Wikipedia currently has no policy on the validity or proper verification of credentials. Proposals either to verify editor credentials or to reject their validity altogether have both been rejected. In the absence of an official policy, editors are free to accept, reject, invoke, or verify any credentials as they see fit, but there is no official requirement for any other editors to treat credentials in the same manner.
Any information about credentials displayed on user pages is by its author only, as Wikipedia does not have procedures for verifying them. Editors may interpret existing Wikipedia policy as supporting a certain credential policy, but such interpretations may not necessarily be shared by the community and do not necessarily reflect official policy.
Contents
Rejected proposals[edit]
The following proposals to verify credentials were rejected:
- Wikipedia:Credentials (proposal)
- Wikipedia:Credential verification (proposal)
- User:Jimbo Wales/Credential Verification
The following proposals to disallow credentials were rejected:
[edit]
- User:Avraham/Wiki of Trust – an essay that contains a proposal for a trust/verification system
- Wikipedia:Administrators accountability – rejected proposal for two levels of editors and two levels of administrators, with the higher level of admins required to disclose their real name
Related projects in sister projects[edit]
- de:Wikipedia:Persönliche Bekanntschaften A project where Wikipedians testify that they have met the owner of a particular account in person (designed mainly to mitigate the effects of malicious sockpuppetry, it does not verify real names or credentials)
Essays[edit]
On credentials:
- Wikipedia:Credentials matter
- Wikipedia:Credentials are irrelevant
- User:Misza13/Nobody cares about your credentials
- User:Bcasterline/Credentials are harmless
On related subjects:
See also[edit]
- Essjay controversy
- Wikipedia: Expert retention
- Wikipedia: Expert rebellion
- The Wikimedia Foundation's Access to nonpublic data policy, which requires volunteers who have access to nonpublic data covered by the privacy policy (such as stewards, checkusers and oversights) to make their identity known to the foundation