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Wikipedia Seigenthaler biography incident

In May 2005, an unregistered editor posted a hoax article onto Wikipedia about journalist John Seigenthaler.[1] The article falsely stated that Seigenthaler had been a suspect in the assassinations of U.S. President John F. Kennedy and U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.

John Seigenthaler in October 2005

After the hoax was discovered and corrected later in September, Seigenthaler, a friend and aide to Robert Kennedy, wrote in USA Today that the article was "Internet character assassination".[2]

The incident raised questions about the reliability of Wikipedia and other websites with user-generated content that lack the legal accountability of traditional newspapers and published materials.[3] In a December 13, 2005, interview,[4] co-founder Jimmy Wales expressed his support for Wikipedia policy allowing articles to be edited by unregistered users, but announced plans to roll back their article creation privileges as part of a vandalism-control strategy.[4] The incident ultimately led Wikipedia to introduce stricter referencing requirements for biographies of living people.

Hoax

On May 26, 2005, a biographical article about John Seigenthaler was created by an anonymous Wikipedia editor that contained, in its entirety, the following text:[5]

John Seigenthaler was the assistant to Attorney General Robert Kennedy in the ealry [sic] 1960's. [sic] For a brief time, he was thought to have been directly involved in the Kennedy assasinations [sic] of both John, and his brother, Bobby. Nothing was ever proven.

John Seigenthaler moved to the Soviet Union in 1971, and returned to the United States in 1984.

He started one of the country's largest public relations firm [sic] shortly thereafter.

Detection and correction

In September, Victor S. Johnson Jr., a friend of Seigenthaler's, discovered the article.[6] After Johnson alerted him to the article, Seigenthaler emailed his friends and colleagues about it. On September 23, 2005, colleague Eric Newton copied Seigenthaler's official biography from the Freedom Forum website into Wikipedia. The following day, this biography was removed by a Wikipedia editor due to copyright violation and was replaced with a short original biography.[7] Newton informed Seigenthaler of his action when he ran into Seigenthaler in November in New York at the Committee to Protect Journalists dinner.

In October 2005, Seigenthaler contacted the Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation, Jimmy Wales, who hid affected versions of the article history from public view in the Wikipedia version logs, in effect removing them from all but Wikipedia administrators' view.[8] Some mirror websites not controlled by Wikipedia continued to display the older and inaccurate article for several weeks until the new version of the article was propagated to these other websites.[9] In 2013, the hoax article was archived to Wikipedia:List of hoaxes on Wikipedia.

Anonymous editor identified

On November 29, 2005, Seigenthaler described the incident in an op-ed in USA Today, of which he had been the founding editorial director. In the article, he included a verbatim reposting of the false statements and called Wikipedia a "flawed and irresponsible research tool".[2]

An expanded version was published several days later in The Tennessean, a daily newspaper in Nashville, Tennessee, where Seigenthaler had served in various capacities from beat reporter to chairman. In the article, Seigenthaler detailed his failed attempts to identify the anonymous person who posted the inaccurate biography. He reported that he had asked the poster's Internet service provider, BellSouth, to identify its user from the user's IP address. BellSouth refused to identify the user without a court order, suggesting that Seigenthaler file a John Doe lawsuit against the user, which Seigenthaler declined to do.[10]

Daniel Brandt, a San Antonio activist who had started the anti-Wikipedia site Wikipedia Watch in response to objections he had to the article about him, looked up the IP address in Seigenthaler's article. He found that it related to Rush Delivery, a delivery service company in Nashville. He contacted Seigenthaler and the media, and posted this information on his website.[11]

On December 9, Brian Chase, an operations manager of Rush Delivery, admitted that he had posted the false biography because he believed Wikipedia to be "some sort of joke website". After confessing, Chase was fired from Rush Delivery.[12][13] He presented a letter of apology to Seigenthaler,[14] who successfully interceded with Rush Delivery to reinstate Chase.[12] Seigenthaler confirmed that he would not file a lawsuit in relation to the incident. He said that he was concerned that "every biography on Wikipedia is going to be hit by this stuff—think what they'd do to Tom DeLay and Hillary Clinton, to mention two. My fear is that we're going to get government regulation of the Internet as a result."[15]

