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Should Wikipedians Edit Stories For Pay?

Hugh Pickens writes "The Register reports that a longtime Wikipedia admin has been caught offering to edit the online encyclopedia in exchange for cash. Someone noticed a post to an online job marketplace where he was advertising his services: 'Besides technical writing, I also am an accomplished senior Wikipedia administrator with several featured articles to my name,' read the post, which has since been changed. 'If you need a good profile on Wikipedia, I can help you out there too through my rich experience.' Wikipedia promptly opened a discussion page to try to reach consensus on the community view of 'paid editing.' So far opinion seems to be divided between those who say it's ok as long as full disclosure is made and 'edits are compliant with WP:NPOV, WP:RS, WP:BLP, WP:N,' and others who believe that paid editing automatically creates a conflict of interest. Back in 2006, Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales shot down a company known as MyWikiBiz, which promised that you could 'author your legacy on the Internet.' The company subsequently had to reinvent itself with no reference to Wikipedia. 'It is not ok with me that anyone ever set up a service selling their services as a Wikipedia editor, administrator, bureaucrat, etc., I will personally block any cases that I am shown,' wrote Wales."

168 comments

  1. How much by calmofthestorm · · Score: 5, Funny

    for positive arguments on the consensus reaching page? I need a well-written, convincing opinion advocating in favor of market forces.

    --
    93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
    1. Re:How much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is as much a market force as wikipedia's policies, as it is private after all.

    2. Re:How much by Darkness404 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The problem is, you can't argue for market forces when the market is against it. Its like trying to market ham at a kosher deli, they aren't going to want it, and no matter how many times you want to "let the free market decide" they simply don't want it. Same with Wikipedia, the market (Wikipedia) is opposed to paid editing of articles.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:How much by rs79 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Can we pay the Wikipedia editors to stop editing articles? Having some moron keep changing verifiable factual information back to something that's flat out wrong over and over gets really tiresome after several years. IMO half those people shouldn't be allowed near the thing.

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
    4. Re:How much by greenreaper · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sure. Just tell me what articles you're interested in, and I'll be sure to let you know how much it'll cost you to keep them the way they are.

    5. Re:How much by seriousthinker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is, you can't argue for market forces when the market is against it. Its like trying to market ham at a kosher deli, they aren't going to want it, and no matter how many times you want to "let the free market decide" they simply don't want it.

      Some actors in the market are against it. Some are for it, as the summary shows. The end result is a black market, the same as always when an authority attempts to prevent supply and demand from meeting.

    6. Re:How much by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Same with Wikipedia, the market (Wikipedia) is opposed to paid editing of articles.

      That doesn't appear to be true. There has been a majority in favor of allowing paid editing since a fairly early stage in the process (and no it doesn't seem to consist of paid shills but I suppose it's hard to tell for certain). It's running at about 60% suporting the idea that whether someone's paid is irrelevant as long as content is neutral, verificable etc. and 40% against.

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
    7. Re:How much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      The problem is, you can't argue for market forces when the market is against it. Its like trying to market ham at a kosher deli, they aren't going to want it, and no matter how many times you want to "let the free market decide" they simply don't want it.

      Some actors in the market are against it. Some are for it, as the summary shows. The end result is a black market, the same as always when an authority attempts to prevent supply and demand from meeting.

      So, you're saying that there are some Jews who REALLY like ham?

    8. Re:How much by Sparr0 · · Score: 1

      If there are homosexual members of religions that not only shun but also often *kill* them, which you can see to be the case by reading any number of very sad news reports, you think it unlikely that there are Jews who enjoy some ham on occasion?

    9. Re:How much by jawahar · · Score: 1

      What is wrong if they get PAID as long as they are disclosing the TRUTH through Wikipedia?

    10. Re:How much by socrplayr813 · · Score: 1

      Who determines what the truth is, though? If people are paid to change Wikipedia, whatever they are paid to put on there slowly becomes the truth in the eyes of the public. The type of people who are most knowledgeable about a subject are often the least likely to care if they're paid because they have other things on their mind. They'll be overpowered by people trying to make a buck and the quality of Wikipedia will go way down.

      --
      The confidence of ignorance will always overcome the indecision of knowledge.
    11. Re:How much by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      What do you expect?

      Who do you think edits Wikipedia? THOSE THAT HAVE NO LIFE!

      If they knew anything about the subject, they would already be occupied with actually doing something in that area!

      This, and the fact that there is never ONE SINGLE TRUTH(TM), (because we do no know truth but only our most secured theories), are the reasons that Wikipedia could never really work, except in some fairy-tale hippie land.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  2. No by eldavojohn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just like Wikipedia discourages people to make edits of a person's own article for themselves, this should also be discouraged. Once you receive money for edits you've made, you're no longer an uninterested third party and have a biased voice. There's no way to enforce this so Wikipedia will have to just continue accepting/rejecting edits based inherently on the edit and what bias it itself may hold.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:No by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

      The facts still have to check out. It's just the slant of the article. Choice of words when describing stuff, etc.

      But I've never found Wikipedia to be that unbiased, especially when it comes to topics that are still debated.

      Ex: It may report a hardware device as vaporware, and state that the company creating it has a cult following that aggressively promote the devices, despite there being no evidence the device will ever exist.

      Then once the device is released, it gets updated to a different slant.

    2. Re:No by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Any person with substantial knowledge on a topic, particularly one that isn't well known, is bound to have bias in some form. Unless the thing is a spec sheet, expect bias somewhere. Its simply human nature. For example, if the device was simply vaporware, many people will think it undeserving of an article, on the other hand if there is a strong following for the device, well, perhaps it warrants a second look. Especially on Wikipedia where policy seems to be "delete all content".

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:No by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Troll

      what if they paid an actual expert? i'd take them posting over some high school kid any day of the week. wikipedia might actually be 1/2 useful then.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    4. Re:No by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 1

      Once you receive money for edits you've made, you're no longer an uninterested third party and have a biased voice.

      You sound like you've encountered Wikipedia before so - open your eyes and look at it. Do you really think all those articles about Star Trek were written by people who are uninterested in it? Someone below mentioned the Scientology article - suprise it's already dominated by a mixture of pro-scientologists and anti-scientologists. Who else would you expect to devote time to it? This is less extreme of an effect for some articles than for others but it still applies throughout - any argument premised on the idea that non-paid Wikipedians are 'uninterested third parties' is not merely wrong but completely absurd. People do not spend their time writing about things they're 'uninterested' in. Unless, of course, they're paid to.

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
    5. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Experts? Isn't that a bit elitist and undemocratic?

    6. Re:No by maxume · · Score: 1

      Traditional encyclopedias seemed to manage paying people pretty well.

      I'm pretty sure that many people bring bias other than dollars to things (and often far more powerful), so I'm not sure how much impact it would really have on quality.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    7. Re:No by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Just like Wikipedia discourages people to make edits of a person's own article for themselves, this should also be discouraged. Once you receive money for edits you've made, you're no longer an uninterested third party and have a biased voice.

      The problem with this argument is that it is likely that anyone motivated enough to edit a Wikipedia article for anything other than grammar is probably an interested party with a biased voice. The idea that it's not appropriate for me to edit an entry on myself to correct factual errors is inherently offensive to me, and if I tried to correct an error in such a resource and I were rebuffed I might consider filing suit for libel. By the same extension (but only if you accept my logic) it should be perfectly fine to pay someone to correct factual errors about me; what's the difference between me doing it, and someone else doing it, except that money changes hands?

