What Wikipedia Can Teach the Rest of the Internet
Jimmy Wales talks about why his online encyclopedia works, how to improve social media, and why Section 230 isn't the real problem with the internet.

Wikipedia, the 21-year-old "free encyclopedia that anyone can edit," went from being a weird online experiment to a mainstay of the modern internet with astonishing speed. Even as the rest of the social internet seems hellbent on tearing itself apart, it has largely maintained its reputation and functionality.
As Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube have become consumed by controversy over moderation, governance, and the definition of free speech, Wikipedia quietly continues to grow in utility, trustworthiness, and comprehensiveness. There are now nearly 6.5 million articles on the English version alone, and it has held its place in the top 15 most-visited sites on the web for well over a decade.
In 2007, Reason's Katherine Mangu-Ward profiled Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales and the site's "simple yet seemingly insane" concept. The question then: "Will traditional reference works like Encyclopedia Britannica, that great centralizer of knowledge, fall before Wikipedia the way the Soviet Union fell before the West?"
The answer is mostly yes. The site still has its share of controversy, including a squabble in July over the definition of recession that spilled over from other platforms and made headlines. But those fights have limited impact on the user experience; only the most devoted followers of online tech controversies had any idea they were happening at all. There are also external battles, including a recent conflict with the Russian government over demands that the encyclopedia censor information about the conflict in Ukraine. But Wikipedia still seems to be a signature success in the turbulent social media space.
In April, Mangu-Ward spoke again with Wales over Zoom for a video and podcast about what he got right—and what he's worried about as politicians all around the globe push for more control of online content.
A key ingredient to Wikipedia's success, says Wales, is its high degree of decentralization. After this interview was conducted, Elon Musk made a bid to buy Twitter and became embroiled in controversy over the sale, bringing new salience to the battle over who controls the flow of information online.
Reason: Last time we talked was 2007. We hung around in Florida. We had some Indian food. On that day you said "there's a certain kind of dire anti-market person who assumes that no matter what happens, it's all driving toward one monopoly—the ominous view that all of these companies are going to consolidate into the Matrix." You said radical decentralization will win out. Were you right?
Wales: I think so. We still have a pretty radically decentralized web. Obviously, we have some big players—Facebook, Amazon, Google, etc. There's a few players who dominate. The online digital advertising space is a handful of players.
For the consumer internet, there's still a huge amount of choice. I worry about some of the bigger companies like Facebook becoming regulation-friendly in a way that I suspect has more to do with consolidating their position than being happy about being regulated. I think there's a lot to keep an eye on.
We're at a point where not just broad swaths of the internet but our whole politics are being consumed with the debate over content moderation and misinformation. It seems to me that Wikipedia quietly got a bunch of those things right a really long time ago.
It's weird that those lessons haven't been generalized. Is that because they aren't generalizable? Is there something special about the Wikipedia project of building an online encyclopedia that anyone can edit?
I do think there are a lot of lessons from Wikipedia that could be applied more broadly. At the same time, we do have to acknowledge that when there's a little box that says, "What's your opinion? Tell us what you think," that generates a lot of controversial commentary by its very nature. People are going to say things that are offensive to other people. You end up needing to draw certain kinds of lines in a way that is really hard to do.
Whereas, with Wikipedia, the purpose [is to] write an encyclopedia article or talk about the articles. If you go to the discussion page for the entry on Donald Trump, it's not really a place to go and rant about Donald Trump. It's a place to talk about the article and how we could improve it. Obviously, those discussions can get quite heated, but it is within a framework of saying, "We're actually here with a particular task in front of us," versus a little box that says, "Tell me what you think."
The social media companies do have a very hard task. I don't think the answer, currently being bounced around in some quarters, [is] that they should be required to basically apply First Amendment standards as what they think is OK to have on the platform. I'm like, well, gosh, no, because things that are absolutely legal to say don't make for a nice online experience. There's groups and places where that would be deeply inappropriate. You can just imagine a Bible study group that's being infiltrated by raging atheists. Maybe it's OK for people to say: Actually, a part of the spirit of the First Amendment is not just being able to say anything you want, anywhere you want, but actually being able to create some spaces, like an online group, where you can talk to people of a like mind and have a civil discussion and kick people out if they're being rude.
Where I see real opportunity for change for the social networks, applying some of the lessons of Wikipedia, is to put more control in the hands of the users. [The] model [of] almost all social networks—I call it the feudal model. We're all serfs on the master's estate, in a sense. If you go to YouTube or Facebook or Twitter, the boundaries of what you're allowed to say and do are set in a very opaque way by moderators who work for the company. They do as good a job as they can, but it's kind of a hopeless, impossible job. In fact, it's quite a terrible job because they're forced to look at the worst content to make very hard decisions.
Whereas, if we had designs that were really more about small-group collaboration, about giving people the ability to control their space, there's lots of interesting ways forward. There's lots of lovely places online that are like that.
There's a lot of hype right now about decentralized autonomous organizations [DAOs]. Wikipedia is not on the blockchain, but is that the kind of thing you're talking about when you say it should be more about the users? Is Wikipedia a proto-DAO?
I wasn't really thinking about DAOs, but I do think it's an interesting area to think about. Lots of people from the DAO world say Wikipedia was like the first DAO, in a weird kind of way.
I'm not sure that's an accurate analogy, but it's an interesting analogy, because there are certain concepts of people being participants, and having control, rather than just being a customer on a platform. I think that ability for people to come together in a very lightweight way, to form partnerships, to divide up money, is actually super interesting.
One of the old concepts I see bandied around sometimes in the pro-market literature [is] this concept of a "friendly society." This is a precursor to big insurance, where people come together and they, in a small group, all contribute to a pot of money. If somebody falls on hard times, they can access that pot of money. The group makes the rules and decides what to do about it, which doesn't necessarily scale to tens of millions of people.
You end up basically with an insurance company, which is fine. There's nothing inherently wrong with that, but there's something potentially powerful about a group of people coming together, using the DAO as a mechanism, to say: "We're all going to contribute a certain amount to this pot. If someone's house burns down, or somebody gets COVID or something like that, this is a pot of money that we're going to share out," in a way that then makes a very lightweight structure for doing something that traditionally we had found very hard to do; or it's highly regulated, like insurance; or the government does it.
Now whether any of that actually is about to happen, I'm not sure. But it certainly seems that there's a possibility for using technology—smart contracts—to do something interesting.
There are a lot of people who are very worried about the future of online speech: What are we going to do about disinformation, and how are we going to preserve spaces for heterodoxy? What's the thing you're worried about? Are you worried that we have too much speech? Are you worried we have the wrong speech? Or is there something else that debate itself is missing?
When politicians are worried about too much speech or wrong speech, they're probably up to no good.
There are some really tough problems. Online harassment; threats; vicious, horrible trolling. None of that is what we want. We want to make sure we're building spaces that people can enjoy.
I think the current business model—which is pure advertising, for social media—is problematic. It drives certain outcomes that I think other business models would be better at dealing with. The way I think about this came from a book called Everything Bad Is Good for You. There was an example in there of the move from pure advertising television. The example is a little awkward now: The Cosby Show, written to be broadly appealing to almost everybody. It's a good quality show. It's a family show. Everybody can watch it. It's good.
We began to move toward paid programming, things like HBO. You had Sex and the City and you had The Sopranos, stuff that wouldn't be suitable for all audiences. In fact, [it was] deliberately designed to appeal to certain narrow audiences. The incentive for HBO was, they wanted to have at least one show that at least one person in every household would pay for. They might have really good children's programming, because they knew maybe some people will pay for children's programming, and so forth. Because their incentives were different, they made different kinds of shows.
Obviously, today, we see this exponentially. We're in this golden age of television with so many fantastic series on Netflix, Amazon Prime. It's not ad-supported.
The point is not to bash advertising as a business model. But when you've got advertising as a business model, it drives your incentives in a slightly different way than people paying you for content.
Are there other ways of financing things? Obviously. Wikipedia is a huge exception. No ads whatsoever. It's funded by donations, by the general public largely, so small donations, but you can imagine other business models where it's some sort of a partnership. All the people who are joining the site are part owners of the site, and are paying for the site, that sort of thing. You can start to think about beginning to do those things at scale, using some of the ideas from DAOs.
I don't know if people are going to do that. But to me, it's a fertile area for potentially resolving some of the real problems we see.
Sometimes this conversation starts out in the same place you started, which is to say, "Hey, there are some unintended consequences of an advertising model," and then goes right to, "The problem must be profits." That's not what you're saying here.
Exactly. I do think there are good and robust reasons why Wikipedia is and should be a nonprofit, but it's not the only possibility.
One of my favorite little places online, there's a Lord of the Rings message board [TheOneRing.net]. Lovely place. They have been somewhat active about copyright law. It's a discussion board. People post things. If they're forced to do pre-upload filtering, they won't be able to afford it. They're probably going to need to move their entire community onto Facebook groups or something, which would be a huge tragedy, because it is a small, sweet place online that's been there for many years now.
