Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-29 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
David Gerard wrote:
 On 28 May 2010 23:21, David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com wrote:

   
 With new contributors, we can both improve the articles and gain new
 ones. It does not matter how someone gets here: if they care enough to
 create nonsense, they can be persuaded to create sensible material.
 The key hurdle is not persuading people to contribute usefully, but of
 persuading them to contribute at all.
 


 +1

 Those who speak of trying to restrict contributions because we haven't
 got the admins have it completely arse-backwards.

   

Without wanting to re-inforce a message just on its merits,
which is certainly something worthy in itself; my preferred
phrasing is bass-ackwards.


Yours, in such deep suplication, it hurts my tippy toe shoes.

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-29 Thread Charles Matthews
David Gerard wrote:
 On 28 May 2010 23:21, David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com wrote:

   
 With new contributors, we can both improve the articles and gain new
 ones. It does not matter how someone gets here: if they care enough to
 create nonsense, they can be persuaded to create sensible material.
 The key hurdle is not persuading people to contribute usefully, but of
 persuading them to contribute at all.
 


 +1

 Those who speak of trying to restrict contributions because we haven't
 got the admins have it completely arse-backwards.

   
- - 1

Two negatives don't make a positive. Except sometimes.

Charles


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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-29 Thread Charles Matthews
Andrew Gray wrote:
 Regardless of what technically happens to that submitted junk, and how
 many boxes they tick in the process, we'll still fundamentally have a
 space people can put prospective article content into, and someone has
 to say no to it.
   
Is that true? When was the family of deletion processes last 
reconsidered? If we had a good look at PROD-like mechanisms, which could 
be partially automated, and holding areas where marginal content could 
be placed in limbo, what would we come up with? What if stub-sorting (by 
topic) were more integrated with quality sorting? We have certainly not 
scaled any great heights of sophistication in dealing with the influx of 
articles. That may or may not be a good thing, but there is surely scope 
for innovation.

Charles


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[WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread WereSpielChequers
The good news is that after dipping below the 1720 peak, admin numbers
are on the rise again and we currently have what I believe is a new
record of 1724 admins. However if one were to exclude adminbots then I
think we are still below peak levels, and even if we are now
appointing admins faster than they are resigning, the key metric is
the number of active admins, and that is currently about 170 below
peak levels, as less than half our admins are now active.

Apart from admin bots we only have 24 admins who created their
accounts in the last 24 months, and at least a couple of them were new
accounts for returning admins.
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:ListUsersdir=prevgroup=sysopcreationSort=1
What few RFAs we have are largely mopping up stragglers from years
back, so wikipedia may still be getting lots of new editors, but very
few are becoming admins

We had a step change after rollback was unbundled in early 2008, and
there was a big fall in RFAs, Things have since deteriorated further,
there were fewer successful RFAs in 2009 than 2008, and the 2010
results so far are continuing the trend. It used to provoke comment
whenever there were no RFAs on the board, now such events have become
normal.

My fear is that if these trends
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:WereSpielChequers/RFA_by_month
continue, we will have a growing gulf between admins and non-admins,
as the defacto requirements for RFA are becoming out of reach for most
editors.

We may still have enough admins to do the urgent admin tasks for quite
some time to come; But I can see us becoming more dependant on the
occasional admin who can clear  a 100 article backlog at CSD in an
hour or two, and  I fear a growing divide between admins and others.

WereSpielChequers

 Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 17:02:06 -0700
 From: Howie Fung hf...@wikimedia.org
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of EN wiki admins
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Message-ID: 4bfdb67e.4000...@wikimedia.org
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

 Here are some numbers I pulled a few months ago regarding the number of
 admin requests over time:


        successful      unsuccessful    total requests  % successful
 2004    177     63      240     74%
 2005    387     213     600     65%
 2006    353     543     896     39%
 2007    408     512     920     44%
 2008    201     392     593     34%
 2009    121     234     355     34%


 I can't comment on the reasons, but I thought I'd share the data in case
 people are interested.

