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Archive for April, 2008

All the Rage #6: Grand Theft Most Popular Idol

Consulting the WikiRage oracle this week, we discover to my mind the most interesting collection of edited articles since we started the feature. But then I will admit, I already have “Grand Theft Auto IV” pre-ordered.

  1. GTA IV screen cap courtesy Coneee on Flickr.Article: Grand Theft Auto IV soundtrack
    Why: The blockbuster video game commonly known as “GTA IV” will be released Tuesday, but there are reports it has leaked online, and the list of songs and artists has to date not been fully listed.
    Detail: A conscientious editor has tried to call the mob to reason: “This page has zero sources. I understand the game comes out on Tuesday, and there are leaked copies that people have (pirated and otherwise), but unless a credible source lists the soundtrack for the game it has no business being on wikipedia. This entire page is original research or speculation. This page needs to be re-done, or mostly deleted until we can verify the soundtrack from a reliable source.” He tried creating a version based entirely on previously published facts, but his version has not prevailed. But as he acknowledges, if the information is accurate, the page will be verifiable on short order. A losing battle.

  2. Article: Thierry Henry
    Why: French soccer player, the Featured Article (FA) on the Wikipedia Main Page on April 23.
    Detail: 82.69.66.147 of London and 82.20.251.226 of Portsmouth, England really have it in for the guy.

  3. Article: Danica Patrick
    Why: The comely young IndyCar driver/GoDaddy spokesbabe won her first IndyCar race — and became the first woman ever to do so.
    Detail: In contrast to Henry, Patrick has enthusiastic supporters in Ciley Myrus (”YOU GO GIRL!”) and Happy Halter-topped Hippie Chick (”WE LOVE YOU, DANICA!”) but they aren’t helping, either.

  4. Danica Patrick photo courtesy mattindy77 on Flickr.Article: Ocean sunfish
    Why: FA on April 23.
    Detail: Sometimes I wonder why people bother promoting their articles for the recognition, considering the high level of tedious vandalism that frequently occurs, as it did in this case. On the other hand, if I was really into the Ocean sunfish, I would probably take pride in defending its honor.

  5. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: Week in, week out, people keep shuffling off this mortal coil.
    Detail: For two weeks in a row, nobody of any significant fame (at least in North America) passed away. Judging by the history page, the most intense interest surrounded the shooting death of a New Orleans rapper named VL Mike.

  6. Article: Super Fun Time
    Why: The mid-season finale of “South Park.”
    Detail: As he has in previous weeks, Professor Chaos — deployer of more userboxes than any other editor I’ve seen — has valiantly defended the page from the inclusion of a Trivia section. Some of his fellow editors are very much annoyed by his insistence that material from the section be moved into the main article, but he is correct that Trivia sections are frowned upon, and there is none in the article now.

  7. Article: Vasa (ship)
    Why: As you may have figured out by now, if the subject has been obsolete for 30 years or more, it must be a FA, as this was on April 24.
    Detail: Seriously, who vandalizes an article about a shipwrecked 17th century Swedish warship? Is it the Swedish part?

  8. Article: American Idol
    Why: It’s still going on, right?
    Detail: It’s come to the point in the season where even I, an ardent non-watcher, know the name of at least one person on the show. But the fact that related articles haven’t appeared on the WikiRage top 10 most-edited much over the past few weeks has to count against its continued relevance.

  9. Pearl Jam concert courtesy _Jer_ on Flickr.Article: Pearl Jam
    Why: FA on April 22.
    Detail: Although considered good enough to be featured on the front page, the article also continued to include fanboy POV like “Pearl Jam continues to generate hit albums, tour successfully, and garner critical acclaim into the 21st century.” in the first section, and still includes a quote asserting they were “the most popular American rock & roll band of the ’90s” just because some guy at All Music Guide said so. Nirvana fans strenuously object.

  10. Article: E=MC² (Mariah Carey album)
    Why: As the title of the article indicates, Mariah Carey’s latest album goes highbrow. Okay, not really.
    Detail: In late March, an editor pointed out on the Talk page, “It should be mentioned in the intro that its a play on the famous formula by einstein.” Why he or she did not simply add it then I don’t know, but it’s better than (but not nearly as fun as) this comment from the Talk page a month before: “whats with that title written on the page???……..is that the new title??…….has it been confirmed??……isnt ‘that Chick’ the official title?? and if it is the official title,whats does the ‘E’ stand for…..d” In any case, today the article helpfully notes the reference, and explains: “The album name means ‘(E) Emancipation (=) equals (MC) Mariah Carey (²) to the second power’.” And I am not sure I am glad we have that cleared up.

  11. Holdovers this week: Nothing from last week returns.

    Falling off the list: Everything from last week.

    Recurring themes: The latest episode of South Park, and Deaths in 2008 makes a comeback.

    Honorable mention: David Archuleta, whose name I alluded to at least recognizing, was in fact #13 for the week.

Images courtesy Coneee, mattindy77 and Jer on Flickr.

