Wikipedia Admin's Manipulation "Messed Up Perhaps 15,000 Students' Lives" 264
Andreas Kolbe writes: Recently, "ArbCom", Wikipedia's highest court, banned an administrator account that for years had been manipulating the Wikipedia article of a bogus Indian business school – deleting criticism, adding puffery, and enabling the article to become a significant part of the school's PR strategy. Believing the school's promises and advertisements, families went to great expense to send sons and daughters on courses there – only for their children to find that the degrees they had gained were worthless. "In my opinion, by letting this go on for so long, Wikipedia has messed up perhaps 15,000 students' lives," an Indian journalist quoted in the story says. India is one of the countries where tens of millions of Internet users have free access to Wikipedia Zero, but cannot afford the data charges to access the rest of the Internet, making Wikipedia a potential gatekeeper.
Anyone who believes Wikipedia (Score:5, Insightful)
without further fact checking, is a complete idiot.
Or as Ronald Reagan once said, "Trust, but verify."
Re: Anyone who believes Wikipedia (Score:3, Funny)
Or as honest Abe said, "Anyone can make up quotes on the internet."
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trust,_but_verify :)
Re: Trust, but verify. (Score:2)
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You can't fool me. Albert Einstein actually said that. It was after he successfully defended the Alamo from invading British forces in 1792.
Re: Anyone who believes Wikipedia (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe you should have read more than one sentence? (Score:5, Informative)
Here, just for you, a quote from the Slashdot headline itself, not even the article:
> India is one of the countries where tens of millions of Internet users have free access to Wikipedia Zero, but cannot afford the data charges to access the rest of the Internet, making Wikipedia a potential gatekeeper.
Re:Maybe you should have read more than one senten (Score:5, Insightful)
The impoverished people living in rural areas, without affordable access to the Internet, and the people that can afford to send their kids to this school, are probably disjoint sets.
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And this is why the "channel" Internet is a horrible, horrible idea, which needs to be nuked from orbit, just to be safe. It'll be the return of corporate-interest TV, with all the propaganda that comes with it - but with the veneer of "it's on the Internet, so people checked it!".
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Bullshit. From the article: "Students paid up to $15,000 for IIPM’s courses."
So they can plunk down $15,000 in fees but can't "afford data charges" to do a tiny bit of non-wikipedia research on what that $15,000 is going to get them?
Again, bullshit.
Re:Maybe you should have read more than one senten (Score:4, Informative)
One might even blame Indian journalists, like the one who is quoted in this article blaming Wikipedia, for not better informing the public about legitimate and scam educational institutions.
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So...you have a website where anyone can say anything and people are trying to figure out who to blame when someone says something false?
I see.
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Read the summary:
The only site that is available to many people. The only other available source would be PR stuff from that very school.
Trying to cross check the promises in some school leafl3eats using a usually trustworthy (and the only available) source isn't a masterpiece, but within the available means, "due diligence"
Re:Maybe you should have read more than one senten (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with your perspective is that you want one party to carry all the blame. Pointing out that someone made a stupid decision (your label of "blaming the victim") does not mean that the other parties do not have responsibility.
Spread the blame to everyone that made poor choices: Indian Institute of Planning and Management, Wikipedia and those that enrolled without verifying their expectations.
Victim idolizing has got to stop.
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Those that enrolled without verifying their expectations to some unspecified degree made poor choices, or possibly good choices that went bad due to sheer bad luck, as any might.
Wikipedia made the lazy choice of not bothering to verify its contents, despite being a Power That Be in its own right nowadays, likely more influental than most na
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Perhaps that's because all of the blame naturally falls on one party. Remove all stupidity from the world and there will still be crime. Remove all the crime from the world and there is none.
Stupidity is contextual anyway and accurate judgments of it don't cross cultural and social barriers readily. In some places, leaving your door unlocked is not at all stupid. Locking your door borders on criminal in some places. In some places wasting your time and energy locking up your tools at the end of the day is s
Re:Maybe you should have read more than one senten (Score:4, Insightful)
Spoken like someone who can't even begin to imagine living somewhere that doesn't have ubiquitous communication with the outside world.
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Forget the Internet - find some folks in the area who graduated from this school, and ask them directly how useful their degree is. Seems pretty effing simple, doesn't it? Even if you have to travel a little or call long distance to do it, a little money spent now saves a ton of cash spent later.