      The only criteria for acceptance of an edit should be its validity, and not who makes it. Period, the end. That this is not true worries me, because it would seem to create a society of elites in charge of what information is accepted. (That's still better than one commercial organization deciding what does into an encyclopedia, and I don't necessarily have any good solutions except the already-extant reviewed articles.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:No by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

      Just like Wikipedia discourages people to make edits of a person's own article for themselves, this should also be discouraged

      This is widely ignored, though. I recall an episode of TWiT where Leo said he edited his own entry, and asked the rest of the panel if they edit theirs, and they all said they do. Leo's edits were to fix factual errors--dates wrong on when specific shows were broadcast, and things like that.

      Once you receive money for edits you've made, you're no longer an uninterested third party and have a biased voice

      I don't think it is as clear cut as you make it sound. People editing controversial topics for free usually have a biased voice, too. A good case can be made that someone who had no opinion on a subject, and is only editing because someone paid him to do so, is less likely to be biased, depending on the details of the financial arrangement.

      Sure, if the arrangement is "edit this page and if we like the changes, we will pay you", then sure, the edit is going to be biased toward the view the payer wants.

      But what if the arrangement is "edit this page and make any changes you feel improve it, and we will pay you". What's the problem there? Presumably the person being offered the contract is some kind of expert in the subject, and so his professional reputation is on the line. That can be a powerful incentive to be fair in the edits--and if the edits aren't fair, they won't stick.

    9. Re:No by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

      Any person with substantial knowledge on a topic, particularly one that isn't well known, is bound to have bias in some form.

      Any person who has a brain and can think is going to have bias. That's human nature and there's NOTHING wrong with that..

      Especially on Wikipedia where policy seems to be "delete all content".

      That appears to be the case. I'm not sure why they have the "no trivia" policy. Trivial Pursuit was once the most popular game in the US. Encyclopedias are a natural information source for such things. (I'm also a fan of the TV game show Jeopardy!)

      When I was very young my parents bought a lower end encyclopedia which I ended up reading end-to-end, partly because I love to read and partly because I love to learn new things. I am most wary of touching Wikipedia. What is wrong with this picture?

    10. Re:No by thekohser · · Score: 1

      See my response to this fallacy, below, John. My post was rated up to "5", but then the Wikipediots came along and must have voted it back down again. So, you'll have to search for it. Look for the word "MyWikiBiz".

  3. And ruin a good thing? by nausea_malvarma · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Wikipedia has grown to be the biggest encyclopedia in the world without paying anybody. I don't see why they should start now. We all contribute to Wikipedia and expect nothing in return. That's how we pay for the articles - with our kindness.

    1. Re:And ruin a good thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      without paying anybody.

      people have gotten paid legitimately and (many more) illegitimately

      I don't see why they should start now.

      They aren't starting now. This has been going on since before Wikipedia - heck - this has been going since before movable type.

      We all contribute to Wikipedia

      Most people don't contribute to Wikipedia.

      and expect nothing in return.

      You expect nothing from Wikipedia? Either that's hyperbole or your have an amazingly carefree attitude.

      That's how we pay for the articles - with our kindness.

      That's not quite how corporations pay for their articles.

    2. Re:And ruin a good thing? by nausea_malvarma · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That's not quite how corporations pay for their articles.

      Oh sure, that's who I'm talking about. People paid to manipulate wikipedia in the interest of a corporation. /sarcasm

      I'm talking about the average wikinerd, who spends his or her spare time compiling huge lists, writing articles on even the most obscure relics from pop culture, and editing every little misspelling and fuck-you they see. The ones with user pages littered with barnstars and embarrassing userboxes detailing their interest in siberian huskies and stamp collecting. Your meat and potatoes wikipedian. They don't do it for money. They do it for the love of wikipedia. They are fucking hardcore!

    3. Re:And ruin a good thing? by Hognoxious · · Score: 0, Troll

      Free wankers or paid wankers, wankers they are, and wankers they will remain.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    4. Re:And ruin a good thing? by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      They do it for the love of wikipedia.

      Often they do it just to stroke their own ego. Look at some of the edit war histories and tell me with a straight face that those people have any kind of higher purpose motivating them. I got into a brief edit war with someone a few months back that, despite all his protestations to the contrary, didn't know the first damn thing about what he was talking about, whereas I was a subject matter expert by any objective measure. The guy simply would not admit he was wrong, and after a couple of iterations I got tired of reverting his changes and just said "fuck it". It really was an object lesson in just how useless Wikipedia can be as a source of accurate information.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    5. Re:And ruin a good thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Free wankers or paid wankers, wankers they are, and wankers they will remain.

      Someone had to say it. Is the truth a (-1 troll)? Apparently it is today.

  4. what diff ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    wikipedia is already biased and untrustworthy. another idiot adding to the existing idiots in the pot wont make a difference.

    1. Re:what diff ?? by Meshach · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Painting the hundreds of thousands of editors and millions of readers as "idiots" may be a little extreme. Some wikipedia pages provide an excellent reference. And especially where readers do not pay for the info that they receive I think we need to relax a bit. In terms of value wikipedia is one of the best deals on the Internet.

      --
      "Maybe this world is another planet's hell"
      Aldous Huxley
    2. Re:what diff ?? by SalaSSin · · Score: 0

      I do agree with you.

      Of course it isn't perfect, but nothing made by man will ever be. It's in our nature to be biased, even if it's just a bit.

      The majority of articles i've read on wikipedia are quite balanced, with some sort of bias that you can directly recognize, so no harm done.

      I mean, people are falling all the time for promotional campaigns on television, which are obviously biased, wikipedia is refreshing compared to that, in the sense that it's quite less biased.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice - Grey's Law
    3. Re:what diff ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the worst. wikipedia is the best method to sneak biased information under the radar. there is simply no way to know what is biased and what is not and when.

    4. Re:what diff ?? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      "wikipedia is already biased and untrustworthy." - Anonymous comment on a random forum.

      Heaven forbid we rely on a referenced article that's on Wikipedia. But yes, obviously I'll take your word for it.

    5. Re:what diff ?? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      And that's different to any other source in existence, how exactly?

      Also, the obvious point is to look at whether there's a reference given. The fact that Wikipedia gives references places Wikipedia ahead of the vast majority of sources out there (including virtually all of the media).

    6. Re:what diff ?? by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

      The fact that Wikipedia gives references places Wikipedia ahead of the vast majority of sources out there (including virtually all of the media).

      Heh. I find it vastly amusing that one of those media sites does include sources for everything - http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/
      (And I trust Rush a lot more than I trust Wikipedia, even if I'm not on the Neocon bandwagon).

  5. Imagine . . . How you could protect yourself here. by MarkvW · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Copyright. Yeah. That would work. You could keep other people from diluting your work by using the protection afforded by copyright laws. That would be great. Thank goodness that we have copyright! That way, people who want to protect the integrity of their work have the legal authority to do so!

  6. Because someone has to... by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 3, Interesting
    --
    "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    1. Re:Because someone has to... by rtfa-troll · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Interestingly, Wikitruth is now frozen, claiming to have won.

      Somehow, I think it's true; more and more people understand that you can use Wikipedia at the same time as questioning it. Many people have learned how to question all media (the problems of Wikipedia are the same as those of traditional media, just more obvious). At the same time there's a whole load of anti-wikipedia people who just wanted to destroy. That doesn't seem to have happened.

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  7. Good start. But let's boil it down. by khasim · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How many people would support The Church of Scientology paying people to edit and publish stories on Wikipedia?

    Still not clear enough?

    How many people would support The Church of Scientology paying a Wikipedia ADMIN to edit and publish stories on Wikipedia?

    1. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by anagama · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How many people would support The Church of Scientology paying people to edit and publish stories on Wikipedia?