That’s What FriendFeeds Are For

As I am frequently given to blogging about the first thing I see in my e-mail box each morning, and commenting on the extremely limited tools on John McCain’s campaign website, here the twain meet. This morning I woke up to find John McCain, or someone using his name, had subscribed to my FriendFeed account:

John McCain joins FriendFeed

FriendFeed is one of the more recent Web 2.0 services on the scene, and some believe it could be the latest next big thing. Considering the McCain campaign’s sometimes uneven online strategy, this is a step in the right direction. It’s better to send your campaign out into the places where people are than to expect them to come to you, anyway. So, I subscribed in return:

Subscribing to John McCain’s FriendFeed

And it’s the campaign, all right — the favorited video indeed shows up on the official McCain YouTube channel as the most recently favorited video.

Better still, the favorited video was uploaded by McCain Girls, the parodic creation of left-leaning humor website 23/6. Sure, the joke may be on McCain, but the McCain campaign is willing to laugh along with the joke. The video favorited is of McCain literally laughing along with it.

Obama, of course, is on FriendFeed as well. He also has more online content piped through it: Digg, Flickr, LinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube. McCain’s camp only lists the official blog’s RSS feed and YouTube account.

I know that’s not all they’re doing. McCain is on LinkedIn; earlier this month the campaign made clever use of the surprisingly resilient socnet, asking a question of the site’s memebers and receiving more than 3,000 responses.

John McCain on LinkedIn

I’m a bit surprised that McCain’s camp appears not to be using Flickr. Surely someone is taking pictures; during the Fred Thompson campaign we kept the Flickr account updated constantly with photographs taken by Thompson family friend Jim Rydell. (We released all photos under a Creative Commons license, thus providing quality photos of Thompson that supporters could use.)

McCain doesn’t appear to be using Twitter at either likely account (here or here), though supporters are giving the campaign a presence (here and here) on the increasingly zeitgeisty socnet. McCain’s camp did create an account on Digg, but they haven’t used the account since late last year.

Maybe all of this is not crucial, but the more social networks a campaign uses, the likelier it is they will reach people they would not have otherwise. Democrats will do all they can to portray McCain as old and out of touch, so presenting him well him to the young and with-it denizens of these online communities should take on added importance. Meanwhile, fundraising seems to be improving a bit, so maybe Pat Hynes will get a few extra hands to take care of these things.

All the Rage #5: Alien Altissima

Like we always do about this time, let’s check in with the top 10 most edited Wikipedia articles of the past week, courtesy of the online statistical tool WikiRage.

  1. Article: Virginia Tech massacre
    Why: April 16 is the first anniversary of the tragedy in Blacksburg, Virginia.
    Detail: As you might expect, there was some controversy in choosing this to be the Featured Article on the very first anniversary. And yet Wikipedian self-importance still manages to shine through. Take this comment from the Talk page: “Has anyone else brought up the idea that MAYBE Virginia Tech ribbon courtesy KeyExpert on Flickr.it might be a bad idea to list this as a featured article? I wonder how many other mentally disturbed people like that man might think ‘Wow, I might even get a featured article out of doing something like this!’” Um, that may be overstating the case. Others have pointed out that stories only can be Featured once, so this will not be on the cover again. Meanwhile, debate continues about whether the article should be called something else, such as “Virginia Tech shootings,” “Virginia Tech Tragedy” or “Virginia Tech episode,” as some feel the term “massacre” expresses too much a point of view.

  2. Article: Mark Speight
    Why: The British children’s television show host committed suicide by hanging.
    Detail: That increasingly rare (it seems) most-edited article which is not a “FA,” in Wikipedia short hand, this is a story so sad I hesitate to even explain it here. But in short, I first heard of Speight in January when his fiancee and co-host Natasha Collins was found dead in the couple’s bathtub. After a night of hard partying — too hard by any standards: lots of cocaine, vodka and sleeping pills — Collins was found dead in the couple’s bathtub. Whether overdose or overheat from the bath, Collins’ body was scalded by the water. Speight was initially arrested, but her death was soon ruled “death by misadventure.” Distraught, Speight quit his television show in late February, went missing a few weeks later, and was found just this week. I said it was sad. Meanwhile, Wikipedians try to figure out how and what to say about it.

  3. Article: Over Logging
    Why: In happier news, the latest episode of “South Park” again returns to the list of most-edited articles.
    Detail: In one of this season’s better episodes, the Internet “dries up” and the show turns into an extended riff on “The Grapes of Wrath” as Stan’s family heads to “Californee,” where the old-timers believe there’s a “whole mess of Inernet.” The Internet itself is represented as a ginormous Linksys router in an underground military facility, and the humans try to communicate with it like the spaceship from “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” Eventually, Kyle figures out they just need to unplug it from the wall and plug it back in. Meanwhile, Wikipedians wrestle with the question of references — “Ghostbusters”? Almost, but not obvious enough to warrant mention. “Moonraker”? No, that too was riffing on “Close Encounters.” The recently-cancelled “Jericho”? Apparently not enough people have seen the show to agree or disagree.

