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The Trouble with Anonymity on the Web

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted August 20, 2007.


Anonymity online is on the rise, allowing people to write, lie and manipulate data without feeling responsible for it. But who's doing all this hiding? Hint: It's not angry, pajama-wearing bloggers.

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Pundits of the Internet age are fond of excoriating the Web because anyone can post on it anonymously. Andrew Keen, whose recent book Cult of the Amateur is a good primer on why people hate the Web, highlights the horrors of anonymity in his work, contrasting the millions of unnamed Web scribblers with honorable, properly identified writers of yesteryear. Keen's point is that people who don't put their names on what they've written don't feel responsible for it; therefore they feel little compunction about lying or misrepresenting their chosen subjects. After all, an anonymous writer doesn't have to worry that their reputation will be tarred -- unlike, say, a writer at The New York Times, whose byline appears on his or her articles.

Every social stereotype has a caricature associated with it, and the "anonymous Web writer" has theirs. They're always portrayed as a he, first of all. And he's inevitably described as being "some blogger writing in his basement in his pajamas." In other words, this anonymous person is not a professional (hence the pajamas) and probably poor (he lives in a basement). He's a nobody, a loner who lashes out at the world from his dismal cell, hiding behind his anonymity and destroying the good reputations of nice people.

Where does this sad little man like to post his anonymous invective? Wikipedia, of course. He can change any entry without leaving his name, adding lies to biographies of innocent mayoral candidates and spewing spam all over facts. And the best part is that most people take Wikipedia seriously. They regard it as a reliable source of knowledge, despite the fact that it's written by unknown, basement-dwelling bloggers in pajamas.

That's why I was so gratified when California Institute of Technology grad student and mad scientist about town Virgil Griffith released his software tool Wikiscanner, which you can use to quickly check on who has been editing Wikipedia entries anonymously. You see, whenever you edit a Wikipedia entry, the encyclopedia logs your unique IP address, which can often be tracked back to a physical location, including your place of employment. Even if you think you're being stealthy with your anonymous writing, you're not. Wikipedia sees all.

And now the public can see all if they visit Griffith's Wikiscanner site. Turns out that all the anonymous propaganda and lies on Wikipedia aren't coming from basement dwellers at all -- they're coming from Congress, the CIA, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and the American Civil Liberties Union. Somebody at Halliburton deleted key information from an entry on war crimes; Diebold, an electronic-voting machine manufacturer, deleted sections of its entry about a lawsuit filed against it. Someone at Pepsi deleted information about health problems caused by the soft drink. Somebody at The New York Times deleted huge chunks of information from the entry on the Wall Street Journal. And of course, the CIA has been editing the entry on the Iraq war.

Wikiscanner allows you to search millions of edits, perusing a precise record of all the changes that have been made. While you can't figure out exactly who at the CIA made the changes to the entry on the Iraq war, you can be sure the changes came from somebody on the CIA's computer network.

Griffith created Wikiscanner for a frankly political reason. As he told the Times of London, he did it "to create minor public relations disasters for companies and organizations I dislike." In the process, however, he's revealed something far more fundamental than the fact that acolytes of Pepsi and the CIA will stop at nothing to propagandize on behalf of their employers: he's undermined the myth of the anonymous blogger in the basement.

It turns out that the people who are hiding behind anonymity online for nefarious or selfish reasons are not little guys in pajamas but the very bastions of accountability that haters of the Web have deified. It's not a mean dude with a grudge who is spreading lies on Wikipedia but rather a member of the federal government or a journalist at The New York Times. Cultural anarchy online is coming not from the hordes of scribbling bloggers but from the same entities that have always posed a danger to culture: corporations and governments who refuse to take responsibility for what they're doing.

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Annalee Newitz (annalee@techsploitation.com) is a surly media nerd who once had the urge to do an anonymous edit on Wikipedia but was scared people would find out she'd done it.

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Transparency is a good thing, most times.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Aug 20, 2007 7:11 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And knowing who (approximately) edits an as-billed public resource like wiki contributes to transparency.

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» Not for the public relations industry! Posted by: thoughtcriminal
TOM DEGAN, Goshen, NY
Posted by: Tom Degan on Aug 21, 2007 3:55 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I first started posting on AlerNet two years ago, my earliest inclination was to do it anonymously. And then I thought, what the heck, let people know who I am - I've got nothing to hide! I find going public, so to speak, to be very liberating. Although I do respect other's need for maintaining their privacy.

