 7 (4): 333–353. doi:10.1080/24701475.2023.2246261.
- Reagle, Joseph (13 October 2020). "The Many (Reported) Deaths of Misplaced Pages". In Reagle, Joseph; Koerner, Jackie (eds.). Misplaced Pages @ 20. MIT Press. pp. 9–20. doi:10.7551/mitpress/12366.003.0004. Retrieved 18 December 2024.
- Tkacz, Nathaniel (20 January 2011). "The Spanish Fork: Misplaced Pages's ad-fuelled mutiny". Wired. Retrieved 25 November 2024.
- Tkacz, Nathaniel (2011). "The Politics of Forking Paths". In Lovink, Geert; Tkacz, Nathaniel (eds.). Critical point of view: a Misplaced Pages reader. Amsterdam: Institute of Network Cultures. pp. 94–109. ISBN 978-90-78146-13-1.
- Christian, Jon (4 October 2017). "Everipedia is the Misplaced Pages for being wrong". The Outline. Retrieved 25 November 2024.
- Harrison, Stephen (26 October 2021). "Why Misplaced Pages Banned Several Chinese Admins". Slate. Retrieved 25 November 2024.
- Cohen, Noam (12 July 2023). "Russian Misplaced Pages's Top Editor Leaves to Launch a Putin-Friendly Clone". Bloomberg. Retrieved 18 December 2024.
External links
- Misplaced Pages:Mirrors and forks, Misplaced Pages's internal list of its Mirrors and forks