Twitter isn't nationalised. It's explicitly private. It might be what you want to see happen to sites like Wikipedia, but it's not nationalised.
And no, I wouldn't say that. I would say that the solution to a problem isn't adding in more of the problem. Wikipedia is a problem because it's an in-group cabal. Further entrenching the strength of a cabal, even if you replace the members, doesn't fix the problem. It's merely replacing it until it too gets taken over again and again and again.
Twitter isn't nationalised. It's explicitly private. It might be what you want to see happen to sites like Wikipedia, but it's not nationalised.
And no, I wouldn't say that. I would say that the solution to a problem isn't adding in more of the problem. Wikipedia is a problem because it's an in-group cabal. Further entrenching the strength of a cabal, even if you replace the members, doesn't fix the problem. It's merely replacing it until it too gets taken over again and again and again.