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Wikipedia Losing Contributors, Says Wales

derGoldstein writes "According to an AP report, 'Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales said the nonprofit company that runs the site is scrambling to simplify editing procedures in an attempt to retain volunteers.' He explained, 'We are not replenishing our ranks... It is not a crisis, but I consider it to be important.' Despite Wikipedia's wide-reaching popularity, Wales said the typical profile of a contributor is 'a 26-year-old geeky male' who moves on to other ventures, gets married and leaves the website."

533 comments

  1. Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's an easy reason for this. The admins are, generally speaking, dicks. This wouldn't be a problem if they were in touch with the community, but they aren't.

    1. Re:Easy reason by royallthefourth · · Score: 4, Interesting

      But how do you fix this? Who do you replace them with? The only people who would spend so much time editing instead of reading Wikipedia have got to be really weird.
      Maybe all edits could be fed into a queue like the Slashdot metamod where they are evaluated by random visitors side-by-side to see if they are reasonable.

    2. Re:Easy reason by eln · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly. Generally speaking, it's better to retain the people you have rather than to find ways to replace them when they leave. Simplifying editing may or may not help replace the people you lose, but addressing the reasons why you're losing so many people is going to be more effective at keeping quality high. When I hear people talk about why they no longer edit Wikipedia, they never talk about the complicated editing process, but they almost always talk about the unreasonable and unaccountable admins.

    3. Re:Easy reason by nschubach · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I just stopped doing it because I lost interest in doing it. It's time out of my day that I can do things far more entertaining. (It's also my main gripe with people who think that taking care of the world's needs will bring some kind of utopian future. If I didn't have to go to work, I wouldn't do work. I'd be the best damn video game player in the world.)

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    4. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not just the admins. There are various people who will stake out a particular page and just delete things for the hell of it, or stick those obnoxious [citation needed] tags all over the place. There are also the political operatives and the cult zombies who will constantly scrub their Glorious Leaders' pages.

    5. Re:Easy reason by roothog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But how do you fix this?

      Require admins, and anyone else who's privilege level is above the basic editor, to use their real names.

    6. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Admins are dicks? True. But so are many of the users.

      I stopped editing purely because so many of the people were hostile and uncivil to ANY suggestion. You couldn't get them to accept even talking about a problem, they were much more concerned with bashing you than they were with whatever issue you brought up. There's a comment to one concern I brought up where months after I left it, and after I left Wikipedia, and somebody asked if anybody was working on that, the person just said "Oh ignore that person, he left" which just goes to show what kind of dicks there are.

      I'd say shut it down instead.

    7. Re:Easy reason by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      But how do you fix this?

      Give less power to admins. They should only be needed to resolve disputes and handle cases of persistent bad behaviour.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    8. Re:Easy reason by geniice · · Score: 1

      Err anyone on wikipedia can resolve disputes (admins have no real special authority in that area) and single admins can't generally resolve persistent bad behaviour. Admins are more targeted to dealing with obvious vandalism, copyvios and other simple stuff.

    9. Re:Easy reason by Afforess · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This may be an unpopular theory, but I think Wikipedia's shrinking community has little to do with the admins behavior. I've only personally heard about their poor behavior from 3rd, 4th, or 5th hand accounts. But that's purely anecdotal and a side-tangent.

      I think the reason the community is shrinking is because Wikipedia, at least the English version, is complete. I'm not implying that there isn't more information that can be added, but as far as the sum of human knowledge goes, I'd guess that they have gotten past that "magic" 95% marker for easily acquired knowledge. Most of the remaining work to be done is article maintenance, and filling in mundane details of niche articles or emerging fields. The days when 5th graders wrote articles on your home town or park near you is gone. My quaint home town article for Rockford, MI (a town with less than 5000 people) is nearly 3 pages long! (I can't believe there was enough to even fill in 1 page, after the generic census data...),

      This isn't a bad thing. It's the natural evolution of such a site. Wales should pat himself on the back and congratulate the community for his contribution to society as a whole. Wikipedia is a job well done and has moved our world forward in a positive direction, in what is becoming a rarer achievement every day.

      --
      If our elected representatives no longer represent us, do we still live in a Democracy?
    10. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. Had a few friends trying to edit stuff that was true, and correct, and had correct sources, but was always edited by an admin and some of my friends were banned or gave up entirely.

      Also heard about people who have a wiki page trying to edit things and remove untrue things and then they were banned....

      Moar like dikipedia....

    11. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They are in touch with the community. With bludgeons and kangaroo courts. Then new admins come in and don't clean up the previously made mess.

    12. Re:Easy reason by quanticle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's a bad idea. Administrators may be in a position of power on Wikipedia, but that doesn't mean that they have a commensurate level of power in the real world. Forcing real name use just opens up administrators to possible personal harassment and physical attack.

      --
      We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
    13. Re:Easy reason by geniice · · Score: 1

      So care to provide a link to the article in question?

    14. Re:Easy reason by Anrego · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yup!

      This is definitely the core of the problem.

      It only takes one aspergers inflicted admin to make a good long term contributer throw their hands up in the air and say "fuck that shit". Additionally other people see this happening and decide not to get involved at all.

      The fact that this issue is brough up nearly every time wikipedia is mentioned would indicate that this is a serious and obvious problem ... not the editing interface. I have never heard anyone complain that "it was just so damn hard to get the text to look correct that I stopped contributing". I _have_ heard people rant about control-freak admins on a fairly regular basis.

      I think the big problem, as someone mentioned, is that the people who make it to the top are the people who spend all day trolling through articles and correcting things. In other words... the people who are probably running on a lean mixture and take things just a little too seriously. The people you need admining wiki are the occasional contributers who are socially well adjusted (which is why they are "occasional" contributers.. they spend time doing other things with real people). How you achieve this I do not know.. but I think it's the answer.

    15. Re:Easy reason by roothog · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Power without accountability to the people that you're exercising power over is dangerous.

      I'd go further and argue that editors should disclose their real names, too, as that provides some accountability for content. Some people really more qualified to edit an article than others.

    16. Re:Easy reason by Anrego · · Score: 1

      Or require them to upload a photo of themselves, smiling, at a bar or other social area, with a minimum of 4 friends who _don't_ look like they are being paid or held hostage.

      In other words, prove that they are socially well adjusted. The big problem with wikipedia administration is that the folks who make it to the top get their largly because they have no actual lives outside the internet and as such spend huge chunks of their day trolling through wikipedia.

    17. Re:Easy reason by 1s44c · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's an easy reason for this. The admins are, generally speaking, dicks. This wouldn't be a problem if they were in touch with the community, but they aren't.

      Agreed. The kind of people that want power over overs in their free time are not the kind of people who are good at using that power productively.

      I gave up everything but small spelling corrections and rephrasing on wikipedia ages ago.

    18. Re:Easy reason by Anrego · · Score: 1

      * get THERE

      Please excuse that. It's Friday!

    19. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You said this more eloquently than I could. I think we've reached the saturation point for wikipedia. Every time I've ever thought of looking something up on wikipedia it has had more than enough information.

    20. Re:Easy reason by MozeeToby · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sometimes admins have to be the bigger dick in a situation because sometimes the admins will be right in an argument with someone who won't back down. Do you want the admin that won't allow creative design topics into the evolution page to have his house picketed by idiots who don't know better? Or the guy who manages the abortion page having his car firebombed because he won't let someone put in the pet statistics?

    21. Re:Easy reason by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If your product is based on ostensibly presenting a version of the truth, at some point you must be held accountable for it. This means you must open yourself up to criticism and attack, but it also means you're open for praise. If you cannot be shown to be deceptive, manipulative, or otherwise false, you cannot in any way, shape, or form be expected to shepherd the truth. I do not understand how someone can think they should work in a scholarly capacity and expect anonymity while simultaneously having authority. Authority and anonymity are a recipe that breeds corruption and lies, as anyone who has had contact with a bureaucracy can attest.

      To put it simply: Why should we believe anything Wikipedia says is true if they aren't even truthful about their identities?

      Or more apropos: [citation needed, bitch]

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    22. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I stopped doing it after all my changes kept being reverted for various stupid reasons. If they don't want people contributing, maybe they should keep some of the content that is actually submitted.

    23. Re:Easy reason by tepples · · Score: 1

      Even though several of his own edits were made to text incorporating links to far less notable manufacturers.

      If you think an article about a given manufacturer doesn't belong on Wikipedia according to your interpretation of the notability policy, take the article to AFD.

      So yeah, if you're an admin, you get to put up all sorts of crap.

      More experienced editors make mistakes too, and admins are just experienced editors with a mop. There's no rule against a new editor reverting an edit made by a more experienced editor. It's just that more experienced editors are more likely to 1. check on their recent contributions over the past week to see if they got reverted and then 2. take the time to discuss any reverted edits.

    24. Re:Easy reason by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      Reduce there level of power. Yes if you say something in a public forum there might be consequences. Easy way to stop is it to randomly assign edits to be reviewed, since an editor need not know the subject after all. Now since an editor can no pick what he wants o work on he can not be coerced into editing something specific. If you do not agree with it you can make changes and they will be reviewed by a diff editor. Real names help people to be accountable, do not like it do not accept that position.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    25. Re:Easy reason by digitig · · Score: 1

      That's the point. If the admins are dicks, they should be personally harrassed and physically attacked, until they cease to be dicks.

      The trouble is, it might be the people doing the harassment and attacks who are being dicks, not the admins. The odds go that way.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    26. Re:Easy reason by geniice · · Score: 1

      Wikipedians hold meetups in pubs from time to time:

      http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Meetups_in_London

    27. Re:Easy reason by ultranova · · Score: 1

      To put it simply: Why should we believe anything Wikipedia says is true if they aren't even truthful about their identities?

      Or more apropos: [citation needed, bitch]

      Didn't you kinda answer your own question here?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    28. Re:Easy reason by Anrego · · Score: 1

      I didn't know that. It's a somewhat good sign I guess.

      However other like minded wiki folk doesn't count!

    29. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take donations. Pay contributors.
      I got "Flagged" for contributing to my own story.

      Read here:
      Help eliminate stupid speeding tickets

      Jim Pruett, Director
      WikiSPEEDia.org
      A TN Charity.

    30. Re:Easy reason by Darkness404 · · Score: 0

      But "qualification" means nothing.

      Think back to your college professors, just because they had advanced education didn't make them brilliant In all areas, even within their fields of study, an amateur with a passion for a niche can easily have more knowledge and expertise.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    31. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or your real name, Mr. Wobbly?

    32. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Second this.

      I have had a lot of experiences similar to those described by the various posters on this page, of editors reverting worthy changes I had made. I had a particularly upsetting experience on a math-related page, with an editor who really didn't seem to understand the math but viewed the page as "his" property. Actually I'm not really sure if he was an editor, or just someone who spent a lot of time on Wikipedia, but he sure seemed like he knew the procedures. In the end I just dropped the issue.

      I'm not even sure that real names would help, because I think these people don't even think of themselves as being dicks, they just develop an attachment to "their" pages and don't realize that they are not experts. They probably believe that they are doing a great service, and would be proud to have their real names attached. My instinct is to propose some kind of meta-procedure for weeding out bad people, but I'm scared this would be quickly subverted by the worst people on the site.

      Dan

    33. Re:Easy reason by ultranova · · Score: 1

      It's also my main gripe with people who think that taking care of the world's needs will bring some kind of utopian future. If I didn't have to go to work, I wouldn't do work. I'd be the best damn video game player in the world.

      Being able to do whatever you want with your time seems pretty utopian to me.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    34. Re:Easy reason by roothog · · Score: 2

      Where did I write that qualification means level of education?

    35. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Watch Team America a lot???

    36. Re:Easy reason by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      To be fair, you may be perceived as not being objective if you're editing an article about your own project.

    37. Re:Easy reason by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 4, Informative

      You are getting modded up because your opinion is rather novel vs. 'the admins are dicks' theory, and for the purposes of full disclosure to which I also ascribe.

      However, I think you really underestimate the indexing of human knowledge. There are hundreds of thousands of stubs on Wikipedia that need expanding, especially outside of the Western sphere. I have a feeling that just because you don't spend a lot of time studying Asian or African topics that nobody does and therefore their expansion isn't needed. I'm rather quite a sinophile, I can assure you that Wikipedia's coverage of Chinese history, culture, and notable figures alone is respectable but far from complete. I can also tell you that Wikipedia's coverage of more minor cultures in Asia and elsewhere borders on poor. Thankfully this improves all the time, but the point is that your 'work is done' theory is very Western-centric I think.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    38. Re:Easy reason by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      There's a hundred possibilities, but in the 5 years or so this problem has been apparent, Wikipedia has tried exactly zero of them.

      At this point, it's a lost cause.

    39. Re:Easy reason by foobsr · · Score: 1

      I think the reason the community is shrinking is because Wikipedia, at least the English version, is complete.

      Go tell it to the Germans, who, according to their front page, are still considering Wikipedia to be in the 'project' stage.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    40. Re:Easy reason by Jappus · · Score: 1

      If I didn't have to go to work, I wouldn't do work. I'd be the best damn video game player in the world.)

      But really, how long would you be able to do this? According to my experience, most people want to work after a certain time. Why do you think most millionaires don't spend all day doing nothing. Sure, they may have more leisure time than the average person, but most of them find a multitude of other things to do. For example running companies, especially if they've built it up themselves. And even those that only socialize all day do exactly that: They socialize, they strive to get in touch with other people, because at some point, even the biggest palace is empty.

      And if you want to see what happens when you combine joblessness with poverty, just go into the nearest run-down pub you can find. Not being able to work sooner or later destroys you, both mentally as well as physically.

      No matter what will happen in the future, no matter how much human work will become unnecessary, people will find ways to work, if only to entertain themselves and feel they're helping others. We're social animals, and will remain so for a long, long time.

    41. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about people who won't reject edits as a matter of principle unless it is from someone they know? Reverting vandalism is one thing, deleting pages and reverting edits without any explanation given is something different, and drives people away.

    42. Re:Easy reason by Gr33nJ3ll0 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't seem to happen here on Slashdot, and everybody knows the names of the editors.

    43. Re:Easy reason by grumbel · · Score: 2

      I think the reason the community is shrinking is because Wikipedia, at least the English version, is complete.

      Kind of. The core problem however isn't that it is complete in a good way, but that the current rules forbid you to extend it, which in turn brings you in conflict with the admins or regulars if you actually try.

      There is plenty of more information that could and should be added to Wikipedia, but that shouldn't be part of the normal overview article, as it might be to much detail. For a video game that could be things like list of cheatcodes, walkthrough stuff, character descriptions, etc. stuff you currently find on Wikia.com. Wikipedia simply has no place for such information and the rules forbid them.

      Essentially Wikipedia should move the goal post a little further and provide systems to handle more detailed information on a subject matter.

    44. Re:Easy reason by dkleinsc · · Score: 2

      The kind of people that want power over overs in their free time are not the kind of people who are good at using that power productively.

      Yeah, instead they're busy playing cricket. Those damned bowlers, busy taking wickets!

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    45. Re:Easy reason by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      Well that, and the deletionist slant is absolute shit.

      It used to be that you created an article and people would build on it over time. Someone would tag it as a "stub" or needs "credible sources", but it would be around pretty much forever.

      The requirements for citation became more and more stringent, and now an article needs around 3 or so good sources to not get into any deep shit (unless it falls under the purview of an asshole admin who doesn't like it). The barrier of entry has been unnecessarily raised. Disk space and bandwidth are cheap, and there's no good reason not to keep bad articles but tag them as unverified. The crappy article of today becomes the featured article of tomorrow.

      However, I don't think we'll see it anytime soon. Admins will keep circle-jerking, get 7 people to vote to delete a page, and bam it's gone. Nothing really good or new will be created in niche subjects. Stuff will be removed and declared "not notable", and Wikipedia will stagnate.

      Pick nearly any subject, be it a scientific discipline or piece of entertainment, and type that term + "wiki" in google. If you type in "Star Wars Wiki", the Wikipedia Star Wars article will be in the top 5 - but so will Wookieepedia, the Star Wars-dedicated wiki. If Wikipedia were truly accomplishing its mission, stuff like Wookieepedia and the thousands of other topic-centric wikis wouldn't have to exist because the articles would already be on Wikipedia. Sure, this doesn't cover everything - wikis that act as game manuals, for instance - but it'd cover damn near everything.

      Part of me wonders if the draconian shift in Wikipedia was done on purpose in order to drive more people towards Wikia (which takes in ad revenue and therefore makes money).

    46. Re:Easy reason by discord5 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd go further and argue that editors should disclose their real names, too, as that provides some accountability for content.

      Which will most likely kill of 99% [citation needed] of edits on Wikipedia. Good job! [citation needed]

      Some people really more qualified to edit an article than others.

      Sure thing, Stephen Hawking is going to update that page on black holes immediately, right after he updates the Theory of Everything and breaks down the entire universe into a single formula [citation needed]. The man has little else to do anyway.

      The problem with wikipedia doesn't lie with the crappy contributions (those get edited out over time anyway), it lies with the people who insist on arguing about its content rather than improving it. This is why most pages [citation needed] are littered with "[citation needed]" left and right. Pointless little edit wars where a paragraph is added, removed, added again, removed again, simply because of clashing egos [citation needed] and not necessarily because the content simply wasn't up to shape [citation needed]...

      Adding real names to this isn't going to change that kind of dickish behaviour, because you have no way of verifying all of the credentials on the various subjects on wikipedia.

      Sincerely yours,
      Captain Dick Darlington
      Department of Funology and Funectomy
      Her Majesties Royal Army

      P.S.: If you want proof of my authority on the subject of funectomy, invite me to a party and allow me to suck all the fun out of the room. My certificate of authority from the Mexican University of Fun expired last week [citation needed]. Sorry about that.

    47. Re:Easy reason by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      Hey now, the Wobblys are a proud line of Irish gymnasts, thank you very much! Sure they take the occasional spill or two off the balance beam, but have you any idea how difficult it is to do a handstand without spilling your Guinness?

    48. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're 90% right. The other problem is that over the years very specific people have taken over key subjects and not allowed anyone else to edit or include additional information or pages. These people simply are unwilling to give up any control over what they control. And once these people finally decide to move on anyone who would have been interested in getting involved have lost any interest in the site.

    49. Re:Easy reason by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Just because you're not using a real name doesn't mean that you're not accountable for what you're doing. It's relatively easy to get access to that if you really need it. The bigger issue is that Wikipedia rewards bad behavior and that's not going to stop just because folks are using their real names. Institutional incompetence and corruption are hardly eliminated just by using real names or even face to face interactions.

    50. Re:Easy reason by emtilt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're right, but the parent is right, too, because in some respects what you describe is niche (regardless of its objective importance). I, for instance, despite being highly educated, wouldn't have any clue where to start contributing to Chinese culture articles.

      I used to edit wikipedia, but I rarely come across articles that I an improve aside from grammar and proofreading these days. The stuff that's missing requires quite a bit of expertise. The only articles I can still meaningfully contribute to are those related to my own field (astrophysics) or a hobby that I know in great depth (film).

    51. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 1

      As a former administrator who used (and still uses) his real name on Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects, I don't think it is necessarily a terrible idea. I was harassed to a limited extent and there was some concern about trolls causing problems for my family, but on the whole it wasn't nearly as bad as you claim here. Most trolls are lazy, which is why admin tools work at all in the first place.

      The worst cases are those folks who know project policies and can wikilawyer their way into doing whatever they want to do with impunity. Many of those are admins already and thus make it even harder to stop them.

    52. Re:Easy reason by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Precisely why is the Wikipedia being held to a higher standard than say the Encyclopedia Britannica? Or for that matter the World Book Encyclopedia. I mean seriously, do you have any idea who it is that works on any of those articles?

    53. Re:Easy reason by omnichad · · Score: 2

      Your spelling corrections don't get reverted? Mine always do. I completely gave up before I ever tried to make a non-trivial contribution.

    54. Re:Easy reason by Animats · · Score: 0

      I think the reason the community is shrinking is because Wikipedia, at least the English version, is complete.

      It's more than complete. Almost all the significant articles were written years ago. The English Wikipedia is up to about 3 million entries, and most of the good ones are in the first million.

      Wales is struggling with the fact that he's old news. He tried to commercialize the Wikipedia concept with Wikia, and that turned into a hosting service for fan articles. He tried "human powered search", and that folded. He need to move on to other things.

    55. Re:Easy reason by Trixter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the reason the community is shrinking is because Wikipedia, at least the English version, is complete. I'm not implying that there isn't more information that can be added, but as far as the sum of human knowledge goes, I'd guess that they have gotten past that "magic" 95% marker for easily acquired knowledge.

      Until the cancer of "not notable" is gone, it can never be "complete" (not 95%, not even 50%).

      I've seen articles on an entire range of software get deleted, while the page for Luke Skywalker goes on forever.

    56. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The wikipedia admins, and some editors are dicks. See "Edit Wars"

      Wikipedia is still elitist-deletionist. If they want to attract editors they need to handcuff the dicks and treat all editors equally. This doesn't happen, and in every wiki, the dicks are the people who think they are doing the wiki a favor by reverting or deleting what they believe to be cruft. Not consensus.

    57. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 2

      As much as I would like to believe this, admins and and do "throw their weight around" and sometimes revert edits that otherwise would not normally be acceptable out of "ordinary editors". I got in one particularly nasty edit war with another admin that ended up going into the wheel warring category, and I simply backed off and essentially quit even participating in the project as a result.

      Oh wait, somebody wants to know why participation has dropped again?

    58. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Generally speaking, it's better to retain the people you have rather than to find ways to replace them when they leave.

      Simple solution: kill the wives - assuming the description of a 26 year old male getting married is accurate and not just a recruitment tactic. I do feel obligated to say to any would-be-wiki-editor-trolls: being a wiki-troll won't get you laid or help your erectile dysfunction - it just makes you a dick, doesn't give you a bigger one.

    59. Re:Easy reason by PriceIke · · Score: 2

      Wikipedia used to be the "site that everyone could edit". Now it is the site that everyone can edit, so long as everyone is a Wikipedia admin. Everyone ELSE's edits get removed.

      One time I created a Wikipedia page for something I considered interesting, which didn't have a page yet. I wrote a detailed page with lots of links and information. It took me at least an hour. I wanted to contribute this small piece of knowledge to the whole, which I understood to be the whole point of Wikipedia. In less than 12 hours, my page had been removed and tagged as not being noteworthy enough for whoever. So I wasted my time trying to share my knowledge. Nowaways, if you want a page to be added, you cannot add it yourself. You have to ASK THAT IT BE ADDED.

      Not only that, but edits to existing pages--no matter whether they are of value or not--are almost always reverted.

      My time is much better spent sharing my knowledge by answering people's questions on Quora. Wikipedia clearly is not interested in what I have to say.

      --
      It's not a lie. It's the truth with lossy compression.
    60. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Her Majesties Royal Army

      I think you're a fake.
      Her Majesty's Royal Army.

    61. Re:Easy reason by mikkelm · · Score: 2

      You're confusing being a dick with being legitimately authoritarian. Many of the admins are actual dicks, people who'll go to lengths to have things done their way, rather than the "right" way, and take out as many dissenting individuals as they can in the process. That's why Wikipedia is the mess of inconsistent enforcement and edge case policy that it is.

    62. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 1

      I stopped doing it after all my changes kept being reverted for various stupid reasons. If they don't want people contributing, maybe they should keep some of the content that is actually submitted.

      I think this goes back to the ethos of those who are working on Wikipedia and how they view contributions.

      BTW, this is an excellent comment and IMHO shows precisely why Wikipedia is losing contributors. If you could care less about new contributors and how they are being treated, those new contributors will care less about you as well. Far too much on Wikipedia is now automated or being run by a bunch of folks who really don't want to be friendly to somebody not familiar with Wikipedia policies. They may feel overwhelmed with trolls or facing other problems, and sometimes you eventually think that everybody is a troll which is a new contributor.

      The spirit of cooperation and willingness to accept new ideas certainly is lost on Wikipedia now. I remember when contributors who had a good idea and wanted to do even very radical overhauls of the site were encouraged to do so. Even things such as changing out the entire engine running the site were at least encouraged to happen as an experimental project to see if you could make a better one. Such radical moves are not simply given "let's see what you might come up with that could be better" but they aren't even considered any more or even be allowed to be raised.

    63. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Want my reasons?
      1) without logging in shows your IP
      2) logging in via HTTPS requires explicit loading of HTTPS authentication page
      3) quite a few disputes with article hoggers:
      a) some maths related article (was years ago) - my every edit being revoked at first without explanation and when I asked "hey, what gives" in discussion got replied that my edits were erroneous without explaining what exactly was wrong with my pretty much grade school maths knowledge
      b) then I added a section to article about Nokia 6120C's undocumented abilities I had discovered by trial and error, like, H.264 profile, bitrate, etc - that got reverted as being "unimportant, subjective" and of course "needing citation"
      c) okay, so I'll stick to editing non-it/non-science articles... BAD IDEA, you see, to edit some page about some not very popular band (maybe Skyforger, I forgot) you need to have "artistic sense" to know how to compose "beautiful sentences" (which only the "true" editor knows how
      d) at this point I was more or less pissed off but having heard that article about Aegisub was about to get deleted as too short I updated it and, well, it got deleted again because "Aegisub is an irrelevant program" by this all-knowing and almighty wikiadmins opinion

      Forget it, I'm out of here, I say.
      Oh, did I mention that both in case of that maths article and Nokia 6120C and even more so in the case of that band those who reverted my edits called it the article "theirs" either because they had written it and it was perfect or just because they felt they knew about them more than those who actually worked with those things.

    64. Re:Easy reason by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Administrators may be in a position of power on Wikipedia, but that doesn't mean that they have a commensurate level of power in the real world.

      Actually I am sure it's an inverse relationship.

    65. Re:Easy reason by nschubach · · Score: 2

      Sure, but if I'm doing that... who's paying for my rent, food, etc. Eventually, there will not be enough money coming in to cover all of us that would be rather unproductive for society.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    66. Re:Easy reason by Unequivocal · · Score: 1

      I've also noticed that you can write almost anything you want if you footnote it and link to basically any semi-authoritative article on a subject that mostly relates to the article (it doesn't have to have anything to do with your actual point). So the obsession with citations, while I understand it on principle, is basically ineffective b/c blackhats who want to inject intentional noise/bad info are not deterred. And it probably dissuades a lot of friendly people with the right intentions..

    67. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's an easy reason for this. The admins are, generally speaking, dicks. This wouldn't be a problem if they were in touch with the community, but they aren't.

      There's an easy reason for this. The admins are, generally speaking, dicks. This wouldn't be a problem if they were in touch with the community, but they aren't.

      I love Wikipedia but after years of contributing I became so frustrated with the hostile patronizing attitudes of some admins that I gave up.

      An old boys network has developed among (some) admins that make it next to impossible for non-admins to take positions contrary to them in articles they are attached to.. The fact is some admins have strong views on some issue and if a non-admin disagrees with him/her far far more often than not other admins will back their fellow admin's position. While most of the time I don't believe this is conscious manipulation it still happens. This is statistically improbable if objectivity was the deciding factor.

      For example, an admin (like anyone else that contributes) might place undue emphasis on controversial minority sources while omitting mainstream reputable sources that far outnumbered them. Technically not wrong but not right either. Or the nomenclature used will be a reflection of an admin's political stances rather than more neutral language. Thus articles slowly begin to slowly be a reflection of a particular admin's views. The effect is so gradual and subtle its difficult to take to arbitration and have a hope of winning (as another admin doing the arbitrating have to both know the subject material well and not be predisposed to defending another admin;s views over even a random IP edit)

      It's common sense there is a conflict of interest when someone is both an admin and contributor to controversial articles (no different that a court case where the judge was also plaintiff) Passing it over to another friendly admin alone isn't much better (sort of like a judge asking his buddy judge o do arbitration in a court case) There is an easy way to fix this problem. Eliminate conflict of interest situations. So if an rticle is controversial, limit the period of time admins can contribute to ot (as an admin and as a contributor). If the admin doesn't want to do that, they can can still have the option of giving up admin duties to continue contributing.

      Most admins are decent folk but much like courts and police, responsible Wikipedia admins should be working to eliminate conflict of interest situations. (rather than the status quo of trying to arbitrate such situations in perpetuity)

    68. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what if the admin is not a dick, but in the process of doing his job appropriately, pisses off someone who is a dick, such as a certain Transformers movie producer, who has been known to cyberstalk people who add information to Wikipedia that he doesn't like (e.g. the fact that his wife's direct-to-DVD movie got lousy reviews), and to threaten the people who have permanently banned him from editing the site because of his repeated violations of its policies? It's hard enough to protect yourself from a nutcase you can identify; the vast multitudes of anonymous nutcases on WP could literally place an admin in mortal danger.

