Slashdot Mirror


Wikipedia Editor Says Site's Toxic Community Has Him Contemplating Suicide (vice.com)

An anonymous reader writes: A longtime Wikipedia editor wrote an email to a large public mailing list Tuesday, saying he was contemplating suicide due to online abuse by his fellow Wikipedians. "Nobody on Wikipedia seems to be kind," he wrote. "You are all so busy power tripping that you forget there is a real, live person on the other side." He lamented that obstructionism by other editors stopped him from contributing to the site's "great mission -- one I feel so keenly." The email was sent to the Wikimedia-L mailing list, which is one of the largest community-run Wikimedia mailing lists and has hundreds of subscribers. The editor was upset after an ongoing disagreement with other editors on the "talk" pages of an article about a local politician. The debate devolved into name-calling, the editor wrote, and eventually he was completely banned from editing the site he had devoted so much time to.

34 of 379 comments (clear)

  1. Well, what do you expect. It's online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The online world is like drunk people. Some drunks are mean, some are nice. You get to know the real person if they have had a few drinks, honest, crook, lecherous, moral. Same for how people behave when they have some power online and can ban folks they disagree with. They are online drunks.

  2. As I've said before... by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...fuck Wikipedia. It's entire model can literally be summed-up as, "King of the Hill." Whoever camps at their computer to edit pages is the editor, regardless of any acumen or credentials with the subject matter, and without regard to any actual rules that govern article structure or citation.

    If Wikipedia wants to fix this, they need to disallow users from camping on pet articles. They need to disallow reverts based on style that have nothing to do with substance and have no real benefit, and they need to ban users that continue to engage in these practices. Until that's done the entire process will be at the whim of the cave trolls that patrol the site because they have nothing better to do.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:As I've said before... by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ...fuck Wikipedia. It's entire model can literally be summed-up as, "King of the Hill." Whoever camps at their computer to edit pages is the editor, regardless of any acumen or credentials with the subject matter, and without regard to any actual rules that govern article structure or citation. If Wikipedia wants to fix this, they need to disallow users from camping on pet articles. They need to disallow reverts based on style that have nothing to do with substance and have no real benefit, and they need to ban users that continue to engage in these practices. Until that's done the entire process will be at the whim of the cave trolls that patrol the site because they have nothing better to do.

      Wikipedia, as an idea, has a lot of promise but unfortunately the reality is far from the promise. There is a lot of good information there, but it is also a convenient and large forum for the power tripping to seek validation by "winning" while they safely post from their mother's basement. Those with useful input eventually decide to go elsewhere because the headaches aren't worth the toile, which off course just makes basement dwelling troll feel go because he has won yet again; even if no one really gives a shit about him or his miserable existence.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    2. Re:As I've said before... by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, then it's more like "whoever has more friends" or "whoever supports the groupthink of the week" gets to set what's considered "right".

      There is no real way to solve this. At least 'til people prefer actual reality to their pet reality.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:As I've said before... by QuietLagoon · · Score: 5, Informative

      ... It's entire model can literally be summed-up as, "King of the Hill." Whoever camps at their computer to edit pages is the editor,...

      In my experience, that is a valid statement.

      .
      I had the few hours to research and edit an article, complete with citations. I did not have the time to sit around, hovering over the article to argue with an "editor" who reverted my change because he had verb-tense disagreements with my edit.

      If the only problem he had was the tense of the verb (and he said that was the only issue he had with the changes I made), then why didn't he just fix the tense of the verb?

      The Wikipedia model has deep systemic problems that are largely ignored by the powers that be at the top of Wikipedia.

    4. Re:As I've said before... by bigpat · · Score: 5, Interesting

      ...fuck Wikipedia. It's entire model can literally be summed-up as, "King of the Hill." Whoever camps at their computer to edit pages is the editor, regardless of any acumen or credentials with the subject matter, and without regard to any actual rules that govern article structure or citation.

      If Wikipedia wants to fix this, they need to disallow users from camping on pet articles. They need to disallow reverts based on style that have nothing to do with substance and have no real benefit, and they need to ban users that continue to engage in these practices. Until that's done the entire process will be at the whim of the cave trolls that patrol the site because they have nothing better to do.

