Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-17 Thread stevertigo
Ryan Delaney ryan.dela...@gmail.com wrote:
 I think that's a noble goal, and the idea behind this project seems like a
 good one. Incidentally, I'm probably in the running for most rabid
 inclusionist here.

Correcting systematic wrongs is, I agree, good.

 I think we all ought to be able to understand, though,
 that it goes too far when the experiment itself becomes a source of
 disruption. I don't know all the details, but I'm guessing that's why WSC
 asked to put it on hold.

Eh. Remember when Jimbo nullified the WP:ATT merger? Or when
Foundation handed over a 1/4 Million USD to some marketeering outfit?

The point is that disruptions happen. We celebrate the good ones.

-Stevertigo
见风转舵

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 10:34 AM, stevertigo stv...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sounds like just more strategic deletionist excusism. There is no
 excuse for anyone giving to destruction a higher value than they do to
 creation.

 So now that things are wrapping up, don't forget to hand out some
 merit badges to the 'winners.'  Ostensibly, there is a deletionist who
 stands out from the pack, for whom a specially branded Trout Award
 will do just fine.

WereSpielChequers could have expressed his concerns a bit better here.

It seems that, under the guise of this project, some people are
intentionally writing very low quality articles and then rules-lawyering
over the specific speedy deletion category names:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3ASeb_az86556action=historysubmitdiff=325921044oldid=325918976

There can be a fine line between probing the boundary of new user treatment
and a breaching experiment.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Ken Arromdee
On Mon, 16 Nov 2009, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
 It seems that, under the guise of this project, some people are
 intentionally writing very low quality articles and then rules-lawyering
 over the specific speedy deletion category names:

I'd argue that tagging something for speedy deletion when it doesn't actually
fit the criteria is itself a form of rules lawyering.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Amory Meltzer
Sort of like getting annoyed with a police officer for giving you a
warning for speeding.  No harm done to anyone, just don't speed next
time.

Pun intended.

~A



On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 11:35, Ken Arromdee arrom...@rahul.net wrote:
 On Mon, 16 Nov 2009, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
 It seems that, under the guise of this project, some people are
 intentionally writing very low quality articles and then rules-lawyering
 over the specific speedy deletion category names:

 I'd argue that tagging something for speedy deletion when it doesn't actually
 fit the criteria is itself a form of rules lawyering.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread stevertigo
Gregory Maxwell gmaxw...@gmail.com wrote:
 WereSpielChequers could have expressed his concerns a bit better here.
 It seems that, under the guise of this project, some people are
 intentionally writing very low quality articles and then rules-lawyering
 over the specific speedy deletion category names:
 There can be a fine line between probing the boundary of new user treatment
 and a breaching experiment.

I don't really understand the [x]-lawyering, in that diff (in Greg's
post). (Note that [x]-lawyering is largely just a stigmanym given
out like candy to anyone who's actually somewhat successful at arguing
against mob rule).

But, since you mention it, is intentionally [creating] very low
quality articles really a serious problem on Wikipedia in the first
place? Edits like these (
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Big_Lebowskioldid=286557
) are what built Wikipedia, and yet the deletionista says these need
immediate deletion to purify and protect WP from POV and OR.
(In that case at lease, capable people decided to employ Wikipedia's
article editing functionality, and {{sofixit}}ed it instead).

The issue is really that deletion is reserved for two things: 1)
Articles created with no purpose (ie. titles that do not correspond to
anything encyclopedically conceptual), and 2) articles created as
vandalism. My thinking is that lots of [[red links]] are in fact a
good thing for WP. Maybe making red links a different color (green?)
might counter our tendency to undo new links and thus foster article
creation? The issue there is teaching newbies how to find the existing
article and redirecting to it.

-Stevertigo
Some people say a man is made outta mud..

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread stevertigo
Ken Arromdee arrom...@rahul.net wrote:
 On Mon, 16 Nov 2009, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
 It seems that, under the guise of this project, some people are
 intentionally writing very low quality articles and then rules-lawyering
 over the specific speedy deletion category names:

 I'd argue that tagging something for speedy deletion when it doesn't actually
 fit the criteria is itself a form of rules lawyering.



