DIRT maintains accuracy at scale because every contributor needs to deposit tokens to write data. If the data is correct, it is freely shared. If the data is incorrect, anyone can challenge the data and earn tokens for identifying these inaccurate facts. Our protocol and platform makes it economically irrational for misinformation to persist in a data set.
T. Zesch, C. Müller, and I. Gurevych. Proceedings of the Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC), electronic proceedings, Ubiquitious Knowledge Processing, Universität Darmstadt, (Mai 2008)
T. Adler, and L. de Alfaro. WWW '07: Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web, page 261--270. New York, NY, USA, ACM Press, (2007)
G. Weaver, B. Strickland, and G. Crane. JCDL ‘06: Proceedings of the 6th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on
Digital libraries, page 358–358. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2006)
Z. Minier, Z. Bodo, and L. Csato. International Symposium on Symbolic and Numeric Algorithms for Scientific
Computing, page 157–164. Timisoara, Romania, (2007)
A. Desilets, S. Paquet, and N. Vinson. International Symposium on Wikis: Proceedings of the 2005 international symposium on Wikis, 16 (18):
3--15(2005)