      It's that sort of reasoning that gets us ridiculous laws regarding child porn (like kids sexting eachother being charged as sex offenders). If you imagine the worst possible scum when making laws, you get stupidly over-broad laws.

      If a person is skilled at writing, it seems reasonable for that person to make a living at writing. It seems that there is a huge bias against people making a living, although we do celebrate the super-rich.

      Of course, if the guy who owns the site makes paid copy against the rules, that's his prerogative because its his site. But this isn't a moral issue -- it's an ownership issue.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    2. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Derekloffin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If it complies with all the rules, then even with the CoS behind the guy, I have no issues. It's when it doesn't comply with the rules that I have issues with it.

    3. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Nicholas+Evans · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How many people would support paying history gradschool students to work on WikiProject: Russian History?

      It's perfectly possible to be unbiased and paid for your work. I don't see why they need a new policy to deal with this - their regular NPOV policies are fine.

    4. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      It's that sort of reasoning that gets us ridiculous laws regarding child porn (like kids sexting eachother being charged as sex offenders).

      Sorry, that's not the law. That's stupid fucking prosecutors. They need years of college to learn to be so fucking stupid you know.

    5. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Everyone thinks that people who disagree with them are garbage.

    6. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      How many people would support The CoS paying a Wikipedia ADMIN to edit-block members of the opposing side, when other paid COS editors stir up an edit war?

    7. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by greenreaper · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which works great right up to the point where someone is actually convicted for something that should never have been a crime to begin with.

    8. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by KahabutDieDrake · · Score: 1

      Frankly, if Scientology is the worst possible scum you can come up with, you're so disillusioned you might as well be Hubbard.

    9. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by anagama · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How many stupid things did you do as a teenager? I mean little meaningless things -- imagine your life if you got busted for one of the frequent lapses in intelligence that plague teenagers, but instead of some slap on the wrist commensurate with the misdeed, you had to walk around the rest of your life with the equivalent of a scarlet letter, shunned, unable to get good work, and reviled by everyone who assume because of that scarlet letter, that you did something really really nasty. That's an utterly random result that makes people disrespect the law and start thinking revolutionary or counter-cultural ideas. It is in no way an actual deterrent and serves instead to undermine government. If we had a law that said the police can shoot dead every 10th speeder they catch, it might be a deterrent. Enough laws like that though, and you can expect violent resistance.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    10. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by innerweb · · Score: 4, Funny

      Charging children with crimes like these is outrageous. That would be like charging them with copyright violations and slapping them with huge fines for downloading music they did not pay for. Oh, wait...

      InnerWeb

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
    11. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by KiahZero · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How about the fact that the age of consent is below 18 in most states, meaning that while it's legal for teenagers to engage in all sorts of sexual activity, a girl taking a picture in her underwear can land her in prison for 10 years with a permanent registration as a danger to children?

      If you don't see anything wrong with that, you need your vision checked.

      --
      I'm a lawyer, but not yours. I wouldn't represent someone who thinks taking legal advice from Slashdot is a good idea.
    12. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      First of all, CoS has a sufficient number of brainwashed followers to edit Wikipedia without pay. Second, if they decide to pay for Wikipedia work in order to get even better results, what makes you think they care whether Wikipedia policy forbids paid work or not? At least if they made the mistake of purchasing the services of someone who publically advertises for editing services and is open about their contracts, there would be openness and the paid-for contributor would have his/her reputation to maintain.

    13. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      And if you agree to disagree?

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    14. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by debatem1 · · Score: 1

      It's wrong because the human cost on your "deterrence" is unconscionably high for the specific individual. It turns the law into a lottery, and its enforcement into a crapshoot. It opens the door for favoritism, encourages classism and racism, and disproportionately ruins the lives of those least able or likely to game the system. It is, in short, legal terrorism, used only to ensure that a small, weak group maintains coercive power against a population through fear and the threat of personal harm.

      I like my thugs on the other side of bars too, but if it's all the same to you, I'd like to be the one holding the keys.

    15. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      I certainly wouldn't want the CoS editing Wikipedia, paid for or otherwise, but that doesn't mean that every instance of paid for editing is wrong.

      People are paid to write free and open source software, and we don't have a problem with that. Of course the difference there is that where we do have a problem with what they wrote, we can fork it. We could fork Wikipedia, but it wouldn't be so easy.

      If the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation were to pay someone to edit some of the healthcare articles, I probably would be happy with that, but if they edited IT and computing articles, I wouldn't be so happy.

    16. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      As far as threats to Wikipedia's integrity are concerned, I think it is the worst.

    17. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      It's simple DA, PD, and school department misconduct. It gives them an excuse to look at pictures of naked adolescents, while engaging in sexual repression. This sexually-charged cognitive dissonance is so attractive as to drive many criminally insane.

    18. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      The Crimminals already do pay people to write good things about them.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    19. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how has this worked so far?

      Moreover, would you also charge teens as sex offenders if they wish to go to a beach and hang around in underwear/bikinis or even topless or nude?

    20. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      I am generally very pro-free market, but the problem I see with paid edits is that most of the people hiring this service will be for edits to articles that directly concern themselves, for example a politician paying for their article to be "cleaned up", or a cult paying to have "facts corrected". If editing your own article is wrong, hiring someone to edit your own article is just as wrong. They only way I could see this being ok, and I also can't imagine it happening, is someone sees an article that is completely unrelated to themselves, their hobbies, their faith, their freinds, their boss, their sports team, and lacking basic grammer skills just HAS to hire someone to clean up the article.

      Sure, that'll happen.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    21. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that the grad students are being paid to do what Wikipedia also wants them to do -- to find good information from reliable sources and incorporate it into the articles. There are multiple interests but no conflict of interest.

      The conflict of interest comes in when Wikipedia says "We want well-sourced information about Company X, whether it's flattering to them or not" and Editor X is being paid by Company X to include only the flattering information."

    22. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We all have to deal with the things we did when we are young all our lives, unless we move outside of the area that knows about it (possibly including leaving the country if we committed a felony and were tried as an adult, which is JUST WRONG... err, sorry for the diversion. Don't worry, I don't have any felonies on my record at any age.) Once upon a time you'd grow up and die in the same village, at least now you can move out of town. You know the joke, right? "You see that bridge over there? I built that bridge with my own hands, stone by stone. But do they call me the bridge builder?"

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    23. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

      The difference is that the grad students are being paid to do what Wikipedia also wants them to do -- to find good information from reliable sources and incorporate it into the articles. There are multiple interests but no conflict of interest.

      So government is good ...

      The conflict of interest comes in when Wikipedia says "We want well-sourced information about Company X, whether it's flattering to them or not" and Editor X is being paid by Company X to include only the flattering information."

      and corporations are bad?

      What about the recent Google Maps controversy over including feudal Japanese boundaries showing Burakumin areas over modern maps?

      Nothing written with respect to what human beings do is ever going to be neutral and unbiased.

    24. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by socrplayr813 · · Score: 1

      I agree with you in principle, but who decides what the truth is and how do they do it? It has to be done the same way you're doing it now, but you're encouraging all people to make more edits. Only a fraction of those people really, truly know what they're talking about. No, it's not a moral issue, but you're upsetting the balance that keeps Wikipedia useful and relevant.

      --
      The confidence of ignorance will always overcome the indecision of knowledge.
    25. Re:Good start. But let's boil it down. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that conflicted editors are prone to be subtly biased. That means the edits which are paid for then need to be checked for neutrality by a volunteer. I can't think of an easy way of paying for that independent fact-checking without compounding the problem.

  8. Re:Imagine . . . How you could protect yourself he by russlar · · Score: 1

    Copyright. Yeah. That would work. You could keep other people from diluting your work by using the protection afforded by copyright laws. That would be great. Thank goodness that we have copyright! That way, people who want to protect the integrity of their work have the legal authority to do so!

