Criticism of Wikipedia: Difference between revisions

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The major points of '''criticism of Wikipedia''', an online [[encyclopedia]], are the claims that the principle of being open for [[editing]] by everyone makes [[Wikipedia]] unauthoritative and unreliable (see [[Reliability of Wikipedia]]), that it exhibits [[systemic bias]], and that its [[group dynamics]] hinder its goals.
'''Criticism of Wikipedia''' may take many forms:


The [[Wikipedia biography controversy|Seigenthaler]] and [[Essjay controversy|Essjay]] incidents caused criticism of Wikipedia's reliability and usefulness as a reference;<ref name=Seigenthaler-incident/><ref name=Essjay-controversy/> Wikipedia has also been the subject of [[parody]] and other humorous criticism.<ref name=internet/><ref name=Uncyclopedia/>
* for issues of accuracy and bias, see [[Reliability of Wikipedia]]
* for academic studies on other issues, see [[Academic studies about Wikipedia]]
* for criticism of Wikipedia's volunteers, see [[Community of Wikipedia]]
* for humorous criticism, see [[Wikipedia in culture]]
* for other criticism, see [[Wikipedia]]


==Criticism of the content==
{{disambig}}
[[Robert McHenry]], a former [[editor-in-chief]] of the ''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]'', said that Wikipedia errs in billing itself as an encyclopedia, because that word implies a level of authority and accountability that he believes cannot be possessed by an openly editable reference. McHenry argues that "the typical user doesn't know how conventional encyclopedias achieve reliability, only that they do."<ref>
{{Cite news| author=[[Robert McHenry|McHenry, Robert]] | date = 2005-12-14
| url = http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=111504A | title = The Faith-Based Encyclopedia Blinks | publisher = TCS Daily | accessdate = 2008-10-12}}</ref> [[Andrew Orlowski]] expressed similar criticisms, writing that the use of the term "encyclopedia" to describe Wikipedia may lead users into believing it is more reliable than it may be.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/12/12/wikipedia_no_responsibility/page2.html|title=Who's responsible for Wikipedia?|last=Orlowski|first=Andrew |date=2005-12-12|work=The Register|accessdate=2009-06-30|quote=The public has a firm idea of what an 'encyclopedia' is, and it's a place where information can generally be trusted, or at least slightly more trusted than what a labyrinthine, mysterious bureaucracy can agree upon, and surely more trustworthy than a piece of spontaneous graffiti—and Wikipedia is a king-sized cocktail of the two.}}</ref>

[[Image:Orlowski.jpg|150px|thumb|[[Journalist]] and Wikipedia critic [[Andrew Orlowski]].]]

Academics have also criticized Wikipedia for its perceived failure as a reliable source, and because Wikipedia editors may not have degrees or other credentials generally recognized in academia.<ref name = Duke /><ref name="Susan_Youngwood">{{Cite news
|first = Susan
|last = Youngwood
|title = Wikipedia: What do they know; when do they know it, and when can we trust it?
|url = http://vermonttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070401/FEATURES/70330002
|work = Vermont Sunday Magazine
|work = [[Rutland Herald]]
|date = April 1, 2007
|accessdate = 2007-04-05
|quote =Perhaps the most important thing to understand about Wikipedia – both its genius and its Achilles heel – is that anyone can create or modify an entry. Anyone means your 10-year-old neighbor or a Nobel Prize winner – or an editor like me, who is itching to correct a grammar error in that Wikipedia entry that I just quoted. Entries can be edited by numerous people and be in constant flux. What you read now might change in five minutes. Five seconds, even.}}</ref> For that reason, the use of Wikipedia is not accepted in many schools and universities in writing a formal paper, and some educational institutions have banned it as a primary source while others have limited its use to only a pointer to external sources.<ref name=Duke>{{Cite web| url=http://media.www.dukechronicle.com/media/storage/paper884/news/2007/03/28/News/Several.Colleges.Push.To.Ban.Wikipedia.As.Resource-2809247.shtml|title=Several colleges push to ban Wikipedia as resource|work=Duke Chronicle|date=2007-03-28|author=Lysa Chen|accessdate=2007-04-02}}</ref><ref>"[http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2007/01/26/wiki A Stand Against Wikipedia]", ''Inside Higher Ed'' (January 26, 2007). Retrieved on January 27, 2007.</ref><ref name=McHenry>
{{Cite news| author=[[Robert McHenry|McHenry, Robert]] | date =2004-11-15
| url = http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=111504A | title = The Faith-Based Encyclopedia
| publisher = Tech Central Station | accessdate = 2008-10-12 }}</ref> This criticism, however, does not only apply to Wikipedia but to encyclopedias in general – some university [[lecturer]]s are not impressed when students cite print-based encyclopedias in assigned work.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2007/02/27/2003350261|title=Wikipedia on an academic hit list|author=Noam Cohen|publisher=NY Times News Service|date=2007-02-27|accessdate=2007-04-16|quote=Middlebury professor Thomas Beyer, of the Russian department, said: 'I guess I am not terribly impressed by anyone citing an encyclopedia as a reference point, but I am not against using it as a starting point.'}}</ref>

Some academic journals do refer to Wikipedia articles, but are not elevating it to the same level as traditional references. For instance, Wikipedia articles have been referenced in "enhanced perspectives" provided on-line in the journal ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]''. The first of these perspectives to provide a hyperlink to Wikipedia was "A White Collar Protein Senses Blue Light,"<ref>{{Cite web|author=Linden, Hartmut|date=2002-08-02| url=http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/297/5582/777|title=A White Collar Protein Senses Blue Light|work=[[Science (journal)|Science]]|accessdate=2005}} (subscription access only)</ref> and dozens of enhanced perspectives have provided such links since then. The publisher of ''Science'' states that these enhanced perspectives "include hypernotes – which link directly to websites of other relevant information available online – beyond the standard bibliographic references."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.aaas.org/publications/books_reports/CCLI/PDFs/01_D_Perspectives.pdf|title=Perspectives from AAAS|publisher=American Association for the Advancement of Science|author=Yolanda S. George and Shirley S. Malcolm|accessdate=2007-10-27|format=PDF}}</ref>

Wikipedia's policies state that assertions should be supported by reliable, published [[journalism sourcing|sources]]—ideally, by [[peer review]]ed publications.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability|title=Wikipedia: Verifiability}}</ref> [[Jimmy Wales]], the ''[[de facto]]'' leader of Wikipedia,<ref name=defacto>{{Cite news|url=http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07092/772696-96.stm|title=Wikipedia co-founder seeks to start all over again—this time with contributors' real names|author=Brian Bergstein|authorlink=Brian Bergstein|date=2007-04-02|accessdate=2007-04-21|agency=Associated Press|quote=Wikipedia's de-facto leader, Jimmy Wales, counters that real names are overrated. | work=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette}} {{Cite web|url=http://www.matei.org/ithink/papers/ambiguity-conflict-wikipedia/|title=Ambiguity and conflict in the Wikipedian knowledge production system|author=Sorin Adam Matei and Caius Dobrescu|publisher=2006 International Communication Association Annual Meeting, Dresden, Germany|accessdate=2007-04-26|quote=The participants included several notable contributors, such as James Wales, Wikipedia's founder and de facto arbiter and leader of the project. |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070610195202/http://www.matei.org/ithink/papers/ambiguity-conflict-wikipedia/ |archivedate = June 10, 2007}} {{Cite news|author=Holden Frith|title=Wikipedia founder launches rival online encyclopaedia|url=http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/the_web/article1571519.ece|work=The Times|date=2007-03-26|accessdate=2007-04-26|quote=Wikipedia's de facto leader, Jimmy Wales, stood by the site's format. | location=London}}</ref> stresses that encyclopedias of any type are not usually appropriate as primary sources, and should not be relied upon as authoritative.<ref name="AWorkInProgress">[http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/dec2005/tc20051214_441708.htm Wikipedia: "A Work in Progress"], ''[[BusinessWeek]]'' (December 14, 2005). Retrieved on 2007-01-29.</ref>

=== Accuracy of information ===
{{details|Reliability of Wikipedia#Accuracy of articles}}

==== Lack of authority ====
Wikipedia acknowledges that it should not be used as a primary source for research.<ref name=wpresearch>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Researching_with_Wikipedia|title=Wikipedia:Researching with Wikipedia|work=[[Wikipedia]]|accessdate=2005-12-14}}</ref> Librarian Philip Bradley stated in an October 2004 interview with ''[[The Guardian]]'' that "the main problem is the lack of authority. With printed publications, the publishers have to ensure that their data is reliable, as their livelihood depends on it. But with something like this, all that goes out the window."<ref name = "Whoknows?">{{Cite news
| last = Waldman | first = Simon | date = 2004-10-26 | title = Who knows?
| url = http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2004/oct/26/g2.onlinesupplement
| work = The Guardian | accessdate = 2005-12-30 | location=London}}</ref> [[Robert McHenry]] similarly noted that readers of Wikipedia cannot know who has written the article they are reading – it may or may not have been written by an expert.<ref name=McHenry>{{Cite news
| url = http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/article1886601.ece | work = [[The Independent]]
| title = The Big Question: Do we need a more reliable online encyclopedia than Wikipedia? | last = Vallely | first = Paul
| date = 2006-10-18 | accessdate = 2006-10-18 | location=London}}</ref>

Due to lack of intrinsic authority, Wikipedia has been also criticized by [[Geoffrey Nunberg]] for relying too much on citing sources even though the said sources may not be more accurate than Wikipedia itself.<ref>
[[Geoffrey Nunberg|G. Nunberg]],
[http://people.ischool.berkeley.edu/~nunberg/wikipedia.html A Wiki's as Good as a Nod],
[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=10731811 NPR Fresh Air commentary 6/5/07 (Wikipedia: Blessing or Curse?)]. Quote: It explains the exaggerated deference that
Wikipedians pay to published sources, even though a lot of the books and articles the contributors cite turn out to be no more reliable than Wikipedia itself.</ref><ref>
[[Geoffrey Nunberg|G. Nunberg]],
[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=104869163 Linguist Reflects On 'Years Of Talking Dangerously'],
NPR [http://www.npr.org/templates/rundowns/rundown.php?prgId=13 Fresh Air from WHYY], Jun 3, 2009.
</ref>

==== Comparative study on scientific articles conducted by ''Nature'' ====

In December 2005 the journal ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' conducted a [[blind experiment|single-blind]] study comparing the accuracy of a sample of articles from Wikipedia and [[Encyclopædia Britannica]]. The sample included 42 articles on scientific topics, including biographies of well-known scientists. The articles were compared for accuracy by academic reviewers who remained anonymous − a customary practice for journal article reviews. Based on their review, the average Wikipedia article contained 4 errors or omissions; the average ''Britannica'' article, 3. The study concluded: "Wikipedia comes close to Britannica in terms of the accuracy of its science entries".<ref name=na05>{{Cite journal| title = Internet encyclopaedias go head to head | author = Jim Giles | journal = [[Nature (journal)|Nature]]| volume = 438 | pages = 900–901 | doi = 10.1038/438900a | date = 2005-12-15
| accessdate = 2008-09-06 | pmid = 16355180 | issue = 7070 }}</ref>

''Encyclopædia Britannica'''s initial concerns led to ''Nature'' releasing further documentation of its survey method.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.nature.com/news/2005/051212/exref/supplementary_information.doc|work=Nature|title=Supplementary information to accompany Nature news article "Internet encyclopedias go head to head"|date=2005-12-22}}</ref> Based on this additional information, ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' denied the validity of the ''Nature'' study, stating that it was "fatally flawed" as the ''Britannica'' extracts were compilations that sometimes included articles written for the youth version.<ref name=FF>{{Cite web|url=http://corporate.britannica.com/britannica_nature_response.pdf|title=Fatally Flawed – Refuting the recent study on encyclopedic accuracy by the journal ''Nature''|date=March 2006|publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.|accessdate=2009-06-30}}</ref> ''Nature'' acknowledged the compiled nature of some of the ''Britannica'' extracts, but denied that this invalidated the conclusions of the study.<ref>{{Cite journal| title = Britannica attacks | journal = [[Nature (journal)|Nature]]| volume = 440 | page = 582 | doi = 10.1038/440582b | date = 2006-03-30
| url = http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v440/n7084/full/440582b.html
| accessdate = 2006-07-14 | pmid = 16572128 | issue = 7084 }}</ref> ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' also argued that while the ''Nature'' study showed that the error rate between the two encyclopedias was similar, a breakdown of the errors indicated that the mistakes in Wikipedia were more often the inclusion of incorrect facts, while the mistakes in ''Britannica'' were "errors of omission", making "''Britannica'' far more accurate than ''Wikipedia'', according to the figures".<ref name=FF/>

''Nature'' has since rejected the ''Britannica'' response<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4840340.stm|title=Wikipedia study 'fatally flawed'|date=2006-03-24|publisher=BBC News}}</ref> and published a point-by-point response to ''Britannica'''s specific objections about alleged errors.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.nature.com/nature/britannica/eb_advert_response_final.pdf|work=Nature|work=Press release|title=Encyclopædia Britannica and Nature: a response|date=2006-03-23|format=PDF}}</ref>

==== Lack of fact-checking on specialized topics ====
Inaccurate information that is not obviously false may persist in Wikipedia for a long time before it is challenged. The most prominent cases reported by mainstream media involved biographies of living people.

[[Image:John Seigenthaler Sr. speaking.jpg|thumb|American journalist [[John Seigenthaler]], object of the [[Seigenthaler incident]].]]

The [[Seigenthaler incident]] demonstrated that the subject of a biographical article must sometimes fix blatant lies about his own life. In May 2005, an anonymous user edited the [[biography|biographical]] article on American journalist and writer [[John Seigenthaler]] so that it contained several false and [[defamation|defamatory]] statements.<ref name=Seigenthaler-incident>{{Cite news|url=http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/editorials/2005-11-29-wikipedia-edit_x.htm|work=USA Today|date=2005-11-29|title=A false Wikipedia "biography"|author=John Siegenthaler}}</ref><ref>[[Katharine Q. Seelye]] (December 3, 2005) [http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/04/weekinreview/04seelye.html "Snared in the Web of a Wikipedia Liar"] [http://nytimes.com/ ''The New York Times'']</ref> The inaccurate claims went unnoticed between May and September 2005 when they were discovered by [[Victor S. Johnson, Jr.]], a friend of Seigenthaler. Wikipedia content is often mirrored at sites such as [[Answers.com]], which means that incorrect information can be replicated alongside correct information through a number of web sources. Such information can develop a misleading authority because of its presence at such sites.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/ss/stories/s1613571.htm|title=Mistakes and hoaxes on-line|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation| date=2006-04-15| accessdate=2007-04-28}}</ref>

In another example, on March 2, 2007, msnbc.com reported that then-New York Senator (currently Secretary of State) [[Hillary Rodham Clinton]] had been incorrectly listed for 20 months in her Wikipedia biography as [[valedictorian]] of her class of 1969 at [[Wellesley College]]. (Hillary Rodham, the former Senator's maiden name, was not the valedictorian, though she did speak at [[Graduation|commencement]].)<ref>{{Cite news|first=Bill|last=Dedman|url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17388372/page/3/|title=Reading Hillary Clinton's hidden thesis|publisher=msnbc.com|date=2007-03-03|accessdate=2007-03-17}}</ref> The article included a link to the Wikipedia edit,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hillary_Rodham_Clinton&diff=18494301&oldid=18493966|title=Hillary Rodham Clinton|publisher=Wikipedia|date=2005-07-09|accessdate=2007-03-17}}</ref> where the incorrect information was added on July 9, 2005. After the msnbc.com report, the inaccurate information was removed the same day.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hillary_Rodham_Clinton&diff=112070224&oldid=111773323|title=Hillary Rodham Clinton|publisher=Wikipedia|date=2007-03-02|accessdate=2007-03-17}}</ref>

Attempts to perpetrate [[hoax]]es may not be confined to editing existing Wikipedia articles, but can also include creating new articles. In October 2005 [[Alan Mcilwraith]], a former [[call center]] worker from [[Scotland]] created a Wikipedia article in which he claimed to be a highly decorated war hero. The article was, however, quickly identified as a hoax by other users and deleted.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/tm_objectid=16929538&method=full&siteid=66633&headline=meet-sir-walter-mitty--name_page.html|title=Exclusive: Meet the Real Sir Walter Mitty|author=Cara Paige|work=Daily Record|date=2006-04-11|accessdate=2007-11-24}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2006-04-17/Persistent_hoax|title=Media coverage of Wikipedia hoax results in article|date=2006-04-17|publisher=Wikipedia|accessdate=2009-06-30}}</ref>

There have also been instances of users deliberately inserting false information into Wikipedia in order to test the system and demonstrate its alleged unreliability. Gene Weingarten, a journalist, ran such a test in 2007; however it was not conclusive as the false information was removed the next day by a Wikipedia editor.<ref>{{Cite news|author=Gene Weingarten|date=2007-03-16|url=http://www.newsobserver.com/105/story/553968.html|title=A wickedly fun test of Wikipedia|work=[[The News & Observer]]|accessdate=2006-04-08 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070320032706/http://www.newsobserver.com/105/story/553968.html |archivedate = March 20, 2007}}</ref> Wikipedia considers the deliberate insertion of false and misleading information to be [[vandalism]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Vandalism&oldid=327665900|accessdate=2009-11-26|publisher=Wikipedia|title=Wikipedia:Vandalism}}</ref>

==== Neutral point of view and conflicts of interest ====
Wikipedia regards the concept of neutral point of view ([[NPOV]]) as one of its non-negotiable principles. However it acknowledges that such a concept has its limitations – its policy indeed states that articles should be "as far as possible" written without bias.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/FAQ|title=Wikipedia:Neutral point of view/FAQ|work=Wikipedia|accessdate=2006-09-13|quote=Neutral point of view is a fundamental Wikimedia principle and a cornerstone of Wikipedia. All Wikipedia articles and other encyclopedic content must be written from a neutral point of view, representing fairly, and as far as possible without bias, all significant views that have been published by reliable sources.}}</ref> Mark Glaser, a journalist, also wrote that this may be an impossible ideal due to the inevitable biases of editors.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2006/04/wikipedia_biasis_there_a_neutr.html|title=Is There a Neutral View on George W. Bush?|author=Mark Glaser|publisher=PBS|date=2006-04-17|accessdate=2007-10-27|quote=The search for a "neutral point of view" mirrors the efforts of journalists to be objective, to show both sides without taking sides and remaining unbiased. But maybe this is impossible and unattainable, and perhaps misguided. Because if you open it up for anyone to edit, you’re asking for anything but neutrality.}}</ref>

===== Scientific disputes =====
The 2005 ''Nature''<ref name=na05/> study also gave two brief examples of challenges that Wikipedian science writers purportedly faced on Wikipedia. The first concerned the addition of a section on violence to the [[Schizophrenia#Violence|schizophrenia]] article, which exhibited the view of one of the article's regular editors, [[neuropsychologist]] [[Vaughan Bell]], that it was little more than a "rant" about the need to lock people up, and that editing it stimulated him to look up the literature on the topic.

The second dispute reported by ''Nature'' involved the climate researcher [[William Connolley]], who was opposed by anonymous editors (''Nature'' considered anonymous editors that did not use their real names{{Citation needed|date=April 2009}}). The topic in this second dispute was [[climate change]]; ''Nature'' reported that this dispute was far more protracted, and led to [[arbitration]], which took three months to produce a decision. The outcome of arbitration, as reported by ''Nature'', was a six-month parole for Connolley − during this time he was restricted to one revert per day. Connolley's opponents were reportedly banned from editing climate articles also for six months.{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}}

===== Exposure to political operatives and advocates =====
While Wikipedia policy requires articles to have a neutral point of view, it is not immune from attempts by outsiders (or insiders) with an agenda to place a [[spin (public relations)|spin]] on articles. In January 2006 it was revealed that several staffers of members of the [[U.S. House of Representatives]] had embarked on a campaign to cleanse their respective bosses' biographies on Wikipedia, as well as inserting negative remarks on political opponents. References to a campaign promise by [[Marty Meehan|Martin Meehan]] to surrender his seat in 2000 were deleted, and negative comments were inserted into the articles on U.S. Senator [[Bill Frist]] and [[Eric Cantor]], a congressman from [[Virginia]]. Numerous other changes were made from an [[IP address]] which is assigned to the House of Representatives.<ref>{{Cite web|author=Margaret Kane|date=2006-01-30|url=http://news.com.com/2061-11199_3-6032713.html|title=Politicians notice Wikipedia|publisher=[[CNET.com]]|accessdate=2007-01-28}}</ref> In an interview, Wikipedia ''de facto'' leader [[Jimmy Wales]]<ref name=defacto /> remarked that the changes were "not cool."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://lawnorder.blogspot.com/2006/01/senator-staffers-spam-wikipedia.html|title=Senator staffers spam Wikipedia|accessdate=2006-09-13}}</ref> Some organizations{{Who|date=September 2010}} are making efforts to correct inaccuracies.