I don't even know if they have ads. But if they do, it's just a few. You begin to think, OK, well, couldn't that group finance themselves somehow as a partnership, or a DAO, where they come together and they all contribute money? Then maybe they can do extra special fun things with the money. Fund scholarships for people to come to conventions and things like that. Who knows what they might want to do with it. It could be quite interesting, and a more positive outcome than everything moving to Facebook.
Let's talk about Section 230. It's 1996. Congress put these words into the Communications Decency Act, this very small number of words that turns out to be very powerful, that "no provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider." Nowadays, people blame Section 230 for a lot of what they don't like about the internet. What are people misunderstanding?
A big part of it is the tension we always have around freedom of expression. People get very eager to fight misinformation or disinformation through some legal process, which in the U.S. is typically very hard to do because the First Amendment is very strong. It doesn't stop people from being tempted.
A lot of the time, when you see people advocating for it, if you dig a little deeper, is they really want to see the speech they don't like banned, and the speech they do like not banned. They often think they've got some clever formula that makes that work. But then if you talk to Donald Trump, he would like to have Section 230 repealed so that he could force Twitter to let him back on Twitter. Other people are like: No, Donald Trump is the problem.
People should just take a deep breath and say, "Actually, if the issues are that there is disinformation and misinformation, Section 230 isn't where you need to look." It is a very simple rule that makes content moderation possible at all.
I don't think anybody serious thinks that it should be illegal for a Bible study group to kick out unbelievers if they want to. A big part of freedom of expression is having your own private space for a conversation without trolls coming in. That sort of thing, there's no simple solution. And certainly, Section 230 isn't the problem.
Just in the last few days, Elon Musk tweeted that he might start his own social media network. Now he's trying to buy Twitter. He's not the only person who has had this thought. You have a social media venture of your own.
The concept of WikiTribune Social, or WT.Social, is it's a small community. We're working on the software. We're thinking through things with the community and seeing what people are liking and doing. The fundamental concept is to pursue a different business model. No ads, no paywall. You just pay if you want to. That's the Wikipedia model.
It's not lucrative at all. We're not making money. But the purpose of that business model, and of the experiment, is to think in a really hands-on and deep way about how incentives shift. If we ran ads, our incentives would end up being exactly the same as every other social platform, which is to get as many page views as possible. One of the ways to do that is to have controversy on the site.
If I want to have a more thoughtful, slow, and reflective place, if the business model is you only pay if you really want to, then you really have to say, "OK, we need to build a place that people are like, 'I actually love this enough that I want to pay for it. It's worth paying for it. It's meaningful to me.'"
How to do that? I'm not sure yet. We're working on it. I barely ever look at things like time on site and how to increase people being on the site. Obviously, you can't ignore that completely. [If] I made a great show but nobody even wants to watch it, [it] isn't a successful recipe for a Netflix series. You can't completely ignore audience—it's more [that] I want to get people who actually care, who think this is worth supporting.
You seem to be emphasizing the freedom of assembly side of things, rather than the freedom of speech side of things.
That is one way of thinking about it. These days, people don't talk as much about freedom of assembly as they talk about freedom of expression. You can go on Twitter anytime and see where somebody's claiming that Twitter is violating their First Amendment rights. Of course, if you know the law, it starts out with "Congress shall make no law." It literally doesn't apply to Twitter. But freedom of assembly is a super interesting way of thinking about it, and the relationship between freedom of assembly and freedom of expression is super interesting.
I can have a Bible study group. Everybody understands that it's a pretty peaceful activity. In real life, no one says, "Yeah, I tried to go down to the church and stand in the front row and scream against the teachings of Jesus and they violated my rights by kicking me out." No, they actually have a right to be in their own space and talk about what they want to talk about without you bothering them.
Talk to me briefly about your politics these days. Do you have a label you like right now?
No, I don't really. In the past, I used the label libertarian, but even when I did, it was in a very cautionary way, because there's a lot that might go under that heading that I wouldn't agree with. For the most part, I avoid talking publicly about politics, except on the narrow issues where I feel like I have a responsibility and a voice.
You won't hear me pontificating about Obamacare, for example, because nobody really cares what Jimmy Wales thinks about health care policy. I'm not an expert. It's not my field. But if you ask me about Section 230, I'm like, "OK, I can tell you all about it. I have a strong view that I'm very happy to talk about."
We certainly have more speech than ever now, right? We have more ways to talk to each other. One theory could be that we are better at getting more truth, that we are better at getting to real answers or important underlying principles. Do you think we are closer to knowing what's true?
I think we have the potential to do that. I'm not sure we are doing it, in general.
It's a stereotypical example: your cranky, racist uncle. We all know the type. This is someone who, 40 years ago, might show up at Thanksgiving or Christmas dinner with really stupid and offensive opinions and spout off about them. That's a family problem, if anything. It's not a huge deal.
Where I do think it's problematic is that, today, [if that] crazy racist uncle goes on Facebook and starts ranting, then the algorithm picks up that everybody's responding to that, that it's a lot of page views. Then crazy racist uncle ends up with 5,000 followers on Facebook that are generated not because Facebook thinks, "Oh, there's a view we'd like to promote," but just because their algorithm is like, "Oh, there's noise. Let's turn that volume up so we can have more page views."
I'm not criticizing the profit motive there. I'm just saying the business model is a bit broken. If that's what you're incentivized to do, I don't want to be a customer of that.
What trend are you most excited about in tech or anywhere in the world?
An ongoing rise in subscription models for journalism, because I do think that, for all the reasons I've talked about before, a pure advertising model can lead you down a very tempting path of clickbait headlines, because it gets more page views. Whereas, if people are going to pay you, you have to think about what it is that makes them love you enough to pay for it. I would hope that we see more success in magazines and newspapers being able to actually get people to pay [for] them.
This magazine editor isn't going to argue with you about that.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "What Wikipedia Can Teach the Rest of the Internet."
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Does Wikipedia claim that it isn’t just another tentacle of state or private propaganda?
Then it should be easy for them to put into clear and unambiguous words exactly how they ensure that what they present as reality, truth, actually is.
That’s what is both essential and missing from this piece.
This is how I clearly and unambiguously ensure that what I say represents truth, reality.
I value the inalienable human right to free speech.
I value the supremacy of correctly applied logic and science in discerning and demonstrating truth aka reality.
I value the application of both in open debate to conclude and demonstrate that truth can never be refuted while untruths can be.
I commit that if what I say is ever refuted, I’ll never say it again.
Who else, including Wiki, can honestly say this and back it up?
Whereas, if people are going to pay you, you have to think about what it is that makes them love you enough to pay for it. I would hope that we see more success in magazines and newspapers being able to actually get people to pay [for] them.
This works very well for professional or interest groups who want a serious conversation but how does it serve the need for an informed polity?
If you choose not to pay to hear the other side of policy proposals, you may lose an opportunity to synthesize and incorporate the best of all arguments into viable policy.
Most commentariat don't spend enough time on the quality of their inputs in solidifying their positions and directly refuting the others, resorting instead to tribal or ad hominem positions. Here at reason we have both studied and thoughtful responses as well as the former and it is worthwhile participating in the conversation despite the noise.
Almost worth paying for.
"Most commentariat don't spend enough time on the quality of their inputs in solidifying their positions and directly refuting the others, resorting instead to tribal or ad hominem positions."
Bingo!!! Also they repeat their lies (big and small) over and over and over again, no matter HOW often the lies are refuted!
lmao... Enter leftard PROJECTION exhibit #9351284385722340.
Tell us one more time how Republicans are the big spenders...
Republicans are the big spenders when it comes to funding the Womb Patrol for Worshitting the Sacred Fartilized Egg Smell!!!!
What does that even mean, Shillsy?
It means that YOU (Perfect One) have less reading comprehension than a turd.
I think that the Bletchley Park boffins who worked the Enigma project would have problems comprehending your posts.
I think it means that the weekend staff is slow at distributing meds.
All of the GOOD totalitarians KNOW that those who oppose totalitarianism are mentally ill, yes!!!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_abuse_of_psychiatry_in_the_Soviet_Union#:~:text=During%20the%20leadership%20of%20General,that%20contradicted%20the%20official%20dogma.
Well that answers that.
Mother's Lament adores and lusts after systems that emulate the Soviet Union... THAT is the clear answer, then!
Since when have you ever spent time on the quality of your comments? Quantity, sure; length, sure; but quality? I never get more than a sentence or two before the nonsense manifests itself again.
Let me guess... Anything that doesn't agree with YOUR politics and YOUR tribe is "nonsense", right? No matter HOW well it is documented!
