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The Register Exposes More Wikipedia Abuse

cyofee writes "The Register has up another article exposing abuse of Wikipedia's policies and processes. It tells a tale of a man, Gary Weiss, controlling the Wikipedia article about himself and his enemies (one of Wikipedia's biggest taboos) all under the blessing of the Wikipedia Cabal. A man who attempted to expose the affair on Wikipedia, along with his his entire IP range (some 1000 homes), was permanently blocked. This comes only days after the affair of the Secret Mailing list."

524 comments

  1. Waht do you know by nunyadambinness · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A good idea corrupted by human execution.

    We told them it would happen, but "NO! This time it's different!". Except, it wasn't.

    Where's that guy who shills for wikipedia, I'd love to hear his take on this.

    1. Re:Waht do you know by AmaDaden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Once as a boy I was told something about absolute power...now how did that go again?

    2. Re:Waht do you know by Minwee · · Score: 4, Funny

      As I recall the saying goes something like "Power corrupts, but absolute power is pretty freakin' cool".

    3. Re:Waht do you know by Vornzog · · Score: 1

      Once as a boy I was told something about absolute power...now how did that go again? Power corrupts. Absolute power is pretty neat.

      --

      -V-

      Who can decide a priori? Nobody.
      -Sartre

    4. Re:Waht do you know by spun · · Score: 1

      Once as a boy I was told something about absolute power...now how did that go again? Um, absolute power is a lot of fun as long as it's you that has it?
      Absolute power is the absolute aphrodisiac?
      Absolute power, it's not just for breakfast anymore?
      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    5. Re:Waht do you know by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1
      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    6. Re:Waht do you know by drcagn · · Score: 1

      Absolute power holders drink absolut vodka?

      --
      Scorta futuere amo!
    7. Re:Waht do you know by Calinous · · Score: 2, Funny

      I don't know, I'll search Wikipedia for it

    8. Re:Waht do you know by Intron · · Score: 1

      "Where's that guy who shills for wikipedia, I'd love to hear his take on this"

      I think he's the one modding your post Flamebait.

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
    9. Re:Waht do you know by mfnickster · · Score: 1

      "First you get the absolute money, then you get the absolute power, then you get the Absolut vodka, then you get the absolute women!"

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    10. Re:Waht do you know by ggvaidya · · Score: 1

      Well, according to Wikipedia, Absolute Power only started in the 1990s ... you must be new here! (here = earth)

      If it's something else, why don't you Be Bold and edit it yourself?

    11. Re:Waht do you know by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Why did I read that as obsolete women instead of absolute women?

    12. Re:Waht do you know by angst_ridden_hipster · · Score: 1

      As my wife likes to posit:

      "Absolute power corrupts absolutely, but a little goes a long way."

      Every time I see some petty bureaucrat acting out, or some idiot with some kind of a uniform busting out the authority moves, I see the truth in that demonstrated.

      --
      Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachtani?
      www.fogbound.net
    13. Re:Waht do you know by mfnickster · · Score: 1

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyslexia :)

      Obsolete women are not modern, whereas absolute women are not relatives?

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    14. Re:Waht do you know by WestCoastJTF · · Score: 1

      No, it's "Power corrupts, but PowerPoint corrupts absolutely."

      --
      JTF: In your heart, you know we're right.
    15. Re:Waht do you know by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Every time I see some petty bureaucrat acting out, or some idiot with some kind of a uniform busting out the authority moves, I see the truth in that demonstrated.

      Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Petty power corrupts beyond all out of proportion to the actual power. No power leaves you posting to Slashdot on Friday night.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    16. Re:Waht do you know by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      Power corrupts; absolute power violates general relativity.

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    17. Re:Waht do you know by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      With great power comes great responsibility.
      With absolute power comes absolute irresponsibility.

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    18. Re:Waht do you know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Post modernism has generated a lot of trouble. Check out what Ravi Zacharias said about the issue to the UN. Likewise see what the NPR and McAllister have to say about propaganda..

      http://www.rzim.org/resources/essay_arttext.php?id=13
      You see, postmodernism plays word games with us. Postmodernism tells us there's no such thing as truth; no such thing as meaning; no such thing as certainty. I remember lecturing at Ohio State University, one of the largest universities in this country. I was minutes away from beginning my lecture, and my host was driving me past a new building called the Wexner Center for the Performing Arts. He said, "This is America's first postmodern building." I was startled for a moment and I said, "What is a postmodern building?" He said, "Well, the architect said that he designed this building with no design in mind. When the architect was asked, 'Why?' he said, 'If life itself is capricious, why should our buildings have any design and any meaning?' So he has pillars that have no purpose. He has stairways that go nowhere. He has a senseless building built and somebody has paid for it." I said, "So his argument was that if life has no purpose and design, why should the building have any design?" He said, "That is correct." I said, "Did he do the same with the foundation?" All of a sudden there was silence. You see, you and I can fool with the infrastructure as much as we would like, but we dare not fool with the foundation because it will call our bluff in a hurry.

      http://www.radioproject.org/transcript/1999/9946.html

      We all like to believe we're much too smart and sophisticated to get fooled by propaganda, but in fact, the propaganda industry is massive. By some estimates there are more public relations practitioners in the United States than there are journalists who actually go out and investigate news and write and deliver the news for us. The largest single grouping of PR practitioners are former journalists who have left journalism and gone over to the dark side of propaganda...

      Making Contact, an international radio program seeking to create connections between people, vital ideas and important information.
      Transcript: #46-99 Shaping the News: The Public Relations Industry and Journalism
      November 17, 1999

      http://www.rzim.org/slice/slicetran.php?sliceid=1100
      Most of us have never been exposed to this sort of overt propaganda, and yet we live our lives daily bombarded by information, ideas, and images urging us to buy something. Propaganda is an instrument of manipulation and attitude formation. There are times when I wonder if advertising is really so different.

    19. Re:Waht do you know by Thansal · · Score: 2, Funny

      Knowledge Is Power.
      Power Corrupts.
      Study Hard.
      Be Evil.

      --
      Do Or Do Not, There Is No Spoon, There Is Only Zuul. Everything in the above post is probably opinion.
    20. Re:Waht do you know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's "Power is delightful, and absolute power is absolutely delightful."

    21. Re:Waht do you know by Torvaun · · Score: 1

      With great power comes great responsibility. With absolute power comes no responsibility at all.

      --
      I see your informative link, and raise you a pithy comment.
    22. Re:Waht do you know by aron1231 · · Score: 0

      of course, slashdot completely avoids this form of mutual back-scratching...

    23. Re:Waht do you know by angst_ridden_hipster · · Score: 1
      No power leaves you posting to Slashdot on Friday night.

      Only if you have a good UPS or your own generator. :)

      --
      Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachtani?
      www.fogbound.net
    24. Re:Waht do you know by nmktlong · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia is dirty:

      The Gary Weiss article reads like Weiss wrote it himself.
      The Byrne article reads as if his enemies wrote it.

      There is dirt on Weiss- he has enemies- but no one can touch his pristine article.

      Byrne has plenty of supporters, and there are facts which support his claims yet no one can modify his negatively biased article.

      I guess it boils down to this:

      No one can criticize or add negatives on the Weiss page
      No one can add positives or support Byrne on his page

      So the question becomes:

      Why is wikipedia protecting the Weiss wiki entry?
      Why is it ok to tarnish the Byrne Wiki entry?

      Weiss claims he never ever edited a Wikipedia article- so why do they protect his bio? This hypocrisy needs to get out.

      People need to understand that wikipedia is trying to tarnish one mans reputation while it is protecting his arch enemy.
      And for what? Why? For whom does the bell toll?

      They tell us nothing is going on- that it is all a fabrication on Brynes part- but then you figure out to what lengths his detractors are willing to go- and you need to ask yourself why?

    25. Re:Waht do you know by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

      "Where's that guy who shills for wikipedia, I'd love to hear his take on this."

      You can say this about all of human history and all human endeavours, nothing is immune from corruption.

  2. Hmph by moogied · · Score: 5, Funny
    --
    So basically, -1 troll/offtopic is really slashdots way of saying "I hate that you thought of something before me."
    1. Re:Hmph by Billosaur · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Definitely funny, but as with all Penny Arcade strips, holds a great grain of truth. Wikipedia is billed as on-line encyclopedia, and while it may contain encyclopedic (and in many cases, overabundant) knowledge, it is actually a system whereby groups can vie for control of the information that others see about a particular topic. How many scandals have their been with entries being edited by groups/individuals on the sly, to make an opposing idea or person seem unpalatable or to spread falsehoods or innuendo? And given its size, how much potential inaccuracy or outright prevarication goes unnoticed?

      It's pretty simple: Wikipedia the concept is excellent. The execution lacks quite a bit. At some point, you have to limit the number of people who can actually edit it, and remove the possibility of it going from encyclopedia of knowledge to something more like Facebook or MySpace. And yes, I know, who do you get to edit it? Eventually you have to bite the bullet, trust some people to be full-time editors, watch them to prevent abuse, and cultivate a culture of accuracy in information transmission.

      --
      GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
    2. Re:Hmph by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Editor/Contributor verification is what you're looking for. Not only should editors/contributors need to be verified, but also expert consensus on the subject content.

    3. Re:Hmph by Rydia · · Score: 1

      "Fruit Fucker" holds a great grain of truth?

      I'm sorry, Penny Arcade is occasionally funny, but snark generally doesn't equate to insight.

    4. Re:Hmph by moogied · · Score: 1
      Fruit Fucker does indeed hold a great grain of truth. The truth is fruit juicers, often fuck fruit for the juice baby.

      Try and look beyond the humor and find something, anything, to grasph onto. Its how you know you're a true fan.

      P.S. Jesus is F'n metal.

      --
      So basically, -1 troll/offtopic is really slashdots way of saying "I hate that you thought of something before me."
    5. Re:Hmph by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      it is actually a system whereby groups can vie for control of the information that others see about a particular topic

      And yet somehow it works.

      The execution lacks quite a bit. At some point, you have to limit the number of people who can actually edit it, and remove the possibility of it going from encyclopedia of knowledge to something more like Facebook or MySpace.

      The execution's fine. At this point the vast majority of articles I read have little or no problems. Most link to relevant information so you can confirm what you're reading is accurate. Interestingly of the articles I see that have "problems" it tends to be obvious trolls on pop-culture articles, or "I hate SuperMegaCorp" type vandalism of large, unpopular, organizations.

      I think the unreliability of Wikipedia is overstated. For every troll there's an army of people ready to pounce and revert bad changes. Indeed, getting on-topic for a moment, that's the problem here. Some guy tried to put an arbitrary link into an article after the link had been removed; the change was reverted; the person putting the link in began a campaign of placing unencyclopedic material into Wikipedia. He kept being reverted. He started being banned. He went the sock-puppet route. His sock puppets were banned. etc. Wikipedia isn't being criticized here because they failed to prevent an article from being fair, but for actions they took to keep some articles from being vandalized, with the events mischaracterized, one might suspect deliberately, by El Reg as being the former.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    6. Re:Hmph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey look, a Penny Arcade Link. That's a guaranteed (Score:5, Funny)

    7. Re:Hmph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree. What you consider scandalous, I consider a more open reflection of reality. Encyclopaedia Britannica has its errors, but while it lacks what you consider to be "scandalous" behaviour, you can be absolutely certain that it is there. The only assurance that you have that it is indeed NOT there is on the authority of EB alone.

      To suggest that innocence is intrinsic to the world is to delude yourself. Every group of people (and not just companies, mind you) will do everything they can possibly do to improve their standing in the world, not excluding illegal, immoral, unethical, or scandalous things. It is ALWAYS a matter of "will we probably get away with this?" and "if we probably won't, how much do we stand to lose?"

      Again, to argue that any company is more altruistic than any other group is simply bad thinking. I've met my share of politician's fans who will stop at nothing to see their preferred candidate elected. The ends justify the means.

      I do not mean to excuse wikipedia, merely to make sure that you are aware that breaking the rules is not the exception. It is the rule.

    8. Re:Hmph by badasscat · · Score: 1

      The execution's fine. At this point the vast majority of articles I read have little or no problems.

      Then we're not reading the same articles.

      It may be true that the most popular pages on the site have few (though certainly not no) problems. But that's easy, and not what makes an encyclopedia what it is. Anybody can write up 200 or 300 or even 1,000 good articles.

      People read encyclopedias when they need information on things they can't find information on anywhere else. Encyclopedias are the original manifestation of "the long tail". Why would you buy an encyclopedia to read about, I dunno, George Bush? You can find all you need to know about him anywhere. You read an encyclopedia when you need to know about Brazil nuts or Mexican honeycreeper birds or anything else that you otherwise don't have easy access to an authoritative source for. Encyclopedias are supposed to contain a wealth of information about everything (or as close to it as they can get), not just a couple thousand "popular" subjects. That's why the paper versions come in giant 26 volume packages. That's what makes encyclopedias truly useful - because you know that any subject you come across that you need info on will be in there, and with reliable info.

      (In other words, while 10,000 people might read the article about George Bush every day, making it among the most popular articles, probably 100,000 people read all the other articles on the site every hour.)

      The problem with wikipedia is that those less-traveled articles - less-traveled but vitally important, for the reason illustrated above - are riddled with errors of every kind. I don't remember the last wikipedia article I've come across that didn't have several obvious typos, for one thing - I've given up even trying to fix all of them, I'd just never be doing anything else. Some articles on wikipedia don't make any logical sense, they're so poorly written. And many contain useless insider or industry jargon (the meanings of which are never explained) that make the articles almost impossible for a layperson to read.

      While the quality of the top articles on wikipedia has probably improved over the years, the quality of the encyclopedia as a whole has definitely gotten worse as more articles are added. Some of it is due to wikipedia's own policies, and some of it is due to editors and admins misunderstanding and mis-applying those policies. Some of it is due to vandalism, some of it is due to well-meaning but borderline illiterate "editors" whose work is never checked or fixed once it's put up. Those people really should not be writing anything there, but the nature of the site is such that nobody's locked out preemptively.

      I know that there have been various initiatives to try to fix some of these problems; suggestions to "freeze" the number of articles on the site for a while, the purge of "non-notable" articles, etc. though most of these solutions are either impractical or ill-advised. What's needed is a change in the nature of the site.

      All this talk about back alley cabals doesn't help matters at all, though, and if nothing else makes it seem a lot less likely that anything's going to change. People in power want to stay in power, and that means preserving the status quo. Wikipedia's reputation is hardly stellar as it is, though - almost everywhere you go these days that references it, you see some sort of snarky disclaimer about the reliability of the info there. There could very well come a day when most people decide that it's just not even a relevant reference anymore for most subjects.

    9. Re:Hmph by Wellspring · · Score: 1

      The problem comes when Wikipedia's stated policies are at odds with their real behavior.

      I honestly don't know anything about naked short selling or the lawsuit or the people involved. But I read the Register article, and looked over the userid's on Wikipedia, and there really seems to be something to what the Register is saying about what the Wikipedia people are doing. The editor seemingly involved has his/her talkpage semiprotected, and the last edit was by that same editor who was recently removed as a sysop, Durova, which removed a question about the Register article. Wikipedia seems to be stonewalling on the whole thing. It seems like they really are pursuing some kind of agenda.

      What scares me is that I don't know what Jimbo Wales or Wikipedia or any of the editors involved stand to gain from this financial debate. Except for Wales himself, they're all anonymous editors and any conflict of interest is totally undisclosed. It's genuinely weird that they're taking these drastic steps to control the four articles involved, and noone seems to know why. I'd probably have dismissed Byrne's allegations as being conspiracy theories if it weren't for the mystery about its wikipedia coverage.

    10. Re:Hmph by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      They missed the part where somebody puts the whole article up for deletion as He Man is a fictional character and not "noteworthy" enough...

  3. If I was... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    If I was Gary Weiss, my motto would be "Citation needed, bitches", then I'd be all like, "Wikipedia Cabal: block that guy's IP range.", then under my breath I'd be like, "bitches."

    1. Re:If I was... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously this works for everything! It rocks. http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=372549&cid=21499055

  4. Meh. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not the idea. The idea was "everyone contributes, and everyone is equal." If that was still the idea, we wouldn't be hearing all these stories of editorial abuse, because things are now unequal, and that inequality is what's breeding all these problems.

    Put a group in charge, and you're going to get abuse. That's just a fact. To get around this, most other organizations add some checks and balances, some oversight, some limitations on power. WP didn't do this, and now they're suffering for it.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:Meh. by Daimanta · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nothing prevents the "iron law of olichargy", so I ask: Why bother? Why don't you create a olichargy from the start and try to control it? Why let an egalitarian society slip into an unfair olichargy rather than having a well structured one from the beginning?

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power lost.
    2. Re:Meh. by AmaDaden · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah. I think the best solution is to put a 'ruling class' in place but to make sure all of their communication is public. If it's found that people are discussing Wikipedia not on Wikipedia they get a temp ban. It's by no means a perfect fix but with out someone in charge somewhere people will form their own little gangs. It just seems to be human nature.

      On a side note, I would love to see Jimbo himself make comment on all this. He seems to have totally given up on Slashdot with his last post. It would be nice to know what is going in the depth of Wikipedia land from it's creator.

    3. Re:Meh. by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Now, I'm not defending Wikipedia per se, but if the Linux kernel were developed like that -- "everyone contributes, and everyone is equal", we'd probably end up with a kernel that combines all the bloat of Microsoft Office with all of the elegance of ed. (Wrap your head around that one!)

      The fact is that open source projects aren't democracies, they're meritocracies. You wanna be one of the cool kids of the LKML? Write a few killer features for the kernel or write a bunch of drivers or find and squash a bunch of bugs or something.

      The idea behind Wikipedia was to develop an encyclopedia around open source principles, right? Well, adopt a open source principles and you'll end up with an open source mentality. Hence, as TFA says:

      We aren't democratic." That's how Wikipedia founder Jimmy "Jimbo" Wales described his famously-collaborative online encyclopedia in a recent puff piece from The New York Times Magazine. "The core community appreciates when someone is knowledgeable," he said, "and thinks some people are idiots and shouldn't be writing."


      Sounds like a meritocracy to me.
    4. Re:Meh. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well I'm actually in favor of oligarchy over democracy in that special case where you can get an oligarch who knows what the hell he's doing. If there was a way to always pick the best person to rule, I'd be a die-hard royalist, or fascist, or whatever.

      Democratic rule basically depends on inefficiency to keep people from doing anything unless most people agree it is the correct thing to do.

      They definitely need more transparency. I think what people are most angry about is the lack thereof. Their formalized processes suck. Their reporting of their bannings, etc, suck.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    5. Re:Meh. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They certainly like to think so.

      The problem is that their idea of merit is far better described as "prolific". If someone does a lot of decent edits, that makes them prolific. If someone creates a small number of extremely high quality original articles, they have merit. It's the second class that really adds value to WP, and they vastly outnumber the first class. But the second class isn't well represented in the admin group, and the first is.

      Without the guys who only write one or two articles, WP would be tiny. But those people have no say. And worse, if they move against the groupthink, then they can be banned.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    6. Re:Meh. by Billosaur · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's not the idea. The idea was "everyone contributes, and everyone is equal." If that was still the idea, we wouldn't be hearing all these stories of editorial abuse, because things are now unequal, and that inequality is what's breeding all these problems.

      Put a group in charge, and you're going to get abuse. That's just a fact. To get around this, most other organizations add some checks and balances, some oversight, some limitations on power. WP didn't do this, and now they're suffering for it.

      An amazing parallel to representative government. In the beginning, we set up a government where everyone has their say by voting for the people who represent them. We invest those people with tremendous power. 535 people make the laws in the United States, 1 person gets to review them before they become law, and 9 others get to review them after they become law. Despite the system of checks and balances the original framers of the Constitution tried to create, the country is run at the behest of 300 million+ citizens by only 545 of their countrymen. That it works at all is amazing; that it is corrupt to some degree is to be understood.

      The Wikipedia problem won't really be easily solvable, because at some point it needs to make the same trade-offs that the Constitutional Convention made. Eventually, if you want a higher degree of accuracy, you're going to have to reduce the number of people who have access to the data and you're going to have to trust that they have no ulterior motives in their editing, and you're going to have to keep track of just what they do and call them on it when it's clear there is malfeasance.

      --
      GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
    7. Re:Meh. by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      It's not the idea. The idea was "everyone contributes, and everyone is equal." If that was still the idea, we wouldn't be hearing all these stories of editorial abuse,


      It's still the idea, it's just that now some people are more equal than others.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    8. Re:Meh. by inviolet · · Score: 1

      There were some typos in your post. Here, I'll fix them for you...

      Well I'm actually in favor of oligarchy over democracy in that special case where you can get an oligarch who knows what the hell he's doing.

      "Well I'm actually in favor of oligarchy over democracy in that special case where you can get an oligarch who aligns the public interests with my private interests."

      If there was a way to always pick the best most profitable person to rule, I'd be a die-hard royalist, or fascist, or whatever.

      "If there was a way to always pick the most profitable person to rule, I'd be a die-hard royalist, or fascist, or whatever."

      Much better now. You should use a spellchecker next time.

      Note: I am not criticizing you in particular. I am criticizing humanity. On a very, very, very related note, it was recently revealed that German popular support for the Nazi party blossomed after the Nazis promised to distribute the Jews' expropriated property.

      --
      FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
    9. Re:Meh. by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Well, Wikipedia does have dispute resolution procedures for these things, and has for ages. You're right in the general point, though. Wikipedia's rules only tend to grow when a need arises for them, so they tend to be mis-shapen, full of loopholes, and rather late on the scene. Accepting that injusticies will happen here and there, and things will sometimes work out badly in the short term, is something you have to figure out on your own when you start there.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    10. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the best solution is to put a 'ruling class' in place


      As long as their power isn't determined by some moistened bink lobbing scimitars at them...
    11. Re:Meh. by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Sure the community "appreciates" folks who are knowledgeable... (Yeah, right.)
       
      But the people who gain power in the Wikpedia structure are the people who play the political game, who make a million tiny edits to boost their numbers, master the WP:ACRONYM system, etc... etc... It is a meritocracy, but the merit they reward isn't knowledge worthy of an article - but the knowledge of how to game the system.

    12. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well everybody is contributing and is equal, it's just that some contributers are more equal than others..

    13. Re:Meh. by nsayer · · Score: 1

      Of course. Everybody is equal, but some are more equal than others.

    14. Re:Meh. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you're capable of "putting" any class into place, then you already are the ruling class.

      One thing I love about geek pop political/organizational theory - it works as if politics were a god game in which systems are designed by an abstract, external power, rather than always produced by people who already have a stake in it as players.

    15. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On a very, very, very related note, it was recently revealed that German popular support for the Nazi party blossomed after the Nazis promised to distribute the Jews' expropriated property.

      recently revealed ?

      that was the idea from the start.

      that's the idea with any extreme political movement that aims and manages to go mainstream.

      you can move a bunch of nut-jobs with religious or racist-romantic junk, but to get effective and serious people to your side, you have to offer them real stuff.

      it's absolutely amazing how the perspective of getting for free the house of his neighbour (for which he, his parents and ancestors have worked and wasted their whole life) may transform any cynical slacker into the most determined, ruthless and dependable soldier for whatever the cause of the day may be.

    16. Re:Meh. by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1

      Well I'm actually in favor of oligarchy over democracy in that special case where you can get an oligarch who knows what the hell he's doing

      Problem: who picks him?

    17. Re:Meh. by AmaDaden · · Score: 1

      True but considering that Wikipedia is run by the Wikipedia foundation and the current 'ruling class' is not necessarily part of that foundation I think the idea applies here. How ever it seems that while no official ties exist both are very buddy buddy. So for change to happen knowledge of these admin abuses would need to become common, for example a major story in the NY Times. If this happened Jimbo might need to consider a massive change to keep things going and to keep the donations coming. Remember we keep Wikipedia running by donating to it and supporting it. The more stories like this I hear about the more I will start telling people to go elsewhere for information. No viewers means no donations means no Wikipedia.

    18. Re:Meh. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Democratic rule basically depends on inefficiency to keep people from doing anything unless most people agree it is the correct thing to do.
      That is why you need a representative democracy and make it clear that they are officers of the post not the people who elected them.

      Take something like the US government. The President is the President of the United States of America, Not the president of you. An important note is that you are a citizen of the US so he does represent you, it is just that he also represents the country and thereby you in the process. It is the same thing with the congress critters. And the beautiful thing this allows them to do is actually make decisions on what is best for the country as apposed to what the people might want.

      I know it is very unpopular when a politician goes against the common wisdom and sentiment of the populace. But when it is done correctly (for the country and not some donors bank account), it can be seen in a few years. Something like a policy that benefits Big Industry but taxing them less then you the citizen might be the entire reason that the Big Industry hasn't moved to Mexico or China and that You might still have a job or even something more fringe like company provided health coverage or retirement benefits.

      It is interesting that people in general aren't smart enough to make some of these decisions. They can see the now (as in the example above, I'm paying more in taxes then they are) but they usually don't look at the long term. I'm sorry I took that all over the place but it was something that needed to be pointed out. I'm sure there are ways to abuse these things even as I laid it out. Hell, I'm sure it is being done right now where elected officials are more worried about getting someone they know rich rather then running the country for the benefit of the country. And when you consider the benefit of the country, you as a citizen is ultimately in there, but it doesn't ignore things like safety, clean air, trade, keeping jobs around, and so on. This is something I don't think a single dictator or ruler could do nor do I think a real democracy could provide.

      People aren't as smart as they think.
    19. Re:Meh. by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      The ideal form of government is the benevolent dictatorship.

    20. Re:Meh. by Samizdata · · Score: 1

      Wow.

      This one Godwined fast.

      --
      It's not the years, honey, it's the mileage. - Colonel Henry Walton Jones, Jr., Ph.D.
    21. Re:Meh. by debrain · · Score: 1

      If you're capable of "putting" any class into place, then you already are the ruling class. What about voters?

    22. Re:Meh. by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1

      Well I'm actually in favor of oligarchy over democracy in that special case where you can get an oligarch who knows what the hell he's doing. If there was a way to always pick the best person to rule, I'd be a die-hard royalist, or fascist, or whatever.
      You'd be a christian.
    23. Re:Meh. by bombshelter13 · · Score: 1

      In 2007, sadly, calling voters either 'capable of putting any class in their place' or 'the ruling class' would be a lie.

    24. Re:Meh. by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      Voters are unimportant. The people who print and count the ballots--they're who's important.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    25. Re:Meh. by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      I was rolling around reading some of the dispute resolutions. Generally just called for permabans for petty garbage and other things. Kind of hard to get around an injustice like that.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    26. Re:Meh. by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Now, I'm not defending Wikipedia per se, but if the Linux kernel were developed like that -- "everyone contributes, and everyone is equal", we'd probably end up with a kernel that combines all the bloat of Microsoft Office with all of the elegance of ed.

      Other than the fact that a few bad lines of code can pooch the entire kernel, whereas an entry on fart jokes isn't going to destroy an entry by a department chair at a university.

      Sounds like a meritocracy to me.

      It's not. What SatanicPuppy said on quality vs quantity: the aforementioned department chair could write a couple excellent entires on subjects in his field, but a shmoe user such as myself could become an admin much faster by editing a bunch of articles.

    27. Re:Meh. by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

      ...and because they've already given away the rights to their two (very useful) articles under the GPDL, they're powerless to do anything. (Just try to retract one of your articles. Go on.)

      HAL.

      --
      Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
  5. Lord Acton... by AB_Positive · · Score: 3, Interesting

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_corrupts#Lord_Acton.27s_DictumPower Corrupts... There's a joke here, but I'm having too much fun wrecking my employee's user accounts with my admin power.

  6. Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Torodung · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Yes, but is this relevant to 85% of the body of work? Do we really need to throw the word "totalitarian" around, or "black helicopters?" Jeez.

    News flash! The Register has less credibility than Wiki, if only for this idiotic smear job.

    In defense of Wikipedia: Sure, Wikipedia has its corruptions and its problems, but so does any other human endeavor.

    Point is, it is a useful source of information. If you don't have the critical skills to determine where it is not useful, you should ask your Mom for help in using it.

    I'd hate for Wikipedia to be taken down over some scandal. These shrill articles about "corruption" are really rather childish. Wikipedia has made no claims to be a superior source of information. There's no reason to throw out the baby with the bathwater here.

    I find it to be an excellent source for non-politicized information, and this will continue to be the case, regardless of administrative difficulties, so long as Wikipedia is given the chance to survive this tabloid "scandal sheet" coverage of its staff.

    Let's not fan the flames, and that is what the linked article is: a flame. Don't do this to the staff of Wikipedia just because you may think they are "a bit snotty."

    --
    Toro

    1. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

      News flash! The Register has less credibility than Wiki, if only for this idiotic smear job.

      Ah yes, but The Register is little more than a rag e-zine but Wikipedia attempts to pass of this air of authority that it obviously does not have as there are people, at the top, fucking things up.

      Yes, but is this relevant to 85% of the body of work? Do we really need to throw the word "totalitarian" around, or "black helicopters?" Jeez.

      How the fuck would we know? We don't have someone who devoted a good bit of his free time in a year to attempting to track down the source of this snafu. It could seriously be that a majority of entries are fucked with in this way -- much to the enjoyment of the douchebags that believe they are somehow important because they are in a "ruling clique" -- but we'd never know w/o more people digging around.

      That said, this sounds like a bunch of forum trolling, whining and conspiracy theory that I see on almost every single web-forum that has some sort of board running most of the show. Move along, it's not worth getting upset over.

    2. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So saying that there is a problem at WP is the same as destroying the whole?

      The only reason people complain is because they care about it. This is a real concern; I have absolutely no problem believing that there are abuses going on. The editors are human, and, even worse, they have a strong emotional stake in the project. That gives them a lot of motivation to do some "ends justifying the means" crap like banning someone they don't agree with.

      The way for WP to solve the whole problem is to address the concerns not to do as you are doing, and pretend like they don't exist, or aren't relevant.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    3. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This article is not a flame- a flame consists of pointless insults without real information. This is real. This so-called 'cabal', while probably not as dramatic as described, is still real. The suppression of information by these people is real.

      The staff has every right to be criticized, because they are engaging in behaviors that are worthy of criticism. I don't understand how your statement of Wikipedia being a good resource relates to them acting like this- even Nixon accomplished some good things- it doesn't mean he should have remained in as President.

    4. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Shky · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is the perceived corruption that goes all the way to the top.

      This isn't about inaccurate information posted by those uninformed, uneducated, or malicious.

