Similar story also reported by the BBC: 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8220220.stm 

Before you shout, Mike's already been on to them to correct the "subsidiary" 
wording. 

Wikipedia to launch page controls 

Jimmy Wales, Getty Images
The call for flagged revisions came from Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales 

The online encyclopaedia Wikipedia is on the cusp of launching a major revamp 
to how people contribute to some pages. 

The site will require that revisions to pages about living people and some 
organisations be approved by an editor. 

This would be a radical shift for the site, which ostensibly allows anyone to 
make changes to almost any entry. 

The two-month trial, which has proved controversial with some contributors, 
will start in the next "couple of weeks", according to a spokesperson. 

"I'm sure it will spark some controversy," Mike Peel of Wikimedia UK, a 
subsidiary of the organisation which operates Wikipedia, told BBC News. 

However, he said, the trial had been approved in an an online poll, with 80% of 
259 users in favour of the trial. 

"The decision to run this trial was made by the users of the English Wikipedia, 
rather than being imposed." 

The proposal was first outlined by Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales in January 
this year. It was met by a storm of protests from Wikipedia users who claimed 
the system had been poorly thought out or would create extra work. 

'Lock down' 

The two-month trial will test a system of "flagged revisions" on the 
English-language Wikipedia site. 

This would mean any changes made by a new or unknown user would have to be 
approved by one of the site's editors before the changes were published. 

Whilst the changes are being mulled over, readers will be directed to earlier 
versions of the article. 

Wikimedia said the system was "essentially a buffer, to reduce the visibility 
and impact of vandalism on these articles". 

There have been several high-profile edits to pages that have given false or 
misleading information about a person. 

For example, in January this year the page of US Senator Robert Byrd falsely 
reported that he had died. 

If a page has a number of controversial edits or is repeatedly vandalised, 
editors can lock a page, so that it cannot be edited by everyone. 

For example, following initial reports of the death of Michael Jackson, editors 
had to lock down two pages to stop speculation about what had caused his death. 

"For these articles, flagged protection will actually make them more open," 
said Mr Peel. 

The decision had been made to focus on the pages of living people, he said, 
because they were the "most high-profile pages with the highest probability of 
causing harm". 

"[The trial] may also be extended to organisations which are currently 
operating," he added. 

The system has already been in operation on the German version of Wikipedia for 
more than a year. 

The changes to the English language site - which now has more than 3m pages - 
will be rolled out in the coming weeks, said Mr Peel. 

The changes will be discussed in Buenos Aires this week at the annual Wikimania 
conference. 

----- "Keith Old" <keith...@gmail.com> wrote: 
> From: "Keith Old" <keith...@gmail.com> 
> To: "English Wikipedia" <wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org> 
> Sent: Tuesday, 25 August, 2009 08:06:05 GMT +00:00 GMT Britain, Ireland, 
> Portugal 
> Subject: [WikiEN-l] New York Times: Wikipedia to Limit Changes to Articles on 
> People 
> 
> G'day folks, 
> 
> The New York Times reports on flagged revisions: 
> 
> http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/25/technology/internet/25wikipedia.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
>  
> 
> 
> "Wikipedia<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/wikipedia/index.html?inline=nyt-org>,
>  
> one of the 10 most popular sites on the Web, was founded about eight years 
> ago as a long-shot experiment to create a free encyclopedia from the 
> contributions of volunteers, all with the power to edit, and presumably 
> improve, the content. 
> 
> 
> Now, as the English-language version of Wikipedia has just surpassed three 
> million articles, that freewheeling ethos is about to be curbed. 
> 
> Officials at the Wikimedia 
> Foundation<http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Home>, 
> the nonprofit in San Francisco that governs Wikipedia, say that within 
> weeks, the English-language Wikipedia will begin imposing a layer of 
> editorial review on articles about living people. 
> 
> The new feature, called “flagged revisions,” will require that an 
> experienced volunteer editor for Wikipedia sign off on any change made by 
> the public before it can go live. Until the change is approved — or in 
> Wikispeak, flagged — it will sit invisibly on Wikipedia’s servers, and 
> visitors will be directed to the earlier version. " 
> 
> (More in article) 
> 
> Regards 
> 
> 
> 
> *Keith Old* 
> _______________________________________________ 
> WikiEN-l mailing list 
> WikiEN-l@lists.wikimedia.org 
> To unsubscribe from this mailing list, visit: 
> https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l 
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