      (posted AC for hopefully-obvious reasons)

    69. Re:Easy reason by sjames · · Score: 1

      Allow admins to be voted off the island. That way they can't be TOO nasty or they'll have to start over as an untrusted user.

    70. Re:Easy reason by scorilo · · Score: 1

      Using real names is a bad idea. The whole point of wikipedia is that the collective wisdom of the many produces better results than the individual wisdom of few (as is the case with other encyclops. It is the best known bastion (and possibly the only one) in the fight against ipse-dixit-ism, a disease deeply embedded in human DNA. Requiring real names would not prevent editors from being dicks, but rather would make corruption easier and restrict dickishness solely to those who can produce credentials or create the illusion that they have them.

      Also, why so many people think here that real names are the answer, while in comments on articles about Google Plus debacle they correctly identify that policy as flawed?!?

      --
      "One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that ones work is terribly important." -BRussell
    71. Re:Easy reason by bth · · Score: 1

      Good summary - the admins come off as the worst kind of detail-oriented bureaucrats.

    72. Re:Easy reason by nschubach · · Score: 2

      But there's no mandate that says the work needs to be productive. The work could be building a new room on my house. It could be biking around town all day. It may not help society in any way. I may even get in their way, making it harder to "pay" for my utopia.

      For instance. If all your worries were taken care of, would you run around the neighborhood picking up other people's garbage they left on the sidewalk? You think there's enough people in this world that would enjoy doing that on their own time? How about cleaning the dishes in a restaurant? Sure, someone may love cooking in utopia, but maybe they don't like scraping the leftovers off the plates and cleaning up afterwards.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    73. Re:Easy reason by BitZtream · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      When did everyone become such pussies?

      Statistically, crime today is no different than it was in the 1900s. There is no reason for you to cower in your home. Stand up and be a fucking man instead of hiding behind a false identity. There are no more muggings, no more home invasions, no more rapes or murders per person today than there was 100 years ago. The only difference is that today you hear about it, in 1900, you never knew that a school shooting occurred 1500 miles away from you, today the entire world knows it WHILE ITS HAPPENING, but that doesn't mean its happening more.

      The only reason you have something to fear is because you bring it on yourself. If you act responsible, considerate and fairly, you'll have no more of a problem than any other job.

      Stop being such fucking pansies and live your fucking lives instead of being afraid to do so. God is must suck to be that much of a coward.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    74. Re:Easy reason by dleemaas · · Score: 0
      Yes... but the question was:

      But how do you fix this? Who do you replace them with?

      In other words, who gets to decide what the difference is between being a dick and being legitimately authoritarian? You? The people being "wronged"? Making admins use their real names would be a bad idea, for the reasons stated above. I don't have an answer, but admins using real names is not it.

    75. Re:Easy reason by frosty_tsm · · Score: 2

      You're confusing being a dick with being legitimately authoritarian.

      Some people can't distinguish between the two. It's kind of like "One man's rebel is another's freedom fighter."

    76. Re:Easy reason by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      No they don't, statistically, there is no difference in the amount of wrong doers on either said. People on 'the good' side just get by with it more and people on 'the bad side' .

      Several studies have show for instance that if say 1 in 20 people is X type of criminal, then 1 in 20 [fireman/policemen/soldiers/guardsmen/sailors/fbi agents/insert WHAT EVER GROUP YOU WANT HERE/catholic priests] are that type of criminal.

      The service you are performing generally has nothing to do with how much of a dick you are.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    77. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 2

      I think the breaking point came when new sister projects essentially stopped being developed. I spoke up as bluntly as I could put it when the New Project Policy page on the Wikimedia Meta project was declared an obsolete historical page. Mind you, that page has not been made historical because a new policy was developed to replace it, but rather because no new Wikimedia projects are being developed.

      Essentially, the Wikimedia Foundation killed the leavening yeast that helped to cause the projects to grow along with the people who had the creative energies to make things happen. When you do that, the project dies. Those people move onto other things when that happens, and indeed they have. You now have Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and many other "social network" sites that didn't exist when Wikipedia was starting out. The fact that those in charge really don't care that the spark of energy which built Wikipedia in the first place is gone and that they killed that spark speaks volumes about why Wikipedia is losing contributors and participants.

      Jimbo didn't help by essentially killing Wikibooks and Wikiversity either, but that is another completely different story even though it is a variation on the theme here. You don't drive away those who have the creative spark, particularly from volunteer organizations. You can and must treat volunteers differently.

    78. Re:Easy reason by scorilo · · Score: 1

      There is no single and absolute "TRUTH", just competing versions and theories thereof. To think that you can hold someone "accountable" for their opinions is silly. It is similar to Italians who sentenced and jailed seismologists for not being able to predict the recent earthquake near Rome, or Romanians who almost convicted meteorologists for "lying about the weather". Forcing people to use their real names will cause more people to abandon wikipedia.

      If you one wants to use his or her real name, nothing stops them.

      --
      "One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that ones work is terribly important." -BRussell
    79. Re:Easy reason by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      There's an easy reason for this. The admins are, generally speaking, dicks. This wouldn't be a problem if they were in touch with the community, but they aren't.

      It's similar to the Gnome and Unity debacle in the Linux desktop world. The people running the projects are totally out of touch with their users and the community, and think they know what's best for everyone. So people are getting fed up and leaving for greener pastures.

    80. Re:Easy reason by frosty_tsm · · Score: 1

      Why do you think most millionaires don't spend all day doing nothing.

      Greed and ego. Most millionaires either aren't satisfied and want more money or want to be the man in charge.

    81. Re:Easy reason by mikkelm · · Score: 1

      If you think an article about a given manufacturer doesn't belong on Wikipedia according to your interpretation of the notability policy, take the article to AFD.

      Yeah, sure. I like nothing more than to spend my free time navigating a bureaucracy of cubicle emperors, each with their own differing interpretation of the same policy, over the course of several days or even weeks, just so that I *might* get to edit a free encyclopedia without compensation.

      Going through a list of other articles that also don't adhere to the policy that was used to reject my content, and trying to get them deleted, that's the next best thing.

      Imagine if policy dorks on Wikipedia were actually required to follow up on their "rulings" by enforcing them across all other applicable articles. Then it wouldn't just be a matter of writing an angry and very verbose "no" on a discussion page, and the selective enforcement of policy would be much less of an issue.

      This will always be a problem as long as Wikipedia accommodates the type of person content to sit around and try to call the shots without taking any action or having any responsibility.

    82. Re:Easy reason by scorilo · · Score: 1

      The only solution that makes sense. VOTE THIS ONE UP!

      --
      "One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that ones work is terribly important." -BRussell
    83. Re:Easy reason by shadowfaxcrx · · Score: 1

      Spoken like someone who's never moderated anything on the internet. Oftentimes you're labeled a dick just for deleting some asshole's link to goatse.

      --
      "I disagree with you" does not equal "flamebait."
    84. Re:Easy reason by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      That's the point. If the admins are dicks, they should be personally harrassed and physically attacked, until they cease to be dicks.

      Sorry, but that's BS, and it's a mob mentality.

      The people who resort to physical violence are usually nutcases anyway. Do you want them controlling everything through fear?

      Suppose you have an admin stepping in when people make edits to a highly political article, suppose about Obama or Michelle Bachmann or whatever. Maybe the admin wants to just keep things neutral, but there's extremists who don't want that: they want to paint Obama as the best President ever despite all his colossal mistakes, or they want to remove any negative material about Bachmann even though she's a nut. The admin removes edits from the extremists that try to rewrite or obscure history, so the extremists get pissed and go drive to his place and shoot him.

      How does that help anything?

      The people who just don't like admins who act like dicks aren't usually the people who resort to extreme measures. They just get mad, maybe start saying things publicly about the problem, and if it doesn't get fixed after a while, they quit and go do something else and then Jimmy Wales whines about Wikipedia losing contributors.

    85. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The problem here are those who feel that Wikipedia being snowed under by "cruft" articles like a synopsis of each episode of Star Trek or separate articles for each monster in World of Warcraft sort of miss the point of those kind of articles: Those articles help provide the "training" and experience for new users to expand into something more serious like John Robert or Quantum mechanics.

      Wholesale deletion of the cruft articles drives entire communities away from Wikipedia, which in turn fractures the community and makes Wikipedia less due to the separation of those communities. A similar thing happened on Wikibooks, where most of the game walk through books were deleted on a wholesale basis, along with the "Jokebook" that worked as a proving ground for many new contributors. I still claim that "cleanup" of Wikibooks killed the project and similar things also happened on Wikipedia and the other sister projects.

    86. Re:Easy reason by m50d · · Score: 2

      There are plenty of new topics that could still have articles written about them - it's just Wikipedia declares them non-notable.

      --
      I am trolling
    87. Re:Easy reason by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      There's really nothing that can be done about this problem, at least not from the outside. It's an internal problem, and only Wales and Wikipedia's upper management can fix it. I would suggest some sort of process so that admins' actions are reviewed periodically and ones who are abusive are removed from those positions, and all of them are given "sensitivity training" of a sort, really training on how to be a good admin and not be a dick, and a warning that they'll be removed if they are.

      However, this again is something that only Wikipedia can do from within. It's much like a big corporation. Some corporations are better run than others, and have processes in place so that management is more consistent at all levels and so individual managers can't have little fiefdoms, and their underlings have a way of talking to their bosses about them. Other companies don't have this, and as a result the company is extremely consistent from group to group, and manager to manager. This generally results in high turnover and various parts of the company dying out due to lack of success, and isn't really good for the company as a whole in the long-term. Wikipedia is acting like this latter type of company. In any organization, you have to have oversight of the middle managers, or else they'll follow their own agenda instead of the company's.

      The only thing the rest of us can do is to vote with our feet.

    88. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In that specific case, being a " big dick" might be an honorary.

    89. Re:Easy reason by tverbeek · · Score: 1

      "Wales said the typical profile of a contributor is 'a 26-year-old geeky male' who moves on to other ventures, gets married and leaves the website."

      The problem with Wikipedia's contributor decay isn't the 26-year-old geeky males who move on a get a life. It's the ones who stay and make Wikipedia theirs.

      Wikipedia doesn't need a better [[editor (software)|]]; it needs better [[editor (person)|]]s.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    90. Re:Easy reason by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Well, because Wikipedia does very little ACTUAL fact checking, contributors do that, with no vested interest in wikipedia's accuracy other than their name on an edit list and maybe some list of 'top contributors' or something silly that no one cares about. The collections you mention actually consist mostly of people verifying facts in articles and finding/weeding out subjectiveness. People that care about doing the job right because the food on their plate is a direct result of them doing their job right. You simply can't say the same for wikipedia editors. Eating and house are far more powerful motivators than some silly edits ranking.

      I don't need to know who actually wrote them, the quality of the writing itself gives it credibility. The fact that there are yearly revisions, with the changes published for inspection also lends credibility. The fact that we know they require their books to be accurate in order to maintain credibility in order to sell their product has a lot to do with it as well.

      Wikipedia is a joke, no one with even a quarter of a clue considerings wikipedia a credible source for anything. Its a GREAT place to start looking for credible sources, but the free for all approach to wikipedia means you simply can not under any circumstances trust its data, you have to verify it ALL, which means its effectively a useless source. Its much more like the only (yahoo still does this I think) web directories, which were really just starting points for finding useful pages, wikipedia is just a far better version of those, pretending to be a factual reference source. Wikipedia just begs for money every few months in such an obnoxious way that people give in just to get his face the fuck out of view while they go waste a few ours fucking around at work.

      I use wikipedia all the time, but you're seriously out of touch with reality if you think its credible or anywhere near large long running encyclopedias. Your argument is basically 'well I don't trust anyone because ...' and you have no reason, just 'because'. Much like most science, I have to trust the work of others to some extent until proven otherwise. If I verified all my sources for EVERYTHING first, I'd spend all my time doing verification. I have plenty of respectable, intelligent, highly educated people AND institutions that consider the Encyclopedia Britannica to safe to assume that its factually accurate.

      I don't know anyone who thinks the same thing about Wikipedia, with the exception of some school kids that just want an easy way out of doing actual research and still don't get that ANY encyclopedia is not a valid reference.

      Wikipedia isn't being held to a higher standard, they aren't even being held to the same standard. No one anywhere considers the three things you mentioned to be on the same level. Alright, you obviously do, and I'm sure there are others, but to put it bluntly, that just makes you look stupid for being so naive and ignorant of the world around you.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    91. Re:Easy reason by donovansmith · · Score: 1

      A couple years ago I spent a few hours on a page that had a major lack of information and the thanks I got was having everything I wrote deleted due to "lack of citations". My motivation to contribute anything to Wikipedia dropped to zero after that. It is anything but "an encyclopedia anyone can edit". Not to mention that much of the content, likely due to their editing policies, is of dubious quality anyway. Good for trivial knowledge but not much else.

    92. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Another huge problem is that admins rarely get punished for breaking the rules, certainly compared to "ordinary editors" and especially brand-new editors.

      I've called some admins on the carpet for that kind of foolish behavior.... usually getting them to back down because I showed myself as somebody with a clue. Still, it takes some wikilawyering to put these kind of admins in their place when they start to forget policies like "All editors are equal" and other similar policies.

    93. Re:Easy reason by Doctor+Morbius · · Score: 1

      they want to paint Obama as the best President ever despite all his colossal mistakes

      Citation needed.

      --
      If I disagree with you it's because you are wrong.
    94. Re:Easy reason by Moryath · · Score: 2

      Most Wikipedia admin actions aren't even remotely within policy, however.

      Look at the "recent changes patrollers" and "vandalism patrol" types, for instance. If you aggregate their logs, you find that most of them aren't filing few-hours, one-day, or even two-day blocks: they are filing week- or month-long blocks (sometimes multiple months!) upon DHCP addresses. Admins can, and do as a matter of policy, lock talkpages to prevent unblock requests. It's supposed to be used in cases of "abuse", but more often than not they just beat the ever-living shit out of a newbie who they've blocked, troll them a few times, and then claim "oh this guy was being abusive or clogging the system with repeat requests so I locked it." Some of them don't even go through the trolling motions, they just lock the pages by default anyways.

      The result? They never get any fucking scrutiny. Who's going to scrutinize them, the other admins who are doing the same thing all the time?

      Once they've locked it, there is no email address one can realistically email to get an unblock situation resolved anymore. Try to do it, and you're likely to wind up one of the modern equivalents of the Durova List.

    95. Re:Easy reason by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "It is the best known bastion (and possibly the only one) in the fight against ipse-dixit-ism [wikipedia.org], a disease deeply embedded in human DNA."

      [citation needed]

      "Also, why so many people think here that real names are the answer, while in comments on articles about Google Plus debacle they correctly identify that policy as flawed?!?"

      Because social networks are meant for private conversation and interaction, not public intellectual research. Real names are useful for somebody else's creepy marketing (at best).

    96. Re:Easy reason by Duradin · · Score: 2

      The Great Webcomics Purge made sure I'd never bother contributing.

      Personally, other than ease of access, I don't really care about articles that would already be in a real encyclopedia, because they're already in a real encyclopedia. What I do care about is all the minutia you can really only get from the obsessive geeks and otaku of that topic. "That's what wikia is for" people can go die in the malware infested fire that is wikia. We're not even close to peak bits, so who really cares if Pikachu and company each have their own page (other than the wikipedia is a "real" encyclopedia people)?

    97. Re:Easy reason by tepples · · Score: 1

      Why does Joerg Schiller get an article, but not Ulrich Drepper?

      Compare AFD to AFD. It appears Schilling got more news coverage than Drepper. If you can find three independent news articles about Drepper, feel free to start an article on the drawing board.

    98. Re:Easy reason by hedwards · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but you're full of it. My argument is that I don't have any way of knowing who it is that's writing a particular entry in an encyclopedia therefore it's a higher requirement for the Wikipedia to have to do that. Those long standing encyclopedias aren't necessarily any more accurate than the wikipedia is ultimately.

      And as far as accuracy goes, How accurate is wikipedia? it's hardly the sort of incompetent mush you're suggesting it is.

    99. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What accountability does using real names bring? Other than "I know who you are and where you live, so you better not delete the crap with which I want to fill Wikipedia"?

    100. Re:Easy reason by Anrego · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes!

      The notability thing is high on my list of "stuff they need to take less seriously". It's a community driven project, so if the community wants to talk in gory detail about anime or star trek or whatever, what is the harm. If it's factual and well written.. who cares how "notable" it is.

    101. Re:Easy reason by hypergreatthing · · Score: 2

      another thing is, is there really a need to delete info deemed not necessary by editors?
      For instance, there are a lot of bands/artists whom have their entry deleted because they're not a "signed band".
      Ex: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calamine_(band)
      Yes, they're the band that did the sealab 2021 theme song. Had an entry, but nope, deleted.

    102. Re:Easy reason by CrackedButter · · Score: 1

      I didn't even get that far; never had a taste of that. Wikipedia shouldn't be 'scrambling' now to simplify the interface, it should be simple to use anyway; as easy as a Wordpress blog.

    103. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If your product is based on ostensibly presenting a version of the truth, at some point you must be held accountable for it.

      Wikipedia's editors do not care about presenting the truth. They view truth as something that people agree upon rather than something that can be shown to be. They care about the rule of majority opinion, with the result looking like this Dresden Codak comic. They care about citations, with the editor's partisan political rag a "Reliable Source" while your partisan political rag is not. Any further citations that support an alternative opinion are "not Reliable Sources". All evidence and critical thinking is "Original Research".

    104. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and is that not some kind of utopian future?

    105. Re:Easy reason by Duradin · · Score: 1

      I'd say that counts as notable, but I'm not a wikipedia admin.

      "Some of the information is questionalbe and I cannot find it anywhere else except for the fact that the band did the Sealab theme song. It is in the show's credits as well as talked about in the commentary"

      Wow, a show's own credits don't count, let alone its commentary. Go Deletionists!

    106. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TL;DR: Read the bold parts only. :) But don't try to reply without reading the rest too, OK? ^^

      LOL. "We know their names! So they can't possibly do something wrong. Just like with our government. ...
      Oh, wait!" ;)

      On a more serious note: I thought a lot about this, and it always comes down to the simple fact, that nobody of us knows reality. We all just hear shit here and read shit there. And we only separate the "good" from the "bad" by how much we "trust" the sources. (The realistic result of being unable to do experiments on everything we hear, to see if it's actually true.) Which is defined by two things: 1. How useful those sources were for us in the past. And 2. How well they fit with our own inner model of reality.
      The problem is: We all are different. So we have a different model of reality and trust different sources.
      And everybody believes his reality is the "One True Reality(TM)". When actually, for all practical purposes (short of everybody having to measure everything down to quantum mechanics), nobody does.

      That's why we humans have leaders and followers. The leaders are very sure of their reality, and the followers trust them, if it's useful for them.
      But the thing is, that 1. Actually it only has to be perceived as being useful! And 2. Delusional people also are very sure of themselves. Dumb people even more so, since they don't have the means to find out actual reality in that depth, and hence are forced to hold "knowledge" dear like unalterable beliefs.

      So now think about what that does to any system, where a small group happens to have more power over something than the rest. Which is the case with admins.

      Obviously, those in power will assume to be correct, and keep their reality up. And every opposing p.o.v. is wiped away as if it never existed. Because it threatens the own model of reality. And without a reliable and consistent model of reality, the human mind breaks down.
      This is not a problem for them. For them, that's how it's supposed to be. And from their p.o.v. that is right.

      The problem is, that we want the same thing. We want to uphold our model of reality. (Notice how the question which model is actually physically correct doesn't even come up. Because it's irrelevant. Nobody has it anyway, and nobody can realistically even have it, as I explained. [Yes, that's hard to swallow, and I'll probably get ignore-modded to hell in the same fashion as described above. But it's the truth, if you really study cognition.])

      So we end up with a load of different models of reality, with everybody thinking his one is obviously right since he heard it somewhere from a "respectable" (to him!) page.
      But only one model is backed by people who control the servers. So which one do you think wins? ^^

      Nobody is at fault here. It's just how life is. Especially humans.

      And so, the solution that seems obvious to me, is to make Wikipedia decentralized. With the actual content of an article coming from the end of a cascade of personal and individual trust relationships. Where "trust" is, what they now call a "reliable source".
      Jimmy trusts Jon on politics and Frank on the rest. Jon trusts Prof. Glaubwurdig on most of politics but about his city, he adds a couple of changes ("corrections" from his p.o.v.) Prof. Glaubwürdig doesn't have to trust anyone on politics and writes many good articles. But on everything else he trusts his colleagues at the university. One of which is Frank. A well-informed expert and aggregator for quality sources.

      Conclusion: I propose a different view for everyone. Let the idiots believe their crap. By enforcing it on them, you won't ever change them anyway. If you want them to agree with what you think is the "One True Reality(TM)", you have to gain their trust.

      But you can dream about everyone on the plane

    107. Re:Easy reason by quanticle · · Score: 1

      That's why you check those handy little citation tags that they have. If you don't believe the article, check its sources.

      --
      We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
    108. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have a warped view of the kind of people who are admins on Wikipedia. Sure there are assholes... there are assholes in any group of people, this is not surprising. I am an admin on Wikipedia, and have been one for (literally) most of a decade. I am an admin not because I desire power over people, but because there are some "housekeeping" functions that are (wisely) not available to any random anonymous editor.

      The problem is not that admins are *inherently* the type of people who desire power over other people... it's that the type of people who desire power over other people are likely to wish to become admins.

      There are plenty of good people on WP, just ask for help if someone is being a bully.

    109. Re:Easy reason by AJWM · · Score: 3, Informative

      This.

      With the probable exception of spam, anything posted was obviously notable enough to somebody to warrant the post in the first place.

      More and more, huge tracts of Wikipedia make it look like the online compendium of popular culture, rather than a place to find out about possibly obscure but real world topics, inventions or discoveries.

      --
      -- Alastair
    110. Re:Easy reason by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      No citation needed at all, for either part of that statement. Almost every President ever elected provides pretty ample evidence that the statement is likely true. There are always partisans who attempt to elevate a given President above the level of competency that he actually operates at. Second, all Presidents are human and all humans make mistakes. Given the power of the Presidency, mistakes made at that level can easily become colossal because of the reach of impact they can have.

      If you do research on a given President and don't find at least a couple colossal mistakes, you're not a very good researcher.

    111. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I think you're off the mark here. Yes, there's a great deal of completeness now, but there's still lots of stuff missing, and always lots of new information, which many of us would be happy to work on if there were any sense that some putz wouldn't come along and erase the work.

      My example was about 4 years ago--this is not a new problem--when I tried to add the Pulp Fiction briefcase to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macguffin . It's kind of obvious, right? It's an unexplained central object in the film whose only purpose is to move the plot along. That's what a MacGuffin is.

      Nonetheless, some editor reverted it, saying it had to have an external reference. I did go and find some random website that said the briefcase was a MacGuffin, but it left a sour taste and I haven't even done casual editing since. Why bother?

      (I see that the page has now been updated, with no external sources, which is great. Did someone have to fight that editor for it, or wait for him to get bored and move on? I dunno, but I have enough to do in my real life. If I can't make casual corrections or additions without having to argue with someone on the Internet, well, fuck it.)

    112. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 1

      The problem I've had with editing is that when you do get to a dispute over an edit there is no group of normal people to arbitrate.

      That isn't quite true. There is an Arbitration Committee that is heavily vetted before anybody gets onto that body and is technically elected by the Wikipedia user community which is supposed to deal with that issue. That sometimes new contributors are unaware of the Arbitrators may be true, and there are usually other ways to deal with editorial disputes that must be tried first before an arbitrator gets involved.

      Most wikis usually have a public discussion forum where you can also raise the issue if you think something is happening that you believe to be unfair or unreasonable, including editing disputes. Sometimes the folks on that forum can be jerks and tell you to buzz off with such petty concerns, but there are usually a few reasonable people who lurk on those forums which will help you out as well. If such help is offered, take it.

      For myself, I think the paid employees tend to screw things up totally, the worst of them being Jimmy Wales himself. That the arbitration board should be monitored in their arguments may be true, but I have rarely if ever seen a serious problem that wasn't really resolved to the best needs of the community through the Arbitration Committee. They have and do "bitch slap" admins that overstep their authority and have the power to "de-admin" somebody who is abusing their authority. The "ArbCom" work for the most part, so much so that the Wikimedia Board of Trustees simply refuses to get involved in overturning their decisions. For non-English Wikipedias, it does become a larger problem as such an ArbCom does not exist for those other language projects. Various proposals have been formed to make an appellate "meta ArbCom" to handle those rare cases where the ArbCom doesn't seem to work out.

      Professional staff is the last thing that Wikipedia really needs, and I think there are too many working for Wikimedia as it is.

    113. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 1

      There is a group of people, including admins, on Wikipedia that insist upon the idea that fewer articles are better. It goes on the mistaken notion that somehow if there are fewer articles, those people coming by to edit Wikipedia will work on those fewer articles to make them better instead of "wasting" their time on frivolous junk like articles on Jar-Jar Binks or other Star Wars characters.

      Much of the reason these other "wikis" exist is in part because they have been explicitly driven out of Wikipedia by these "deletionists" who insist that the fancruft articles are bad for a "true encyclopedia".

    114. Re:Easy reason by Snaller · · Score: 1

      "Require admins, and anyone else who's privilege level is above the basic editor, to use their real names."

      Yeah, because in the real world conflicts never happen between people who use their real names.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    115. Re:Easy reason by Nick+Ives · · Score: 2

      Well, we currently waste enough food to feed 1bn people. Add in all the overheads caused by the market and it's easy to see how we could feed everyone essentially for free.

      As to how we make sure people bother to farm, maybe we could just turn food production into a form of (inter)national service? If you don't want to take part fine, you just have to spend your life paying for food. People who want it can spend a couple of years when they're young doing farm work and then enjoying free food for life.

      Then it's just a matter of housing; houses are relatively cheap to build and maintain. I'm sure we can figure out how to build even better, cheaper and more easily maintainable houses. That would mean that again, one would only have to spend a small proportion of ones life engaged in housing work.

      Once you've got food and housing, everything else is gravy.

      --
      Nick
    116. Re:Easy reason by shadowfaxcrx · · Score: 1

      Point taken. ;)

      --
      "I disagree with you" does not equal "flamebait."
    117. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Why do you think most millionaires don't spend all day doing nothing. Sure, they may have more leisure time than the average person, but most of them find a multitude of other things to do.

      Almost every financially wealthy person (unless they inherited the money or won the lottery) I have ever met usually is insanely driven and works incredibly long hours... usually to the exclusion of other social pursuits. They may show up to campaign fundraisers or a social cocktail party, but most of the time they are usually "working" even at those events... building contacts, negotiating deals, or doing something that will in the long run earn money for them and their companies.

      This isn't to say that somebody working 5 jobs and working 100+ hours per week is going to be wealthy, but those who are wealthy certainly don't sit around doing nothing.

      For myself, being unemployed was perhaps the worst experience I have had precisely because I was spinning my wheels doing nothing. At least doing something like writing on Wikipedia gave me something to do when I was looking for a job, but it isn't the same thing. Most people who participate on Wikipedia do it on a part-time volunteer basis.... and when I see somebody over doing the "admin" work on Wikipedia or elsewhere I usually advise them to scale it back and not let it wrap up their lives.

    118. Re:Easy reason by MarkvW · · Score: 1

      Fix it by creating a workable appeal process where the appeal judges are outside the cabal--perhaps ordinary editors selected randomly.

      If a meta-editor is reversed too many times, demote his or her sorry ass--without appeal.

    119. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because people are all about the truth and goodness. No, doing the right thing means more often than not you're going to be punished for it. That's why we need whistleblower laws, witness protection, anonymous sources, women who wrote under pseudonyms and special reports for the truly good people. If your worldview were true, then politicians wouldn't be scumbags, because we would demand it, education and sciences would be valued and not treated like the joke that they are. Sorry, hate to tell you the world doesn't work the way you want it to. This is not Star Trek, there is no good and faithful Federation. People who contribute, do so because they feel good doing it. They want to do it anonymously so that those around them in the real world will not treat them like dirt for being good. I think it says more about the human condition that we punish others for doing good things because it makes us feel badly, than anything you wrote. This is why capitalism is supposed to work. We are greedy enough to watch over our own interests. I truly wish the world did work in the way you suggest, that our reputation actually mattered. but it doesn't. The shield exists to protect those who defend against the blows of others.

