Wikipedia’s nonprofit status questioned by D.C. U.S. attorney

(washingtonpost.com)

601 points | by coloneltcb 12 hours ago

52 comments

  • metaphor 12 hours ago
  • jjmarr 11 hours ago
    The English Wikipedia is a massive target for influence campaigns. I don't think there are any other communities as resilient as it. Just an example:

    There's certain individual or group that edited under the name "Icewhiz", was banned, and now operates endless sockpuppet accounts in the topic area to influence Wikipedia's coverage on the Middle East. One of them was an account named "Eostrix", that spent years making clean uncontroversial edits until one day going for adminship.

    Eostrix got 99% approval in their request for adminship. But it didn't matter, because an anonymous individual also spent years pursuing Eostrix, assembling evidence, and this resulted in Eostrix's block just days before they became a Wikipedia administrator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Sockpuppet_investiga...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Arbitration_Com...

    It's a useful contrast to a place like Reddit, where volunteer moderators openly admit to spreading terrorist propaganda or operating fake accounts when their original one gets banned. You don't get to do that on Wikipedia. If you try, someone with far too much time on their hands will catch you because Wikipedia doesn't need to care about Daily Active Users and the community cares about protecting a neutral point of view.

    Not denying the existence of influence campaigns. There have been several major pro-Palestinian ones recently, which is probably why this letter has been sent. But the only reason you know about them is because Wikipedia openly fights them instead of covering them up. Most social media websites don't care and would rather you don't bring it to their attention. That is why Reddit banned /r/bannedforbeingjewish.

    • TomK32 1 hour ago
      What a contrast to the early days: 22 years ago I was simply appointed admin on the German language Wikipedia when there was simply a lack of hands doing deletions and stuff. No voting, just a show of hand a lots of trust put into people only know by what they write and discuss on this new website.

      A few years of work (10k edits) and a few years of dwindling participation on my side someone noticed that quite a few of those early admins never faced a vote at all. The process had re-elections when 25 wikipedians asked for a vote, took them almost three weeks, I got that treatment as well in 2009. Indeed someone had enough time to dig through and find a discussion where I wasn't the nicest person (at the same time writing and discussing on Wikipedia help me a lot to develop a healthy social skill). Well, I didn't use the admin rights anymore so I rather resigned before someone dug even deeper ;)

      For security reasons those admin rights should be time limited anyways.

    • PeterStuer 33 minutes ago
      Keri Smith, a former hardcore SJW activist, has documented how she and others daily targeted people through Wikipedia edits for preparing a cancel. It's quite fascinating the extend of organization and process they used.

      For instance, they would not directly edit the target's page, but start working 2 links removed from it, compromise the "friend of a friend of a friend", and then work towards the actual target and finally try to cancel the target through "association with " accusations.

      • andybak 10 minutes ago
        Skimming this: https://www.kerismith.net/

        and seeing some of the people she proudly mentions - it seems like she's just switched cults.

      • maigret 23 minutes ago
        What is SJW? Please avoid using unclear acronyms.
        • albumen 13 minutes ago
          Social Justice Warrior. The acronym has been around for a long time.
        • bowsamic 13 minutes ago
          Social Justice Warrior but it’s worth noting that actually the acronym has cultural connotations that the words alone do not
        • regularjack 15 minutes ago
          SJW is a term invented by sociopaths to make it look like caring for other people (you know, being a human) is somehow bad.
    • ArinaS 2 hours ago
      On Wikipedia people like Icewhiz are called "long-term abusers", and there's a public list with more than a hundred of them - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:LTA.
      • atombender 1 hour ago
        That list is fascinating. Like the obscure Canadian illustrator [1] who for a decade has been repeatedly trying to put herself into Wikipedia despite being told she's a "non-notable" artist.

        I'm frankly amazed that enough people have the time to track this nonsense and stamp it out that it ends up being self-correcting. It's not just about time, either; chasing bad edits and prosecuting bad users must be a huge chore in terms of the sheer amount of work needed. I always find it amazing how horrible the tools are (like how almost anything, including having discussions, is done by editing pages; how can anyone have a discussion in such a disorganized way?), which surely must be a hindrance to productivity or to the ability to detect and deal with constant abuse. But seemingly it works. Maybe there are better tools that pro-level admins know about?

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Long-term_abuse/Anan...

        • 20after4 1 hour ago
          There are a whole bunch of little utilities like browser extensions and bookmarklets and even an entire in-house cloud infrastructure that is used for hosting various kinds of bots and web-based tools for automating workflows. It's all very ad-hoc, crude and not very well organized or publicized. There have been a few efforts over the years to create a repository for all of the little tools to help with exposure and some level of vetting for security risks. I'm not sure any of those projects were ever successful (or even made it past the planning stage) but there has been some appetite for improving that ecosystem.
          • stogot 25 minutes ago
            They have excess money as an org, why don’t they hire SWEs to improve it?
        • rvnx 1 hour ago
          She tried to add herself to a list called “professional Canadian painter”, and from what I see, she is a professional Canadian painter for 10+ years.
          • card_zero 1 hour ago
            But not notable. Unless notable for long-term Wikipedia abuse. Maybe eventually she gets mentioned on a news site for that, and then she can finally have an article.
    • BrtByte 1 hour ago
      Wikipedia isn't immune to influence campaigns - honestly, no open platform is - but the key difference is how seriously the community takes it. The amount of volunteer effort that goes into investigating sockpuppets, enforcing sourcing standards, and maintaining some kind of neutrality is incredible when you step back and think about it.
    • bjourne 10 hours ago
      I knew IceWhiz. You are correct that he (or rather "they") eventually was kicked from the site. But he/they operated on the site for years and was the biggest PITA you can imagine. He must have single-handedly scared away two dozen honest contributors with his BS. It is very, very easy to game the rules on Wikipedia. Wars of attrition goes on for years. Normal people don't waste their time. IceWhiz and his meat puppets have endless patience and all the time in the world.
      • gonzobonzo 8 hours ago
        Right. The fact that someone so terrible got 99% approval and only one anonymous investigator was able to stop them makes me think that it's likely a lot of other terrible admins who didn't have an anonymous investigator go after them probably go through the process.

        And the times I've brought up the fact that Wikipedia can be unreliable before, I've had numerous editors come in and claim that wasn't true and that people could rely on the claims they find in Wikipedia. This runs counter to the claim that Wikipedia editors know about these influence campaigns and openly fight about them. A lot of the active and vocal editors are openly dismissing such concerns.

        • card_zero 3 hours ago
          Wikipedia isn't supposed to be a source, so "reliable" here has to mean "reliably presenting a full range of notable sources". No editor should be saying you can rely on claims found in Wikipedia, except in the sense of relying that the claims are in the sources.

          (Except the claim as stated isn't always in the source anyway. Best to check.)

          • simonw 3 hours ago
            I found Molly White's video here really useful for helping me understand the Reliable Sources policy: https://blog.mollywhite.net/become-a-wikipedian-transcript/

            > The way we determine reliability is typically based on the reputation for editorial oversight, and for factchecking and corrections. For example, if you have a reference book that is published by a reputable publisher that has an editorial board and that has edited the book for accuracy, if you know of a newspaper that has, again, an editorial team that is reviewing articles and issuing corrections if there are any errors, those are probably reliable sources.

        • chii 4 hours ago
          I wonder if there's room in using AI to gather past edits of someone, as part of vetting, and use the sentiment analysis to check how neutral their biases are.
          • sunaookami 3 hours ago
            AI is itself biased because the training data is.
          • lazide 2 hours ago
            Neutrality != necessarily accurate or useful. And the most neutral thing to say is nothing.

            And most LLMs probably have Wikipedia as a significant part of their training corpus, so there is a big ouroboros issue too.

      • efilife 1 hour ago
        how do you know he scared off 24 contributors?
        • 20after4 38 minutes ago
          I'd interpret it as a bit of Hyperbole, I don't think the specific number is significant. Perhaps "several" would be a better choice of a quantifier.
    • eqvinox 1 hour ago
      You're saying it yourself: it's a target of influence campaigns. The Wikimedia Foundation ìs not a source of them itself.

      The non-profit public benefit service they provide is the openly editable encyclopaedia wiki, not its contents or its editors. The same safe harbour provisions as with other content hosters should (and need to) apply as with YouTube hosting questionable videos.

    • ksajadi 1 hour ago
      I am not sure if I agree with the statement "the only reason we know about them is because Wikipedia fights them". I am sure there are admins and accounts on wikipedia who work hard to protect the sites integrity. However, I know a lot of the misinformation on wikipedia pages, specific to the Middle East were uncovered by organizations outside of the site and who quotes the content that found its way to the site, so in those cases, the internal checks and balances of wikipedia didn't work.
    • dustingetz 1 hour ago
      what does that have to do with tax classification
    • yannis 3 hours ago
      Wikipedia is the best source of humanities "common knowledge". Yes there are users that abuse the system to push their own point of view. Many articles in Wikipedia have improved tremendously over the years; many times it is not unusual for an article to have over a hundred references. It gives you all the info you want to understand the subject before you delve further through books. Now for politics I can see the problem. Even on a well behaved site like HN you can get polarized views. Just say Israel is committing genocide or ethnic cleansing and you see the reaction. Ditto for Ukraine and now Trumpism. So yes there are pages that reflect views. Take them as such. Another advantage of Wikipedia is that many references are pushed to archive.org and saved.

      "DEAR AMERICAN FRIENDS IN THE ADMINISTRATION KEEP YOUR HANDS OFF THE WIKIPEDIA"

      • BrtByte 1 hour ago
        Wikipedia's value isn't that it's perfect, it's that it shows its work
        • 20after4 32 minutes ago
          On articles that are either controversial or cover some kind of current events, I often find more value from reading the edit history and the discussions than from the article itself.
    • kurtreed2 10 hours ago
      One can look into Shira Klein and Jan Grabowski's report about how the Polish ultranationalists have distorted the Holocaust topic area on Wikipedia (https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/25785648.2023.2...) if they want to find a counterexample. To the best of my understandings so far, I think Icewhiz is a good guy, just that he doesn't have strong grasp about Wikipedia's guidelines, particularly regarding multiple accounts, and was the victim of sustained smear campaigns by Polish ultranationalists who were able to psychologically manipulate the admins into banning him in order to let their distortionist edits stick. Now he's an Emmanuel Goldstein figure for both the ultranationalists and the pro-Hamas editors who seek to deflect external scrutiny to their edits.
      • jjmarr 9 hours ago
        A month after that article was published (and shortly after the article was posted on Wikipedia), the Arbitration Committee opened a sua sponte case to review the topic area despite the substance of that article being "Icewhiz was right".[1] It resulted in bans of Icewhiz' enemies for distorting the Holocaust topic area. I think moderators on pretty much any other website would laugh and ignore an article like that as being whining from a user they banned.

        I agree that Icewhiz is an Emmanuel Goldstein-like figure at this point who's used by pro-Hamas editors/ultranationalists. A bunch of those pro-Palestinian editors that loved to complain about Icewhiz to deflect from their own behaviour were topic-banned from Israel-Palestine area a few months ago in January.[2]

        It's challenging to deal with the Israel-Palestine conflict on any website that allows for user contributions. There's astroturfing and nation-state backed influence operations from probably a dozen countries. I don't think there's any website that has successfully navigated that minefield as well as Wikipedia.

        [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests...

        [2]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests...

        • kurtreed2 8 hours ago
          > I don't think there's any website that has successfully navigated that minefield as well as Wikipedia.

          There's a survivorship bias in play here as we don't have a good other sample or more to compare to. After Wikipedia went big in the 2000s it was for a very long time a de-facto monopoly for people seeking out reference information on the Internet. Even Google's Knol project, which was intended to be a Wikipedia competitor, faltered after a few years. Same goes for Everipedia as well.

          • krisoft 1 hour ago
            > There's a survivorship bias in play here as we don't have a good other sample or more to compare to.

            It is not survivorship bias to point out that the survivor survived.

            > Even Google's Knol project, which was intended to be a Wikipedia competitor, faltered after a few years.

            Not “faltering after a few years” is part of “succesfully navigating that minefield”. If you fall out of the “race” no matter how good your policies would be otherwise you won’t be a reliable source of information. Because your can’t be if you no longer exists.

            This is not a statement about what could have worked, this is a statement about what did work. And there survival is a necessary ingredient of success.

          • santoshalper 1 hour ago
            But there is a survivorship bias because doing what Wikipedia does is almost impossible.
        • breppp 3 hours ago
          > I don't think there's any website that has successfully navigated that minefield as well as Wikipedia.

          I don't believe this is the case, the Israeli/Palestine are restricted to long-time contributors, so the articles are either messy and unmaintained due to lack of editors, or worse, edited only by members of influence campaigns who have scared away everyone else

    • StanislavPetrov 8 hours ago
      The infamous "Philip Cross" always comes to mind.

      https://www.wikispooks.com/wiki/Philip_Cross

    • hiddencost 5 hours ago
      [flagged]
    • LightHugger 10 hours ago
      There are counterexamples where this has failed/continues to fail, the gamergate article is famously non-neutral, only accepting primary sources from journalists directly involved in the controversy. This is rather than true secondary sources with less extreme and biased views, like is supposed to be the rules there. You can switch from the english one to other languages and get completely different content with very balanced point of views because the other languages weren't controlled by the influence campaign.

      So, is it better than reddit? I agree, probably. That bar doesn't seem very high though.

      Part of the issue with gamergate discussion is that there's a lot of vapid perspectives along the lines of "it's just video game journalism who cares" which allows an infinite amount of bad behavior, dishonesty and manipulation in the name of an abstract greater good. I believe it was used as a prototype for future wikipedia manipulation for "more important" topics.

      • sedev 8 hours ago
        > only accepting primary sources from journalists directly involved in the controversy

        This is false. The talk page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Gamergate_(harassment_cam... lays it out clearly: because of the nature of Gamergate (misogynist harassment campaign), the page about Gamergate is heavily scrutinized in order to make sure that all source cites follow the same reliable-source rules that are in force across all of Wikipedia. Please don't lie about Wikipedia.

        • LightHugger 2 hours ago
          This is a lie. Wikipedia directly excluded reliable sources that countered and only cites sources that are as biased as possible for that article. Like i said, literally just switch the language to japanese, translate back to english and you will get a completely different set of information that is far less biased.

          Gamergate is also not a misogynist harassment campaign. Please don't spread lies and misinformation, thanks and try to be more honest and less of an idealogue.

          • 20after4 25 minutes ago
            Perhaps it is your perspective which is biased and that leads you to project that accusation towards the wiki (and the gp commenter here)
      • acdha 10 hours ago
        Do you have any specific examples? You mentioned the Gamergate article but your assertion that it doesn’t reference non-primary sources needs some citations that all of the academic and media sources were directly involved. Since it was a harassment campaign involving journalists, there’s a big question about what a policy would need to look like to prevent someone from attacking a journalist and then saying Wikipedia can’t use their work because they’re involuntarily involved.
        • LightHugger 2 hours ago
          The entire story of gamergate was a campaign where the ethical problems of the gaming journalism were exposed.

          Why would the journalists directly involved in that campaign be allowed to just directly malign and smear their critics and then have that be taken as fact, with no comment whatsoever to their involvement or other sources that disagreed or commented on this? Because that article stands as a beacon of unfairness and misinformation.

          The idea that it's impossible to solve this problem is false. Like i mentioned, just check other languages for that article, they were not as completely destroyed by bias.

          • intended 11 minutes ago
            > Q1: Can I use a particular article as a source? > A1: What sources can be used in Wikipedia is governed by our reliable sources guideline, which requires "published sources with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy". If you have a question about whether or not a particular source meets this policy, a good place to ask is the Reliable sources noticeboard.
      • freen 10 hours ago
        Anecdote != evidence.

        Also, your anecdote is specifically about a social media article about an attempt to use social media spaces to harass people.

        Seems extra “special case” to me.

        • LightHugger 2 hours ago
          Gamergate was not related to harassment, it was a leftist consumer action movement about unethical yellow journalism, that then obviously got smeared by the yellow journalists they criticized.

          It's one of those things where honest sources exist but you have to be somewhat good at seeing contradictions and lies, then being willing to discard liars as uncredible. It's not like archives of the supposed "harassment" sites don't exist anymore either, in those days it was mostly progressive leftists posting on the 8chan threads despite being maligned as a right wing center of evil or whatever. Sometimes the truth is just so absurdly and dramatically different from what yellow journalists purport but people are just too lazy and stupid to look into it themselves. After all "who cares it's just video games" (and yet this campaign of dishonesty turned a generation against the dem party in the US and likely contributed to trump's election)

          • santoshalper 1 hour ago
            I think your view of gamergate is absolutely fucking delusional. I watched it all go down in real time like many of us did. Saying Gamergate was about ethics in games journalism is roughly as accurate as saying the US Civil War was about "states rights". In that it is kinda sorta technically true if you ignore 99% of what was actually happening.
      • jjmarr 10 hours ago
        The question is whether it's better than an alternative (likely for-profit) site created in the wake of the Wikimedia Foundation's financial inability to run the website.

        When Gamergate went to the Arbitration Committee over certain individuals pushing a point of view, a ton of "anti-Gamergate" people that were trying to take over the article and prevent pro-Gamergate editors from having an impact got banned.[1] This was in 2014, when people advocating against these leftist journalists were seen as fringe and meaningless.