  4. Article: The Fires of Pompeii
    Mona Lisa in Japanese characters, courtesy ciro@tokyo on Flickr. Why: Here’s where the U.S.-centric bias of this list comes into play: this was the latest episode of “Doctor Who” on BBC One.
    Detail: I can speak at great length about “South Park” and not at all about “Doctor Who” but when it comes to who produces the better articles — it’s the Brits. Perhaps this owes something to the fact that “Doctor Who” has been on the air for much, much longer than even the veteran cartoon show, and perhaps this owes something as well to the fact that more people are involved in writing, acting and shooting those episodes. This seems to generate coverage that “South Park” — usually written by Trey Parker and Matt Stone the week before it airs — just doesn’t get. That said, fans of the Doctor are in the habit of breaking the article into sections, whereas “South Park” fans tend to write one big paragraph summarizing the episode.

  5. Article: Prom Night (2008 film)
    Why: This PG-13 horror/thriller was released in theaters last weekend.
    Detail: The what? The who? I hadn’t even heard of it until just now, but Box Office Mojo says it was the number one grossing film in America last week, and this weekend it’s holding on to third place. The plot summary is very long already, so that appears to be most of the editing activity. And like “American Idol” edits in recent weeks, this article is edited by a significant percentage of unregistered users. In this case, they may even be a majority.

  6. Article: Lisa del Giocondo
    Why: FA on April 13.
    Detail: You know the woman who posed for Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa? No? Well, this is her. The article was the target of an unusual level of vandalism, even for a FA. Worse, most of it wasn’t even clever.

  7. Article: Trevor Immelman
    Why: He beat Tiger Woods to win the 2008 Masters.
    Detail: I think it’s interesting to look at his his article on the day before won and the state of the article today. It’s not substantially longer or better, but if you compare the Biography sections, there is no question the writing is much stronger.

  8. Tree of heaven, the ghetto palm, courtesy spike55151 on Flickr.Article: Ailanthus altissima
    Why: FA on April 15.
    Detail: Yes, but what is it? A tree. The tree of heaven, it’s called in China to which it is native. Unlike most topics, this one has acquired a (potentially short-lasting) editor who has given themselves the handle Ailanthus altissima editor.

  9. Article: List of Omnitrix aliens
    Why: If I understand this correctly, there is a Cartoon Network show called “Ben 10,” and in this show he can turn into a variety of aliens to fight a variety of villains. A bracelet-like device called the Omnitrix allows him to transform into these creatures. I think the show has just completed its run, and now another series is beginning, “Ben 10: Alien Force.”
    Detail: All I can tell you is that apparently there is a lot to be said about these aliens. And all of a sudden, I can imagine what my parents must have thought when I once might have tried to explain the game “Mega Man.”

  10. Article: Rob & Big
    Why: Another recently concluded television series I’ve never heard of.
    Detail: This one ran on MTV2 and seems to have been a reality show about a professional skateboarder and his best friend/bodyguard. This article might be of some interest to the philosophical debate between Wikipedia “mergists” and “separatists” (don’t worry, it’s not like racial separatism). Roughly speaking, the issue at stake is whether more information should be included in a main article to avoid creating too many short pages vs. whether to break out information into multiple pages to avoid making the main article too long. In this case, every single episode of Rob & Big’s three-season run is summarized on this, the main page. My preference would be to create three new pages, one for each season. However, that would leave almost no content on the main page. So what we have here is an article without much information besides capsule summaries of each episode. A real dilemma. But also not of any great importance compared to, say, the Virginia Tech massacre. I’ll be an Eventualist on this one and assume someone else with more knowledge will come along and improve the article another time.

  11. Holdovers this week: For the first time in the five weeks I’ve been writing this, there are none.

    Falling off the list: Everything from last week.

    Recurring themes: Nothing really, besides the predictable prominence of FAs and pop culture.

    Honorable mention: Deaths in 2008, a hardy perennial of the WikiRage top-edited articles, is nowhere to be found this week. Either nobody you’ve heard of died this week (which is probably true) or WikiRage occasionally misses some. (This may have happened last week with the previous episode of “South Park.”) Considering that this page has been edited more than 500 times since April 14, that’s my guess. I’ll look into the situation a little more, but it’s a reminder that on the web, frustratingly, no metric is completely reliable.

Images courtesy KeyExpert, ciro@tokyo and spike555151 on Flickr.

Everything in Moderation: A Closer Look at Comment Spam

At my ever more occasionally updated personal blog, I’ve long published a series of posts called “Great Spams of the Internet” wherein I highlight a particularly amusing bit of e-mail spam and even the occasional e-mail interaction. Once when a 419 scammer tried to get me to call him on the telephone, I replied:

Regrettably, I was born with no mouth.

He was very understanding, writing back the next day:

thank you sir thank for your mail all is understood well i can question you just of the condition you gave any please kindly make a way we can both talk

At least I think he understood. In any case, this is the long way around getting to my real point.

