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by jonathanpierre 2325 days ago
It does work well though. As a user, I can't remember significant Wikipedia or Wikidata outages.

And I'm really not sure if whatever blockchain solution that person on twitter wants Wikimedia to use is even able to get to that scale, yet alone perform better an it than what Wikimedia currently has.

1 comments

Here in Turkey, we had Wikipedia banned for 4 years. Luckily, the ban has been lifted last month.

I'm not arguing blockchain would be a good mitigation for a future incident though.

Was that the fault of Wikipedia's database?
In a limited sense, yes, it was.

Because Wikipedia's database is centralized, and lives at a particular (range of) IP addresses, it's trivial for a state actor to censor it.

Does a sprinkling of magic blockchain solve this problem? Not really. But something more specific to the problem might; being able to torrent the full data dump is a step in the right direction.

You can torrent a full snapshot

https://wiki.kiwix.org/wiki/Content_in_all_languages

And also download snapshots from IPFS

https://blog.ipfs.io/24-uncensorable-wikipedia/

I guess the issue with snapshots of large datasets is that they go out of date, and downloading the whole data set regularly is a bit painful

Well, yes, that's why I indicated that being able to torrent a fully snapshot is a step in the right direction.
Users do not connect directly to the database. Turkey definitely didn't blackhole traffic to Wikipedia's database.
The fact that users can't connect directly to the database is, at least in part, a limitation of the database chosen.
Yes, in a strictly semantic sense, it is a limitation. However, in general such access would be not only a bad idea due to the loss of abstraction and additional work to implement (duplicate) access controls, it would also not be very useful for users over the multiple possibilities for access that already exist.

And all this is really a red herring, both in relation to the unspecified use of blockchain and in relation to resistance to state censorship.