Also, when adding information to Wikipedia/Wikidata, it is best practice (but 
not mandatory) to provide external references backing up your claims.
Nicolas.


 

     On Wednesday, January 7, 2015 10:26 AM, Peter F. Patel-Schneider 
<[email protected]> wrote:
   

 Wikipedia has already addressed this question.  See 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Autobiography.  In summary, one should 
not add or change information about oneself, unless the change could not be 
considered to be non-controversial or there is some reason that a change 
should be made and the reasons for the change are laid out in a talk page. 
This is pretty much just the general conflict of interest guidelines applied 
to information about oneself, I think.

There was an instance of someone writing their own Wikipedia entry.  (I'm not 
linking to information about the issue to somewhat hide the identity of the 
guilty.)  The end of the discussion was that the page would not be taken down. 
  The decision hinged, in part, on how easy it would be to anonymously enter 
or change information about oneself, so forbidding this kind of activity is 
impossible to police.  The best that can be done is to point out that this 
kind of activity is strongly discouraged.

I think that the Wikipedia policy should be carried over directly to Wikidata. 
  It lets responsible individuals fix or point out errors concerning 
information about them, but has strong admonitions against making any other 
kind of changes to this information.

Peter F. Patel-Schneider

On 01/07/2015 06:25 AM, Markus Krötzsch wrote:
> Back to Denny's original question:
>
> Does anybody see a specific danger of abuse if living people get to edit their
> own data right now? Entering wrong claims deliberately would maybe not be the
> biggest issue here (since it is already in conflict with other general
> policies -- we do not want wrong data, whoever is entering it -- and the fact
> that we want to rely on external sources for all non-obvious data would still
> apply). Could it be problematic if somebody enters too much/too detailed data
> on their own person? Could somebody use this to place links to external web
> content (spam) hidden in personal properties? But this, again, would probably
> conflict with other policies too, and it does not seem to be a problem
> specific to the particular POVs that a living person may have. Any other ideas
> of possible abuse? My main question is: where could POV be an issue when
> entering (externally referenced) data of the granularity that we have?
>
> Some proposals of what we could allow/forbid that are specific to our special
> form of content:
>
> * Allow living people to edit certain properties on their own page
> (whitelist)? I currently don't see any way of really abusing things like
> birthdate, given name, etc. that are just personal properties, unless maybe in
> rare cases where there is a real dispute (maybe a living person who insists on
> being younger than he really is?).
>
> * Alternatively, maybe it could even be enough to have a blacklist of certain
> properties that one could be using in illegitimate ways (no specific idea now
> what this might be).
>
> * I would also allow people to set their labels and reasonable aliases, but
> not have them enter any descriptions (could be POVed).
>
>
> If living people are asked to not edit all or certain parts of their entity,
> then there needs be a process for them to report errors. I would not like
> wrong information to be broadcasted about me on Wikidata without having any
> way to get it fixed.
>
> In addition, there should be a template that one can use on one's user page to
> disclose that one is the person described in a certain item. Conversely, we
> should also use our "website account on" property (P553) to connect living
> people to their Wikidata user account, so the COI is recorded in the data. One
> could further disclose other COIs on one's user page in some standard format,
> but maybe with Wikidata we could actually derive such COIs automatically (your
> family members, the companies you founded, the university you graduated from,
> etc. can all be specified in data).
>
> Cheers,
>
> Markus
>
>
> On 04.01.2015 19:57, Andy Mabbett wrote:
>> Yes. they can. That's stated explicitly:
>>
>>      A Wikimedia Project community may adopt an alternative paid contribution
>>      disclosure policy. If a Project adopts an alternative disclosure
>> policy, you may
>>      comply with that policy instead of the requirements in this section when
>>      contributing to that Project.
>>
>> And Commons, for one, has already done so:
>>
>>
>> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Paid_contribution_disclosure_policy
>>
>> which says in full:
>>
>>      The Wikimedia Commons community does not require any disclosure of paid
>>      contributions from its contributors.
>>
>>
>> On 4 January 2015 at 07:40, Jasper Deng <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> @Andy: no, the terms of use are the minimum because since a user must
>>> legally accept them when editing a project, everyone is bound by them by
>>> virtue of editing. Local projects cannot override that.
>>>
>>> On Sat, Jan 3, 2015 at 11:28 AM, Andy Mabbett <[email protected]>
>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 3 January 2015 at 18:13, Joe Filceolaire <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> The terms of use are the minimum requirements.  Each wiki may have more
>>>>> requirements.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> No, they are the *default* requirements. Each wiki may have *different*
>>>> requirements.
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Andy Mabbett
>>>> @pigsonthewing
>>>> http://pigsonthewing.org.uk
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>
>>
>>
>
>
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