[WikiEN-l] When Websites Attack
William Pietri
william at scissor.com
Sun Aug 26 17:21:32 UTC 2007
Daniel R. Tobias wrote:
> [...] a notable right-wing
> commentator out in the "real world", was editing pages related to
> Moore and his films. That Wikipedian, who until recently edited
> under his real name and openly disclosed his occupation,
> affiliations, and outside publications, suddenly decided not long ago
> that he wanted to be retroactively anonymous, so he changed his
> username and insisted that all the various policies protecting
> editors against "outing" apply now.
And this, sadly, is the hole that will sink our acceptance of anonymity.
It has been very exciting to see all of the organizations busted
recently for fiddling Wikipedia. But anybody sinister and mildly smart
is going to get an account now. Our strong protection of anonymity will
definitely be seen as exploitable. If we continue on our current course,
someone is eventually going to get exposed for manipulating Wikipedia,
and we will get tarred and feathered for actively aiding and abetting them.
For a while I've been considering proposing that all admins, or at least
all new admins, have public identities. That's not because I
particularly like the idea. Anonymity creates a lot of opportunity for
good. But I can no longer persuade myself that one of the world's top
publishers of reference information can be run by anonymous internet
identities. Not because it doesn't work, but because it undermines
public trust.
Essjay was a huge black eye for us, and nobody could question that he
was a generally good guy who meant well. When it is discovered that some
admin is actually an intentional fraud used to manipulate coverage, it
will be an even bigger mess. And the way we're going, it's only a matter
of time.
William
--
William Pietri <william at scissor.com>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:William_Pietri
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