Revision as of 17:20, 3 August 2008 editJmabel (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators90,269 edits →OR: ''Onion'', CAMERA← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 16:22, 18 December 2024 edit undoNadVolum (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users4,123 edits →Antisemitism section: I'm not surprisedTag: 2017 wikitext editor | ||
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{{Old AfD multi|result1='''No consensus'''|date1=December 23, 2004|page1=Criticism of Misplaced Pages/2004-12-03|result2='''Keep'''|date2=March 13 2005|page2=Criticism of Misplaced Pages/2005-02-25|result3='''Speedy Keep'''|date3=October 18, 2005|page3=Criticism of Misplaced Pages/18 October 2005|result4='''Keep, don't move and don't merge'''|date4=December 10, 2005|page4=Criticism of Misplaced Pages|result5='''Keep'''|date5=December 13, 2006|page5=Criticism of Misplaced Pages (3rd nomination)|result6='''Speedy Keep'''|date6=August 6, 2008|page6=Criticism of Misplaced Pages (4th nomination)}} | |||
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{{Press | |||
|author= Naomi Alderman | |||
|date= 7 April 2009 | |||
|url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2009/apr/07/wikipedia-encarta | |||
|title= Encarta's failure is no tragedy | |||
|org= Guardian News | |||
|section= News:Technology:Misplaced Pages | |||
|author2=Shawn Pogatchnick | |||
|title2= Irish student hoaxes world's media with fake quote | |||
|url2=http://www.ctvnews.ca/irish-student-hoaxes-world-s-media-with-fake-quote-1.397534 | |||
|org2=] | |||
|date2=11 May 2009 | |||
|author3=Brian Feldman | |||
|title3=Why Misplaced Pages Works | |||
|url3=http://nymag.com/selectall/2018/03/why-wikipedia-works.html | |||
|org3=] | |||
|date3=March 16, 2018 | |||
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<div align="left">'''Note''': This is the Talk page for the Misplaced Pages article on external criticisms of Misplaced Pages. Users interested in discussing their own problems with the project should go to the ] where there are specific sections for dealing with various types of issue. | |||
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* '''No consensus''', VFD December 23, 2004, see ] | |||
* '''Keep''', VFD March 13 2005 , see ] | |||
* '''Speedy Keep''', AFD October 18, 2005, see ] | |||
* '''Keep, don't move and don't merge''', AFD December 10, 2005, see ] | |||
* '''Keep''', AFD December 13, 2006, see ] | |||
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:''For critical takes''' on Misplaced Pages covered by Misplaced Pages itself, see ] (40 science articles) and ] (7 articles of general interest).'' | |||
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== Controversy with the Authors and Readers of Webcomics == | |||
|from_oldid2 = http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Criticism_of_Wikipedia&oldid=413021228 | |||
|to2 = Misplaced Pages in culture | |||
|diff2 = http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Wikipedia_in_culture&diff=413056590&oldid=412868735 | |||
|from3 = Criticism of Misplaced Pages | |||
A frequently cited criticism of Misplaced Pages and one that is sometimes blamed for the decline in traffic is the manner in which an admin determines that certain topics aren't significant enough to merit an article and deletes the article written about the topic. As a result of this policy, several articles about popular webcomics and blogs that recieve tens of thousands of viewers according to Alexa, many of which won critical praise had articles about them deleted by wikipedia. <references/http://www.webcomicker.com/?p=33> <references/http://comixtalk.com/terrence_markswikipedia_and_y> It was viewed as not acceptable my many webcomic authors and readers that articles about websites and webcomics that have tens of thousands of regular viewers are deemed as candidates for deletion as a result of an admin who is personally unfamiliar with the comic. Others found it counter intuitive that because of Misplaced Pages's deletion policy, users who come to wikipedia looking for information about a popular blog or webcomic or site were unable to find it. This seemed to go against what was traditionally considered one of Misplaced Pages's greatest assests, it's ability to provide information on topics that professional encyclopedias like Encyclopedia brittanica were too limited in scope to cover. Others view as a sign that Misplaced Pages has become too hierarchical, closed, and overrun with "admins" and "editors" and Misplaced Pages itself is becoming burdened by the bureacracy of of it's editing staff. | |||
|from_oldid3 = http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Criticism_of_Wikipedia&oldid=410903406 | |||
*I'm not sure on this one. I personally think a lot of admins/editors tend to delete stuff for "non-notability" just because ''they'' haven't heard of it, or aren't familiar with it. But then again, the policies of wikipedia pretty much say you gotta cite stuff, and if you don't/can't, then the assumption is that it's not notable ''enough''. I could be wrong though, and like I said, this is just my opinion. However, I do think it's a bit unfair sometimes; different people have different definitions of what "notability" is. I saw an AfD (is that the correct term?) for an article on a Dallas-area radio show host one time. The guy has been, and continues to be, number one in the ratings and is pretty well known in the area. But an editor nominated the article for deletion because essentially he was of the opinion (paraphrasing), "Well, ''I'' haven't heard of him, so he can't be all ''that'' well known". This was despite the fact that the editor wasn't a Dallas-area resident...then again, of course, I think all of this just goes back to one of the core debates within Misplaced Pages: do we include everything or just some things? Do we strive to "provide information on topics that professional encyclopedias like Encyclopedia brittanica too limited in scope to cover", or do we try and be just as "professional" as said encyclopedias? Perhaps these points could be expanded upon or added to the "]" section. ] (]) 15:28, 30 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