      Still it beats by a hundred fold the encyclopedia set that used to adorn every middle class household's and library's bookshelf as their first view of the world. Wikipedia is a treasure of useful information, a starting point for unknown topics.

      In such an endeavor striving too much for perfection is the enemy of the good. People always have to understand the perspectives and biases of their sources. That isn't a flaw, that is just reality.

      Wikipedia is still the most successful attempt to provide a starting point, an entry point, to all of human knowledge.

      Sure it still sucks, but show me something better and that will suck too.

    5. Re:As I've said before... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not the idea of an encyclopaedia anyone can edit that is bad, it's the Wikipedia MMORPG that has been built up around it.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    6. Re:As I've said before... by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wikipedia is a treasure of useful information, a starting point for unknown topics.

      Most of the time, sure. Unfortunately, it's really difficult to tell the difference between a well-researched article that agrees with the scholarly consensus vs. an article based on weird sources (but usually popular, not necessarily scholarly) that are 50 years out of date. Now, it's true that paper encyclopedias could suffer from that problem too. On the other hand, good paper encyclopedias often had information on authors of articles or at least the major subject editors, so you could take a guess about whether it was reliable. You don't have that on Wikipedia, where "anyone can edit."

      But there are much worse things -- like how you don't know whether an article has been randomly vandalized, or edited recently by some idiot who just inserted false information. Back when I was actually active editing Wikipedia for a while (before I became aware of how insanely screwed up it was), I remember a number of cases of very subtle vandalism that went unnoticed for weeks.

      My favorite was some person -- who was a registered user, rather than just an "anonymous IP address," so it didn't send up as many immediate red flags -- who went through and just changed DIGITS in historical dates. So some random historical person suddenly did X in 1742 instead of 1752 or whatever. They did this on perhaps a dozen articles, and the edits stood for at least a week. The main reason I think he was caught is because -- like most vandals -- eventually he couldn't contain himself and altered some historical article on a woman to say she was "a dirty whore" or something. If he hadn't done that, it might have been months or years before anyone noticed that this one guy had been randomly switching digits across a bunch of Wikipedia articles.

      The "vandalism" problem is definitely something that is much WORSE than traditional paper encyclopedias... and if you don't think you've viewed articles that contain various subtle forms of it, you have no idea of how much vandalism is attempted on Wikipedia all the time. (And that doesn't even get into deliberate hoaxes or persistent misinformation that doesn't look like obvious vandalism.)

      In such an endeavor striving too much for perfection is the enemy of the good. People always have to understand the perspectives and biases of their sources. That isn't a flaw, that is just reality.

      "Perspectives and biases of their sources" is important. But the problem with Wikipedia is that we don't know the perspectives and biases, because it's written mostly by anonymous people and pseudonyms (who have sometimes been known to lie about their identities, even when they claim to provide real-world info about themselves).

      And leaving almost all articles open to random editing ensures a continuous war against the kind of vandalism I've already mentioned. That's not a "perspective or bias" -- that IS a serious FLAW. Say what you will about Encyclopedia Britannica, but when I open the paper copy two days later, there won't be random NEW misprints appearing or the word "PENUS!!" suddenly appearing in the middle of an article.

      Sure it still sucks, but show me something better and that will suck too.

      I have a real problem with this attitude -- "Oh, well it's still better than other stuff!" That's a lame excuse, frankly. We could still improve the concept significantly.

      I've been saying this for years, but if Wikipedia really wants to be successful in the long term, it needs major changes. The idea that "anyone can edit!" any article was great in the early days to build a foundation of information -- and it's still good for new articles

    7. Re:As I've said before... by Rakarra · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Whenever I metamodded, I would go in thinking "yeah, now I have a chance to right the clearly-political mods! Let's do this!"
      Then I'd get in and it'd be "Well, ok, that's fine. Yeah, that one was fine too. This one... I have no idea what the moderator was thinking. Whatever." And it'd be a boring list. I'd go in because I wanted to undo some of the crazy mods I'd seen, but when I metamodded... I never ran across them. The two possibilities are that the crazy mods are somehow excluded from the system, which seems extremely unlikely, or that.. well, maybe there aren't as many crazy/weird/wrong moderations as we suspect there are, that the vast majority of moderation is done correctly.