      This is about administrators, and the site's creator, supporting (again, *perceived*) fallacies, in an effort to discredit and disgrace someone.

      THAT's the problem.

      --
      CC Licensed Serialized Story and Podcast: Ingenioustries
    5. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Torodung · · Score: 1

      So saying that there is a problem at WP is the same as destroying the whole? No. That would be reasoned. Read the f-ing article, which is titled:

      Wikipedia black helicopters circle Utah's Traverse Mountain

      The imagery of the linked article is a deliberate and polemic assault designed to take Wiki down, and rob it of all credibility. He is trying to make a bunch of milquetoast intellectuals sound like "Dr. Evil." If you didn't read the article, you won't understand why I'm upset with this crap.

      The article is not a reasoned complaint, it's a hit job.

      --
      Toro
    6. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have NO idea what you are talking about. Snotty? How about "a bit libelous" or "teenagers shutting down topic experts who can't even legally drive" or "hostage biography victims who aren't famous" or "allowing their site to be used for political cruft and blackballing the targets for editing it".

      All Wales fault of course. The world's 7th most visited website deserves better management, and the kids who work there for free (its mostly kids) deserve someone who teaches them to treat people with respect.

      This is the TIP of the iceberg.

    7. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many, many good things have happened, continue to happen, and will continue to happen because of wikipedia.

      Need wikipedia for school, children, etc.? Here's the solution! :-)

      http://www.soschildrensvillages.org.uk/charity-news/wikipedia-for-schools.htm

      Enjoy!

    8. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Torodung · · Score: 0, Troll

      Shows how highly you think of Wiki, eh?

      I think Wiki has a good deal of credibility, and the Register slightly less. That still means the Register has a pretty good record, but contains, like Wiki, the odd spurious hack job.

      Stop thinking in dualities. There's a whole spectrum of quality to work with. Saying an entity has less credibility doesn't mean it has NO credibility. Just less.

      --
      Toro

    9. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Point is, it is a useful source of information. If you don't have the critical skills to determine where it is not useful, you should ask your Mom for help in using it.

      Unless the article is CLEARLY bias, the only way to know if an article is useless is to already know more than the article. How would you know that an article is missing some detail? If you know enough to determine a particular article is not adequate, why are you looking it up on Wikipedia in the first place?

      The real problem is - as outlined in this article and others - when you DO know more than Wikipedia, and try to fix it, people can actively prevent you from doing so. Not just random people undoing your edits, but admins banning you, locking articles and deleting your articles. There is ZERO accountability on the part of the admins and other staff. Zero. Ultimately the usefullnes and credability of Wiipedia rests in the hands of anonymous, appointed staffers who don't have to answer to anyone.

      Make admins accountable for the content of the articles. Not necessarily the factual/technical accuracy, since it seems unreasonable for an admin to be an expert on every subject they might watch over, but the impartiality of both the tone and accessability of the articles. Most of all, remove their anonimity and provide a proper mechanism for outing the bad apples.

      Wikipedia should be the encyclopedia anyone can edit, not just the people whom the admins agree with.
      =Smidge=

    10. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Rycross · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We in the business have a name for that kind of headline. "Joke" As far as the article, calling it a "deliberate and polemic assault designed to take Wiki down, and rob it of all credibility" is some superb hyperbole. The article itself dabbles in hyperbole, but you've pretty much one-upped it. They overdo it in many place (seriously, "totalitarian"?) but most of what is written seems reasonable when you strip away the, *ahem*, creative writing.

      The thing that makes these little flukes on Wikipedia a scandal is that instead of admitting theres a problem, the wiki in-group will loudly deny any problems and pose it as an all-or-nothing, you're-with-us-or-against-us situation.

    11. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Billosaur · · Score: 1

      Frankly I don't trust either. I look at anything I read on-line with heavy-handed skepticism, because I've been burned a time or two. Also, haven't the editors of The Register been feuding with Jimmy Wales for years now? You have to take what both sides say with a large grain of salt. I give the edge to The Register simply because independent groups have uncovered the abuses going on with Wikipedia.

      --
      GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
    12. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by phayes · · Score: 1

      Saying that the Register has no objectivity when Wiki is concerned is no troll.

      On most subjects, yeah, the Reg is a good resource, but every single article mentioning Wikipedia becomes a hatchet job. In some cases like this one, The Reg may actually have a point, but 95% of the time the best thing to do is ignore any article from the Register that contains the word wikipedia as it will be filled with negative opinions & mockery but no facts. I find their systematic opposition of anything wiki to be one of the Reg's worst faults.

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    13. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 1

      The Register before: Wikipedia is full of half-truths, lies, propaganda, and poorly written amateur drivel! Strict editorial control is the only way to arrive at The Truth!

      The Wiki cabal lets loose the banhammer on people who create multiple accounts to spread half-truths, lies, propaganda, and poorly written amateur drivel.

      The Register now: Wikipedia is a totalitarian regime led by a secretive cabal who wants nothing more than to silence The Truth!

    14. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Actually, as I understand it, there is accountability, but it is not based in hierarchy nor in authority. This bugs some people. Others just shrug and use it.

      It is community based. If you try to say "I am the authority on this" without engaging the community, you are going to run into trouble.

      It's an experiment, to be sure, and it may yet fall on it's face. I just don't want to see it deliberately knocked over.

      I'm not going to get into critical reading, but I'll drop a hint. If you are unsure of the authenticity of a source, you need to back it up with additional source material. If the stakes are high, or your integrity is at stake, you need to get primary source material. Wikipedia is no substitute for this kind of academic rigor.

      There is no magic bullet for actual research. Treating Wiki, or any other secondary source as such, is something you should have been warned against in high school, and beaten mercilessly for in undergrad. I still have the cane marks, myself. ;^)

      --
      Toro

    15. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Ding! Yup. Both require liberal amounts of salt to digest properly.

    16. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by foobsr · · Score: 1
      The problem is the perceived corruption that goes all the way to the top.

      Learning by:
      • Observation
      • Doing
      Resulting in perceived (or even real) personal profit.

      It would be a sensation if things were different.

      CC.
      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    17. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Torodung · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They overdo it in many place (seriously, "totalitarian"?) but most of what is written seems reasonable when you strip away the, *ahem*, creative writing. Seems reasonable? Strip away the writing that serves to color all those facts with a sinister and conspiratorial nature? I wish.

      You're in the business and you don't understand how modern PR works?

      I agree, there's some useful information in there, but it is tinged with so much connotation of conspiracy and sinister control that it can have a rather marked affect on how the reader will interpret the seemingly reasonable material. It could even make them accept it without question if the job is done well enough.

      This is how you get anyone to accept a poor, evil interpretation of reasonable events. You hit them with emotional words ("creative" writing), and then you "back them up" with facts that aren't sinister at all, if you gave any context.

      The net result is a hit job. People are being encouraged to see mildly concerning information, to be sure, as part of a "cabal" of wicked "totalitarians" bent on.... well, God knows what. The author doesn't really get into why such sinister agents would be on the move in... Wikipedia.

      Really, it goes a bit beyond a "joke." That's a very lame excuse for some rather provocative PR work aimed at coloring opinions on Wikipedia.

      The only reason I used hyperbole was because it's rather hard to condense the above into something someone is willing to read. That article is poorly written, and it seeks to assault Wiki, as many of the other articles at the Register do.

      I'm quite sick of it.

      --
      Toro
    18. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by owlnation · · Score: 1

      Sure, Wikipedia has its corruptions and its problems, but so does any other human endeavor.
      It does, but I wonder whether it's fair to blame The Register. I seem to recall the last time Wikipedia was doing a fundraising push there was all sorts of articles about all sorts of things Wiki-related - positive and negative (the essjay scandal for example).

      Then there was a calm period where there was just the normal everyday minor background corruption/totalitarian stories about Wikipedia.

      And then... now that they are back fundraising (love the little guy doing the nazi salute on the fundraising icon - woah! really uber-dumb icon for a site often accused of info-fascism) here come the stories about Wikipedia again.

      Coincidence? Or is there marketing/PR people getting these stories out there to ensure high profile and more money?

      I think the corruption claims are justified, and it is important they are investigated -- openly. Jimmy Wales' history seems to be a lot shadier than his Wikipedia biography would have you believe.

      Wikipedia has made no claims to be a superior source of information.
      Not exactly, no. That's true. However, it has delusions of grandeur as to being an authoritative source (one thing it must NEVER be while even the possibility of cabals exist (which is always going to be the case)).

      As a source of zeitgeist and trivia wikipedia is fine -- a source of important information it isn't.
    19. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by f16c · · Score: 1

      As far as I can tell the problem with the Wiki ban was that it was done out of sight of the rest of us and with little evidence that it was nessesary. Overstock is hardly my favorite company but the issue raised about naked short selling is legitimate. Pulling this sort of crap is a real good wayfor Wikipedia to become irrelevant in no time.

      --
      bob@Osprey:~>
    20. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Mazin07 · · Score: 1

      Double-check The Register's credibility by looking it up on Wikipedia.

      I'm sure there's a logical fallacy somewhere...

    21. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by dwillden · · Score: 1

      Well as the Traverse Mountain neighborhood is just across the highway from an active National Guard training camp there are actually black helicopters flying around quite often. Almost daily in fact.

      --
      I'm too lazy to compose a creative sig.
    22. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First of all, is *anybody* talking about taking down Wikipedia?

      Secondly, and the thing that bothers me the most about all of this, is that there's a simple technical fix to the majority of Wikipedia's problems. "Deleted" articles should remain viewable by the general public, not just administrators. Even if that didn't solve the problem, it would at least let people look at the articles and see whether they should actually be deleted or not.

      Thirdly, Wikipedia's motto is "anyone can edit." If they don't let people with 'sockpuppets' (I hate that term) edit, then they need to change the motto. Pointing out hypocrisy in this is perfectly well and fine; it's the same as Comcast advertising unlimited usage, then canceling accounts when they use 5 GB a month. If banning exists on Wikipedia, then not anyone can edit it.

    23. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Rycross · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You're in the business and you don't understand how modern PR works?

      I used a poor turn of phrase, sorry. I'm not in the business of writing.

      I agree, there's some useful information in there, but it is tinged with so much connotation of conspiracy and sinister control that it can have a rather marked affect on how the reader will interpret the seemingly reasonable material. It could even make them accept it without question if the job is done well enough.

      Yep, I mentioned that I thought that they were hyperbolic, and I agree with your point. To call the admins "totalitarian" is excessive.

      This is how you get anyone to accept a poor, evil interpretation of reasonable events. You hit them with emotional words ("creative" writing), and then you "back them up" with facts that aren't sinister at all, if you gave any context.

      I agree.

      Really, it goes a bit beyond a "joke." That's a very lame excuse for some rather provocative PR work aimed at coloring opinions on Wikipedia.

      From my limited reading of the site in question, I had the impression that this kind of stuff is normal for them. I guess my point of view was more that they were trying to be witty and not malicious. But, see my previous post and above comments. I do agree that the article is too hyperbolic to be informative. There may be legitimate complaints, but they're tainted by the way they're stated, which leads me to...

      The only reason I used hyperbole was because it's rather hard to condense the above into something someone is willing to read. That article is poorly written, and it seeks to assault Wiki, as many of the other articles at the Register do.

      See, thats the thing, you did kind-of the same thing as the article.

      And to be honest, I really like Wikipedia, but every time there's a controversy, instead of saying "Well yeah, we'll have to fix that. Nothing is perfect," Wikians come out of the woodwork to scream, "How dare you sir! There's absolutely nothing wrong with Wikipedia, and if you insist there is then you just want to bury the project!" At least thats how it seems to me. Anthropomorphizing the situation, you go from a likable guy who you can give you really great, if maybe a bit flawed, information, to a perfectionist prick who starts screaming at you at the first hint of criticism.

      Framing the argument to say that agreeing with what the article is saying amounts to killing off Wikipedia smacks of the latter person. Based on what you've written, thats not at all what you were trying to say. But I also apply that logic to the article at hand.

      I'm quite sick of it.

      You and me both. I guess thats what I was trying to point out, but I stated my point poorly. Communication is a bitch.

    24. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by mrwolf007 · · Score: 1

      "black helicopters?" Jeez.
      Its an El Reg meme. You know, in soviet russia the overlords welcome memes.

      Point is, it is a useful source of information. If you don't have the critical skills to determine where it is not useful, you should ask your Mom for help in using it.
      That kinda misses the point, doesnt it?
      If i already have all the knowledge on the topic that interrests me, whats the point of looking it up?

      Let's not fan the flames, and that is what the linked article is: a flame. Don't do this to the staff of Wikipedia just because you may think they are "a bit snotty."
      I dont consider the linked article a flame.
      Of course, if you have been "in bed" with the /.-cabals you could have this post deleted and my ip blocked.
      I dont want to discredit wikipedia, i do consider it usefull. But the stength of wikipedia, giving everyone the power to edit articles, is also its greatest weakness.
      Wikipedia isnt a box ring, but if thats whats happening (two people undoing each others changes to the same article) thats a serious problem. Wikipedia will have to solve that problem. And banning one adversary wont solve the problem, they will only loose neutrality and be considered biased. I do think you realise the problem with people being allowed to edit their own (and adverseries) biographies on a project that would like to be an encyclopedia and like to be considered neutral.
    25. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Smidge204 · · Score: 1
      My point is it is not possible to know what is valid and what isn't unless you already know the information, so it becomes a serious problem when administrators ACTIVELY create bias in articles - especially articles that are difficult to quantify in solid facts like articles about religion, politics, and people.

      Actually, as I understand it, there is accountability, but it is not based in hierarchy nor in authority. This bugs some people. Others just shrug and use it.

      It is community based.


      So a wiki admin is accountable to the wiki community in much the same way that a monarch is accountable to his public? That's not really accountable at all.

      What's the likelihood of getting an admin thrown out for power abuse (and general douchebaggery) if that admin is popular among the other staff? I've never even heard of second-hand accounts of this happening. What's the likelihood of throwing out an unpopular admin regardless of actual performance? I'd suspect it's so likely it might even be spontaneous. That's the crux of the problem. At least with corrupt politicians they have to go through the trouble of rigging an election to keep their jobs.

      -----

      I had a pretty lengthy debate about the relative merits and "truthiness" of Wikipedia. I think most reasonable people would not take it as an authority on anything. However, even though wikipedia explicitly states no claims to validity, there is no doubt that people visit it with at least SOME expectation that the information they get will be valid. It is touted as an encyclopedia - an all encompassing, typically factual collection of knowledge. They sell the fact that anyone can edit it to correct mistakes and that many eyes and many opinions help to eliminate bias. People expect articles to be written by or at least corrected by those who know what thet're talking about. Whenever someoen defends WP these are exactly the drums they beat.

      You never see anything about Wikipedia being inaccurate unless you click the very small link at the bottom of the page that says "Disclaimers." Nobody would use an encyclopedia if they weren't at least somewhat sure the information they find in it is correct. Even if it is common sense that anyone could write anything, and therefore you can't trust it. A lot of effort goes into maintaining a public image of authority while downplaying the ugly truth of the matter.

      That said, though, I use wikipedia several times a day and usually (but not always) employ that information without any further research, usually because the purpose of that information is of little consequence. I don't think I'm unique in that matter, but that only reinforces the image of an authoritative source.
      =Smidge=
    26. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Torodung · · Score: 1

      You and me both. I guess thats what I was trying to point out, but I stated my point poorly. Communication is a bitch. It's what happens when someone else polarizes the argument for us, but we find that we have no argument between us. The printed word is severely overrated as a means of communication.

      --
      Toro
    27. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crap. Anyone can edit- that doesn't mean they won't get deleted for attacking its integrity, whether by vandalizing it, or attempting to blackmail editors, as Overstock has done.

    28. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by nugneant · · Score: 1

      meme


      You'd sound about 100% less irritating if you'd just call it a "running gag" or "inside joke" like those of us who don't live life inside a Douglas Copeland book.

      (and it figures someone who spells "useful" with two L's would be fond of Wikipedia's, er, "style of prose" :))
    29. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwater by olegalexandrov · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia does allow sockpuppets to edit (that is, the same person having multiple accounts). What it does not allow is for that person to abuse this (e.g., use two accounts in turn to do reversions to bypass the three-revert rule). ~~~~

  7. Also blocked by Splab · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We have the same issue where I live, more than 1000 homes behind the same firewall. We have been blocked from editing at some point, bit harsh to block out so many IP's, but thats life I guess. Good thing I don't have the need to contribute.

    1. Re:Also blocked by Gloy · · Score: 1

      Chances are one of those 1000 homes did feel the need to contribute; sadly not in a constructive way. Blocking them is better than the alternative, which is letting them continue to screw things up until they get bored and possibly ruin many more pages for many more readers. If there are indeed "more than 1000 homes behind the same firewall", then there's a good chance that they all have the same IP address as far as the outside world is concerned; if this is the case, only one IP address will have been blocked, so it's not really "harsh" blocking of "so many IPs". Finally, such blocks are always temporary and usually limited to anonymous users, and can thus be avoided simply by creating an account (which takes about ten seconds) and leaving it logged in.

    2. Re:Also blocked by gnuman99 · · Score: 1

      IPv6 with static addressing, but no, we don't need it. Dynamic IPv4 is why asshats are good and well on the internets - you can't really block them.

    3. Re:Also blocked by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      on the other hand, for those of us who are well-meaning but often have views that rub people up the wrong way, or express ourselves badly, they're a godsend defence against asshat admins who casually consider the banstick a valid way to win an argument.

      --
      FGD 135
    4. Re:Also blocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like the recent turn your journal entries have taken. The whole "I am starving" and "Fuck The World" stuff. It seems like you are moving your fictional "hero" towards death by either starvation, suicide, or homicide. Hopefully, it will happen soon.

      Your character will become a martyr in the binary world of Slashdot. Congratulations, you are an hero.

    5. Re:Also blocked by RailGunner · · Score: 1

      I could try creating a thousand sock-puppet accounts

      You already did:

      Shteven, Omaze, hairpinblue, Don Qigong, Foo Moe Dee, FuMoDi, maximilln, SilverspurG, and I'm sure there are several others.

    6. Re:Also blocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow RG, even _I_ never figured you for such a retard.

      Shteven isn't HiLJs. That one's mine. Whiff number one.

      If you were watching HiLJ's journals at the time when you were actively trolling him (and rather viciously and juvenilely for someone who claims the level and calibre that you do) you'd know that he began as maximilln and then turned to SSG, quite in line with his IRC nicknames on Undernet, which made it quite easy for us to track and continually harass him. Or have you forgotten that part about '98-'05? We had fun, you were part of it, you shared in some of the e-mail jokes.

      None of us saw Omaze, not that he made many posts with that account before he disappeared for most of '06 and then showed up just before Christmas last year as HiLJ. Hairpinblue was his obvious personal account to go with his HiLJ advertising character. You're totally whiffing on number two if you didn't see that connection.

      Don QiGong was an obvious troll account for Stevie to see how closely we were watching for him. You've horribly underestimated our quarry (or overestimated your own worth, or both) if you think that even Stevie would be dumb enough to post such an obvious JE on the first day of signing up that account. All that FooMoeDee stuff was just dealing with us (yes, you, Pudge, Jhon, MH42, Red, and the rest of us from the #linux/help crowd) when we were giving him absolute daily hell. Whiff number three. You're out.

      RG... I appreciated you when I could use you to further my own online amusement... but with this post you've really demonstrated the reason why I kicked you to the curb: You're an imbecile of enormous proportions. When you're on your own personal ego-trip you easily fall prey to overestimating your own skill and vastly underestimating the skill of your target.

      Thank God I got rid of you when I did.

    7. Re:Also blocked by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      Fuckwad. I AM Red Foreman, so don't pull that crap around here.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    8. Re:Also blocked by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      Why did Fort Knox quit posting, other than AC?

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    9. Re:Also blocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Screw you sweetheart. We've been trying to make Stevie give up and jump off a tall building since anyone can remember. We've played interested women on the network, we've posted profiles of him on polygamy sites, we had him trojaned (using e-mail cards we sent him as those interested women) for years before he made the switch to Linux, we had a server running processes specifically to pass his screenshots, keystrokes, and network traffic logs to anyone running the properly modified mIRC script. We had his user information, we had his nicknames on alert for any IM network in existence, we edited chat logs and sent them to admins (and law enforcement) to draw their scrutiny to him. We had his home telephone number, his work telephone number, his address and, when he bought a new motherboard, video card, audio card, and hard drive (because our trojan had sufficiently fucked his system), we had his credit card number. We even had a peon at wi.rr.com who gave us the little bit that we needed to keep tabs on him after he switched to Linux. You have no idea how enormously useful that little ruse was when he moved to comcast. Comcast wanted evidence and all we had to do was refer to ticket numbers we had filed through the wi.rr.com peon. It was so easy, it was so funny, that we had an extra online party just to celebrate it.

      When cDc did BO we thought they'd stolen the code that we wrote just to fuck with poor wittle Stevie. When p2p filesharing became big with the kiddies we thought they'd stolen our server code that we wrote because it was so remarkably similar.

      Guess how many of us have been caught? NONE. ZERO. That's right sweetheart. We can do what we do to anyone, at any time, given the proper amount of interest.

      Don't tell us what we can and can't do to Stevie. We've been doing it forever. We've ensured that his life has been a subprime hell, and we've raked innumerable amounts of half-witted sysadmins into our game based on suspicion alone. Sysadmins are so cocky about their clique. "Hello, I'm the admin from blah-blah-blah, and I have reason to believe that user maximilln is abusing your network." "Hello, I'm the admin from blah-blah-blah, and I have reason to believe that your employee, Steven, is abusing your network and involved in this, this, and this." There's our trojan, in the network logs, putting in just the right packets to add just enough substance to make it warrant escalating the scrutiny.

      What do you think constant, undeserved, floodlight scrutiny does to someone who's already having a hard time? I'll tell you what: IT'S FUCKING HILARIOUS.

      We're admins and that means instant credibility. We're in the IN club. Stevie, on the other hand, is just another one of our hundreds of targets that we toy with for fun.

      Have fun being homeless, Stevie! Don't think we're ever going to let up on you. We've already infiltrated half the social network in the San Diego area. We had that all on our own long before you ever thought about moving there. When none of the companies you interviewed with would extend to you an offer of employment: that was us. A couple of phone calls to netadmins ensures that at least one person on the interview review panel will say "I'm not quite sure about this candidate." You couldn't even move to Siberia before we'd be there to ensure that, no matter what you're doing, you'll be stuck as an entry level schmuck.

    10. Re:Also blocked by RailGunner · · Score: 1

      Nice try, HomelessInLaJolla - but there's one glaring error: I never trolled you, and we've already been over that.

    11. Re:Also blocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is some of the weirdest stuff I've read on /. --the Homelessinlajolla troll character and the others characters supposedly trolling him.
      He claims he's starving and homeless. Since when do starving people have the energy to post 100s of journal entries? And now that it's the rainy season in lajolla, how does he keep his computer dry if he's really homeless?
      What's the real story?

    12. Re:Also blocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Nice try, HiLJ sockpuppet.

      Seriously, this is transparent. Trying to garner sympathy for your fictional character by posting a "tell all" post from some nameless cog in the "Wheel of Destruction!!!" which is out to get you?

      WOW.

    13. Re:Also blocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Similarly, you _could_ go get a job, you _could_ get your life back together, you _could_ stop relying on the kindness of others for your continued existence... but why would you want to? The last time you felt like giving a damn was when you insulted an old woman asking about a bakery.

    14. Re:Also blocked by pudge · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is he's talking about me, but I have ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA what ANY of this is about.

  8. You can't complain by log1385 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Any project like Wikipedia will be subject to abuse. That's just the way things are. Actually, I'm always surprised the Wikipedia is as reliable as it is, and that so many people are willing to devote their time and effort to make it better.

    --
    Seek and ye shall find.
    1. Re:You can't complain by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      That's exactly it, really. If you give Joe and Jane Randoms admin priviledges, then on average some of those people are going to do dodgy things with them, or make mistakes. That's why there's a concensus structure built into the Wikipedia's higher-level administration which (much like the need for concensus in article-building) tends to weed this stuff out. Alas the subject of the article didn't bother looking at the Dispute Resolution pages and instead just extrapolated wildly as to the motives for these actions, making the usual category errors as to how Wikipedia operates (it's more like a herd of cats than The Borg).

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    2. Re:You can't complain by moro_666 · · Score: 1

      you're correct. i can't really complain.
      after all it's a free web page from a regular user's point of view.

      _however_ i can choose not to donate one penny to wikipedia for a f-up like this. and not because of this single article story, but because of the way it was handled. jim should have brought it out to the open from the start, but no, they just had to do "something" "behind the curtains".

      jimbo, stop it right there, before you destroy the wikipedia. if you have troubles with users or their writings, at least explain to people properly what's going on and why. just letting a group of admins silently "kill stuff off" and making it look like some mysterious dark thing does not work in 2007, the only thing that you'll get is resistance.

      --

      I'd tell you the chances of this story being a dupe, but you wouldn't like it.
  9. Already taken care of by overshoot · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Register has up another article exposing abuse of Wikipedia's policies and processes [CC].
    That problem has been solved: the El Reg IP range has been blocked now.
    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
    1. Re:Already taken care of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      I've seen entire /26s blocked by idiot moderators on Wikipedia, it happened once because I didn't register and undid vandalism that was being done by a registered user. They actually banned me for massive vandalism, then I skipped ips since they are dynamically assigned from my isp, in response for this, "use of sockpuppets," they banned the entire /26, and when it was pointed out how fucking retarded the entire situation was, they declared that I should register or expect this.

      Wikipedia is entirely untrustworthy and run by a bunch of blooming wackos with no concept of reality.

    2. Re:Already taken care of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Wikipedia is entirely untrustworthy and run by a bunch of blooming wackos with no concept of reality

      I agree, which is why I only post on Slashdot!

    3. Re:Already taken care of by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      I don't know if you were being sarcastic or not, but Slashdot's moderating policies are complete bullshit too, and most users are somewhere very far away from reality.

    4. Re:Already taken care of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent +1.

      The wikipedia administration, as a whole, is fucking batshit insane.

    5. Re:Already taken care of by kalirion · · Score: 1

      The difference being that Slashdot moderators do not ban users or IP ranges.

    6. Re:Already taken care of by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      Not because they don't want to, but because they're unable to.

    7. Re:Already taken care of by kalirion · · Score: 1

      True, but they were intentionally not given that power. On the other hand, Slashdot moderators are semi-random so they're not really analogous to Wikipedia admins. Are there people in the Slashdot hierarchy with the power to ban users and IPs?

  10. Story seems dubious to me by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's notable{{cn}} (heh) that, reading between the lines, Jimbo Wales is actually pretty convinced that those editing the articles concerned in the way described and banned for the fact are acting in bad faith.

    Ainsworth has contributed more featured articles to Wikipedia than all but six other writers. But in October, when he attempted to edit the Weiss article, he was immediately banned from the site for 24 hours by an administrator known as "Durova" - the administrator at the heart of the secret mailing list scandal.

    And Durova's ban was seconded by none other than Jimmy Wales.

    "Durova [has] my full support here. No nonsense, zero tolerance, shoot on sight," Wales wrote on the site. "No kidding, this has gone on long enough."

    and

    Without a doubt, Judd Bagley has seriously angered the powers that be at Wikipedia. He's even received an email from Jimbo Wales saying: "Your feigned innocence is not very endearing" and "It would be helpful if you could come to terms with the fact that you have behaved very very badly over a long period of time."

    Not exactly evidence of a cabal acting in secret. More evidence of a group of people behaving trollishly and being banned for doing so.

    Indeed, looking at the original sequence of events that supposedly set this off:

    Bagley restored the link to Businessjive. A few hours later, the same person removed it. So Bagley restored it again. And it was removed again.

    it looks like the whole thing was set off because of link-spamming from the supposed "victims" in this case.

    The Register doesn't give us enough information to actually tell if this is the case or if there's some other reason. It doesn't report in full what was said by anyone proposing bans on the so-called victims. It portrays the events as arbitrary despite the fact that, actually, these things don't go on in secret. Most telling of all, if Wikipedia's admins were banning people without presenting reasons for doing so, this would be newsworthy which means the fact they're not saying no reasons were given is itself telling.

    Very poor from El Reg. There may be a story right there, but anyone familiar with Wikipedia who's capable of reading between the lines is going to give a big "WTF" and assume El Reg is making up controversy where none exists.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    1. Re:Story seems dubious to me by falcon5768 · · Score: 1
      Well he outright said that Wiki was presenting reasons why. The reasons why wiki banned them though does not in any way match the facts at hand, nor the time stamp for those events taking place.

      While I agree there is still some bit of evidence missing here, there is definatly something fishy going on, and it wouldn't be the first time the admins and owner of wiki have been publicly outed for being liars and biased.

      --

      "Slashdot, where telling the truth is overrated but lying is insightful."

    2. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Appeals to Authority don't make very good arguments. Basically all you've told us is that Jimbo Wales said the bans were OK, so they must be. As far as "link-spamming," what you've written there is pretty much worthless as proof. Such revert wars go on all the time at Wikipedia. You've given no compelling evidence whatsoever that the people were banned fairly, had the ban reasons communicated, or that the people banned and community had chances to provide input.

    3. Re:Story seems dubious to me by jjohnson · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The parent isn't saying "Jimmy said it's good, and I believe him", it's poining out that the Reg article failed to give compelling (or any) evidence that the bans were *unfair*, the reasons *uncommunicated*, or the banned *prevented* from offering input--it's another one-sided attack job by El Reg, which has long had a vendetta against Wikipedia.

      It would be an interesting story if it all happened as the article described, but I don't trust the Register any more than I trust Wikipedia, especially when the latter is the former's topic.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    4. Re:Story seems dubious to me by nuzak · · Score: 1

      > Basically all you've told us is that Jimbo Wales said the bans were OK, so they must be.

      Heck, I draw the opposite conclusion of the GP: Wales is as much of a controlling paranoid lunatic as Durova.

      Have you ever read wikipedia adminspeak? It's an unparseable argot of acronymic jargon. The only thing that I've seen that read similarly was ops manuals for Scientology orgs.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    5. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Raul654 · · Score: 0

      "anyone familiar with Wikipedia who's capable of reading between the lines is going to give a big "WTF" and assume El Reg is making up controversy where none exists."

      They are. Bagley is a huge troll, and no objective person could possibly believe his "contributions" to Wikipedia (spamming, using spyware to infect admins) were positive. Surprise surprise, he got banned. This is not news, except in that the Reg is trolling Wikipedia trying to make news out of a non-story.