    You mean do copyright right? Rather than copyright-as-an-anti-distribution tool?

    --
    Anybody want my mod points?
  9. Death by DirtyCanuck · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Youtubes demise? Deleting full episodes, editing comments, deleting controversial videos and muting personal videos.

    Wikipedia? Going from a user generated non bias global collaborative encyclopedia to just an encyclopedia.

    Once these companies get big enough, the always revert back to standard business models. This however is always completely against what made them so good to begin with, youtube became famous for the very content they now destroy, and pay people to seek out.

    Next in line? Google......

    They all sell out.

    1. Re:Death by d4nowar · · Score: 0

      I like how you pulled Google's name out of a hat there.

      Only correlations I see are: Google owns Youtube (they own a lot of things). Google, Youtube, and Wikipedia are all websites.

      Tell me how that makes Google next in line over any other website on the interwebs.

    2. Re:Death by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agree

    3. Re:Death by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      My worries about Wikipedia were confirmed when I had a doctor use a Wikipedia entry to determine what type of medicine to prescribe for my condition. When I expressed my shock over this he politely informed me that "most doctors" use it to make decisions about medication. I can only imagine what kind of other professionals are using Wikipedia to make potentially life altering decisions.

    4. Re:Death by mdwh2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Citation needed.

      Of course that would be worrying, but let's be clear that the fault is with the doctors, not Wikipedia. I would be equally worried if doctors were getting their info from BBC articles, or indeed Britannica - that doesn't mean that there is anything wrong with Wikipedia, the BBC, or Britannica, it's just that they're not authoritative sources for medical information.

      Wikipedia makes it clear that it should not be used for professional advice, and that it certainly does not give medical advice.

  10. Paid editing is a really bad idea. by JoshuaZ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There's an excellent analysis by user Ha! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Paid_Editing#Statement_by_Ha.21 who shows that versions made for pay are generally PR puff pieces at best. He's expanded that to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Ha!/paid_editing_adverts which drives the point home even further. Allowing paid editing would be the death of anything resembling neutrality. There are serious problems with neutrality already, but this would kill it completely.

    1. Re:Paid editing is a really bad idea. by truesaer · · Score: 1

      Paid editing in inevitable. If you think companies, celebrities, etc aren't having employees routinely edit articles relevant to them you're dreaming. And wikipedia allows anonymous edits. Therefore, it doesn't really matter if it is or isn't allowed. The only question is whether the edits are good contributions or not.

    2. Re:Paid editing is a really bad idea. by rtfa-troll · · Score: 1

      Mugging is also inevitable. That does not mean that legalising it will help. Making it against policy puts companies that pay for it at risk and is good.

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
    3. Re:Paid editing is a really bad idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words: Ethics says no, but the really shitty job market says yes.

      And yes it's like mugging. It's not that most people really want to do that kind of thing, but until something better comes by, it's a way to snag a few extra bucks. Ain't no rest for the wicked and all that, you know?

    4. Re:Paid editing is a really bad idea. by truesaer · · Score: 1

      Then put it this way, what counts as "paid editing?" If I work for Microsoft am I simply banned from editing any article relevant to my industry? Can I edit things informally if not a specific job duty? Does whether I use my home or work computer matter? What about university researchers who are surely writing about their research? They may be one of only a few people qualified to write on many topics. Without their contributions there may simply be no information available on a subject. But researchers are highly invested in the acceptance of their ideas both financially and in terms of reputation. I doubt any reasonable set of criteria in the grey area could be agreed upon.

  11. interesting topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well at first I wanted to pick one side of this and argue against anyone that picked the other side, then I thought maybe it would be better if I just felt ambivalently as there are good points to be made on either side, I guess a third option would be to just not care either way, I feel this way a lot.

  12. Not.. necessarily.. bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Brittanica pays its editors and authors after all. I think if you pay someone to edit articles, it ought to be fine, as long as they are about subjects in which you have no vested interest. Ethically, there wouldn't be a problem there, although there might be some technical issues in actually making sure that that is the case.

    I mean, if someone's a good writer/researcher, and someone else wants to sponsor them (pay their bills so they can concentrate on writing/researching), what would be wrong with that?

    1. Re:Not.. necessarily.. bad... by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1, Interesting

      True but the issue under discussion is precisely having outsider sources pay to write articles. In the vast majority of cases it is companies (the examples given by Ha!) it is companies paying to have articles about themselves or individuals paying to have articles about themselves. Paying in a completely uninterested fashion would not create the same problems. However, it would create other problems completely unrelated. As Lessig discusses in his book Remix, people are often willing to volunteer when no one is getting paid for it. But if some people are getting paid or if everyone is getting paid a small amount they switch from thinking of it is as a volunteer work but instead of as employment and you get many fewer people willing to join in. So that simply raises separate problems.

    2. Re:Not.. necessarily.. bad... by mysidia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Brittanica pays their editors, HOWEVER, Brittanica is a neutral party, so their payment doesn't bias the editor.

      There might not be an article in Brittanica about Brittanica itself. However, if there is, you could expect it to be biased in Brittanica's favor, since the editors are paid by Brittanica, they are naturally encouraged to portray their source of $$$ in a positive light, when writing the article.

      Microsoft doesn't personally pay the Brittanica editor that rights the article about their company.

      Etc.

      The only fair way I can imagine handling this would be to allow large corporations to place money in "Escrow", so that Wikipedia would administer the funds, and pay them to editors of articles related to the company that Wikipedia editors had already decided were "wanted" articles.

      Since the payments are third-party administered by Wikipedia, and based only on the quality of the work, the editor can take a neutral point of view, publishing even negative information, without fear of losing funding, or getting 'fired' by the subject of the article...

    3. Re:Not.. necessarily.. bad... by SquirrelsUnite · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but who's going to pay someone to edit articles they have no vested interest in? I guess there already are people who are editing articles at their work about their area of expertise - maybe even with the knowledge of their employers - so technically they are getting payed to do it.
      The important question is how your work is evaluated? Is it based on some criteria other than accuracy, style and relevance? I think it's dishonest to expect that a company or person will pay you to write the truth about them no matter what. If you accept a work like that you are either going to cheat your employer or violate the NPOV rule.

  13. And how much money does Jimbo make? by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Jimbo is just pissed his Wikia spin off failed on him so he doesn't want anyone else trying?

    i'd be suprised if Jimbo doesn't make his living off wikipedia in some form, it's hyporitical of him to condem anyone else trying something similar.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    1. Re:And how much money does Jimbo make? by worthawholebean · · Score: 0

      He does make his living off Wikipedia... it's called a salary.

    2. Re:And how much money does Jimbo make? by worthawholebean · · Score: 2, Informative

      My bad - he has not received money from Wikimedia ever. Even if he did have a salary, it would be to administer, not to create content.

    3. Re:And how much money does Jimbo make? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Wikia is very successful, so your post makes no sense. They are doing more than a half a billion pageviews a month, if you hadn't noticed, and editorship is up 10% in the last month.

  14. How would you stop it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there going to be a background check on anyone that edits a page? You can't stop it, so you can already forget about it.

    Next thing you are going to tell me is that the internet shouldn't have unsolicited e-mail. That'll be the day, junior.

  15. Bad idea, but ... by PPH · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... can we pay certain people not to edit it?

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  16. Well... by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

    I think there are two types of paid editors, one as an image improver, the other as writing good articles. For example, an "image improver" would be one who goes to a company's page and changes earning reports to make the company seem profitable. Or someone who carefully edits information on the latest politician involved in a scandal. Those type of things should be expressly banned. On the other hand there are some who can focus on writing good articles. For example, an author of, say a band might hire someone to add in more things about the band, particularly if they aren't that well-known yet, things that are verifiable yet add things to the article such as home towns, personal info, discography, etc. Things that if written correctly would not be objectionable.

