David Gerard wrote:
(I have had to consider this problem with wanting to write about Australian '80s indie rock. Trouble is, I'm one of the authoritative sources. Do I just not write about the stuff I'm the specialist in? Do I write about it and link to interviews I wrote and published? Should I just put a list of possible articles and the source I would list as reference and leave others to maybe write the articles?
I see no problem with published experts writing about their field of expertise on Wikipedia. It's the sort of thing we should very much encourage to boost our credibility. They can't use Wikipedia to present and advance new material that hasn't seen the light of day yet - that would be original research. But if they rewrite their own information that has been published elsewhere, that would be fine. It's no different from what anyone else can do using the same information, but the expert is particularly well qualified to do so.
The critical thing is that the expert *can and should* cite their own credible material that has already been published elsewhere. This makes it verifiable and is a check against original research. In academia, it might be bad form to cite yourself as a source unnecessarily, or as the primary evidence for a disputed proposition. But self-citation also happens legitimately, particularly in under-researched fields where the available source literature is meager. Also, if some of the work is effectively primary rather than secondary source material (oral history being such an example), it could be positively poor scholarship *not* to cite yourself in such cases.
In this sense the problem is somewhat different from the issue that occasionally arises when people contribute to articles about themselves or organizations they participate in. The concern there, I think, is more about the appearance of impropriety and potential to slant the content in violation of NPOV. The scenarios do have one thing in common, though, which is that it can be challenging to distinguish between one's personal knowledge of the subject and the knowledge that has actually been disseminated to the public already.
--Michael Snow
I see no problem with published experts writing about their field of expertise on Wikipedia. It's the sort of thing we should very much encourage to boost our credibility.
I agree, but there gray areas. Take, for example, a person who invents and patents a new engine and forms a company to market the desing.
The product isn't established, but recieves some press.
Should this person be prevented from writing a Wikipedia article? (see [[Quasiturbine]])
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