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Wikipedia Prankster of Fake Bio Outs Self
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Wikipedia, the free online wiki encyclopedia that anyone can edit (Link), relied on the generally positive and honest intentions of users to contribute items to its database.
The problem with anyone being able to edit entries is that malicious intentions are just as easy to do. This is exactly what happened as the popular web encyclopiedia finally succumbed to such an incident, when a prank modified an entry about John Seigenthaler Sr., founder of the First Amendment Center and chairman emeritus of The Tennessean, alleging that the man was involved in assassinations of John and Robert Kennedy. The prankster recently admitted to the act, and the story has become a lesson about how sites should prepare for any eventuality and how, on the Internet, your worst nightmares, if not addressed early on, can indeed happen. Although the self-policing, self-organizing nature of the site should "balance out" such occurrences, and other users would eventually correc the offending entry or change, the site is simply too popular that most entries go unchanged, even those with misleading or even altogether malicious changes. The SeattleTimes story is here. |
This story has serious implications for the future success of Newsback. There need to be safeguards against this happening here.
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True. We've mulled over this before and while we operate more on a controlled nature than a straight free-for-all as is the case of Wikipedia, and apart from the "semi" self-policing/rating nature of the site, in the plans are a clear disclaimer of sorts to address this.
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Interestingly, there is already a site calling itself WikipediaClassAction for 'people "who believe that they have been defamed and or who have been or are the subject of anonymous and malicious postings to the popular online encyclopedia Wikipedia'.
@Via |
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