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== De Facto Leader == | |||
|from_oldid4 = http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Criticism_of_Wikipedia&oldid=411494833 | |||
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|diff4 = http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Misplaced Pages&diff=411526211&oldid=411525050 | |||
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Why in the devil does it say that Jimmy Wales is the de facto leader of Misplaced Pages 3 times? I think most readers of this page probably could care less from knowing that he is so much cooler than us "mere mortals", that it has to be mentioned 3 times. | |||
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|from14 = Criticism of Misplaced Pages#Partisanship | |||
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|to14 = Ideological bias on Misplaced Pages | |||
|diff14 = https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Ideological_bias_on_Wikipedia&diff=842395097&oldid=842390766 | |||
|date14 = 05:08, 22 May 2018 | |||
}} | |||
== Subsection on Antisemitic bias on Misplaced Pages == | |||
== Carolyn Doran and "hive mind" == | |||
Without prejudice to the ongoing discussion of whether merge or keep the current ] as its main article, a new subsection on antisemitic bias is now added. So far, it is based mainly on academic research. The comments of ] and major Jewish organizations, re: ADL as an RS source, also merit inclusion here, even if expanded at greater length in a main article. ] (]) 11:02, 31 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
Can someone think of a good addition to the "hive mind" section that uses Misplaced Pages's response to the Carolyn Doran article? Most of the stuff I add to articles seems to get reverted, so I'm not even going to try. --] (]) 11:06 AM PST 6 Jan 2008 | |||
:FYI there are more sources on the ADL case cited by the Signpost: ]. Are there any sources that cover a response by Wikimedia? ] (]) 11:27, 31 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Criticisms in articles about critics == | |||
::For a Wikipedian's published and other responses to one of the academic articles, see: ]. @] ] (]) 12:24, 31 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::@] Thanks for the ping. Did you ] and other responces to that article (recommendation: install ]...). | |||
:::Regarding: "Several studies have found flaws in Misplaced Pages's handling of the mass murder of Jews during the Holocaust, including Wikipedias in different languages". This is certainly true of the Grabowski paper that I am sadly too deeply familiar with and per above, I consider it deeply flawed, but the current text is an accurate summary of it. | |||
:::Moving to other, better sources cited (IMHO, anything will be better than the paper mentioned above...). | |||
:::I am not sure if is a good source for this sentence, as I am not seeing what "flaws" their research identified. Instead, I note in conclusion that they write that Misplaced Pages's policies "prevents the use of Misplaced Pages for the propagation of views of Holocaust deniers or highly subjective interpretations of the past in general", although he does talk about " the instrumentalisation (e.g. by framing Ukrainians as Holocaust perpetrators in the Russian Misplaced Pages) or disparagement (e.g. by putting emphasis on non-Jewish victims in the Ukrainian Misplaced Pages) of Holocaust memory", which perhaps could be seen as a flaw of Misplaced Pages in this context? | |||
:::] (should be linked to , all our current refs in the new section are poorly formatted :( ) also talks about the flaws in the context of neutrality: "the articles in Polish and Hebrew present almost solely cases of heroism performed by members of their own respective nations. The semiotic analysis strengthens the conclusions of the manifest analysis: the appearance of judgmental or evaluative language in the articles is rare, yet occasional choices of vocabulary (such as the interchangeability between the words “Jews” and “victims” in the Hebrew version) reminds us that the articles are written in a certain cultural context." | |||
:::den Hartogh () is a master thesis, so not a very high quality source. Likewise, they seem to focus on issues such as "One of the most significant findings of this research is that the Holocaust entries under study revealed that there does not exist one representation of the Holocaust, but each language version has its own unique account of events and phenomena included in the representation of the Holocaust." and "Another important finding is that it has been found that none of the Holocaust entries under study is rated ‘good quality’, which indicates that the pages are in considerable need of improvement according to Wikimedia standards." | |||
:::Crucial point here is that outside of the first (bad but technically reliable) source, the other mentioned sources don't seem to find flaws in the context of antisemitism. | |||
:::For additional academic sources on this topic, see: | |||
