Microsoft attempts bribing some to change a wiki article

MarineCorps

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(AP) -- Microsoft Corp. has landed in the Wikipedia doghouse after it offered to pay a blogger to change technical articles on the community-produced Web encyclopedia site.

While Wikipedia is known as the encyclopedia that anyone can tweak, founder Jimmy Wales and his cadre of volunteer editors, writers and moderators have blocked public-relations firms, campaign workers and anyone else perceived as having a conflict of interest from posting fluff or slanting entries. So paying for Wikipedia copy is considered a definite no-no.

"We were very disappointed to hear that Microsoft was taking that approach," Wales said Tuesday.

Microsoft acknowledged it had approached the writer and offered to pay him for the time it would take to correct what the company was sure were inaccuracies in Wikipedia articles on an open-source document standard and a rival format put forward by Microsoft.

Spokeswoman Catherine Brooker said she believed the articles were heavily written by people at IBM Corp., which is a big supporter of the open-source standard. IBM did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Brooker said Microsoft had gotten nowhere in trying to flag the purported mistakes to Wikipedia's volunteer editors, so it sought an independent expert who could determine whether changes were necessary and enter them on Wikipedia.

Brooker said Microsoft believed that having an independent source would be key in getting the changes to stick -- that is, to not have them just overruled by other Wikipedia writers.

Brooker said Microsoft and the writer, Rick Jelliffe, had not determined a price and no money had changed hands -- but they had agreed that the company would not be allowed to review his writing before submission. Brooker said Microsoft had never previously hired someone to influence a Wikipedia article.

Jelliffe, who is chief technical officer of a computing company based in Australia, did not return an e-mail seeking comment.

In a blog posting Monday, he described himself as a technical standards aficionado and not a Microsoft partisan. He said he was surprised to be approached by Microsoft but figured he'd accept the offer to review the Wikipedia articles because he considered it important to make sure technical standards processes were accurately described.

Wales said the proper course would have been for Microsoft to write or commission a "white paper" on the subject with its interpretation of the facts, post it to an outside Web site and then link to it in the Wikipedia articles' discussion forums.

"It seems like a much better, transparent, straightforward way," Wales said.

http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/internet/01/24/microsoft.wikipedia.ap/index.html


Suprise Suprise.:rolleyes:
 
Wake me up if its Vista related :coffee:.
 
Well it is (almost) Vista related ;) Actually its about the new MS Office filesystem .docx which is a new standard which Microsoft would like to establish against the open office file systems...
Lovely, just make it not backwards compadable with older MS Office Suites. :shake:
 
Well, Wikipedia is full of fallacies. So MS hiring someone (not bribing) to correct some factual errors in articles is actually reasonable. (Hey Ma! Look at me! I'm defending Microsoft! :eek:)

On the other hand, Wikipedia has a policy of not accepting *paid for* stuff from enybody, so they are well within their rights to reject any such work.
 
Well, Wikipedia is full of fallacies. So MS hiring someone (not bribing) to correct some factual errors in articles is actually reasonable. (Hey Ma! Look at me! I'm defending Microsoft! :eek:)

can you point out some of these fallacies?
 
Wikipedia is edited by users. This means that what you see might be an opinion of that specific user. Microsoft could have been trying to correct the information, but they just did it in a bad way
 
So MS hiring someone (not bribing) to correct some factual errors in articles is actually reasonable. (Hey Ma! Look at me! I'm defending Microsoft! :eek:)
Here you're not defending Microsoft, you're just defending the truth.

On topic : Bad Vista, Bad Vista, Bad Vista. ;)
 
ugh.....why do so many people talk bout Vista, it's going to be like every other thing M$ has put out, a billion bugs
That of course, plus a minor thing : Microsoft's attempt at getting back Apple's market by massively DRMing every multimedia content. Which so many people will gladly pay for. And to think they have the right to vote... :eek:
 
Digital Restrictions Management. Long story short, it's a case of "We still own your computer and you use it only by our grace". It masquerades as an attempt to protect copyright by making sure that you don't use your computer for anything illegal. Unfortunately, this has very bad repercussions, because one of the ways it works is to mangle output.

Beyond the obvious playback-quality implications of deliberately degraded output, this measure can have serious repercussions in applications where high-quality reproduction of content is vital. For example the field of medical imaging either bans outright or strongly frowns on any form of lossy compression because artifacts introduced by the compression process can cause mis-diagnoses and in extreme cases even become life-threatening. Consider a medical IT worker who's using a medical imaging PC while listening to audio/video played back by the computer (the CDROM drives installed in workplace PCs inevitably spend most of their working lives playing music or MP3 CDs to drown out workplace noise). If there's any premium content present in there, the image will be subtly altered by Vista's content protection, potentially creating exactly the life-threatening situation that the medical industry has worked so hard to avoid. The scary thing is that there's no easy way around this - Vista will silently modify displayed content under certain (almost impossible-to-predict in advance) situations discernable only to Vista's built-in content-protection subsystem.


LungXray.png

"Mr Johnson, that fuzzy region on your X-ray indicates one of two things. Either you have multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, or the copy-protection system on our computer thinks that part of your left lung looks like Mickey Mouse."
 
Wow !! :eek: Microsoft Vista, for a better world. ;) [throw in images of an ad where a young boy/girl is on the verge of accomplishing his/her dreams thanks to the new Microsoft Vista]

Buying Vista is like eating poo : why doing it ? Feeling Fear Factor-ish ? :crazyeye:
 
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