On 4/20/07, doc doc.wikipedia@ntlworld.com wrote:
George Herbert wrote:
On 4/20/07, doc doc.wikipedia@ntlworld.com wrote:
People have a absolute right not to have their name googled and find that the highest ranking site (or perhaps only internet information on them) has been written by a silly slanderous schoolkid, their ex-husband's angry girlfriend, or a disgruntled ex-employee or rival
out
to trash them. And often these subtle attacks are on the face reading well-referenced and seemingly factual. Never spotted as simple
vandalism.
Look around. There are millions of websites (blogs, home pages, YouTube videos, etc) out there with libelous material, much of it blatantly false, out there for anyone to see.
Very few of those have any sort of reasonable feedback mechanism short of a libel/slander lawsuit. Some ISPs have a no-attacks policy; most don't, and those that do often have a nearly impractical hurdle getting through their abuse department.
We have policies with real teeth about what is OK to have here and what isn't. We have people who enforce those policies, vigorously, once we're notified. We have people associated with the project actively looking for them, though I don't presume to suggest that we actually find enough of it ourselves. And we have a stable versions technical upgrade coming sometime.
Again: Wikipedia is not the worst place on the Internet from a perspective of actually protecting people's rights not to be attacked or slandered, or at least to get it fixed if they are. It's arguably close to the best place on the Internet from those perspectives.
It's maddening to see you argue elsewise. Look around you.
If Wikipedia can't reasonable insure that people don't have these
rights
infringed, then it has no business hosting their biographies in the first place.
You're assigning people a lot of rights that they don't legally or socially have.
They *don't* have a right, in the United States at least, of absolute privacy against any discussion of them.
They don't have a right to sue anyone who runs a website on which libel is posted, just for having hosted it, prior to being notified of it.
Your argument isn't "We can't infringe people's rights". You're using that language, but it's factually incorrect.
Your argument is, "We can't be mean to non-notable people".
That is not legally true. It is to some degree morally true. But we have to keep that in perspective. People don't deserve to be abused. But they don't deserve to hide notable activities from the public, or from the historical record.
We can destroy the encyclopedia to be nice to people. That's insane.
We can keep the encyclopedia within the law and existing societal and internet norms for protecting people against abuse. And we do.
We can protect them better than YouTube, MySpace, and a million other sites. And we do.
We don't have to be perfect. We're an open content system, and an encyclopedia, and an internet project. We're within the norms for such projects. We care a lot about this topic, from the amount of arguing over it that happens. And that's good. But it can be taken too far.
You all, today, are taking it too far.
I never mentioned law - I am speaking of ethics.
And *'Wikipedia - the best place on the internet to be libeled'* isn't a great tag line.
Frankly, I don't believe that people who are holding the line you are care at all about this subject. You have just set up so many straw men it isn't true.
Without discussing any specific individual's situation, I would like to strongly endorse Doc's overall approach to these issues.
We are now one of the top ten websites in the world and are often, as has been noted, the leading hit when a semi-notable person is searched for. We have crucial obligations to live up to in this area. Whether we are doing an acceptable job of upholding standards is a topic on which there could be differences of opinion, but that we have an obligation to uphold such standards is not, and making sure that we do so is in my opinion one of the two most pressing issues facing the project today.
Newyorkbrad