The intelligent, well-informed, and benevolent members of tribes have ALWAYS been resented by those who are made to look relatively worse (often FAR worse), as compared to the advanced ones. Especially when the advanced ones denigrate tribalism. The advanced ones DARE to openly mock “MY Tribe’s lies leading to violence against your tribe GOOD! Your tribe’s lies leading to violence against MY Tribe BAD! VERY bad!” And then that’s when the Jesus-killers, Mahatma Gandhi-killers, Martin Luther King Jr.-killers, etc., unsheath their long knives!
“Do-gooder derogation” (look it up) is a socio-biologically programmed instinct. SOME of us are ethically advanced enough to overcome it, using benevolence and free will! For details, see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/Do_Gooders_Bad/ and http://www.churchofsqrls.com/Jesus_Validated/ .
"I never get more than a sentence or two before the nonsense manifests itself again."
He didn't even manage a sentence this time, Á àß äẞç.
He's got a zillion buttons. I just found another!
No, it’s all your copy pasta bullshit.
I’ll give you this, you’re more intelligible than Hank or Hihn.
The problem with subscriptions is too many of them. ENB loves to throw in links to paywall sites NYT and WaPo, other sites have their own favorite paywall links. They all brag about being only $5 or £5 per month. Do they think they are the only worthy source?
Those subscriptions professional writers cite (such as ENB) are either funded by the employer or subsidized through the tax code and (ENB) indeed gets value from them.
Both by illuminating content or obscuring context for/from folks who won't bother to examine the source material. But for the reading public, it would get expensive.
Wikipedia is a wonderful ideal but like most ideals, it is easily corrupted. Special interests can focus their efforts on making sure their version of history is the one that appears in Wikipedia.
Well, they can try. Have they ever succeeded? Example please.
Go to the wikipedia 'recession' page and select the 'view history' tab.
There you will find all the edits to an article. Search for 'recession' and page through the results... starting in july 2022 the definition of 'recession' began to become heated with back and forths on how to define a recession to meet current needs.
But, one would expect 'special interests' to focus on special pages. For example, nuclear power advocates would most probably edit those pages rather than hydroponics advocates and with greater authority as to accuracy, since adversaries have opportunity to present (properly cited) their uncomfortable truths.
Thanks!
I don't have a good example, but John Stossel found some:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kiRgJYMw6YA
Thanks!
I liked the following comment from your link (in educational circles, academia frowns on, or prohibits outright, use of Wikipedia... So you just use the same sources that Wiki uses; done deal!!!)
The only thing I used Wikipedia for was to see what references they cited and then use those directly of they were good as I remember being told from when Wikipedia was brand new to not trust it as a valid source of information. A source to find valid sources sure, but not a solid source itself
T.D. Adler was a former Wikipedia Editor and provides a lot of great coverage of the corruption and bias that goes on behind the scenes. It's not too hard to find if you simply look:
ARTICLES BY T.D. ADLER
https://www.breitbart.com/author/t-d-adler/
https://tdadlerwp.medium.com/
People whose only interests are in making corrections can’t keep up with those who are politically motivated. The person who spots an error submits a correction and moves on. The politically motivated hack can sit there and incessantly refresh a page to make sure it keeps up with the narrative.
So of course, Wikipedia ends up falling victim to the most politically motivated. Language and even facts get distorted and spun by people seeking to push a particular narrative. Wikipedia is, in many ways, long form Twitter.
Wikipedia policy is now such that they will refuse to correct factual information of individuals if they have a major newspaper citing incorrect facts about the person. This has happened woth both crowder and tim pool. They put in requests to editors to fix false statements to be told the wrong facts were backed by papers like the NYT. Wiki intentionally chooses narratives over correctness.
Wikipedia has never been about truth. Wikipedia's standard policy is "verifiability" not truth. There are actually quite a few glaring problems with that standard as practiced on Wikipedia, though -- and you've brought up only one of the more obvious manifestations of it.
To WP, "reliable sources" are defined in such a way as to exclude things like real-world people correcting actual errors about their lives. Even a document produced by such a person to prove the fact would be considered "original research," which is generally prohibited by WP policies. WP prefers "secondary sources," and even though this isn't official, more weight is generally given to easily accessible online sources, because editors can visit such things more easily. Even if there are dozens of books in libraries that can contradict a WP "fact," good luck convincing a determined WP editor to fix it because they have one article in some prominent media source online that says their version is true.
Just to bring up another problem with "verifiability" over truth -- it easily allows people to game the system to put undue weight by leaving out context for an actual "fact." (This is kind of violating the "whole truth" standard we often ask witnesses to adhere to.) Example I actually saw on Wikipedia: some random Wikipedia editor was on a crusade to prove some chemical was poison and evil. (Mainly, in this case it seems, because it wasn't "organic" or some sort of BS.) So, they dug up a few actual facts about the chemical -- all VERIFIABLE -- about how awful it could be in large quantities, articles about related chemicals that are more problematic, etc. But they omitted context, like the fact that common "natural" alternatives to this chemical were even WORSE for people, as demonstrated by a lot more studies. The "verifiable" numbers sounded scary until you realized they didn't occur in real-world scenarios, and the ones that did were miniscule compared to the harm done by "natural" alternatives.
I haven't checked on this article in years, but the BS lived on for at least a few years there.
Welcome to Quora.com
There was a hilarious kerfuffle over the Haymarket massacre. This was a labor riot around 1880? which morphed into a bunch of dead from bombs and guns, I think, been a while and not really germane. What does matter is that there was a trial which found a bunch of people guilty, several hung.
The narrative became that the trial was a kangaroo court worthy of Hitler.
Somewhere 10-20 years ago, someone found the actual transcript of the trial and wrote a book on it, showing in great detail how the state bent over backwards to make the trial fair, with several hundred people as potential jurors, forensic evidence including chemical analysis of bomb fragments, etc, and he concluded it actually had been a really fair trial which had actually got most of the right criminals, a remarkable thing for the 1880s.
He tried updating the Wikipedia page and was shot down over and over for citing his own research and published book.
I think that was the first time I'd paid attention to Wikipedia's politics. Since then I've noticed a lot more of their politics trashing articles. Anything remotely political, I read them with a jaundiced eye and look for alternate articles. They are too damned woke to be trustworthy and reliable.
It's not just special interests. Common estimates say that at least 7% of edits to Wikipedia are vandalism, defined as deliberately editing in a manner that would decline the quality or accuracy of an article. There are bots that catch a high percentage of the most glaring types of vandalism (e.g., someone replacing a whole article with lots of profanity). But the more subtle the vandalism and the more established the user on Wikipedia, the longer errors can persist.
Back when I used to dabble in trying to make Wikipedia better by editing some articles (before I realized it was a lost cause), I saw lots of random vandalism. One of my favorite examples was a person who opened an account (anonymous edits are more frequently flagged by bots as potential vandalism right away), made one or two helpful edits, and then a few months later decided to go on a vandalism spree.
What did they do? They edited random DIGITS in historical dates. Like something that happened in 1763 became 1753 or 1736. They did this in a half-dozen articles, and these edits went unnoticed for at least a week. Then, like many vandals, they got greedy. They edited an article about a famous historical feminist to throw in a random sentence somewhere saying she was a "dirty slut" or something. That finally brought some attention, and the edits to that article and the dates were reversed.
But the reality is that many such subtle edits/vandalism aren't caught. Errors and full-blown fictional BS has persisted on Wikipedia for years. It gets bad enough now in many articles that it leads to what some call "cito-genesis," where a persistent error gets copied by some journalist into a news article or even into a book, and then the Wikipedia article cites the news article or book to justify its own existence. A citation is created from nothing, and a new false "fact" has just come out of nowhere. These are notoriously difficult to spot and remove from Wikipedia -- even if you do find one, you may have to convince the bureaucratic Wikipedia crazy editors that it's not real, which is hard. (I had a few friends who for nearly a decade maintained an entire fictional article on WP about a historical figure who never existed. It had quite a few scholarly citations to random facts that weren't actually about the fictional historical figure, just facts around that person, so the only way to see the problem was to read all the sources and realize that this historical figure never is mentioned... and therefore never existed.)
I never called that article out because by that point I had realized that WP is a seriously flawed model and is actually quite dangerous because it allows "truth" to be determined by the person who is most determined to fight edit wars and know the WP bureaucracy. Because beyond vandalism, the biggest threat to accuracy on Wikipedia is the editors themselves. Popular articles need consensus among editors, so it's easier to get changes made for inaccuracies as you can appeal to people with a variety of perspectives. If you wander not too far off the mainstream into articles that aren't really popular and are on more trivial subjects (probably 90% of WP articles), what you'll often find is a "King of the Hill" -- some editor who is interested in that subject for whatever reason and who likes it how it is. If you try to make changes, even to correct errors, they will often revert the edits or get into fights with you. That is what first convinced me to give up the idea of trying to help WP by editing it, because I encountered these people at every turn -- jerks who had little interest in accuracy, just wanting to protect "their domain."