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
  17. Yes, but only if... by SpitfireSMS · · Score: 1

    Only if wikipeida were a paid-subscription site.
    It doesnt make sense to me take ad revenue from the site to pay every jackass that changes "there" to "their"

    1. Re:Yes, but only if... by Darkness404 · · Score: 2, Informative

      This isn't about Wikipedia hiring editors, but rather companies or groups hiring editors for Wikipedia, sometimes in violation of policies. For example, if GM hired someone to change the article to make it have a positive spin on it.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
  18. Yeah. by khasim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Do you really believe that a company would hire a Wikipedia admin to wedge an article about said company onto Wikipedia because said company was looking for a NEUTRAL point of view?

    Is that because there just aren't enough decent writers out there? Or that those other decent writers want way too much money?

    Or is it because those companies believe that an admin would have the best chance of getting a biased story posted?

    1. Re:Yeah. by Derekloffin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I honestly don't believe that any contributor posts with a neutral point of view actually. That a person gets paid, just makes their biases more obvious. However, again, it ultimately comes down to whether he's obeying the rules or not, not his lack of neutrality.

    2. Re:Yeah. by addsalt · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Is that because there just aren't enough decent writers out there? Or that those other decent writers want way too much money?

      I think that is more on target. Writing anything from a neutral point of view is difficult/impossible. If you are taking the time to edit an article, you are most likely not an impartial 3rd party. Hopefully what this could encourage is more well written articles. As with all articles, the obviously false information can get edited out by other users. If the information then gets continually changed the article gets frozen (a la Scientology).

      I can see this going awry, but I'd be interested to see where it heads.

    3. Re:Yeah. by bit01 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I honestly don't believe that any contributor posts with a neutral point of view actually.

      A NPOV is the author trying to present information in the best interests of the typical reader. The author is human, has incomplete information and so cannot be completely unbiased but nonetheless they make a best effort.

      That a person gets paid, just makes their biases more obvious.

      A non-NPOV is the author trying to present information in the best interests of the writer. They are trying to manipulate the reader into making irrational judgments based on incomplete and biased information in favour of the writer, not the reader. The author is not making a best effort for the reader at all.

      I know which I'd prefer.

      ---

      An unobtrusive ad is a non-functional ad. It is a non-sustainable business model.

    4. Re:Yeah. by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The point of wikipedia is that, as anyone can edit it, the non-neutral point of view is easily fixed by.

      On the other hand, if you buy an editor, which is someone who has the power to block edits and has the power of perceived authority given by the common user of wikipedia. That means that if some organization pays an editor to edit someone, that organization is counting on the power granted to that editor to make their piece of propaganda be edit-proof by any common user who sees through the bullshit and takes it upon himself to fix that crap. After all, those organizations are only starting to talk about paying off editors after their less expensive paid astroturfers stopped being efficient.

      --
      Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
    5. Re:Yeah. by mikechant · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Do you really believe that a company would hire a Wikipedia admin to wedge an article about said company onto Wikipedia because said company was looking for a NEUTRAL point of view?

      Some companies are reasonably ethical and well regarded. They might be quite happy to have a neutral POV article on wikipedia rather than no article at all, given that no-one has much that is bad to say about them.

    6. Re:Yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The communications/marketing department would be responsible for this type of effort. That department often reports directly to the company president/CEO. This is not a relationship that encourages a "neutral" POV. There is a reason why the reports done by outside consultants are considered extremely sensitive data open to only a very small # of eyes. And that reason is that those reports are actually neutral.

    7. Re:Yeah. by CrashandDie · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes.

      But then again, some points of view are more neutral than others.

  19. Re:Imagine . . . How you could protect yourself he by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Copyright is not an "anti-distribution tool". It's an anti-unauthorized-unpaid-distribution tool. Don't bring your propaganda here.

  20. Nope. by zerospeaks · · Score: 0

    No. That settles that. Glad we had this talk.

    --
    http://wwww.zerospeaks.com
  21. I get paid to post on Slashdot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Every single time I post, I get paid. Mod points increase the amount. It's awesome and increases the quality of my contributions here. Why some discussions I get dozens of posts and rake in the dough!

    (Sssh, don't tell Cmdr Taco!)

    1. Re:I get paid to post on Slashdot! by name*censored* · · Score: 2, Funny

      Every single time I post, I get paid.

      Well that doesn't surprise me. I bet you get paid by the post - you must account for at least 1/3 of the posts here, M(r/s). Coward!

      --
      Commodore64_love: I don't comprehend people who're so frightened of death that they'll bankrupt themselves to stay alive
  22. The market should be self-correcting in this case by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    Seems to me that if a paid writer edited a page and it conformed to community standards (notariety, neutral POV, sourced, etc.), there wouldn't be a problem. If the writing didn't conform, then it would get rejected by the community, and the writer would likely not get paid. (And if someone wants to pay somebody to make rejected edits to Wikipedia, that's called a fiscal stimulus.)

    There are plenty of ways to have a vested interest besides being directly paid, and Wikipedians have been very successful in finding and correcting egregiously self-serving edits. Why would writers getting paid break the current system?

  23. More to the point... by Antidamage · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Should Slashdot editors continue to be paid for their sub-wiki level of article quality?

    Slashdot should refocus on user generated content, with the most skilled editors earning priority and eventually compensation on their story submissions. I expect taco to be out of a job within a week.

  24. Lock me up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Gee, I've used the Wikipedia reward board to pay for things. Lock me up.

    Also, professionals are being allowed to edit articles in their own field in ways which support their views.

    So it's OK to ask for people to edit for pay, but it's not OK to ask to be paid to edit.
    And it's OK to be paid while you edit, but it's not OK to be paid to edit.

  25. Wouldn't this be counterproductive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the goals they list under why they should have paid editors in the first place is keeping the accuracy of articles up and improving the site's reputation and image. Almost every college professor I've had warns their students against using Wikipedia at all due to accuracy problems.

    Yet, wouldn't paid editors make the site appear even worse than it already is, especially once things like paid edit wars between various government officials and large corporations start appearing?

  26. I've spent $300 on this already by greenreaper · · Score: 4, Informative

    Wikipedia has a reward board where people can offer cash or other rewards for articles to be created or (usually) improved to a certain standard. There is also a bounty board to offer donations to the Wikimedia Foundation for similar tasks. I have personally given $300 to individuals who have worked to raise furry articles to good article status. I see nothing wrong with this. A good article must, by definition, be neutral, and if it is not on a notable subject, it is very unlikely to achieve the status. Frankly, given the amount of skill and effort it takes to meet the requirements (I've done it myself, I know how tough it is), $50 an article is cheap.

    1. Re:I've spent $300 on this already by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 3, Funny

      I have personally given $300 to individuals who have worked to raise furry articles [wikipedia.org] to good article status [wikipedia.org]. I see nothing wrong with this.

      I do.

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    2. Re:I've spent $300 on this already by Gazzonyx · · Score: 1

      Care to expand upon that?

      Saying that you have a problem with it does nothing for me; someone, without an opinion on the topic, willing to consider both sides of the argument. Bring a bit of signal with that noise, will ya'?

      --

      If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.

    3. Re:I've spent $300 on this already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i suggest you yiff in hell

    4. Re:I've spent $300 on this already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      --Joke-->
      .......
      ...0...
      ../|\..
      ../ \..
      ..You..

