Wikipedia:Scam warning

Wikipedia

Scam warning: Don't fall for scammers offering to "help" you with your "Wikipedia problem"!

Scammers may pretend to be Wikipedia volunteers or a "professional" public relations firm, and ask you to pay them for "services" such as writing an article, getting a draft article accepted quickly, preventing or reversing deletion of an article, or protecting an article from changes. This is a scam.

  • Help from real Wikipedia volunteers is always free. They will never ask for money or any other compensation.
  • No one can guarantee that an article will be accepted or "protected".

If someone makes such offers:

  • Do not reply. Stop all contact.
  • Do not share personal information, or your Wikipedia account password.
  • Do not click on any links they send.
  • Do not send money or do anything else they want.

What to do instead:

  • Forward the whole conversation, including email headers, to paid-en-wp@wikipedia.org.
  • Delete the messages. If you shared your Wikipedia account password, change it immediately and consider enabling two-factor authentication.

Don't get scammed!

  • Scammers look for declined draft articles, articles recently deleted, editors writing about themselves or about a subject in which they seem have an intense interest, and so on. They then offer to sell the victim "services" such as writing an article, getting a draft article accepted quickly, preventing or reversing deletion of an article, or protecting an article from changes. If someone offers any kind of paid Wikipedia assistance or services, it is a scam.
  • Scammers may claim to be Wikipedia administrators, Wikimedia Foundation staffers, or other "influential people", or claim to be able to pull strings with people willing to circumvent Wikipedia rules in exchange for payment.
  • Scammers want you to communicate with them outside of Wikipedia.
They may want you to use LinkedIn, Snapchat, Facebook, WhatsApp, Discord, email, or the telephone, so that legitimate Wikipedia editors won't see what's going on and tip you off to the scam.
  • Scammers "guarantee" their services.
Absolutely nobody can guarantee anything about what will happen on Wikipedia today, tomorrow, or next year. (And they're certainly not going to refund your money if your wishes don't come true.)

If someone asks for money to help you with your "Wikipedia problem":

  • Stop all communication with them.
  • Forward the entire conversation, including email headers, to paid-en-wp@wikipedia.org.
  • Stop all communication with them immediately and cut all ties; block them from being able to contact you ever again. Do not reply or respond to the scammer even if to tell them that you are aware of the scam or that you are reporting their activity.
  • Keep a local copy of all messages and correspondence, but only if you need it in order to supplement a report with your bank or with law enforcement. Otherwise, delete any and all messages and communications that they've sent you.
  • If there's an editor you trust, consider contacting them for help

Wikipedia cannot help you recover any money that was lost or stolen as a result of any scams, but reporting the activity will help to prevent future scams as well as protect others from becoming victims. If you believe that you were defrauded, consider reporting the incident to local authorities or a consumer protection agency in your jurisdiction.

Some people are paid to edit Wikipedia. Paid editors are:

  • not employed by the Wikimedia Foundation or by the Wikipedia community; they have no authority beyond that of any other volunteer editor
  • required to follow Wikipedia's paid editing process of disclosure and policy
  • required to follow Wikipedia's conflict of interest process of disclosure and policy
  • required to comply with Wikipedia's usual policies and guidelines, and their edits will be reviewed by the community like any other edits.

Some paid editors create "sockpuppets" for each client they work with to try to hide their paid editing. Edits by sockpuppets can be reverted without discussion.

No editor can "guarantee" any outcome or result will occur on Wikipedia: not that a draft will be accepted, an article kept or deleted, any content remain kept or be deleted, nor any tags remain or be removed.

If you receive a solicitation for paid editing services that contradicts any of the above, the paid editor is misleading you. Before employing a paid editor, you should read Wikipedia's paid editing disclosure and conflict of interest pages and verify that they are following these rules.

Getting volunteer help

For volunteer help, see:

See also