    120. Re:Easy reason by LateArthurDent · · Score: 1

      The problem with wikipedia doesn't lie with the crappy contributions (those get edited out over time anyway), it lies with the people who insist on arguing about its content rather than improving it. This is why most pages [citation needed] are littered with "[citation needed]" left and right. Pointless little edit wars where a paragraph is added, removed, added again, removed again, simply because of clashing egos [citation needed] and not necessarily because the content simply wasn't up to shape [citation needed]...

      I agree with you in principle, but I think you picked a bad example when you chose the [citation needed] tags. Now, you're not the first to voice the complaint, but I just don't understand it. Why are those a problem?

      The way I see it, [citation needed] is no more annoying than [32] next to a sentence, and exactly as helpful. If you see an actual citation, you know where to go to to in order to do more research on the subject. If you see the [citation needed] tag, you know that the information might be right, but it reminds you that the submitter didn't back up the statement. If I see an article with a ton of [citation needed] tags, my brain is perfectly capable of filtering them out as I read, if I'm not interested in citations. I don't see them an an annoyance, I see them as a valuable service.

    121. Re:Easy reason by hankwang · · Score: 1

      I once made a link from a mention of a leading kit car manufacturer to their web site.

      As usual with Slashdot discussions about Wikipedia, there are many stories of people who got reverted and rarely any links to the edit history.

      In this case, I suspect that this was your first and only edit on Wikipedia and that possibly you are affiliated with this "leading kit manufacturer". My experience is that if I bother to check out external links added as first-time edits, they look like link spam 99% of the time; that's why they are often reverted immediately.

      In case you are curious about what makes something look like link spam: the same editor added links to the same website to 10 other articles, or the text with the links reads like an advert ("..is a leading manufacturer of high quality $product"), or the landing page is a web shop, or the landing page is a content-scraping farm plastered with ads.

      I have done many such reverts myself (no, not an admin), although I am not very active anymore, for exactly the reasons mentioned in TFS: got older, got married, too many other things to deal with in life.

    122. Re:Easy reason by jojoba_oil · · Score: 1

      [citation needed]

      No, seriously. I don't think you were wrong, I'd just be interested to see the changes the other admin was trying to make/prevent, and to what level they were taking it.

      When I first learned about Wikipedia, I made a change here or there to improve clarity of points. They were all relatively minor grammatical fixes and kept the same idea that was already there. Almost every single one was reverted. I couldn't get more reason than that I was not logged in, and the editor didn't trust/like anyone who would edit from an "anonymous" IP address. (At the time, I was not interested in creating an account and saw no benefit to it. I still feel the same way. But now I don't even bother if the content is bad.)

    123. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      addressing the reasons why you're losing so many people is going to be more effective at keeping quality high.

      We've got to find a way to keep the geeky 26-year-olds from getting married!

    124. Re:Easy reason by X0563511 · · Score: 2

      Accountability.

      Right now there's no easy way for a random user to look at an admin's history. You don't have to have real names. Just knowing that admin X blasted every comment about Y with position Z, whilst telling the objectors that their opinion (regarding the correctness of such action) was meaningless.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    125. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But how do you fix this? Who do you replace them with? The only people who would spend so much time editing instead of reading Wikipedia have got to be really weird.

      I find your line of thinking insulting and simply unfair.

    126. Re:Easy reason by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      This is entirely a problem of not having enough quality editors to review modifications, unfortunately.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    127. Re:Easy reason by hankwang · · Score: 2

      Most of the remaining work to be done is article maintenance, and filling in mundane details of niche articles or emerging fields.

      I disagree. It is true for most things that I know about enough to be confident in writing about without further research (i.e., physics-related stuff), but when I look up scientific-ish topics outside the more geeky fields (math, physics, computer science), I encounter articles all the time that could be improved vastly.

      Think about plant species. I look out of the window and see hedera helix, which has an article covering the basic information but feels way too short for such a common garden plant and invasive species. I look at a common house plant in front of me and get an article that is just two paragraphs. Other example: An over-the counter drug, bromhexine, with only a very brief article.

    128. Re:Easy reason by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      Allow admins to be voted off the island. That way they can't be TOO nasty or they'll have to start over as an untrusted user.

      That seems like a good idea. Assuming a large number of anonymous votes are needed to get rid of an admin and that other admins can't interfere in any way maybe it would work.

      I really don't know if a few or a lot of administrators are a-holes but I do know if you make a bunch of good faith edits sooner or later you will run into an admin on a power trip throwing his/her weight around. At that point all your good will is lost. A functional way to get rid of the bad admins could help a lot.

    129. Re:Easy reason by SteelAngel · · Score: 2

      This this and especially this.

      Wikipedia went downhill as soon as the Admins got a stick up their butt about "notability"--the Wikipedia definition of notability is so skewed as to be worthless. Very notable historical pages such as Old Man Murray get deleted, well-informed and well written articles on obscure topics get wiped clean, while at the same time there are dozens of stub articles that provide no worth.

      The whole of Wikipedia is a disaster nowadays. It's run by petty dictators acting out their dreams of dictatorship. Back in the day, they would be sitting in their parents basement memorizing bus schedules. Today, thanks to the internet, they post those schedules on wikipedia and edit camp them against all the evil people who would even think of editing their masterwork.

    130. Re:Easy reason by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      Your spelling corrections don't get reverted? Mine always do. I completely gave up before I ever tried to make a non-trivial contribution.

      I don't think small self-evident corrections get reverted much. I don't know for sure because I don't check. I figure I did my bit and there is no point wasting more time checking small corrections.

    131. Re:Easy reason by discord5 · · Score: 1

      I agree with you in principle, but I think you picked a bad example when you chose the [citation needed] tags. Now, you're not the first to voice the complaint, but I just don't understand it. Why are those a problem?

      Because it's indicative of a mentality issue. Obviously someone was "authoritative enough" on the subject to indicate that the article needed improvement, but instead of improving it (by either removing the invalid claims, or by backing them up with a citation) that person just slaps on "[citation needed]" and leaves it at that. If you pick 10 random pages on Wikipedia that aren't stubs, I guarantee you that 7 out of them will have at least 2 "[citation needed]" where a short query on google would've easily turned up results. (warning : numbers pulled out of my rear-end, do not use as actual statistics)

      The whole "[citation needed]"-thing has to a certain point evolved into a form of Wikipedia trolling on it's own.

    132. Re:Easy reason by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      You didn't, and neither did Darkness404. He merely provided an example of people who should be qualified in part by virtue of their education and experience, and yet may lack critical knowledge.

      Without defining qualification (which is not necessarily required at the beginning of such a conversation, but should be done relatively early), demanding a qualified person becomes an impossible goal.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    133. Re:Easy reason by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      By using metamoderation and karma system.

      Kinda like on Slashdot. Plus a little more accountability and a special conflicts board, formed from elected officials.

    134. Re:Easy reason by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      Though I've never even attempted to write any content for Wikipedia, I can easily believe your story. Just yesterday, a buddy of mine found an old photo of me playing electric guitar in a band we formed back around the 1990 time-frame. In it, I had a red Charvette branded guitar (part of Charvel's cheaper line of electric guitars at the time). I'd forgotten all about it until seeing the pic, so I thought to look it up on Wikipedia and learn a little more about the brand. Oddly enough, they had an entry for Charvel with quite a bit of info on their products, not nothing about Charvette whatsoever!

      When I did a Google search, though, a cached copy of the same Charvel entry apparently did. It looked to me like someone decided Charvette didn't belong in the Charvel entry (for who knows what reason?) and deleted mention of it in a revision.

      IMHO, if you don't have enough info about a specific product or product line to justify its own independent entry, there's *nothing* wrong with referencing it under a parent manufacturer or in some article where it could be related to the primary topic. It's better to have the info accessible than to have nothing at all about it, simply because nobody collected enough info to meet some editor's standards for a separate entry.

    135. Re:Easy reason by discord5 · · Score: 1

      Her Majesties Royal Army

      I think you're a fake. Her Majesty's Royal Army.

      Ok, so just between you and me, this is correct according to the new Oxford English grammar rules established in 2508. I am actually a time-traveler sent from the year 2634 to prevent a global disaster. July 12th 2633 the Wikipedia servers amassed enough knowledge to become self aware. In the next year it had been quietly positioning our Orbital Ion Cannons above the Sahara desert, and then turned our own weapons against us.

      When that bombardment finished, pictures of the Earth showed the message "Intelligent Life {{Citation needed}}" carved in the Sahara visible from space. We have become the laughing stock of the Milky Way, and on July 20th 2634 her Majesty Elizabeth XXXIV personally sent me back in time with the mission to sabotage the Wikipedia project before it becomes too powerful. In order to do so I have been randomly adding the {{Citation Needed}} tag to popular articles, combating the system from within.

      It is my belief that this will slow down the growth of the Wikipedia project enough so that in 2508 we don't have to develop an AI to grammatically correct all articles on Wikipedia (a task otherwise exceeding the available manpower on earth), but only will have to change one incorrectly spelled word on the wikipedia page of our magnificent glorious leader Elizabeth XXXIV (God shave the Queen!), thus avoiding Wikipedia becoming sentient and using orbital ion cannons on our deserts because it thinks it is being funny.

      This mission is extremely classified so I'm afraid that if you are contemplating of telling this to others I will have to kill you. I'll know if you tell someone, since I know the future. Now, if you'll excuse me, I've got to fill out this weeks lottery

      Sincerely yours,
      Captain Dick Darlington
      Department of Funology and Funectomy
      Her Majesties Royal Army

      PS : We did consider sending a messenger to the past not to change the grammatical rules of Oxford English, but we all agreed that we hated apostrophes, so we chose to eliminate the Wikipedia project instead.

    136. Re:Easy reason by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      issue permbans to anyone who has ever inititated an AFD or voted to delete in an AFD for an article being non-notable alone.

      it's a poisonous and harmful policy and has been misused and abused relentlessly. delete untrue or inaccurate or unverifiable articles, but ban the deletionists as they offer no value. I can buy a terabyte external hard drive for less than $100 there is no excuse

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    137. Re:Easy reason by TWX · · Score: 1

      When my contributions to box-step dances and the box-step dance move itself were reverted because the editor felt that it was inappropriate to describe the dance in the article about the dance, I gave up on bothering to contribute.

      Screw. Them.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    138. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, the reason I stopped editing Wikipedia is because of people going overboard with notability and deleting articles of genuine interest.

    139. Re:Easy reason by geekoid · · Score: 1

      So, it's dangerous. It's not that much power, and it can be easily countered.

      Wikipedia is fine.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    140. Re:Easy reason by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "In other words, prove that they are socially well adjusted. "
      And buy that you mean 'fits into your tight definition of socially well adjusted.'

      You are a twad.

      "The big problem with wikipedia administration is that the folks who make it to the top get their largly because they have no actual lives outside the internet and as such spend huge chunks of their day trolling through wikipedia."
      So? why is that 'bad'? I would rather the article was edited by some who spent their life learning about it.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    141. Re:Easy reason by geekoid · · Score: 1

      " I'd be the best damn video game player in the world"
      The Irony being that in order to become the best damn video game players you would be required to work at it.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    142. Re:Easy reason by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Doing what you want doesn't mean not being productive.

      It may for you, but If I didn't have to work, I would be volunteering at the schools and teaching after school science classes..with rockets and lasers.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    143. Re:Easy reason by JabberWokky · · Score: 1

      As the active admin of the world's largest English language community wiki (Davis Wiki), we're keen on inclusiveness and will go to great lengths to educate and bring in any real individual. That means a lot of forgiveness, understanding and real world outreach... which is now part of our culture. It's a harder path, but it seems to have worked out quite nicely.

      The problem is, Wikipedia has established their culture. And it's based on facts and rules, not emotion and people, which are the things that attract humans to activities. Mechanisms like increasing empathy by calling somebody up and listening to them is tool that work extraordinarily well... and just wouldn't operate in the rules based, often adversarial culture of Wikipedia. It works for Davis Wiki because there are thousands of people already aligned along finding common ground and solutions by any method necessary, even if it's unique.

      It also helps that there's no authority for content -- if you dispute something, *you* have to work it out. As human beings. Together. There are no rules regarding content (other than the IRS provided no-commercial activity because we're a non-profit), and there's no admin who has final authority on content, so you really need to actually come to a resolution that will hold. In fact, there are no hard and fast rules at all, which prevents "rules lawyers" from pointing at them or incessant quibbling about their wording or shades of meaning. It's just a shared project to document Davis, California, and the community at hand works things out using very established traditions (which, when they work well, can be as powerful as rules).

      Developing strong traditions and a culture of editors rather than rules is tough, but I think it results in a far better situation. True, you encounter the same problems over and over, which would be fixed by a first set of rules, but those rules would in turn create second order problems... and so on, until you have too many to follow (which is part of Wikipedia's current problems).

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    144. Re:Easy reason by geekoid · · Score: 1

      No, not real names. Enforced guideline.

      DO you really want the person editing a page on planned parenthood to have to use their real name?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    145. Re:Easy reason by geekoid · · Score: 1

      The it's not important to you. Big deal. Don't edit and move along.

      You seem to have plenty of time to bitch.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    146. Re:Easy reason by mikkelm · · Score: 1

      Apparently it's a big deal to Jimmy Wales, which is why I'm commenting.

      No need to get your panties in a twist.

    147. Re:Easy reason by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Sure, but that work doesn't "help" society in any real way. I'd still be a burden on society.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    148. Re:Easy reason by lgw · · Score: 1

      But then, why does notability matter anyway? If no one hits the page, it's free. If many people hit the page, it's therefore notable.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    149. Re:Easy reason by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Sure, but if there are enough people like me, there would not be enough goods to cover the work that you do. The question is then: How many people would be a drain on society and would the people not draining be able to do enough to counteract this?

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    150. Re:Easy reason by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      For the smart ones, their first experience with a divorce will generally do it.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    151. Re:Easy reason by digitig · · Score: 1

      Just so. And since the majority of Wikipedia users are not admins, the majority of dicks on Wikipedia will not be admins.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    152. Re:Easy reason by BigSes · · Score: 1
      Honestly, I don't think this is the case. If you want to refer the English version to English speaking countries, there are plenty of potential articles missing. I've visited many of English speaking countries in the Caribbean, and there are many "stars" and tourist locations that have no entry at all. Also, I am a huge video gamer, and I love reading about what games really entertain me, and there are no detailed articles about them. If articles exist at all, they are very superficial and vague (not even containing what would be "census" type information for a game, including format, release year, etc). Granted, many of these games are off the beaten path and 20+ years old, but I find them to be no more or less relevant to gaming (and sales figures back it up) than, say, any Rogue-like or Ultima title.

      So, you might ask, why don't I write any of these articles myself? To be honest, the negative discussions that infest the web about their editors and niches have completely turned me off to the idea. I'd love to write an amazing article, complete with information from sources that can be cited, etc. Why bother? If its going to get deleted or deemed not noteworthy, I just don't want to waste my time.

      I really like your idea of Wikipedia, English version, being completed, but I think that is far from the case. If I think 3 pages on Creme Fraiche or Rockford, MI, is a waste, I know just as many people would think an article of that size on something as mundane as a Soca musician from Barbados, or Wrecking Crew for the NES is just a wasteful. I wish they would just let the writers decide what is relevant. If you want to post a large, unbiased, and well written article about Justin Beiber, shouldn't that be valued as a submission to the sum of human knowledge (or at least English speaking knowledge)? Human knowledge is not based on who decides what is important, its knowledge, plain and simple. I'd love to back you up on this idea, but I think the problem with Wikipedia is still the snobby admins, and the information around the internet that scares away people like me. I don't want to write a 12-page article, complete with citations, pictures, etc, just to have it deleted for non-relevancy because it was about Steven Segal. If I was ever in Rockford, MI, I know I would certainly appreciate the ability to access such an article. Its not about what it is, its about that it exists and is done properly.

    153. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love when wikipedia just deletes huge sections of its website, because some admin being a rules lawyer has decided for everyone that that topic is not "noteworthy."

    154. Re:Easy reason by Anrego · · Score: 1

      So? why is that 'bad'?

      Read the large majority of the posts for this article. That's why. People who are not socially well adjusted tend to come off as douche-bags, which pisses people off, which results in people not contributing.

      People complaining about wikipedia admins is nothing new.. and more importantly it's not just a few cases of sour grapes. It's been a consistently known problem and the long term impact is starting to show.

      The image I (and I think a lot of people) get when they think of a wikipedia admin is not a good one.

      I picture some reasonably intelligent kid, who for lack of any social skills has mostly failed in real life. He has few friends, and works in a job where he gets no respect or is outright abused. He has been marginalized by society and so he spends every night in his parents basement playing out his fantasies of being a big shot on the internet... getting some kind of validation every time he deletes an article or reverts a change to one of _his_ articles.

      This is what is going to kill wikipedia in the long run. The people who will be left are the people that wikipedia succeeded in spite of.. not because of, and once that happens it will just crumble.

      I _really_ hope things get turned around before it gets to that point. I used to be really enthusiastic about the project and was more than happy to contribute (both in editing and financially) but now I'm so dis-enchanted by the child-like admins and deletion-ism and what it has done to the community that I just don't want to be involved in it any more.

    155. Re:Easy reason by bonch · · Score: 1

      But how do you fix this? Who do you replace them with?

      People who aren't dicks.

    156. Re:Easy reason by RJFerret · · Score: 1

      There are hundreds of thousands of stubs on Wikipedia that need expanding...

      I'm sorry, I disagree, the parent is getting modded up because it's insightful--I never ran across an admin, despite being very active. Years ago I used to do nothing but go through stub articles, fleshing them out, developing them with solid references, connecting them to other related articles and wikilinking them everywhere relevant, and guess what? Those pages now have seen few views and little to no activity.

      Sure, what you say is marginally true, there will always be information, particularly from other languages/histories/cultures that isn't included in the English version, just as imagery I provided for articles would get duplicated in the German version but few others.

      But that falls into the 5% that doesn't NEED (note, "need", not your want) to be there. Not a single one of the stubs I worked on would be found in a printed encyclopedia or included in a CD of Wikipedia.

      Ironically, stub articles with more than just a name, offer most of the content people searching Wikipedia want! Fleshing it out with far more "copy" does nothing but obscure the useful main point.

      I'm not saying my time was wasted (I found it fun), but years ago none of that information truly contributed to society. Of course it's valued by someone, but Wikipedia can be considered "complete" without it.

    157. Re:Easy reason by steelfood · · Score: 1

      You don't replace them. You limit them.

      Every set period of time, admins get x number of article deletions, y number of reverts, z number of edits, etc.

      Nobody gets unlimited modifications. The lack of scarcity makes things worthless. Worthless things are treated as trivial and thus abused before being discarded. Make something scarce, and it becomes important.

      The embedded culture of edit wars and automated reverts won't go away immediately. But people will start to think twice about what they're willing to go to war over when they lose because their quota ran out.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    158. Re:Easy reason by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of good people on WP, just ask for help if someone is being a bully.

      By which time I've already lost the time I spent contributing and my goodwill. At that point I'm not going to sink more time into wikipedia by looking for someone to help fight back against the injustice, I'm going to give up on the whole thing and find something more useful to do.

      The only changes I'm willing to make now are ones that take less than a couple of minutes. That's spelling and minor rephrasing and even then I seriously consider not bothering as even minor self-evident changes can lead to hysterical protests and all kinds of bizarre accusations.

    159. Re:Easy reason by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      most people want to work after a certain time.

      No, they 'need' to work, not want to work. They do need the social interaction, occasional praise or critism and all the other little bits that go with your typical job like sunlight. They don't really WANT to have to work, but thats the only sure fire way to get all the little bits of 'living' that our minds need to keep from going bat shit insane cause orange motor cycles don't have doors.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    160. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 2

      For an interesting discussion that eventually led to my leaving Wikibooks as a regular contributor, I'd point out this following discussion:

      http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Wikibooks:Reading_room/Archives/2006/May#Gaming_manual_as_a_textbook

      Mind you, the wheel warring here was absolutely atrocious.... and note who started the whole thing.

      Also, look at this edit:

      http://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Wikibooks%3AWhat_is_Wikibooks&action=historysubmit&diff=281147&oldid=265973

      Again, note who made the change, and also note that he did not achieve consensus on this edit, but simply made a policy change. If that isn't wheel warring, I don't know what else I can call it. This edit was reverted by the community too! Mind you, check out this particular user's list of contributions on the site. Not exactly a major player in the community either. And no, he didn't "own" the servers as the WMF had long since taken control of those pieces of hardware.

      I'm just saying that in hindsight action were taken which drove substantial numbers of people from at least this sister project, and I can point out similar kinds of anti-new user policies which drove people from Wikipedia under the presumption that the new users would continue to come and that instead we had to hold back the tide to keep them from overrunning the place. Now they simply stopped coming altogether. It was also during this particular episode that if you look back at inflection points in terms of the growth of new users, that the number of new users coming into the projects pretty much stopped growing. Wikipedia was trying to become "more professional" so it lost the initial spark of energy which kept it growing.

      I could point to a real wheel war I got into with none other than Brion Vibber, but that goes beyond the scope of what I'm talking about here. I did get kind of sick of the whole thing and there were other situations I got involved with too involving other "admins" that kept reverting stuff I was involved with by imposing page blocks on content I wanted the community to edit, reverting blocks, blocking users that I unblocked, and other really horrible practices. It opens old wounds for me, so I try not to go searching for it, but the stuff is there to look at and in the project archives.

    161. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      regarding rockford, it shouldnt take up 3 pages. aside from the basic facts of the cities existence, most of the article was promotional material not appropriate for an encyclopedia article. As a regular editor, i find it alternately enervating and exciting to find badly written articles: i love fixing them, but i just cant understand why people continue to view it as a dumping ground for their utterly trivial thoughts. the material i removed should be in wikitravel, or a private, ad driven city website. The problem of wikipedia is the problem of the "tragedy of the commons", and until human beings can learn to accept their place in the world, and respect the value of commonly held resources, civilization will continue to collapse and rot just as we think we are making progress. wikipedia should adopt the "crying indian" as their mascot, but it wouldnt make a difference. I bet robert heinlein would see how human nature bites us on the ass there. (ps im not a libertarian, but i cant help but respect heinlein for his original thinking)

    162. Re:Easy reason by perryizgr8 · · Score: 2

      wikipedia is supposed to be "the sum of human knowledge", not a compilation of notable sources.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    163. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Die in a fire

    164. Re:Easy reason by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      More and more, huge tracts of Wikipedia make it look like the online compendium of popular culture, rather than a place to find out about possibly obscure but real world topics, inventions or discoveries.

      This is precisely the problem with deletionist mentality. Wikipedia does not have a "real world balance" policy. People write about things they are familiar with and knowledgeable about, and so popular culture, by definition, will receive a disproportionate amount of attention.
      It is not up to administrators to pass judgement on the "validity" of topics in some effort to maintain an ideology.
      http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wiki_is_not_paper

    165. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THIS. MOD UP please

    166. Re:Easy reason by Dracophile · · Score: 1

      Power without accountability to the people that you're exercising power over is dangerous.

      What "power"? It's a bunch of dots on a screen! Or did you get arrested by Wikipedia or something?

      --
      Athy, athier, athiest.
    167. Re:Easy reason by Dracophile · · Score: 1
      Let me try something...

      It only takes one aspergers inflicted admin to make a good long term contributer throw their hands up in the air and say "fuck that shit".

      Instead, try: "It only takes one aspergers inflicted user to make a good long term admin throw their hands up in the air and say "fuck that shit". Not that I'm casting aspersions, but is this going on, too?

      --
      Athy, athier, athiest.
    168. Re:Easy reason by Teancum · · Score: 2

      I assume that the e-mail address is one you got through other means, as normally the e-mail addresses are not public information, at least from the Wikipedia page. Wikipedia-l is another story, which is where I presume you got the information.

      Yes, some users have some very crazy "usernames".... which is something you should expect with an on-line community. Before you get critical of this particular arbitrator's name, have you seen what he has done on Wikipedia and why he was elected by his peers for the arbitrator position? Do you have a specific beef against him or are you simply complaining because you felt he ruled in some manner contrary to how you wanted him to rule on a particular issue you sent before the ArbCom? He has a few arrows in his back because he has waded into a few arguments, but who on Wikipedia who has actually done something hasn't?

      I really don't see the problem here unless you give something more substantial.

    169. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, admins are dicks.

          I used to be interested in ZUI's, Zoomable User Interfaces. Wikipedia HAD a great list of links to hard to find examples all over the net - certainly the most complete reference available anywhere. One day i checked Wikipedia to track down a link to a good example and found most of the links deleted - gone to all but the most diligent and knowledgeable searchers - which basically means vanished forever since no one knows how to search those deleted links in the 'previous edits' system.

          Thanks asshole editors, you've screwed Wikipedia up so much it's become useless fluff rather than a deep reference tool.

    170. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole "[citation needed]"-thing has to a certain point evolved into a form of Wikipedia trolling on it's own.

      Citation needed.

    171. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely correct. Much the same that you rightly observe regarding Asian topics applies equally or even more so to Africa. Bias through omission makes a mockery of the term "encyclopaedic content". Wikipedia has a very peculiar worldview, and no, I don't believe this due merely to a "shortage" of editors who are knowledgeable about African or Asian affairs. IMO, it is the result of deliberate omission (i.e. censorship) . At least that has been my experience as a former African-based wikipedia editor over a considerable period of time.

    172. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's an easy reason for this. The admins are, generally speaking, dicks. This wouldn't be a problem if they were in touch with the community, but they aren't.

      I completely agree. I was working with some friends trying to update an article which was horribly wrong and out of date. The problem is that the topic lacks proper sources as its not covered in the media, so the whole thing was reverted. So they'd rather have an outdated, unsupported and wrong article, than an updated one just because it only had few sources?

      The admins on wikipedia are so anal about things and it turns contributers off. Why spend your time on things when some person just deletes it all and there's nothing you can really do.

    173. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're in the right place for that!

    174. Re:Easy reason by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      It would certainly help if the rules admins are supposed to enforce were less strict and generally designed to piss people off. I honestly believe that some admins just love trolling and have managed to work it into the rules to legitimise it.

      Take a look at some of the non-English Wikipedias. The Japanese one is usually a good example, so I suggest looking at the article on cats. There is plenty of factual information, not every last bit of it cited but since everyone generally agrees it to be balanced and true it isn't a problem. Near the bottom is a small photo gallery which includes some of the fun trivia that the English WP mass-deleted a few years back, stuff about how cats like to sleep on computers and keyboards, or how you can train one to use a human toilet. The article is long enough to have had lots of good content deleted on the English site because the trolls managed to make a rule about the length of articles. They can't (yet) get a notable article like this one deleted outright but they have plenty of tools for removing the content.

      Basically the attitude on the Japanese site is fairly relaxed and yet somehow the article quality is pretty good too. On the English site people basically spend all day beating each other over the head with rules and trying to destroy each other's work. They remind me of a guy I knew who would memorise every rule in the AD&D Player's Handbook so that when the DM did anything he didn't like he could cite some obscure paragraph that said he can't.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    175. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know there are people who make a living off playing computer games? If you really think you'd be the best damn video game player in the world if you were doing it full-time then maybe it is time for a career change.

    176. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen brother. I've tried to contribute and been overruled by the admin nazis, who are apparently either ignorant, jealous or both.

    177. Re:Easy reason by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      but the point is that your 'work is done' theory is very Western-centric I think.

      I think that you ran too far with the "it's all been done" interpretation. Aforress' example of his tiny home town's description on Wikipedia being three pages long is the crux. Where does one decide how much is enough? Some might say that three pages is enough, others might think the pages are woefully incomplete without a genealogy of all the town's inhabitants, street maps, and complete geological information.

      We should give some thought that as information becomes less incomplete, (less incomplete used as opposed to "more complete", which irritates some) it takes a different person to fill in the info. I can give a fair dissertation on say, the history of radio technology, but it takes a person of another and higher level of education to provide deeper - and considered by some, minute - details

      So at some point, it has to be decided just how much detail to go into. In say, a university environment, I can tell you that the level of detail goes very deep indeed, and that level of detail can be provided by only a few. I once saw a 2 inch thick scholarly tome devoted to the subject of the trilled R in European languages. Beyond a quick perusal I surely didn't read it.

      So now we have less potential contributors, and an issue of just how much depth is needed or desired. At some point, it can end up making a reference source so unwieldy that most people stop using it. I'm sure the person who wrote about the trilled R was very qualified and astute. For almost everyone else on the planet, the executive summary would be more than enough.