India:
Surface area 3,287,590 km2
Population 1,210,193,422
[Source [wikipedia.org]]
If a young university/school teaches 1000 students a year and has been going (for example) for 10 years, that's around 10,000 alumni in total. In a country of over a billion people, that's just over 0.0008% of the population. One in every 121,019 people. What are the chances of finding people who graduated from the school?
Imagine you're sitting in Guin, Alabama, and you want to know about the reputation of Lewis-Clark State College in Lewis
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People can be both victims and perps.
Who is the victim in these situations?
- School vs. Wikipedia
- School vs. parents
- School vs. students
- Parents vs Wikipedia
- Parents vs. students
- Students vs. Wikipedia
And even that is an oversimplified view, if only because most of these parties may have multiple separate relationships to eachother.
Re:Maybe you should have read more than one senten (Score:5, Interesting)
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interesting
thank you, TIL
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what we have is a world where people like yourself take all of your outrage, and point it at the victim for being "stupid"
The world is not a black and white as you seem to see it. In most cases both parties carry some blame with the majority going to the perp.
all crimes can be described in a manner where the victim has done something stupid along the way and so they "deserve" it
Sorry but leaving a car with the engine running outside a store while one goes shopping is stupid. If the car gets stolen the driver is at least partially to blame.
because you further victimize the victim
We also teach the victim ways to avoid the issue in the future.
and you let the perp get away without any blame or focus.
No, the perp needs to have consequences for his bad act.
some even laud the criminal for being strong and tough for picking on the stupid and the weak.
Rarely does that happen.
The problem with the "victim" attitude is the lack of personal resp
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you are completely incorrect
there is right and wrong
then there is stupid and smart
those are completely and utterly different. and yet you mix them up as if they are the same topic on the same measure! incredible. all you are doing is self-identifying as morally ignorant
you really can't tell the difference between a smart person doing something evil and a dumb person fucking up? that's really the same weight in your moronic "understanding" of the world?
what the fuck is wrong with people?
it's rather disturbin
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Wikipedia Zero [wikimediafoundation.org] has not been launched in India. Check the map.
The article does not say that Wikipedia Zero is their only connection to the internet just that it is free. If one has enough money to spend on tuition to a business school one probably has enough money to do a Google search to verify a Wikipedia entry.
they also had been led to believe that they had researched by drinking from the unerring fountain of all human knowledge.
Anyone who still believes that needs help.
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thank you, well said
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Why EXACTLY is this a troll post mods? We are talking about poor people whose only access to online info is a Wikipedia under the control of scammers...I don't see how they can be seen as anything BUT innocent victims...
Because if you think about it, there are more ways than just the Internet to research a school. Granted there's a lot of ignorance in the equation, but it wouldn't take too much effort to call a few prospective future employers and ask their opinion. It wouldn't take too much effort to find at least a couple of people in the locale who graduated from that school and get their opinions. None of this takes much of an education or wit to discover and perform.
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I can only guess that it is something to do with the whole Ayn Rand/superman philosophy beloved of software developer libertarians.
"I make a few hundred thousand a year because I got a Computer Science degree and work in silicon Valley, therefore so can anyone else, and someone who is not at least reasonably rich is just a loser responsible for their own poverty, stupidity and poor choice of career and domicile.
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I don't think that blaming the victim is inherently immoral. There are several moral codes, including the Abrahamic faiths, that include some aspect of blaming the victim. For instance rape victims are supposed to be stoned to death, under most circumstances. Basically, if they are within earshot of others, then obviously they didn't yell loud enough, so they should be punished. There's an allowance for a woman who is outside walking around beyond where others can hear her. I disagree with this specific rul
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without further fact checking, is a complete idiot.
No just Wikipedia...
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Yeah, spelling too....
Re:Anyone who believes Wikipedia (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's a noble goal to provide info
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They go to "great expense" to send their children on courses there, but can't afford a SIM card to do any research?
Re:Anyone who believes Wikipedia (Score:4, Insightful)
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You should always check information from any source before using as fact. Especially, if it is about business or law schools. What is new about that? Wikipedia is a good source in areas which are not entangled with business, like math, biology, computer science. However, you still should check primary sources.
Re:Anyone who believes Wikipedia (Score:5, Informative)
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A band-aid is better than nothing. Global, free, uncensored internet will arrive (eventually).