Reactions

Seigenthaler's public reaction

In his November 29, 2005, USA Today editorial, Seigenthaler criticized Congress for Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which protects ISPs and web sites from being held legally responsible for content posted by their customers and users:[2]

Federal law also protects online corporations – BellSouth, AOL, MCI, Wikipedia, etc. – from libel lawsuits. Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, passed in 1996, specifically states that "no provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker." That legalese means that, unlike print and broadcast companies, online service providers cannot be sued for defaming attacks on citizens posted by others. And so we live in a universe of new media with phenomenal opportunities for worldwide communications and research – but populated by volunteer vandals with poison-pen intellects. Congress has enabled them and protects them.

On December 5, 2005, Seigenthaler and Wales appeared jointly on CNN to discuss the matter. On December 6, 2005, the two were interviewed on National Public Radio's Talk of the Nation radio program. Wales described a new policy that he had implemented in order to prevent unregistered users from creating new articles on the English-language Wikipedia, though their ability to edit existing articles was retained.

In the CNN interview, Seigenthaler also raised the spectre of increased government regulation of the Web:

Can I just say where I'm worried about this leading. Next year we go into an election year. Every politician is going to find himself or herself subjected to the same sort of outrageous commentary that hit me, and hits others. I'm afraid we're going to get regulated media as a result of that. And I tell you, I think if you can't fix it, both fix the history as well as the biography pages, I think it's going to be in real trouble, and we're going to have to be fighting to keep the government from regulating you.

In the December 6 joint NPR interview, Seigenthaler said that he did not want to have anything to do with Wikipedia because he disapproved of its basic assumptions. In an article Seigenthaler wrote for USA Today in late 2005, he said, "I am interested in letting many people know that Wikipedia is a flawed and irresponsible research tool."[2] He also pointed out that the false information had been online for over four months before he was aware of it, and that he had not been able to edit the article to correct it. After speaking with Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales, Seigenthaler said: "My 'biography' was posted May 26. On May 29, one of Wales' volunteers 'edited' it only by correcting the misspelling of the word 'early.' For four months, Wikipedia depicted me as a suspected assassin before I erased it from the website's history Oct. 5. The falsehoods remained on Answers.com and Reference.com for three more weeks."[2] Editing Wikipedia, he suggested, would lend it his sanction or approval, and he stated his belief that editing the article was not enough and instead he wanted to expose "incurable flaws" in the Wikipedia process and ethos.

On December 9, Seigenthaler appeared on C-SPAN's Washington Journal with Brian Lamb hosting. He said he was concerned that other pranksters would try to spoof members of Congress or other powerful figures in government, which may then prompt a backlash and turn back First Amendment rights on the Web.

In the June 2007 issue of Reason magazine, Seigenthaler also expressed concern about the lack of transparency underlined by Wales' removal of the hoax pages from the article's history page. He also stated that many of the comments left by users in the edit summaries were things he would not want his nine-year-old grandson to see.[16]

Wikimedia Foundation reaction

In an interview with BusinessWeek on December 13, 2005, Wales discussed the reasons the hoax had gone undetected and steps being taken to address them.[4] He stated that one problem was that Wikipedia's use had grown faster than its self-monitoring system could comfortably handle, and that therefore new page creation would be restricted to account-holders, addressing one of Seigenthaler's main criticisms.