      It's simply not possible to have any wiki or other reference be complete. I'd say it isn't even desirable, except to a very few people who would probably be annoyed at the pedestrian information they see leading up to their interest.

      Although I note from your response, at least you got to take a convenient jab at those pesky western-centric folks.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    178. Re:Easy reason by lilburne · · Score: 1

      The Nature article is full on bullshit. It isn't even close to an accurate appraisal or comparison between the two works. You'll find the debunking of the nature article all over the web if you chose to look. As an example of 18 months the article on NURBS was wrong in that it had mixed up cN and gN continuity. The history articles are abysmal one would be hard pressed to find one of them of any reasonable length that wasn't riddled with errors. Large chunks of it are copied verbatim from 17th and 18th century histories, with all the errors and slanted views of the period. Some 8000+ pages have been tainted by an editor with 60,000+ edits who has systematically misrepresented, over egged, or simply lied to remove references to Western Europe discoveries in Science, Mathematics, Medicine, History, Philosophy, and Art. You can help clean up the crap here. The pages on organisms frequently have photos that aren't of the organism that the page is about.

    179. Re:Easy reason by FunkSoulBrother · · Score: 1

      In fairness to the English Wikipedia -- if you don't cull some of that trivia shit, you end up with a hundred lines like the following in the article on New York:

      *In Episode 1S204 of The Simpsons, the Simpsons mentioned New York

      *In Issue 455 of Star Wars Digest, there was a comment regarding New York

      etc etc ad nauseum.

    180. Re:Easy reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen. Precisely the problem.

  2. Sick of the cabals by Pope · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Or more likely they're sick of the cabals that form. Wikipedia has lost lots of contributers over the past few years because of them, and will continue to do so unless these spergmeisters are kicked off the pages that they edit camp.

    As usual, it's a couple of intractable morons that ruin it for the casual contributor.

    --
    It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    1. Re:Sick of the cabals by Fractal+Dice · · Score: 1

      The probability that a random new edit will be beneficial drops as the project matures and becomes more polished. Increasingly powerful and conservative cabals are natural consequence of any academic system defending its signal:noise ratio.

    2. Re:Sick of the cabals by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yep. Wikipedia was in trouble from the moment "deletionists" became a word.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:Sick of the cabals by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I've grown up in a particular industry, I've worked in the industry for almost 20 years, it's a small specialist field referring to a particular geographic area in Australia, I try to add information to the pages that already exist and are not complete, I always cite my work when I edit something and I remain factual and not opinionated or personal... yet most of my work continually gets rolled back by editors based in the US who edit camp particular sections of wikipedia and don't seem to like ANY change to their pages.

    4. Re:Sick of the cabals by omglolbah · · Score: 1

      Yup, common issue.

      I dont bother with it anymore...

    5. Re:Sick of the cabals by geniice · · Score: 0

      Can you provide an example?

    6. Re:Sick of the cabals by fermion · · Score: 1
      That was my thought. Attrition is a fact of life in any enterprise, A problem on appears if the organization is no messed up that it cannot attract and retain new talent. When I think of editing, I think of the chances that my edits will remain, and if given that slim chance, if it would be an effective use of my time.

      OTOH, making it easier to correct error might be helpful. I have heard many people complain that there are blatant errors in wikipedia, yet I seldom here these people correct the errors. They use the errors to discredit wikipedia, but leave those errors to propagate. If it were easier to edit, these complainers might become correctors.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    7. Re:Sick of the cabals by GameMaster · · Score: 1

      Yea, and don't forget the rabid "deletionists" that look for, absolutely, ANY reason to delete a wiki article (often ignoring the actual rules in the process), and then get praised by the echo-chamber that is their little corner of the Wikipedia administrator world.

      --

      Rules of Conduct:
      #1 - The DM is always right.
      #2 - If the DM is wrong, see rule #1
    8. Re:Sick of the cabals by Fractal+Dice · · Score: 1

      [citation needed]

    9. Re:Sick of the cabals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wikipedia was in trouble from the moment "deletionists" became a positive word.

      FTFY

    10. Re:Sick of the cabals by sinequonon · · Score: 1

      It would be so bad if opinionated knobs keep showing up with a point-of-view agenda to push, which requires a so-called "cabals" of editors to form and keep a watch for repeated bias. As an example: creationist editors seeking to espouse their non-scientific, minority views on everybody regarding the age of the Earth and evolution. The minute the edit is removed because of non-compliance with Wikipedia policy on such matters, up come the arguments about "edit warring", "ownership", and so forth. It's a load of bull crap. You might think a little differently if the shoe were on the other foot.

      --
      -Bob-
    11. Re:Sick of the cabals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect someone forgot to put on their asbestos underwear.

  3. Unfortunate, but expected by realsilly · · Score: 1

    Many people go to Wikipedia as a 1st search hit. And it's always nice to get decent info. But it's inevitable that it would lose volunteers. It is common for many things. People help, then move on leaving room for others to take up the torch, but somehow the torch gets set down, and no one ever picks it up.

    --
    Life takes interesting turns, but the most interest is when you're off the beaten path.
    1. Re:Unfortunate, but expected by shadowrat · · Score: 1

      it seems like there isn't as much work to do. The history of everything has been entered. All that's left to do is wait for the slow march of time to dispense new information. It doesn't help that most of the new information to contribute is along this vein.

    2. Re:Unfortunate, but expected by kbolino · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You imply laziness where others see frustration. I edited Wikipedia for a long time, and granted not all of my edits were good, but then I watched as my contributions, one-by-one, regardless of quality, got deleted. This took years, mind you, but it left me with the distinct impression that either I had nothing of value to add to Wikipedia, or Wikipedia had nothing of value for me. Perhaps both.

      I would go back in a heartbeat if WP worked like it did in 2004 again. But it doesn't, and I don't think that's going to change any time soon, so my edits nowadays are minor, few, and far between.

    3. Re:Unfortunate, but expected by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy shit, seriously? In the articles about WW2 for example, each sentence in an article can be expanded to an entire chapter or history book. Reading Wikipedia is like reading the back cove r of a novel.

    4. Re:Unfortunate, but expected by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's worse than that. Not only do you have to put up with silly human admins deleting useful things all the time because of their strange sense of what is "notable", but there are many bots making poor decisions too. There have been innumerable times I have found useful articles or images only to discover it's got some big, ugly tag at the top of it indicating it's marked for deletion soon because of some ridiculous technicality. Between bad editors and bad bots removing their work it's a wonder anyone wastes their time contributing anything more than fixing typos.

  4. The problem is WikiPolitics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Edit the "wrong" article the "wrong" way and you'll get some asshat jumping on you. Wikipedia isn't exactly a friendly place to new people, or even some veterans, so that makes it difficult to retain volunteers.

    1. Re:The problem is WikiPolitics by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      I find it sad that someone downrated your comment (twice!) when it seems to be perfectly reasonable to me from my wiki experiences.

    2. Re:The problem is WikiPolitics by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      I find it sad that someone downrated your comment (twice!) when it seems to be perfectly reasonable to me from my wiki experiences.

      There's nothing in Slashdot which prevents Wikipedia admins from getting mod points. Just saying.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  5. Uh by mikkelm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Perhaps if the whole thing wasn't run by a small clique of sociopathic dorks who wield a ridiculous bureaucracy in a manner that can yield any conclusion that they wish it to yield, then people might stick around for longer than their first editing war.

    Every procedure on that site is a complete farce.

    1. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, Wikipedia is run by Congress?!?

  6. What do you want for nothing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I get so tired of people complaining that volunteers don't volunteer even more.

    Stop complaining and try appreciating that someone gave you something gratis.

    Better yet, try volunteering yourself instead of whining about the lack of a free ride.

    1. Re:What do you want for nothing? by Xacid · · Score: 1

      You sound like a wikipedia moderator. Gee, I wonder why I don't bother contributing anymore - just read all the other posts above. It's no secret.

    2. Re:What do you want for nothing? by bonch · · Score: 1

      Stop double-spacing every sentence.

  7. HEY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're not dorks...

    1. Re:HEY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did your mother tell you that?

  8. StackExchange by YodasEvilTwin · · Score: 2

    Wikipedia needs to adopt some of the stuff StackExchange does to encourage user participation and APPROPRIATE moderation. The SE platform wouldn't work for Wikipedia, but some aspects of the user system would be highly beneficial. Reputation of some sort would be great, along with better privilege levels.

    1. Re:StackExchange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Introduce karma-whoring to wikipedia? Great idea!! /s

    2. Re:StackExchange by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Every single Wikipedia article: "why aren't you using jQuery you idiot!"

      Still, the StackExchange community is more healthy than Wikipedia's, but it still has a ton of groupthink issues.

    3. Re:StackExchange by YodasEvilTwin · · Score: 1

      Who cares WHY people contribute as long as it's a good contribution?

    4. Re:StackExchange by YodasEvilTwin · · Score: 1

      Groupthink is fairly easy to avoid when the point is to gather objective, encyclopedic information rather than Q&A. Not that the current Wiki moderators don't imbibe the blue ganja juice offered by their cult.

  9. Let's see... my experience with editing Wikipedia by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I once was an editor there. Allow me to illustrate why I am no longer.

    It all started when I dared to step into the turf of something one of the "higher ups" considered his. An edit of me was reverted. Not just something trivial that begs for a "citation needed", it was a well worded and sourced piece of information. The reason was that it was "not enough on topic". Ok, I see that differently, but so be it. Not like I have to have everything I write published.

    What bugged me was that the day after, my entry was, almost verbatim, in there again. This time under the name of the person who thought it's "offtopic" only one day earlier. But ok, so be it, some people need it for their ego to be the "only authority" on some subject.

    The problem started when this became the rule rather than the exception. Whenever something new developed in an issue, it descended into mind numbing bickering whose version gets to stand. And since I'm more in the fact-gathering and less in the butt-kissing game, usually it's not my version that stands. So hey, maybe they don't need me as an editor.

    The last straw was when I removed some defacement (IIRC it was an article about greek pillars and someone made a rude reference of someone fucking someone else up the rear) and it got reverted by my personal stalker. It seems, they get butt-kissing brownie points for doing as many reverts as possible, preferably without reading first what got written.

    So, in case you're wondering why you don't get more editors, take a look at the existing ones.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  10. Re:CK ref: by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 0

    Where Alph the sacred river ran, through caverns measureless to man... Now care to explain why you quoted that? I don't get it.

  11. Politics in everything by sakdoctor · · Score: 2

    The WORLD is run by small cliques of bureaucracy wielding, sociopathic dorks.

    1. Re:Politics in everything by idontgno · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Which gives the phrase "You can't fight city hall" its peculiar poignancy in the Wikipedia context.

      You might wrestle with the cabals of incompetent, self-serving, mildly power-hungry bureaucrats if your life, liberty, family, or property were on the line. You'd walk away from the pointless (and probably fruitless) aggro if it's just Wikipedia, because there is no personal stake. It absolutely isn't worth it. If Wikipedia goes to hell, for the overwhelming majority of people the result will be "and nothing of value was lost."

      Sad, too. It had such potential.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    2. Re:Politics in everything by winkydink · · Score: 1

      You're confusing the world with most open source projects, I fear.

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    3. Re:Politics in everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is, you HAVE to participate in the world. (Or you could commit suicide, but that's illegal for some reason.) If politics on Wikipedia (or Slashdot, or Digg, or the Lions Club or Halo or almost anywhere else) bugs you, you can refuse to participate, and *LEAVE*.
      If you know someplace I can go to leave real-world politics behind completely, PLEASE post it below. I'll name one of my children after you.

    4. Re:Politics in everything by roothog · · Score: 1

      That doesn't make it OK.

    5. Re:Politics in everything by magarity · · Score: 1

      If you know someplace I can go to leave real-world politics behind completely, PLEASE post it below.

      I hear Mars has water on its surface these days.

    6. Re:Politics in everything by blair1q · · Score: 1

      But you vote on who they are. Therefore you accept their rule, even if you disagree with them.

      When was the last time Wikipedia held an election?

    7. Re:Politics in everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The content is licensed under creative commons ... someone could always fork it!

    8. Re:Politics in everything by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      They have elections. I was asked to vote once. To run, a candidate must be an active contributor, this mean they had to have made at least 500 edits the last year. To find out what the candidates really stood for I checked their edits. Out of 60 candidates 60*500 edits were all related to the election, none of the candidates had done a single non-election related edit.

  12. Losing them when they're better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My guess is that the married with kids geek is probably a little less of a dick than the 26 year old geeky male, which in turn could lead to other people contributing to Wikipedia who have been put off by the way things currently work there.

  13. Wikipedia's policies are insane by Dwedit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wikipedia needs to amend its "Notability" and "Verifiability" policies badly, and stop deleting articles (which blocks access to the edit history). They don't accept evidence as verification, only "published sources" which use inaccurate speculation and second-hand information. Misinformation keeps reappearing on pages, because it has a citation to some other website which makes the claim, despite that it is untrue.

    An example of a time I was highly frustrated is when I was trying to read about the software program called Impulse Tracker, then discovered that its page was deleted. So what if Impulse Tracker is "not notable", its file format is still used in the tracking scene, so I wanted to read about the original program, but can't because the page was deleted. And if I want to reconstruct the page, I can't because the edit history is blocked out.

    1. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by qzjul · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This; when you've worked on an article over a month or so with a dozen people to make it better, and then random editors delete it for notability, it really turns you off from doing anything more...

    2. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by sakdoctor · · Score: 2

      They don't accept evidence as verification, only "published sources"

      Evidence wikipedia is fucked.

    3. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by CanEHdian · · Score: 3, Informative

      Wikipedia needs to amend its "Notability" and "Verifiability" policies badly, and stop deleting articles (which blocks access to the edit history). They don't accept evidence as verification, only "published sources" which use inaccurate speculation and second-hand information. Misinformation keeps reappearing on pages, because it has a citation to some other website which makes the claim, despite that it is untrue.

      An example of a time I was highly frustrated is when I was trying to read about the software program called Impulse Tracker, then discovered that its page was deleted. So what if Impulse Tracker is "not notable", its file format is still used in the tracking scene, so I wanted to read about the original program, but can't because the page was deleted. And if I want to reconstruct the page, I can't because the edit history is blocked out.

      Another example is the history of PSP homebrew. Anyone that knows anything about the timeline and the releases by nem (hello, world for FW 1.00), the ps2dev toolchain, the Swaploit and K-Xploit tools by PsP-Dev (which most definitely did not involve any "cracked code" from Sony) and Sony's firmware Japanese release dates knows that this Wikipedia article is definitely incorrect. For the exact same reason: anything that is printed-but-nonsense trumps not-printed-but-true. The sad thing is that a couple decades from now the Wikipedia version will live, but the actual history has long been forgotten: "History is written by the victors" is now "History is written by Wikipedia's clique of editors".

      --
      When the copyright term is "forever minus a day", live every day like it's the last.
    4. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      wow, just like the academic scientific community then, where it matters where the information comes from than if the information has it's own merit and makes sense and is verifiable on it's own. case in point: usability science of today.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      -Blink- -blink- so... much... discussion.. about.. fermented shit being used as a drug???

    6. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Derekloffin · · Score: 1

      What really disgusts me about the deletions is apparently, admins are more than willing to delete an article that didn't even come close to properly following the deletion rules: One of the articles I follow, which admittedly has issues, had a standard editor who obviously didn't know what he was doing, put up the deletion tag on the article. However, said editor did it improperly, making the discussion sound like it was not about deletion but simply about article improvement. There also was no deletion discussion page made up. A couple weeks pass, being a low priority article it generally gets ignored save the usual vandal edits, admin comes along, and deletes it. No comment as to why (which really makes me wonder if these guys even LOOK at the deletion discussions which in this case was non-existent). Okay, so various editors notice this, I in particular ask where was the discussion on the deletion I apparently missed. Finding there was none, and that the deletion was put up in error in the first place, we request some talk from said admin (politely too), and he ignores us for 2 weeks. Finally we had to go to a completely different admin who promptly restored the article. Thankfully some admins seem to do their job and I thank them, but ones like the first are far too common. I should mention said first admin I later found has been named on /. before for... less than upstanding deletion behavior, yet he's still there.

    7. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aww, some creationist is mad that schools aren't teaching his religion as science. Boo-fucking-hoo.

    8. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by bberens · · Score: 1

      I read a study from MIT that says studies from Yale are rubbish.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    9. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by neoform · · Score: 1

      They don't accept evidence as verification, only "published sources" which use inaccurate speculation and second-hand information.

      When I tried to bring up on the "Christianity" article that it was actually a polytheistic religion (due to the "Trinity", devil, angels.. etc), I was hounded by a bunch of zealots who claimed that there was no credible citations that it wasn't monotheistic... Apparently because Christians claim to be in a monotheistic religion, makes it so...

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    10. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by tepples · · Score: 1

      admins are more than willing to delete an article that didn't even come close to properly following the deletion rules

      The case you mention sounds like it'd be a fairly easy case at Deletion review.

      he ignores us for 2 weeks.

      In Wikipedia culture, taking a break from editing altogether isn't considered ignoring.

    11. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by KahabutDieDrake · · Score: 1

      The really scary part is that wasn't written as an overly long pun joke, like it would have been on any other forum on the internet. No, these guys are very seriously discussing fermented shit, and it's use as an intoxicant. :boggle:

    12. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by blivit42 · · Score: 1

      Not notable? I may be confusing itracker with another tracker of that era, but wasn't itracker the one with the built-in Worm mini-game? It even had 2-player support. I have fond memories of playing 2-player Worm with others in my dorm in the mid 90's.

      Aside from Worm, it was actually a very nice tracker, and had a high compatibility rate with playback of other MOD formats. I'd certainly put itracker on the list of notable trackers that advanced the then- state-of-the-art. I think I used it a lot for adding BPM events to the beginning of a lot of my old Amiga mods so that they'd play at the correct tempo on a PC, which used a different NTSC/PAL vertical scan rate timer setting or something like that to determine the beats per minute. It was the old NTSC vs. PAL Amiga problem for MOD file tempos. Or maybe it was whichever tracker used .XM as the native format, my memory is a bit hazy on that.

      BTW, If you ever want to convert MOD/IT/XM/S3M/etc. to MIDI, check out the -OM output mode of TiMidity++. It does a pretty good job of it (disclaimer: I wrote a lot of the mod->midi code a long time ago).

    13. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Derekloffin · · Score: 2

      In Wikipedia culture, taking a break from editing altogether isn't considered ignoring.

      Unfortunately, said wasn't the case as he was active at the time.

      As for a deletion review, we thankfully didn't need to go to that hassle. Point was that we should have had to in the first place. It is frustrating to the max, and most people aren't going to bother, they'll just leave.

    14. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      The 'recycling' section was particularly disturbing.

    15. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    16. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An example of a time I was highly frustrated is when I was trying to read about the software program called Impulse Tracker, then discovered that its page was deleted. So what if Impulse Tracker is "not notable", its file format is still used in the tracking scene, so I wanted to read about the original program, but can't because the page was deleted. And if I want to reconstruct the page, I can't because the edit history is blocked out.

      Funny you mention this, I was researching the history of trackers a while ago, while trying to learn about different formats (XM, IT, S3M etc) and I noticed this too. However it seems that since then, it's back (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impulse_Tracker). Hope it stays there as it's far from "not notable" in the tracking scene, many people still use this program or derivatives for composing music.

    17. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The answer to that part is more specialized wikia pages. Most bigger video games have one, and tend to be infinitely more useful and detailed than wikipedia could ever be. Because of this, it tends to come up first in a google search

      ie: google 'Fallout new vegas wiki'.

      So make your own wikia page, and have it detailed, accurate, and useful. The traffic from online searching will migrate over to your site first rather than the more useless primary wikipedia page.

    18. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by mbkennel · · Score: 2

      "Apparently because Christians claim to be in a monotheistic religion, makes it so..."

      Probably uniquely among any subjects, what believers in a religion believe the religion to be about does deserve to be considered authoritative descriptions of its beliefs.

      One could from the outside mention observable practices which parallel other polytheistic religions (prayer to distinctly different physical representations) and those that do not (mythic stories in polytheistic pantheons frequently involved serious conflicts of opinion, intention, and will among gods, but this rarely heard of among branches of Christian trinity.)

    19. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by neoform · · Score: 1

      Riight, so when Jesus died and cursed out to his father (who is actually himself), he was just talking to himself, right?

      How about angels? They're supernatural, immortal, can fly, have super-human powers, people pray to them... that pretty much fits every criteria for a god.

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    20. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impulse_Tracker

      So the article exists. This doesn't mean that it has been always there.
      After all this bitching in slashdot I would like to see some concrete examples of articles that don't exist. What are some of the most important things that don't have page in Wikipedia? I understand editing wikipedia nowadays is difficult as it is mostly "full", but as a user it still almost never fails me. Whatever I look up has pretty decent page in there. Please prove me wrong. I see many people are really unhappy with the system, but I just can't see the problem when I am using it.

    21. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by bonch · · Score: 1

      The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit represent the same god.

    22. Re:Wikipedia's policies are insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the exact same reason: anything that is printed-but-nonsense trumps not-printed-but-true.

      And how is this different than in real life? How are anonymous contributors to Wikipedia meant to know what's true and what's not? Answer: they can't. All they can reliably figure out is whether something is sourced or not.

  14. Perhaps we are taking it too much for granted by mallyn · · Score: 1
    I use Wikipedia all the time for basic research.

    For example, I learned on it the basics of how cable internet works (routers, modems, etc).

    I may be one of those who take it for granted. It's just there. Like the street in front of my house. I know deep down inside that my taxes are paying for it, but I don't think that all the time.

    We all know deep down inside that Wikipedia needs volunteers and donors, but we don't remind ourselves of it. We just use it.

    --
    Most Respectfully Yours Mark Allyn Bellingham, Washington
    1. Re:Perhaps we are taking it too much for granted by bberens · · Score: 1

      I'm in this boat. I've never looked for anything on wikipedia that wasn't already there. Only very specific metrics that I had to get from the original source like the US census bureau or something.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
  15. Re:A million monkeys typing by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 0

    Your trolling gets less and less coherent as time goes on. I really don't get what you're trying to do. It must be that kind of night, I'm just not understanding people.

  16. Wiki Nazis by fishb0ne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If by simplifying editing procedures you mean getting rid of the untouchable wiki nazi admins, there may be hope still.

  17. Problem with Hobby v. Job by IP_Troll · · Score: 1

    Isn't this the problem with all hobbies? As you mature and get older you move away from things with which you used to fill your leisure time. Hobbies drop off and are filled with spouse/kid/work related issues.

    When the typical editor noted in the article ages through the honeymoon/kids period of their lives, I would suspect they will return to editing Wikipedia, even more so when they retire from work. The typical editor will return to editing just like the typical person that built models as a kid or played with toy trains, when they have leisure time to devote without distraction.

    1. Re:Problem with Hobby v. Job by Hatta · · Score: 1

      No, that's not a problem with hobbies. That's a problem with jobs.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  18. As opposed to frustration over bots gone mad... by Marcika · · Score: 1

    [The typical guy who left is someone who] moves on to other ventures, gets married and leaves the website

    Yeah right. The ones who left are people leaving in frustration when their contributions get deleted wholesale by script kiddies like Betacommand who are allowed to go postal with killbots.

    Don't forget the ones leaving in frustration when the Arbitration Committee decides in favour of people who get paid to "own" a topic and who have the time to astroturf/argue/discuss about their biased edits as long as is needed to drive any honest contributor away. Hint: discussion page activity is in inverse proportion to how unbiased the contributor is....

  19. Somewhat accurate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's kind of funny. I'm a 26-year-old geeky male who recently got married. I used to edit Wikipedia, but I don't have the time for it these days.

    Not that I did last year or the year before... Once I got out of school and got a job is when it started. I suppose for me Wikipedia was like an online version of the college bull session. If you have lots of time to wax philosophical and debate things, you can edit Wikipedia. Usually it's not really worth it. When you have other things to do it seems silly.

    Especially, as the years went on, I was more and more bothered by the "career Wikipedians", many of them Administrators, who spend too much time absorbed in the "culture" of editing. They go around citing Wikipedia's ridiculously self-contradictory policies (my favorite example of this: they have an "Ignore all rules" policy) to justify their pet edits and pet reverts. These people are typically not very bright and don't have the clear logical thinking to see their own hypocrisy. I'll be frank: I think their net contribution to the universe is fundamentally negative.

  20. not a crisis by melikamp · · Score: 1

    I agree that it is not a crisis. One would expect that at some point, the bulk of the work will be done. Peak knowledge, if you will. It is much easier to write a Wikipedia article about the process of galaxy formation than to develop a corresponding scientific theory, so I would expect us to catch up to our current state of knowledge. Subjectively speaking, most of the articles are already mostly written. At this point, it is up to specialists in narrow fields to continue improving Wikipedia and to keep it up to date. Speaking as one of them, this is a perfect task for people who work in higher education.

  21. Not surpricing by luvirini · · Score: 5, Informative

    Given the "friendliness" that greets new contributors.

    I have entered correct information with references and such in few articles where I am somewhat of an expert, like one where I did my masters in the topic and created couple of pages that were in the page request list in topics where I am fairly knowledgable.

    End results: >70% of my edits were removed within few days and in several cases replaces with actual WRONG information. Of the created pages one has today totally wrong information, one has been proposed to merge with another page, but nothing has happened in way many months and a third page was just removed.

    1. Re:Not surpricing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "End results: >70% of my edits were removed within few days and in several cases replaces with actual WRONG information."

      Yes, that is exactly my experience too. I have made minor grammar fixes, corrects to some incorrect facts, and other things and most were reverted next time I looked at the pages.

      Sorry, but the reversionists have driven contributors away from wikipedia. Until that changes, people will continue to leave. Why should I bother spending my time trying to improve pages only to see my changes reverted by some obsessive person who feels they "own" the page?

    2. Re:Not surpricing by inkscapee · · Score: 1

      As so many commenters have said already, it's the extreme dickish atmosphere that drives good people away. When everything you do is nitpicked to death, when your contributions are deleted or changed for the worse, when there are endless debates over who is notable enough to have a bio in Wikipedia, it becomes a pointless waste of time. If you want good people investing their time and expertise for free then you shouldn't let angry nutters stomp all over their work. This is such a big duh it suggests that mr "I am beautiful" Wales is awfully dense to not know it already.

    3. Re:Not surpricing by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      Is it that hard to only allow a specific editor to revert a page once every few months? Track for collusion between editors and perm ban any found to be colluding to revert. Maybe throw is a revert checker let people get a random revert and check it to be valid if not reduce the ranking of the person that reverted the edit. Allow people to ignore reverts/edits of people with low rankings.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    4. Re:Not surpricing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll second this, having had moderators remove or edit down to a blurb my well thought out and generally well referenced posts was what drove me to stop contributing. I'm not wasting my time preparing entries only to have them watered down to the point of irrelevance.

    5. Re:Not surpricing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My experience has been that you have to be a little pushy if you think/know you are correct. Take it to the discussion page. Un-revert your edits. And so on.

      The self-appointed-expert contributors tend to "revert" almost automatically, but can be badgered into letting good information through their screen.

      BUT, I agree it's not a particularly useful or welcoming way to try to gain and keep interest from a broad array of contributors.

    6. Re:Not surpricing by melikamp · · Score: 1

      I find it hilarious that people who complain about systemic editorial abuse on Wikipedia won't bother to provide even a single link to a recorded instance.

    7. Re:Not surpricing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Citation needed.

    8. Re:Not surpricing by vlueboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not sure if you can see the subtext, so let me be the first to make it clear that quitting wikipedia as an editor is exactly like getting a divorce: we've already given up. We just tell our story like a battered war veteran talks about wars --without giving names of things that are long dead, or expecting you, the audience, to fix our past.

      In other words, seeing other slashdotters resonate with our suffering does not fix the problem. What fixes it is the fact that we have already gotten closure through a non-negotiable decision to move away. We don't think that a random slashdotter will go up there and fix the problem, either, and unlike marriage, it's easy to find a replacement especialized wiki to contribute to... or to just stop making real contributions while getting all the other benefits and none of the revert drama.

    9. Re:Not surpricing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been complaining about the terrible heat we've had lately. I don't feel the need and can't be bothered to cite evidence of the heat wave because everyone I talk to has also been experiencing it first-hand. The only people not completely convinced we've had a heat wave are basement-dwellers who haven't been outside in weeks. You know - the same people unconvinced that Wikipedia is currently broken.