:::* Pfanzelter, Eva (2015) At the crossroads with public history: mediating the Holocaust on the Internet, Holocaust Studies, 21:4, 250-271 [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17504902.2015.1066066#d1e337 - but I don't think she finds any flaws... | |||
:::So outside the first source, we don't really have any reliable (academic) works that argue Misplaced Pages has 'Antisemitic bias' (in the context of the Holocaust). I think this needs to be rewritten or the heading changed; since only one of the three cited sources supports the 'antisemitic bias' claim (so this is borderline DUE...). | |||
:::I am also concerned that the next paragraph is cited to a poor newspaper article and a press statement by the researchers ("In 2023, following allegations of deliberate distortions of Holocaust history, the English Misplaced Pages's Arbitration Committee subsequently opened a case to investigate and evaluate the actions of editors in the affected articles. Ultimately, the Committee ruled to ban two editors from contributing to the topic areas, although the researchers who studied the issue criticized the proposed remedies as " depth and consequence".). While the first sentence is factually correct, the second is misleading - for example, the two topic banned editors represented "both sides", one of them was criticized and the other praised by the "researchers". Effectively, the community of our experts (ArbCom) reviewed the researchers allegations carefully and found that most of them cannot be substantiated or are unactionable. The researchers were unhappy with that, but I don't think it is due to give their press release much a voice. I'd recommend removing the second sentence with the reference to the PR, and replacing the newspaper citation with what I think is a better analysis by a journalist who specializes in Misplaced Pages: . Note that AFAIK there has been no publication about this after the case; the journalist interest died out before the case was closed, and since the ArbCom did not confirm the researchers claims about major conspiracy, did not even ban anyone (except one sock), and just topic banned two editors (which is pretty much a wiki equivalent of the slap on the wrist), well, this all proved to be just a storm in the teacup. <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</sub> 03:07, 1 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:PS. I'll @] who merged some content. I don't want to edit this myself, due to some possible COI. I'll leave it up to you folks to figure out what do do here, but the merged content is, as I note above, problematic (only one academic ref supports the assertions made in the heading about antisemitism, the other refs are pretty much saying that Misplaced Pages is incomplete and different language versions of Misplaced Pages have different POVs). | |||
:PPS. I have not reviewed the ADL part, so I am not sure if this is relevant to thread heading or not. I would expect it to be relevant, since after this is ADL. <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</sub> 03:13, 1 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Sorry about this. I added this with the intention for others to correct it. ] (]) 03:18, 1 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks for taking the time to write out your analysis and recommendations, @]. I spent much of the day trying to revise and salvage ], after the Merge closure was reverted at my request. I agree with your basic assessment of 3 academic articles and I've removed the "flaws" wording for now. I think they do find some bias worth reporting, but may require some careful way to say it. (For starters, I elaborated on two studies in the above-linked article.) I started to change the sentences about Grabowski and Klein, but will need to pick this up again Sunday or next week. I appreciate your COI situation, so I'm pleased to learn and discuss with you here and then make appropriate edits. ] (]) 21:44, 1 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::@] Thank you. The topic may be notable, although I am not sure we have much in the way or academic sources (particularly of good quality); there is certainly some newspapers that tackle this (including in the aftermath of the 2022 paper - have you read the three rebuttals to it, including mine?). The version in the Misplaced Pages and antisemitisms covering now seems reasonably due and neutral, thank you, although I have some concerns regarding this sentence | |||
::: {{Cquote|Ultimately, the Committee banned two editors from the topic areas, although Klein criticized the proposed remedies as " depth and consequence"}} | |||
:::as far as its logic and correctness (mind you, I am not sure if we have independent RS to correct it). As I might have mentioned above, some additional sanctions were levied (including, IIRC, a total of three tppic bans); additionally, one of the topic banned editors was someone the authors endorsed. So the sentence implies, roughly correctly, that the ArbCom did not go far enough, but it also implies that the two topic bans were desired by the researchers, whereas in fact only one of them would be. And wasn't her PR published in response to the case closure, of at the stage of proposed decisions? This should be double checked. It's complicated to explain this in the article's body (and probably would be undue, even if we could cite independent sources...). I'd say something like "Ultimately, the Committee's remedies were criticized by Klein as " depth and consequence"", although it would be good to add a short sentence saying that "the Committee did not find sufficient evidence to confirm the researchers allegations" (if there would be any RS for that), since otherwise we are missing some context (as in, why the remedies were criticized). Effectively, the paper made grandiose claims which were not substantiated, hence, lackluster remedies. Feel free to mull over how this can be worded. Frankly, I'd prefer not to be involved in this too much, both due to COI and because I find this issue quite upsetting/stressful (since from my POV, I was subject to significant slander there). <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</sub> 05:26, 2 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:Whoever approved the merge and finalised it: | |||