As you may know, I run a blog here. As you can probably guess, I get my share of spam comments; most are caught by the Akismet plug-in for WordPress. But then, most are fully automated and advertise prescription drugs, gambling websites or sex acts that would probably boost my unique visitor counts if I mentioned them, but I don’t need that kind of traffic.

However, a small percentage of it manages to evade Akismet’s filters and find its way into my moderation queue. In some cases, they are only barely distinguishable from real comments. In some cases not listed here, I’ve approved comments that I am sure were intended only to improve the SEO of the website linked, but were interesting enough to allow through on their own merits.

Most are not, but this doesn’t mean they’re entirely without value. Some of them are clever, some are just amusing. I’ve been holding onto a few of them to discuss here, so let’s open up the queue, if for no other reason than now I can finally delete them:

Example spam comment received at Blog P.I.

Here, somebody is pushing what appears to be a YouTube clone, even using a joking nickname YouTube acquired once the site itself was acquired by Google. In fact, the site turns out to be a combination of Google’s input forms. Though the IP address indeed traces back to the United Kingdom, the author is not especially concerned with proper English spelling or punctuation. They also have no system for keeping track of which websites they have already hit, or they just don’t care. I’m leaning toward the latter.

Example spam comment received at Blog P.I.

Here is one that, at first glance, looks like a genuine comment: This was intended for a post that mentioned Ron Paul, just as the one above tried attaching itself to a post discussing Google and YouTube. But if you follow the link, it goes to a blog whose posts consist of only of one YouTube video and sometimes-relevant text copied from other websites — “scraped” as it’s called. And there’s a good reason why it sounds like a real comment: It was scraped from another comment from the same thread.

Example spam comment received at Blog P.I.

This one promotes yet another inscrutable blog, this time in a foreign language that I presume to be Turkish. I guess this because the IP address resolves to Izmir, Turkey. The one above resolves to Istanbul, Turkey. The two cities are not close by, so they are probably not the same person. But if Turkey is a hotbed of comment spam, that’s news to me.

Example spam comment received at Blog P.I.

Undoubtedly, this one is my favorite. Like the Wikipedia vandal whose edit summary consisted of “Blanked the page” or the panhandler who admits he needs the money for booze, “Sohbet” is admirably honest about his intentions. I might even consider throwing him a link, except that the website no longer exists — less than a month after he was trying to extract Google juice/build traffic for it. Also of note: the IP address resolves to Antalya, Turkey. Still, if Turkish comment spam is a known phenomenon, I can’t find any discussion about it.

Example spam comment received at Blog P.I.

Funny at first, but tedious. I get a lot of these, and it’s kind of similar to another common tactic I’ll get to in just a bit. Flattery will get you everywhere with some people, but not me. Also, the linked site is in Russian. Russian spam at least I am familiar with.

Example spam comment received at Blog P.I.

Better than YouTube! Quite a claim. Surprisingly, the website is well-designed, coherent and legitimate. For someone who just wanted to find videos related to a presidential or prospective VP candidate, it might actually be better than YouTube. So here we can start to draw a clear distinction: Some spam comment campaigns aim to promote fake websites that seek ad revenue or to promote another website. Others are spammy promotions for real websites; it’s very possible the creators of this website don’t know exactly what their SEO is up to. But I’m not particularly offended by this comment. It doesn’t add to the conversation so I won’t approve it, but it got the general subject matter of this website correct, it’s vaguely conversational, and it doesn’t represent itself as anything other than what it is: a pitch.

Example spam comment received at Blog P.I.

Lastly, this one I’m including not because it’s compelling, but because it’s so common. Also, because it represents the dishonest counterpoint to the previous example. Here, the commenter announces enthusiasm for the targeted website (in this case mine), then immediately starts pitching another website. Notice that his subject matter is completely off-base with what Blog P.I. is about. The targeted post — which I wrote in July, 2006 — included exactly one use of the word “wedding,” in a throwaway reference to New York Times announcements page thereof.

Predictably, the website being promoted is commercial in nature, but doesn’t offer anything for sale itself. What it does, though, is link to pages on a real wedding supply website, which presumably hired the spammer to boost their search engine ranking. A bit of rudimentary sleuthing reveals the SEO’s identity and company; he’s using his real name (which is something, I guess) and he didn’t even register the URL anonymously.

But I’m not going to single him out with a link or textual mention that could turn up in a search engine. He’s not doing anything illegal and, as noted above, similar practices are exceedingly common. I’ve been a critic of certain SEO practices, but I’m fascinated by also them, and clearly I think some tactics are better than others. The way I see it, if you’re going to do black hat SEO, why not do it with some style?

Also, the joke is on them: Every link in my comment section is automatically assigned a nofollow attribute.

I Want to E-Mail All the Little People

Some months back I signed up for an e-mail list administered by, in varying combinations, Jane Hamsher, Glenn Greenwald, Matt Stoller and Markos Moulitsas. The pitch at the time was for Stop the DC Establishment, a campaign to persuade journalists of “Petraeus’s long record of errant judgment in Iraq.”