He also gave his opinion that encyclopedias as a whole (whether print or online) were not usually appropriate for primary sources and should not be relied upon as authoritative (as some were doing), but that nonetheless Wikipedia was more reliable as "background reading" on subjects than most online sources. He stated that Wikipedia was a "work in progress".[4]

A variety of changes were also made to Wikipedia's software and working practices, to address some of the issues arising. A new policy, 'biographies of living persons', was created on December 17, 2005; editorial restrictions, including reference requirements, were introduced on the creation of new Wikipedia articles; and new tracking categories for the biographies of living people were implemented.[17]

The Foundation added a new level of "oversight" features to the MediaWiki software,[18] accessible as of May 16, 2012, to around 37 experienced editors and Wikimedia staff members nominated by either Wales or the Arbitration Committee. This originally allowed for specific historical versions to be hidden from everyone (including Oversight editors), which then become unable to be viewed by anyone except developers via manual intervention, though the feature was later changed so that other Oversighters could view these revisions to monitor the tool's use. Currently such procedures are standardized by the 'Office actions' policy which states: "Sometimes the Wikimedia Foundation has to delete, protect or blank a page without going through the normal site/community process(es). These edits are temporary measures to prevent legal trouble or personal harm and should not be undone by any user."[19]

Other reactions

In reaction to the controversy, The New York Times business editor Larry Ingrassia sent a memo to his staff commenting on the reliability of Wikipedia and writing, "We shouldn't be using it to check any information that goes into the newspaper."[20] Several other publications commented on the incident, often criticizing Wikipedia and its open editing model as unreliable, citing the Seigenthaler incident as evidence.

The scientific journal Nature conducted a study comparing the accuracy of Wikipedia and the Encyclopædia Britannica in 42 hard sciences–related articles in December 2005. The Wikipedia articles studied were found to contain four serious errors and 162 factual errors, omissions or misleading statements, while the Encyclopædia Britannica also contained four serious errors and 123 factual errors, omissions or misleading statements.[21] Referring to the Seigenthaler incident and several other controversies, the authors wrote that the study "suggests that such high-profile examples are the exception rather than the rule."

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Cohen, Noam (August 24, 2009). "Wikipedia to Limit Changes to Articles on People". The New York Times. Retrieved April 7, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e Seigenthaler, John (November 29, 2005). "A false Wikipedia 'biography'". USA Today. from the original on November 28, 2012. Retrieved October 27, 2013.
  3. ^ . The Project for Excellence in Journalism. September 14, 2009. Archived from the original on March 22, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d Helm, Burt (December 13, 2005). . BusinessWeek Online. Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on April 11, 2015. Retrieved October 16, 2013.
  5. ^ "First edit to Seigenthaler's biography page". Wikipedia. May 26, 2005. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  6. ^ Carney, John I. (February 13, 2006). . Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  7. ^ Archived version of the rewriting of the official biography.
  8. ^ Two deletion log entries of the article.
  9. ^ Dalby, Andrew (2009). The World and Wikipedia: How we are editing reality. Somerset: Siduri. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-9562052-0-9.
  10. ^ Terdiman, Daniel. "Is Wikipedia safe from libel liability?". CNET. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  11. ^ Terdiman, Daniel (December 15, 2005). "In search of the Wikipedia prankster". CNET.
  12. ^ a b Buchanan, Brian J. (November 17, 2006). . First Amendment Center. Archived from the original on February 12, 2007. Retrieved October 4, 2011.
  13. ^ "The wiki principle". The Economist. April 22, 2006. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  14. ^ . First Amendment Center. June 4, 2007. Archived from the original on June 4, 2007. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
  15. ^ Page, Susan (December 11, 2005). "Author apologizes for fake Wikipedia biography". USA Today. from the original on December 28, 2011. Retrieved October 27, 2013.
  16. ^ Mangu-Ward, Katherine (June 2007). "Wikipedia and Beyond: Jimmy Wales' sprawling vision". Reason Magazine: 20–29. Retrieved March 8, 2016.
  17. ^ "Wikipedia and Seigenthaler; Restricted editing". Wikipedia Signpost. December 5, 2005. Retrieved November 23, 2021.
  18. ^ Ral315 (June 5, 2006). "New revision-hiding feature added". Wikipedia Signpost.
  19. ^ "Office actions". Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved November 23, 2021.
  20. ^ . December 7, 2005. Archived from the original on March 8, 2006.
  21. ^ Giles, Jim (December 15, 2005). "Special Report: Internet encyclopaedias go head to head". Nature. 438 (7070): 900–901. Bibcode:2005Natur.438..900G. doi:10.1038/438900a. PMID 16355180.