      We don't get any feedback for metamodding, so it's hard for us to say "yes, the system is working!" But in general I think the system works.

  3. This may sound harsh... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you're contemplating suicide based on something going on with the Internet, you have lost perspective and need to go outside.

    1. Re:This may sound harsh... by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think in general if people are making you want to commit suicide, you need to get away from those people. Do not expect those people to change their ways to save you, in fact, if on the internet, expect them to get worst.

    2. Re:This may sound harsh... by OzPeter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you're contemplating suicide, you have lost perspective.

      FTFY

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    3. Re:This may sound harsh... by gmack · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I doubt he was actually contemplating suicide. This seems more on the level of emotional blackmail to me.

    4. Re: This may sound harsh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Take this from one person who circles these feelings on a fairly regular basis. When you are really contemplating suicide you don't tell people. When you are serious, you go quiet. The saw about"we knew we should worry because he stopped talking" is true. Saying I'm thinking about suicide is generally a plea to stop the argument and oh by the way, let me win kind of thing.

      I'm not trying to be dismissive. I'm sure some very terrible things were said. If he can't handle the heat he should probably step out of the kitchen for awhile. No one owes you happiness.

  4. Yup, yup... by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Back in the day, I hade almost several 1000 quality edits - which is to say slightly more than typo correction - but walked away for many of the reasons that this guy puts light on. Suicide would have been a bit of an over reaction, though.

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    1. Re:Yup, yup... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Back in the day, I hade almost several 1000 quality edits

      And all of them to this one article:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  5. Re:Well, what do you expect. It's online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And... as a followup to my post. If you get suicidal over online crap. You need to get off the internet and go outside to play.

  6. Re:Well, what do you expect. It's online. by Kokuyo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some people are more sensitive than others. Telling all of those to GTFO will lead in a lot of resources wasted. Because, believe you me, the power hungry assholes usually aren't the great contributors to society they want you to think they are.

  7. Re:People online need to be more sensitive by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 3, Funny

    I can relate to his experience - not in wikipedia, but other forums, including slashdot and LinkedIn. I have found that most people are nice, but there are certain people who become nasty very quickly. Those individuals can easily destroy a discussion. IMO we need to expect civility in online forums - otherwise, why have a forum? People should not make personal attacks - comments should be issue focused. I see a-lot of posts on slashdot that get personal, like "you are an idiot", etc. That is not appropriate - it is childish. IMO, a comment that embeds a personal attack should result in the commenter being banned for awhile at least.

    You're an idiot.

    --
    "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
    --- Jerry Garcia
  8. ...and I'll say it again... by Medievalist · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As Dilbert long ago pointed out, the craziest person wins any debate where the only thing that matters is persistence.

    Now maybe we know what happens to the second craziest person... they commit suicide?

  9. Time to step away by HalAtWork · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When anything you're doing is evoking feeling so extreme, time to step away and do something completely different for a while to recollect yourself and regain some perspective. Don't do the futile thing of hoping you can cope or change things for the better in your current position while you are experiencing such extreme feelings.
     
    Wikipedia is not a way of life, it is not someone you love, it is not worth suffering or ending yourself for. Find something that makes you happy.

  10. Re:Well, what do you expect. It's online. by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And... as a followup to my post. If you get suicidal over online crap. You need to get off the internet and go outside to play.

    Yup.

    This is the challenge of putting anything out to the public, since it becomes a form of public domain. Even if the copyright technically belongs to a small group, the stake holders are in the millions and the unofficial armchair committee huge. Sometimes the best thing is to know when you need to agree to differ and walk away from the shitfest. It is not always easy, but the short term pain may make the long term so much better.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  11. Details by Tailhook · · Score: 4, Informative

    The actual message is here. The politician mentioned in the story is this guy.

