No. Dead people should be treated with equal respect
to living ones.
On 3/28/07, Marc Riddell <michaeldavid86(a)comcast.net> wrote:
on 3/28/07 10:27 AM, Andrew Gray at shimgray(a)gmail.com wrote:
Basically, we have an issue with the biographies
of living people
where - by the simple act of repeating published and verifiable
information - we can give a vastly misleading impression about them;
we report their drunk-driving conviction at 19 in the same tone and
length as we report their Nobel prize. Oh, it's verifiable and true...
but should we be publishing it? Editorial common sense says, perhaps,
no.
My own thinking begins with why is the person being included in the
encyclopedia in the first place? Was it because of their work in a
particular field? - Contributions to the world at large? - Notorious acts
of
criminal behavior? What? Let the substance of the Article be guided by
these
criteria.
And, if other publications wish to publish personal information, so be it;
that is their purpose for being - let WP stay with it's own.
Another thought: After this person dies would it then be fair game to add
all of the personal stuff? And, would it now be OK to do so? And if so,
why
so?
Marc Riddell
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