Censorship of Wikipedia by governments has occurred widely in countries including (but not limited to) China, Iran, Myanmar, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, Uzbekistan, and Venezuela. Some instances are examples of widespread Internet censorship in general that includes Wikipedia content. Others are indicative of measures to prevent the viewing of specific content deemed offensive. The duration of different blocks has varied from hours to years.
hmm, this seems relevant: https://lemmy.world/post/21289935
Doesn’t count politicians trying to rewrite their own pages to remove proof of things they did I guess
No. And the fact you think it does means you have no idea what it is to live in a dictatorship.
Or it means that I’m sick of people letting “democracies” slowly turn into dictatorships because “we’re not north korea so don’t complain”.
Governments using their employees (=> taxpayer money) to try to alter information on media that should be independent sounds a lot like censorship.
Sure, there is much worse, but it doesn’t mean that everything is fine.
Someone editing a Wikipedia page is exactly the same as not being able to say something under the penalty of torture or death /s
Dude count yourself lucky that the worst thing that happened to you or anyone you know is a politician telling an intern to vandalize Wikipedia.
Please quote where I said that it’s the same.
I love how when it comes to subjects like that the only argument is “it’s worse elsewhere so stop caring”.
Caring about such a “small thing” (is it, even?) is how you don’t end up switching from the first half of your example to the second half.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_imprisoned_for_editing_Wikipedia
Bassel Khartabil was a contributor to a number of open-source projects including Wikipedia; his arrest in 2012 was likely connected to his online activity. He was executed at Adra Prison near Damascus in 2015. Several organizations, including the Wikimedia Foundation, established the Bassel Khartabil Free Culture Fellowship in his honor in 2017, for an initial period of three years.
That’s a tiny bit different from vandalizing a Wikipedia page.
A lone politician doing dumb shit on the internet has nothing to do with state sponsored censorship, let alone a drift towards a dictatorship. This is a moronic take.
When the politician is part of the government, it is the government’s responsibility.
And considering that most democracies are currently seeing a clear shift towards fascism, they do drift towards dictatorships.
Saying it’s it’s moronic doesn’t make your argument smarter.
When the politician is part of the government, it is the government’s responsibility.
No, it is not. Unless the candidate brought forth a resolution to officially change the article by the government itself. Editing Wikipedia articles is not illegal so I’m not sure what you expect the government to do here. Making it illegal is certainly the move of a dictatorship though.
Saying it’s it’s moronic doesn’t make your argument smarter.
Thanks for further proving my point.
You’re not talking about governments but about laws. People in the government engage the responsibility of the government.
I’m talking about policy, which is how governments work. A lone politician editing a wikipedia article is not the work of the government.