Larry Delay and Pablo Bachelet write that from their perspective, some articles dealing with Latin American history and groups (such as the [[Sandinista National Liberation Front|Sandinistas]] and [[Cuba]]) lack political neutrality and are written from a sympathetic Marxist perspective which treats socialist dictatorships favorably at the expense of alternate positions.<ref>{{Cite news|author=Pablo Bachelet|url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=MH&p_theme=mh&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&s_dispstring=cuba%20wikipedia%20AND%20date(all)&p_field_advanced-0=&p_text_advanced-0=(cuba%20wikipedia)&p_sort=_rank_:D&xcal_ranksort=4&xcal_useweights=yes|title=War of Words: Website Can't Define Cuba|date=2006-05-03|work=[[The Miami Herald]]|accessdate=2008-07-08}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|author=Matt Sanchez|url=http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/wiki-whacked-by-political-bias/|title=Wiki-Whacked by Political Bias|date=2008-05-14|publisher=[[Pajamas Media]]|accessdate=2008-07-08}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|author=Larry Delay|url=http://lanic.utexas.edu/project/asce/pdfs/volume16/pdfs/program.pdf|title=A Pernicious Model for Control of the World Wide Web: The Cuba Case|date=2006-08-03|publisher=Association for Study of the Cuban Economy(ASCE)|accessdate=2008-07-08|format=PDF}}</ref>

In April 2008, the Boston-based Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America ([[Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America|CAMERA]]) organized an e-mail campaign to encourage readers to correct perceived Israel-related biases and inconsistencies in Wikipedia.<ref>Metz, Cade, "[http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/04/29/wikipedia_blocked_doj_ip/ US Department of Justice banned from Wikipedia], ''The Register'', April 29, 2008.</ref> Excerpts of some of the e-mails were published in the July 2008 issue of ''[[Harper's Magazine]]'' under the title of "Candid camera".<ref name=Harpers>{{Cite web|url=http://harpers.org/archive/2008/07/0082086/|title=Candid camera|work=[[Harper's Magazine]]|date=2008-07}}</ref> CAMERA argued the excerpts were unrepresentative and that it had explicitly campaigned merely "toward encouraging people to learn about and edit the online encyclopedia for accuracy".<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.camera.org/index.asp?x_context=2&x_outlet=32&x_article=1525 |title=Letter in Harper's Magazine About Wikipedia Issues |publisher=Camera |date=2008-08-14 |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref> According to some defenders of CAMERA serious misrepresentations of CAMERA's role emanated from the competing Electronic Intifada group; moreover, it is said, some other Palestinian advocacy groups have been guilty of systematic misrepresentations and manipulative behaviors but have not suffered bans of editors amongst their staff or volunteers.<ref>Andre Oboler, "Exposed - Anti-Israel Subversion on Wikipedia," May 14, 2008, Media Critiques at http://www.honestreporting.com/articles/45884734/critiques/new/Exposed_-_Anti-Israeli_Subversion_on_Wikipedia.asp; also see Andre Oboler, "Wiki Warfare: Battle for the on-line encyclopedia," May 13, 2008, ''Jerusalem Post'' at http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=101037</ref> Five editors involved in the campaign were sanctioned by Wikipedia administrators.<ref name=Telegraph>{{Cite news|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1934857/Israeli-battles-rage-on-Wikipedia.html|title=Israeli battles rage on Wikipedia|work=[[The Daily Telegraph]]|publisher=Telegraph Media Group Limited|accessdate=2008-05-08|date=2008-05-08|last=McElroy|first=Damien | location=London}}</ref> Israeli diplomat David Saranga said that Wikipedia is generally fair in regard to Israel. When confronted with the fact that the entry on Israel mentioned the word "occupation" nine times, whereas the entry on the Palestinian People mentioned "terror" only once, he replied <blockquote>"It means only one thing: Israelis should be more active on Wikipedia. Instead of blaming it, they should go on the site much more, and try and change it."<ref>[http://www.haaretz.com/culture/arts-leisure/your-wiki-entry-counts-1.235851 Your wiki entry counts], Haaretz, By Cnaan Liphshiz 25.12.07</ref></blockquote>

Political commentator Haviv Rettig Gur, reviewing widespread perceptions in Israel of systemic bias in Wikipedia articles, has argued that there are deeper structural problems creating this bias: anonymous editing favors biased results, especially if the editors organize concerted campaigns of defamation as has been done in articles dealing with Arab-Israeli issues, and current Wikipedia policies, while well-meant, have proven ineffective in handling this.<ref>Haviv Rettig Gur, "Israeli-Palestinian conflict rages on Wikipedia," ''Jerusalem Post'', 16.05.10, at http://www.jpost.com/Israel/Article.aspx?id=175660.</ref>

On August 31, 2008, ''[[The New York Times]]'' ran an article detailing the edits made to the biography of Alaska governor [[Sarah Palin]] in the wake of her nomination as running mate of Arizona Senator [[John McCain]]. During the 24 hours before the McCain campaign announcement, [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sarah_Palin&diff=234778085&oldid=234741793 30 edits], many of them flattering details, were made to the article by Wikipedia single-purpose user identity Young Trigg.<ref>Noam Cohen (August 31, 2008) [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/01/technology/01link.html?ex=1378008000&en=2690a3850cb270d0&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink "Don’t Like Palin’s Wikipedia Story? Change It"] Technology. ''The New York Times''.</ref> This person has later acknowledged working on the McCain campaign, and having several Wikipedia user accounts.<ref>[http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/india-news/sarah-palins-wikipedia-entry-glossed-over-by-mystery-user-hrs-before-vp-announcement_10091497.html "Sarah Palins Wikipedia entry glossed over by mystery user hrs. before VP announcement"], ''Thaindian News'' (September 2, 2008)</ref>

In November 2007, libelous accusations were made against two politicians from southwestern France, [[Jean-Pierre Grand]] and [[Hélène Mandroux-Colas]], on their Wikipedia biographies. Jean-Pierre Grand asked the president of the [[French National Assembly]] and the [[Prime Minister of France]] to reinforce the legislation on the penal responsibility of Internet sites and of authors who peddle false informations in order to cause harm.<ref>[http://www.vnunet.fr/fr/news/2007/11/28/wikipedia_en_butte_a_une_nouvelle_affaire_de_calomnie « Wikipédia en butte à une nouvelle affaire de calomnie »], Vnunet.fr, 28 novembre 2007.</ref> Senator [[Jean Louis Masson]] then requested the Minister of Justice to tell him whether it would be possible to increase the criminal responsibilities of hosting providers, site operators, and authors of libelous content; the minister declined to do so, recalling the existing rules in the [[:fr:Loi pour la confiance dans l'économie numérique|LCEN]] law.<ref>[http://www.senat.fr/questions/base/2007/qSEQ071102679.html Question] from Senator Jean-Louis Masson to the Minister of Justice, and the Minister's response</ref>

On August 25, 2010, the [[Toronto Star]] reported that the Canadian "government is now conducting two investigations into federal employees who have taken to Wikipedia to express their opinion on federal policies and bitter political debates."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/852228--ottawa-investigating-wikipedia-edits |title= Ottawa investigating Wikipedia edits|author=Allan Woods |date= August 25, 2010 |publisher=[[Toronto Star]] |accessdate=26 August 2010}}</ref>

In 2010, [[Al Jazeera]]'s Teymoor Nabili suggested that the article ''[[Cyrus Cylinder]]'' had been edited for political purposes by "an apparent tussle of opinions in the shadowy world of hard drives and 'independent' editors that comprise the Wikipedia industry." He suggested that after the [[Iranian presidential election, 2009]] and the ensuing "anti-Iranian activities" a "strenuous attempt to portray the cylinder as nothing more than the propaganda tool of an aggressive invader" was visible. The edits following his analysis of the edits during 2009 and 2010, represented "a complete dismissal of the suggestion that the cylinder, or Cyrus' actions, represent concern for human rights or any kind of enlightened intent," in stark contrast to [[Cyrus the Great|Cyrus]]' own reputation as documented in the [[Old Testament]] and the people of Babylon.<ref>[http://blogs.aljazeera.net/middle-east/2010/09/11/cyrus-cylinder-wikipedia-and-iran-conspiracies The Cyrus Cylinder, Wikipedia and Iran conspiracies | Al Jazeera Blogs]</ref>

===== Commandeering or sanitizing articles =====
Articles of particular interest to an editor or group of editors are sometimes commandeered<ref>Jackson, Ron (2009-08-04) http://www.dnjournal.com/archive/lowdown/2009/dailyposts/20090804.htm</ref> and sanitized<ref>Umbria Blogosphere Analysis – Wikipedia and Corporate Blogging (2007-08-24) http://www.jdpowerwebintelligence.com/downloads/CNN_Wikipedia.pdf "Organizations like Sony, Diebold, Nintendo, Dell, the CIA and the Church of Scientology were all shown to have sanitized pages about themselves."</ref><ref>MacDonald, Marc (2008-02-01) http://www.beggarscanbechoosers.com/2008/02/wikipedia-continues-to-sanitize-bush.html</ref> to continually reflect a point of view that sheds a favorable light on the subject or group. Editors essentially "squat" on pages, watching for negative entries, then immediately revert them. This is especially true of pages on politicians as shown on [[USA Congressional staff edits to Wikipedia]]. Sanitized pages range from the [[Tanaka Memorial]] being sometimes protected by sympathetic Chinese, to the page on [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]], a group that regularly sanitizes "its" page. The page on [[Scientology]] has also been subject to being commandeered and put under the [[Wikipedia:Protection policy]]. These habits of commandeering, sanitizing and squatting discourage informed experts from spending the time and attention to make well-footnoted entries for fear that accurate and time-consuming work will be quickly deleted.

===== Editing for financial rewards =====
In January 2007 [[Rick Jelliffe]] claimed in a story carried by [[CBS]]<ref name=mscbs>Brian Bergstein (Jan. 24, 2007) [http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/01/24/tech/main2392719.shtml Microsoft Violates Wikipedia's Sacred Rule] The Associated Press. Retrieved on 2008-09-03.</ref> and [[IDG]] News Service <ref name=msidg1>Nancy Gohring (Jan 23, 2007) [http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9008842 "Microsoft said to offer payment for Wikipedia edits"] IDG News Service. Retrieved on 2008-09-03.</ref><ref name=msidg2>Nancy Gohring (Jan 24, 2007) [http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9008842 "Microsoft's step into Wikipedia prompts debate"] IDG News Service.</ref> that [[Microsoft]] had offered him compensation in exchange for his future editorial services on Wikipedia's articles related to [[OOXML]] (Office Open Extensible Markup Language). A Microsoft spokesperson, quoted by CBS, commented that "Microsoft and the writer, Rick Jelliffe, had not determined a price and no money had changed hands – but they had agreed that the company would not be allowed to review his writing before submission". Also quoted by CBS, [[Jimmy Wales]] expressed his disapproval of Microsoft's involvement: "We were very disappointed to hear that Microsoft was taking that approach".

In a story covered by the [[BBC]], former [[Novell]] chief scientist Jeffrey Merkey claimed that in exchange for a donation his Wikipedia entry was edited in his favor. Jay Walsh, a spokesman for Wikipedia, flatly denied the allegations in an interview given to ''[[The Daily Telegraph]]''.<ref>March 12, 2008 [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7291382.stm Wiki boss 'edited for donation'] Technology. BBC News.</ref>

===== WikiScanner systematically exposes biased editors =====
In August 2007, a tool called [[WikiScanner]] developed by [[Virgil Griffith]], a visiting researcher from the [[Santa Fe Institute]] in New Mexico, was released to match anonymous IP edits in the encyclopedia with an extensive database of addresses.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/wikipedia-and-the-art-of-censorship-462070.html |author=Robert Verkaik |title=Wikipedia and the art of censorship |publisher=The Independent |date=August 18, 2007}}</ref>

News stories appeared about IP addresses from various organizations such as the [[Central Intelligence Agency]], the [[National Republican Congressional Committee]], the [[Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee]], [[Diebold|Diebold, Inc.]] and the [[Government of Australia|Australian government]] being used to make edits to Wikipedia articles, sometimes of an opinionated or questionable nature. Another story stated that an IP address from the BBC itself had been used to vandalize the article on [[George W. Bush]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/media/article2264150.ece?token=null&offset=12|title=Exposed: guess who has been polishing their Wikipedia entries?|date=2007-08-15|accessdate=2007-08-15|author=Rhys Blakely|publisher=Times Online | location=London}}</ref>

The [[BBC]] quoted a Wikipedia spokesperson as praising the tool: "We really value transparency and the scanner really takes this to another level. Wikipedia Scanner may prevent an organisation or individuals from editing articles that they're really not supposed to."<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6947532.stm|title=Wikipedia 'shows CIA page edits'|date=2007-08-15|accessdate=2007-08-15|publisher=BBC|author=Jonathan Fildes}}</ref> Not everyone hailed WikiScanner as a success for Wikipedia. [[Oliver Kamm]], in a column for ''[[The Times]]'', argued instead that:<ref name=okw>[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article2267665.ece Wisdom? More like dumbness of the crowds | Oliver Kamm – Times Online]{{Dead link|date=March 2010}}</ref>

<blockquote>The WikiScanner is thus an important development in bringing down a pernicious influence on our intellectual life. Critics of the web decry the medium as the cult of the amateur. Wikipedia is worse than that; it is the province of the covert lobby. The most constructive course is to stand on the sidelines and jeer at its pretensions.
</blockquote>

WikiScanner only reveals conflicts of interest when the editor does not have a Wikipedia account and their IP address is used instead. Conflict of interest editing done by editors with accounts is not detected, since those edits are anonymous to everyone – except for a [[Wikipedia:RFCU|handful of privileged Wikipedia admins]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/12/18/the_wikipedia_paradox/ |author=Cade Metz |title=Truth, anonymity and the Wikipedia Way: Why it's broke and how it can be fixed |publisher=The Register |date=December 18, 2007}}</ref>

===== Conflicts involving policy makers =====

In February 2008, British technology news and opinion website ''[[The Register]]'' published an article called "Wikipedia ruled by 'Lord of the Universe'" about a prominent [[Wikipedia administrator]], Jossi Fresco. It reported that Fresco declared a [[conflict of interest]] related to [[Prem Rawat]], then made "biased" edits to the Prem Rawat article to minimize criticism, and altered the Wikipedia policies over [[WP:LP|personal biography]] and "[[wp:coi|conflict of interest]]", to favour them. The article pointed out that Fresco was also involved in Wikipedia's "Conflict of Interest Noticeboard", the situation which ''the Register'' article described as "a conflict of conflict of interest". The article ended with the claim:<ref name="Metz Cade">Metz, Cade, [http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/06/the_cult_of_wikipedia/ "Wikipedia ruled by 'Lord of the Universe'"], ''The Register'', February 6, 2008.</ref> "Jossi Fresco may bear the most extreme conflict of interest in the history of Wikipedia – and he edits the policy that governs conflict of interest." Fresco subsequently [[Special:Contributions/Jossi|ceased participation in Wikipedia]].

Some of the most scathing criticism of Wikipedia's claimed neutrality came in ''The Register'', which in turn was allegedly criticized by founding members of the project. According to ''The Register'':<ref>Cade Metz (March 6, 2008). "[http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/03/06/a_model_wikipedian/page2.html Why you should care that Jimmy Wales ignores reality]". ''The Register''. Retrieved on 2008-09-03.</ref>

<blockquote>In short, Wikipedia is a cult. Or at least, the inner circle is a cult. We aren't the first to make this observation.<ref name=cult/>

On the inside, they reinforce each other's beliefs. And if anyone on the outside questions those beliefs, they circle the wagons. They deny the facts. They attack the attacker. After our Jossi Fresco story, Fresco didn't refute our reporting. He simply accused us of "yellow journalism". After our Overstock.com article, Wales called us "trash".

</blockquote>

=== Quality of the presentation ===
====Quality of writing====
[[Roy Rosenzweig]], in a June 2006 essay that combined both praise and criticism of Wikipedia, had several criticisms of its prose and its failure to distinguish the genuinely important from the merely sensational. He said that Wikipedia is "surprisingly accurate in reporting names, dates, and events in U.S. history" (Rosenzweig's own field of study) and that most of the few factual errors that he found "were small and inconsequential" and that some of them "simply repeat widely held but inaccurate beliefs", which are also repeated in ''Encarta'' and the ''Britannica''. However, he made one major criticism.
<blockquote>Good historical writing requires not just factual accuracy but also a command of the scholarly literature, persuasive analysis and interpretations, and clear and engaging prose. By those measures, ''American National Biography Online'' easily outdistances Wikipedia.<ref name=Rosenzweig/></blockquote>

Contrasting Wikipedia's treatment of [[Abraham Lincoln]] to that of [[American Civil War|Civil War]] historian [[James M. McPherson|James McPherson]] in ''American National Biography Online'', he said that both were essentially accurate and covered the major episodes in Lincoln's life, but praised "McPherson's richer contextualization… his artful use of quotations to capture Lincoln's voice … and … his ability to convey a profound message in a handful of words." By contrast, he gives an example of Wikipedia's prose that he finds "both verbose and dull." Rosenzweig made a further criticism, contrasting "the skill and confident judgment of a seasoned historian" displayed by McPherson and others to the "[[wikt:antiquarianism|antiquarianism]]" of Wikipedia (which he compares in this respect to ''[[American Heritage (magazine)|American Heritage]]'' magazine), and said that while Wikipedia often provides extensive references, they are not the best ones.<ref name=Rosenzweig>{{Cite journal|author=Roy Rosenzweig|title=Can History be Open Source? Wikipedia and the Future of the Past|journal=The Journal of American History|volume=93|issue=1|month=June | year=2006|pages=117–146|url=http://chnm.gmu.edu/essays-on-history-new-media/essays/?essayid=42|accessdate=2006-08-11|doi=10.2307/4486062}} (Center for History and New Media)</ref>

Rosenzweig also criticized the "waffling—encouraged by the npov policy—[which] means that it is hard to discern any overall interpretive stance in Wikipedia history." By example, he quoted the conclusion of Wikipedia's article on [[William Clarke Quantrill]]. While generally praising the article, he pointed out its "waffling" conclusion: "Some historians…remember him as an opportunistic, bloodthirsty outlaw, while others continue to view him as a daring soldier and local folk hero."<ref name=Rosenzweig/>

Other critics have made similar charges that, even if Wikipedia articles are factually accurate, they are often written in a poor, almost unreadable style. Frequent Wikipedia critic Andrew Orlowski commented: "Even when a Wikipedia entry is 100 per cent factually correct, and those facts have been carefully chosen, it all too often reads as if it has been translated from one language to another then into to a third, passing an illiterate translator at each stage."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/10/18/wikipedia_quality_problem/page2.html|title=Wikipedia founder admits to serious quality problems|author=Andrew Orlowski|date=2005-10-18|work=The Register|accessdate=2007-09-30}}</ref> A study of cancer articles by [[Yaacov Lawrence]] of the Kimmel Cancer Center at [[Thomas Jefferson University]] found that the entries were mostly accurate, but they were written at college reading level, as opposed to the ninth grade level seen in the [[Physician Data Query]]. He said that "Wikipedia's lack of [[readability]] may reflect its varied origins and haphazard editing."<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.upi.com/Health_News/2010/06/04/Wikipedia-cancer-information-accurate/UPI-87311275628573/|title=Wikipedia cancer information accurate|date=4 June 2010|work=UPI|accessdate=31 December 2010}}</ref> ''The Economist'' noted that the quality of writing of Wikipedia articles can be a guide to the reader: "inelegant or ranting prose usually reflects muddled thoughts and incomplete information."<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.economist.com/node/8820422?story_id=8820422|title=Fact or fiction? Wikipedia's variety of contributors is not only a strength|date=10 March 2007|work=The Economist|accessdate=31 December 2010}}</ref>

==== ''The Wall Street Journal'' debate ====
In the September 12, 2006 edition of ''[[The Wall Street Journal]]'', [[Jimmy Wales]] debated with [[Dale Hoiberg]], editor-in-chief of <CITE>''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]''</CITE>.<ref name="wsj9-12-2006">{{Cite news|url=http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB115756239753455284-A4hdSU1xZOC9Y9PFhJZV16jFlLM_20070911.html|title=The Wall Street Journal Online|accessdate=2006-09-13 | date=2006-09-12}}</ref> Hoiberg focused on a need for expertise and control in an encyclopedia and cited [[Lewis Mumford]] that overwhelming information could "bring about a state of intellectual enervation and depletion hardly to be distinguished from massive ignorance."

