I've never found anything wrong with Wikipedia. Their information seems to be accurate and up-to-date. I use them for research all the time.
They have a team of dedicated editors and watchers and specialized software to monitor changes, making sure that it's not so easy to vandalize Wikipedia.
That's the funniest post I've ever seen you make.
If their team was so "dedicated", why have I had to fix so many pages with completely incorrect information about both radio and television stations? They monitor changes but if someone runs into a brickwall when editing an entry and doesn't go deep enough to research it, they end up writing whatever they "think must have happened". That immediately creates a danger of inaccuracy, which is something no encyclopedia wants in other than incidental amounts.
Here is an example of something I corrected just the other day:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KWCH-DT
KWCH started operation as KTVH and was the first television station in that area (primary CBS affiliate, some carriage of ABC and NBC) until the short-lived KEDD on channel 16 began operation in Wichita as a primary affiliate of NBC. The two were joined not long afterward by KAKE on channel 10 which took full-time ABC affiliation, ending the carriage on KTVH and KEDD of ABC on a secondary basis. When KARD-TV went on the air on channel 3 several months before KEDD's network affiliation contract was set to expire, KEDD knew they wouldn't be renewed (and NBC confirmed that not long afterwards) and they literally went dark the day their NBC affiliation ended.
Here is what the KWCH Wikipedia entry said, all deleted now by yours truly:
KTVH shared NBC programming with KEDD-TV (channel 16). Both stations lost the NBC affiliation when KAKE-TV (channel 10) signed on in October 1954, but channel 12 continued to air some ABC programming until KARD-TV (channel 3, now KSNW) signed on in September 1955 and took over the NBC affiliation. KEDD, meanwhile, operated as an independent station for a short time after losing NBC to KAKE before it shut down.
Do you see how many incorrect statements are made in the space of only three sentences?
1. KAKE didn't take NBC away from the two, but ABC. In fact, I was able to further verify using newspaper archives that KEDD carried more NBC programming and KTVH carried more CBS programming as a result, with virtually no ABC programs anywhere but channel 12.
2. KARD did not take over the affiliation upon signing on, since the NBC contract with KEDD was still in force. It was channel 3 which operated for several months as an independent, waiting for that contract to end. Again, using the newspaper archives for additional confirmation, KEDD cleared the entire NBC schedule its last day as an affiliate (April 30, 1956) with the exception of one 15-minute daytime soap opera. KARD's schedule on that day didn't even begin until 5:00pm and was filled with local programs and syndicated shows such as
Highway Patrol and
The Cisco Kid.
All of the erroneous information could have been avoided by a simple search at David Gleason's site for all articles about KEDD in
Broadcasting, but whoever wrote those sentences essentially made up a version of history.
Wikipedia is, as David says, a good first source, but should never be used as a citation without verifying the "fact" independently.