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The Register Takes Aim at Wikipedia Again

Syberghost writes "The Register has fired off another salvo in their long-running war of words with Wikipedia, in the form of an article about the lack of "moral responsibility" from the operators of Wikipedia. Wikipedia users fired back less than an hour later, making the Register headline obsolete."

53 of 630 comments (clear)

  1. Moral Victory by biocute · · Score: 5, Insightful

    making the Register headline obsolete.

    And then what? Does that make the Register story obsolete too?

    While I don't think Wiki should worry about all these whingings (does TheOnion have moral responsibility to warn its readers?), Wiki users might get more out of the whole ordeal by asserting (via an entry) the unnecessity of moral responsibility in Wiki.

    1. Re:Moral Victory by winkydink · · Score: 5, Funny

      online debating is to real debating as wikipedia is to a real encyclopedia

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    2. Re:Moral Victory by KDan · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes, of course. In the wonderful world of the Wikipedists, anything they say is golden because it's in a kind of encyclopedia, which automatically justifies it as being the absolute truth and if you don't like it you can change it yourself or go whine about it on slashdot and claim that the "Wikipedia has fired back" and if this is a firing back then the ammo was a fart and I'm getting bored of writing in this long add-on sentence style that resembles some Wikipedia articles and so I'm going to stop now.

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
    3. Re:Moral Victory by dnoyeb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But thats the purpose of a citation isin't it? Would you rather them not cite anything?

      I think wikipedia is a perfect example of democracy and what happens within. The people that use the site must police the site. Or do you want to elect a governing body to determine what goes in and what does not go in? And who controls that body?

      Wikipedia works perfectly. The only flaw I see is that they even bothered to remove that offensive article. That sets an unfortunate precedent for wiki. They should have left it, and let the community do the job they are charged with. Wiki must encourage/force/let the community to do its job.

    4. Re:Moral Victory by metlin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Exactly.

      Wikipedia is a wiki - quite obviously, the system is not perfect and it has its benefits and its downfalls. They are not claiming otherwise, either.

      Now, what is the Register's alternative? Rather, what's Andy Orlowsku's alternative? That dude seems to rate a classic /. troll, or worse, a school kid who's picking on something he doesn't like and keeps whining.

      Wikipedia isn't perfect, and there are always morons out there who'd do some nasty things. If you're using Wikipedia for your research, you must be nuts. However, it is a starting point.

      In fact, in some domains (e.g. Physics), Wikipedia has oodles of good information that it becomes an excellent reference. Is it a 100% reliable reference? No. But it is a reference, and like anything else, it has its pros and cons.

      These guys sound like little whiners - who just know a wee little and go on and on about something. Reminds me of the case with Al Fasoldt who kept doing the exact same thing.

      Wikipedia is a dynamic, free, open encyclopedia that is more sophisticated and more comprehensive than a lot of encyclopedias out there. And this dynamicism brings with it a small price - brainless morons and vandals who, like in every other system, have no moral scruples or accountability.

      That does not mean the system is flawed - that means some of the people are.

    5. Re:Moral Victory by s20451 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      People cite Wikipedia's unreliability almost as a feature, because it insulates Wikipedia from criticism over accuracy, libel, etc.

      But if Wikipedia is intended to be so unreliable that it is worthless for debating purposes (which are pretty trivial compared to, say, public safety), then is there any point to having it at all?

      Personally, I love Wikipedia and would be very happy if it found a way to be both open and reliable.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    6. Re:Moral Victory by s20451 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wikipedia is much closer to anarchy than democracy.

      Imagine if the federal government worked like Wikipedia. I could log on to wiki.gov and add new laws and edit existing ones at will, but so could anyone else.

      It would be pretty cool to see how that would turn out, if you didn't have to live there.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    7. Re:Moral Victory by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'd rather that people THINK instead of bowing out to anonymous authorities in an attempt to "prove" something.

      Wikipedia is just worse than most because it's essentially a peer reviewed group without actual peer control. That means it's prone to myths within the community and ignorances from the original writers of the articles, as well as political and religious biases brought from outside the community.

      I completely agree it's a fascinating experiment in electronic democracy and group hive minds. It's just not a repository of facts or anything resembling facts.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    8. Re:Moral Victory by jcr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I could log on to wiki.gov and add new laws and edit existing ones at will, but so could anyone else.