The message shifted over time, asking list members to back the Democrats’ SCHIP plan (unsuccessful), oppose the January FISA bill (unsuccessful) and sign an FEC complaint about John McCain’s campaign finances (unresolved but likely unsuccessful). In every case, the list was a call-to-action directly furthering the Leftroots’ political goals.

This week, I received an e-mail from the same firedoglakeaction@gmail.com account used to send out most of these messages. But this one was just a little different:

Jane Hamsher’s commercial solicitation on behalf of Glenn Greenwald

A few “to be sure” statements: It’s their list, anyone can unsubscribe, and Greenwald’s book is undoubtedly sympatico with their previous messages.

But let’s be clear about what they’re doing: They are making commercial use of an e-mail list subscribers joined for expressly political reasons. More to the point, the list is now being used to advertise a product by one of the list’s owners.

I have no way of knowing the reaction of people on the list who signed up out of genuine support for their cause (as the blurred name above suggests, I didn’t sign up as myself) but I can certainly imagine some will be irritated that their interest in Greenwald’s political activities implies an agreement to receive commercial solicitations on his behalf. I’m a little irritated, if that counts for anything.

I actually wasn’t going to write about this, until I heard this week that Greenwald and Hamsher barely attended the Wednesday Dupont Circle event; apparently they showed up at the very end and gave a “hard sell for Greenwald’s book.” Two is one short of a trend, but if it becomes that, they could risk squandering their readers’ loyalty.

The New Hotlineness

I’d been hearing the rumors for a few weeks but, finally, the new National Journal site design has had its debut. But on a Friday?

In Washington, bad news always gets released on Fridays. The idea is to bury it just as the week’s traditional news cycle is winding down — as reporters are racing to get out of, or heading out on the, town.

Is that what’s going on here? Here’s the page specific to The Hotline, so you be the judge:

The New Hotline website design on National Journal

It’s certainly much more modern than the National Journal website of old (see below right). You can’t tell from the screen shot, but there is just as much actual content on the page; it’s just been pushed below the fold. Now it resembles nothing so much as a wonkier version of Slate (which has had its own disastrous redesigns, not that I’m calling this one disastrous).

But that red is so neon it looks like it belongs on the cover of Wired, and for the moment it clashes badly with the colors of the sponsor’s advertisement.

Classic (Old) Hotline website designIt also looks odd next to the darker red, which is more representative of the colors used across the site. Indeed, click over to Congress Daily and National Journal (aka “The Magazine”) and you may think you’re losing your eyesight.

On the other hand, I count two links to my old online column/daily blog report, The Blogometer, apparently the only National Journal feature with two links on this particular page. That alone is enough to get a thumbs-up from me.

Well done, National Journal!

The Selling of the Snark

New Wonkette logoSo Nick Denton is selling/has sold/given away Wonkette, the third blog created as part of his Gawker Media blog network, which made Ana Marie Cox famous for DC and Jessica Cutler famous for fifteen people. But that was a long time ago.

Denton has parted ways with titles before, selling Oddjack and shutting down Sploid and Screenhead a few years back. This time he has found new homes for each of his websites. As of today, Wonkette belongs to managing editor Ken Layne. This is the second time Denton has put one of Layne’s blogs out to pasture; he was the sole editor of Sploid during its brief-ish run.

During Wonkette’s existence I have been an occasional reader and loyal critic. I am an approved commenter on the Gawker network, and every once in awhile I swing by to let them have it. Coincidentally, the most recent time was just last night.

Under Cox, I felt the blog leaned too far to the left while claiming to be non-partisan. Under subsequent editors I let go of that complaint and moved on to on the fact that it is simply not written for a Beltway audience. It breaks no news and advances no stories; it merely adds a garnish of cheap snark to the day’s headlines. Ana Marie Cox and Jessica Cutler, no longer with WonketteGawker matters to New York City (well, Manhattan at any rate) and Valleywag matters to the Silicon Valley (even if they hate it), but Wonkette offers no special insight on Hollywood for ugly people. Outside it’s America, which treats politics like entertainment. Here in the District, Defamer and Deadspin probably matter more, since we don’t want to talk shop after hours. But don’t take my word for it — check out the comments at DCist.

The last time Denton tried to make the site relevant to the actual District which it purports to cover, he moved Alex Pareene from New York to DC. Pareene was very funny (and still is on Gawker, for which he writes now) but these new kids — recent college student Jim Newell and total unknown Sara K. Smith — are bad Xerox copies. Fittingly, Layne doesn’t even live in Washington.

I take Denton entirely at his word in his explanation for selling it:

Why these three sites? To be blunt: they each had their editorial successes; but someone else will have better luck selling the advertising than we did. … As for Wonkette: political advertisers are a strange breed; they don’t come through the same agencies our sales people deal with.