 Howie

 Source:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Successful_requests_for_adminship
 and related pages.
 Note: 2004 is incomplete as unsuccessful candidacies were tracked
 starting April 2005

 On 5/26/10 3:51 PM, Ryan Delaney wrote:
 Pretty much. That's more or less why I quit the project.

 On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 1:51 PM, The Cunctatorcuncta...@gmail.com  wrote:


 By all measures, en.wiki has been in decline for years as an active
 project.
 It's just the typical death by bureaucracy that most projects like this
 undergo.

 On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 4:45 PM, Kwan Ting Chank...@ktchan.info  wrote:


 WereSpielChequers wrote:


 What are the likely results of a dwindling number of admins, and a
 growing wikigeneration gap between admins and other editors?



 Well, they're not dwindling since admin rights don't get taken away on
 inactivity. ;-) But to the general question, because the standard

 expected

 of a candidate for RfA has gone up over the years?

 KTC

 --
 Experience is a good school but the fees are high.
     - Heinrich Heine

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 --

 Message: 6
 Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 19:03:40 -0500
 From: MuZemike muzem...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of EN wiki admins
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Message-ID: 4bfdb6dc.6020...@gmail.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

 We need to remember that correlation does not imply causation here,
 which I think is what David is slightly hinting at. There are probably
 many other factors in admin decline as well, including increased
 popularity of Wikipedia (which leads and has led to a lot more problems,
 good and bad), increased questioning of literally every decision made,
 increased criticism (general and specific) of adminship 

Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Alan Liefting
Tightening up on new page creation would free up a lot of time for 
admins as well as other editors.  A lot of rubbish articles get created 
that need to be speedied.


Alan Liefting

WereSpielChequers wrote:
 The good news is that after dipping below the 1720 peak, admin numbers
 are on the rise again and we currently have what I believe is a new
 record of 1724 admins. However if one were to exclude adminbots then I
 think we are still below peak levels, and even if we are now
 appointing admins faster than they are resigning, the key metric is
 the number of active admins, and that is currently about 170 below
 peak levels, as less than half our admins are now active.

 Apart from admin bots we only have 24 admins who created their
 accounts in the last 24 months, and at least a couple of them were new
 accounts for returning admins.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:ListUsersdir=prevgroup=sysopcreationSort=1
 What few RFAs we have are largely mopping up stragglers from years
 back, so wikipedia may still be getting lots of new editors, but very
 few are becoming admins

 We had a step change after rollback was unbundled in early 2008, and
 there was a big fall in RFAs, Things have since deteriorated further,
 there were fewer successful RFAs in 2009 than 2008, and the 2010
 results so far are continuing the trend. It used to provoke comment
 whenever there were no RFAs on the board, now such events have become
 normal.

 My fear is that if these trends
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:WereSpielChequers/RFA_by_month
 continue, we will have a growing gulf between admins and non-admins,
 as the defacto requirements for RFA are becoming out of reach for most
 editors.

 We may still have enough admins to do the urgent admin tasks for quite
 some time to come; But I can see us becoming more dependant on the
 occasional admin who can clear  a 100 article backlog at CSD in an
 hour or two, and  I fear a growing divide between admins and others.

 WereSpielChequers

   
   

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread AGK
On 28 May 2010 16:48, Alan Liefting alieft...@ihug.co.nz wrote:
 A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.

That's very true. And the CAT:CSD workload is more prone to backlog
than it was a couple of years ago, perhaps because RfA is not as
sympathetic to the 'recentchanges patrol' editors (the kind who keep
such backlogs down) of years gone by.

AGK

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Gwern Branwen
On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 11:48 AM, Alan Liefting alieft...@ihug.co.nz wrote:
 Tightening up on new page creation would free up a lot of time for
 admins as well as other editors.  A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.


 Alan Liefting

{{fact}}.

Jimbo himself admits that banning all anons from page creation didn't
do much of anything to help.

-- 
gwern

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Alan Liefting


AGK wrote:
 On 28 May 2010 16:48, Alan Liefting alieft...@ihug.co.nz wrote:
   
 A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.
 

