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December 14, 2007 1:54 PM PST

Google's Knol experiment to rival Wikipedia?

by Rafe Needleman

Last night on the official Google blog, Udi Manber, vice president of engineering, announced that Google is testing a publishing platform called Knol.

It's being compared to Wikipedia and Mahalo. While it's a somewhat different take on knowledge collection, these comparisons are apt.

From what we know so far, Knol is a wiki-like platform. Authors can create topics, and there are tools to interlink articles and content, but as Manber says, an article, or "knol," is "just a Web page." Where it differs from a wiki is its focus on the author. All knols will highlight who wrote them.

Knol should make it easy to create nicely formatted reference pages.

(Credit: Google)

That small difference becomes dramatic when you put Knol alongside Wikipedia. Wikipedia is a collaborative system. There is no author listed on a wiki page because a page may have many authors (if you want to, you can divine who said what on the history pages).

Since Knol pages will be authored, users won't, presumably, be able to dive in and edit another page. They'll be able to submit edits to the author for approval, though. So much for open collaboration. But as a platform for authors who might want to make some money from their work, it's a better bet (Knol will allow authors to monetize their pages as they see fit).

Purists may think that since Google is in the business of monetizing content via advertising, it should not compete with other publishing platforms. However, this is not the first time that Google has gotten into this business.

Blogger, of course, is Google's biggest success in text-publishing platforms. But Google also experimented with its own database, Google Base, in which it not only indexes the information but also stores it. And then there's YouTube.

I would compare Knol to Blogger, and eventually, I think it will have Digg-like elements. Knol is like Blogger because it's a personal publishing platform. It's all about giving authors a platform for writing. It's just a like a blog, but much more structured. If you like a Knoller, you'll likely want to read more written by that person, or even subscribe to his work.

It could become Digg-like, in that multiple Knol pages on the same topic will compete with each other. And while the Manber's post hinted that the arbiter of Knol quality will be Google search rankings, I cannot imagine that there won't, at some point, be both a social network of Knol users and a main page that ranks the most popular Knol pages by votes, page views, discussion flow, or other group metrics.

At this point, based only on the official blog post, Knol looks like a solid end-user publishing platform. I strongly doubt that it will put much of a hurt on Wikipedia, since its author focus makes it much the antithesis of the open, community-driven wiki model. Knol looks more like a Google version of About.com, Mahalo, or Squidoo.

No word on when--or if--Knol will be released to the public.

See also: Google develops Wikipedia rival on News.com. If you're interested in this story, I recommend that you read the official Google post as well as Danny Sullivan's post on Search Engine Land.

Originally posted at Webware
Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (11 Comments)
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by consultantseoservices December 17, 2007 8:40 AM PST
Knol, Wiki, Digg or anything. It?s all about for webmaster?s latest technology to use and get profits. Hope, Google could do better than previous techlogy.

Let?s say all the best Knol!

www.consultantseoservices.com
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by AppleSuxLeo December 17, 2007 2:51 PM PST
Yep...they will kill off Wikipedia just like they killed off PayPal,Yahoo Mail and Windows Live Mail ;) Bwahahahaha !!!
Reply to this comment
by wakyman1995 December 18, 2007 12:42 PM PST
google will probably make easir tools than wikipedia, not everyone knows html

i hope wikipedia stays though
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by bigoakinc December 21, 2007 8:39 AM PST
I'm curious how Google will deal with the problem of similar content. At least Wikipedia consolidates content from multiple authors. What will Knol do? Will multiple authors be allowed to write about the same thing? Or will it be first written, first served? Will quality of the article be taken into account and if so, by whose standards?
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by Rod Roddy December 23, 2007 12:25 PM PST
NAH, Google hasn't taken anything over--it just buys it. As far as its push to wards a web based office suite, or a gigantic wiki--they still have a loooong way to go. Microsoft will not go down without a fight, I'm sure of it (they do have the most widely used office product in the galaxy). And Wikipedia is way too entrenched into the worldwide psyche--it'll never happen...of course as I said Google just flat out buys them.
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by chandank December 23, 2007 2:07 PM PST
Though Google is a good company and it's products are generally good. But what I have best liked and still like about Google is it's a people's company. It has a good user base and it has always respected users knowledge. But with this move of trying to compete with the Internet's community's best knowledge base, Wikipedia, Google I guess is going against the the users. Google is loved by users, but I am not sure an effort to crush Wikipedia, something which is created by internet users, how good a move it that. I would have loved it if Google had rather have supported Wikipedia.
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by DrAlvi December 28, 2007 5:54 AM PST
Wikipedia rules.

And so does AskDrWiki
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by emoslayer6224 December 31, 2007 10:22 AM PST
Google will just buy them. I don't really care to use html when there is a perfectly free Ajax based editor that Google supplies. There's no point. Still, I will only complain if Google changes the hierarchy and no longer allows editing. They should, however, get rid of the little circle of paranoid morons that bans users for not making their edits in the same style as they use.
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by geneven December 31, 2007 1:49 PM PST
I don't think Wikipedia can easily be killed off. It's awesome. It's not standing still. Just as Google's book publishing didn't eliminate Gutenberg Project -- it has limits.
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by dsarokin January 2, 2008 6:40 PM PST
There's a good page explaining how about.com generates revenue:

http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=767877

It seems to involve a corner of the online advertising world that Google doesn't dominate yet, and may well explain the attraction (at least, part of it) of experimenting with Knol.
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by LinkStarbureiy December 14, 2008 5:36 PM PST
It's too early to tell how well-received or relevant Google Knol (GK) will become. Though, taking nothing away from the efforts of Wikipedia, I personally use and like the product (GK) and think it's a great service to academia. If nothing else, the system encourages people to write and share knowledge; at the very least, it's a reputation-builder. This could be yet another way for enterprises to cite the online resumes of prospective hires (Ahem! Potential Egglepple hires take note ;).

Link Starbureiy
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