English-dialect editors of the online reference book refered to the daily paper's "notoriety for poor certainty checking, melodrama, and level out manufacture", said the announcement posted on Wikipedia Wednesday.
The vote implies the newspaper's utilization as a kind of perspective ought to be "for the most part precluded", it said.
The Wikimedia Foundation, the not-revenue driven association that runs the Wikipedia site, recognized the vote in an announcement refered to in The Guardian, however said it was up to its unpaid editors.
Starting now and into the foreseeable future, it said "the Daily Mail will for the most part not be referenced as a 'solid source' on English Wikipedia, and volunteer editors are urged to change existing references to the Daily Mail to another source considered dependable by the group".
The National Enquirer, a US newspaper, is the main news production that "ought to never be utilized", as indicated by editors' rules.
Content on Wikipedia is composed and altered by a worldwide system of volunteers who must construct their articles in light of "dependable, outsider, distributed sources with a notoriety for truth checking and precision".
The rules additionally highlight that exceptional care ought to be taken when sourcing from state-related news associations, including the Chinese press office Xinhua, North Korea's Korean Central News Agency, and Press TV in Iran.
They caution they might be purposeful publicity associations, however don't ostensibly boycott them.
The Daily Mail's dependability had been the subject of level headed discussion among Wikipedia editors since January 2015.
A few adversaries of the move contended that "singling out one source does not manage the other poor sources that are at present allowed", and that verifiably the British newspaper may have been exact.
The Daily Mail, Britain's second greatest offering day by day daily paper, has beforehand been blamed for prejudice, drama and mistakes.
Its online operation, MailOnline, is thought to be the world's biggest English talking daily paper site with 24.5 million month to month extraordinary guests.
The gathering did not promptly react to AFP asks for input.
AFP