    5. Re:I've spent $300 on this already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yiff in hell furfag

    6. Re:I've spent $300 on this already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      furry? I'm sorry but that's some creepy deluded shit....if the articles don't convey that, they aren't neutral.

  27. Autocracy? by SleepyHappyDoc · · Score: 0

    "I will personally block...". Sounds pretty autocratic to me.

    --
    Stasis is death. Embrace change.
  28. They already are biased, might as well get paid. by BrookHarty · · Score: 1

    Ever check out the favorite topics and edits of some of the popular wikipedia editors? They have their personal bias's already. Its been biased editing going on since day one. People can say it doesn't happen, but it does. It has a very large group of editors who think alike and push the rules towards their own beliefs and moderate accordingly. They already use the rules to ban or alter topics they have strong opinions about, even though this goes against the rules.

    They might as well, just open the flood gates and let what spin offs happen. This is the motto of open source as a whole. As long as the information is free and everyone can add/change articles, let the public do what what they want.

    I'd rather see it open to more topics, and less editor heavy handed on people or topics they dont like. Do we really need every simpson episode in full detail articles yet smaller articles are routinely deleted because some biased editors report they are not popular enough?

    Wikipedia could be so much, but its bogged down in politics and personal agendas. Might as well open up more, than trying to rule it with an iron fist.

  29. No Debate by Gruff1002 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Anytime someone is paid for something there is a slanted "opinion". Pay me enough I'll tell you anything you want to hear, I'll slam any person, or business if the price is right. This is entirely contradictory to the spirit of a wiki.

    1. Re:No Debate by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

      Anytime someone is paid for something there is a slanted "opinion"

      People who aren't paid have slanted opinions too. What's your point?

    2. Re:No Debate by socrplayr813 · · Score: 1

      Anytime someone is paid for something there is a slanted "opinion"

      People who aren't paid have slanted opinions too. What's your point?

      They have trouble controlling popular topics as it is (ie. keeping them accurate and unbiased). Imagine if companies could pay people to edit Wikipedia for them. There's no way they could keep up with the sheer volume of edits. Not to mention the people who help to maintain Wikipedia would likely get tired of cleaning up, increasing the risk of those people quitting/giving up. The overall quality of Wikipedia would suffer, I fear to the point of becoming a glorified advertisement that people take as gospel.

      --
      The confidence of ignorance will always overcome the indecision of knowledge.
  30. The author looks like a paid schill by slashqwerty · · Score: 1

    This isn't about Wikipedia hiring editors, but rather companies or groups hiring editors for Wikipedia, sometimes in violation of policies.

    It looks like the person in question has done exactly that. I can't link straight to the page but here is the author's profile. Click on "Web Content (9)". This will show reviews of his work. He was paid $125 for a project titled "Wikipedia submission for my new product". He even got a rating of 4.9 out of 5.0 for the work. He was paid $150 for another project title "Write our Wikipedia Listing for Our Company".

  31. And now, a word from MyWikiBiz by thekohser · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I am under contract with a person or corporation to write an article about said person or corporation, I have very, very, very little interest in presenting an "advocacy" position on behalf of that entity. Rather, success is measured in durability within Wikipedia, so my highest priority is...

    How do I write (and publish) this article in such a way that it passes WP:NPOV, WP:V, WP:RS, and all the other WP:things, while simultaneously NOT DRAWING THE ATTENTION of someone from the WikiHive intent on deleting paid promotional puff pieces?

    Guess what? The articles that result are relatively bland, not puff pieces, quite encyclopedic, and (ever since I learned this technique) 100% durable within Wikipedia -- with surprisingly little follow-up maintenance, and likewise lasting appreciation of my clients.

    1. Re:And now, a word from MyWikiBiz by thekohser · · Score: 1

      By the way, if anyone is wondering just how "shut down" is the MyWikiBiz paid editing service, we had three paid engagements in the last quarter of 2008, and one paid article created and published on Wikipedia in the second quarter of 2009. So, it's certainly not thriving, but it's far from dead.

    2. Re:And now, a word from MyWikiBiz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [citation needed]

  32. It's inevitable, so manage it by Spasemunki · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This already happens and inevitably will become more common as Wikipedia's profile rises. WP might as well get out in front of it with policies that make it easier to police and verify.

    Currently, PR firms who are hired by companies to raise their profile already add biased, poorly sourced puff pieces to Wikipedia. They are promptly shredded by the community and deleted in nine cases out of ten. They do, however, create a lot of work for Wikipedian volunteers, usually because the PR people in question know websites generally, but nothing about the rules and culture that govern Wikipedia. They also do not generally disclose up front that they have a business relationship with the company they're writing the article about.

    There's an argument to be made that there's an advantage to replacing these PR firms with people who are already clued in to Wikipedia's culture and guidelines. They could communicate up front to a client what will and won't fly on WP, and the best way to add verifiable information about the company without running afoul of neutrality and verifiability guidelines. If all these paid editors do on behalf of their employer is add content and provide sources, as long as their work is in accord with policy I don't see a reason to care that they are getting paid.

    There are freelance wackos and fanboys that attempt to sabotage or whitewash pages about companies and other institutions as it is. How are paid editors different? At least you could require them to declare their influences. Make stringent requirements about disclosure, and allow paid editors to edit and provide info in talk pages, but not to take any administrative actions on the pages they're paid to edit. Any violation results in a topic ban for that account.

  33. It depends... by SoulReaverDan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...I suppose on what is really being paid for. Are you paying for someone to spin an article in your favor, or are you simply paying to make sure that the article is well done, well formatted, and grammatically correct. I see no objections to the latter, honestly.

    1. Re:It depends... by plankrwf · · Score: 1

      I have no modpoints, or I would have modded you 'up'!
      You strike at what I think is the crucial 'way out' for any professional, who is put in a situation of (possibly) conflicting interests:
      Take a step back.

      As a consultant, I am sometimes in a position in which my position at the client would have me do "intake interviews" (is that the correct way to say it?) with collegues from the same consultancy company. The (possibly) conflicting interests: those of the client, wanting the best 'man (woman) for the job' and those of my company, wanting to post as many consultants as possibly.
      My "standard trick": I ask someone else to do the interview. I have in the past been asked to name a possible candidate for my team (and have done so), asking another consultant (working at the same client but working for a rivaling consultancy company) to do the interview.

      The same behaviour should in my opinion guide a wikipedia editor: he (she) should:
      - Get paid to give advice on how to edit the text. Or even: completely write it. But...
      - the submission should be under a different id. In other words: the article should not get any reputability just because the (supposedly) well known/highly regarded editor wrote it. And...
      - the editor should refrain from having anything to do with this article. This could go as far as not even linking to the article, but that might be asking too much in the case of wikipedia.
      In either case, the article (and edits thereof) should evolve as if the editor had not been involved at all, but had just lent his(her) brains for the little time spent in writing the first few versions.
      If the article at any point in the future would be up for arbitration of any kind, the editor should 'excuse' himself, the same way a judge will retire from a case in which he (she) has any real or imaginary interest in the result.
      (The dutch terms are 'wraken' or 'verschonen'; sorry, don't know the English words for it).

    2. Re:It depends... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the article at any point in the future would be up for arbitration of any kind, the editor should 'excuse' himself, the same way a judge will retire from a case in which he (she) has any real or imaginary interest in the result.
      (The dutch terms are 'wraken' or 'verschonen'; sorry, don't know the English words for it).

      "recuse"

  34. well said, thank you by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Funny

    so i will send you the $50 we discussed previously via paypal now

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  35. How about paid copy-editors? by Nekomusume · · Score: 1

    There's not shortage of pages that could use grammar/etc. repair.

  36. I dont see the problem...if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they're just being paid to write a good article, I don't see what the problem is. Featured articles are generally well written, so all he may be advertising is his skilled use of the english language.