Cheers,

You-know-who

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Just because it comes from a government computer doesn't mean it's party line
Posted by: AsteroidMiner on Aug 21, 2007 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are lots of true patriots, as opposed to party liners, inside
the government. The party liners are the supervisors, not the do-
ers. Mid-level non-supervisors who are not mere mouthpieces
have good job-saving reasons to remain anonymous. I'm retired
from the government and living in a nice big house, not a
basement. I don't lie, but I get accused of lying a lot. I don't see
how using my real name would make me more believable.
You aren't supposed to believe people anyway. If you go to
college and major in science, the first thing they teach you
implicitly is that people are not believable. Science is built on
trusting nothing and nobody but Nature. You disbelieve it until
doing the experiment personally forces you to believe it.
There is only one way to be really non-dogmatic. That way is to
be a scientist. See: "Science and Immortality" by Charles B. Paul
1980 University of California Press. In this book on the Eloges
of the Paris Academy of Sciences (1699-1791) page 99 says:
"Science is not so much a natural as a moral philosophy". [That
means drylabbing [fudging data] will get you fired.]
Page 106 says: "Nature isn't just the final authority, Nature is the
Only authority."
Nature isn't just the final authority on truth, Nature is the Only
authority. There are zero human authorities. Scientists do not
vote on what is the truth. There is only one vote and Nature owns
it. We find out what Nature's vote is by doing Scientific [public
and replicable] experiments. Scientific [public and replicable]
experiments are the only source of truth. [To be public, it has to
be visible to other people in the room. What goes on inside one
person's head isn't public unless it can be seen on an X-ray or with
another instrument.]
Science is a simple faith in Scientific experiments and a simple
absolute lack of faith in everything else. So what I post is
intended as a starting point for people to go find out for
themselves. If you won't or can't understand it for yourself, you
may as well go to church.

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» Speaking of miners... Posted by: eddie torres
Annalee Newitz's education is in English
Posted by: AsteroidMiner on Aug 21, 2007 8:12 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Annalee Newitz's education is:
Ph.D., English and American Studies, UC Berkeley, May 1998.
B.A., English, UC Berkeley, May 1989.

I don't know what American Studies are, but English is a
certification to know nothing. In order to understand the meaning
of the word "truth", you have to get a degree in Science.
Disregard anything said by people with degrees in English, it isn't
likely to be even related to reality.

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» Hard science is soooo sexy... Posted by: thoughtcriminal
ANONYMITY is an ILLUSION: "thank you Americans"
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Aug 21, 2007 8:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
um, does ANYBODY think they have PRIVACY or ANONYMITY anymore? REALLY? omg.
are we SAFEer?

just ask Rove & Negroponte

"anonymity" is an ILLUSION.

I can't believe anyone actually STILL believes ANYTHING they do isn't recordded & catalogued.

RFID people... wake up.

Theocratic "U.S. is building database on Iraqis":

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Anonymity and secrecy
Posted by: ray burchard on Aug 21, 2007 9:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a revelation, anonymity and secrecy demonstrating a lack in the courage of conviction and the place to hide one's ineptitude, ignorance and dishonesty.

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I didn't think Americans SPOKE "English" anymore...
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Aug 21, 2007 10:25 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gee, & here I thought US schools 'taught AMERICAN', not actually English...

or so my American friends keep telling me...

"I speak AMERICAN! ... you Canadians have ACCENTS... "

riiiiight... everybody ELSE has an accent...


*sigh*

But then, poutine was never made from Freedom Fries

Spread Love...
... but wear the Glove!


BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian

"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"

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Annalee is back!
Posted by: DaBear on Aug 21, 2007 12:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I very much enjoyed this piece, Annalee. Welcome back.

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Of course there's no real anonymity with NSA and ATT looking over one's shoulder...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Aug 21, 2007 12:44 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hi guys! Have you pulled your heads out yet, or are you still so deep in that you're seeing daylight?

Ah well... look: here's the game I've been playing here on Alternet. It really is just an attempt to publicly expose the tactics used by the US government, the corporate media and the public relations industry to control information and debate in the United States.

The PR firms all rely entirely on 'third-party credibility' - and that means using journalists, scientists, bloggers, 'ordinary citizens', and even politicians (though they're pretty low on the credibility scale these days). Who needs these services? Well, bankers and CEOs and military numbskulls, primarily. Who is going to believe anything that comes out of the mouth of Exxon's CEO, after all? Even the replacement of Rumsfeld with Petraeus was just another attempt at putting a fresh face on the same dead-end strategy.

What I've tried to do is to inject a lot of information into the Alternet debates, with the primary goal of annoying the hell out of public relations firms, corporate media outlets and government psyops types. I like to think I've done a reasonably decent job of this.