      You can almost do that today, but you have to be a lobbyist with an expense account to grease the congresscritters.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    9. Re:Moral Victory by tjp368 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If you want to make that comparison, Wikipedia is to encyclopedia as Register is to news.

      --
      Visit my website! Click the ads! Yay!
    10. Re:Moral Victory by kalidasa · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Human beings are incapable of being objective

      Dogmatic nonsense. In my experience, plenty of human beings are capable of being objective within specific realms of knowledge. You can ask them to be objective about "is it day or night" at noon; but perhaps not at astronomical twilight.

      Here's how "authority" works: an authority is someone who tells you things that check out. Over time, you trust them to continue to tell you things on the same subject that check out. If you are curious about an aspect of a subject on which your "authority" has tended to tell you things that seem to have worked out, you are more likely to consult that authority.

      Academic authority is merely an attempt to create a web-of-trust relationship that models that kind of authority, so you can trust people whom you have never previously consulted and had an opportunity to verify. That's what a degree is: a bunch of folks who have previously been certified (with their degrees) to know what they're talking about agree to certify that yet another person knows what he's talking about. You could say that it's a house of cards; but the point is that these folks are subjected to tests of their reliability throughout their careers. The more unreliable they are, the less often they are relied upon, and ultimately, the less likely that they will be in a position to certify others as authorities.

    11. Re:Moral Victory by LordLucless · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Wikipedia is a good starting point for finding out information about a certain topic. It's not a good ending point. If I want to start learning about, say, Edgar Allen Poe, where do I start? If I just typed in "Edgar Allen Poe" into Google, I'd get sites selling his work, sites selling biographies, poetry appreciation sites, crib notes for students studying his work, etc. With Wikipedia, I can go straight to the article, and get a brief overview of his life.

      Then down the bottom of that article, there's a list of reference books and external sites, which I can then go and check out. At this point, I can make the transfer between the "unreliable" Wikipedia into the "reliable" medium of published literature. But using Wikipedia, I now have a good idea of just which books to look up, and a basic understanding of some of the things I'm likely to encounter.

      Now, this example is probably not the best, as Edgar Allen Poe will probably be listed in most print encyclopedias. But say I wanted to find out about some wierd race from Babylon 5. Good luck finding that in a print encyclopedia. But if I check Wikipedia, I can get the basic facts, and some links to more authoritive sources.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    12. Re:Moral Victory by jlowery · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What can be said against Wikipedia can be said against the WWW. If you go to Wikipedia for information, you will find it light in some areas, heavier in others, and pure fluff or chicanery everywhere else. Sound's like the WWW, doesn't it?

      --
      If you post it, they will read.
    13. Re:Moral Victory by MaggieL · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you want to make that comparison, Wikipedia is to encyclopedia as Register is to news.

      Which may explain while the Register feels compelled to slag them.

      Wikipedia, for all it's flaws, is vastly more successful than the Register is. Wikipedia scares the mainstream media --which in this context includes (beleive it or not) the Register--cross-eyed.

      If you don't understand how Wikipedia is produced, and by whom, you're unlikely to be able to judge its reliability. Of course the same is true of the Encyclopedia Britannica, the New York Times, CNN, DailyKos, moveon.org, FreeRepublic and Little Green Footballs.

      --
      -=Maggie Leber=-
    14. Re:Moral Victory by DrSkwid · · Score: 4, Funny

      I've got 3 Register T-Shirts and 0 Wikipedia ones

      victory to vulture central

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    15. Re:Moral Victory by instarx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I totally trust Wikipedia for what it is... a starting resource that almost always gives me a good introduction to a concept,

      You said it more clearly than I did, and that is what I meant when I called wikipedia a broadaxe being used as a scalpel. My impression, and it is no more than that, is that many people use it as the definitive source and go no further.

      Using wikipedia is like being handed a list of import regulations for every country on the planet but being told that 5% are wrong. At first you might think it was was a really useful tool, but I suspect that after realizing you still had to look up every country's rules anyway to make sure it wasn't one of the 5% you would soon decide it wasn't worth the effort. That's pretty much me and wkipedia.

      I will grant you this: because the information on wikipedia at least has the CHANCE of being verified by others it is more likely to be trustworthy than most of the unattributed information floating around on the internet.

  2. Ironically by pHatidic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Register article saying that Wikipedia was filled with errors was itself filled with errors. At one point they actually called MMORPG's "shoot em up games." The real definition is right in the acronym, I mean how hard is it to figure it out.