 That's very true. And the CAT:CSD workload is more prone to backlog
 than it was a couple of years ago, perhaps because RfA is not as
 sympathetic to the 'recentchanges patrol' editors (the kind who keep
 such backlogs down) of years gone by.

 AGK
   
Keeping editing as a *very* open model makes extra work for the active 
editors. Since the anons cannot create new articles we are now getting 
millions (?) of bad faith editors creating an account to make edits.  
There are now over 12 million editors - many of them are blocked and 
many are drive by vandals with only a few edits.

Account creation or new article creation by new users needs to be changed. 


Alan Liefitng

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread AGK
On 28 May 2010 17:18, Gwern Branwen gwe...@gmail.com wrote:
 Jimbo himself admits that banning all anons from page creation didn't
 do much of anything to help.

He's not talking about banning unregistered/unconfirmed users from
creating pages. I think he is talking about tightening up on article
creation generally, though in what way I'm unsure.

 {{fact}}

In any case, he certainly has a point. Having to wade through the
nonsense that gets submitted to Wikipedia is a huge time leech.
Suggesting otherwise is silly.

AGK

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Alan Liefting


Gwern Branwen wrote:
 On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 11:48 AM, Alan Liefting alieft...@ihug.co.nz wrote:
   
 Tightening up on new page creation would free up a lot of time for
 admins as well as other editors.  A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.


 Alan Liefting
 

 {{fact}}.

 Jimbo himself admits that banning all anons from page creation didn't
 do much of anything to help.

   
Spending time on New Article Patrol will illustrate my point.  I am 
having trouble finding stats on the article reject rate.  Banning anons 
from page creation did not do much because the bad faith anons started 
creating new accounts and then carried out their bad faith edits.


Alan Liefting

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread William Pietri
On 05/28/2010 08:31 AM, WereSpielChequers wrote:
 We may still have enough admins to do the urgent admin tasks for quite
 some time to come; But I can see us becoming more dependant on the
 occasional admin who can clear  a 100 article backlog at CSD in an
 hour or two, and  I fear a growing divide between admins and others.


Has anybody looked at the details of the admin experience around 
particular tasks?

In debugging the user side of sites, I often look at things in game 
design terms: How easy is X to accomplish? How rewarding is success? How 
punishing is failure? What's the ratio of success to failure? Does it 
provide lasting challenge, or does it become boring? If the action 
becomes rote, is there a higher-level goal or reward?

 From the stats I've seen, my hypothesis would be that doing admin tasks 
just isn't much fun, so it wears people down over time. You get an 
initial burst of activity because somebody has leveled up and is trying 
out their new powers. And then people stick with it out of a love for 
Wikipedia, or an attachment to keeping something polished. But 
eventually day-to-day grind of the work overcome that and people drop 
out, or stick with it out of duty but become crankier.

But that's just a guess. It'd be great to see some serious user research 
on the admin experience.

William

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread MuZemike
I'll add that it doesn't take much to simply create an account and 
create an article that says I luv Jane Doe she iz so awsumtastic!! 
While banning anonymous creation in the mainspace had its good 
intentions, it's probably not as useful now as it was intended.

For instance, just today I speedy deleted a whole group of articles 
about some classmates in a primary school somewhere in the UK. If anons 
were allowed to create mainspace articles, and instead of a registered 
user creating these articles we had an IP, then not only would there be 
more transparency in who is creating them and where (as only CheckUser 
can see underlying IPs from registered accounts), but if blocks are 
needed to prevent disruption, we can make them relatively short-term 
(instead of the common practice of indefinitely blocking registered 
accounts as vandalism-only).

Of course, it can also be argued that disallowing such editing may 
indeed help in smart article creation by reducing the number of crap 
articles (I mean complete crap) that gets created. There is probably 
some tradeoff there in new page creation as far as anon creation is 
concerned.

-MuZemike

On 5/28/2010 11:29 AM, Alan Liefting wrote:

 AGK wrote:

 On 28 May 2010 16:48, Alan Lieftingalieft...@ihug.co.nz  wrote:

  
 A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.