Now, if I can do this, one little person in front of a computer hiding behind the silly acronym of 'thoughtcriminal' (which is just a little propaganda trick designed to constantly remind the reader of George Orwell, 1984 and 'thoughtcrime' - don't think of a blue elephant, now) - well - ask yourself this: what can PR firms accomplish, when they have access to millions of dollars and whole fleets of online bloggers, as well as the active cooperation of every corporate media outlet in the country?

Oddly enough, the website hosting 1984 has a cut-out link to the PR campaign being run by the Edison Electric Institute on behalf of coal-fired utilities... (www.getenergyactive.org) - now that's funny!

He looks at his diary, in which he has repeatedly written “Down with Big Brother” and thinks that he is already a dead man. Once he has committed thoughtcrime, the only question is how long it would take the thought police to catch up with him. But once he has resigned himself to being practically already dead, staying alive as long as possible and rebelling in however small a way become matters of immensely significant proportions.

He wanted to communicate with a different age, whether of the past or the future where men were individual or free. He wanted to carry on in some small measure, the human heritage. As a beginning of this communication, he writes in his diary addressing that unknown age “from the age of doublethink, from the age of solitude, of Big Brother, of uniformity – Greetings.”


P.S. Russell Tice and Mark Klein are not anonymous - talk about some real American heros!

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Anonymity can be a good thing
Posted by: Darian on Aug 21, 2007 2:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The message is generally more important than the messenger. A statement doesn't necessarily becomes more credible just because a name (brand) has been attached to it. Anonymity can hide conflicts of interest, but it can also preserve the integrity of discourse by factoring out ad hominem rhetorical attacks. For example, the degree that Annalee Newitz has is irrelevant to the validity of her statements IMHO.

Even if I thought her degree conferred the power to reveal Truth, how do I know this was written by the real Annalee Newitz and not some impostor? If we really want to know who is writing what, we must appeal to some technological means for guaranteeing authentication. As it happens, the technology for doing this sort of thing can also be used to really protect anonymity (and secrecy for that matter).

There is a time for anonymity and a time for authentication. It is always a good time to think for yourself before accepting someone else's words as your own thoughts.

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I was all set to rip into Newitz...but alas......
Posted by: ekipnrut on Aug 21, 2007 3:34 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....it turns out that the people who are hiding behind anonymity online for nefarious or selfish reasons are not little guys in pajamas but the very bastions of accountability that haters of the Web have deified. It's not a mean dude with a grudge who is spreading lies on Wikipedia but rather a member of the federal government or a journalist at The New York Times. Cultural anarchy online is coming not from the hordes of scribbling bloggers but from the same entities that have always posed a danger to culture: corporations and governments
.....she's 100% correct.....end discussion :O)
What people should be on the watch for is fascist proposed legislation being surreptitiously passed through our ALWAYS comatose,toothless,neutered 'watchdog' Congress , curtailing and/or eliminating access to the Internet.
GR
GR2
[I have neither connection to nor affiliation with either link...
other than I was able to get them to work on posting!!! :O)]

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Hole in the Dike
Posted by: Glennk1949 on Aug 21, 2007 6:26 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Internet is an enormous HOLE in the Corp..Fascist dike that has been constructed this last 40 yrs. as a deliberate reaction to the events of that time. Its kind of funny that the hole itself was a product of those same forces trying to utilize the University system to improve its own computing resources. The original Internet (the ARPANET) was a child of DARPA http://www.darpa.mil/index.html. or the military/Industrial complex. It all started as Woodstock was happening a funny kind of confluence. The most connected generation yet had given birth to what today is its true gift to the world the INTERNET and hopefully the last bulwark of freedom against the very machine consciousness that unwittingly helped create it! Life is not as we know without its ironies and this whole subject is one of them. The very fact that we are having it daily was not what the dark forces of repression within our society wanted. They want to use these nets for CONTROL and ironically they are also being used for just the opposite.

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Great article. But shouldn't this have been obvious?
Posted by: FDPN on Aug 21, 2007 8:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who has the time, knowledge, and desire to edit Wikipedia pages?

People who sit in front of computers all day with a lot of free time.

Who falls into that category?

Students and oh, just about EVERY federal employee in the WORLD (to include most military NCO's and officers). They do nothing. They get tenure and they fill a chair in a cubicle until they retire and die. That is the federal employment life cycle. That's why they contract everything out these days - federal employees are worthless.

Youtube and games might be off limits to these poor office dwellers, but editing Wikipedia until it matches their world view isn't.