        If the WMF got eliminated tomorrow, the gap will probably get filled by a big for-profit tech site. You'll get a bunch of leftist (because they don't have jobs) volunteer moderators with an agenda. The company will provide zero oversight and ban you for criticizing those moderators because it could cause bad publicity. Reddit is a low bar but that's what the Wikipedia replacement will be.

        It's incredibly short-sighted, especially from a right-wing perspective.

        [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests...

        • moshegramovsky 10 hours ago
          > You'll get a bunch of leftist (because they don't have jobs) volunteer moderators with an agenda.

          What do you consider a leftist? Why do you think they don't have jobs?

        • LightHugger 2 hours ago
          I am not a right ring perspective, i'm left, but because i'm an honest person i'm simply able to point out an article that is composed solely of extremist lies and misinformation. Wikipedia is not the only source and if you fully research the topic you will quickly realize how bad that article is.

          The pro-gamergate editors were completely shut out of that article eventually and the article doesn't even mention any perspectives from the other side, it's an obviously biased on it's face article and i'm not sure why you can't just acknowledge that this system is flawed sometimes.

          I agree with your premise that WMF has far better anti bias processes than reddit, reddit is a literal worst case scenerio for bias. I disagree with the idea that it's perfect though so i brought up a clear example of an extremely biased article that is still messed up to this day. I do suggest swapping to the japanese wiki article and just comparing the quality of information, it's really cool.

          Also i vouched for your post, not sure why it was flagged, mine was as well.

          • santoshalper 1 hour ago
            We can't acknowledge it because we think you are 100% dead wrong and you're trying to retroactively gaslight us into believing Gamergate wasn't primarily toxic far right-wing trolling, which it was. I don't need to base my opinion on what Wikipedia says because I was there and you are delusional.
    • 0xDEAFBEAD 7 hours ago
      Did you read this post?

      "Reliable Sources: How Wikipedia Admin David Gerard Launders His Grudges Into the Public Record"

      https://www.tracingwoodgrains.com/p/reliable-sources-how-wik...

    • hulitu 3 hours ago
      This is the ideal picture of Wikipedia. In reality they are also used to spread propaganda and are happy about it as long as it fits certain naratives.

      Wikipedia is, today, a pale shade of what it once was, a source of information.

    • 0xDEAFBEAD 7 hours ago
    • lukan 3 hours ago
      To me those links you provided, indicate a lot, of what is wrong for me with wikipedia.

      Because it is extremely hard to figure out what is going on. Lots of mysterious abbreviations. Unclear timeline.

      I still don't really know it, it seems the scandal is, that he had a sockpuppet account? And there is only "private" evidence (meaning not public)?

      "The Arbitration Committee has determined through private evidence, including evidence from the checkuser tool, that Eostrix (talk · contribs) (a current RfA candidate) is a sockpuppet of Icewhiz (talk · contribs). Accordingly, the Committee has resolved that Eostrix be indefinitely blocked."

      So having a sockpuppet account is the reason for indefinite ban? Or that in combination with edits he made? Really, really hard to figure out for someone just having a quick look into the topic. And this is what prevented me since the beginning to participate in Wikipedia. I always got this impression. I made some edits here and there, but I think was mostly reverted/deleted/ignored - but no idea, I never felt like making the investment to really dive into it - and that seems required to contribute. Casual contribution seems pointless - and they likely miss out a lot through this.

      "But the only reason you know about them is because Wikipedia openly fights them instead of covering them up."

      So it seems good if wikipedia is more open - but from this story I just take "private evidence" with me and lots of questions about the whole process.

      • simonw 3 hours ago
        "Really, really hard to figure out for someone just having a quick look into the topic."

        Sometimes things are genuinely complicated. If you want to understand the hardest, most elaborate forms of Wikipedia community management you're going to need to work really hard at figuring out what's going on.

        Community dynamics at this scale, and with this level of bad actors, are not something that can be explained in a few paragraphs.

        • Loic 3 hours ago
          Thank you.

          More and more, especially in engineering, I am in contact with people who just want everything to be easy to understand in TikTok length video clips or short posts.

          Some things are hard to understand, dynamic systems especially, black or white answers do not exist.

          (Sorry for the slightly off-topic/meta rant. This hit a nerve by me.)

          • lukan 3 hours ago
            Well, I believe things with serious consequences like banning someone permanently - should indeed be presented clearly. Exactly because I know some organisations like to shield themself from criticism, by having a intransparent process.
        • lukan 3 hours ago
          Oh in general for sure, but my first (attempted?) edit for Wikipedia was 20 years ago so I am not a completely newb.

          And this is kind of like a court decision.

          But in a real court, I can see the verdict and the laws that were broken. All in complicated, but readable english. Which makes it clear (usually). But in wikipedia to understand a indefinite ban, I have to understand global wiki community dynamics first? I am a bit reminded of Kafka - The Trial.

          • krisoft 1 hour ago
            > But in a real court, I can see the verdict and the laws that were broken. All in complicated, but readable english.

            Thats not really true either. There is a lot to unpack to understand court cases. Just the hearsay rule and its exception would fill a book. Jurisdiction, double jeopardy, means rea, “reasonable man”, Brady disclosure, fruit of poisonous tree, presumption of regularity, habeas corpus, SLAP, reasonable doubt, writ of mandamus, motion to dismiss, motion to supress, motion for change of venue, motion in limine, amicus curiae, consideration. Just to unpack the latin terms makes your head spin, and then you will be caught out by some term with some seamingly easy to understand common meaning used in surprising ways.

            One can almost say it is a whole profession to understand what is going on in court. We could call them lawyers or something if we want to be fancy about it. And then turns out even those specialist further specialise in narrower areas.

  • sedev 8 hours ago
    I am going to say a thing I say a lot: please edit Wikipedia. It is easier to do than you probably think! Wikipedia's biggest constraint is no longer money or server space, it's editor time (especially since LLM-based garbage is a force multiplier on disruptive editing that does not have a corresponding improvement to good-faith editing). Any topic area you know about and/or care about can benefit from your attention. Fixing typos is valuable. Adding photos is valuable. Flagging vandalism is valuable. Please edit Wikipedia.
    • flask_manager 8 hours ago
      I have in the past, but three things put me off doing so now;

      Pages where I can spot inconsistencies are often controversial, with long dense discussion pages, edits here are almost impossible beyond trivial details. I dont mind fixing trivia, but not if the actual improvement I think I can make is rejected.

      There is a bit of a deletionist crusade to keep some topics small, for example, Ive had interesting trivia about a cameras development process simply deleted. Maybe it is truly for the better, but it is not really that easy to add to the meat of the project, without someone else's approval.

      Third, the begging banners really feel a bit gross; I know the size of the endowment, and how long it would be able to sustain the project (forever essentially)... It really feels like the foundation is using the Wikipedia brand to funnel money to irrelevant pet causes. This really puts me off contributing.

      • webstrand 6 hours ago
        I made an edit last year, it immediately got reverted and I got a banner on my user page for vandalism. I complained about that, other people agreed with me but the person who reverted my edits never responded. So there it sits.
        • technothrasher 56 minutes ago
          The only few times I tried to make small edits, typo corrections, or similar, they just got immediately reverted as vandalism. So when I found a page that is largely wrong about a relatively obscure historical figure that I actually know a lot about and have plenty of source material for, I didn't really feel motivated to put the work in to clean it up.
          • stogot 22 minutes ago
            I made a small edit to fix a mistake once and it didn’t get called vandalism but I sort of got a harsh message telling I did it wrong and didn’t follow processes

            There must be some admin-level expectations of how things should be done but the editor flow gives you zero warning or indication. This was a while back so maybe they changed the flow

        • Arch-TK 2 hours ago
          If there's a dispute and the person you're having a dispute with never materialises to argue their side of the argument, you're fine to just revert the banner.
        • the_mitsuhiko 3 hours ago
          Would be curious to learn what you edited.
        • paradite 4 hours ago
          Seems like the story of Stackoverflow.
      • YZF 5 hours ago
        I've also edited random things in the past. Like inaccuracies in Comp.Sci. topics.

        I used to like Wikipedia but I'm changing my mind. One thing amongst many others was seeing some company that competed with the startup I worked in basically introduce marketing material into the site. It just feels like it's too big and there are too many interests that want to distort things. I was surprised to see some article recently removed effectively rewriting history and directing to some alternative version. I just checked again and it's been restored but it just seems like the wild west.

        I'd need some serious convincing to restore my trust in it. There are still some good technical/science articles I guess. It kind of sucks that instead of getting more reliable information on the Internet we're trending towards not being to trust anything. It's not clear how we fix this since reliability can not be equal to popularity.

        • bawolff 5 hours ago
          > It just feels like it's too big and there are too many interests that want to distort things. I was surprised to see some article recently removed effectively rewriting history and directing to some alternative version. I just checked again and it's been restored but it just seems like the wild west.

          In fairness, this does mean the system is working.

          • YZF 5 hours ago
            Yeah- Maybe it's "eventually working". It's hard to trust when it seems so fluid. Maybe there needs to be some mechanics to make it harder to change. Something like being able to suggest changes/corrections but having those come out on some schedule after a review? (thinking software release process here). Quarterly Wikipedia releases? Creating some "core" of Wikipedia that is subject to tougher editorial standards?

            Not sure.

            • bawolff 3 hours ago
              Its definitely an eventual consistency kind of model.

              There was some attempts at change review (called "pending changes") that is used on very continous articles, but it never really scaled that well. I think its more popular on german wikipedia.

              Wikipedia is so dominant that it has kind of smoothered all alternative models. Personally i feel like its kind of like democracy: the worst system except for all the other systems. All things are transient though, i'm sure eventually someone will come up with something superior that will take over, just like wikipedia took over from encyclopedia briticana.

            • card_zero 2 hours ago
              Mechanics like that exist for when warring over a page escalates. See the old essay (20 years old now!) "The Wrong Version": https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/The_Wrong_Version
            • terribleperson 4 hours ago
              Harder to change doesn't make it more or less correct, just means wrong information sticks around longer. Because revision history is kept and changes are instant, it's easy to fix bad changes. For topics that see extensive astroturfing, they can be restricted.
              • JimDabell 2 hours ago
                It’s worth remembering that the entire point of a wiki is that it’s quick and easy to make a change (the name means “quick” in Hawaiian). Being quick and easy to change was the defining quality of Wikipedia and its advantage over more rigid traditional encyclopaedias. These days editing Wikipedia seems like you have to fight bureaucracy and rules lawyering, and doesn’t seem very wiki-like at all.
      • gotoeleven 7 hours ago
        It really feels that way because that's what they're doing. There's a legit non-profit internet encyclopedia barnacled with a bunch of generic left wing political stuff, except the barnacle is bigger than the boat.
        • arrowsmith 6 hours ago
          Yeah I stopped donating to Wikipedia once I learned where the money goes.

          Even if it ends up supporting causes I agree with, why would I need the Wikimedia Foundation as an intermediary? I could just give money directly to the causes!

    • 3036e4 1 hour ago
      I edited mostly a single page many years ago. It wasn't a controversial subject really, just one where there is a lot of garbage popular history and some light revisionism that made it a bit of an effort to remove unreliable sources and add some better sources. Never any issues or fights over it, but I got bored eventually and just let it be.

      Recently I edited a page or two, then tried to edit more, but everything is so complex now. All the special markup and stuff to consider is really off-putting. Took me forever to figure out how to properly fix the year of death of a person and some other data I just ignored because it was too much red tape. Wish it was more simple plain text. Makes quick drive-by edits too much work.

    • moritonal 8 hours ago
      I created a page, it got declined because the guy who two films have been made about didn't count as important enough. I kind of get it, but still, did kill the energy slightly.
      • terribleperson 4 hours ago
        The notability requirement is a real bane, but it also kind of makes sense when there's really insufficient manpower for the articles they already have. But then, maybe they'd have more manpower if they loosened the notability requirement.
      • strogonoff 6 hours ago
        If you care about a topic and want to edit Wikipedia but do not want to deal with the process, you can simply talk about what you want to change on the discussion page. Is there an equivalent workaround when it comes to creating new pages?
    • Xelbair 45 minutes ago
      With how hostile userbase is on wikipedia, no - i would rather not. especially in my native tongue.
    • j4coh 5 hours ago
      I’ve tried, but every article even the most inconsequential seems to have an angry bird in the roost enforcing whatever their particular vision of the article is.
      • Hamuko 5 hours ago
        It's even worse when you add a source and you get reverted for reasons quite clearly disproven in your source. I had to make a single edit three times because it got undone twice by two separate administrators. A less stubborn person would've just given up on the first baseless revert and never edited Wikipedia again.
      • undersuit 4 hours ago
        Edits are public so other members of the community can eventually make a case against or for the actions of a dedicated maintainer. Keep trying.
        • vasco 4 hours ago
          Sounds like stackoverflow defenders. I'm another person who tried about 5-7 times over the years to do larger improvements all for it to go to waste. Minor edits many times survive but even those I stopped doing because of the sour effect of the larger ones getting denied.
        • j4coh 3 hours ago
          Honestly I have more valuable things to do with my time.
    • Terr_ 6 hours ago
      I tried on a completely uncontroversial page that documented a certain idiom and examples of where it was used.

      My edit was reverted, twice, because apparently there is no such thing as a notable source for lines from a 1980s British TV episode, not even a fan website that has a transcript for all of them. Gave up after that.

      • card_zero 1 hour ago
        That's an error, because episodes can be cited directly, and the template "cite episode" exists for this:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Cite_episode

        It can be seen in use for instance on the Beavis and Butt-head article, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beavis_and_Butt-Head where the citation looks like this:

        "Werewolves of Highland". Beavis and Butt-Head. Season 8. Episode 1. October 27, 2011. MTV.

      • pbhjpbhj 1 hour ago
        Sounds like that might have been a copyright issue? In the UK a transcript of a show would need permission of the writers/owners to be reproduced. I can see Wikipedia would be sensible to disallow infringing works as being bad sources.

        Ironically an excerpt of the script/transcript would be allowed by UK copyright - but a site with only excerpts would probably but be a good source for Wikipedia's purposes.

    • qingcharles 4 hours ago
      I've been an editor since 2004. It's getting really, really hard now. Like, it is really off-putting and no longer enjoyable.
      • Paracompact 2 hours ago
        Curious, as a longtime editor, what's gotten harder for you recently?

        As a casual, very infrequent editor, I echo everyone else's complaints that it's intimidating to have your additions reverted by the old guard who seem to have an increasingly particular vision of the site.

    • klntsky 4 hours ago
      I don't want to contribute to this giant propaganda machine by making it more valuable. Structural problems must be fixed first.

      "If your solution consists of 'everyone should just X', you don't have a solution"

    • Matthyze 2 hours ago
      Since so many commenters here have bad experiences, I'll provide a counterweight. I've made numerous edits and have run into little to no resistance. I'm sure asking people on a forum does not evoke a representative response.
    • t1E9mE7JTRjf 6 hours ago
      Tried many times, nothing sticks. Lots of resistance.
    • tonymet 7 hours ago
      I tried volunteering and contributed a few thousand edits, and ended up brigaded into hours of silly reviews by sock puppets and their crony admins. The bureaucracy is nuttier than a Monty python sketch. Endless futile debates on talk pages.

      It’s not supposed to have many rules (according to the Jimbo gospel), but admins apply policy pages as law , and given how many inane and convoluted policies there are, you can be censured for practically anything with the right quote. You can see these sockpuppet brigades watching and pouncing on the edit history of any semi controversial page.

      It’s a pathetic monoculture that lacks any self awareness or sense of introspection. Critical discussions are quickly shut down and the authors are put into a penalty box.

      Leadership needs to address the power dynamics, and come up with a better self regulating structure. Editors need to identify themselves and their agenda. Networks & brigades need to be monitored and shutdown using activity tracking.

      Wikipedia’s social network is operating with 1990s era protocols but their influence via syndication on every common news surface means they are way too influential. Google, Alexa, LLMs and mainstream media all syndicate Wikipedia content as gospel. But the content is completely unregulated.

      And don’t get me started on Wikimedia Foundation.

    • raphman 2 hours ago
      To offer a counter-example to the many anecdotes about being gatekept(?) by veteran Wikipedia editors: I have the opposite experience.

      I occasionally contribute to various topics, and in many cases experienced editors silently fixed formatting errors I made, allowing me to focus on contributing to Wikipedia without having to keep up with the best practices.

      I also participated in a deletion discussion once, and - despite being inexperienced and in the minority position (keep) - the experienced editors considered my arguments and responded to them.

    • zelphirkalt 2 hours ago
      Years ago I tried adding a weblink directing to a community, to an article about a game, where there were already weblinks to other communities, which were in no way any more official or proper than the community I linked to, but this edit never made it into the page, because someone played gatekeeper there, probably a person of the already linked communities. Since then I don't even bother editing wiki any longer. It is gatekeeping by people with their own agenda. What else I read about edit wars did not inspire confidence either.
    • noosphr 3 hours ago
      I'll add: please edit in areas where you are an expect. Over the last 20 years I have racked up a few thoudand edits, rewrites, new articles, etc.. Don't contribute to the low effort noise everyone is screaming about. In a century an edit in transcendental number theory with a citation is going to be a lot more important than whatever the current culture war is.
    • antegamisou 2 hours ago
      > Fixing typos is valuable. Adding photos is valuable. Flagging vandalism is valuable. Please edit Wikipedia.

