Tuesday, November 28, 2006

How to Remove Trojan.winreg.LowZones.f

The following is a detail page of Virtual Grub Street's Adware & Malware Indentifier Index:

The information in the Adware & Malware Indentifier Index is the result of thousands of web searches. It can not, however, possibly be complete. The subject is vast and constantly changing. Moreover, vendor uninstall tools and other removal tools do not necessarily remove all of an infection from your computer. Vendor uninstall tools, for instance, may silently leave cookies or other tracking software installed. It is suggestible to follow up a removal with one or more adware scans and/or to do an inspection using a HijackThis log. The information on the page is not guaranteed correct and any use you may choose to make of it is entirely at your own risk.


Trojan.LowZones.f

  • Associated Worms/Trojans: Trojan.WinREG.LowZones.f is a.k.a. Downloader-QG; QLowZones-26; Trojan.WinREG.LowZones.f; Troj/LowZone-AL .
  • Executable Files: Temporary Internet Files\Content.IE5\[Random Alpha-Numeric]\lg[1].exekansup.reg; Temporary Internet Files\Content.IE5\[Random Alpha-Numeric]\lg[1].exe/kans.reg; [Random Alpha-Numeric].exe/kansup.reg; \[Random Alpha-Numeric].exe/kans.reg; temp\kansup.reg.
  • Dynamic Link Libraries: N/A.
  • Directory/Search Page: N/A.
  • Uninstall page URL: N/A.
  • Related Articles: Fighting Malware with Standard Windows Tools (February 25, 2007). You may have more in your bag of tricks than you realize. Important Removal Tool Note.
  • Notes: This trojan has also been used to download registry permissions and files for ISearchTech adware and Mirar Toolbar.
  • This infection can be removed by using Ewido Security Suite trialware.






VGS encourages you to post comments about the service it offers, and, in particular, about your experiences with the removal tools suggested in its pages. Removal tool comments will be most effective in helping those who come after you if you post them to the individual detail page for the malware item you used the tool to remove. Please be as clear and as detailed as possible. The most effective comments might include such information as: 1) What browser and operating system you are are running on your computer (i.e. Windows 98, NT, XP, Linux, Internet Explorer 6.0, Firefox); 2) What updates are installed (i.e. SP1, SP2); 3) What anti-virus/malware package(s) are resident in your computer

Sunday, August 06, 2006

A Word to the Wise.

I've been the target of a number of direct attacks against my computer over the last several months. I'm providing the relevant Norton logs below, including the "remote address" (the IP of the attacker). My own IP is x'd out for obvious reasons.


8/6/2006 @ 6:13:42 PM: Rule "Default Block NetBus Trojan horse" blocked (207.12.157.2, NetBus(12345)).
Inbound TCP connection.
Local address, service is (XXX.XXX.XX.XX), NetBus(12345).
Remote address, service is (207.12.157.2, 3018).
Process name is "N/A".

See: Wikipedia page User talk:207.12.157.2; DNS Stuff/WhoIs page.


8/4/2006 @ 9:42:57 PM: Rule "Default Block Backdoor/SubSeven Trojan horse" blocked (209.159.206.135, 27374).
Inbound TCP connection.
Local address, service is (XXX.XXX.XX.XX, 27374).
Remote address, service is (209.159.206.135, 2783).
Process name is "N/A".


7/11/2006 @ 8:07:05 PM: Rule "Default Block Senna Spy Trojan horse" blocked (206.165.215.13, 13000).
Inbound TCP connection.
Local address, service is (XXX.XXX.XX.XX, 13000).
Remote address, service is (206.165.215.13, 13000).
Process name is "N/A".


5/10/2006 @ 10:53:19 PM: Rule "Default Block NetBus Trojan horse" blocked (209.214.148.159, NetBus(12345)).
Inbound TCP connection.
Local address, service is (XXX.XXX.XX.X, NetBus(12345)).
Remote address, service is (209.214.148.159, 1123).
Process name is "N/A".


Although not many Wiki Watchdog pages are getting indexed by the search engines these days, I hope that the IPs will be of help to you should you Google one or more of them in relation to an attack on your own computer.



Related posts:


Thursday, June 22, 2006

From the Mailbag: "...meat-turd god-kings..."

Well, it has certainly been a strange trip. A little over a week ago VGS's blog pages gradually started indexing again. At about the same time one of my reviews at a new venue disappeared from the search engines and subsequent reviews there have failed to appear altogether. I will provide more detail on this subject in a seperate post.

With the majority of my blog pages, and more than a few of my pages on other servers, yanked off the search engines I thought it a good time to step back and reflect upon the true nature of the Internet. Now that most of the pages have returned - albeit at a much lower ranking for having been removed for well over a month - it seems best to make at least a few more posts and to see where matters go.

I begin with a look at the mailbag. I'll also post the comments at their associated pages but will answer at greater length here. I'll take them in pretty much chronological order:


Fri, 16 Jun 2006 21:20:14 -0700 (PDT)

Jaberwocky6669 has left a new comment on your post "...the politics, the lameness, the backstabbing...":

Just to be sure, I did not say that which is in quotes! That is from a wiki called Wiki Truth. So don't misquote me!


While I did not in the least misquote Ms. J. I will be glad here to verify that the text in quotes was not her own creation. That is what quotation marks indicate and I have depended upon the reader to be aware of the grammatical implications of those particular items of punctuation.

Nor did I quote her comment in its entirety. I did indicate her cooptation of the Wiki Truth quote, as did she herself. I did not, however, include such choice morsels as the following which in her original post went without quotes:


The idea of Wikipedia is absolutely wonderful and amazing, but sadly a large group of meat-turd god-kings has decided to be extremely anal and put a stop to all of that because they believek that they have the final word on everything. Wikipedia: the most anal place on Earth.
I hope these clarifications are sufficient to Ms. J's needs.



* * *

I've been quite pleased that recent comments are actually sane (if a bit edgy, at times). The following, from Anonymous, makes an excellent point:


Wed, 21 Jun 2006 01:14:24 -0700 (PDT)

Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?":

No browsing information is displayed, only your IP address. The information obtained and displayed on the Administrators' Noticeboard was just what could be gained from a whois, which anybody can do. The GNU Free Documentation License requires that every contributor be attributed, so Wikipedia must give out IP addresses- to everyone, not just users. Click the "history" tab to see.

First, while IP addresses are not properly brows-er information they are brows-ing information. That the information can easily be misused is clear from the chat thread (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Incidents&diff=50171464&oldid=50170801#Legal_threat
_against_editor
) quoted in Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands? It is hardly an answer to point out (quite correctly) that the information is actually available to millions rather than thousands.

Can it possibly be a coincidence that edits by registered users are entered under noms du wiki rather than their IP addresses? If the information is so harmless or somehow required by law why aren't their IPs being listed as well, I wonder? As I have demanded, the IPs need to be available only to a small group of the most trusted administrators who can release them only to proper authorities, etc., as a lawful requirement arises. The edit histories can easily display discrete IDs of non-registered users in a fashion something like the following: "Anon 06-21-06-00012" (indicating the 12th non-registered user to edit on the 21st of June, 2006). The tag would then be corrolated to the user IP in a secure data base and the information available for offical and/or lawful uses.