Wales emphasized Wikipedia's differences, and asserted that openness and transparency lead to quality. Hoiberg claimed that he "had neither the time nor space to respond to [criticisms]" and "could corral any number of links to articles alleging errors in Wikipedia", to which Wales responded: "No problem! Wikipedia to the rescue with a fine article", and included a link to the Wikipedia article ''Criticism of Wikipedia''.<ref name="wsj9-12-2006" />

===Systemic bias in coverage===
{{See also|Academic studies about Wikipedia#A minority of editors produce the majority of persistent content}}

Wikipedia has been accused of [[systemic bias]], which is to say its general nature leads, without necessarily any conscious intention, to the propagation of various prejudices. Although many articles in newspapers have concentrated on minor, indeed trivial, factual errors in Wikipedia articles, there are also concerns about large scale, presumably unintentional effects from the increasing influence and use of Wikipedia as a research tool at all levels. In an article in the ''[[Times Higher Education]]'' magazine (London) [[philosopher]] Martin Cohen frames Wikipedia of having "become a monopoly" with "all the prejudices and ignorance of its creators", which he describes as a "youthful cab-drivers" perspective.<ref name="Cohen 26">{{Cite journal|title=Encyclopaedia Idiotica |first=Martin |last=Cohen |journal=Times Higher Education |issue=28 August 2008 |page=26 |url=http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=403327}}</ref> Cohen's argument, however, finds a grave conclusion in these circumstances: "To control the reference sources that people use is to control the way people comprehend the world. Wikipedia may have a benign, even trivial face, but underneath may lie a more sinister and subtle threat to freedom of thought."<ref name="Cohen 26"/> That freedom is undermined by what he sees as what matters on Wikipedia, "not your sources but the 'support of the community'."<ref name="Cohen 26"/>

Critics also point to the tendency to cover topics in a detail disproportionate to their importance. For example, [[Stephen Colbert]] once mockingly praised Wikipedia for having a "longer entry on '[[lightsaber]]s' than it does on the '[[printing press]]'."<ref name ="ColbertReport">Stephen Colbert, ''The Colbert Report'', episode 3109, August 21, 2007.</ref> In an interview with ''The Guardian'', Dale Hoiberg, the editor-in-chief of ''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]'', noted:<ref name = "Whoknows?" />
<blockquote>People write of things they're interested in, and so many subjects don't get covered; and news events get covered in great detail. In the past, the entry on [[Hurricane Frances]] was more than five times the length of that on [[Chinese art]], and the entry on ''[[Coronation Street]]'' was twice as long as the article on [[Tony Blair]].</blockquote>
This critical approach has been satirised "Wikigroaning", a term coined by Jon Hendren<ref name="wsj">{{Cite journal|title=Oh, that John Locke |first=Jamin |last=Brophy-Warren |journal=The Wall Street Journal |issue=June 16, 2007 |pages=P3 |url=http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB118194482542637175-lMyQjAxMDE3ODExNzkxNDc0Wj.html}}</ref> of the website [[Something Awful]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=The Art of Wikigroaning |date=2007-06-05 |first=Johnny "DocEvil" |last=Hendren |accessdate=2007-06-17 |work=Something Awful |url=http://www.somethingawful.com/d/news/wikigroaning.php}}</ref> In the game, two articles (preferably with similar names) are compared: one about an acknowledged serious or classical subject and the other about a topic popular or current.<ref name="Abrown">{{Cite journal| first=Andrew |last=Brown| issue=June 14, 2007 |title=No amount of collaboration will make the sun orbit the Earth |journal=The Guardian |url=http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,2101810,00.html | location=London | date=2007-06-14 | accessdate=2010-03-27}}</ref> Defenders of a broad inclusion criteria have held that the encyclopedia's coverage of pop culture does not impose space constraints on the coverage of more serious subjects (see "[[:meta:Wiki is not paper|Wiki is not paper]]"). As Ivor Tossell noted:

<blockquote>That Wikipedia is chock full of useless arcana (and did you know, by the way, that the article on "Debate" is shorter than the piece that weighs the relative merits of the 1978 and 2003 versions of Battlestar Galactica?) isn't a knock against it: Since it can grow infinitely, the silly articles aren't depriving the serious ones of space.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070615.wweb15/BNStory/Technology/home|title=Duality of Wikipedia|author=Ivor Tossell|work=[[Toronto Globe and Mail]]|date=2007-06-15|accessdate=2007-06-20}}</ref></blockquote>

==== Notability of article topics ====
Wikipedia's [[Notability in Wikipedia|notability]] guidelines, and the application thereof, are the subject of much criticism.<ref name=autogenerated1>J.P. Kirby (October 20, 2007). [http://www.the506.com/ramblings/20071020.html The Problem with Wikipedia.] J.P.'s Random Ramblings.</ref> [[Nicholson Baker]] considers the notability standards arbitrary and essentially unsolvable:<ref name=autogenerated2>Volume 55, Nicholson Baker (March 20, 2008) [http://www.nybooks.com/articles/21131 The Charms of Wikipedia – The New York Review of Books] Vol. 55, Number 4.</ref>
<blockquote>
There are quires, reams, bales of controversy over what constitutes notability in Wikipedia: nobody will ever sort it out.
</blockquote>
Criticizing the "[[deletionists]]", Nicholson Baker then writes:<ref name=autogenerated1/>
<blockquote>Still, a lot of good work—verifiable, informative, brain-leapingly strange—is being cast out of this paperless, infinitely expandable accordion folder by people who have a narrow, almost grade-schoolish notion of what sort of curiosity an on-line encyclopedia will be able to satisfy in the years to come.

[...] It's harder to improve something that's already written, or to write something altogether new, especially now that so many of the World Book–sanctioned encyclopedic fruits are long plucked. There are some people on Wikipedia now who are just bullies, who take pleasure in wrecking and mocking peoples' work—even to the point of laughing at nonstandard "[[Engrish]]." They poke articles full of warnings and citation-needed notes and deletion prods till the topics go away.</blockquote>

Yet another criticism<ref>Bobbie Johnson, Guardian Newpapers Limited, 2009</ref> about the deletionists is this: "The increasing difficulty of making a successful edit; the exclusion of casual users; slower growth – all are hallmarks of the deletionists approach."

Complaining that his own biography was on the verge of deletion for lack of notability, [[Timothy Noah]] argued that:<ref>{{Cite web|last=Noah |first=Timothy |url=http://www.slate.com/id/2160222/pagenum/2 |title=Evicted from Wikipedia. – By Timothy Noah – Slate Magazine |publisher=Slate.com |date=2007-02-24 |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref>
<blockquote>
Wikipedia's notability policy resembles U.S. immigration policy before 9/11: stringent rules, spotty enforcement. To be notable, a Wikipedia topic must be "the subject of multiple, non-trivial published works from sources that are reliable and independent of the subject and of each other." Although I have written or been quoted in such works, I can't say I've ever been the subject of any. And wouldn't you know, some notability cop cruised past my bio and pulled me over. Unless I get notable in a hurry—win the Nobel Peace Prize? Prove I sired Anna Nicole Smith's baby daughter?—a "sysop" (volunteer techie) will wipe my Wikipedia page clean. It's straight out of [[Philip K. Dick]].
</blockquote>
In the same article, Noah mentions that the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer [[Stacy Schiff]] was not considered notable enough for a Wikipedia entry before she wrote an extensive ''[[The New Yorker|New Yorker]]'' article on Wikipedia itself.

==== Liberal bias ====
Another criticism is that a politically [[Modern liberalism in the United States|liberal]] bias is predominant. According to [[Jimmy Wales]]: "The Wikipedia community is very diverse, from [[liberalism|liberal]] to [[conservatism|conservative]] to [[libertarianism|libertarian]] and beyond. If averages mattered, and due to the nature of the wiki software (no voting) they almost certainly don’t, I would say that the Wikipedia community is slightly more liberal than the U.S. population on average, because we are global and the international community of English speakers is slightly more liberal than the U.S. population. There are no data or surveys to back that."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2006/04/email_debatewales_discusses_po.html|title=Wales Discusses Political Bias on Wikipedia|author=Mark Glaser|publisher=PBS Mediashift|date=2006-04-21|accessdate=2007-08-21}}</ref> Andrew Schlafly created [[Conservapedia]] because of his perception that Wikipedia contained a liberal bias.<ref name="Guardian">{{Cite news| last = Johnson | first = Bobbie | url = http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,2024434,00.html | title = Conservapedia—the US religious right's answer to Wikipedia | work = The Guardian | date = 2007-03-01 | location=London | accessdate=2010-03-27}}</ref> Conservapedia's editors have compiled a list of alleged examples of liberal bias in Wikipedia.<ref name="itwire">{{Cite news|last=Turner|first=Adam|title=Conservapedia aims to set Wikipedia right|url=http://www.itwire.com/content/view/10160/1154/|work=IT Wire|date=2007-03-05|accessdate=2008-05-12}}</ref> In 2007, an article in ''[[The Christian Post]]'' criticised Wikipedia's coverage of [[Intelligent design]], saying that it was biased and hypocritical.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.christianpost.com/article/20070509/27307_'Design'_Proponents_Accuse_Wikipedia_of_Bias,_Hypocrisy.htm|title='Design' Proponents Accuse Wikipedia of Bias, Hypocrisy|author= Doug Huntington|date=2007-05-09|accessdate=2007-08-09|work=The Christian Post}}</ref> [[Lawrence Solomon]] of the ''[[National Review]]'' considered the Wikipedia articles on subjects like [[global warming]], [[intelligent design]], and ''[[Roe v. Wade]]'' all to be slanted in favor of liberal views.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Solomon|first=Lawrence|title=Wikipropaganda On Global Warming|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/07/08/opinion/main4241293.shtml|work=National Review|publisher=CBSNews.com|date=2008-07-08|accessdate=2008-07-20}}</ref>

In a September 2010 issue of the conservative weekly ''[[Human Events]]'', [[Rowan Scarborough]] presented a critique of Wikipedia's coverage of American politicians prominent in the approaching [[United States midterm election|midterm election]]s as evidence of systemic liberal bias.<ref name="scarborough">{{Cite web|last=Scarborough|first=Rowan|url=http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=39139 Wikipedia|title=Whacks the Right|date=2010-09-27|accessdate=2010-10-03|work=[[Human Events]]}}</ref> Scarborough compares the biographical articles of liberal and conservative opponents in Senate races in the Alaska Republican primary and the Delaware and Nevada general election, emphasizing the quantity of negative coverage of [[Tea Party movement|tea party]]-endorsed candidates. He also cites some criticism by Lawrence Solomon and quotes in full the lead section of Wikipedia's article on its rival [[Conservapedia]] as evidence of an underlying bias.

====American and corporate bias====
[[Tim Anderson (lecturer)|Tim Anderson]], a senior lecturer in [[political economy]] at the [[University of Sydney]], said that Wikipedia administrators display a U.S.-oriented bias in their interaction with editors, and in their determination of sources that are appropriate for use on the site. Anderson was outraged after several of the sources he used in his edits to [[Hugo Chávez]], including ''Venezuela Analysis'' and ''[[Z Magazine]]'', were disallowed as "unusable". Anderson also described Wikipedia's Neutral point of view policy to ZDNet Australia as "a facade", and that Wikipedia "hides behind a reliance on corporate media editorials".<ref>Marcus Browne (February 13, 2008) [http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,62037725,00.htm Wikipedia accused of 'US-centric bias'] [[ZDNet]] Australia</ref>

====Gender bias====
Wikipedia has been criticized<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2011/02/02/where-are-the-women-in-wikipedia/a-culture-of-editing-wars</ref> by some journalists and academics for lacking not only women contributors but also extensive and in-depth encyclopedic attention to many topics regarding gender. An article in ''The New York Times'' cites a Wikimedia Foundation study which found that fewer than 13% of contributors to Wikipedia are women. [[Sue Gardner]], the executive director of the foundation, said increasing diversity was about making the encyclopedia "as good as it could be." Factors the article cited as possibly discouraging women from editing included the "obsessive fact-loving realm," associations with the "hard-driving hacker crowd," and the necessity to be "open to very difficult, high-conflict people, even misogynists."<ref>Noam Cohen, [http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/31/business/media/31link.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&partner=rss&emc=rss&adxnnlx=1296482628-WKqXsGSoGM9myNIYsHbqYw "Define Gender Gap? Look Up Wikipedia's Contributor List,"] ''The New York Times''. Found at [[The New York Times]], January 31, 2011.</ref>

===Sexual content===
Wikipedia has been criticized for allowing graphic sexual content such as images and videos of [[masturbation]] and [[ejaculation]] as well as photos from [[hardcore pornography|hardcore pornographic]] films found on its articles. Child protection campaigners say graphic sexual content appears on many Wikipedia entries, displayed without any warning or age verification.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.livenews.com.au/Articles/2008/09/09/Wikipedia_attacked_over_porn_pages |title=Wikipedia attacked over porn pages |publisher=Livenews.com.au |date= |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref>

The Wikipedia article ''[[Virgin Killer]]'' – a 1976 album from [[music of Germany|German]] [[heavy metal music|heavy metal]] [[rock band|band]] [[Scorpions (band)|Scorpions]] – features a picture of the album's original cover, which depicts a naked [[prepubescent]] girl. The original release cover caused controversy and was replaced in some countries. In December 2008, access to the Wikipedia article ''[[Virgin Killer]]'' was [[Internet Watch Foundation and Wikipedia|blocked for four days]] by most Internet service providers in the United Kingdom, after it was reported by a member of the public as [[child pornography]].<ref>{{Cite news|work=[[The Register]]|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/12/07/brit_isps_censor_wikipedia/|title=Brit ISPs censor Wikipedia over 'child porn' album cover|date= 7 December 2008|first=Cade|last=Metz|accessdate=10 May 2009}}</ref> The [[Internet Watch Foundation]], a nonprofit, nongovernment-affiliated organization, criticized the inclusion of the picture as "distasteful".<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/08/AR2008120803188.html|work=The Washington Post|date=December 10, 2008|first=JR|last=Raphael|title=Wikipedia Censorship Sparks Free Speech Debate|accessdate=May 10, 2009}}</ref>

In April 2010, [[Larry Sanger]] wrote a letter to the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]], outlining his concerns that two categories of images on [[Reporting of lolicon images on Wikimedia Commons|Wikimedia Commons]] contained child pornography, and were in violation of U.S. federal obscenity law.<ref>{{cite news|last=Farrell|first=Nick|title=Wikipedia denies child abuse allegations: Co-founder grassed the outfit to the FBI |url=http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1603521/wikipedia-denies-child-abuse-allegations|accessdate=9 October 2010|newspaper=The Inquirer|date=April 29, 2010}}</ref> Sanger later clarified that the images, which were related to [[pedophilia]] and one about [[lolicon]], were not of real children, but said that they constituted "obscene visual representations of the sexual abuse of children", under the [[Child pornography laws in the United States#Section 1466A|PROTECT Act of 2003]].<ref name="The Register-April" /> That law bans photographic child pornography and cartoon images and drawings of children that are [[Obscenity#United_States_obscenity_law|obscene under American law]].<ref name="The Register-April">{{Cite news|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/09/sanger_reports_wikimedia_to_the_fbi/|work=The Register|date=April 9, 2010|first=Cade|last=Metz|title=Wikifounder reports Wikiparent to FBI over 'child porn'|accessdate=April 19, 2010}}</ref> Sanger also expressed concerns about access to the images on Wikipedia in schools.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/infotech/internet/Wikipedia-blasts-co-founders-accusations-of-child-porn-on-website/articleshow/5871943.cms|title=Wikipedia blasts co-founder's accusations of child porn on website|date=April 29, 2010|work=[[The Economic Times]]|accessdate=29 April 2010}}</ref> Wikipedia strongly rejected Sanger's accusation.<ref name=AFP/>

[[Wikimedia Foundation]] spokesman Jay Walsh said that Wikipedia doesn't have "material we would deem to be illegal. If we did, we would remove it."<ref name=AFP>{{Cite news|url=http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iPnPNqEkWafeVXnPIWfaS2wN6XSQ|title=Wikipedia blasts talk of child porn at website|date=April 28, 2010|publisher=[[Agence France-Presse|AFP]]|accessdate=29 April 2010}}</ref> Following the complaint by Larry Sanger, Wales deleted sexual images without consulting the community. After some editors who volunteer to maintain the site argued that the decision to delete had been made hastily, Wales voluntarily gave up some of the powers he had held up to that time as part of his co-founder status. He wrote in a message to the Wikimedia Foundation mailing list that this action was "in the interest of encouraging this discussion to be about real philosophical/content issues, rather than be about me and how quickly I acted."<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/10104946.stm |title=Wikimedia pornography row deepens as Wales cedes rights |publisher=BBC News |date=May 10, 2010 |accessdate=May 19, 2010}}</ref>

===Exposure to vandals===
{{main|Vandalism on Wikipedia}}

[[Image:Wikipedia vandalism.svg|thumb|300 px|[[Vandalism]] of a Wikipedia article]]

Wikipedia has a range of tools available to [[Wikipedia:Wikipedians|users]] and [[Wikipedia:Administrators|administrators]] in order to fight against vandalism. Supporters of the project argue that the vast majority of vandalism on Wikipedia is reverted within a short time, and a study by Fernanda Viégas of the MIT Media Lab and Martin Wattenberg and Kushal Dave of IBM Research found that most vandal edits were reverted within around five minutes; however they state that "it is essentially impossible to find a crisp definition of vandalism".<ref>{{Cite journal|url=http://alumni.media.mit.edu/~fviegas/papers/history_flow.pdf|publisher=MIT|format=PDF|title=Studying Cooperation and Conflict between Authors with history flow Visualizations|author=Fernanda Viégas, Martin Wattenberg, Kushal Dave}}</ref> While most instances of page blanking or the addition of offensive material are soon reverted, less obvious vandalism has remained for longer periods.

A 2007 peer-reviewed study<ref name=mngrp07>Reid Priedhorsky, Jilin Chen, Shyong (Tony) K. Lam, Katherine Panciera, Loren Terveen, John Riedl, "Creating, destroying, and restoring value in wikipedia", Proc. GROUP 2007, doi: [http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1316624.1316663 ACM.org]</ref> that measured the actual number of page views with "damaged" content, concluded:
<blockquote>42% of damage is repaired almost immediately, i.e., before it can confuse, offend, or mislead anyone. Nonetheless, there are still hundreds of millions of damaged views.
</blockquote>

===="Death by Wikipedia"====
"Death by Wikipedia" is a phenomenon in which a person is erroneously proclaimed dead through vandalism. Articles about the comedian [[Paul Reiser]], British television host [[Vernon Kay]], and the West Virginia Senator [[Robert Byrd]], who died on June 28, 2010, have been vandalized in this way.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Metz |first=Cade |url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/01/22/wikipedia_vandalism_crackdown/ |title=TheRegister.co.uk |publisher=TheRegister.co.uk |date=2009-01-22 |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Goss |first=Patrick |url=http://www.techradar.com/news/internet/vernon-kay-shocked-at-death-by-wikipedia-464838 |title=Techradar.com |publisher=Techradar.com |date=2008-09-15 |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Pershing |first=Ben |url=http://voices.washingtonpost.com/capitol-briefing/2009/01/kennedy_the_latest_victim_of_w.html?hpid=topnews |title=WashingtonPost.com |publisher=Voices.washingtonpost.com |date= |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref>

===Privacy concerns===
Most [[privacy]] concerns refer to cases of government or employer data gathering; or to computer or electronic monitoring; or to trading data between organizations.<ref>See [http://www.mcbump.com/privacyissues.htm "Legal Issues in Employee Privacy"] by Thamer E. "Chip" Temple III for further discussion</ref> "The Internet has created conflicts between personal privacy, commercial interests and the interests of society at large" warn James Donnelly and Jenifer Haeckl.<ref name=DH>{{Cite web|url=http://www.modl.com/images/library/114.html|title=Privacy and Security on the Internet: What Rights, What Remedies?|date=2001-04-12|author=James Donnelly and Jenifer Haeckl|publisher=MCLE}}{{Dead link|date=March 2010}}</ref> Balancing the rights of all concerned as technology alters the social landscape will not be easy. It "is not yet possible to anticipate the path of the common law or governmental regulation" regarding this problem.<ref name=DH />

The concern in the case of Wikipedia is the right of a private citizen to remain private; to remain a "private citizen" rather than a "[[public figure]]" in the eyes of the law.<ref>See [http://www.texaspress.com/Lawpress/LawMedia/Libel/LibelCases.htm "Libel"]{{Dead link|date=March 2010}} by David McHam for the legal distinction</ref> It is somewhat of a battle between the right to be anonymous in [[cyberspace]] and the right to be anonymous in [[real life]] ("[[meatspace]]"). Wikipedia Watch argues that "Wikipedia is a potential menace to anyone who values privacy" and that "a greater degree of accountability in the Wikipedia structure" would be "the very first step toward resolving the privacy problem."<ref>[http://wikipedia-watch.org/hivemind.html Wikipedia's Hive Mind Administration], November 9, 2005 ([http://blogoscoped.com/archive/2005-11-10-n36.html copy of original text] at Google Blogoscoped)</ref> A particular problem occurs in the case of an individual who is relatively unimportant and for whom there exists a Wikipedia page against their wishes.

