Why Wikipedia Decided to Stop Calling Fox a ‘Reliable’ Source

By NOAM COHEN<https://www.wired.com/contributor/noam-cohen>  10/08/2020
https://www.wired.com/story/why-wikipedia-decided-to-stop-calling-fox-a-reliable-source/


WHEN KAREN BASS, a congresswoman from Los Angeles, emerged in late July as a 
serious contender to be Joe Biden’s running mate, interest in her Wikipedia 
page exploded.

By that time, the entry had grown to 4,000 words, been worked over by more than 
50 different editors, and drew a weekly readership of 360,000.

During that flurry of editing, a new section twice appeared below a list of 
offices Bass has held and legislation she has supported: "Controversy." It 
described the "substantial controversy and criticism" Bass had received for her 
words upon the death of Fidel Castro in 2016, and cited a Fox News report.

Each time, less than an hour later, this addition would be gone—deleted by 
another Wikipedia editor. Anticipating there might be some pushback at the 
removal, the editor offered a simple explanation: “Fox News is not enough …”

In those few days, Americans first learning about this obscure potential 
vice-presidential candidate naturally turned to the internet to fill in the 
details: Googling her name, clicking on a link shared by a Facebook friend, or 
turning to Wikipedia.

Yet where someone wound up getting their information about Bass—who leads the 
Congressional Black Caucus and had been speaker of the California State 
Assembly—is hardly a minor matter. It could make all the difference, because 
while the executives of Google, Facebook, and YouTube seem content to 
distribute any incendiary reporting that arrives over the transom, the 
administrators of Wikipedia keep trying to live up to their responsibility as a 
source for accurate information.

In an aggressive move that is anything but sitting back, a panel of Wikipedia 
administrators in July declared that Fox News would no longer be considered 
“generally reliable” in its reporting on politics and science, and in those 
areas “should be used with caution to verify contentious claims.” (Fox News 
articles on other topics were unaffected.)

There simply were too many examples of misleading, inaccurate, and slanted 
reporting about science and politics for Wikipedia to pass on Fox News articles 
as part of a broader search for the truth.

And while the decision hasn’t exactly banished Fox News from Wikipedia on those 
topics—there are still thousands of links to Fox News articles that appear 
there—it deprives Fox News of the ability to frame how the public interprets 
political events and politicians on Wikipedia. The changes to Bass’s article 
that highlighted a Fox News-promoted controversy give a glimpse at the stakes 
involved.

The attitude of the large platforms toward Fox News couldn’t be more different 
from Wikipedia’s.

Search Google News or YouTube or Facebook and you will find plenty of Fox News 
reporting on politics and science, and why not?

Once you disregard the importance of accuracy and proportionality, Fox News is 
great for business. Its biased reporting slakes a thirst of a sizable chunk of 
the public.

According to a tally of the top-performing links published on Facebook each 
day, a Fox News article was number one for three days of a recent seven-day 
span.

For a digital platform, Wikipedia is refreshingly old-school in its values.

Operated by a nonprofit foundation, it certainly isn’t afraid to be boring. And 
while I, and others, may be quick to read into the political significance in 
the decision to minimize Fox News’s influence on Wikipedia, the administrators 
who announced the changed policy tend to play down the drama.

One of those administrators, who is British and goes by the handle Lee 
Vilenski, took on the matter despite, or actually because of, his lack of 
interest in politics. His area of editing usually includes snooker and pool; 
the only Trump he referenced in a long email exchange with me is Judd, the 
30-year-old world snooker champion from Bristol.

In Vilenski’s mind, the question didn’t require much heavy thinking: “We don’t 
have to assume that Fox is acting in good or bad faith—we simply need to assess 
if we can trust the information being provided. In this case, a lot of users 
suggested using our policies that it couldn’t be trusted enough to be 
‘reliable’ for these two topics.”

The administrators made clear that they weren’t implementing policy on their 
own, but summarizing what the community believed as reflected in a monthlong 
debate that involved roughly 100 editors.

In June, an editor made a formal request that Wikipedia look again at the 
decision to consider Fox News a generally reliable source. That original 
conclusion was made 10 years earlier, and clearly a lot had changed.

In the debate that followed, our current fraught times spilled out, of course.

There were discussions of how Fox News enabled President Trump’s minimization 
of the dangers from the Covid-19 pandemic, while other big topics included 
persistent allegations of misinformation about climate change or the bogus 
claim of so-called “no-go zones” for non-Muslims in British cities like 
Birmingham.

Defenders of Fox News—and there were some—emphasized its willingness to 
eventually correct errors and portrayed its biases as a product of a two-party 
adversarial political system, with MSNBC allegedly just as biased in the other 
direction. They also pointed to misstatements on important topics like the 
threat from Iraq during the buildup to war by highly respected sources like The 
New York Times.

But ultimately Wikipedia opted for an earnest, rather than cynical, approach to 
reliability.

It chose to believe there is such a thing as reporting without overt bias, just 
as it believes its encyclopedia publishes articles that are doing their best to 
be true.

The question boiled down to: Could this particular community put its faith in 
this particular news organization so it could get busy producing an 
encyclopedia?

“With thousands of active editors at any given time, there must be a consensus 
on such matters or we would never get anything done,” wrote Primefac, another 
of the administrators.

“Otherwise, we would squabble on everything, from which sources to use to how 
many spaces after a full stop.”

Such earnestness, I hope, is what can save us from the digital nihilism around 
us. Or perhaps you might call it integrity.

With this latest decision, Wikipedia offers a promising model for digital 
platforms: rather than focus on the accuracy or social harm of an individual 
post—and then either remove it or offer some needed context—better to assess 
whether the creator of that post is interacting with the community honestly on 
certain subjects and allow or disallow their contributions accordingly.

In other words, make the kind of judgments one does all the time as you 
establish a community group, build a book club, or write an article (for 
Wikipedia or anywhere else).

Incredibly, Facebook currently employs as a fact-checker an entity that is an 
affiliate of the Daily Caller. But if you look at Wikipedia’s guide to sources 
for its editors, you’ll find that it holds the Daily Caller in even lower 
esteem than Fox News. The source is marked with a stop-sign icon, which 
indicates that it “publishes false or fabricated information.”

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