* * *

And here's an edgy one:


Wed, 21 Jun 2006 01:20:27 -0700 (PDT)

IT Engineer has left a new comment on your post "Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?":

Legal threats no matter the situation are heavily frowned upon by the system.
--
Your 'IP' by itself is handed out with every email you send, wikipedia records nothing more than that for 'everuser' access. It just so happens, that ~any~ internet user with annother's IP can reduce the area they are from to a general locality, that fact has absolutely ~nothing~ to do with wikipedia. It's called a 'whois' and has been around since the bit twiddling days of the net. Please do your reseach before inserting foot futher in mouth.


Well ain't that sumthin! I love these comments because they make it so clear how much Wikiaddicts live in a world of their own.

Let's take it from the top, shall we? Who or what exactly is "the system"? And just when did the legal system defer to it such that it is a law unto itself? And how is it's belief that it is a law unto itself anything less then another glaring example of why IP addresses and other information can not be entrusted to it?

I might even accept that "the system" lawfully has considerable sway within its own virtual domain. But the point here is that "the system" easily, and with a sense of empowerment, went stalking prey well beyond its borders in the real world. The minute it crossed those borders, "the system" was nothing more than a dangerous mob with a sense of empowerment to commit egregious torts and transgress the law. In short, if anyone is wilting under the "frown" of "the system" it can only be because the legitimate legal system is failing to do its job.

I would not be surprised, at that rate, to learn that the Gambino family is considering buying Encyclopedia Britannica so that it can pursue its interests with impunity before the law. I can see it now: "Legal threats no matter the situation are heavily frowned upon by The Family." They apparently would also qualify for non-profit status in the state of Florida.

Next item: Yes, our IP addresses are readily available to anyone who wishes to expend a modest amount of energy. And, of course, I am not unaware of WhoIs. I've used it myself as part of Virtual Grub Street's research into adware sites.

There is the additional "edit history" feature available to Wikipedians, it bears saying. It is how Donald Albury "coincidentally" found his way from the Seminole page at 1:14 UTS ( 01:14, 22 April 2006 Dalbury) to the Claudia Emerson page at 1:16 (01:16, 22 April 2006 Dalbury), noticing that Beth Wellington was furious that her C. E. fan page was edited by someone who didn't have her fan-club-leader authorization and giving him the perfect opportunity to game the system like an old hand. He followed my edit history waiting for his best opportunity to pounce. You guys are really something.

But then back to IPs in general. As simple as they are to get ahold of, you may notice that almost no other forum (or similar group written/edited site) gives people the information just by virtue of becoming a registered user. That is because they know that they can not vouch for how users will put the information to use and realize that they quite properly have a responsibility for might happen as a result. Only a tiny number of site admins have access to the information. And most of those sites don't systematically invite the general public, thus attracting millions from among the unwary to deposit their individually indentifiable information in a vast database where thousands of unvetted users have the option to gather time-lapse information from them for stalking, fraud, identity theft, etc. Furthermore they do not have non-profit status suggesting that they are especially responsible.



Related Stories:

Monday, May 15, 2006

Since I Began Wiki Watchdog (5/15/06)

I thought it might be interesting to review some of the events of my days since I began Wiki Watchdog, on April 22, 2006, and strongly advised readers not to donate to Wikipedia until it institutes key changes to reduce the effects of Wikibullying, Wikiwolfpacking, Wikimobbing, Wikistalking, Wikietcetera. (see: Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?):


  1. My Palm Beaches Review first lost Google search engine coverage for the pages in it linked from Wikipedia. The site has since disappeared entirely from the Google search engine. It has not had a hit from any search engine for approximately two days: see http://gilbert-wesley-purdy.blogspot.com/ (site URL) and site:http://gilbert-wesley-purdy.blogspot.com/ (Google listing of site pages being indexed);
  2. The Google coverage for my Virtual Grub Street Front Page site has been reduced to a handful of pages: see http://virtual-grub-street.blogspot.com/ (site URL) and site:http://virtual-grub-street.blogspot.com/ (Google listing of site pages being indexed);
  3. A number of the longtime first page Google listings associated with the original Virtual Grub Street blog have slipped to lower search pages. The total listing of pages has gone down from above 140 to 97. Site traffic has correspondingly gone down by over 30% as a result: see site:gilbertwesleypurdy.blogspot.com/ (Google listing of site pages being indexed);
  4. The most recent Google search engine index for the Wiki Watchdog blog has retained the main blog page and the three individual pages indexed during the previous crawling-cycle. None of the new individual pages has been indexed: see http://vgs-wiki-watchdog.blogspot.com/ (site URL) site:http://vgs-wiki-watchdog.blogspot.com/ (Google listing of site pages being indexed);
  5. The Google listings for "Gilbert Wesley Purdy" have gone down to 707 from above 980 pages;
  6. The Google cache page for QLRS - Criticism : AT'ang Canon Vol. 3 No. 4 Jul 2004 (my book review / essay "A T'ang Canon") has disappeared. Because this has not been done by Google (nor, apparently, a legitimate administrator of QLRS's server), the following default listing appears:
    Welcome to my Website!
    www.qlrs.com/critique.asp?id=367 - 1k - May 11, 2006 -
    Cached - Similar pages

    (see: page 1 of Google search)

  7. My sonnet sequence "On First Reading Lowell's Notebooks" and essay "The Enigma of W. D. Snodgrass" are no longer being indexed: see site:www.limestonemag.net "limestone magazine" "Gilbert Wesley Purdy";
  8. My poems "55 Madonna", "A Meeting of the Garden Club", and my reviews "Brisk Leaps the Heart" and "The Reconstruction of John Willis Menard" are no longer being indexed: see site:poetry.allinfo-about.com "Gilbert Wesley Purdy".
  9. The claim that I vandalized User:Prometheuspan's talk page has been removed and the message supporting him in his struggle has been returned to the page: see "...pack psychology driven anarchy...";
  10. Donald Albury "is taking a moderate wikibreak and will be back on Wikipedia at the end of May": see User talk:Dalbury and Wiki Watchdog's article Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?.

Can an Al Qaida cell really have infiltrated Wikipedia? Somehow I suspect we'll all have to decide for ourselves.

"All we are saying is give jackbooted fascism a chance."



Phil Sandifer (a.k.a. Snowspinner) is a Wikipedia Administrator who has all but grown famous for this quote from his user page, listed under the heading "I'm not a goddamned inclusionist":

All we are saying is give jackbooted fascism a chance.

If this seems like an inappropriate philosophy for a Florida-registered non-profit organization it will apparently have to be lived with. According to Wikitruth's Snowspinner page:

Snowie is much loved by Jimbo, who has declared him his kind of admin...