Nick Denton, no longer the owner of WonketteSo now Wonkette returns to Henry Copeland’s unique Blogads advertising network, which handles a great deal of political advertising (including Blog P.I., on the infrequent occasions that someone wants to do business with us) and is a much better fit than whatever agency handles Gawker’s advertising.

Ultimately, politics just isn’t where the money is. (Don’t think for a moment Mark Penn built that tunnel between his houses in Georgetown with campaign earnings.) But as others note, now is the time to cash out. Traffic is up, likely due to growing interest in the presidential election. And just as you don’t want to sell pumpkin futures the day after Halloween, the day before isn’t any good either. Better do it while your buyers still have some expectation of getting a return on their investment.

All the Rage #4: Flame On (and Off)

It’s time once again to turn our attention to what Wikipedians turned their attention to this week, according to the most-edited list at WikiRage.

  1. Article: Suleiman the Magnificent
    Why: This fourteenth century Ottoman sultan was the Featured Article on April 8.
    Detail: As usual, the front-paging of an article results in some vandalism. But the overall effect is salutary, as the article gets closer scrutiny by serious editors. In the meantime, you get enjoyable debates like this: “Article says: ‘Suleiman married a harem girl Roxelana, who became Hürrem Sultan’. I understand that PC or indifference thereto is a controversial subject, but is ‘harem girl’ (although perhaps literally correct) really the best way for us to phrase this? … As a female member of the household, she would still have been part of the harem. I don’t really see a problem with the term. I suppose we could change ‘girl” to ’slave,’ if that’s what the problem is.”

  2. Article: J.K. Rowling
    Why: The children’s author who is wealthier than the Queen was the Featured Article on April 11.
    Detail: At 23:42 GMT on April 12, David4674 reduced the entire article to… nothing. His edit summary was surprisingly forthright: “Blanked the page.” But don’t worry, David4674 isn’t a real editor: he’s a sock puppet of… Dan 689. Both appear to have been banned.

  3. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: Passing this week: Monk’s psychiatrist and numerous people I’ve never heard of.
    Detail: Abu Ubaidah al-Masri, an al Qaeda operative in Pakistan is believed to have died of hepatitis in December 2007, but U.S. government sources didn’t announce this until just the past week, hence his inclusion in the list.

  4. Article: Victoria Cross
    Why: Not a television actress from the 1980s, but in fact the highest military decoration in the British Commonwealth. Featured Article? Good guess! It was on April 9.
    Detail: Only the Talk page will tell you that Major General Candy in “The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp” was a fictional recipient of the VC, if it matters, and I am not sure it does.

  5. Article: Yi So-yeon
    Why: As of April 8, this 29 year-old astronaut is the first Korean and second Asian woman in space
    Detail: If you’re envious now, just wait until she starts doing TV commercials. Although you might have to be in South Korea to see them, I’m sure the money is just as good.

  6. Article: 2008 Summer Olympics torch relay
    Why: The ceremonial relay has been in the news for controversy: Human rights protesters have targeted the ceremony, even snuffing out the flame a couple times in France.
    Detail: Not yet making the page: Complaints about the environmental impact of carrying the torch around the globe.

  7. Article: Chrono Trigger
    Why: Not that Wikipedians are opposed to editing video game articles already, but this was the Featured Article on April 10.
    Detail: When the article appeared on Wikipedia’s main page on Thursday, the box art was not included, even though it is included in the article. I’m not sure I quite follow the reasoning, but Wikipedia is lately in the habit of keeping fair use images off the front page, only including an image if it is free use.

  8. Article: Tomb of Antipope John XXIII
    Why: The only question is, when was it the Featured Article? The answer is April 6.
    Detail: I have to admit, this question from the Talk page crossed my mind, too: “If he’s the anti pope, does that mean he worships the anti christ?”

  9. Article: American Idol (seaon 7)
    Why: It’s dominating the iTunes top 10 list, so why shouldn’t it be on the Wikipedia top ten list?
    Detail: Let’s be clear about this: “Also, regarding David Hernandez: As far as I’ve read, only incriminating pictures of him working at the bar were released. I have NEVER heard about any nude pics floating around out there on the net. Could anyone find a source to prove this? (And a link to these alleged ‘nude’ pictures. Not even for personal reasons. I’m just pretty certain only clothed pics of him with the name of the bar he works at were at VFTW and that’s it.)”

  10. Article: Olympic Flame
    Why: See #5.
    Detail: I find all this torch business a little silly, but did you know that in a ceremony involving eleven “priestesses” the torch is lit by the sun’s rays using a parabolic mirror? That’s kind of cool.

  11. Holdovers this week: Deaths in 2008, articles related to controversy involving China and the Olympics (returning from week 2)

    Falling off the list: April 1, 2008; Ima Hogg; Celine Dion; April Fool’s Day; Canada on Strike; Earth Hour; NATO; Google’s hoaxes; Bette Davis

    Recurring themes: Featured Articles being the most-edited of the week.

