A recent scandal involving the fabricated identity of a
Wikipedia
editor is causing some to rethink the way in which user-driven sites should
evaluate content.
The concern stems from the story of a Wikipedia contributor known as 'Essjay'
who served as an editor and moderator for the online encyclopaedia.
Wikipedia gathers all its content from public submissions which are edited
and maintained by volunteer editors who are also responsible for settling
disputes between users and cleaning up vandalised web pages.
Essjay claimed on his Wikipedia user page to be a tenured theology professor
at a private American university.
The claim was met with little doubt and the perceived expert became the
author and moderator for a number of entries on religion and theology.
However, on following up a July article in which Essjay was quoted, the
New
Yorker discovered that the respected member of the Wikipedia community was
actually a 24 year-old man with
no
formal theology degree.
The resulting fallout led many to question the validity of Wikipedia, and
ended in Essjay resigning his post and leaving the site.
In a parting statement Essjay said: "Leaving is the best thing for me and for
Wikipedia. I walk away happy to be free to go about other things."
The scandal has led Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales to consider implementing
a system to separate recognised experts in a given field from enthusiasts with
no credentials.
"I made a proposal that we have a system whereby people who are willing to
verify their real name and credentials are allowed a special Verified Credential
notification. This could be a rather open ended system, and optional," Wales
said in an article for Wikipedia's public mailing list.
Nicholas
Carr, author of Does IT Matter, added: "In the wake of the Essjay
mess, Wikipedia's long-time 'anti-credentialist' philosophy is beginning to
crack."
Carr suggested in a personal blog entry that users have long considered
information in Wikipedia separate from the 'credentialing' standards of the
outside world.
"Many of Wikipedia's most eloquent advocates have argued that the
encyclopaedia's practice of judging an author's work solely on its own merits
without being influenced by the author's credentials is one of the project's
core strengths, both ideologically and practically," he wrote.
If the site does impose a system for separating recognised experts from
regular users, it could change the way in which the site runs, according to
Carr.
"Once you impose a credentialing system, even if it's 'optional', you change
the dynamic of an organisation and set it on a new course," he explained.
"No longer would 'the answer' be 'simple'; deference would begin to be
granted to contributors based on their academic degrees and other 'verified'
credentials, as well as to their contributions."
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