Report: 85 percent of Wikipedia brand pages flawed
Most such entries are incomplete or filled with poor-quality information. So how should you fix your organization’s page without igniting a media scandal?
The information’s out of date, but you’re afraid to update it, lest you get caught up in a Wikipedia editing scandal of the sort that has hit organizations caught sprucing up their entries.
A report released today by EthicalWiki indicates that 85 percent of brand pages on Wikipedia were incomplete or suffered from poor-quality information furnished by Wikipedia users.
Here’s the rub: Companies that edit their pages often find themselves getting pushback from Wikipedia users upset about image-polishing, says EthicalWiki Owner David King.
“For me, ethics is not a choice, but an obvious necessity,” says King, whose company helps organizations change their Wikipedia entries without stirring up a backlash.
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