In 2005 Agence France-Presse quoted Daniel Brandt, the Wikipedia Watch owner, as saying that "the basic problem is that no one, neither the trustees of Wikimedia Foundation, nor the volunteers who are connected with Wikipedia, consider themselves responsible for the content."<ref name="agfrancpresse">{{Cite web|title=Wikipedia Becomes Internet Force, Faces Crisis|url=http://www.spacemart.com/reports/Wikipedia_Becomes_Internet_Force__Faces_Crisis.html|publisher=Agence France-Presse|date=2005-12-11|accessdate=2007-12-26 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20071006093627/http://www.spacemart.com/reports/Wikipedia_Becomes_Internet_Force__Faces_Crisis.html |archivedate = October 6, 2007}}</ref>

In January 2006, a German court ordered the [[German Wikipedia]] shut down within Germany because it stated the full name of [[Boris Floricic]], aka "Tron", a deceased hacker who was formerly with the [[Chaos Computer Club]]. More specifically, the court ordered that the URL within the German <tt>.de</tt> domain (<tt>http://www.wikipedia.de/</tt>) may no longer redirect to the encyclopedia's servers in Florida at <tt>http://de.wikipedia.org</tt> although German readers were still able to use the US-based URL directly, and there was virtually no loss of access on their part. The court order arose out of a lawsuit filed by Floricic's parents, demanding that their son's surname be removed from Wikipedia.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2006-01-16/Tron_dispute|date=2006-01-16|work=Wikipedia Signpost|publisher=Wikipedia|title=Tron dispute}}</ref> On February 9, 2006, the injunction against Wikimedia Deutschland was overturned, with the court rejecting the notion that Tron's right to privacy or that of his parents were being violated.<ref>[http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/69391 Heise Online: "Court overturns temporary restraining order against Wikimedia Deutschland]{{Dead link|date=March 2010}}, by Torsten Kleinz, 9 February 2006.</ref> The plaintiffs appealed to the Berlin state court, but were refused relief in May 2006.

== Criticism of the community ==
The [[Wikipedia community]] (people who contribute to Wikipedia) is also subject to various criticisms. Emigh and Herring argue that "a few active users, when acting in concert with established norms within an open editing system, can achieve ultimate control over the content produced within the system, literally erasing diversity, controversy, and inconsistency, and homogenizing contributors' voices."<ref name="emigh" /> The community has also been criticized for responding to complaints regarding an article's quality by advising the complainer to fix the article themselves.<ref>[[Andrew Orlowski]], "[http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/23/wiki_fiddlers_big_book/ Wiki-fiddlers defend Clever Big Book]", ''The Register'', July 23, 2004.</ref> Professor [[James H. Fetzer]] criticized Wikipedia in that he could not change the article about himself;<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1683057245164550824&q=fetzer |title=Professor James Fetzer Exposes Wikipedia.org |publisher=Video.google.com |date= |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref> to ensure impartiality, Wikipedia has a policy that discourages the editing of biographies by the subjects themselves except in "clear-cut cases", such as reverting vandalism or correcting out-of-date or mistaken facts.<ref>"{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Autobiography|title=Wikipedia:Autobiography|publisher=Wikipedia|accessdate=2007-05-03}}</ref>

The community has been described as "cult-like,"<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://technology.guardian.co.uk/opinion/story/0,16541,1667346,00.html |title=Log on and join in, but beware the web cults |first=Charles |last=Arthur |date=2005-12-15 |work=The Guardian | location=London | accessdate=2010-03-27}}</ref><ref name="WhatIsItWithWikipedia">{{Cite news|title=What is it with Wikipedia? |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4534712.stm |date=2005-12-16 |publisher=BBC |first=Bill |last=Thompson}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/12/06/wikipedia_bio/ |title=Who owns your Wikipedia bio? |date=2005-12-06 |first=Andrew |last=Orlowski |work=The Register}}</ref> although not always with entirely negative connotations.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/internet/08/03/wikipedia/index.html |title=Wikipedia: The know-it-all Web site |date=2003-08-04 |first=Kristie |last=Lu Stout|publisher=[[CNN]]}}</ref> A larger social community also helps in maintaining a supportive atmosphere and collective etiquette, such as resolving disputes by appealing to reliable sources and Wikipedia's own policies.<ref>"[[Wikipedia:Researching with Wikipedia|Wikipedia:Research with Wikipedia]]", Wikipedia (March 28, 2005).</ref>{{Failed verification|date=September 2008}}

Wikipedia does not require that its users identify themselves. This means that multiple people may use one account—or, more often, one person may use multiple accounts, often in an attempt to influence an argument. The latter practice is known as "[[Sockpuppet (Internet)|sockpuppetry]]", which is actively discouraged on Wikipedia.<ref>"[[Wikipedia:Sock puppetry|Wikipedia:Sockpuppetry]]", Wikipedia. Retrieved on 2007-01-27.</ref>

=== Jimmy Wales' role ===
The community of Wikipedia editors has been criticized for placing an irrational emphasis on [[Jimmy Wales]] as a person, with phrases such as "What Would Jimbo Do?" Wales' role in personally determining the content of some articles has also been criticized as contrary to the independent spirit that Wikipedia supposedly has gained.<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/sep/25/wikipedia.internet Wikipedia isn't about human potential, whatever Wales says]. ''[[The Guardian]]''. Published September 25, 2008.</ref><ref>[http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/03/06/a_model_wikipedian/ Why you should care that Jimmy Wales ignores reality]. ''[[The Register]]''. Published March 6, 2008.</ref>

=== Selection of editors ===

<span id="pettiness"></span>
[[Stacy Schiff]] notes in her ''New Yorker'' article about Wikipedia that<ref name="New Yorker"/>

<blockquote>
Wikipedia is an online community devoted not to last night's party or to next season's iPod but to a higher good. It is also no more immune to human nature than any other utopian project. Pettiness, idiocy, and vulgarity are regular features of the site. Nothing about high-minded collaboration guarantees accuracy, and open editing invites abuse.
</blockquote>

==== Lack of credential verification and the Essjay controversy ====
{{Main|Essjay controversy}}

In July 2006 ''[[The New Yorker]]'' ran a feature about Wikipedia by [[Stacy Schiff]].<ref name="New Yorker">Schiff, Stacey. [http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/060731fa_fact "Know it all: Can Wikipedia conquer expertise?"], ''The New Yorker'', July 24, 2006.</ref> The initial version of the article included an interview with a [[Wikipedia:Administrators|Wikipedia administrator]] known by the [[pseudonym]] Essjay, who was described as a [[tenure]]d [[professor]] of [[theology]].<ref name="guardian">{{Cite news
|url = http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,2028328,00.html
|title = Read me first
|accessdate = 2007-08-01
|last = Finkelstein
|first = Seth
|date = March 8, 2007
|work = Technology
|publisher = The Guardian
|archiveurl =
|archivedate= | location=London}}At some point, Essjay claimed he had sent a letter to a real-life college professor using his invented persona's credentials, vouching for Wikipedia's accuracy. In the letter he wrote in part, "It is never the case that known incorrect information is allowed to remain in Wikipedia."</ref> Essjay's Wikipedia user page<ref>{{Cite web|title=Archived copy of Essjay's Wikipedia user page|publisher=The Internet Archive|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Essjay|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20060111060701/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Essjay|archivedate=2006-01-11}}</ref> (now removed) made the following claim:

<blockquote>
I am a tenured professor of theology at a private university in the eastern United States; I teach both undergraduate and graduate theology. I have been asked repeatedly to reveal the name of the institution, however, I decline to do so; I am unsure of the consequences of such an action, and believe it to be in my best interests to remain anonymous.''
</blockquote>

Essjay also claimed on his userpage that he held four academic degrees: Bachelor of Arts in Religious Studies (B.A.), Master of Arts in Religion (M.A.R.), Doctorate of Philosophy in Theology (Ph.D.), and Doctorate in Canon Law (JCD). Essjay specialized in editing articles about [[religion]] on Wikipedia, including subjects such as "the penitential rite, transubstantiation, the papal tiara";<ref name="New Yorker" /> on one occasion he was called in to give some "expert testimony" on the status of [[Mary (mother of Jesus)|Mary]] in the [[Roman Catholic Church]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Five_solas&diff=prev&oldid=15002257|title=Talk:Five solas|publisher=Wikipedia|date=2005-06-11|accessdate=2007-06-18}}</ref> In January 2007, Essjay was hired as a manager with [[Wikia]], a wiki-hosting service founded by Wales and [[Angela Beesley]]. In February, Wales appointed Essjay as a member of the [[Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee|Wikipedia Arbitration Committee]], a group with powers to issue binding rulings in disputes relating to Wikipedia.<ref name="Orlowski">{{Cite web|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/03/02/wikipedia_fraud/|title=Bogus Wikipedia Prof. was blessed then promoted|accessdate=2007-03-18|last=Orlowski|first=Andrew|authorlink=Andrew Orlowski|date=March 2, 2007|work=Music and Media|work=The Register}}</ref>

[[Image:L Sanger.jpg|150px|thumb|[[Larry Sanger]], who left Wikipedia and founded [[Citizendium]].]]

In late February 2007 ''The New Yorker'' added an editorial note to its article on Wikipedia stating that it had learned that Essjay was Ryan Jordan, a 24-year-old college [[Dropping out|dropout]] from [[Kentucky]] with no advanced degrees and no teaching experience.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6423659.stm|title=Fake professor in Wikipedia storm|publisher=BBC|last=Staff|date=2007-03-06|accessdate=2007-03-08}}</ref> Initially Jimmy Wales commented on the issue of Essjay's identity: "I regard it as a pseudonym and I don’t really have a problem with it." [[Larry Sanger]], [[History of Wikipedia#Conceptual origins|co-founder]]<ref name="Larry_Sanger_Springs_Citizendium">{{Cite news
|first=Brian
|last=Bergstein
|title=Sanger says he co-started Wikipedia
|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/25/AR2007032500570.html
|work=[[The Washington Post]]
|agency=Associated Press
|date=March 25, 2007
|accessdate=2007-03-26
|quote =The nascent Web encyclopedia Citizendium springs from Larry Sanger, a philosophy Ph.D. who counts himself as a co-founder of Wikipedia, the site he now hopes to usurp. The claim doesn't seem particularly controversial—Sanger has long been cited as a co-founder. Yet the other founder, [[Jimmy Wales]], isn't happy about it.}}</ref><ref name="sanger-NYTimes">{{Cite news
|title=Fact-Driven? Collegial? This Site Wants You
|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9800E5D6123BF933A1575AC0A9679C8B63&n=Top%2fReference%2fTimes%20Topics%2fSubjects%2fC%2fComputer%20Software
|work=New York Times
|accessdate=2007-08-01
|date=2001-09-20 | first=Peter | last=Meyers}}"I can start an article that will consist of one paragraph, and then a real expert will come along and add three paragraphs and clean up my one paragraph", said Larry Sanger of Las Vegas, who founded Wikipedia with Mr. Wales.</ref><ref>{{Cite news| url = http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2006/02/12/bias_sabotage_haunt_wikipedias_free_world/?page=4 | title = Bias, sabotage haunt Wikipedia's free world | author = David Mehegan | work = [[The Boston Globe]] | date = February 12, 2006 | accessdate = 2007-07-30}}</ref> of Wikipedia, responded to Wales on his [[Citizendium]] blog by calling Wales' initial reaction "utterly breathtaking, and ultimately tragic." Sanger said the controversy "reflects directly on the judgment and values of the management of Wikipedia."<ref name="cz">{{Cite web|url=http://blog.citizendium.org/2007/03/01/wikipedia-firmly-supports-your-right-to-identity-fraud/|title=Wikipedia firmly supports your right to identity fraud|accessdate=2007-03-02|publisher=Larry Sanger|date=1 March 2007|author=Larry Sanger|work=Citizendium Blog}}</ref>

Wales later issued a new statement saying he had not previously understood that "EssJay used his false credentials in content disputes." He added: "I have asked EssJay to resign his positions of trust within the [Wikipedia] community."<ref>{{Cite web|title=User talk:Jimbo Wales|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Jimbo_Wales&oldid=112270687}}</ref> Sanger responded the next day: "It seems Jimmy finds nothing wrong, nothing trust-violating, with the act itself of openly and falsely touting many advanced degrees on Wikipedia. But there most obviously is something wrong with it, and it's just as disturbing for Wikipedia's head to fail to see anything wrong with it."<ref name="sanger2">{{Cite web|url=http://blog.citizendium.org/2007/03/03/jimmy-wales-latest-response-on-the-essjay-situation/|title=Jimmy Wales’ latest response on the Essjay situation|accessdate=2007-03-03|publisher=Larry Sanger|date=3 March 2007|author=Larry Sanger|work=Citizendium Blog}}</ref>

On March 4, Essjay wrote on his user page that he was leaving Wikipedia, and he also resigned his position with Wikia.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.wikia.com/wiki/User:Essjay|title=Essjay's Wikia user page|accessdate=2007-09-19}}</ref> A subsequent article in ''[[The Courier-Journal]]'' ([[Louisville, Kentucky|Louisville]]) suggested that the new [[résumé]] he had posted at his Wikia page was exaggerated.<ref>{{Cite web|first=Andrew |last=Wolfson |title=Wikipedia editor who posed as professor is Ky. dropout: Man resigns post after controversy |url=http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070306/NEWS01/703060446/1008 |work=[[Louisville Courier-Journal]] |date=March 6, 2007 |accessdate=2007-03-07 |archiveurl=http://www.kctcs.net/todaysnews/index.cfm?tn_date=2007-03-06#9315 |archivedate=2007-05-17}}</ref> The March 19, 2007 issue of ''The New Yorker'' published a formal apology by Wales to the magazine and Stacy Schiff for Essjay's false statements.<ref name="WalesApology">{{Cite news| last = Wales| first = Jimmy| author-link = Jimmy Wales| newspaper = [[The New Yorker]]| date = 2007-03-19| title = Making amends| page = 24 }}</ref>

Discussing the incident, the ''New York Times'' noted that the Wikipedia community had responded to the affair with "the fury of the crowd", and observed:

<blockquote>
The Essjay episode underlines some of the perils of collaborative efforts like Wikipedia that rely on many contributors acting in good faith, often anonymously and through self-designated user names. But it also shows how the transparency of the Wikipedia process—all editing of entries is marked and saved—allows readers to react to suspected fraud.<ref name=Essjay-controversy>{{Cite news|first=Noam |last=Cohen |title=A Contributor to Wikipedia Has His Fictional Side |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/05/technology/05wikipedia.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5090&en=f79cc41f899c2de6&ex=1330750800&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=2007-03-05 |accessdate=2007-03-05 }}</ref>
</blockquote>

The Essjay incident received extensive media coverage, including a national U.S. television broadcast on [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC's]] ''[[World News with Charles Gibson]]''<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://abcnews.go.com/Video/playerIndex?id=2929512|title=ABC News broadcast on Essjay|accessdate=2007-03-08}}</ref> and a March 7, 2007 [[Associated Press]] story that was picked up by more than 100 media outlets listed in the [[Google]] news cache.<ref>{{Cite news|title= After flap over phony professor, Wikipedia wants some writers to share real names |url= http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2007-03-07-wikipedia-credentials_N.htm |agency=Associated Press|first=Brian |last=Bergstein|date= March 7, 2007 | work=USA Today}}</ref> The controversy has led to a proposal that users claiming to possess academic qualifications would have to provide evidence before citing them in Wikipedia content disputes.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,129702-c,webservices/article.html|title=Wikipedia Founder Addresses User Credentials|first=Martyn|last=Williams|publisher=IDG News Service|date=2007-03-09}}</ref> The proposal was not accepted.<ref>[[Wikipedia:Credentials|Wikipedia Credentials]]</ref>

In 2009, it was revealed that a British [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour]] councillor had been anonymously editing Wikipedia as 'Sam Blacketer', including many political articles in the UK. He resigned from membership of the Arbitration Committee.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/wikipedia-sentinel-quits-after-using-alias-to-alter-entries-1698762.html |title=Wikipedia 'sentinel' quits after using alias to alter entries |publisher=Independent.co.uk |date= 2009-06-07|accessdate=2010-03-31 | location=London | first1=Jamie | last1=Welham | first2=Nina | last2=Lakhani}}</ref>

=== Anonymity of editors ===
{{See also|On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog}}
Wikipedia co-founder<ref name="GlynMoody">{{Cite news|url=http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,1818630,00.html|title=This time, it'll be a Wikipedia written by experts|author=Glyn Moody|work=The Guardian|date=2006-07-13|accessdate=2007-04-28|quote=Larry Sanger seems to have a thing about free online encyclopedias. Although his main claim to fame is as the co-founder, along with Jimmy Wales, of Wikipedia, that is just one of several projects to produce large-scale, systematic stores of human knowledge he has been involved in..."[Jimmy Wales] saw that I was essentially looking for employment online and he was looking for someone to lead Nupedia"...Career: 1992–1996, 1997–1998 Graduate teaching associate, OSU; 2000–2002 Editor-in-chief, Nupedia. | location=London}}</ref> [[Larry Sanger]] wrote:<ref>{{Cite web|title = Toward a New Compendium of Knowledge (longer version) |url = http://www.citizendium.org/essay.html | work = Citizendium.org | accessdate = 2006-10-10 }}</ref>
<blockquote>Widespread anonymity leads to a distinguishable problem, namely, the attractiveness of the project to people who merely want to cause trouble, or who want to undermine the project, or who want to change it into something that it is avowedly not – in other words, the troll problem.</blockquote>

But more importantly, allowing anonymous editing generally induces a
lack of authority, accountability, and healthy (or at least civil)
interaction:<ref>
B. Bergstein,
[http://www.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/2007-03-25-wikipedia-alternative_N.htm Citizendium aims to be better Wikipedia], ''[[USA Today]]'', Posted 3/25/2007 3:00 PM.
</ref>
<blockquote>... Wikipedia's anonymity reduces the accountability that stimulates healthy exchanges. ... "When you put everybody in a system that is flat, where everybody can say yes or no, without any sense of authority, what you get is tribalism", ... "What has gone into the article creation is very often the result of this dysfunctional system. It presents itself with this aura of authority, whereas what goes on behind the scenes is anything but."</blockquote>

On many occasions, open (anonymous) editing is the source of many problems: Pettiness, idiocy, vulgarity, lack of accuracy, abuse [[#pettiness|(complete quotation)]].<ref name="New Yorker"/>

A February 2008 article in ''[[SF Weekly]]'' details a journalist's futile attempts to track down the real identity of Wikipedia user Griot, who got involved in edit wars over the biography of [[Ralph Nader]] as well as local politicians, and was eventually banned on Wikipedia for [[WP:SOCK|sock puppeteering]]. The article draws the distinction between the press and Wikipedia:<ref name=sfweekly>Mary Spicuzza (February 13, 2008) [http://www.sfweekly.com/2008-02-13/news/wikipedia-idiots-the-edit-wars-of-san-francisco Wikipedia Idiots: The Edit Wars of San Francisco] ''SF Weekly''</ref>

<blockquote>
Say what you will about the press: There is at least a measure of accountability in a newspaper that is rarely seen on Wikipedia. It's called a byline. I mean, I'm sure I've produced some less-than-brilliant work during the dozen or so years I've been a journalist. But at least I've had the guts to sign my name — my real name — to what I write.
</blockquote>

The article also quotes Paul Grabowicz, the new-media program director for the [[University of California at Berkeley]] Graduate School of Journalism:
<blockquote>
"I guess I have the same feeling about Wikipedia and other citizen-generated sites [as I have] about the media: The more transparency the better" [...] "People should be able to find out who is producing the information."
</blockquote>

In Wikipedia itself the term "anonymous" is used in a much narrower sense than in the citations above. Namely only those editors that do not have a registered account, and use an auto-generated [[IP address|IP]]-labeled account, are called anonymous or "anons". To disambiguate the two notions on anonymity, in the remainder of this section the term ''unregistered'' is used for the narrower Wikipedia meaning.

Unregistered editors reveal their IP addresses, which can be used by admins to register complaints with Internet service providers or to put "range blocks" in place. Admins may also choose not to block because they might exclude regular contributors who share the same IP. Knowledgeable computer users and [[hacker (computing)|hackers]], though, are easily capable of finding ways around IP blocking. Many have suggested requiring users to register before editing articles, and on December 5, 2005 non-registered editors were prohibited from creating new articles on the English Wikipedia.<ref>{{Cite web|author=[[Jimmy Wales|Wales, Jimmy]]|date=2005-12-05|url=http://mail.wikipedia.org/pipermail/wikien-l/2005-December/033880.html|title=WikiEN-l Experiment on new pages|accessdate=2005-12-30}}</ref> This does not address the larger problem of anonymity however.