  37. That would turn Wikipedia into a PR site by Klistvud · · Score: 0

    Which is not necessarily bad, as long as its users were savvy enough to grasp that. According to recent surveys, they are not (for instance, they seldom check out the article sources). Users generally forget that Wikipedia is quite biased as it is (the relative lengths of the articles are actually a type of bias, since greater lengths suggest greater "relevance"). Getting paid for editing articles would actually merely shift the bias from a "random" one to a more "one-sided" bias of "what you get is what you pay for". Is that desirable? Well, it certainly is to people and corporations that have money to spend. But to the rest of us?

    --
    Intellectual Property: an immaterial non-entity, most fiercely contended by those with no proper intellect to speak of.
  38. sure.. look what pay has done for congress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we now have the best, most NPOV legislative body in the world... all thanks to lobbyists.

    after all, if nobody is willing to pay for an article, then it probably is not important enough to be written, right?

  39. Hmm by rubah · · Score: 1

    Would this be an issue if it were an anonymous contributor?

  40. David Shankbone being paid by Israeli Government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There is an interesting topic on how one "leading Wikipedia" David Shankbone Miller got paid by the Israeli government and given all sorts of professional advantages, such as introductions famous authors and Shimon Peres, in an attempt to curry favor with the Wikipedia camp.

    http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?showtopic=24358

    The big joke is what they got back were pictures of pissing goats and dimly lit gay clubs. Probably not the kid of PR Israel thought they were buying.

    By all accounts, this guy had had more than one trip out to Israel paid for and yet there is no discussion of this kind of sponsorship. No one is accounting for it. He did stick this one photo up though ...

    http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Palestinian_boy_with_toy_guy_in_Nazareth_by_David_Shankbone.jpg

    and tried adding the title, "A recent study by Herzogâ(TM)s trauma centre found that 33 per cent of Israeli youth have been affected personally by terrorism, either by being at the scene of an attack or by knowing someone injured or killed by terrorists. Seventy per cent of those surveyed reported increased subjective fear or hopelessness." ... a nice bit of bought "NPOV" and a good reason why it should not be allowed.

    It would appear that this particular gun has backfired on his paymasters.

  41. wrong wrong wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there was a puff piece about a corporation that made FEATURED a few weeks ago. absolutely no critical content at all.

    i tried adding information about campaign donations by the company leaders... that got deleted real fast.

  42. David Shankbone being paid by Israeli Governm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is an interesting topic on how one "leading Wikipedia" David Shankbone Miller got paid by the Israeli government and given all sorts of professional advantages, such as introductions famous authors and Shimon Peres, in an attempt to curry favor with the Wikipedia camp.

    http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?showtopic=24358

    The big joke is what they got back were pictures of urinating goats and dimly lit gay clubs. Probably not the kid of PR Israel thought they were buying.

    By all accounts, this guy had had more than one trip out to Israel paid for and yet there is no discussion of this kind of sponsorship. No one is accounting for it. He did stick this one photo up though ...

    http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Palestinian_boy_with_toy_guy_in_Nazareth_by_David_Shankbone.jpg

    and tried adding the title, "A recent study by HerzogÃ(TM)s trauma centre found that 33 per cent of Israeli youth have been affected personally by terrorism, either by being at the scene of an attack or by knowing someone injured or killed by terrorists. Seventy per cent of those surveyed reported increased subjective fear or hopelessness." ... a nice bit of bought "NPOV" and a good reason why it should not be allowed.

    It would appear that this particular gun has backfired on his paymasters.

  43. The Paid Editing Debate dates back to Jan-2007 by betasam · · Score: 1

    Here's a note about a man who claimed that he was being "paid" by Microsoft to edit Wikipedia articles. He also claimed to be a contributor for OOXML on Wikipedia. His contributions following this article were being dismissed as biased.

    There are two parts to this issue. They are (1) "Should Wikipedia offer to pay those who edit articles?" and (2) "Should any Wikipedia contributor get paid for contributing articles?" On (1), Wikipedia's stance is clear, they are not willing to pay anyone to edit articles. They would like to continue with their open model with little or no moderation. On (2) they are merely talking about the quality of the resultant article. They seriously do not have a mechanism to stop a 3rd party Wikimedia contributor from contributing for money or for the sake of love of the subject or for personal bias.

    IMHO, Wikipedia must avoid policing any and all editors unless they are on their own Payroll. Their open model has served as a simple mechanism to collect relevant information on a topic which may or may not necessarily be accurate. There have been enough debates that have concluded that Wikipedia cannot be quoted as a citation for serious scientific study due to lack of moderation and verification of sources.

    --
    No Greater Friend, No Greater Enemy! (Lucius Cornelius Sulla)
  44. yeah and if that article has any critical content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    you would still have donated.. right? sure. sure.

    NPOV doesnt mean a lack of critical content, it means viewpoints can be mentioned but not one to the exclusivity of others.

    but in general 'fans' of something dont want any critical viewpoints even mentioned. they dont understand NPOV.

    so, whatever.

  45. Wikipedia articles are owned by... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...Those with the most time on their hands.

    They always have been.

    Just try and outlast, say, a bored housewife with an axe to grind and nothing better to do than grind it.

    Or maybe the unemployed aspiring journalist who likes to insert references to himself and his work into half the existing Wikipedia entries.

    And then there are the relentlessly self-promoting ego-monsters who believe Wikipedia was created solely for to allow them to finally reveal their greatness and grandeur to the world.

    Or the high school kid hellbent on mindless vandalism to impress his little friends, as well as for the sheer pleasure of it.

    Those are just a few obvious ones, but there are many others.

    Wikipedia is a wonderful concept, but unfortunately it's an utter bitch in reality.

    1. Re:Wikipedia articles are owned by... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No need to get personal, you asshole! You know you've just described my mom, my lazy dad, my freinds, and me! What do you have against us, anyway? Just 'cause you have a life, and none of us do, that makes you superior, or what? EAT MY SHORTS!!

    2. Re:Wikipedia articles are owned by... by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

      Just try and outlast, say, a bored housewife with an axe to grind and nothing better to do than grind it.

      You just described my ex-wife, you insensitive clod!

  46. The only good solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only good solution is to allow people to get paid to create articles, but to make sure that the admins are as unbiased as possible. The admins should also be somewhat smart, and should be confined to their areas of expertise (I've seen a few quantum physics articles with flags on them that look fine to me - start the quantum jokes now), if admins were confined to their areas of expertise, and they clued each other in to vandalism when they saw it outside of their area, then it would work well. To try to keep the admins should be paid by the Wikipedia foundation, and users should be able to complain about biased or stupid admins.

    The trick is to find people who are smart, unbiased, and willing to work for free/cheap. I leave that as an exercise to Jimmy Wales and fellow Slashdotters.

  47. You don't go far enough. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wikipedia is a bad idea. It's the best engine for defamation since the invention of the printing press. Ask anyone who's been accused of being part of the Kennedy assassination (this happened to a high-profile American politician), kept from flying (happened to an academic)...shall I go on?

    1. Re:You don't go far enough. by JoshuaZ · · Score: 0

      No. That's all connected to the fact that there are idiots in the world and they need to understand that not everything they see on the net is factual. Wikipedia never asked to be used as a source as such. Despite the fact that this is general idiocy more than anything else, Wikipedia is working on improving its coverage of biographies of living people and has developed a number of new policies and procedures to help deal with such issues. One upcoming switch that will soon occur is to move to so called "flagged revisions" where articles will have two forms, the most recently edited form and the most recently approved form. Anyone will be able to look at both but the default will be to see the most recently approved form. Presumably, anyone who bothers looking at the other one will know enough to know not to rely on random unsourced statements in the unapproved versions.