Other sources

  • Boyd, Danah (December 17, 2005). . Corante.com. Archived from the original on December 20, 2005. Retrieved December 18, 2005.
  • Cooper, Charles (December 2, 2005). "Wikipedia and the nature of truth". CNET.
  • Lamb, Brian (December 9, 2005). "Interview with John Seigenthaler". C-SPAN Washington Journal.
  • Mielczarek, Natalia (December 11, 2005). "Fake online biography created as 'joke'". The Tennessean.
  • Orlowski, Andrew (December 12, 2005). "There's no Wikipedia entry for 'moral responsibility'". The Register (UK).
  • Phillips, Kyra (December 5, 2005). "Live From... Transcript". CNN., interview with John Seigenthaler and Jimmy Wales.
  • NPR (December 12, 2005). "Wikipedia joker eats humble pie". BBC News.
  • NPR (December 6, 2005). "Wikipedia to Require Contributors to Register". National Public Radio., Talk of the Nation story summary and radio broadcast.
  • Seigenthaler, John (December 4, 2005). "Truth can be at risk in the world of the web". The Tennessean.[dead link]
  • Terdiman, Daniel (December 5, 2005). "Growing pains for Wikipedia". CNET.
  • Terdiman, Daniel (December 7, 2005). "Is Wikipedia safe from libel liability?". CNET.

External links

  • Is an Online Encyclopedia, Such as Wikipedia, Immune From Libel Suits? by Prof. Anita Ramasastry on Writ
  • John Seigenthaler, "Wikipedia, WikiLeaks, and Wiccans": 49-minute presentation at Vanderbilt University, October 21, 2011, C-Span Video Library
  • by Katharine Q. Seelye of The New York Times