-Stevertigo

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Carcharoth
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 4:50 PM, Gregory Maxwell gmaxw...@gmail.com wrote:

 or do you claim that we shouldn't
 delete sub-stubs duplicating pre-existing articles?

If the title is valid, it is easier to turn it into a redirect and
merge any content not already mentioned in the existing article (a
s-merge as it is sometimes called). The failure to consider moving
content elsewhere (and leaving a redirect to preserve the
contributions history) is a common misunderstanding made by those who
request deletion in such cases. Whenever I look at an article proposed
for deletion, I ask myself, is this verifiable and encyclopedic and
would someone potentially be searching for information on this
topic?, then I ask myself if it is notable? If it is not notable
but still verifiable and encyclopedic, the answer is usually to merge
the information (in some limited sense) to a broader article. Deletion
is a blunt tool sometimes used when editorial consideration and actual
editing can get better results instead.

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Ken Arromdee
On Mon, 16 Nov 2009, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
 Rules lawyering is generally taken to mean an excessively strict and
 pedantic reading of rules often leaning on obscure clauses and
 interpretations to push a preferred outcome contrary to intuitive
 sense and the probable intent of the rule.

I'd say that the probable intent of the rule was to allow a small number
of very unambiguous, very specific, and very obvious cases, which have been
extensively discussed in advance, to be deleted.  Speedy deletion is *not*
meant to delete everything that's delete-worthy.

Adding another case that hasn't been discussed in advance is an attempt to
push it towards deleting anything delete-worthy, which is not what it's
for.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread stevertigo
 On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 4:50 PM, Gregory Maxwell gmaxw...@gmail.com wrote:
 or do you claim that we shouldn't
 delete sub-stubs duplicating pre-existing articles?
Carcharoth carcharot...@googlemail.com wrote:
 If the title is valid, it is easier to turn it into a redirect and
 merge any content not already mentioned in the existing article (a
 s-merge as it is sometimes called). The failure to consider moving
 content elsewhere (and leaving a redirect to preserve the
 contributions history) is a common misunderstanding made by those who
 request deletion in such cases.

+!

Well, that's the point. If our sanitation engineers actually did what
real sanitation engineers do and actually salvaged things (nice coffee
table!), nobody would have a problem with deletion as a process.

And as for the philosophical aspects, we don't generally let nihilists
have too much control for the simple reason that they tend to turn
destruction into an -ism.

-Stevertigo
Is that some sort of Eastern thing?

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Carcharoth
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 5:13 PM, stevertigo stv...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 4:50 PM, Gregory Maxwell gmaxw...@gmail.com wrote:
 or do you claim that we shouldn't
 delete sub-stubs duplicating pre-existing articles?
 Carcharoth carcharot...@googlemail.com wrote:
 If the title is valid, it is easier to turn it into a redirect and
 merge any content not already mentioned in the existing article (a
 s-merge as it is sometimes called). The failure to consider moving
 content elsewhere (and leaving a redirect to preserve the
 contributions history) is a common misunderstanding made by those who
 request deletion in such cases.

 +!

 Well, that's the point. If our sanitation engineers actually did what
 real sanitation engineers do and actually salvaged things (nice coffee
 table!), nobody would have a problem with deletion as a process.

 And as for the philosophical aspects, we don't generally let nihilists
 have too much control for the simple reason that they tend to turn
 destruction into an -ism.

To be fair. When actually trying to do this at NPP, practice is harder
than theory. I have every sympathy and respect for those doing NPP, as
they will make mistakes. I would err on the side of caution and leave
such articles to be dealt with later, but then PROD and AfD also get
applied without much cleanup effort applied, so that doesn't seem to
help either. Often, the only real solution is to apply {{sofixit}}.
Which, ironically, is sort of what I think this whole project
(WP:NEWT) was doing. Making an attempt to gather data to get a fix to
a perceived problem. There have been some good suggestions for other
ways to gather the data. Me, I'd personally be interested in looking
at articles that got deleted at seeing whether any can be rewritten
and (in some cases) the history undeleted. Take a random sample of
deleted articles and see what proportion actually didn't fix the
criteria and what proportion can be written as acceptable articles.