 That's very true. And the CAT:CSD workload is more prone to backlog
 than it was a couple of years ago, perhaps because RfA is not as
 sympathetic to the 'recentchanges patrol' editors (the kind who keep
 such backlogs down) of years gone by.

 AGK

  
 Keeping editing as a *very* open model makes extra work for the active
 editors. Since the anons cannot create new articles we are now getting
 millions (?) of bad faith editors creating an account to make edits.
 There are now over 12 million editors - many of them are blocked and
 many are drive by vandals with only a few edits.

 Account creation or new article creation by new users needs to be changed.


 Alan Liefitng

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Martijn Hoekstra
snip
I'll add that it doesn't take much to simply create an account and
create an article that says I luv Jane Doe she iz so awsumtastic!!
While banning anonymous creation in the mainspace had its good
intentions, it's probably not as useful now as it was intended.
/snip

And I'd like to add to that, that dealing with these pages is quite a
lot of work. Speedy the page is quickly done. You then have to explain
to the user that the article isn't appropriate, but that he's welcome
to continue making contributions, and guide him the way. Templates
just don't work for that, cause they always feel templated. In 4/5
cases the user will want to know what he must do in order to do make
an article on Jane Doe. That takes quite some time to explain, and you
will have to explain that chances are Wikipedia will never have a page
on poor jane, no matter how well she takes care of the elderly, it's
just not WP:N material, but they are more than welcome to prove you
wrong (no, sorry, the mention the hardworking and kind volunteers at
the retirement home isn't enough to WP:V she's hard working. Or kind.
Nor does it amount to significant coverage). All in all, I estimate
that dealing with such pages takes about 10 times as much work as it
is to create them.

It's worth it though, even if you retain only 1% of good editors. That
1% incidently is vastly more valuable than the amount of initial
articles you gain by making it easy to create new articles.

On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 8:31 PM, MuZemike muzem...@gmail.com wrote:
 I'll add that it doesn't take much to simply create an account and
 create an article that says I luv Jane Doe she iz so awsumtastic!!
 While banning anonymous creation in the mainspace had its good
 intentions, it's probably not as useful now as it was intended.

 For instance, just today I speedy deleted a whole group of articles
 about some classmates in a primary school somewhere in the UK. If anons
 were allowed to create mainspace articles, and instead of a registered
 user creating these articles we had an IP, then not only would there be
 more transparency in who is creating them and where (as only CheckUser
 can see underlying IPs from registered accounts), but if blocks are
 needed to prevent disruption, we can make them relatively short-term
 (instead of the common practice of indefinitely blocking registered
 accounts as vandalism-only).

 Of course, it can also be argued that disallowing such editing may
 indeed help in smart article creation by reducing the number of crap
 articles (I mean complete crap) that gets created. There is probably
 some tradeoff there in new page creation as far as anon creation is
 concerned.

 -MuZemike

 On 5/28/2010 11:29 AM, Alan Liefting wrote:

 AGK wrote:

 On 28 May 2010 16:48, Alan Lieftingalieft...@ihug.co.nz  wrote:


 A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.


 That's very true. And the CAT:CSD workload is more prone to backlog
 than it was a couple of years ago, perhaps because RfA is not as
 sympathetic to the 'recentchanges patrol' editors (the kind who keep
 such backlogs down) of years gone by.

 AGK


 Keeping editing as a *very* open model makes extra work for the active
 editors. Since the anons cannot create new articles we are now getting
 millions (?) of bad faith editors creating an account to make edits.
 There are now over 12 million editors - many of them are blocked and
 many are drive by vandals with only a few edits.

 Account creation or new article creation by new users needs to be changed.


 Alan Liefitng

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Del Buono, Matthew Paul
I agree actually. It would also open the opportunity for rangeblocks on editors 
that dodge autoblocks more easily.

However I don't think you will ever achieve consensus for this. There are 
people in the community today that advocate blocking ip editing entirely, not 
just article creation. Getting those users to agree with opening anonymous 
article creation will likely be difficult. I'm not one of those people, but I 
recognize their presence.