Jimbo, of course, is Jimmy Wales the appointed-for-life CEO of Wikipedia.

Witness statements...

The following witness statements are presently posted at Wiki Watchdog:


  1. "Honor Killings", "Circumcision", "Dog Shows", "Child Soldiers", "Abortion" by Jason Scott;
  2. "...it's better to shoot first and ask questions later..." Mark Pellegrini (a.k.a. Raul654);
  3. "All we are saying is give jackbooted fascism a chance." Phil Sandifer (a.k.a. Snowspinner);
  4. '...the "democratic" people's MAFIA...' Steve Rubel & Steve Wallis;
  5. "...feel that they are immune from accountability." Daniel Brandt;
  6. "...a bunch of nasty, arrogant dimwits..." Warren Boroson;
  7. "...normal person, plus anonymity, plus large audience, equals flaming f**kwad." Jason Scott;
  8. "A Nightmare Of Libel and Slander." John Leyden;
  9. "...the politics, the lameness, the backstabbing..." jaberwocky6669;
  10. "...pack psychology driven anarchy..." Prometheuspan; and
  11. Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands? Gilbert Wesley Purdy.

I will soon be posting a prequel to Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?

'...the "democratic" people's MAFIA...'



Steve Rubel, at Micro Persuasion, upset more than a few Wikipedians and self-professed apathetic-types, when he wrote an article declaring Wikipedia to be King Disruptor III (after Microsoft and Google):

History is about to repeat itself. A successor to Google's throne is waiting in the wings - it's Wikipedia, King Disruptor III. Like its predecessors, Wikipedia is powerful because it provides access to largely accurate information that can be hard to find. This king, however, is unlike any other because it operates in a completely democratic way. It's run by the people, without any grand financial ambitions. This doesn't mean its rule will be perceived solely as a benevolent one, however.

Already, Wikipedia instills a deeper fear than either Google or Microsoft did when they were at such a young age. [Go to complete article >>>]

At least one reader found the piece to be prescient, however:


I AGREE WITH YOU STEVE RUBEL, COMPLETELY. My best regards and
congratulations for your admirable and CLEAR vision.WIKIPEDIA is it: a "democratic" TIRANY. Very, very, very dangerous. Even more than you described. Too much more!But I admire your courage; and I am really curious how and where did you get it to wrote such an article. Are you not afraid?!... I am very surprised!Wikipedia is a people's tyranny. Jesus Christ was also killed by a people's tyranny. It's the more dangerous type of tyranny.Well... to whom who it may concern: think about that and DEEPLY research Wikipedia structure: the Wikipedia administrators (the "democratic" people's MAFIA), the sysop powers, and so on, and so on...Maybe I am
to[o] frontal, but maybe I know what I am saying.

My best regards Steve Rub-El,Wallis.

Posted by: Sir Wallis Monday, December 12, 2005 at 09:12 PM


Saturday, May 13, 2006

Since I Began the Wiki Watchdog (Update)

I thought it might be interesting to review some of the events of my days since I posted "Since I Began the Wiki Watchdog," and strongly advised readers not to donate to Wikipedia until it institutes key changes to reduce the effects of Wikibullying, Wikiwolfpacking, Wikimobbing, Wikistalking, Wikietcetera. (see: Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?):






  1. The Google cache page for QLRS - Criticism : AT'ang Canon Vol. 3 No. 4 Jul 2004 has disappeared again. Because this has not been done by Google (nor, apparently, a legitimate administrator of QLRS's server), the following default listing again appears:
    Welcome to my Website!
    www.qlrs.com/critique.asp?id=367 - 1k - May 11, 2006 -
    Cached - Similar pages

    (see: page 1 of Google search)

  2. The StatCounter for the Wiki Watchdog counted only "Unique Visitors" (rather than "Page Loads") until late yesterday evening when it suddenly began counting page loads again. As I have been composing this page the blocking cookie spontaneously "reverted" (disappeared) for the second time this week. That makes twice this has happened in the year and a half that I have been using StatCounter and praising it for what has been excellent service until late.

Check back for further updates to "Since I Began the Wiki Watchdog". It might prove highly instructive to see where this goes.

"...feel that they are immune from accountability."



Daniel Brandt's battles with Wikipedia are well known. The end of his tenure as an editor seems to have been entirely occupied with attempting to have his Wikipedia bio page removed. The following is an excerpt from his recent letter to Wikimedia's legal counsel, Bradford A. Patrick. The letter appears on Brandt's Wikipedia Watch site:
April 23, 2006

Bradford A. Patrick, Esq.
Fowler White Boggs Banker
501 E. Kennedy
Blvd., Suite 1700
Tampa, FL 33602-5239
bpatrick@fowlerwhite.com
Tel: 813-228-7411
Fax: 813-229-8313


Dear Mr. Patrick:

I am writing to you because you are the attorney for Wikimedia Foundation. This letter should be interpreted as a formal notice made to the Foundation.

For six months I have been defamed and / or had my privacy invaded by agents of the Foundation. This has occurred primarily, but not exclusively, on these pages:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Brandt
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Daniel_Brandt
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_Talk:Daniel_Brandt

* * *

I am prepared to show that certain administrators, some of whom remain anonymous despite efforts to identify them, have contributed to a situation where much of the material related to me amounts to defamation and/or invasion of privacy. I further contend that there is evidence of unchecked hostility and maliciousness on the part of some editors and administrators. An overview of this pattern of behavior is available at www.wikipedia-watch.org/hivemind.html.

* * *

I cannot answer my detractors as a Wikipedia user, because administrators have blocked me indefinitely. This was primarily due to their perception of a legal threat from me. This "no legal threats" policy is inappropriate in a civil society, one purpose of which is to provide civil remedies under the rule of law. It causes the Foundation's editors and administrators to feel that they are immune from accountability. [Go to the complete letter >>>]
Brandt has also been branded a spammer for redirecting links from Wikipedia (originally to his Wikipedia Watch page cited above: www.wikipedia-watch.org/hivemind.html) to the Wikipedia Review homepage. Again, this does not meet any known definition of spam (see: Wikipedia and the Question of LinkSpam) but an angry Wikipedia hive does not scrupple at mere facts. He pulled a fast one and that's spam enough!

"...a bunch of nasty, arrogant dimwits..."



