An Interactive Learning Design Blog

An Interactive Learning Design Blog

Aug 18, 2007

Final word on Wikipedias "Objectivity"

Wired Magazine has just posted the WikiWatch. Kevin Poulsen writes:

Caltech graduate student Virgil Griffith just launched an unofficial Wikipedia search tool that threatens to lay bare the ego-editing and anonymous flacking on the site. Enter the name of a corporation, organization or government entity and you get a list of IP addresses assigned to it. Then with one or two clicks, you can see all the anonymous edits made from those addresses anywhere in Wikipedia's pages.

Griffith's work is a neat example of what can be uncovered just by reorganizing public information. Wired News writer John Borland has the full story here.

THREAT LEVEL predicts a lot of sad, embarrassing secrets will emerge from this project once netizens dive into it -- and we'd like to be a part of that. So visit the Wikipedia Scanner and do some sleuthing. Post what you find here on our wall of shame, where you can join other Wired News readers in voting submissions up or down. We've seeded the list with a few finds of our own. Happy hunting!


It's an amazing list-the top-rated edit is Diebolds attempt to edit its voting machine record,followed closely by Scientology's edits of its entry...

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