Shirik
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-Original Message-
From: MuZemike muzem...@gmail.com
Date: Fri, 28 May 2010 13:31:40 
To: English Wikipediawikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

I'll add that it doesn't take much to simply create an account and 
create an article that says I luv Jane Doe she iz so awsumtastic!! 
While banning anonymous creation in the mainspace had its good 
intentions, it's probably not as useful now as it was intended.

For instance, just today I speedy deleted a whole group of articles 
about some classmates in a primary school somewhere in the UK. If anons 
were allowed to create mainspace articles, and instead of a registered 
user creating these articles we had an IP, then not only would there be 
more transparency in who is creating them and where (as only CheckUser 
can see underlying IPs from registered accounts), but if blocks are 
needed to prevent disruption, we can make them relatively short-term 
(instead of the common practice of indefinitely blocking registered 
accounts as vandalism-only).

Of course, it can also be argued that disallowing such editing may 
indeed help in smart article creation by reducing the number of crap 
articles (I mean complete crap) that gets created. There is probably 
some tradeoff there in new page creation as far as anon creation is 
concerned.

-MuZemike

On 5/28/2010 11:29 AM, Alan Liefting wrote:

 AGK wrote:

 On 28 May 2010 16:48, Alan Lieftingalieft...@ihug.co.nz  wrote:

  
 A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.


 That's very true. And the CAT:CSD workload is more prone to backlog
 than it was a couple of years ago, perhaps because RfA is not as
 sympathetic to the 'recentchanges patrol' editors (the kind who keep
 such backlogs down) of years gone by.

 AGK

  
 Keeping editing as a *very* open model makes extra work for the active
 editors. Since the anons cannot create new articles we are now getting
 millions (?) of bad faith editors creating an account to make edits.
 There are now over 12 million editors - many of them are blocked and
 many are drive by vandals with only a few edits.

 Account creation or new article creation by new users needs to be changed.


 Alan Liefitng

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Emily Monroe
I say this as a new page patroller myself:

For love of all that's sweet and holy, somebody higher up please  
tighten up the technical standards for non-userfyed article creation.  
Most of my PRODs and CSDs nominations are from people who simply don't  
know what they are doing. In the meantime, they get to bypass the more  
popular recent changes, and instead their aganist-policy creations are  
clogging up the more obscure new page patrol.

Emily
On May 28, 2010, at 10:48 AM, Alan Liefting wrote:

 Tightening up on new page creation would free up a lot of time for
 admins as well as other editors.  A lot of rubbish articles get  
 created
 that need to be speedied.


 Alan Liefting

 WereSpielChequers wrote:
 The good news is that after dipping below the 1720 peak, admin  
 numbers
 are on the rise again and we currently have what I believe is a new
 record of 1724 admins. However if one were to exclude adminbots  
 then I
 think we are still below peak levels, and even if we are now
 appointing admins faster than they are resigning, the key metric is
 the number of active admins, and that is currently about 170 below
 peak levels, as less than half our admins are now active.

 Apart from admin bots we only have 24 admins who created their
 accounts in the last 24 months, and at least a couple of them were  
 new
 accounts for returning admins.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:ListUsersdir=prevgroup=sysopcreationSort=1
 What few RFAs we have are largely mopping up stragglers from years
 back, so wikipedia may still be getting lots of new editors, but very
 few are becoming admins

 We had a step change after rollback was unbundled in early 2008, and
 there was a big fall in RFAs, Things have since deteriorated further,
 there were fewer successful RFAs in 2009 than 2008, and the 2010
 results so far are continuing the trend. It used to provoke comment
 whenever there were no RFAs on the board, now such events have become
 normal.

 My fear is that if these trends
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:WereSpielChequers/RFA_by_month
 continue, we will have a growing gulf between admins and non-admins,
 as the defacto requirements for RFA are becoming out of reach for  
 most
 editors.

 We may still have enough admins to do the urgent admin tasks for  
 quite
 some time to come; But I can see us becoming more dependant on the
 occasional admin who can clear  a 100 article backlog at CSD in an
 hour or two, and  I fear a growing divide between admins and others.