According to his Wikipedia bio, "Warren Boroson (born January 22, 1935) is an American author, journalist with the Daily Record, and syndicated financial columnist. He has written over 20 books, including Keys to Investing in Mutual Funds and How to Buy a House for Nothing (or Little) Down. His most recent book is The Reverse Mortgage Advantage : The Tax-Free, House Rich Way to Retire Wealthy! . His columns are syndicated to 200 Gannett newspapers." Perhaps the distinction of having his bio appear in Wikipedia was what attracted him to give editing a try. The resulting column ("Wikipedia site filled with major mistakes"), in the Daily Record, begins as follows:

My only personal experience with Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia, was decidedly unfavorable. I was left with the impression that a bunch of nasty, arrogant dimwits are in charge. [Go to complete column >>>]
It seems that Mr. Boroson's impressions went beyond Wikimistakes.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Since I Began the Wiki Watchdog

I thought it might be interesting to review some of the events of my days since I began Wiki Watchdog, on April 22, 2006, and strongly advised readers not to donate to Wikipedia until it institutes key changes to reduce the effects of Wikibullying, Wikiwolfpacking, Wikimobbing, Wikistalking, Wikietcetera. (see: Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?):

  1. My Palm Beaches Review first lost Google search engine coverage for the pages in it linked from Wikipedia. The site has since disappeared entirely from the Google search engine: see http://gilbert-wesley-purdy.blogspot.com/ (site URL) and site:http://gilbert-wesley-purdy.blogspot.com/ (Google listing of site pages being indexed);
  2. The Google coverage for my Virtual Grub Street Front Page site has been reduced to a handful of pages: see http://virtual-grub-street.blogspot.com/ (site URL) and site:http://virtual-grub-street.blogspot.com/ (Google listing of site pages being indexed);
  3. A number of the longtime first page Google listings associated with the original Virtual Grub Street blog have slipped to lower search pages and the traffic has correspondingly gone down by approximately 20% as a result;
  4. The most recent Google search engine index for the Wiki Watchdog blog has retained the main blog page and the three individual pages indexed during the previous crawling-cycle. None of the new individual pages has been indexed: see http://vgs-wiki-watchdog.blogspot.com/ (site URL) site:http://vgs-wiki-watchdog.blogspot.com/ (Google listing of site pages being indexed);
  5. The Google cache page for QLRS - Criticism : AT'ang Canon Vol. 3 No. 4 Jul 2004 disappeared for 2 days but is now back up;
  6. The claim that I vandalized User:Prometheuspan's talk page has been removed and the message supporting him in his struggle has been returned to the page: see "...pack psychology driven anarchy...";
  7. Donald Albury "is taking a moderate wikibreak and will be back on Wikipedia at the end of May": see User talk:Dalbury and Wiki Watchdog's article Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?.

Can an Al Qaida cell really have infiltrated Wikipedia? Somehow I suspect we'll all have to decide for ourselves.

"...normal person, plus anonymity, plus large audience, equals flaming f**kwad."



Jason Scott's The Great Failure of Wikipedia (the "Transcription of a presentation/speech given at Notacon 3, April 8, 2006") has recently appeared in the web and garnered considerable attention. Jason can hardly be called anything but a disinterested witness. The quote, here, is only a tiny portion of a long piece with many wide ranging and intelligent observations on the Wikipedia phenomenon:

I'd buy entirely that the Penny Arcade theory, which was normal person, plus anonymity, plus large audience, equals flaming f**kwad. That's the mirror that Wikipedia is presenting to us, and I think that we can learn quite a bit from it. [Go to the complete speech >>>]

This, of course, is precisely the point that underlies the first demand listed at the end of Wiki Watchdog's article Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?

Jason Scott's speech can also be downloaded in various audio formats from http://www.archive.org/details/20060408-jscott-wikipedia.

"A Nightmare Of Libel and Slander."



Joel Leyden, owner and editor of the Israel News Agency, and once a registered Wikipedia User, who went by the handle Israelbeach, hasn't much positive to say about the behavior at Wikipedia:
One realizes after being inside Wikipedia, behind the many so-called facts and figures, that there are networks within a network. Some good, some bad. A few respond with vicious relentless assaults that would make the Mafia proud. [Go to the article >>>]

Leyden is not exactly a disinterested reporter. He is a father's rights advocate who set out to assure that Wikipedia also presented that perspective in its coverage of related issues. The details are a bit fuzzy but many of his observations go beyond his own personal situation and are confirmed by countless others.



Saturday, May 06, 2006

"...the politics, the lameness, the backstabbing..."



Wiki Watchdog has been getting out a bit lately, learning how to get around within Wikipedia and where to go for insight into how others view the behavior of (rogue?) Wikipedians. There is a lot being said out there. The following excerpted from the chat-page Stumble Upon is among the many amusing comments:

by jaberwocky6669, Apr 25, [2006], 8:17am

What it truly means to be a wikipedian... "You can set up a user account, start editing everything you can find, enmesh yourself into the politics, the lameness, the backstabbing and moronity, and fight an ever-present desperate whirlpooling battle of contract law, miserable personalities and microscopic anal details. You can run out of additional information to add to subjects you know, and instead tunnel deep into shit you don't have the slightest notion about, using your intense knowledge of Wiki-jargon and gaming the system to fight every bastard who tries to change an article in a way you don't agree with, or which might have any information you're unable to garner in the first 5 matches of a Google search. After a while at this, you will look up from your screen, realize you have achieved an expansive case of Secretarial Spread, your computer surrounded with soda, chips and candy, and your hands twitching, wanting to reload the page to see if that meat-turd from Whocaresia dared question your changes to that article on that dead king that someone else is trying to have deleted... ...and congratulations, you are now a Wikipedian."... During my time at Wikipedia I never became embroiledin batttles or edit wars or any conflict. So don't assume that I am disappointed with Wikipedia because something happened to me that I didin't like. [Go to complete thread >>>]


The Watchdog will be mainly about the behavior of Wikipedians. There is clearly a serious problem in that regard, beginning with the idea that what occurs in the anti-Oz called Wikiworld is not to be properly scrutinized by those who the tornado left back in Kansas. At the same time, Wikiworld freely spills over its borders in its wolf-pack attacks on insufficiently wary real-world-ers. [see Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands? for just one instance.]


Also See:



Recent Wikipedia / Wikitruth Coverage.

Wikipedia Ripe for Political Dirty Tricks
By Shannon McCaffrey
Associated Press Writer
Apr 28, 2006
Montgomery Advertiser

Political operatives are covertly rewriting - or defacing - candidates' biographical entries to make the boss look good or the opponent look ridiculous.

As a result, political campaigns are monitoring the Web site more closely than ever this election year.

Revisions made by Capitol Hill staffers became so frequent and disruptive earlier this year that Wikipedia temporarily blocked access to the site from some congressional Internet addresses. The pranks included bumping up the age of the Senate's oldest member, West Virginia's Robert Byrd, from 88 to 180, and giving crude names to other lawmakers. [Go to the complete story >>>]



Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?
By Gilbert Wesley Purdy.
April 22, 2006
Wiki Watchdog

Any user, it would appear, is provided access to the browser information of anyone who checks onto any editing platform throughout all public Wikipedia pages! That is, anyone who becomes a registered user can view the browser information by virtue of the mere fact of having registered. Adminstrator status is not required. Thus the following "Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents" chat thread in which I am freely and publically defamed, my personal information is posted and a plan is discussed about attacking me via that information:... [Go to the complete story >>>]



Wales Discusses Political Bias on Wikipedia
by Mark Glaser
April 21, 2006
Media Shift

I have had my own direct experience with editors of the Keith Olbermann page which suggests this is the case. I edit a blog called Olbermann Watch . Not that it was ever my goal in life but I am now the leading blog critic of Keith Olbermann and a recognized authority on Keith Olbermann (citation: quoted in Washington Post, New York Observer, Hartford Courant, Online Journalism Review, etc.).

