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I'm going to sue Wikipedia, and all the editors if I don't get a jizzillion dollars within the next two minutes.
{{essay|WP:DOLT}}
{{essay|WP:DOLT}}



Revision as of 08:28, 14 November 2009

I'm going to sue Wikipedia, and all the editors if I don't get a jizzillion dollars within the next two minutes.


The scenario

After receiving his cousin's call, Bob Jones, a semi-famous sportsman, looks up his entry on Wikipedia – a website he's never really visited before. To his horror he reads a ghastly article – either full of lies or a one-sided hatchet job spinning its sources to make him read like a dangerous criminal. (Actually, unbeknownst to him, the article was anonymously written by his ... ex-lover, disgruntled ex-employee, old school-bully, business rival, dangerous stalker etc. – but hey, they let anyone edit here!)

Furious, Bob is about to call his attorney in Trenton, when he sees the "anyone can edit" tagline. He presses the edit tab and, thinking "hey, maybe I can sort this?", he blanks the libellous piece of spite. "Phew, now how do I complain to a moderator?"

Then, something strange happens. A yellow bar appears, and there's some official-looking notice, on something called his "talk page", that's accusing him of wanton vandalism and spitting threats at him. What the hell is going on? Bob returns to the article and finds to his horror that "Wikipedia" has restored the libel. Now he's angry and unsure how to communicate the seriousness of this to the site, so he blanks the article again, leaving what he views as a clear but polite note: "Please do not replace this page. It contains legally actionable material. If it is replaced again, I will need to take legal action".

User:Headhunter409

Meanwhile, Colin Gordon[1] aka User:Headhunter409, from Blackacre in Auchterturra, is a high school student (or maybe a retired mechanic). He likes editing, but what he really wants to do is be noticed as a good guy on project work – anti-vandalism, new page patrol – and his eye's really on being a Wikipedia administrator. He might be using automated tools to do more admin-type stuff, faster, and watching his edit count climbing. Before a late breakfast that morning he's doing a spot of vandal slaying – when he stumbles first across the blanking (revert and warn) and then Mr Jones' message. "No legal threats! I’ll just pop to the administrators' noticeboard and issue an All points bulletin to get an immediate block done." Checking off one more good judgement to cite at his RFA, he heads off, feeling good.

Switch back to Bob Jones. Bob's in a hell of a mess, and it's not his fault. He's officially blocked from editing as a Bad Editor, whilst his insane stalker is free to add more libels to the article. Bob has no idea why "Wikipedia" wants to do this to him – why don't they think about the effect their articles have? Why do they help someone wreck his life, then make it impossible to fix? His expensive lawyer is about to interrupt Cary Bass's morning's work at the Wikimedia Foundation.

One thing you can be sure of: Bob and Cary's disastrously bad day won't be noted in Headhunter409's Request for adminship – in fact, Colin may never realize how much of a problem his action led to, for Wikipedia and for Bob.

The message

  • Don't be a DOLT – stop and think.
  • Always check basic facts before making assumptions
  • Never unblank biographies without asking why the IP might be blanking it. Remember, you could be personally responsible for re-publishing libellous content.[2][3] Not good.
  • When a legal threat is made, step back and ask "why?" Maybe there's an obvious reason, and you could help the victim rather than increase their woes. How would you feel if it were you?
  • Don't let policies like no vandalism and no legal threats lead to your editing cluelessly and adversely affecting some innocent person's life by your thoughtless action.
  • Wikipedia has real life consequences; Wikipedia is not a video game.

Jimmy Wales on the same

In August 2006, Jimbo stated:


And in September 2008, further stated:


And in November 2008:


See also

References

  1. ^ Headhunter409 is a fictional dolt, any resemblance to any actual dolt, whether living or dead, is purely coincidental. (But if the shoe fits....)
  2. ^ Whether you are legally liable is not something on which we can give advice (but see French court decision of Mrs M. B., Mr P. T., Mr F. D. vs. Wikimedia Foundation Inc., which determined that as a host WMF was not responsible for the edits by its contributors and which then implies that each edit is the responsibility of the individual contributor. Barrett v. Rosenthal makes it clear that established United States law is that no one is legally liable for reposting libelous statements online; but this may not apply where the reposter conspires with an original content provider to defame. See Supreme Court of the State of California, Alameda County, Barrett v. Rosenthal: Court Opinion, Ct.App. 1/2 A096451.Remember too legality is not the sum of morality: do no harm.
  3. ^ Caveat: The ruling also "...decided that common law “distributor” liability survived the congressional grant of immunity, so that Internet service providers and users are exposed to liability if they republish a statement with notice of its defamatory character." Page 2, Paragraph 1 of the ruling.
  4. ^ Wales, J, Speech at Wikimania: August 2006 Wikimania archives
  5. ^ Wales, J, Post to Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents, 9 September 2008
  6. ^ Wales, J, Post to Talk:Katy Brand, 2 November 2008