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Training in logical thought isn't limited to the hard sciences
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Aug 21, 2007 8:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone here besides me remember what Noam Chomsky is trained in, has his degree in, gets his major motion from?

Ian

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The Emancipation of Ideas
Posted by: bodo on Aug 22, 2007 2:34 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All that need be accountable is the information itself. Statements are accountable to their sources, the human behind the content need not always be involved.

Free market ‘autonomy of information’ on the internet feeds much of the alternative media, and frees the people behind that media from the prying eyes of the Panopticon.

Our old world order controllers would love to have tabs on every single purveyor of information present in this webspace. Anonymity enables circumvention of potential repercussions, should the police state which has been erected all around us be activated into full effect.

Once the people behind the information have been rendered invulnerable through unadulterated anonymity, all that remains to be attacked is the information itself, which is what we see here with the deletions on Wikipedia.

The futility of this exercise cannot be understated.

Ideas could not be stamped out, but not for the minds that grant them safe harbor.

The key to the alternative media explosion has these fundamental characteristics of the internet — anonymity and de-monopolization of information flow — largely to thank for its continual, unmolested development.

The model for media which we have become accustomed to via mainstream homogenization and inculcation, is not the correct model, as has by now been clearly demonstrated.

It is however, the only the model in which we find a reference point, having been the dominant form only until recently.

We are now witness to this paradigm’s decline, but there are remnants of a conditioned culture which still linger here and everywhere. This culture is as much inherent in the medium as the message.

The successor to this dying zeitgeist is self realizing, and does not require your conscious acknowledgement to achieve collective alignment.

The remnants of the declining paradigm exist as much in our minds as in the power structures that conceived and cultivated them.

Bare witness to resistance as the old guard struggles to maintain hegemony over our material world and the perceptions which manifest it.

Let all ideas stand on their own and receive automatic judgment, subject to the intellectual natural selection which the internet incubates. Without the illusion that is manufactured consensus, the fraudulent cannot stand and so will recede, replaced by what may amount to the truth.

The truth being nothing more than that which has survived, in the heart and in the freed human mind.

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Caveat lector
Posted by: revjnunley on Aug 22, 2007 9:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Still, you gotta be careful before slinging around charges that folks are practicing the "dark arts of spin."

A claim going around that the Episcopal Church's Presiding Bishop, Katharine Jefferts Schori, ordered information removed from Wikipedia is absolutely false. The charge originated on the conservative Virtue Online website last May and resurfaced last week in London's Independent newspaper in a story about Wikiscanner.

The story said that the Episcopal Bishop of Pennsylvania's personal assistant deleted information concerning allegations of several scandals, claiming she was ordered to do so by Jefferts Schori. I talked with the assistant yesterday. She says she was misquoted, that she was acting entirely on her own initiative, and confirms she has never met or talked to Jefferts Schori or anyone else at the Episcopal Church Center (until now, of course!). Jefferts Schori also confirms she's never met or talked with the Pennsylvania bishop's assistant.

Penetrating glimpse of the obvious, especially for reporters: you can't trust everything you read on the Web...

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BUT, writers at NYT do not seem to worry about their reputations.
Posted by: american on Aug 22, 2007 1:43 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I differ: The NYT writers hardly do risky investigative journalism, so they aren't really letting it all hang out, thus real risk to their reputation is not that great.

For example, the risk to reputation is not like that of a whistleblower who may require anonymity to survive. The corollary to this is that pre-emptive whistleblowers, like anonymous commenters such as me, require anonymity because they will receive repression and punishment for simply exercising their right to free speech in a physically harmless way in a voluntary public forum, such as AlterNet’s comments.

Let's not even think of throwing the baby out with the bath water. Careful, Annalee: In these times I have witnessed, and have seen come to pass, flimsier excuses for abrogating our freedoms.

This probably isn't causal, but after I used some lines of a PNAC (the “think tank” that created the War from scratch) foreign policy dictum from Wikipedia in an AlterNet comment, the Wikipedia lines were deleted.

The lines were:

"...That is why we feel it necessary to defend Israel today, when its survival is threatened. No complicated geopolitical calculations of (American) national interest are necessary"-

Knowledge is power, as is suppression of knowledge: Whoever gives you knowledge is giving you power; whoever takes it away is removing it.

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Wikipedia article on VEAL
Posted by: FDPN on Aug 22, 2007 2:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone seen that wikipedia article on veal?

Tell me that wasn't edited by someone that makes their living in the American cattle industry.

No mention of controversy or anything.

Meh. Just one more example.

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