:Why did they delete almost all of the actual content in the original article and not reproduce it here? | |||
:It seems less like a merger and more like a deliberate burying of the original information. ] (]) 21:26, 18 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::fwiw, the previous Main article was turned into a draft at ], with the possibility that it could be moved to Mainspace as an article. ] (]) 23:43, 18 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Hmm. Let’s come back in a week or two and see just how much ends up actually being published here. | |||
:::Given some of the users involved there, I don’t have very high hopes given the Pirate Wires allegations. ] (]) 00:18, 19 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
==Pro-forma COI declaration== | |||
How much coverage of crticisms of Misplaced Pages is appropriate in articles about the critics? A "]"/"]" mostly-online magazine, '']'', has critiqued its coverage in Misplaced Pages. Is this notable and to what extent? Is it excessively self-referential? ]] ] 09:06, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
: A short mention should be OK in most cases. The long text at ] may be too much for such a short article. What is missing from that article are viewpoints ''other'' than the magazine itself. ] <small>]</small> 15:30, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
Since many critics of Wikipediocracy act as though they are members of a cult, bending WP site rules to advance their objectives, I will note here that I replaced a 404ed link for a permalink to a Wikipediocracy external link. I am a registered user and regular participant of that site but have no formal connection to its ownership or management, nor a financial connection of any sort. Derp derp. —Tim Davenport /// ] (]) 18:06, 5 November 2024 (UTC) /// "Randy from Boise" on WPO | |||
:In most cases, it shouldn't be mentioned, per ] (ask if "Misplaced Pages played a major role in the subject of the article") and ] ("An article should not give undue weight to any aspects of the subject, but should strive to treat each aspect with a weight appropriate to its significance to the subject"). A magazine or a writer has probably treated hundreds or thousand of different topics during its history/his life; it is quite likely that the decision of a Wikipedian to single out Misplaced Pages among those subjects to be mentioned in the article has more to do with his perspective as a Wikipedian than with its notability with respect the actual subject. A good test is whether other, independent publications have reported on such criticism, ] passes this test. Regards, ] (]) 22:30, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
Well the ARE a cult, as evident by them removing Newsweek from reliable sources, which is middle of the road, and adding Vox, which is far left with a long list of bad articles and few retractions ] (]) 22:31, 15 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Defensiveness? == | |||
==Discussion at ]== | |||
One thing I've noted is that in several sections, criticism is not allowed to stand on its own, but instead has either a refutation or 'last word' from "The Misplaced Pages Perspective". Whilst balance demands that criticism can be discussed and refuted, it seems to be more of a 'last word' than a response on its own merits. Particularly awkward to my reading was that of the debate between Jimmy Wales and a Britannica editor where, not content with merely a response, goes on to give more credence to the WP POV. This is a hard one to judge. It's hard to put fingers on it, but it seems like every section is compelled to show "but that's not really true", and comes off defensive. Thoughts? ] (]) 02:31, 4 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
] You are invited to join the discussion at ]. ] (]) 20:22, 10 November 2024 (UTC)<!-- ] --> | |||
:To update the redlinks above -- The article is currently being edited and discussed at: ], input welcome! ] (]) 04:22, 19 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::no, ] is a better description for it. Thats when you have moderators refusing anything by shouting "WP:NPOV!", "WP:CRYSTAL BALL!", and every other obscure rule they have for every obscure thing. I`ve been looking at the discussions on wikipedia for almost 2 years and I still find rules that I have never seen before. Its their way of boosting their ego online, which sadly, doesn`t matter at all except here. ] (]) 11:17, 4 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Link to ] in the Gender bias and sexism section == | |||
:I agree that there is an element that comes off as defensiveness in some of the sections, although in general I don't mind the criticism/response format. As the article title is about criticism the lead in any section should be the criticism, but comprehensive coverage requires a response from Misplaced Pages as well. Without turning to analysis at the end of the section, which would be ], I'm not clear what the alternative might be. For the most part ] and readers can draw their own conclusions, but certainly there's plenty of room for a good old-fashioned copyedit. ] ] 01:44, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