wikipedia, seigenthaler, biography, incident, 2005, unregistered, editor, posted, hoax, article, onto, wikipedia, about, journalist, john, seigenthaler, article, falsely, stated, that, seigenthaler, been, suspect, assassinations, president, john, kennedy, atto. In May 2005 an unregistered editor posted a hoax article onto Wikipedia about journalist John Seigenthaler 1 The article falsely stated that Seigenthaler had been a suspect in the assassinations of U S President John F Kennedy and U S Attorney General Robert F Kennedy John Seigenthaler in October 2005 After the hoax was discovered and corrected later in September Seigenthaler a friend and aide to Robert Kennedy wrote in USA Today that the article was Internet character assassination 2 The incident raised questions about the reliability of Wikipedia and other websites with user generated content that lack the legal accountability of traditional newspapers and published materials 3 In a December 13 2005 interview 4 co founder Jimmy Wales expressed his support for Wikipedia policy allowing articles to be edited by unregistered users but announced plans to roll back their article creation privileges as part of a vandalism control strategy 4 The incident ultimately led Wikipedia to introduce stricter referencing requirements for biographies of living people Contents 1 Hoax 1 1 Detection and correction 1 2 Anonymous editor identified 2 Reactions 2 1 Seigenthaler s public reaction 2 2 Wikimedia Foundation reaction 2 3 Other reactions 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Other sources 5 External linksHoax EditOn May 26 2005 a biographical article about John Seigenthaler was created by an anonymous Wikipedia editor that contained in its entirety the following text 5 John Seigenthaler was the assistant to Attorney General Robert Kennedy in the ealry sic 1960 s sic For a brief time he was thought to have been directly involved in the Kennedy assasinations sic of both John and his brother Bobby Nothing was ever proven John Seigenthaler moved to the Soviet Union in 1971 and returned to the United States in 1984 He started one of the country s largest public relations firm sic shortly thereafter Detection and correction Edit In September Victor S Johnson Jr a friend of Seigenthaler s discovered the article 6 After Johnson alerted him to the article Seigenthaler emailed his friends and colleagues about it On September 23 2005 colleague Eric Newton copied Seigenthaler s official biography from the Freedom Forum website into Wikipedia The following day this biography was removed by a Wikipedia editor due to copyright violation and was replaced with a short original biography 7 Newton informed Seigenthaler of his action when he ran into Seigenthaler in November in New York at the Committee to Protect Journalists dinner In October 2005 Seigenthaler contacted the Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation Jimmy Wales who hid affected versions of the article history from public view in the Wikipedia version logs in effect removing them from all but Wikipedia administrators view 8 Some mirror websites not controlled by Wikipedia continued to display the older and inaccurate article for several weeks until the new version of the article was propagated to these other websites 9 In 2013 the hoax article was archived to Wikipedia List of hoaxes on Wikipedia Anonymous editor identified Edit Wikinews has related news Author of Wikipedia character assassination takes responsibility On November 29 2005 Seigenthaler described the incident in an op ed in USA Today of which he had been the founding editorial director In the article he included a verbatim reposting of the false statements and called Wikipedia a flawed and irresponsible research tool 2 An expanded version was published several days later in The Tennessean a daily newspaper in Nashville Tennessee where Seigenthaler had served in various capacities from beat reporter to chairman In the article Seigenthaler detailed his failed attempts to identify the anonymous person who posted the inaccurate biography He reported that he had asked the poster s Internet service provider BellSouth to identify its user from the user s IP address BellSouth refused to identify the user without a court order suggesting that Seigenthaler file a John Doe lawsuit against the user which Seigenthaler declined to do 10 Daniel Brandt a San Antonio activist who had started the anti Wikipedia site Wikipedia Watch in response to objections he had to the article about him looked up the IP address in Seigenthaler s article He found that it related to Rush Delivery a delivery service company in Nashville He contacted Seigenthaler and the media and posted this information on his website 11 On December 9 Brian Chase an operations manager of Rush Delivery admitted that he had posted the false biography because he believed Wikipedia to be some sort of joke website After confessing Chase was fired from Rush Delivery 12 13 He presented a letter of apology to Seigenthaler 14 who successfully interceded with Rush Delivery to reinstate Chase 12 Seigenthaler confirmed that he would not file a lawsuit in relation to the incident He said that he was concerned that every biography on Wikipedia is going to be hit by this stuff think what they d do to Tom DeLay and Hillary Clinton to mention two My fear is that we re going to get government regulation of the Internet as a result 15 Reactions EditSeigenthaler s public reaction Edit In his November 29 2005 USA Today editorial