      Wise that you omit adding other credible sources that do not agree with the main editor's views. What you're describing sounds like already preserving their work, no matter if it happens to be provide info based on multiple convergent sources or not.

    • brightball 8 hours ago
      I always wonder why certain topics are locked.
      • sedev 8 hours ago
        For most things the talk pages will explain why it is restricted, but if someone forgot to put a notice there, there's also a giant list of "the following topic areas reliably attract disruptive editing and get people angry, so admins move much more quickly to restrict editing than they would otherwise." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:General_sanctions#Ac...
    • thaumasiotes 5 hours ago
      > please edit Wikipedia. It is easier to do than you probably think!

      Last time I tried to do that, I flagged a citation that went to a book saying the opposite of what wikipedia was citing it in support of as "failed verification".

      This attracted the attention of an editor, who showed up to revert my flag, explaining that as long as the book exists, that's good enough.

      Wikipedia could improve noticeably by just preventing the existing editors from making edits.

    • Animats 4 hours ago
      I used to edit Wikipedia actively. I was was active on the conflict of interest notice board and involved in pushing back against a few self-promotional scams. The worst one involved the "binary options" industry, before it was shut down. "Better Place", a hype-based electric car startup that went bankrupt, was another.

      A few years previous, most heavy promotion on Wikipedia was music-related. Then business hype dominated. Then political hype took over. Trying to push back in the "post truth" era is valuable but painful.

      It was worth doing for a while. But not for too long. It's wearing.

    • thallium205 8 hours ago
      Why is their editor so awful to use?
      • arrowsmith 6 hours ago
        I don't know, but it's definitely not a lack of funding.
      • card_zero 1 hour ago
        Designers happened.
    • bagels 7 hours ago
      Why? Bots reverse every edit.
    • leephillips 6 hours ago
      Please do not edit, write for, read, or cite Wikipedia. If you care about or know about a topic, consider writing a book or article about it.
  • mjrpes 11 hours ago
    Here's the letter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ocNyx34Et19sKtlta0bTPPzSPcp...

    No claims, no evidence. No sources, except "it has come to my attention" and "information received by my office".

    • simonw 10 hours ago
      Yikes that letter is alarming.

      > In view of public criticisms, including those expressed by Wikipedia Co-Founder Dr. Lawrence M. Sanger, regarding the opacity of editorial processes and the anonymity of contributors, what justification does the Foundation offer for shielding editors from public scrutiny?

      Larry Sanger has been criticizing Wikipedia for more than 20 years: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Sanger#Criticism_of_Wiki...

      The author of that letter is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed_Martin_(Missouri_politician... - "the first U.S. attorney for D.C. in at least 50 years to be appointed without experience as a judge or a federal prosecutor".

      • ZeroGravitas 3 hours ago
        The Heritage Foundation has been open about their desire to strip Wikipedians of anonymity, this is just the government putting that plan into practice:

        https://slate.com/technology/2025/02/wikipedia-project-2025-...

        • buyucu 1 hour ago
          The easiest solution is for the Wikimedia Foundation to move out of Us jurisdiction to a more democratic country.
          • guerrilla 4 minutes ago
            I don't think that would work. The US would just attack those countries as they are doing right now, trying to force us to give up DEI and ESG.
        • squarefoot 2 hours ago
          If the HF is behind this, then Wikipedia is doomed beyond any legal defense. Back it up entirely and move it overseas.
        • satanfirst 2 hours ago
          Their entry on Wikipedia is well worth a read:

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Heritage_Foundation

          Kind of explains a lot in the balancing act in Trumps rise to power while trying to look like a marionette for various interests this term. They should remember Hitler's rebellion from his masters.

      • the_mitsuhiko 3 hours ago
        Getting really bad vibes from this. Plenty of people in power are unhappy with Wikipedia for years. So far it’s an amazing source and surprisingly neutral given the complexity of the problem. Would not want to lose it in a political fight.
    • SonOfLilit 4 hours ago
      This is legal communication written by a lawyer and intended to be read by lawyers.

      Consistently, the first thing every lawyer has said to me when preparing for any interaction with third parties that had a legal aspect was "never volunteer information you were not explicitly asked for". Of course lawyers would practice this among themselves. The law requires him to suspect something wrong to investigate, so he states "I hereby formally suspect something wrong". If the investigation leads to a court filing, the law would then require him to submit evidence, so he will strategically decide which evidence to submit and submit it. Why would he commit in advance to what evidence he believes relevant if not required by law?

      But also, if reading the letter as if written in good faith - which I find hard to do - those are all true reasons to suspect something wrong (it is common knowledge and well established that Wikipedia is a very influential source of knowledge, and that there are attempts at foreign influence), and great questions to ask to investigate whether the Foundation is making a reasonable effort to fight it if you were a regulator or auditor or other investigator, all of which have great answers already written up that prove the foundation is doing a very good job at establishing and maintaining processes to ensure the neutrality of its articles. In my headcanon, Wikipedia's lawyer responds simply with a list of URLs.

    • dxroshan 7 hours ago
      What is happening is very scary. Many people don't seem to care about any evidence or sources. They blindly follow whatever lies that their leaders say. I think this has been the case at anytime in history. However, now, with the internet, it is easy to spread such lies to mass and easy for such leaders to make blind followers.
      • rnd0 3 hours ago
        Clearly people care very deeply about sources and evidence -and they're attacking things (wikipedia, various gov websites) which can be used as objective sources.

        If you don't have objective sources, it's easier to lead people around by the nose -hence the attack.

    • toomuchtodo 11 hours ago
  • tzs 11 hours ago
    > Before being named U.S. attorney, Martin appeared on Russia-backed media networks more than 150 times, The Washington Post reported last week. In one appearance on RT in 2022, he said there was no evidence of military buildup on Ukraine’s boarders only nine days before Russia invaded the country. He further criticized U.S. officials as warmongering and ignoring Russia security concerns.

    This is getting ridiculous. Is there anyone associated with this administration who does not have a record of promoting Russia's positions?

    • NelsonMinar 9 hours ago
      Martin was also at the coup attempt on Jan 6 and on that day said "Like Mardi Gras in DC today: love, faith and joy. Ignore #FakeNews". https://archive.ph/jekzQ
      • kristopolous 8 hours ago
        That's more relevant. RT has had some fairly legitimate people on it such as Larry King, Julian Assange, John Pilger, Amy Goodman... Many Pulitzer prize and Peabody winners ... It's a mixed bag, people can't be so reductive about it.

        Not defending it, but just saying that being on RT doesn't necessarily imply anything.

        These things are complicated. Alex Jones and Michio Kaku were both on Genesis for instance https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesis_Communications_Netwo...

        We have the capability of being adults here. Whether we are or not is always a choice.

        • foogazi 6 hours ago
          One time sure, 150+ on the Russia propaganda network ? I’m drawing my own adult conclusions about it: “The friend of my enemy is my enemy”
          • ncr100 5 hours ago
            Yes. 150+ times is akin to Funding an individual, rather than seeking to add a unique perspective.
          • alephnan 6 hours ago
            That’s not how foreign policy and international politics work. Every country would be enemies with every other country in that case.

            All the pro-Palestinian anti-Israel country would be enemies of the US then, including Japan. You’d be supporting Trump’s tariffs and anti-China us or them stance then towards every country that has friendly business relations with China, which is everybody at this point. Heck, even Taiwan and China are friends more than Westerners would like to think. Meanwhile, America is friends with countries like Saudi Arabia and countries that keeps a blind eye to the funding of terrorism in America

            There’s a reason the famous saying is “the enemy of my enemy is my friend” rather than “the friend of my enemy is my enemy”

            • eVeechu7 5 hours ago
              Comparing the choices of individuals with foreign diplomacy is specious. It is much harder for countries to have principles than individuals.
              • alephnan 5 hours ago
                The same can be said of boardroom politics and board of directors. Or investment circles such as tech venture capital
                • watwut 5 hours ago
                  They don't have principles.
                  • psychoslave 4 hours ago
                    Even "maximize the hegemonic monopolistic power of my claws" can be taken as mindset principles.

                    Having principles is orthogonal to striving adoption of ethical fair well being for everyone.

            • psychoslave 4 hours ago
              "les états n'ont pas d'amis, que des intérêts."

              States are very different beasts, unlike human individual which have clear skin borderies as a given, they are able to take parts of each other and assimilate them. Even when they are not in official direct opposition, rampant dirty plots are always going on in the parallel background of any the official sympathy to everyone, be it because even within a state there is a broad variation of contenders.

        • NelsonMinar 8 hours ago
          RT is not legit. It is Russian propaganda. When those people participated they were collaborators.
          • roenxi 5 hours ago
            Ex-CIA head Brennan famously remarked in an MSNBC interview [0] that when he says something is a Russian information operation that includes dumping accurate information.

            So really it isn't enough to identify something as Russian propaganda - it is necessary to analyse whether it is propaganda of the accurate and informative variety, or the inaccurate variety.

            Propaganda really just means someone is arguing a viewpoint. The BBC is classic propaganda, but nonetheless a pretty reliable source of information and a lot of the views are very agreeable.

            [0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8Shx2AR_E4

            • chii 4 hours ago
              > a lot of the views are very agreeable

              That's why you don't "ignore" propaganda, but consume all, from all sides. Just consuming agreeable propaganda simply means it is working.

              • exceptione 28 minutes ago
                Nope, you shouldn't. Because propaganda is effective.

                Humans are by default not influenced by logic, but rather respond on beliefs and emotions. This is one of the hardest thing to swallow for us people, we do see ourself as independent rational thinkers. We are sometimes able to, with effort.

                To understand it better, you should know that Russian propaganda is not designed to instill a certain belief, but rather to make you not belief the truth. The Kremlin is happy to push different, conflicting stories. You end up with a society of nihilists.

            • foldr 1 hour ago
              The BBC isn’t propaganda. It has its biases for sure, but it doesn’t exist for the purpose of spreading a particular viewpoint. It’s good to be aware of media bias, but it’s reductive and cynical to view all media as propaganda.
              • roenxi 18 minutes ago
                > The BBC isn’t propaganda. It has its biases for sure, but it doesn’t exist for the purpose of spreading a particular viewpoint.

                If it isn't pushing a British viewpoint, wouldn't it be incumbent on the British government to shut it down? Why would they be funding something that was pushing viewpoints that undermined Britain? This is simple incentive analysis stuff, this organisation isn't being funded for billions of dollars because the Brits happen to just be uniquely dedicated to the cause of the truth even if it hurts their interests. They're British! They're one step removed from the people who invented espionage, there is a long history of information warfare here.

                RT & the BBC are both state backed media organisations. It is quite difficult to come up with a reason for those except propaganda. The US has been running this experiment for centuries now, it has been well established that the government-sponsored perspective isn't any more legitimate than anyone else's.

                • foldr 5 minutes ago
                  Every news organisation has a viewpoint and could potentially be shut down by whoever controls the purse strings. This logic will lead you to the conclusion that all news is propaganda. That might be technically true in some very broad sense, but it tends to lead to absurd comparisons like your comparison between the BBC and RT.

                  Incidentally, various British governments have tried quite hard to shut down (or at least neuter) the BBC and failed. You're failing to take into account the fact that the BBC is a popular institution and that there would be domestic political consequences for a government that attacked it too strongly. If you think that your average British government minister goes around thinking "thank goodness for the BBC's news coverage!" then you may be a little out of touch with British politics.

              • paganel 1 hour ago
                > but it doesn’t exist for the purpose of spreading a particular viewpoint.

                Id does exactly that, as does all State-supported media (such as RFI in France or Deutsche Welle in Germany).

                • foldr 40 minutes ago
                  The BBC’s editorial line isn’t determined by the government of the day. I’m not familiar with the output of examples you mention, but there’s no comparison with RT, which is simply a propaganda arm of the Russian state.
          • SanjayMehta 4 hours ago
            This applies to all state owned media. The US is unique that even privately held corporations push propaganda.

            The most gratuitous example is NYT, as documented by Ashley Rindsberg in his book “The Gray Lady Winked.”

            • spacechild1 2 hours ago
              > The US is unique that even privately held corporations push propaganda.

              How is that unique to the US?

          • myst 8 hours ago
            [flagged]
            • thenberlin 7 hours ago
              Entirely uncritical state controlled or substantially aligned media masquerading as news is always bad and should be criticized. See also almost anyone called on in White House press briefings these days.

              Plus, you are saying it like all propaganda is somehow the same. Rosie the Riveter != "Russia isn't going to do anything...well, it's America's fault...NATO something something...actually, Ukraine basically deserved it."

            • consumer451 7 hours ago
              Not who you are responding to, but given that as rational humans, we have the capacity to make non-binary comparisons, Kremlin propaganda is indeed far worse than most. I say this as a European who sees clear flaws in the US system, but that does not make the Russian system good, or even a little good. It is objectively horrible. The Russian people, for one, deserve far better.

              It is important to point out that Russian propaganda is actually excellent propaganda. However, their message is the at the very bottom:

              There is no truth, up is down, nothing matters, the invader is the victim, etc.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_propaganda_in_the_Russia...

            • usernomdeguerre 7 hours ago
              If NelsonMinar doesn't say it, I will.
            • Braxton1980 7 hours ago
              It is.

              Stop trying to make everything equal.

        • ncallaway 7 hours ago
          Ed Martin made 198 TV appearances on RT in 2023 and 2024.

          How many RT TV hits did Larry King do? How recently did King appear on RT?

        • asveikau 5 hours ago
          > Amy Goodman

          Source for that? My impression is that Democracy Now!, while it has a clear perspective and set of biases, has been fairly independent. I don't think Goodman herself would be involved with them, but I think some of her sometimes guests have been.

          In general I agree with folks replying to you that RT is not trustworthy and someone being involved with it is a red flag.

        • rolandog 4 hours ago
          > That's more relevant. RT has had some fairly legitimate people on it such as Larry King, Julian Assange, John Pilger, Amy Goodman... Many Pulitzer prize and Peabody winners ... It's a mixed bag, people can't be so reductive about it.

          Can you back up your accusations with facts? I can state that I have not seen any reprehensible reporting from Amy Goodman; but rather the opposite, backed up by facts (e.g. about mass graves on Russian-occupied areas [0]).

          [0]: https://www.democracynow.org/2022/9/29/ukraine_russia_mass_g...

        • otherme123 4 hours ago
          It's not too difficult to draw connections between Wikileaks, Assange, RT and Russian government. It's known that the GRU funneled info to Wikileaks many times, and at the same time they never published anything that could seriously affect Putin. Examples: the Dirt on opponents were published by UK newspapers. The Fancy Bear papers were published by hacker groups and online news. Pandora Papers by the ICIJ.

          The only leak than contains something barely close to Putin and was published on Wikileaks were the Panama Papers, that names three friends of him, not in the government. The lack of any russian officials in those papers speaks volumes.

          Best case scenario, they are tools. Worse case, they are assets.

        • intermerda 7 hours ago
          > Not defending it, but just saying that being on RT doesn't necessarily imply anything.

          I'm not sure who's claiming that here. The RT appearance in question is about him spreading disinformation and Russian propaganda on the eve of Ukraine invasion.

          • kristopolous 7 hours ago
            It's pretty constant on hn. People paint everything from country X, holistically, with some broad and blunt moral brush.

            It reads like a cartoon. Everything from China is loaded with secret spyware snooping on you for countless unspecified evils - everything out of Russia by anyone is part of some secret global propaganda network.

            I point it out as absurd and reductive whenever I see it and people dogpile on me like I desecrated a sacred cow.

            The world is incredibly complex and a simple label doesn't cut it. Wernher von Braun was a Nazi but that doesn't mean his work on rocketry was fictional lies.

            You need to assess things based on the merits of the thing, not on any narratives of attributive associations you're choosing to assign.

            • SR2Z 7 hours ago
              Yes but in this case, the dude in question was uncritically parroting Russian propaganda - as do most people on RT, since that's its purpose.
            • gitremote 4 hours ago
              State media in fascist dictatorships don't reflect the diversity of their people. It is untrue that humans of any nationality have free speech and a free press as a check against their government's actions. It is untrue that any country's government is legally obligated to transparency that is required in a democracy.

              When people say that Russian and Chinese state media are propaganda, it is not always because they are racists. Many people say this because they make a distinction between a government and the people, and understand the difference democracy makes.

              It's great that you're trying to emphasize with people in other countries. Empathize deeper and think through how it must be like to live in such a political environment to their full conclusions.

              • keybored 5 minutes ago
                The media in liberal democracies don’t reflect the diversity of their people.
            • Braxton1980 7 hours ago
              >everything out of Russia by anyone is part of some secret global propaganda network.

              Who has claimed all Russians are part of a large propaganda network. This is about a government news network.

              • kristopolous 6 hours ago
                [flagged]
                • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
                  The US government is also framed the same way on HN, though I don't like this metrics gathering method.

                  Most discussions are of the war in Ukraine which also connects to US politics. It's going to be negative and treated extremely suspect because Putin is ex KGB, lied that he wouldn't invade, the war itself, and their influence in US elections.

