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Associate Press should make their own knowledge website.

That way the wackypedia meddlers cannot make changes to protect the guilty (or innocent).

If AP had their own site I would have a look at it from time to time. It could become huge. A real money spinner for them.

posted by : interested_party, 20 December 2008 Complain about this comment
Hack whinner

Mike, hack is a very misunderstood term. It basically refers to text editing without much care. Originally in the context of making programming changes to software quickly without much forethought. Later it expanded to quickly developed software which is inclusive of quickly developed software to defeat or workaround things in other software they would rather not be there.

posted by : Matt, 19 December 2008 Complain about this comment
SHMURP

hey mike,
it doesn't say 'people employed as civil servants'.

I find this kind of article interesting yet slightly disturbing: How willing the judicial system is to protect the government from its own laws.

posted by : egil, 19 December 2008 Complain about this comment
misleading opening to article

The article opened with 'IN A LANDMARK CASE, a judge has ruled that it is okay for public servants to post political statements on Wackypedia...', which implies that the use of Wackypedia by public servants was in question. This idea would be upsetting, to say the least. At no time does a public servant give up their legal rights.

You later state, more accurately, that 'Arkansas policy dictates that state resources are not to be used for political purposes...' and explain that the issue is not one of public servants using Wackypedia for political reasons, but for anyone to use state reasons for political reasons.

Thanks for clarifying later on, but the article as a whole reeks of sensationalism due to the opening.

Also, a better title might be 'Judge Protects Mis-users of State Computer Resources'. Not as flashy, but more accurate. I'm not sure how editing a Wackypedia article is considered 'hacking'.

And yes, I read the inq, I get the jokes, and I know it's not really 'Wacky'pedia. So there, haters.

posted by : mike, 19 December 2008 Complain about this comment
Our world

So imagine a world where you can be legally adept and yet technologically inept. The courts (worldwide) seem to be behind the times. Is it a case of needing to over turn some of the old guard or are we edging in to a time where one person simply cannot be informed enough on enough subjects in order to make competent decisions? Clearly this case begs a lot of technical questions.
GZ

posted by : GZ, 19 December 2008 Complain about this comment

Judge protects Wackypedia hackers

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