The issue of course is that these people are actually now determining the STATE OF KNOWLEDGE ITSELF, as more journalists turn to Wikipedia to "verify" facts, as more book editors and scholars sometimes visit there just to look up something quickly. Think of how insane that is: some anonymous person on the internet who likes to play "King of the Hill" on his little fiefdom is actually determining the state of knowledge on some obscure topic... until someone with a library card actually goes and looks stuff up on that topic from before WP, finds it in a book, produces citations, and then maybe spends hours or days fighting the "King of the Hill" through the Wikipedia bureaucracy to prove that the edits should be made.
Special interests are just one issue with WP, but they mostly matter on hot-button topics. For the rest of WP, there are serious and dire concerns too. (And there are relatively straightforward ways to fix such things, which also still maintain autonomy to propose edits for random WP users, but the bureaucracy has rejected them in favor of a free-for-all. And active WP editors have been decreasing in number, so the rot is likely getting worse with every year.)
Is the Biden Asministration telling Wikipedia what to edit yet?
"We're at a point where not just broad swaths of the internet but our whole politics are being consumed with the debate over content moderation and misinformation. It seems to me that Wikipedia quietly got a bunch of those things right a really long time ago."
Ahem. I was wandering around the web researching slaves owned by blacks. I ran across an article about John Casor. Wikipedia said this:
At this time (1665), there were only about 300 people of African origin living in the Virginia Colony, about 1% of an estimated population of 30,000. The first group of 20 or so Africans were brought to Jamestown in 1619 as indentured servants. After working out their contracts for passage money to Virginia and completing their indenture, each was granted 50 acres (20 ha) of land (headrights). This enabled them to raise their own tobacco or other crops.
In one of the earliest freedom suits, Casor argued that he was an indentured servant who had been forced by Anthony Johnson, a free black, to serve past his term; he was freed and went to work for Robert Parker as an indentured servant. Johnson sued Parker for Casor's services. In ordering Casor returned to his master, Johnson, for life, the court both declared Casor a slave and sustained the right of free blacks to own slaves.
I went back to cite it later, and it said this:
At this time, there were only about 300 people of African origin living in the Virginia Colony, about 1% of an estimated population of 30,000. The first group of 20 or so Africans were brought to Point Comfort in 1619 as enslaved Africans. After working between 15 and 30 years, most were granted their freedom to purchase land and start their own homestead.
Rewriting history. Wikipedia style:
I suspect this is an attempt to conflate actual slavery, by force, with a contract of indenture, voluntarily entered into for a period of time.
This will help blur the blatant lie of slaves being brought to Jamestown in 1619, when the fact is that they were indentured servants who sold their indenture to pay the passage to the new world.
Major restatements were from ‘indentured servant’ to ‘enslaved African’, from ‘Jamestown’ to ‘Point Comfort’ (perhaps to avoid searches including Jamestown? Point Comfort is 40 miles downriver from Jamestown), from ‘granted land’ to ‘granted their freedom to purchase land’ (after serving an indenture, they were free by law, and no granting of the freedom to purchase was needed).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Casor
https://en.wikipedia.org/ w/index.php?title=John_Casor &diff=next&oldid=979332193
Thanks, that was interesting!
The lines between servant and slave were fuzzy, in olden times. (SOOOO many of us are "wage slaves" these days; this kind of talk doesn'ty help.) Here's another example of that: Re-writing the Bible to turn slaves into bondservants: https://www.biblestudytools.com/bible-study/topical-studies/is-the-term-bondservant-the-best-way-to-describe-slavery.html
I seem to recall some folks wanting to white-wash ALL slavery in the Bible, doing an across-the-board replacement of all "slave" terms with "bondservant" instead. I'm too lazy to look for more links.
These days, people don't talk as much about freedom of assembly as they talk about freedom of expression.
These people are so retardedly deluded. Both these fucking cancers are shutting down speech, while saying only one group is allowed to assemble.
Ctrl f: Larry Sanger
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You are useless kmw.
What is up with reason pushing such softball interviews. Your a 'libritarian' who is sitting one on one with a member of the provda. Do your fucking job kmw. Also fire robby, if a gov official askes to be interviewed by you, then you are not a libritarian reporter
if a gov official askes to be interviewed by you, then you are not a libritarian reporter
maybe the pol wants to reach a demographic he wouldn't normally get to address.
He is referencing the Fauci interview on the Hill show where Robbie didn't push back on one answer from Fauci. Fauci requested Robbie apparently and refused to sit with one of the other reporters who chose to leave the Hill have being disallowed to sit for the interview with Fauci as she has had good and pressing questions for the cdc prior.
It was Kim Iverson. Had forgot her name.
https://www.bizpacreview.com/2022/08/19/the-hill-reporter-vaccine-critic-tells-why-she-abruptly-left-popular-show-and-it-involves-dr-fauci-1275129/
Exactly. Kim gives an interview with Russell Brand about it:
https://simulationcommander.substack.com/p/kim-iversen-reveals-details-of-fauci
Fauci requested robby. And roddie was the good little lap dog fauci expected.
So being thoroughly and completely captured by the left is supposed to be the way forward? Sorry lady these lies are so transparent as to be insulting. Everyone knows if you deviate from marxist dogma on a topic they care about the entry will be edited back to the leftist lies almost instantly, the fact you ignore this or promote such shows you have no concept of reality.
"Jimmy Wales talks about why his online encyclopedia works"
It doesn't work. You can't trust it on any remotely controversial topic.
You can't trust it on other topics either. I've seen it be blatantly wrong on uncontroversial stuff several times, from miscounting the the number of years an obscure village grew, to totally overestimating the time it takes to play a hand in a semi-popular card game.
At best you can follow the citations to read the actual sources (which is, admittedly, helpful.)
But how many controversial topics are there compared to uncontroversial ones?
And even on the controversial ones, there are usually links to primary sources. Still, when it comes to controversial topics, often enough people will believe what they want to believe, regardless of Wikipedia or any other source.
BTW when I created a new Wiki entry, I was surprised at how rigorous the process was, and I was also surprised by the high quality of later contributions. This was it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunslinger_effect
Just here to see how jeff embarrasses himself today. Sqrsly currently showing him how to do it.
Reasons obsession with propping up Wales is disturbing. He is not for free speech nor is he for organized free discussions.
https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/07/31/wikipedia-founder-jimmy-wales-slams-reddi ts-free-speech-policy_n_7913178.html
This isn't the hero libertarian story reason wants it to be. Wiki itself is now propaganda for any story that touches politics with walled super editors choosing leftist slants only.
This is worse than reason propping up Polis. I would like to say the reason writers are better than this, but they obviously aren't with multiple stories propping this asshole up.
“When dealing with people, let us remember we are not dealing with creatures of logic. We are dealing with creatures of emotion, creatures bristling with prejudices and motivated by pride and vanity.” - Dale Carnegie.
Wikipedia might be better than Gov-Gun'em-down censorship but it's hardly a beacon of truth.
[WE] mobs make-up their own 'truths' (the assembly bit) but often fail repeatedly by any standard of *reality*. Re-connecting the world 'truth' with *reality* would be a big step for the current fad of disassociating the two. Truth must have a proven record of predictability and repeatability not a track record of unpredictability and unreliability like Climate Change Wack-jobs.
Nice quote. It explains thing like when someone says "Boo" about your side, creatures of emotion react by assuming that means praise for the other side. Or when someone fails to mention or criticize X in a conversation, that means they must support it. Or if someone is wrong about X then they must be wrong about Y, even if Y has nothing to do with X. It really helps to explain the argumentative styles in these comments. Emotion, dishonesty, and a love for logical fallacies.
Poor sarc.
Poor sarc. Always making excuses for his own ignorance and intentional gaslighting.
I just listed your favorite three arguments. All variations of the ad hominem. None of them refute any actual arguments made by someone. They all shift the topic to the person making the argument.
It's literally all you do in these comments.
You may as well embrace it.
It all makes sense when you understand two things about Jesse:
(1) He accepts at face value everything that comes from a right-wing source.
(2) He never backs down or apologizes even if genuinely wrong. He is in constant attack mode.
So he is an attack dog for Team Red, and any method to achieve that is fair game to him.
He's not unique in this regard. From what I've seen a majority of the people on the internet feel that you don't need to argue with what a person says if you can attack the person. It's a great way to "win" an argument when you have no argument. JesseAz spent an entire year saying I was wrong about X, no matter what X was, because I didn't sufficiently criticize the summer riots. Or if I say anything about the police he brings up Saint Babbitt. Or if I say anything critical of Republicans he says I'm a leftist. If it wasn't for fallacies, he'd have no arguments at all.
But don't give him credit for being unique. He's not in that regard.
