House Republicans Want To Doxx Wikipedia Editors Over Bogus ‘Bias’ Complaints

from the congress-shall-make-no-law dept

Congress has absolutely zero constitutional authority to investigate a private website for its editorial decisions. Zero. None. This is First Amendment 101.

Yet House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer and Cybersecurity Subcommittee Chairwoman Nancy Mace have decided otherwise. In a letter to Wikimedia Foundation CEO Maryana Iskander, these two Republicans are demanding that Wikipedia hand over editor identities, internal communications, and arbitration records because some studies suggest there might be bias in Wikipedia articles about Israel-Palestine issues.

Imagine for a moment if Democratic members of Congress sent an identical letter to Fox News, demanding they explain their editorial choices on Israel coverage and turn over internal communications, source identities, and decision-making records. Comer would be on every cable news show screaming about government censorship and the death of the First Amendment. And he’d be right.

But because it’s Wikipedia—a platform that operates on transparent editing processes and neutral point of view policies—suddenly government intimidation is perfectly fine.

Government Doxxing With Official Letterhead

The letter’s requests read like a fishing expedition designed by people who fundamentally misunderstand both Wikipedia and the Constitution. They want:

  • Records of all editor conduct disputes and disciplinary actions
  • “Identifying and unique characteristics” of editor accounts, including IP addresses and activity logs
  • Internal communications about “coordination by nation state actors”
  • Analysis of “patterns of manipulation or bias related to antisemitism and conflicts with the State of Israel”

Let’s translate that bureaucratic language. When they say “identifying and unique characteristics” and “IP addresses,” what they really mean is: they want to doxx Wikipedia editors. They’re demanding that Wikimedia turn over personal information about volunteer contributors so Congress can identify and potentially target people whose edits they don’t like.

That’s not oversight. That’s government-sponsored doxxing with official letterhead.

This isn’t oversight—it’s an attempt to intimidate volunteer editors and chill speech by threatening to expose their identities to government scrutiny. The fact that they’re specifically targeting coverage of Israel-Palestine issues makes the political motivation embarrassingly obvious.

What This Is Really About: Working the Refs

Don’t be fooled by the concern trolling about “foreign manipulation” and “academic institutions subsidized by taxpayer dollars.” This investigation has nothing to do with protecting Wikipedia’s integrity and everything to do with destroying it.

This is “working the refs” taken to its logical extreme—and it’s exactly the kind of government pressure that should terrify anyone who actually cares about free speech. The goal isn’t to fix supposed bias; it’s to create actual bias by making editors afraid to include information that doesn’t align with MAGA talking points.

Can’t win the argument on Wikipedia using reliable sources and neutral editing processes? No problem—just get Congress to investigate until editors start self-censoring out of fear that their personal information might end up in the hands of hostile government officials.

The chilling effect isn’t an accidental side effect. It’s the entire point.

Wikipedia’s strength comes from its army of volunteer editors who contribute their time and expertise to building a free, accessible encyclopedia. These volunteers now have to worry that Congress might demand their personal information if politicians don’t like their edits.

Think about what this means in practice: a volunteer editor researching Israeli settlement policies or documenting civilian casualties in Gaza now has to consider whether adding well-sourced information might result in Congress demanding their IP address and personal details. That’s not oversight—that’s intimidation designed to silence inconvenient facts.

The Wikimedia Foundation should tell Comer and Mace exactly where they can stick their unconstitutional demands. Wikipedia doesn’t answer to Congress about its editorial decisions, and Congress has no business trying to intimidate volunteer editors.

Free Speech Absolutists Suddenly Go Quiet

Here’s what’s particularly galling, though not at all surprising: the same people who spent years screaming about “government censorship” when social media companies made actually independent editorial decisions are now dead silent about actual government officials actually threatening to investigate a platform for its speech.

Where are all those passionate defenders of free speech now? Hey Matt Taibbi, Bari Weiss, and Michael Shellenberger! Where’s the outrage about government overreach? Where are the warnings about authoritarianism?

Oh right, they only care about “free speech” when it means protecting their ability to spread misinformation without consequences. When it comes to actual First Amendment violations by government officials trying to intimidate encyclopedia editors, suddenly they’re nowhere to be found.

Wikipedia Has a Well-Known Reality Bias

Wikipedia isn’t perfect. No human endeavor is. But it’s built on transparent processes, neutral point of view policies, and verifiable sources. When those processes lead to conclusions that don’t align with certain political narratives, the problem isn’t with Wikipedia.

The problem is with people who can’t accept that reality doesn’t always conform to their preferred version of events.

If Comer and Mace think Wikipedia articles about Israel-Palestine issues are biased, they’re free to create accounts and try to improve them using reliable sources and Wikipedia’s established editing processes. That’s how the system works. But, of course, Comer and Mace know that such action would require them to do actual work, and likely would fail as they’d be unable to back up their assertions with credible sources.

What they can’t do—or at least, what they shouldn’t be able to do in a country with a functioning First Amendment—is use the power of government to intimidate editors into compliance with their political preferences.

But here we are.

The Wikimedia Foundation should fight this tooth and nail. And every American who actually cares about free speech should be paying attention to what happens next. Because if Congress can investigate Wikipedia for “bias,” they can investigate any platform, any media outlet, any website that publishes information they don’t like.

And that’s a road that leads nowhere good.

