User:Mrt3366/Experience/Consensus

In a world where religious orientation, adherence to a mutual belief system and dogma act as strong adhesive force, people's prejudices, biases and other interests will naturally converge. It would be suicidal to summarily preclude the possibility that, as Wikipedia's popularity grows, the major prejudices and memes in the real-world would spill over to Wikipedia content.

Postulations
The whole idea of consensus depends on the following presuppositions:
 * 1) all the concerned editors will keep abreast of any discussion they might want to take part in
 * 2) a fair percentage of honest and competent people would be involved in shaping the consensus.
 * 3) the preponderance of the commenters would be honest in their evaluation,
 * 4) most would be competent enough to acknowledge and admit the fairly objective assertions

I posted similar concerns on Jimbo's talk where my comments were treated mostly like a pariah, but I got one cheeky bon mot, (I thank him for giving me something to adorn my post)

Problem

 * Biases

Since global population is not homogenous everywhere and disparities exists in every portion of our civilization, there are demographic biases in race, religious beliefs, sex, etcetera in the real world as well as on Wikipedia, the troubling fact is that the people belonging to have significantly less chance of having a neutral representation on Wikipedia. Some believe that since there is "little diversity" among editors and "the contributor with an agenda often prevails" the controversial content of Wikipedia are "controlled by a stagnant pool of editors from a limited demographic".
 * 1) global minority groups, or
 * 2) the underdeveloped nations, or
 * 3) the underprivileged classes


 * Apathy

There are a number of articles on controversial subjects that don't garner response or support from vast majority of wiki-community. The RFCs and Noticeboard entries often become irresponsive where the heavier group (comprising mainly of involved editors) buries the dissenters with arbitrary, stern and often autocratic assertions but no one cares to force the bullies to base their opinions on policies. Most of the times, no matter how diligently "minority-editors" point to WP:NOTAVOTE, the bigger group, just by sheer number of arbitrary "votes", has its way.

Many find repose in the fact that these controversial articles are nugatory in number, I agree, but nevertheless our goal includes them too. Few numbers to put into perspective, Wikipedia, as of now, contains 4,244,289 entries in namespace. If even 0.1% of pages are controversial that would give 4,244 controversial pages. Wikipedia has 5,855 reviewers, 4,850 roll-backers, 2,908 auto-patrolled users and 1,448 administrators. If even 1% of each is seriously biased (not pointing fingers but I have seen bias, oh trust me!) that would mean 58 biased reviewers, 48 biased roll-backers, 29 biased auto-patrolled users and 14 seriously biased administrators. That is enough to wreak havoc on the controversial articles of Wikipedia. Given that everybody has some sort of predilection it should not sound like exaggeration or scaremongering.
 * Complacency


 * Dishonesty

Another problem arises when unctuous biased editors most of the times knowingly (perhaps because of contumacious desires or ulterior motives) support a stance that is antithetical to the goal of our project itself and decreases credibility of Wikipedia. Some wiki-administrators commit numerous faux pas while closing debates by not paying due attention to the inherent irrationalities of certain "votes" or should I say, "wishes"?

Nobody should really believe that or  are the only ones who were dishonest, biased, or detrimental to the site. Jagged 85 had made roughly 82,096 edits distributed in an array of 11,433 articles (mostly about subjects that were related to Islam in some way) before he was eventually banned. Although there is a cleanup template Jagged 85 cleanup, who can guarantee that all the biased edits have been traced back, let alone scrutinized?

Both editorial discretion and its scope are often abused. Sometimes well-sourced info are omitted from a controversial article, sometimes unsourced synthesis is included, sometimes legitimate sources are excised with arbitrary rationales that have nothing to do with policies, often undue weight is given to minuscule assertions and all these happen under the auspices of "consensus". Dan Murphy, too, believes, "Wikipedia’s rules are applied inconsistently, and capriciously, and incidents like these never lead to discussions about the underlying structural problems that make abusing others on Wikipedia so easy. The question is never asked about the ethics of allowing “Qworty” to have more influence over Ms. Filipacchi’s article than Filipacchi herself (she has a conflict of interest, or “COI,” you see. “Qworty,” thanks to “agf,” is clearly simply a good Samaritan adding to the sum of human knowledge in his spare time.)
 * Editorial discretion
 * Inconsistent enforcement of the policies

Or about the fact that anonymity is such a powerful tool for people that manipulate editorial content. Or the fact that there are no editorial controls exercised by professionals over the articles.

The best that can be hoped for is that an accumulation of incidents like Robert Clark Young and Johann Hari will eventually filter out into the broader public consciousness and damage the Wikimedia Foundation’s fundraising to the extent that they finally take steps to enforce better standards. That time does not seem close (Wikimedia broke its fundraising record again last year). "

There is no provision for any speedy action to be taken against the above-mentioned editors. There is not enough deterrence in place. "Consensus on Wikipedia does not mean unanimity", you may quip. Yes but majority can be prejudiced or biased too. May be I am not being articulate enough but I hope you get the idea. There is no real yardstick with which we can measure our allegiance to the purpose of the project. I guess, what I am trying to say is there is bias in the application and enforcement of Wikipedia policies themselves and there is no team which is actually guarding the project from these surreptitious attacks on its neutrality. And probably no one is even aware of this loophole, much less trying to amend it.
 * Lacking deterrence

End result
As you can already see, this is worrying. How can we revert the community-wide biases and accepted but harmful status quos? Is there a mechanism in place for that? Who knows, Wikipedia may even become a propaganda vehicle if this is allowed to go on.

Solution?
In short, better governance on Wikipedia. If you ask, "How?" then I have not the faintest idea. There is no easy way. But one thing for sure, since the ArbCom is a like an apex Court, I wouldn't call it speedy action if I had to go to ArbCom every time for such actions. It is really so darn hard that I don't know where or how to begin.