 WereSpielChequers




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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Emily Monroe
 I'll add that it doesn't take much to simply create an account and  
 create an article that says I luv Jane Doe she iz so awsumtastic!!  
 While banning anonymous creation in the mainspace had its good  
 intentions, it's probably not as useful now as it was intended.

 For instance, just today I speedy deleted a whole group of articles  
 about some classmates in a primary school somewhere in the UK. If  
 anons were allowed to create mainspace articles, and instead of a  
 registered user creating these articles we had an IP, then not only  
 would their be more transparency in who is creating them and where  
 (as only CheckUser can see underlying IPs from registered accounts),  
 but if blocks are needed to prevent disruption, we can make them  
 relatively short-term (instead of the common practice of  
 indefinitely blocking registered accounts as vandalism-only).
snip

Bad idea. I think we need to have a level above autoconfirmed, where  
people can do things like gain additional rights (rollback, adminship,  
the like), and create articles. They need to have enough edits, and  
been here long enough so we can pass judgement on whether or not they  
are good faith.

Emily
On May 28, 2010, at 1:31 PM, MuZemike wrote:

 I'll add that it doesn't take much to simply create an account and
 create an article that says I luv Jane Doe she iz so awsumtastic!!
 While banning anonymous creation in the mainspace had its good
 intentions, it's probably not as useful now as it was intended.

 For instance, just today I speedy deleted a whole group of articles
 about some classmates in a primary school somewhere in the UK. If  
 anons
 were allowed to create mainspace articles, and instead of a registered
 user creating these articles we had an IP, then not only would there  
 be
 more transparency in who is creating them and where (as only CheckUser
 can see underlying IPs from registered accounts), but if blocks are
 needed to prevent disruption, we can make them relatively short-term
 (instead of the common practice of indefinitely blocking registered
 accounts as vandalism-only).

 Of course, it can also be argued that disallowing such editing may
 indeed help in smart article creation by reducing the number of crap
 articles (I mean complete crap) that gets created. There is probably
 some tradeoff there in new page creation as far as anon creation is
 concerned.

 -MuZemike

 On 5/28/2010 11:29 AM, Alan Liefting wrote:

 AGK wrote:

 On 28 May 2010 16:48, Alan Lieftingalieft...@ihug.co.nz  wrote:


 A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.


 That's very true. And the CAT:CSD workload is more prone to backlog
 than it was a couple of years ago, perhaps because RfA is not as
 sympathetic to the 'recentchanges patrol' editors (the kind who keep
 such backlogs down) of years gone by.

 AGK


 Keeping editing as a *very* open model makes extra work for the  
 active
 editors. Since the anons cannot create new articles we are now  
 getting
 millions (?) of bad faith editors creating an account to make edits.
 There are now over 12 million editors - many of them are blocked and
 many are drive by vandals with only a few edits.

 Account creation or new article creation by new users needs to be  
 changed.


 Alan Liefitng

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread David Goodman
Emily, your approach to patrolling has it backwards. The priority is
not removing  articles; the priority is adding contributors. Without
new contributors   the inevitable attrition of existing active people
will cause the quality to decline and the potential for covering new
or neglected topics to diminish.

With new contributors, we can both improve the articles and gain new
ones. It does not matter how someone gets here: if they care enough to
create nonsense, they can be persuaded to create sensible material.
The key hurdle is not persuading people to contribute usefully, but of
persuading them to contribute at all.

For patrolling, nothing is easier than to remove impossible articles.
One step harder,  not all that much harder, but only a minority of New
page patrollers do it, is figuring out which articles are improvable.
A good deal harder is doing what Martijn asks for: to convert the
people wandering into to make their mark, to  mark their mark by doing
something useful. It can be enormously rewarding.

I do not know how frequently he is able to try it.  Myself, of the two
or three dozen articles I deal with each day, I have time and energy
to work with only one or two of the contributors.  Martijn and I
cannot do it all ourselves, but perhaps we can persuade you to join
us, and try to rescue  one contributor a day. It doesn't even take
being an admin--if each of the thousand or so people who actively
screen the incoming material did this for just one person, we could
make an attempt to help the writer of every one of the unsatisfactory
articles.  If one in a hundred responded to us and became a
significant contributor, 3,000 new  really active people a year would
deal with a great many of the problems of wikipedia. If we   could get
one in ten,   it would totally rejuvenate the project.

