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  1. en.citizendium.orgCitizendium

    Feb 18, 2024 · Welcome to Citizendium, a wiki for providing free knowledge where authors use their real names. We regard information as a public good and welcome anyone who wants to share their knowledge on virtually any subject.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CitizendiumCitizendium - Wikipedia

    In early 2022, Citizendium upgraded its software to the latest version of MediaWiki. User accounts were not retained and had to be recreated on the new server. As of July 2023, Citizendium's web traffic was only 70,000 visits per month. See also. Internet portal; United States portal; List of online encyclopedias; Scholarpedia

  3. Nov 16, 2023 · The Citizendium (si-tih-ZEN-dee-um, "a citizens' compendium") is a wiki-based free encyclopedia project founded in 2007 by Larry Sanger, who also co-founded Wikipedia. It allows users to write and edit articles on many subjects, as long as they register and edit under their real, verified name.

  4. en.citizendium.org › wiki › Main_PageMain Page - Citizendium

    Dec 7, 2022 · CZ is free. All written content is available under the Creative Commons-Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license or any later. Written content that originated in part from Wikipedia is also available under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike . Help • Financial Report • Follow Citizendium on Twitter • Facebook.

  5. en.citizendium.org › wiki › WikipediaWikipedia - Citizendium

    Citizendium differs primarily from Wikipedia in that its chief goal is to have "reliable" and high-quality content. It hopes to achieve that goal by only allowing users with real-name registration to edit, while giving experts in a particular field more authority regarding its content.

  6. Feb 26, 2007 · If you're Larry Sanger, the answer is simple: you build another Wikipedia. A better one. This is Sanger's dream as he ramps up the Citizendium project, an ambitious undertaking that aims to...

  7. A video game is a game played using an electronic controller to manipulate images on a display screen. The earliest video games merit little additional description; most were abstractions, blips on a black and white screen designed to simulate sports and board games.