                  This is about the Russian government though. If your argument is that it's wrong in these constraints then I disagree but your generalization is valid. My original comment was about Russia as a whole but I think I wrong to try to shift to that as it doesn't come up

                • habinero 6 hours ago
                  Russia interfered with our elections and is actively hostile to us. It's not a meme, it's real.
            • shermantanktop 4 hours ago
              Sometimes focusing on each of the individual puppets distracts you from who is pulling the strings.
            • j4coh 5 hours ago
              Why use a non-example to mention it though?
        • computerthings 6 hours ago
          [dead]
    • r053bud 10 hours ago
      We voted for this! This is “democracy” at work
      • keybored 3 minutes ago
        It’s interesting that people who claim Americans live in a democracy will slam-dunk any topic based on a completely binary decision made every four years.

        No discussion beyond that point is needed.

      • Cthulhu_ 4 hours ago
        Sure, but you also voted for a system of checks & balances, laws, and separation of powers - whatever happened to all these laws and stuff from the Cold War where even a hint that you may have ties to Russia would get you a Visit?
      • kzrdude 2 hours ago
        Do you think it's legitimate when the administration transgresses constitutional limits? With legal eyes nobody voted for that, you can't vote inside the system to break the system, office holders are expected to follow the law once elected.
      • candiddevmike 10 hours ago
        Less than 30% of voter age Americans voted for this
        • rchaud 8 hours ago
          The majority that did vote, voted for this. The participation rate has always been low in rich western countries. Given the standards of media literacy and civics education, there's no evidence that a higher participation rate would have changed the outcome.
          • Perenti 6 hours ago
            Everybody votes in Australia (not sure how rich, but in top 20 for sure). If you don't you have to show cause or pay a AUD$50 fine. I know some think this is anti-freedom, but it does prevent farces like the current USA. Historically there have been problems in the past (30 years ago) but these days the Australian Electoral Commission (Independent from government) revise electoral boundaries to ensure no more gerrymanders.
            • tmtvl 2 hours ago
              In Belgium attendance is mandatory as well. I think it's a positive as it means complacency ("my side has already won, no reason to go out and vote") is never a factor in the outcome.
          • nntwozz 8 hours ago
            > The participation rate has always been low in rich western countries.

            The general election in 2022 had 84,2% of eligible voters in Sweden.

            • cscurmudgeon 7 hours ago
              [dead]
            • riffraff 7 hours ago
              Italy had 64% for the parliamentary elections in 2022, which is the lowest ever but it's pretty far from 30%.
          • pesus 8 hours ago
            Plurality, not majority. It may be pedantic but it's an important difference.
            • rafram 8 hours ago
              I was going to say that it was a majority this time, but it seems like the results shifted as more votes were counted after election night, and he ended up with 49.8%. Still, unbelievably, pretty close to a majority.
          • mpesce 6 hours ago
            We regularly have 92% - 93% participation in federal elections here in Australia. Having one next weekend, and already record numbers of pre-poll votes.
            • chaboud 6 hours ago
              It’s almost like elections are held on Saturdays and participation is compulsory.

              Almost…

            • Perenti 6 hours ago
              And those that don't vote have to show a very good reason, or pay a fine, or face gaol.
              • grues-dinner 4 hours ago
                Correction: those that don't enter a polling station. What you do in there is up to you. You can cast a vote, spoil the ballot, cast a "donkey vote" (numbering the options in the order printed), leave the ballot empty, as long as it goes in the box.
            • CalRobert 6 hours ago
              Must be the sausages
          • CalRobert 6 hours ago
            Under fifty percent for what it’s worth. And there was a lot of disenfranchisement
          • bagels 7 hours ago
            Not majority, under 50%
          • mulmen 7 hours ago
            There’s also no evidence that increased turnout would have had the same result.

            What seems to be overlooked in these conversations is the skill with which American voters have been disenfranchised by partisan forces.

            It’s easy to blame people for not voting if you ignore the real difficulties in actually casting a vote for many Americans.

            • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 hour ago
              << It’s easy to blame people for not voting if you ignore the real difficulties in actually casting a vote for many Americans.

              I hesitated while reading this part, because I wholly agreed with the first 2 sentences. Do you mean physically difficult in terms of barriers to voting or making a less direct comment about the usefulness of that vote? If the former, I think I disagree compared to other countries ( and the levels of paperwork needed ). If the latter, I would be interested to hear some specifics.

            • sgc 6 hours ago
              That an enormous sample size. Statistically a complete participation should be very close, so the burden of proof lies with those who claim it would be different. Regardless of whether Trump would have won or not, that is a clear indication of evenly split public sentiment. So we still get to justly reap the fruits of our collective choices. There is no exoneration by whimsically dreaming of improbable alternatives.

              I don't think it is was that hard to vote. That is a straw man to avoid facing the hard truth of American apathy. Now next election, perhaps we can have a conversation on that point. Things a trending rather poorly right now.

              • ellen364 4 hours ago
                The electorate self-selected into voters and non-voters, it wasn't a random sample. Some chose to go to the polls and some chose to stay at home. Voter preferences don't say a lot about the preferences of non-voters, who've already shown they choose differently.
                • mulmen 4 hours ago
                  There’s also one party that disproportionately targets specific voter demographics for suppression.
            • rayiner 7 hours ago
              In fact there was an extensive analysis of the election by Democrat pollster David Shor, who found that 100% turnout would have resulted in an even larger Trump win, by 4.8 points: https://www.vox.com/politics/403364/tik-tok-young-voters-202...

              This has been the pattern for awhile now. The pool of politically unengaged people are especially Trumpy compared to regular voters: https://abcnews.go.com/538/vote-back-trump/story?id=10909062...

              • mulmen 4 hours ago
                This is very interesting but how would turnout and choice change if historically disenfranchised and suppressed communities had equal access to the polls?
          • Narkov 8 hours ago
            > The participation rate has always been low in rich western countries.

            Australia has entered the chat.

            • crabmusket 7 hours ago
              For reference, informal votes were around 5% in our last federal election:

              https://results.aec.gov.au/27966/website/HouseInformalByStat...

              This article contains a fun breakdown of the types of informal votes including a category for "the usual anatomical drawings" (0.7% of informal votes):

              https://www.crikey.com.au/2025/04/22/2025-federal-election-p...

            • extra88 7 hours ago
              You can't bring them up without including that voting is compulsory there.
              • crabmusket 7 hours ago
                See my sibling comment. Getting your name checked off is compulsory but nothing stops you from handing in a blank ballot.
                • swat535 1 hour ago
                  Why would you hand blank ballot at. That point? You might as well vote.
                  • aloha2436 22 minutes ago
                    "I don't like any of the rat-bastards." "I don't care." "I think it's funnier to draw a dick. (And I don't care.)" "I trust other people to make the right choice." "I refuse to participate in this bourgeois sham election." ...are all reasons I've heard, even if I don't actually understand any of them.
          • rayiner 7 hours ago
            Arguments based on voter participation overlook that voting is a statistical sample of the population. The people who don’t vote broadly break down roughly the same way as the people who do vote. And even to the extent they don’t, it’s risky to make assumptions about how they would have voted.

            If you can generalize about non-voters, it’s that they’re broadly more anti-institution than voters—which is what causes them to put less stock in the institutional practice of voting. In the U.S. in the Trump era, that has meant that non-voters or infrequent voters support Trump somewhat more strongly than regular voters.

          • Someone 4 hours ago
            > The majority that did vote, voted for this

            Nitpick: Trump got less than 50% of the votes (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_United_States_presidentia...)

            More importantly, I think quite a few who voted for Trump didn’t vote for this extreme version of Trump.

          • akio 8 hours ago
            The majority did not vote for Trump, and I question how many of the minority that did vote for him voted for this, specifically. Almost certainly not all of them, given his approval rating is now well below his popular vote share.
        • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
          100% of voter age Americans made a decision. That includes not registering to vote or not voting.

          Pretend I want a snack, I can choose between a cookie and an apple. If I dislike both then I also have the option to not get a snack. Neither is selected.

          This is different from not voting because a candidate still wins.

          • Supermancho 6 hours ago
            If the US wanted voting to be more popular, there would be a Federal Holiday to promote it. There is no incentive when there are known costs...at least since the wild inflation of the 80s when it got prohibitive to lose a shift and the slow dissolution of union jobs. This is the result of the tyranny of indifference. Those that benefit continue to promote and benefit, those that do not, are disenfranchised. It's a common theme in history.
            • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
              >If the US wanted voting to be more popular, there would be a Federal Holiday to promote it.

              I agree but it doesn't actually matter. 97% can vote by mail, early, or another method besides election day according to this article https://www.cbsnews.com/news/map-early-voting-mail-ballot-st...

              >There is no incentive when there are known costs... is the result of the tyranny of indifference.

              What is the cause of the Indifference in your opinion ?

          • computerthings 6 hours ago
            [dead]
        • KingOfCoders 6 hours ago
          Voters who do not vote say "I'm fine with all winners", like "What pizza do you want?" - "I'm fine with every pizza".
        • jen729w 7 hours ago
          And those that stayed at home deserve what they got.
        • monkeyelite 9 hours ago
          What presidential elections are you comparing it to?
        • rayiner 7 hours ago
          David Schor’s analysis found that if everyone had voted, Trump would have won by 4.8 points: https://www.vox.com/politics/403364/tik-tok-young-voters-202...
        • makeitdouble 8 hours ago
          "American democracy"
        • fnordpiglet 9 hours ago
          And a minority of those who did vote voted for this.
      • timeon 49 minutes ago
        > We voted

        Depends if your “democracy” have one person = one vote. Or if the land is included somewhere in the vote.

      • fguerraz 6 hours ago
        There is no democracy without a free press, or else no one can make an informed decision. I doubt that the press can be called free when it’s owned by oligarchs.
      • ty6853 10 hours ago
        I mean yes? Democracy is a pretty poor model for governance. IMO peak enlightenment happened circa the 17th or 18th century when classical liberalism decided government should be based on individual liberties and anything outside of that is decided democratically not because it is a good system but because votes are roughly a tally of who would win if we all pull knives on each other because we didn't like the vote.
        • makeitdouble 8 hours ago
          Democracy is not 2 parties doing voter suppression and gerrymandering as a filter to pass the result to an electoral college.

          The US system was never designed to be fair to individuals in the first place, pointing at it as a failure of democracy is IMHO pulling the actual issues under the rug.

          • rayiner 7 hours ago
            It’s basically impossible to engage in meaningful voter suppression in a country where election results can be cross-checked against high-quality polling.

            “Gerrymandering” also has no effect on Presidential elections. And in 2024, Republicans won a larger share of the House popular vote than their share of House seats.

            • makeitdouble 6 hours ago
              Voter suppression is the act of limiting the pool of voters. That includes putting large swaths of the population behind bars or flagged as non eligible to voting, putting barriers to voter registration etc.

              It can never be 0 and every country will have a minimum requirement, but the degree to which it is done in the US is far ahead of most western country.

              Gerrymandering has an effect on the criteria for voter eligibility, the voting rules in the state etc. It's not direct but who's in power has a sizeable effect on who will have an easier time voting.

              • rayiner 6 hours ago
                No, “voter suppression” is the act of preventing legitimate voters from voting. Society determining that categories of people shouldn’t vote (children, felons, non-citizens, etc.) isn’t voter suppression, it’s simply establishing qualifications for voting. The goal isn’t to get to 0 or try to get as close to 0 as possible. People who should vote should be able to vote, while people who shouldn’t vote shouldn’t be able to vote.

                In the modern era, we should probably narrow the franchise, instituting civics tests and restricting voting to natural born citizens. Statistically, both of these would have hurt my party in 2024, so this isn’t self-interest speaking.

        • sapphicsnail 7 hours ago
          How can someone talk about democracy peaking when the franchise was extended to a tiny minority of the population. You don't give a damn about individual liberties, you only care that the "right" people have liberty.
          • edgyquant 7 hours ago
            That poster is specifically arguing against democracy
            • sapphicsnail 7 hours ago
              Your right. I stand corrected. They don't give a damn about democracy or individual liberties.
              • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 hour ago
                Hmm. What if I told you that the parent was clearly in favor of the republic? Would that change your disposition? If not, why not.
        • timeon 45 minutes ago
          Seems like US-centric view. Many countries had several iterations since then.
        • tsimionescu 6 hours ago
          Ah yes, the wonderful time of enlightenment when all straight white Christian land-owning men's rights became recognized, not just the nobility's. Just a few short centuries from there, the rights of poorer white men, children, women, people of any other skin color, non-Christian, and LGBT people would be recognized too.
          • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 hour ago
            You jest, but skin in the game is argument is not irrelevant. It is called a franchise for a reason after all. You want a slice of the pie, you should be able to prove that you know what you are doing. Owning land was a good enough proxy then. We can argue what would be a good proxy now.
            • keybored 0 minutes ago
              You’re saying that people who owned land (and humans) as property had skin in the game while everyone else did not. Just stop.
        • watwut 5 hours ago
          Whatbexactly are values you consider enlightened and did you ever bother to read history, specifically the parts about how society functions not just where armies went?

          I assure you French prior, dueing and after French revolution was not pinacle of great governance. More like, the low.

        • entropicdrifter 10 hours ago
          [flagged]
      • Shekelphile 8 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • jfengel 8 hours ago
          I know that Harris put up zero fight about it. I infer that she believed it to be legitimate.

          That's not definitive, to be sure. But it's sufficient for me to believe that we did this to ourselves. Now all we can do is figure out how we're going to get through it.

        • toast0 8 hours ago
          Maybe I'm too optimistic, but I think actual election fraud, big enough to steal an election, would be too big to miss.

          Yes, it might only take a small number of votes in the right place, but either you somehow know the right place, or you have to move a lot of votes.

          There's a reasonable discussion to be had along the lines of 'these guys seem to be doing everything they whine about', but could they get a big operation done without a) bragging openly about it, b) leaving a big trail, or c) having a falling out with a conspirator who then tells all.

          Adding on, certainly gerrymandering and voter supression laws affect voting results, but I have trouble calling that stealing an election.

          • tayo42 7 hours ago
            Points B and C are believable. Constant headlines about screw ups like the signal chats and sloppy handling of data from doge
        • wongarsu 8 hours ago
          Trump did thank that "very popular guy. He was very effective. And he knows those computers better than anybody. All those computers, those vote counting computers, and we won Pennsylvania in a landslide." If Biden or Obama had said something like that the nation would be in uproar.

          https://www.youtube.com/live/kdvpXxXVyok?si=XALuK7No9-PLQBAr...

          • Terr_ 6 hours ago
            Also consider the circumstantial evidence of Musk illegally promising to pay people (via lottery) to vote, and then using the defense that the lottery was actually rigged.

            If nothing else, that establishes a willingness to tamper with elections.

      • yndoendo 10 hours ago
        Democracy built lies, decide, and rejection of facts through propaganda.

        Really need a viable means to fight it, say allowing an elected official's constitutes being able to sue them for no less than $10,000 for incidence of bearing false witness. Help erode the dark money networks.

        Also having a 4th branch of Governments, the people with State and Federal binding resolution, would help. Only way to overrides those in power is to unionize the will.

        • westmeal 10 hours ago
          The suing thing would be cool but the court system is slow by design. I can't see it working in practice however I'm also really fed up with the bullshit so i understand.
        • Ar-Curunir 8 hours ago
          Good luck relying on a court of law when the President suspends courts and arrests judges. The latter is happening right now.
    • Fauntleroy 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • kylecazar 10 hours ago
        If they were any good at it there would probably be less overt Russian sympathizing.
      • esseph 10 hours ago
        They'd be the exact same.

        It's like like Dugin's Foundations of Geopolitics was a wish list.

      • jfengel 8 hours ago
        Except that's not coming from the top. Tens of millions of people wanted this.

        Maybe this is indeed what Russia would do to us. But we're beating them to the punch by doing it to ourselves.

      • walrus01 11 hours ago
        Well, considering they have a very high ranking guy in the Putin regime who considers that to be his full time job, google "Vladislav Surkov", they seem to be doing a fairly effective job of it so far.
        • hightrix 10 hours ago
          Russia has a pretty high ranking guy in the US Government as well, google Krasnov.
    • BannedUser1 7 hours ago
      [flagged]
    • hjgjhyuhy 6 hours ago
      Yeah, everything about this administration makes perfect sense if we assume that Trump is a Russian asset. Of course billionaires like Thiel and Musk have their say as well.

      I wouldn’t be surprised to see America sell weapons to Russia, and provide them military support in the future when they launch their next invasion.

  • pachorizons 10 hours ago
    Remember as you read more and more news like this that many of the owners of Y Combinator supported this.
    • tomhow 6 hours ago
      The only YC figure who espouses any position on U.S. federal politics is Paul Graham, who loudly campaigns against the current administration almost every day on Twitter.
    • hackyhacky 7 hours ago
      Who, specifically, are you referring to; and what have they done or said to make you believe that they support this?
      • fzeroracer 6 hours ago
        Well, the good news is that there's a very convenient link at the bottom of the page here on HN for the AI startup school [1] which is host to a bunch of people that you should recognize.

        [1] https://events.ycombinator.com/ai-sus

        • hackyhacky 1 hour ago
          Not an answer to my question.
          • intermerda 16 minutes ago
            It is actually, unless you are unable to parse information without being spoon fed to you.
      • Spivak 5 hours ago
        Wealthy people who could be coined liberal-tarians or just your average tech bro political grab bag largely backed Trump out of financial interest and who, imo, deluded themselves that the administration would be unsuccessful at "the bad stuff" much like his 2016 run.