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread George Herbert
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 8:06 AM, Gregory Maxwell gmaxw...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 10:34 AM, stevertigo stv...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sounds like just more strategic deletionist excusism. There is no
 excuse for anyone giving to destruction a higher value than they do to
 creation.

 So now that things are wrapping up, don't forget to hand out some
 merit badges to the 'winners.'  Ostensibly, there is a deletionist who
 stands out from the pack, for whom a specially branded Trout Award
 will do just fine.

 WereSpielChequers could have expressed his concerns a bit better here.

 It seems that, under the guise of this project, some people are
 intentionally writing very low quality articles and then rules-lawyering
 over the specific speedy deletion category names:

 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3ASeb_az86556action=historysubmitdiff=325921044oldid=325918976

 There can be a fine line between probing the boundary of new user treatment
 and a breaching experiment.

I disagree that this rose to the level of a breaching experiment.
However - it was intended as an experiment, not a way to pick on
individual new page patrollers.  And ended up being perceived as the
latter, rightly or wrongly.  And that wasn't a good thing.

The lessons and changes to flow out of this (I hope...) need to be
structural and community, not individual and personal and
inquisitorial.


-- 
-george william herbert
george.herb...@gmail.com

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Ryan Delaney
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 8:35 AM, Ken Arromdee arrom...@rahul.net wrote:

 On Mon, 16 Nov 2009, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
  It seems that, under the guise of this project, some people are
  intentionally writing very low quality articles and then rules-lawyering
  over the specific speedy deletion category names:

 I'd argue that tagging something for speedy deletion when it doesn't
 actually
 fit the criteria is itself a form of rules lawyering.


Actually, it's the other way around. Deliberately writing a bad article that
should be deleted, but doesn't technically fit the CSD due to some loophole,
sounds like the definition of disruption to make a point. I'd have to see a
test case to say that for sure.

- causa sui



- causa sui
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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Surreptitiousness
Carcharoth wrote:
 Take a random sample of
 deleted articles and see what proportion actually didn't fix the
 criteria and what proportion can be written as acceptable articles.
   
Have a look at [[Charles Mills Gayley]], which I created as a stub, was 
deleted as an A7, and which I eventually returned to this year, 
restoring it and expanding, and which an anon has this time run with.  
That's how Wikipedia is supposed to work. We lost over three years of 
potential article growth there.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Ken Arromdee
On Mon, 16 Nov 2009, Ryan Delaney wrote:
 Actually, it's the other way around. Deliberately writing a bad article that
 should be deleted, but doesn't technically fit the CSD due to some loophole,
 sounds like the definition of disruption to make a point. I'd have to see a
 test case to say that for sure.

But CSD *isn't for deleting everything that should be deleted*.  So the
fact that the article doesn't fit CSD but should be deleted anyway isn't
a loophole.  Plenty of things which should be deleted don't fit CSD.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Ryan Delaney
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Ken Arromdee arrom...@rahul.net wrote:

 On Mon, 16 Nov 2009, Ryan Delaney wrote:
  Actually, it's the other way around. Deliberately writing a bad article
 that
  should be deleted, but doesn't technically fit the CSD due to some
 loophole,
  sounds like the definition of disruption to make a point. I'd have to see
 a
  test case to say that for sure.

 But CSD *isn't for deleting everything that should be deleted*.  So the
 fact that the article doesn't fit CSD but should be deleted anyway isn't
 a loophole.  Plenty of things which should be deleted don't fit CSD.


No argument there. What's important about this case is that (as it has been
explained to me, anyway) someone was deliberately writing a bad article with
the express intention of being a pain in the ass. That's gaming the system
in a disruptive way to make some kind of political point, and we generally
frown on that for obvious reasons.

- causa sui
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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread David Gerard
2009/11/16 Ryan Delaney ryan.dela...@gmail.com:

 No argument there. What's important about this case is that (as it has been
 explained to me, anyway) someone was deliberately writing a bad article with
 the express intention of being a pain in the ass. That's gaming the system
 in a disruptive way to make some kind of political point, and we generally
 frown on that for obvious reasons.