Seigenthaler criticized Congress for Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act which protects ISPs and web sites from being held legally responsible for content posted by their customers and users 2 Federal law also protects online corporations BellSouth AOL MCI Wikipedia etc from libel lawsuits Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act passed in 1996 specifically states that no provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker That legalese means that unlike print and broadcast companies online service providers cannot be sued for defaming attacks on citizens posted by others And so we live in a universe of new media with phenomenal opportunities for worldwide communications and research but populated by volunteer vandals with poison pen intellects Congress has enabled them and protects them On December 5 2005 Seigenthaler and Wales appeared jointly on CNN to discuss the matter On December 6 2005 the two were interviewed on National Public Radio s Talk of the Nation radio program Wales described a new policy that he had implemented in order to prevent unregistered users from creating new articles on the English language Wikipedia though their ability to edit existing articles was retained In the CNN interview Seigenthaler also raised the spectre of increased government regulation of the Web Can I just say where I m worried about this leading Next year we go into an election year Every politician is going to find himself or herself subjected to the same sort of outrageous commentary that hit me and hits others I m afraid we re going to get regulated media as a result of that And I tell you I think if you can t fix it both fix the history as well as the biography pages I think it s going to be in real trouble and we re going to have to be fighting to keep the government from regulating you In the December 6 joint NPR interview Seigenthaler said that he did not want to have anything to do with Wikipedia because he disapproved of its basic assumptions In an article Seigenthaler wrote for USA Today in late 2005 he said I am interested in letting many people know that Wikipedia is a flawed and irresponsible research tool 2 He also pointed out that the false information had been online for over four months before he was aware of it and that he had not been able to edit the article to correct it After speaking with Wikipedia co founder Jimmy Wales Seigenthaler said My biography was posted May 26 On May 29 one of Wales volunteers edited it only by correcting the misspelling of the word early For four months Wikipedia depicted me as a suspected assassin before I erased it from the website s history Oct 5 The falsehoods remained on Answers com and Reference com for three more weeks 2 Editing Wikipedia he suggested would lend it his sanction or approval and he stated his belief that editing the article was not enough and instead he wanted to expose incurable flaws in the Wikipedia process and ethos On December 9 Seigenthaler appeared on C SPAN s Washington Journal with Brian Lamb hosting He said he was concerned that other pranksters would try to spoof members of Congress or other powerful figures in government which may then prompt a backlash and turn back First Amendment rights on the Web In the June 2007 issue of Reason magazine Seigenthaler also expressed concern about the lack of transparency underlined by Wales removal of the hoax pages from the article s history page He also stated that many of the comments left by users in the edit summaries were things he would not want his nine year old grandson to see 16 Wikimedia Foundation reaction Edit In an interview with BusinessWeek on December 13 2005 Wales discussed the reasons the hoax had gone undetected and steps being taken to address them 4 He stated that one problem was that Wikipedia s use had grown faster than its self monitoring system could comfortably handle and that therefore new page creation would be restricted to account holders addressing one of Seigenthaler s main criticisms He also gave his opinion that encyclopedias as a whole whether print or online were not usually appropriate for primary sources and should not be relied upon as authoritative as some were doing but that nonetheless Wikipedia was more reliable as background reading on subjects than most online sources He stated that Wikipedia was a work in progress 4 A variety of changes were also made to Wikipedia s software and working practices to address some of the issues arising A new policy biographies of living persons was created on December 17 2005 editorial restrictions including reference requirements were introduced on the creation of new Wikipedia articles and new tracking categories for the biographies of living people were implemented 17 The Foundation added a new level of oversight features to the MediaWiki software 18 accessible as of May 16 2012 to around 37 experienced editors and Wikimedia staff members nominated by either Wales or the Arbitration Committee This originally allowed for specific historical versions to be hidden from everyone including Oversight editors which then become unable to be viewed by anyone except developers via manual intervention though the feature was later changed so that other Oversighters could view these revisions to monitor the tool s use Currently such procedures are standardized by the Office actions policy which states Sometimes the Wikimedia Foundation has to delete protect or blank a page without going through the normal site community process