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posted by Woods on Thursday June 19 2014, @12:51AM   Printer-friendly
from the paid-to-proofread dept.

The Wikimedia Foundation, a nonprofit that operates Wikipedia and related projects, explained yesterday that it will establish new rules covering paid editing. The heart of the change is that anyone who is paid to edit the site must "add your affiliation to your edit summary, user page, or talk page, to fairly disclose your perspective," according to Wikimedia's explanation of the change. The organization has also published a FAQ on paid editing.
The changes come after some high-profile commotions over paid editing. In October, Wikipedia deleted more than 250 accounts believed to be connected to a PR firm that was writing articles on the site. In January, the Wikimedia Foundation fired an employee who was accused of taking paid editing gigs. Among the world's most heavily trafficked websites, Wikipedia ranks sixth, according to Alexa. It's the only top website that's owned by a non-profit.

 
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  • (Score: 1) by Buck Feta on Thursday June 19 2014, @04:41AM

    by Buck Feta (958) on Thursday June 19 2014, @04:41AM (#57265) Journal

    > just as successful as drug prohibition

    Your point about the rule's ineffectualness is well taken, but at least millions of morally innocent people won't end up in prison as by drug laws.

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