Though it does sadden me somewhat that conservatives have latched onto ad hominems as persuasive arguments. That used to be a thing used mostly by the left, because the right was more apt to use facts and logic.
Those days are gone. I wonder why. Could it have something to do with worshiping a crybaby in the White House for four years?
Like what jeff is doing below despite 2 sources backing the claims made?
Lol.
Wow you two are both delusional idiots.
How about jeff yesterday making a claim against rmac, rmac providing him a cite, then jeff wailing and crying with dishonest posts after? Never happens right sarc?
You two are the most delusional pieces of shit here. Lol.
I'm not talking about jeff. I'm talking about you and your fetish for fellating fallacies.
How so, sarcasmic?
He has made this claim 3 times and still has not provided an actual example for his claims.
R Mac decided to hold himself up to a higher standard than the typical commenter. He did so freely and of his own volition. It is not my fault if he is shown to be failing that standard miserably.
R Mac has no standards. He's just poo flinging monkey.
Jeff lied about R Mac, R Mac proved he lied, now Jeff's trying to redirect and of course, sarcasmic, who has no clue what happened, is covering for Jeffy.
Sarc's penchant for poor life choices even extends to the online world.
Poor Sarc.
Lol, I even said right after Lying Jeffy would pretend it never happened and…here we are.
R Mac has no standards. He's just poo flinging monkey.
Of course he is. He is just like the other right-wing mean girls around here, constantly trying to find gotchas and opportunities to mock and criticize the people he doesn't like, while giving a pass and outright ignoring the sins of his tribal allies. He is no different than Jesse or ML here. (Well, he is less blatantly obsequious in his defense of his tribal allies than ML the lap dog attack poodle is.) But he was the one who claimed to be "vociferous" in criticism of "dishonest and disingenuous people here", and he did so freely. I want him to admit that that is a lie, that he does what everyone else sees that he does, he trolls the people he doesn't like and gives cover to the people he does like.
R Mac: "I even said right after Lying Jeffy would pretend it never happened and…here we are"
As evidenced by his very next post where he stomped his feet and called names, but sure as shit didn't mention it.
Chemleft: "I want him to admit that that is a lie, that he does what everyone else sees that he does, he trolls the people he doesn't like and gives cover to the people he does like."
That's sarc, not R Mac, Jeffy.
And if he wasn't kissing your ass in a desperate search for attention, your boss at the fifty-cent factory would have canned you for incompetence ages ago.
In fact you should do something nice for poor sarc, take him fishing or something. You owe him.
“R Mac decided to hold himself up to a higher standard than the typical commenter.”
Another lie by Lying Jeffy. I said I value honesty and that’s why I criticize liars. Typical commentators don’t lie all the time.
You value honesty? All you do is tell lies about people. So either you do not value honesty, or you believe some really stupid shit.
Such as?
That I'm a leftist, that I run socks, and that I'm somehow "broken" and you get the credit. It's all bullshit that you repeat incessantly. So you're either a liar or you believe some really stupid shit. My opinion is a combination of both.
Again here is the exact quote:
2. Personally, my driving factors are the NAP, and being honest (why I’m so vociferous in my criticism of dishonest and disingenuous people here).
This is a lie. You are not "vociferous in [your] criticism of dishonest and disingenuous people here". You are very selective in your vociferous-ness. You criticize the people you don't like over minor infractions while you give passes to huge whoppers of lies by the people you do like.
I have given you opportunity over opportunity to criticize any of your tribal allies over their lies, but you decline to do so. Instead you make a big deal over hyperbole and sarcasm by the people you don't like, which are not even lies per se.
ML claimed that Graham's abortion bill would protect abortion nationwide up to 15 weeks of pregnancy. That's a lie. I pointed out that it's a lie. You said nothing.
Jesse viciously slandered me by calling me a supporter of pedophilia. That is a lie. You said nothing.
I used hyperbole in describing Jesse's position on Jan. 6. You hounded me for several posts demanding that I admit my "lie".
You are a disingenuous liar if you want us to think that you are "vociferous" in your criticism of liars. You are not.
Poor sarc, those are all subjective opinions. I think you’re a lefty because you repeatedly jump into stories negative to Democrats and shit up the threads to deflect from the topic. I think sqrlsy is your sock because you forgot who you were signed in as and posted the copy pasta nonsense under your sarcasmic handle. I think you’re broken because, well you certainly act like it.
Lying Jeffy, so I didn’t decide to hold myself up to a higher standard than the typical commentator like you just lied.
R Mac is a sock of Satan, / Mary Stack / Tulpa / Mary’s Period / “.” / , etc.
“Dear Abby” is a personal friend of mine. She gets some VERY strange letters! For my amusement, she forwards some of them to me from time to time. Here is a relevant one:
Dear Abby, Dear Abby,
My life is a mess,
Even Bill Clinton won’t stain my dress,
I whinny seductively for the horses,
They tell me my picnic is short a few courses,
My real name is Mary Stack,
NO ONE wants my hairy crack!
On disability, I live all alone,
Spend desperate nights by the phone,
I found a man named Richard (Dick) Decker,
But he won’t give me his hairy pecker!
Dick Decker’s pecker is reserved for farm beasts,
I am beastly, yes! But my crack’s full of yeasts!
So Dear Abby, that’s just a poetic summary… You can read about the Love of my Life, Richard Decker, here:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/10/11/farmers-kept-refusing-let-him-have-sex-with-their-animals-so-he-sought-revenge-authorities-say/#comments-wrapper
Farmers kept refusing to let him have sex with their animals. So he sought revenge, authorities say.
Decker the hairy pecker told me a summary of his story as below:
Decker: “Can I have sex with your horse?”
Farmer: “Lemme go ask the horse.”
Pause…
Farmer: “My horse says ‘neigh’!”
And THAT was straight from the horse’s mouth! I’m not horsin’ around, here, no mare!
So Richard Decker the hairy pecker told me that, apparently never even realizing just HOW DEEPLY it hurt me, that he was all interested in farm beasts, while totally ignoring MEEE!!
So I thought maybe I could at least liven up my lonely-heart social life, by refining my common interests that I share with Richard Decker… I, too, like to have sex with horses!
But Dear Abby, the horses ALL keep on saying “neigh” to my whinnying sexual advances!
Some tell me that my whinnying is too whiny… Abby, I don’t know how to fix it!
Dear Abby, please don’t tell me “get therapy”… I can’t afford it on my disability check!
Now, along with my crack full of yeasts… I am developing anorexia! Some are calling me a “quarter pounder with cheese”, but they are NOT interested at ALL, in eating me!!! They will NOT snack on my crack!
What will I DO, Dear Abby?!?!?
-Desperately Seeking Horses, Men, or ANYTHING, in Fort Worth,
Yours Truly,
R Mac / Mary Stack / Tulpa / Mary’s Period / “.” / Satan
"ML claimed that Graham's abortion bill would protect abortion nationwide up to 15 weeks of pregnancy. That's a lie. I pointed out that it's a lie. You said nothing."
See, this is what Jeff always does, he twists statements just enough so that he can argue against his misquotes instead.
I said that Graham's abortion bill legalizes abortion on a federal level, which it does, and is consistent with most European abortion policy, which it is.
But look at Jeff twist my words into something else.
Now I'm no fan of Graham's abortion bill because 1. the federal government has no business in something that is constitutionally in the States purview, and 2. with the exception of medical issues I'm against any and all abortion. It's murder. Graham's a compromised idiot.
But look at Jeff insinuate that I'm on Lindsey's fucking bandwagon. What a dishonest clown.
"Sqrlsy is a sock of Satan, / Mary Stack / Tulpa / Mary’s Period / “.” / , etc."
Fixed. Sqrlsy was also Michael Hihn's spirit animal.
I said that Graham's abortion bill legalizes abortion on a federal level
This is the lie. Graham's bill does not legalize abortion on a federal level. It prohibits abortion on a federal level after 15 weeks and permits states to be even more restrictive than that. I pointed this out to you. I quoted the actual text of the bill. You ignore it and continue to repeat this lie. You are spreading propaganda at this point.
The biggest irony of this post is 2 posts up sarc does what he accuses others of. Lol.
Nope.
I'm not saying that criticism of X equals support for Y.
I'm not saying that failure to mention Y equals support for Y.
I'm not saying that you being wrong about X means you're wrong about Y.
That's your job.
You are talking about others instead of their arguments dummy.
I really thought that when Trump was elected that people would finally stop calling me a hard-right conservative for my criticism of Obama.
Somehow I morphed into a hard-left progressive overnight by virtue of my criticism of Trump.
Now these same mouthbreathers still think I'm a leftist even though I refer to the president as "the idiot on the White House" and never voice support for the left.
Why? Because criticism of X equals support for Y, and failure to mention Z equals support for Z.