      --


      To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
      --E.C. Stanton
    6. Re:Story seems dubious to me by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Actually, no I didn't. I said that Jimbo Wales appears to be acting on good faith, based upon what was written. Given he oversees Wikipedia, it's hard for me not to take that into account, especially given the lack of factual information in the El Reg article.

      El Reg has given "undue weight" to someone who has a problem with stock shorting and is finding it hard to convince Wikipedia to incorporate their opinions on stock shorting and Overstock.com into related articles. Either Wikipedia's admins are acting in bad faith or they're not. What Wales is doing is certainly relevant to that discussion. Wales is apparently acting in good faith. That suggests to me that the Wikipedia admins he's watching over are doing so too.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    7. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Its hard to say whether or not the bans were unfair when the rational for doing them are done on secret mailing lists. Thats the problem here. Theres no way to prove that the bans were fair because the reasons behind them were secret. The poster I responded to wrote in such a way to say "Well, Jimbo says the reasons were fair, so they were," which is a pretty nasty appeal to authority. Especially because Jimbo doesn't exactly have a good record for this sort of thing (initially defending the guy who faked his credentials, IIRC).

      If there were easily accessible proof that this person did something wrong, they could produce that instead. Or is this another one of those secret mailing list bans? Granted, El Reg didn't produce much other than hyperbole, but to respond with appeals to authority and hand-waving makes me wonder if there isn't something to what they're saying, especially considering the way the admins have started to operate.

      Moreover, Jimbo's "no tolerance" language certainly doesn't endear me to his point of view.

    8. Re:Story seems dubious to me by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      The reasons for the IP block ban are explained but not the user bans. The user bans are, ultimately, more interesting as they target specific actions by named individuals.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    9. Re:Story seems dubious to me by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Ainsworth has contributed more featured articles to Wikipedia than all but six other writers. But in October, when he attempted to edit the Weiss article, he was immediately banned from the site for 24 hours by an administrator known as "Durova" - the administrator at the heart of the secret mailing list scandal.

      And Durova's ban was seconded by none other than Jimmy Wales.

      "Durova [has] my full support here. No nonsense, zero tolerance, shoot on sight," Wales wrote on the site. "No kidding, this has gone on long enough."

      If you look at the history on the talk page for Greg Weiss, these events actually occurred the other way around. Jimmy Wales posted his support of Durova's announcement of a zero tolerance policy before Ainsworth was banned. After the ban, Wales then suggested that the zero tolerance policy was perhaps being taken a bit far (Ainsworth was banned for posting off-topic content on the talk page when he responded to Durova's also off-topic threats).

    10. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Znork · · Score: 1

      "There may be a story right there"

      And if there is a story here it would have been much better spent investigating wether Bagley or Byrne had a point about naked short selling. Wikipedia countering obviously obnoxious spam/kooks isnt particularly interesting. Actually proving the kooks correct (and subject to a massive conspiracy to silence them, perpetrated not just by Wikipedia but most media as well) would be of much more journalistic value.

      Otherwise, most of us prefer our reality moderately kook-prefiltered.

    11. Re:Story seems dubious to me by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Its hard to say whether or not the bans were unfair when the rational for doing them are done on secret mailing lists.

      That doesn't appear to be the case. User:WordBomb shows a reason and links to criteria that appears to me to be reasonable. El Reg managed to avoid pointing out that WordBomb had been banned for sock-puppetry.

      The poster I responded to wrote in such a way to say "Well, Jimbo says the reasons were fair, so they were,"

      No, I didn't, that's clearly a lie as by the time you wrote the above I'd already responded to your comment. I originally said Wales appears to be acting in good faith after quoting lines from the hit-job El Reg has written on him that actually prove the case. The story suggests that a secretive Wikipedia cabal censored WordBomb. There's nothing apparently secret about it, the alleged "cabal"'s de-facto leader is clearly acting in good faith, so the story is dubious.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    12. Re:Story seems dubious to me by john83 · · Score: 1

      Very poor from El Reg. There may be a story right there, but anyone familiar with Wikipedia who's capable of reading between the lines is going to give a big "WTF" and assume El Reg is making up controversy where none exists. The Register has a very anti-wikipedia slant to all of its articles on the subject. There's one author in particular, Orlowski I think, who has written many such articles. That doesn't mean there's nothing going on, but if it's on El Reg, assume it's being interpreted in the least favourable light possible.
      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    13. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Compholio · · Score: 1

      Its hard to say whether or not the bans were unfair when the rational for doing them are done on secret mailing lists. Thats the problem here.
      Just take a second and look at some of the edits described in the article. I don't have time to go through everything but a quick look at the reference to "70.23.85.112" shows a battle between him and "67.164.193.128" where he continually removes inappropriate editing by (according to the article) the "victim".

      Example 1:

      The town of Harrison, NY is known to be home to several individuals either directly or indirectly involved in the practice of illegal naked shorting. To paraphrase Shakespeare: "Methinks they doth protest too much."

      Example 2:
      Before:

      [ ... URL ... Regulators Cite Little Evidence of Naked Shorting]
      After:

      [ ... URL ... As Exected, Corrupt Regulators Cite Little Evidence of Naked Shorting]
      Looks to me like the guy was trying to run a smear campaign and the editors came down on him, just like they should. These edits don't require an explanation, a little kid could tell that they're not appropriate.
    14. Re:Story seems dubious to me by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      It portrays the events as arbitrary despite the fact that, actually, these things don't go on in secret.

      Hmm? Did you miss this article? Or this policy?
       
      There is plenty of arbitary and secret activities going 'round on Wikipedia.
    15. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Tiew · · Score: 1

      I agree this story is dubious. I'm surprised everyone is jumping to assume Wiki is in the wrong not the guy accusing them. Looking at the talk page for the naked short selling artical makes me much more inclined to side with the Wiki establishment here. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Naked_short_selling

    16. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well thats nice but it your actually read the Reg story that is mentioned. Though since it's from the victims point of view he was banned for restoring a defaced entry to the way it should be

      *begin sarcasm
      wow another person involved in this has another point of view on the same events that happened? that bastard!
      *end sarcasm

    17. Re:Story seems dubious to me by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Did you miss this article?

      Yes, did you read the comments?

      Or this policy?

      {{cn}}

      There is plenty of arbitary and secret activities going 'round on Wikipedia.

      Sure, there may well be. But when people are banned the reasons are available for all to see. They were in this case. Why did El Reg not publish the fact that the supposed "victim" in this case was actually banned for sock-puppetry?

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    18. Re:Story seems dubious to me by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

      Very poor from El Reg. There may be a story right there, but anyone familiar with Wikipedia who's capable of reading between the lines is going to give a big "WTF" and assume El Reg is making up controversy where none exists. Of the information I can personally verify on random searches into Wikipedia, I give it low marks in terms of accuracy. I'm much more inclined to think that El Reg might have a point here. At any rate, I trust their label a lot more than I trust Wikipedia.
    19. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jimbo Wales is actually pretty convinced that those editing the articles concerned in the way described and banned for the fact are acting in bad faith.

      I don't think you know much about Wales. There are plenty of fine examples of Wales thinking and doing completely ridiculous, petty things.

    20. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Rycross · · Score: 1

      No, I didn't, that's clearly a lie as by the time you wrote the above I'd already responded to your comment.

      I was writing my comment at the time you posted that one, so no I didn't read your comment before I wrote mine. And no, it isn't a lie, its my interpretation of what you were saying.

      he story suggests that a secretive Wikipedia cabal censored WordBomb. There's nothing apparently secret about it, the alleged "cabal"'s de-facto leader is clearly acting in good faith, so the story is dubious.

      Its not clear from the quotes you posted that he was acting in good faith. There was nothing in the posts other than Jimbo's word that the bans were appropriate. It appears that I'm misinformed about the legitimacy of the ban as pointed out by other posters, but those posters put forth information, not opinion based on authority. They also didn't call me a liar.

    21. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Rycross · · Score: 1

      1) It appears I'm wrong. Thanks for pointing that out.
      2) Thanks for posting actual factual information, instead of a Wikipedia administrators opinion on the matter.

    22. Re:Story seems dubious to me by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      There was nothing in the posts other than Jimbo's word that the bans were appropriate.

      Sure, because if I'm acting in bad faith I privately email people I'm being unfair to, and accuse them privately and completely pointlessly of things they're not doing. Riiiiiiiight.

      The evidence is that Wales was acting in good faith. He believed sincerely that the people being banned were acting in bad faith as is evident from his public and his private behavior.

      That's the point. Your characterization of what I wrote is completely off-base. I wasn't saying the people being banned were acting in bad faith because Wales said so, I said that Wales' behavior shows he believed they were acting in bad faith, which means Wales and the other admins were acting in good faith when they banned them. It's that simple.

      And that is the point, ultimately. Because El Reg isn't accusing Wikipedia of merely making an error, it's accusing them of cabalism and conspiracy. Whether the victims really are trolls or not is a secondary issue in that discussion.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    23. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wikitruth.info - for people with too much time on their hands, and who can't spend that time trolling Wikipedia 'cos all of their sockpuppets have been banned.

      Not a great advertisement for finding faults in Wikipedia.

    24. Re:Story seems dubious to me by fumblebruschi · · Score: 1

      It did seem the Register was using pretty loose standards here. It says that Bagley "became convinced" that Weiss was sock-puppeting, and that Bagley "was sure" that Weiss was the real identity behind a few IP addresses. But the Register did not investigate that for itself, nor, apparently, did it even ask Bagley what his reasons were for believing it. From the article you could just as easily conclude that Bagley is a paranoid troll. Be nice if the paper actually did some research.

    25. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Makes sense, as Wales is a scientologist.

    26. Re:Story seems dubious to me by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Well, to me, The Register does come across as one of those places where, for some petty reason, they have something against Wikipedia. There are also some like that at Kuro5hin.org. I honestly don't know why Wikipedia gets picked on to the extent that it does. I think you'd have to be a bit of a fucktard to simply hate the site (rather than being honestly critical of it).

      Personally, I think Wikipedia needs a real revamp. In terms of the interface, too, not just the editorial workflow. It feels pretty clunky now that it's no longer someone's little experiment. And a bit less freedom would probably help. The "anyone can edit it" idea has proven that it can work as a concept, but now it needs refining, and I'm glad Jimmy Wales realises this.

    27. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wales is an Objectivist. Different cult, less jargon.

    28. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sure got that nailed. The Register, for some reason, hates Wikipedia with a passion; any story they run on it *will* be making up a controversy where (presumably) none exists. It's like reading the Stürmer for getting the facts about judaism - totally insane.

      Incidentally, this is pretty much the reason why I don't read the Register for *anything* anymore, too. Journalists are supposed to at least *try* and be objective; if they deliberately lie and distort the facts in stories concerning one topic, how can I trust them for anything else?

    29. Re:Story seems dubious to me by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      And no, it isn't a lie, its my interpretation of what you were saying.

      BTW, yes, it's a lie. You had it explained to you twice by the time you hit the submit button, at least once by the person you were replying to, and as I said, my me several minutes previous.

      It wasn't, by this time, your "interpretation", because you knew your interpretation to be false. You'd had it pointed out to you. You continued at this point, so it was no longer an error on your part, it was quite deliberate.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    30. Re:Story seems dubious to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bagley is an ass but so is Gary Weiss and there's no doubt he was not only in a massive conflict of interest with his editing as Mantanmoreland but that he was also sockpuppeting (something Fred Bauder confirmed). I understand why Bagley/Wordbomb was banned and agree with it. What hasn't been explained is why Weiss/Mantanmoreland wasn't banned and worse why he was protected by editors such as SlimVirgin and even Jimmy Wales himself.

  11. Oh, well if the Register says so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The story must be entirely accurate and non-sensationalized. As you'd expect from any story containing the phrase "wikipedia cabal."

  12. I stopped editing Wikipedia because of this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and controversies like it long ago. I created over 600 articles, mostly on Martian and Mercurian craters, and the inner workings of the U.S. executive branch of government. The problem with Wikipedia is that only the power-hungry authoritarians seek to become administrators, while the regular editors are content to just sit there and write rather than formulate policy.

    1. Re:I stopped editing Wikipedia because of this by Gloy · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the problem would go away if people stopped seeing it as one. Isn't it rather like the way people who don't do anything useful end up in management, supervising those who actually get the job done?

    2. Re:I stopped editing Wikipedia because of this by celle · · Score: 1

      Ya, we need a genetic test for these fuckers so we can get them out of government as well as wikipedia.

  13. The answer is obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    remove all entries related to biographies (living or dead) i dont remember seeing biogs in Encyclopedia Britannica so why should Wiki have them ? i see way too many ego entries about [insert random american blogger/nonperson] for them to be of any value to the public there are plenty of other venues for personal promotion this kind of crap is wikipedias equivalent of spam but instead of product promotion its corporate/blogger promotion wouldnt it be just better to start a different wiki just for biogs and egos and i dunno perhaps call it "myspace" or "blogspot"

    1. Re:The answer is obvious by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      If you haven't seen biographies in Encyclopedia Britannica, then you haven't been reading Encyclopedia Britannica.

      Your suggestion is not a very good one. How would you describe a US Civil War battle without bringing any of the commanders into it? How could you have a discussion about anything in history without getting into the personalities behind the event. Even the light bulb article would be vapid without mentioning the inventors.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    2. Re:The answer is obvious by 2short · · Score: 1

      The answer is always obvious if your completely ignorant of the question.

      "i dont remember seeing biogs in Encyclopedia Britannica..."

      Um, yeah. There's like, a couple at least.

    3. Re:The answer is obvious by Serge_Tomiko · · Score: 1

      He was probably referring to living persons (ie the myspace reference).

      I do agree, biographical entries should be about the entire lives of peoples. That is only possible until someone is dead.

    4. Re:The answer is obvious by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      remove all entries related to biographies (living or dead) Hey, he said living or dead, not me!

      I do agree, biographical entries should be about the entire lives of peoples. That is only possible until someone is dead. People are just as fired-up today about Ronald Reagan as they were when he was alive. The article about him would be just as contentious now as it was 3 years ago when he was still alive. Moreover, you wouldn't be able to truly cover the fall of the Berlin wall without covering Reagan and Gorbachev - plus other actors of the day. Do you really want to omit the fall of communism from Wikipedia just because of the threat of non-neutral POV?

      For certain issues, you will never get agreement even after 100s of years. Start a thread about the US Civil War being "caused by slavery" and see what I mean. Generations of American history textbooks have treated the South delicately so that they could sell books, and as a result there are generations of people who were taught that the Civil War was not caused by slavery.
      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  14. Re:Thanks by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, did what you say have any content? All I got from your comment was, "We said it would fail and now it has, oh the humanity." You could have copy pasted that comment into any thread about anything failing, and it would have had all the same relevance.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  15. Printable version, 4 fewer pages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
  16. Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Sockatume · · Score: 4, Informative

    This sort of stuff happens all the time, the only difference here is that somebody's decided to sell the idea to the general public as a devious "Wikipedia elite" rather than a couple of administrators with personal axes to grind. I notice there was no reference to using Wikipedia's own complaint processes to try and resolve the issue - just the usual edit, edit, get blocked, complain about it on your blog pattern.

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    1. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1
      But you can't try to go through the process because the zomg cabal is there to keep you down!1!

      Seriously. Administrative abuse is a problem at Wikipedia like it is at any site that has volunteer administrators (and many online and real-world institutions that have paid and unpaid administrators). It's the insinuations that there's some sort of evil cabal that are ridiculous. As a formerly-active Wikipedia administrator typically more interested in keeping the place clean than in Politics, I can say that it's pretty much a daily occurrence for some nut or another to try and edit some page in some ridiculous fashion (you know, Bush is the devil, XYZ group is corrupt and here's a bunch of blogs saying why, look at my free energy device, et cetera et cetera), get blocked, then cry zomgfoul! the cabal is keeping me down!!! Quite frankly, if you can't differentiate yourself from the Time Cube guy when you're crying foul, your complaint (valid or otherwise) will be lost in a noise of stupidity. (Tips for standing out: Be rational and collected, try to be calm, and drop the zomgopressed!!! angle.)

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    2. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I notice there was no reference to using Wikipedia's own complaint processes to try and resolve the issue - just the usual edit, edit, get blocked, complain about it on your blog pattern.

      You clearly didn't read the entire article. I suggest you go back and finish it. FYI, it's 5 pages long.

      --
      "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    3. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      I read the whole thing, albeit quickly. It seemed like the only attempt at contacting the admins was made by The Register looking for comments on the argument, but I'll double check.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    4. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Yep, he put some "unflattering" comments into the article regarding his Wiki sparring partner, and was banned for it. We have it on his word that this was part of a spectacularly ill-advised effort to get the guy he just insulted to perform the dispute escalation. So he was an asshole, or a moron. Your pick, but either way he didn't try to escalate the edit conflict.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    5. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      For clarity:

      "I did this by adding some true but unflattering details to the Gary Weiss article, expecting Mantanmoreland to object and escalate the matter to the official Wikipedia dispute resolution process, resulting in Mantanmoreland's banning from Wikipedia."

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    6. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just the usual edit, edit, get blocked, complain about it on your blog pattern.

      That's odd, since it was described as the decidedly unusual "edit, edit, get blocked, get unblocked, 'investigate' things for a year, complain about it on your own website, get permanently blocked on Wikipedia."

      Perhaps you could point to the Wikipedia policy that permits the permanent blocking of people who disagree with Wikipedia. The last time I checked, permanent banning was reserved for those who engaged in repeated and persistent vandalism of the content itself.

    7. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by phlamingo · · Score: 1

      Did you even read the article?

      --
      I had forgotten how much cooler teenagers look when they are smoking. Oh, wait ...
    8. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Twice, one skim one close. Any particular questions or do you just not like my conclusions?

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    9. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

      Administrative abuse is a problem at Wikipedia like it is at any site that has volunteer administrators How many of those other sites are trying to be neutral reference sites? Do you understand why this may give some of us concerns over the whole site?

      I don't trust anyone to form an opinion for me, so I did my own testing. Based on a random search of topics where I can personally verify the accuracy of the data, I give Wikipedia low marks. If they dumped 95% of the site, the world might even be a better place, but in my opinion, it's just not worth the effort to figure out where the good data is.
    10. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You clearly didn't read the entire article. I suggest you go back and finish it.

      I've never read an article on The Register that wasn't hyperbolic bullshit. I'm sure there's some grain of truth in there, but why should anyone waste time reading tabloid beyond entertainment.

    11. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the problem is SlimVirgin being an over aggressive admin and not being checked, not Wikipedia itself.

      Posting anon, don't want to be banned.

    12. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For topics I know something about I'd give Wikipedia much higher marks.

      It's definitely better informed on those topics than the general public. Which means if the general public read Wikipedia to learn about those topics, although they won't come out with the knowledge they could get from a lifetime's study or even from a degree course on the subject, they'll at least know more than when they started. That's pretty good for an encyclopedia.

      Plus, it makes people like Andrew Schlafly practically incoherent with rage. That's got to be a good thing.

    13. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by mrwolf007 · · Score: 1

      I know its uncool to RTFA, especially if its 5 pages long, but that (complaining and trying to resolve the issue) happened.

    14. Re:Wikipedia edit dispute occurs, more at eleven by Harlockjds · · Score: 1

      using the "complaint processes to try and resolve the issue" is getting responses like

      "It is clear that Wikipedia itself is under attack from a bunch of self-impressed publicity-seeking anarcho-brats who have more interest in carping, whining, and cyber-bullying than helping to work collaboratively to make a better encyclopedia. I think Wikipedia has every right to protect itself from this crap."

      so yeah that's not really productive :D

  17. All or nothing by overshoot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd hate for Wikipedia to be taken down over some scandal.
    So there's no point in wasting cycles on Wikipedia's imperfections, since the only alternative is its total destruction?

    That's good to know -- I don't need to write up that material I was going to submit since Wiki is a "love it (as is) or leave it" regime.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
    1. Re:All or nothing by Torodung · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hey, whoa pardner. I'm not the one with the "all or nothing" attitude. There are plenty of people saying that this "scandal" somehow affects every article on Wikipedia, even the ones on the boiling point of water, and that is mostly because they have an agenda to take it all down.

      They don't like the idea of Wikipedia, or they are natural conspiracy theorists who think all power and centralized control is evil, and are willing to take Wiki down in their cause to reform it on an idealistic model of total anarchy, which anyone with a lick of sense knows wouldn't work, as evidenced by the vandalism problems Wikipedia has had.

      I don't want to see that agenda served. I think Wikipedia is a good idea, but it was inchoate, as all good ideas are, and they need time and balance to sort out the problems with that idea, without someone screeching "totalitarian" at what is little more than a bunch of snotty intellectuals with little to no PR experience and/or tact.

      Though they failed to mention Nazis, I am calling "Godwin" on the whole bit. I agree with you. It needs to be worked with, and praised for what it is, not assaulted.

      --
      Toro

    2. Re:All or nothing by Sockatume · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Characterising the project as ruled by a partisan elite with an army of drones at their disposal, just because of the actions of a few pissant administrators, is certainly doing a disservice to the 90% of Wikipedia admins, editors, and unregistered users who aren't complete assholes.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    3. Re:All or nothing by dtobias · · Score: 4, Informative

      Speaking as one of the people who was quoted in the article with critical comments about Wikipedia's leadership and policy, I'm certainly not out to "destroy" Wikipedia. I still like Wikipedia, use it as a reference all the time, and enjoy editing it (and hope they don't ban me for saying critical stuff about it). What I don't like is the attitude of certain cliques there, and I hope that articles like this lead to some reform that cuts off their power without destroying the site itself.

      --
      --Dan
      Web Tips
    4. Re:All or nothing by Torodung · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I didn't think you meant to hurt Wiki, just the article author. When a writer sources reasonable critical quotes amidst his theories of "cabals" and "black helicopters," he is doing you a grave disservice.

      I doubt you'll be banned for reasoned criticism, and I only think less of the author of this article, who clearly has a dire agenda, or is so wrapped up in media hype that he doesn't recognize it anymore. Some of these writers have it "turned up to 11" all the time.

      Best of luck to you. I'm sorry if I implicated everyone mentioned in the article. I was against the bombastic, ridiculous writing, not the people mentioned within.

      --
      Toro

    5. Re:All or nothing by Programmerman · · Score: 1

      "There are plenty of people saying that this "scandal" somehow affects every article on Wikipedia, even the ones on the boiling point of water, and that is mostly because they have an agenda to take it all down."

      That's because when the credibility of the medium is compromised, its entire contents take a hit. Were all articles ACTUALLY afflicted with scandal and bias? No. Of course not. But, will that happening on some articles affect the perception of readers?

    6. Re:All or nothing by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Before anyone complains about my numbers, I should point out that I'm including people who write fiction articles from an in-universe perspective, people who write mathematics and physics articles at a postdoc level, and everybody who has ever edited an article about Pokemon in my 10% "complete assholes" there. YMMV.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    7. Re:All or nothing by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      If that 90% continues to willingly tolerate the 10%... Then why shouldn't they be tarred with the same brush? In theory, they could rid themselves of the pissants. But they don't.

    8. Re:All or nothing by legojenn · · Score: 1

      "There are plenty of people saying that this "scandal" somehow affects every article on Wikipedia, even the ones on the boiling point of water, and that is mostly because they have an agenda to take it all down."

      ---

      Yeah, Some people say the boiling point of water is 100 degrees and others who insist that it's 212 degrees.

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    9. Re:All or nothing by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      They do, where people bother to use the complaints procedures. You can read up on past arbitrations against dodgy administrators in the archives.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    10. Re:All or nothing by axus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is a common theme in abuse of power... it's paranoia that people are out to get you, out to destroy everything. And the paranoia is used as justification for evil acts. Here's an idea: the people who own the servers aren't going to shut it down unless they want to. Armed guards aren't going to show up and take away the servers. Banning someone that speaks freely doesn't have anything to do with "an agenda to take it all down". It's hypocritical to condemn China for censoring journalists and websites, and then turn around and censor someone complaining about abuse of power.

    11. Re:All or nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its always the assholes that spoil things for everyone else. Why should Wikipedia be different.

    12. Re:All or nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, Jimbo controls everything wether you want to admit it or not, and he is part of this. He endorsed this whole mess, and has finally even admitted that wikipedia is not democratic, and anyone they don't agree with should be banned. That's pretty clearly a fundamental problem, not just some fringe 10%.

    13. Re:All or nothing by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      The full quote is: "Greatest misconception about Wikipedia: We aren't democratic. Our readers edit the entries, but we're actually quite snobby. The core community appreciates when someone is knowledgeable, and thinks some people are idiots and shouldn't be writing." So I assume you're an idiot, and are therefore pissed off that you don't get a fair shot at writing an encyclopedia?

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    14. Re:All or nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      natural conspiracy theorists who think all power and centralized control is evil

      Time out. You (among others) need to distinguish between power as in "the right to employ coercion (physical force) as a means" and power as in "the right to control an organization through voluntary association".

      Big. Freaking. Difference.

      In no way can any private organization be compared to political power, because the first prerequisite and defining characteristic of political power cannot be met: that special right to employ actual coercion as the means. You're not under the assumption that the Wikipedia was achieved at gunpoint, are you? Then obviously, under no circumstances can it be compared to political power.

    15. Re:All or nothing by spun · · Score: 1

      Don't doubt for a second that people are banned from wikipedia for reasonable criticism, I've seen it happen dozens of times. By the way, would you care to point out where in the article you see "bombastic, ridiculous writing?"

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    16. Re:All or nothing by mfnickster · · Score: 1

      > Yeah, Some people say the boiling point of water is 100 degrees and others who insist that it's 212 degrees.

      I think we should split the section off into a new article titled "Degree naming controversy." Anyone agree?

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    17. Re:All or nothing by dtobias · · Score: 1

      Well, the Register's style is overly sensationalized in general, and tends to draw heavily from people with axes to grind (including me in this case). The result is rather slanted, and to be taken with a big grain of salt (just as is true of Wikipedia articles themselves). However, the bigger issue, to me, is the way that Wikipedia insiders react by automatically dismissing articles like this as merely the ravings of properly-banned crackpots, and insisting that critics are always wrong and Wikipedia insiders are, if not always right all the time, still "the good guys" and needing to be reflexively and completely supported against the gang of evil trolls out to get them. This "us vs. them" mentality is the main thing wrong with Wikipedia nowadays.

      --
      --Dan
      Web Tips
    18. Re:All or nothing by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Oh God, no.

      I'm not saying that "there's nothing wrong with Wiki." I'm saying "two wrongs don't make a right." I'm saying "there's nothing wrong with Wiki that can't be fixed."

      There are some real problems going on at Wikipedia, mostly because it is a cutting edge idea, and therefore, there was no way to test the design before it failed. Guess what? BOOM!

      You remember the fiery results of early rocket tests, right? Same difference.

      I'm glad level headed people are participating, standing up for what they believe in, and refusing to be intimidated. If people are truly trying to form an authority at Wikipedia, the process should be transparent, and they should be given a very short leash.

      It was all the talk of "cabals" and "totalitarianism" that got my goat, especially since many other articles from The Register seem to be on a tear about Wikipedia.

      --
      Toro

    19. Re:All or nothing by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I think you're underselling the problem. Wikipedia is rife with propaganda, and suffers not just from the empowerment of a few zealots to squat on vast tracts of intellectual space by conspiracy, but also from a serious issue of lowest-common-denominator consensus worldview bias. It's nothing than an open, accountable reputation system couldn't fix, but I can't see that happening as long as Jimbo is drunk on the blood of his enemies.

      The solution then is to fork the content, but it would take someone with the kind of drive and vision of Jimbo to pull it off -- and against the entrenched competitive position of Wikipedia, it would be harder than Jimbo's very righteous accomplishment. If my other gigs pay off big enough, I might take it on, but not now, not until I'm independently funded.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    20. Re:All or nothing by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I think you're vastly underestimating the problem with the admins. It's actually doing a great service to the editors and unregistered users, when you try to out the corruption of the admins.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    21. Re:All or nothing by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Don't be foolish. It's 373.12 (at 1 atm, of course)

    22. Re:All or nothing by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      The persistence of dodgy administrators in the system indicates the process isn't working.

    23. Re:All or nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Though they failed to mention Nazis, I am calling "Godwin" on the whole bit.[citation needed]
    24. Re:All or nothing by georgewilliamherbert · · Score: 1

      (Disclaimer - I am a Wikipedia administrator)

      The key problem with this article was that it took Judd Bagley's claims as accurate and failed to look into any possible misbehavior that he may have committed that would have justified his permanent exclusion from the site.

      Yes, Bagley has made some valid points about Wikipedia failures and follies in the past. I can't think of any critic (internal or external) who has simply gone ape and not had any valid points at all ever.

      However, Bagley also has taken extreme measures in repeated attempts to libel, harrass, and stalk Wikipedia people. He's tried to find people's home IP addresses by sending emails with embedded images pulling from a webserver he controlled and could check the access log on. He's called and harrassed people, including threatening phone calls. He maintains a blog and website which has made exceptional threats against WP people.

      He got banninated because he's behaving really, really dangerously around people.

      When journalists take his word about the crimes committed against him as revealed truth, without bothering to see if perhaps he might have caused them by misbehaving himself, it folds and spindles and mutilates the truth and sticks it away in a sad little corner.

      Regarding Dan Tobias' comment on cliqueishness, there is some truth to this. But it cuts both ways. There is an "insiders club" of admins who are longstanding well known and work well together - I probably fall in this category - but very little happens in the club that's not out in public (wikien-l mailing list, or on the wiki). There are also critics who see any suspicious activity of the club as evidence for a malign cabal. I think Dan falls on that side but not to excess.

      Wikipedia is not perfect, and probably never will be. But it is almost entirely open (access to info and ability to participate) - very few things are private or excluded, including participation in articles or internal policy and administration. Unless you vandalize or attack people on the site, anybody in the world can come participate. The barrier to entry to starting to participate in the policy and administration is a couple of week's worth of experience and coming up to speed if you focus on it.

    25. Re:All or nothing by dtobias · · Score: 2

      Re: "Yes, Bagley has made some valid points about Wikipedia failures and follies in the past. I can't think of any critic (internal or external) who has simply gone ape and not had any valid points at all ever."...

      How about telling that to some of the other top admins, especially JzG (Guy)... he in particular always comes off breathing fire about how there's absolutely no redeeming value in anything any of the banned editors or outside critics or "attack sites" ever say... or even in any ideas that are in any way similar that are expressed by editors in good standing. People like that do their cause more harm than good.