  3. Get some perspective! by bchernicoff · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The very openeness that makes Wikipedia such a dynamic and powerful resource exposes it to abuse. Is it a perfect system? No. Is it an incredibly valuable tool? Yes. Will it continue to improve because of things like this? Of course.

  4. Fired back? by hesiod · · Score: 4, Funny

    If that Wiki entry is firing back, the gunpowder must have been wet.

  5. Re:Ha by servognome · · Score: 5, Funny

    wikipediOWNED!

    UGH, it's wikipediPWNED! I'm so sick and tired of poor spelling on /.

    --
    D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
  6. The Register is a bunch of hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you knew their history, you would know why.

    Founded in Nazi Germany by Adolph Hitler they were used to register all Jews marked for death in concentration camps. During the 60's, they supported neo-Nazis in America and were involved in the Kennedy Assassination. In the 90's they started covering IT news.

      - From WikiPedia

  7. Pot.. Kettle.. by Dynamoo · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Now, Wikipedia has its faults.. but to be honest, I find it a hugely relevant, usually accurate and very enjoyable resource, sometimes marred by personal agendas and bias. On the other hand, The Register is a hugely relevant, usually accurate and very enjoyable resource, sometimes marred by personal agendas and bias.

    I think this is a case of the pot calling the kettle black. Any intelligent netizen takes a variety of sources (e.g. Wikipedia, El Reg, Slashdot, Digg, the BBC etc) and forms their own opinions.

    Yes, Wikipedia has grown up, and I think it needs to tighten up procedures. But The Register's bizarre vendetta against what the term "wiki fiddlers" is annoying. Perhaps The Register needs to grow up a little too?

    --
    Never email donotemail@WeAreSpammers.com
    1. Re:Pot.. Kettle.. by radicalskeptic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Now, Wikipedia has its faults.. but to be honest, I find it a hugely relevant, usually accurate and very enjoyable resource, sometimes marred by personal agendas and bias.

      Seriously. Wikipedia is a tool, similar to almost all sites presenting information on the internet: good for a quick reference, but not authoritative. And I think most people realize that.

      A few weeks ago I was writing a paper on Thelonious Monk. Wikipedia says he started playing piano at age six, but, for example, this site says age nine. So Wikipedia has a 50% chance of being wrong on that point. But really I don't mind, and I'm not going to stop using it, because Wikipedia is more of a springboard and a starting place in exploring a subject, rather than an etched-in-stone authority. And I think most people "get" that. The Register, apparently, does not.

      --
      WARNING: If accidentally read, induce vomiting.
    2. Re:Pot.. Kettle.. by Kelson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Seriously. Wikipedia is a tool, similar to almost all sites presenting information on the internet: good for a quick reference, but not authoritative. And I think most people realize that.

      That's something that often gets lost in Wikipedia debates. In that respect, it is very much like the Internet as a whole: The best thing about it is that anyone can publish. The worst thing about it is that anyone can publish.

    3. Re:Pot.. Kettle.. by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yes, it is, but over the last fortnight I've found myself handing in 3 pieces of work with wikipedia as the primary reference. It's simply a lot more possible to data-mine than any other source. When you're doing degree level physics (don't laugh at my incompetence at research) the amount of sources that will explain what you want to know in an understandable format rapidly approaches zero. What you use is wikipedia, because it's the only thing you can understand - you either reference wikipedia (allowing whoever is marking to take those references with as big a shovel of salt as they want), or you lie and reference the papers that relate to the topic but that you didn't read because you didn't understand them.
      I go with honesty

      --
      FGD 135
  8. Speed of Response by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This episode shows a strength of Wikipedia, it is quick to respond to problems when it recognizes them. Tell a company about a bug, wait a month, get a response. Tell Wikipedia about a factual error, wait a hour, and see it fixed.

  9. Who cares? by Albinofrenchy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The reason this went unfound for so long? No one cares about Seigenthaler. Even if he was a Nazi.

    --
    "A man is but the product of his thoughts what he thinks, he becomes." -Mahatma Gandhi
  10. Some truisms by pHatidic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The same process that makes the most popular articles on Wikipedia of better quality than Britannica also makes the least popular articles of lesser quality. Although no one was willing to say it to his face, the real reason the error in Siegenthaler's article persisted for so long is that not many people care enough about him to read his eponymous article. Over the four months it was posted I'm willing to bet less than a thousand people read it. Really it is a tree-falls-in-a-forest issue, if no one is reading incorrect material does it really matter that it's incorrect?

