Wiley and Wikipedia
A new service emerged just a few days ago that helps to identify who is responsible for changes to Wikipedia, the "encyclopedia that anyone can edit". It's called WikiScanner. Already a number of interesting changes have been dug up thanks to this. Diebold appears to have deleted unsavory information about their voting machines and their fund-raising for President Bush. Scientology computers have been used to remove criticism on the church's page. BBC got caught changing "George Walker Bush" to "George Wanker Bush". FOX News has been caught making edits about Al Franken.
As I once pointed out to T.S. Wiley's husband, Neil Raden (a computer consultant): "You're not nearly as anonymous on the Internet as you think." (This was after we caught Neil Raden posting messages and e-mails under fake names -- what's known as "sock puppetry".)
So have there been any anonymous changes to Wikipedia originating from the T.S. Wiley household? Yes, more than just a few:
http://wikiscanner.virgil.gr/f.php?ip1=72.205.193.253
Click on the links in the "diff" column to see what was added, changed, or removed.
Besides the expected attempts to slant the Wiley Protocol story, you'll find some interesting contributions to articles on Neil Raden's competitors (we assume) -- Bill Inmon and Claudia Imhoff -- in the Business Intelligence field.

Thanks for the WikiScanner
Thanks for the WikiScanner report on the Wiley Protocol's Neil Raden. The scanner info supports what we just suspected until now, that they continually get caught doing unethical things or just plain making stuff up to enhance their interests.
WileyWatch has been consistently true to its watchdog mission, ferreting out the facts with intellect and the aid of techology. But my question is this. If WileyWatch has caught them in the long list of deceptions chronicled on this web site, what other deceptions have gone undiscovered?