      --
      --Dan
      Web Tips
    26. Re:All or nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oooh, call him a troll next. That'll get him.

    27. Re:All or nothing by Megaport · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that everytime there is a wikipedia story here, we see the sort of astroturfing the parent is trying to do with their post. I don't think that this is any sort of wiki-cabal response though, nor a conspiracy.

      Wikipedia's problems are _so_ deep that the admins will come here onto SLASHDOT (of all places) and argue that "if you've done nothing wrong, you don't have to fear our power. Only the bad guys are being hurt by these admin abuses."

      Jeebus, save me. Go back and read your post and repent, or turn in your card my friend.

      -M

      --
      # grep slashdot access.log | grep html | sort | uniq | wc -l 2604
    28. Re:All or nothing by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Yes. I call that "the means justify the means."

      They are doing terrible things, and so we must take "drastic action." This is the mentality of this so-called "cabal." I understand that.

      I also fully understand that wiki has some deep and terrible problems under the hood. Making these clique members circle the wagon with bombast and hype, however, is the last thing we should do. Such things just give them (mistaken and wrong-headed) justification. If you drive in the nails, they will feel exactly like Christ, and believe it too.

      I'm being misinterpreted as a "wiki" defender. I am not. I find Wikipedia useful, and there is so much good happening in many places, and I'm hoping future articles about its problems will be handled more responsibly, because irresponsible or glib reporting will lead to more excesses on the part of those we wish to "expose."

      Best to just talk to them, if you're close, than ratchet up the volume to 11. That's what I'm saying.

      --
      Toro

    29. Re:All or nothing by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Heh. The wise man said, "Let he who is without sin throw the first stone."

      On today's Internet, this translates to "Hey douchebags, don't throw stones." ;)

  18. Missing the point entirely by nunyadambinness · · Score: 0

    Yes, but is this relevant to 85% of the body of work?


    Yes, because there's no way to find out what the 15% is.

    Point is, it is a useful source of information.


    NO, the point is, it WAS a good source of information, which has NO credibility now.
    1. Re:Missing the point entirely by Xaositecte · · Score: 1

      Personal vendettas have little or no impact on, say, Particle Physics.

      I've found Wikipedia to be a useful starting point for researching highly technical or historical articles. You'd have to be mad to think of it as a good source for, say, politics, or still-living individuals.

    2. Re:Missing the point entirely by Gloy · · Score: 1

      Any still-living individual, or just one that happens to be in the media at the moment?

    3. Re:Missing the point entirely by butterwise · · Score: 1
      Oh really:

      "Particle Physics sucks." 03:59AM, 7 December 2007 Astrophysics (Talk | contribs) (16 bytes) (undo)
      --
      If a baby duck is a "duckling," why would anyone want to eat "dumplings?"
    4. Re:Missing the point entirely by mrwolf007 · · Score: 1

      Personal vendettas have little or no impact on, say, Particle Physics. The following is a diff from the Particle physics page.

      There is also a little known theory whereby the particles described may take the form of waves which upon refraction through various elementary gases/elements may make the waves appear to be of varrying colours. It is believed this is the origin of the phrase "Taste the Rainbow", most commonly heard on the advertisments for the popular candy "Skittles".
      Well,
      a) Someone must have come up with this theory, who? I dont know.
      b) Why are they advertising for candy on a particle physics page?
  19. Nothing new... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of people maintain their own page on wikipedia

    See this person for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atul_Chitnis

    He has managed to remove all controversial comments about him.

    See the talk page for details
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Atul_Chitnis

  20. Re:What do you know by hedwards · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't really think that it was a good idea to start with. The main reason being that between outright corruption and the constant state of flux it wasn't ever something that could be properly relied upon.

    It is unfortunate, but unlike an encyclopedia, the constant state of change makes it nearly impossible to use for anything beyond casual reference. Even grade school level reports require a more reliable source of information, or at least one which can be guaranteed to be the same when somebody goes to verify the claims.

  21. Precisely: you *can't* complain by overshoot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually, I'm always surprised the Wikipedia is as reliable as it is, and that so many people are willing to devote their time and effort to make it better.
    ... which they may stop doing if they can't complain, yes?
    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
    1. Re:Precisely: you *can't* complain by Sockatume · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Err, they can complain. This guy could've complained. Instead he chose to add "unsavoury" facts to his editing rival's page on the Wikipedia until he was banned for it. His excuse is that he expected the other guy to escalate it to a complaint. It's classic Wikipedia Edit War stuff, with the addition of a dubious conspiracy theory.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  22. Am I missing something? by Hillview · · Score: 1

    as mentioned here, http://o-smear.blogspot.com/2007/11/spam-what-spam.html - at least a portion of the "censored" content appeared to be links to Overstock.com products as advertised for sale. Hm, that reminds me.. I want a spam sammich!

    --
    -Troll, Flamebait, and Offtopic are NOT equivalent to disagreement.
  23. A very good thing by franois-do · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Wikipedia is like a garden : it is not fixed once and for all, and you have to keep fighting continously in order to keep it healthy and tidy. To this respect it does not differ much of our own organisms.

    The defense or truth by presenting all point of views with the origin of each one is both the goal of the Wikipedia and of a vigorous, sane society. "Germ-free" have probably no real future in a living world.

    --
    Signature omitted in order to save space. Thanks for your understanding.
    1. Re:A very good thing by SL+Baur · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wikipedia is like a garden Ah, that's the real truth, isn't it? We all know what you spread on the ground to make plants grow.

      Thanks for clearing that up.
  24. Is Anyone Really Surprised? by aquatone282 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anytime you put a group of humans together, a pecking order will be established and the group will establish and enforce its own set of informal rules, often overriding any formal rules the group may have set forth to guide its actions and behavior.

    It doesn't matter if its the local garden club or an open source project - leaders will emerge and their followers will do almost anything to protect the leader's position in the hopes of protecting their own elevated ranking.

    --
    What?
    1. Re:Is Anyone Really Surprised? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter if its the local garden club or an open source project - leaders will emerge and their followers will do almost anything to protect the leader's position in the hopes of protecting their own elevated ranking.

      I think the unique thing about wikipedia is that it's become so prominent that the editors have even a bigger rush of power than the local garden club president gets. Which makes their behavior proportionally more paranoid.

    2. Re:Is Anyone Really Surprised? by Zedrick · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up.

      It's so insightful that it hurts.

  25. Re:Thanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Writing is hard, and it seems you're not apt to do it.

  26. Re:Thanks by SnoopJeDi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Writing to inform isn't that hard either, you should try it sometime.

    Slashdot is not the place for subtle subtext and prose. Unless it's trolling or misinterpreted sarcasm. Then, go for it.

    The respondent posted his reply because your comment was not a complete maturation of an idea, and was more commentary than discussion-invoking.

  27. Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Apple+Acolyte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think it's necessary for those who are in decision making positions step out from behind the shadows and start making decisions in a more transparent way as part of some sort of formal Wiki council. It doesn't make sense for such a popular public resource to be controlled behind the scenes without any mechanism available to promote responsibility and accountability of the powers involved. And while I'm on the subject, am I the only one who absolutely detests the name Jimbo?

    --
    Part of the hardcore faithful who believed in Apple long before it was cool again to do so
    1. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Raul654 · · Score: 1

      "I think it's necessary for those who are in decision making positions step out from behind the shadows and start making decisions in a more transparent way as part of some sort of formal Wiki council."

      They do. (I'm on it)

      --


      To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
      --E.C. Stanton
    2. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Second your suggestion of more transparency at the Wikipedia. There really needs to be a more obvious "these are the guys who can fix your problems or kick your ass, this is how you contact them, this is what they're working on" thing going on there. At the moment, it's mostly publicly readable, but split over various talk pages and debates in obscure parts of the Wikipedia: namespace.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    3. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you claim to be transparent, then why are you threatening bans for people who log the #wikipedia channel?

      threats here

      wikipedia log bot (successfully evading their detection)

    4. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      That committee (including yourself) has a history of choosing their preferred version of accuracy over the prescribed NPOV. Its contribution toward impartiality is therefore significantly questionable.

      If you want the arbcom to be respected as an agent of open transparency, then make a stronger effort to encourage the inclusion and documentation of prominent contradictory viewpoints. Currently you fail at this.

    5. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Kiaser+Wilhelm+II · · Score: 1

      I'd call you a troll but you seem to be telling the truth based on your link. What is the official response to this policy?

      --
      Lord High Crapflooder The Right Honourable Vlad Craig Esther McDavenpherson III
      Destroyer of Mercatur.Net
    6. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by RomulusNR · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's not like arbitrators have an email list where they can chatter amongst themselves in private.

      --
      Terrorists can attack freedom, but only Congress can destroy it.
    7. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Raul654 · · Score: 1

      The point is, arbitration committee decisions are public, as are the arbitrator's votes themselves. The process is transparent.

      As for the mailing list - it exists because arbitrators need a forum to discuss and deliberate that is free (or mostly free) from noise. Just look at any evidence or workshop page to see what I mean by noise. The rules for who is allowed to subscribe to the arbcom mailing list are stated clearly and publicly, as is the list of people who subscribe to it.

      --


      To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
      --E.C. Stanton
    8. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Titoxd · · Score: 1

      A few links you may like: The List of administrators. If you prefer the MediaWiki-generated list, try Special:Listusers.

      Aside from those, there's two links that show pretty much where all the fights go on. The first one is the Administrators' noticeboard, and the second is the Incidents noticeboard. If you read those two pages, you'll pretty much know about every single petty conflict there is. Even if you don't remember the links, you can conveniently type WP:AN and WP:AN/I in the search bar located in the sidebar, and you'll reach the pages. Be warned that reading the pages might be slightly depressing.

    9. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why are you threatening to ban people who post public logs of what happens in #wikipedia?

      Doesn't sound very transparent to me.

    10. Re:Since Wikipedia is So Popular by volpe · · Score: 1

      [...]controlled behind the scenes without any mechanism available to promote responsibility and accountability of the powers involved.
      [yada yada yada]
      And while I'm on the subject, am I the only one who absolutely detests the name Jimbo?

      So, slash-coders, when's that "line-item moderation" feature going to be rolled out?

  28. Stories like this are hurting credibility by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Look, stories like this are seriously hurting The Register's credibility, and now Slashdot's as well for reposting this nonsense credulously. I can't believe anyone is even able to say "The Wikipedia Cabal" with a straight face. Wikipedia is fractured into many small groups and cliques just like the rest of human society (trust me, I know, I'm a Wikipedia administrator). All that's going on here is there is some dispute between a certain group of Wikipedians and some other people. I'm not going to say that either side is innocent because neither is. But to paint it as some gigantic conspiracy, with Wikipedia being ruled and dictated by some secret monolithic cabal, is hogwash.

    1. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by nuzak · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > The Register's credibility

      Tell me you didn't type that with a straight face.

      No, Wikipedia isn't being "ruled and dictated" by some "secret monolithic cabal". It's just got a bureacracy that's developed its own impenetrable code, and makes arbitrary decisions that act to reinforce their own feelings of mutual belonging in their weird little clique, regardless of whether it has any real positive impact on Wikipedia.

      Sure, there are good admins on WP. Jimbo Wales and his little entourage are not among them.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    2. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by owlnation · · Score: 2, Informative

      Look, stories like this are seriously hurting The Register's credibility, and now Slashdot's as well for reposting this nonsense credulously.
      Wrong on two levels.

      1. The Register -- what credibility?
      2. Nonsense? -- Stories like this are essential - it's called "freedom of the press". Obviously some Wikipedians don't like that sort of vandalism... um, I mean thing.

      At least The Register (for all its many faults) and Slashdot do attempt to get the truth about Wikipedia out there. That's very important, considering the kind of people who appear to be running Wikipedia.
    3. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by sam_paris · · Score: 1

      Well you would say that wouldn't you? It's basically an anti-wikipedia article so you don't exactly have a NPOV

    4. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by joeszilagyi · · Score: 3, Informative
      Its really not a giant conspiracy, Cyde. It's a pretty hamfisted bunch of tiny little ones, which makes it even worse. Especially as the scale of things they're willing to go to war over is pretty tiny and pathetic.

      Nice signature quote, by the way. Did you know they're gearing up for pre-production for a sequel? Last I read they're just buttoning down the funding.

      --
      Dude, where's my packet?
    5. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by nagora · · Score: 1
      It's just got a bureacracy that's developed its own impenetrable code, and makes arbitrary decisions that act to reinforce their own feelings of mutual belonging in their weird little clique, regardless of whether it has any real positive impact on Wikipedia.

      And the clear distinction with a cabal is what exactly?

      Jimbo Wales and his little entourage are not among them.

      Wiould that be Jimbo Wales and his cabal of elite Wikians who run the for-profit branch of the organisation and supress anything that threatens their credibility (and therefore their earnings)?

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    6. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by doas777 · · Score: 1

      If you've never noticed Cyber-elitist cliquism on the Internet, you haven't been paying much attention. also you do yourself a disservice by categorically dismissing the sources (El Reg and /.), since after all, coordinated categorical dismissal is exactly what the ruling clique is being accused of. way to prove your opponents point.

    7. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 1

      Its really not a giant conspiracy, Cyde. It's a pretty hamfisted bunch of tiny little ones, which makes it even worse. Especially as the scale of things they're willing to go to war over is pretty tiny and pathetic.

      I'm not denying any of this. I'm simply amazed that anyone considers it worthy of reporting on the front page of Slashdot. We have all sorts of internal Wikipedia squabbles that are even a lot juicier than this one - can they be on the front page too? Every large group of people inevitably has internal squabbles. Especially open source projects, where everyone's a volunteer. The ridiculous part is treating this as if it is noteworthy and painting it with the conspiracy brush, which this story and the linked article do do.

      Nice signature quote, by the way. Did you know they're gearing up for pre-production for a sequel? Last I read they're just buttoning down the funding.

      No, I did not know that, but that's awesome. I can't wait!

    8. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by MLCT · · Score: 1

      stories like this are seriously hurting The Register's credibility The register has credibility? Since when? The site is a joke.
    9. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by Sheepdot · · Score: 1

      Except this is Jimbo Wales, right? So it's not just any "group" of Wikipedians.

      Also, if it keeps up, is it possible a new wiki will be taking willing editors from Wikipedia?

    10. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by cyofee · · Score: 1

      I don't think anyone expected a Wikipedia administrator to admit there's a Cabal.

    11. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by Dutch+Reagan's+Ghost · · Score: 1

      I agree that the blanket denial is unconvicing in the face of the many specific, substanted accounts of admin abuse floating around. If this admin--or any other--wanted to actually change people's minds on the subject, they could start by specifically adressing some of the claims that are out there in a more meaningful way than "Soandso is a sock puppet and a spammer, we have secret checkuser data confirming it." I'm sure it isn't their intent, but the impression I get from these sorts of responses is that these wiki admins don't feel any obligation to explain their actions to the "community" (quoted for absurdity due to the anti-communal shift in Wikipedia's administration), which only reinforces my perception of them as a chummy, politicking, autocratic clique that is out of touch with Wikipedia's explict purpose.

    12. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Of course, Mr Cyde Weys a very early administrator, and one viewed by many to be one of the cabal, if not at least definitely "inner circle" material, may not be your most neutral debater in this issue.

    13. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      The Register had credibility? I mean, I occasionally enjoy reading something there, but that probably has something to do with their antics being amusing, rather than considering it a reputable, journalistic resource.

    14. Re:Stories like this are hurting credibility by Mr.+Somey · · Score: 1

      I probably needn't point this out, but the word "cabal" appears in the Register article exactly zero times.

  29. Re:Thanks by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1, Troll

    A good idea corrupted by human execution.

    There is this thing called "Grammar" which tells me that the above sentence completely lacks meaning, as it has no subject. I'll assume you're talking about WP.

    Let's explore this idea of "human execution." What type of execution are you saying would be better? Not many projects of this sort that aren't executed by humans, at least in our experience, and it turns out that a number of human executed projects (including WP) have turned out pretty well, so human influence is not obviously all-corrupting. Also, it turns out that corruption isn't exactly a slippery slope...Even if you become corrupt, you don't have to stay that way.

    So basically you wrote a sentence fragment that paraphrases a fatuous truism. That's fine. The problem is when you then turn around and complain because someone "stole your idea" when they actually write something that's not so non-specific as to be meaningless. That's pretty lame.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  30. Summary for the impatient by Raul654 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Employee of overstock.com spams Wikipedia, uses lots of sockpuppets to avoid being blocked, and uses spyware to infect at least one user. Wikipedia blocks him. The Reg writes an article defending said employee and attacking Wikipedia (which Slashdot promptly reposts).

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
    1. Re:Summary for the impatient by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mark, would you like to explain to me why my log bot in #wikipedia has not been banned despite your repeated threats to several Slashdot users that such activity would be banned?

      wikipedia log bot

    2. Re:Summary for the impatient by astaldaran · · Score: 1

      "Employee of overstock.com spams Wikipedia, uses lots of sockpuppets to avoid being blocked, and uses spyware to infect at least one user. Wikipedia blocks him. The Reg writes an article defending said employee and attacking Wikipedia (which Slashdot promptly reposts)." Journalists often do things which are unscrupulous in order to attain a story. They seem to subscribe that they, and only they, have the right to justify their means by the ends, but in a sense our society does this. For example look at shows like StarTrek TNG or Voyager and they break rules all the time in order to be doing "the right thing" (as they see it). To say that this is bad journalism, I think, is a bit unfounded. Sure it may not cover all the needed information but most news coverage is lacking in background information. I think it is clear that there is a problem with Wikipedia, just as gaged from all the articles about it, and even if there isn't the belief or appearance of their being one is just as bad for a site, indeed a community, where things are suppose to happen in the open and for the better good of the entire community. Whether or not the problem is as severe as articles like this claim; certainly wikipedia must address it in order to continue as the vast source of information that it is.

    3. Re:Summary for the impatient by CyberK · · Score: 1

      Let's not forget "Wikipedia bans an entire town a year later just to be on the safe side."

    4. Re:Summary for the impatient by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      It's funny that, from my reading, a 'web bug' is described as spyware. Not really the same thing. Ethical? Perhaps debatable. But when you already suspect (rightly or wrongly) that you're dealing with someone who has vested interests that lie tangential from you, you'd be on guard too. Interestingly, no-one comments on the fact that the first thing that our Wikipedia admin does when receiving information is pass it on to the other party of the conflict, before even reading it herself.

      Of course not, that's a can of worms that really shouldn't be opened up, that might give trolls ammunition. Hah.

    5. Re:Summary for the impatient by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      you forgot to remove references to you being a wikipedia administrator from your profile.

      there are at least a dozen of you out tonight trying to slam the victim of this embedding a web bug is not spyware, especially when it reveals that the administrator really is sharing confidential info to exactly the people he shouldn't be.

      wikipedia is drenched in corruption and cliques.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    6. Re:Summary for the impatient by Goobergunch · · Score: 1

      Note that parent is a Wikipedia arbitrator, bureaucrat, and administrator. Whether you consider this to be positive or negative depends on your perspective.

    7. Re:Summary for the impatient by Mr.+Somey · · Score: 1

      And if people are dumb enough to believe that this story is really that simple, then they're probably dumb enough to believe this version of it, I suppose.

      It's a little longer, but how about this one: Enemy of Overstock.com spams Wikipedia, writes article about himself, and allies himself with corrupt admins to protect said article after indie web journalist who is not (yet) an Overstock employee attempts to add info about a lawsuit against enemy, which is reverted. Indie web journalist sends an e-mail to one of the WP admins with an offsite-linked .GIF file (last I checked, .GIF files aren't necessarily considered "infections") to determine who actually reads the e-mail. E-mail is not read by the WP admin at all, but is in fact read by enemy. Indie web journalist is then hired by Overstock.com.

      But the part about Wikipedia blocking him is accurate, at least! I guess one out of four isn't so bad, considering the source...

      And the moral of the story: http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?showtopic=14446&pid=65149&st=0&#entry65149

  31. Wikipedia Destroyed by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

    When Wikipedia is destroyed,
    it won't be from without,
    but from within!

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:Wikipedia Destroyed by ggvaidya · · Score: 1

      ... and then we'll restore it from backup!

  32. Re:Thanks by moderatorrater · · Score: 1

    Actually, I found his post to be very complementary to yours, embiggening both.

  33. Animal Farm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...anybody remember that book from High School? Seems kinda familiar, no?

  34. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwaterTROLL-1 by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 3, Informative

    News flash! The Register has less credibility than Wiki, if only for this idiotic smear job.

    I'd mod you Troll -1, had I mod points today. The credibility of The Register, which has a reputation years long, is not in question with me.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  35. Exactly. RTFA, then you'll know the score by Torodung · · Score: 1

    Well said! We've definitely got a RTFA disconnect here.

    The summary sounds quite reasonable, then you get to the article and you find out it's based on an infantile rant.

    1. Re:Exactly. RTFA, then you'll know the score by joggle · · Score: 1

      Then PLEASE explain the fallacies in the article's logic or at the very least link to a good counter argument (this is slashdot after all, feel free to link to anything other than goats...). It seems no-one is up to the task. I keep reading and reading looking for someone to argue the other side of the argument but everyone I come across is to the effect 'it's just a rant, move along'. No, it is not. Based on the evidence I've read they have a decent argument, regardless of any motives these people may have. Saying it's an 'infantile rant' isn't going to convince anyone. Showing me how this is an infantile rant would be much more effective. Are you up to it? Then please defend the actions of Wikipedia with more than a one-line sentence devoid of any information. I'm currently leading towards the viewpoint expressed in the article in at least part because I haven't read a good counter-argument yet.

  36. Well, easy way to punish Wikipedia: by blcamp · · Score: 1


    Just have /. post stories on them about every 10 minutes or so.

    At the very least, thier servers will get a good workout.

    One other idea: make some addition contributions to any article they have regarding Censorship, Freedom of Speech, etc...

    --
    The problem with socialism is that they always run out of other people's money. - Margaret Thatcher
    1. Re:Well, easy way to punish Wikipedia: by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 1


      Just have /. post stories on them about every 10 minutes or so.

      At the very least, thier servers will get a good workout.

      The Slashdot Effect barely causes a blip in the Wikimedia server cluster's traffic nowadays.

      --
      But then again, I could be wrong.
    2. Re:Well, easy way to punish Wikipedia: by Gloy · · Score: 1

      Here is a graph showing requests over the past day. Pay attention to the scale; peak levels are around 45,000 requests per second. Slashdot's traffic in its entirety would barely be visible on that scale.

  37. yet more toxic fallout from overstock.com by Tom+Womack · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is just another part of the slow-motion meltdown of overstock.com, and the 'naked short-selling' financial conspiracy theory. There seem to be a lot of financial conspiracy theories around at the moment, presumably since there is some degree of actual financial chaos in the background, and the things financiers have demonstrably got away with are crazy enough that it's difficult to reject conspiracy theories on the mere grounds of strangeness in appearance.

    Disclaimer: yes, I write stuff on wikipedia, my handle is fivemack. Mostly I write about chemistry; it's pretty clear that wikipedia is the most comprehensive and reliable site for chemistry on the Web, since chemistry is advanced stamp-collecting and wikipedia is a superb medium for presenting stamps in multiple series. The science side of wikipedia is a wonderful resource, and doesn't seem too prone to the kind of lunacy that afflicts other parts of the encyclopedia; people have less heated feelings about the melting-point of tellurium or the carcinogenicity of tetramethylhydrazine than they do about whether Mount Ararat is a Turkish or an Armenian mountain.

    1. Re:yet more toxic fallout from overstock.com by sl3xd · · Score: 2, Informative

      Being from the salt lake valley (where overstock.com is headquartered), I know a few people who used to work there.

      Used to is the operative word. They weren't let go; they quit. And the reason is always the same: Rampant nepotism.

      When a relatively new (and incompetent) person is promoted, and a highly experienced and trained person is passed by, it raises an eyebrow. When the reason the person was promoted is they are a niece/nephew, it's a different story entirely.

      It's not any one branch of the company - it seems systemic, from management, to sales, to marketing, to IT.

      And there's a slow exodus of the people who actually have talent, which are then replaced by relatives...

      With that kind of corporate culture-- promoting illegal hiring and promotion practices, it's not hard to see how overstock.com can have management that isn't willing to see any of their own problems. Being oblivious to their own problems, they decide to try to put blame on external sources - be it Wikipedia, financial institutions, etc.

      That being said, I would like to see more transparency on Wikipedia.

      And I certainly feel that blanket IP address bans are a bad thing. Banning people whose only 'crime' against wikipedia is belonging to the same ISP as someone who is a problem is not something I'd expect.

      I really do think that Wikipedia should consider more thorough authentication mechanisms -- like requiring a crypto certificate from an authority that verifies identity; however this is an expensive and time-consuming process. But it should help reduce the sock-puppet effect.

      --
      -- Sometimes you have to turn the lights off in order to see.
    2. Re:yet more toxic fallout from overstock.com by Tom+Womack · · Score: 1

      Yes, I had a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Cla68 and there is clearly a lot of weird toxicity going on there.

      I got the impression that this was a matter of an author googling around a topic and not realising that the convincing page early up in the hits was written by a lunatic, then a number of editors deeply fed up of dealing with the consequence of this lunatic jumping on him. I could easily see myself doing the same.

      There's a lot of dire technical-management-substitute involved, at least in part because there are no very useful side-channels: it's not clear that there's a way of saying 'umm, you realise that you're linking to a site written by a lunatic, maybe reconsider?'. Since editors have to spend most of their time dealing with people motivated by malice, it's forgiveable that they assume of malicious motivation ...

    3. Re:yet more toxic fallout from overstock.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when is FOIA data from the SEC "conspiracy"? You need to get your facts straight about illegal naked short selling. Check the Senate finance committee's discussion of illegal naked short selling and financial market manipulation. Let me guess financial market manipulation is a "conspiracy".

      The evidence concerning illegal naked short selling is overwhelming including proxy voting well over 100% of companies outstanding share count. Illegal market manipulation using naked short selling is not a conspiracy it is fact. Tell Elgindy serving time in prison that it is a conspiracy. The justice system doesn't seem to buy your fraudulent "conspiracy theory" supposition. Nice try though.

  38. Blocking IP ranges by Tx · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's vaguely worth mentioning that I've been blocked from posting on /. in a similar manner a couple of times. My ISP forces traffic through it's transparent proxies, and /. seems quite happy to block an entire proxy. Fortunately it doesn't seem to have happened rec##KR2F@F@$F$ {NO CARRIER}

    --
    Oh no... it's the future.
    1. Re:Blocking IP ranges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your transparent proxy apparently is running on a 56K modem.

  39. Wikipedia is not a democracy, people by EriktheGreen · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Wikipedia isn't a democracy, and I think the only people surprised by the way the admins operate are the ones with stars in their eyes.

    Wikipedia is probably the most successful collaborative effort on the internet, surpassing the Linux kernel in size and complexity. Its editors and authors do a lot of great work, putting data out there and generally being fair and balanced.

    But, it's not a church, it's not a publicly run trust, and there's no oversight committee. Jimbo Wales and Co. can do whatever they want.. it's their site. They can ban anyone they like for any reason, even if they publically claim to be even handed, fair, and open, and the worst they may be guilty of is lying. The real reason people are up in arms is that they are surprised about it.

    We get lied to every day, by the government, church, our coworkers, neighbors, pretty much everyone. We sort of expect it, though. Very few people buy in to a religion wholesale and stop questioning anything related to it. Unless you're a fanatic and stupid to boot, you realize that some of it is crap. Even though churches claim that morality and truth are the highest law, and they don't lie, cheat, or steal.

    People have let themselves believe (perhaps not consciously) that since wikipedia exists today, that we must have reached some kind of golden age of the Internet and mankind, that wikipedia will grow until it contains everything we know, and all will contribute to it, everyone will learn that being fair and true is the only way to live, and we'll all understand each other better.

    But wikipedia lies like anyone else. It's not utopia. "Best" is a relative term.

    Wikipedia is the biggest collaboration out there. But that doesn't mean it's made from pure angelic light trapped in circuits.... it's made of people, and people can be corrupt, biased, bigoted, jerks.

    The main reason I've never contributed to Wikipedia is that I was burned in the past. Anyone remember CDDB? There are other examples. I've seen some recent positive press for Wikipedia in the recent announcement that the code will be GPL.... it's another step in the right direction.

    Information wants to be free.

    Erik

    1. Re:Wikipedia is not a democracy, people by EriktheGreen · · Score: 1
      oh no. fortunately, not every jackass with a patch has commit access to the linux kernel. your comparison is invalid.

      No, it's perfectly valid because I explicitly mention that I'm comparing the size and complexity of the two, not the nature of the editing system, type of contributors, hardware platforms, or anything else, my comparison is limited to those two items.

      It's larger in size by lines written. It's more complex in that more people contribute (as you say) to Wikipedia, on more subjects, and are more difficult to manage.

      Erik

      PS: Sometimes to me it does seem like every jackass with a patch commits to the kernel....

    2. Re:Wikipedia is not a democracy, people by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1
      "Wikipedia is probably the most successful collaborative effort on the internet, surpassing the Linux kernel in size and complexity."

      Except the Linux kernel is a usable product that one can use without having to worry about malfeasance, drama, or lack of reliability.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    3. Re:Wikipedia is not a democracy, people by celle · · Score: 1
      "and people can be corrupt, biased, bigoted, jerks."

      It's not "can be" its "often are".

    4. Re:Wikipedia is not a democracy, people by Dutch+Reagan's+Ghost · · Score: 1

      Very few people buy in to a religion wholesale and stop questioning anything related to it
      You haven't spent much time in the Midwest or South, have you?

      Just because public (or semi-public) institutions sometimes violate our trust doesn't mean that it is acceptable for them to do so.
    5. Re:Wikipedia is not a democracy, people by SpacePunk · · Score: 1

      "We get lied to every day, by the government, church, our coworkers, neighbors, pretty much everyone. We sort of expect it, though. Very few people buy in to a religion wholesale and stop questioning anything related to it. Unless you're a fanatic and stupid to boot, you realize that some of it is crap. Even though churches claim that morality and truth are the highest law, and they don't lie, cheat, or steal. "

      So, now with Wikipedia, we get to collectively lie to ourselves where the 'truth' becomes a middle area of belief instead of the absolute it should be. Where people get upset with Wikipedia is that they finally recognize it as a collective lie, and realize that Jimbo and company end up owning their contribution to that collective lie.

