'The Editors' by Stephen Harrison: Wikipedia, internet communities, and the battle for truth in the digital age

Event description

  • Free
  • Open to the public

Crowd-sourced internet encyclopedias — most famously, Wikipedia — have the power to shape the story we tell about the past and the information with which we move into the future. The people who edit those forums — namely, an army of unpaid volunteers — take their roles seriously. But what happens when that power is manipulated?

That’s the set-up for Stephen Harrison’s new novel, "The Editors". When a freelance journalist attends the global conference for Infopendium, a fictional rendition of Wikipedia, she expects a straightforward story: editors — PhDs and high schoolers alike—debating the rules of the crowdsourced encyclopedia. But when a hacker targets the conference, leaving a cryptic message, it sets off an online information war with grave offline consequences.

Join Future Tense and Harrison, a leading journalist covering Wikipedia and online information ecosystems and the longtime author of the "Source Notes" column, to discuss The Editors, internet communities, and the battle for truth in the digital age.

The first 20 registrants will receive a free copy of the book upon arriving at the event. You can also purchase it online.

Speaker:
Stephen Harrison
Author, The Editors

Moderator:
Andrés Martinez
Editorial Director, Future Tense
Professor of Practice, Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication

Event contact

Mia Armstrong-Lopez
mia.armstrong@asu.edu
Date

Thursday, August 22, 2024

12 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Eastern time
Time

12:00 pm1:30 pm (MST)

Location

ASU Barrett & O'Connor Washington Center at Arizona State University

Cost

Free