Congress Made Wikipedia Changes
Dr Occult writes "BBC news is reporting misuse of Wikipedia by politicians for 'polishing' their images. The article on President Bush has been altered so many times - not just from within Congress - that Wikipedia's volunteer monitors have had to block further 'editing'." From the article: "Wikipedia says the controversy raises questions about whether it is ethical for those with a vested interest in the subject to edit entries about it. It said the Congressional computer network has been blocked from editing for brief periods on a number of occasions in the last six months due to the inappropriate contributions."
The Washington Post also has an article on this
Some day, I'll remember to put the break tags in my first posting of the day. /yawn
The Bush article isn't blocked from all editing, just that by anonymous and new users, due to the rampant anonymous vandalism and people with too much time on their hands who create dozens of accounts just to vandalize that article. For anonymous newbies, the Bush article is equivalent to Wikipedia's "Sandbox" for test editing.
Keep in mind that Wiki has a policy against original research that hasn't been published elsewhere. Which is not to say that they couldn't contribute, but just that it would have to be done carefully:
One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
5 entries found for vested interest.
(n)
1. Law. A right or title, as to present or future possession of an estate, that can be conveyed to another.
2. A fixed right granted to an employee under a pension plan.
3. A special interest in protecting or promoting that which is to one's own personal advantage.
4. vested interests: Those groups that seek to maintain or control an existing system or activity from which they derive private benefit.
Anyways, regardless of whether or not information is as objective as humanly possible, we all have our own biases and prejudices that we will unconsciously apply to the message, thus subverting its objectivity. The best we can hope for is to maintain the illusion of objectivity.
I am scientifically inaccurate.
Tim
As a German, you should study your history better. Hitler SEIZED power in a coup. He and his party were a small minority in the German government.
A more accurate analogy would be if Hillary Clinton, the junior senator from New York, were to cite the terrorist attacks and the Republican's failure to deal with them as justification for her seizing the presidency, whereupon she would immediately send the army out that night to kill and imprison all her political opponents.
That is essentially what Hitler did.
You can tell the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
We have a guideline on living people's articles. Basically, (1) every statement has to be utterly verifiable (2) every statement has to be relevant to why they have an article. This is followed very imperfectly, but when followed it saves greatly on crap.
http://rocknerd.co.uk
Hence the Biographies of living persons guideline.
http://rocknerd.co.uk
There's nothing wrong with having a vested interest in the subject of an article. There *is* something wrong with letting that interest influence you - you are expected to abide by the NPOV principle etc., but as long as you do that, things are fine. Granted, you might sometimes accidentally write things in a way that's not entirely NPOV (and I really do mean accidentally, not "accidentally"), but that's something that will just be corrected later on by someone else (or even by yourself, if you notice it).
The real problem is those with an agenda who knowingly and deliberately push that agenda.
quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.