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You got a good point, but is the amount of money and effort wikimedia is putting on this venture be that big? To me it seems most of the work is being done by Facebook and the Indian Carriers themselves.
Anyone who believes the Internet (Score:2)
without further fact checking, is a complete idiot. Or as Ronald Reagan once said, "Trust, but verify."
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I disagree with your first statement but agree with the second. Most people believe what their friends and uncritical family members tell them and do zero verification with outside resources. Trusting Wikipedia, while risky, is a big step up from that. It's way over the top to say they're complete idiots for doing so. Otherwise everybody is a complete idiot for believing in anything they haven't themselves verified - and we can hardly expect such rampant skepticism to lead to a better society.
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Or as Scully heard, "Trust no one."
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According to Suzanne Massie [suzannemassie.com], "trust, but verify" is the translation of a Russian proverb, "Doveryai no Proveryai," that she taught Reagan, and he repeated this saying more than once. Other source is: www.reagan.utexas.edu/... [utexas.edu].
Full disclosure: I searched through Wikipedia [wikipedia.org].
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As MBAs are often complete idiots and utterly disconnected from reality, I am not sure your argument counts. In fact, believing a Wikipedia-article without any additional verification may be a good test to see whether somebody is MBA material. Hence on a meta-level, this school did a very professional assessment of whether people were qualified for an MBA or not and only directed those to it that were. Hence, again on meta-level, this would actually strengthen the belief that the school was genuine and well
caveat emptor (Score:4, Insightful)
Here in the US, colleges still send thick glossy booklets full of pretty pictures of campus locations students will hardly ever see in rare weather conditions with attractive and diverse people they'll never meet. Then we wonder why we have millions of non-STEM graduates serving coffee and whining about "student debt relief" for their useless degree(s). To me, all the "extra" college grads we have in the country are a much bigger deal than "just" 15K people getting a little wiser on how the world really works.
Re:caveat emptor (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the problems is this bit from TFS:
A bunch of poor people, with limited access to the internet, turn to one of the only sources of information they have.
And it turns out that source isn't trustworthy.
How is the consumer supposed to know otherwise when they have no access to better information?
Yes, we all know that wikipedia isn't always an authoritative source. But for people who only can get to wikipedia through their basic cell phone plans .... that was the only source of information.
Given the available sources of information, I'd like to see you arrive at a better conclusion.
Re:caveat emptor (Score:4, Insightful)
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The talk page [wikipedia.org] for the school is extremely active, with archives going back to 2005, and hundreds of pages of discussion of the controversiality of the main page. Assuming "Wikipedia Zero" includes access to the talk page, everyone had access to enough information to see that something was fishy.
I guess we need better education as to how Wikipedia works, with the recommendation to check the talk page if the topic is controversial.
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Yeah, this is not an access issue, it's more the research skills of the parents.
Even without the talk page, the assertion that people are sending their kids to school while unable to afford food and shelter, much less Internet access is a bit... ignorant. Education is not cheap. SIM cards and data are cheap in India, even by local standards, at least for those who have enough to consider sending their kids to school. A quick search on vodaphone.in puts 1G of data for 30 days at around $4USD without a
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But for people who only can get to wikipedia through their basic cell phone plans .... that was the only source of information.
While I agree that there is genuine concern about wikipedia becoming a gatekeeper in general, I don't think it's valid to claim this was the sole source for people to be making college decisions on. Wikipedia Zero has only been around in India for about 2 years. What did they use prior to that to look up information on colleges? Did those other sources of information disappear in those two years? Just because a new, convenient source of information becomes available doesn't mean people should suddenly treat
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Re:caveat emptor (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, asshole.
Think about this. The average person in India has very little access to things like the internet. They have cheap ass cell phone plans which give them free access to Wikipedia, and not much else. What the fuck do you think "Wikipedia Zero" is? It costs them nothing to access it, whereas a data plan might be a months pay. Which they might want to spend on food and housing.
There are only so many places to try to glean information, and places to apply effort.
So you can sit in your comfortable first world life and be a smug douchebag, or you can try to accept that people in poor third world countries have access to FAR less sources of information without it costing them dearly. Which means they place far more reliance on the sources they have.
So go shove your attitude up your punk ass, and save me your bullshit.
