You raise an excellent question, ones that begs an information accountability on the part of scholars, but also I think on the part of every citizen. In my thesis research I asked the very same question, except I propose that information accountability and guardianship is not as black and white as tradition would have it, specifically due to the proliferation of ICTs, and ends in questions of censorship and information monopoly as the vice to misinformation. I explore the
nature of collaborative information & knowledge studies, where I've outlined a
methodology towards a Collaborative Knowledge
Ethics as encapsulating the contemporary cultural postmodern understanding
of knowledge as freed from
authoritative and peer reviewed standards.
The nature of collaborative
information & knowledge models such as the wiki concept, wikipedia,
wikimedia, open source, copyleft, crowdsource, social media, knowledge commons,
creative commons, and collective intelligence are telling of the nature of
information dialectics and the ebb and flow of information control. It is noteworthy to compare two supposedly opposite standards of authoritative knowledge, those being on one hand the
traditional peer reviewed journal and on the other hand Wikipedia (yes...for better or worse, Wikipedia IS the standard as far as cultural dialectics is concerned, which is what you confirm in your question). While the
traditional argument would posit that the peer-reviewed journal is
representative of highly qualified information, it would insist that
collaborative information & knowledge, as per the wiki phenomenon, is neither qualified nor quantifiable. However,
the argument can be made that both peer-reviewed information and collaborative
information are susceptible to the same cyclic nature of monopoly and control
and that the state of transparency of either at any given time is a matter of
the waxing and waning of cultural dialectics. Whereas peer-reviewed information
circles become closed systems of dead scholasticism where information often
becomes nothing more than self-serving affirmations of already established
parameters, so too is the wiki phenomenon,
as exemplified by Wikipedia, while on one hand a catalyst to information
dissolution through saturation, on the other hand a monopolized product of a
select few.
A good example of
the concerns of Media Ethics for example is the above noted scenario that posits Wikipedia
as both an authoritative and un-authoritative control of information flow.
While scholarship maintains, perhaps rightfully so, that authoritative flow of
information should stem from peer reviewed scholarship into the wider contexts
of culture, culture has taken “information” into its own hands, creating a
middle-man that supplants information before the so-called natural process of
dissemination can take place. Where once we had a cultural faith in information
as a priori to communication, we now
face a culture that has hijacked not only the credibility of information but
also the credibility of credibility itself. Dissatisfied and impatient with the
slog and staunchness of authority and “high-brow” scholarship, culture has
re-interpreted not only information, but the very idea of information, taking taxonomy,
ontology and epistemology into its own hands (unaware, of course, of what those
foundations are) and creating the wiki
phenomenon, which in turn gives birth to such phenomena as Wikipedia and other
collaborative knowledge structures. Can one argue that the above are really
only one phenomenon, manifestations of the same thing - affordance to a digital
culture in the very process of tearing down the power structures that in form it?
We need to consider the possible ironies and double standards posited in
this very assumption of peer-review as incontestable, and should address the red flags of censorship implied within, at least coming from an information ethics point of view. Does not even the scholarly control of information
through peer-reviewed
avenues constitute a form of censorship? It is not unthinkable that bias,
chance, and ideology guide the process. A large portion of the peer review
process involves not just fact checking but also capitalizing and prioritizing
based on ‘suitability’, where only the ‘very best’ work (based on what
parameters?) sees the light of day. Nathanial Enright points out that
capitalism quickly turns information into a commodity (Enright, 2011). The best
peer reviewed journals are also the most stringent, and rigorous competition
weeds out everything but the ‘best’ submissions. In such a scenario it isn’t
long before prestige becomes the motivating factor in publication. And what
better sign of gross censorship than a drive towards ego before subject? As
Casadevall and Fang point out, “The prestige of a journal has become a
surrogate measure for the quality of the work itself. (Casadevall and Fang,
2009).