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Can the web really forget? Twitterbot catches Russia Wikipedia edits

July 22, 2014

The Russian government has reportedly been caught editing a Wikipedia page relating to crashed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 and removing references to Russian involvement.


The Telegraph reports that a Russian-language Wikipedia page about civil aviation accidents was edited from within the government-run All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company.

Статья в Википедии Список авиационных катастроф в гражданской авиации была отредактирована ВГТРК http://t.co/peZ60q07Fj

— Госправки (@RuGovEdits) July 18, 2014


The user wrote that “the plane [flight MH17] was shot down by Ukrainian soldiers”.
That replaced an entry written just an hour earlier that said the plane had been shot down by “terrorists of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic with Buk system missiles, which the terrorists received from the Russian Federation.”
The edits were uncovered by @RuGovEdits, a Twitter bot that automatically tweets every time Wikipedia is edited from a computer with a Russian government IP address.
An IP address is a unique number related to certain computers or networks.
All edits made to Wikipedia are permanently logged along with the editor’s username and IP address.
The move is a stark reminder to brands and organisations that the web is a difficult beast to control, and attempts to change records of past events is getting harder than ever. It also indicates just how revealing these little Wikipedia edit twitterbots can be.

Uncategorized brands, government, Russia, Twitter

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