Not only do I know a great deal about Keith Olbermann, I also have a good deal of familiarity with some of the Wikipedia editors who have watch-listed his entry — liberal fans of Keith Olbermann. Some of these fan/editors have declared online that the Keith Olbermann page is their “pet project” and, not surprisingly, the entry reads more like a “fan site” than an encyclopedia entry. Some of these editors have openly sought to use that page to market their own fan sites and forums. Not surprisingly, the Keith Olbermann entry is massively non-NPOV. [Go to the complete interview >>>]



Wikipedia Founder Calls Protest Site Wikitruth 'A Hoax'
by Antone Gonsalves
April 17, 2006
TechWeb News

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales on Monday claimed that a protest Web site reportedly launched by contributors to the online encyclopedia is a "hoax."

According to the British newspaper The Guardian, the site called Wikitruth was launched by a dozen Wikipedia administrators who were unhappy with what they believed to be the gradual deterioration of the site. [Go to complete story >>>]



A thirst for knowledge
Andrew Orlowski
Thursday April 13, 2006
The Guardian


...Robert McHenry, a former editor-in-chief of Encyclopaedia Britannica, has described Wikipedia as "a game without consequences". BBC Radio 1's afternoon DJs recently took turns to deface each other's entries live on air. MPs have joined in, too. But as Skip begins to guide me through the arcane and often Kafkaesque bureaucracy of Wikipedia, vandalism starts to look like the least of its problems.

Skip isn't his real name or his Wikipedia identity. It's a pseudonym the 30-year-old Silicon Valley IT professional uses as he documents the inner machinations of the project, along with a dozen other Wikipedia administrators, on a site called WikiTruth (www.wikitruth.info).... [Go to complete story >>>]



Wikipedia - separating fact from fiction
By Martin Hickman and Genevieve Roberts
February 13, 2006
New Zealand Herald

...Wikipedia (wiki wiki means 'quick' in Hawaiian) was founded in January 2001 as a sideline to the Numedia encyclopaedia being written by experts for an American company, Bomis, whose main interest was internet pornography.

In 2003, Bomis handed the burgeoning encyclopaedia to a not-for-profit organisation headed by one of its executives, the Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales.

The Wikipedia Foundation is funded by public donations and has just three employees, a lead software developer, Wales's assistant and an intern.

But there is an army of between 600 and 1,000 unpaid administrators, developers, stewards and bureaucrats, who maintain the site.

A bigger pool of 13,000 regular contributors edits at least five entries a month each.... [Go to complete story >>>]


Online Encyclopedia Is A Gathering For Internet Predators
by POSC
December 14, 2005
POE News

It has come to the attention of the Parents for the Online Safety of Children (POSC) that there is a underground cabal of pedophiles who edit WikiPedia, trying to make WikiPedia a distribution center for pedophile propaganda. [Go to complete story >>>]



Page:
[1] [2] [3]

How to Remove ISearchTech.SideFind

The following is a detail page of Virtual Grub Street's Adware & Malware Indentifier Index:

The information in the Adware & Malware Indentifier Index is the result of thousands of web searches. It can not, however, possibly be complete. The subject is vast and constantly changing. Moreover, vendor uninstall tools and other removal tools do not necessarily remove all of an infection from your computer. Vendor uninstall tools, for instance, may silently leave cookies or other tracking software installed. It is suggestible to follow up a removal with one or more adware scans and/or to do an inspection using a HijackThis log. The information on the page is not guaranteed correct and any use you may choose to make of it is entirely at your own risk.


ISearchTech.SideFind



Also See:

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

"...pack psychology driven anarchy..."



In the below Wikipedia "Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents" chat-thread older and wiser hands try to calm a newer User (the upper-case "U" indicating a registered Wikipedia user) who finds Wikipedia to consist of "pack psychology driven anarchy" (see: "Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?"):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:ANI#regarding_.22rejected
.22_arbitration_case_.22merecat.22

In any case, I am slowly coming to the realization that Wikipedia is a mostly headless beneficient dictatorship combined with a loose level of consensus process resulting actually in pack psychology driven anarchy, and, I will probably quit participating, because i don't see that theres any sane way to deal with abusiveness, and the policies in place that do deal with the issues require exorbitant amounts of time and energy, which means that only the very worst problems are ever resolved, and editors who are clearly gaming the system and manipulating and lying can continue to do so as long as they are clever enough not to become a really big pain to some administrator. Prometheuspan 19:59, 28 April 2006 (UTC)

Of course, the older hands are only that: older. They are most certainly not wiser, at least not by any definition that would be accepted outside of the anti-Oz of Wikiworld. It is the newer User, as of yet imperfectly assimilated into Wikiworld, who still retains a glimmer of reality-orientation.



Also see:



Monday, May 01, 2006

Jimmy Wales and Wikipolitics.

Political bias and dirty tricks is the current Wikisubject de cachet, it would seem. This from Mark Glaser's "Wales Discusses Political Bias on Wikipedia" (MediaShift, 21 April 2006):


Conservative blogger Robert Cox, who writes the National Debate blog, told me he was amazed at the quality of Wikipedia and thought it was a great resource. But there was something about the free online community-generated encyclopedia that was getting under his skin — what Cox believed was a liberal bias in many hot-button topic entries, despite Wikipedia’s principle of giving a neutral point of view (NPOV).

Cox felt there was a liberal tilt to the entry on George W. Bush, Bill Clinton , and the partial-birth abortion entry, to name a few. Plus, at one point, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales invoked the dreaded WP:OFFICE command — basically a unilateral edit done only by Wales — to tone down a scathing liberal point-of-view entry on the conservative site NewsMax.com .

Glaser does address a question to Jimbo Wales about editors possibly ignoring their own rules and simply "reverting" (i.e. removing) material based upon the personal predilection of small groups self-appointed of "censors":


From time to time, I have attempted to correction misinformation or edit a section to make it NPOV. Those edits are typically “reverted” within the hour without explanation or discussion. Over the past month, I signed up for an account with my name in the User ID; many of the editors know who I am and are openly hostile to my editing the site. These editors aggressively revert any edits I make to the entry. When I attempt to discuss my recommended edits they ignore me. When I make the edits they criticize me for not discussing them. If I continue to make edits they complain to the “Wikipedia cops.” Even after posting a detailed exposition on why the page is massively NPOV they have ignored the substance of my post and instead attacked the messenger.