On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 4:45 PM, Emily Monroe bluecalioc...@me.com wrote:
 I'll add that it doesn't take much to simply create an account and
 create an article that says I luv Jane Doe she iz so awsumtastic!!
 While banning anonymous creation in the mainspace had its good
 intentions, it's probably not as useful now as it was intended.

 For instance, just today I speedy deleted a whole group of articles
 about some classmates in a primary school somewhere in the UK. If
 anons were allowed to create mainspace articles, and instead of a
 registered user creating these articles we had an IP, then not only
 would their be more transparency in who is creating them and where
 (as only CheckUser can see underlying IPs from registered accounts),
 but if blocks are needed to prevent disruption, we can make them
 relatively short-term (instead of the common practice of
 indefinitely blocking registered accounts as vandalism-only).
 snip

 Bad idea. I think we need to have a level above autoconfirmed, where
 people can do things like gain additional rights (rollback, adminship,
 the like), and create articles. They need to have enough edits, and
 been here long enough so we can pass judgement on whether or not they
 are good faith.

 Emily
 On May 28, 2010, at 1:31 PM, MuZemike wrote:

 I'll add that it doesn't take much to simply create an account and
 create an article that says I luv Jane Doe she iz so awsumtastic!!
 While banning anonymous creation in the mainspace had its good
 intentions, it's probably not as useful now as it was intended.

 For instance, just today I speedy deleted a whole group of articles
 about some classmates in a primary school somewhere in the UK. If
 anons
 were allowed to create mainspace articles, and instead of a registered
 user creating these articles we had an IP, then not only would there
 be
 more transparency in who is creating them and where (as only CheckUser
 can see underlying IPs from registered accounts), but if blocks are
 needed to prevent disruption, we can make them relatively short-term
 (instead of the common practice of indefinitely blocking registered
 accounts as vandalism-only).

 Of course, it can also be argued that disallowing such editing may
 indeed help in smart article creation by reducing the number of crap
 articles (I mean complete crap) that gets created. There is probably
 some tradeoff there in new page creation as far as anon creation is
 concerned.

 -MuZemike

 On 5/28/2010 11:29 AM, Alan Liefting wrote:

 AGK wrote:

 On 28 May 2010 16:48, Alan Lieftingalieft...@ihug.co.nz  wrote:


 A lot of rubbish articles get created
 that need to be speedied.


 That's very true. And the CAT:CSD workload is more prone to backlog
 than it was a couple of years ago, perhaps because RfA is not as
 sympathetic to the 'recentchanges patrol' editors (the kind who keep
 such backlogs down) of years gone by.

 AGK


 Keeping editing as a *very* open model makes extra work for the
 active
 editors. Since the anons cannot create new articles we are now
 getting
 millions (?) of bad faith editors creating an account to make edits.
 There are now over 12 million editors - 

Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Andrew Gray
On 28 May 2010 17:29, AGK wiki...@gmail.com wrote:

 In any case, he certainly has a point. Having to wade through the
 nonsense that gets submitted to Wikipedia is a huge time leech.
 Suggesting otherwise is silly.

Mmm. I think it's unavoidable, though - perhaps the question should be
how can we distribute that workload better among our many active
users?

The basic problem is: the volume of crap new articles is simply a
function of the volume of all contributions. If we accept articles in
a way that isn't so difficult as to drive off most casual
contributors, people are still going to *try* to submit junk.

Regardless of what technically happens to that submitted junk, and how
many boxes they tick in the process, we'll still fundamentally have a
space people can put prospective article content into, and someone has
to say no to it.

The time consumption of turning it down is probably going to be
approximately the same regardless of what the hurdles are... unless we
come back full circle to raising the barriers so high that we
significantly reduce the number of *all* articles submitted, and
that's undesirable for a whole host of reasons.

-- 
- Andrew Gray
  andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of active EN wiki admins

2010-05-28 Thread Emily Monroe
First off, let me say that you have influenced my editing a bit. Just  
read my whole email.