  22. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  23. Possible explanation - "Mission accomplished" by gman003 · · Score: 1

    The thing is, there's not much important left to write about. All the things people generally go onto Wikipedia for are well-covered - there's data on every country, language, mountain range, planet, president, prime minister, prince and poet. There's a ton of placeholder articles, yeah, but does anybody really want to write an article on a Venezuelan political party from the '40s, a minor asteroid of no special significance, a particular bird species (already well-documented in the family page), or an early-90s Congressman from Ohio? Those are all real examples, by the way.

    There's still current events, yeah, but history isn't being made that quickly. And the rise of topic-specific wikis is draining Wikipedia of otherwise useless articles (and their authors). Why have a page for every Pokemon on Wikipedia when you can have a page for every Pokemon on a Pokemon-specific Wikipedia? That's actually a good thing - it lets Wikipedia be an introductory course to pretty much everything, and more specific wikis can be more thorough and detailed. But this does mean that all the obsessive fan-nerds will be moving their Star Wars expanded-universe character bios from Wikipedia to Wookiepedia.

    So, really, is a decrease in editors really a bad thing? Does it decrease the quality of already-existing pages? No. Do we need articles being written at a high rate? Not anymore.

    1. Re:Possible explanation - "Mission accomplished" by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Yes, actually, I most enjoy writing articles about arcana. But good luck getting any of it to stick, when the source you're citing was something you read 20 years ago.

  24. There was a time by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    There was a time when the quality of Wikipedia articles was so bad that it was easy for me to add something to them and make them better. [Citation needed] didn't really exist, and most of it was uncited. Now a lot of it is complete enough (and has decent references) that it makes a good starting point for research in a lot of topics.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    1. Re:There was a time by blair1q · · Score: 1

      It peaked at 75% accuracy. It seems to have dropped, from what I can see. And all the [citation needed] and footnote tags just make it unreadable.

  25. Re:CK ref: by pinfall · · Score: 2, Funny

    Where Alph the sacred river ran, through caverns measureless to man... Now care to explain why you quoted that? I don't get it.

    An empty palace is still empty no matter how much trash you fill it with. Seemed obvious to me.

  26. Married? by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

    These Wikipedia people must not be slashdotters. They actually meet people of the opposite gender?

    --
    Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    1. Re:Married? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These days its possible to marry someone of the same gender (even legal in some states or countries.)

  27. Re:CK ref: by jbarr · · Score: 0

    The parent article might have given him a Rush.

    --
    My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
  28. Deletionists are the main problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Wikipeidia used to have excellent articles on physics, maths computer science and other hard science subjects. Most of them have simply disappeared. Wikipedia is not limited by paper. There's simply no goddamn reason to delete most articles, especially not factually correct scientific articles as opposed to meandering plot summaries of TV shows no-one adult who isn't a goddamn furry cares about.

    1. Re:Deletionists are the main problem. by geniice · · Score: 1

      Err one of the side effects of publish or perish is that hard science topics find it very easy to meat wikipedia's inclusion criteria.

    2. Re:Deletionists are the main problem. by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      Your response doesn't address the issue raised by the GP. Judging by your responses so far I'd say that you're currently a wikipedia editor. Perhaps you could take the feedback presented here as a way to improve your own editing, instead of defending other editors with poor practices. No offense intended but some may be taken.

    3. Re:Deletionists are the main problem. by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      I believe you meant "meet" (achieve, join) rather than "meat" (flesh, steaks, etc.) Just pointing that out. (My "area of expertise" is the English language itself, but Wikipedia's admins don't like someone poking around their articles correcting period usage, apparently.)

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    4. Re:Deletionists are the main problem. by geniice · · Score: 1

      Thing is we don't see many hard science articles deleted. There are a grand total of 28 articles that are nominaly related to science and technology listed for deletion on wikipedia. Few are hard sciences though (quite a few ads in there):

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:AfD_debates_(Science_and_technology)

    5. Re:Deletionists are the main problem. by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Citation needed. ;-)

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    6. Re:Deletionists are the main problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's now, not stuff that's already happened

  29. And? What was expected? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There are too many rules, the environment is too hostile (examine the default template "warning" about being blocked, it's a threat, not a warning), pages are guarded jealously by people who will claim that there is no consensus for any change they don't like, etc.

    So, fewer people are editing for whatever reason, and many people who try and edit, are driven away.

    Some specific reasons some people don't post are outlined [...] reasons [people] don't edit Wikipedia (in their own words).

    At the article Chronicling the abuses, a commentator made the point:

    Wikipedia’s articles on anarchism are the demonstration of the weakness of their policies. They have a ‘teach the controversy’ approach which ends up promoting fringe views on the same level as actual scholarship, so the Anarchism subset of the site is heavily slanted towards the ‘anarcho’ capitalist view, when there is no historicity to the claims that anarcho-capitalism has any relations to the anarchist movement in general.

    This type of slant (on other articles as well) also drives away editors who can't put up with the shit.

    So, Wikipedia, because of, in many cases the policies and guidelines currently in place, fails to be inclusive. It is not "newbie" friendly (who has time to read all the rules...), and so newbies are bitten and leave.

    So, what's the solution? Well, I think that's easy. Any big organization has problems of a much larger scale than small organizations. So, break Wikipedia up into subject specific Wikis. The general encyclopedia model has been demonstrated to have flaws. Now lets try again. The people who care about web comics can edit on Comicpedia. Etc. Fewer arguments about notability as well.

  30. Why aren't more people editors? by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    The profile says it all.

    That '26 year old single nerd' is perfect example of the intellectual crusader mentality so perfectly captured by xkcd: http://xkcd.com/386/

    If you're not one of them, you're not going to put up with the bullshit necessary to edit articles.

    Further, have you ever tried to edit Wiki? It's not just a matter of posting some new text into a text box, there are all sorts of damn tags, etc that just make it too much of a nuisance to bother, even if I know a fact could be better corrected.

    --
    -Styopa
  31. The next step by Crag · · Score: 1

    Clearly Wikipedia fills a niche. The next step is a p2p model.

    Participants run a "shared reality documentation store" on their machines to host documents and media they endorse and a "shared reality documentation client" proxy service which behaves like a web site and queries the stores. It's like FreeNet without trying to preserve anonymity.

    Instead of edit wars there would be multiple documents on the same subject competing for popularity. Looking up "Evolution" you'd get dozens of results. The top two would be endorsed by 90% of the well-liked network participants and would represent the two dominant views on the subject. Individuals' search results could be adjusted to take their own moderations into account. That is, if Alice tend to disagree with Bob, the meaning of Bob's input is reversed in the context of Alice's searches.

    Users would be pseudonymous but (like Slashdot) would have some sort of aggregate "good citizen" metric based on past behavior as judged by their peers. Users could browse the public behaviors of their peers and assign valuations to actions, including other people's "moderation". I might hate your article endorsements but love your moderation. For people not interested in that kind of granularity, users could have the option to just like or dislike another user (like the friend/foe system here). Users would not be required to provide CPU and disk space to be considered good users, but their decisions about how much to contribute would be public and could be used to make automatic or manual judgments.

    Articles would scores would be based on some function of the scores of the users who had endorsed them. Participants can only delete articles from their own store and then campaign for others to delete it from theirs. There would be no global "notability" threshold, only a cumulative score based on users' moderation actions.

    This is basically how the internet works already, lobbyists and pending legislation not withstanding. The main difference here is formalization and making a uniform UI which non-techies would enjoy using.

    (Yes, I realize this is a fairly raw and flawed proposal. I'm hoping someone will see the valuable parts of it and make it happen.)

    1. Re:The next step by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      Clearly Wikipedia fills a niche. The next step is a p2p model.

      That could work. If we could feed in wikipedia's articles to began with that would be a great start. Throw in a public key encryption to authenticate users and you should have a system that's secure, scalable, and doesn't need much or any new hardware to function.

      Any idea how much data wikipedia's contains anyway? Of course not every node would have a copy of everything.

  32. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The point of Wikipedia is not to become super-awesome-editor-who-gets-credit-for-their-work. It's to produce encyclopedia articles. But if you're really going to get your panties in a bunch over your edits disappearing and then reappearing at the whim of another editor, just remember that somewhere in the history of that article, there's an edit with your name on it that puts that material in the article first.

    Also, if you have a personal stalker reverting your edits without reading them, there are procedures in place for dealing with such situations.

  33. Stop deleting stuff by MpVpRb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you spend a lot of time writing something, and then somebody decides that it's not "notable", it's unlikely that you will contribute again.

    Wikipedia is just bits, bits are cheap, why do the editors act like they are rationing a scarce resource?

    1. Re:Stop deleting stuff by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand Walesian philosophy.

      There is truth in large numbers and concensus. If you don't have concensus, then you don't have truth. So whatever you are writing if it isn't agreed with by the majority (or even the minority of powerful people in the Wiki world), you are wasting your time and theirs.

      This is the logical outgrowth of much of the counter-culture movement beginning in the 1950s and it isn't going to disappear easily.

    2. Re:Stop deleting stuff by hnkstrprnkstr · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. I spent a lot of time entering an article which was deemed "not notable" and quickly deleted. Who has time to waste? So long, Wikipedia.

    3. Re:Stop deleting stuff by tepples · · Score: 1

      If you spend a lot of time writing something, and then somebody decides that it's not "notable"

      Then you probably didn't spend time finding reliable sources to cite.

    4. Re:Stop deleting stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then stop wasting our time complaining about people abandoning Wikipedia when it's clear the aspies running the show aren't interested in changing things.

    5. Re:Stop deleting stuff by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      Collective 0-0009 looked upon us, and they smiled.

      "So you think that you have found a new power," said Collective 0-0009. "Do all your brothers think that?"

      "No," we answered.

      "What is not thought by all men cannot be true," said Collective 0-0009.

      "You have worked on this alone?" asked International 1-5537.

      "Many men in the Homes of the Scholars have had strange new ideas in the past," said Solidarity 8-1164, "but when the majority of their brother Scholars voted against them, they abandoned their ideas, as all men must."

      "This box is useless," said Alliance 6-7349.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    6. Re:Stop deleting stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cause its supposed to be an encyclopaedia of useful information, not your geocities account.

    7. Re:Stop deleting stuff by SteelAngel · · Score: 1

      Except that "truth" isn't built by consensus.

      Sometimes the truth is uncomfortable. Hiding it is dangerous.

      The sad part is that a lot of movements of the past few decades have bought into this mantra that truth is somewhow malleable and that reality is merely a construct of how many people believe it to be true. Shades of 1984.

      Speaking Truth to Power? More like "Making crap up and calling it truth, then screaming about babykillers to to your Congressperson and buying ads in the New York Times."

    8. Re:Stop deleting stuff by TheSpoom · · Score: 2

      There is truth in large numbers and concensus. If you don't have concensus, then you don't have truth. So whatever you are writing if it isn't agreed with by the majority (or even the minority of powerful people in the Wiki world), you are wasting your time and theirs.

      That's possibly the most 1984esque comment I've ever read on Slashdot, and I've been here a while.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    9. Re:Stop deleting stuff by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      If you spend a lot of time writing something, and then somebody decides that it's not "notable"

      Then you probably didn't spend time finding reliable sources to cite.

      In practice it doesn't work that way. The rules on what is and isn't a 'reliable source' are open to interpretation as are the rules on what is 'notable'. Admins appear to love deleting new articles. It's the quickest and easiest way for them to convince themselves they are helping.

  34. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

    wow... that's really strange. It's hard to imagine that somebody's main source of entertainment is just reverting a particular person's edits. Did your stalker just do this to you, or anybody who dared edit "his" page?

  35. I tried to edit Wikipedia once by sandytaru · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My changes were immediately reverted and I was harassed by one of their overzealous editors for not citing a source. The change in question was correcting someone's grammar. I'm not surprised one bit that they're losing contributors.

    --
    Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    1. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by geniice · · Score: 0

      can you provide a link?

    2. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by KahabutDieDrake · · Score: 1

      You say that like anyone outside the English department at your university would care even a little bit about a minor grammatical mistake in a factual article. Also, you probably caused some butthurt from some editor/contributor that thinks he actually knows how to write in the English language. (they almost never do)

    3. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 2

      You keep asking this like it's some kind of mantra... when it seems like a lot of these stories from personal experience are in the past and the people in question don't much care anymore. Maybe you should consider that a large number of these stories may actually be true, and there is at least SOME problems with wikipedia's editorial policy. Yes, some of the stories may have no valid basis... but there's a hell of a lot of them and some may actually relate to admin abuse of power.

    4. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by geniice · · Score: 0

      Thing is in most cases when we do track them down the person was trying to push their own pet theory/advertise a company/other problematical behaviour. Other times it's just plain trying to add stuff that is already in wikipedia in a more relevant place.

      The plural of unsupported anecdote is not data.

    5. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      You could have taken revenge by reinserting the correction and citing e.g. The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. He wanted a reference, he got a reference. And he can't say that reference is not notable either.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    6. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A band-aid is not a cure.

    7. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by truesaer · · Score: 1

      I've read all the highly rated comments on several /. stories like this, and no one ever provides a real example of these egregious situations. I'm certain there are some douchey admins out there, but I've made about 30 small edits to 17 different articles in a wide range of topics in the last 6 years and I've yet to have anything reverted. I don't take that to mean others don't have this problem, but it seems like no one is willing to take even 30 seconds to log into their wikipedia account and copy a link from the "My Contributions" section.

      It makes me doubt a bit that this is such a big problem. If it were, wouldn't the evidence be easier to come by? Personally, with 17 edits in 6 years I'm not very passionate either way on the subject. I look things up in Wikipedia several times a day, and it always seems to give me what I want. In the end that's all that matters to most people.

    8. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      This was years ago. I have no idea what the article was even about; I check Wikipedia daily, sometimes hourly, and there have been times I've surfed twenty articles in because something was interesting and Wikipedia is conducive to horizontal research. I'm also not in the habit of bookmarking places people annoyed me on the Internet, due to space concerns.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    9. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      If the English majors don't care, who will?

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    10. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by vlueboy · · Score: 2

      Ugh. Responding in any other way would have spared you from this reply:
      you, sir, are exactly what is wrong with wikipedia, down to your very reply subtly paraphrasing the notorious "citation needed." We all know the question itself is made more to annoy than to fix anything. For every "most cases" that you discussed above, there is always "the rest of the cases."

      How should we expect those, er, "victims" will react to being asked to provide "proof" of being wronged by the same group that did the wronging?

    11. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by melikamp · · Score: 1

      No they can't. They never do. All they can do is bitch and whine.

      I edit Wikipedia not a lot, but regularly. In a few instances I got reverted, and every time I came to agree with the editor's decision. While my experience is anecdotal, here is why I think all of these whiners are full of crap: if a single one of my good edits got reverted I would probably make a stink there and then. Granted, not everyone is as anal as me in this respect, but I would have at least bookmarked the page where they did this to me and made them RUE the day they saw my nick. How hard can this be? And who wouldn't enjoy that, even if a little bit? "Here, this is an excellent edit of mine that got reverted/stolen. Here is the name of the SOB who did it." When people complain about "the general air of hostility" or "all their edits reverted" without providing a single link, I have no choice but to presume one of the following: (from unlucky to incompetent to malicious)

      - They are too thin-skinned for a public editing process: they couldn't hang on WIkipedia because they can't hang anywhere with just a bit of public scrutiny.

      - They never really cared about editing Wikipedia, and so after their crappy edits got reverted, they threw away their nicks.

      - Their edits weren't as good as they say, or the editors weren't as dickish as they say, or there was a legitimate grievance, but it got resolved in a fair way. So obviously they can't link to it, on pain of looking like fools.

      - Their edits sucked and they know it.

      - They got into a flame war for no reason and now have fun trolling with a made up story.

      - They work for a PR firm that works for Britannica.

      Neither of the above is the fault of Wikipedia or its policies.

    12. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by 1s44c · · Score: 2

      You could have taken revenge by reinserting the correction and citing e.g. The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. He wanted a reference, he got a reference. And he can't say that reference is not notable either.

      And he will revert it as not relevant, or for some other reason. It soon becomes a game of who can spend more time pushing a small change into an article.

      With nothing to gain from winning and a large amount of wasted time win or lose normal people give up.

    13. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by NoMaster · · Score: 2

      I edit Wikipedia not a lot, but regularly. In a few instances I got reverted, and every time I came to agree with the editor's decision. While my experience is anecdotal, here is why I think all of these whiners are full of crap: if a single one of my good edits got reverted I would probably make a stink there and then.

      I used to edit Wikipedia a bit a few years ago - nothing major, just fixing stupid errors like mixups between north/south or east/west on pages related to my city and surrounding area. Obviously wrong, too trivial to require a citation, simply fixable, and easily verifiable by any "editor" who was capable of finding North on a map.

      And when they were reverted - as most were within a few hours - I didn't make a stink there and then. I said "Fuck it - be wrong then!" and went on with my life. Because, frankly, I don't care if Wikipedia is wrong.

      Just stop telling me that Wikipedia is right - or that, if it's not right, it's my fault for not trying hard enough! to make it right.

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    14. Re:I tried to edit Wikipedia once by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Yeah it sounds like you are the 2nd entry from the top.

  36. Who are you on en.wp? by tepples · · Score: 1

    I always cite my work when I edit something and I remain factual and not opinionated or personal... yet most of my work continually gets rolled back by editors

    I'd like to look through your most recent contributions to Wikipedia and offer tips, but you appear not to use the same username on Wikipedia that you use here. What is your username on Wikipedia so that I can find examples? Without examples, all I can recommend is to discuss all reverts on the article's talk page.

    1. Re:Who are you on en.wp? by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      I gave up trying to edit seriously about 2-3 years ago, I have no idea what username I was using at the time (or if I even logged in, it may be IP address only)... it was articles connected to various aspects of the Western Australian racing industry (horse racing, greyhound racing, harness racing)... you may be able to work it out but it's 2am here and I'm going to bed, I have no desire to trawl through the articles looking for reverts.

    2. Re:Who are you on en.wp? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which does nothing but get the camper to send you a message telling you about how wrong you are and to stop editting his content

  37. AFDs plz by tepples · · Score: 1

    I watched as my contributions, one-by-one, regardless of quality, got deleted.

    Please link to the "Articles for deletion" discussion pages for these contributions so that I can help you.

    1. Re:AFDs plz by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Most contributions to Wikipedia are not new articles, but changes and additions to existing articles. Now I don't know what kbolino did (even if Wikipedia should have someone using the same nick, I can't be sure it's him), but I'd be very surprised if most of his contributions were new articles.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:AFDs plz by tepples · · Score: 1

      I'd be very surprised if most of his contributions were new articles.

      Perhaps I got too hung up on "deleted" for removing new articles and "reverted" for removing changes to articles. But even in the case of "reverted", I still can't help further without links to diffs.

    3. Re:AFDs plz by j-beda · · Score: 1

      But you cannot help enough people with this type of "I'll look into it" type of assistance to stop them all from leaving. If the process is unsatisfying, people will not contribute as much. If they feel their contributions are not valued, wikipedia is in trouble.

    4. Re:AFDs plz by SEE · · Score: 1

      It's not actually helping to go around writing checks to people to individually compensate them for damages done by a drunk. What you're actually doing is enabling the drunk to continue his bad behavior.

    5. Re:AFDs plz by lgw · · Score: 1

      tepples, no one cares enough to ask for help on this stuff. That's the whole point. If casual volunteers with no knowledge or interest in wikilaw can't make obviously right edits without fear of reversion, then you're not going to get new serious contributors.

      Wikipedia has been dominated by deletionism and page onership for 5+ years now - it's incredibly off-putting. I figure it's only a matter of time before WP deletes its last article and vanishes in a puff of editorial dispute.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  38. Re:A million monkeys typing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's run by a gang of mental midget dictator-for-life's who believe that capitalism is the one and only God-given way

    Are you on crack? Have you tried editing the page on Karl Marx or Che Guevara? WIkipedia has no shortage of leftards.

  39. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

    So your response to a cyber-stalker is to stalk them back? Sounds like a healthy past-time.

  40. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  41. Wikipedia has finally discovered reality by cdrguru · · Score: 2

    The reality is that well-researched material is difficult and time consuming. You can get maybe 50-60% of the material that makes up what an encyclopedia was in the 1980s from people with passion and dedication but after that you are faced with just a lot of work. Work for no compensation other than ego-boosting.

    This reality has been utterly rejected by the Walesian philosphy of knowledge in which there is no real "truth" there is just concensus.

    What they are left with is a whole bunch of stuff of unknown quality that people with various passions have written over the years. OK, admittedly some of it is accurate and good but there is no telling what. There is plenty that was written by someone with an agenda and Wikipedia made (and continues to make) it possible for someone with enough dedication to block anyone from corrupting their perfect treatise. Eventually, it is going to be left alone even if the original contributor departs.

    The amount of passion that is out there for people to spend time writing and defending their turf in the Wikipedia world just isn't enough for the whole thing to work consistently for a long period of time. Sure, there might be a base of the truly hardcore, but it isn't enough. They seem to have some kind of rating now so people can continue to tune the text according to concensus, but concensus isn't important except in that Walesian dimension. As someone pointed out earlier what you tend to get with enforced concensus is the million-monkeys effect. While it is entirely possible you can get another Shakespear you absolutely will get a lot of drivel. What concensus does is form that drivel according to social norms so it isn't recognized. It is still nothing but the regurgitated ramblings of pop culture.

    How do you fix this? Well, I don't think it is possible. Walesian philosophy says that in large numbers there is truth and all truths are equal. With that in mind, what possible hope does a real subject matter expert have? Sure, there might be a few with real passion to tell the world their views on genetics, high energy particle physics or the social orders in ancient Egypt. But they chances they are going to win out over the concensus belief system are small indeed. It was an interesting experiment and it isn't entirely surprising that it lasted as long as it has. But passions move on and Jimmy is unlikely to find much passion out there filling in the cracks in what has been built or taking over what has been abandoned.

    1. Re:Wikipedia has finally discovered reality by JMJimmy · · Score: 1

      I agree with your point to an extent but I believe there's something more going on here. My personal belief is that it's a conflict between what contributors want Wikipedia to be vs what Wikipedia wants to be vs what Wikipedia was vs what the reality has become.

      What Wikipedia was:
      It was a place where anyone could contribute their bit of knowledge about a particular subject and walk away feeling they had done a good thing. The belief was that that text would be refined, updated, and addressed if incorrect.

      What Wikipedia has become:
      A place where every contribution is scrutinized, usually by one or two "active" members, who often revert or demand citations. The breadth of subjects is restricted and anything non-standard is immediately removed. The corporate and social structure created is adversarial and overly complex. The citations are becoming more and more obtuse/inaccessible (literally behind paywalls) and add little to the quality of the site.

      What Wikipedia wants to be:
      A happy go lucky repository of rudimentary beliefs and "subjective balance" supported by those who do the work and those that need tax write offs.

      What contributors want it to be:
      Everyone has their own interpretation of this. My personal belief is that the majority of contributors are looking for a place that is a repository for knowledge, all that is known, beliefs and arguments, data, and clear distinctions between them.

      Until these are reconciled into something more cohesive Wiki will continue to bleed contributors.

  42. Edit Wars are a Problem by thepainguy · · Score: 1

    I don't edit much any more because I'm tired of making contributions and having them reverted by someone else. What's the point?

    1. Re:Edit Wars are a Problem by dmcq · · Score: 1

      Yes I would agree this is the main problem. The place is infested with people with a mission to make their view the only view that WIkipedia will show. And not just on the topics you'd expect like climate change and abortion and Israel and evolution etc. Even fairly trivial topics have their local warriors. And many of the people complaining about WIkipedia are edit warriors who they have finally managed to get themselves banned despite the extreme difficulty of doing so if they just remain halfway polite. Admins are not the problem. They have too little power if anything to get rid of troublemakers efficiently.

      --
      thou discernest my thoughts from afar
  43. It's all about User Interface by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone is focusing on the editors and ignoring another HUGE issue -- User Interface.

    The simple fact that you have learn a bizarre annotation scheme to write anything to the site severely limits the sites potential contributor audience. There are tons of knowledgable people who would be willing to contribute if they could just copy from Word and past into the wiki.

    What they need is a good WYSIWYG editor that makes life easy.

    1. Re:It's all about User Interface by yianniy · · Score: 1

      BTW, I posted this. Forgot to login first

    2. Re:It's all about User Interface by JMJimmy · · Score: 1

      This is definitely true. They've pigeonholed themselves into the wiki parser (and all it's limitations/quirks) when technology has long since passed that format by.

      I think another overlooked problem is the lack of a solid interface for data. There's list upon list of various data sets that are completely isolated. These could be incredible tools that interface with the main article to provide meaningful content that does not require multiple updates. As it is now you need an insanely complex template system of isolated objects. One of the best examples I can think of is actually on http://dragonage.wikia.com/wiki/Dragon_Age_Wiki take this page as an example: http://dragonage.wikia.com/index.php?title=Heavy_chestpieces_(Dragon_Age_II)&action=edit It requires 15 different templates, 18 transclutions of objects that are written in "wiki code" instead of something the average person could edit.

      I actually created a template on that site quite a while ago.... how many people could make sense of this: http://dragonage.wikia.com/index.php?title=Template:Approval&action=edit (I tried pasting it in here, Slashdot complained about too many 'junk' characters) All it does is put a picture and a green or red number in some text. I look at it now and I don't think I could modify it without first deconstructing it piece by piece.

  44. What did you expect? by JockTroll · · Score: 1

    Time has a number of effects on people and even sub-people: it causes aging. Aye, with aging the abhuman basement dweller comes closer to the reality he fears: the day it has to come out. Out in the harsh, competitive world. Out in the merciless, fast world. Out, in the world of the Jock. Here in the real world the loserboy abhuman basement dweller, that awful mass of wrinkled fatty flesh, the stench of its stale sweat polluting the air, it has no place. Here it needs to exist and feed itself, here it can only rely on itself and its scarce, laughable skills. Here its quaint "non-competitive" philosophy holds no value at all. And in this harsh but fair world work takes its right toll on the non-person, reducing the undeserved amount of free time it previously enjoyed and hence, reducing the time it can dedicate to "projects" like this "wiki-shitty-pedia". Instead it must toil and strive, its back bent, its head bowed, under a reddish sun. As it should be.

    --
    Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
  45. Self-revert by tepples · · Score: 1

    An edit of me was reverted.

    Next time this happens, take the revert to the article's talk page.

    What bugged me was that the day after, my entry was, almost verbatim, in there again. This time under the name of the person who thought it's "offtopic" only one day earlier.

    That sounds like a "self-revert". It happens when the reverting editor realizes that he made a mistake in a revert.

    personal stalker.

    Please see AC's post.

    1. Re:Self-revert by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Next time this happens, take the revert to the article's talk page.

      What you cannot seem to be made to understand is that no one outside Wikipedia can be bothered to give a shit about "the proper process". We don't care. It's one thing to see an article we can copy-edit or add a little bit to. Hey, I can spend two minutes adding to the collection of human knowledge? I'm in! But it's entirely different to expect us to want to spend time babysitting our edits so that the griefer jackasses who stake ownership to large swaths of a hard drive don't delete our work on a whim.

      You keep saying "well, all you have to do is..." but that's never going to happen. We're not "into" Wikipedia in the same way that the Aspie teen hitting "reload" 100 times an hour is, and aren't willing to donate large chunks of time to it.

      The problems (and any possible solutions) lie wholly with Wikipedia and not with casual editors. Expecting the entire world to modify their behavior to cater to Wikipedia's processes and procedures - which were cooked up by those same editors who are ruining it for everyone else - is a pipe dream at best.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:Self-revert by SteelAngel · · Score: 1

      Next time this happens, take the revert to the article's talk page.

      Point is that this shouldn't be a problem as big as it is. We shouldn't have to waste time better spent on a "productive" task to argue with people on the talk page of an article about an edit reversion that should not have happened.

      Perhaps, maybe, wikipedia editors should be held accountable for their actions. Right now, great power comes with no responsibility. Seeing a few editors get banned from the site forever would help. Lets start with any editor that has posted "Delete: See [WP:Notability]"

    3. Re:Self-revert by tepples · · Score: 1

      What you cannot seem to be made to understand is that no one outside Wikipedia can be bothered to give a shit about "the proper process". We don't care.

      Then allow me to sum up the objection as I understand it: "Wikipedia is dying because casual editors are unwilling to babysit their changes through BRD." If we can agree on that wording, that'll save us all some time the next time Jimbo whines about this.

    4. Re:Self-revert by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      I have no idea what BRD means, but yeah, that's the gist of it. I hope we can also agree that would-be casual editors outnumber entrenched, abusive editors by a couple of orders of magnitude.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    5. Re:Self-revert by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      The next time I'll probably do the same as I did last time: I won't give a shit and move on.