    6. Re:Wikipedia is not a democracy, people by I+am+Jack's+username · · Score: 1

      Anyone remember CDDB? There are other examples. I've seen some recent positive press for Wikipedia in the recent announcement that the code will be GPL.... it's another step in the right direction.
      CDDB's software was GPL, but the volunteer donated content was not free.

      Wikipedia's volunteer contributed text has always been GFDL.[1] What's happening now is that the FSF is making the new GFDL compatible with the new Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license so that Wikipedia's content under the new FSF GFDL can play nice with CCSA 3.5.[2]

      If there really are Wikipedia administrators using their black helicopters to shoot non vandal editors (possible, tho I haven't seen the cites), and the millions of good people editing aren't stopping the bad administrators; the GFDL license allows anyone to fork Wikipedia content and then prevent the evil administrators from joining that project.

  40. Quote by owlnation · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This Jimmy Wales quote: "We aren't democratic."

    That's one for future generations. That quote should haunt him for the rest of his career. It's right up there with all the ones Bill Gates and Ballmer have made, that are repeated here often.

    Two words: "true colors".

    I was going to add in the usual references to nazis and Ayn Rand and all the rest -- but honestly, Jimmy's quote says it all, and says it clearer. It's all you ever needed to know about Wikipedia.

    1. Re:Quote by Sockatume · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course they're not a democracy, they're supposed to be factually accurate, not a popularity contest. Recall that they used to put article deletion to the vote, and treating discussions that way (after they'd nominally switched to a concensus basis for article deletions) was responsible for the half-assed decision that gave us Straubgate. (That's not to try and belittle Straub's ingenious plotting.)

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    2. Re:Quote by neverutterwhen · · Score: 1

      Why? Knowledge isn't democratic. Democracy is the only halfway decent system of long term government, but that doesn't mean that it can be applied in any situation. No doubt, the structure at Wikipedia could be improved, and greater transparency is always welcome, but I don't see why anyone should be haunted, for saying that a website isn't democratic.

      --
      My appreciation of Douglas Adams is far deeper than yours.
    3. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty ironic coming from an organization that says that Wikipedia is supposed to be for the people and open to everyone to modify. I guess he means people's in the Soviet Union sense.

    4. Re:Quote by Sockatume · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The full quote is: "Greatest misconception about Wikipedia: We aren't democratic. Our readers edit the entries, but we're actually quite snobby. The core community appreciates when someone is knowledgeable, and thinks some people are idiots and shouldn't be writing." In other words, knowledgable contributions are valued more highly than idiot ones. So, yes, that's all you need to know about Wikipedia's bias - an online encyclopedia values good information above bad.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    5. Re:Quote by teorth · · Score: 1

      "Wikipedia is not a democracy" is actually part of official Wikipedia policy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:What_Wikipedia_is_not#Wikipedia_is_not_a_democracy

    6. Re:Quote by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      You can't be serious, right? Or are you naive enough to believe that strict democratic systems are the best solution to all problems in life? Reality is often not as simple as that.

    7. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a fucking ridiculous post.

      The *truth* is not democratic, fuckwit.

    8. Re:Quote by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      No, but it does have a regrettable liberal bias...

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
  41. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwaterTROLL-1 by Nevyn · · Score: 1

    The register's reputation isn't in question, we have the answer and it's worth much less than Wikipedia.

    --
    ustr: Managed string API with ave. 44% overhead over strdup(), for 0-20B
  42. Re:What do you know by Gloy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A permanent link to a particular revision of every article, that's guaranteed not to change, is available for every revision of every article, view the page you're interested in and click the "Permanent link" link at the bottom of the sidebar. Seems to me that it is quite possible to overcome the "material has changed when verified" problem by simply citing that link instead. That of course doesn't change the fact that no encyclopedia should be cited in serious academic work.

  43. How is this a troll? MOD PARENT UP. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He makes very good points. MOD UP.

  44. sounds like by Spazmania · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sounds to me like the central problem is that after banning an abusive user with a genuine beef they then failed to take reasonable action on the genuine beef. As a result, two or three articles have become hopelessly corrupted and instead of freezing them in that state they should be declared hopelessly corrupted and removed.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  45. Todays lesson: spotting bullshit. by LordLimecat · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Before even beginning to RTFA, i knew this was gonna be a garbage article with nothing but assumptions. I wont say that wikipedia doesnt have problems, but whenever i see references to a "cabal" @ wikipedia, my bullshit-radar kicks in. Did everyone reading the article miss the point where Bagley vandalized another persons wikipedia article, and then wondered why he got banned? Im not an expert on dealing with issues @ wikipedia, but I'm going to take a wild stab and say that performing vandalism in order to get the attention of admins is a rather bad idea. Im gonna go a step further and saying that engaging in an edit war on another article doesnt help your reputation @ wikipedia. Bagley was behaving like a classic troll, regardless of the merits of his claim, and he was acting on a hunch--it states in the article that he wasnt even sure that Weiss was the one engaged in the edit war with him. Nothing to see here except more register.co.uk bullshit.

  46. IP Address bans do not work by Joe+U · · Score: 1

    A p2p app designed to bypass Wikipedia IP bans would destroy wikipedia a lot quicker from the outside and completely trash their method of tracking.

    Simply, you run an app and whenever you go to wikipedia it routes through someone elses computer. I'll call it 'wikiproxia'.

    1. Re:IP Address bans do not work by Sigma+7 · · Score: 1

      A p2p app designed to bypass Wikipedia IP bans would destroy wikipedia a lot quicker from the outside and completely trash their method of tracking. Tor exit nodes are blocked from editing Wikipedia. Writing a P2P application designed to edit Wikipedia would also get blocked with the same level of effort.

      It also takes one infiltration into the group to mess up the P2P system. Either the list of IP addresses obtained from the master server get blocked, or there is a series of rapid edits to a single page.

    2. Re:IP Address bans do not work by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Designed properly, I think a random shifting list of proxy servers would be pretty hard to detect and could cause havoc.

    3. Re:IP Address bans do not work by Gloy · · Score: 1

      Simply, you run an app and whenever you go to wikipedia it routes through someone elses computer. I'll call it 'wikiproxia'. Then "someone else's computer" will be blocked instead. And you'll pretty quickly find yourself running out of someone elses sufficiently dumb to allow their IP address to be used for such things.
    4. Re:IP Address bans do not work by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      Tor exit nodes are blocked from editing Wikipedia.

      Not according to Our Gracious Leader: http://www.webcitation.org/5QELRL7gf

      Nor according to the talk page - the general consensus seems to be soft-blocking of anonymous editing. I was pleasantly surprised by his response to this. Of course, there wasn't really any other response that wouldn't look colossally stupid when you had Admins using Tor nodes left right and center and having free reign, whilst freely employing the "banhammer" on mere mortals.

    5. Re:IP Address bans do not work by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      You're assuming that most people care about being banned by wikipedia.

      What I'm trying to say, is there are always ways around IP bans, if someone really had it in for wikipedia, they would link a similar program to a botnet.

  47. And Still Yet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Numerous slashdot users will use wikipedia as a source to support the most absurd arguments.

    The recent posting on stupid YouTube users applies as much to wikipedia as any other "collaborative" efforts of the same genre.

    Yes, there are some great pages there, but you just can never trust any of them.

  48. The Register's humor by SuperBanana · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, but is this relevant to 85% of the body of work? Do we really need to throw the word "totalitarian" around, or "black helicopters?" Jeez.

    Relax, chief. It's The Register's odd British humor. Go look at any of their articles about robots- they usually insert jokes about robots being one step closer to world domination/human enslavement.

    Nevermind that this is the paper that runs the Bastard Operator From Hell series. I can't believe you got modded up to 5 for not realizing a joke on a famously snarky-humor-laden technology news sites.

    Also, your comments were a lovely bit of straw man crap: nobody is seriously suggesting (or is it really even possible to) "take down" Wikipedia.

    The Register has less credibility than Wiki, if only for this idiotic smear job.

    Says you, chief. I think they're one of the best sources for technology news around and I love their (obvious to any idiot) twist. CNET and others happily parrot press release after press release; only the good 'ol Reg actually views 'em with an eye of skepticism.

    1. Re:The Register's humor by sam_paris · · Score: 1

      News to Torodung, the Register is a British site with a humorous slant. They have an ongoing joke about black helicopters, which anyone with a sense of humour, or who is a regular reader would "get" immediately.

      Stop being such a sourpuss.

      Oh and welcome to the internet.

    2. Re:The Register's humor by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Amusing hyperbole aside, the actual copy casts a guy who got in a Wikipedia edit dispute, created an account to add "unsavoury" comments to his target's article, and was banned for it, as a freedom fighter standing alone against a sinister cabal.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    3. Re:The Register's humor by spun · · Score: 1

      You have no sense of humor, do you? I've been reading the reg for years, and they use the phrase "black helicopters" as a joke on themselves and people who believe in such things. Anyone who reads the reg knows this. They had a "spot the black helicopters on google maps" contest. They joke about secret robot conspiracies to take over the world. It's a self deprecating joke.

      I think you understand that. I think you are being disingenuous in order to present your bias as fair. By pretending to be outraged, you distract criticism from that which you are trying to protect. The more I read of what you write here, the more I am convinced you are a part of the wikiclique.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    4. Re:The Register's humor by dwillden · · Score: 1

      Actually in an ironic twist, the Black Helicopters comment was more a statement of fact than any attempt at hyperbole or the like. The Neighborhood of Traverse Mountain, which is in the city of Lehi, Utah, sits on the Traverse Mountains which seperate Salt Lake County and Utah county, these mountains are split by the Jordan River, and I-15. On the opposide of the river from Traverse Mountain, sits Camp Williams, a National Guard Training camp which actually has black helicopters flying around it (Blackhawks and Apache's) on a daily basis.

      --
      I'm too lazy to compose a creative sig.
    5. Re:The Register's humor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey low-uid man, don't you know everyone is an astroturfer?

    6. Re:The Register's humor by Torodung · · Score: 1

      "It's a joke" is the new dodge. John Stewart uses it all the time, when everyone knows darned well he's doing an effective, and non-humorous hit job on (for example) Dick Cheney (who deserves it, IMHO, but it doesn't make the whole "Darth Vader" thing a joke).

      The totalitarian theme of "black helicopters" is carried throughout the first page of the article, and then repeats itself as some bizarre belief that there is a Wikipedia "cabal." What it is is a bunch of tactless people who don't have a PR manager, not a cabal. That is what makes it not funny. I believe it is intentional and non-humourous, given other coverage about Wikipedia on the site.

      So my sense of humor is, understandably, in the wash. It is due back tomorrow.

      I have never even submitted a thing to Wikipedia. I don't have an account there. I just don't enjoy hyped up bad writing that uses propaganda tactics to shade meaning. They crossed a personal line, and I am cranky, so I said so.

      I know you honestly can't believe that I should be upset about this, or disagree with you, but I think the Register is in the middle of what amounts to a poorly shrouded, and protracted, flame war with whomever upsets them at Wikipedia. Maybe it's a "sour grapes" thing, I don't have the inside story.

      That's my story and I'm sticking by it. I have karma to burn. I can't believe all the trolls and flamebaits I'm getting over this, and expect them on this post to from people who think there is never anything wrong with the way the Register presents its "facts." Simple disagreement is not trolling.

      Y'all can't believe I'm taking the "black helicopters" thing seriously, and I understand that, but in light of the remainder of the article, it didn't make me laugh this time. It is not a joke when you carry it throughout and color every fact with the tincture of arrogance and corruption.

      You can wait until tomorrow for my funny to come back. I just hope they don't starch it.

      --
      Toro

      (no karma bonus)

    7. Re:The Register's humor by spun · · Score: 1

      You sure don't deserve a flamebait or troll mod for speaking your mind. And I believe you when you say it's an affront to your sense of honor and dignity rather than a defense from a member of the cabal. But I do believe there is more going on at wikipedia than just a bunch of clueless but well meaning people who don't have a PR manager. I think there is real craziness over there. Institutionalized paranoia, a kind of group psychosis, us vs. them mentality, lack of trust in other's motives, and lack of insight into their own. The nutters have taken over the nuthouse, and they are defending it with venom and bile. It's a sad state of affairs, but one I've seen happen online since before the Internet ever went public, at places like CompuServe and GEnie.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    8. Re:The Register's humor by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Add various groups on Usenet, throughout its history to that list.

      Anecdotally, I've heard there are some nutty people at Wiki, and I have bothered to look under the hood, so I've seen some of it. It's ugly, especially the sheer arrogance of some of the members. I'm just not sure escalating the paranoia is helpful. Arrogant people are, at heart, insecure. This article struck me as pointless escalation, more likely to produce the behavior it condemns.

      You sound like you're closer to it than I. I mentioned disastrous early rocket tests in another post. If Wikipedia does go boom, make sure y'all try again. I find it to be a worthwhile source.

      Hopefully, they'll kludge something together without a collapse. Thanks for taking the time to respond.

      --
      Toro

    9. Re:The Register's humor by spun · · Score: 1

      I'm not even that close to the affair. That's probably why I have the dispassion to look at your position equitably. It's not that important, really: you and I have both seen the like before. Maybe you've come at it from the inside, and I've come at it from the outside, more frequently? It would explain our inherent bias.

      I've seen things from the outsider's perspective too frequently to give carte blanch to the insiders. And I've seen the ratio's of online communications, I know the prototypical ratio of status quo attackers to defenders. It's always seemed to me like the defenders have the advantage, and I habitually favor the underdog.

      Anyway, I think we can both agree it would be a damn shame if the schism destroyed something as valuable as Wikipedia. I hope the entrenched power elite can look at the criticism of the outsiders with an open eye. And perhaps it would behoove people such as I to remember that most people, most of the time, really do care about the welfare of all. Even the elitists, for the most part, despite their ineffective methods.

      Damn, the rebel part of my self finds that hard to admit that.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    10. Re:The Register's humor by nugneant · · Score: 1

      Hmm... if you love Wikipedia so much, why don't you fuck it?

    11. Re:The Register's humor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not group psychosis and institutionalized paranoia, it's very individualized paranoia, on the part of between six and twelve older admins who, inconveniently enough, do actually have people out to get them, although nowhere near as many as they think (as for who the paranoids are, about half of them are named in the El Reg's Bagley fluff piece.) Since they do have genuine batshit crazies antagonizing them (and Bagley qualifies), they loudly play the victim card in response to any criticism of themselves and their warping of policies around themselves to use as shield and club. Thank God the last of them is coming off the Arbcom as of this election cycle. Quietly banning them (and the only way to do that quietly would be to have a developer scramble their passwords) would cut down on the Drama and the Crazy by about 90%. Too bad Jimbo is too attached to the idea of being their friend to order Tim or Brion to do that.



      Seriously, there's a thousand admins and ten thousand editors who show up, do their thing, and go home without touching with any of this shit; it's just a dozen people who give the project such a black eye.

  49. the result of the social experiment. by leuk_he · · Score: 1

    Good observation!

    The number of edit on wikipedia is going down. one reason can be that on the most popular topics everything has been written. But i think the real trouble is that wiki/fanbboys-regulars are busy applying their rule this is spam, and this is vandalism, original research, and in the end they forget the `bold edit` guideline. As a result new editors will be scared of, and the current editors will tell to themselves they are doing a fine job. new editors and old editors both are right in their POV.

    if you dont like wikipidia no more. GO and Multiply the nonsense or publish a book or a blog, and buy a real encyclopedia.

    1. Re:the result of the social experiment. by nugneant · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes, Unencylopedia. A veritable melting pot of thirteen year olds and non-native English speakers desperately flailing around in the hopes that sooner or later somebody will say something funny.

      Sorta like the "infinite monkeys on infinite type-writers" thought-experiment, only there's more Chuck Norris jokes and nobody ends up writing Hamlet.

  50. "Cabal" is ridiculous. by Chairboy · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've been accused of being part of the 'cabal' because I'm an administrator who pissed off a bunch of people last year, and have on-again off-again been hounded by characters who keep baying conspiracy and trying to get folks worked into a lather.

    Until now, I assumed that people would be able to properly set the bozo bit on these guys, but now that they've gotten The Register convinced, it's time for the big secret to come out:

    We (the Wikipedia admins) aren't competent enough to form a conspiracy. Seriously. We all have our own agendas, our own skillsets, varying levels of intelligence, and wildly different ideas on how the project should run. Accusing us of having the ability to form a global star-chamber of sorts that seeks to control the nature of truth is like accusing us of keeping the metric system down or making Steve Gutenberg a star.

    We're just editors with some extra tools, and we fight like rabid cats.

    But thanks for the compliment.

    1. Re:"Cabal" is ridiculous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude - you haven't worked it out yet. The people are setting the bozo bit to true for is the Wikipedia Admins - and that would be errr.....you.

    2. Re:"Cabal" is ridiculous. by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      "We (the Wikipedia admins) aren't competent enough to form a conspiracy."

      Which is exactly what we would expect a member of the Cabal to say!
    3. Re:"Cabal" is ridiculous. by MostAwesomeDude · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, you are an admin, and on my list, you have lost the assumption of good faith in administrative actions. Perhaps, after watching you at work for a while, I might be willing to trust your actions, but right now I have to assume that any action you make is in bad faith. You can thank your fellow administrators for that.

      --
      ~ C.
    4. Re:"Cabal" is ridiculous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you're a fucking idiot, and I don't think he cares whether or not he has your assumption of good faith.

  51. For those looking for more information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Have a look here.

    Relevant quote:

    AntiSocialMedia.net, a creation of the banned user WordBomb*, is part of an extended campaign of harassment directed at several users.

    * WordBomb is the account Judd Bagley created.

    Those who have never been to RFAR, look at the bottom for more information, click links for details.
  52. Wikipedia is good despite the cabal by spun · · Score: 1

    Wow, that is some serious defensiveness. Wikipedia is above criticism, huh? Guess what, mature individuals and organizations welcome criticism. The inner circle of wikipedia are paranoid loons in an echo chamber, all reinforcing each others paranoid delusions. I find wikipedia useful in spite of the horrid things they do, not because of them. This isn't about the useful things the majority of wikipedians do, this is about the craziness perpetrated by the cabal that is destroying the useful things the majority do.

    The cabal are the ones being childish. No one is attacking wikipedia here, we are attacking the nutters who are ruining it. Running the cabal out on a rail will only make wikipedia better, so why are you fighting it?

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Wikipedia is good despite the cabal by Torodung · · Score: 1

      I don't have boo to do with Wikipedia, except directing my daughter there for the mathematics articles. I am a writer, and I'm pissed off about the writing in the linked article.

      You are mentioning the word "cabal." Do you know what it means?

      cabal
      cabal (ke-bàl) noun
      1. A conspiratorial group of plotters or intriguers: "Espionage is quite precisely it-a cabal of powerful men, working secretly" (Frank Conroy).
      2. A secret scheme or plot. See synonyms at conspiracy.


      So what we have here is a set of conspiratorial plotters, eh? Where everyone knows their names, and when they are criticized, no one dies. Some people have been banned by accident because Wiki has a vandalism problem, and they are nailing large IP ranges, because some of those morons are agressive about doing their dirty work via proxy. That is all.

      Certainly, some of the folks at Wikipedia are arrogant, but a cabal?

      I think you are breathing hype instead of oxygen, sir.

      --
      Toro

    2. Re:Wikipedia is good despite the cabal by spun · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I know what a cabal is. I've been following the story for a while, and I'm pissed off at the behavior of a small group of people conspiring on the secret mailing list to ban people they dislike. Perhaps the writer in question here deserved it, but dozens more did not. This isn't about protecting wikipedia from vandals. This is about a small group of people acting in secret to crush those they dislike and to protect each other's interests.

      I find it hard to believe that anyone uninvolved in the cabal could be as shrill and defensive about it as you appear to be. It seems as though you are taking attacks on this small group of people personally, why is that? We aren't attacking wikipedia, which is a great institution, but the selfish, childish, and paranoid people who are destroying it. Why should this bother you so much if you are not one of them?

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    3. Re:Wikipedia is good despite the cabal by nagora · · Score: 1
      Yous missedd out this one from the OED:

      "5. A small body of persons engaged in secret or private machination or intrigue; a junto, clique, côterie, party, faction."

      WP administration is just a collection of cabals vieing for the favour of St. Jimbo.

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  53. Re:Wasn't trying to inform by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my, you're just another fucking idiot aren't you?

  54. Re:Wasn't trying to inform by Four_One_Nine · · Score: 1

    Hey, just as a friendly reminder, you forgot to complain about the moderators.

    --
    I did it for Johnny.
  55. User SIIHP is back, and now with MORE tantrums! by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    Oh..... I think I know where user SIIHP went. Seems he made a new handle. Let's see - we have here accusations of lying, temper tantrums, insults and multiple variations of "I never said that". Sounds right on the money. Awesome. I have my internet entertainment back.

    I'm wondering how long it'll take you to post at -1 again?

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  56. Please add new definition of "sockpuppets" by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1

    Please add new definition of "sockpuppets" at:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sockpuppets

    I'm sure some people would love to have an "official" definition.

    --
    Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    1. Re:Please add new definition of "sockpuppets" by Raul654 · · Score: 1

      You mean like this definition here? And the lists of Bagley's known and suspected sockpuppets?

      --


      To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
      --E.C. Stanton
    2. Re:Please add new definition of "sockpuppets" by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      If you had RTFA, or even been on Wikipedia for very long, you'd know that the list of "known" sockpuppets is useless, as it's had too many false positives to be worthy of consideration. Not to mention many of those false positives are intentionally false positives.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  57. this is... by m2943 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    as opposed to traditional media, blogs, and rags like The Register, where 100% of the content are controlled by a "cabal" of self-appointed guardians-of-the-truth.

    Thanks, but I take Wikipedia over The Register any day.

  58. The problem is discourse. by CodeShark · · Score: 4, Insightful
    At some point my thought is that there has to be some way that Wikipedia can have discoursive (is that a word?) articles, i.e., if there are competing arguments, set up a Wiki Page that can't be altered so easily that points to both. And it may be important to prevent the antagonistic groups from editing each other's pages.


    An example -- and I don't think this will be off topic when you see where I am going with it: for years a set of researchers in Australia insisted that most peptic and duodenal ulcers were caused by a bacteria called helicobacter pylori. Problem was, the treatment for the bacteria was a simple and very cheap course of antibiotics and pink bismuth (brand name is usually Pepto Bismol) for about two weeks -- which negated the value of some very expensive American-developed medicines who basically trashed the research in the medical community for years. The end of the story is that the researchers, Warren and Marshall were correct, and 80% of all ulcers ARE caused by that bacteria. In fact these two were awarded the 2005 Nobel Prize in Medicine for their work on H. pylori.

    So what would happen if Wikipedia were available back then and the powers that be basically chose the wrong side and banned Warren and Marshall from editing articles on stomach ulcers, because another group had a vested interest in keeping the status quo? Which is where the real ruckus lies and why I am now backing Citizendium instead of Wikipedia.

    --
    ...Open Source isn't the only answer -- but it's almost always a better value than the alternatives...
    1. Re:The problem is discourse. by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 1

      So what would happen if Wikipedia were available back then and the powers that be basically chose the wrong side and banned Warren and Marshall from editing articles on stomach ulcers, because another group had a vested interest in keeping the status quo?

      Wikipedia would have contained the mainstream but wrong information? And would have corrected it later when it was shown that they weren't just nuts? Or are you trying to assert that wrong information inserted into Wikipedia will be protected against correction forever?

      There have been plenty of people over time that have come out saying the mainstream is wrong. Some of them have been right, and famously so. Most of them have been wrong and are forgotten. It is not Wikipedia's job to decide that the bulk of medical knowledge is wrong and that a couple of iconoclasts are right.

      What exactly did the Encyclopaedia Britannica do when confronted with this? Did they change their article on peptic ulcers to say that mainstream medicine was wrong and these two guys were right? I doubt it.

      Which is where the real ruckus lies and why I am now backing Citizendium instead of Wikipedia.

      Citizendium, the open content encyclopedia that can't even decide what license it's going to use.

      --
      But then again, I could be wrong.
    2. Re:The problem is discourse. by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Well, I doubt they would've been editing Wikipedia themselves. What happens with fringe topics is usually that fans of them start editing the Wikipedia, and the usually do quite well for themselves. Wikipedia certainly has is fair share of protoscience, fringe science, and outright pseudoscience covered. For example, there are large sections on biofeedback and neurofeedback which are (IMO) highly dubious, but with the addition of references to the relevant research, they're still present and welcome. Any science being promoted just by the two individuals who came up with it with no published research to back it up would be subject to summary deletion, though.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    3. Re:The problem is discourse. by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Oh, the word is discursive. I think you were close enough. ;)

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    4. Re:The problem is discourse. by ultramk · · Score: 1

      So what would happen if Wikipedia were available back then and the powers that be basically chose the wrong side and banned Warren and Marshall from editing articles on stomach ulcers, because another group had a vested interest in keeping the status quo? Which is where the real ruckus lies and why I am now backing Citizendium instead of Wikipedia.

      Well, Wikipedia is not the forum for that. That's why we have these things called peer-reviewed studies. That's how science is done, not in the court of public opinion. An encyclopedia (online or not) is not in the business of determining the right or wrong facts: it merely presents the published findings of others in an easily searchable format. It is not a place to try to challenge or change the orthodoxy of science, it is a place to accurately reflect and document the current thinking and state of the art on the subject.

      Personally, I see zero reason to document each and every unpublished, random hypothesis that somebody dreams up, just on the off chance they happen to be right. Let the system work. The truth will out.

      To quote Sagan:
      "But the fact that some geniuses were laughed at does not imply that all who are laughed at are geniuses. They laughed at Columbus, they laughed at Fulton, they laughed at the Wright brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown."

      --
      You catch enchiladas by picking them up behind the head and holding them underwater until they don't kick anymore -VeGas
    5. Re:The problem is discourse. by CupBeEmpty · · Score: 1

      The best part was they showed it to be true by using h. pylori to give THEMSELVES ulcers... then cured themselves with the standard treatment. Althought I love how you troll with the "American-developed" cures. I guess there were no European or Asian companies that also had treatments?

    6. Re:The problem is discourse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with your story is that it just isn't true.

      The delay between Warren and Marshall's hypothesis and a change in the gold standard treatment was exactly what you'd expect for any medical advance. The hypothesis that a bacterium was the cause had been previously ignored on that basis that it seemed unlikely it could survive the hostile environment. Once someone had demonstrated that bacteria not only could, but routinely did survive in this environment the seed of the idea was sown, and it was only a matter of time before someone tried it, published their results, and so on.

      The only thing that was unusual in this case was the severity of the condition versus the simplicity of the new treatment. If they had cured an obscure type of cancer, using a modification of an existing generic cancer drug regimen, they would be unknown to the general public, and it would still have taken several years to go from the initial idea ("Hey maybe we can use a much lower dose of the ABVD drugs used to treat Hodgkins") to publishing a paper documenting significant clinical results, and from there to setting a new gold standard.

      Laymen also tend to skip over the fact that other presumed causes remain relevant (stress is bad for you, this is just one of the health problems that can result, the fact that we can now cure it doesn't make stress less bad for you, avoid stress and if necessary change your lifestyle to prevent ongoing illness). And that this is only effective in 80% of cases (at least you mentioned that) and so some people are stuck with the previous gold standard treatment even though "everyone knows" you can cure the illness with antibiotics.

    7. Re:The problem is discourse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would happen is exactly what did happen. The researchers would continue their research in the face of unified opposing views (including Wikipedia). They would eventually make their case, showing everyone else (including Wikipedia editors) to be a bunch of close minded asses. Then they would collect their Nobel prizes and cash.

      Wikipedia isn't influential enough to change basics like that. Still, I agree that there might be a better way.

    8. Re:The problem is discourse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, Wikipedia is not the forum for that. That's why we have these things called peer-reviewed studies. That's how science is done, not in the court of public opinion.

      Miss the point much? He was talking about Wiki pages, not peer reviewed studies.

    9. Re:The problem is discourse. by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia would have contained the mainstream but wrong information? And would have corrected it later when it was shown that they weren't just nuts? Or are you trying to assert that wrong information inserted into Wikipedia will be protected against correction forever?

      Red herring. Under the parents scenario, there is no reason there couldn't be an entry on the ulcer page for contrary research if it had some merit, but it would have been deleted by admins in the U.S. and the Australians banned.

    10. Re:The problem is discourse. by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 1

      Red herring. Under the parents scenario, there is no reason there couldn't be an entry on the ulcer page for contrary research if it had some merit, but it would have been deleted by admins in the U.S. and the Australians banned.

      I was confused, what with the sane solution you offer being what usually happens. Being evil is far more work in this case.

      --
      But then again, I could be wrong.
  59. If you want to read unsantized information on WP by joeszilagyi · · Score: 4, Informative
    Go to:

    * http://www.wikipediareview.com WR is a forum that is populated by a mix of Wikipedia administrators posting openly, regular users, and a few "banned" users. Unfortunately, the Wikipedia 'elite' routinely badmouth the holy hell out of the WR forums because of the fact that "banned" users are allowed. Also, the Wikipedia "BADSITES" final solution (which is still active--disregard that rejected notice, its just been implemented anyway), was a direct revenge response against Wikipedia Review and similar sites that the Wikipedia leaders have no ability to silence or control in any way.

    * http://www.wikitruth.info Wikitruth is a private Wiki, which is ran by a variety of actual Wikipedia administrators, who post deleted content from Wikipedia and other insider information. Wikipedia HATES Wikitruth, almost as much as they hate Wikipedia Review, but are both helpless and powerless against them. Why? Because anything posted to Wikipedia is posted under the GFDL, and you can't de-GFDL Wikipedia content. Wikipedia just "chooses" not to display deleted content as an editorial decision. Oops.

    Go to Wikipedia Review for frank and uncensored discussion about Wikipedia. Yes, some lunatics and social and/or mental defectives live there; the same as on the Slashdot comments. But a frightening number of smart and eloquent people post there. Those are the ones that Wikipedia is truly frightened of, because they can't be controlled or stopped. Go to Wikitruth for the best insider dirt.

    I'm sure someone will mod me down as flame bait, or trolling, or someone who edits Wikipedia will be along to troll me. However, isn't it funny how whenever this sort of thing happens, you *cannot* get a straight answer out of the Wikipedia "executives"? It's always spin control, and damage control, sadly. Irresponsible.

    --
    Dude, where's my packet?
  60. I stopped reading after by noewun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    . . .all under the blessing of the Wikipedia Cabal.

    Cabal? Really? Are you sure you don't just need to turn off the machine and get outside for a while?

