Wikipedia Bans Scientology from Editing their site..

by sammielee24 6 Replies latest jw friends

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    Wikipedia has banned the Church of Scientology and its members from editing its site after discovering that members of the church were editing articles in order to give the church favorable coverage.

    The move is being hailed as "an unprecedented effort to crack down on self-serving edits," and it is the first instance in which Wikipedia has banned a group as large as the Church of Scientology.

    The Register reports:

    According to evidence turned up by admins in this long-running Wikiland court case, multiple editors have been "openly editing [Scientology-related articles] from Church of Scientology equipment and apparently coordinating their activities." Leaning on the famed WikiScanner, countless news stories have discussed the editing of Scientology articles from Scientology IPs, and some site admins are concerned this is "damaging Wikipedia's reputation for neutrality."

    One admin tells The Reg that policing edits from Scientology machines has been particularly difficult because myriad editors sit behind a small number of IPs and, for some reason, the address of each editor is constantly changing. This prevents admins from determining whether a single editor is using multiple Wikipedia accounts to game the system. In Wikiland, such sockpuppeting is not allowed.

    The Wikicourt considered banning edits from Scientology IPs only on Scientology-related articles. But this would require admins to "checkuser" editors - i.e. determine their IP - every time an edit is made. And even then they may not know who's who.

    The case — the fourth Scientology-related dispute on the site in four years — opened in December 2008 and closed Thursday with the Wikipedia arbitration committee voting unanimously to block IP addresses associated with the Church from editing the site.

    "The purpose of Wikipedia is to create a high-quality, free-content encyclopedia in an atmosphere of camaraderie and mutual respect among contributors," part of the decision read. "Use of the encyclopedia to advance personal agendas - such as advocacy or propaganda and philosophical, ideological or religious dispute - or to publish or promote original research is prohibited."

    "Editors who access Wikipedia through an organization's IP address and who edit Wikipedia articles which relate to that organization have a presumptive conflict of interest," it continued. "Regardless of these editors' specific relationship to that organization or function within it, the organization itself bears a responsibility for appropriate use of its servers and equipment. If an organization fails to manage that responsibility, Wikipedia may address persistent violations of fundamental site policies through blocks or bans."

  • drwtsn32
    drwtsn32

    Good.

    Cults need to realize that they can't do "information control" in the Internet age!

  • BabaYaga
    BabaYaga

    Awesome! Kudos to them.

    They certainly handled the Scientologists better than eBay chose to...
    http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/02/19/1943206

    From the link:

    Scientology Given Direct Access To eBay Database

    "The Church of Scientology can delete auctions from eBay with no supervision under the VeRO program, and has used this to delete all resale of the e-meters Scientologists use. This is to stop members from buying used units from ex-members instead of buying from the official (and very expensive) source. Given Scientology's record of fraud and abuse, should eBay give them this level of trust? Will this set a precedent for other companies that want to stop the aftermarket resale of their products?"

  • watson
    watson

    What kind of affect will this have BTS?

  • XJW4EVR
    XJW4EVR

    I am sure the the Co$ will now target Wikipedia as "fair game." Which means various aggressive policies and practices carried out by the Church of Scientology towards people and groups it perceives as its enemies. According to L. Ron Hubbard, "fair game" means that the Co$ can go after "The homes, property, places and abodes of persons who have been active in attempting to: suppress Scientology or Scientologists are all beyond any protection of Scientology Ethics, unless absolved by later Ethics or an amnesty ... this Policy Letter extends to suppressive non-Scientology wives and husbands and parents, or other family members or hostile groups or even close friends."

  • WTWizard
    WTWizard

    At least they won't have to worry about doing that with the Jehovah's Witlesses. Their own Filthful and Disgraceful Slavebugger seems to have done that for them--leaving the editing of those articles up to us apostates.

  • passwordprotected
    passwordprotected

    Good news.

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