Company Fined €25,000 For Altering Wikipedia
hcs_$reboot writes "A French court ordered a company to pay 25,000 Euros to a competitor about which she had removed the name of a Wikipedia entry dedicated to her field. Hi-Media, the defendant, was identified thanks to her IP address found from the Wikipedia page."
That summary makes no sense whatsoever; can someone translate?
-SaNo
Can someone translate from ramblese?
Now we can sue you for recommending our pages for speedy deletion. Take that!
Paid to the competitor? Like, that competitor was recognized as having a legal interest in being listed in a private, community-run website?
That is odd. I could see the fine being paid to the Wikimedia foundation, since they're the ones whose terms of service were violated by the malicious edits; but I think a legal can of worms is opened by the idea that a third party could sue for being deprived of a publicity service to which they were never entitled in the first place.
From the article...
A good soul hidden under the IP 143.126.11.222 blew up, ...
It could of been a professional open source competitor to the likes of Britannica, World-book and Encarta (which was killed by Wikipedia), but no they let deletionists and admins with serious mental problems take over. Luckily there are inclusionist wikis out there but as long as Wikipedia keeps appearing on the top of search engine results it will reel in more suckers while Jimbo Wales keeps hanging out with his babes.
If you are a Wikipedian reading this, please turn of your computer and go outside. You won't care about NPOV and notabillity once you get laid.
Since when is Wikipedia an appropriate place to advertise?
I saw it firsthand. Individuals get active in Wikipedia, get titles of editors, and then start to carry out commercial orders of removing competitors' names.
I do not click on Wikipedia links anymore. It is like that magical ring. When one has got too much power it corrupts. There are other sites too where information can be found.
Wikipedia is being used now by inside marketeers to skew the market.
My French is rather rusty... but here's a go:
A company (A) had removed the name of their competitor (B) form the (French) Wikipedia article on Micropayments. Thanks to Wikipedia's logs the company who had their name removed (B) was able to identify the culprit as their competitor (A) and sued, successfully claiming 25,000 € in damages.
French natives, please correct me if I'm misreading here. :)
.: Max Romantschuk
If you want to be anonymous on Wikipedia, you have to get yourself a name. If you post as an IP, its much easier to find you.
Fandroids hate facts.
Now the stupid admins and users with an overinflated sense of ego can threaten legal action just because someone edits a page and they don't agree with it?
Come on, Wikipedia's just a website.
Summation 2
TFA has an image of the Wikipedia edit. I found it, and they removed a link from a list of Plates-formes, whatever that is.
I don't know about the French Wikipedia, but on the English one, "Links to individual web pages that primarily exist to sell products or services...", as these appear to be, are "normally to be avoided". And in fact, the current article has only a list of internal links.
(T>t && O(n)--) == sqrt(666)
As a Wikipedia admin it is fun to control information to my extremist right wing views that make Ron Paul and Ann Rand look like hippies. I stay up on my computer 16 hours a day and also I don't have a job because I live with my parents basement for the last 20 years after dropping out of high school. After reading conservativism for dummies I found Wikipedia in 2003 and have been editing there ever since. I have a botnet of sockpuppets on discrete IP ranges so they can't be checkusered and use them to get "consensus" to delete anything I don't like and bias the arbcon. I also weigh 450lbs and stuff my face constantly with cheetos, double cream, mountain dew and KFC megabuckets. My mom buys fleshlights and anime porn because I will never get a girlfriend.
My user name on wikipedia is Bsadowski1.
The RIAA determines identity based on an IP address and we get complaints and reams of technical reasons why it is inaccurate. The identity of false editor is determined from an IP in a Wikipedia edit log, and successfully sued, and we all cheer freedom and openness. Now I hate the RIAA's litigious actions as much as the next guy, but this seems wholly inconsistent. Is the identity of someone behind an IP address only questionable when we don't like the outcome?
This is a bad precedent to set. Considering that Wikipedia is meant to be edited by anyone, even it is is wrong (Sarah Palin fanatics editing Paul Revere's page). The changes are supposed to be reviewed and amended if they are wrong, like in the care of Paul Revere, sorry Palin fans. Also I don't see how this caused the company any loss. I mean someone shopping for a micro payment system is not going to be looking on Wikipedia on which company to choose and if that is how a company is doing business they probably won't be doing it for long.
Just because you are wrong and I called you out on it doesn't mean I am a Troll.
You're confused between real-life (interfering with another business's trade- for which Hi-Media was fined) and a childish fantasy land where is ok to do anything you like (where you "I can't see how Hi-Media did anything wrong enough to justify such a huge fine" which you think "a warning [or] a ban").
Welcome to the grown-up's world, where your actions have consequences, whether your like it or not.
Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
user. 'Now that ffel an obligation RECRUITMENT, BUT
Wikipedia is much better now that people have actually started trying to enforce some notability
Let's see: English Wikipedia defines notability of a subject as coverage of the subject in multiple reliable sources independent of a subject. Yet there's no remotely rigorous definition of "multiple", "reliable", or "independent". This makes notability on English Wikipedia look like "a farce", as gottabeme put it. Has French Wikipedia defined notability more objectively than English Wikipedia has?
How can you claim losses for being removed from an article on Wikipedia?
It's not an advertising platform, and the way the company was even in the article to begin with may have been inappropriate, regardless of who it was who removed it.
The fundamental question to me is what right do you have to be in a Wikipedia article? Let's assume for a moment that WP was not a publically editable site, but that it was a closed system with designated editors. Would Wikipedia be obligated to include every possible company that might be related to a particular product or service in their encyclopedia? Should they be sued for excluding some company?
If not, then why is it illegal for an editor to remove a company from a Wikipedia page? Why does it matter that it's publically editable?
The court, apparently finds it anti-competitive, but by what right does any company have to be listed in Wikipedia? Are they paying for advertising? Do they have a contract?
Now, the governing board or whatever of Wikipedia, internally, might find it to be a violation of site policy for a company to remove a competitor from Wikipedia, but why should courts be involved in what is essentially an internal governance/editorial issue at Wikipedia?
The information that was removed might have been a spam link.
It's not the purpose of Wikipedia to promote businesses.
A Wikipedia page does not owe you free advertising.
If I find that my competitor is abusing Wikipedia to boost their search engine ranking, of course I will remove it.
It could of [have] been a profe[...], but no[need a comma here] they let deletionists [...] inclusionist wikis out there[need a comma here] but as long as Wikipedia keeps [...]
If you are a Wikipedian reading this, please turn of[f] your computer and go outside. [...]
Edited that for ya.
WALSTIB!
I had a Wiki link for a music synthesis app (shareware) that was removed. I assumed Wiki had changed policy re linking to anything remotely commercial. So, why should someone get a commercial link/free advertising from Wiki anyway?
It is unbelievable that a court of law could consider an IP address proof. It is relatively easy to spoof an IP address which makes it no more than circumstantial evidence. An IP address doesn't prove anything. It would be like saying that because a letter (snail mail) had a senders address on it it must have been written by that sender. Possibly yes, likely yes, but not definitely.
Fines are what you have to pay the government. When you have to pay compensation to another for the harm you caused, it's called damages. They could be punitive or compensatory damages, but it's still damages.
Wikipedia. The encyclopedia anyone can edit. Except when you can't. Yet again proving that silly slogans have little to do with reality.
Wikipedia's policy on external links is at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:External_links
But with over 3 million articles there will always be a few that have been missed.
Didn't the judge know that if one doesn't like what one reads in Wiki, there's that neat EDIT button to fix things? How can they deny HiMedia that privilege? :D