Here is some recent coverage on this evolving issue if you haven't been following:
Wikipedia creates new rules, forcing editors to disclose if they
Wikipedia wants paid editors to disclose their conflict of interest.
What do you guys think about this stuff now that some different reports are coming out and people are discussing it? I read a comment by someone on reddit about the reasons Wikipedia is doing this (QUOTED BELOW):
Wikipedia has been dealing with this issue for awhile, so it interesting to see how this all unfolds. Do you agree with that above comment's interpretation of Wikipedia's motivations here?
Wikipedia creates new rules, forcing editors to disclose if they
Wikipedia wants paid editors to disclose their conflict of interest.
What do you guys think about this stuff now that some different reports are coming out and people are discussing it? I read a comment by someone on reddit about the reasons Wikipedia is doing this (QUOTED BELOW):
"In practice what this does is gives the Wikimedia Foundation a way to go after people who are doing shady stuff at large scale, like offering article-whitewashing services for a fee, and evading community attempts to stop them (e.g. by continuing to register new accounts when Wikipedians ban the old ones). Now there's a means by which the community can "escalate" it to legal action by the Foundation, if they can't gt a company to either 1) behave; or 2) go away; using the normal on-wiki means. But I suspect that would be quite rare. The vast majority of cases will continue to be handled on-wiki, by warning people, banning accounts, etc., not bringing it to court.
edit: Forgot to mention, the other thing it can help with is that just the existence of a ToS provision will cause some PR firms to follow it. A lot of the bigger PR firms and trade groups have internal codes of ethics, and "thou shalt not promote on a 3rd-party website in violation of its ToS" is a common one. Whereas "thou shalt not promote on a 3rd-party website in violation of its unofficial community consensus" isn't, so PR firms have be pretty willing to just pretend Wikipedia's conflict-of-interest rules didn't exist until now, since they weren't in the ToS. "
Wikipedia has been dealing with this issue for awhile, so it interesting to see how this all unfolds. Do you agree with that above comment's interpretation of Wikipedia's motivations here?