        No amount of shouting from the rooftops that this time was actually different convinced anyone. I can't really blame us collectively, we resoundingly voted for this— it's as much of a mandate you're likely to ever get in the US and we're in the find out stage of fucking around.

        Looking back on old social media posts the theme is that everyone, supporters and not, were high on copium that Trump would do <list of things I like | aren't so bad> and the <list of truly terrible things> was just obviously crazy and wouldn't actually happen or were a joke.

        • boxed 1 hour ago
          Who specifically was the question.
    • NelsonMinar 9 hours ago
      Their silence now is cowardly.
      • addandsubtract 8 hours ago
        In before this thread is also flagged for being "political".
        • tomhow 6 hours ago
          The only moderator action taken on this submission was to prevent it from being downweighted by community flags – 5 hours ago.
        • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
          There's a post that the FBI arrested a judge who helped an illegal immigrant avoid capture during a court proceeding.

          900+ upvotes

          - it has nothing to do with tech

          - it's about a hot button political issue

          - it helps the Republican cause.

          Not flagged

          • YZF 5 hours ago
            I'm just curious why you think it helps the Republican cause? When I saw this reported in the media my feel was this is something Democrats are going to latch on to demonstrate the government is seeking to intimidate the judicial branch.

            I guess it can have different interpretation.

            Either way I'd really prefer not to see this stuff on Hacker News. We have enough things that push people buttons in other places.

            • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 hour ago
              HN has degraded a little since I joined some years ago. It is still better than most of the online fora out there, but you can feel the change in the posts.
        • concordDance 20 minutes ago
          This entire thread is worthless social media junk food.
  • rsingel 7 hours ago
    Acting DC AG Martin has a history of sockpuppetry. Bought a sycophant a laptop and then ghostwrote Facebook posts attacking a judge in a case against Martin. Should have been disbarred.

    https://www.propublica.org/article/ed-martin-trump-interim-d...

    It's always projection with the MAGA crowd

  • jimt1234 12 hours ago
  • seltzered_ 8 hours ago
    Haven't read the article in full yet, but it reminded me of this nice excerpt on Wikipedia and truth and the best of what we know:

    https://emilygorcenski.com/post/on-truth/

    ""But one of the most significant differences critical for moving from polarization to productivity, is that the Wikipedians who write these articles aren’t actually focused on finding the truth. They’re working for something that’s a little more attainable, which is the best of what we can know right now. "

  • vFunct 10 hours ago
    Letter should be thrown in the trash. Let him bring up charges if they feel a crime has been committed.
  • vFunct 10 hours ago
    I have a question on non-profits in general. What exactly is the advantage of being incorporated as a non-profit, when all you have to do to not be taxed as a for-profit corporation is spend all your money each year and not show any profit? It seems you'd have more privacy as a for-profit corporation, since you don't have to disclose donors.
    • hollerith 10 hours ago
      If I donate to a 501(c)(3) organization, the donation gets very favorable treatment by the tax code, reducing my taxes (provided I have income that can be cancelled out by the donation).
      • 0x457 9 hours ago
        hmm, please correct me if I'm wrong, but donations just decrease your tax liability by the amount you've donated. It's the same as if you donated your pre-tax dollars to 501(c)(3) org.
        • bluGill 2 minutes ago
          Right but you get to choose where your money goes.
        • toast0 8 hours ago
          The second sentence is mostly accurate, but the first implies something else.

          If your taxable income was $50,000 and you donate $10,000, and (some other conditions) your taxable income would now be $40,000; same as if you managed to move the money pre-tax.

          However. If you donate aprechiated capital assets, you get two benefits. Your taxable income is offset by the value of the asset, and the capital gains disappear. It's much better than selling the asset and donating the proceeds; and it's handy if you don't have good records for your cost basis.

    • dragonwriter 10 hours ago
      Charity non-profits -- 501c3 organizations -- have donations that are tax deductible for their donors. Other kinds of nonprofits have other advantages to their stakeholders, but usually the attention around "nonprofits" is specifically about 501c3 orgs.
    • droopyEyelids 10 hours ago
      Eligibility to receive grants & tax deductible donations, public perception & credibility
  • tintor 10 hours ago
    Wikipedia needs decentralized hosting infra, away from any single country. It is way too important.
    • bawolff 7 hours ago
      Decentralization typically means instead of being subject to one crazy government you are subject to multiple and have to deal with all.

      I think wikipedia's approach of centralizing in one place but allowing downloading backups and making all sourcecode and server config public is better. If the worst happens anyone can setup a fork.

    • BrtByte 1 hour ago
      Moving to decentralized hosting would be extremely hard without compromising performance, reliability, or the ability to moderate effectively
    • k4rli 1 hour ago
      One of the few truly good sites remaining. I'm afraid decentralization will take away the credibility even further but also would be very sad to see it fall.
    • dewey 7 hours ago
      The hosting isn’t important, it’s easy to move or have an offline copy already. The access to fundraising is much more important and more complicated.
      • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 hour ago
        I didn't immediately consider this, but I think I agree. In a weird way, the access and reach wikipedia has is a lot more valuable from that perspective. And if there is one thing that the US government can do is restrict that in ways that would effectively neuter it.
    • imglorp 9 hours ago
      Start backing it up now. Partisan influence could be as minor as forcing some edits or as major as pulling their DNS. Every authoritarian in the world follows this same playbook. Over started looking into kiwix.

      IA is at risk too.

      • kurtreed2 8 hours ago
        You can download backups of Wikipedia articles at dumps.wikimedia.org. For the IA they had a plan to move to Canada back in 2017.
  • BrtByte 1 hour ago
    Wikipedia definitely isn't perfect - bias in editing is real, and it's fair to critique how reliable it is - but threatening their nonprofit status over it is wild.
  • nickserv 1 hour ago
    Obviously this would happen with the current administration in the USA.

    The foundation should be moved to a country where the rule of law and neutrality are respected. Switzerland perhaps?

  • gigatexal 1 hour ago
    This admin has no shame. They’re burning everything good/stable about the US because of an unstable, megalomaniac idiot happened to win the presidency.
  • doener 4 hours ago
    The US are no longer a safe country for volunteer projects.
    • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 hour ago
      You may want to elaborate a little ideally listing countries that would be a safe alternative. In short, it seems like an easy throwaway comment.
  • CommenterPerson 31 minutes ago
    Wikipedia is a shining example of what the internet could have been. Before the internet was "Enshittified"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enshittification

    I am going to increase my monthly contribution.

  • hayst4ck 11 hours ago
    Reason and truth are the enemy of authoritarian regimes. They want you to believe that truth is subjective. Truth and reason provide alternative legitimacy to authority. If nothing is true, there is no basis on which to judge those in power.

    There is a long legacy of authoritarian regimes attacking curious places, universities, historians, museums, books or any institution that grounds itself in reality which provides you a way to reasonably criticize authoritarian actions. Many authortarian regimes will "purge" as many of the country's intellectuals as they are able.

    Wikipedia is absolutely the enemy of this administration and authoritarians everywhere in the world would love to see it's demise or collapse into chaos.

    Whether the Wikipedia page for Israel says Gaza is a genocide or not, or that it's an ongoing debate matters. It matters because it influences what people think and therefore what they consent to or what they deem worth fighting for or applying resources to and that goes for just about any issue out there. If you can't read about the suffering that racism has caused, then how bad is racism really? If there are no examples of successful labor movements, then why would you hopelessly start one?

    • txcwg002 7 hours ago
      According to its cofounder, Wikipedia abandoned truth long ago.

      https://larrysanger.org/2020/05/wikipedia-is-badly-biased/

      • laughingcurve 6 hours ago
        It’s pretty clear from this blogpost that Larry Sanger has abandoned a pursuit of truth and neutral point of view and instead does not like how reality fails to conform to his personal biases and preferences about the way the world is.
        • ruszki 4 hours ago
          If nothing else, the rambling about global warming and MMR vaccines makes it obvious. It’s not neutral to spread many times disproven lies. Especially how he wants to spread it, without saying that it’s not true, because that’s not neutral. He just forgot that saying that something is true is also not neutral.

          I understand the caution, and we need to be more cautious in today’s world. And I do in controversial topics quite frequently. For example, giving points for women during university admissions just for being women in Norway seemed outrageous. And when I feel that way, I immediately start to check its validity, especially that the article “forgot” to mention how many points. At the end they give out 1 or 2 points on a scale of 50, and not to just women but also men, where they are underrepresented. The article just lied about that we should have outrage. It’s a lie.

          Larry Sanger wants such lies on Wikipedia. He should be way more cautious when he’s outraged. Also 100% of people who commented under this article on Reddit should do the same.

      • hayst4ck 6 hours ago
        What organizations, institutions, or media do you think have a greater commitment to truth, or even just a commitment to truth?
        • flanked-evergl 6 hours ago
          Organizations can't have commitments to truth. Only people can. And there is no mechanism that ensures that editors and admins have a commitment to truth.
          • hayst4ck 5 hours ago
            OK, I can't argue with that. Timothy Snyder might make a similar correction, "markets can't be free, only people participating in the market can be free" is something he says frequently.

            If only people can have commitments to truth, which organization, institution, or media do you think has a leader that seems to have a commitment to truth, especially truth in their institution? Who is our gold standard of "as good as it gets"?

            • flanked-evergl 4 hours ago
              I think for very scientific and technical matters that is entirely divorced from politics Wikipedia is fine, not great, but entirely serviceable.

              For everything else I won't trust it, which sadly includes matters of war and history, as almost all causal claims about the world rests on counter factuals, and therefore does not merely depend on what is.

              Politics also concerns what ought to be, not what is, and most editors of Wikipedia do not agree with me regarding what ought to be or even how one should determine what ought to be.

              Wikipedia would do better if they could figure out a way to manage bias rather than try to eliminate it. I don't want to be overly critical. Wikipedia is useful, but it's really very far from ideal and I would not want my tax money going anywhere near it.

              • orwin 3 hours ago
                Wikipedia is a great point of entry for history.

                Roughly ~20 years behind current academic research on most subjects, makes it 10 to 40 years more advanced than other encyclopaedia and school curriculums.

                But its value is on the bibliography. You have research papers linked, which makes it infinitely better than most other sources. The only way to get closer to the truth in history is rigorous demonstrations, and those only exist in academic papers.

                The view on Wikipedia on the French revolution are mostly Furet's views, which is 20 years behind, as it is the case in the Anglo world. Furet isn't the only one cited in Wikipedia though, and his point of view is nuanced with research from the 90s and 2000s, all with links to actual research. The last time I checked, research from JCM on the recently (late 2000s) discovered 'archives du comité' isn't discussed yet there, but all that makes it infinitely better than encyclopaedia brittanica. Infinitely.

              • hayst4ck 3 hours ago
                Do you have any examples to show why I shouldn't trust it in regards to political topics or history?

                You also really avoided the "what's better"/"what's a better model" question.

                Social consensus, consent, and political mandate aren't ideas that can be hand waived away, they matter and they effect you and they are deeply impact by what people perceive to be true.

                So the question still stands, if you mention a topic like Mao's cultural revolution, where should I go to get a primer and verify that the way you're talking about it appears to be grounded in reality.

      • happosai 4 hours ago
        Imagine sharing this link unironically thinking the content makes great sense.
    • moshegramovsky 9 hours ago
      > Reason and truth are the enemy of authoritarian regimes. Truth and reason provide alternative legitimacy to authority. If nothing is true, there is no basis on which to judge those in power.

      Well said.

      Hannah Arendt wrote a great book about this, but it sounds like you might have already read it.

      • hayst4ck 6 hours ago
        I haven't. I would imagine Timothy Snyder is an avid fan of, if not a major historian of, Hannah Arendt and I probably got that through Snyder. I had actually not heard of her specifically yet.

        https://history.yale.edu/news/timothy-snyder-has-been-awarde...

        Apparently Snyder received the Hannah Arendt Prize for Political Thought.

        He quotes her here: https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2017/04/preparing-for-an...

        After the Reichstag fire, political theorist Hannah Arendt wrote that “I was no longer of the opinion that one can simply be a bystander.” Courage does not mean not fearing, or not grieving. It does mean recognizing and resisting terror management right away, from the moment of the attack, precisely when it seems most difficult to do so.

    • belorn 44 minutes ago
      Wikipedia policy is verifiability and giving the reader a first step. Truth is something that the reader decide for themselves. Wikipedia are neither the enemy nor a friend for regimes or political movements.

      It is not the role of Wikipedia to authoritative say if the war in Gaza is an genocide. Their role is to say what reliable source has reported, which in this case has so much reliable sources talking about it that there is a dedicated article about just it.

      There more reliable sources are talking about a subject, and the more the subject gain notability, the more likely it will be included in Wikipedia. Editors can apply some common sense, but they are not the arbiters of truth, nor should they ever be seen as such. If a readers want simple and single truths that they can believe in then they are better served by whichever news papers that can cater to their particular world views.

    • seydor 5 hours ago
      an encyclopedia is supposed to be broader than any other biased information source, so i think your last paragraph is false. people are supposed to make up their own mind

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encyclopedia

    • emacsen 10 hours ago
      Aren't you making their point though?

      The ADL and other Jewish organizations have pointed out that aside from articles about Israel that articles about or mention Jewish topics generally have been editing with disinformation or that made Jews out to be the aggressors.

      I agree with you that in order to believe in the ideals of liberal democracy that we must have a core belief in truth. And it's absolutely true that the Trump administration has taken a position that is deeply chilling on the issue of speech. It's clear they want to be the sole arbiters of what "truth" is and they want to use their power to manipulate the reality.

      All that said, I cannot as a Jew ignore the fact that Wikipedia is not in itself neutral, and that "more eyes" does not negate systemic bias. What I've seen as a Jew is what the true meaning of marginalized minority is, which is to say that if you are truly a minority and truly marginalized then in a vote of "truth", your reality will be dismissed if it conflicts with the vast majority, and that Jews are only 0.2% of the world population.

      While I brought it up, I am not debating the issue of antisemitic bias in Wikipedia[1] as anything other than an illustration of your point of objective truth being true, but also that we can't simply rely on the wisdom of the crowd to materialize that truth.

      To preemptively address the issue that's bound to come up when I post this- I'm not arguing that the evils of silencing the entire Wikipedia project are equal to or a fair response to Wikipedia's antisemitic bias. I do believe Wikipedia needs to address its bias problem and that's best done through internal reform.

      Two wrongs don't make a right, nor are two wrongs always of equal weight.

      [1] Firstly because my point is separate, and secondly because I've encountered the exact issues I've found in Wikipedia elsewhere, which is why I'm sure I'll be voted down.

      • Hikikomori 3 hours ago
        Anti semitism or anti Zionist? Asking as the ADL doesn't seem to understand that there's a difference.
      • moshegramovsky 9 hours ago
        I agree 100%. It's exhausting fighting against antisemitic bias, and it feels like it's everywhere these days. My problem with Ed Martin is that what he is doing is clearly wrong. Hannah Arendt wrote a book about people like him.
        • ummonk 7 hours ago
          At a time when students are having their visas revoked merely for writing Op-Eds critical of Israel, it's rather ridiculous to see the pro-Israel side acting like you're the ones being persecuted everywhere.
          • bawolff 5 hours ago
            Since when do two wrongs make a right?
        • emacsen 9 hours ago
          The fact that my comment is -2 on HN is a great example of the problem.

          I'm working on a solution to the effects of this isolation, but it's not ready for a big announcement.

        • giraffe_lady 9 hours ago
          Could one of you point me to antisemitic bias on wikipedia just so I have a concrete example at hand?
          • moshegramovsky 9 hours ago
            • intermerda 7 hours ago
              I tried giving it a shot. It starts with an "executive summary", followed by an intro to how Wikipedia works. The very first link to any concrete evidence is by a guy who has a page on PragerU with gems like "Russian collusion hoax" and how the "mainstream media" is "fake news".

              It's a pretty simple case of Wittgenstein's ruler for me. It tells me more about ADL as an org than the content.

            • hackandthink 6 hours ago
              The analysis there is not convincing.

              It is obvious that Wikipedia admins communicate with each other. The fact that Aljazeera is referenced is also okay.

              In fact, this is not the official Israeli narrative, it seems rather trustworthy.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israeli%E2%80%93Palestinian_co...

            • deeThrow94 3 hours ago
              The ADL destroyed any credibility they had worked to build when they started conflating criticism of israel with antisemitism.
            • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
              Instead of posting another person's argument that contains your source can you be more specific?

              This is like citing an entire book to prove a point.

            • pesus 7 hours ago
              I'm not sure the organization that defended Musk's Nazi salute is a reliable source on antisemitism.
          • emacsen 9 hours ago
            Basically, almost any time Zionists are mentioned, they're mentioned in a negative light and with genuine disinformation, such as that Zionism is the belief that Arabs needs to be destroyed. That is like saying the Civil Rights movement in the US was about killing white people.

            They also position things in such a way that implies antisemitic things, such as saying that Zionism is only 200 years old, or discussing the Israel wars only or primarily through an Arab lens.

            These biases around Jewish topics are small individually but large in aggregate, especially in how they present Jews and Jewish topics.

            Multiple Jewish and civil rights organizations have done a more comprehensive job at discussing this, even organizations who don't usually agree on things. While they talk about "anti-Israel bias" Wikipedia articles on or mentioning Zionism (80% of Jews are Zionist) are IMHO just as, if not more damaging, and demonstrate the issue.