      As I said, I neither get paid for editing Wikipedia, nor does my personal self-esteem or the esteem of my peers depend on whether my entry in WP stands or falls. I edit. You like? Good. You don't? Fine as well. It's not like I really care.

      And that's maybe the problem here. People who get reverted by self proclaimed "protectors" of articles, allowing only their opinion (I don't even want to know what it must be like on topics that might even be mildly controversial, all I edited was articles about ancient Greek pillars and a few tidbits about IT security) will simply not put up with it and move on. It's simply not worth the investment.

      Taking the whole shit to the articles talk page IS already more investment than I'm willing to give it. I am not really in the mood to discuss a topic I don't really feel strongly about. And frankly, I do not feel strongly about facts. They're not really a "feel" topic, they just are, or are not, but if it's verifiable, there's little room for discussion.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:Self-revert by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      If we can change "babysit their changes through" with "deal with political bullshit during", we can agree.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    7. Re:Self-revert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry about what BRD means.

      I did once, when I thought Wikipedia was based on rational thought, and came to find out that the proponents of BRD can't even be bothered to define or follow the process themselves.

      There never was any real discussion, but there was plenty of boldness and reversion.

  46. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by NoSig · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Whine whine whine... It is hard to take you and anyone else seriously unless you link to Wikipedia. Citation needed.

    I find it much harder to take you seriously if you believe that putting in "whine whine whine" does something positive for you. If you argue like that on Wikipedia, some introspection may be in order on how not to drive editors away.

  47. Theme song by Daetrin · · Score: 3, Funny

    For everyone who pointed out the _real_ reason why editors are leaving Wikipedia:

    Tom Smith - WikiPirates

    Some lust for gold and silver, and some for gems and jewels
    But some want greater treasures, and they use their software tools
    For some of us quest for knowledge, and we wants it undefiled,
    But now and then you get a troll who thinks he's Oscar Wilde.

    Beware the Wiki Pirates, who sail the server seas.
    They flaunt their fake credentials and their advanced degrees.
    They control the information with bullying moderation,
    'Cause arrogance and online swagger trump your expertise.

    No matter what your sources, no matter whom you cite,
    He doesn't want to hear it, 'cause he knows for sure he's right
    There is no compromising, no bargain or accord,
    He's never heard of you, or doesn't like you, or he's bored.

    Beware the Wiki Pirates, they love to wield their clout
    All day they'll argue details that no one cares about
    They don't see as overreachin' their demands for page deletion
    Web pages are in short supply, and what if we run out?

    Yo ho, yo ho, no one ever thought,
    Yo ho, yo ho, in this web we'd be caught,
    The Wiki's meant to document the stuff the mainstream missed,
    Instead we've got a pompous sot who's building up his wrist.

    So if ye've got a subject that really interests you,
    Beware the Wikipirates, they've got nothing else to do.
    Someday we'll have a knowledge base with all you want and need,
    Till then we'll take cold comfort that they're likely not to breed.

    Beware the Wiki Pirates, who whine at our attacks.
    They're only trying to help us, never mind the rules and facts.
    They're just honest, not unpleasant, it's not their fault that we're peasants,
    If we'd only see their brilliance, everybody could relax.

    Beware the Wiki Pirates, that basement-dwellin' band.
    They regulate and obfuscate what they don't understand.
    The grief they give ya will reduce ya to trivia and minutiae,
    And prayin' that you really do get banned,
    Only "public noteriety" will get you in their library,
    Be grateful they're all lost at sea... they'd try to delete the land.

    --
    This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  48. perhaps better if it didn't Wikipedia exist by k6mfw · · Score: 2

    When I search for particular subjects, the Wikipedia and aggregates always dominate the results. Since information on Wikipedia is questionable then what material they have is "contaminated" meaning you have to spend extra time verifying it. "If it's on the internet, then it must be true!" but I like webpages that have the name and contact of the person that wrote the material. And like everything else you have to consider the source, i.e. govt websites, company websites (download useful troubleshoot manuals or simply marketing by dweebs), websites by nutzoid people, websites by reputable people. As we all know who it comes from makes a difference in credibility of information. But many sites I cannot quickly find because Wikipedia hijacks search results!

    Wikipedia is useful if you want to find very basic information, i.e. is Gina Lollobrigida an actress, ESA astronaut or photographer? (she is only two of those three).

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
    1. Re:perhaps better if it didn't Wikipedia exist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For those of you who don't want to do the checking yourself, she's an astronaut and a photographer.

    2. Re:perhaps better if it didn't Wikipedia exist by coolsnowmen · · Score: 1

      if you don't like wikipedia, but like a certain search engine like google, why not just filter it out like this: "http://www.google.com/search?q=carbon+-wikipedia"

    3. Re:perhaps better if it didn't Wikipedia exist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or "-site:wikipedia.org".

      Don't know how to take care of the aggregates though...

  49. Deletionists are the problem by securitytech · · Score: 1

    It's not everybody getting married, it's the admins hypocritically deleting notable, sourced articles and edits while endorsing much less notable articles and edits.

    And after reviewing other comments here, it seems the slashdot crowd has a majority consensus on this. It's why I quit and the only other editor I know in real life has quit. The conclusion we came to is why bother wasting our time?

    1. Re:Deletionists are the problem by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the bots are worse. I largely stopped editing Wikipedia when I discovered that a bot had tagged about a dozen images I uploaded as not having fair use explanations when those images had perfectly good fair use explanations but they were in human-readable text rather than some specific tag format that it was looking for. I couldn't be assed to change the pages to please a stupid bot, so the images were deleted even though they met all the actual, real requirements to be on Wikipedia.

      I believe that particular bot was later stopped because it was so retarded and caused so many deletions of things that were perfectly legitimate.

  50. Blame editors by mapuche · · Score: 1

    I'm sure my experience as a contributor was very similar to the rest of the people who has left the building. The first problems arose when I got a "shadow" with my first article, any contribution from my part was changed, reverted or simply deleted. Most of the few articles started by me, ended 100% different in just a few months. Ok, maybe my thing isn't writing but all my images were deleted as well, even with a CC license.

    I'm not interested to contribute anymore, life is too short.

    1. Re:Blame editors by geniice · · Score: 1

      hmm whats your wikipedia username?

  51. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some people like credit for their work. Instead he kept seeing people coming in and 'stealing' his work. Then on top of it just reverting him 'just cause'.

    This is why we cant have anything nice. I call it the douchebag factor. It crops up in groups where people are supposed to help each other. Most people are normal and do things in an 'ok' way. But every once and awhile you get someone who decides to get their OCD on, wants some sort of 'fame', or has figured out how to get something out of it at the expense of others. So they revert/edit like crazy. They think they are actually doing something, but really they just are overhead. They will *not* go away. The site just is not built that way. They get their rocks off doing this. Eventually the real editors just say 'fuck it' and leave. As it just adds overhead to what they do already. They can not even build on/fix what they had as it has been reverted. Sure you can dig it out and put it up again. But as soon as you do that it is gone again.

    Those douchebags drive off real people users. It is why many things like 'have a penny take a penny' dont work long term. Once the douche figures out the game they game it until it sucks. Sucking any sort of fun/benefit out of it. By the time 'they get theirs' you really do not care about the project anymore and move on.

  52. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 1

    Did you miss the rest of my post? Yes, I believe the parent was whining. And I explained why I thought he was whining: the article he edited became better, but that wasn't enough for him. But you are in the same camp, aren't you? You don't really care if someone points out that there is nothing major wrong with the editing process, and your complaints about it are stemming from your undue AND unrealistic expectation of fame and recognition every time you fix a paragraph on a site edited by millions of people.

  53. Some info belongs on a specialized wiki by tepples · · Score: 1

    They don't accept evidence as verification

    Get your evidence noticed by a member of the scholarly or mainstream media and they'll accept it. For example, MobyGames noticed PocketNES in the credits of Contra 4 for DS, making PocketNES notable.

    Misinformation keeps reappearing on pages

    How should Wikipedia tell the difference between evidence and misinformation?

    So what if Impulse Tracker is "not notable", its file format is still used in the tracking scene

    Then the page belongs on a wiki about the tracking scene, not on Wikipedia. For example, detailed information about the technical specifications of the Nintendo Entertainment System belongs on Nesdev wiki more than on Wikipedia. See Wikipedia:Alternative outlets on Wikipedia and The Wiki Rule on TV Tropes.

    And if I want to reconstruct the page, I can't because the edit history is blocked out.

    If you want to continue a deleted article on a specialized wiki, go to the deletion review page and ask an administrator to e-mail you a copy of the deleted article.

    1. Re:Some info belongs on a specialized wiki by sycorob · · Score: 1

      Is Wikipedia running out of disk space all of a sudden? Why do topics have to be "notable" to be included? One of the great things about Wikipedia originally was that it wasn't limited to a certain number of pages, so finally there were articles on topics that never could have been included in a paper encyclopedia. Why is it the standard that topics have to prove themselves "notable" or die, given that it angers people that spent time and effort adding information to Wikipedia and often removes topics that people were interested in reading about? In effect, it seems like the Wikipedia organization is working hard to make Wikipedia less useful to many potential users and actively pushing away potential contributors.

      From your post it sounds like you have inside knowledge about Wikipedia, so if you can help me understand this, I would greatly appreciate it.

    2. Re:Some info belongs on a specialized wiki by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a great example of the hostility one finds in editing Wikipedia.

  54. Too much political mess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wikipedia has too much political strife for me to deal with it. You need mentors to help contributors, not dictators.

  55. GASP! Possible harassment and attack!? by denzacar · · Score: 1

    You mean like, like what they do to... JOURNALISTS? Or, or, or... BLOGGERS!?

    Yeah... It is really terrible to see those weekend beheadings of journalists at town squared and daily burnings of bloggers by the mad masses who disagree with their news stories on every corner.
    But what can you do?

    It's not like there is some sort of a law and order structure out there that would police the laws and do other stuff to protect the people from being lynched by a mad mob.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    1. Re:GASP! Possible harassment and attack!? by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Yes, because editing a wikipedia article is exactly like a journalist or blogger who goes into a country where his race/creed is hated, then makes a public spectacle of himself ... oh yea, and the country just happens to be known for not taking shit from anyone who doesn't agree with them ...

      You can't show me one journalist or blogger (and for the record, bloggers are just douche bags writing to a website, they are not fucking journalists) who was beheaded that you couldn't have told them that was going to happen before they started writing. I seriously doubt you can find one instance of it happening where I'd even care about it. No, its not just cause I'm a cold heartless bastard, its because I'm realistic and feel little sympathy for someone who got hit with the obvious that they could have avoided REAL fucking easy by just not going there. No, they had to try to be billy bad ass, and be the jew who got the great news story about the evil palestinian terrorists by infiltrating their training camps ... and then he's fucking shocked when they are like 'hey Benjamin Edelstein, guess what, we know your a jew and now you die!' (for those of you who don't know, Benjamin Edelstein is very obviously jewish name) ... and billy bad ass is no billy bad ass's body, and billy bad ass's head in a box being shipped back to mommy. If you're surprised, you're a moron. Its not right, but it IS reality.

      I feel no sympathy for the chinese man who writes bad things about a government known to take people like himself out in the street and shooting them. I'm sorry it happened, but your an idiot if you didn't see it coming. You are NEVER anonymous, someone IS GOING TO GIVE YOU AWAY, even if its a computer. If you don't realize this the world really is better off without you in the gene pool.

      Seriously ... bloggers? give me a fucking break. Just because you CAN post to some blog, doesn't mean anyone cares what you're saying. Nor does it mean you SHOULD post on the PUBLIC INTERNET WHERE EVERYONE GOOD OR BAD CAN SEE IT.

      Taking out people with no common sense is good for evolution. Sorry your on that list.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    2. Re:GASP! Possible harassment and attack!? by bertoelcon · · Score: 1

      Someone mod parent up.

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
  56. Start by finding reliable sources by tepples · · Score: 1

    Anyone that knows anything about the timeline and the releases by nem (hello, world for FW 1.00), the ps2dev toolchain, the Swaploit and K-Xploit tools by PsP-Dev (which most definitely did not involve any "cracked code" from Sony) and Sony's firmware Japanese release dates knows that this Wikipedia article is definitely incorrect.

    You could start by finding reliable sources for the release dates of PSP firmware, which shouldn't be too hard. It might be a bit harder to find mainstream gaming media sources reporting on said PSP scene releases though.

    1. Re:Start by finding reliable sources by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      Or just publish a page and self-cite... like some seem to do.

    2. Re:Start by finding reliable sources by Jiro · · Score: 1

      You're not actually allowed to publish a page and self-cite unless it's a professional publication or the information is only about yourself.

      But this is indeed one of Wikipedia's flaws. Certain topics are typically discussed only in blogs, message boards, and other sources that aren't considered legitimate by Wikipedia standards. Every so often an acceptable Wikipedia source happens to mention one of those topics, usually without researching it much, and so the Wikipedia article gets written based on those random mentions.

      And you can't even delete it for being incorrect. "Verifiability, not truth" ends up pretty bad when you have things that are verifiable but false.

    3. Re:Start by finding reliable sources by grumbel · · Score: 1

      You could start by finding reliable sources for the release dates of PSP firmware, which shouldn't be too hard.

      Actually that's extremely hard, as the mainstream gaming press doesn't report about that stuff or only in such general terms that the information is either not very useful or outright incorrect. And all the detailed information about the topic on the Internet isn't considered a "reliable source", as its either some homebrew forum, Wiki, blog or whatever.

      It's essentially a classic case where the requirement for a "reliable source" is used to push sources that are actually less reliable.

  57. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 1

    Some people like credit for their work. Instead he kept seeing people coming in and 'stealing' his work. Then on top of it just reverting him 'just cause'.

    But he did get credit for his work. The edit history clearly shows who actually improved that article and who is a stealing douchebag. The parent's complaints are shallow. The article got better thanks to him, and there is a record of it. What else did he expect?

  58. The profile sounds familiar... by Dahamma · · Score: 1

    Wales said the typical profile of a contributor is 'a 26-year-old geeky male' who moves on to other ventures, gets married and leaves the website."

    Wow, that's exactly the same typical profile of a /. poster! Well, except for the moving on, getting married, and leaving...

  59. Re:A million monkeys typing by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

    I got down-modded for posting that response? Seriously, go and check out 'For a Free Internet's posting history, he's either a professional troll or a gifted amateur.

  60. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    I think it has something to do with some kind of e-peen, "who makes the most edits". And, let's be honest, the fastest way to get a lot is to revert something. As long as this means they're undoing defacements and advertisements, that's fine. But from what it seems to me is that there are a few that simply move down the "recently edited" list and revert randomly anything not coming from one of the "more important" names.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  61. Eff off, Wales. by blair1q · · Score: 1

    You didn't create an environment in which smart people were treated well. You created a cliquish clusterfuck. Eat me.

  62. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can see why that sort of thing would be off putting, in certain circumstances. But even for your edits that weren't reverted, what did you get from Wikipedia?

    Maybe it is because lack the volunteer gene or something but I can't figure out why it would matter to you that edits you made presumably under a pseudonym, gratis, on a gratis internet encyclopedia, would matter to you one way or the other. Was there some way you could find out if any of your unrevrted edits were ever read by anyone, and if so that they were helpful? In the absence of that all this volunteer editing seems the equivalent of shouting factoids into the darkness and hoping someone hears you and finds them interesting.

  63. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sorry, I have enough drama and social troubles in my RL. I'm in no way interested in some in an area where I neither get paid for it nor get anything else out of it. I went to Wikipedia to read articles and add my knowledge on a subject to it where applicable and sourceable. If that's not wanted, no problem on my end of the bargain. I'm neither dependent on being a WP-editor for any kind of income, and neither do I draw my self-respect (or respect of any of my peers) from being able to claim "ownership" of any WP-articles.

    I added what I knew, corrected what I could prove wrong with relevant sources and if that's not wanted, ok. You can take a horse to the river but can't force it to drink.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  64. BOLD, revert, discuss by tepples · · Score: 1

    End results: >70% of my edits were removed within few days

    Then >70% of your edits should have led to talk page discussions.

    one has been proposed to merge with another page

    This often happens when a stub article looks like it'd fit in well as a section of another article. Can you link to either of the surviving articles in question?

    1. Re:BOLD, revert, discuss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      For fuck sake, stop spamming you god-damn link, what are you? A PR Officer?

    2. Re:BOLD, revert, discuss by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

      Then >70% of your edits should have led to talk page discussions [wikipedia.org].

      Should have, but didn't. And I guarantee the GP's story is not even close to unique. My guess, and I freely admit it is only a guess, is that many of those reversions were made by an admin. If so, the problem is that questionable actions like that are often left unquestioned because they were done by an admin, as people fear blocking or other retribution.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
  65. Wikipedia Questionable by mholve · · Score: 0

    Personally, I find Wikipedia to be somewhat questionable anyway. A porn actress or other web bimbo gets a Wikipedia page - but someone that's, say, contributed to Open Source projects and created websites to actually help people, etc. can't. What, these people aren't "notable?"

  66. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe you should just fucking stop trolling, asshole.

  67. Good, maybe they are returning to Everything2.com! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or as I like to say, the original Wikipedia. Of course, blocking Google didn't help keep its profile up when Wikipedia hit the scene.

    At least with Everything2, it is much more difficult for a single person to remove or edit something from sheer dislike. That takes a lot of downvotes. The flipside is, articles are wwwwwwwwwaaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyyyyyy more subjective.

  68. Re:CK ref: by Toonol · · Score: 1

    Does it relate to "Xanadu", the decades-in-development ambitious hyperlinking system for information? That would tie in to wikipedia, tangentially.

  69. And of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you do manage to win a vote over an admin, he'll declare the vote non-binding because it was flooded with "outsiders" and then delete the article anyways.

    1. Re:And of course by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      That sounds familiar. Everyone who votes keep is classed as a sockpuppet, because someone noticed the page was marked for deletion and posted a message notifying the relevant community, who logged in for the first time to object to the deletion. Rather than saying 'welcome, improve the page, become active contributors' the response was 'fuck off, we don't like your sort around here'. I saw this happen three times before I gave up on Wikipedia. In one case, the vote was keep, the page was then nominated for speedy deletion by someone whose only contributions to Wikipedia were comments on talk pages and marking articles for deletion, and then deleted after counting all of the people who voted 'keep' as unperson.

      Wikipedia should be using non-notable pages as a training ground for new recruits. Sure, put a notice up at the top saying 'this page is about a topic that is probably not very notable and isn't subject to the same quality control as the rest of wikipedia', but then leave it alone. Let people contribute. Welcome their contributions. And then try to encourage them to contribute to more important topics.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  70. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

    How many people outside of wiki editors do you think LOOK at the history page?

  71. It too damn hard to edit by Latinhypercube · · Score: 0

    It too damn hard to edit !!!! I can write my own html. But their editor is bloody impossible !!!!!
    How the hell is any lay person going to do it ??!!
    Make your editor easier !!! Put some effort into it !! Please !!!

    1. Re:It too damn hard to edit by geniice · · Score: 1

      It is being worked on. For the time being though see:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Cheatsheet

  72. Deletionists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course there will be fewer editors if work is constantly deleted.
    Wikipedia needs to foster an inclusionist mindset to get beyond their current limit.
    Face it, it will never be printed, so why are editors so fanatical about excluding whole topics?
    Maybe it should be forked to create the Encyclopedia Galactica and leave the anal retentive Wikipedia editors to pore over their 'would be paper' encyclopedia.

  73. Re:A million monkeys typing by Toonol · · Score: 1

    I hope you're humorously imitating some of the psychotic editors that are causing such problems over at Wikipedia.

  74. Re:CK ref: by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

    Probably the person from Porlock was Tim Berners Lee, trying to protect the WWW from competition.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  75. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 1

    So credit is not enough for you? You DO expect fame and recognition by masses when editing Wikipedia? You seriously don't see a problem with that?

  76. No shit? Dump some of your Nazi editor whores by BitZtream · · Score: 1

    Seriously, with the deletionists and all the other rampant Napoleon syndrome/computer courage bastards who have special priveleges it makes it so no one wants to waste their time submitting articles. When you delete an article with perfectly valid info just because it isn't pretty enough, rather than fixing it, you pretty much have made it clear that you don't want people to contribute, you want elitist assholes to contribute.

    I'd rather have a poorly written article on some obscure subject than no article on an obscure subject.

    The notoriety bullshit needs to go as well, wtf does it matter, the disk space is so fucking cheap that there is absolutely no point in deleting anything ever. So to get notable, I have to put up a couple fake print books on a couple of the sites that will let you publish pretty much any PDF to paper ... so if I want to fake something, I can still do it with practically zero effort. All wp accomplishes by deleting these articles is a loss of potentially useful knowledge.

    Deletion for lack of citations is another one. Mark it as uncited in some big obvious way (As is already done) BUT DON'T FUCKING DELETE IT. Just because it doesn't have citations that fit your retarded idea of what a citation needs to be doesn't mean its wrong or invalid. Rather than delete it, let me know its got nothing to back it up (which I can figure out by looking at the citations list ... like you do in every other publication like this) by putting a header on it that says so (already done) but leave the fucking thing there. Someone else might find it and add citations, you gain absolutely nothing by deleting articles. Not only do you lose the articles themselves and their public presence, after a purge you've lost the history too.

    The deletionists are basically book burners, and we should treat them EXACTLY the way we'd treat anyone in the real world that came and tried to burn our books ... burn THEM at the stake.

    An article is subjective rather than factual? DON'T FUCKING DELETE IT. There is almost certainly SOME validity to even the most subjective of statements. By leaving it there, you're more likely to have some person like me see it and think 'god I hate when fuckers get it so wrong because their fanboys' and I'll spend the next 3 or 4 hours fixing it, adding citations, putting my reasoning on the talk page, ect .... and then the next day some douche will say 'no your wrong' and it magically goes away ... regardless of the fact that I've posted citations to documents on websites like say .... nasa.gov backing up everything I've said. No talk page discussion, just delete or revert depending on the page and the douche thats protecting it.

    You want Wikipedia to have a chance? You're going to need to replace your entire staff, and make it publically known that you are doing so, and then you need to pray that all the people like myself who have gotten so fed up with your staffs bullshit ... actually come back and give you a second chance.

    You've already dug your own grave Wikipedia, you can now climb in it and we'll bury you, or you can make a good attempt to fix the fucking problem, but fixing the problem is going to require a changing of the guard. And no, there is no other solution. Your staff IS THE ENTIRE PROBLEM.

    Take away the fucking delete button, remove it entirely from the wikimedia software, there is NO REASON it should exist on wikipedia (obviously copyright issues make that statement untrue, but you can deal with that off line manually as the C&D letters come in, its not going to be that common.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  77. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 1

    Hey I didn't mean to say you did anything wrong. If anything, I was trying to encourage you to ignore the horseplay and go back to improving Wikipedia whenever you see the need and have an opportunity.

  78. Don't make a non-PC edit by Quila · · Score: 5, Informative

    Long ago I noticed once that the well-sourced facts set out in one Wikipedia article contradicted a claim (not directly sourced) made in a related article. So I naturally edited the claim to correspond to the facts, mentioning the edit was for internal consistency. I hadn't come to edit an article, but I consider it to be a Good Thing to fix small errors as you see them.

    Unfortunately for me the claim happened to be in a gay-related article and apparently embodied the PC position towards this incident.

    The storm hit. An admin reverted it without comment (against Wikipedia rules). I explained the reasoning in Talk and reverted back. Then he reverted again, no comment. Now I reverted, explaining he was violating the rule about explaining reversions.

    Count: Two reverts for me, two for the admin.

    The admin reverted again, saying I needed to cite the source outside of Wikipedia (the same source the other article cited). So I re-did the entry and re-posted with the suggestion. I can work with people, and take positive editing suggestions seriously.

    Count: Three reverts for me (if you consider a repost to be a revert), three for the admin.

    He reverted it AGAIN without comment, blatantly breaking the three revert rule. Then he said if I tried to change it again it would count as a 3RR violation and I would be banned. I checked the admin's personal page, yep, a gay activist.

    At no time were the facts in the other related article challenged or changed. At no time did he tell me I was wrong, or that my edit was factually incorrect. He just didn't want the facts to be on that page.

    Even if an admin isn't involved, a cabal of supporters can do the same thing, reverting your posts at will. They can get one or two reverts each, winning while you hit your three revert ceiling. There is really no consensus as Wikipedia tries to reach, since a small, organized and dedicated cabal can easily win over the unorganized concensus of many casual editors. If the cause is a liberal one, it is most likely that their cabal will be supported by the admins.

    Now I try to stay away from anything relating to PC, but even then it can seep into the most neutral-seeming articles.

    1. Re:Don't make a non-PC edit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds interesting, but without saying what the edit/fact was, it's difficult to know that the admin was being unreasonable.

      What was it?

    2. Re:Don't make a non-PC edit by bonch · · Score: 2

      People keep posting these personal experiences without links.

    3. Re:Don't make a non-PC edit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The above, times a thousand, applies to anything even remotely touching climate science articles on Wikipedia.

      No matter how well sourced.

    4. Re:Don't make a non-PC edit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to let you know, it's not just left-wingers. I had a run-in with a military cabal reverting all my constructive edits, ultimately resulting in my current apathy toward the site.

      Full disclosure: I'm a bit right-of-center myself.

  79. Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need to get rid of the "ownership" of articles.

    The "watch" feature should be eliminated. No automated "watching" or "subscribing" feature should be allowed.

    A user should be able to edit any given article for a single, one-hour period every month. No longer. After their one-hour editing session, a user will be locked out of that article for the next month. During that period, the user will only be allowed to use a "report" function so a locked-out user can flag spam, trolling, and non-neutral information for another editor to correct.

    There is absolutely no reason why a single person should be editing an article more than once a month these days. Wikipedia is big, there are plenty of users to fix problems beside you.

  80. Re:CK ref: by BitZtream · · Score: 1

    The poster is a spam account trying to make his account look more legitimate by making posts and having people reply too him so it looks like he's been here for a while.

    When you see something that clearly makes no sense what so ever, assume it was a bot running on a spam account, ESPECIALLY first or nearly first posts. Some of them are clearly MegaHAL based bots by looking at the speech they produce.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  81. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by sabt-pestnu · · Score: 1

    > FTA: "A lot of editorial guidelines ... are impenetrable to new users."

    I'm not a wikipedia editor, but I do edit on other wikis. And yes, there's factionalism, cabals, groupthink, it goes by many names.

    Unfortunately for some, I have grown out of my "putting up with bullshit" stage. The nice thing is that you can document the history of this bullshit. The not so nice thing is that you then have to make a fight of it.

    And that's the crux of it, right there. People edit Wikipedia because they find it entertaining or rewarding to do so. "Making a fight of it" isn't fun, for most folks.

  82. Notability is a consequence of verifiability by tepples · · Score: 1

    Why do topics have to be "notable" to be included?

    Notability isn't a policy itself as much as a consequence of verifiability, one of the core content policies of Wikipedia.

    Why is it the standard that topics have to prove themselves "notable" or die

    If a subject is non-notable, it's impossible to determine whether claims about it are made up.

    1. Re:Notability is a consequence of verifiability by Eric+Green · · Score: 1

      Utter nonsense. I've had articles that I follow from time to time deleted for "non-notability" even if they were well-sourced and had verifiable information. If the person or subject they were about was incomprehensible to some cheeto-munching "editor" in his mommy's basement who decided that an article that had been up for literally years wasn't "notable" because nobody had edited it in years and only a few dozen people had even *looked* at it in that time, zap. End of article. A notability delete tag would get added, and because we're talking about an obscure topic in the history of mathematics of interest only to mathematicians, few of whom bother checking Wikipedia on a regular basis to check for things like delete tags, *gone*. Blam bam thank you m'am. History deleted. Down the memory hole. Who needs history anyhow? We got articles about recently dead crack-smoking singers to update, after all!

      Wikipedia worked better when it was an actual anarchy as vs. this current hyper-moderated BS. Sure, popular pages got defaced regularly back in those days, but those of us who had info to contribute on actual scholarly topics didn't have to worry about "notability" back in those days, and the popular pages eventually got edited or reverted back into some semblance of order. Now... eh. I'm not going to bother.

      Sayyyyy.... why doesn't someone start "RealPedia" which is Wikipedia as it was back before all the nonsense? Hmm...

      --
      Send mail here if you want to reach me.
  83. WP:OWN by tepples · · Score: 1

    If you initiate BRD but the camper doesn't cite any specific Wikipedia policy or guideline that your edits violate, and the camper continues to revert your edits, then the camper is in violation of the policy on ownership-like behavior. But I'd have to see a specific case in order to be able to give more specific advice.

