Conversations with Coleman

Who Decides What’s True on Wikipedia?

68 snips
Apr 20, 2026
Ashley Rindsberg, investigative writer who exposed bias at major media outlets, probes Wikipedia’s structural slants. He describes how a small, anonymous cadre shapes politically charged articles. They explore concentrated admin power, coordinated editing campaigns like the Israel–Palestine 'Gang of 40', and why Wikipedia’s tilt can ripple into Google and AI.
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ANECDOTE

Coleman Hughes Faced Identity Edits On His Page

  • Coleman Hughes recounts his own Wikipedia biography battle where editors tried to remove his African-American heritage.
  • He notes the stakes: identity edits affect perceived authority on racial topics and can be contested for ideological reasons.
INSIGHT

Rules And Networks Decide Content Not Accuracy

  • Editing disputes usually favor whoever masters Wikipedia's rules and networks, not necessarily the more accurate contributor.
  • Rindsberg explains admins and savvy editors can call in favors, revert edits, and make decisions that entrench biases.
INSIGHT

Small Anonymous Elite Controls Major Powers

  • A tiny group of high-power anonymous admins hold disproportionate tools and influence across millions of articles.
  • Rindsberg cites Larry Sanger's 'power 62' and notes admins can trace IPs and grant admin status, concentrating authority.
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