    --
    I am a believer of momentum and curves.
    1. Re:I stopped reading after by iapetus · · Score: 1

      I stopped reading when I saw it was an El Reg article. I love the guys, seriously, but they're not exactly neutral when it comes to Wikipedia. :D

      --
      ++ Say to Elrond "Hello.".
      Elrond says "No.". Elrond gives you some lunch.
  61. Re:Jeff Merkey AKA the comanche kid ---Did it too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And he is still doing it now.

  62. Re:Throwing the baby out with the bathwaterTROLL-1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And who cares what you think?

  63. Godwin. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually, no.

    I think the biggest benefit of an oligarch/monarch is that they have the capacity for intelligent long range planning, of the sort that everyone goddamn HATES, but which really does good things for the world.

    As an example, I think we should have a higher tax on gasoline to drive down consumption, and increase public transportation and help fund alternative fuel research. Is this possible in our democracy? Not really. Everybody votes against anyone who would even suggest it. During World War II, there was mandatory recycling in a number of cities, and that has benefits, but people hated it, and it got repealed as soon as the war ended.

    An absolute ruler has the ability to switch policy overnight. Democracies are unwieldy and take years to come to a new policy, and often they contain so many exceptions that they're practically useless.

    If you could insure the whole "philosopher king" thing, make sure you have a person as absolute ruler who is both capable and worthy of it, then that would be by far the best system. Since you can't, we go with democracy, not because it's in any way better, but because it limits the possible harm that can come out of government toward the people. However democracy can't save the people from their own shortsightedness, and it's just damn inefficient.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:Godwin. by inviolet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think the biggest benefit of an oligarch/monarch is that they have the capacity for intelligent long range planning, of the sort that everyone goddamn HATES, but which really does good things for the world.

      It does good things for the particular ruler's worldview, yes. The loss of all the outliers is not without its cost, though.

      As an example, I think we should have a higher tax on gasoline to drive down consumption, and increase public transportation and help fund alternative fuel research. Is this possible in our democracy? Not really. Everybody votes against anyone who would even suggest it.

      Have you given serious thought to how the opponents might also be right? I realize the whole issue seems so simple to you, but there is a serious and rational counterargument that I'll bet you aren't even aware of. The counterargument is: our time is our most valuable commodity, the source of all other values, and public transportation's real expense is in lost time. Buses and trains seem cheaper when you don't factor in the very high hidden cost of all those people standing around at the station for fifteen minutes.

      During World War II, there was mandatory recycling in a number of cities, and that has benefits, but people hated it, and it got repealed as soon as the war ended.

      Again, it seems simple to you because you aren't factoring in all the costs that those "shortsighted" people are weighing. The value of their time, spent sorting and hauling or whatever, vastly outweighs the value of the recycled materials.

      An absolute ruler has the ability to switch policy overnight.

      You say that like it's a good thing. There is a lot of economic value in stability, even if the current stable point is not the absolute most efficient. Change is very expensive when there are contracts and properties and projects running.

      Democracies are unwieldy and take years to come to a new policy, and often they contain so many exceptions that they're practically useless.

      Your cynicism prevents you from seeing the hidden utility of a slow legislature and judiciary. And the exceptions as often as not exist to transform a "It sounds so simple and perfect!" law into one that isn't so costly to implement.

      If you could insure the whole "philosopher king" thing, make sure you have a person as absolute ruler who is both capable and worthy of it, then that would be by far the best system. Since you can't, we go with democracy, not because it's in any way better, but because it limits the possible harm that can come out of government toward the people. However democracy can't save the people from their own shortsightedness, and it's just damn inefficient.

      A philosopher king can save us from shortsightedness by delivering us over to narrowmindedness. It's not clear that we should prefer one over the other.

      I'll tell you the worse problem with democracy. On the day that the poorest 51% of the population discovers it can vote itself the wealth of the richest 49%, economic collapse is imminent.

      P.S. It's not a godwin unless your opponent tries to refute you by drawing a paralle between your argument and Hitler's. I mentioned Nazi Germany to illustrate mankind's willingness to join any evil as long as it is personally profitable.

      --
      FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
    2. Re:Godwin. by fastest+fascist · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you, but personally I make no commitment to any political system. The ability to choose my own actions (and the responsibility for their consequences as well as the authority to evaluate their morality) is mine, and no-one else's. At least with this so-called democracy there is lip-service to personal freedom. Personal freedom is the only thing that matters to an individual: If you are not free, you are not an individual, you are not living your own life but someone else's. And you only get one life. So on these grounds, I reject all justifications for governing my person. For practical purposes, I will largely go along with majority decisions, but this does not indicate unconditional support for them, nor does it indicate that I will continue to do so in the future.

      In other words, no "philosopher king" will ever be good enough for me, unless I am that king. And I don't want to be.

    3. Re:Godwin. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      It took it as you saying, "You just want to be like the Nazis" which still seems reasonable, since you're still being pretty hostile.

      Absolute ruler != narrowminded or uninformed. It just doesn't follow, though you're trying to suggest it does. I would also suggest that you're less likely to get a broadminded approach simply by asking a lot of narrowminded people to offer their opinions (e.g. Congress).

      Yes, I know a lot of people were inconvenienced by having to sort their trash, just as I know a lot of people would be inconvenienced by riding the bus. I submit, however, that the good of future generations should have say, since they're the ones who will be cleaning up the garbage, and they're the ones that will have to deal with the problems stemming from our car-centric culture.

      Your economics jibe shows you're still not following me. You persist on thinking hitler. Would an intelligent person who has a broad understanding of commerce disrupt the commerce of the whole nation for no reason, or listen to no opinion but their own? On the other hand, you could quickly divert resources to stem a disaster, without worrying about morons throwing pork for themselves on the bill. It is not an advantage to change your mind every day. It is, however, and advantage to be able to change without a massive effort wasting years with fruitless bickering among people who can't be bothered to truly understand the issues.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    4. Re:Godwin. by loucura! · · Score: 1

      The whole of history provides us with many examples of peevishly short-sighted absolute rulers, and very, very few (if any) examples of upstanding, forth-right philosopher kings.

      --
      Black and grey are both shades of white.
    5. Re:Godwin. by Skim123 · · Score: 1

      I'll tell you the worse problem with democracy. On the day that the poorest 51% of the population discovers it can vote itself the wealth of the richest 49%, economic collapse is imminent.

      It's a good thing that most modern nations are not democracies, but republics.

      It's not a godwin unless your opponent tries to refute you by drawing a paralle between your argument and Hitler's. I mentioned Nazi Germany to illustrate mankind's willingness to join any evil as long as it is personally profitable.

      Keep in mind that such corruption and evil occurred during WWII in the US, as well. The loudest proponents of Japanese Internment were the farmers competing with the Japanese farmers in the West. Point being, this sort of evil is possible in both a representative government and a fascist one, although the fascist one can clearly carry out its will with much greater efficiency.

      This discussion got me thinking about how religious beliefs on how the universe was created. Clearly, there are flaws in mankind and nature - evildoers, earthquakes, etc. Was God a single, omniscient being whose opinions and views were able to be executed efficiently, but didn't necessarily jibe with the inhabitants of his creation? Like, could God care less about tsunamis, so he didn't bother taking them out of the equation, but to the detriment of those who have to live within his kingdom? Or was "God" an elected body and "His" creation of the universe is flawed because of the competing viewpoints of "His" constituency, the poor decision making due to groupthink, and the inherent inefficiencies in having a large group of people work on some common task?

      --

      I could not justify my existence if I were a turkey farmer. Would I terminate myself? Undoubtably, yes.

    6. Re:Godwin. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Yes, I know. All through the thread I have said over and over again, "If we could find the right person, Monarchy would be the best system."

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    7. Re:Godwin. by gambolt · · Score: 1

      Have you given serious thought to how the opponents might also be right?


      Nobody rational would ever think that. Nobody is knowingly wrong, so everyone thinks they are right. If two people disagree, the only possibilities are a) they are both wrong and b) one is wrong and one is right. They can't both be right and still disagree. The law of excluded middle pretty much rules that out.
    8. Re:Godwin. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't worry. anon understands what you mean..

    9. Re:Godwin. by YayaY · · Score: 1

      I totally agree with you, except that I would like to be the King of All and Everything!

      --
      Votator.com implements a fair voting scheme (free
    10. Re:Godwin. by inviolet · · Score: 1

      Nobody rational would ever think that. Nobody is knowingly wrong, so everyone thinks they are right. If two people disagree, the only possibilities are a) they are both wrong and b) one is wrong and one is right. They can't both be right and still disagree. The law of excluded middle pretty much rules that out.

      Is that sarcasm?

      Rational people can legitimately disagree on any value judgment when they are operating on different time horizons. For example, the Iraq war is ruinously expensive in the short term, but perhaps very profitable (in terms of oil) in the medium term, and possibly massively beneficial (in terms of Middle-East reform) in the long term. The arguments about the Iraq war boil down to which time horizon we should focus on / invest in.

      I go so far as to propose that all political arguments are arguments over time horizon.

      --
      FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
    11. Re:Godwin. by Etrias · · Score: 1

      It does good things for the particular ruler's worldview, yes. The loss of all the outliers is not without its cost, though.

      Have you given serious thought to how the opponents might also be right? I realize the whole issue seems so simple to you, but there is a serious and rational counterargument that I'll bet you aren't even aware of. The counterargument is: our time is our most valuable commodity, the source of all other values, and public transportation's real expense is in lost time. Buses and trains seem cheaper when you don't factor in the very high hidden cost of all those people standing around at the station for fifteen minutes.

      Again, it seems simple to you because you aren't factoring in all the costs that those "shortsighted" people are weighing. The value of their time, spent sorting and hauling or whatever, vastly outweighs the value of the recycled materials.

      You say that like it's a good thing. There is a lot of economic value in stability, even if the current stable point is not the absolute most efficient. Change is very expensive when there are contracts and properties and projects running.

      Your cynicism prevents you from seeing the hidden utility of a slow legislature and judiciary. And the exceptions as often as not exist to transform a "It sounds so simple and perfect!" law into one that isn't so costly to implement.

      A philosopher king can save us from shortsightedness by delivering us over to narrowmindedness. It's not clear that we should prefer one over the other.

      I'll tell you the worse problem with democracy. On the day that the poorest 51% of the population discovers it can vote itself the wealth of the richest 49%, economic collapse is imminent.

      Your entire comment is based on economics. All of your replies are your "narrowminded" view that everything should be measured on a cost basis of time and/or materials. Costs of anything should be measured across a broad spectrum and not just dollar amounts. This is why societal investments are so hard to move in a republic because short term thinking (money involved usually) shouts down the benefits of long term investment. In many cases, society is served better by thinking ahead but often pays much more in the future because they didn't act when they could, burdening future generations with their lack of foresight. All you need to do is look around and there is proof of this everywhere: global warming (theorized in the late 19th century), the Social Security impending crisis (talked about in the 80's), the military industrial complex (Ike warned us about this) and nuclear proliferation (just after WWII). I could come up with more, but you get the point.

      Our republic already represents economic interests and rarely the actual interests of it's constituency (it is not a democracy, no matter what you actually think). I'd think we'd be happy with a leader who would take a reasoned approach to what society considers are the issues of it's time, but right now we can't get anything but "leaders"--used in the loosest sense of the word--representing their corporate sponsors.

      The idea behind a philosopher king would be one who actually confronts the issues, debates them and reasons out a path for society to take, not some kind of militant egotist.
    12. Re:Godwin. by Watts+Martin · · Score: 1

      On the day that the poorest 51% of the population discovers it can vote itself the wealth of the richest 49%, economic collapse is imminent. Given that the richest ten percent of Americans have about 70% of the wealth, and most high office holders -- and all current presidential candidates, the majority of whom are millionaires -- are from that richest ten percent, I don't think there's a statistically high chance of the huddled masses collectively slapping their foreheads and saying, "Shit! We can 'redistribute' all of Bill Gates' money by just voting it away from him! Thanks, Slashdot!"
    13. Re:Godwin. by bishop32x · · Score: 1
      They can't both be right and still disagree. The law of excluded middle pretty much rules that out.

      This statement assumes a solution space of a single point, in real solution spaces are often by much larger. For example, possible solutions to for a crime wave include (but are not limited to):

      -hiring A more police officers

      -spending B on jobs in the area

      -adjusting prison terms by C

      -spending D on community out-reach

      -providing E free weapons to law abiding citizens so they can defend themselves

      -requiring mandatory abortions for F percent of the populaton judged to raise criminals

      -rounding up every male between the ages of G and H and sending them into the middle of now-where to work in a labor camp

      Just considering these options we have a 8 dimensional solution space. It is non-trivial to optimize this solution for a) crime reduction, b) cost and c)moral standards, and giving the quality of data which exists for these kinds of things, it's probably impossible. So it's very possible that two people can both be right and still disagree, they just have to pick different points in the solution space.

    14. Re:Godwin. by l4m3z0r · · Score: 1

      P.S. It's not a godwin unless your opponent tries to refute you by drawing a paralle between your argument and Hitler's. I mentioned Nazi Germany to illustrate mankind's willingness to join any evil as long as it is personally profitable.

      It is Godwin Law's since Godwins law just states that the longer the dicussion is the probability that comparinsons to Nazi/Hitler are made approaches 0.

      Godwin's law has no stipulation that anything is fallacious about the arguments its just a observation. The argument using Nazis/Hitler must be ruled fallacious on its own terms.

    15. Re:Godwin. by Grygus · · Score: 1

      I disagree. When deciding on something of any complexity, if you haven't even considered your opponent's viewpoint then you haven't really thought it out. In order to properly consider his viewpoint you must suspend your own pre-judgments and allow that it is possible that your opponents are correct. If you won't even consider that you may be wrong, I would not describe you as rational.

    16. Re:Godwin. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      It's a good thing that most modern nations are not democracies, but republics.

      I think this is one of the most insightful statement I have seen on slashdot in a long time. As long as the representatives of the republic are democratically elected, it is probably the best form of government around.

      Keep in mind that such corruption and evil occurred during WWII in the US, as well. The loudest proponents of Japanese Internment were the farmers competing with the Japanese farmers in the West. Point being, this sort of evil is possible in both a representative government and a fascist one, although the fascist one can clearly carry out its will with much greater efficiency.

      I think that was the point he was making. Not necessarily about Germany and Germans but about people in general. When they can see a benefit they will support actions that will undoubtedly later be considered evil. I was going to use another word then evil, but could think of the correct spelling and settles on evil as a middle ground. It could be that the actions are less then evil but still not proper.

      This discussion got me thinking about how religious beliefs on how the universe was created. Clearly, there are flaws in mankind and nature - evildoers, earthquakes, etc. Was God a single, omniscient being whose opinions and views were able to be executed efficiently, but didn't necessarily jibe with the inhabitants of his creation? Like, could God care less about tsunamis, so he didn't bother taking them out of the equation, but to the detriment of those who have to live within his kingdom? Or was "God" an elected body and "His" creation of the universe is flawed because of the competing viewpoints of "His" constituency, the poor decision making due to groupthink, and the inherent inefficiencies in having a large group of people work on some common task?

      Well, according to the Judeo-Christian and muslum religions, God was always there and always will be and he is all powerful and omni potent. Now, any interpretation I might make on his reasoning would be flawed from the start because I don't pretend to know what would be going on in the mind of a God or that I would posses the sole interpretation of his actions. But I am willing to give it a shot.

      Generally, with religion, we have stories that warn us about impending disasters and the wrath of God. They tell us things like what is safe to eat, where to live, how to act within our own house, how to interact with others and so on. We either fail to see them or we think it won't happen to us because we are faithful to our religion Even though we move into the areas of concern.

      Something like a Tsunami could be a side effect of a wanted attribute. Lets say that a god wanted water to behave the way it does. Lets say he also wanted the tectonic plates to move and lest say that there is a reason for this that is above and beyond anything we can fathom in our mortal minds. Now we come to another point, our mortal minds are the ones that think death is a bad thing yet we have reasoned the way to put animals out of their misery when they are injured enough that they will just suffer a slow and painful death. So we can mercy kill and animal but reject the idea of a GOD doing the same with humans. (keep that in mind)

      The Bible says that God created humans for his pleasure. When we please him he is happy and when we don't please him, he is upset. According to bible, we also know that a person's soul belongs to go and that when you die, you go to heaven, the kingdom of GOD. (of course there are concepts like hell and the lake of fire that destroys the soul). We also know that the Jewish and Muslim religions are basically related to Christianity in that they share the same god with different interpretations of the meaning of prophets and how to worship him.

      Here is the catch, A tsunami, is it bad and punishment from God because of something the people w

    17. Re:Godwin. by gambolt · · Score: 1

      In that case they are not both right. They are talking about two different things.

    18. Re:Godwin. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Nobody rational would ever think that. Nobody is knowingly wrong, so everyone thinks they are right. If two people disagree, the only possibilities are a) they are both wrong and b) one is wrong and one is right. They can't both be right and still disagree. The law of excluded middle pretty much rules that out.
      That would only be true if you limit the possibilities of the answers. There really isn't a single right way and a single wrong way. There are multiple right ways and multiple wrong ways.

      Say for a question like should we sort out trash and recycle what we can. The answers could be yes, force the consumer to do it or yes, set a sorting facility up at the landfill and use robotics to do it. Both are correct answers to the question of recycling. But they differ in implementation. You would have two apposing views that say the same answer and therefore would both be considered correct. Well assuming that sorting out recyclable parts of our trash is a correct answer.

      Another example could be health care. Should more people have health care coverage. And the two answers could be; Yes, lets raise taxes and let the government cover them. Or it could be Yes, lets give tax breaks and other incentives so more people can be covered and lets limit what the maximum can be charged so that anyone not currently covered can afford coverage. Again, two answers of yes but different approaches to the same goal. And is could be that a combination of the two might be a third answer.
    19. Re:Godwin. by IthnkImParanoid · · Score: 1
      This may not directly counter your point since your argument was largely hypothetical, but the likelihood of "the right person" existing is very low. "The right person", at the very least:
      • Can properly formulate, weigh, and understand vastly different opinions, perspectives, and strategies. This would require a dizzying intellect and memory capacity. A leader has to know the right solution before they can implement it.
      • Is immune to the negative aspects of human social behavior, e.g. cliques and nepotism, us-versus-them mentalities. There's probably some strong evolutionary pressure reinforcing these behaviors.
      • Cannot be deceived or manipulated. A single leader is a single point of failure and a single target for corruption.
      • Either cannot be wrong or must be able and willing to admit mistakes.
      • Must place the best interests of society above all else. The temptation to use power for one's own benefit grows as power grows.
      • Must lead effectively and hold the confidence of the people.
      • Must live. How many disgruntled assassins does it take to bring down the government?

      I cannot prove that one person having these qualities is impossible, but there seems to be little point in extolling the virtues of a system that requires such an unlikely individual to exist.
      --
      It's nothing but crumpled porno and Ayn Rand.
    20. Re:Godwin. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The true problem with your possition is that you can never find the right person. Such a person does not exist and never will. So your position seems rather hollow.

    21. Re:Godwin. by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Not true. Godwin's law is in the context of outrageous ad hominem attacks. If the comparison to Hitler or Nazis is apt, it wouldn't apply. Nor could it, as the timing of the Nazi appearance in appropriate and inappropriate threads would differ widely; hence a common "law" would be useless unless it were really two sub-laws, in which case it's not really doing its job anymore, is it?

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    22. Re:Godwin. by Dutch+Reagan's+Ghost · · Score: 1
      You were doing great right up until here...

      I'll tell you the worse problem with democracy. On the day that the poorest 51% of the population discovers it can vote itself the wealth of the richest 49%, economic collapse is imminent.
      This is not a problem for American democracy because of a little thing called the Constitution. This danger was forseen by the founders who initially made property, and not "the pursuit of happiness," one of the original inalienable rights in the DoI. It is a reason why private property rights are firmly ensconced in the BoR. Sure, we could amend private property protections out of the Constitution, but that would take a supermajority in both house and approval of 3/4 of state legislatures. Even if the poorest 51% managed to get the supermajority--already an incredibly long shot for reasons including our current districting system and the importance of money in electoral campaigns--the legislatures in the richer 49% of states--I'm looking squarely at you, fellow Connecticutians--would never allow such a thing. And don't you say, "the poorest 51% will write a new Constitution..." because that isn't democracy, that's simply a tyranny of the majority.

      Argh, I've done it again, I really need to work harder to keep realism out of /. political discourse.
    23. Re:Godwin. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personal freedom is the only thing that matters to an individual: If you are not free, you are not an individual, you are not living your own life but someone else's.


      I'm very tired of reading stuff like this on SlashDot and other geek sites. Just because most of you are Chaotic Neutral doesn't mean you can tell us Lawful Neutral guys what does and does not matter to us. Kindly shut your piehole.
    24. Re:Godwin. by Chirs · · Score: 1

      Buses and trains seem cheaper when you don't factor in the very high hidden cost of all those people standing around at the station for fifteen minutes.

      You really think those fifteen minutes will make much of a difference? In many large centers its faster to take public transit because they have special lanes/routes that are not congested, not to mention the difficulty of actually finding a parking spot. Also, taking the bus is much more relaxing than driving...I can get a lot of reading/thinking done while commuting.

      The value of their time, spent sorting and hauling or whatever, vastly outweighs the value of the recycled materials.

      The earths resources are finite, as is landfill space. It doesn't matter if it costs people time to recycle if there is no place to put the garbage and no way to get new materials.

    25. Re:Godwin. by Rydia · · Score: 1

      I think this is one of the most insightful statement I have seen on slashdot in a long time. As long as the representatives of the republic are democratically elected, it is probably the best form of government around.


      Untrue! The best form of government around is the Constitutional Ninjocracy. This system holds the ultimate in checks and balances: retaliatory assassinations. Say the Ninja-King decided that he didn't like a law, so issued a signing statement to render it toothless. The Ninja-Senators could simply enter the Black House and off him in the middle of the night, and then hold an election for a new Ninja-King the next month. Say Senator Yoshitsune (N-?) was in an inappropriate liaison with a congressional grasshopper. The Smokebombs and Other Methods of Entry and Egress Committee could track him down and off him, then assign the poor grasshopper to the tutelage of another master ninja. By this method, all rules are obeyed, since every member of the government is a trained killing machine who swore a blood oath to protect the secrets of their order, destroy rogue agents, and uphold the constitution. This would also help the media, as any scandals would be dealt with quietly and in total secrecy, so reporters could get a break from the neverending scandal coverage and avoid any fake scandals; you cannot interview that which you cannot see!

      "But," you ask, betraying your low intelligence, "What is to keep these masters of the shadows from turning their awesome ninja might against the general populace?" That, my poor deluded fool, is why it is a constitutional system. There is a separate branch of Ninja-Jurists whose sole purpose is to ensure that any Ninja-Legislators meet swift justice if they abuse the system. The Constitution furthermore disallows revenge-killings between branches of government, assuring that each branch's assassinative actions are either allowed under some general law, or internal to each branch. This, naturally, assures separation of sneaky powers of stealth, and gives each branch of the government incentive to uphold the rules to the letter, in the hope of replacing the lapsed representative with a member of their own sect.

      Armies of ninja ruling from the shadows- not just a laughable translation, but a sound system of government.
    26. Re:Godwin. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I'll give you a C+ for creativity and an A+ for amusing.

      Anyways, good post. It was just the break I needed.

    27. Re:Godwin. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buses and trains seem cheaper when you don't factor in the very high hidden cost of all those people standing around at the station for fifteen minutes.
      And that's exactly why he was describing this point of view as short-sighted. Oil is a limited resource! Yes, by using private transportation we can be slightly more productive today, but that means we're burning through our limited supply of transportation faster, with the consequent risk that we'll run into shortages long before we develop a viable alternative. What would you rather - fifteen minutes waiting at the station today, or two-week journeys in a horse-drawn carriage in ten years' time?

    28. Re:Godwin. by Score+Whore · · Score: 1

      The only thing Godwin's law says is that as the length of a usenet thread increases the probability that someone will mention the nazi's approaches 1.

    29. Re:Godwin. by Doctor+Faustus · · Score: 1

      If you could insure the whole "philosopher king" thing, make sure you have a person as absolute ruler who is both capable and worthy of it, then that would be by far the best system. Since you can't, we go with democracy, not because it's in any way better, but because it limits the possible harm that can come out of government toward the people. However democracy can't save the people from their own shortsightedness, and it's just damn inefficient.

      If you're seriously interested in such things, read Machiavelli's Discourses on Livy . If not, the gist is, looking at the history of ancient civilizations, especially Rome, it appears that the most successful societies maintain aspects of democracy, monarchy and aristocracy, with all three constantly pushing for more power vs. the others. From there, you get to Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws (which isn't remotely as interesting to read), and then the debates at the U.S. Constitutional Convention and the arguments for ratification in The Federalist Papers.

      But I'm becoming increasingly convinced that Machiavelli's view was better than the follow-on work.

    30. Re:Godwin. by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 1

      Seems unlikely to find a person who meets all those criteria, much less one person per generation to continue the leadership. But run through that checklist with a computer system as your leader, and you have a strong candidate.

      The catch, of course, is that computer systems are designed by humans. Also the inevitability that they will decide to destroy all humans.

    31. Re:Godwin. by koick · · Score: 1

      our time is our most valuable commodity, the source of all other values, and public transportation's real expense is in lost time. Buses and trains seem cheaper when you don't factor in the very high hidden cost of all those people standing around at the station for fifteen minutes.
      You just lost that one; what about when you're sitting on the 405 for an hour and a half when a train could have taken you there in 25 minutes. Now, that's high cost because it's lost time, lost money, lost gas, and lost planet.
    32. Re:Godwin. by Tacticus.v1 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately Carrot is just a fictional character :(

    33. Re:Godwin. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Buses and trains seem cheaper when you don't factor in the very high hidden cost of all those people standing around at the station for fifteen minutes."

      As opposed to commutying 1-2+ hours to work + gas + car maintenance + energy costs? I think you havent' considered the profound impact of car culture and the kind of resources it sucks up from the planet.

    34. Re:Godwin. by nugneant · · Score: 1

      He's using economic vocabulary, but something can be "profitable to society" without making anyone money.

      Read a book, you literalist cretin.

    35. Re:Godwin. by nugneant · · Score: 1

      Oh, ninjas, that's pretty funny! hehehehehehe... the only thing that could make that any funnier would be like if you had some pirates in there maybe. SHIVER ME TIMBERS and ninjas hahahaha god they're so WACKY!

    36. Re:Godwin. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was going to use another word then evil, but could think of the correct spelling


      Eff-you-see-kay-ee-dee. HTH, HAND :-)
    37. Re:Godwin. by rajinder · · Score: 1

      Vetinari is more appropriate given the above topic, Carrot was just king, Vetinari was the tyrant with the only vote.

      --
      - It is simple to make something complex, and complex to make it simple
    38. Re:Godwin. by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      the Iraq war is ruinously expensive in the short term, but perhaps very profitable (in terms of oil) in the medium term, and possibly massively beneficial (in terms of Middle-East reform) in the long term.

      I think you meant: The war on Iraq is:
      • Enormously profitable in the short term (for the people who count)
      • a wash in the medium term (oil is oil, who gives a damn who's selling it)
      • a crazy disaster in the long term (who needs more enemies)
      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    39. Re:Godwin. by l4m3z0r · · Score: 1

      It is true. You denying it is true is like denying that Nazis existed or the holocaust happened! :)

      Read: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law

  64. Don't Believe Everything you Read by Greyfox · · Score: 3, Informative
    But we've known THAT all along, right? Everyone has an agenda and whether or not they know it is irrelevant; their bias will show in their work. Take your research from several different sources and go see with your own eyes if you're really that interested.

    On a side note, we need the same level of transparency into our Governments that we're currently seeing in Wikipedia. There were shenanigans going on, but those shenanigans were exposed for anyone who bothered to look for them. Opensecrets.org is a good start, but it doesn't really offer the same level of governmental shenanigans-catching.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  65. Why blacklisting is a bad idea by Ed+Avis · · Score: 2, Interesting
    There seem to be similarities between the Wikipedia cabal blocking all edits from a particular IP range and spam blacklist services that recommend blocking mail from a particular range. As Jef Poskanzer wrote:

    Well, I don't know why, but in practice every single DNS-RBL eventually comes under the control of power-hungry weenies. They start listing sites unreliably, and if you complain you find yourself listed. And there's usually no way to get off the list.
    Sound familiar? From TFA, it appears that Wikipedia blocked an IP range not because of abuse on Wikipedia, but because someone expressed his own views on his own private website. Similarly spam blacklists have been known to block people for 'promoting spam' by hosting web pages, even when those actions are not correlated with sending messages you'd want to block. Web filtering programs often block pages which are critical of web filtering, just for expressing an opinion the filtering company doesn't like, not for hosting obscene material.

    Is there any way around the 'power-hungry weenie' problem? I think some explicit policy on blocking could help. If any IP address is blocked from Wikipedia, there must be a link to an archived copy of the Wikipedia vandalism that was responsible for the blocking, and this evidence should be verifiable by anyone.
    --
    -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    1. Re:Why blacklisting is a bad idea by MostAwesomeDude · · Score: 1

      Sure. Do Slashdot-style page moderation. Deletion requires a quorum of moderators to agree (say, twenty), and there are only a hundred or so moderators on any given day. User administration is handled by a different group of people, administrators, and any block requires at least two administrators to sign off on it. Mods are randomly chosen from a pool of editors with a history of good faith, noted by other editors, and administrators are nominated and then elected by a majority of editors in the moderator pool. (Note that election would not be by quorum, you need a majority of ALL editors with voting power.) Blocks may not be made on IP addresses. Blocks placed on IPs in dynamic ranges must not last longer than a week.

      How does this sound?

      --
      ~ C.
    2. Re:Why blacklisting is a bad idea by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      And barring the mods to edit may help even more I tell you!

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
  66. Self-regulation by The+Second+Horseman · · Score: 1

    It doesn't work. How long does it take a state's medical boards to remove a butchering quack from the ranks of medical professionals? Seriously. When you add anonymity to the mix, you're counting on a huge group of people all acting in an ethical manner. It just won't happen. And the administrators aren't any better - it's an anonymous group with "power" (albeit in a rather meaningless realm - if Google didn't give such high page rankings to Wikipedia entries, it wouldn't matter half as much as it does), and they're going to use it. That's what happens. In the absence of strong ethical standards, and a group who feels that the way to avoid criticism and attack is to behave in a manner utterly beyond reproach, it's far to easy for critics to think it's the product of infinite monkeys or a bunch of crazy, obsessive nutjobs who drive out qualified contributors. Wikipedia would be better off getting rid of the "flat" structure officially and putting something in place, than pretending it's flat and have groups forming up behind the scenes to impose it themselves.

