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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 218.43.35.97 (talk) at 16:17, 25 August 2006. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Uncyclopedia
File:Uncyclopediamainpage.png
Type of site
Humor
OwnerWikia
Created byJonathan Huang, & "Stillwaters"/"Euniana"
URLhttp://uncyclopedia.org/
CommercialNo
File:Uncyclopedia logo.png
Uncyclopedia's logo, which is a potato named Sophia, is a parody of Wikipedia's globe logo. It should be noted that this potato is not the same entity as the "founder" of Uncyclopedia, Sophia [1].

Uncyclopedia, "the content-free[2] encyclopedia that anyone can edit,"[3] is a satirical parody of Wikipedia, though Uncyclopedia claims the reverse. [1] The site was launched in January 2005 by Jonathan Huang and an unnamed counterpart (known as 'Stillwaters' or 'Euniana'), and claims to be a project of the "Uncyclomedia Foundation"[4], a parody of the Wikimedia Foundation, but it is really owned by Jimbo and Angie's Wikia.

The original self-proclaimed mission of Uncyclopedia was to provide a Satirical point of View (SPOV) in the wiki format. However, as the community grew, the content expanded to include many other forms of humour. There is no restriction on the kinds of humour allowed; however, all articles are held to a standard of comprehensibility and must appeal to more than just a small group of people[5][6].

History

File:Main Page Uncyclopedia.png
Screenshot of Uncyclopedia's main page on March 3, 2006 when it was changed to reflect a new version of Wikipedia's Main Page that was not yet in use. It also thanks its users for creating the ten millionth article, just after Wikipedia had created one million.

Uncyclopedia was launched in January of 2005 by co-founder Jonathan Huang (Chronarion) as a satire piece on Wikipedia, as a response to the demand in Wikipedia's "Bad Jokes and Other Deleted Nonsense" page for a place to put their nonsense. However, it was not advertised at all on Wikipedia itself and became more of a place for small satirical essays on assorted topics.[citation needed]

Uncyclopedia quickly outgrew its original webhost; on May 26, 2005, it was announced that Uncyclopedia would be hosted by Wikia, Inc.[7] Its license and domain name remained unchanged. On July 10, 2006 the uncyclopedia.org domain was switched in ownership from founder Chronarion to Wikia, Inc.

Uncyclopedia's content is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 license. As with other Wikia sites, the full article database is freely available for online download. As of August 2006, the English-language Uncyclopedia contains over 18,000 articles, making it one of the largest Wikia-hosted wikis (see the Statistics page for a more up-to-date number)[8].

Content

A recurring joke is that of misquoting Oscar Wilde, either with a well-known, but slightly edited genuine quote designed to parody the overuse of quotes, or with a phrase completely different from his style. There is an entire lexicon of fictitious Oscar Wilde quotes, which has its own namespace, "Wilde:"[9].

Self-reference is another common theme in Uncyclopedia articles. For example, the rot13 page is written in rot13,[10] while the iPod article has the second letter of every word beginning with "i" capitalized.[11]

Less obvious tongue-in-cheek humor is also common. For example, the Chinese name of the People's Republic of China is considerably longer there than on Wikipedia, but literally means (in Chinese), "The Communist Party of China One Party Dictatorship People-Cannot-Be-Master-Of-Their-Own-Affairs Republic"[12].

To cope with the amount of one-liners Uncyclopedia received, it established an Undictionary[13], an "ick!tionary" of one-liners and "daffynitions" covering a wide variety of topics. It was intended to parody Wiktionary, but the project never took off, and is mostly seen as a collection of garbage (as evidenced by proposed logos depicting garbage cans). Uncyclopedia also accommodates news articles with its UnNews[14], the "source for up to the minute misinformation". UnNews originally copied Wikinews to the letter, but has since evolved to do things differently, and offers different features. For example, most if not all UnNews articles have an available audio version.

MediaWiki

The site uses MediaWiki software to mimic Wikipedia conventions; which itself is parodied with these following analogies: Uncyclomedia Foundation[15] (Wikimedia Foundation), UnNews[14] (Wikinews), Unquotable[16] (Wikiquote), Undictionary[13] (Wiktionary), UnBooks[17] (WikiBooks), UnMeta[18] (Meta-Wiki), UnSource[19] (Wikisource), UnSpecies[20] (Wikispecies), and UnCommons / Uncyclomedia Commons[21] (Wikimedia Commons). Image description pages are also branded under Uncyclomedia Commons, including a logo mirroring the Wikimedia Commons.

Uncyclopedia uses MediaWiki to imitate Wikipedia templates, such as its Wikipedia template (parodying Wikipedia sister project templates), and its Endspoiler template.

For those without comedic tastes, the so-called-experts at Wikipedia have an article about: Uncyclopedia.

Notability

Uncyclopedia has been referenced online in the New York Times[22], The Boston Herald[23], The Guardian[24], The Register[25], the Taipei Times[26], and the Arizona Daily Star[27].

Controversy

Uncyclopedia has faced some opposition in the New Zealand Herald, where it was stated to be a "cyber bullying menace."[28]

"Roy Kelly, principal of King's College, said the uncyclopedia website was "nasty", putting it on a par with text bullying and playground violence."

Since then, Uncyclopedia has considered a no vanity policy, whereas vanity has traditionally been allowed for schools and online communities (against the wishes of the community, as most see it as lacking in quality and now troublesome as well). Any pages created for the purposes of personal attack or bullying are removed as soon as they are noticed, as always; however, it is very difficult for administrators to monitor each page. As of July 2006, vanity pages which are questionable are either deleted or put under the care of one or more administrators.

In other languages

File:EincycLogo.JPG
Eincyclopedia's logo.