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Companies: wikimedia, wikimedia foundation, wikipedia

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Comments on “House Republicans Want To Doxx Wikipedia Editors Over Bogus ‘Bias’ Complaints”

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37 Comments
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Congress has absolutely zero constitutional authority to investigate a private website for its editorial decisions. Zero. None. This is First Amendment 101.

Republicans care more about the Second Amendment than they ever will about the First. If they could, they’d repeal it and turn this country into a Christian theocracy where only government-allowed speech could be posted on government-controlled websites by government-approved employees⁠—and most of that speech would be about praising Christ, guns, and the reigning monarch of the Great American Empire.

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Strawb (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4

You are going against the grain. TD doesn’t believe in blaming tools but rather the users of the tools.

Who is this “TD” you’re referring to? BestNetTech has multiple authors with various viewpoints. Which one are you suggesting is in favour of exclusively blaming users for whatever misery a tool brings?

Also, while not clear, I was being sarcastic in saying that I’d never heard the argument before. It’s as stupid as it is useless.

If people were as homicidal as the argument implies, countries with strict gun control laws should be killing en masse with anything they could find. But they don’t.
What does that tell you?

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David says:

You got that the wrong way round.

The Wikimedia Foundation should fight this tooth and nail. And every American who actually cares about free speech should be paying attention to what happens next.

It is not the job of the Wikimedia Foundation to fight for the First Amendment while Americans actually caring about free speech watch the fight.

It is the job of the Americans actually caring about first speech to fight for it, at the ballot box, talking with their representatives, on the street, educating their children about the Constitution, using all their media access and possibilities to point out where the U.S. is going.

That is not a job Wikimedia can do for them. Picking your heroes and then moving to the sidelines watching them is setting them up for failure in a fight that isn’t theirs to start with.

Anonymous Coward says:

The Wikimedia Foundation should fight this tooth and nail.

But probably won’t. I stopped editing like 15-20 years ago, when they stopped allowing anonymous editing. Since pretty much every Wikipedia page has some obvious error, my Wikipedia editing history would leak my entire viewing history, and I don’t want to have to think twice about which pages I view.

The best way to protect user data is to collect as little as possible.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

A pseudonym is less identifying than an IP address

Maybe if one’s really good at choosing pseudonyms that don’t identify them. Certainly don’t use one’s age or birth year, as is common. Don’t base it on your favorite fictional story, ’cause then people know what you like—although that’s gonna become obvious from the editing history anyway, which makes de-anonymization a big concern.

You’re missing the main point, though, which is that the Wikimedia Foundation will still have the real IP address associated with the account. Maybe they’re trustworthy, but they’re still an organization subject to U.S. law, which is worrying in its current state. They don’t allow accounts to be created more anonymously, except in rare cases like Chinese dissidents; and even then, there’s a whole pain-in-the-ass process to go through. They’re still very much against people having duplicate accounts, which are a necessity for decent privacy.

So I stopped editing; the only way to win is not to play. (That quote, of course, reveals something about my age right away. I’d be more careful were I posting under a named account. I might also avoid the subjunctive mood, maybe the periods in “U.S.”…)

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: they stopped allowing anonymous editing

You’re mistaken about that. Anyone who wishes can edit without creating an account, in which case the edit is associated with the editor’s IP address. Since IP addresses can change, and a single IP might be associated with more than one person, the editing history for a given IP generally doesn’t captures any one person’s entire editing history. On the other hand, IP editing does give others information about where you’re located.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

You’re mistaken about that. Anyone who wishes can edit without creating an account, in which case the edit is associated with the editor’s IP address.

That is not anonymous. If you try to do that actually-anonymously, you’ll run afoul of policy against open proxies.

Just look at the history of BestNetTech stories about data being “de-anonymized” to see the problems with this. Some people’s IP addresses don’t change for years. If I edit the page for my hometown, that’s one more data point to de-anonymize me. So I’d have to be constantly thinking: okay, there’s an error to fix, but what would my exposure be from editing this page?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Doctor Biobrain (profile) says:

If Wikipedia was biased nobody would use it. It’s only useful if it’s accurate. But that’s a concept rightwingers can’t understand because they think nothing ever changes and all our favorite businesses and institutions would remain even if you change the people involved.

By this thinking, in all possible universes Wikipedia would always exist no matter who runs it, so they can work the refs to push their bias and it will remain a trusted source. And they can take over the CDC to recommend the most ridiculous medical suggestions and everyone who trusted it before will continue to trust it. And they can pressure every news org to only report rightie propaganda and their readers and viewers will now become Republicans.

Once you recognize this pattern you see it in all their arguments. Professional athletes aren’t the best of the best, you can replace the ones you dislike with cheaper options who do what they’re told and those people will become our beloved stars. We don’t need leftie actors like Robert DeNiro and George Clooney because we’ll happily watch rightie actors like Scott Baio and Kevin Sorbo if given the same roles. And we can replace liberal professors with Prager U videos and still get all the educated college grads we need without the pesky radicalism.

We’re all just mindless sheep who agree with whatever you put in front of us so you should just make everything how Trump wants it to be and everyone in America will support him.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Bloof (profile) says:

Re:

Conservatives have made multiple attempts to create a wikipedia clone that fits their bias, but they swiftly turn into a parody as everyone who values fact is banned or yelled at until they quit, leaving the site as a largely dead fan fiction site where most of the activity is people being mad at Wikipedia proper in discussion sections, or violent edit wars over minutiae.

Conservapedia and infogalactic only seem to exist as monuments to the fact you can only build something to a certain size if you’re terrified of popping the bubble that surrounds you.

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