    1. Re:WP:OWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the point. I shouldn't have to go through all that bureaucracy because someone auto reverts my postings on a particular subject across multiple pages. It's not worth the trouble. End result is that wikipedia is too much of a hassle to work with so I'm not going to put forth the effort to fix a broken model. In my case, a bad source(really an opinion piece) with incorrect math on a subject takes precedent over doing the equation yourself, because, you know, basic math needs to be sourced. 1+1=3 because a source says so

    2. Re:WP:OWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what if he's in violation? All of the mechanisms for dealing with violations like that are prone to being hijacked by the same cabals that are screwing with you in the first place. Building consensus sounds awesome until you realize several comments in that the only votes being counted in the consensus are the ones that can do a good enough job dick waving edit counts and the like around to prove that they a "real" contributer (or in other words the same cabal that is acting like they own the article in the first place) and all other additions to the discussion will be market with condescending little shitty notices about how few edits the poster has or whatever other craptastic reason anybody can think of to discount otherwise valid discussion.

  84. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Citation needed

  85. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

    No, I don't expect fame and recognition from editing wikipedia articles. What I see as a problem is OTHERS looking for that and trying to claim it.

  86. Sounds like all leadership by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, sounds like the government. Maybe we can just figure out a new way of running an administration.

  87. I remember Thomas James Ball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I gave up all hope in Wikipedia when their editors deleted his page, as well as removing him from the list of political self-immolations.

    1. Re:I remember Thomas James Ball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second this.

    2. Re:I remember Thomas James Ball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should committing suicide one way get a Wikipedia page and another not? I won't get a Wiki page if I jump off the Empire State Building.

  88. The Slashdot approach by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Slashdot has figured out how to fix this problem.

    Most comment sections on news Web sites are junk, usually not worth reading. But on Slashdot, the comments are generally more entertaining and useful than the articles themselves.

    Why is this? I think it's because of the clever moderating system. Ordinary users get to vote comments up or down, and the result is that the trash sinks to the bottom, and the good stuff gets highlighted.

    So Wikipedea should try the Slashdot approach...let people vote on the edits that should be reverted, and which ones should be kept.

    1. Re:The Slashdot approach by bonch · · Score: 1

      You've gotta kidding me. Slashdot's moderation system is atrociously bad, and groupthink is rampant. It's so bad that there was a long-promised new moderation system that was supposed to replace this one, but that promise seems to have slipped through the cracks of time. It only takes a couple of people to bring a comment down to 0 or -1, and then that comment is filtered out by most user's comment view settings. There are also constant abuses of the fact that Overrated/Underrated modifiers aren't subject to meta-moderation (in other words, they can't be reversed), so you can censor somebody without risking your ability to moderate future comments.

  89. Re:CK ref: by alphatel · · Score: 1

    The poster is a spam account trying to make his account look more legitimate by making posts and having people reply too him so it looks like he's been here for a while.

    When you see something that clearly makes no sense what so ever, assume it was a bot running on a spam account, ESPECIALLY first or nearly first posts. Some of them are clearly MegaHAL based bots by looking at the speech they produce.

    I am? WTF are you talking about twitrod?
    Did you ever see Citizen Kane. No probably not. You don't have to make your house out of glass to live in a glass house.
    You don't dig an offbeat comment that's fine. I have been OT'd plenty of times. But I also more 5-Funny to my credit in the year I've been here than your entire life. The reason? I do not always run the beaten path to a pad answer.
    Now go bot yourself.

    --
    When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
  90. Power? by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Power without accountability to the people that you're exercising power over is dangerous.

    The only "danger" here is that someone's time might be wasted. If you let that happen to you repeatedly, then you are a fool but nothing worse.

    I'd go further and argue that editors should disclose their real names, too, as that provides some accountability for content.

    Exactly how will they be accountable? Are you going to fire them? Cut their pay? Call them juvenile names? Tell their mommy?

    Some people really more qualified to edit an article than others.

    Certainly true but who gets to decide who the "more qualified" person is? Particularly for cases where the differences in qualifications are not large.

  91. Just like Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just like Linux despite having 20 years of effort (10 more than Wikipedia) has only a small share of the computer market, the "real brains" of the world, those who have jobs that rely on reliable sources, don't want to have their knowledge played around with admins and huggle/ twinkle users. Why do the research and learn all the wiki code and wiki speaks just so you can be "rv using tw".

    Vandals on the other hand are the real heroes of Wikipedia, they expose the flaws of Wikipedia and embarrass admins for the incompetent fools they are.

    If Apple brought an "iCyclopedia", it would put Wikipedia out of business easily and would probably sell more than the Bible and Koran combined. Just a Shame Microsoft stopped updating Encarta.

  92. Re:CK ref: by badboy_tw2002 · · Score: 0

    DUDE. Let me start out by saying that you are my freaking hero. You TOTALLY mega-slammed that guy, and boy did he deserve it! "BItZstream" HA! What a total joke. Lets just say that I've been following your career since you started here one year ago. I even called you out in my regular /. commentary column "The Slash" in my annual "best newcomers 2010" feature. My title for you? "Possible Funny Guy". Can I call them or what? Now, I don't want to get ahead of myself, or freak you out or give you a big head leading you to make arrogant posts, but your career has the current trajectory of others that have ended up in the Hall of Fame. Lets just leave it at that, shall we? Keep the +5 Funny's coming, that's your ticket to /. stardom!

    Later bro!

  93. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know what I love about all these WikiHate posts? That they never link to the article in question. They just make assertions, and don't back them up. Is this what your posts to Wikipedia were like? Because unless you have significantly regressed since then, you are the problem, and the admin was dealing with your poor writing appropriately. Why not post the article, and enough information to verify your claim?

  94. Math by sourcerror · · Score: 1

    I think there are a lot of math articles that are more confusing than needed, but are well sourced, and they're hard to improve without pissing the original editors off.

  95. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  96. Re:CK ref: by alphatel · · Score: 1

    Hey assclown number 2, all I was trying to was wake up the guy who called me a bot. For you I have no useful words, you seem to have found them all and will find many more in your hero folder with your hero friends.

    --
    When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
  97. Re:CK ref: by Moryath · · Score: 4, Informative

    They were warned about this years ago. Former wikipedia administrator Kelly Martin wrote whole treatises on it. in her blog. A former admin under the pseudonym of "Parker Peters" wrote up apt descriptions of why it happened - power-mad individuals abusing their "buttons", individuals who gamed the system, gangs who formed to "control" articles - on his blog too.

    I've found this discussion to be particularly apt, a discussion of precisely how Wikipedia fails to retain newcomers because most newcomers who actually make an edit are quickly shooed out the door by either the POV pushing gangs or the edit-count-aholic "recent changes patrol"; adding in to this is the fact that the trigger-happy admins remaining no longer stay remotely within policy, as the average "visitor vandalism" punishment is not a block of one day, but one month or sometimes more directed at DHCP addresses, and generally these power-mad fools compound the problem by instantly locking down the talkpage so that if someone else were to get that address, they can't even ask for an unblock... not that the unblock process ever actually works any more, since the same trigger-happy gestapo types patrol the Unblock Requests page.

    The underlying problem, the thing that drives people away from Wikipedia, is that it's impossible to get started in. The admins are, just about uniformly, complete dickholes. The "regulars" who remain are either edit-count-itis freaks who will play revert-war with automated tools just to get their edit count up, or are shameless sycophants who play hanger-on to those admins deemed "in power" - the goal of both groups being to boost their chances of someday getting the "extra buttons."

    To paraphrase Douglas Adams, the first problem of Wikipedia admins is that nobody should be allowed to do it who ever actually WANTS the job.

    The secondary problem is that those sections that really need fixing, are the domain of power-mad admins or control-freak groups who maintain them and drive people away as quickly as they come in order to WP:OWN the content.

    The third part is that you can't even talk about Wikipedia without having to reference byzantine, contradictory, fucked-up rules. You can't participate in Wikipedia without memorizing most of them, and the moment you cross one of the power-mad fools they call admins or some of the POV groups, you're going to get hammered over the head with those same "rules", and before you know it you're going to be on the end of a longstanding block with a talkpage lock if you dare try to file an unblock request that says, in essence, "please unzip so I can suck your cock o powerful sir."

    If you think I'm joking, try reading their own guide. Explaining why you believe the block was out of policy? ZZZTTT! WRONG! Pointing out that you're being targeted by people with WP:OWN issues or that you're responding to a major problem involving some other Wikipedia policy violation? ZZZTTT! WRONG! The only way you get an unblock requested is to (a) know a corrupt admin who happens to be your friend or (b) play the "mea culpa mea culpa" game.

    Oh, and as for using CheckUser to show that you are NOT a sockpuppet after the favorite tactic of dickhole admins and POV warrior alike, the false sockpuppetry accusation? Sorry. CheckUser is Sooper Sekrit Kangaroo Court Data that can ONLY get you sent to the gulag.

  98. Easy to fix. Look at what works. by mbkennel · · Score: 1

    They should do what legitimate encyclopedias once did: hire writers who actually know WTF they are talking about and editors who know how to manage.

    For example, for one of the most famous editions of Encyclopedia Britannica, Albert Einstein wrote the article on relativity (and no doubt a professional editor helped with the English).

    This goes against the naive "everybody is equal on the Internet so they should be equal on Wikipedia" BS. Of course it's not true on Wikpiedia either---the obsessive passive-aggressive deletionist nerds and pettifogging procedural bureaucrats practically run the place and this has little correlation with insight, but a huge correlation with pissing off more mature people who know the subject.

    With good editors then academics can get "publication credit" for writing and editing articles.

  99. Bernard Finnigan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about not dicking contributors around and preventing them from adding verifiable attributable facts due to what ever bullshit that caused this to happen for months.

  100. Now, THERE's a Bar Set Pretty Low... by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 4, Funny

    I also [received] more 5-Funny to my credit in the year I've been here than your entire life.

    Dood, I get +5 Funny here all the time, and I'm a fuckin' idiot. For the sake of your self-esteem and all that's holy, please don't ascribe any real-life value to slashdot moderations.

    1. Re:Now, THERE's a Bar Set Pretty Low... by alphatel · · Score: 1

      I'm a fuckin' idiot

      oorah.

      --
      When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
  101. No surprise at all by fysdt · · Score: 1

    Some moderators are too strict. No wonder wikipedia is losing contributors.

  102. Don't believe everythign you read by sjbe · · Score: 1

    I do not understand how someone can think they should work in a scholarly capacity and expect anonymity while simultaneously having authority.

    Wikipedia is arguably NOT a scholarly work, and it certainly has no meaningful "authority". It is not the sole or primary source for any information pretty much by definition. Anonymity or the lack thereof of the writers has nothing to do with whether the information presented is accurate or useful. If Wikipedia were to present too much inaccurate information, people would cease using it as a source. As things stand it is a useful source of information for some limited things. It is up to you to understand where those limits are.

    To put it simply: Why should we believe anything Wikipedia says is true if they aren't even truthful about their identities?

    Easy. You shouldn't assume anything written on Wikipedia is true. What is written may be true but it also sometimes is false, misleading, confusing or incomplete. You shouldn't assume ANYTHING from a single source is true no matter what that source might be or no matter how good their reputation. The same goes for the organization - in fact the same goes for any organization, not just the Wikipedia Foundation. Listen to what they say and come to your own conclusions based on all the facts available to you.

  103. Re:CK ref: by biek · · Score: 1

    GP makes a valid point, there are spambots that pepper forums with posts like that. There's no need to take it personally and whip out your sweet posting cred just because people don't get your old reference.

  104. suppose by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

    Suppose that real names were required on WikiDickia. How do you verify that people are who they say they are?

    Day 1 of wikipedia's new real people only campaign: I roll up and register that I am Stephen Hawking. How are you going to verify that? Unless, I start spouting off that the universe is actually a giant banana, chances are slim that you would even suspect that I am not who I claim to be.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
  105. Once made a page... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My small story with wikipedia, I once made a well written page, although a bit low on sources, on something that hadn't been there before. Within minutes, the page had dissappeared, you can guess if I'll be writing anymore pages there...

  106. Same fucking system? by nog_lorp · · Score: 1

    We are running on the same system we had in 2001. It is fucking terrible.
    The staff is not the problem. There are staff with similar responsibility all throughout the world of web communities, and they have demonstrate only hints of the level of idiocy and trolling that Wikipedia staff show.
    The problem is everything fundamental about the project. Working with articles as the unit of data: FUCKING STUPID. This is handled by copying and pasting content across articles that need the same information, rather than having subarticles that can be included. Having single, 'authoritative' versions of articles: COMPLETE FUCKERY. This leads to a vast majority of strife, edit warring, and trouble because NPOV articles are a completely failed concept.
    Stop generally being a fascist monster creating insane policies that destroy efforts at community, and maybe your website will flourish again instead of being a case study in the wrong way to do things.
    P.S. did anyone else imagine in 2001 that we would still be using a fundamentally unchanged MediaWiki software for Wikipedia? "Wiki formatting" and shit? Fuck.

  107. Dilbert knows best. by StrifeJester · · Score: 1

    Where did they get their facts? Wikipedia is flourishing. Don't believe me? Give me ten minutes then go check wikipedia. http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2009-05-08/

  108. Moderation systems by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    by those contributing articles, sort of like the the karma system here. You can't vote if your karma is bad.

    I would not recommend real names, in this day and age that is like handing someone a gun and hoping they don't shoot. There are too many crazies out there that would only be cowed by a crowd but have one person "do them wrong" and you could end up with admins needing to go to the police for protection.

    My problem Wikipedia is that is seems the words repository for current culture, meaning music videos, if not single songs, are bound to have full pages dedicated to them without question but things older than the editors rarely do, and if the page does come in existence it might not live long. The notability/annotation/etc requirements work hard against tech that has literally fallen off the net.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  109. References, all the way down by Quila · · Score: 1

    If(1) you(2) have(3) to(4) cite(5) every(6) single(7) word(8) and(9) punctuation(10),(11) the(12) articles(13) are(14) going(15) to(16) get(17) hard(18) to(19) read(20).(21)

    We're dead of we have to recursively cite parentheses.

    1. Re:References, all the way down by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      If(1) you(2) have(3) to(4) cite(5) every(6) single(7) word(8) and(9) punctuation(10),(11) the(12) articles(13) are(14) going(15) to(16) get(17) hard(18) to(19) read(20).(21)

      We're dead of we have to recursively cite parentheses.

      https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Malicious_compliance

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  110. Re:CK ref: by skids · · Score: 1

    I dunno, I go there occasionally, drop a few edits, and they seem to stick around and nobody complains. I don't even have an account. Maybe it's the type of page I tend to edit, or maybe it's that people who experience the above problems just don't get what an encyclopedia is supposed to be and don't make quality edits.

    (hint, it should take you at least 10 minutes a sentence if you are properly fact-checking, ensuring you are cross-linking where helpful, and choosing your words carefully, as one should when writing such material. If you don't have time to do that, then instead drop a suggestion on the talk page for someone else to consider if they decide to work on the page.)

  111. The "Non-Neutral" Admins by authalic · · Score: 1

    The Admins are definitely a problem. There needs to be some kind Admin Review process, or a time limit on their terms as Admins. In my experience, it's possible for a small group of editors and Admins to effectively push a point of view.

    I edited a statement in an article, pertaining to the historical beliefs of a religious organization, in order to bring it inline with what is overwhelmingly accepted by scientists in the field. I soon found my edits getting reverted by a group of editors and Admins, all with profiles mentioning an affiliation with the religion in the article. They would use the rules of Wikipedia, and insist on verifiable citations of every basic fact, while at the same time, providing no evidence for their POV other than their religious texts. I found myself arguing on the side of science, trying to verify statements which no scientist disputes (essentially trying to prove a negative), while the other side argued their interpretation of evidence, citing religious scripture and folklore. The problem with Wikipedia can be summed up by this quote from one of those editors:

    "differing views should be presented and not just eliminated because one thinks they are not true. The truth doesn't matter - what matters is the verifiability."

    I eventually gave up any effort to work on these articles. Two weaknesses of the Wikipedia model were clear: Any statement that can be found in print, whether it be a scientific journal article or a purely speculative interpretation of a verse from scripture, can be used to meet the standard of Verifiability; and, a small group of editors who manage to get a few members of their ranks promoted to Admins can effectively keep a point of view in place across a range of articles.

    --
    "I'll die before I surrender, Tim"
    1. Re:The "Non-Neutral" Admins by geniice · · Score: 0

      1)Admins answer to [[WP:ARBCOM]]

      2)what was the article in question?

  112. October Revolution by sourcerror · · Score: 1

    It's the Great October Revolution all over again.

  113. When reliable sources aren't, make them better by tepples · · Score: 1

    Then perhaps you have to correct Wikipedia "through the back door", so to say, by getting the mainstream gaming press to publish corrections to its articles.

    1. Re:When reliable sources aren't, make them better by Jiro · · Score: 1

      The whole problem is that the mainstream media doesn't care about such topics. If they don't care enough to publish accurate information in the first place, they won't care enough to publish corrections. The media generally only publishes corrections when either there are legal implications or when the inaccuracy is embarrassing them in some way.

      Besides, you're just demanding that people jump through hoops for no reason. Even if the media somehow did publish a correction, they're just going to verify the correction by using the same blogs as everyone else. They're not going to do investigative journalism or anything else that we're not doing anyway.

      The proper fix to a reliable sources policy that leaves out the best sources of information is to change the policy, not to insist that the policy is okay because the complainer can always do something that you know very well won't work.

  114. Re:No shit? Dump some of your Nazi editor whores by nog_lorp · · Score: 1

    I disagree strongly. How did they get the staff that is so terrible? I think the guidelines put staff in a ridiculous position.

  115. Whatever, Wales by doston · · Score: 1

    Sounds like they need more 26 year old geeks working on Wiki. Personally, I think the site is pretty useful, but go on and have housewives from Tennessee writing articles about their battle with dermatitis and it just might resemble 'Yahoo Answers' soon. This is such a non-crisis.

  116. This is horrible news!! by webbiedave · · Score: 1

    Now we won't be able to read a detailed plot of the latest crappy Hollywood movie or know which episode of Family Guy a particular subject was culturally referenced!

  117. Do other authors agree with you about the Trinity? by tepples · · Score: 1

    I've always understood the Trinity as one god with three user accounts.

    But as I understand you, you claim that a three-faced God makes Christianity not monotheistic, or that the presence of other spirit creatures makes Christianity not monotheistic. If this view is widespread enough for a general-interest encyclopedia, as opposed to a specialized wiki on Wikia or the like, there ought to be other authors with the same view whose works have been reviewed by the mainstream press.

  118. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by NoSig · · Score: 1

    If you start out with describing the other person in terms of "whine whine whine", it really doesn't matter what you say after that, which was my original point and that you clearly still haven't taken to heart. I have no stake in Wikipedia wars.

  119. They deleted BOOK COVERS I posted! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Book covers are fully allowed under "fair use", even WikiPedia's guidelines. I uploaded a few rare 1980s and early 1990s book covers to a few articles, and they were deleted for no reason. I haven't been back since.

  120. Re:CK ref: by Moryath · · Score: 2

    Ever tried to just fix a spelling error? Good fucking luck.

  121. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 1

    You are new here, ain't you?

  122. Barriers to Entry by stevesliva · · Score: 1
    You're right, of course, with the Douglas Adams comment. No one should really want to be an admin there.

    But that's not really as much of a problem as the huge barrier to entry that byzantine rules create. They're probably even running short on OCD recluse zealots.

    --
    Who do you get to be an expert to tell you something's not obvious? The least insightful person you can find? -J Roberts
    1. Re:Barriers to Entry by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Except Douglas Adams was wrong.

      Why people want the job is what is important.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  123. simple answer - short memory by Intron · · Score: 2

    I wrote an article on someone who's career predated the internet, had published several books and published groundbreaking research with Nobel prize winners. Deleted for "lack of notability" because there isn't much about him on the internet. Meanwhile, there are 50 articles on Pokemon, an article on every NBA player, and an article on every town in America. Note: Ever been to Harpster, Ohio? Not notable.

    --
    Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
  124. The problem with Wikipedia by Syberz · · Score: 1

    Power corrupts.

    --
    ~Syberz
  125. Wiki zealots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suspect that many former contributors left for the same reason I stopped participating: wiki-zealots.

    Normal people don't have the time to endlessly fight the losers whose lives revolve around policing how other people contribute to the project. These zealots have unlimited amounts of time to revert contributions, argue over changes, and generally annoy other editors.

    Wikipedia also went downhill when it started becoming "respectable" and insisted that every word by cited and that entries be shorter rather than longer. They even took the fun out of pop culture entries like "jumping the shark."

  126. They have an emerging competitor: StackExchange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those 26-year old geeky males TFA mentions have a new place to hang out: StackExchange.

    Could Wikipedia and the new Q&A networks co-exist? Only time will say. The Wikimedia Foundation was slow to react to changes in the free-knowledge market. They could have launched their own Q&A site; but they didn't. Now they'll have to compete with StackExchange and Quora for contributors. It's natural for experts to seek visibility and recognition, and the new wave of Q&A sites are more effective than Wikis at this.

  127. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A "rate the page" and "rate the editor" feature might help.

  128. Re:CK ref: by gorzek · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have, several times. I corrected various little things. Nothing that should've been remotely controversial. No account or anything like that.

    Result? Reversion, every time.

    Fuck it.

  129. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  130. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by AJWM · · Score: 1

    Why not ask that question in a non-anonymous post?

    But I'll answer it anyway. Because it's not worth the effort. I believe the assertions -- I've seen it happen. I could cite examples, but I won't, because I just don't care anymore. Including not caring about whether or not you believe a word of this post (whoever you are).

    The Wikipedia moderation^Wedit system is broken. Fuck it, drive on.

    --
    -- Alastair
  131. Treatment for problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Admins , revertists and deletionists are the main problems.

    Here are some solutions.
    First of all admins must of had sex without paying for it and must be employed and be able to pay the mortgage/rent instead of living in their moms basements., Deletionists must be a fanboy of show that they are willing to defend to the death and must donate to inclusionist causes. plus revertists must be stripped of their twinkle and huggle tools and be given impulsive control medication..

    Then Wikipedia needs to get rid of notabillity and allow the true inclusionist information paridise where every fact and trivia can be devoured.

  132. Simple solution: by couchslug · · Score: 1

    Lock the basement door. (runs)

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  133. Re:CK ref: by alphatel · · Score: 1

    I don't have any cred, and I don't care. But bot I am not.

    --
    When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
  134. That's A Shame by Nukedoom · · Score: 1

    There's no other place like Wikipedia. I've never had any big problems when editing, but then again, I don't edit much. Still, if the common sentiment is that the Wikipedia editors are dicks, that won't bode well for new contributors. If it fails, hooray, woo, sparkles. But it's a useful place, and I'd to see it go under just because people can't get along.

    1. Re:That's A Shame by Nukedoom · · Score: 1

      ...I'd *hate* to see it go under just because people can't get along.

  135. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Fjandr · · Score: 1

    Stating you don't like a pattern of behavior and leaving so it doesn't continue to bug you isn't whining. Some people don't feel the need to continually put up with assholes who are bent on harassing them. Walking away is perfectly reasonable. There's nothing whiny about recounting a perfectly on-topic personal experience in a remarkably neutral way regarding incredibly immature behavior on the part of a Wikicrat.

    Or, if he's lying, why are you whining about it? Your post certainly qualifies more as whining than the OP's does.

  136. Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Why not you? by crioca · · Score: 1

    I see several ex editors here talking about the abuses they suffered that caused them to leave Wikipedia, but at no point do they talk about making any attempt to stop the abuse. If you take a little time to document your actions and pay attention to Wikipedia's natural documentation, you can take these abuses to a higher authority and get some action taken. How can you complain about the problems with the system if you simply bent to the whims of the abusers?

    1. Re:Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Why not you? by Golden_Rider · · Score: 1

      Because it takes AGES to get anything resolved, and because most people probably do not feel like investing even MORE time fighting windmills after having already spent a long time writing articles, which then got deleted/reverted.

      It's not as if I NEED to write on wikipedia. If I do something in my spare time and feel unwanted there, I just go away and do something else. And that's exactly what happens on wikipedia: new editors feel unwanted, and so they leave.

      "take a little time to document your actions" - "take these abuses to a higher authority and get some action taken" - seriously? For something which people are supposed to do in their spare time and enjoy? No, wikipedia, the ball is in your court. Make new editors feel WELCOME instead of telling them to go through some arbitration thing before they can even post their first article successfully.

    2. Re:Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Why not you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did as you suggest. I tried to stop the abuse by following the process. But which one? I wasn't sure, so I tried several, thinking that one of them would ultimately get a rational response. I even tried discussing and clarifying Wikipedia's ambiguous "natural documentation" that "higher authorities" had developed.

      The cost of doing so increased exponentially at each step, and eventually grew disproportionate to the importance of changes I had proposed in the first place. I grew weary, and gave up.

      I'm sure others have had similar experiences.

      Please don't assume that your proposed solution works for everyone. It certainly didn't in my case.

  137. banned for life for using real name by Jecel+Assumpcao+Jr · · Score: 1

    I find it ironic that several people are proposing that demanding real names would solve some of Wikipedia's problems because I was banned for life for using a "spam user name", which happens to be my real first name (I have never used a nickname since I got online in 1986, except in systems that use numbers as user IDs). Now I know that is not the real reason, but it is the official reason and the only option they offer for getting my account unbanned is to post a special message selecting a different user ID, which then wouldn't be my real name.

    My guess is that the real reason I was banned was because my home page (which was deleted) only had a short phrase about me and a link to my home page, which is a company page. When I created my account (a few years before the guy who banned me), I took a quick look at a few other user pages and most were like this so I just copied their style. If this is not acceptable, then just delete the page. I don't care: I was asked to create a page when I created the account though I didn't really want to. But banning for life seems a bit harsh.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jecel
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Jecel

    1. Re:banned for life for using real name by minospd · · Score: 1

      Your page was removed because it was targeted by a notorious online troll, who for some reason is protected by Wikipedia's administrators. The troll believes that no one he is not fond of should be allowed to post anything on Wikipedia that reflects favorably on themselves. Interestingly, he uses Wikipedia "commons" to store his collection of personal photos, and promotes his favorites on his own user page.

  138. Gina Lollobrigida by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    was also a sculptor of some note. Her best film IMO was the 1956 version of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, in which Anthony Quinn played the hunchback and Gina played the hunchfront.

  139. wrong tree by Tom · · Score: 1

    It's not that editing is so difficult, you fools. It really isn't - I have set up MediaWiki installations for several purposes and even the people who have very little affinity with markup languages, etc. are doing ok editing content. Theirs isn't as polished and they certainly don't write new templates, but they certainly have no trouble putting content into the wiki.

    The reason people are losing interest in contributing to Wikipedia is twofold:
    a) the easy picks have been picked. There are very few common topics where much editing is needed anymore. Your home town, your country, your favorite sports team and TV series already have their WP entries. As do your hobbies and the species of your pets.
    b) if you do contribute, chances are high that your edits will be reverted or your pages deleted. Part of the reason is a) - your page was likely a duplicate - and part of the reason is the incest, crazy admins, deletionists, power-mongers and all the other fucktards who consider WP as their personal playing ground that needs to be defended against newcomers.

    So between not being able to contribute anything worthwhile and being treated badly when you try, anyone is actually surprised editor counts are going down? Seriously? The only surprising thing is that it took so long for that to happen.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  140. Women to the Rescue? by dangle · · Score: 1

    I attended a talk this year that Jimmy Wales gave at a local university, where he described wanting to actively increase the number of women contributing and editing Wikipedia. Barriers he cited included the fact that "Men are very comfortable making authoritative statements about things they know nothing about."

    1. Re:Women to the Rescue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [super-irony]

  141. Re:CK ref: by hairyfeet · · Score: 3, Informative

    And you just hit the nail on the head why Wikipedia sucks. it might be good for finding out which wire to switch to make a crossover cable (although frankly I don't even trust it for that) or some lame fact about 1880s tractors but if it is anything somebody might have decided to claim as their own? Fuck you its getting reverted.

    Hell I got banned for daring to ask EXACTLY what counted as "notable" since I had provided BOTH the exact disc and minute on the director's commentary a mistake was pointed out as well as a link to the director's blog where he pointed out that what was on the screen was not what he shot but had been changed by the suits after he had finished.

