YSK: When you want to learn the facts on a controversial topic, check Wikipedia
When there is a heated, with a lot of strong and exaggerated arguments on both sides, and I don't know what to believe, or I'm overwhelmed with the raw information, I look at Wikipedia. Or even something that is not a current event, but the information I found on the internet doesn't feel reliable.
I'm sure some would find flaws there, but they do a good job of keeping it neutral and sticking to verifiable facts.
For purely scientific articles Wikipedia is great. But anything remotely controversial or even political on that site should be taken with a grain of salt.
There's too many editors out there who enforce their biases and wage war on such articles.
A wikipedia sources list is not some sort of list of all available data on a subject. It's a list of what information was used to build the article.
On anything remotely divisive, there will be available primary sources for multiple viewpoints, and obviously a slanted article will largely contain sources supporting its slant and leave out sources that don't. Just checking the sources can easily result in the illusion of consensus where there is none.
The issue I've come across is vindictive or mean editors who 'own' pages and refuse to allow changes to 'their' article.
Case in point, when a rather well-known bishop was convicted of child molestation I edited his article to add that information.
Boom, reverted, no reasons given.
Anytime I added the block of information back to the article he or she reverted the changes. Wikipedia was no help, so now I refuse to edit Wikipedia articles or even treat them as factual - too many editors have their own agendas.
If you know the policies and how to find your way around Wikipedia, and are certain that you're right - you can generally have the truth prevail (as long as you have reliable sources backing up your claims).
The real trick is to know the policies and where to complain that they're not being upheld. In your case you should goto the BLP noticeboard, and ask for an uninvolved editor's help in figuring out how to, or whether the information should be added.
This generally gets others interested in advocating for the truth.
See, it sounds like that's another way of saying "If you don't have a ton of spare time and nothing better to do with it, don't even try to edit Wikipedia"
They usually freeze changes when stuff like that happens to prevent “emotional” edits. If it got removed even after the information was verified, you can appeal by providing other sources.
Also, check the article’s talk page—for controversial topics, the article usually represents a consensus that was reached after comparing and discussing different sources, debunking misinformation, etc.
The article pages are more subject to vandalism, edit wars, and knee-jerk reversions, but there are usually more editors committed to making sure the article reflects the talk page consensus in the long run.
I remember keeping eye on some wikipedia pages during early stage of controversial topics. They do hide information and then lock the page.
There are too many misleading statements. However, it is a good start to get an understanding of the large picture. Afterwards more research is needed.
I like the Associated Press and Reuters, too. Their articles are pretty bland, but that’s kind of the point. They make their money by licensing their content to as many publications as possible, so they have a major financial incentive to remain neutral and reliable.
However, the fact that there’s a financial incentive at all can call their reporting into question, of course. Money corrupts everything. Still, I consider them better than most.
Wikipedia isn't some magical concensus platform, it's just a website with admins and power users like anything else. I wouldn't take Lemmy or Reddit at face value and you shouldn't take Wikipedia at face value either for the same reasons. It's not neutral at all and feelings, biases and personal beliefs are all over the website because the people with power keep it that way.
No, I didn't anticipate significant backslash. The criticism of Wikipedia is valid, but I'm comparing it to the raw stream of BS I get on social media, not to an idealistic vision of what wikipedia should be
Okay, but like, places like AP and Reuters are right there and free. If someone's thirsty, you shouldn't point them at a dirty puddle because it's better than sewage, you should turn the faucet on.
@fbmac This article in defense of Citizendium.org , an alternative to Wikipedia with author identity verification, is a great anecdotal rundown of why this is a bad idea. Give Citizendium a try, I'm not saying it is perfect but it is a bit better.