    Honorable mention: Eek, a Penis! was the episode of South Park this week, and even though it was edited 220 times this week, somehow that wasn’t enough to make the top 100. I’m suspicious; #100 was controversial talk show host Randi Rhodes, and her page was edited less than 100 times in the past week. Hmm.

The Angriest Man in the Blogosphere

The title of this post derives from: a) a somewhat unfair Mark Bowden essay in The Atlantic criticizing “The Wire” Creator David Simon, and b) Simon’s reputation for showing up in the comments of blogs that discuss his show.

Simon is probably far too busy preparing his next HBO project — “Generation Kill,” set for July — to respond this time. But if he reads this, he should know I consider his conflicted love letter to Baltimore not just better than any other television drama, but much better by far. (I am a typical white person in this regard.) I still love “The Sopranos,” but let’s face it — it’s a cartoon, and not as well-crafted.

That said, I find Simon’s smug insult of the blogosphere in a handful of recent interviews rather less enlightening. For instance, take a long e-mail interview published in the Baltimore City Paper following the series finale in early March. Asked why he didn’t include bloggers in his portrayal of the troubled newspaper industry, he volunteered this hypothetical scene:

INT. GARDEN APARTMENT/ANYWHERE - DAY

A white MALE, thirties, unshaven, sits in his underwear typing on a desktop computer. C.U. on computer screen. As he links to Baltimore Sun coverage off the newspaper’s web site, creating a link on his own blog. The MALE scratches his left testicle, then satisfied, begins typing. C.U. on the moving cursor as commentary ensues.

CUT TO: EXT. DRUG CORNER/WEST BALTIMORE - DAY

This is a bit tongue-in-cheek, but he wasn’t kidding:

The internet is skimming the froth of commentary from the first-generation news gatherers like The Sun. They have parasitically achieved immediacy and relevance by co-opting the debate, the humor, the rage, and the provocation that results from the news product–WITHOUT ACTUALLY INVESTING OR COMMITTING IN ANY SERIOUS WAY TO THE SYSTEMIC ACQUISITION OF THAT NEWS.

And the parasite is killing the host. Is the internet a marvelous tool in myriad ways? Of course. Is it the future? No doubt. But thus far it is not a responsible or viable alternative to a major metropolitan newspaper.

Criminy. This is the mirror image of the kind of blogger triumphalism that died out several years ago. Blogs aren’t killing newspapers (although Craigslist might be) and it’s not far off the misguided rant of Sam Zell, who lit into Google News for supposedly killing newspapers shortly after purchasing the media company which owns… the Baltimore Sun, Simon’s former employer.

Look, Simon is correct that many bloggers depend upon newspapers for stories to comment upon. It’s true that most of them couldn’t do this without the old media’s content. But this is not his unique insight; bloggers themselves have been dealing with this paradox for years. And they are not all sitting around in their pajamas (as another memorable slur had it). Some have set up their own news organizations: Josh Marshall’s TPM empire includes reporters as well as commentators.

Meanwhile, journalists are moving in on bloggers’ turf as well. Reporters such as Chris Cillizza at the Washington Post or my old colleague Marc Ambinder at The Atlantic do almost all of their reporting on the web. This is a genuine ecosystem with much give as well as take. Bloggers who work for free send traffic back to newspapers. And some of those bloggers have bigger audiences than the newspapers.

Of course, bloggers working for free, or very little, is part of what many perceive to be a problem. What bloggers are really doing is taking over the kind of opinion journalism — in politics, music and movies — that were traditionally the province of newspapers. If the blogosphere is killing newspapers, it’s because much of their product is easily done by amateurs who simply didn’t have a platform before the Internet and didn’t have the tools until Pyra Labs cooked up a software program called Blogger while killing time between other projects.

David Simon at a podium, courtesy Brad Searles at Flickr.Moreover, Simon is also is wrong to portray bloggers as adding nothing to the debate. The signature counter-example is when Republican-leaning bloggers asked questions about CBS’s reporting on President Bush’s National Guard service that major news organizations didn’t. Dan Rather is the most prominent scalp, but before that Trent Lott had to step down from his leadership position because of comments about Strom Thurmond’s legacy that Marshall kept alive.

Not all these stories are as prominent, and they don’t all end in firings. More recently, The Smoking Gun fact-checked a Los Angeles Times story fingering Sean Combs for the murder of Tupac Shakur; the story was based on documents that were easily shown to be unreliable, not unlike those CBS relied upon.

It may be that The Smoking Gun is not a blog, but now we’re just quibbling about content management systems. It is also true that TSG is owned by truTV (formerly Court TV), but it began as an independent website, as most blogs are. Speaking of which, Simon gave an interview with a similar rant to Salon — still independent against all odds, and still doing journalism and commentary on a daily basis.

And the competition has also likely caused major news organizations to look closer at their colleagues’ reporting. In the best of cases, it’s forcing news organizations to focus on what they’re best at — where their comparative advantage lies. Obviously that’s reporting, as Simon says. Newsgathering is moving away from newspapers to some extent, but commentary is moving away from newspapers at a rapid clip. In the worst of cases, people like Zell are making bonehead moves that will expedite the shakeout. And the guy scratching his balls in front of his MacBook is just a bit player in a changing media landscape.