Yes, that's just being silly. A test is to write an article as if
you're not a known experienced editor, but still try to do a
reasonable job on it.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread George Herbert
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 3:14 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 2009/11/16 Ryan Delaney ryan.dela...@gmail.com:

 No argument there. What's important about this case is that (as it has been
 explained to me, anyway) someone was deliberately writing a bad article with
 the express intention of being a pain in the ass. That's gaming the system
 in a disruptive way to make some kind of political point, and we generally
 frown on that for obvious reasons.


 Yes, that's just being silly. A test is to write an article as if
 you're not a known experienced editor, but still try to do a
 reasonable job on it.


I partially disagree.

Writing a bad article - unreferenced, poor grammar, etc - on a
subject which is not yet covered and yet which clearly meets our
notability and topic requirements and whose notability and validity
can be easily established with web searches - is an excellent
experiment.

Part of the challenge here is not just What if a nobody comes along
and creates an ok article.

Part of the challenge is whether we handle new clueless nobodies well,
when they have a good article idea but no idea how Wikipedia does
things, yet.  That's what doing a bad-ish article tests.

Writing an intentionally bad article in the there's no reason to have
an article on this isn't particularly good - we can find enough of
those in new page patrol logs and CSD deletion logs - spam, opinion
pieces, vandalism, random graffiti, BLPs of schoolchildren, etc.
without doing experiments, I think, unless we think we need some
control cases done by the same testers.

Keep in mind that this was a very ad-hoc experiment, and by normal
protocols horribly run.  That said, it's also horribly important, and
has (despite the flaws) given some extremely important data.



-- 
-george william herbert
george.herb...@gmail.com

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 5:56 PM, Ken Arromdee arrom...@rahul.net wrote:
 But CSD *isn't for deleting everything that should be deleted*.  So the
 fact that the article doesn't fit CSD but should be deleted anyway isn't
 a loophole.  Plenty of things which should be deleted don't fit CSD.

Absolutely.

The intention of CSD is to reduce the overhead related costs of the
full deletion process for classes of deletions which are broadly
uncontroversial.

Your speedy deletion of X was bogus because the matter of articles of
X-type being deleted is not at all clearly clear, and I think the
article should be kept  is a clearly reasonable objection.

Your speedy deletion violated paragraph 3 sub-paragraph 2 section A
of speedy code 27b/6., without any tying back to the intent of the
rules and the goodness of the outcome is another matter entirely…

If we're really to the point where we have to make boundary-testing
articles to probe the process as clearly good newbie articles are
being kept, then the problem can't be that bad. ...

On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 12:02 PM, Carcharoth
carcharot...@googlemail.com wrote:
 If the title is valid, it is easier to turn it into a redirect and
 merge any content not already mentioned in the existing article (a
 s-merge as it is sometimes called). The failure to consider moving

In this case it was one sentence of the X is a Y form, and we
already had an article on X by another name. Calling anything coming
out of that a 'merge' would be a polite lie at best.  It's one I've
made before… but we should still call it for what it is.

Many of the redirects I've created in the past were later deleted. I
don't know that anyone has any clue what the criteria is for keeping
redirects or not, so I can't say that one should have been created
here.  Since no one seems to have joined clubs based on redirect
preferences there doesn't really seem to be many loud arguments about
the right criteria.

The conversion of an article to a redirect is equivalent to straight
deletion, the most significant exception is the deletion may have
missed an opportunity to create a useful redirect. (In my view, the
fact that the old text is available in a highly obscure location
rather than a very highly obscure location isn't very important). It's
harmful to miss the redirect, but if your goal is to improve redirects
there are MANY more low hanging fruit that could be addressed before
worrying about deletions which should have been redirect conversions.

On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 3:05 PM, George Herbert
george.herb...@gmail.com wrote:
 I disagree that this rose to the level of a breaching experiment.
 However - it was intended as an experiment, not a way to pick on
 individual new page patrollers.  And ended up being perceived as the
 latter, rightly or wrongly.  And that wasn't a good thing.
 The lessons and changes to flow out of this (I hope...) need to be
 structural and community, not individual and personal and
 inquisitorial.

My apologies: It was my intent to say that this was walking that line,
not that it was over it. On re-read I see that I didn't at all come
off that way.

I'm sure all involved intended to do well.  I think they'd do best by
avoiding process pedantry and sticking to clear-cut cases which were
handled clearly wrong with a harmful outcome.  There will be fewer
examples of this, but the examples found will be far more compelling.

