Thanks for your suggestions. Just some quick pointers below.
h, 18/05/2014 08:26:
(I-A). Tabulate the data points in absolute numbers first, not
percentage numbers [...]
(I-B). Include all language versions for the *editing traffic* report as
well. [...]
(I-C). Provide static data objects in
*Apologies for cross-posting*
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Is there a way to retrieve a canonical list of bots on enwiki or elsewhere?
I'm interested in omitting automated revisions (sorry Stuart!) for the
purposes of building co-authorship networks.
Grabbing everything under 'Category:All Wikipedia bots' excludes some major
ones like SmackBot, Cydebot,
People whose last name is Abbot will be discriminated.
And a true story: A prominent human Catalan Wikipedia editor whose name is
PauCabot skewed the results of an actual study.
So don't trust just the user names.
בתאריך 18 במאי 2014 19:34, מאת Andrew G. West west.andre...@gmail.com:
User name
Dear Nemo,
As I am waiting for a more complete response, I am not sure that I
understand your last No as in No, we definitely can't means. To
clarify, take the CLDR supplement Language-Territory information for
example
Very helpful, Lukas, I didn't know about the logging table.
In some recent work [1] I found many users that appeared to be bots but
whose edits did not have the bot flag set. My approach was to exclude users
who didn't have a break of more than 6 hours between edits over the entire
month I was
Could you give an example of what we could do better than CLDR or the
relevant ISO standards?
On 18 May 2014 10:06, h hant...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Nemo,
As I am waiting for a more complete response, I am not sure that I
understand your last No as in No, we definitely can't means. To
How does one cite emails in ACM proceedings format? :)
On Sunday, May 18, 2014, R.Stuart Geiger sgei...@gmail.com wrote:
Tsk tsk tsk, Brian. When the revolution comes, bot discriminators will get
no mercy. :-)
But seriously, my tl;dr: instead of asking if an account is or isn't a
bot, ask