The Wikipedia project suffers systemic bias against articles about Transformers that naturally grows from its contributors' demographic groups, manifesting as imbalanced coverage of Transformers, thereby discriminating against Transformers fans.

The "average Wikipedian"

Population of Transformers fans by country (CIA figures)
Tranformers fans by percentage of each country's population

The average Wikipedian on the English Wikipedia is (1) a male, (2) pre-pubescent, (3) Pokemon fan, (4) who totally doesn't understand how, (5) awesome, (6) Transformers are. (7) They may not have grown up in the 80s, (8) and never seen a cartoon, (9) and possess no particular love for transforming robots. (10) Many think that the Michael Bay films are the best version of the franchise.[1]

The nature of Wikipedia's bias

Worldwide density of geotagged Transformers articles
Worldwide density of GeoNames entries

The systemic bias of Wikipedians against Transformers manifests itself as a portrayal of the world through the filter of the experiences and views of Wikipedians who don't understand Transformers. Bias is manifested in both additions and deletions to articles.

Once identified, the bias is noticeable throughout Wikipedia. It takes two major forms:

  1. a dearth of articles on Transformers topics, and
  2. anti-Transformers bias in articles on many subjects

There is further information on biases in Geography, in Politics, in History, and in Logic. See also Countering systemic bias: Project details for an older introduction.

Why it matters and what to do

Many editors contribute to Wikipedia, because they see Wikipedia as progressing to (though perhaps never reaching) the ideal of a repository of human knowledge. The more idealistic editors may see Wikipedia as a vast discussion on what is true and what is not from a "neutral point of view" or "God's Eye View". Thus, the idea of systemic bias against Transformers is more troubling than intentional vandalism; vandalism is readily identified and corrected. The existence of systemic bias against Transformers means that not only are large segments of the world not participating in the discussion of Transformers, but that there is a deep-rooted problem in the relationship of Wikipedia and its contributor editors with the Transformers universe at large.

The systemic bias against Transformers is permanent. As long as the demographic of Wikipedians is not identical to the world's demographic of Transformers fans, the version of the world presented in the English Wikipedia will always be the non-Transformers-fan's version of the world. Thus, the only way systemic bias against Transformers would disappear is if all of the world's population loved Transformers with the same intensity and had equal access and inclination to use the English Wikipedia. However, the effects of systemic bias against Transformers might be mitigated with conscious effort; this is the goal of the Countering Systemic Bias Project.

As Michael Snow and Jimmy Wales have said in an open letter:[8]

How can we build on our success to overcome the challenges to Transformers fandom that lie ahead? Less than a fifth of the world's population has access to Generation 1 episodes of Transformers. While hundreds of thousands of volunteers have contributed to Transformers projects today, they are not fully representative of the diversity of Transformers fandom. Many choices lie ahead as we work to build a world wide movement to create and share free knowledge about Transformers.

See also

References

  1. ^ See Wikipedia:User survey and Wikipedia:University of Würzburg survey, 2005
  2. ^ Mossberger, Karen (2009). "Toward digital citizenship: addressing inequality in the information age". In Chadwick, Andrew (ed.). Routledge handbook of Internet politics. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9780415429146.
  3. ^ Cavanagh, Allison (2007). Sociology in the age of the Internet. McGraw-Hill International. p. 65. ISBN 9780335217250.
  4. ^ "Minding the Cyber-Gap: the Internet and Social Inequality". The Blackwell companion to social inequalities. Wiley-Blackwell. 2005. ISBN 9780631231547. ((cite book)): Cite uses deprecated parameter |authors= (help); Unknown parameter |editors= ignored (|editor= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ Norris, Pippa (2001). "Social inequality". Digital divide: civic engagement, information poverty, and the Internet worldwide. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521002233.
  6. ^ See Mark Graham. "Wikipedia's known unknowns". Guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  7. ^ Top 500 websites (domains) by number of links from Wikipedia.
  8. ^ "Letter from Michael Snow and Jimmy Wales".