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We Know What You Did Online Last SummerSubmitted by Diane Farsetta on Fri, 08/31/2007 - 17:38.
Topics: citizen journalism | crisis management | human rights | internet | issue management | secrecy
Here at the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD), we see WikiScanner as a great way to better understand how public relations firms and other "perception managers" are subverting online discussions and social media. And what better website to track this on than Wikipedia, the world's most popular wiki, or collaboratively edited website? Unlike CMD's wiki projects -- SourceWatch, Congresspedia and TobaccoWiki -- Wikipedia does not require people to register before they can edit the site. What WikiScanner does is map anonymous Wikipedia edits to the company, government agency or organization whose computer network was used to make those edits. It should be noted that the anonymous editors could have been carrying out official business, or could have been acting on their own initiative. So what edits of note did CMD find? Public relations firmsSome public relations firms promoted themselves via Wikipedia, as exemplified by Weber Shandwick's addition to the "Scottish Parliament election, 2007" article:
Some firms removed potentially embarrassing information, as exemplified by Ketchum's removing the following information from an article on Susan Molinari, the president of Ketchum Public Affairs:
Other firms removed undeniably embarrassing information, as exemplified by Hill & Knowlton's edits on the "Politics of the Maldives" article. H&K was retained by the government of the Maldives in 2003, to deal with growing unrest and mounting evidence of human rights abuses. H&K deleted from the article:
H&K also softened the article's language on the repression of political parties in the Maldives, explaining that:
Government agencies and contractorsOf course, PR firms aren't the only entities manipulating the public record. Consider the somewhat-tortured justification for the U.S. invasion of Iraq, added to the "Iraq Survey Group" article by someone on a U.S. Energy Department computer:
Lastly, some edits seem to be the work of people blowing off steam. Understandable, but at times highly inappropriate, like these additions to the "American Civil Liberties Union" article, made on a computer at Science Applications International Corporation, a major U.S. military contractor:
In his WikiScanner FAQ, Virgil Griffith says that while identifying anonymous editors may help strengthen Wikipedia articles on more controversial topics, anonymous speech is important and Wikipedia "seems to work" pretty well. Most of the edits described above were quickly reverted by other Wikipedia contributors. Cyber spinners, beware! We have new debunking tools, and we know how to use them. Diane Farsetta is the Center for Media and Democracy's senior researcher. Want to help unmask Wikipedia spinners? See our project page on how it's done, and please add what you find to SourceWatch. |
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