Local english tabloid puts it's slant on the news. Unfortunately we didn't get 
any quote in there. 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1208941/Free-edit-Wikipedia-appoints-volunteer-editors-vet-changes-articles-living-people.html
 



Wikipedia has been forced to abandon its policy of allowing anyone to edit its 
pages. 

An army of 20,000 unpaid 'expert editors' will be drafted in to check all 
changes to articles on living people before the pages go online. 

The move is a response to the hijacking of the site by those with political or 
personal motives. 



jimmy
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia. logo


Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales says that the change in the system is just a test 

Wikipedia

Tory and Labour politicians, as well as 'web vandals', have falsified entries 
to discredit their enemies. 

Wikipedia was set up eight years ago as a free encyclopedia built on the work 
of volunteers. 

All contributors had the power to edit, improve and update the content and it 
has become one of the top ten internet sites with more than 13million entries. 


But well-publicised hoaxes have forced the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit 
Californian body that runs the site, to curb its freewheeling ethos. 

They hope the switch to volunteer editors will curb malicious tampering and 
reduce the risk of lawsuits. Wikipedia tried to clamp down on the problem in 
2005 by banning anonymous users from creating entries. 

Experts said the latest change was much more significant and 'crosses a 
psychological Rubicon'. 

The system of 'flagged revisions' will compromise the founding principle that 
everyone has an equal right to edit any Wikipedia page. 


But Michael Snow, who is the chairman of the Wikimedia board, said it was no 
longer acceptable 'to throw things at the wall and see what sticks'. 

Jimmy Wales, one of the site's founders, said: 'We have really become part of 
the infrastructure of how people get information. There is a serious 
responsibility.' 

With millions of changes made to entries every month, it is thought that 20,000 
editors will be needed. 

Modified pages go live only with their approval. 

Wikipedia is the first reference point for many web inquiries - often because 
its pages head the search results on Google and Yahoo. 


More than 30million visits have been made to the Michael Jackson page since his 
death on June 25. 

'Wikipedia now has the ability to alter the world that it attempts to 
document,' said New York University professor Joseph Reagle. 

A limited number of popular or controversial pages are already protected, 
including those for singer Britney Spears and U.S. president Barack Obama. 


Wikipedia's credibility took a dent when it emerged in 2005 that a biography of 
American journalist John Seigenthaler, once an assistant to US Attorney General 
Robert Kennedy, had been altered to accuse him of involvement in the 
assassinations of both his boss and JFK. 

In one notorious case David Cameron’s aides altered the page on the artist 
Titian to score a point over Gordon Brown. 


And in 2007 it emerged one of its main contributors had faked his 
qualifications. 


Ryan Jordan, who had edited more than 20,000 pages of information, had claimed 
to be a professor of theology but was exposed following a magazine article as a 
24-year-old college dropout from Kentucky. 

Last year, the New York Times worked with Wikipedia to restrict information 
about the kidnapping of a correspondent in Afghanistan. 



Read more: 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1208941/Free-edit-Wikipedia-appoints-volunteer-editors-vet-changes-articles-living-people.html#ixzz0PI5pABLo
 

_______________________________________________
WikiEN-l mailing list
WikiEN-l@lists.wikimedia.org
To unsubscribe from this mailing list, visit:
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l

Reply via email to