The ] section has a link to the ] article (emphatised in the quote below). I am not sure why. | |||
== Criticism of editors == | |||
{{Quote frame|Misplaced Pages has a longstanding controversy concerning gender bias and sexism. Gender bias on Misplaced Pages refers to the finding that between 84 and 91 percent of ] are male, which allegedly leads to ''']'''.}} ] (]) 14:57, 17 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:This was a server side error on my part. ] (]) 15:46, 17 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
There doesn't appear to be any mention of the treatment of neophyte contributors (or their contributions) by the established editorial community. It has been my repeated experience that articles I contribute are arbitrarily merged into broader topics without consideration of the worth of the distinction. Is it the active policy of wikipedia to constrain the number of articles in this fashion, or is this a minority experience? Is there any documented criticism of this behaviour, or should I start complaining elsewhere so I can cite it? ] (]) 23:25, 29 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
*I think that criticism is covered under the ] section of this article. You could possibly add something to that, but then again, since you're a new user, it might not last ;) Plus, I think it's bad form to write an article/complaint somewhere else ''just'' so you can cite it on wikipedia. I think it's considered original research or something (i'm not sure on the policies -- anyone care to correct me on this?) ] (]) 15:17, 30 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
== |
== Antisemitism section == | ||
This new section contains: {{tqb|However, as early as 2010, one study found that antisemitic bias occurred through "a systematic use of criticism elimination", which refers to the ability of Misplaced Pages editors to prevent criticism of organizations that deploy antisemitic discourse.}}This is sourced to:{{pb}}{{Cite journal |last1=Oboler |first1=Andre |last2=Steinberg |first2=Gerald |last3=Stern |first3=Rephael |date=October 11, 2010 |title=The Framing of Political NGOs in Misplaced Pages through Criticism Elimination |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/19331680903577822 |journal=Journal of Information Technology & Politics |language=en |volume=7 |issue=4 |pages=284–299 |doi=10.1080/19331680903577822 |issn=1933-1681}} {{pb}}And that is a touch ironic, because in discussing a case study regarding editing of the War on Want article for criticism elimination, the writers describe an edit and says, {{tqb|This is a sophisticated edit that alters the public record in Misplaced Pages through selection and misrepresentation of an alternative source.}}Now that source does contain case studies regarding antisemitism, yes, but the paper is not ''about'' antisemitism. It is about critcism elimination of NGOs, and so when it speaks of "a systematic use of criticism elimination", it is saying something about how editors edit Misplaced Pages, yes, but it is not specifically talking about antisemitism. Antisemitism forms part of two of the case studies, but the criticism of Misplaced Pages here is that editors can take sources and misrepresent them to make the points those editors want to make. Which is exactly what we are doing here by including this in our antisemitism section. ] (]) 12:14, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
There are several sections where the text dangerously sways into ] problem of original research. The smaller sections which deal with criticism of particular wikipedia rules and traditions are OK. However the larger sections, such as about meddling of politicians and "humorous criticism" are not good. While they look referenced, but many of them are basically ]s from which implicitely drawn conclusion is that they constitute criticism. This is not right. This article must have references which '''explicitely''' say that, e.g., ''"the Onion's" article 'Misplaced Pages Celebrates 750 Years Of American Independence' is humorous criticism of wikipedia"''. Otherwise it is a personal opinion of a wikipedian and it is unproven why it is criticism and not simply a joke: "A lawyer and a priest meet in a bar" is not necessarily about criticism of a priest. I may continue the list of this kind of nitpicking, but I invite everyone to reread the text carefully and get rid of ]. ] (]) 18:17, 31 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
* Could you be specific about sections and passages that you have issue with? Otherwise, I don't see how someone can address your issue. - ] | ] 18:19, 31 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
**I was very specific with one example (Onion): why says that Onion's was criticism, not just making fun of wikipedia? Also I explained how someone can address the issue: review at least the two sections mentioned and judge whether given examples are '''described someone in ] as criticism'''. If you are so insistent, please expolain why "In April 2008, the Boston-based Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) organized a campaign to correct Israel-related biases and inconsistencies in Misplaced Pages" is "critisism"? On the contrary, it looks as wholehearted acceptance and willing to work on improvement of wikipedia (possibly from their POV, but that is a totally different issue). I could have deleted this and other passages myself, but I 98.5% sure I will be reverted on spot, due to high visibility of the page. Therefore I am asking for other opinions. ] (]) 01:01, 1 