    The politician, Salim Mehajer, is really something. Sort of an Australian Donald Trump. He runs people over with his super car, threatens people, violates election laws and then gets himself acquitted or wrist-slapped for all of it in court. The editor wanted to elaborate on details of this stuff in Salim Mehajer's Wikipedia page and the powers-that-be blocked him. Seems like the editor was trying to do the equivalent of investigative reporting, to the degree that it amounted to original research and detail excessive for a Wikipedia page.

    --
    Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
  12. Re:Go for it by joeboomer628 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't do it, allowing bad behavior to destroy good things just encourages more bad behavior. People who know how to accomplish something worthwhile are the only hope in a world full of loonies.

    --
    JoeR
  13. I don't even bother anymore by buk110 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've tried to make edits. There was a page where I had cited evidence from multiple sources that my change should be accepted, and no reason was given just a "nope". So why bother?

  14. Better for Science, not politics. by SeattleLawGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure it still sucks, but show me something better and that will suck too.

    For Science and Math and a lot of facts, it is much better. But for propaganda, it's much worse. The encyclopaedia entry on a given politician did not used to be made by that politician's intern or PR firm.

    --
    Real lawyers write in C++
    1. Re:Better for Science, not politics. by justthinkit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There is a simple and automated solution to this.

      Wikipedia could post an integrity score for each of its pages. The score would be based solely on how often edits are reverted. If a page bounces back and forth repeatedly, the score would be close to zero and people would be told to not put much stock in that page. And, again automatically, the page's editor(s) would be notified and, in time, could be consequenced in a variety of ways.

      Slashdot needs something similar, for when mods up then down then up then down mod a post. Typically the down-modders are the problem but, with a bit of human intervention by the editors, they could "settle the argument" and deal out a consequence to whomever is on the problem side.

      --
      I come here for the love
  15. And it's worth it (?) by eepok · · Score: 3, Interesting

    And it's worth it.

    It's not my intent to be callous to its effects on the people who put the effort in, but Wikipedia is without a question the most correct, current, and expansive singular source of knowledge that mankind has every seen. It's far from perfect, but it's literally the best that has ever been. It might just be that zealotry and incivility is the only known way to provide a rigid standard of quality control in an organization where there are no genuine laws, authoritarian oversight, or wage structure to hold over peoples' heads. So, if the ends justify the means, then keep it up!

    But if it doesn't-- if the emotional effects on some is too great a cost for the benefits, then someone needs to find another way to facilitate the intellectual and emotional drive for people to volunteer their own time to put so many hours of work into building and maintaining such an important source of information.

    Complaining about its imperfections is insufficient.

  16. Re:Well, what do you expect. It's online. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It doesn't seem like this person crumbled at the first mean thing said to them, it's more like an on-going series of incidents over a long period of time. Most normal people are like that - generally stable and able to cope with what life throws at them, but if put under sustained pressure will eventually crack.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  17. Re:We don't know how to be nice. by Jhon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "...some people think it is because of Political Correctness is taking over. It isn't it is because we as a culture are trying to flatten the class structure."

    We've been flattening class structure since the 1600s and has nothing to do with Trump's popularity. PC is fairly new and it *IS* causing huge unnecessary problems and conflict. By labeling nearly EVERYTHING racist or sexist to silence your opposition there can be no middle-ground or compromise. I believe it's impossible to govern a republic based on democratic principles for very long without compromise -- you end up with sometimes more than 50% of the population against the establishment. .

    Trump is popular because he's talking about things both the Ds and the Rs wont talk about -- like illegal immigration for instance. PC crap and 'micro aggressions" are just really starting to piss people off. I swear its right out of George Orwell how we're changing language to change perception. "Pro Life" vs "Pro Choice"? That's so crazy minor compared to a young black woman calling out a young white man with dreadlocks for stealing her culture -- or taking "felon" and "criminal" out of our lexicon in favor of "persons who have been involved in the justice system" or "individuals who have been incarcerated". I'm not making that up!

