(Wisconsin) Supreme Court Justice Rebecca Bradley has been quietly editing her own Wikipedia page

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Bice: Supreme Court Justice Rebecca Bradley has been quietly editing her own Wikipedia page
jsonline.com

Last week, a person with the Twitter handle @arizonasunblock from Tampa, Florida, noticed that Bradley, who has been on the high court since 2015, appeared to make major changes to her Wikipedia biography earlier this year.

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I've seen this happen so many times and it's always so embarrassing. There's a lovely template that you can slap onto an article that says something along the lines of "this article appears to have been edited by someone with a close association with the subject." It's truly a marvel in how close it skates towards saying, "the subject of this bio didn't like parts of what people were saying, so they edited it to suit themselves" without saying exactly that. It's subtly brutal.

Fortunately for the feelings of people who edit their own wiki bios, I suspect that they probably don't feel the sense of shame that I would if I were in that position.

They're the type of person who is upset they get caught and apologizes of they upset someone but not for their actual transgression.

Why use that template when you could revert the self-serving edits instead?