    People ask, "Where will Wikipedia be after five years." The real question is, "Where will the world be after five years of Wikipedia?"

  11. Call me a paranoiac... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From TFA:
    Everything you read is suspect! You'd better duck!
    Only a paranoiac, or a mad person, can sustain this level of defensiveness for any length of time however, and to hear a putative "encyclopedia" making such a statement is odd, to say the least.


    This is just plain bullshit. My grandfather had a saying he taught me(and pardon me for some downhomey common sense), but it was popular among he and his friends, and they were very well adjusted people:
    Believe half of what you hear, and nothing that you see.

    This isn't paranoia. This is reality. Individuals, corporations, governments, etc... tend to be bullshitters. Half the time, they don't even realize they're spreading bullshit. The reason is too many mistake their opinion for fact, because most people don't go deep enough to care what the difference is.

    The INSTANT you identify a source as something you can believe is honest and accurate without you having to verify facts or take with a grain of salt, is the instant you've set yourself up to be misled and enter a state of dogmatism.

    You question everything. You question what you see, you question what you hear, you question it all. Not out of some hysterical paranoia, but out of rational observation of the reality that we live in a bullshitters paradise.

    This article should get -1, Ministry of Truth publication. Believe half of what you hear, nothing that you see, and be happy and secure doing it.

  12. What's up with with the Reg these days? by CurlyG · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They seem to be on a trolling binge in recent weeks. I don't really mind this - their tone as always been cynical and has respected no sacred cows, but the current flock of flamebait arcticles just seem to me to be a little desperate.

    The blog attacks were kind of amusing last year, when the blogging hype was at it's most ridiculous, the snarky Wikipedia articles were occasionally entertaining, though I've never really understood the motivation in attacking that project (unless you happen to be an encyclopedia publisher). But it now just seems to be axe-grinding for no obvious reason than to bait various predictably-easy-to-bait groups of people, and the writing itself is less subtle and much less entertaining.

    How long can you keep generating sparks from that axe you're grinding when there's no axe left?

    --
    You know they call 'em fingers but I've never seen 'em fing. Oh, there they go.
  13. Lawsuit by MeatSockit · · Score: 5, Informative
    Just to note, there's allegedly a class-action lawsuit against Wikipedia. But it turns out that the site was created by an organization called QuakeAID, who had previously had complaints about Wikipedia due to information about possible problems as an organization soliciting donations. Today, they posted a whiny press release about the site going live:

    Now another story suggesting that Wikipedia is out of control emerges. Some months ago, OfficialWire published an article about untrue postings on Wikipedia, by Christian Wirth also known as RaDMan. Shortly after the devastating earthquake and tsunamis on December 26, 2004 in the Indian Ocean, Wirth took upon himself to wage a war against QuakeAID Foundation, Inc. Wirth's arsenal consisted of untrue, libelous writings that he and Wikipedia published as fact. All attempts, by QuakeAID's founder, to correct the untrue comments were re-edited, blocked or labelled as 'untrue' by a group of volunteers, who hold themselves untouchable and above the law.

    QuakeAID has written once again to Jimbo Wales, demanding the untrue and libelous information be removed from Wikipedia, while a group of interested parties have joined together and plan to initiate legal proceedings against Wales and Wikipedia Foundation, Inc., and numerous others--the so-called anonymous 'volunteers'--who they believe should be held responsible for the content they publish.

  14. Re:57 electoral votes... by Synic · · Score: 3, Funny

    so correct it? that's the whole point, jackass

  15. oh, shut up already by penguin-collective · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't see any reason to change anything about Wikipedia or how it is created. I understand how it is created, how much I can trust it, and what I need to do to verify the information on it. Anybody who doesn't understand this about Wikipedia at this point must be from Mars.

    I think people who criticize Wikipedia for the way its entries are created are living in a world where they assume that just because an information resource is well known or popular, it must be accurate. That wasn't true when companies like the New York Times and ABC had a near monopoly on information dissemination, and it sure isn't any more accurate today.

    What needs to change is not Wikipedia, it's people's naive notions about epistemology. Or, to put it more bluntly: don't trust any information unless it either doesn't matter, or you can verify it from multiple independent sources yourself. Popularity, trust, and reputation of a source are very unreliable guides to the validity of information.

