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Thoughts on Correcting Bad Data on the Internet EDITOR'S NOTE: This article is a sidebar to "What Are We Going To Do About Bad Data on the Internet?" by Patricia Law Hatcher.
The Sarah Odding case clearly demonstrates that printed articles are not reaching an audience whose medium of publication and communication is the Internet. In this instance, the article was published in a major national journal. Can we assume that corrections printed in local journals and short-run family histories are even less likely to picked up by Internet genealogists? Clearly, we need to communicate in the medium of the audience we want to reach. While posting the correct information somewhere (whether a list, a home page, or a database) is helpful, the percentage of sites indexed by search engines is continuing to fall, thus making the likelihood that it will be stumbled across quite low. Also, you’ll have one “good” (and hopefully documented site) competing with dozens of incorrect sites. Most Internet genealogists haven’t been exposed to publications like GC and don’t understand that it is quality rather than quantity that matters. Nor do they know the names of experienced players well enough to know whose word to trust. The solution is obviously to e-mail the hosts of sites with misinformation, but this has both pluses and minuses.
E-mail Pluses
E-mail Minuses
The Big Picture Any data we place on the Internet should be fully documented. This includes lineages placed in databases. An e-mail link to the submitter is not documentationit simply identifies the transmitter of the information. There’s a big difference. Nor is it an acceptable substitute to permit the user to spend six minutes to download a GEDCOM file in order to determine if it even has any documentation. If the database does not support readily-available documentation, we need to complainloudly and frequently. As George Archer pointed out in the Fall 1998 issue of GC (in a blood-chilling statement, if you are a serious genealogist), only three of the nine GEDCOM-to-HTML programs reviewed by Alan Mann in the previous issue supported documentation. And Liz Kerstens pointed out in her recent Internet publishing lecture at the Federation of Genealogical Societies conference in St. Louis, that even fewer of them support placing the documentation on the same page as the data. Hence the readers who print the page to study it will later find they did not get the documentation to evaluate. (She suggests we use an editor to rearrange the pages, but for many, this is beyond their computer competency.) Patricia Law Hatcher, CG, is a technical writer, instructor, and professional genealogist.
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