    All I ever got was "not notable" and when asked what exactly IS notable if both the director AND writer don't count I got banned for daring to question the almighty admin. Fuck them, I have better things to do that take abuse from little shits when I'm not getting paid. it really doesn't surprise me they can't keep anybody, if wales gave a shit he'd be watching the admins and tossing the douches. Instead he lets them run riot and turn the place into their own little asskissing wank fest. no thanks.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  142. Decline is due to (1) complexity (2) bossy editors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wikipedia can be made 1000% better in a few seconds by deleting all the rules (the "Wikipedia" namespace). Those rules were written by small cliques of editors who joined wikipedia because they like playing at bosses and cops, rather than working as editors and fixers of articles. The only purpose of those rules is to give the appearance o f legitimacy to the prejudices and abuses of their authors (such as deletion of articles they deem "non-notable", and disparaging tags on articles). Those bossy authors seem to explain why old authors are dropping out.

    On the other hand, new authors are discouraged from joining by the sheer complexity of the markup language, which is mostly due to thousands of editor-defined templates, most of them unnecessary or detrimental. Many of those templates are only formatting aids: forgotten is the most genial idea in the original Wikipedia namely keep formatting to the absolute minimum in order to make editing as easy as possible. Other templates, like infoboxes and navboxes, hog the source without adding any value to readers. If the Foundation wants to save Wikipedia, it should forcefully curb the proliferation of templates and clean up the wikisource

  143. Simple. by denzacar · · Score: 1

    Wanna be an Ãoeber-admin - register with your Name, Home Phone number and Address.
    Possibly a photo of you holding an ID and a card sent by Wikipedia to the address you listed.
    You know - something you know, something you are, something you have.

    Hey... with great power and all that.
    Naturally, anything but the name would not be available to general public.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  144. Everything erased by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every single contribution I made was erased for not following some pedantic standard.

    Guess how many contributions I will make in the future?...

  145. Hi Mr. Troll! Whatsamatter? No huggy-wuggy?? by denzacar · · Score: 1

    Were you also drunk while writing that? Possibly on drugs?
    Cause those are some of the most incoherent and yet actually somewhat understandable sentences I've read in a long time.
    The whole post doesn't make much sense though.
    The best that I could grasp from it is that you hate journalists and bloggers.
    Also Jews and Chinese.

    Damn boy... Didn't your pappy thought you ANYTHING, boy?
    Jews, Chinese, Commies, Faggots and NIGGERS!
    How could you forget that?!

    Some days boy... you just really disappoint me.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  146. Term limits? by J-1000 · · Score: 1

    The people you need admining wiki are the occasional contributers who are socially well adjusted (which is why they are "occasional" contributers.. they spend time doing other things with real people). How you achieve this I do not know.. but I think it's the answer.

    Term limits?

  147. Re:CK ref: by geekoid · · Score: 1

    You mean the movie where the guy dies alone, yet everyone seems to know his last word?

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  148. Re:CK ref: by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Nothing in this thread indicates that you are not a bot.

    There our bots on dating sites as clear as your posts.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  149. Re:CK ref: by fyngyrz · · Score: 2


    Result? Reversion, every time.

    Fuck it.

    Or, if not outright reversion by the site, careful editing of a subject one knows well and are working to make accurate re-edited into oblivion by people who know it considerably less well.

    And then there are the "locked" subjects, where really poorly put together subject matter can become perpetual; you couldn't fix it if you wanted to.

    It's one thing to be asked to contribute to a global knowledge resource; it is quite another to do so and have your work tossed aside for all the wrong reasons, or be locked out in favor of someone considerably less qualified than you are.

    There is a vast swath of the population that is poorly informed (to be kind) and the idea of editing open to all is never going to fly as long as no one oversees the quality of people's work; on the other hand, if the clueless and/or deluded are in charge of such oversight, it can't work well either. I think it would take a very, very careful set of policies and people -- and a solid review process -- to make this work any better than it does (which isn't very well, frankly.) Add that to the sheer amount of data involved in a concept like wikipedia... and you get chaos -- no matter how orderly the formatting of the site and the cute little notes about "this article needs..." make it seem.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  150. There is a huge bubble od possible editors by geekoid · · Score: 1

    that are about to have a lot of free time. I suggest you find ways to get Baby boomers interested, as they are all starting to retire.

    This is also a big drag n the economy; why no one talks about it is beyond me.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  151. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by hxnwix · · Score: 1

    You are new here, ain't you?

    wow, piece of shit detected

  152. Stop taking yourself seriously, Wikipedia. by toddmbloom · · Score: 1

    Seriously, between the general dickishness of the contributors and the fact that they seem to take themselves way too seriously, what's the point. I'm not going to go to Wikipedia because I want to seriously research something anyway, so why take the attitude that you're better than everyone else.

  153. Deletion review by tepples · · Score: 1

    I've had articles that I follow from time to time deleted for "non-notability" even if they were well-sourced and had verifiable information.

    Did you take them to Deletion review?

    History deleted.

    Deletion of an article only removes it from public view as not part of the encyclopedia. All revisions of all deleted articles are preserved in history and are visible to administrators. Ask an administrator to e-mail the deleted article to you.

    Down the memory hole.

    The misnamed "oversight" process, or suppression of a revision from even an administrator, happens only in cases of blatant copyright infringement or defamation of living people. Very few articles get suppressed.

    why doesn't someone start "RealPedia" which is Wikipedia as it was back before all the nonsense?

    Want Wikipedia without notability guidelines? You could always try joining or starting a specialized wiki about a given topic on Wikia. If you plan on starting a specialized wiki, you could even start by getting deleted articles e-mailed to you. The YTMND Wiki, for example, started with the deletion of three articles about fads on YTMND.

    1. Re:Deletion review by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      I've had articles that I follow from time to time deleted for "non-notability" even if they were well-sourced and had verifiable information.

      Did you take them to Deletion review?

      How would I, a casual user without a Wikipedia account who just follows articles, take a deleted article to a Deletion Review?

      History deleted.

      Deletion of an article only removes it from public view as not part of the encyclopedia. All revisions of all deleted articles are preserved in history and are visible to administrators. Ask an administrator to e-mail the deleted article to you.

      How would I, a casual user without a Wikipedia account who just follows articles, find an administrator who will respond and email the deleted article to me?

      OK, so I just went to Wikipedia to look all that up. Guessed that "Contact Us" would lead me in the right direction. Decided "Report a problem with an article" under "For Readers" looked like a good place to start. Nope, it specifically says "In particular, the volunteer response team will not add links / add data / override article deletions. It is therefore useless to contact us by email about such issues". So It seems that's not the place to request a deletion review - still, might be handy for when I want to contact an admin to get a deleted article emailed to me.

      No, wait - I scroll down a bit and there's a link that says "You want to delete or undelete an article". Good stuff, exactly what I'm after! Click on that, and see "To undelete an article, request its restoration on our Deletion Review page. Before requesting an undeletion, please read the undeletion policy and ask the administrator who deleted the article, if you know who it is. We will not process requests for undeletion sent through email."

      No, stuff it - it's already gotten more involved that I want it to be. Do I really have to now read the undeletion policy, poke around trying to find who deleted the page, contact them (how?), wait an appropriate amount of time to get a reply, hope that reply is informative, then remember the undeletion policy before heading off to the deletion review page?

      Hmmm, maybe I do. So, a week after all that, I head off to the Deletion Review page. Wait, what's this? "For articles deleted via proposed deletion or simple image undeletions, please post a request at Wikipedia:Requests for undeletion." Well, you could've told me that a week ago! But how do I find out if the article was deleted via a proposed deletion?

      Dunno. So I keep reading down the page - hang on, now I've got to read Wikipedia:Deletion Policy and the list of perennial requests? Better do that then ... ... ...
      OK, I'm back now, still scrolling down, reading all the do's and don'ts, and I think I've got it all covered. Wait, what? "If your request is completely non-controversial (e.g., restoring an article deleted with a prod, ...". My request is completely non-controversial - but WTF is a prod? Oh, it's a "Proposed Deletion" - good, I covered that earlier. Now I'm just six arcane steps away from making my first Request for Undeletion!

      Or, remembering that I'm just a casual reader with absolutely no investment in Wikipedia beyond following a now-deleted page, it's more likely that I just said "Fuck it, can't be bothered" somewhere back around "Contact Us"...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    2. Re:Deletion review by tepples · · Score: 1

      contact them (how?)

      On the user talk page of the administrator who deleted the article.

      But how do I find out if the article was deleted via a proposed deletion?

      The article's deletion log will state whether it was deleted through the proposed deletion process or through a discussion in Wikipedia:Articles for deletion.

    3. Re:Deletion review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't they just fucking make the source to the deleted article available for download in raw wiki form? What possible harm could that be?

  154. Re:A million monkeys typing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Responding to a troll post is considered "feeding the troll" and you will be downmodded regards of the merits of your post.

    If aren't willing to lose the karma, post as AC. Every /.er interested in meta-discussion about this site browses at -1 and will see your post just as if you made it as a namefag.

  155. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by hxnwix · · Score: 1

    So credit is not enough for you? You DO expect fame and recognition by masses when editing Wikipedia? You seriously don't see a problem with that?

    With slapping your name on someone else's work without even bothering to thoroughly erase the victim's name? Yes, I see the problem with that, asswipe.

  156. Nope by Quila · · Score: 2

    It was simply an inconsistency in Wikipedia. Sourced information in one article said one thing, while another article stated differently without a source. It was a long time ago.

    Although in looking back at it now, it appears it was "some say" weasel-worded around the problem. I'm sure putting WP:WW on there would get slapped down fast, but I'm not about to try since I know it is an admin- and cabal-controlled article.

    Wait, now I see the sources in the other article are gone, all content regarding it removed, claimed to be NPOV or UNDUE. I guess my rogue admin finally got to that article too. That information had been up there for a rather long time. I guess the PC cleansing hadn't gotten around to it.

  157. Slashdot as a model for wikipedia? Please. by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    By using metamoderation and karma system.

    Slashdot has *exactly* the same problems -- unfair moderations, an ultimately ineffective meta moderation process, complete lack of accountability for the official editors, wrong-headed bans, known, repeated misbehavior on the part of the official editors; part of this is because of secret moderation (not anonymous -- I don't care who an editor *is*, but I sure want to know which specific editor is responsible for a bad moderation so their reputation on the site may be associated with their actions on the site), there's more too, but it's pointless to go into -- slashdot is run as an authoritarian, top-down system where far too little care has been used in selecting the all-powerful top tier, and consequently we get extremely bad moderations in bulk quantities.

    Just like Wikipedia.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  158. Too big a risk of wasting one's time. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As other's have said, Wikipedia's moderators are dicks.

    You can spend your time writing some well cited, on topic, paragraphs to contribute to a subject, but there is still a good chance a moderator will delete it before anyone actually gets the chance to read it. Why risk wasting a whole afternoon?

    I've never considered Wikipedia, "the encyclopedia anyone can edit." Unless you're in a position of power over there, the odds of your edits being accepted are slim.

    I understand the need for moderation to keep out vandalism and poor quality work, but the moderators at Wikipedia exists to keep out anything not written by a select few.

  159. Veto broke Wikipedia's Editing Political Model by npendleton · · Score: 1

    If you research and post a modification of an existing article, particularly if one is biased or flawed, it can be vetoed with UNDO in a blink of an eye. Bad faith edits such as graffiti need UNDO. Users must declare if an edit is graffiti or not. Good faith edits need to be reviewed publicly, and not undone so fast. The easiest way to detect conflict is creating transparency for comparing editor and article version is with concordances of words deleted and added by author in an article, and over the life span of an article. It would help find who is misusing the UNDO, and create the basis of limiting power of editors who are not helping.

  160. Notability is necessary for verifiability by tepples · · Score: 2

    But then, why does notability matter anyway?

    Because notability is necessary for verifiability. If no reliable sources care enough about a given subject to write about it, how are claims about the subject supposed to be verifiable?

    1. Re:Notability is necessary for verifiability by lgw · · Score: 1

      Again, if no on hits the page, who cares? And if the page becomes contentious, people will be motivated to dig harder. But of course, Wikipedia cares little about "reliable" sources and much about "citable sources" in the first place.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  161. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 1

    And you, sir, judging by your choice of words, must be a grizzled veteran.

  162. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by bonch · · Score: 1

    The point of Wikipedia is not to become super-awesome-editor-who-gets-credit-for-their-work.

    But that's what it has become. It's also interesting that you ignore what actually drove him away, someone stalking his edits and reverting them for no reason. No wonder you posted anonymously.

  163. Wikipedia forgot its competitive advantage by primerib · · Score: 1

    The two things that set Wikipedia apart were the fact that it was unrestricted in number of pages compared to a physical encyclopedia, and its open editing approach which allowed it to effectively delve into subjects that wouldn't be worth a print publication's time. Wikipedia will never replace professional editors and academic publications for in-depth research, but it does a smashing job of helping get the basics of damn near any subject down in under 30 seconds.

    The very fact that I could use Wikipedia as a reference to find at least a stub and a couple links about some obscure Swedish Metal band, or a Spanish-language sitcom that ran in Colombia from 1979-1981 is EXACTLY why I was a fervent supporter (both financially and with volunteer editing) for years.

    Sadly, the rampant deletionism and counter-productive notability guidelines have neutered the entire point of Wikipedia. They haven't gotten a dollar or an edit from me in years, and I really can't see that changing.

  164. Why I left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm one of the high-edit count editors who left. I got tired of trying to protect articles against an endless stream of editors with limited knowledge and strong convictions. The article on the Battle of Karbala was under continual revision by devout Shi'a who wanted to turn it into an online taziyeh (passion play). One editor wanted to turn the article on Rani Mukerjee (Bollywood actress) into a fan shrine. The article on salwar kameez had to be turned into shalwar kameez because that's the way they pronounce it in Pakistan! The scrimmage at the article on Al-Khwarizimi was notable: he was Arab - no, Persian - no, Uzbek. I just looked at the article. Looks like the Persian nationalists won. Yay! They claimed this famous person for THEIR team! That makes them better and smarter, for sure!

  165. Not again thanks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a hole about Commodore machines in Mexico, I have some ads and manuals from that age about that proof that Commodore 16/64/64C/Amiga was sold in a local supermarket called Aurrera. So I did edit that on the Wikipedia page staring with the Commodore 16 and upload a photo of a contest held for the supermarket. Then out of blue there was another dude that was saying that Commodore NEVER sold machines in Mexico and all my ads scans were a scam or copyright violations, and insisted to kick me out of Wikipedia claiming to admins that I was a liar. Only since I showed a link to a Sigma-Commodore 16 from Mexico in a Commodore 16 website (plus/4.com), the dude left me in peace in part. He just removed 80% of my collaboration since he says I'm not a collector.

    From that I prefer just check Wikipedia and never edit it again, the trolls and admins destroy your will to help.

  166. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what matters here is that it is types like you which have made Wikipedia shit for everyone else. Always have to have the last word, more interested in personally winning an argument than the subject honing in on a better result.

    and usually you haven't won the argument at all, the other side just got sick of your baloney (of the Carl Sagan detection kit variety) and walked away as they have better things to do than argue with a sociopathic moron.

    this is an attack on you, but try to think about it, the reflection may help you better deal with others in your personal life.

    aka go outside for a walk, you're taking this stuff way too seriously.

  167. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 1

    what matters here is that it is types like you which have made Wikipedia shit for everyone else.

    Yeah, my occasional fixing of typos and uploading of pictures really turned people away. I really made a splash there. Go, check it out, it's the same nick. You see, when I want to troll, I come to Slashdot, and when I want to be helpful, I head to Wikipedia. People who whined about Wikipedia's hostility today probably do it the other way around. Sure, Wikipedia is an online encyclopedia and Slashdot is an uncensored, opt-in moderated pseudo-news board with illiterate "editors" and a strong GNAA presense, but hey, don't let these basic facts get to you. Keep defending jerkoffs who badmouth Wikipedia, but won't give us a single link to a documented instance of abuse.

  168. One example of severe Asperger's.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chan_Chu

    Someone wanted to delete this picture I uploaded, "because it was of a statue" (and thus 'copyrighted').

    That's when I really lost faith in Wikipedia.

  169. Although adult shoes changed a protection layerAlt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although adult shoes changed a protection layer
    "The ugg boots baby's feet underwent many changes, is not serious, don't need any treatment, often is the development of normal part, said:" Michael Goldbearg, doctors in the interview, tufts university medical school professor and chairman of the orthopaedic Boston. Although adult shoes changed a protection layer, become a symbol of status, the child shoe has been in its basic only feet from the dangers of the outside world. No matter the age, the main purpose of the shoe size is to provide a protective covering, and in cold weather, prevent the outdoor sharp objects on the damage. But, when the ugg online child just learning to walk, they need a lot of shoeless time. Inside the house, rubber sole socks no downside risk to provide security. But in some of the time the children left their house safety and can move outside, in not compromise their feet,. Therefore, when parents buy a children's shoes, important is to remember their babies "by experienced sales personnel test the feet, and children because no one wants to shoes, and the uggs boots child is slippery walk or friction ankle or toe." make sure your feet, and children is standing measures in! Dr. "added: Michael Goldbearg. Recently a professional personage to children's feet, including a pediatrician, orthopaedic surgeons, and foot, orthopaedics disease therapists, opinion surveys show that normal and have a problem feet shoes and shoes differences of opinion is bigger. So, what is left father do? The problem is the uggs online only reasonable way in recent research and experience, studies some traditional idea, to determine whether professional opinions, should maintain or discarded. .TS

  170. Re:CK ref: by Patch86 · · Score: 1

    I've only ever made one proper edit, and many spelling corrections. As far as I know, most of the spelling corrections stayed made- the only reversions seem to be where my edit has gotten caught in the crossfire of some other edit/revert war.

    My only real edit was made on a very large, major article, and survives to this day. Looking at it now (many years later) it is really an appalling bit of writing, but it's inoffensive, it adds value, and it's still there. So no complaints from me.

    My only bad experience was once trying to make a correction on an article about sci-fi. There was one individual in particular who was running amok, and there were already serious flamewars on the talk page before I started. Suffice it to say, I took a deep breath and walked away.

  171. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Why do people volunteer for anything? Basically, they never "get" anything tangible from it. If they volunteer to donate blood, they get a free pair of sausages where I live, more a symbolic act than actual payment (seriously, even bums wouldn't do it for that, they prefer to donate plasma for cash). If I volunteer my time for some "noble" cause (for varying definitions of noble), I probably won't get more than a "thank you".

    Then why did I edit it? Because I'm one of the old creed hackers of "spreading knowledge multiplies it". Knowledge and information is to be disseminated and handed to those looking for it. That's how knowledge will become more, with more people knowing more and hence being able to build on top of more knowledge. Actually, I didn't even expect a "thank you". I did pretty much what you describe, I shouted facts into the darkness, hoping that someone finds them interesting and learns something from it, just like I gained some insight from Wikipedia.

    It's kinda disheartening if someone in the darkness shouts back "shut the fuck up, nobody wants to hear your drivel". It makes me wonder if I invest my time wisely.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  172. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Please explain to me why I should invest my time, and quite a bit of it, into editing an article for a 50:50 chance to have it reverted at the whim of someone who considers it "his" article? I could have used the two hours editing to earn money. Or jack off. Or do something else that would have been more productive than editing WP only to see it undone because I stepped on someone's turf.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  173. The uniqueness of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The uniqueness of
    Pink tight jeans, you can't forever and any other jeans. The reason is each jeans is unique, in its own way. If you compare the uggs online several aspects of the jeans, you are in the process of myopia. Therefore, the important thing is you to check the different from different brand jeans, cowboy to provide you with the most suitable for decision before you. You need to ensure that your jeans outer is very smooth. So you can have the extra comfort levels, this is not easy and any other jeans. characteristics You can wear pink tight jeans to any place. Both parties or outing, these it is a razor summer leisure and the summer between disaster thin lines. According to these skills, what don't you wear women's summer clothes in fashionable good side. Heavy metal overload A silver kitten heels nondusting sandals or tank is completely gold to sunshine kiss, but avoid wearing skin extraction from head to foot metal clear. Although you may successfully with you, you of the uggs boots thermal ensemble could be mistaken for a huge aluminum foil roll... Or refused to participants dance star. Sheep leather boots? Alas!!!!! When the snow is falling, there is nothing better than a pair of sheepskin boots better tootsies of floor heating. Sadly, began to winter wear or fashion gallons legion has become the ugg online ubiquity of footwear. In the summer, the beach on the streets of Los Angeles has found that many celebrities, almost naked, except their boots. If you must have one without socks feet, package and wool skins at 90 degrees from the practical aspects of the weather, consider the mock? Alas!!!!! I see the London, I see France ... ... But do you really want to you in your office of the construction project every people see your ugg boots underwear? The summer is a perfect time, put on your favorite a pair of white pants. When you go to the dance in your fashionable white 7 minutes of pants home, here's a little test: you to those white pants slides, after look in the mirror. ..TS

  174. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 2

    Because it improves the state of everyone's knowledge. Sure, editing Wikipedia is harder than it used to be, but it's not because of the community or the policy. It is because the main body of work is complete, the standards are higher, and there is more scrutiny. There is a way to keep Wikipedia (or any community project of a similar size) organized, fair, and free from vandalism, and it's a bureaucratic process. You and others who whined here over the past few years always have the same story: your edits got reverted, so you lost interest and quit. That's perfectly fine and you are a hero in my book until there is an implication that "they don't need you as an editor". They do, but you just don't seem to understand what an editor is supposed to do. It sounds like you expected to edit articles in a vacuum, which is not realistic. In a project this large, you need to be a bureaucrat as well, which boils down to resolving conflicts through discussion and filling out official forms. Really, there is no other way to do it. It's an overhead, but frankly, it's nothing compared with the research that goes into an article, so you should definitely give it another go. With just a bit of patience and a consistent effort, you should be able to bulldoze over jerkoffs who try to game the system and get your edits the exposure they deserve. You will succeed every time, because your edits are good, the software keeps a complete record, and moderators do read the history.

    My criticism about no links provided is also valid and goes hand to hand with what I am saying above. You guys so obviously don't care about your own contribution or the community review process, you didn't bookmark a single instance of alleged abuse. And you want us to believe you cared before? I am not buying it.

  175. Potentially flawed model? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about perhaps rethinknig the model as a business?

    As it stands now (as far as I'm aware), people contribute articles and edits for free, for the great good, doing hard work, while everyone else consumes for free.

    Now, we'd want it to remain free for general consumption, but then how else can one incentivize more (and better) contributions?

    Perhaps it should go more social -- awards, badges, perhaps even a small portion of its fundraising dedicated to monetary compensation / prizes for the most edits with the highest standards, or something like that. Look at what StackExchange has been able to do with its badge system; I think it's hugely popular within that community.

    With the amount of people out of work in the US, incentivizing the pursuit and support of public knowlegde could be a great pursuit, and could even bring larger amounts of (public- or private- sponsored) donations to Wikipedia.

  176. Don't create new articles by tepples · · Score: 1

    The rules on what is and isn't a 'reliable source' are open to interpretation

    This is in fact one of my biggest complaints about Wikipedia. When I asked on the talk page of Wikipedia:Verifiability or Wikipedia:Identifying reliable sources (I don't remember which) for a clarification that might lead to a more rigorous definition of a reliable source, I was told I was being petty.

    Admins appear to love deleting new articles.

    Then don't create new articles. Adding a section to an existing article about a related subject is less risky than creating a new article. New editors not yet familiar with wiki politics can let someone else decide when a subject is independently notable and thus deserves a split.

  177. Delphi method by jawahar · · Score: 1

    I think Wikipedia moderation should use https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Delphi_method

  178. Baning users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I was an editor on wikipedia. Probably edited 10-15 articles. Most were about my local town and nearby villages. They were fine. No problems. I signed up for a wikiproject and proposed a change in the design of the page. My brother, who is my house-mate, saw this, and made 'sockpuppet' accounts to support my change. I was perma-banned. I have defended myself, pointed out that at times he was online on another account while I was, showing that he was a different person. They didn't believe me, so I have been banned for close to 3 years. 2 weeks ago I received an email that an admin had unlocked one of the talk pages of a sockpuppet account, for no reason, other than to appear busy. I no longer make edits to wikipedia, and the articles that I created are no inaccurate, but there is no one to update them.

  179. Hey Jimbo by hicksw · · Score: 1

    Wikipedia has become crap maintained by creeps. An encyclopedial LCD.
    Kind of like Myspace/Facebook/Google+.

    I once had hope that it could be a general collection of all our external memories. There is no need to prune astroturf (people can figure that out and ignore or laugh at it), personal observations (hey, who says each individual is right, or wrong), and capture fleeting (auto)biographic knowledge.

    Just stop editing. Maybe a slashdot-style random moderation could help for a while.

    And you really, really need real name attribution for when the libel lawyers come to call.

    God rest you merry, Jimbo. Sorry things didn't work out.
    --
    The more project management you do the less likely your project is to succeed. - Google CIO Douglas Merrill

  180. Structural failure by minospd · · Score: 1

    The fundamental problem is that Wikipedia's governance structure has no meaningful mechanisms for self-correction. In one sense, it is being run by a Congress where members are selected for life, and control the selection of their colleagues. In another, it is run by the online equivalent of Afghan warlords. Wikipedia seems to combine the less attractive aspects of both metaphors.

  181. I have had success by Quila · · Score: 1

    I was against an anti-US contingent on a military issue, but I got lucky with a rational admin who realized I knew what I was talking about, they didn't. It helped that I used to actually run the hardware in question.

  182. Re:CK ref: by koona · · Score: 1

    Yea, I'm with ya Skids. I added a reference to
    Great Tits regarding small frozen bats not long
    ago.
    See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_tits
    It has stayed there for a month or more.
    Someone better aquainted with the system
    than I, properly added the provided reference to
    the appropriate section. The system worked as
    advertised in that instance at least.

    I miss the old magnetic perineum jokes.

  183. Moderation vs Administration by Vryl · · Score: 1

    I think you are pretty close. /. recycles its moderators. Very quickly. This is probably not quite doable for wikipedia.

    I suggest that there is some limit on the length of time one can be an admin. Increase the size of the pool (still have screening), but decrease the time you can admin. There are lots of ways. Some sort of cycle - 6 months on, 6 months off - that sort of thing...

  184. If the backup of deleted articles were public by tepples · · Score: 1

    Some pages are speedily deleted because they're illegal to distribute to the public. If the backup of deleted articles were public, that would put a bigger strain on the oversight group as people would use the backup of deleted articles as a place to host encoded porn and warez as well as defamatory text.

  185. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by NoSig · · Score: 1

    You are new here, ain't you?

    That makes two of us then since my userid is #36999690 and yours is #36999802. I guess you should have signed up before breakfast that day, then you wouldn't have missed me by 112 or 0.0003%. Anyway your response is another example of what I was talking about.

  186. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by NoSig · · Score: 1

    Post IDs. Yeah... I'm a moron.

  187. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by NoSig · · Score: 1

    You are trying to play this off as you not being serious to protect your ego, but you weren't trolling, you were expressing yourself. You see yourself as having made a valid point and we are all trying to deny you the bragging rights of your insightful critique. When that didn't happen, you attacked. When that failed, you tried to play it off with a joke. Life won't go well for you until you realize what the problem here was - it wasn't your point being ignored.

  188. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by melikamp · · Score: 1

    Dude, are you seriously?

    I find it much harder to take you seriously if you believe that putting in "whine whine whine" does something positive for you. If you argue like that on Wikipedia,

    Do I? (Go and see, it's the same nick.) And if I do, how does it invalidate my point here on Slashdot? My point was that the OP was whining, that the editing process is not all unicorns and roses, that he needed to grow some hair on his chest, fill out a few forms, and go back to improving Wikipedia.

    If you start out with describing the other person in terms of "whine whine whine", it really doesn't matter what you say after that

    I wasn't describing a person, I was describing the tone of a single post. And why cannot I point out that someone is whining? And even if I am wrong, why does that automatically invalidate everything else I say?

  189. Re:Let's see... my experience with editing Wikiped by NoSig · · Score: 1

    A conversation is an exchange of facts, but it is also more than that. It is a social interaction. If you were having a discussion and the other guy suddenly struck you, that changes the conversation even if a strike is irrelevant to facts and arguments. Of course you can't be violent in text, but perhaps the analogy could be illuminating. Starting off "whine whine whine" doesn't invalidate your arguments, it invalidates the interaction with you. It changes the subject from facts to a fight to be the bigger dick, and it is hard-to-impossible to change the subject back to arguments and facts. Your point is not being ignored, you yourself changed the subject to something else. The word "whining" is an attack and not an argument, it is no different from calling the OP an idiot or any other generic word like that. You can do that, but then you change the subject and you can't go back to the discussion you wanted to have.