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Wikiality — Part II

2007 February 15

There was some traffic on the E-Comm List­serv (on which I sur­repti­tiously lurk — and if you don’t know what is and are inter­ested in , highly recom­men­ded) courts cit­ing Wiki­pe­dia with a couple of links to some other stuff, includ­ing an art­icle on Slaw as well as an art­icle in the New York Times about the con­cerns raised by some regard­ing cit­ing Wiki­pe­dia. Some excerpts and notes to expand on my pre­vi­ous post:

From the con side:

In a recent let­ter to The New York Law Journal, Ken­neth H. Ryesky, a who teaches at Queens Col­lege and Yeshiva Uni­ver­sity, took excep­tion to the , writ­ing that “cita­tion of an inher­ently unstable source such as Wiki­pe­dia can under­mine the found­a­tion not only of the judi­cial opin­ion in which Wiki­pe­dia is cited, but of the future briefs and judi­cial opin­ions which in turn use that judi­cial opin­ion as authority.”

This raises a good point that I didn’t men­tion in my pre­vi­ous post. I cer­tainly think Wiki­pe­dia is fine to note cer­tain things, but I really, def­in­itely, pos­it­ively, do not think that it should be cited as judi­cial author­ity. In my pre­vi­ous art­icle I thought this was so self-evident I didn’t bother men­tion­ing, but the quote above illus­trates that it might not be all that clear. Court decisions, as most of you know, are writ­ten by judges who take into account the facts and apply the law to the facts of the case, along with other facts and that may have a bear­ing on the case. The source of the law includes stat­utes and of course pre­vi­ously decided cases, which enun­ci­ate rules or that the court either applies, dis­tin­guishes based on the facts as being inap­plic­able, or, in some cases, over­turns (for any num­ber of reas­ons). Court decisions are not, of course, pub­lished on Wiki­pe­dia and are not sub­ject to the col­lect­ive edit­ing of Wiki­pe­dia, nor should they be. Rather, ref­er­ences to Wiki­pe­dia in court cases are to provide addi­tional or ancil­lary con­text or facts to a case. They do not and should not derog­ate from prin­ciples of law that are set forth in court decisions. But, con­trary to what Mr. Ryesky, Esq., indic­ates above, I don’t think refer­ring to Wiki­pe­dia for con­text or facts will sud­denly under­mine the found­a­tions of law, since the reas­on­ing itself still will and must be based on sources of law, not facts and not context.

Hence the fol­low­ing end to the NTY article:

Stephen Gillers, a pro­fessor at New York Uni­ver­sity Law School, saw this as cru­cial: “The most crit­ical fact is accept­ance, includ­ing the lit­ig­ants,” he said. “A should not use Wiki­pe­dia when the is not pre­pared to accept it as authority.”

For now, Pro­fessor Gillers said, Wiki­pe­dia is best used for “soft facts” that are not cent­ral to the reas­on­ing of a . All of which leads to the ques­tion, if a fact isn’t cent­ral to a judge’s rul­ing, why include it?

“Because you want your opin­ion to be read­able,” said Pro­fessor Gillers. “You want to apply con­text. Judges will try to set the stage. There are back­ground facts. You don’t have to include them. They are not determ­in­it­ive. But they help the reader appre­ci­ate the context.”

He added, “The higher the court the more you want to do it. Why do judges cite Shakespeare or Kafka?”

Exactly.

related:

  1. Wiki­al­ity  —  Part III
  2. Wiki­al­ity
  3. Pre­texting, Eth­ics and Clients
  4. wiki­pe­dia, legal author­ity and facts
  5. Microsoft Pat­ents RSS. Or Tries To. Maybe.

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