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Anonymous Editing Analysis

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Imagination: Théo Bondolfi for Ynternet.org Foundation. Created with AI assistance.

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Analysis: Anonymous Editing on WikiDeal

This page examines whether anonymous (IP-based) editing should be allowed on WikiDeal's MediaWiki, and recommends pseudonymous accounts as the preferred alternative.

Why Wikimedia Allows Anonymous Editing

The Wikimedia Foundation allows anonymous (IP-based) editing on Wikipedia for the following reasons:

"Anonymous editing lowers the barrier to entry and allows anyone to fix errors without creating an account."Wikimedia Foundation — Anonymous Users
"Openness is one of Wikipedia's core principles. Anyone can edit most articles, and this policy is a key factor in Wikipedia's success."Wikipedia — Why create an account?

SWOT Analysis: Anonymous Editing on WikiDeal

Strengths Weaknesses
  • Lowers barrier to entry
  • Encourages spontaneous corrections
  • Follows the Wikipedia open model
  • Cannot endorse contracts (no identity)
  • Cannot participate in Open Calls (no accountability)
  • Contract editing has legal implications
  • Quality assurance impossible without reputation
Opportunities Threats
  • Could attract casual contributors
  • Aligns with open philosophy
  • Spam and vandalism
  • Legal liability for anonymous contract modifications
  • Undermines endorsement system

Decision: No Anonymous Editing

WikiDeal does not allow anonymous editing. All editors must create an account:

  1. Endorsement requires identity — anonymous endorsement is meaningless
  2. Contracts have legal weight — accountability is essential
  3. Open Calls require accountability
  4. Quality through expertise — verified expertise over volume
  5. Financial compliance — Swiss law (AMLA/LBA)

Pseudonymity: The Recommended Alternative

Users can register with a pseudonym instead of their real name:

Feature Anonymous Pseudonymous Real Name
Contactable No Yes (email required) Yes
Real name public N/A No Yes
Edits traceable By IP Under pseudonym Under real name
Can endorse No Yes Yes
Can join Open Calls No Yes Yes

MediaWiki does not display IP addresses of logged-in users. Email is stored but never shown publicly. Pseudonyms cannot be reverse-engineered by other editors.

WikiDeal's position: Pseudonymous accounts are welcome. Email required for contactability, real name not required.

Exception: Whistleblower Observatory and Service

A dedicated Whistleblower Observatory and Service will provide protected mechanisms for reporting misconduct. This is a separate system from standard wiki editing.

Principles

  • Evidence-based — all reports must be supported by verifiable evidence
  • Proportional procedures — response is proportional to the severity of the reported issue
  • Presumption of innocence — reports are not made public before verification
  • Protection from defamation — the system protects both whistleblowers and those accused from unfounded attacks
  • Constructive first — priority is given to constructive improvement proposals; stronger denunciations only when issues are not acknowledged by the persons concerned
  • Support resources — dedicated support persons help whistleblowers formalize their reports
  • Anonymous submission — protected anonymous forms for whistleblowers, unlike standard wiki editing

Three Levels of Reports

Level 1 — Individual abuse patterns:

  • Repeated unjustified compensation claims (e.g., claiming objects were damaged during lending, exploiting insufficient condition reports at the start of a service)
  • Service providers who fail to deliver and attempt to avoid responsibility

Level 2 — Structural community issues:

  • Organizations with repetitive patterns of consumer rights denial
  • Requires citizen mobilization and investigation → corrections impacting an entire user community, not just one individual

Level 3 — Public health and safety:

  • Suppliers of toxic products (e.g., cleaning products presented as harmless when they are not)
  • Secondary suppliers selling hazardous materials to service companies
  • Requires strong intervention and community-wide corrective measures

Inspiration: Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI)

WikiDeal's Whistleblower Observatory draws inspiration from the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI) — a resolution unanimously adopted by the Icelandic Parliament on June 16, 2010. IMMI was co-founded by Birgitta Jónsdóttir, Smári McCarthy, and Julian Assange, and seeks to make Iceland a legal safe haven for journalists and whistleblowers.

Key references:

References


Imagination Théo Bondolfi, formalized with AI assistance. This page awaits more human validation.

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