Wikipedia founder speaks out on the 'Essjay' brouhaha
by Martyn Williams
March 09, 2007 (IDG News Service) -- Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, a user-generated and -edited online encyclopedia, said he expects contributors to the site who claim certain credentials will soon have to prove they really have them.
The new policy, currently under discussion by the community of users who regularly write and maintain the site, is being considered after it emerged this month that one of Wikipedia's most respected editors wasn't as qualified as he claimed.
The user, who went under the pseudonym "Essjay," described himself in an online profile as a "tenured professor of theology" and said he taught both undergraduate and graduate courses in the subject. He also said he held a bachelor of arts degree in religious studies, a master of arts in religion, a doctorate in philosophy in theology and a doctorate in canon law.
But that wasn't true.
Essjay was actually Ryan Jordan, a 24-year-old from Kentucky who revealed his true identity when he joined Wikia Inc., the for-profit company run by Wales that seeks to use the community content model to make money.
"I decided to be myself, to never hide my personality, to always be who I am, but to utilize disinformation with regard to what I consider unimportant details: age, location, occupation, etc.," he wrote on Wikipedia when questioned about the different profiles, according to a copy of a now-deleted page kept by Wikipedia Watch. Jordan said he lied about his job and educational background in order to protect his identity. But when he was hired by Wales to work at Wikia, he came clean on who he really was.
However, the controversy didn't stop there. Essjay was interviewed for a story in The New Yorker magazine in 2006, so the revelation of his fake profile prompted an editor's note in a recent edition. That spread the controversy well beyond Wikipedia's message boards.
Subsequent investigations into his claims on his Wikia profile indicated that some of those could also be false.
"It's a bit of a mess," Wales said in an interview in Tokyo. Wales arrived in Japan at the beginning of the week and plans to stay there a month.
"We're not happy about it," he said. "To discover that someone had been deceiving the community for a long time really was a bit of a blow to our trust. Wikipedia is built on the idea of trusting other people and people being honest, and we find that, in the most part, everyone is, so it was a real disappointment."
As a result of the problem, contributors are now likely to be asked to back up any specific claims they make regarding qualifications, especially when they are relevant to articles being written, edited or altered, said Wales.
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