  16. The key question by Darius+Jedburgh · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Would we somehow be better off if Wikipedia didn't exist at all?
    Despite some inaccuracies the Wikipedia is a veritable goldmine of useful information. What do the people who complain about it expect? An editor to peer review every single article? Wikipedia is probably the best model for a free encyclopedia that anyone has come up with and it's an amazing use of technology almost undreamt of a couple of decades ago. As long as we bear in mind how the entries are created (and it's not exactly a tough concept to grasp) how can it not be providing great benefit for people? The nay-sayers would put us back into the dark ages where we have to pay money for out-of-date information when there are people out there with the up-do-date facts who want to share them now for nothing. By all means don't keep the innacuracies a secret (because, among other things, that'll help to get them fixed), but there's no need for moral lectures unless you have a better alternative to propose. So I think your question is the right one to ask.
  17. Internet Content by kenp2002 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wikipedia is the prefect format for any type of information on the Internet. Sadly The Register has failed to observe one significant point; Unlike the Register itself Wikipedia is subject to a thousand year old form of analysis: Peer Review. If peer review is good enough for the scientific community (they put a man on the moon, the register has yet to accomplish that) and the medical community (they have done heart transplants, the Register has not) and the Linux Kernel, as any open source project, is subject to peer review (they have a very good perating system, the Register has yet to boot a machine) why would we not subject our historical data to such a process? Why not subject our media to such processes. Sadly it seems that the Register has the disease many younger Internet-generation kids have, a lack of patience. Peer review is slower, but as history moves on, faster. I personally think that colleges could help improve the content by assigning classmates, in the study of their respective fields to contribute to Wikipedia's need for editors. The broad variety of instructors, and college cultures could accelerate Wiki's accuracy and improve credibility. It would also be an excellent place for students and colleges to like student thesis and papers as additional linked sites. I.e.

    The American Revolution
    Student Works
          Browse Purdue's Student Archives
          Browse Stanfords' Student Archives

    and so forth.

    If peer review is good enough for science, medicine, and open source it is certainly good enough for history as well.

    My 2cents

    --
    -=[ Who Is John Galt? ]=-
    1. Re:Internet Content by the+phantom · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not that I am disagreeing entirely, but in academia, peer review is done by people that have proven that they are experts in a field. Any random shmo can edit a Wiki. Wikipedia editors, by and large, need offer no credentials.

  18. Thank goodness for The Register by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm glad we have an authoritative opinion on this issue, otherwise I wouldn't know what to think about Wikipedia. Those reckless ne'er-do-wells should heed this criticism, because as we all know, British tabloids have never had their credibility called into question due to the publication of libelous or inaccurate information.

    I attribute this scandal to the streak of rugged individualism present in American culture. When will you Yanks learn that the truth is decided by experts, and that expertise is determined by well-known and respected members of a field?

  19. Wikipedia abused Andrew Orlowski as a child by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wikipedia must have abused Andrew Orlowski as a child, because I can't think of any good reason for him to keep harping on it. Check out the Register's archives. All of the Wikipedia bashing is from Orlowski. Wow, Andrew, great reporting. I totally didn't know that some things on the internet are false. Way to go on the investigative reporting! Could we maybe get a twenty part series entitled, "Shock! Falsehoods found on internet!"

    Some Wikipedia fans are little overenthusiastic. Wikipedia's lack of review is a weakness. But just because it's a weakness doesn't make it useless. Indeed, most of the internet is full of unreviewed crap, yet we all still use it. While Wikipedia would like to think of itself as challenging traditional encyclopedias, I don't see it happening. But compared to doing research on the internet as whole (say, via Google), it's a definate win. Wikipedia is, compared to the general internet, better organized, more neutral, and better reviewed. For a quick overview of a topic I find it an extremely valuable resource. I accept its weaknesses, help flesh stuff out as I can, and get on with my life. If Orlowski thinks Wikipedia is unredeemable crap, so be it. He's reported that. Now move the fuck on. Reposting "Wikipedia has some errors and is therefore completely useless" every week is hardly a good use his time or The Register's money.

  20. Reliability and quality come from accountability. by CyricZ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Reliability and quality come from accountability, be it an encyclopedia or a complex engineering project.

    An engineer who makes one mistake, even if it is not fatal, will lose his license. Why is that? Because said mistakes cannot be tolerated.

    The same goes for an encyclopedia. If a high degree of quality is wanted, then people will have to pay severely when they make a mistake. Of course, that's very difficult to accomplish in an online setting, especially one like Wikipedia.