    When the press and the establishment both refuse to use the term "illegal immigrant" and refer to those who have a PROBLEM with unregulated and vetted migration across our sovereign borders as "anti - immigrant" (rather than anti-ILLEGAL-immigration) it's appalling.

    You can only shut down the opposition so much via tactics like this for so long before something fractures. There's no more ability to compromise and "meet in the middle". You are right that people feel less empowered -- but not just white people (how long until we want to call ourselves 'melanin lacking individuals'?) And it's because our system broke. Things that should require a constitutional amendment are being forced on a country not fully ready for it by judicial fiat. That takes sovereignty out of the hands of the individual.

    It's no wonder why Trump is so popular. It's also no wonder why he's so hated.

    *I'm not a Trump supporter. He strikes me as a psychopath the way he attacks and loves in almost the same sentence. That doesn't mean I can't see the appeal to FINALLY have someone speak honestly and blow off PC dribble and talk about topics that are basically quasi-taboo to the establishment of both parties.

  18. Wikipedia by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with Wikipedia - as I see it - is that it is no longer an open space for collecting whatever-quality information from the general public; and it cannot, ever, reach anywhere near the new goal it has set for itself, which is a hig-quality, peer-reviewed site with accurate and/or balanced content. Basically, they shot themselves in the foot by reaching (way) too high.

    Anyone with any sense knows that counting on Wikipedia for fundamental accuracy is, and has always been, hugely hit-and-miss. As it stands now, some pages by their very nature settle out at one extreme or another; one I am familiar with is the page on Atheism, which begins with one accurate sentence, and then wanders off into absolute theist-oriented nonsense before the paragraph is done. The page has a history of being locked to change, while presenting incredibly distorted views of the subject matter. It can't stay accurate, even if it were to be edited to be so at any one point in time, because atheists understand atheism to be one thing, and theists understand it to be another, and never the twain shall meet. When the editors freeze it, though, then it ends up in whatever extreme it was last edited in and... we have an echo chamber.

    Some pages are reasonably accurate, typically those that engender little or no controversy. Others are like the atheism page, pretty much tripe that you'd have to say "oh, no way" if you wanted to provide someone an accurate reference to the matter therein. Knowing which is which requires someone expert on the subject matter before they even arrive; and that makes the pages into an echo chamber at best, and completely misleading at worst.

    I have no objection to a net resource that is not accurate (that pretty much describes the whole Internet universe, in my opinion) but I am uncomfortable with a resource that claims accuracy, but can't actually reach that goal, and worse, as in this example, actually promotes nonsense. It's too reminiscent of Fox News "entertainment" take on reporting for me.

    They have other severe problems. Put up an image you took, and they will very likely take it down. They're absolutely insane about attribution and so on; I used to try to provide high-quality, relevant source images in the areas I am qualified to do so, but the static level from "editors" never sank below a deafening roar, and my images were as likely to be deleted as not. I have better things to do with my time than try to fight those kinds of battles, especially as there's no winning against such opponents.

    Someday, it is my hope that someone will start a wikipedia-like site (the code is available, though the cost of a site like this is high) and keep their eye on the ball: collecting information from the people at large, without claiming any particular level of ultimate accuracy that is impossible to actually achieve. An information free-for-all is one thing; a kingdom ruled by a small cadre of anally retentive assholes is entirely another.

    Copyright law and that lowest class of human beings, lawyers (and legislators, but really, I repeat myself), aren't helping either.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:Wikipedia by NormalVisual · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have no objection to a net resource that is not accurate (that pretty much describes the whole Internet universe, in my opinion) but I am uncomfortable with a resource that claims accuracy, but can't actually reach that goal, and worse, as in this example, actually promotes nonsense.