Let me respond to your statements one at time, in no particular order.

 For patrolling, nothing is easier than to remove impossible  
 articles. One step harder,  not all that much harder, but only a  
 minority of New page patrollers do it, is figuring out which  
 articles are improvable.

I've improved articles, particularly during lulls when new pages  
aren't being created (or, at least, when new, nonsense articles aren't  
being created--I know, I should do this all the time, and I think I'll  
least do it much more often). I've copyedited, I've wikified, I've  
added categories, I've removed POV statements, and I've added to  
wikiprojects. Every so often, I'll do so to see if it really does fit  
deletion criteria. Sometimes, when I do this, I get an edit conflict  
with somebody else adding a deletion tag. 99% of the time, it's a CSD  
tag. If it's a CSD tag, then I usually give up. I don't have the time  
to improve the article before it gets deleted, for one. Plus, if my  
intuition is verified by someone else, then perhaps my intuition is  
correct.

If an article is highly technical, I'll just not mark that page as  
patrolled. I'm sure that's forgivable.

 The priority is not removing  articles; the priority is adding  
 contributors.

I partially agree with you on this. The point of new page patrol isn't  
removing articles. The point isn't adding contributors, either,  
though. It's catching problem articles early on, and then actually  
doing something about it.

  It does not matter how someone gets here: if they care enough to  
 create nonsense, they can be persuaded to create sensible material.

I guess this falls under assumption of good faith. The sad truth is  
that we're not always dealing with good faith. If somebody writes  
about the awesomeness of their newest crush, or insulting their hated  
teacher as their first article, it tells me that they don't take  
Wikipedia very seriously. While these editors have good faith, they  
lack maturity. If they inserted such nonsense into an existing  
article, we wouldn't have so much patience. This is particularly true  
if they don't log in. We'd give them four chances, and ban them. Like  
I said, it isn't an issue of good faith. It's an issue of competence.

If somebody, on the other hand, posts their resume or writes about  
their garage band, this is probably true. We can point to the  
notability guidelines and be like Look. It isn't personal, but if  
your band doesn't even have a consistent name yet, then you probably  
shouldn't write an article about it.

My main concern is that I see new contributors' writing articles, and  
it's obvious that they are biting off more than they chew. Templated  
or no, there is no way to say No, your article doesn't fit criteria  
for inclusion to a newcomer, who doesn't even have a talk page yet,  
without violating WP:BITE. Every time I have to tag an article written  
by such a person, I know that chances are good they are never coming  
back.  The problem is, most of them never bother to read the message.  
I'm not sure how to completely fix this. If I write out, Hey! Your  
article might be speedily deleted! Quick! Slap a {{hangon}} tag and  
write why your article should be included in Wikipedia on the talk  
page! You might also try actually improving the article really, really  
quickly!, the article might be deleted by the time I'm done. That's  
why templated messages exist.

Maybe we can remove the scary-looking red, exclamated triangle from  
the template, and remove any mention of speedy deletion from the  
subject header (just have it be like Your article, [insert article  
link here]). This bothers me a bit philosophically because it's  
euphemistic, but it might be necessary.

All I'm proposing is giving space between autoconfirmation and being  
able to create articles.

I think I'll try out writing the deletion warning message for the  
articles that I PROD. I will also try to improve the less obvious  
articles that I think might fit the CSD criteria more often (Its good  
practice for editing less difficult articles, anyway ;-).

And at this point, I think I'll at least temporarily bow out of the  
debate.

Emily

On May 28, 2010, at 5:21 PM, David Goodman wrote:

 Emily, your approach to patrolling has it backwards. The priority is
 not removing  articles; the priority is adding contributors. Without
 new contributors   the inevitable attrition of existing active people
 will cause the quality to decline and the potential for covering new
 or neglected topics to diminish.

 With new contributors, we can both improve the articles and gain new
 ones. It does not matter how someone gets here: if they care enough to
 create nonsense, they can be persuaded to create sensible material.
 The key hurdle is not persuading people to contribute usefully, but of
 persuading them to