 A lot can happen in a wiki-minute, like the 60 seconds of everything that happens on wiki-media projects. Or even the time it takes to answer, what makes a Wikipedia article unique? Wikipedia is the free-inside Wikipedia everyone can edit, and nearly 300,000 volunteers around the world do it every month. Many Wikipedia articles share the same structure, a table of contents, different sections, and an info box with stats and images. Content on Wikipedia can't exist without a secondary source. A newspaper, publication, archive, or historical record that editors rely on to create and improve content. Towards the bottom of each article, you can see all the sources used by editors to build that article. The quality of an article is as good as its sources. At the top menu, you'll find the talk page that's where volunteer editors discuss the contents of an article. Articles are the result of great debate and collaboration. There are two types of hyperlinks on Wikipedia. When you see a red hyperlink, that means those pages are not yet started, but are waiting for someone like you to start editing them. Like knowledge, the work on Wikipedia is never finished. That's what makes a Wikipedia article unique in only one minute.