This kind of experiment is only part data collecting... it also has
the purpose of convincing a wider circle of people that there is a
problem which needs to be addressed.  Only people who are already
convinced are going to be moved by borderline cases.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread stevertigo
Ryan Delaney ryan.dela...@gmail.com wrote:

 Actually, it's the other way around. Deliberately writing a bad article that
 should be deleted, but doesn't technically fit the CSD due to some loophole,
 sounds like the definition of disruption to make a point. I'd have to see a
 test case to say that for sure.

The entire NEWT project is a disruption to make a point - and the
point is well made: A good number of deletionists could do something
better with their time.

-Stevertigo

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread David Goodman
so far from being  disruptive, the  project is an attempt to
demonstrate the ongoing disruption being routinely carried out by
people deleting improvable articles. sometimes a few test cases are
the clearest way to show that, and the project seems to have made done
that very successfully. We now need to consider how to improve what we
do so the   discouragement of new authors decreases.

I remind everyone that what admins do  is open and can and should  be
audited. Though that was not the purpose of the project, it is
perfectly in order to check the  deletions of individual admins.  We
should expect at least the same knowledge of basic rules we look for
at an RfA.

David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 11:17 PM, stevertigo stv...@gmail.com wrote:
 Ryan Delaney ryan.dela...@gmail.com wrote:

 Actually, it's the other way around. Deliberately writing a bad article that
 should be deleted, but doesn't technically fit the CSD due to some loophole,
 sounds like the definition of disruption to make a point. I'd have to see a
 test case to say that for sure.

 The entire NEWT project is a disruption to make a point - and the
 point is well made: A good number of deletionists could do something
 better with their time.

 -Stevertigo

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Ryan Delaney
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 9:00 PM, David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com wrote:

 so far from being  disruptive, the  project is an attempt to
 demonstrate the ongoing disruption being routinely carried out by
 people deleting improvable articles. sometimes a few test cases are
 the clearest way to show that, and the project seems to have made done
 that very successfully. We now need to consider how to improve what we
 do so the   discouragement of new authors decreases.

 I remind everyone that what admins do  is open and can and should  be
 audited. Though that was not the purpose of the project, it is
 perfectly in order to check the  deletions of individual admins.  We
 should expect at least the same knowledge of basic rules we look for
 at an RfA.

 David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



You might be misunderstanding what the objection is here. Nobody needs to be
reminded that use of sysop tools is subject to peer review.

-- causa sui
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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread stevertigo
Ryan Delaney ryan.dela...@gmail.com wrote:

 You might be misunderstanding what the objection is here. Nobody needs to be
 reminded that use of sysop tools is subject to peer review.

True (though I don't think David is misunderstanding anything). The
issue is not reviewing how sysops use their tools. It is about
correcting the misconceptions upon which sysops base a substantially
destructive usage of those tools.

-Stevertigo

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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Ryan Delaney
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 9:50 PM, stevertigo stv...@gmail.com wrote:

 Ryan Delaney ryan.dela...@gmail.com wrote:

  You might be misunderstanding what the objection is here. Nobody needs to
 be
  reminded that use of sysop tools is subject to peer review.

 True (though I don't think David is misunderstanding anything). The
 issue is not reviewing how sysops use their tools. It is about
 correcting the misconceptions upon which sysops base a substantially
 destructive usage of those tools.


I think that's a noble goal, and the idea behind this project seems like a
good one. Incidentally, I'm probably in the running for most rabid
inclusionist here. I think we all ought to be able to understand, though,
that it goes too far when the experiment itself becomes a source of
disruption. I don't know all the details, but I'm guessing that's why WSC
asked to put it on hold.

-- causa sui
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Re: [WikiEN-l] How friendly are we to Newbies? Create an article as a newbie challenge now paused

2009-11-16 Thread Steve Bennett
On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 3:17 PM, stevertigo stv...@gmail.com wrote:
 The entire NEWT project is a disruption to make a point - and the

No. The main goal is/was data collection - to find out whether the
assertions made by the original blog post were accurate or not. It
seems that there are grounds for considerable improvement, but we're
not at crisis point.

Steve

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