The wiki provides so much flexibility that several offices throughout the community using it to maintain and transfer knowledge on daily operations and events. Anyone with access to read it has permission to create and edit articles after acquiring an account with
Intelink. Since Intellipedia is intended to be a platform for harmonizing the various points of view of the agencies and analysts of the Intelligence Community, Intellipedia does not enforce a
neutral point of view policy. Instead, viewpoints are attributed to the agencies, offices, and individuals participating, with the hope that a consensus view will emerge. Intellipedia also contains non-encyclopedic content including meeting notes and items of internal, administrative interest. Deputy DNI
Thomas Fingar made a comparison to
eBay, where the reliability of sellers is rated by buyers. He said: Intellipedia. It's been written up. It's the Wikipedia on a classified network, with one very important difference: it's not anonymous. We want people to establish a reputation. If you're really good, we want people to know you're good. If you're making contributions, we want that known. If you're an idiot, we want that known too. During 2006 and 2007, inspired by the
barnstar used on both
Wikipedia and
MeatballWiki, Intellipedia editors awarded symbolic
shovels to users to distinguish Wiki
gardening and to encourage others in the community to contribute. A template with a picture of the limited-edition shovel (actually a trowel) was created to place on
user pages for Intellipedians to show their
gardening status. The handle bears the imprint: "I dig Intellipedia! It's wiki wiki, Baby." The shovels have since been replaced with a mug bearing the tag line, "Intellipedia: it's what we know". Different agencies have experimented with other ways of encouraging participation. For example, at the CIA, managers have held contests for best pages with prizes such as free dinners. Chris Rasmussen, knowledge management officer at the Defense Department's
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), argues that "gimmicks" like the Intellipedia shovel, posters, and handbills, encourage people to use
Web 2.0 tools like Intellipedia and are effective low-tech solutions to promote their use,
Training Several agencies in the Intelligence community, particularly the CIA and NGA, have developed training programs to provide time to integrate social software tools into analysts' daily work. These classes focus on the use of Intellipedia to capture and manage knowledge, but they also incorporate the use of the other social software tools, including
blogs,
RSS, and social bookmarking. The courses stress immersion in the tools and instructors encourage participants to work on a specific Intellipedia projects. The courses also expose participants to social media technologies on the Internet. ==Awards==