I know David Simon isn’t the biggest fan of capitalism, but does he really think that competition is bad? I am sure he can’t really think that more speech is bad.

Image courtesy Brad Searles on Flickr.

All the Rage #3: Fools Rush In

Wikipedia vandalism has long been a subject of interest here at Blog P.I. It’s more of a nuisance than a real problem, and it will never go away. No, the better question is, when is it likely to be more common? Do you remember what Tuesday was?

  1. Article: April 1, 2008
    Why: This page is the repository for lists of April Fools Day jokes and pranks, and it goes into the hundreds.
    Detail: April Fool’s Day is in no danger of falling into obscurity: the page was only created on March 31 and subequently edited 1023 times, more than double and nearly triple the number of edits on last week’s most-edited page.

  2. An actual Rick roll, courtesy Rakka on Flickr.
  3. Article: Ima Hogg
    Why: With a name like that, how could it not be vandalism?
    Detail: Well, there’s more to it than that. Wikipedia itself made this the Featured Article on the main page of the English Wikipedia on April 1, with a skewed blurb visible on this user page. Just skewed, not contra-factual. But then the real article itself was indeed beset by April Fool’s jokesters, especially after being mentioned on the Houston Chronicle’s website.

  4. Article: Celine Dion
    Why: This was the Featured Article on April 3rd.
    Detail: A complaint from the talk page: “A few days ago when the FA was a pro wrestling show, there were many complaints, but no one has complained about this? Interesting.”

  5. Article: April Fools’ Day
    Why: This is the article where the greatest hits are collected, under the phrase “Well-Known Pranks.”
    Detail:A disproportionate number of recent additions concern themselves with video game companies.

  6. Article: Canada on Strike
    Why: Not only is this the latest South Park episode, it even made extensive reference to viral videos and Internet celebrities, from Star Wars Kid to Tay Zonday.
    Detail: Unsurprisingly, commentary on Internet phenomena can inspire and inform new ones. From the article: “In the days following the airing of the episode in the U.S., many of the featured videos as linked above hosted on Youtube have received thousands of comments parodying the episode in return, notably the ‘I’m not your…’ sequence, forming a meme of its own.”

  7. Charlton Heston at the Lincoln Monument, courtesy Discover Black Heritage on Flickr.
  8. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: As of week three, still the only page to appear on all three lists.
    Detail: Kind of a down week for the Grim Reaper. Until Charlton Heston passed away last night, just barely making this roundup, we lost… an American-born mad bomber in Bolivia, the last Turkish veteran of WWI, minor hip hop figure Frosty Freeze, a British race horse, and someone who was, until Saturday, Japan’s oldest living woman.

  9. Article: Earth Hour
    Why: A one-hour holiday in which businesses, governments, monuments and websites worldwide turned off the lights to save a bit of energy to demonstrate their nominal concern with the depletion of Earth’s precious resources. A whole hour!
    Detail: Obviously I’m cynical, but I’m far from the only one. Someone in Australia is primarily responsible for the “Criticisms” section, which is no less than a fourth of the entry. All from an Australian perspective. Not mentioned, but I’m thinking of adding: Google drew some flak for turning its home screen black for the hour, even though on many common monitors it actually requires more energy.

  10. Article: NATO
    Why: The Cold War institution was in the news this week, as Croatia and Albania have been invited to start talking about future membership. Putin can’t be happy about that.
    Detail: Many of the edits concern recent developments, but it seems this has also brought attention to other aspects of the article which needed work.

  11. Earth Hour balloon over Sydney, Australia, courtesy Earth Hour on Flickr.
  12. Article: Google’s hoaxes
    Why: Nobody does April Fool’s Day like Google does April Fool’s Day.
    Detail: Google has been known for pulling one big prank in an announcement for every April 1st going back to 2000, but this year they outdid themselves, pranking visitors on many of their sites and services across the world. It seems like just about every division got a chance to dupe its public users. This year was the first for YouTube, which Rickrolled anyone who clicked on the featured videos.

  13. Article: Bette Davis
    Why: Friday was the actress’ 100th birthday, and Wikipedia made her article the Featured Article for the day. Thereby inviting vandals.
    Detail: On the talk page, one person complained: “Why are there tanks at the top of the page?” Some time later, another complained: “Where did the tanks go?”

  14. Holdovers this week: Deaths in 2008

    Falling off the list: Major Boobage, Fitna (film), 2008 Tibetan unrest, American Idol (season 7), Sea otter, iCarly, 2008 unrest in Tibet, Stephen Curry (basketball), American Idol

    Recurring themes: The most recent episode of South Park, a vandalized front page article

    Honorable mention: Rickroll came in at #15.

Images courtesy Rakka, Discover Black Heritage and Earth Hour on Flickr.