      But none of this has anything to do with the matter at hand which is the issue of paid editing. (Also, while we are correcting your misconceptions, defamation, libel and slander are not synonyms. Slander is spoken. Libel is written. Defamation includes both slander and libel. So what you really mean is libel, not defamation).

  48. From the "... Oh, now I get it category..." by Gazzonyx · · Score: 1

    Crap. Reading comprehension, FTW!

    I need some caffeine, sixty seconds ago.

    --

    If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.

    1. Re:From the "... Oh, now I get it category..." by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      It wasn't a good joke, to be fair.

      Furries are though.

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
  49. Users okay, admins not by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    I don't see a problem with users being paid to write. All mechanisms to deal with astroturfing, POV pushing and so on are already in place, and, frankly, there are quite enough people willing to do all those things already even without being paid. A few more paid shills won't make things substantially worse, and there may still be those who get paid and actually write good (as far as WP is concerned) articles.

    Now admins are another matter. Adminship abuse is harder to point out and prove, and they have much more power, and can consequently deal that much more damage before rooted out. I'd say that being on someone's payroll specifically to deal with WP matters should immediately disqualify one from being an administrator, or applying for that position.

  50. Re:Imagine . . . How you could protect yourself he by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 2, Funny

    Don't bring your propaganda here.

    Gentlemen, you can't spread propaganda in here! This is Slashdot.

    --
    To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
  51. Quote from his own ad: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I have a rich experience in technical writing, content writing, and instructional design."

    Well, either he has a single instance of writing experience and/or he can't write. Either way, I can't see why anyone would hire this doofus.

  52. Paid or not, it's irrelevant by loufoque · · Score: 1

    Whether the actual person is paid or not is irrelevant. The same reviewing process should take place.

    Also, I don't see anything wrong with paying someone to write articles for me. Writing articles is certainly time-consuming work that I'd rather have someone else do than myself, so that I can focus on my job.
    An example is if I'm part of some community around a newly created programming language X, and we need to create a good wikipedia page to advertise, demonstrate, etc. our language. The community is busy working on the runtime, what we're actually good at, so hiring someone to do that page for us seems like a good idea.

    As long at it is only products, technologies, or something like and not controversial historic stuff there is no such thing as bias anyway.

  53. You see nothing wrong in this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You see nothing wrong in this because you are too obtuse to understand the difference between the mechanism and the outcome.

    Just because in your case the results were beneficial (let's assume) it does not mean that they are likely to be so in all cases. Paying people will get more done, more quickly, but it will also, in many instances, provide a powerful incentive to place honesty on the back burner. You can be sure that the most money will be offered and the work most effective in seeding the articles with edits which favour large corporations and rich individuals... admittedly, while at the same time, some do gooders are helping to pay for quality improvements.

    While editing is open to all and sundry, the system at least approaches something democratic, but when you bring money into the picture, influence becomes proportionate to the wealth of the individual.

    Nobody should be paid for editing Wikipedia.

  54. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  55. So I pay someone loads to write an article... by that+IT+girl · · Score: 1

    ... then someone with an agenda of their own just comes and edits straight over it?

    Unless I'm missing something here, that just seems like a waste.

    --
    10 FILL MUG WITH COFFEE
    20 DRINK COFFEE
    30 GOTO 10
  56. Science and Engineering Articles by PleaseFearMe · · Score: 1

    If you do not count the biology vs. religion debate, it is difficult to find bias in the hard sciences. Facts are facts and there is no reason why anyone would have a disputed yet irrefutable idea. Maybe science foundations can set up a program that rewards editors whose articles become featured.

  57. How Could You Do It? by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

    I like the idea of Wikipedia contributors getting paid, and I like the idea of the money coming from those who want articles about specific topics created or enriched.

    The only downside is the risk of bias. How can you remove that risk?

    Quick thought: Anyone can put money, and a target topic, into a kitty. The most funded topics get paid research done on them. The researchers are not told who put the money in the fund. So they don't know if they payer was a supporter or critic.

    If someone has an unbiased desire for a more rich Wikipedia, this approach works just fine. If they want a particular spin, there's no data channel for their preference to be communicated.

    Just a quick rough thought - how could you make it work better?

  58. Fuck Wikipedia by Moe1975 · · Score: 0, Troll

    nuff' said

    --
    SARAVA!
  59. Re:yeah and if that article has any critical conte by greenreaper · · Score: 1

    Of course. I would be disappointed if an article reached good article status without mentioning such things, as coverage of the topic should be broad. In fact, the very first article concerned, furry convention, had to have coverage of critical response to such events added before it could become a good article.

  60. so you are filling up wiki with non notable crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    good show guvnah

  61. No.. but it won't be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " Should Wikipedians Edit Stories For Pay?"
              No they shouldn't. But people shouldn't spam, phone spam, or junk-mail spam either, and yet these all happen.

              I don't think anyone will stop people editing wikipedia for pay, whether wikipedia wants it or not. If they keep making biased edits, they'll be outed and banned for this anyway, and if they aren't, well, if they get paid all the better. I think it's very likely a conflict of interest for wikipedia admins to be paid for edits though.

  62. Wikipedia's Credibility Gap by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

    If the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation were to pay someone to edit some of the healthcare articles, I probably would be happy with that, but if they edited IT and computing articles, I wouldn't be so happy.

    What reason is there to believe that they have any relevant expertise in health care? And if they did, wouldn't that make it a conflict of interest?

    I put little credence in anything I read on Wikipedia; all of the articles regarding subjects that I have first hand experience with get something wrong.

    11 years ago, I made a mistake editing about.el in XEmacs - I wrote 1998 instead of "present", which Wikipedia had faithfully copied the last time I checked. (checking again) I suppose I should be happy that Wikipedia has deleted my contributions entirely rather than continue to copy that mistake. Good going Wikipedians.

    1. Re:Wikipedia's Credibility Gap by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      They don't, but they could pay someone who does.

      Just having expertise in the area doesn't mean you have a conflict of interest, otherwise you would only have people who don't know what they are talking about writing articles on Wikipedia. That of course does happen quite a bit at the moment.

  63. Re:so you are filling up wiki with non notable cra by thekohser · · Score: 1

    Well, one of my paid articles about a pharmaceutical remedy receives over 5,000 page views on Wikipedia per month. I don't know how YOU define "non-notable", but apparently there are over 5,000 people a month search for information on Wikipedia about some of my "crap" that I put there.

    This is the sort of idiot response I had to put up with on Wikipedia, and frankly, one of the main reasons I just went underground. I got tired of arguing with teenagers who lack a foundation in logic.

  64. Selling expertise or access? by webagogue · · Score: 0

    If the editor was simply selling his expertise in writing acceptable/good/great Wikipedia articles then I cannot see any harm in what he was doing. But, if he was selling his access (can he edit things others are not allowed to edit? can he bypass filters/restrictions that your average joe cannot?), then he's wrong. He's wrong and there should be a policy that anyone caught doing so has their rights busted down to average joe.

    --

    Knowledge is valuable. Ignorance is dangerous. Censorship is unacceptable. http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=10
  65. Motivation and effect. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't believe money is the right incentive, but the only way it could work is if you pay per hour, and not per edit/performance. Otherwise people will just make edits for the sake of making edits.

    Also, you would have to be paying someone who has something to contribute. For example, pay a specialist to review (and edit where necessary) articles on Wikipedia within his expertise.

  66. Re:David Shankbone being paid by Israeli Governmen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *yawn* - you're scandalized by this, of all things?! LOL

    Wouldn't the kid with the toy gun also be Israeli if he lives in Nazareth, Israel?