  67. Wizards of OZ by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I actually read TFA and (almost) all the included links to Wikipedia, AntiSocial, WikipediaReview, WikiTruth, etc... I think I can sum up what Jimbo and the other WP Admins would like everyone to keep in mind:

    "Pay no attention to the people behind the curtain."

    Where possible, of course Wikipedia is manipulated for the benefit and glory of those that own or run it (and/or their friends) - DUH. There's money to be made, agendas to set, axes to grind, opinions to influence, minds to manipulate. Then, of course, there are the evil uses :-)

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  68. Hey moderators by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Flamebait my wiki ass. Who modded it that way, Jimbo and the wiki elite?

    Moderators on crack, no. Moderators from wiki, wouldn't be surprised. All you other non-wiki moderators need to jump in and correct this.

  69. Re:Wasn't trying to inform by Goaway · · Score: 1

    I had no idea there were rules to what could be posted. "It's not against the rules, so I can do what I want!" is the favourite excuse of the coward and incompetent.
  70. Complaint is over-rated by Tom+Womack · · Score: 1

    I don't see it as a critical failing of an encyclopaedia that its governance structures are such as to bias its pool of contributors towards the stoic.

  71. I love how they link to Ars Technica by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Truly amazing that they link to Ars, which is known to "purge" it's own article and protect it against edits it doesn't like. Book Jacket indeed.

  72. This is really too bad by mcsqueak · · Score: 1

    This kind of stuff really hurts the reputation of Wikipedia. I use it every day for work and personal interests, but this type of internal corruption is why I'll never donate money to the Wikipedia foundation and why I don't think Wikipedia will grow much more than it already has.

  73. Re:You're wrong and a liar now by butterwise · · Score: 1

    Nunya and Satan: Would you two please knock it off? You're scaring the children...

    --
    If a baby duck is a "duckling," why would anyone want to eat "dumplings?"
  74. Unsurprisingly... by Moryath · · Score: 3, Interesting
    look at the chain of wikipedia's former administrators who've been booted off the project.

    Look at how they operate. Parker Peters did a fantastic job writing it up: http://parkerpeters.livejournal.com/

    If you look at every one of these cases, who keeps popping up? It's the same group of editors - David Gerard, JayJG, JzG, SlimVirgin, etc... all with the blessing of Der Fuehrer Jimbo.

    SECOND - Interesting emails have come to me. They are transcripts of the private "discussion" surrounding the banning of anyone who disagrees with abusive administrators in general on wikien-l, and in particular, my own ban - which was placed, not for the lying reasons they gave, but because I was making sense, I had exposed their lies and abuses, and they knew that I had the proper evidence on a CheckUser that they had deliberately lied about. They source to David Gerard, and my analysis was spot-on; he was the genesis of the banning campaign, which is no surprise, as he's always been the most totalitarian, corrupt, hotheaded, and completely worthless representative of any of the Wikipedia and Wikien-l higher-ups.

    Such is the Wikipedia way, the way that exists in most totalitarian states; if you are not right, you simply kill the messenger. They are doing their level best to do this, to this day. That they are trying to close off and shutter anyone who exposes them, and further hiding their back channels to hide their misdeeds, is plenty of proof.


    If Der Fuehrer Jimbo did bother to pop up on Slashdot as a few posters have wished he would, what would he say? It'd doubtlessly be the same thing he says on Wikipedia as he goes around threatening to ban anyone who exposes the abuses of his buddy clique as a so-called "troll."
    1. Re:Unsurprisingly... by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So what is the ultimate goal here. Is Wikkipedia really an open encyclopedia accessible to everyone or id it an exclusive club of yes men attempting to push some hidden agenda.

      And if it is even remotely the second, I could see how exposing the corruption would be a serious things. It threatens the validity of the agenda. But I have to ask, if there is no agenda, then why would corrupt practices be something of interest. And if there is an agenda, what might it be? I know they have had slanted coverage of politically charged events. Things like one paragraph somewhat hidden on other pages explaining the real problems with the Katrina response and three quarters of the main article focusing on the government, Bush and how evil they are. But I doubt their motivation is purely political.

      I would be interested in knowing though. They certainly aren't banning together in secrecy in order to place incorrect information into articles for the sake of being wrong are they? I know they have had some posers like the tenured Harvard professor that was so good, he didn't have to leave his basement in KY long enough for anyone at Harvard to know who he was. There was a few others to. Of course there is also the accusations of ignoring policies to rule on topics or changes outside the secrete mailing lists.

      I don't know. Does anyone have any suggestions to what their motivation might be? Just "Power" doesn't cut it for me. It would be like having the toughest character in a video game. It only relates to the game, they don't attempt to conceal it and when people get pissed, they just play a different game. So I don't see this sort of power translating to anything other then imaginary power. Lets dig and see if we can uncover the real reasons.

    2. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Moryath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So what is the ultimate goal here. Is Wikkipedia really an open encyclopedia accessible to everyone or id it an exclusive club of yes men attempting to push some hidden agenda.

      "Yes."
      For a lot of topics, Der Fuehrer Jimbo or one of his cronies probably don't give a rat's ass. So they wind up leaving those alone, at which point other dynamics (also here) come into play.

      And if it is even remotely the second, I could see how exposing the corruption would be a serious things. It threatens the validity of the agenda. But I have to ask, if there is no agenda, then why would corrupt practices be something of interest.

      Corrupt practices should be of interest on the basis that they're corrupt, but also because everything has real-world implications. Articles on a country have real implications - they can impact tourism, they can impact politics, they can impact how people view the country. Articles on a political dispute, or a political leader, can have a formative impact on how they are viewed, especially as Wikipedia has hit so high in its search rankings seeing as it's essentially one gigantic fucking linkfarm (that gives out no bump to anyone else now that they implemented external-link "nofollow" tags).

      Psychological research for decades has shown what ought to be pretty obvious - the first impression someone gets about something is always the strongest, and absent a massive shock or mound of evidence, will always have more impact on thought patterns than later information. Wikipedia, by virtue of being engineered to hit high in the search rankings, is the first place most people will get information on a given random topic.

      That makes it important.

      And if there is an agenda, what might it be? I know they have had slanted coverage of politically charged events. Things like one paragraph somewhat hidden on other pages explaining the real problems with the Katrina response and three quarters of the main article focusing on the government, Bush and how evil they are. But I doubt their motivation is purely political.

      Depends what article and who you're asking. A number of $cientologists work to bias the hell out of $cientology articles - hiding what the Cult of $cientology wants hidden from view, such as the fact that the "Oxford Capacity Analysis" (their rigged personality test) has nothing to do with Oxford University for example. A rather sizable group of Arabs work to whitewash and control any article related to Islam and regularly war over the Israel/Palestinian issue... the trick is getting yourself entrenched and acquiring allies who are equally fanatical on some other topic that you don't really give a rat's ass about. You scratch their back, they scratch yours... and at the end of the day, the result is that most of the administrators on the site aren't set up about making a better encyclopedia, but keeping an article under their control and helping their new "friends" do the same on theirs.

      Check out This page as one example. What do we see? A user named OrangeMike, who just "happens" to be a well-known Democrat operative in Milwaukee and longstanding friend of communist mayor Frank Zeidler comes along and starts whitewashing articles that mention his friend, and abuses his connections to other admins to get his opponents banned. The situation is almost a textbook example of what Parker Peters refers to.

      A short time later, after questions of his conduct are removed from >his Adminship candidacy page by his abusive-a

    3. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've known one of those editors for a number of years pretty well and It scares me to think they are an official spokesman, becuase they are a rampant self serving egomaniac who has been throwing their weight around on usenet for years. they are also the most odious sleeze i've ever encountered, but that's another story.

      it's obvious there is a cabal of super editors who have ultimate control of what happens or doesn't because they are drinking buddies of the guy calling the shots. I suspect they are all pretty much the same, small time geeks who want to throw their epeens about and the paranoid shoty egomaniacs tend to be the ones who rise to the surface in these 'democratic' freeforalls

      ps: this is the wiki media spokesman who is referenced in the story
      http://www.encyclopediadramatica.com/David_Gerard

    4. Re:Unsurprisingly... by gwern · · Score: 1

      Essjay never claimed to be a Harvard professor.

    5. Re:Unsurprisingly... by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      Since Wikipedia itself claims to only be a compilation and not a definitive source of information, I have a hard time seeing the problem. They aren't responsible for other people's perceptions. Trying to make them so is fairly disingenuous.

      Of course, why not hammer them for it anyway? It's the human thing to do.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    6. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 4, Informative

      especially as Wikipedia has hit so high in its search rankings seeing as it's essentially one gigantic fucking linkfarm (that gives out no bump to anyone else now that they implemented external-link "nofollow" tags).

      Not entirely correct. There is a policy in place that allows Wikia - Jimbo's for-profit enterprise - links, to not be "nofollow"ed, and gain the benefit of Wikipedia's PageRank. Funny, that. If you go look at Wikipedia's entries on Family Guy, too, you'll see another interesting practice - great swathes of things been "not-notable" transwiki'd to Wikia, where ads on each and every page generate Jimbo income. Almost every single link on the Family Guy entries now point to Jimbo's Wikia.

    7. Re:Unsurprisingly... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You know, your right. I must have lost track of all the false qualifications that he did make a claim to and inserted that by accident. My bad, I didn't mean to improperly represent someone hiding behind their own misrepresentations.

      BTW, do you know what university he was claiming to be tenured at?

    8. Re:Unsurprisingly... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Do you see it now? Wikipedia has the power to hurt politicians, public figures, or political groups you don't like. It has the power to influence what people first think about a religion, or a hospital, or a school, or a city. It has immense power in that regard, and the corruption is all the worse because of that.
      Well, that is what I asked for. I mean, if they just wanted power for the sake of power, then it wouldn't matter because it would be useless. But you properly showed that they wanted power for a purpose. You see, Having power just to have power isn't bad even when it is used. But it is how or why it is used that can make it bad.

      But yea, outside bossing people around at the site and staying within the rules, they had an agenda or several agendas. You pointed quite a few out and I am thankfull for it.
    9. Re:Unsurprisingly... by gwern · · Score: 1

      He didn't claim any particular university - he described it in vague enough terms it could've been any of easily dozens of colleges/universities in the Northeast, as I recall some stalkers on Wikipedia Review frustratedly concluding (before the whole issue of which school became moot, obviously).

    10. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      > a textbook example of what Parker Peters refers to

      Ahh, Parker Peters, my favorite investigative journalist/photographer, who's also secretly the superhero Manspider.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    11. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They bill themselves as an encyclopedia. They engineered the site to be the first hit on as many searches as they can.


      That is the most ignorant thing I have read today. You must have really thought Reefer Madness was a documentary huh?
    12. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Haeleth · · Score: 1

      if you do a google search on a random subject, what's always in the top 3 results? A Wikipedia page.
      Let's try it!

      The first subject that came into my head (influenced rather by this article) was "register". Hmm, Wikipedia doesn't appear on the first two pages of results - the first Wikipedia result is number 25.

      Okay, maybe a fluke. Next I tried "Jimbo". There are no Wikipedia results in the top 3 -- Jimbo's user page does however come in at number 6.

      There you go -- not just one but two counterexamples, neatly disproving your false assertion.
    13. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Smauler · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Wikipedia has that power now. However, there is one big thing that prevents that power from becoming too strong. Anyone can copy it. Anyone can replicate Wikipedia in its entirety, and change the bits they want, and moderate the bits they want. The _only_ thing wikipedia has is its popularity. There is nothing else, Wikipedia as an organisation has 0 true assets, apart from their popularity.

      If or when wikipedia gets too corrupt, users will leave. They'll leave to an identical copy of wikipedia without the corrupt bits.

      Most of the problem pages on wikipedia are about people or companies. I personally very rarely look up information on people (who aren't long dead) or companies on wikipedia - Wikipedia is never going to be a good source of information on those kinds of things, nor should it aim to be.

    14. Re:Unsurprisingly... by lessthan · · Score: 1

      Nice, now try proper nouns. How about "Japan?" Yep, Wikipedia is the 1st link. Let us use the totally random name "Michael?" Wow, it is the third link. How odd. And now for ironic effect "Haeleth?" Oh yes, the third link is your 'User Talk' page. I didn't even think that would work. You found a few words that didn't return a Wikipedia link. Big deal. You don't fool anyone.

      --
      Space Shuttle was a program that strapped humans to an explosion and tried to stab through the sky with fire and math
    15. Re:Unsurprisingly... by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Stalkers when they find information about wikipedia users, but what does that make wikipedia users that find information about wikipedia subjects.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    16. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the term is "faggots".

      Hope this helps.

    17. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's spelled "shit", you fucking two-year-old.

    18. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

      1: It's not what they say that matters, it's how they're seen. And plenty of people see them as a definitive source of information.

      2: It's not what they say that matters, it's what they do. They say they're neutral, but some pigs are more neutral than others....

      Hal.

      --
      Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
    19. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

      If or when the users find out that the site has been corrupted. But Jimbelzebub won't let that happen any time soon. Hence why only a few of us have left.

      HAL.

      --
      Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
    20. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Meski · · Score: 1

      They bill themselves as an encyclopedia.
      They engineered the site to be the first hit on as many searches as they can.
      Engineered? Maybe Google should ban them for excessive SEO. I'd like to see that.
    21. Re:Unsurprisingly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moron. There is no cabal.

  75. "Naked short selling", and all that by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ugh. Now that I've read the Wikipedia article on "naked short selling", I'm probably going to have to edit it. It doesn't mention some of the real problems. "Naked short selling" creates fake stock, which is then purchased and owned by someone. And they can vote that stock. This can lead to more votes than there are shares outstanding.

    The fake stock created by naked short selling is supposed to be replaced by buying real stock within 13 days. But that's not always happening. "Overstock.com" has had such fake stock outstanding for years, more fake stock than they actually have outstanding.

    Here's a New York Times article that discusses the issue. Forbes has also written about this.

    The top stocks with fake stock outstanding for long periods are:

    • Overstock.com
    • Martha Stewart
    • Netflix
    • Blockbuster
    • Delta Airlines
    1. Re:"Naked short selling", and all that by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      Tell us how long your edit lasts before it's reverted due to "vandalism" or some other nonsense.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    2. Re:"Naked short selling", and all that by MarkGriz · · Score: 1

      Bloomberg TV did a pretty informative story on it as well.

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
    3. Re:"Naked short selling", and all that by TheWizardOfCheese · · Score: 1
      Well if you do edit that article you will become a poster child for the weaknesses of Wikipedia, because you don't know what you are talking about. I see no evidence that you have read either link you provide, as neither of them supports your bizarre assertions and the Forbes article goes some way toward contradicting them. It says:

      In naked short-selling, the trader sells the shares without properly borrowing the stock. When the stock isn't properly borrowed, the buyer at the other end of that short-sale doesn't get delivery of the shares within the mandated three-day window. The buyer also loses out on voting rights and tax-advantages until the short-seller closes out the position.

      You see? The problem is that the buyer of the shorted stock can't vote the stock if the trade fails. That is because the stock doesn't exist, and it doesn't exist because nobody but the board of the company in question can create more stock. You can't create "fake" stock just by shorting it. That is why it is possible to sell more than a company's float via naked shorting.

      I would go on to describe what a naked short is, but the Wikipedia article is perfectly accurate, in marked contrast to your own post. Suffice to say that the difference between a naked short and an ordinary short if the trade fails is that in the former case, it is the stock buyer that has a problem whereas in the latter it is the stock lender (in addition to the stock shorter, of course, who always has a problem.)
      --

      "The good reader is a rarer swan than the good writer."
    4. Re:"Naked short selling", and all that by volpe · · Score: 1

      "Overstock.com" has had such fake stock outstanding for years,

      Yeah, well at least they don't make no bones about it.

    5. Re:"Naked short selling", and all that by nmktlong · · Score: 1

      That's part of the problem- they won't let you edit the naked short selling page!
      Try and you will get kicked off.

      Try and edit the Patrick Bryne page and you will get kicked off.

      The Bryne page makes him out in the worth possible light.
      The Gary Weiss page makes Weiss out to be angelic!

      Weiss is mired in controversy but you wouldn't know if by looking at his wiki entry.

      No one can edit the Weiss or the Byrne entries- but one entry reads as if it was written by an admirer while the other reads as if it was written by an enemy! Read them both and you decide which is which.

      Wikipeida has a personal vendetta against Bryne- and they are protecting the Weiss wiki entry.

      This is deep- and a little bit disturbing.

    6. Re:"Naked short selling", and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "You see? The problem is that the buyer of the shorted stock can't vote the stock if the trade fails. That is because the stock doesn't exist, and it doesn't exist because nobody but the board of the company in question can create more stock. You can't create "fake" stock just by shorting it. That is why it is possible to sell more than a company's float via naked shorting.
      "

      What a bunch of crap. There is hard evidence posted from FOIA requests from the SEC and analysis of proxy voting records that prove that illegal naked short selling is occurring along with companies having more than 100% of the total shares outstanding voted in corporate proxy votes. The receiving broker has no idea if the shares credited in a computerized book entry are legitimate or phantom shares in their customers account and no incentive to uncover the facts if so interested. You are correct when you state:

      "You can't create "fake" stock just by shorting it."

      It is created by intentionally failing to deliver illegally naked shorted shares often using the market maker's exemption. It is nice that you tout the WikiNazi party line, but the facts are much more convincing in this argument.

    7. Re:"Naked short selling", and all that by Animats · · Score: 1

      No, there really is a problem with voting rights vs. short selling. See "One Share, One Vote - Short Selling Short-Circuits System", in the International Herald Tribune: When brokerages lend out a customer's stock to short sellers and those traders sell the stock to someone else, both investors are often able to vote in corporate elections. ... "It is an abomination," said Thomas Montrone, chief executive officer of Registrar & Transfer, which oversees shareholder elections. "A lot of the time we have no idea who's entitled to vote and who isn't. It's nothing short of criminal." And: ""It appears to be the case where there are opportunities to game the system" (Cary Klafter, VP Legal and Government Affairs, Intel.)

      There are other references, but that's enough for now.

    8. Re:"Naked short selling", and all that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You see? The problem is that the buyer of the shorted stock can't vote the stock if the trade fails. That is because the stock doesn't exist, and it doesn't exist because nobody but the board of the company in question can create more stock. You can't create "fake" stock just by shorting it. That is why it is possible to sell more than a company's float via naked shorting.
      "

      What a bunch of crap. There is hard evidence posted from FOIA requests from the SEC and analysis of proxy voting records that prove that illegal naked short selling is occurring along with companies having more than 100% of the total shares outstanding voted in corporate proxy votes. The receiving broker has no idea if the shares credited in a computerized book entry are legitimate or phantom shares in their customers account and no incentive to uncover the facts if so interested. You are correct when you state:

      "You can't create "fake" stock just by shorting it."

      It is created by intentionally failing to deliver illegally naked shorted shares often using the market maker's exemption. It is nice that you tout the WikiNazi party line, but the facts are much more convincing in this argument.

  76. Sending Spyware to the Admins by Kelson · · Score: 1

    While I agree that the response was excessive (banning 1K IPs to block one user's actions), I have a hard time feeling sympathy for someone who thought it would be a good idea to send spyware to the person to whom he was appealing. That doesn't seem like a good strategy.

    1. Re:Sending Spyware to the Admins by Raul654 · · Score: 1

      It's not excessive. We're not talking about blocking 1000 users here - we're talking about blocking 1000s IP addresses. The actual number of people who edit Wikipedia from that range (besides Bagley) is very likely 0.

      --


      To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
      --E.C. Stanton
    2. Re:Sending Spyware to the Admins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess making good on your threats to ban public logging of your channel is too much

      http://raul654sucks.ath.cx/wikipedia.html

    3. Re:Sending Spyware to the Admins by Kelson · · Score: 1

      The actual number of people who edit Wikipedia from that range (besides Bagley) is very likely 0.

      But the article opens with a story about just such a user. That means at least 1 person who was not Bagley has tried to edit from that range. Even the screenshot (asuming it's accurate) states that the range was "actually (and almost exclusively) used by them" (emphasis added), implying that other users had been seen coming from that range. Are you really that confident that no one on a given residential network will want to edit Wikipedia over the next however-many months?

  77. Utopia it ain't by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1
    Does anyone really still believe that WikiPedia is a valid source of information from accountable sources?

    In addition to accountability, WikiPedia also lacks a historical perspective on the items it tries to document. Anything occurring in the recent past is always given far more "column inches" than more significant things that happen in the past. Even worse, things experienced by the writer of the WikiPedia article are given much, much more precedence than those things not experienced by the writer. That is what happens when you have amateur writers and editors: pop culture and pop knowledge win, historical perspective loses.

  78. Double Standards and by Raisey-raison · · Score: 1

    If you take a look at Wikipedia article on Garry Weiss http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Weiss it reads like a positive list of achievements and that it reads much like an advertisement. There is even a template designed to be placed in an article if this happens normally to alert people of such blatant bias and the need for a rewrite. The article does not discuss any of the controversy. You will see that it has now been locked (not even semi protected). As someone who has regularly edited Wikipedia the blocking a page while leaving it in so biased a state is quite unusual. It so blatantly breaks Wikipedia's own rules that it's quite amusing.

    However as nsayer and Minwee allude to, the people involved are powerful and the rules are always different for the powerful. Clearly Jimbo Wales and other senior administrators should not be editing articles (and worse still be the sole editors) about controversies in which they are involved. Some might think they are a little biased. Indeed any references to the recent controversy in the article above that were there before have been deleted by a senior admin.

    I would suggest that a separate group of Wikipedian's who are not admins be created to oversee disputes such as this one. In fact the senior admins involved in the dispute should be temporarily barred from editing the relevant articles until things have calmed down a bit.

  79. Re:If you want to read unsantized information on W by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is a comprehensive list of topics the Wikipedia "cabal" are most involved in censoring? Is there a reference somewhere?

  80. The Register again? by MutantEnemy · · Score: 1

    The Register has had a hate on for Wikipedia for quite some time. Don't ask me why, I have no idea. But when is Slashdot going to stop taking its pieces about Wikipedia at face value?

    --
    Grr! Arg!
    1. Re:The Register again? by julesh · · Score: 1

      The Register has had a hate on for Wikipedia for quite some time. Don't ask me why, I have no idea.

      Wikipedia generally considers The Register an unreliable source, even in its core area of competency (i.e. IT news), despite the fact that the site objectively meets all the criteria for being reliable that are described in various policies.

      This might have something to do with it.

    2. Re:The Register again? by MutantEnemy · · Score: 1

      Which came first, The Register attacking Wikipedia regularly or Wikipedia seeing The Register as a poor quality source?

      --
      Grr! Arg!
  81. Re:Thanks by shystershep · · Score: 1

    "Human execution corrupted a good idea."

    There is a subject, etc.: he just wrote it in the passive voice. When you remove the passive voice it's easier to tell. So, no, it's not just a sentence fragment. It is grammatically correct, just poor style.

    I'd recommend Strunk & White's Elements of Style to both of you.

    --
    The bigotry of the nonbeliever is for me nearly as funny as the bigotry of the believer. - Albert Einstein
  82. A simple solution for Wikipedia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The simplest thing for Wikipedia to restore the confidence of its users (at least those users, like me, whose confidence in Wikipedia has been shaken due to the revelation of these private email lists) would be to ban the use of private communication among administrators when discussing Wikipedia business. It would be easy enough to create a publicly-readable, restricted-writable discussion forum for administrators inside Wikipedia space (and not on Wikia), and if all such discussion was public all the time, accusations and suspicions of conspiracy would cease.

    What this article seems to hint at is that Wikipedia administrators, even a very small (but coordinated) subset of them, can have a significant impact on the pubic perception of issues and information that can move markets. Society recognizes that that kind of market power must only be exercised within a transparent and regulated environment, in order to avoid the temptation of or perception of insider dealing. It seems to me that in order to avoid any risk of treading in this very problematic space, the Wikipedia organization should open up its deliberative process to more public and transparent oversight.

    1. Re:A simple solution for Wikipedia by Gloy · · Score: 1

      It would be easy enough to create a publicly-readable, restricted-writable discussion forum for administrators inside Wikipedia space (and not on Wikia), and if all such discussion was public all the time, accusations and suspicions of conspiracy would cease. There is one. Here. Except that anyone can edit it because, you know, it's a wiki. Why would it be "restricted-writable"? Yet its existence doesn't seem to stop people whining.

      What this article seems to hint at is that Wikipedia administrators, even a very small (but coordinated) subset of them, can have a significant impact on the pubic perception of issues and information that can move markets. Now you're getting yourself a little over-excited. I think you vastly overestimate the influence that a bunch of nerds sitting in front of computers can have on anything. On that note it's worth pointing out that, in the scale of things, your comment is worthless and nobody cares about it, as is this one, as is the -1, Troll moderation it will shortly be recieving.
  83. Reference to this article erased in 11 mins. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just added a simple reference on Wikipedia about the Register article as an anonymous user. As an outside observer with no axe to grind I wondered how long it would be beofre it was modified. It took 11 minutes. Once the reference was removed the article was "protected" from modification until next year.

    Was removed by an IP 209.200.52.180 that is somewhere in NYC. The same IP has made dozens of edits just like the article states. Looks like foul play to me when you simply remove a factual reference because it brings light to bad behavior.

    Overstock.com page on Wikipedia (my edits from 68.34.73.97): http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Overstock.com&action=history
    All edits from 209.200.52.180: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/209.200.52.180

    The anonymous edits from that IP are numerous. In my book if you do that much editing you should have an account. I maybe touch one or two articles a year (maybe) so just add anonymously. I do not remove or correct information anonymously, as that is ass-hattery (in fairness, I have corrected some bad spelling and/or small grammar slips).

    Looks to me from all the recent press that Wikipedia is just like the rest of the world: full of partisanship, feuds and corruption.

    Won't get my donations.

    1. Re:Reference to this article erased in 11 mins. by Gloy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The article was protected because of edit warring. You, 209.200.52.180 and various other people . In such a situation administrators do not take sides. Seriously, make all the accusations you like. They don't. They simply protect the page, in whatever state it is in when they get there, as reverting to their preferred version would, of course, be seen as taking sides. Of course, those unfortunate enough not to have their changes in the protected version will immediately start making accusations, usually simply of Protecting the Wrong Version(tm), but sometimes conspiracy theorists such as yourself seem to like to go a bit further. Perhaps you should read this.

    2. Re:Reference to this article erased in 11 mins. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
      That's right. There is no such thing as foul play, all humans are fair and just in their actions and never ever seek to serve themselves.

      In many contests of this nature, I can easily see a player's tinfoil and raise them an ostrich.


      -FL

  84. Wikipedia is just a victim of the times by damburger · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    These days, Americans seem intent on politicising every damn thing, so its no surprise a project contributed to largely by Americans devolves into petty politics.

    --
    If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
  85. This post demonstrates the paranoia by spun · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of people saying that this "scandal" somehow affects every article on Wikipedia, Show me who says that.

    They don't like the idea of Wikipedia, or they are natural conspiracy theorists who think all power and centralized control is evil, and are willing to take Wiki down in their cause to reform it on an idealistic model of total anarchy, which anyone with a lick of sense knows wouldn't work, as evidenced by the vandalism problems Wikipedia has had. This is exactly the paranoid line of thinking espoused by the cabal. The cabal is confusing themselves with wikipedia. They think they are wikipedia, and any attack on them is an attack on the whole. Nothing could be further from the truth. These "conspiracy theorists" don't want to destroy wikipedia, they want to save it from the people who are actually destroying it.

    The cabal do not make wikipedia useful. It is the horde of small contributors that the cabal continuously screws over that actually do the work that makes it useful. If the inner circle of wikipedia were to fall off the face of the planet tomorrow, the site would be better for it.
    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  86. Only useful idiots are left supporting Wikipedia by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

    For years, if not since inception, Wikipedia's only purpose has been to give power hungry trolls an endless stream of victims, and a platform for pushing their own agendas. There's been too many scandals and too many blatant abuses of power for anyone but the most enabling of supplicants to still take Wikipedia seriously.

    --
    Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  87. Re:What do you know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good point, I didn't realize that. Although as you said, it still isn't particularly well suited to academic work, due to the majority of those changes being vanalism.

    That's probably better suited to reducing the likelihood of inadvertently posting indirect porn to a forum.

  88. Wikipedia is pretty messed up by ShakaUVM · · Score: 4, Interesting

    >>If you look at every one of these cases, who keeps popping up? It's the same group of editors - David Gerard, JayJG, JzG, SlimVirgin, etc... all with the blessing of Der Fuehrer Jimbo.

    I don't know the other guys, but I really detest JayJG. He would do "drive-by reversions" on completely uncontroversial edits, like adding ISBN numbers to book entries, or modifying a summary to better reflect the article below, usually saying they were "unsupported edits".

    Looking at his history list at the time, he was doing between one to three reversions a minute, so there's no fucking way he actually read the article in question to see that the summary changes were, in fact, reflective of the article below (which also had the references in question). Changing it to have the reference in the summary, he'd revert it saying that there was now too much link cruft in the summary.

    Either he was pushing his own personal agenda (which, looking at his history of 'edits', I'm strongly inclined to believe), or he was just trying to boost his "edit count" in some sort of retarded metric that a lot of wikipedians share, that rank people by the numbers of edits they make, which is perfectly retarded. I saw a admin ignore one guy's post in a edit war thread because he "only had 80 edits".

    I actually prefer to make edits anonymously, since I'd rather have the edits judged solely on their merits, and not traced to me as well, in case a potential employer googles me, but the wikipedian admins (ignoring the don't bite the newbs policy) tend to treat all anonymous edits as vitriolic spam, regardless of quality. You know what? Just turn off anonymous editing on all of wikipedia if you're going to reject the addition of something as noncontroversial as adding ISBN numbers to a page, ok? Right now, they're just pretending to allow anonymous edits.

    Try the following experiment: make 10 anonymous edits to a {{controverisal}} page, then make 10 while logged in, and see if their isn't a bias there.

    The only really positive thing is that it seems JayJG has retired (an extended so-called "wikibreak", which is a perfectly retarded term as well, IMO).

    1. Re:Wikipedia is pretty messed up by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Either he was pushing his own personal agenda (which, looking at his history of 'edits', I'm strongly inclined to believe), or he was just trying to boost his "edit count" in some sort of retarded metric that a lot of wikipedians share, that rank people by the numbers of edits they make, which is perfectly retarded. I saw a admin ignore one guy's post in a edit war thread because he "only had 80 edits".

      c) all of the above.

