Salon.com published another article detailing the ongoing incidents with Wikipedia user Qworty, who has identified himself as Robert Clark Young.
In the Salon article, writer Andrew Leonard comments that Qworty's edits "undermine faith" in Wikipedia. His article documents Qworty's role in the controversy involving Amanda Filipacchi's op-ed, which kindled a debate on Wikipedia sexism as it relates to categories (see Signpost coverage), where Qworty was responsible for a series of revenge edits against Filipacchi in the days after she released her op-ed. He defines these as "modifications to a Wikipedia page motivated by anger. They are acts of punishment. Such behavior is officially considered bad form by the larger Wikipedia 'community,' but given Wikipedia's commitment to anonymity and general decentralized structure, it is a practice that is very difficult to stamp out."
The piece goes on to detail how individuals affiliated with Wikipediocracy approached Leonard with research determining that they thought Young was Qworty, including Andreas Kolbe (User:Jayen466). When asked by the Signpost why he took such a keen interest in exposing Qworty, Andreas said that he wants "the public to know just what goes on under the surface of Wikipedia and how the site plays dice with people's reputations by allowing anonymous editing of biographies of living persons ... I believe the public needs to understand just what is going on in Wikipedia day after day."
Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales commented on his talk page, "'For those of us who love Wikipedia, the ramifications of the Qworty saga are not comforting'. That sums it up for me." Extensive discussion has also ensued throughout Wikipedia, particularly on Wales' talk page. Another article from TalkingWriting.com on the topic rhetorically asked, "How do we mobilize against an eight-headed monster that keeps ducking responsibility for unreliable information amassed by volunteers?" The article does, however, go on to say that most of Wikipedia's contributors have "good intentions".
Qworty eventually admitted to being Bob Young and has since been indefinitely blocked and site banned by the community pursuant to a discussion on the administrator's incident noticeboard. Wikipediocracy also published a detailed article.
Since publishing the article, Leonard posted a follow-up indicating his fascination with Wikipedia's policies and updating readers on the block of Qworty. In related stories, PolicyMic.com published an article indicating that until Wikipedia changes its policies on verifiability and adding information, it will remain an unreliable source, and the Salon article spurred the creation of a Wikipediocracy Wikipedia article, which was nominated for deletion and quickly kept.
Discuss this story
NPR and Sue Gardner
"A horrible place to be"
"well-known woman in open source". Hey, there are plenty of others, such as myself, a guy, that says that Wikipedia is "a horrible place to be" at times.
Open source requires more open communication from top to bottom. I like this ShoutWiki page: Open company test. Has Wikipedia ever taken this test? Especially this part of the test: "Open Communication / Open Community: Are you able to communicate with other users and with the developers of the product? There are many venues where this communication can occur: mailing lists, discussion forums, blogs (both employee author and customer authored) or wikis." We only have Meta-Wiki as our means of open communication between average editors and the Wikimedia Foundation board and staff. But hardly anyone uses Meta-Wiki for long since few want to check the Meta watchlist after awhile. So little is followed up on. Meta-Wiki should be moved to English Wikipedia or the Commons. Both have far larger numbers of international users with user pages, that regularly check the associated watchlist.
The Qworty incident shows another reason why Wikipedia can be "a horrible place to be". Also, sockpuppets are so easy to create. That compounds the problem of biased editors getting away with harassment and biased editing for so long.
God forbid you get caught in the cross-hairs of tag teams of biased editors. Especially tag teams that also have new sockpuppets moving in and out of the team over months. I can see why women run away from this chaos. Men may put up with it longer since Wikipedia often has a male locker room culture, fraternities of tag-team editors, and hazing rituals. So men are more acculturated to it.
Most sockpuppets would be so easy to get rid of. Just require that all registrations require an email address. That would get rid of a lot of sockpuppets. Especially if questionable accounts get sent verification emails now and then that require a response. That would weed out a significant number of sockpuppets. You could still be anonymous with an alias name on your Wikipedia email account. That is what I do. But imagine trying to maintain and verify many email accounts for sockpuppets. I could go on and on with ideas to make Wikipedia more welcoming and open. --Timeshifter (talk) 23:22, 23 May 2013 (UTC)[reply]