Registered means has created a user account.

Confirmation can be done manually or automatically. From memory, it occurs 
automatically after 10 acceptable edits (I presume this means not-reverted 
edits) and/or 4 days after creating the user account. I think these values were 
chosen because past experience shows us that vandals have very little patience 
and tend to vandalise within their first few edits or first few days so anyone 
who gets past these milestones probably has good intentions. Confirmation is 
done manually if the user needs the right to create articles sooner than the 
automatic process would otherwise assign it; this situation usually arises at 
edit-a-thons where new participants always have good intentions (I've never 
seen a vandal come to an event). Administrators and those users who are 
designated event coordinators (e.g. me) have the ability to confirm an account 
earlier if there is some good reason.

Where is more information about policy changes in Wikipedia? Good question. 
After 14 years on-wiki, policies change without my knowledge all the time. It 
is a very common complaint that policy change takes place without adequate 
notification to affected WikiProjects, etc, so people can be aware of the 
proposal and participate in the discussion. And I suspect this situation suits 
a lot of people who know they are pushing through an unpopular change. There 
are lots of places where policy changes can be discussed and consensus reached, 
so it's hard to monitor all of them. Even using a watchlist, some discussion 
pages are so active, you just cannot keep watching them (when many of the page 
changes are not of any significance). We lack an effective notification system 
of issues at a higher level than "page change". There is an expectation that 
significant discussions should be drawn to the attention of others, but somehow 
this doesn't always happen.

Does the policy work? Yes and no. Very few articles survive the Articles for 
Creation process. If you review there (as I have done), you realise pretty 
quickly that new users almost always create articles about living people and 
current organisations, many of which appear to run-of-the-mill, e.g. a local 
dental practice group, a financial planner, etc. Although you usually have no 
concrete evidence (unless their user name is the same or a variant of the 
article title), nonetheless you tend to suspect this is people writing about 
themselves or their organisation and that there is conflict of interest and 
promotional intent. Some of them are well-written according to our Manual of 
Style, which tends to make you suspect undisclosed paid editing could be 
involved. So faced with the deluge of such articles, the reviewer quickly 
becomes conditioned to click "not accepted - insufficient citations to reliable 
sources" (which is code for an option you don’t get "I really doubt this is an 
encyclopaedic topic"). While the user can revise it and resubmit the draft, it 
generally gets rejected again and again. Eventually the user gives up and the 
draft is deleted after six months inactivity. Because the reviewing at AfC is 
rather soul-destroying (or so I find), reviewers decide to do something else 
with their time than monitor this stream of CoI dross, and so AfC is 
perpetually short of reviewers and there is usually a huge backlog of AfC 
reviews pending (which further discourages the contributing user). So back to 
the question of "does this policy work?". The answer is Yes it works in that it 
protects Wikipedia from content we do not want. The answer is No it doesn't 
work as genuine good faith users attempting to create an article on a topic 
that probably is encyclopedic are not noticed and given genuine assistance due 
to the conditioning of the reviewers and we lose those well-intentioned people 
as contributors because of this bad experience. It also burns out a lot of AfC 
reviewers along the way. What's the way to fix it? I wish I knew.

Kerry

-----Original Message-----
From: Wiki-research-l [mailto:wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On 
Behalf Of Haifeng Zhang
Sent: Saturday, 10 August 2019 4:48 AM
To: wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: [Wiki-research-l] Question on article creation policy

Dear folks,

I'm checking the Article Creation page 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Article_creation), and it says:


The ability to create articles directly in mainspace is 
restricted<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:ACPERM> to autoconfirmed 
users, though non-confirmed users and non-registered users can submit a 
proposed article through the Articles for 
Creation<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_creation> 
process, where it will be reviewed and considered for publication.


Anyone knows when the restriction (e.g., registered and auto-confirmed) become 
effective? I tracked the past revisions of the page but found no clue. A more 
general question is: where to find information about policy changes, e.g., 
article creation, in Wikipedia?


Thanks,

Haifeng

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