August 2008 (UTC) | |||
*** I'm not "insistent" at all. I'm just suggesting that if you want your issue fully addressed, a comprehensive list is more useful than an example or two. I'd agree that the ''Onion'' is a stretch. I'm not sure how to handle the CAMERA incident; it may not belong on this page. Did you see the piece in ''Harper's'' about it? It was definitely a conscious attempt to subvert the Misplaced Pages process. Things like deliberately making 100+ good edits to innocuous subjects before pushing a POV that was one's real intention in joining in the first place; having people who would totally avoid Israel-related topics until they could become admins, then use the admin role in an agenda-driven manner; etc. - ] | ] 17:20, 3 August 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I have attempted to . It seems to me it wasn't inaccurate, per se, but I take your point. | |||
==Should we include this material?== | |||
:The key points seem to be: | |||
I think . Should we include such material here? I asked , but the answer from Mukadderat was not particularly convincing. Thank you. ] (]) 03:36, 1 August 2008 (UTC) | |||
:* There's systematic removal of criticism of NGOs | |||
:* Two instances of such removal included NGOs accused of antisemitism or an anti-Israel bias | |||
:* The latter is a subset of the former, but not the whole of it. | |||
:I hope it's clearer now. ] (]) 12:46, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:Hardly an unbiased set of authors! Oh well I suppose criticism of them would be a fourth level criticism I think, I'm fairly happy though to have all and sundry criticism of Misplaced Pages in this article wherever it comes from! ] (]) 16:22, 18 December 2024 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 16:22, 18 December 2024
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Subsection on Antisemitic bias on Misplaced Pages
Without prejudice to the ongoing discussion of whether merge or keep the current Misplaced Pages and antisemitism as its main article, a new subsection on antisemitic bias is now added. So far, it is based mainly on academic research. The comments of Deborah Lipstadt and major Jewish organizations, re: ADL as an RS source, also merit inclusion here, even if expanded at greater length in a main article. ProfGray (talk) 11:02, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
- FYI there are more sources on the ADL case cited by the Signpost: Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages Signpost/2024-07-04/In the media. Are there any sources that cover a response by Wikimedia? ProfGray (talk) 11:27, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
- For a Wikipedian's published and other responses to one of the academic articles, see: Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages Signpost/2023-02-20/In the media. @User:Piotrus ProfGray (talk) 12:24, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
- @ProfGray Thanks for the ping. Did you User:Piotrus/Response and other responces to that article (recommendation: install PubPeer...).
- Regarding: "Several studies have found flaws in Misplaced Pages's handling of the mass murder of Jews during the Holocaust, including Wikipedias in different languages". This is certainly true of the Grabowski paper that I am sadly too deeply familiar with and per above, I consider it deeply flawed, but the current text is an accurate summary of it.
- Moving to other, better sources cited (IMHO, anything will be better than the paper mentioned above...).
- I am not sure if Makhortykh is a good source for this sentence, as I am not seeing what "flaws" their research identified. Instead, I note in conclusion that they write that Misplaced Pages's policies "prevents the use of Misplaced Pages for the propagation of views of Holocaust deniers or highly subjective interpretations of the past in general", although he does talk about " the instrumentalisation (e.g. by framing Ukrainians as Holocaust perpetrators in the Russian Misplaced Pages) or disparagement (e.g. by putting emphasis on non-Jewish victims in the Ukrainian Misplaced Pages) of Holocaust memory", which perhaps could be seen as a flaw of Misplaced Pages in this context?
- Wolniewicz-Slomka (should be linked to , all our current refs in the new section are poorly formatted :( ) also talks about the flaws in the context of neutrality: "the articles in Polish and Hebrew present almost solely cases of heroism performed by members of their own respective nations. The semiotic analysis strengthens the conclusions of the manifest analysis: the appearance of judgmental or evaluative language in the articles is rare, yet occasional choices of vocabulary (such as the interchangeability between the words “Jews” and “victims” in the Hebrew version) reminds us that the articles are written in a certain cultural context."
- den Hartogh () is a master thesis, so not a very high quality source. Likewise, they seem to focus on issues such as "One of the most significant findings of this research is that the Holocaust entries under study revealed that there does not exist one representation of the Holocaust, but each language version has its own unique account of events and phenomena included in the representation of the Holocaust." and "Another important finding is that it has been found that none of the Holocaust entries under study is rated ‘good quality’, which indicates that the pages are in considerable need of improvement according to Wikimedia standards."
- Crucial point here is that outside of the first (bad but technically reliable) source, the other mentioned sources don't seem to find flaws in the context of antisemitism.
