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Paid editing, broadly construed, is any editing where an editor is being compensated in some way, e.g. employees and contractors for money, students earning a grade and course credit such as Wikipedia:School and university projects, recognition from social and business associates, Wikipedians at Wikipedia:Bounty board, in-trade compensation, etc.
Investigation of undisclosed paid editing on Wikipedia often requires a search for information about an editor outside-Wikipedia. Information such as listings on job sites, real identities listed on a company website, or a link between a username and an identity on a third-party website can all provide evidence that an editor is engaging on Wikipedia in areas where they have a conflict of ...
On Monday, the company expressed disappointment over TelevisaUnivision‘s decision to pull its programming, leaving thousands of Spanish-speaking consumers without access to vital local news and ...
This includes inserting or deleting content to the advantage of the editor's employer or client into or from an article, talk page, or policy. Many, but not all, types of paid editing are forbidden. For example, paid editing of a talk page is generally acceptable, but undisclosed paid editing of a policy page is forbidden.
You must exercise care not to become a tendentious editor, or else you could be blocked. If your changes to an article could lead to controversy due to your financial interests, you should use the article's talk page to suggest changes, or the {} template to request edits, instead of editing. You will not be ignored.
Digital Public Library of America. Miscellaneous items related to Spanish-language newspapers "Spanish". Chicago Foreign Language Press Survey. Chicago Public Library Omnibus Project of the Works Progress Administration of Illinois. 1942 – via Newberry Library. (English translations of selected Spanish-language newspaper articles, 1855–1938).
The controversy turned to exit payments for senior executives in early 2024 which led to the resignation of Ní Raghallaigh. According to The Irish Times 's political editor Pat Leahy, "The story of RTÉ's agonies is an important one for politics, society and media". [ 12 ]
The Clinton/Lewinski scandal hit in the middle of a week where the page was encouraging debate on a totally different topic, highlighting beautifully how extremely difficult it is to not update a BBC-branded site continuously and retain credibility", remembers Julia Zapata, first editor of the site and later Head of BBC Mundo until 2009.