===Editorial process===
{{See|Academic studies about Wikipedia#Power plays}}

====Level of debate, edit wars, flame wars, and harassment====
The standard of debate on Wikipedia has been called into question by persons who have noted that contributors can make a long list of salient points and pull in a wide range of empirical observations to back up their arguments, only to have them ignored completely on the site.<ref name=cult>{{Cite news
| url = http://technology.guardian.co.uk/online/insideit/story/0,,1667345,00.html
| title = Log on and join in, but beware the web cults | last = Arthur | first = Charles
| date = 2005-12-15 | accessdate = 2006-07-14 | work=The Guardian | location=London}}</ref> An academic study of Wikipedia articles found that the level of debate among Wikipedia editors on controversial topics often degenerated into counterproductive squabbling:
<blockquote>"For uncontroversial, 'stable' topics self-selection also ensures that members of editorial groups are substantially well-aligned with each other in their interests, backgrounds, and overall understanding of the topics...For controversial topics, on the other hand, self-selection may produce a strongly misaligned editorial group. It can lead to conflicts among the editorial group members, continuous edit wars, and may require the use of formal work coordination and control mechanisms. These may include intervention by administrators who enact dispute review and mediation processes, [or] completely disallow or limit and coordinate the types and sources of edits."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://mailer.fsu.edu/~bstvilia/papers/stvilia_wikipedia_infoWork_p.pdf|format=PDF|title=Information Quality Work Organization in Wikipedia|author=Besiki Stvilla, Michael Twidale, Linda Smith, Les Gasser|publisher=Florida State University|accessdate=2007-10-05}}</ref></blockquote>

Another complaint about Wikipedia focuses on the efforts of contributors with [[idiosyncratic]] [[belief]]s, who push their point of view in an effort to dominate articles, especially controversial ones.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=55&objectid=10368068|title=Wikipedia – separating fact from fiction|work=[[The New Zealand Herald]]|date=2006-02-13|accessdate=2007-04-17|author=Martin Hickman and Genevieve Roberts|quote=Such checking leads to a daily battle of wits with the cyber-wreckers who insert erroneous, ludicrous and offensive material into entries. How frequently entries get messed about with depends on the controversy of their subjects. This week the entry [[Muslim]] is being attacked dozens of times a day following the row about cartoons of [[Mohammed]] with angry denunciations of suicide bombing and claims of hypocrisy. Prime Minister [[Tony Blair]]'s entry is a favourite for distortion with new statements casting aspersions on his integrity.}}</ref><ref name="Torsten_Kleinz">{{Cite news
|first=Torsten
|last=Kleinz
|title=World of Knowledge
|work =The Wikipedia Project
|url=http://www.linux-magazine.com/issue/51/Wikipedia_Encyclopedia.pdf
|format=PDF|work=[[Linux Magazine]]
|month=February | year=2005
|accessdate=2007-05-12
|quote=The Wikipedia's open structure makes it a target for trolls and vandals who malevolently add incorrect information to articles, get other people tied up in endless discussions, and generally do everything to draw attention to themselves.}}</ref> This sometimes results in revert wars and pages being locked down. In response, an Arbitration Committee has been formed on the English Wikipedia that deals with the worst alleged offenders—though a conflict resolution strategy is actively encouraged before going to this extent. Also, to stop the continuous reverting of pages, [[Jimmy Wales]] introduced a "three-revert rule",<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:3RR |title=Wikipedia: Three revert rule}}</ref> whereby those users who reverse the effect of others' contributions to one article more than three times in a 24-hour period may be blocked.

Another edit war reported in mainstream press happened soon after the death of [[Kenneth Lay]], the disgraced former [[CEO]] of [[Enron]], who died from a [[myocardial infarction|heart attack]]. Several editors to the encyclopedia added content to Lay's Wikipedia biography surmising that the death was in fact a [[suicide]], well in advance of any official determination of cause of death. Such edits were reverted and re-inserted several times; eventually the article reported the cause of death as a heart attack. As of July 2007, there is no evidence to suggest that Lay's death was by other than natural causes. The edit history of the article was investigated by the press, and ''[[The Washington Post]]'' published a column on the subject.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/08/AR2006070800135_pf.html/|title=Death by Wikipedia: The Kenneth Lay Chronicles|date=2006-07-09|author=Frank Ahrens | work=The Washington Post}}</ref>

Another edit war occurred in August 2009 on [[Swedish Wikipedia]], where [[Onoff]] employees removed critical content from the article about Onoff, a Swedish retail chain that sells home electronics and appliances. Erik Frankedal, press contact for Onoff, told Computer Sweden that he didn't know about this edit and didn't have the time to check it out. [[IDG]] reported about this event.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.idg.se/2.1085/1.243223/onoff-friserade-sig-sjalvt-pa-wikipedia |title=Onoff and Swedish Wikipedia |publisher=IDG.se |date= |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref>

An ''SF Weekly'' article<ref name=sfweekly/> commented on the stakes of edit wars:
<blockquote>
Many an edit war may seem like a fight over nothing to the casual observer, but considering that according to its staff, the popular, multilingual Web site gets about 7 billion views per month, stakes can be high. An edit yields what millions of people read on the site on any particular topic.
</blockquote>

A common complaint about Wikipedia concerns so-called "[[Flaming (Internet)|flame wars]]", or deliberate insults made by users to create a hostile environment.
The increasingly hostile environment in Wikipedia has led to a sharp and alarming decline in the number of Wikipedia editors,
as reported in a recent article in ''The Wall Street Journal'' on 27 Nov 2009, titled
"Volunteers Log Off as Wikipedia Ages"<ref name="angwin.fowler.wsj.2009">
J. Angwin and G.A. Fowler,
Volunteers Log Off as Wikipedia Ages,
''The Wall Street Journal'', 27 Nov 2009.
Read the article from
[http://www.resourceshelf.com/2009/11/23/wsj-volunteers-log-off-as-wikipedia-ages/ Resource Shelf].
</ref>
<blockquote>Volunteers have been departing the project that bills itself as "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit" faster than new ones have been joining, and the net losses have accelerated over the past year. In the first three months of 2009, the English-language Wikipedia suffered a net loss of more than 49,000 editors, compared to a net loss of 4,900 during the same period a year earlier. ... "Wikipedia is becoming a more hostile environment", contends Mr. Ortega, a project manager at Libresoft, a research group at the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid. "Many people are getting burnt out when they have to debate about the contents of certain articles again and again."<ref name="angwin.fowler.wsj.2009"/> </blockquote>

This concern has been acknowledged by Wikipedia; civility<ref>{{Cite web| url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:CIVIL |title= Wikipedia: Civility}}</ref> and "no personal attacks"<ref>{{Cite web| url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:NPA |title= Wikipedia: No personal attacks}}</ref> are official policies of the project, and the concept of "wikiquette" has been adopted by some users in response.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/h074pg176l3k3120/fulltext.pdf|title=''Wiki: Web Collaboration'', Chapter One: "The Wiki Concept", p. 28-29|author=Anja Ebersbach, Markus Glaser and Richard Heigl|publisher=Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006 ISBN 978-3-540-25995-4|accessdate=2007-01-28|format=PDF}}</ref>

In an article in ''[[The Brooklyn Rail]]'', Wikipedia contributor {{srlink|User:David Shankbone|David Shankbone}} contended that he had been harassed and stalked because of his work on Wikipedia, had received no support from the authorities or the [[Wikimedia Foundation]], and only mixed support from the Wikipedia community. Shankbone wrote that "If you become a target on Wikipedia, do not expect a supportive community."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.brooklynrail.org/2008/06/express/nobodys-safe-in-cyber-space|title=Nobody's safe in cyberspace|last=Shankbone|first=David|month=June | year=2008|work=[[The Brooklyn Rail]]|accessdate=2008-07-10}}</ref>

====Consensus and the "hive mind"====

[[Oliver Kamm]], in an article for ''[[The Times]]'', expressed skepticism toward Wikipedia's reliance on [[WP:CON|consensus]] in forming its content:<ref name=okw/>
<blockquote>
Wikipedia seeks not truth but consensus, and like an interminable political meeting the end result will be dominated by the loudest and most persistent voices.
</blockquote>

In his article, ''Digital Maoism: The Hazards of the New Online Collectivism'' (first published online by ''Edge: The Third Culture'', 30 May 2006), computer scientist and digital theorist [[Jaron Lanier]] describes Wikipedia as a "hive mind" that is "for the most part stupid and boring", and asks, rhetorically, "why pay attention to it?" His thesis follows:

<blockquote>
The problem is in the way the Wikipedia has come to be regarded and used; how it's been elevated to such importance so quickly. And that is part of the larger pattern of the appeal of a new online collectivism that is nothing less than a resurgence of the idea that the collective is all-wise, that it is desirable to have influence concentrated in a bottleneck that can channel the collective with the most verity and force. This is different from representative democracy, or meritocracy. This idea has had dreadful consequences when thrust upon us from the extreme Right or the extreme Left in various historical periods. The fact that it's now being re-introduced today by prominent technologists and futurists, people who in many cases I know and like, doesn't make it any less dangerous.<ref name="JaronLanier"/>
</blockquote>

Lanier goes on to point out the economic trend to reward entities that aggregate information, rather than those that actually generate content. In the absence of "new business models", the popular demand for [[information|content]] will be sated by mediocrity, thus reducing or even eliminating any monetary incentives for the production of ''new'' knowledge.<ref name="JaronLanier">{{Cite news
|first=Jaron
|last=Lanier
|title=Digital Maoism: The Hazards of the New Online Collectivism
|url=http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/lanier06/lanier06_index.html
|publisher=[[Edge Foundation, Inc.|Edge Foundation]]
|date=May 30, 2006
|accessdate=2007-04-30}}</ref>

Lanier's opinions produced some strong disagreement. Internet consultant [[Clay Shirky]] noted that Wikipedia has many internal controls in place and is not a mere mass of unintelligent collective effort:

<blockquote>Neither proponents nor detractors of hive mind rhetoric have much interesting to say about Wikipedia itself, because both groups ignore the details... Wikipedia is best viewed as an engaged community that uses a large and growing number of regulatory mechanisms to manage a huge set of proposed edits... To take the specific case of Wikipedia, the Seigenthaler/Kennedy debacle catalyzed both soul-searching and new controls to address the problems exposed, and the controls included, inter alia, a greater focus on individual responsibility, the very factor "Digital Maoism" denies is at work.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://many.corante.com/archives/2006/06/07/reactions_to_digital_maoism.php|title=Reactions to Digital Maoism|publisher=Many2Many|author=Clay Shirky|date=2006-06-07|accessdate=2007-05-01}}</ref></blockquote>

In a 2005 study, Emigh and Herring note that there are not yet many formal studies of Wikipedia or its model, and suggest that Wikipedia achieves its results by social means—[[Norm (sociology)|self-norming]], a core of active users watching for problems, and expectations of encyclopedic text drawn from the wider culture.<ref name="emigh">Emigh & Herring (2005) "Collaborative Authoring on the Web: A Genre Analysis of Online Encyclopedias", Proceedings of the Thirty-Eighth Hawai'i International Conference on System Sciences. ([http://ella.slis.indiana.edu/~herring/wiki.pdf PDF])</ref>

===Social stratification===
{{See|Academic studies about Wikipedia#Work distribution and social strata}}

An article in ''[[Computer Power User]]'' asserted that former editors of Wikipedia formed Wikitruth, a site that exposes alleged censorship and infighting on the encyclopedia.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.computerpoweruser.com/editorial/article.asp?article=articles%2Farchive%2Fc0607%2F46c07%2F46c07.asp|title=When The Wiki Hits The Fan|author=Steve Smith|month=July | year=2006|publisher=Computer Power User|accessdate=2007-10-27 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080107025121/http://www.computerpoweruser.com/editorial/article.asp?article=articles/archive/c0607/46c07/46c07.asp <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-01-07}}</ref> Jimmy Wales dismissed the site as a "hoax" created by editors who had their articles deleted or modified on Wikipedia.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.informationweek.com/hardware/personaltech/185303404|title=Wikipedia Protest Site 'A Hoax' – Founder|author=Antone Gonsalves|date=2006-04-17|publisher=InformationWeek|accessdate=2007-10-27}}</ref>

Since its creation, Wikipedia ostensibly upheld the basic principle of equal status for all good-faith editors. {{As of|2010}}, Jimmy Wales still claimed in his statement of principles for Wikipedia:<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Jimbo_Wales&oldid=370807626</ref>
<blockquote>There must be no cabal, no elite, and no hierarchy or structure to get in the way of this openness to newcomers. Any security measures to be implemented to protect the community against real vandals (and there are real vandals, who do occasionally affect us), should be implemented on the model of "strict scrutiny."</blockquote>

====Expansion of administrator authority====
On the other hand, to reduce vandalism and to control user conduct, Wikipedia created a class of volunteer [[sysop|administrators]] or "sysops" who are invested with the means and authority to discipline users.<ref name=nyt1>Hafner, Kate (June 17, 2006). "Growing Wikipedia Refines Its 'Anyone Can Edit' Policy". New York Times. [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/17/technology/17wiki.html?_r=1&scp=8&sq=wikipedia&st=cse]. Retrieved June 25, 2010.</ref> Administrator powers include deleting articles, protecting pages from editing, and blocking users; actions that ordinary (non-sysop) editors cannot do nor undo. Special rules and protocols were set up to prevent administrators from abusing their powers; such as the [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion]] (AfD) page, a forum to discuss article deletions. An administrator who wished to delete an article was required to post a notice on the article itself, and wait for comments of other editors, before carrying out the deletion. Moreover, since every sysop can undo the actions of other sysops, any reported abuse by one individual can in principle be corrected by his peers.

Nevertheless, those extra powers inevitably meant that the opinion of administrators, individually and as a whole, would prevail over that of ordinary users in certain kinds of disputes. While the principle of equality among editors was never formally revised, changes in Wikipedia policies have gradually increased the effective authority and independence of administrators. These changes intensified after 2006, when the [[Wikipedia biography controversy|Seigenthaler biography incident]] forced Wikipedia to tighten its defences against malicious edits. For instance, at some point sysops were given the authority to [[Wikipedia:Speedy deletion|speedily delete]], without prior discussion on the AfD, articles that were clearly malicious, or deemed inappropriate by any of several other criteria. In 2010, these criteria were further widened to include biographies of living persons (BLPs) which did not include adequate references, irrespective of their contents being verifiable or not. As a consequence of these enlarged powers, administrators have increasingly had to impose their opinion, ex officio, over that of ordinary users.<ref name=forte>Forte, Andrea; Larco, Vanessa; Bruckman, Amy (June 2009). "Decentralization in Wikipedia Governance". Journal of Management Information Systems 26 (1): 49–72. ISSN 0742-1222. "Despite the traditional division between technical and social powers on the site, administrators are beginning to step into more authoritative roles and are making more and more interpretive and "moral" decisions about user behavior.".</ref> At the same time, the body of Wikipedia rules and procedures kept increasing in size and complexity. This further increased the authority gap between administrators and veteran editors, who know the rules, and ordinary editors — especially novice ones.

====Complaints about administrator abuse====
Complaints about abuse of power by administrators are frequently made in Wikipedia's internal forums, including the [[Wikipedia:Talk page|discussion pages]] associated with specific articles, pages for discussions of rules and procedures, the message boards of individual users, as well as general bulletin boards. Many of those complaints appear to be due to ignorance or misunderstanding of Wikipedia's rules. Only a small fraction of those allegations have been formally submitted to Wikipedia's disciplinary committees. Allegations have also been made in those internal forums that administrator abuse has been steadily increasing in frequency and severity, and that it is one major reason for [[Wikipedia:Modelling Wikipedia's growth|decline in editor numbers since 2006]]--a striking reversal from its exponential growth from 2001 to 2005.<ref name="parc">Bongwon Suh, Gregorio Convertino, Ed H. Chi, Peter Pirolli (2009), "[http://www-users.cs.umn.edu/~echi/papers/2009-WikiSym/wikipedia-slow-growth-ASC-PARC.pdf The Singularity is Not Near: Slowing Growth of Wikipedia]". Proc. WikiSym’09.</ref>

In the context of these complaints, the term "administrator" is often used to also encompass editors who are not formally administrators, but who engage in administrative activities like tagging and categorizing articles, running [[Wikipedia:Robot|robots]], writing and enforcing rules, and proposing user bans and article deletions, or who are mistaken by other editors as administrators on the basis of their previous actions or arguments.

Allegations of administrator abuse have recently{{When?|date=September 2010}} started to circulate outside Wikipedia in blogs, online technical forums, and in mainstream media. "Some disillusioned former Wikipedians gripe about such bureaucratic heavy-handedness and/or the rabidity of some of the site's devotees, grumbling about 'Swastikipedia.'"<ref>Millard, Mike (February 20, 2008). "Wikipediots: Who are these devoted, even obsessive contributors to Wikipedia?". Salt Lake City Weekly. http://www.cityweekly.net/utah/article-5129-feature-wikipediots-who-are-these-devoted-even-obsessive-contributors-to-wikipedia.html. Retrieved June 25, 2010.</ref> It has also been noted that, despite the perception of Wikipedia as a "shining example of Web democracy" that "a small number of people are running the show."<ref name="wilson">Wilson, Chris (February 22, 2008). [http://www.slate.com/id/2184487/pagenum/all/#p2 "The Wisdom of the Chaperones: Digg, Wikipedia, and the myth of Web 2.0 democracy."] ''Slate''. Retrieved June 25, 2010.</ref> Despite the need for some form of control in an open system, this "doesn't explain the kind of territorialism—the authorial domination by 1 percent of contributors—on the site's pages."<ref name="wilson"/> In an article on Wikipedia conflicts, ''[[The Guardian]]'' noted complaints that administrators sometimes use their special powers to suppress legitimate editors.<ref name=admin /> The article discussed "a backlash among some editors, who argue that blocking users compromises the supposedly open nature of the project, and the imbalance of power between users and administrators may even be a reason some users choose to vandalise in the first place."<ref name=admin>{{Cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2007/mar/25/wikipedia.web20|title=Wiki wars|author=Jenny Kleeman|date=2007-03-25|accessdate=2007-10-04|work=The Guardian | location=London}}</ref>
<blockquote>
'My vandalism started after an edit conflict over the Courier-Journal's sports and editorial coverage, where my – what I felt were – legitimate edits on the page for C-J criticism were removed and I was blasted,' he says. 'I have being vandalising Wikipedia and its user pages for months, mostly because seeing my vandalism or that of others was funny as hell... and to punish admins.'
</blockquote>

====Perception of administrators as a closed community====

Among the allegations of administrator abuse, one often finds claims that the administrators have become a clique whose goals or viewpoints set them apart from ordinary users. An article on ''The Register'', dated 4 December 2007 and entitled "Secret mailing list rocks Wikipedia", alleged the use of a private mailing list to coordinate administrative actions.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/12/04/wikipedia_secret_mailing/|title=Secret mailing list rocks Wikipedia|author=Cade Metz|date=2007-12-04|accessdate=2007-12-04|work=The Register}}</ref> A follow-up article on 8 December 2007 specifically alleged that administrators were collaborating with critics of [[Overstock.com]] to "own" articles about the company.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/12/06/wikipedia_and_overstock/|title=Wikipedia black helicopters circle Utah's Traverse Mountain |date=2007-12-08|accessdate=2008-05-02|work=The Register}}</ref>

====Consistency of complaints====
The existence and significance of widespread administrator abuse is highly disputed within Wikipedia. A common rebuttal to such allegations is that a raising of editorial standards became necessary to improve the quality of Wikipedia articles. In particular, the higher rates of article deletions observed since 2006<ref name="parc"/> are claimed to be necessary to meet new guidelines on allowed article topics, such as a set of "notability" requirements. The same argument is used to justify the insertion of tags in articles that warn readers against perceived flaws and/or request that other editors perform certain editorial actions.

There have been no systematic surveys of the opinions of ordinary editors about sysop behavior, or about Wikipedia governance in general. A limited enquiry was made in 2009 among former Wikipedia editors, with the goal of finding out the reasons why they had left.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} [[Wikipedia:Newbie treatment at Criteria for speedy deletion|Another experiment]] was conducted in 2009, with the goal of determining whether Wikipedia had indeed become hostile to new editors. In this experiment, several experienced editors pretended to be inexperienced new users, deliberately created poor-quality articles, and followed their fate over the following weeks.