It’s a neat trick — they demand that I propose changes on the discussion page, ignore me, then when I go ahead and make those changes they revert them, all the while complaining to an admin that I should be banned from editing because I won’t “discuss” changes. The real issues is that these people WANT the page to be massively non-NPOV and resent any efforts to alter their “pet project.” [Go to the full text >>>]

At least this person does not seem to have been "wolf-packed" (see: "Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?"). Still, the outlines of the dark side of Wikiworld, which inspired the WW blog, can be vaguely made out. It could only be expected that Wales, given his "investment" in Wikipedia, and the enormity of the beast, would blow the issue off with a platitude and that is precisely what he did.

It is not difficult to understand that the political implications are of more interest to the general public. A Montgomery Advertiser/AP article, with the following tidbit, came out shortly after the MediaShift piece:

In Georgia this week, the campaign manager for a candidate for governor resigned amid allegations he doctored the Wikipedia biography of an opponent in the democratic primary. Morton Brilliant was accused of revising the entry for Lt. Gov. Mark Taylor to add his son's arrest last August in a drunken driving accident that left his best friend dead. The information was accurate and had been in the news. But Brilliant's boss, Georgia Secretary of State Cathy Cox, declared the son's legal troubles out of bounds. The link to Brilliant was discovered by Taylor's campaign, which immediately accused the Cox camp of engaging in "gutter politics" and demanded Brilliant's resignation.

Incidental to the various examples of the political uses of Wikipedia's open editing format, the reader learns that:

With more and more Americans getting news and information from the Internet, the stakes are high. Wikipedia had 25.6 million unique visitors in March, making it the 18th most popular site on the Internet. [Go to the full text >>>]

Interesting info. But, of course, by the Wikipedia definition of "LinkSpam," unless a site you link-to from a Wikipedia page is one of the 17 with better traffic stats you are by definition a "Spammer" (see: Wikipedia and the Question of LinkSpam). Shucks ma'am, all in a Wikiday's Wikiwork.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Messin' Wi' Peepul Biggern You.

Update (1 May 2006, 06:30 UTC): The individual pages of VGS's PBR began to reappear on the Google search-engine later on the day of the original post. I am pleased to think that it came down to nothing more than a massively coincidental, one-and-one-half-day alogorithmic burp.

I've added this update (27 April 2006, 04:09 UTC) to the following post:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Rich_Farmbrough
&diff=prev&oldid=51748033#Claudia_Emerson

Thanks mr. Purdy's latest accomplishment. Linking to a site that took a poem from poetry without proper attribution, rather than linking to Poetry He proudly says NPR is using his screed against Wikipedia. He also brags that the admins here removed the complaints about him--actually it was just archived. Sigh redux.--Beth Wellington 00:51, 28 April 2006 (UTC)

It turns out that the defaming chat-thread, openly describing the plans for a personal attack against me, are only archived, not removed. Ms. Wellington ("a Roanoke, Virginia-based poet and journalist.... contributing editor to the New River Free Press,... book reviewer for the Roanoke Times and... member of the Southern Appalachian Writers Cooperative (SAWC) and the Appalachian Studies Association"), who lives and works near Claudia Emerson, describes my phrase "To Wikipedia's credit" as "also brags that the admins here removed the complaints about him". More to come about Ms. Wellington, who, it turns out, actually began the ugly events described in Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands? in order to maintain personal control over her fellow Virginian's (and personal friend's, perhaps?) Wiki fan-page in the wake of Emerson winning to Pulitzer for Poetry.

On to the original post:

Well, if I thought the incident described in Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands? was astonishing, all I had to do was to wait a couple of days to wonder if it hasn't been out done by a mile.

To Wikipedia's credit, as of yesterday the first development was generally positive: the chat thread (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:ANI#Legal_threat_against_editor) in which Wikipedia users and administrators openly discuss going after me, in the world at large, has been removed.

At the same time, I could not help but notice that Virtual Grub Street's Palm Beaches Review had not received a Google search engine hit in a day and a half. That has not happened since the first couple of days of its existence. Upon checking, I discover that many if not all of the individual pages of Virtual Grub Street's Palm Beaches Review no longer appear on the Google search-engine. Could someone among the Wikipedia Users have a contact in the Google search-engine offices that (s)he contacted after the fashion described in Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands? There are thousands of such users, after all, and a whole lot of power networking goin' on.



I strongly advise that no one donate to Wikipedia so long as such behavior is being indulged in.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Wikipedia and the Question of LinkSpam.

As more and more readers become aware of the extremely unfortunate incident of misusing browsing information - described in Wiki Watchdog's earlier piece Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands? - they may find themselves asking the question: "What exactly is LinkSpam?" If they had even so much as heard of it before, they probably thought it referred to links inserted by machine ("bot") into blogs and public pages, the defining quality being that they link to pages that have little or no genuine content other than advertising.

The terms "Spam" and "LinkSpam" have become perjoratives - even extreme perjoratives - on the Internet given the degradation of the browsing experience that they represent. It is not difficult to understand the stigma that goes along with being a "Spammer".

Wikipedia, in its own definition of LinkSpam goes a bit farther. In Wikiworld LinkSpam is any link that:


...takes advantage of link-based ranking algorithms, such as Google's PageRank algorithm, which gives a higher ranking to a website the more other highly-ranked websites link to it.

Being one of the most visited sites on the web, and linking to it being easier than writing out and maintaining one's own definition pages, Wikipedia's definition is powerfully supported by the fact that Google links to it.

But what does Google or any other entity link to when they link to Wikipedia? They link to a page that is open edited on a continuing basis with a few persons checking off on the changes when they can find the time. From one day to the next Google has no idea what precisely is the content of the page.

Again, Wikipedia is one of the most visited sites on the Internet. This creates an interesting example of convenient reasoning: being a "highly-ranked website", any link that has been removed from it can be labeled "LinkSpam" because it was presummably posted at Wikipedia in order to "take advantage of link-based ranking algorithms, such as Google's PageRank algorithm". Because any user can remove a link that they personally find unacceptable, without having to cite any specific rule that prohibits it, each of the thousands of registered users of Wikipedia individually defines whether a link meets the criteria of Spam or not. In Wikiworld LinkSpam, it turns out, is nothing but a link a registered user of Wikipedia does not like. And because Spam - as was mentioned above - is a perjorative of the first order, that registered user is released to publically defame an unwelcome guest as a "Spammer". How convenient!

This is exactly the present situation. If your link has been removed you are a Spammer. Let the matter lie and perhaps it won't be too highly publicized. Perhaps your browsing information won't be tracked in order to network an end to your access to the Internet. If your link has not been removed, you are not - at least until another user with a different set of personal interests comes along and declares the link to be Spam.

Other more legitimate terms, such as "reverted link," are available, and perfectly expressive, but it doesn't have the force of defamation - and it is clear that that is the point. Not only is it a wilfull attack, but, repeated in high-traffic Wiki chat-pages, it is an attempt to effect the reputation of a third party by the misuse of tools provided one through being registered with Wikipedia.

