From: Wiki  Woman
 There was the day in February when an editor replaced a photo of Hillary on  her Wikipedia page with a picture of a walrus. Then there was the day this month  when a Hillary supporter changed Obama's bio so that it referred to him as "a  Kenyan-American politician." But such sweepingly hostile edits are usually fixed  quickly by other Wikipedia users. Often, it's the most arcane distinctions on  the candidates' pages that provoke the bitterest tugs-of-war. Recently, an angry  battle broke out on Hillary's page over whether to describe Clinton as "a  leading candidate for the Democratic nomination" or just "a candidate," since  each phrase implies a different shade of judgment on her chances. Five minutes  after an Obama supporter deleted "leading" just after 11 p.m. on March 8,  another editor put it back. Seven minutes after that, the word was deleted  again. Some thirty minutes after that, it was put back. On it went, with  different Wikipedia editors debating the significance of Hillary's delegate  deficit on her talk page and accusing each other of introducing the dreaded  "POV"-- or "point of view," a violation of Wikipedia's most fundamental  principle--into the article. At around six in the morning, completing the  atmosphere of pandemonium, somebody replaced Hillary's whole page with "It has  been reported that Hillary Rodham Clinton has contracted genital herpes due to  sexual intercourse with an orangutan."
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 Schilling is the man who protects Hillary's online self from the public's  hatred. He estimates that he spends up to 15 hours per week editing Wikipedia  under the name "Wasted Time R"--much of it, these days, standing watch over  Hillary's page. Hardly a news event or argument over her situation goes by  without Wasted Time R's input: He edited her page 77 times in the last month,  mostly pruning away changes he viewed as inappropriate, such as a rant about  Geraldine Ferraro or a stealthy effort to diminish Hillary's role in improving  the State Children's Health Insurance Program. The fact that Schilling is  married to a librarian who, he laments, "never recommends anybody use Wikipedia"  (no one, no one, hates Wikipedia as much as librarians) does not diminish  his vigilance. "You constantly have to police [the page]," he says, recalling  the way Rudy Giuliani's Wikipedia article declined in quality after its  protectors lost interest. "Otherwise, it diverts into a state of  nature."
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