            Most importantly though, talk to the Jews in your life about this. They will tell you.

            https://www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/news/wikipedia-entrie...

            https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/article-846563

            https://cameraoncampus.org/blog/seven-tactics-wikipedia-edit...

            https://www.adl.org/resources/report/editing-hate-how-anti-i...

            https://www.standwithus.com/post/it-s-time-to-correct-wikipe...

            https://www.piratewires.com/p/how-wikipedia-s-pro-hamas-edit...

            • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
              >Basically, almost any time Zionists are mentioned, they're mentioned in a negative light and with genuine disinformation,

              Your first statement is a sweeping generalization that you can't prove

              • bawolff 5 hours ago
                I don't know if that statement is true or not, but it certainly seems like a specific enough statement that could be proved or disproved given enough effort.
            • giraffe_lady 9 hours ago
              Most of the jews I know are through anti-genocide activism and they have a different view of this. I wanted to check because it is important to me that I not engage in antisemitism. Thanks for the info.
              • emacsen 8 hours ago
                The idea of contrasting what I said with being "anti-genocide" implies that people who disagree with you are "pro-genocide".

                Once one believes that those who disagree with them are "pro-genocide", then they can easily dismiss anything the other has to say say or any view they have, since they're functionally dehumanized.

                I would ask that, if you can, try to consider that there are nuances, and that using triggering language does not bring understanding, it only amplifies conflict.

                That said, this conversation has been too difficult for me, and I'm not going to engage with you on it further.

                • hayst4ck 7 hours ago
                  > Once one believes that those who disagree with them are "pro-genocide", then they can easily dismiss anything the other has to say say or any view they have, since they're functionally dehumanized.

                  I would really like you to read this back to yourself and think about it deeply, really deeply.

                • giraffe_lady 8 hours ago
                  No I mean literally we are part of an organization focused on preventing and ending genocide broadly. Israel-palestine is one of them but there are several others ongoing and several more that may escalate into genocide in the next few months or years. I do see why you have a hard time with wikipedia.
      • TRiG_Ireland 10 hours ago
        This is the same ADL that said that Nazi salutes are fine, but that protesting against genocide isn't? Why do we care what the ADL says about anything? They're fascist sympathisers.
        • moshegramovsky 9 hours ago
          It was not remotely okay that they did this, and I agree that refusing to speak out severely hurt their credibility. The next time I get a fundraising email, I'm going to tell them they can kiss something.
        • emacsen 9 hours ago
          Demanding moral perfection from an organization in order to believe that discrimination exists is a standard that I don't believe is fair to any group.
          • TRiG_Ireland 9 hours ago
            I don't demand "moral perfection", but I draw the line at overt fascism. The ADL are fascist sympathisers.
            • emacsen 8 hours ago
              Did you read the statement they put out later that day about Musk, or the day after?

              I agree this was a terrible move on the ADL's part, and there have been others, but you're essentially labeling the oldest anti-hate group "fascist" because you disagree with one statement they made.

              This dismisses any concerns they raise, or if someone else says the same as them, then they too must be pro-facist.

              • cma 1 hour ago
                He also tweeted in approval of this tweet putting forward the "Jewish people planned it" antisemitic form of great replacement theory with "you have said the actual truth":

                > Jewish communties have been pushing the exact kind of dialectical hatred against whites that they claim to want people to stop using against them.

                > I'm deeply disinterested in giving the tiniest shit now about western Jewish populations coming to the disturbing realization that those hordes of minorities that support flooding their country don't exactly like them too much.

                > You want truth said to your face, there it is.

                Then a bit later Musk gives the heil Hitler salute twice in a row, once facing the crowd, then turned around and gave it facing Trump.

                The stuff the ADL put out after the salutes was only after he added on jokes involving Nazi party members, right? Or was the one later that day before that?

      • giraffe_lady 9 hours ago
        Could you point me to an example of what you have in mind on wikipedia? I'm admittedly not as practiced at discerning subtle antisemitism as I am some other forms of discrimination. But also usually when it's being alluded to in the abstract like this people mean something closer to "criticism of israel's actions."
        • moshegramovsky 9 hours ago
          • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
            I didn't read that because the person asked for an example and you directed them to a 150 printed page article where you didn't specify which page(s)

            This is the equivalent of stating that dinosaurs evolved into birds then when asked for one piece of evidence directing a person to a book, by another author, on how dinosaurs evolved into birds

          • giraffe_lady 9 hours ago
            OK yeah I've read that. Thanks.
    • timewizard 7 hours ago
      > provide alternative legitimacy to authority.

      Authority is never legitimate. Those that claim special rights to it because they bring "truth" or "reason" are the most suspect of them all.

      > Many authortarian regimes will "purge" as many of the country's intellectuals as they are able.

      This is a letter not the killing fields.

      > It matters because it influences what people think

      That people find this a defensible position and believe that just finding the "right editors" or "true guardians" can vouchsafe this poor outcome for humanity is always surprising to me.

      Shouldn't people have access to reported information and then come to their own educated conclusions?

      > If there are no examples of successful labor movements, then why would you hopelessly start one?

      The existence of Wikipedia is a convenience and perhaps not one that should be given tax free status. I think the selected history of labor movements will be just fine.

      Even if Wikipedia died tomorrow because of one letter you could still walk into any bookstore in America and buy a book on any subject you want.

      • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
        >The existence of Wikipedia is a convenience and perhaps not one that should be given tax free status.

        Because it's a convenience?

    • xlinux 6 hours ago
      So everything wiki mods believe is truth? What about those who never even got a chance to speak out?

      It's always controlled by. Winners write the history. Now Americans decide what's truth and fact

      • hayst4ck 5 hours ago
        Wikipedia has at least 15 million articles in languages other than English and around 7 million English articles.

        Are you asserting that it is standard that Americans are writing and moderating all of these articles in other languages?

        • xlinux 3 hours ago
          In my country, one section mentions English articles (written by amercans) to prove their point.
          • orwin 3 hours ago
            Then your country Wikipedia admins are idiots if they accept that, as Wikipedia isn't considered a primary source on Wikipedia.
          • hayst4ck 3 hours ago
            Can you link an example?
      • Braxton1980 6 hours ago
        >Now Americans decide what's truth and fact

        what about evidence?

  • hodgesrm 11 hours ago
    In my humble opinion Wikipedia is the single best thing thing to emerge from the Internet boom. Its name is a wordplay on one of the most important intellectual projects of the Enlightment.[0] The DC prosecutor letter reads like something straight out of the totalitarian playbook.[1]

    Please donate now to show your support. It's time to fight back against this crap.

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encyclop%C3%A9die

    [1] "Show me the man and I'll show you the crime." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Give_me_the_man_and_I_will_giv...

    • BrtByte 1 hour ago
      Wikipedia isn't perfect, but it embodies the idea that knowledge should be built collaboratively and made freely available to everyone
    • LordGrignard 10 hours ago
      Hi I don't know if you know it but Wikipedias not that poor or hard pressed... Atleast, the whole "donate or we broke" narrative that they build every few months is complete bullshit https://youtu.be/3t8GUbzVxmQ?si=sa_oHe3DA_QmpGcE
      • globular-toast 2 hours ago
        Neither is Google, yet there is still probably multiple ads on that video you linked.
  • almosthere 11 hours ago
    It's 2 paragraphs... What's the substance of the allegation?
    • moshegramovsky 9 hours ago
      He doesn't have a leg to stand on and he knows it. Otherwise he would empanel a grand jury and wait for indictments. He is a partisan sadist and he loves to use the legal system to abuse people.
    • mikeyouse 11 hours ago
      It’s a similar nonsense letter to the same ones he sent to several prominent medical journals. Speech chilling, 1st amendment violating unsubstantiated threats on DOJ letterhead. Of all the unfit people in this administration, he’s likely the most unfit. His entire career has been deeply unethical and partisan and often borderline illegal.
      • mindslight 9 hours ago
        But what about The Twitter Files?! (cue X-Files intro music)
    • jimt1234 8 hours ago
      The allegation is the substance.
  • keisborg 4 hours ago
    Ed Martin seems like a SME when he himself has been influenced by foreign agencies and spoke their case.
  • CommanderData 1 hour ago
    Similar to TikTok, ADL were effectively banned from Wikipedia.

    This coincidences nicely with all of this.

  • methuselah_in 6 hours ago
    Well, why go after everything?
  • IceHegel 4 hours ago
    Curtis Yarvin has a riff that goes something like this: Liberal Wikipedia, Communist Wikipedia, and Fascist Wikipedia will all actually agree on the vast majority of topics: Physics, botany, the solar system, chemistry, math, statistics etc.

    However they'll be worlds apart on history, economics, anthropology, sexuality, politics, previous leaders and so on.

    Our Wikipedia is the world seen through the eyes of the New York Times + Harvard. Our Wikipedia is probably correct about Physics, botany...

    • Fraterkes 1 hour ago
      Yarvin putting his intellectual mediocrity on display: the nazis, for example, dismissed relativity as "jewish science".
      • tgv 1 hour ago
        Quoting a parvenu like Yarvin is a sign of fanaticism. He sounds like a teenager on weed. The only reason he's gotten into the limelight is because some powerful people aligned with Project 2025 agree with him, and needed some philosophical sounding blather to cover their power lust.
  • rawgabbit 11 hours ago
    Same person also threatened the New England Journal of Medicine. Thought crime is real.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/25/health/nejm-prosecutor-le...

  • TZubiri 11 hours ago
    As a non american that edited wikipedia.

    You guys control the servers, if anything you have the psyop advantage.

    However, the librarians are very vocal about self determination and keeping wikimedia out of important decisions.

  • rahil627 2 hours ago
    the status of Washington Post is clear :/

    ...now where's my ladder..

    https://12ft.io/

  • citizenkeen 11 hours ago
    How do I start worshipping Wikipedia so it can become a church?
  • HenryBemis 10 minutes ago
    A "NOBUS" weapon. Any system (country/gov/para-...) needs the right 'tools' for people-manipulation and people-programming. And such weapons should not be allowed to be used against 'us'. Kinda like devices that must accept (and malfunction) but not cause interference.

    So, for a "let people speak their mind - don't control information" the Trump side quickly goes to universities must teach only what 'WE' want, Wikipedia must mention only what 'WE' like. Hilarious if not pathetic and dangerous (very-very 1984-ish...)

    Side-note: it has since amused me but apparently it's not often told/at all.. the absolute propaganda tool for Russia/Soviet was "Pravda" (the "Truth"). Imagine my amusement when Trump created "Truth Social". You can't make that shit up....

    Now, as I've said before, I live in the EU and don't vote in the US, so you folks decide, and then we all get to 'share' the experience (since I do have some/plenty of SP500 and similar instruments).

  • jtrip 12 hours ago
    The scale of deep body trauma that has been done to the US will not seem clear today, but it will have dire consequences for the future trajectory of US. I am sad for this, for the current status quo I was born under, but I suppose History must happen.
    • Loughla 11 hours ago
      I'm not sad for myself. I'm older and established. I'm scared for my cousins, nieces, nephews, and children for the fucking train wreck they're going to step into.

      It was bad enough with 2001, 2008, and 2020. But this is next level.

    • MPSFounder 11 hours ago
      The PhD institution I went to reduced their acceptance from 50 to 26. There is fear of not securing funding. The damage done is projects that are promising were cut. These projects will get picked up by other countries. The damage in the long term will be losing our edge in many regards, which will harm our economy. Where I did my undergrad just replaced their dean with an AIPAC member who has no experience in academia (a first in nearly two hundred years of this institution's). It is insane what is happening. A judge in Wisconsin was arrested today. There are those who believe America is resilient. The damage being done (I can promise you) will cause this great nation unbelievable harm in the long run, when this traitor in charge and his foreign allies (Putin and Netanyahu) which he promises allegiance to OVER our constitution and our moral values have long since passed. There is much noise, much of it as a distraction, but on the small level, many changes (most recently the NSF director leaving) are tangible changes that have a real impact that is certainly felt immediately in budget cuts, but will be even more drastic in its long term strategic impact. Also, I fly a bunch, and I see an immediate change in the respect America used to command abroad. Our values and reputation, which took over a hundred years in the making, became a laughing stock, and our closest allies no longer view America as a beacon.
    • sneak 11 hours ago
      The US has not been a force for good in the world in some time, if ever.

      Unfortunately for Americans, it has to get worse before it can get better. Much worse.

      The institutions are deeply corrupt, and have been for decades. They must be destroyed and possibly replaced. It sucks, and it will hurt. It may even possibly require an entire revolution, as many of the deeply evil US institutions such as the CIA and FBI are so deeply and tightly integrated with the federal government that it may require destruction of the state itself.

      The status quo has been comfy for a lot of Americans, but the world as a whole is not a better place because Facebook and Lockheed and the US CIA exist.

      This has been pending for most of a century.

      What comes after will be more transparent, more fair, and more integrated with society.

      • int_19h 1 hour ago
        Regardless of all the nasty things US has done, if it goes down, it will get much worse for everyone else as well. Quite possibly worse than it will for Americans themselves. For one thing, it's such a big actor economically that its downfall will hurt everyone a great deal just from that alone. But secondly, when empires go down, they usually do so flailing at any real or perceived enemies around them - and given the sheer military strength of this country, it's not going to be pretty.
      • empthought 10 hours ago
        > but the world as a whole is not a better place because Facebook and Lockheed and the US CIA exist.

        You've cherry-picked a few bogeymen.

        What about Norman Borlaug, Bell Laboratories, the Gates Foundation, Margaret Sanger and the Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology?

      • consumer451 11 hours ago
        > What comes after will be more transparent, more fair, and more integrated with society.

        Can you walk me through how you see this playing out, step-by-step?

        I want to believe!

        • energy123 8 hours ago
          Revolutionaries tend to suffer from extreme naivete or arrogance. They don't understand that idealists like them usually get pushed aside or killed by the real crazies during the power vacuum stage, then the country becomes significantly worse. It's happened so many times in history. Until the US starts killing half of its population like Pol Pot did it can always get worse.
        • sneak 11 hours ago
          Over the last thousand years, humans have become more educated and more connected. Violent deaths have been steadily falling.

          Over the last hundred years, American military and paramilitary forces, and their vendors, have subverted transparency and democracy to turn America into a military dictatorship.

          There is nothing to suggest that the fall of the United States and subsequent replacement (with whatever may come) will reverse the thousand year trend of increased education and decreased violence.

          The culture of the 3.6% of people who live in the current territory of the USA will be irreparably damaged, however. This may not be entirely a bad thing, given how significant an outlier the US lifestyle is compared to the rest of the world.

          • bigthymer 9 hours ago
            > There is nothing to suggest that the fall of the United States and subsequent replacement (with whatever may come) will reverse the thousand year trend of increased education and decreased violence.

            We're talking about long-term cycles of change here so it is difficult to opine with certainty leaving a lot of room for differing opinions. Unfortunately, however, I think the end of Pax Americana will usher in increased conflict and violence, particularly in the West which has experienced a long period of peace due to American dominance.

  • mikeyouse 11 hours ago
    Remember when people pretended it was the scandal of all scandals that the IRS was reviewing PACs who were forbidden from doing political activity for political activity? And now many of those same people are cheering this, and the act blue ‘investigation’, and the threats against Harvard’s tax exempt status for nakedly corrupt reasons? Man I wish shame still had some stopping power.
    • milesrout 11 hours ago
      [dead]
    • nailer 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • anigbrowl 11 hours ago
        I don't think those accusations need to be taken seriously while they're being hyped by people like Jim Jordan. If they have evidence of wrongdoing they should forward it to the DoJ and write it up in an indictment, where it can be reviewed by a court and jury that will evaluate the claims made therein.
      • mikeyouse 11 hours ago
        I’m sure you’d find the exact same thing if some grifty billionaire funded a fake investigation into those people who were contributing money to WinRed and yet, only one of the two is facing investigation.. it is so far past the time when this DOJ should be given the benefit of the doubt and steel manning their obvious corruption doesn’t make anyone seem scholarly, just credulous.
        • SpicyLemonZest 11 hours ago
          It's not true that only one of the two is facing investigation. Multiple state AGs are investigating WinRed, and rightly so - there's substantial evidence that they're using dark patterns to trick people into recurring donations when they intended to donate only once. The controversy is that a political official is ordering an investigation of ActBlue, not that political fundraising platforms ought to be above scrutiny.
          • mikeyouse 11 hours ago
            Federally it certainly is true. And I agree, they shouldn’t be above scrutiny which is why it’s so important for the DOJ to maintain their independence and to avoid partisanship.. but Elon was loudly claiming they were funding the Tesla protests a few weeks ago and the rest of the administration got in line to encourage this pretextual nonsense.
        • nailer 11 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • mikeyouse 11 hours ago
            Go ahead and read some of the thousands of 1-star reviews on TrustPilot for WinRed:

            https://www.trustpilot.com/review/winred.com?stars=1

            It turns out the name of the political donation game is recurring donations and spammy messages. I 100% believe people donated to some random cause via act blue and didn’t realize they were signing up for recurring donations through there —- like all political fundraising arms do as evidenced by all the people complaining that WinRed incessantly removes money from their account that they didn’t authorize. But again, only 1 of the 2 is being investigated and it’s obviously a corrupt investigation so here we are.