Youre called left now because in any criticism of the left you rush into a thread to deflect the criticism and attack the right instead. Despite your claims otherwise would are incapable of criticism against the terrible dem regime currently in power. Spending all your time defending and deflecting for the left.
Again. You operate from pure delusion. Even people like Overt have called you out on this behavior. Then you ramp up the same behaviors. You've allied with other leftists like jeff and Mike as well.
And you've even claimed the left is more libertarian. Need the post? This despite the entire last 2.5 years of covid and IC abused over the last 6 years.
You revel in delusion.
The only delusion here is your belief that criticism of X equals support for Y, or failure to mention or criticize Y equals support for Y.
In this case X is the political right and Y is the political left.
Maybe you believe these fallacies to be true. In which case there's no help for you at all.
What about when Y is pretending to be Z when criticizing X, but is really just Y being a troll and a shill?
Y do V keep X-tending Z-s formulaic gibberish? (Besides, I was advised there would b no math questions…)
Don't worry, Utkonos, it's sarcasmic math, which isn't very complex and invariably leads to erroneous answers.
And I can completely understand where Jesse is coming from.
You see, Jesse's brain is so full of right-wing mush(*), because he only consumes right-wing media sources and uncritically accepts every one of them, that from his perspective, the right-wing narrative IS the truth. So, in Jesse's world, Biden really did try to create a no-shit Ministry of Truth with the Disinformation Governance Board. He really was planning to throw conservatives into gulags for posting right-wing memes on Twitter. This is what Jesse sincerely believes. And so when I or others try to point out the ACTUAL truth, Jesse views this as "deflecting for the left", because the ACTUAL truth is not the "Truth" that Jesse knows to be true.
So in Jesse-world, the choice is crystal clear. Either:
(1) Accept at face value the right-wing narrative on everything; or
(2) Admit to being a leftist.
(*) And no R Mac, I am not claiming that Jesse's brain is literally composed of mush. This is called hyperbole. It is not a lie. Understand the difference.
I can imagine Jeffy's Doritos-stained fat fingers smashing the keys with rage as he typed that, his chins trembling with rage.
If his mom's smart she won't go down to the basement to retrieve his dishes tonight, or she might just get another black eye.
It’s fucking rich considering how many times Jesse has linked to WaPo and NYT to show their blatant hypocrisy and regurgitation of Democrat talking points.
Right. Jesse and ML link to NYT/WaPo over some gossipy anonymously-sourced story that says mean things about Republicans, in order to demonstrate their low journalistic standards. Meanwhile, they cite NY Post/Washington Examiner over some gossipy anonymously-sourced story that says mean things about Democrats, and they take it at face value.
So you admit that he doesn’t “only consume” right leaning news. Glad we could clear that up.
No. You listed what you appear as the causes of your victim hood. You are never at fault buddy. You never troll. You never use hyperbolic strawman arguments. You are pure and true.
Poor sarc.
I listed your favorite fallacies that you consider to be persuasive arguments. You really should own it. It's obvious to anyone who isn't a mouthbreather.
No. You listed your internal rationalization for your behaviors.
The fallacies that you employ are rationalizations for my behavior?
You're mental, man. Seriously.
What fallacies do you think Jesse is guilty of, sarc?
What fallacies? You've proven time and again you dont actually understand the fallacy terms you claim others commit.
Still waiting sarc.
Are you just proving you were projecting above?
NBC News deletes quote from compassionate liberals regarding refugees.
“Florida Gov. DeSantis sending asylum-seekers to Martha’s Vineyard is like ‘me taking my trash out and just driving to different areas where I live and just throwing my trash there,’ a founding member of a foundation which helps refugees says.”
https://www.dailywire.com/news/nbc-news-deletes-tweet-that-contained-disturbing-quote-from-immigration-activist-about-migrants
The mask keeps slipping.
The mask is all the way off.
Calls grow for a modern Church Committee to investigate the FBI and DoJ.
https://justthenews.com/accountability/calls-grow-among-prominent-figures-create-new-church-committee-probe-fbi-abuses
The ironic thing about the right's animosity towards Section 230 is that all of their hateful chat would be immediately shut down if they got their way. It would have the same effect on internet forums that a renewal of the Fairness Doctrine would have on their precious talk radio programs.
It would all go kaput.
I almost hope they get their way.
False.
Making websites liable for the slander and libel people like you put into the comments would shut them all down. Yet you're all for it because you somehow think it will give you and your hateful friends a larger voice. You're trying to shoot yourself in the foot and you don't even know it.
Again false. See websites prior to 230.
Ooo, bald assertion. That's convincing proof right there!
It's totally different than when he says QI is necessary and someone asks how public officials existed before they were protected from lawsuits.
QI is necessary because every one of Jesse's sources declares QI to be necessary and opposing QI is what libtards do. Therefore QI is necessary. QED.
QI is necessary because people on the left want to get rid of it.
Doesn't matter what it is, if the left supports it then he must oppose it.
If the parties switched sides on abortion, JesseAz would suddenly discover that he's always supported a woman's right to choose.
Cite?
Another fallacious strawman I've never made. I've been consistent on abortion for over 2 decades.
Again you are doing what you accuse others of above.
QI at some form is necessary. I've explained why to your feeble mind multiple times. Such as new rights being found by the USSC would then be liable for lawsuits for past behaviors under prior precedence. I know you're not intelligent enough to understand this so you continue to deny my past statements.
An example of this is with gay marriage. Sans QI activists could have sued any clerk or government that disallowed marriage licenses without QI despite the right not having been established prior.
It needs to be reformed not ended. But youre too dumb to actually understand this.
QI at some form is necessary.
How did the government function between 1789 and 1967? Just curious.
Or was it 1982?
There was implied prior to 1982 as stated in the ruling development of QI. This isn't difficult. Do you need examples of governments not being liable from civil actions prior to 1982?
Ex post facto laws are still illegal.
According to JesseAz, for nearly 200 years the government was unable to function because frivolous lawsuits tied so many employees up in court that they couldn't get anything done.
That's his argument against QI, right?
Cite? The government operated largely free from civil lawsuits prior to the 1960s.
That's kinda hard, being that 230 came into existence 28 years ago when the Internet was in its infancy.
Were there even website-based discussion forums pre-1996? From what I recall, discussion forums were instead curated walled gardens like CompuServe or AOL, or Usenet-based forums. And those were populated by a relatively small number of people, mainly, college students or the occasional person who had dial-up Internet as a type of luxury. So claiming that websites could operate now like they *could have* operated over 20 years ago when the Internet was in a much different state of development, seems foolish.
How about all the countries in the world that don't have 230?
Canada and all of Europe? Was there a lick of difference?
The modern internet was developed in 1992 dummy. Prior to that IRC and arpanet existed since 1969.
I thought you were a "tech guy."
Section 230 came about in 1996. Four years after the modern internet as you said. Arpanet has is a red herring since its use was extremely limited.
Your argument is that those four years of internet and a little-known system used by universities and government are proof that 230 is not necessary.
Keep it up though. I know it is impossible for you to admit to being wrong, so this should be entertaining.
Oh. So there were no comment systems in those 4 years nor any chat rooms prior to 1992. You are truly ignorant.
By the way sarc. What you are doing is making bald assertions. No cites. No evidence. The very things you claim others do above. This is one of your most common tactics, then you scream victim hood and demand others to a higher standard. Just like jeff does. You two are ridiculous people.
Ah yes. Your standard response when someone points out your fallacies is to say "You're screaming victim!" Yet another ad hominem, because you're saying the person pointing out your fallacy is wrong because they're a victim. It's literally all you do.
Embrace it.
What fallacy? Do you have a citation?
And that response isn't a fucking ad hominem you retarded fuck. How do you still get this wrong?
When I point out your use of logical fallacies, your standard response is to say I'm crying victim. That's an ad hominem because your argument is that I'm wrong because I think I'm a victim. May as well say I'm wrong because I wear glasses and don't like sweet pickles. Your demand for a citation is an appeal to authority by the way. Another fallacy.
Keep it up. It's all you've got.
Can you provide a single citation of you ever accurately stating a fallacy correctly?
Calling you a whiny victim signaling bitch isn't an ad hominem btw.
Please educate yourself so you don't prove your ignorance.
If they don’t moderate content beyond obviously illegal shit (like buttplug posting links to kiddie porn) they wouldn’t be liable for anything by the plain text of the law.
The ironic thing about the right's animosity towards Section 230 is that all of their hateful chat would be immediately shut down if they got their way.
Perhaps it would. Of course, I'm not so sure that tolerating the left's hateful chat while shutting down the right's is a better state of affairs. The fact is Section 230 provides common carrier liability protections to Big Tech. If you're going to beat your chest about how libertarian you are for opposing the imposition of common carrier access regulations on Big Tech, you still have to come to terms with the fact that you're them this subsidy.
Yesterday Jeff was posting 2nd hand testimony from activists claiming the migrants being shipped to MV were lied to. Daily caller received the forms migrants were given.