Uncyclopedia has "sister projects" in 23 other languages. The French-language version, founded in June 2005 as the first in a long series of Uncyclopedia "Babel" wikis, is known as Désencyclopedie, a "disencyclopedia" which purports to have been written by an infinite number of monkeys with typewriters. The site's logo is a die, because "dé" is also French for "die".

The Hebrew-language version Eincyclopedia (Hebrew: איןציקלופדיה) was founded in December 5, 2005. The word Eincyclopedia is a combination of the Hebrew word אין ("Ein", meaning "void" or "non-existent") and encyclopedia. Eincyclopedia's version to the Oscar Wilde misquotes of Uncyclopedia are the misquotes of the claimed Messiah Sabbatai Zevi, who is also represented as the founder and main writer (through telekinesis) of the site.

The Spanish-language version, Inciclopedia, was founded in Febraury, 2006. It was set up after a sudden increase on the number of incoming articles in Spanish at the central uncyclopedia, following the closure of the Spanish humor wiki Frikipedia due to legal issues with SGAE, a Spaniard organization for the rights of authors, angered by Frikipedia's entry on them[29].


The Japanese-language version, founded in May 2006, uses the name Ansaikuropedeia (アンサイクロペディア, the katakana transliteration of Uncyclopedia) alongside the alternate name Bakajiten (バ科事典, a pun on the Japanese word for encyclopedia, hyakkajiten [百科事典]) popularized by Japanese blog Ebunroku Kotonoha's Japanese translations of the Japan, Oda Nobunaga and Konami articles in March 2005. Its current slogan is "Quack Experimental Wiki 'Uncyclopedia'" (へっぽこ実験ウィキ『バ科事典(アンサイクロペディア)』), a homage to the full title of the Excel Saga anime series.

The seven largest Unyclopedias, all of them having over 1,000 articles, are the English-language Uncyclopedia (over 17,000 articles), the Polish Nonsensopedia (over 4,000 articles), the German Uncyclopedia (over 2,000), the Suomi (Finnish) Hikipedia (over 2,000 pages in its largest fork), the regular-script Chinese 偽基百科 (being the homophone of Chinese wikipedia, "維基百科", and meaning "fake wikipedia") (over 1,400 articles), the Spanish-language Inciclopedia (over 1,200 pages), and the French-language Désencyclopédie (over 1,100 articles).

Uncyclopædia exists in many languages:
ar: العربية بيضيپيديا
ca: Català Valenciclopèdia
cs: Cesky Necyklopedie
da: Dansk Spademanns Leksikon
de: Deutsch Uncyclopedia.de
el: Ελληνικά Ανεγκυκλοπαίδεια
en: English Uncyclopedia
es: Español Inciclopedia
fa: فارسی (Persian) نانشنامه
fi: Suomi Hikipedia
fr: Français Désencyclopédie
he: עברית איןציקלופדיה
hu: Magyar Unciklopédia
it: Italiano Nonciclopedia
ja: 日本語 アンサイクロペディア
la: Latina Necyclopædia
nl: Nederlands Onziclopedie
no: Norsk Ikkepedia
pl: Polski Nonsensopedia
pt: Português Desciclopédia
ru: Русский Абсурдопедия
sv: Svenska Psyklopedin
zh-tw: 中文(正體) 偽基百科
zh: 中文 伪基百科
meta: UnMeta Uncyclomedia Foundation
info: Babel Project List of Uncyclopædias

Also, the English version of Uncyclopedia has several articles translated to Engrish using Babelfish.

See also

List of common themes on Uncyclopedia

References

  1. ^ "Talk:Sophia (Wikipedia's Entry)". 2006-07-08. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  2. ^ "Content-free" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  3. ^ "Main Page - Uncyclopedia" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  4. ^ "Uncyclomedia Foundation - Uncyclopedia" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  5. ^ "Deletion Policy" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-22.
  6. ^ "Vanity Policies" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-22.
  7. ^ Beesley, Angela (2005-05-26). "Uncyclopedia joins Wikia". Wikia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  8. ^ "Wikia Statistics". Retrieved 2006-07-22.
  9. ^ "Wilde:Main Page" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-22.
  10. ^ "ROT13" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-30.
  11. ^ "iPod" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-30.
  12. ^ "People's Republic of China - Uncyclopedia" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  13. ^ a b "Undictionary" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  14. ^ a b "UnNews" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  15. ^ "Uncyclomedia Foundation". Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  16. ^ "Unquotable" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  17. ^ "UnBooks - Uncyclopedia" (Wiki). Uncyclopedia. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  18. ^ "UnMeta". Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  19. ^ "UnSource". Retrieved 2006-07-20.
  20. ^ "UnSpecies". Retrieved 2006-07-20.
  21. ^ "UnCommons". Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  22. ^ Boxer, Sarah (2005-08-25). "But Is There Intelligent Spaghetti Out There?". The New York Times. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  23. ^ Schorow, Stephanie (2005-04-08). "This wiki-cool Web site lets Net surfers define world". Boston Herald. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  24. ^ Schofield, Jack (2005-04-14). "Web Watch". Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  25. ^ Orlowski, Andrew (2005-12-12). "There's no Wikipedia entry for 'moral responsibility'". Retrieved 2006-06-24.
  26. ^ "`Pastafarianism' gains prominence and support in intelligent-design drive". Taipei Times. 2005-08-25. Retrieved 2006-07-18.
  27. ^ "Online parody of Tucson not always funny, but interesting". Arizona Daily Star. 2006-08-18. Retrieved 2006-08-22.
  28. ^ Woulfe, Catherine ? (2006-05-28). "Schools face new cyber bullying menace". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2006-07-20.
  29. ^ Taken from Yahoo's cache after Frikipedia's closure. "Inciclopedia's entry on SGAE".