Beginning with the name, "Tags", I don't see this system as a wiki. I see it as a tags system whose main purpose is to surface related articles; and occasionally a tag has an explanation attached. Unfortunately, article surfacing doesn't work well because a) articles are tagged inconsistently; and b) articles are sorted by how highly their tag is upvoted, which I find unintuitive behavior with unintuitive sorting results.
Anyway, if I look at the Tags system for a minute as if it was Wikipedia, here's what I see:
- On Wikipedia, one wiki page leads to either other wiki pages or external links. In the LW Tags pages, there's a weird separation between linking to other tags pages vs. linking to LW posts vs. the list of tagged LW posts at the bottom. Because of this, there's no LW equivalent to wiki rabbit hole browsing.
- Any tag which exceeds one page's worth of text (like this one) hides that text behind a "Read more" button. That's not the behavior you'd expect to see if the Tags explanations were meant to be read.
- LW has a strong authorship focus; for any normal post I know exactly who is responsible for what part of the text: namely, the author is responsible for everything. Whereas in the Tags system, I just noticed that the Tags pages do indicate who is responsible for which edits, but I still don't have nearly the same trust in the authoritativeness or cohesiveness of the overall content as I would for a normal post.
- Also, normal LW posts have comments at the bottom; tags pages have a discussion section you have to click into, which I expect few people to do.
- From what I can tell, there's no curation of tags pages, to indicate whether a tags page is accurate and/or worth reading. The rest of LW promotes posts if they have high karma, but a voting system seems ill-suited for content which is regularly edited. Imagine if curated tags pages appeared in the LW Recommended section or in the main feed.
- Anyway, LW contains way way way too much text for anyone to read everything, so I consider the lack of discoverability and promotion of good tags reason enough that I basically never bother with them.
- Due to lack of discoverability of Tags pages, I'd have to seek tags out intentionally, but the big Tags page is intimidating and doesn't encourage exploration and rabbit hole browsing in the way the Wikipedia homepage does.
All this taken together means that, if I want to know what a concept like "Calibration" is, my first impulse is not to check the tags page, but to look for high-karma LW posts which answer this question. So I hardly ever read the contents of Tags pages.
The main blocker for me is social rather than technical. Back when the new wiki first started, I created a page but the LW devs (or at least one of them) didn't like the page. There was some back and forth, but I came away from the discussion feeling pretty unwelcome and worried that if I were to make more contributions they would also involve lengthy debates or my work would be removed. I haven't really kept up on the wiki since that time, but I haven't seen anything that has changed my mind about this.
A few technical things that would make it nicer to edit:
In a smaller way this is my experience also, and more so on the EA forum wiki.