To edit is to say something, Andreas Kolbe.
To me it is very fortunate that the right to anonymity takes presedence over COI-editing. Edits can be changed or removed, a personal identity cannot. Regards, Sir48
2014/1/6 Andreas Kolbe jayen466@gmail.com
Well, if you don't say anything, Sir48, you are not misrepresenting anything, are you?
It's a path many people have chosen in Wikipedia. They just remain silent. The right to remain silent about who you are and who you work for is enshrined in the principle of anonymity.
People (including the English Wikipedia's arbitration committee) have long said that the policies guaranteeing the right to edit anonymously are in tension with the guidelines discouraging editing with a conflict of interest, and that the conflict between these two sets of policies and guidelines is imperfectly resolved.
And in the final analysis, the English Wikipedia's policy against harassment and outing takes precedence over the conflict-of-interest guideline.
At any rate, conflict-of-interest editing is discouraged, but not forbidden in the English Wikipedia, while posting another editor's employer is a banning offence (unless the editor has previous disclosed it himself on Wikipedia).
That this creates a lucrative market for companies like Wiki-PR should not come as a surprise.
While non-transparent paid editing does not seem to me to violate the Wikimedia terms of use, transparent paid editing clearly does not violate them either. Surely, the way forward lies that way.
But while the German Wikipedia community for example is quite welcoming to paid editors who act transparently – the German Wikipedia even has verified company accounts like User:Coca_Cola_Germany – the English Wikipedia community is exceedingly hostile to such users, to the point of blocking company account names *on sight*, with the result that many such editors prefer to fly under the radar, using a made-up name and the shield of the anonymity policy.
Andreas
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 6:16 PM, Thyge ltl.privat@gmail.com wrote:
I'm not in principle against transparent paid editing, but it could actually be considered to violate the ToU's wording: "misrepresenting
your
affiliation with any individual or entity"
Regards, Sir48
2014/1/6 Andreas Kolbe jayen466@gmail.com
Sure, Todd. But that is not actually in the Wikimedia terms of use. The terms of use say,
- Attempting to impersonate another user or individual,
misrepresenting
your affiliation with any individual or entity, or using the
username
of
another user with the intent to deceive;
They do not say,
- Attempting to impersonate another user or individual,
misrepresenting
your affiliation with any individual or entity, or *using more than username* with the intent to deceive;
That whole section is about impersonating other people, making out that
you
represent someone you do not represent, etc. Silence as to one's affiliations and identity has always been permitted on Wikimedia
projects.
Andreas
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 1:43 PM, Todd Allen toddmallen@gmail.com
wrote:
They are, however, avoiding scrutiny, as evidenced by widespread disapproval of their actions. That is not a permissible use of socks.
The
community expects to place more scrutiny on paid editors, not less. On Jan 6, 2014 6:23 AM, "Andreas Kolbe" jayen466@gmail.com wrote:
That doesn't follow to me from that wording, Nathan. The English
Wikipedia
for example allows socking to enable contributors to contribute to
articles
that they would rather not have their real-life name or normal
Internet
persona associated with.
User:John Smith is allowed to create an account named User:ColourfulCharacter to edit those articles. In doing so, he is
not
using "the username *of another user* with the intent to deceive".
There is no other user of that name. (The only exception would be
if
there
were a user called User:ColorfulCharacter, say, and Smith's intent
was
to
create confusion between the two accounts.)
User:John Smith is using a secondary screen name to obscure the
fact
that
both accounts are operated by the same person. And that is allowed.
I don't even see that Wiki-PR infringed the letter of that section,
as
a
normal person would read it. Just like John Smith, they did not use
the
name of some other user. They created multiple accounts. There was
no
other
user whose username they used, or whom they tried to impersonate.
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 1:07 PM, Nathan nawrich@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 8:01 AM, Andreas Kolbe <
jayen466@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Nathan, > > I am unable to find a mention of sockpuppetry in the Terms of
Use,
whether > in Section 4 or elsewhere. > > http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Terms_of_Use > > I don't think there could be such a mention, really, given that
project
> policies recognise a number of legitimate uses of socks. > > A. > > The term isn't used, but the behavior is clearly encompassed by
the
prohibition described in the "Engaging in False Statements,
Impersonation
or Fraud" - specifically "using the username of another user with
the
intent to deceive." _______________________________________________ Wikimedia-l mailing list Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe:
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