Variations upon this type of behavior are not at all uncommon in chat-pages, it is true, but can Wikipedia actually think that their "Administrator Chat" (or any Wikichat, for that matter) is just another chat page? That it need not hold itself to any standard? How, then, under such circumstances, can legitimate companies such as Google continue to support it? It is a sad day when Wikipedia stands quietly by and allows its users to defame third parties and to track them via their browsing information looking for vulnerabilities that might be exploited.



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Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Important Removal Tool Note

One of Virtual Grub Street's several missions is to provide a clearinghouse for information regarding freeware removal tools available on the Internet. For this reason, it attempts to provide a wide range of information to help you identify which malware your computer is infected with. This may include files names, common infection names, associated url's, and explanatory notes, etc.

But this does not mean that following the VGS instructions will free your computer of all malware and associated files. Your computer may have acquired more than one infection in its various travels. More and more malware (and adware) is bundled. More and more often, the bundling is clearly designed such that removing one malware item merely unleashes another installed "behind" it. For example, removing EliteBar, such that your computer is no longer hijacked to the SearchMiracle and YupSearch advertising search engines, may result in your computer being hijacked to the Mirar search engine instead (Mirar having been bundled with together with EliteBar at the point of origin).

The approach generally used by HijackThis experts available on the Internet is to "bomb" an infected computer with 6-8 generally trusted anti-adware/spyware utilities (including the most recent version of HijackThis) and to instruct the user to consult two or more free online scanners and to post the results. They then use HijackThis to remove the remaining files associated with the infection(s).

As long as the infection is addressed by at least one of the software packages, the approach is likely to be successful. There is no harm in having downloaded the 6-8 freeware (or trialware) items onto your computer, although keeping them up to date can be a bit of a chore and your computer's execution time can be effected. The online scanners, of course, will generally download registry values, ActiveX files and tracking cookies, and may even create data files for future consultation: the stuff, that is to say, that you were trying to prevent the malware from depositing and periodically transmitting. As for the fix, itself, it will necessarily take some number of hours to accomplish the downloads and further hours to run the software. This will be followed by a trip to the HijackThis expert where the various scan reports will be posted, analyzed and further directions given.

If the HijackThis forums offer what you are seeking, the VGS clearinghouse offers you information that may help you to understand what the resident expert is doing. Choose your forum carefully. The best attended forums tend to have the more capable experts. Always be aware that the expert will provide a disclaimer that you must agree that she or he will be held harmless should the process fail, or, worse, damage your computer. Directions to delete a suspect file can easily leave your computer seriously hobbled.

Should you prefer, the VGS clearinghouse is designed to bring you together with targetted information and one or more targetted freeware removal tools. The removal tools may or may not perform precisely as advertised by the persons who created them. Moreover, you may be infected with a variant that the suggested tool can not remove. VGS has, however, gone to considerable effort to verify that the various tools that appear in its pages have been positively reviewed by those who have used them. The information is yours to use entirely as you choose and entirely at your own risk. It is always advisable to follow-up a removal with a scan by your preferred anti-virus/malware software in order to verify the condition of the computer. The choice is yours whether or not to let dormant files, that may be leftover after removal, remain on your computer.



VGS Alert:

Saturday, April 22, 2006

Is Wikipedia Handing Out Your Browsing Information to Thousands?

By Gilbert Wesley Purdy.




"Any user, it would appear, is provided access to the browser
information of anyone who checks onto any editing platform throughout all public Wikipedia pages!"


I have been a fan of Wikipedia. I agree that it must be closely watched to prevent inappropriate material being added to its pages. Perhaps that is why it and I have gotten along so well over the past several years. I have provided it with links to fully legitimate and documented secondary source material specifically targetted to the subject pages. Its articles have been greatly enhanced as a result. Thousands have availed themselves of the information.

A considerable portion of the work I do on the web is of the information clearinghouse sort, computer, history and literature. I have received numerous information queries and messages of appreciation and thanks as the result.

This past week, when Claudia Emerson won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, I posted a link-list to a wide range of Emerson information at my Palm Beaches Review. I know the Wikipedia pattern quite well by now and I realized that Emerson fans, personal friends, etc., would begin a Wiki page on her. I went to the page and put on the 2nd and 3rd links to appear on it, one to the Emerson poem at my blog family. The effort cost me some two hours.

***
'Thus the following "Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents" chat thread in which I am freely and publically defamed, my personal information is posted and a plan is discussed about attacking me via that information...'
***

When I checked back, the next day, I discovered that the links had been removed. But that was not all. My two hours of research had been appropriated by whomever had removed the links. Someone had blatantly stolen my labor. I reposted my link and otherwise did nothing. This began two days of someone removing the link and my replacing it.

Finally a Donald Albury (of nearby Delray Beach, Florida, as it turned out) left a message. The message identified him as nothing more than a "User". It was posted on a public "discussion" page:


Please do not add commercial links (or links to your own private websites) to Wikipedia. Wikipedia is not a vehicle for advertising or a mere collection of external links. You are, however, encouraged to add content instead of links to the encyclopedia. See the welcome page to learn more. Thanks. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 01:16, 22 April
2006 (UTC)

It was astonishing to hear from a "User" who felt he could repeatedly remove my links and then direct me to pages (there would be others) none of which prohibited the links. I would later check the various Wikipedia pages on the subject of external-links and found that mine resoundingly qualified as "appropriate" according to the rules. I returned my link to the page and left the following reply in the "discussion" section:


I am going to try this just once. I am a freelance writer of some reasonable reputation on the web and in the literary and academic communities of the United States, Great Britain, Canada, Australia and elsewhere. You have removed my material because you personally find it unacceptable. When you removed the Claudia Emerson Page, you took the individual links listed on my page and placed them on the C.E. Wiki page thus stealing my labor. [It turns out that more than one "User" was involved and Donald Albury may not have been the one to do that particular dirty deed.] Furthermore, nearly every one of those links you found quite acceptable, so long as my site wasn't associated with it, has advertising on their pages and are happy to have the shot at some extra earnings. The material I posted is entirely appropriate. It will almost certainly earn me nothing in advertising. It will, it is true, help people to think of my sites as an information resource. In the case of the other page you have removed material from, it will provide verifiable and pertinent topic[al]/historical information on the subject covered. My sole benefit will be that people might take the opportunity to look around at related material also verifiable and pertinent.

If you will check, well over half of the "external links" listed on Wikipedia have advertising on their sites and/or are commercial concerns and/or have paid workers and officers.

Happily, you are located in Delray Beach: only a few miles away. I also am provided with your name, address and Bell South account info. I am sorry to have to say that, should you persist, I will have to contact my attorney and consult him about having legal papers served in this matter. I will also contact Bell South about the use you are making of their product. It is you who are harrassing me, vandalizing my links which I have as much right to post as anyone else. These are publically edited pages. You have no legal authority over any page of it. I am providing absolutely legitimate information.

The first astonishing discovery was that any user is indeed allowed, by the Wikipedia system, to go to his compatriots, and, finding one in agreement, can have the IP address of the "offender" (of the two imperious souls) blocked.