====Pareto effect====
Known phenomena such as the [[Pareto principle]] and the [[1% rule (Internet culture)|1% rule]] affect the Wikipedia community. Wikipedia's own statistics show that only a small number of users account for a large number of the edits made.<ref>{{srlink|Wikipedia:List of Wikipedians by number of edits}}</ref> The alleged results of this is that Wikipedia, as viewed, is not truly a global community work but rather the work of an anonymous minority whose material is overrepresented. (Note that this is different from the complaints regarding administrators because the users in question are not required to be administrators, just to edit a lot.) In 2006, Jimmy Wales himself observed that the majority of Wikipedia edits are made by a group of around 500 people who "all know each other".<ref name="whowriteswikipedia">[http://www.aaronsw.com/weblog/whowriteswikipedia Who Writes Wikipedia? (Aaron Swartz's Raw Thought)]</ref> However, when amount of text was used as a metric instead of edit count, the result was often the opposite. Most of the top contributors to the content of articles tended to be not big-time editors, but rather people who only edited Wikipedia occasionally - many of whom had not even bothered to register a Wikipedia account. <ref name="whowriteswikipedia"/>

==Plagiarism concerns==
The Wikipedia Watch criticism website in 2006 has listed dozens of examples of [[plagiarism]] by Wikipedia editors on the English version.<ref name="wwplagiarism">{{Cite web|title=Plagiarism by Wikipedia editors|url=http://www.wikipedia-watch.org/psamples.html|publisher=Wikipedia Watch|date=27 October 2006}}</ref> [[Jimmy Wales]], the Wikipedia co-founder,<ref name="GlynMoody" /> has said in this respect: "We need to deal with such activities with absolute harshness, no mercy, because this kind of plagiarism is 100% at odds with all of our core principles."<ref name="wwplagiarism"/>

== Impact on society ==
Some observers claim that Wikipedia is undesirable, because it is an economic threat to publishers of traditional encyclopedias, many of whom may be unable to compete with a product that is essentially free. [[Nicholas Carr]] writes in the essay "The amorality of Web 2.0", speaking of the so-called [[Web 2.0]] as a whole: "Implicit in the ecstatic visions of Web 2.0 is the hegemony of the amateur. I for one can't imagine anything more frightening."<ref>{{Cite web| title = The amorality of Web 2.0
| url = http://www.roughtype.com/archives/2005/10/the_amorality_o.php | date = 2005-10-03
| work = Rough Type | accessdate = 2006-07-15 }}</ref> Others dispute the notion that Wikipedia, or similar efforts, will entirely displace traditional publications. For instance, [[Chris Anderson (writer)|Chris Anderson]], the editor-in-chief of ''[[Wired Magazine]]'', wrote in ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' that the "[[wisdom of the crowds]]" approach of Wikipedia will not displace top [[scientific journal]]s with their rigorous [[peer review]] process.<ref>{{Cite web| title = Technical solutions: Wisdom of the crowds | url = http://www.nature.com/nature/peerreview/debate/nature04992.html | work = Nature | accessdate = 2006-10-10 }}</ref>

==Satire of Wikipedia==
Wikipedia has been satirized by humorists who call attention to factual inaccuracies that may appear in articles owing to sloppy or biased editors or vandalism. For example, an article in ''[[The Onion]]'' was entitled ''"Wikipedia Celebrates 750 Years Of American Independence."''<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theonion.com/content/node/50902 |title=Wikipedia Celebrates 750 Years Of American Independence |publisher=Theonion.com |date= |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref> In a piece on ''[[The Colbert Report]]'', entitled "[[Wikiality]]" (a [[portmanteau]] of "wiki" and "reality"), [[Stephen Colbert (character)|Stephen Colbert]] encouraged his viewers to change Wikipedia's article on [[elephant]]s to state that the number of [[African elephant]]s had tripled over the past six months.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Colbert speaks, America follows: All Hail Wikiality!|publisher=c-net news.com|url=http://news.com.com/2061-10802_3-6100754.html|author=Caroline McCarthy|date=2006-08-01}}</ref> Colbert's comments provoked a wave of vandalism of various articles at Wikipedia.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Wikipedia satire leads to vandalism, protections|publisher=Wikipedia Signpost|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2006-08-07/Wikiality|date=2006-08-07}}</ref> On the January 29, 2007 edition of his program, Colbert did another segment on an attempt by [[Microsoft]]<ref name=mscbs/><ref name=msidg1/><ref name=msidg2/> to hire writers to skew certain Wikipedia articles in their favor, ending with a call by Colbert to change the Wikipedia article on "[[truth]]" to the phrase "Truth has become a [[commodity]]" and offering a $5 cash reward to the first viewer to do so. The most recent satire of Wikipedia occurred on January 5, 2011 on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart on Comedy Central. During an interview with Wikipedia "volunteer" Jimmy Wales, Stewart claimed he was in fact, Batman; Wales responded with laughter and suggested that Wikipedia administrators would correct and lock Stewart's page. Quickly, the online community responded, editing Stewart's page to represent his claim to be Batman. Wikipedia administrators responded by correcting the changes and locking Stewart's page. Stewart joins the group of Comedy Central personalities including Daniel Tosh and Stephen Colbert, who have called for specific humorous Wikipedia edits.

In the ''[[American Dad!]]'' episode "[[Black Mystery Month]]" the character [[Steve Smith (American Dad!)|Steve Smith]], seeking the "one place where a person can put out crazy information with no evidence that millions will accept as true," turns to Wikipedia.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Fox Broadcasting Company recaps: American Dad – Episode 13: Black Mystery Month|url=http://www.fox.com/americandad/recaps/index.htm|date= 2007-02-18 |accessdate=March 8, 2007 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070301000725/http://www.fox.com/americandad/recaps/index.htm |archivedate = March 1, 2007}}</ref>

An article in ''[[The Sun (United Kingdom)|The Sun]]'' derided Wikipedia for including a "List of big-bust models and performers". Quoting an unnamed "company source", the article concluded: "It's every computer geek's dream come true – definitely one of Wikipedia's breast, I mean best, assets".<ref>Katie Cheeseman (12 December 2007) [http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article574234.ece "Wikipedia's bust idea ever"] ''[[The Sun (United Kingdom)|The Sun]]''</ref>

In a [[GamesRadar]] editorial, columnist Charlie Barrat juxtaposed Wikipedia's coverage of [[video game]]-related topics with topics that have greater real-world significance, such as God, World War II and former U.S. presidents. The voluminous material that in many cases exists regarding the former when compared with the latter is the subject of his criticism and satire.<ref>{{Cite web| url=http://www.gamesradar.com/pc/f/the-wtf-world-of-wikipedia/a-2008062510326553058 | title=The WTF World of Wikipedia | accessdate=February 20, 2009 | author=Charlie Barratt | date=June 25, 2008 | publisher=[[Future Publishing]] | pages=1–5}}</ref>

Satire also exists in the form of parody encyclopedias such as [[Encyclopedia Dramatica]]<ref name=internet>{{Cite news|url = http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/01/magazine/01WIKIPEDIA-t.html|title = Wikipedia |author = Jonathan Dee |work = New York Times Magazine |date = 2007-07-01 |accessdate = 2007-11-19}}</ref> and [[Uncyclopedia]].<ref name=Uncyclopedia>{{Cite web|url=http://usinfo.state.gov/usinfo/USINFO/Products/Webchats/wales_19_may_2006.html|title=Freedom of Speech through Wikipedia|date=2006-05-19|accessdate=2007-10-04|publisher=U.S. Department of State}}</ref>

==See also==
*[[Deletionism and inclusionism in Wikipedia]]
*[[History of Wikipedia]]
*[[Reliability of Wikipedia]]
*[[User-generated content]]
*{{srlink|Wikipedia:Press coverage}}
*{{srlink|Wikipedia:Why Wikipedia is not so great}}
*{{srlink|Wikipedia:Criticisms}}
*{{srlink|Wikipedia:Replies to common objections}}
*[[Wikipedia Review]] and [[Wikitruth]], two web sites about Wikipedia frequently critical of it and its leadership.

==Further reading==
*[[Andrew Keen]]. ''The Cult of the Amateur''. Doubleday/Currency, 2007. ISBN 978-0-385-52080-5 (substantial criticisms of Wikipedia and other web 2.0 projects). Listen to:<ref>{{Cite web|last=Keen |first=Andrew |url=http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=11131872 |title=Does the Internet Undermine Culture? |publisher=Npr.org |date=2007-06-16 |accessdate=2010-03-31}}</ref> the NPR interview with A. Keen, Weekend Edition Saturday, June 16, 2007.
*[[Sheizaf Rafaeli]] & Yaron Ariel (2008). Online motivational factors: Incentives for participation and contribution in Wikipedia. In A. Barak (Ed.), Psychological aspects of cyberspace: Theory, research, applications (pp.&nbsp;243–267). Cambridge, UK:[[Cambridge University Press]].<ref>[http://cyberpsych.yeda.info/ Yeda.info]</ref>

==References==
{{Selfref|This article incorporates text from the [[GNU Free Documentation License|GFDL]] [[Wikipedia]] page [[Wikipedia:Replies to common objections]].}}
{{Reflist|2}}

{{Wikipediahistory}}

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[[Category:Criticisms of companies|Wikipedia]]
[[Category:Criticisms of software and websites|Wikipedia]]

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[[fa:نقد ویکی‌پدیا]]
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Revision as of 21:58, 25 June 2011

The major points of criticism of Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia, are the claims that the principle of being open for editing by everyone makes Wikipedia unauthoritative and unreliable (see Reliability of Wikipedia), that it exhibits systemic bias, and that its group dynamics hinder its goals.

The Seigenthaler and Essjay incidents caused criticism of Wikipedia's reliability and usefulness as a reference;[1][2] Wikipedia has also been the subject of parody and other humorous criticism.[3][4]

Criticism of the content

Robert McHenry, a former editor-in-chief of the Encyclopædia Britannica, said that Wikipedia errs in billing itself as an encyclopedia, because that word implies a level of authority and accountability that he believes cannot be possessed by an openly editable reference. McHenry argues that "the typical user doesn't know how conventional encyclopedias achieve reliability, only that they do."[5] Andrew Orlowski expressed similar criticisms, writing that the use of the term "encyclopedia" to describe Wikipedia may lead users into believing it is more reliable than it may be.[6]

Journalist and Wikipedia critic Andrew Orlowski.

Academics have also criticized Wikipedia for its perceived failure as a reliable source, and because Wikipedia editors may not have degrees or other credentials generally recognized in academia.[7][8] For that reason, the use of Wikipedia is not accepted in many schools and universities in writing a formal paper, and some educational institutions have banned it as a primary source while others have limited its use to only a pointer to external sources.[7][9][10] This criticism, however, does not only apply to Wikipedia but to encyclopedias in general – some university lecturers are not impressed when students cite print-based encyclopedias in assigned work.[11]

Some academic journals do refer to Wikipedia articles, but are not elevating it to the same level as traditional references. For instance, Wikipedia articles have been referenced in "enhanced perspectives" provided on-line in the journal Science. The first of these perspectives to provide a hyperlink to Wikipedia was "A White Collar Protein Senses Blue Light,"[12] and dozens of enhanced perspectives have provided such links since then. The publisher of Science states that these enhanced perspectives "include hypernotes – which link directly to websites of other relevant information available online – beyond the standard bibliographic references."[13]

Wikipedia's policies state that assertions should be supported by reliable, published sources—ideally, by peer reviewed publications.[14] Jimmy Wales, the de facto leader of Wikipedia,[15] stresses that encyclopedias of any type are not usually appropriate as primary sources, and should not be relied upon as authoritative.[16]

Accuracy of information

Lack of authority

Wikipedia acknowledges that it should not be used as a primary source for research.[17] Librarian Philip Bradley stated in an October 2004 interview with The Guardian that "the main problem is the lack of authority. With printed publications, the publishers have to ensure that their data is reliable, as their livelihood depends on it. But with something like this, all that goes out the window."[18] Robert McHenry similarly noted that readers of Wikipedia cannot know who has written the article they are reading – it may or may not have been written by an expert.[10]

Due to lack of intrinsic authority, Wikipedia has been also criticized by Geoffrey Nunberg for relying too much on citing sources even though the said sources may not be more accurate than Wikipedia itself.[19][20]

Comparative study on scientific articles conducted by Nature

In December 2005 the journal Nature conducted a single-blind study comparing the accuracy of a sample of articles from Wikipedia and Encyclopædia Britannica. The sample included 42 articles on scientific topics, including biographies of well-known scientists. The articles were compared for accuracy by academic reviewers who remained anonymous − a customary practice for journal article reviews. Based on their review, the average Wikipedia article contained 4 errors or omissions; the average Britannica article, 3. The study concluded: "Wikipedia comes close to Britannica in terms of the accuracy of its science entries".[21]

Encyclopædia Britannica's initial concerns led to Nature releasing further documentation of its survey method.[22] Based on this additional information, Encyclopædia Britannica denied the validity of the Nature study, stating that it was "fatally flawed" as the Britannica extracts were compilations that sometimes included articles written for the youth version.[23] Nature acknowledged the compiled nature of some of the Britannica extracts, but denied that this invalidated the conclusions of the study.[24] Encyclopædia Britannica also argued that while the Nature study showed that the error rate between the two encyclopedias was similar, a breakdown of the errors indicated that the mistakes in Wikipedia were more often the inclusion of incorrect facts, while the mistakes in Britannica were "errors of omission", making "Britannica far more accurate than Wikipedia, according to the figures".[23]

Nature has since rejected the Britannica response[25] and published a point-by-point response to Britannica's specific objections about alleged errors.[26]

Lack of fact-checking on specialized topics

Inaccurate information that is not obviously false may persist in Wikipedia for a long time before it is challenged. The most prominent cases reported by mainstream media involved biographies of living people.

American journalist John Seigenthaler, object of the Seigenthaler incident.

The Seigenthaler incident demonstrated that the subject of a biographical article must sometimes fix blatant lies about his own life. In May 2005, an anonymous user edited the biographical article on American journalist and writer John Seigenthaler so that it contained several false and defamatory statements.[1][27] The inaccurate claims went unnoticed between May and September 2005 when they were discovered by Victor S. Johnson, Jr., a friend of Seigenthaler. Wikipedia content is often mirrored at sites such as Answers.com, which means that incorrect information can be replicated alongside correct information through a number of web sources. Such information can develop a misleading authority because of its presence at such sites.[28]

In another example, on March 2, 2007, msnbc.com reported that then-New York Senator (currently Secretary of State) Hillary Rodham Clinton had been incorrectly listed for 20 months in her Wikipedia biography as valedictorian of her class of 1969 at Wellesley College. (Hillary Rodham, the former Senator's maiden name, was not the valedictorian, though she did speak at commencement.)[29] The article included a link to the Wikipedia edit,[30] where the incorrect information was added on July 9, 2005. After the msnbc.com report, the inaccurate information was removed the same day.[31]

Attempts to perpetrate hoaxes may not be confined to editing existing Wikipedia articles, but can also include creating new articles. In October 2005 Alan Mcilwraith, a former call center worker from Scotland created a Wikipedia article in which he claimed to be a highly decorated war hero. The article was, however, quickly identified as a hoax by other users and deleted.[32][33]

There have also been instances of users deliberately inserting false information into Wikipedia in order to test the system and demonstrate its alleged unreliability. Gene Weingarten, a journalist, ran such a test in 2007; however it was not conclusive as the false information was removed the next day by a Wikipedia editor.[34] Wikipedia considers the deliberate insertion of false and misleading information to be vandalism.[35]

Neutral point of view and conflicts of interest

Wikipedia regards the concept of neutral point of view (NPOV) as one of its non-negotiable principles. However it acknowledges that such a concept has its limitations – its policy indeed states that articles should be "as far as possible" written without bias.[36] Mark Glaser, a journalist, also wrote that this may be an impossible ideal due to the inevitable biases of editors.[37]

Scientific disputes

The 2005 Nature[21] study also gave two brief examples of challenges that Wikipedian science writers purportedly faced on Wikipedia. The first concerned the addition of a section on violence to the schizophrenia article, which exhibited the view of one of the article's regular editors, neuropsychologist Vaughan Bell, that it was little more than a "rant" about the need to lock people up, and that editing it stimulated him to look up the literature on the topic.

The second dispute reported by Nature involved the climate researcher William Connolley, who was opposed by anonymous editors (Nature considered anonymous editors that did not use their real names[citation needed]). The topic in this second dispute was climate change; Nature reported that this dispute was far more protracted, and led to arbitration, which took three months to produce a decision. The outcome of arbitration, as reported by Nature, was a six-month parole for Connolley − during this time he was restricted to one revert per day. Connolley's opponents were reportedly banned from editing climate articles also for six months.[citation needed]

Exposure to political operatives and advocates

While Wikipedia policy requires articles to have a neutral point of view, it is not immune from attempts by outsiders (or insiders) with an agenda to place a spin on articles. In January 2006 it was revealed that several staffers of members of the U.S. House of Representatives had embarked on a campaign to cleanse their respective bosses' biographies on Wikipedia, as well as inserting negative remarks on political opponents. References to a campaign promise by Martin Meehan to surrender his seat in 2000 were deleted, and negative comments were inserted into the articles on U.S. Senator Bill Frist and Eric Cantor, a congressman from Virginia. Numerous other changes were made from an IP address which is assigned to the House of Representatives.[38] In an interview, Wikipedia de facto leader Jimmy Wales[15] remarked that the changes were "not cool."[39] Some organizations[who?] are making efforts to correct inaccuracies.

Larry Delay and Pablo Bachelet write that from their perspective, some articles dealing with Latin American history and groups (such as the Sandinistas and Cuba) lack political neutrality and are written from a sympathetic Marxist perspective which treats socialist dictatorships favorably at the expense of alternate positions.[40][41][42]

In April 2008, the Boston-based Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) organized an e-mail campaign to encourage readers to correct perceived Israel-related biases and inconsistencies in Wikipedia.[43] Excerpts of some of the e-mails were published in the July 2008 issue of Harper's Magazine under the title of "Candid camera".[44] CAMERA argued the excerpts were unrepresentative and that it had explicitly campaigned merely "toward encouraging people to learn about and edit the online encyclopedia for accuracy".[45] According to some defenders of CAMERA serious misrepresentations of CAMERA's role emanated from the competing Electronic Intifada group; moreover, it is said, some other Palestinian advocacy groups have been guilty of systematic misrepresentations and manipulative behaviors but have not suffered bans of editors amongst their staff or volunteers.[46] Five editors involved in the campaign were sanctioned by Wikipedia administrators.[47] Israeli diplomat David Saranga said that Wikipedia is generally fair in regard to Israel. When confronted with the fact that the entry on Israel mentioned the word "occupation" nine times, whereas the entry on the Palestinian People mentioned "terror" only once, he replied

"It means only one thing: Israelis should be more active on Wikipedia. Instead of blaming it, they should go on the site much more, and try and change it."[48]

Political commentator Haviv Rettig Gur, reviewing widespread perceptions in Israel of systemic bias in Wikipedia articles, has argued that there are deeper structural problems creating this bias: anonymous editing favors biased results, especially if the editors organize concerted campaigns of defamation as has been done in articles dealing with Arab-Israeli issues, and current Wikipedia policies, while well-meant, have proven ineffective in handling this.[49]

On August 31, 2008, The New York Times ran an article detailing the edits made to the biography of Alaska governor Sarah Palin in the wake of her nomination as running mate of Arizona Senator John McCain. During the 24 hours before the McCain campaign announcement, 30 edits, many of them flattering details, were made to the article by Wikipedia single-purpose user identity Young Trigg.[50] This person has later acknowledged working on the McCain campaign, and having several Wikipedia user accounts.[51]

In November 2007, libelous accusations were made against two politicians from southwestern France, Jean-Pierre Grand and Hélène Mandroux-Colas, on their Wikipedia biographies. Jean-Pierre Grand asked the president of the French National Assembly and the Prime Minister of France to reinforce the legislation on the penal responsibility of Internet sites and of authors who peddle false informations in order to cause harm.[52] Senator Jean Louis Masson then requested the Minister of Justice to tell him whether it would be possible to increase the criminal responsibilities of hosting providers, site operators, and authors of libelous content; the minister declined to do so, recalling the existing rules in the LCEN law.[53]

On August 25, 2010, the Toronto Star reported that the Canadian "government is now conducting two investigations into federal employees who have taken to Wikipedia to express their opinion on federal policies and bitter political debates."[54]

In 2010, Al Jazeera's Teymoor Nabili suggested that the article Cyrus Cylinder had been edited for political purposes by "an apparent tussle of opinions in the shadowy world of hard drives and 'independent' editors that comprise the Wikipedia industry." He suggested that after the Iranian presidential election, 2009 and the ensuing "anti-Iranian activities" a "strenuous attempt to portray the cylinder as nothing more than the propaganda tool of an aggressive invader" was visible. The edits following his analysis of the edits during 2009 and 2010, represented "a complete dismissal of the suggestion that the cylinder, or Cyrus' actions, represent concern for human rights or any kind of enlightened intent," in stark contrast to Cyrus' own reputation as documented in the Old Testament and the people of Babylon.[55]

Commandeering or sanitizing articles

Articles of particular interest to an editor or group of editors are sometimes commandeered[56] and sanitized[57][58] to continually reflect a point of view that sheds a favorable light on the subject or group. Editors essentially "squat" on pages, watching for negative entries, then immediately revert them. This is especially true of pages on politicians as shown on USA Congressional staff edits to Wikipedia. Sanitized pages range from the Tanaka Memorial being sometimes protected by sympathetic Chinese, to the page on The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a group that regularly sanitizes "its" page. The page on Scientology has also been subject to being commandeered and put under the Wikipedia:Protection policy. These habits of commandeering, sanitizing and squatting discourage informed experts from spending the time and attention to make well-footnoted entries for fear that accurate and time-consuming work will be quickly deleted.

Editing for financial rewards

In January 2007 Rick Jelliffe claimed in a story carried by CBS[59] and IDG News Service [60][61] that Microsoft had offered him compensation in exchange for his future editorial services on Wikipedia's articles related to OOXML (Office Open Extensible Markup Language). A Microsoft spokesperson, quoted by CBS, commented that "Microsoft and the writer, Rick Jelliffe, had not determined a price and no money had changed hands – but they had agreed that the company would not be allowed to review his writing before submission". Also quoted by CBS, Jimmy Wales expressed his disapproval of Microsoft's involvement: "We were very disappointed to hear that Microsoft was taking that approach".