“Yes, they were asked multiple times if they wanted to go,” said a source with close contact to the ground operation that moved the around 50 illegal migrants.
.
The packets included a map with Martha’s Vineyard marked with a red star with the label “YOU ARE HERE,” written in both English and Spanish. The packets also had documents with local resources, including the contact information for community services and churches in the area, potential employment opportunities and public assistance programs.
Jeff claimed yesterday the 2nd hand testimony was more responsive than the signed consent forms the governors have been using. Now there is more evidence of even more information these migrants were given. Jeff?
https://dailycaller.com/2022/09/16/migrants-desantis-vineyard-massachusetts/
Miami Herald was also given the contents of the packets given to migrants from Florida.
https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/article265894561.html
Of course in this attempted attack on the governors they bury this paragraph with a picture.
The only frame of reference for the migrants, attorneys said, were two maps tucked inside a red folder that had school-level maps of the U.S. and Martha’s Vineyard. The U.S. map had a red line that linked Texas to Massachusetts. The Martha’s Vineyard map had a red dot in the middle.
Professor Turley explains why the calls for kidnapping charges are false.
https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/3647169-no-desantis-is-not-a-human-trafficker-or-kidnapper/
Do you understand that signed consent forms obtained under false pretenses are fraudulent?
They were told they were going to Boston. That was a lie.
They were told that if they went on the trip, there would get work permits and a place to live. That was a lie.
So they consented to a fraudulent deal. Which you support and defend. Evidently fraud is okay when it serves a right-wing narrative.
So you admit you can't read what I actually posted and double down on your claims falsified by such information as posted from 2 sources above.
Good work Jeff.
https://www.npr.org/2022/09/15/1123109768/migrants-sent-to-marthas-vineyard
The cites i posted have recieved the actual materials given to the migrants. You continue to ignore this fact. Why?
Because you are a dishonest leftist shit. Lol.
Yup they were given a cartoon map of Martha's Vineyard with a star on it that said "You Are Here". That is absolutely correct.
But what were the migrants promised in exchange for their "consent" on the form? Were they told they were going to MV, or to Boston? What does the actual form say?
And why should I believe your anonymous sources?
So I should believe your anonymous source over an actual interview of one of the migrants?
They were told they were going to Boston. They were told they would be getting work permits and places to live. Those were all lies.
Where is the actual form that they signed, Jesse?
And more evidence of Jeff's dishonesty. They have a picture of the given map in the herald post. You continue to intentionally ignore this. They aren't relying on anonymous sources. They have the material given. You continue to intentionally ignore this.
This is proof of your dishonesty. You would rather rely on wnd hand information from leftist reporters than those seeing and posting primary evidence.
You are a fucking clown jeff.
I don't doubt the existence of the map.
But what were the migrants promised?
If they were promised that they were going to Boston and not MV, then that is a lie, correct?
Furthermore, none of your sources, anonymous or otherwise, discuss why the migrants were lied to when it comes to promises of work permits or a place to live.
Why do you think it's appropriate to lie to migrants in order to obtain fraudulent consent? Oh wait I know, it's because the migrants are just disposable trash, the important thing is to embarrass Team Blue.
Who cares? What matters is what they got in writing and what they signed.
Yes, it is really horrible that Democrats lied about welcoming these migrants with open arms, that Democrats are using these migrants as pawns in their political games, and that Democrats are treating these migrants as disposable trash.
Right, so who gives a shit about details like fraud when it comes to illegal migrants.
By the way, where is the actual form that they signed? Hmm?
Where is the actual form, Jesse?
Don't you find it interesting that your right-wing sources aren't publishing the actual text of the consent form that these migrants supposedly signed?
"under false pretenses"
Like advertising yourself as a sanctuary city when you clearly fucking aren't?
Did the municipal government of Martha's Vineyard go trolling migrant shelters in San Antonio, offering false promises of food and jobs and places to live if they signed the form? No, that was the state government of Florida.
"Did the municipal government of Martha's Vineyard go trolling migrant shelters in San Antonio"
No. Instead they held news conferences and had their heroic stance published by some of the largest news outlets in the world.
You always try to get oddly specific when trying to get tricky.
Did the government of MV outlaw bears in trunks or not? Hmm?
So, R Mac skipped over dozens of posts above, where his tribal allies offered huge whoppers of lies, and chose to make a snarky irrelevant comment about me. Yes yes, he is so "vociferous" in his criticism of liars, isn't he?
Couldn’t answer the question I see.
Yeah, I've noticed you actually "skip" shit you can't twist or lie about, Jeffy.
Like how advertising in San Antonio migrant shelters counts, but not in the world's biggest newspapers with international reaches.
Right. So did the migrants sign a consent form with the MV municipal government?
Did Martha's Vinyard make their advertised sanctuary status conditional on consent forms, Jeffy?
Can you point to the spot on their declaration where they said that?
A statement of belief is not the same as a contractual obligation.
His benefit of the doubt only goes in one direction.
Correct, they didn't. The municipal governments of Martha's Vinyard, Detroit, DC, NYC, etc. have just been lying for years about their migrant policies.
The simple fact is that several million illegal migrants have entered Texas, Florida, and other border states and those border states can't handle it. But the Biden administration refuses to do anything about it. So the states are taking matters into their own hands.
Be glad that these illegal migrants are getting free tickets out of state. The states could likely arrest many of them for criminal code violations, and I expect that's the next step if Biden doesn't fix this.
By "taking matters into their own hands", you mean "using migrants as props and exploiting them to push an agenda", right?
“Yes, they were asked multiple times if they wanted to go,” said a source with close contact to the ground operation that moved the around 50 illegal migrants.
And let's just be clear: Jesse is taking at face value the claims by an anonymous source because it supports his narrative. He would never tolerate such low journalistic standards were it the NYT or WaPo peddling rumors and unsourced innuendo against right-wingers. But it's totally fine when it's the Daily Caller using it to prop up Team Red.
And Jeff skips over the evidence of 2 sources showing the materials recieved by migrants.
Lol.
Keep digging jeff. The herald literally has a picture.
At this point youre intentionally lying to protect the left.
Why should I believe your anonymous sources, Jesse?
Chem Jeff radical statist has devolved into being a sea otter
We’ve completely and utterly broken him.
So you're calling Jesse out and alleging he's doing something you've done thousands of times here yourself?
What a clown.
what I posted has actual primary evidence of their claims. Jeff continues to ignore this as he posts 2nd hand information from leftwing sources instead.
It is actually evidence of how much of a liar he is as well as his dishonesty.
You cite anonymous right-wing sources that confirm your biases and you consider that "proof". Quelle surprise.
You ignore *primary* interviews with the migrants themselves, several of whom say that they were lied to and tricked into signing the form based on false promises. You don't acknowledge this because it looks bad for Team Red.
You continue to ignore the fact that these migrants were treated by DeSantis and crew as disposable human beings, little better than cargo. They had no qualms exploiting penniless, powerless, desperate people for a political stunt. And you approve.
And you have never addressed the vast power imbalance between the state government and these penniless powerless migrants when it came to obtaining "consent" via these forms, even if fraudulently obtained.
These migrants were manipulated and exploited by a much more powerful entity to serve as unwitting political pawns in this stunt.
But who really cares about that, right? Who cares if these migrants are manipulated and exploited and treated as little more than cargo? The important point here is that Team Blue was embarrassed! Isn't that right Jesse?
Say what you want about the MV residents who couldn't wait to ship them off the island, but did they decide to use those migrants in their own stunt? They didn't, say, bus them to DeSantis' residence in Florida, did they?
Those "powerless migrants" aren't welcome. They aren't state residents. They are likely in the country illegally. And the border states simply can't handle them anymore.
Border states can either move them to blue states, or they can arrest them and throw them in jail when they commit crimes, which they invariably will.
Right, so it's okay to exploit powerless migrants if they are illegal.
Is it you or Sarc who, repeatedly, has said that trespass is a capital offense and killing a trespasser is a suitable punishment?
Incidentally Jesse.
Can you explain why the state of Florida is paying people to go trolling migrant shelters in Texas to find migrants to manipulate and exploit to send to Martha's Vineyard?
Nearly 2 hours and this remains unanswered. Huh. I wonder why.
Can you explain why the state of Florida paying people to enlist illegals to go to self-declared sanctuary cities elsewhere is wrong?
Do you think that they should enlist volunteers instead?
How come it's okay for Joe to ship illegals to Florida, but not DeSantis to ship them to cities that made a big deal publicly about being refuges for them.
The fun thing about all this is it exposed you all as the evil, lying hypocrites that you are.
You were fine moralizing as border towns got swamped by hundreds of thousands and their infrastructure broke. But ship you moralizers small batches of fifty, and you're hypocrisy becomes evident.