But this was by no means the most astonishing discovery. Any user, it would appear, is provided access to the browser information of anyone who checks onto any editing platform throughout all public Wikipedia pages!

Not only did all of this occur, but Donald Albury also removed my comment and characterized the entire three paragraphs as simply and only "a legal threat against me". He is simply permitted to do this as a WP user. Imagine my surprise when I found myself identified by name and accused of vandalizing and spamming Wikipedia. It turns out the Mr. Albury is also a member of a recently formed Wikipedia vigilante group dedicated to defining links they do not personally approve of as "spam". The only authority anyone in this group has is that they have agreed among themselves to perform this function as site censors and no other Wikipedia users have tried to form a group to prevent them.

More on this particular subject in another post.

Instead, I return to the particular subject of this post: Any user, it would appear, is provided access to the browser information of anyone who checks onto any editing platform throughout all public Wikipedia pages! That is, anyone who becomes a registered user can view the browser information by virtue of the mere fact of having registered. Adminstrator status is not required. Thus the following "Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents" chat thread in which I am freely and publically defamed, my personal information is posted and a plan is discussed about attacking me via that information:


http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Incidents&diff=50171464&oldid=50170801
#Legal_threat_against_editor

Legal threat against editor

209.214.14.138 (talk • contribs) has made a legal threat against me on his/her talk page because I have reverted linkspam he/she has posted repeatedly to several articles. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 03:10, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

I have reverted said legal threats and I suggest a block and possible page protection, especially if the person replaces the threats. Pegasus1138Talk Contribs Email ---- 03:33, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

A block will be very difficult to set. This editor has used three different IP addresses today, 209.214.14.184 (talk • contribs), 209.214.14.15 (talk • contribs) and 209.214.14.138 (talk • contribs), all registered to BellSouth. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 03:39, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

I don't see anyone else in the range 209.214.14.*, but I haven't checked all of them. Maybe a range block for that set? JoshuaZ 03:42, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

I suspect that's a dial-up bank for BellSouth. I have no idea what the collateral damage would be. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 03:50, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

And he's now switched to 209.215.55.111 (talk • contribs). A range block would have to include 209.214 and 209.215. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 03:55, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Hmm, I suspect that that is too large a range for a long block, maybe block them for 15 minutes? JoshuaZ 03:57, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Semiprotection of the articles in question might be a better solution at this point. -Loren 03:57, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Good point, although is our main concern the spam or the legal threats? Semi-protection only deals with one of those problems. JoshuaZ 03:59, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

That is too big a range, it is 209.214.0.0/15, and mediawiki only allows up to /16, not even mentioning that would be 131,072 addresses.... Prodego talk 04:01, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Well, I take issue with both the spamming and the legal threats. But blocking isn't really a feasible option due to the offending anon being behind a dynamic IP, hence the only way of stopping the continued addition of linkspam is to prevent anon users from editing the pages in question. I'm not terribly familiar with the allegations the anon is making having not been involved with the articles in question, but someone may want to tell the anon to state his/her rationale for including the external link in question on the article talk page to gauge the general consensus, which IMHO, will be the only long term solution to this problem. -Loren 04:04, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

.
Can someone hurry and semi the pages and then maybe the anon will be willing to talk? JoshuaZ 04:06, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

I'll semiprotect the page, but I'll leave it to people farmiliar with the article to engage the anon in dialouge and request unprotection when the time comes. -Loren 04:08, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Note: It appears the sites in question were first linked to by 216.114.82.71 (talk • contribs), registered to Palm Beach Community College. Possibly the same person judging by the anon's comments. -Loren 04:15, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Ugh. I used to take classes there back in 2000,2001. Completely unsecured computer labs, and an uninterested administration staff. His legal threats appear to be baseless, but if you'd like I can call my friend who's a PBCC student, and ask him for the phone number for PBCC's appropriate staff department. ⇒ SWATJester Ready Aim Fire! 07:18, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

All of the links inserted by the editor are to Virtual Grub Street, which apears to be the work of Gibert Wesley Purdy. Purdy is a poet, translator and critic. He has a post office box in Lake Worth, and may well have a connection to PBCC. While I regard the legal threat as baseless, I am concerned that he is only ten mile or so from me, and I have been very open about my identity. However, I now am fairly sure I know who he is. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 11:13, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Try contacting BellSouth, perhaps? NSLE (T+C) at 11:16 UTC (2006-04-22)

It's a possibility, as far as the legal threat goes. I need to think how I would approach it. Any contact with BellSouth about the spamming is more problematic, and certainly shouldn't come from me. I'll defer to the judgment of others on that issue. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 14:03, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

PBCC has a large campus in Lake Worth. ⇒ SWATJester Ready Aim Fire! 11:32, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

I used to live off of Lake Worth Road 2 or 3 miles west of the campus. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 14:03, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Rather than continue my personal issues on this page, I have opened a discussion at User talk:Dalbury#Response to legal threat. I woild appreciative advice from seasoned editors. -- Donald Albury(Talk) 14:22, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

Well then Wikifascism lives! Of course, parts of this are illegal, others are a blatant and egregious legal tort and all of it is shameful in the extreme. This is the kind of behavior people too often show when they feel that electronics gives them impunity. Among other things, they set up as a law unto themselves (and to satisfy themselves), actual laws be damned!



***

"Many Wikipedians remove personal attacks on third parties on sight, and although this isn't policy it's often seen as an appropriate reaction to extreme personal abuse. " -- Wikipedia:No personal attacks

***

A stroll back through the pages of the various WikiChats makes one thing very clear. The Wikipedia crew is grossly out of control. The tendency among its members is toward regular mob-action against individuals over which they have no lawful authority. Personal vendettas are constant and laws appear to be freely broken. Replies to their actions are removed when considered inconvenient and characterized, in whatever fashion proves servicable, in public chatrooms were defamation is freely indulged in. In the process, the "collateral damage" caused is enormous.


I strongly advise that no one donate to Wikipedia so long as such behavior is being indulged in. At a minimum, the following changes are clearly necessary:



  1. Access to browsing information of visitors to Wikipedia must be securely in control of the site administrators only. It is probably best even to limit the number of administrators (their are presently over 700) who are allowed to access the information.
  2. Wikipedia members who remove posted material must post their reason for doing so, in the "discussion" (or some equivalent) area, and cite the rule under which the removal was effected.
  3. A clearly identified link must be provided to the administrator's/user's page which must clearly describe the extent of the authority of the administrator/user: the actions that can be taken by a member at the given level. Available appeal processes should also be listed.
  4. Any Wikipedia member who threatens to use Wiklipedia generated browser information to attack another person must immediately and permanently have his membership revoked.

It would be wise for the leading administrators of Wikipedia to regularly hire a consulting attorney to go over their process pages and to recommend policy and other changes. I sincerely hope that Wikipedia will recover from this deeply disturbing period in its history and continue as a fine resource for us all.








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