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Is it time to shed our anonymity online?

Reading about the 19th century battles between Noah Webster and his many enemies, real and imagined, I was struck by the famed American lexicographer and others’ frequent resort to the anonymous article. In 1834, an article in a Massachusetts periodical accused Joseph Worcester, Webster’s mild-mannered rival, of “gross plagiarism”.

Webster’s name did not appear on the article, but it was in all likelihood written by him, according to The Dictionary Wars, a book by Peter Martin. Anonymous articles were common in the 18th century and much of the 19th.

In recent decades, anonymity in books, newspapers and established websites has been infrequent enough to create a sensation. Witness the fuss about Primary Colors, the 1996 novel about the Bill Clinton era. Originally published anonymously, it was eventually revealed to have been the work of the political columnist Joe Klein. Last year, the New York Times published an unsigned op-ed by a senior official in the Trump administration, who wrote that presidential appointees were “thwarting Mr Trump’s more misguided impulses”.

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斯卡平克

邁克爾•斯卡平克(Michael Skapinker)是英國《金融時報》副主編。他經常爲FT撰寫關於商業和社會的專欄文章。他出生於南非,在希臘開始了他的新聞職業生涯。1986年,他在倫敦加入了FT,擔任過許多不同的職位,包括FT週末版主編、FT特別報道部主編和管理事務主編。

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