This notion that people have perfect access to information to make perfect choices is completely bullshit when the only sources they have available to them are dishonest, or would cost far more than they'd be able to afford without a better job like they were trying to find.
Don't me such a smug little prick. Mostly it makes you sound like an idiot who doesn't know what the hell he's talking about.
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Maheshwar Peri and other journalists who went up against them took a tremendous personal financial risk. As the Newsweek article makes clear, they were sued repeatedly, and had to defend each case. See also Siddhartha Deb's story: Siddhartha Deb’s Publishing Odyssey [newyorker.com], ‘Why I Took On Arindam Chaudhuri’ [wsj.com].
The sta
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The elephant in the room is the fact that colleges and forced cheap, easy student loans are being used to keep unemployment numbers down in the recession. Many millions of US student are in college because they couldn't find a good job. Many of them would stop attending immediately if a good job were offered.
It's not education, it's welfare.
The elephant in the room is that you don't automatically get a good job offer with a Bachelor's degree. A career is something you build. A job is something you get. While I understand the desire of baby-boomer's to give their children everything they didn't have, i.e., job-free college, I think something important is missing from their children's lives. You see, you can't expect a really good paying job even if you have a Masters degree if you haven't worked a day in your life. Don't get me wrong,
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>> STEM is a dangerous gamble to be in these days
I read the article. Even at the low wages mentioned, the woe-be-gotten STEM grad student is still making 2-3x than a barista...in their preferred field. By my scoring, STEM's still winning.
Most degrees from India... (Score:5, Insightful)
I've worked with plenty of Indian engineers (mechanical, electronic, and software) over the past 30+ years, and my general impression is that at least 50% have no knowledge of the subject matter at all. As far as I could tell they simply purchased a document claiming they had a degree. So, this appears to be just another example.
Re:Most degrees from India... (Score:5, Interesting)
Corrupt institutions in India are the NORM, not the exception. Long before Wikipedia existed, the country was filled with fake diploma mills and a million other institutional scams. The parents in this case are just looking for a convenient scapegoat (and playing their favorite game of "Blame the evil American/European companies for all our shitty country's problems!").
Re:Most degrees from India... (Score:5, Insightful)
That is very unfair. It could be that just the ones that are willing to work for cut rate contractors have limited skill sets... Who would have guessed.
India has a lot of very educated people in the tech fields. After all they have do have nuclear weapons, launch vehicles, and aerospace industry. All of which go very wrong very quickly without educated engineers working on them.
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Close to half of the software developers from India that I've worked with did not actually touch a computer until 3rd year of their degree. I am not saying that it reflects their ability, most of them were very intelligent and could learn well, eventually, but they certainly did not come from the university prepared in the same way as I would expect.
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It's handy to have an Indian coworker to vet their degree. Last coworker I had from India had a masters but spelled like he was on a q9 keyboard.
We did the same for applicants citing Chinese degrees or to call about job experience. They should be happy we had somebody who knew the schools, spoke the language and could make the calls, it often worked in their favour, but sometimes it spotted a fraud.
Sadly if somebody can only cite a random foreign school and experience and if nobody can vet them, I'll
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No he made a statement based a very small sample. That is unfair. I never said that the OP worked for a cut rate contractor I said that I would expect that you would see less talented people working for cut rate contractors. He could have just been unlucky, worked with a low quality contractor, or hired a cut rate contractor.
I make no claim to which of those is true.
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Thank you my good bigot that makes sweeping statements of condemnation.
Social justice.... Now that is funny....
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Re:Most degrees from India... (Score:5, Insightful)
We have Indian applicants for the web developer jobs we have open at the moment, and invariably they all seem to have achieved degrees with honours in less than 2 years, often more than one degree in the same time. I refuse to believe that any degree achievable in less time than an equivalent UK degree is worth anything, let alone two.
And then, the number of those applicants who then claim to have achieved another major qualification in a London college or university in only a few months... Especially when you can link those London colleges to visa fraud stories in the national media.
It would take a lot for me to take an Indian graduate at face value.
Re:Most degrees from India... (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to do a lot of contractor hiring. I started with the attitude "if you lie on your resume, I won't even consider you". After realizing that I would never hire anyone - I backed off on the attitude. The interview process became an exercise in determining what the candidate knows, while the candidate made every attempt possible to deceive me. It was very disheartening and I hated hiring someone who lied to my face for 60 minutes straight because he lied less than everyone else and was the most likely of the bunch to get the job done.
