The Sam Adams Alliance is hosting some wikis which invite citizens to help other citizens bring transparency and accountability to government. They are Ballotpedia, Judgepedia, and SunshineReview.
Wikis may be as revolutionary for human civilization as the invention of movable type by the printer Gutenberg around 1450 A.D. Movable type meant that manuscripts could be produced for much lower cost, and therefore made available to thousands of people. That lead to more books, then book collections, more scholars, and an acceleration of human learning and human civilization.
However scholarship, science and other book learning were still an exclusive area, confined to the privileged, the lucky, and the occasional determined genius.Libraries later offered a wealth of knowledge to millions, just for the cost of the time. Not just the time to visit the library, but the time to search and research among dusty books and journals; information was there, on the shelves, some of it accurate, some not; but it was not easily searchable or verifiable.
Enter the internet — and much information is available. It is easy to find many things — though not so easy to verify. And it may not be easy to find just what you want. But there seems to be an expert in everything — and with wikipedia Jimmy Wales facilitates a spontaneous order F.A Hayek would have appreciated. Dispersed experts add their knowledge, engage with other experts, and reach a consensus presentation on millions of terms, events, and people.
Now wikis are developing on many other topics — some of them very important. And some covering areas where the obscurity of information is deliberate — government power and government spending. Enter Judgepedia, to cover the least accountable, but often the most powerful branch of government. How many sitting judges can you name? Most operate with great power and little scrutiny. Judgepedia offers a forum for those who know to let the rest of us find out what judges have done, and what citizens can do about it.
SunshineReview is just getting going — and it promises a window on the spending of governments at all levels — right down to the counties and school districts least likely to want citizens to look behind the budget categories that often obscure more than they reveal.