CongressEdits (@congressedits) was an automated
Twitter bot account created in July 2014 that tweeted changes to
Wikipedia articles that originated from
IP addresses within the ranges assigned to the
United States Congress. The changes could have been made by anyone using a computer on the U.S. Capitol complex's computer network,
including both staff of U.S. elected representatives and senators as well as visitors such as journalists, constituents, tourists, and lobbyists. CongressEdits has been called a
watchdog by
NBC News.
In October 2018, Twitter
suspended the account, making its tweets only accessible through
archival services. CongressEdits can now be found on the social media site
Mastodon.
History
CongressEdits was written by and was run by Ed Summers, a web developer, who was inspired by a friend's tweet about Parliament WikiEdits, run by
Tom Scott, which performs the same function for the staffers of
Parliament of the United Kingdom.
It has since been credited for inspiring additional bots for Australia, Canada, South Africa, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Israel, Chile,
Italy and Greece. Summers wrote that his "hope for @congressedits wasn't to expose inanity, or belittle our
elected officials." He emphasized that he did not see edits to such articles as ''
Step Up 3D'', ''
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia'', or
Horse head mask as "something to make fun of," and points to "substantial edits like changing a
Congressperson's party affiliation from Democrat to Independent." Ultimately, he wanted to see Congressional staffers log in to Wikipedia, identifying themselves to use their knowledge of the issues and history to help make Wikipedia better.
Summers wrote that he saw the project "as a potentially useful transparency tool".
Tweets since November 6, 2017 included screenshots of the specific changes made to the article.
CongressEdits was credited with bringing to light edits to
Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture by a
United States Senate shared address on December 9 and 10, 2014, which removed the phrase "(a euphemism for
torture)", with revision notes of "removing bias"; however, these edits were soon reverted.
In 2017, the bot revealed many instances of disruptive edits by apparent Congressional
interns,
ranging from commentary on pop culture to inserting unsourced and controversial information about living people to direct communication with followers of the account.
Source code
The code for the
bot
Bot may refer to:
Sciences
Computing and technology
* Chatbot, a computer program that converses in natural language
* Internet bot, a software application that runs automated tasks (scripts) over the Internet
**a Spambot, an internet bot des ...
itself is
open-source software, and can be configured to watch for anonymous edits from any IP ranges or individual IP addresses.
Controversy
On July 25, 2014, Wikipedia's co-founder
Jimmy Wales
Jimmy Donal Wales (born August 7, 1966), also known on Wikipedia by the pseudonym Jimbo, is an American-British Internet entrepreneur, webmaster, and former financial trader. He is a co-founder of the online non-profit encyclopedia Wikipedi ...
told the
BBC that the @congressedits Twitter feed may have been counterproductive. Referring to a
Wikipedia administrator's 10-day editing block, imposed on July 24 against a shared address within the range assigned to the
U.S House of Representatives
The United States House of Representatives, often referred to as the House of Representatives, the U.S. House, or simply the House, is the Lower house, lower chamber of the United States Congress, with the United States Senate, Senate being ...
, for disruptive editing, Wales said, "There is a belief from some of the
ikipediacommunity that it only provoked someone—some prankster there in the office—to have an audience now for the pranks, and actually encouraged them rather than discouraged them."
In September and early October 2018, during the
Brett Kavanaugh Supreme Court appointment hearings, Republican senators were
doxxed by Congressional IP editors who inserted home addresses and phone numbers into Wikipedia articles. The private information was tweeted to the bot's approximately 65,000 followers before it was removed from the articles.
Following additional doxxing by Congressional IP editors, Twitter suspended the account.
See also
*
United States Congressional staff edits to Wikipedia
References
Notes
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{{COI on Wikipedia
Internet properties established in 2014
Twitter accounts
Wikipedia
United States Congresses
Internet bots