No, I'm not going to let you get away with this tactic. You do this all the time. You refuse to answer a question that is posed, so you try to invert the question and turn it around on the asker. This is so you are not put in the position of having to defend your answer. It's a lot easier to attack an answer than it is to defend an answer, and you pull this stunt all the time.
No, I want you to answer the question that was asked:
Can you explain why the state of Florida is paying people to go trolling migrant shelters in Texas to find migrants to manipulate and exploit to send to Martha's Vineyard?
It's hopefully a start for all Southern states to band together and start shipping illegals off to Northern states to share the burden.
It would be very interesting to know who “Perla” is.
Cite?
Isn't it obvious? To get as many migrants as possible out of state.
Why is the state of Florida concerned about migrants in Texas?
From above:
Jesse: "Wikipedia policy is now such that they will refuse to correct factual information of individuals if they have a major newspaper citing incorrect facts about the person."
heraclitus: "Wikipedia has never been about truth. Wikipedia's standard policy is "verifiability" not truth."
This leads to an odd problem I've had trying to add information. Wikipedia wants secondary sourcing rather than direct citation of research papers.
Unfortunately sometimes nobody has reported on some of the studies that have a huge impact on the topics.
Here's an example: The European Water Buffalo was a large ungulate thought to have gone extinct at the end of the Pliestocene. It's Wikipedia page says so. Domesticated water buffalo herds in Europe today were thought to have been imported in ancient times by the Greeks from the Indus valley via Mesopotamia.
A new 2020 genetic study on domestic herds in Europe however show that a large portion of their DNA comes from the original wild European Water Buffalo rather than the Asian domesticated subspecies. They never went extinct after all, and persist to this day in Romanian and Italian farmers herds where they are becoming increasingly rare.
Unfortunately, no media outlets reported on the paper. Without a secondary source the appropriate changes can't be cited, so the old, erroneous view persists on the page.
Just for the lulz I decided to edit the Wikipedia entry for the European water buffalo with a link to that paper to see what happens.
This is actually the paper I was talking about: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene.2020.610353/full
But yeah, it'll be interesting to see.
Yes, that was the one that I linked to.
They also have a list of acceptable sources, mostly left wing. If you site a right wing source they will deny the edit as unreliable.
Try editing your own Wikipedia entry. They don't acknowledge a first party source as valid. Very frustrating to get inaccuracies corrected.
In The Newsroom there was a funny scene on exactly that - the Emily Mortimer character sees an error in her Wikipedia entry and can't correct it herself. She has to get a friend to place the fact in some article which she can then cite.
But I suppose it (somewhat) prevents people lying about themselves.
Good interview. Wikipedia is an important innovation in distributed online knowledge dissemination.
But Wikipedia is not the be-all and end-all of online encyclopedias. Using Wikipedia must also be accompanied by some basic concepts of media literacy. After all Wikipedia goes to great pains to require citations and sources for the claims made in its articles, including the more controversial ones. But they can't make the readers actually go to the references. As with all things, one must use one's reason and logic to evaluate the strength of a claim considering all available evidence, and not just blindly trust a claim because "it's on Wikipedia".
And as usual I see a lot of the right-wingers here complaining bitterly about it. But what is the alternative?
So you don't actually have an opinion but had to get in a shot on "right-wingers".
Does anyone still doubt that Jeff is DNC fifty-center?
I've never doubted it. Sarc should ask jeff for a job.
All the criticisms were so bitter.
I like how their remarks show that their entire lives are about politics and political fighting.
I don’t think I’ve ever used Wikipedia to get detailed facts on any political topic. I’ve used it hundreds of times to look up details of music singles and albums: publish date, who composed the song, which session players player on the track.
If you don’t use Wikipedia for the exact same reason as Mike Liarson that shows you’re ENTIRE LIFE is about politics and political fighting.
Is this like how you've never read Rolling Stone and don't know who Joe Rogan is?
Meh. Humans evolved as social animals. Language (and the cognitive function to support language) evolved to enhance social interaction. Social interaction is all about emotional bonding, signaling, and out-group vilification, and has nothing to do with objective truth.
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The Biden admin just handed out its first federal grant to dismantle a highway built to perpetuate racial discrimination. (via @thereidout Blog)
Purer insanity. If someone built a racist highway in Detroit to keep blacks away they obviously failed. Detroit is over 82% black and has been majority black for decades.
Do the residents avoid using the highway nowadays? Buttigeig might as well given Detroit a grant to rebuild Poletown. What an asshole. Now they're just burning money.
The problem is, that the Black Bottom neighborhood wasn't hurt so much by the Chrysler Freeway (I-75/I-375) as it was by the Brewster-Douglass housing project that ripped the heart out of the neighborhood. The reason that segment (I-375) is being removed is due to the condition of the freeway (bad) and the lack of traffic using it, i.e. it's not worth the cost to do a full rebuild. But, the anti-car admin would rather blame the freeway rather than the housing project.
Easier way to understand:
Freeways were promoted by people who had practical and economic goals. Housing projects were promoted by people who had visionary social management goals. Which mission do Democrats more often align with?
Wow, it's almost as if consumers of internet content need to think for themselves, regardless of the source of content.
But dude, what if those consumers start thinking rebellious or even seditious thoughts?
Wikipedia is the poster child for the problem with 230. They censor pretty much everything that isn't left wing
Can guy explain what the Wikipedia political editors’ bias has to do with Section 230? No hand waving; connect the dots from the language of 230 to Wikipedia’s political editing.
Well well.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/sep/18/migrants-marthas-vineyard-republicans
I heard legal experts are 100% positive DeSantis is guilty of KIDNAPPING and HUMAN TRAFFICKING, which is a federal crime carrying a penalty of 5 years per victim. Like Drumpf, he'll be in prison before the 2024 election. 🙂
#LizCheney2024
PS — Got any more hilarious memes from #Resistance Twitter influencers like BrooklynDad?
Well what? That trial lawyers, who last time I heard are dominantly supporters of Team Blue, want to push the left wing agenda (and make some serious bank from whatever deep pockets might be in play)?
Do you really think that announcement "proves" anything?
It confirms his bias towards all things Republican, so yes.
Wikipedia is a good example for the rest of the internet? I'd like to see Mangu-Ward debate that with John Stossel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kiRgJYMw6YA
Content moderation is censorship.
That’s ridiculous. Content moderation is your ability to tell a guest in your house they have to leave if they are insulting people at the dinner table.
How about when the police come and tell you to make your guests leave?
A positive action as described is an editorial action.
Look. You idiots don't seem to get it. Berenson was successful against Twitter due to contract violations. Vague terms in contracts are considered unactionable.
If social media came iut tomorrow with explicit rules and regulations id have no problem woth their moderation. But they lie about it, violating the terms of contracts set up by the users.
You assholes don't care because the censorship is against people you dislike. You ignore the working at the behest of government as well which is an actual 1a violation.
And Berenson's evidence (and pending suit) suggests that direct communication between the feds and Twitter led to censorship. But Mike is fine with government curation of his life.
Oh, and by the way, JesseAz, you aren’t invited over to my house. Ever.
Stop with the ankle biting.
Oh no! Poor Jesse.
Why would I want to visit a homeless shelter?
I love that Mike is such a smug, condescending douche with absolutely no reason for feeling superior.
wikipedia is an aspiration, often an example of "Wisdom of Crowds." But on far too many political subjects, shows a profound collectivist bias. That's the wrong end of the spectrum for someone posing as a "libertarian."
Stossel offers concrete examples of ideology overriding truth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kiRgJYMw6YA
He’s not personally writing the Wikipedia articles.
Where does he fucking assert that moron?
Hey, there's always Conservapedia
Stupidest fucking alternative since RationalWiki.
What's a style and clarity.intern?
Propagandist trainee?
Anything on Wikipedia touching on history, biography, politics, philosophy, and economics cannot be trusted anymore. The science and math portions are useful, though not always accurate.
Wikipedia is trash. Take nothing that is presented there as factual or truthful.
The original creator has stated as much.
How an army of motivated extremists can win edit wars?
Larry Sanger on Wikipedia: https://youtu.be/McoEd6VqijY
Wikipedia contributor’s content is overwhelmingly left wing, FAKE media propaganda. Use Wikipedia with a discerning eye. And DO NOT do what I did, several years ago, and write them a check when they fly their begging banner. Never again, Fakeipedia.
Bingo. I kept waiting for some mention of this, but, squat. What a suck up.
"What Wikipedia Can Teach the Rest of the Internet"
You site too can censor unwanted opinions.
In fact, there is a lot of interesting and quite useful information on various topics on the Internet and even on Wikipedia, which often helped me a lot. But in general, I try to trust more reliable resources that can be called highly specialized, for example, here https://envelop.medium.com/what-is-envelop-niftsy-4325c5fb0ca2 you can read many different and useful articles about NFT, which I'm especially interested in now.