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
  21. Two-word response by Kelson · · Score: 3, Insightful
    1. Re:Two-word response by MarkusQ · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm probably wasting my time, but:
      • The "straw man" accusation was targeted at the post above it, not the wikipedia, so the anonymity of the Wikipedia community has no bearing on the point.
      • In any case, anonymity has nothing to do with straw man arguments.
      • And even if it did, print encyclopedias do not provide their readers with information on the authorship of individual articles
      • In fact, Wikipedia actually provides more (and more accessible) information on the revision history and editorial decisions leading to the present state of an article than any print encyclopedia I've ever heard of.
      • Wikipedia may not provide a strong or prominent enough disclaimer to suit you, but the obvious question would be: what does? TV news? The New York Times? Can you name a single "authoritative" source of information that either 1) Prominently disclaims their status as authoritative or 2) provides some substantive guarantee of the accuracy of the information?

      --MarkusQ

  22. Re:Reliability and quality come from accountabilit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    An engineer who makes one mistake, even if it is not fatal, will lose his license. Why is that? Because said mistakes cannot be tolerated.

    Is this erroneous information something you picked up reading Wikipedia, or is it just a product of your own personal ignorance and stupidity?

  23. If the troll label fits by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Nope, Andrew Orlowski is a troll. I still have no idea why The Reg keeps him on. An article or two about the flaws of Wikipedia? Great! An occasional cheap shot at the "We're going to defeat all traditional encyclopedias" silliness? That's what I like about The Register! But seven full articles attacking Wikipedia, all written by Orlowski? (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7) This isn't journalism, not even of the snarky sort The Reg is good at. This isn't about expressing an opposing viewpoint. This is about trying to be controversal, to rile people up, and generally be an ass.

    Andrew Orlowski is a troll.

    1. Re:If the troll label fits by autophile · · Score: 4, Funny
      Nope, Andrew Orlowski is a troll. I still have no idea why The Reg keeps him on.

      You must be new to British tabloid journalism.

      --Rob

      --
      Towards the Singularity.
  24. Re:Reliability and quality come from accountabilit by UserGoogol · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To be slightly pedantic, no. Accountability can only help ensure quality once you have it. If you have a room full of kindergarteners and ask them to write a Calculus textbook, they will produce a textbook of dubious quality even if you kill every kid who makes a mistake. Quality can only come from people who know what they're doing. Accountability is merely one way to seperate the competent ones out from the incompetent.

    Personally, I suspect that Wikipedia's method is a somewhat viable way to shuffle out the stupids, as true statements will be less likely to be edited than untrue statements, so gradually over time Wikipedia will tend to be more and more likely to contain true statements. But eh, you might be right.

    --
    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." -- Hanlon's Razor
  25. flamebait by selfdiscipline · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I actually can't really disagree with you, but it is more of an "inciteful" remark than an insightful remark.
        I've been trying to figure out why this issue is getting people so worked up (myself included), because it's all about some random website claiming to be a sort of encyclopedia. People claim to be experts all the time, and they lie or misinform out of ignorance; it's not a new phenomenon. Why then, do we have articles written like the one at the register, urging a call to arms over "moral responsibility?
        It's all over one word: Encyclopedia. If wikipedia called itself the "Unreliable Encyclopedia", would this article have been written? I suppose the author would have had a hernia over what he considered the contradiction in terms. And yet, there do exist unreliable encyclopedias I suspect: those published in the 1950s do not contain up-to-date political and scientific information. They are unreliable, although I would not like to try and guess if they are more or less reliable than wikipedia.
        I think that responsibility is the heart of this issue, and is why so many people get worked up about it. It's about who is to be assigned blame if wikipedia is inaccurate.
        The author of the register article obviously wants the administrators of wikipedia to be held responsible, as if it was a top-down heirarchy. But it's not: it's more of a sort of p2p encyclopedia. It's not useful to blame wikipedia for being irresponsible any more than it is to blame gnutella for having illegal media on its network.
        And the problem with attacking wikipedia and saying its not only useless, but it is harmful, is that it is not only attacking those people who spread disinformation. It is also attacking smart people who have a lot of worthwhile knowledge, and have carefully attempted to transfer this knowledge to an online medium that they knew people would use.
        Now, maybe those people who write good articles for wikipedia shouldn't do so, because it'll only confuse people into thinking that wikipedia is more than a mountain of lies.
        But I think that the answer lies in finding a way to hold individual wikipedia authors more accountable for their actions.
        Hopefully as the internet grows up, people will go from thinking "I have to be careful in believing what I read on the internet" to "I have to be careful in what I say on the internet, because it represents me". We should start believing that it is a serious offense to spread disinformation on the internet, so that people will hold themselves to higher standards.
        I say we need secure, historied, online personae.