      This is pretty much my take on it too. I got into an minor edit skirmish a few years ago regarding Disney World's monorail system. My problem was that most of the authoritative references are copyrighted by Disney and not for distribution outside the company. So, even though I'd worked there for many years, had been a trainer, and knew the trains and system inside and out, it didn't matter because someone found some content on some Disney fan site (that also happened to be inaccurate) and wanted to continually invalidate my corrections with the aforementioned inaccurate (but attributable) info. I just said "fuck it" and haven't even looked at the article since then, and take most things on Wikipedia with a grain of salt. Being able to attribute sources doesn't make a lick of difference if the info is wrong to begin with.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    2. Re:Wikipedia by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The committee process is such that it works against itself. Not just Wiki committees but any committee. The people on the committees are rarely unbiased observers because you have to rise to a certain level of interest in the subject before volunteering. No one joins a home owner's association when they just want to live somewhere, keep their nose down, not be bothered and not bother anyone else; so they tend to be populated with people who like doing petty politics, or who have had a major issue to be dealt with, or so forth. Political committees are almost always populated by the true believers (revolutionaries still full of zeal).

      Other problem is that committees become slaves to their own rules. Once a practice is set in place it becomes extremely difficult to change. If you try others will object that the new suggestions is not how things are supposed to be done. Thus once there's a requirement for proper attribution you will get people on the committee who's highest mission in life is to ensure that there is proper attribution with no exceptions and will treat that as more important then the original goal of the committee.

    3. Re:Wikipedia by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Informative

      Could you be more specific?

      I'll try.

      Atheism is the lack of belief in a god or gods. That's it. That's all of it. It's not "rejection of belief", and it's not the "position there are no deities."

      Theism: belief in a god or gods. That's it. That's all of it. It's not just YWHA, it's not just Quetzalcoatl, it's not just Odin. A god or gods. Any one, or any combination. There you go.

      The root 'a' means "without."

      So atheism means "without belief in a god or gods."

      There is no book, no canon, no mantra. Nothing about it speaks to rejection or assertion or anything at all, in fact. It's the state of lacking these specific beliefs. It's what a baby has, or a dog has. No belief. It's like having no money. Either you have it, or you don't. And when you don't, talking about what kind of money you have... that's intellectually bewildered. Likewise, when you don't hold a belief, to say it's this or it's that... it's nothing. Either you have it, which makes you a theist, because that's what a theist is, or you don't, which makes you an atheist, because that's what an atheist is.

      Anything else - is something else and doesn't even address the issue.

      Rejection of someone's belief? That's all you, or whomever. Assertion of some state or lack thereof? That's all you, or whomever. It's not atheism.

      Can you be atheist - without belief in a god or gods - and hold such views? Of course - because atheism doesn't say yea or nae about that, or anything else. You can be atheist and like peanut butter sandwiches; you can be atheist and send people to gulags; you can be atheist and with, or without knowledge.

      And while knowledge and meaning are both, however cursorily, on the table, you're either atheist, or you're not. Agnostic is not a third position - it doesn't even deal with the same question, which is belief. It deals with knowledge. It's not a modifier, either, it's about what you (think you) know, which does not speak to belief at all; "atheist agnostic" is just like "atheist peanut butter assembler" and "theist agnostic" is just like "theist peanut butter assembler."

      Historically speaking, theists, being both in the majority and in control of most media and definition sources, have usually characterized atheism in a way most convenient, or perhaps familiar, to them. You'll find it called out as "disbelief" in many places, and you'll find people claiming "it's a religion" and "it's a belief" just as often. All are incorrect, and serve, if anything, as a wall between actual understanding of the issue at hand, and the fog of name-calling that stands in for idea exchange in most conversations about this. And that's not to say that there aren't atheists out there who have bought into the idea that lack of belief is somehow belief, or disbelief. There are. Maximum clarity requires isolating every idea in this space and understanding it at a fundamental level. What you do not want to do is start tacking modifiers like "hard" or "soft" or "agnostic" or "peanut butter assembler" onto a basic position as if it were actually a fundamental position in itself. Because it isn't. Any more than "peanut butter liking lego builder" is a basic position.

      By all means, hold whatever ideas you want to. What I'm saying here, basically, is that if you can identify which ideas actually accrue to what fundamental facets of your mental state, your education, your social outlook and so on, you'll be much clearer headed overall, and you're likely to be able to understand others much better as well.

      That, and Wikipedia's atheism article is a mess. :)

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.