      • _DeadFred_ 11 hours ago
        Now imagine a sitting President personally saying 'the highest holders of my grift coin get a personal visit with me'. That would seem odd, wouldn't it?
        • nailer 11 hours ago
          You can call Donald Trump a dirtbag and say that giving visits to Trump token holders is corrupt. You can and should investigate whether that is illegal. I have no issue with this.

          That doesn’t mean that random people who don’t know who an organisation is should be giving political donations to that organisation.

          In short, your logical fallacy is: whataboutism

          ——

          Edit for Fauntleroy below due to rate limit:

          No. The only thing I have discussed is the accusations against actblue, which I did not bring up. I have bought up no other topics.

          —-

          Edit for deadfred: hence asking about if anyone is alleging identical behaviour from WinRed earlier. From what I have seen, they are not.

          Edit 2 for deadfred: "You narrowed to ActBlue" no I did not. mikeyouse bought ActBlue up. "there is no need to go into specifics of ActBlue" yes there is - either they did what they are being accused or they did not.

          • _DeadFred_ 11 hours ago
            Accusing others of whataboutism is a way to dodge the real point: if identical behavior is excused for allies but condemned for opponents, the outrage isn't about ethics it's about weaponized partisanship.

            Edit in response: The broader conversation is about weaponizing government power against political opponents, ActBlue was just one example give in many being discussed. You narrowed to ActBlue to have something you felt you could condemn safely, while ignoring the larger pattern. That selective focus is the weaponization your argument is trying to distract from.

            Edit: Stepping back and noting the pattern there is no need to go into specifics of ActBlue. Especially when this VERY administration is blatantly selling access with their shill coin. Your hyper focus is a weaponized distraction, a 'gotcha' from the larger discussion. The administration does not care about corruption in fundraising, they care about targeting their opposition and shutting down any influence they have via fundraising, via information/knowledge sharing on the web, via universities with students willing to challenge the status quo.

            • nailer 5 hours ago
              While ActBlue was the first example mikeyouse bought up, and it happens not reflect very well on the Democrats, we can just as easily discuss Harvard racially discriminating and violating title 9 to control campus admissions, hiring and speech if you like.
          • Fauntleroy 11 hours ago
            You started this (soon to be flagged to nonexistence) chain with whataboutism.
            • what 11 hours ago
              >soon to be flagged to non existence

              Are you organizing a brigade offsite?

  • 4ndrewl 2 hours ago
    “allowing foreign actors to manipulate information and spread propaganda to the American public.”

    How dare they? Don't they know that's our job Mr Putin?

  • g-b-r 9 hours ago
    All US organizations should seriously consider moving out of the country, at this point; it might become harder to do it in the future
  • add-sub-mul-div 11 hours ago
    But the Democrats tried to control misinformation during a public health crisis so it goes both ways.
    • krupan 10 hours ago
      It does, but both side's followers are blind to it when their side does it. Or they think it's ok for their side to do it. I'm not sure which is scarier
      • acdha 10 hours ago
        You’re painting with an awfully broad brush, omitting both the magnitude of the difference and far overstating the homogeneity of one of those sides.
        • yesco 10 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • tgv 1 hour ago
            > pandemic authoritarianism

            Sacrificing people on the altar of your freedom is better? There was a reason for lock-downs and masks. They were implemented worldwide. It wasn't some fluke of US policy.

          • acdha 7 hours ago
            You’re not arguing in good faith if you’re not recognizing that the “pandemic authoritarianism” started under Trump, or asserting that the lab leak theory was ever suppressed (it was continuously discussed throughout - just check the comments here for the last 5 years!) or that the most criticized theories making wild claims about bioweapons or gain of function research are now widely accepted. Many assessments have included the possibility of a lab leak of a natural specimen from the beginning, but in the absence of evidence nobody credible is saying more than, say, the CIA’s “low confidence” back in January.
          • g-b-r 9 hours ago
            > Its inevitable we will face yet another worldwide pandemic in the next decade or so

            If we do, the absurdities about masks and vaccines that were spread by some will make it last just as long as the covid one

          • moshegramovsky 9 hours ago
            A lot of what you refer to as "pandemic authoritarianism" took place under Trump as well. Vaccine mandates have been part of many jobs for years and years. It's not a Republican or Democrat thing.
      • archagon 10 hours ago
        Wikipedia is not owned by “The Democrats.” Its editors are a pretty diverse and esoteric bunch.
  • outside1234 10 hours ago
    Is this the start of the shakedown by Trump to start allowing misinformation?
    • moshegramovsky 9 hours ago
      I fear the answer is yes. Did you hear about the "gala dinner" for the top 220 holders of his meme coin? I wish I was joking.

      Power corrupts...

  • sgnelson 8 hours ago
    Serious question, after the past few months, how can anyone deny that America is heading in a totalitarian direction? Those of you who believe that all of the many actions that have happened in the past few weeks are "okay", please explain your perspective without resorting to "whataboutism" or cherry picking only one or two of the things that have occurred lately. Because from what I'm sitting, this is not behavior of a government based on democratic ideals.
    • morkalork 12 minutes ago
      When you take a step back and look at what is happening as a whole, it's definitely not looking good.

      I was going to start listing examples but that's not the point now. And even if something specific is undone weeks after because of outcry it's still a steady two steps forward, one step back, progression in a nasty direction.

      I've read some books, seen some documentaries, learned some history. What's happening is very obvious and anyone who doesn't also see it is either ignorant or in denial.

    • YZF 5 hours ago
      I'm not an American so I'm kind of looking at this from the side but I'll try to engage here...

      What does "heading in a totalitarian direction" mean in this context exactly?

      I'm not trying to use this as a "cherry pick" but this was news from today: "Trump administration reverses abrupt terminations of foreign students’ US visa registrations

      DOJ announced the reversal in federal court after weeks of intense scrutiny by courts and dozens of restraining orders issued by judges."

      How is this consistent with your theory/hypothesis?

      I think what's important is not to look solely at evidence supporting your idea. The important thing is to find things that disprove your idea. That's the scientific method. I.e. finding something that weakens your hypothesis is what you need to look for. If you're not able to find anything at all disproving your theory then we should be really worried but I think there are actually many things going on that are consistent with a functioning democracy. Keep in democracy doesn't necessarily mean acting in ways that you consider to be good. You might think it's crazy to make deep cross cuts in the government but if this is what people voted for then maybe that can play out. Yes, it seems arbitrary and maybe important things are being cut, which is no different than what you'll see when companies do layoffs. But there's also a lot of resilience. At least I don't think it's anti-democratic to run on a platform of reducing government costs and then act on it. If anything the opposite. It might be really bad, but democratic, or it might end up being a good idea. Another example is you probably think it's crazy for the US to abandon Ukraine. I don't like that either but the US government can set foreign policy and it was reasonably clear that's the way they were going to go before the elections. Is this good for the world? I don't think so. Is it anti-democratic. I don't think so either. How will it play out? Who knows.

      I would say that Trump is pushing the limits of presidential powers more than others before him. Some of the actions his administration is taking are borderline anti-democratic and borderline legal. But many of them are actually legal and some others will work their way through the courts. Even the Supreme Court which is generally right leaning has rebuked Trump and will likely not blindly side with him.

      I'm not a fan of this administration but at least so far it doesn't look like it's the end of democracy in America. That seems like fear mongering. I think the "opposition" would be better off trusting democracy more, highlighting how its policies contrast with the current government policies, the problems it would solve better for Americans compared with the current government etc. This is probably going to end up being better for America's democracy in the long run. The erosion of democracy is partly due to the incessant attacking and divisiveness/polarization. Focus on common ground which I think is actually larger than what most think and trying to let better ideas win vs. being critical of everything is better. Not that you shouldn't speak out against obviously bad actions but it seems we are just 100% focused on attacks.

      The US states also have a lot of power. The citizenry have a lot of power. Senate/congress. Courts. I think you guys will be fine but let's see how it goes. To me the bigger risk is the loss of common ground and polarization. If you have half the country basically feeling the other half is the enemy rather than debate policies that's something that can lead to trouble.

    • Tycho 8 hours ago
      I think it’s fairly obvious that the Democrat establishment has been abusing its power through NGOs, media collusion, judicial overreach, lawfare, selective non-prosecution, show trials, pre-emotive pardons, vaccine mandates, de-banking/de-platforming and censorship. A little pushback and suddenly it’s “totalitarianism”.
      • acdha 8 hours ago
        Citation needed for anything on the scale we’ve seen - for example, the topic of this discussion is a non-profit having their status threatened for non-specific reasons which appear to be constitutionally-protected speech. If it’s “fairly obvious”, you should have no trouble providing examples of something equivalent to this legal threat.
        • Tycho 7 hours ago
          I recall right-leaning social media sites like Gab, Parler, r/TheDonald, Infowars being taken offline.

          I can’t read the WP article because it’s paywalled, however I have been suspicious of Wikimedia for a long time. I used to donate to them thinking I was helping to keep the severs running, then being alarmed to find the money was going on all sorts of nonsense. The former CEO (Maher) was blatantly a political/intelligence operator. Fits the pattern of the establishment/powers-that-be abusing the NGO/non-profit sector to illicitly further their aims, so I’m not surprised the new DoJ are looking into them.

          • kashunstva 3 hours ago
            > I recall right-leaning social media sites like Gab, Parler, r/TheDonald, Infowars being taken offline.

            Were these not the actions of private entities rather than official government acts?

          • acdha 7 hours ago
            Those sites weren’t taken offline by Democratic officials, they had to find new hosting after breaking the contracts they entered into with private companies. They were still free to move elsewhere, as they did, whereas in this case Wikipedia is being threatened with penalties for remaining in the country.

            I would also note that the last straw for companies like Parler was involvement in a violent attempt to overthrow the government whereas in this case the objection appears to be constitutionally-protected speech. Again, those are nowhere near comparable situations. Where is something like, say, going after a right-wing non-profit because they published content which criticized Biden?

            • Tycho 2 hours ago
              There was the whole IRS targeting of conservative groups under Obama.

              And I’m sure the “government overthrowers” (lol) also used Facebook and Twitter, yet only these other ones were taken down. We later found out, of course, that the likes of FB and Twitter had embedded censorship teams working hand-in-glove with the security state and advocacy groups.

      • Riverheart 7 minutes ago
        [delayed]
      • dayvigo 4 hours ago
        Conservatives are the most prominent and dangerous de-bankers. It is well known that Mormons have a lot of power the payment processor world, and censor content they find offensive to their religion, using concerns about fraud and chargebacks as mere convenient excuses.
      • poincaredisk 8 hours ago
        I have no idea if that's true, maybe it is, but the parent specifically asked for a response without whataboutism.
      • TheMiddleMan 7 hours ago
        Dems and republicans both do their political corruption, Trump is something else.

        https://commonslibrary.org/authoritarianism-how-you-know-it-...

        What are the Top 10 Elements of the Authoritarian Playbook?

        1. Divide and rule: Foment mistrust and fear in the population.

        2. Spread lies and conspiracies: Undermine the public’s belief in truth.

        3. Destroy checks and balances: Quietly use legal or pseudo-legal rationales to gut institutions, weaken opposition, and/or declare national emergencies to seize unconstitutional powers.

        4. Demonize opponents and independent media: Undermine the public’s trust in those actors and institutions that hold the state accountable.

        5. Undermine civil and political rights for the unaligned: Actively suppress free speech, the right to assembly and protest and the rights of women and minority groups.

        6. Blame minorities, immigrants, and “outsiders” for a country’s problems: Exploit national humiliation while promising to restore national glory.

        7. Reward loyalists and punish defectors: Make in-group members fearful to voice dissension.

        8. Encourage or condone violence to advance political goals: Dehumanize opposition and/or out-groups to justify violence against them.

        9. Organize mass rallies to keep supporters mobilized against made-up threats: Use fearmongering and hate speech to consolidate in-group identity and solidarity.

        10. Make people feel like they are powerless to change things: Solutions will only come from the top.

        • YZF 5 hours ago
          This feels like a decent list. I'm not an American but some of these processes seem to be happening in other places.

          1. Is all of us, on the "right" or the "left". Let's not do this.

          2. Here you could say maybe the government is doing a little. But I would still say most of the lies and conspiracies that are reverberating in our society are not originating from there. This is like 95% on all of us (or social media). 5% you can maybe blame Trump.

          3. I don't really see this happening yet.

          4. I would say the "left" has been demonizing the right very effectively. But sure, goes both ways. This just seems to be standard for political debate today (it's the end of the world if those guys get power). I think it's mostly up to us to push back against this. So if you're a democrat push back against casting Trump as a dictator (I don't think he is) and if you're a republican push back against all this "stop the steal" and "lock her up" whatever nonsense.

          5. Not happening IMO.

          6. I guess Trump is blaming illegal immigrants for the rise in crime. I don't think is is a perfect match to the intention here. America is so multi-cultural/diverse anyways so this tactic doesn't really work.

          7. Trump sort of does this but not really to the extent that I think the author of the list meant. So far it seems there's no fear from voicing dissent. Musk went ballistic on Navarro calling him a moron and is critical of Trumps tariffs. Many other republicans are critical. This is more of a kindergarden than authoritarianism.

          8. Not happening. Would be very worrying if we get there.

          9. Not happening. We had large rallies before the election but you don't see the sort of things you might see in Iran or Turkey. Again this would be a worrying sign if we get here.

          10. Also not happening. You see universities fighting back against Trump. you see courts. you see states. you see people. If anything it seems people feel like they have a lot of power.

          • int_19h 1 hour ago
            You seriously don't believe that pardoning people like Enrique Tarrio for violent crimes perpetrated openly in pursuit of political goals doesn't encourage violence?
      • IceHegel 4 hours ago
        Yeah, it's pretty clear that Democrats (as they are) are getting fed into the woodchipper.

        They became too petty and no longer served their purpose as the political party of the ruling class, oligarchy turned. Hell of a way to go out though.

  • bigbacaloa 4 hours ago
    [dead]
  • tonetheman 11 hours ago
    [dead]
  • jmclnx 12 hours ago
    Well seems the war on truth has started. There is a 1984 quote about history that escapes me now.
    • dang 11 hours ago
      Ok, but please don't post unsubstantive comments to Hacker News.
    • shmerl 12 hours ago
      Probably:

      > We, the Party, control all records, and we control all memories. Then we control the past, do we not?

    • BoingBoomTschak 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
    • myth_drannon 12 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • AlienRobot 12 hours ago
        I have never had a single problem with Wikipedia in 20 years, and I don't believe an alternative exists. All text written on Wikipedia is royalty free and so are most of the images. The meaningfulness of that can't be overstated. Wikipedia is the web's greatest website and a wonder of the world.

        You can't love the web without loving Wikipedia, so I'm wary of anyone who disrespects it.

        • jimt1234 12 hours ago
          In my 20-year experience with Wikipedia, I've seen one factual error relating to the Chicago Cubs, something really minor. But yeah, that's it.
      • Ar-Curunir 12 hours ago
        Absolute nonsense. Wikipedia is infinitely better than every source of “facts” out there.
        • hagbard_c 11 hours ago
          No, Wikipedia is no better than any other site which allows user edits and in many ways reliably biased towards certain narratives - which narrative depends on the subject of the Wikipedia article. Wikipedia articles should always be read in conjunction with the Talk and Edit history pages and even then it is necessary to find original sources for any claims made in Wikipedia articles.
          • efilife 1 hour ago
            why is this downvoted? You call for verification of the claims wikipedia articles serve to us. Don't people agree we should verify info before accepting it?
    • gwervc 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • spamizbad 11 hours ago
        If you call something gender fluid you lose tax exempt status? Good to know.

        I just feel that logically this doesn't make any sense. Having the view or even promoting the idea that a mythical creature is "gender fluid" isn't an overt political action. It doesn't help any political party or politician. There are numerous fully-compliant tax-exempt organizations that directly aid LGBTQIA+ individuals. How are these above board but having someone submit content to your organization that claims the Nure-onna might be genderfluid is crossing into the realm of politics by influencing election outcomes?

      • _DeadFred_ 11 hours ago
        I hope we don't ban Sci-Fi because someone reads all the 'current thing woke infected' 1960s sci-fi where gender switching was super common.
      • miltonlost 11 hours ago
        Do you have the Japanese folklore monster article? Citation needed please. Because, if the monster can, you know, shift genders, then maybe gender fluid is an accurate term.
    • Alupis 12 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • duskwuff 10 hours ago
        Despite anything he may say about himself, Larry Sanger is not, by any stretch of the imagination, "the founder of Wikipedia". He was a paid employee of the project in 2001; his involvement with the site ended in early 2002 when funding for the position ran out. His experience with the site nearly 25 years ago does not make him an authority on how it is run today.
        • SanjayMehta 10 hours ago
          Wikipedia’s article on Sanger calls him cofounder and credits him with its name:

          “ Lawrence Mark Sanger (/ˈsæŋər/ ⓘ;[1] born July 16, 1968) is an American Internet project developer and philosopher who co-founded Wikipedia along with Jimmy Wales. Sanger coined Wikipedia's name, and provided initial drafts for many of its early guidelines, including the "Neutral point of view" and "Ignore all rules" policies.”

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Sanger

          • duskwuff 9 hours ago
            "Co-founder" is debatable, but he certainly wasn't "the founder" of the site.

            Regardless - whether you choose to describe Sanger's early involvement with Wikipedia as a "founder" or not, 2002 was a long time ago, especially online. The site which he was involved with was very different from the one which exists today.

