Wikipedia talk:Wikipedia Signpost/2005-12-05/Seigenthaler
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
< Wikipedia talk:Wikipedia Signpost | 2005-12-05
Contents |
[edit] Related links
A list of coverage related to this incident, copied in part from Talk:John Seigenthaler Sr. and Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/Newsroom/Suggestions.
[edit] Copies of original article
- A false Wikipedia 'biography' sparks reflection (China Daily)
- A false Wikipedia 'biography' (First Amendment Center)
- Truth can be at risk in the world of the Web (Tennessean)
- You Can't Trust Wiki (Hartford Courant)
[edit] Follow-up articles
- The Danger of Wikipedia (Editor & Publisher)
- Readers Respond to Wikipedia Article (Editor & Publisher)
- Complaints Over Wikipedia Accountability With Bios (Search Engine Watch)
- Wikipedia Is The Next Google (WebProNews)
- John Seigenthaler Sr. Criticises Wikipedia (SlashDot)
- Wikipedia slander? (CNet)
- Wikipedia and the nature of truth (CNet)
- Wikipedia In Hot Water Over False Bio (TechSmec.com)
- Trust No One (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
- A Wicked-pedia (CBS News)
- Journo moans at Wikepedia: Siegenthaler's Lisp (The Inquirer)
- Is Wikipedia a threat or a menace? (ZDNet.com)
- Wikipedia Bios Draw Controversy (TechNewsWorld)
- Wikipedia Hits a Wall (copy of above; Linux Insider)
- Snared in the Web of a Wikipedia Liar (The New York Times)
- Wikipedia Bio Claimed Slanderous (Techtree.com, India — Seigenthaler is global news now)
- Complaints over Wikipedia (Kashar World News, Pakistan)
- It's Your Story...You Tell It Anyway You Want On Wikipedia: Journalist, others, experience first-hand that 'truth' is a rare commodity on the Internet (OfficialWire)
- 'Worldly' readers call 'interference' on Internet (The Shreveport Times)
- Wikipedia: The Art Of Internet Character Assassination - The Post Chronicle
- Wiki Don't Lose That Number - Nashville Scene blog
- It's Your Story...You Tell It Anyway You Want On Wikipedia - The Official Newswire (No comment)
- Snared in the Web of a Wikipedia Liar - Canada Free Press (Even less comment)
- Misinformation in Wikipedia - Times of India
- UberWikipedia - BuzzMachine (Jeff Jarvis)
- Rex Hammock
- Dangers of world’s biggest game of Chinese whispers - The Herald
[edit] Followup
USA Today has published a follow-up article: It's online, but is it true?