es These edits are temporary measures to prevent legal trouble or personal harm and should not be undone by any user 19 Other reactions Edit In reaction to the controversy The New York Times business editor Larry Ingrassia sent a memo to his staff commenting on the reliability of Wikipedia and writing We shouldn t be using it to check any information that goes into the newspaper 20 Several other publications commented on the incident often criticizing Wikipedia and its open editing model as unreliable citing the Seigenthaler incident as evidence Wikinews has related news Wikipedia and Britannica about as accurate in science entries reports Nature The scientific journal Nature conducted a study comparing the accuracy of Wikipedia and the Encyclopaedia Britannica in 42 hard sciences related articles in December 2005 The Wikipedia articles studied were found to contain four serious errors and 162 factual errors omissions or misleading statements while the Encyclopaedia Britannica also contained four serious errors and 123 factual errors omissions or misleading statements 21 Referring to the Seigenthaler incident and several other controversies the authors wrote that the study suggests that such high profile examples are the exception rather than the rule See also EditBertrand Meyer Wikipedia hoax a French academic who was falsely declared dead on the German WikipediaReferences EditNotes Edit Cohen Noam August 24 2009 Wikipedia to Limit Changes to Articles on People The New York Times Retrieved April 7 2012 a b c d e Seigenthaler John November 29 2005 A false Wikipedia biography USA Today Archived from the original on November 28 2012 Retrieved October 27 2013 The State of the News Media 2006 The Project for Excellence in Journalism September 14 2009 Archived from the original on March 22 2016 a b c d Helm Burt December 13 2005 Wikipedia A Work in Progress BusinessWeek Online Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on April 11 2015 Retrieved October 16 2013 First edit to Seigenthaler s biography page Wikipedia May 26 2005 Retrieved August 24 2022 Carney John I February 13 2006 Seigenthaler battles online encyclopedia Shelbyville Times Gazette Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 Archived version of the rewriting of the official biography Two deletion log entries of the article Dalby Andrew 2009 The World and Wikipedia How we are editing reality Somerset Siduri p 59 ISBN 978 0 9562052 0 9 Terdiman Daniel Is Wikipedia safe from libel liability CNET Retrieved January 25 2021 Terdiman Daniel December 15 2005 In search of the Wikipedia prankster CNET a b Buchanan Brian J November 17 2006 Founder shares cautionary tale of libel in cyberspace First Amendment Center Archived from the original on February 12 2007 Retrieved October 4 2011 The wiki principle The Economist April 22 2006 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved November 22 2021 Man who posted false Wikipedia bio apologizes to Seigenthaler First Amendment Center June 4 2007 Archived from the original on June 4 2007 Retrieved July 12 2022 Page Susan December 11 2005 Author apologizes for fake Wikipedia biography USA Today Archived from the original on December 28 2011 Retrieved October 27 2013 Mangu Ward Katherine June 2007 Wikipedia and Beyond Jimmy Wales sprawling vision Reason Magazine 20 29 Retrieved March 8 2016 Wikipedia and Seigenthaler Restricted editing Wikipedia Signpost December 5 2005 Retrieved November 23 2021 Ral315 June 5 2006 New revision hiding feature added Wikipedia Signpost Office actions Wikipedia Wikimedia Foundation Retrieved November 23 2021 The New York Times Business editor Larry Ingrassia s memo Wiki whatdia December 7 2005 Archived from the original on March 8 2006 Giles Jim December 15 2005 Special Report Internet encyclopaedias go head to head Nature 438 7070 900 901 Bibcode 2005Natur 438 900G doi 10 1038 438900a PMID 16355180 Other sources Edit Boyd Danah December 17 2005 Wikipedia academia and Seigenthaler Corante com Archived from the original on December 20 2005 Retrieved December 18 2005 Cooper Charles December 2 2005 Wikipedia and the nature of truth CNET Lamb Brian December 9 2005 Interview with John Seigenthaler C SPAN Washington Journal Mielczarek Natalia December 11 2005 Fake online biography created as joke The Tennessean Orlowski Andrew December 12 2005 There s no Wikipedia entry for moral responsibility The Register UK Phillips Kyra December 5 2005 Live From Transcript CNN interview with John Seigenthaler and Jimmy Wales NPR December 12 2005 Wikipedia joker eats humble pie BBC News NPR December 6 2005 Wikipedia to Require Contributors to Register National Public Radio Talk of the Nation story summary and radio broadcast Seigenthaler John December 4 2005 Truth can be at risk in the world of the web The Tennessean dead link Terdiman Daniel December 5 2005 Growing pains for Wikipedia CNET Terdiman Daniel December 7 2005 Is Wikipedia safe from libel liability CNET External links EditIs an Online Encyclopedia Such as Wikipedia Immune From Libel Suits by Prof Anita Ramasastry on Writ John Seigenthaler Wikipedia WikiLeaks and Wiccans 49 minute presentation at Vanderbilt University October 21 2011 C Span Video Library Snared in the Web of a Wikipedia Liar by Katharine Q Seelye of The New York Times Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wikipedia Seigenthaler biography incident amp oldid 1133231848, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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