On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 5:04 AM, Piotr Konieczny <pio...@post.pl> wrote:

>  Well, this is based on  my experience as GA author and reviewer. I have
> never seen an IP successfully nominate an article (I did see nominations
> once or twice, they failed quickly, as the articles were not up to GA level
> and IP never came back). And of course, I have yet to see an IP GA reviewer
> (that is not a troll or a useless if good faithed newbie). If you are aware
> of any successful GANs were the primary author was an IP, I'd like to look
> at them. I'd hypothesize that:
>

But that wasn't the point raised.  The point raised was not: can IP
addresses successfully navigate Wikipedia process?  It was: can IP
addresses successfully create content?  If you're focused solely on
process, then yes, correct.  You will not see IP addresses engaged their
because the rules generally prohibit it.

On the other hand, if the issue is can ip addresses create content, then it
appears to me, yes, they can create content and do so successfully without
getting their content rolled back.  They are an important group.  in the
area I write in, between 10% and 35% of all edits to articles appear to be
made by IP addresses.  (Most of them based on the regional interest for the
topic.)  They often include information that has improved articles and can
learn sourcing.  This is not always the case, but happens often enough that
their editor value should be considered.
-- 
twitter: purplepopple
blog: ozziesport.com
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