BTW, this was at a really big company and 99% of the resumes that HR sent me were educated in India and came to the US to work in the previous three to five years.
Re:Most degrees from India... (Score:5, Funny)
99% of the resumes that HR sent me were educated in India
Well, as they say on Mythbusters...there's your problem right there. Searching for honest employees and then only looking at resumes from Indians is like searching for sober employees and then only looking at resumes from Russians.
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Re:Most degrees from India... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'll see your anecdote and raise you some speculation.
I've worked with a number of young Indian engineers and found them to be roughly comparable to American engineers with the same level of experience; if anything they have a slightly higher level of textbook knowledge because (I speculate) their educational system puts a higher premium on memorization. That turns out to be awesome when you're lucky enough to be hiring someone with that certain spark of talent it takes to be great at the job. On the other hand it also means you can easily end up hiring a dud who interviews great because he happens to have a prodigious memory. When the VC my company worked with asked us to take on some surplus H1B engineers he'd sponsored I had a range of experiences from absolutely top-notch talent to total cement-heads with an encyclopedic recall of the GoF book.
But what I've never run into an Indian H1B who didn't know anything at all about his field, although I'm sure it happens. Given the size and level of economic development in India I'd be shocked if there were not at least a few diploma mills, but you'd be a fool to turn your nose up at a diploma from U of Mumbai or IIT/Delhi.
It can be tricky evaluate a candidate from a different country and culture than you, so you've got to expect that a conscientious company may end up hiring a few clunkers. But if your Indian colleagues were *all* ignoramuses, it suggests to me the companies you worked for were incompetent or bottom-feeders when it comes to recruiting engineering talent.
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The next time you want to post a broad, bigoted claim that covers well over a billion people, at least have the courage to do so with your own account instead of AC. If you're afraid of the repercussions of doing so, maybe you should stop and ask yourself why there would be repercussions in the first place.
Data charges? (Score:2)
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On mobile? Data caps are nearly ubiquitious.
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verifiability not truth (Score:4, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Some advice to Indians (Score:3)
How do you say "Don't believe everything you read on Wikipedia" in Hindi?
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How do you say "Don't believe anything you read on Wikipedia without checking the citations " in Hindi?
FTFY
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wikipedia have not only messed that (Score:4, Informative)
Re:wikipedia have not only messed that (Score:4, Interesting)
Wikipedia really needs to change the way it operates and remove the ability for individuals to monopolize and control a page. I think if they moved to a system where multiple editors would work together to collaboratively make changes to a page over several weeks before pushing out the changes to the live version. While that isn't going to eliminate the petty squabbles, it at least results in a less hostile environment that prevents one power-tripping idiot from reverting all of your changes and trying to ban you.
Pandering to women while keeping the same environment that has been shown to drive so many women away isn't going to fix the problem. It's just trying to slap a band-aid on top of a gaping wound. Worse, it's a waste of resources that could otherwise be spent actually addressing the underlying cause of the problem.
Another take on the same story ... (Score:4, Informative)
"bogus Indian business school" (Score:2)
In the end (Score:2)
Ugh! (Score:3)
Re:Well if Wikipedia said it, it must be true (Score:4, Insightful)
I think the problem is that there is a lose affiliation. Wikipedia is responsible for what its employees, paid or unpaid do. The administrators are not just members of the general public, wikimedia gives them special privileges. The administrator in this case seems to have had an affiliation with the school, and was doing things at wikipeida to lie for/about the school.
Re:Well if Wikipedia said it, it must be true (Score:5, Insightful)
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And a company can still be legally liable for its "volunteers", they are still workers for the company, they are just not paid.
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Education shouldn't be a market at all. Education is a human right.
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I don't think anyone is saying we need to start banning people who want to get educated, of course education is a right.
But it's not an entitlement either.
Just don't lie about your offering, that's fraud. Fraud is not a right.
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They should at least have access to a broad range of news outlets, Google Scholar and Google Books. Zero-rated programmes diminish rather than increase the chances of that happening, perpetuating rather than ending the digital divide and treating
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People need some incentive, which doesn't have to be money, to spend the time doing work on wikipedia articles.
Sure, you say that now, but when someone takes you up on your offer [slashdot.org], you complain about it.