Vladimir Putin calls for ‘reliable’ Russian version of Wikipedia
President says user-edited site should be replaced with Big Russian Encyclopaedia
Vladimir Putin was speaking at a Kremlin meeting on the future of the Russian language. Photograph: Alexei Druzhinin/Tass
Vladimir Putin has called for the creation of a more “reliable” Russian version of Wikipedia.
The president told a Kremlin meeting on the future of the Russian language: “As for Wikipedia … it’s better to replace it with the new Big Russian Encyclopaedia in electronic form,” RIA Novosti news agency reported. “At least that will be reliable information, presented in a good, modern way.”
Putin was referring to a Russian encyclopaedia published between 2007 and 2014 in paper form.
The government plans to allocate nearly 1.7bn rubles (£20.7m) to developing a Russian online reference resource similar to Wikipedia in the next three years, according to government documents published in September.
Putin was responding to a comment by a university rector who complained about the use of Wikipedia by courts to reach verdicts.
The widely used Russian-language Wikipedia, known as Vikipedia, says it has more than 1.5m articles.
In 2015, Russia briefly banned Wikipedia over an entry on a form of cannabis.