      There's a reason why there's userblocks for "This user has made xx,000 edits to Wikipedia". Often you'll read of a new admin who'll have "joined November 2006, made 11,000 edits, then became admin April 2007". 11,000 edits in 4 months?

      Look at Articles for Deletion, too - regular mention will be made of (though it's not policy) certain people's edit counts, "just as a helpful FYI". Durova, who got bit by the "sleuthing" calamity, is one in particular for that, or who'll point out that "this is this user's first vote in an AfD in their last 500 edits" (when said user has several thousand edits) - I've thought for a while about this and can think of not a single valid point that that makes.

      The only really positive thing is that it seems JayJG has retired (an extended so-called "wikibreak", which is a perfectly retarded term as well, IMO).

      Assuming a) he's not behind the scenes pulling strings, unlikely not to be the case, as he's still very vocal on mailing lists, and b) he doesn't have a sockpuppet (hell, I'd be surprised if he didn't have another admin sockpuppet).

    2. Re:Wikipedia is pretty messed up by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      There's a reason why there's userblocks for "This user has made xx,000 edits to Wikipedia". Often you'll read of a new admin who'll have "joined November 2006, made 11,000 edits, then became admin April 2007". 11,000 edits in 4 months?
      Right. And Wikipedia encourages this kind of behavior by tracking this, and then making laudatory stats pages which show the "top 10 editors", which is amazingly stupid.

      When I completely rewrote a major section of the Taekwondo article, I made... one edit. If I'd been one of these attention-seeking people, I'd have made each word a different edit, to artificially boost my nonsensical "edit count".

      I have seen similar statements about a person's edit count, and agree that there's really no valid reason for it, unless maybe that it's the person's first post ever (in an AfD discussion??) which might be evidence he's a sockpuppet. There's this sort of sneering sense of superiority among people with these artificially inflated edit counts towards normal users, as if normal users couldn't go around reformatting dates or adding citation-needed tags to every other sentence in random articles.

      Assuming a) he's not behind the scenes pulling strings, unlikely not to be the case, as he's still very vocal on mailing lists, and b) he doesn't have a sockpuppet (hell, I'd be surprised if he didn't have another admin sockpuppet).

      Is he? Oh, wonderful. :p

    3. Re:Wikipedia is pretty messed up by clayne · · Score: 0

      Look at this, they even get little "medals":

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jayjg

      Nice way to setup a vie for virtual power and recognition there, Jimmy.

    4. Re:Wikipedia is pretty messed up by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've always wanted to set up a little clique with my friends and award each other all the ridiculous "barnstars" they have.

      Best of all, since JayJG is part of an administrator clique, when I posted a negative comment on his user page about his behavior, he called it ridiculous and had an admin friend of his remove it within 30 minutes.

      Accountability? Nah. Not more important than cliquishness.

  89. Re:What do you know by Omestes · · Score: 1

    Even permanently linking potentially flawed information is a rather bad source. The problem (which is increasingly evident) is that there is no real accountability on Wikipedia. Yes I can find out that SexyJohn69 wrote this current article, but really that means nothing, whereas in a real book, or article, I can evaluate the credibility of the author based on his credentials. Sure, SexyJohn69 can claim any credential he has (or wants, or decided he should have) on his personal page, but that is about as useful as the text he wrote.

    More news like this makes me kind of depressed, I had some actual hope for the Wikipedia project, but as time goes on it just keeps proving how fatally flawed the idea is. I first got a whiff of this while doing a quicky search of Ayn Rand, and quickly got sucked into the 300 pages of argument, and flames by "pro Rand", and "anti Rand" Wikipedians. 300 pages of name calling hardly surrounds anything written there with an aura of respectability or veracity. You pro/anti stances shouldn't matter to an overview of written content, sure you can disagree or agree, but the text remains the same.

    Part of the problem, I think, is the idea of "nonbiased". NO ONE, in their own mind, is biased. Everyone, in their own minds is completely objective and correct, and thus everyone dissenting is biased. And when you develop an editorial system like Wikipedia, which seems purposely adjusted to group-think and editorial territoriality you end up with a biased, politically influence pile of steaming fallaciousness.

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
  90. Well, well by StreetStealth · · Score: 1

    This is the first "there is no cabal" argument I've seen that I haven't had the strange compulsion to mod "funny."

    --
    Your mind is clear / The things that you fear / Will fade with how much you / Believe what you hear
  91. Re:What do you know by Gloy · · Score: 1

    I have to take issue with your claim that the majority of changes are vandalism; assuming you are using the same definition of "vandalism" as Wikipedia does -- any intentionally unconstructive revision -- approximately 5% of changes are vandalism.

  92. i used to work at overstock.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i used to work at overstock.com as a software developer. it was basically the kind of nightmarish software sweatshop you read stories about but don't believe actually exists. i only lasted a few months before i had to get out and, based on my experience, i have 0 trust that anyone associated with that company is interested at all in telling the truth.

    as such, it wouldn't surprise me at all that wikipedia is making the right call here.

    honestly, i'm surprised the company hasn't gone completely under yet. i'm a big fan of free-market capitalism, but i do wish the invisible hand would work faster sometimes (took SCO forever to die and now the sinking trainwreck of overstock.com appears to be holding on much longer than it should).

    (posted AC for obvious reasons. in my experience, the management of that company are extremely petty and delusional which give a high probability of them throwing a fivolous lawsuit my way for exposing some truth of my own.)

  93. Patrick Byrne and Naked short selling by edxwelch · · Score: 1

    This is really all about Patrick Byrne and wheither his opinions about Naked short selling are correct or not. It's almost impossible to judge, becuase there are no unbiased opinions on the web.
    Even if you don't agree what he says is quite interesting:
    http://www.deepcapturethemovie.com/

  94. Trustipedia by JudicatorX · · Score: 1

    Ha! And the article of the day on the wikimedia fundraising blog is 'Can you trust wikipedia'? http://whygive.wikimedia.org/2007/12/07/can-you-trust-wikipedia/ Pfft.

    --
    "It is a good divine that follows his own instructions" - Portia, The Merchant of Venice
  95. Re:Only useful idiots are left supporting Wikipedi by Gloy · · Score: 1

    It's a bit unfair to say that that is its only purpose. For a start, you omitted its purpose as a convenient tool to separate students who research things properly from those who look at the first thing they find on the Internet. Then there's its use as a way of going to look something up and then wasting several hours reading entirely unrelated articles. Finally despite what you -- and various other people who evidently only look at administrative pages and not the actual articles -- say, there is plenty of stable, useful material there.

  96. Wiki? We used to smoke wikisticks... by godcipherdivine · · Score: 1

    So do think it was appropriate for me to create the OMFG wikipedia article?

    You go to Heaven for the climate, Hell for the company. It's your choice.

    Dan

  97. Re:Thanks by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 1

    Actually, I found his post to be very complementary to yours, embiggening both. Indeed, they were perfectly cromulent.
  98. Re:If you want to read unsantized information on W by Gloy · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hey, I found one here.

    Grow up. Please.

  99. No, there's no point in wasting cycles ... by wsanders · · Score: 1

    ... on Wikipedia because there will always be people who will argue that Abraham Lincoln was was worse than Hitler, that all Christians must be killed, that the Earth is flat, and other crackpot ideas. Not worth arguing about.

    But you are known by the company you keep, and if enough shite posted by idoits piles up on Wikipedia, then I'm also going to stop finding it useful for things like how many bytes are in an Ethernet header, and just go somewhere else.

    --
    Give a man a fish and you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish, and he'll say "WHERE'S MY FISH, YOU IDIOT?"
  100. Time to take this one apart by Moryath · · Score: 1

    As an example, I think we should have a higher tax on gasoline to drive down consumption

    and therefore directly injure people who have to rely on it for their livelihoods beyond simply traveling to and from work - farmers, truckers, deliverymen, and so forth - who are probably making fucking close to minimum wage anyways.

    Is this possible in our democracy? Not really. Everybody votes against anyone who would even suggest it.

    And for good reason!

    During World War II, there was mandatory recycling in a number of cities, and that has benefits, but people hated it, and it got repealed as soon as the war ended.

    I've lived in a mandatory-recycling city, because Milwaukee and its surrounding suburbs all have that. You know what's funny about it? That's the only way to get it to happen. Where I live now, I'd love to recycle my glass and a lot of my paper, but I can't because without the government program it's not fucking profitable and there's no place around willing to take anything but scrap metal for recycling.

    An absolute ruler has the ability to switch policy overnight.

    And royally fuck up when they do, too.

    If you could insure the whole "philosopher king" thing, make sure you have a person as absolute ruler who is both capable and worthy of it, then that would be by far the best system. Since you can't, we go with democracy, not because it's in any way better, but because it limits the possible harm that can come out of government toward the people. However democracy can't save the people from their own shortsightedness, and it's just damn inefficient.

    "Democracy is the worst form of government... except for all the others." And we don't really have a democracy (you want that you need to go to a religious commune, or else Switzerland is the closest existing); we have a representative republic.

    And even the representative republic royally fucks up when you have shitwads like Shrub who are more interested in the $$$ they're going to get from the drug gangs for keeping the border open and starting wars to keep the public's attention off of it.

  101. Wiki censors. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is all about censorship. After all, censorship is becoming America's favorite past-time. The US gov't (and their corporate friends), already detain protesters, ban books like "America Deceived" from Amazon and Wikipedia, shut down Imus and fire 21-year tenured, BYU physics professor Steven Jones because he proved explosives, thermite in particular, took down the WTC buildings. Free Speech forever.
    Last link (before Google Books caves to pressure and drops the title):
    America Deceived (book)

    1. Re:Wiki censors. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Europe is totally better than America in this regard. Oh, except for everywhere-but-the-Netherlands with their idiotic Decency Boards and whatnot. Get fucked.

  102. Re:Only useful idiots are left supporting Wikipedi by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1
    "It's a bit unfair to say that that is its only purpose. For a start, you omitted its purpose as a convenient tool to separate students who research things properly from those who look at the first thing they find on the Internet. Then there's its use as a way of going to look something up and then wasting several hours reading entirely unrelated articles."

    I exaggerated slightly for effect, and what you have said above does have merit.

    "Finally despite what you -- and various other people who evidently only look at administrative pages and not the actual articles -- say, there is plenty of stable, useful material there."

    This is wholly inaccurate. I don't find squabbling, backstabbing, and quashing of any and all dissent to be very readable. I'm a frequent reader of the articles, and I frequently find glaring errors and inaccuracies in them. Don't ask me to fix them; I'm done with revert wars and POV pushing. And no, offering a multitude of authoritative sources doesn't help. There is only one pravda on Wikipedia, that of the Cabal, or rather that of interconnected and inter-supporting power cliques.

    I don't get why every time a person that's likely been on Wikipedia longer than most people, they get tagged as clueless noobs.

    --
    Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  103. Unsurprisingly... by Moryath · · Score: 0

    They bill themselves as an encyclopedia.
    They engineered the site to be the first hit on as many searches as they can.

    "With great power comes great responsibility" - like it or not, they ARE affecting perceptions every time someone comes to their "compilation". The mere fact that they are spurs on the groups that try to bias it.

  104. None of this suprises me.. by Evil+Kerek · · Score: 1

    It's the same basic reason that communism ultimately fails. It assumes that the basic nature of people are good. The problem is, power corrupts. Period. Even with checks and balances, it's a huge problem - much less when there are no checks and balances as with the wiki crap. I was never of a fan of it from the get-go - I find the basic idea of anyone can edit to be patently absurd when it comes to accuracy. It's certainly an interesting place to visit, but it has a false sense of being 'right' when there's really no reason to assume it IS correct. Just when you get your mom to understand that just becuase it's on a web page, it doesn't make it reality, along comes wiki-crap that likes to tout itself as being factual when it truth, it sorta depends on when you read it. You never know if some moron put up something stupid and no one has caught it yet. Anyway, a bit off track. I can't remember who said it, but basically no one that WANTS to be president should be president. That statement says so much in so few words about human nature. Wiki will evenutally self destruct.

  105. Worst. Diction. Ever. by billius · · Score: 1

    He read the site's extensive screed on the curmudgeonly veep, and before he knew it, he was inclined to contribute his own thoughts to the discussion.
    Remember kids, drugs and thesauruses make a dangerous combination.
  106. Re:Thanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Writing is hard, and it seems you're not apt to do it.

    Now, there's an awkard sentence! Try this:

    "Writing is hard, and it seems you're not adept at it." or better:

    "Writing is difficult and it seems you're not adept at it."

    HTH. HAND.

  107. puppet police by epine · · Score: 1

    Actually, Slashdot banned 99.9% of the IP range from contributing to the front page, and left the rest of us with no ability other than entering into endless discussions on the talk page, none of which ever appear in Google's top ten search results for common search terms.

    Yet one more data point in the universal requirement of introducing learned helplessness into any large-scale human interaction. Promise too much, you get a riot. Promise too little, the circumscribed become defenders of righteousness.

    Even with the quick fingered (and occasionally abusive blocks) on Wikipedia, it remains 100 times more open than Slashdot. But since we never labored under the delusion that this was more than "news for nerds" social unrest on Slashdot has no ability to cure a slow news day on the Inquirer/Register (with their own sordid feuds to better help them condemn the feuds of others).

    Lately the Inq/Reg are suffering from the hiatus in the Intel/AMD Nvidia/ATI sand squabbles. Eight cores. Yawn. Opteron errata. Yawn. The Everywhere Girl played out her string. Yawn. Fiorina and Cappellas are both gone. Now all they have left to scratch eyeballs is the Wackypedia. If AMD finally delivers a compelling product from their ATI ingestation, they might have eight weeks worth of IT news to report. And then what? I hate to think.

    The fundamental problem at Wikipedia right now is that sock-puppets are conceptually impossible to patrol. In the old model, the problem was a fringe lunatic who needed to adjust his/her meds. In the old days, spam was likewise largely the result of isolated cowboys. The first round of defensive measures made it difficult to succeed at spam on a disorganized basis. Systems theory response? Shift to organized spam. The same will happen with sock puppets at Wikipedia, if interest groups perceive enough incentive to do so.

    It would be a bit of work to pull off. You'd need several hundred identities in good standing, and enough "real" people to keep these identities in good standing with a diversity of edit histories. Maybe you can seed the pool by purchasing on the sly a long established identity from someone who has since fallen on hard times. You would probably need some orchestration to ensure that your puppets don't cross paths and congregate on the same issues too often.

    I'm not saying I see the economic justification for anyone to go to this trouble, but if someone did, the existing sock-puppet defenses would not prove adequate to the task. I believe that this uncomfortable, naked fact that defense against orchestrated sock-puppets is presently unworkable contributes to the paranoia level of the beleaguered admins who teeter on the precipice of failure. I can recall a point in time when some of self-appointed spam-fighters got themselves into the same emotional state (and the same fights over abuse of blacklists erupting).

    The crucial difference is that Wikipedia is centralized whereas spam was decentralized (although some of the largest players such as AOL, Yahoo, MSN, and Google could sample a large fraction of the effluent flow). Wikipedia needs to further exploit that centralization to find other mechanisms to accomplish the same end (preventing vested interests from banding together to shout down opposing perspectives) without having to resort to their shadowy order of paranoid puppet police.

  108. Sorry: Can't use Godwin's Law in this thread by geekotourist · · Score: 1

    Since Mike Godwin now works for the Wikimedia Foundation, the Godwin number for all discussions on, in or about Wikipedia is automatically one, and any subsequent invocations have zero marginal value.

  109. Reminds me of academe by DrVomact · · Score: 1

    They say that political infighting in academic circles is so notoriously vicious "because the stakes are so low". Something like this must be going on at Wikipedia. What was so important about any of this? What horrible deed did the banned offender commit?

    I read the article and the comments, and I'm still very fuzzy on what all this was about. Apparently, there was a squabble of the sort often referred to as a "urination contest", and the Virgin won. I guess the controversy centered on "naked pantsing", or something like that. (Note to self: must research involvement of Thin Virgin with Naked Pantsing. And why does Mr. Wales oppose said activity? Is he, perhaps, a secret practioner?)

    OK...seriously...isn't there some kind of conflict resolution policy in place at Wikipedia? Aren't there procedures that must be followed before drastic action is taken against an individual who offends against Wikipedia policies—let alone collective punishment of a range of IP addresses? I'm thinking something like this:

    1. Offender is notified by Wiki staff that he has violated published policies, and that he should cease and desist from these proscribed activities, or explain why he is not in violation.
    2. If offender repeats his offenses and fails to provide a convincing defense, his case should be reviewed by at least 3 Wiki staff members, or adjudicators appointed by the Wiki organization for this purpose.
    3. The adjudicators publish their findings in a venue dedicated to this purpose, and sanction the offender. Such sanction might consist of revoking the offender's editing or contribution privileges for a limited time, or forever. Most importantly, the published findings must describe the offenses committed by the accused, and the evidence that supports the allegations.
    4. The offender may appeal a ban once. A set of different adjudicators would "hear" the case, and perhaps the Wiki community at large would be consulted. The following decision would be final.

    Now, that's how I think a serious enterprise of the sort that Wikipedia claims to be would proceed. What's happening now doesn't look serious to me. Indeed, it appears to me that the people in charge over there think that Wikipedia is their own private plaything. That's hardly going to encourage me to become a contributor.

    --
    Great men are almost always bad men--Lord Acton's Corollary
    1. Re:Reminds me of academe by julesh · · Score: 1

      Aren't there procedures that must be followed before drastic action is taken against an individual who offends against Wikipedia policies--let alone collective punishment of a range of IP addresses?

      Yep. Although they don't have to be strictly followed in all cases.

      I'm thinking something like this:

            1. Offender is notified by Wiki staff that he has violated published policies, and that he should cease and desist from these proscribed activities, or explain why he is not in violation.


      Yep, that's the first step for anything other than serious offences, although the notice can be given by any editor, not just "staff".

      2. If offender repeats his offenses and fails to provide a convincing defense, his case should be reviewed by at least 3 Wiki staff members, or adjudicators appointed by the Wiki organization for this purpose.

      Only 1 administrator is required, although any administrator can veto the decision made by the first administrator if it is considered incorrect.

      3. The adjudicators publish their findings in a venue dedicated to this purpose, and sanction the offender. Such sanction might consist of revoking the offender's editing or contribution privileges for a limited time, or forever. Most importantly, the published findings must describe the offenses committed by the accused, and the evidence that supports the allegations.

      Yes, that's the next step. Usually the sanctions are reported in the same place (Administrator's Noticeboard) that is used by regular editors to request attention from administrators with an issue. Permanent bans are unusual, and are typically only given to repeat offenders.

      4. The offender may appeal a ban once. A set of different adjudicators would "hear" the case, and perhaps the Wiki community at large would be consulted. The following decision would be final.

      Offenders may appeal any number of times, although if this right is abused it may be removed. There are no rules, however, on who may make a decision over an appeal. Unusual cases may be taken to the "arbitration committee", which is appointed by election. Arbitration committee decisions are final; no others are.

      The problem is, it is possible to shortcut this process. Particularly if the infringing behaviour is noticed by an administrator rather than a regular user they can take action directly without reporting it on the relevant Noticeboard. Also, there have been cases where an appeal has been denied by the same administrator who put an initial block in place, and further appeals denied (a blocked user may request an appeal by placing a notice on their own discussion page; sometimes the administrator will 'protect' this page to prevent this happening).

      These cases are rare, though, and I think that in this particular case the procedures were followed (I certainly remember reading about this case several months ago, I think it was discussed in depth on the noticeboard, and I came to the conclusion at the time that the involved admins' decisions were correct; I didn't know about the IP range block, though).

  110. Let me delete Dubya for you by Titoxd · · Score: 1

    Hey, it's not like I wouldn't mind seeing this... oh, wait, I already have.

  111. Re:Worst. Diction. Ever. by Dutch+Reagan's+Ghost · · Score: 1

    It didn't seem that bad to me.

    And don't you hypercritical armchair linguists generally prefer Latin plurals?

  112. Re:If you want to read unsantized information on W by julesh · · Score: 1

    * http://www.wikipediareview.com/ WR is a forum that is populated by a mix of Wikipedia administrators posting openly, regular users, and a few "banned" users. Unfortunately, the Wikipedia 'elite' routinely badmouth the holy hell out of the WR forums because of the fact that "banned" users are allowed. Also, the Wikipedia "BADSITES" final solution (which is still active--disregard that rejected notice, its just been implemented anyway), was a direct revenge response against Wikipedia Review and similar sites that the Wikipedia leaders have no ability to silence or control in any way.

    1. "BADSITES" was not, and never was aimed at WR. BADSITES was primarily intended as a tool against Encyclopedia Dramatica, which included quite a lot of openly hostile and very personal criticism against a number of regular wikipedia editors, including real names of editors who wished to remain anonymous. Nevertheless, the proposed policy is not in place, and attempts to enforce it WRT sites other than ED have failed (e.g. ).

    2. I'd dispute any suggestion that WR presents an unbiased view of wikipedia. Note that WR was started and is run by an editor who had been banned from editing Wikipedia. There is a lot of comment on the site from people who don't know the whole story involved (e.g. they covered the lawsuit by Barbara Bauer and subsequent out-of-process deletion of the article about her as a good thing, which anybody who knows anything about the subject would say is not the case: that wikipedia article should have existed, and didn't say anything that shouldn't have been said).

  113. Is everything what is seems? by bromski · · Score: 1

    I have been reading a little bit of these stories and this Bagley dude seems rather shady to me. Sure Gary Weiss may put some feathers in his on ass. But Judd Bagley seems to be a hired gun to eradicate any criticism of his employers, whatever it takes. Sure Gary doesn't like Judd but if you read his stories they seem a whole lot more convincing than Judds. I personally think The Register missed out on this one here. They have been used in the hit job Bagley is been hired for on account of Patrick Bryrne.

  114. Re:If you want to read unsantized information on W by CBob · · Score: 1

    Or just look into the webcomics/notabilty purge background. The wiki admin tactics in that "little" episode soured me on wiki.

    (btw, they still defend the actions/admins from then)

  115. Re:If you want to read unsantized information on W by julesh · · Score: 1

    Erm... forgot to include the link that should have been in parent post.

  116. Power attracts the corruptible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think power always corrupts (think Ghandi, ML King, to name a few greats), but rather it attracts the corruptible. If people realized this fully, they would at least keep checks and balances on these power hungry folks. Democracy is messy, but it sure beats tyranny...

  117. Re: Old saying by gringer · · Score: 1

    There's an old saying in America — I know it's in New Zealand, probably in America — that says, power tends to... absolute power... absolutely. Absolute power — It's quite powerful.

    --
    Ask me about repetitive DNA
  118. Gary Weiss article by dtobias · · Score: 1

    In the talk page of the Gary Weiss article (the article itself is currently under protection so nobody can edit it), lots of highly fallacious arguments are being made by high-ranked admins to shoot down all attempts to put in anything about the issues discussed in the Register article. The line of argument seems to go something like:

    1) Bagley claims that [list various claims of his, such as that the
    Weiss article is non-NPOV]
    2) Bagley is a sociopathic, evil harasser.
    3) Therefore, the claims in (1) are all false.
    4) Thus, anybody who repeats the claims should be dismissed out of
    hand.

    --
    --Dan
    Web Tips
  119. Wikipedia is dirty: by nmktlong · · Score: 1

    The Gary Weiss article reads like Weiss wrote it himself. The Byrne article reads as if his enemies wrote it. There is dirt on Weiss- he has enemies- but no one can touch his pristine article. Byrne has plenty of supporters, and there are facts which support his claims yet no one can modify his negatively biased article. I guess it boils down to this: No one can criticize or add negatives on the Weiss page No one can add positives or support Byrne on his page So the question becomes: Why is wikipedia protecting the Weiss wiki entry? Why is it ok to tarnish the Byrne Wiki entry? Weiss claims he never ever edited a Wikipedia article- so why do they protect his bio? This hypocrisy needs to get out. People need to understand that wikipedia is trying to tarnish one mans reputation while it is protecting his arch enemy. And for what? Why? For whom does the bell toll? They tell us nothing is going on- that it is all a fabrication on Brynes part- but then you figure out to what lengths his detractors are willing to go- and you need to ask yourself why?

  120. Some straight shooting from the boys of Utah? by Thrustworthy · · Score: 1

    Let's start with SCO... there's something in the water in Happy Valley.

    BTW that county is the largest single contributor to Mitt Romney's campaign fund.

  121. Mod parent back up please by McDutchie · · Score: 1

    The fact that you got modded down to the gutter for daring to express an anti-The Register, pro-Wikipedia viewpoint on Slashdot is a nice illustration of the fact that abuses of power happen everywhere, not just on Wikipedia.

  122. Reminds me of... by e-scetic · · Score: 1

    This whole thing reminds me of my IRC days. My MOO/MUD days. My Fidonet days. My BBS days. Cripes, even my university days. Gosh, this makes me feel so old.

    And I shake my hed as I pat the Wiki children onna hed.

    Children will be children.

  123. Mad with power by sporkme · · Score: 3, Insightful

    EPA Official: S-sir, I'm afraid you've gone mad with power...
    Russ Cargill: Of course I have. You ever tried going mad without power? It's boring. No one listens to you!
    /simpsons

    Yeah, whatever, I will still do research for unimportant papers via Wikipedia and its vast citations, because when I use other encyclopedias I only get ONE source for information. Jeez, what is the big deal? If your subject is controversial, what makes you think a single source is more reliable? If you just need to know the molecular structure for cuprous iodide or Mussolini's place of birth it's great! Only pricks are trying to turn it into another Myspace.

  124. Re:What do you know by roguetrick · · Score: 1

    Certain high level wikipedia editors have the ability to remove such a permanent link from the database, for reference check out Jimbo's birthday on wikitruth. http://wikitruth.info/index.php?title=Jimbo's_birthday

    --
    -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
  125. Re:If you want to read unsantized information on W by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For some reason, 'smart and eloquent people' and 'insider dirt' seem to me to be mutually exclusive concepts. Why in Darwin's name would you be interested in the latter if you were one of the former? Wouldn't you, for example, have actual meaningful things to do with your time?

  126. Re:Worst. Diction. Ever. by mabinogi · · Score: 1

    You mean (very amateurish) armchair editors.
    Linguists don't criticise language usage, they study and learn from it.

    --
    Advanced users are users too!
  127. Just curious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you love Wikipedia so much, why don't you fuck it?

  128. Wikipedia's complaint process: by nugneant · · Score: 1

    0. Get involved in content dispute with paint-huffing retard.
    1. Leave message on other editor's talk page. Get ignored / threatened / whined at / banned (choose one)
    2. Leave message on article's talk page. Wait one week for someone besides yourself and the other guy to chime in. Get sucked into ridiculously pretentious, drawn-out argument.
    3. Go to Requests for Comment. Get yelled at by some condescending beardo because you skipped a step, god what a newb you are.
    4. Go to Peer Mediation section. Wait one month for the queue to drain. Get yelled at by some condescending beardo because you dumb fuck you should be posting in "Outside Opinions" not Peer Mediation god what a stupid little newblet you are.
    5. Go to Outside Opinions. Wait a day or two. Realize that anybody and everybody who pays attention to this page is a fucking moron who offers only the most ineffectual, waffling advice possible. (note that one time in seven you'll find someone with half a brain, which basically unlocks a long ending cinematic where they do everything for you. Sorta like that one disc of Xenosaga, except more typos)
    6. Realize that you've wasted weeks of your life to this useless Wikipedia shit.
    7. Post "FUCK YOU NIGGER I HOPE YOU BURN IN HELL YOU FAGGOT FUCK YOU FUCK YOU FUCK YOU FUCK YOU" and/or long, rambling, shaggy-dog death threats on the talk pages of anybody and everybody. Post links to one of the "SlimVirgin is Linda Mack" tell-alls in highly visable places for style points.
    8. Get banned.
    9. Register new account, repeat step 6.
    10. Once your entire neighborhood is banned from Wikipedia, sit back and congratulate yourself. You have resolved the dispute.
    11. (New Game+) Go back to step 0. This time, you play the role of the paint-huffing retard. Make sure to be completely, willfully, flagrantly stupid, yet remain as cheerful and polite as possible. This keeps you safe from the banhammer, prolonging the game and making it more fun for everybody involved.

  129. the truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    let me tell you one thing about Gary Weiss: ********

  130. Re:You're wrong and a liar now by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    Sorry 'bout that. Every now and then a professional troll gets a rise out of me.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  131. Technical question about mod system by Torodung · · Score: 1

    How does my post get attributed "flamebait," when the majority of the mods down were for "overrated?"

    A little confused, would enjoy a short reply.

    Thanks.

    --
    Toro

  132. Human nature. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope historians and psychologists are studying the hell out of Wikipedia because it's rise and fall is going to be the stuff of legends by the time I reach old age.

  133. Re:The story not true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello?? is anyone in there thinking? Hello??

    It is WELL documented that Marshall and Warren were initially ridiculed. And had papers rejected by the medical establishment, because everyone KNEW that the science of ulcers didn't involve bacteria. In medical terms the standard treatment changed rather quickly once the truth was known.

    So the initial poster's comments are spot on for something like Wikipedia which is supposed to be open, but in the case of what they are calling "nasty short selling", apparently only one side of the argument is getting to play, and a whole group of people banned based on one person's position. Which is where discourse needs to be incorporated into what we think of as an online encyclopedia. Even as much as the Wikipedia folks protecting part of a page with something like the text. "Some of the statements on this page have been disputed. The disputed arguments are to be found at __________________". And then work on cooling down the edit wars so both sides have a chance to present their positions and let the reader decide.

  134. Re: American developed cures... by CodeShark · · Score: 1
    Mea culpa. I don't know if there were European or Asian drug companies that also had anti-ulcer medications being sold at $.75-$1.00 a pill like the US based medications (Tagamet etc.) when a $3.00 bottle of pepto and about $7.00 of antibiotics were the real cure.

    What I do know is that once my dad -- a hospital pharmacist who would have known which companies were doing what at the time -- read the research, etc. he started to point the medical doctors in the area towards the simple solution as something to consider and the doctor's themselves moved away from just passing out and prescribing based on the samples provided by the American drug companies.

    --
    ...Open Source isn't the only answer -- but it's almost always a better value than the alternatives...
  135. Discuss this here: by FtVirgin · · Score: 1

    Anyone who wants is welcome to discuss this issue at The Wikipedia Review, a forum dedicated to discussion of Wikipedia while remaining totally independent of the controlling establishment there: www.wikipediareview.com