@liilliil@gleick
Your point was that misinformation can be placed on Wikipedia, then quoted in other sources, then those sources get added to Wikipedia as validating the misinformation in a circular fashion, and that Wikipedia editors actively resist efforts to fix the misinformation even when you tell them about it.
“On July 29th, she published a post titled "I accidentally started a Wikipedia hoax" on The Daily Dot[1], which noted the Wikipedia edit had been cited in a number of other publications”
1. "I once intentionally put a fake on wikipedia."
2. 'This fake was reprinted by several newspapers, which were “authoritative sources” for wikipedia.'
3. "All further attempts to roll back the information to the true state were rebuffed by the wikipedia administration"
You have proven point 1 only. Nobody would deny that Wikipedia can be maliciously edited.
1. "I once intentionally put a fake on wikipedia."
2. 'This fake was reprinted by several newspapers, which were “authoritative sources” for wikipedia.'
3. "All further attempts to roll back the information to the true state were rebuffed by the wikipedia administration"
@negative12dollarbill @gleick My point was that deliberately placed misinformation can persist on wikipedia for years, dude