- For additional academic sources on this topic, see:
- Pfanzelter, Eva (2015) At the crossroads with public history: mediating the Holocaust on the Internet, Holocaust Studies, 21:4, 250-271 [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17504902.2015.1066066#d1e337 - but I don't think she finds any flaws...
- So outside the first source, we don't really have any reliable (academic) works that argue Misplaced Pages has 'Antisemitic bias' (in the context of the Holocaust). I think this needs to be rewritten or the heading changed; since only one of the three cited sources supports the 'antisemitic bias' claim (so this is borderline DUE...).
- I am also concerned that the next paragraph is cited to a poor newspaper article and a press statement by the researchers ("In 2023, following allegations of deliberate distortions of Holocaust history, the English Misplaced Pages's Arbitration Committee subsequently opened a case to investigate and evaluate the actions of editors in the affected articles. Ultimately, the Committee ruled to ban two editors from contributing to the topic areas, although the researchers who studied the issue criticized the proposed remedies as " depth and consequence".). While the first sentence is factually correct, the second is misleading - for example, the two topic banned editors represented "both sides", one of them was criticized and the other praised by the "researchers". Effectively, the community of our experts (ArbCom) reviewed the researchers allegations carefully and found that most of them cannot be substantiated or are unactionable. The researchers were unhappy with that, but I don't think it is due to give their press release much a voice. I'd recommend removing the second sentence with the reference to the PR, and replacing the newspaper citation with what I think is a better analysis by a journalist who specializes in Misplaced Pages: . Note that AFAIK there has been no publication about this after the case; the journalist interest died out before the case was closed, and since the ArbCom did not confirm the researchers claims about major conspiracy, did not even ban anyone (except one sock), and just topic banned two editors (which is pretty much a wiki equivalent of the slap on the wrist), well, this all proved to be just a storm in the teacup. Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 03:07, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
- For a Wikipedian's published and other responses to one of the academic articles, see: Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages Signpost/2023-02-20/In the media. @User:Piotrus ProfGray (talk) 12:24, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
- PS. I'll @Hemiauchenia who merged some content. I don't want to edit this myself, due to some possible COI. I'll leave it up to you folks to figure out what do do here, but the merged content is, as I note above, problematic (only one academic ref supports the assertions made in the heading about antisemitism, the other refs are pretty much saying that Misplaced Pages is incomplete and different language versions of Misplaced Pages have different POVs).
- PPS. I have not reviewed the ADL part, so I am not sure if this is relevant to thread heading or not. I would expect it to be relevant, since after this is ADL. Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 03:13, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
- Sorry about this. I added this with the intention for others to correct it. Hemiauchenia (talk) 03:18, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for taking the time to write out your analysis and recommendations, @User:Piotrus. I spent much of the day trying to revise and salvage Misplaced Pages and antisemitism, after the Merge closure was reverted at my request. I agree with your basic assessment of 3 academic articles and I've removed the "flaws" wording for now. I think they do find some bias worth reporting, but may require some careful way to say it. (For starters, I elaborated on two studies in the above-linked article.) I started to change the sentences about Grabowski and Klein, but will need to pick this up again Sunday or next week. I appreciate your COI situation, so I'm pleased to learn and discuss with you here and then make appropriate edits. ProfGray (talk) 21:44, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
- @ProfGray Thank you. The topic may be notable, although I am not sure we have much in the way or academic sources (particularly of good quality); there is certainly some newspapers that tackle this (including in the aftermath of the 2022 paper - have you read the three rebuttals to it, including mine?). The version in the Misplaced Pages and antisemitisms covering now seems reasonably due and neutral, thank you, although I have some concerns regarding this sentence
“ | Ultimately, the Committee banned two editors from the topic areas, although Klein criticized the proposed remedies as " depth and consequence" | ” |
- as far as its logic and correctness (mind you, I am not sure if we have independent RS to correct it). As I might have mentioned above, some additional sanctions were levied (including, IIRC, a total of three tppic bans); additionally, one of the topic banned editors was someone the authors endorsed. So the sentence implies, roughly correctly, that the ArbCom did not go far enough, but it also implies that the two topic bans were desired by the researchers, whereas in fact only one of them would be. And wasn't her PR published in response to the case closure, of at the stage of proposed decisions? This should be double checked. It's complicated to explain this in the article's body (and probably would be undue, even if we could cite independent sources...). I'd say something like "Ultimately, the Committee's remedies were criticized by Klein as " depth and consequence"", although it would be good to add a short sentence saying that "the Committee did not find sufficient evidence to confirm the researchers allegations" (if there would be any RS for that), since otherwise we are missing some context (as in, why the remedies were criticized). Effectively, the paper made grandiose claims which were not substantiated, hence, lackluster remedies. Feel free to mull over how this can be worded. Frankly, I'd prefer not to be involved in this too much, both due to COI and because I find this issue quite upsetting/stressful (since from my POV, I was subject to significant slander there). Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 05:26, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
- Whoever approved the merge and finalised it:
- Why did they delete almost all of the actual content in the original article and not reproduce it here?
