
Conversations with Coleman Who Decides What’s True on Wikipedia?
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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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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.
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.
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.







