While I pretty much agree with you on most of the above statement, I do have a small disagreement with this one. First of all, I do agree that whoever at MS came up with the idea to pay some guy to change the wiki entries was a complete idiot, even the guy who they approached said that he was to take a fair look at the posts and find any inaccuracies and change them. Nothing else.
That is what was said by
the one who came forward. Was he the only one approached? We don't actually know. Remember we know of it because he chose to be public with this. Microsoft was silent about the idea. If more were approached (as seems likely to me) who were they and what instructions were
they given? Why the sudden interest in "correcting" Wikipedia and why only on the OOXML vs ODF topic?
Given Microsofts various deceptive comments about ODF (Open Document Format) such as it's designed for integration only with OpenOffice/StarOffice and therefore they can't be compatible (but they later sponsored a plugin that gives ODF compatibility). Microsofts whole behaviour towards Mass. adopting ODF and creating their own competing "standard" (all 7000 pages of it). Given all this can we trust that he is the only such editor. If not can we tust that the instructions he was given are shared by the (hypothetical) others?
Microsoft is attempting to get OOXML on the ISO fast track to becoming a standard (approval or not to be decided by early Feb). That could be derailed if conflicts within the OOXML proposal are brought forth. The timing of this combined with attempts to get the Wiki entry changed by a "friendly" editor makes it appear that they want to cover something up. Do they? I don't know, only Microsoft actually does. It appears very suspicious to me. Only time will tell though.