In a story covered by the BBC, former Novell chief scientist Jeffrey Merkey claimed that in exchange for a donation his Wikipedia entry was edited in his favor. Jay Walsh, a spokesman for Wikipedia, flatly denied the allegations in an interview given to The Daily Telegraph.[62]

WikiScanner systematically exposes biased editors

In August 2007, a tool called WikiScanner developed by Virgil Griffith, a visiting researcher from the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico, was released to match anonymous IP edits in the encyclopedia with an extensive database of addresses.[63]

News stories appeared about IP addresses from various organizations such as the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Republican Congressional Committee, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Diebold, Inc. and the Australian government being used to make edits to Wikipedia articles, sometimes of an opinionated or questionable nature. Another story stated that an IP address from the BBC itself had been used to vandalize the article on George W. Bush.[64]

The BBC quoted a Wikipedia spokesperson as praising the tool: "We really value transparency and the scanner really takes this to another level. Wikipedia Scanner may prevent an organisation or individuals from editing articles that they're really not supposed to."[65] Not everyone hailed WikiScanner as a success for Wikipedia. Oliver Kamm, in a column for The Times, argued instead that:[66]

The WikiScanner is thus an important development in bringing down a pernicious influence on our intellectual life. Critics of the web decry the medium as the cult of the amateur. Wikipedia is worse than that; it is the province of the covert lobby. The most constructive course is to stand on the sidelines and jeer at its pretensions.

WikiScanner only reveals conflicts of interest when the editor does not have a Wikipedia account and their IP address is used instead. Conflict of interest editing done by editors with accounts is not detected, since those edits are anonymous to everyone – except for a handful of privileged Wikipedia admins.[67]

Conflicts involving policy makers

In February 2008, British technology news and opinion website The Register published an article called "Wikipedia ruled by 'Lord of the Universe'" about a prominent Wikipedia administrator, Jossi Fresco. It reported that Fresco declared a conflict of interest related to Prem Rawat, then made "biased" edits to the Prem Rawat article to minimize criticism, and altered the Wikipedia policies over personal biography and "conflict of interest", to favour them. The article pointed out that Fresco was also involved in Wikipedia's "Conflict of Interest Noticeboard", the situation which the Register article described as "a conflict of conflict of interest". The article ended with the claim:[68] "Jossi Fresco may bear the most extreme conflict of interest in the history of Wikipedia – and he edits the policy that governs conflict of interest." Fresco subsequently ceased participation in Wikipedia.

Some of the most scathing criticism of Wikipedia's claimed neutrality came in The Register, which in turn was allegedly criticized by founding members of the project. According to The Register:[69]

In short, Wikipedia is a cult. Or at least, the inner circle is a cult. We aren't the first to make this observation.[70]

On the inside, they reinforce each other's beliefs. And if anyone on the outside questions those beliefs, they circle the wagons. They deny the facts. They attack the attacker. After our Jossi Fresco story, Fresco didn't refute our reporting. He simply accused us of "yellow journalism". After our Overstock.com article, Wales called us "trash".

Quality of the presentation

Quality of writing

Roy Rosenzweig, in a June 2006 essay that combined both praise and criticism of Wikipedia, had several criticisms of its prose and its failure to distinguish the genuinely important from the merely sensational. He said that Wikipedia is "surprisingly accurate in reporting names, dates, and events in U.S. history" (Rosenzweig's own field of study) and that most of the few factual errors that he found "were small and inconsequential" and that some of them "simply repeat widely held but inaccurate beliefs", which are also repeated in Encarta and the Britannica. However, he made one major criticism.

Good historical writing requires not just factual accuracy but also a command of the scholarly literature, persuasive analysis and interpretations, and clear and engaging prose. By those measures, American National Biography Online easily outdistances Wikipedia.[71]

Contrasting Wikipedia's treatment of Abraham Lincoln to that of Civil War historian James McPherson in American National Biography Online, he said that both were essentially accurate and covered the major episodes in Lincoln's life, but praised "McPherson's richer contextualization… his artful use of quotations to capture Lincoln's voice … and … his ability to convey a profound message in a handful of words." By contrast, he gives an example of Wikipedia's prose that he finds "both verbose and dull." Rosenzweig made a further criticism, contrasting "the skill and confident judgment of a seasoned historian" displayed by McPherson and others to the "antiquarianism" of Wikipedia (which he compares in this respect to American Heritage magazine), and said that while Wikipedia often provides extensive references, they are not the best ones.[71]

Rosenzweig also criticized the "waffling—encouraged by the npov policy—[which] means that it is hard to discern any overall interpretive stance in Wikipedia history." By example, he quoted the conclusion of Wikipedia's article on William Clarke Quantrill. While generally praising the article, he pointed out its "waffling" conclusion: "Some historians…remember him as an opportunistic, bloodthirsty outlaw, while others continue to view him as a daring soldier and local folk hero."[71]

Other critics have made similar charges that, even if Wikipedia articles are factually accurate, they are often written in a poor, almost unreadable style. Frequent Wikipedia critic Andrew Orlowski commented: "Even when a Wikipedia entry is 100 per cent factually correct, and those facts have been carefully chosen, it all too often reads as if it has been translated from one language to another then into to a third, passing an illiterate translator at each stage."[72] A study of cancer articles by Yaacov Lawrence of the Kimmel Cancer Center at Thomas Jefferson University found that the entries were mostly accurate, but they were written at college reading level, as opposed to the ninth grade level seen in the Physician Data Query. He said that "Wikipedia's lack of readability may reflect its varied origins and haphazard editing."[73] The Economist noted that the quality of writing of Wikipedia articles can be a guide to the reader: "inelegant or ranting prose usually reflects muddled thoughts and incomplete information."[74]

The Wall Street Journal debate

In the September 12, 2006 edition of The Wall Street Journal, Jimmy Wales debated with Dale Hoiberg, editor-in-chief of Encyclopædia Britannica.[75] Hoiberg focused on a need for expertise and control in an encyclopedia and cited Lewis Mumford that overwhelming information could "bring about a state of intellectual enervation and depletion hardly to be distinguished from massive ignorance."

Wales emphasized Wikipedia's differences, and asserted that openness and transparency lead to quality. Hoiberg claimed that he "had neither the time nor space to respond to [criticisms]" and "could corral any number of links to articles alleging errors in Wikipedia", to which Wales responded: "No problem! Wikipedia to the rescue with a fine article", and included a link to the Wikipedia article Criticism of Wikipedia.[75]

Systemic bias in coverage

Wikipedia has been accused of systemic bias, which is to say its general nature leads, without necessarily any conscious intention, to the propagation of various prejudices. Although many articles in newspapers have concentrated on minor, indeed trivial, factual errors in Wikipedia articles, there are also concerns about large scale, presumably unintentional effects from the increasing influence and use of Wikipedia as a research tool at all levels. In an article in the Times Higher Education magazine (London) philosopher Martin Cohen frames Wikipedia of having "become a monopoly" with "all the prejudices and ignorance of its creators", which he describes as a "youthful cab-drivers" perspective.[76] Cohen's argument, however, finds a grave conclusion in these circumstances: "To control the reference sources that people use is to control the way people comprehend the world. Wikipedia may have a benign, even trivial face, but underneath may lie a more sinister and subtle threat to freedom of thought."[76] That freedom is undermined by what he sees as what matters on Wikipedia, "not your sources but the 'support of the community'."[76]

Critics also point to the tendency to cover topics in a detail disproportionate to their importance. For example, Stephen Colbert once mockingly praised Wikipedia for having a "longer entry on 'lightsabers' than it does on the 'printing press'."[77] In an interview with The Guardian, Dale Hoiberg, the editor-in-chief of Encyclopædia Britannica, noted:[18]

People write of things they're interested in, and so many subjects don't get covered; and news events get covered in great detail. In the past, the entry on Hurricane Frances was more than five times the length of that on Chinese art, and the entry on Coronation Street was twice as long as the article on Tony Blair.

This critical approach has been satirised "Wikigroaning", a term coined by Jon Hendren[78] of the website Something Awful.[79] In the game, two articles (preferably with similar names) are compared: one about an acknowledged serious or classical subject and the other about a topic popular or current.[80] Defenders of a broad inclusion criteria have held that the encyclopedia's coverage of pop culture does not impose space constraints on the coverage of more serious subjects (see "Wiki is not paper"). As Ivor Tossell noted:

That Wikipedia is chock full of useless arcana (and did you know, by the way, that the article on "Debate" is shorter than the piece that weighs the relative merits of the 1978 and 2003 versions of Battlestar Galactica?) isn't a knock against it: Since it can grow infinitely, the silly articles aren't depriving the serious ones of space.[81]

Notability of article topics

Wikipedia's notability guidelines, and the application thereof, are the subject of much criticism.[82] Nicholson Baker considers the notability standards arbitrary and essentially unsolvable:[83]

There are quires, reams, bales of controversy over what constitutes notability in Wikipedia: nobody will ever sort it out.

Criticizing the "deletionists", Nicholson Baker then writes:[82]

Still, a lot of good work—verifiable, informative, brain-leapingly strange—is being cast out of this paperless, infinitely expandable accordion folder by people who have a narrow, almost grade-schoolish notion of what sort of curiosity an on-line encyclopedia will be able to satisfy in the years to come. [...] It's harder to improve something that's already written, or to write something altogether new, especially now that so many of the World Book–sanctioned encyclopedic fruits are long plucked. There are some people on Wikipedia now who are just bullies, who take pleasure in wrecking and mocking peoples' work—even to the point of laughing at nonstandard "Engrish." They poke articles full of warnings and citation-needed notes and deletion prods till the topics go away.

Yet another criticism[84] about the deletionists is this: "The increasing difficulty of making a successful edit; the exclusion of casual users; slower growth – all are hallmarks of the deletionists approach."

Complaining that his own biography was on the verge of deletion for lack of notability, Timothy Noah argued that:[85]

Wikipedia's notability policy resembles U.S. immigration policy before 9/11: stringent rules, spotty enforcement. To be notable, a Wikipedia topic must be "the subject of multiple, non-trivial published works from sources that are reliable and independent of the subject and of each other." Although I have written or been quoted in such works, I can't say I've ever been the subject of any. And wouldn't you know, some notability cop cruised past my bio and pulled me over. Unless I get notable in a hurry—win the Nobel Peace Prize? Prove I sired Anna Nicole Smith's baby daughter?—a "sysop" (volunteer techie) will wipe my Wikipedia page clean. It's straight out of Philip K. Dick.

In the same article, Noah mentions that the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Stacy Schiff was not considered notable enough for a Wikipedia entry before she wrote an extensive New Yorker article on Wikipedia itself.

Liberal bias

Another criticism is that a politically liberal bias is predominant. According to Jimmy Wales: "The Wikipedia community is very diverse, from liberal to conservative to libertarian and beyond. If averages mattered, and due to the nature of the wiki software (no voting) they almost certainly don’t, I would say that the Wikipedia community is slightly more liberal than the U.S. population on average, because we are global and the international community of English speakers is slightly more liberal than the U.S. population. There are no data or surveys to back that."[86] Andrew Schlafly created Conservapedia because of his perception that Wikipedia contained a liberal bias.[87] Conservapedia's editors have compiled a list of alleged examples of liberal bias in Wikipedia.[88] In 2007, an article in The Christian Post criticised Wikipedia's coverage of Intelligent design, saying that it was biased and hypocritical.[89] Lawrence Solomon of the National Review considered the Wikipedia articles on subjects like global warming, intelligent design, and Roe v. Wade all to be slanted in favor of liberal views.[90]

In a September 2010 issue of the conservative weekly Human Events, Rowan Scarborough presented a critique of Wikipedia's coverage of American politicians prominent in the approaching midterm elections as evidence of systemic liberal bias.[91] Scarborough compares the biographical articles of liberal and conservative opponents in Senate races in the Alaska Republican primary and the Delaware and Nevada general election, emphasizing the quantity of negative coverage of tea party-endorsed candidates. He also cites some criticism by Lawrence Solomon and quotes in full the lead section of Wikipedia's article on its rival Conservapedia as evidence of an underlying bias.

American and corporate bias

Tim Anderson, a senior lecturer in political economy at the University of Sydney, said that Wikipedia administrators display a U.S.-oriented bias in their interaction with editors, and in their determination of sources that are appropriate for use on the site. Anderson was outraged after several of the sources he used in his edits to Hugo Chávez, including Venezuela Analysis and Z Magazine, were disallowed as "unusable". Anderson also described Wikipedia's Neutral point of view policy to ZDNet Australia as "a facade", and that Wikipedia "hides behind a reliance on corporate media editorials".[92]

Gender bias

Wikipedia has been criticized[93] by some journalists and academics for lacking not only women contributors but also extensive and in-depth encyclopedic attention to many topics regarding gender. An article in The New York Times cites a Wikimedia Foundation study which found that fewer than 13% of contributors to Wikipedia are women. Sue Gardner, the executive director of the foundation, said increasing diversity was about making the encyclopedia "as good as it could be." Factors the article cited as possibly discouraging women from editing included the "obsessive fact-loving realm," associations with the "hard-driving hacker crowd," and the necessity to be "open to very difficult, high-conflict people, even misogynists."[94]

Sexual content

Wikipedia has been criticized for allowing graphic sexual content such as images and videos of masturbation and ejaculation as well as photos from hardcore pornographic films found on its articles. Child protection campaigners say graphic sexual content appears on many Wikipedia entries, displayed without any warning or age verification.[95]

The Wikipedia article Virgin Killer – a 1976 album from German heavy metal band Scorpions – features a picture of the album's original cover, which depicts a naked prepubescent girl. The original release cover caused controversy and was replaced in some countries. In December 2008, access to the Wikipedia article Virgin Killer was blocked for four days by most Internet service providers in the United Kingdom, after it was reported by a member of the public as child pornography.[96] The Internet Watch Foundation, a nonprofit, nongovernment-affiliated organization, criticized the inclusion of the picture as "distasteful".[97]

In April 2010, Larry Sanger wrote a letter to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, outlining his concerns that two categories of images on Wikimedia Commons contained child pornography, and were in violation of U.S. federal obscenity law.[98] Sanger later clarified that the images, which were related to pedophilia and one about lolicon, were not of real children, but said that they constituted "obscene visual representations of the sexual abuse of children", under the PROTECT Act of 2003.[99] That law bans photographic child pornography and cartoon images and drawings of children that are obscene under American law.[99] Sanger also expressed concerns about access to the images on Wikipedia in schools.[100] Wikipedia strongly rejected Sanger's accusation.[101]

Wikimedia Foundation spokesman Jay Walsh said that Wikipedia doesn't have "material we would deem to be illegal. If we did, we would remove it."[101] Following the complaint by Larry Sanger, Wales deleted sexual images without consulting the community. After some editors who volunteer to maintain the site argued that the decision to delete had been made hastily, Wales voluntarily gave up some of the powers he had held up to that time as part of his co-founder status. He wrote in a message to the Wikimedia Foundation mailing list that this action was "in the interest of encouraging this discussion to be about real philosophical/content issues, rather than be about me and how quickly I acted."[102]

Exposure to vandals

Vandalism of a Wikipedia article

Wikipedia has a range of tools available to users and administrators in order to fight against vandalism. Supporters of the project argue that the vast majority of vandalism on Wikipedia is reverted within a short time, and a study by Fernanda Viégas of the MIT Media Lab and Martin Wattenberg and Kushal Dave of IBM Research found that most vandal edits were reverted within around five minutes; however they state that "it is essentially impossible to find a crisp definition of vandalism".[103] While most instances of page blanking or the addition of offensive material are soon reverted, less obvious vandalism has remained for longer periods.

A 2007 peer-reviewed study[104] that measured the actual number of page views with "damaged" content, concluded:

42% of damage is repaired almost immediately, i.e., before it can confuse, offend, or mislead anyone. Nonetheless, there are still hundreds of millions of damaged views.

"Death by Wikipedia"

"Death by Wikipedia" is a phenomenon in which a person is erroneously proclaimed dead through vandalism. Articles about the comedian Paul Reiser, British television host Vernon Kay, and the West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd, who died on June 28, 2010, have been vandalized in this way.[105][106][107]

Privacy concerns

Most privacy concerns refer to cases of government or employer data gathering; or to computer or electronic monitoring; or to trading data between organizations.[108] "The Internet has created conflicts between personal privacy, commercial interests and the interests of society at large" warn James Donnelly and Jenifer Haeckl.[109] Balancing the rights of all concerned as technology alters the social landscape will not be easy. It "is not yet possible to anticipate the path of the common law or governmental regulation" regarding this problem.[109]

The concern in the case of Wikipedia is the right of a private citizen to remain private; to remain a "private citizen" rather than a "public figure" in the eyes of the law.[110] It is somewhat of a battle between the right to be anonymous in cyberspace and the right to be anonymous in real life ("meatspace"). Wikipedia Watch argues that "Wikipedia is a potential menace to anyone who values privacy" and that "a greater degree of accountability in the Wikipedia structure" would be "the very first step toward resolving the privacy problem."[111] A particular problem occurs in the case of an individual who is relatively unimportant and for whom there exists a Wikipedia page against their wishes.

In 2005 Agence France-Presse quoted Daniel Brandt, the Wikipedia Watch owner, as saying that "the basic problem is that no one, neither the trustees of Wikimedia Foundation, nor the volunteers who are connected with Wikipedia, consider themselves responsible for the content."[112]

In January 2006, a German court ordered the German Wikipedia shut down within Germany because it stated the full name of Boris Floricic, aka "Tron", a deceased hacker who was formerly with the Chaos Computer Club. More specifically, the court ordered that the URL within the German .de domain (http://www.wikipedia.de/) may no longer redirect to the encyclopedia's servers in Florida at http://de.wikipedia.org although German readers were still able to use the US-based URL directly, and there was virtually no loss of access on their part. The court order arose out of a lawsuit filed by Floricic's parents, demanding that their son's surname be removed from Wikipedia.[113] On February 9, 2006, the injunction against Wikimedia Deutschland was overturned, with the court rejecting the notion that Tron's right to privacy or that of his parents were being violated.[114] The plaintiffs appealed to the Berlin state court, but were refused relief in May 2006.

Criticism of the community

The Wikipedia community (people who contribute to Wikipedia) is also subject to various criticisms. Emigh and Herring argue that "a few active users, when acting in concert with established norms within an open editing system, can achieve ultimate control over the content produced within the system, literally erasing diversity, controversy, and inconsistency, and homogenizing contributors' voices."[115] The community has also been criticized for responding to complaints regarding an article's quality by advising the complainer to fix the article themselves.[116] Professor James H. Fetzer criticized Wikipedia in that he could not change the article about himself;[117] to ensure impartiality, Wikipedia has a policy that discourages the editing of biographies by the subjects themselves except in "clear-cut cases", such as reverting vandalism or correcting out-of-date or mistaken facts.[118]

The community has been described as "cult-like,"[119][120][121] although not always with entirely negative connotations.[122] A larger social community also helps in maintaining a supportive atmosphere and collective etiquette, such as resolving disputes by appealing to reliable sources and Wikipedia's own policies.[123][failed verification]

Wikipedia does not require that its users identify themselves. This means that multiple people may use one account—or, more often, one person may use multiple accounts, often in an attempt to influence an argument. The latter practice is known as "sockpuppetry", which is actively discouraged on Wikipedia.[124]

Jimmy Wales' role

The community of Wikipedia editors has been criticized for placing an irrational emphasis on Jimmy Wales as a person, with phrases such as "What Would Jimbo Do?" Wales' role in personally determining the content of some articles has also been criticized as contrary to the independent spirit that Wikipedia supposedly has gained.[125][126]

Selection of editors

Stacy Schiff notes in her New Yorker article about Wikipedia that[127]

Wikipedia is an online community devoted not to last night's party or to next season's iPod but to a higher good. It is also no more immune to human nature than any other utopian project. Pettiness, idiocy, and vulgarity are regular features of the site. Nothing about high-minded collaboration guarantees accuracy, and open editing invites abuse.

Lack of credential verification and the Essjay controversy

In July 2006 The New Yorker ran a feature about Wikipedia by Stacy Schiff.[127] The initial version of the article included an interview with a Wikipedia administrator known by the pseudonym Essjay, who was described as a tenured professor of theology.[128] Essjay's Wikipedia user page[129] (now removed) made the following claim:

I am a tenured professor of theology at a private university in the eastern United States; I teach both undergraduate and graduate theology. I have been asked repeatedly to reveal the name of the institution, however, I decline to do so; I am unsure of the consequences of such an action, and believe it to be in my best interests to remain anonymous.

Essjay also claimed on his userpage that he held four academic degrees: Bachelor of Arts in Religious Studies (B.A.), Master of Arts in Religion (M.A.R.), Doctorate of Philosophy in Theology (Ph.D.), and Doctorate in Canon Law (JCD). Essjay specialized in editing articles about religion on Wikipedia, including subjects such as "the penitential rite, transubstantiation, the papal tiara";[127] on one occasion he was called in to give some "expert testimony" on the status of Mary in the Roman Catholic Church.[130] In January 2007, Essjay was hired as a manager with Wikia, a wiki-hosting service founded by Wales and Angela Beesley. In February, Wales appointed Essjay as a member of the Wikipedia Arbitration Committee, a group with powers to issue binding rulings in disputes relating to Wikipedia.[131]

Larry Sanger, who left Wikipedia and founded Citizendium.

