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Not a tragic accident but a 'massacre' and a 'genocide' |
Whenever Israel commits a tragic blunder, such as the killing of 15 people in ambulances in Gaza, you can expect two things: the IDF will investigate and promptly release its findings, and Hamas will call it a "massacre" that is part of a plot to commit "genocide" against all Palestinians.
No make that three things. Wikipedia will adopt the Hamas narrative.
Thus Wikipedia has an article titled "Rafah paramedic massacre," which it describes as "Part of the March 2025 Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip during the Gaza war and the Gaza genocide." In the lead paragraph, the word "massacre" is footnoted to this article in the virulently anti-Israel British organ The Guardian.
There is nothing especially atypical about this latest effort by Wikipedia to smear Israel using incendiary language that is prohibited by the site's policy, which ostensibly is designed to promote "neutrality." As this blog has pointed out numerous times in the past, site policies such as "NPOV," the "neutral point of view" policy, are routinely disregarded as far as Israel is concerned.
"Impartial tone"? Forget about it.
"Contentious labels"? Perfectly OK.
"Non-judgmental article titles"? You've got to be kidding.
This article, which is almost ridiculously slanted against Israel from its Hamas-fed title on down, is a vivid demonstration of how the recent "Palestine-Israel" arbitration case did not put a dent into the "Wikipedia flood" of anti-Israel editors and their campaign to use Wikipedia to vilify Israel. What it shows is that the "flood" is exceptionally large, and has an immense talent pool to draw on when a few of its members are sidelined.
The creator of this article was a Wikipedian who was totally uninvolved in the arbcom case, User:Skitash. He has been around since 2022 and has produced a large volume of edits, but has kept his head down and has avoided controversy as far as I can see. He has received some off-wiki criticism for removing Kurdish as an official language of Iraq and for "vandalizing all the pages of Moroccan cities by removing their Tamazight name. Tamazight being the native language of North Africa." He has engaged in the same tendentious behavior by removing Amazigh names.
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Wikipedia jurist 'CaptainEek' |
In fairness, it should be pointed out that Skitash did not write this article alone. It was a group effort, consisting of a number of anti-Israel Wikipedia editors, not a single one of whom sought to tone down the pro-Hamas slant of the article, which originally did not have "massacre" in its title. The article was given that title by User:Rafe87, who edits aggressively to push the pro-Hamas point of view and has even been sanctioned. Like "Skitash," "Rafe87" was also not on arbcom's radar screen in the recent case.
These editors' agenda has not caught the attention of Wikipedia, but you can bet that the off-wiki criticism (including this blog) will do so. One member of the largely anonymous "Arbitration Committee," called "CaptainEek," has gained support for the view that editing an article in a manner consistent with off-site criticism is verboten, even though it does not violate Wikipedia policy. But violating Wikipedia policy? That is OK with her.
The Trump Administration is expected to act against Harvard's tax exemption. Whether that's valid or not is for others to decide. But look at this article, this rubbish, this Hamas propaganda and ask yourself: Why does the U.S. taxpayer support a website that produce this drivel in not one but thousands of articles?
3 comments:
As part of purging the facts of Goliath nazism by Palestine Arabs, the 'Red Moon 'nazi club was deleted by the anti Israel lobby
https://web.archive.org/web/20220214093050/https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Moon_(nazi_club)
A lot of Wikipedia administrators, particular those engaged in "sock-hunting", think they're so smart in sussing out alternate accounts, particularly those belonging to block users. However, stylometry, one of the main methods in Wikipedia's sockpuppet investigations, has some limitations.
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7345380
"Therefore, when preserving the anonymity of an author is critical, such as that of a whistle blower, it is important to ensure the stylistic anonymity of the conveyed text itself in addition to anonymizing communication channels (e.g. Tor, or the minimization of application fingerprints). Currently, only two stylistic anonymization strategies are known, namely: imitation and obfuscation attacks. A long-term objective is to find automated methods that reliably transform given input texts such that the output texts maximize author anonymity while, reasonably, preserving the semantics of the input texts. Before one proceeds with such long-term objective, it is important to first identify effective strategies that maximize stylistic anonymity. The current state of the literature implies that imitation attacks are better at preserving the anonymity of authors than obfuscation"
LLM models is going to make stylometry obfuscations much more easier in the future while Wikipedia's outdated model of sock-hunting will only produce more false positives harming a lot of innocent people. To prevent such breaches of user's rights to liberty and safety, future replacements like Justapedia needs to base on their enforcement approach on disruptive behaviors rather than persons themselves, at least in most normal cases.
Obviously, to adjudicate serious disputes and to ensure that mob rule would not derail Justapedia and so on from neutrality and objectivity, they need to set up a panel of experts for an oversight review board that could serve as a Supreme Court for serious content disputes. Instead of the mission creep of "sock hunting", some Wikipedia critics from the earlier eras suggested setting up a "sock-proof jury" where randomly chosen editors, preferably those who are real-name verified, can help resolve content disputes.
Look also at this
https://web.archive.org/web/20250425181435/https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Yusuf_Abu_Durra&diff=prev&oldid=1226490929
In general, Gilbert Achcar is relied on as if he is a RS. This propagandist racist has also glorified Palestinian Islamist attacks on civilians Oct/7, dared to compare it to Warsaw uprising no less. He was already debunked as soon as he published his book including on JPost
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