- It seems less like a merger and more like a deliberate burying of the original information. KronosAlight (talk) 21:26, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
- fwiw, the previous Main article was turned into a draft at Draft:Antisemitism on Misplaced Pages, with the possibility that it could be moved to Mainspace as an article. ProfGray (talk) 23:43, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
- Hmm. Let’s come back in a week or two and see just how much ends up actually being published here.
- Given some of the users involved there, I don’t have very high hopes given the Pirate Wires allegations. KronosAlight (talk) 00:18, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
- fwiw, the previous Main article was turned into a draft at Draft:Antisemitism on Misplaced Pages, with the possibility that it could be moved to Mainspace as an article. ProfGray (talk) 23:43, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
Pro-forma COI declaration
Since many critics of Wikipediocracy act as though they are members of a cult, bending WP site rules to advance their objectives, I will note here that I replaced a 404ed link for a permalink to a Wikipediocracy external link. I am a registered user and regular participant of that site but have no formal connection to its ownership or management, nor a financial connection of any sort. Derp derp. —Tim Davenport /// Carrite (talk) 18:06, 5 November 2024 (UTC) /// "Randy from Boise" on WPO
Well the ARE a cult, as evident by them removing Newsweek from reliable sources, which is middle of the road, and adding Vox, which is far left with a long list of bad articles and few retractions 76.150.163.26 (talk) 22:31, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
Discussion at Talk:Misplaced Pages and antisemitism § Proposal to merge to Criticism of Misplaced Pages
You are invited to join the discussion at Talk:Misplaced Pages and antisemitism § Proposal to merge to Criticism of Misplaced Pages. Levivich (talk) 20:22, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- To update the redlinks above -- The article is currently being edited and discussed at: Draft:Antisemitism on Misplaced Pages, input welcome! ProfGray (talk) 04:22, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
Link to Misplaced Pages in the Gender bias and sexism section
The Gender bias and sexism section has a link to the Misplaced Pages article (emphatised in the quote below). I am not sure why.
Misplaced Pages has a longstanding controversy concerning gender bias and sexism. Gender bias on Misplaced Pages refers to the finding that between 84 and 91 percent of Misplaced Pages editors are male, which allegedly leads to systemic bias.
Neixe (talk) 14:57, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
- This was a server side error on my part. Neixe (talk) 15:46, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
Antisemitism section
This new section contains:
However, as early as 2010, one study found that antisemitic bias occurred through "a systematic use of criticism elimination", which refers to the ability of Misplaced Pages editors to prevent criticism of organizations that deploy antisemitic discourse.
This is sourced to:
Oboler, Andre; Steinberg, Gerald; Stern, Rephael (October 11, 2010). "The Framing of Political NGOs in Misplaced Pages through Criticism Elimination". Journal of Information Technology & Politics. 7 (4): 284–299. doi:10.1080/19331680903577822. ISSN 1933-1681.
And that is a touch ironic, because in discussing a case study regarding editing of the War on Want article for criticism elimination, the writers describe an edit and says,
This is a sophisticated edit that alters the public record in Misplaced Pages through selection and misrepresentation of an alternative source.
Now that source does contain case studies regarding antisemitism, yes, but the paper is not about antisemitism. It is about critcism elimination of NGOs, and so when it speaks of "a systematic use of criticism elimination", it is saying something about how editors edit Misplaced Pages, yes, but it is not specifically talking about antisemitism. Antisemitism forms part of two of the case studies, but the criticism of Misplaced Pages here is that editors can take sources and misrepresent them to make the points those editors want to make. Which is exactly what we are doing here by including this in our antisemitism section. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 12:14, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- I have attempted to reword the text in question here. It seems to me it wasn't inaccurate, per se, but I take your point.
- The key points seem to be:
- There's systematic removal of criticism of NGOs
- Two instances of such removal included NGOs accused of antisemitism or an anti-Israel bias
- The latter is a subset of the former, but not the whole of it.
- I hope it's clearer now. Lewisguile (talk) 12:46, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- Hardly an unbiased set of authors! Oh well I suppose criticism of them would be a fourth level criticism I think, I'm fairly happy though to have all and sundry criticism of Misplaced Pages in this article wherever it comes from! NadVolum (talk) 16:22, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
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