            • SanjayMehta 9 hours ago
              I agree. Wikipedia used to be a useful starting point for almost any research.

              Today, not so much. I can’t remember where I read it, but there was an analysis of just one topic where it was shown that circular referencing was used to establish a narrative.

              Coming back to the point at hand: the US attorney targeting Wikipedia is merely restating allegations which have been made by many others on Wikipedia’s biases for and against certain topics and individuals.

      • Loughla 11 hours ago
        His argument is that Trump is being criticized more for being controversial than Obama.

        Honestly. Is Trump not more controversial than Obama?

        • hagbard_c 11 hours ago
          No, that depends on your viewpoint. Those who come from a "democrat" background will certainly consider Trump to be more controversial than Obama while those from a Republican background will see Obama - especially second-term Obama - as far more controversial than Trump. Independents will vary on their interpretation but Obama is not likely to end up in the history books as the 'Change agent' he promised to be and will mostly likely be seen as partly responsible for the deterioration of race relations in the USA due to his use of and support for identity politics in a (successful) attempt to win a second period by cobbling together the 'coalition of the oppressed'.

          How Trump will end up in the history books wholly depends on whether he succeeds in his attempts to curtail globalism and save the USA from becoming insolvent due to the rising debt. If the economy fails his presidency will as well and with that he'll be remembered for all the controversy around his political career. If he succeeds he'll be seen as a 'realpolitiker' who pulled the USA out of the downward spiral it had been in since ... the late 90's? The end of the cold war?

          Of course there is also the chance of a large-scale conflict breaking out during his watch in which case his place in the history books also depends on how that ends.

          Time will tell.

          • Supermancho 11 hours ago
            > Obama is not likely to end up in the history books as the 'Change agent' he promised to be and will mostly likely be seen as partly responsible for the deterioration of race relations in the USA

            That's a fantasy. His mere existence in the position, contradicts the premise. Hillary hoped to be in a similar position...history would have also been kind to her, despite her vicious nature by the obvious virtuous implications (a woman can become POTUS).

          • habinero 11 hours ago
            > partly responsible for the deterioration of race relations in the USA

            This is just a euphemism for "he was black in public and lesser white people didn't like it".

            • SpicyLemonZest 11 hours ago
              No, that's not accurate. When people talk about the "deterioration of race relations", they're referring to a well-documented phenomenon (https://news.gallup.com/poll/1687/race-relations.aspx) where poll respondents say race relations are bad (and trending downwards) since 2015 while they were good from 2001 to 2013. I'm skeptical that Obama bears any responsibility for this, given that the trend didn't start until his second term, but it's a real trend and not a euphemism.
            • lurk2 11 hours ago
              [flagged]
          • anigbrowl 9 hours ago
            It's hard to take you seriously when you employ 'democrat' background and Republican as contrasting terms. Referring to the Democratic party and its supporters is more easily effected by saying [the] Democrats. This sort of baity rhetoric undermines any aspirations to objectivity.
      • techpineapple 11 hours ago
        Yes, as described in the blog post, I would imagine the median Fox News viewer to find Wikipedia biased. But the median Fox News viewer is not the median American, much less median world citizen.

        But no seriously, having finished reading it, this article is incredibly Christian-centric and Americentric.

        • jimt1234 11 hours ago
          There's always Conservapedia: https://www.conservapedia.com
        • nailer 11 hours ago
          Regarding the missing topics mentioned in the article (updated to quote them for convenience):

              The Barack Obama article completely fails to mention many well-known scandals: Benghazi, the IRS scandal, the AP phone records scandal, and Fast and Furious, to say nothing of Solyndra or the Hillary Clinton email server scandal—or, of course, the developing “Obamagate” story in which Obama was personally involved in surveilling Donald Trump.
          
          For example, the September 11 attacks on the US Embassy in Benghazi objectively happened - few people on the left or right would pretend they did not happen or that were not notable events of Barack Obama’s presidency (as the article discusses).

          This is not a matter of whether you watch Fox News or not.

          • clipsy 11 hours ago
            Have you bothered to do any sort of comparison as to how similar attacks are reported? At a quick glance, I see nothing on George W Bush's wiki page[0] about the 2002 consulate attack in Kolkata[1], for example.

            [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Bush

            [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002_attack_on_American_cultur...

            • duskwuff 11 hours ago
              Not that it's necessarily wrong for it to not be listed there, though. The article on GWB is about him and what he did as president - it isn't meant to be a complete history of the United States between 2001 and 2009.
              • clipsy 10 hours ago
                I agree -- which is also why the absence of Benghazi on Obama's wiki page is not, in my view, a sign of bias.
            • nailer 7 hours ago
              How is that remotely similar? There was not a scandal implicating George Bush regarding the Kolkhata attack.
          • techpineapple 11 hours ago
            Oh look!

            https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Benghazi_attack

            They creatively censored it under the title “2012 Banghazi Attack”

            • _DeadFred_ 11 hours ago
              The article is nonsense. It links to Obama's Wikipedia page and complains Obama's page doesn't talk about Benghazi. But Obama's Wikipedia page links to a huge article about.... Benghazi. So his complaint is what, the article about Benghazi isn't summarized on Obama's Wikipedia page? Weak sauce.
              • nailer 6 hours ago
                > So his complaint is what, the article about Benghazi isn't summarized on Obama's Wikipedia page?

                No. His complaint is:

                > The Barack Obama article completely fails to mention many well-known scandals: Benghazi

                Visit:

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barack_Obama

                Read:

                > Libya

                > Main articles: 2011 military intervention in Libya and 2012 Benghazi attack

                > In February 2011, protests in Libya began against long-time dictator Muammar Gaddafi as part of the Arab Spring. They soon turned violent. In March, as forces loyal to Gaddafi advanced on rebels across Libya, calls for a no-fly zone came from around the world, including Europe, the Arab League, and a resolution[378] passed unanimously by the U.S. Senate.[379] In response to the passage of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973 on March 17, the Foreign Minister of Libya Moussa Koussa announced a ceasefire. However Gaddafi's forces continued to attack the rebels.[380]

                > On March 19, a multinational coalition led by France and the United Kingdom with Italian and U.S. support, approved by Obama, took part in air strikes to destroy the Libyan government's air defense capabilities to protect civilians and enforce a no-fly-zone,[381] including the use of Tomahawk missiles, B-2 Spirits, and fighter jets.[382][383][384] Six days later, on March 25, by unanimous vote of all its 28 members, NATO took over leadership of the effort, dubbed Operation Unified Protector.[385] Some members of Congress[386] questioned whether Obama had the constitutional authority to order military action in addition to questioning its cost, structure and aftermath.[387][388] In 2016 Obama said "Our coalition could have and should have done more to fill a vacuum left behind" and that it was "a mess".[389] He has stated that the lack of preparation surrounding the days following the government's overthrow was the "worst mistake" of his presidency.[390]

                The link is there (I don't know how long it's been there but don't care to investigate), but there is no text about the Benghazi attack on the US Embassy - just other topics. Many people can and would criticize Barack Obama and his then-Secretary of State for inaction to protect the embassy from an attack the embassy saw coming.

            • nailer 11 hours ago
              The article above that we are discussing discusses the omission of the Benghazi attack as an aspect of Barack Obama‘s presidency.
      • cogogo 11 hours ago
        I actually clicked this link in good faith. Glad to see the downvote I can’t make arrived.
        • hagbard_c 11 hours ago
          Why are you glad for a downvote? Just because you don't agree with Sanger's point of view does not make it less worthwhile to read about it. Censorship is not something to be glad about and yes, downvoting opinions outside of your desired narrative until they are greyed out into oblivion or killed is a form of censorship.
      • aingling 11 hours ago
        Exactly, he sees the problem clearly. And this article was five years ago. It's become even more entrenched now. There's basically no way of fixing this.

        We can see similar problems with other sites that rely on volunteer labor, like Reddit.

  • kurtreed2 11 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • anigbrowl 11 hours ago
      A polemic! It must all be true.

      Last revised by deleted account 1 month ago

      Damn Wikipedia assassinating critics now? Where will it all end

      • kurtreed2 10 hours ago
        > Damn Wikipedia character assassinating critics now

        FTFY. If you go dig deeper at foundation.wikimedia.org you'll inevitably come across an Israeli court document describing systemic smear defamation and libel campaign mounted by toxic editors against an academic, which lasted around a decade.

        • anigbrowl 10 hours ago
          You're trying too hard, much like the writer of this polemic.
          • kurtreed2 8 hours ago
            You should make an account on Wikipediocracy (which is frequented by many Wikipedia editors and insiders) and express all your paeans about Wikipedia's supposed infallibility, and see how fast you'd get dressed-down.
  • sandspar 9 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • 7373737373 9 hours ago
      Are you assuming bias/opinion is one-dimensional and the "median American" stands for the Truth?
      • sandspar 8 hours ago
        No but thanks for asking.
    • rgbrenner 8 hours ago
      ok but what’s the crime?

      also english wikipedia is actually for english speakers.. so it includes countries that aren’t america. there’s a reason they didn’t name it american wikipedia.

      • sandspar 8 hours ago
        Yeah I agree there doesn't seem to be a crime. I was addressing the tone of the comment thread.
    • ks2048 9 hours ago
      NPR is left {{Citation needed}} [1]

      [1] outside of identity politics

      • sandspar 8 hours ago
        This will sound rude but I mean it respectfully. If you believe NPR is not left leaning then you are in a severe filter bubble and may want to update your news diet.
        • ks2048 7 hours ago
          Point taken, but I think my comment is a reflection of the problems with the modern use of "left" and "right".

          Yes, of course NPR is more on the side of democrats than republicans.

          But, it is very much pro-business, and often pro-war status quo ("right"). And, as I mentioned ("identity politics"), also very much pro-diversity in race/gender/etc. ("left").

          So, IMHO, very much "centrist", not "left" (except on race/sex/gender).

    • ks2048 9 hours ago
      If the median American thought the Earth was flat, should it treat that as a valid theory?
      • flanked-evergl 4 hours ago
        Politics concerns what ought to be, not what is.
      • sandspar 8 hours ago
        If only if were that easy. American politics is mostly fought over interpretations, not simple facts.
    • ddxv 3 hours ago
      Yes, I do believe that the majority of Wikipedia articles are unbiased in that people spend their time and effort trying to find the most neutral and fact based way of discussing a topic.
    • padjo 4 hours ago
      Truth has a left wing bias.
  • hsuduebc2 11 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • Vortigaunt 11 hours ago
      "Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone."

      https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Richard_Stallman

    • kjkjadksj 11 hours ago
      Talking about our march into fascism is still considered off topic here apparently. Isn’t that exactly the sort of topic a supposed forum of hackers ought to be discussing however?
      • jjulius 11 hours ago
        This forum, in spite of the name, was never about the older hacker ethos that began way back when. It was founded by a VC and was called "Startup News" at first, only changing its name six months later. It was created by the wealthy, for those who wanted to get wealthy (and make it's founder wealthier in the process). It co-opted "hacker".
        • z3c0 11 hours ago
          [flagged]
      • MathMonkeyMan 11 hours ago
        The concern is that it's too easy to contribute to hot political topics. Moderation wants to prevent this forum from becoming identical to so many others, and the only tool available is to deemphasize posts.
        • hsuduebc2 9 hours ago
          That’s an absolutely valid point — it’s important to prevent discussions from devolving into chaotic political battles. But there is a clear limit to how far you can go. When moderation starts suppressing or de-emphasizing information simply because it doesn’t align with a certain viewpoint — even when that information is objectively true — it’s no longer moderation, it’s censorship. What’s happening around Wikipedia shows how quickly the protection of truth can turn into political pressure: when a platform is accused of "propaganda" simply because its content is inconvenient for certain groups. I really hope we are not yet at the point where mere disagreement automatically makes someone a propagandist who must be silenced by force.
        • TZubiri 11 hours ago
          Hot political topics are often semi protected anyways.
      • hsuduebc2 11 hours ago
        I fully agree with you. Maybe I wrote it in a bad way. I do not like that these things that are objectively wrong for a functioning democracy are getting flagged because for some reason this got political connotations. I consider it dangerous and I do not understand why this is controversial at all.
  • xqcgrek2 11 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • habinero 11 hours ago
      Churchs are tax exempt. Are they supposed to be neutral?
      • dralley 9 hours ago
        Yes.

        They aren't, and nobody has the political cajones to actually pick that fight. But that doesn't mean that many of them aren't breaking tax laws left and right.

      • LordGrignard 10 hours ago
        well no one said churches should remain tax exempt
    • miltonlost 11 hours ago
      what drift? What do you consider "neutrality"?
      • sterlind 10 hours ago
        the Overton window has shifted sharply Right. if you've shifted along with it, the institutions that haven't shifted at all look like they've moved sharply Left.

        Wikipedia hasn't shifted particularly Left since 2020. Centrists are just blind to shifts of the Center. it's the political equivalent of the equivalence principle.

    • acdha 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
  • m2f2 11 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • jemmyw 11 hours ago
      I had the same thought but most European countries don't have as wide freedom of speech laws as the US. Same problem with moving to Australia or New Zealand, though it'd be awesome to have a project like that based here.
    • warkdarrior 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • cogogo 11 hours ago
        Not funny. My family is bilingual english/spanish and my wife is a green card holder but not a citizen. Doesn’t seem far fetched. But if we go down… it won’t be without a fight.
        • tialaramex 10 hours ago
          I recommend fleeing not fighting. Over 100 000 people fled Germany in the 1930s, which might have seemed like an over-reaction, except, well, you know what happened to many of those who didn't.
  • OgsyedIE 11 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • aingling 11 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • alganet 10 hours ago
      They (those worried about commie political bias) could do their own public digital university and social media websites. Instead of being free, they could charge a fee that would both serve to repel the freetards and fund the project.

      Oh shit! That happened already, didn't it? How is it going at attracting talented individuals?

      We should remember that anti-wikipedia propaganda exists for decades now. Despite of that, it is a place cherished by many (including non commies). Its demise would be a public disaster.

      Hoarders will maintain copies of it. And if there is bias, there will be tons of biased bootlegs around.

      Further investigation would be more wise than rapid decisions by instinct.

    • adipose 11 hours ago
      Can you give particular examples of the particular worldview that they are trying to push?
  • alganet 11 hours ago
    It sounds weird. Why does it look like a conspiracy theory?

    Yo dawg, I heard you like to appeal to conspiracy theory types...

    Why would someone introduce lots of seemingly indiscernible edits into important articles, fully knowing that the edit history is available to anyone who wants to look?

    It would make more sense to spread propaganda in a place that doesn't fully track it.

    Unless the exposition of such tracking edits as an obvious smoking gun exists to be staged to look like someone else did it.

    Of course, it could all be to trigger a recursive conspiracytheorypocallipse that further erodes any belief in community generated content.

    What should we do, Master Anakin? There's too many of them conspiracies.

  • firesteelrain 11 hours ago
    Wikipedia/Wikimedia could move to a country that allows this type of manipulation on their platform or figure out how to comply with the existing US law.

    Wikipedia could also stop operating as a 501c3 and incorporate.

    But the typical out for these organizations are that they are not responsible for what people post. I don’t feel like that is very responsible. They already have moderation on the platform.

    But Wikimedia/pedia can’t claim 501c3 status. It could spin off the political content/controversial into 501c4 which has more leeway. It can tighten editorial controls, emphasize first amendment, look at Section 230. Publish reports showing how misinformation is identified and corrected, partner with fact checking organizations.

    But also if they cannot police their own content without an unpaid army of volunteers then herein lies the bigger issue with their model.

    • blibble 9 hours ago
      or they could move to a country that respects the rule of law and continue operating as they do at present

      may I suggest Switzerland

    • kurtreed2 10 hours ago
      Except they have a financial cancer. If the government investigations uncover more scandals, beyond what were found in the Israel-Palestine topic area, public support and goodwill for Wikipedia will evaporate overnight, and they'll have no choice but to liquidate or absorbed into a successor organization.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:CANCER

  • tonymet 7 hours ago
    only about 10% of their contributions are needed to run the websites. WMF should have their non-profit status revoked since they are defrauding contributors . They need to restructure and break up the scam into “real Wikipedia” , a legit nonprofit and the scam that consumes 80-90% of contributions.
  • seydor 5 hours ago
    > “Wikipedia is one of the last places online that shows the promise of the internet, housing more than 65 million articles written to inform, not persuade,” the Wikimedia Foundation said Friday in a statement

    Well that is apparently very false when it comes to american politics and jewish matters. On the positive side, for other countries and languages the biases are very different and quite wide ranging.

    Maybe this threat by the US government is a good thing, it will force wikipedians to take their head out of the sand and go back to wide-ranging NPOV , and remove all those judgemental adjectives and epithets that are thrown around in so many articles.

    I don't believe the idea of wikipedia can be threatened because it is a really resilient idea across political lines and there are billions who will want to recreate it.

    • lclc 5 hours ago
      The bias also exists very strongly in the German Wikipedia.
  • timonoko 3 hours ago
    Wikipedia is dead. One fun remains, and is to ask some AI, what is wrong with this and that Wikipedia article.

    Me and Gemini actually found a major fault on one politician's wikipage, but decided there is no change correcting that, because there is no "trusted source".

    And the reason for that with government controlled media monopoly it is easy remove any references, only hearsay remains.