    --


    -------
    Incite and flee.
    1. Re:flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I actually can't really disagree with you, but it is more of an "inciteful" remark than an insightful remark.
              I've been trying to figure out why this issue is getting people so worked up (myself included), because it's all about some random website claiming to be a sort of encyclopedia. People claim to be experts all the time, and they lie or misinform out of ignorance; it's not a new phenomenon. Why then, do we have articles written like the one at the register, urging a call to arms over "moral responsibility?
              It's all over one word: Encyclopedia. If wikipedia called itself the "Unreliable Encyclopedia", would this article have been written? I suppose the author would have had a hernia over what he considered the contradiction in terms. And yet, there do exist unreliable encyclopedias I suspect: those published in the 1950s do not contain up-to-date political and scientific information. They are unreliable, although I would not like to try and guess if they are more or less reliable than wikipedia.


      I think you have hit the nail on the head dead-on in terms of the "Encyclopedia" distinction. I teach a Research Methods class for a small liberal arts college in the U.S. and the frustration that occurs from students citing wikipedia as an authoritative source can be overwhelming. It is difficult enough to teach students that the first source they find on the web is not the best source - you would be stunned by how many papers I receive (and correct, and correct again in subsequent revisions) where students cite unaccredited geocities websites, bulletin board posts, etc. in their papers. Wikipedia presents a whole new onion to peel - students see the word "Encyclopedia" and associate it with what they've been taught in primary and high school education systems: The information you find in an Encyclopedia is valid.
                That being said, sure, other Encyclopedias become dated or contain inaccuracies, but the fundamental difference is that someone is accountable and culpable for correcting those mistakes or lack of updates. When information in Encyclopedia Brittanica goes out of date, someone corrects the information. With Wikipedia, there's no accountability. There's no impetus for someone to go back and fact check. Wikipedia relies on other users to "pipe up" when they feel its necessary to - and even then those who pipe up may or may not be a qualified source on a particular issue.
                  Granted, not every article on Wikipedia suffers from these problems, and not every article needs a "qualified source," (for instance, what are the necessary qualifications for an article outlining the history of the Smurfs?) but the "encyclopedia" distinction is one that almost implies that the information contained within is credible, reliable, and subject to qualified review. Wikipedia is just as flawed as slashdot.

      Hell, it's only a matter of time before I'm referring to Wikipedia articles written by **Beatles-Beatles** with edits and updates from Scuttlemonkey. :-)

    2. Re:flamebait by Deviant+Q · · Score: 3, Insightful
      If wikipedia called itself the "Unreliable Encyclopedia",

      I think that's what the "Wiki" in Wikipedia means. Along with a lot of good things, like freedom, up-to-date-ness, etc., but unreliability is in there too.

      --
      "May the days be aimless. Let the seasons drift. Do not advance the action according to a plan."
  26. Epistemology vs. Review Process by aphor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems to me that we have two separate issues to deal with. One is the theoretical limits of epistemology that Wikipedians must cite when defending errors in the Wikipedia. The other is the difference between an honest mistake and deliberately misleading content. The Register, I think, is correct to say that the former is no excuse for the latter.

    So the real problem is not that the Wikipedia cannot achieve a higher level of factual rectitude. The real problem is that the Wikipedia has no facility to help novices establish the authority of an article of the Wikipedia. The best science can offer us [laypeople] is a bunch of journals that practice a complicated protocol of anonymous referees from a select bunch of supposed "experts" in the journal's field. If you want to don the scientist hat, you can always try to replicate the results of someone's journal article. I leave it as an exercise for the reader, but plenty of crap, for various reasons, has slipped through the journals' sacred peer reviews.

    The real problem here is that the Wikipedia puports to be peer-reviewed, but each article has its subscribers, and it isn't clear whether an article has been tacitly approved by innumerable readers, or quietly corrupted out of salutary neglect. This ambiguity is the real failing of the Wikipedia, but it should be easily corrected by applying something similar to Slashdot Karma--just to show whether any editorial attention has affected any given article or not.