In late February 2007 The New Yorker added an editorial note to its article on Wikipedia stating that it had learned that Essjay was Ryan Jordan, a 24-year-old college dropout from Kentucky with no advanced degrees and no teaching experience.[132] Initially Jimmy Wales commented on the issue of Essjay's identity: "I regard it as a pseudonym and I don’t really have a problem with it." Larry Sanger, co-founder[133][134][135] of Wikipedia, responded to Wales on his Citizendium blog by calling Wales' initial reaction "utterly breathtaking, and ultimately tragic." Sanger said the controversy "reflects directly on the judgment and values of the management of Wikipedia."[136]

Wales later issued a new statement saying he had not previously understood that "EssJay used his false credentials in content disputes." He added: "I have asked EssJay to resign his positions of trust within the [Wikipedia] community."[137] Sanger responded the next day: "It seems Jimmy finds nothing wrong, nothing trust-violating, with the act itself of openly and falsely touting many advanced degrees on Wikipedia. But there most obviously is something wrong with it, and it's just as disturbing for Wikipedia's head to fail to see anything wrong with it."[138]

On March 4, Essjay wrote on his user page that he was leaving Wikipedia, and he also resigned his position with Wikia.[139] A subsequent article in The Courier-Journal (Louisville) suggested that the new résumé he had posted at his Wikia page was exaggerated.[140] The March 19, 2007 issue of The New Yorker published a formal apology by Wales to the magazine and Stacy Schiff for Essjay's false statements.[141]

Discussing the incident, the New York Times noted that the Wikipedia community had responded to the affair with "the fury of the crowd", and observed:

The Essjay episode underlines some of the perils of collaborative efforts like Wikipedia that rely on many contributors acting in good faith, often anonymously and through self-designated user names. But it also shows how the transparency of the Wikipedia process—all editing of entries is marked and saved—allows readers to react to suspected fraud.[2]

The Essjay incident received extensive media coverage, including a national U.S. television broadcast on ABC's World News with Charles Gibson[142] and a March 7, 2007 Associated Press story that was picked up by more than 100 media outlets listed in the Google news cache.[143] The controversy has led to a proposal that users claiming to possess academic qualifications would have to provide evidence before citing them in Wikipedia content disputes.[144] The proposal was not accepted.[145]

In 2009, it was revealed that a British Labour councillor had been anonymously editing Wikipedia as 'Sam Blacketer', including many political articles in the UK. He resigned from membership of the Arbitration Committee.[146]

Anonymity of editors

Wikipedia co-founder[147] Larry Sanger wrote:[148]

Widespread anonymity leads to a distinguishable problem, namely, the attractiveness of the project to people who merely want to cause trouble, or who want to undermine the project, or who want to change it into something that it is avowedly not – in other words, the troll problem.

But more importantly, allowing anonymous editing generally induces a lack of authority, accountability, and healthy (or at least civil) interaction:[149]

... Wikipedia's anonymity reduces the accountability that stimulates healthy exchanges. ... "When you put everybody in a system that is flat, where everybody can say yes or no, without any sense of authority, what you get is tribalism", ... "What has gone into the article creation is very often the result of this dysfunctional system. It presents itself with this aura of authority, whereas what goes on behind the scenes is anything but."

On many occasions, open (anonymous) editing is the source of many problems: Pettiness, idiocy, vulgarity, lack of accuracy, abuse (complete quotation).[127]

A February 2008 article in SF Weekly details a journalist's futile attempts to track down the real identity of Wikipedia user Griot, who got involved in edit wars over the biography of Ralph Nader as well as local politicians, and was eventually banned on Wikipedia for sock puppeteering. The article draws the distinction between the press and Wikipedia:[150]

Say what you will about the press: There is at least a measure of accountability in a newspaper that is rarely seen on Wikipedia. It's called a byline. I mean, I'm sure I've produced some less-than-brilliant work during the dozen or so years I've been a journalist. But at least I've had the guts to sign my name — my real name — to what I write.

The article also quotes Paul Grabowicz, the new-media program director for the University of California at Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism:

"I guess I have the same feeling about Wikipedia and other citizen-generated sites [as I have] about the media: The more transparency the better" [...] "People should be able to find out who is producing the information."

In Wikipedia itself the term "anonymous" is used in a much narrower sense than in the citations above. Namely only those editors that do not have a registered account, and use an auto-generated IP-labeled account, are called anonymous or "anons". To disambiguate the two notions on anonymity, in the remainder of this section the term unregistered is used for the narrower Wikipedia meaning.

Unregistered editors reveal their IP addresses, which can be used by admins to register complaints with Internet service providers or to put "range blocks" in place. Admins may also choose not to block because they might exclude regular contributors who share the same IP. Knowledgeable computer users and hackers, though, are easily capable of finding ways around IP blocking. Many have suggested requiring users to register before editing articles, and on December 5, 2005 non-registered editors were prohibited from creating new articles on the English Wikipedia.[151] This does not address the larger problem of anonymity however.

Editorial process

Level of debate, edit wars, flame wars, and harassment

The standard of debate on Wikipedia has been called into question by persons who have noted that contributors can make a long list of salient points and pull in a wide range of empirical observations to back up their arguments, only to have them ignored completely on the site.[70] An academic study of Wikipedia articles found that the level of debate among Wikipedia editors on controversial topics often degenerated into counterproductive squabbling:

"For uncontroversial, 'stable' topics self-selection also ensures that members of editorial groups are substantially well-aligned with each other in their interests, backgrounds, and overall understanding of the topics...For controversial topics, on the other hand, self-selection may produce a strongly misaligned editorial group. It can lead to conflicts among the editorial group members, continuous edit wars, and may require the use of formal work coordination and control mechanisms. These may include intervention by administrators who enact dispute review and mediation processes, [or] completely disallow or limit and coordinate the types and sources of edits."[152]

Another complaint about Wikipedia focuses on the efforts of contributors with idiosyncratic beliefs, who push their point of view in an effort to dominate articles, especially controversial ones.[153][154] This sometimes results in revert wars and pages being locked down. In response, an Arbitration Committee has been formed on the English Wikipedia that deals with the worst alleged offenders—though a conflict resolution strategy is actively encouraged before going to this extent. Also, to stop the continuous reverting of pages, Jimmy Wales introduced a "three-revert rule",[155] whereby those users who reverse the effect of others' contributions to one article more than three times in a 24-hour period may be blocked.

Another edit war reported in mainstream press happened soon after the death of Kenneth Lay, the disgraced former CEO of Enron, who died from a heart attack. Several editors to the encyclopedia added content to Lay's Wikipedia biography surmising that the death was in fact a suicide, well in advance of any official determination of cause of death. Such edits were reverted and re-inserted several times; eventually the article reported the cause of death as a heart attack. As of July 2007, there is no evidence to suggest that Lay's death was by other than natural causes. The edit history of the article was investigated by the press, and The Washington Post published a column on the subject.[156]

Another edit war occurred in August 2009 on Swedish Wikipedia, where Onoff employees removed critical content from the article about Onoff, a Swedish retail chain that sells home electronics and appliances. Erik Frankedal, press contact for Onoff, told Computer Sweden that he didn't know about this edit and didn't have the time to check it out. IDG reported about this event.[157]

An SF Weekly article[150] commented on the stakes of edit wars:

Many an edit war may seem like a fight over nothing to the casual observer, but considering that according to its staff, the popular, multilingual Web site gets about 7 billion views per month, stakes can be high. An edit yields what millions of people read on the site on any particular topic.

A common complaint about Wikipedia concerns so-called "flame wars", or deliberate insults made by users to create a hostile environment. The increasingly hostile environment in Wikipedia has led to a sharp and alarming decline in the number of Wikipedia editors, as reported in a recent article in The Wall Street Journal on 27 Nov 2009, titled "Volunteers Log Off as Wikipedia Ages"[158]

Volunteers have been departing the project that bills itself as "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit" faster than new ones have been joining, and the net losses have accelerated over the past year. In the first three months of 2009, the English-language Wikipedia suffered a net loss of more than 49,000 editors, compared to a net loss of 4,900 during the same period a year earlier. ... "Wikipedia is becoming a more hostile environment", contends Mr. Ortega, a project manager at Libresoft, a research group at the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid. "Many people are getting burnt out when they have to debate about the contents of certain articles again and again."[158]

This concern has been acknowledged by Wikipedia; civility[159] and "no personal attacks"[160] are official policies of the project, and the concept of "wikiquette" has been adopted by some users in response.[161]

In an article in The Brooklyn Rail, Wikipedia contributor David Shankbone contended that he had been harassed and stalked because of his work on Wikipedia, had received no support from the authorities or the Wikimedia Foundation, and only mixed support from the Wikipedia community. Shankbone wrote that "If you become a target on Wikipedia, do not expect a supportive community."[162]

Consensus and the "hive mind"

Oliver Kamm, in an article for The Times, expressed skepticism toward Wikipedia's reliance on consensus in forming its content:[66]

Wikipedia seeks not truth but consensus, and like an interminable political meeting the end result will be dominated by the loudest and most persistent voices.

In his article, Digital Maoism: The Hazards of the New Online Collectivism (first published online by Edge: The Third Culture, 30 May 2006), computer scientist and digital theorist Jaron Lanier describes Wikipedia as a "hive mind" that is "for the most part stupid and boring", and asks, rhetorically, "why pay attention to it?" His thesis follows:

The problem is in the way the Wikipedia has come to be regarded and used; how it's been elevated to such importance so quickly. And that is part of the larger pattern of the appeal of a new online collectivism that is nothing less than a resurgence of the idea that the collective is all-wise, that it is desirable to have influence concentrated in a bottleneck that can channel the collective with the most verity and force. This is different from representative democracy, or meritocracy. This idea has had dreadful consequences when thrust upon us from the extreme Right or the extreme Left in various historical periods. The fact that it's now being re-introduced today by prominent technologists and futurists, people who in many cases I know and like, doesn't make it any less dangerous.[163]

Lanier goes on to point out the economic trend to reward entities that aggregate information, rather than those that actually generate content. In the absence of "new business models", the popular demand for content will be sated by mediocrity, thus reducing or even eliminating any monetary incentives for the production of new knowledge.[163]

Lanier's opinions produced some strong disagreement. Internet consultant Clay Shirky noted that Wikipedia has many internal controls in place and is not a mere mass of unintelligent collective effort:

Neither proponents nor detractors of hive mind rhetoric have much interesting to say about Wikipedia itself, because both groups ignore the details... Wikipedia is best viewed as an engaged community that uses a large and growing number of regulatory mechanisms to manage a huge set of proposed edits... To take the specific case of Wikipedia, the Seigenthaler/Kennedy debacle catalyzed both soul-searching and new controls to address the problems exposed, and the controls included, inter alia, a greater focus on individual responsibility, the very factor "Digital Maoism" denies is at work.[164]

In a 2005 study, Emigh and Herring note that there are not yet many formal studies of Wikipedia or its model, and suggest that Wikipedia achieves its results by social means—self-norming, a core of active users watching for problems, and expectations of encyclopedic text drawn from the wider culture.[115]

Social stratification

An article in Computer Power User asserted that former editors of Wikipedia formed Wikitruth, a site that exposes alleged censorship and infighting on the encyclopedia.[165] Jimmy Wales dismissed the site as a "hoax" created by editors who had their articles deleted or modified on Wikipedia.[166]

Since its creation, Wikipedia ostensibly upheld the basic principle of equal status for all good-faith editors. As of 2010, Jimmy Wales still claimed in his statement of principles for Wikipedia:[167]

There must be no cabal, no elite, and no hierarchy or structure to get in the way of this openness to newcomers. Any security measures to be implemented to protect the community against real vandals (and there are real vandals, who do occasionally affect us), should be implemented on the model of "strict scrutiny."

Expansion of administrator authority

On the other hand, to reduce vandalism and to control user conduct, Wikipedia created a class of volunteer administrators or "sysops" who are invested with the means and authority to discipline users.[168] Administrator powers include deleting articles, protecting pages from editing, and blocking users; actions that ordinary (non-sysop) editors cannot do nor undo. Special rules and protocols were set up to prevent administrators from abusing their powers; such as the Wikipedia:Articles for deletion (AfD) page, a forum to discuss article deletions. An administrator who wished to delete an article was required to post a notice on the article itself, and wait for comments of other editors, before carrying out the deletion. Moreover, since every sysop can undo the actions of other sysops, any reported abuse by one individual can in principle be corrected by his peers.

Nevertheless, those extra powers inevitably meant that the opinion of administrators, individually and as a whole, would prevail over that of ordinary users in certain kinds of disputes. While the principle of equality among editors was never formally revised, changes in Wikipedia policies have gradually increased the effective authority and independence of administrators. These changes intensified after 2006, when the Seigenthaler biography incident forced Wikipedia to tighten its defences against malicious edits. For instance, at some point sysops were given the authority to speedily delete, without prior discussion on the AfD, articles that were clearly malicious, or deemed inappropriate by any of several other criteria. In 2010, these criteria were further widened to include biographies of living persons (BLPs) which did not include adequate references, irrespective of their contents being verifiable or not. As a consequence of these enlarged powers, administrators have increasingly had to impose their opinion, ex officio, over that of ordinary users.[169] At the same time, the body of Wikipedia rules and procedures kept increasing in size and complexity. This further increased the authority gap between administrators and veteran editors, who know the rules, and ordinary editors — especially novice ones.

Complaints about administrator abuse

Complaints about abuse of power by administrators are frequently made in Wikipedia's internal forums, including the discussion pages associated with specific articles, pages for discussions of rules and procedures, the message boards of individual users, as well as general bulletin boards. Many of those complaints appear to be due to ignorance or misunderstanding of Wikipedia's rules. Only a small fraction of those allegations have been formally submitted to Wikipedia's disciplinary committees. Allegations have also been made in those internal forums that administrator abuse has been steadily increasing in frequency and severity, and that it is one major reason for decline in editor numbers since 2006--a striking reversal from its exponential growth from 2001 to 2005.[170]

In the context of these complaints, the term "administrator" is often used to also encompass editors who are not formally administrators, but who engage in administrative activities like tagging and categorizing articles, running robots, writing and enforcing rules, and proposing user bans and article deletions, or who are mistaken by other editors as administrators on the basis of their previous actions or arguments.

Allegations of administrator abuse have recently[when?] started to circulate outside Wikipedia in blogs, online technical forums, and in mainstream media. "Some disillusioned former Wikipedians gripe about such bureaucratic heavy-handedness and/or the rabidity of some of the site's devotees, grumbling about 'Swastikipedia.'"[171] It has also been noted that, despite the perception of Wikipedia as a "shining example of Web democracy" that "a small number of people are running the show."[172] Despite the need for some form of control in an open system, this "doesn't explain the kind of territorialism—the authorial domination by 1 percent of contributors—on the site's pages."[172] In an article on Wikipedia conflicts, The Guardian noted complaints that administrators sometimes use their special powers to suppress legitimate editors.[173] The article discussed "a backlash among some editors, who argue that blocking users compromises the supposedly open nature of the project, and the imbalance of power between users and administrators may even be a reason some users choose to vandalise in the first place."[173]

'My vandalism started after an edit conflict over the Courier-Journal's sports and editorial coverage, where my – what I felt were – legitimate edits on the page for C-J criticism were removed and I was blasted,' he says. 'I have being vandalising Wikipedia and its user pages for months, mostly because seeing my vandalism or that of others was funny as hell... and to punish admins.'

Perception of administrators as a closed community

Among the allegations of administrator abuse, one often finds claims that the administrators have become a clique whose goals or viewpoints set them apart from ordinary users. An article on The Register, dated 4 December 2007 and entitled "Secret mailing list rocks Wikipedia", alleged the use of a private mailing list to coordinate administrative actions.[174] A follow-up article on 8 December 2007 specifically alleged that administrators were collaborating with critics of Overstock.com to "own" articles about the company.[175]

Consistency of complaints

The existence and significance of widespread administrator abuse is highly disputed within Wikipedia. A common rebuttal to such allegations is that a raising of editorial standards became necessary to improve the quality of Wikipedia articles. In particular, the higher rates of article deletions observed since 2006[170] are claimed to be necessary to meet new guidelines on allowed article topics, such as a set of "notability" requirements. The same argument is used to justify the insertion of tags in articles that warn readers against perceived flaws and/or request that other editors perform certain editorial actions.

There have been no systematic surveys of the opinions of ordinary editors about sysop behavior, or about Wikipedia governance in general. A limited enquiry was made in 2009 among former Wikipedia editors, with the goal of finding out the reasons why they had left.[citation needed] Another experiment was conducted in 2009, with the goal of determining whether Wikipedia had indeed become hostile to new editors. In this experiment, several experienced editors pretended to be inexperienced new users, deliberately created poor-quality articles, and followed their fate over the following weeks.

Pareto effect

Known phenomena such as the Pareto principle and the 1% rule affect the Wikipedia community. Wikipedia's own statistics show that only a small number of users account for a large number of the edits made.[176] The alleged results of this is that Wikipedia, as viewed, is not truly a global community work but rather the work of an anonymous minority whose material is overrepresented. (Note that this is different from the complaints regarding administrators because the users in question are not required to be administrators, just to edit a lot.) In 2006, Jimmy Wales himself observed that the majority of Wikipedia edits are made by a group of around 500 people who "all know each other".[177] However, when amount of text was used as a metric instead of edit count, the result was often the opposite. Most of the top contributors to the content of articles tended to be not big-time editors, but rather people who only edited Wikipedia occasionally - many of whom had not even bothered to register a Wikipedia account. [177]

Plagiarism concerns

The Wikipedia Watch criticism website in 2006 has listed dozens of examples of plagiarism by Wikipedia editors on the English version.[178] Jimmy Wales, the Wikipedia co-founder,[147] has said in this respect: "We need to deal with such activities with absolute harshness, no mercy, because this kind of plagiarism is 100% at odds with all of our core principles."[178]

Impact on society

Some observers claim that Wikipedia is undesirable, because it is an economic threat to publishers of traditional encyclopedias, many of whom may be unable to compete with a product that is essentially free. Nicholas Carr writes in the essay "The amorality of Web 2.0", speaking of the so-called Web 2.0 as a whole: "Implicit in the ecstatic visions of Web 2.0 is the hegemony of the amateur. I for one can't imagine anything more frightening."[179] Others dispute the notion that Wikipedia, or similar efforts, will entirely displace traditional publications. For instance, Chris Anderson, the editor-in-chief of Wired Magazine, wrote in Nature that the "wisdom of the crowds" approach of Wikipedia will not displace top scientific journals with their rigorous peer review process.[180]

Satire of Wikipedia

Wikipedia has been satirized by humorists who call attention to factual inaccuracies that may appear in articles owing to sloppy or biased editors or vandalism. For example, an article in The Onion was entitled "Wikipedia Celebrates 750 Years Of American Independence."[181] In a piece on The Colbert Report, entitled "Wikiality" (a portmanteau of "wiki" and "reality"), Stephen Colbert encouraged his viewers to change Wikipedia's article on elephants to state that the number of African elephants had tripled over the past six months.[182] Colbert's comments provoked a wave of vandalism of various articles at Wikipedia.[183] On the January 29, 2007 edition of his program, Colbert did another segment on an attempt by Microsoft[59][60][61] to hire writers to skew certain Wikipedia articles in their favor, ending with a call by Colbert to change the Wikipedia article on "truth" to the phrase "Truth has become a commodity" and offering a $5 cash reward to the first viewer to do so. The most recent satire of Wikipedia occurred on January 5, 2011 on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart on Comedy Central. During an interview with Wikipedia "volunteer" Jimmy Wales, Stewart claimed he was in fact, Batman; Wales responded with laughter and suggested that Wikipedia administrators would correct and lock Stewart's page. Quickly, the online community responded, editing Stewart's page to represent his claim to be Batman. Wikipedia administrators responded by correcting the changes and locking Stewart's page. Stewart joins the group of Comedy Central personalities including Daniel Tosh and Stephen Colbert, who have called for specific humorous Wikipedia edits.

In the American Dad! episode "Black Mystery Month" the character Steve Smith, seeking the "one place where a person can put out crazy information with no evidence that millions will accept as true," turns to Wikipedia.[184]

An article in The Sun derided Wikipedia for including a "List of big-bust models and performers". Quoting an unnamed "company source", the article concluded: "It's every computer geek's dream come true – definitely one of Wikipedia's breast, I mean best, assets".[185]

In a GamesRadar editorial, columnist Charlie Barrat juxtaposed Wikipedia's coverage of video game-related topics with topics that have greater real-world significance, such as God, World War II and former U.S. presidents. The voluminous material that in many cases exists regarding the former when compared with the latter is the subject of his criticism and satire.[186]

Satire also exists in the form of parody encyclopedias such as Encyclopedia Dramatica[3] and Uncyclopedia.[4]

See also

Further reading

  • Andrew Keen. The Cult of the Amateur. Doubleday/Currency, 2007. ISBN 978-0-385-52080-5 (substantial criticisms of Wikipedia and other web 2.0 projects). Listen to:[187] the NPR interview with A. Keen, Weekend Edition Saturday, June 16, 2007.
  • Sheizaf Rafaeli & Yaron Ariel (2008). Online motivational factors: Incentives for participation and contribution in Wikipedia. In A. Barak (Ed.), Psychological aspects of cyberspace: Theory, research, applications (pp. 243–267). Cambridge, UK:Cambridge University Press.[188]

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