    The real problem with the Register's scathing polemic is that it is just scathing polemic. The Wikipedia and the Register are apples and oranges. The authority of the Register's criticism cannot really be levelled with the Wikipedia, though its argument has a resounding us and them posture. It conveniently ignores the wealth of good content in math and science and that traditional encyclopedias get historical biography just as wrong (Christopher Columbus is a good candidate for this angle). So the punk teenager straw man at the conclusion of the Register article could just as well have been a fat, lazy armchair anthropologist to characterize the racist crap in the encyclopedias I grew up using.

    In the end, I think the Wikipedians are right. "The price of liberty is vigilance." The Register is also right. This is one thing that will happen if we're asleep at the wheel. However fiery the iconoclasty makes you feel, do we throw the baby out with the bathwater? No. We take what we have and make it better.

    --
    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
  27. Wikipedia ! = Truth by MMaestro · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Anybody who thinks Wikipedia is a perfectly reliable source of unbiased information is an idiot.

    And yet this one of the most commonly accepted beliefs regarding Wikipedia. Some people on Slashdot alone have gone so far as to claim that Wikipedia is public domain and have gotten modded up for it.

    Its no longer about whether or not the government can control the information, its now a matter of whos controlling the spread of disinformation. If 'anyone can edit' entries, who's monitoring the monitors? At least with the government its this big huge target we can all see and gang up against. With Wikipedia, we're staring at a bunch of easily masked IP addresses, false user ID info and the complete anonymity (for anyone determined) of the internet. I'd take the lesser of two evils and stick with the big, mean, elitist, capitalist run governments.

    1. Re:Wikipedia ! = Truth by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Insightful
      At least with the government its this big huge target we can all see and gang up against. With Wikipedia, we're staring at a bunch of easily masked IP addresses, false user ID info and the complete anonymity (for anyone determined) of the internet. I'd take the lesser of two evils and stick with the big, mean, elitist, capitalist run governments.

      The worst Wikipedia can do is call you a chicken fucker, and you can very easily erase that insult.

      The worst the government can do is disappear you, torture you, or kill you. If you try to "gang up" on it, odds are very good that at the very least you will be herded into a cage at gunpoint.

      Pardon me if I find the notion that the government is "the lesser of two evils" in comparison with a website, an incredible conclusion.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  28. Published Encyclopedias Unreliable by LogicX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "This defense firmly puts the blame on the reader, for being so stupid as to take the words at face value. Silly you, for believing us, they say."

    Yes. He is correct. Despite his sarcasm, users ARE silly for believing things at face value. Just because a work is published does NOT make it the definitive source for all accurate knowledge. How many scientific findings have been published, and later discovered to be inaccurate.

    He seems to think that because a work is put to paper that is must have more accuracy than a work such as wikipedia. I challenge this: Errors in the Encyclopædia Britannica that have been corrected in Wikipedia

    Wikipedia has the opportunity to be both free and more accurate than any printed work. Even an encyclopedia, devoting resources to topics they are not experts in get things wrong, such as some of the items on the list above. Wikipedia gives those out there directly working on it -- Subject Matter Experts -- to contribute their knowledge for others to share.

    In regards to the fears of lawsuits, obviously due diligence would be given to review the content of articles before put to paper and widely distributed. What more can be asked for? This is the same thing that Britannica does.

    Until Wikipedia is making some claim to take authority over content -- they are just like the post office, the telephone company, or xerox. They are providing a service. Just as Xerox is not responsible for people violating copyright law with their copiers, Wikipedia is not responsible for the accuracy of information on their site. If you ask me, the rules, regulations and procedures they have come up with are an amazing effort at being open to respecting others, and cooperating with them. Similar to the post office working with police to track packages.

    I think something commonly being overlooked here is -- Who exactly was affected by this article? The article apparently wasn't link to from other pages -- meaning that it wasn't seeing much attention, which is why it hadn't been changed. Who cares if it was there for months, if only 5 people saw it, was he really severely hurt by this? When he came across it, fix it, move on. Hes actually created a much larger problem by bringing so much attention to this.

    --
    May this post be indexed by spiders, and archived for all to see as my Internet epitaph.
  29. Don't you know how the Register is funded? by JoeBuck · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Every time Orlowski pisses people off, someone posts a complaint to Slashdot, and all the Slashdot folks rush off to read Orlowski's latest outrage. The Register then sends a hefty bill to the advertisers for all the page views, and management eggs old Andrew on to outrage the world yet again.

    Of course they keep him on; he represents income. If you don't like it, don't read him and don't post links to him on Slashdot. You're just falling for his act.