At 08:34 PM 8/13/2009, wjhon...@aol.com wrote: >"Please don't contentiously edit the article" applies to all editors, >not just experts. So I can't see the need for this distinction you >think should exist. I'm still not seeing what you want here clearly. > >I certainly hope you wouldn't be able to get community consensus to >treat experts as having a WP:COI If a conflict-of-interest means >"you're smart we don't want smart people" than we're really sunk.
Absolutely that is not what it means. It means that we want "smart people" to *advise us,* not control us. By the way, on the subjects I care about, this would mean absolutely no contentious editing in the article, but more serious participation in Talk, because I would claim expertise, enough to take me out of the neutral editor category. Experts aren't neutral! (not usually, anyway, where there is significant controversy). However, they know what we need to know in order to determine neutral text. How in the world would I gain a community consensus for a stupid idea? Okay, "applies to all editors." Come on, great theory, absolutely not common practice where controversy exists! Not contentiously editing would mean 0RR or 1RR. But there would be rapid mechanisms for a declared expert to get help. The point is to both clearly respect, and make that real, and, at the same time, contain expertise. What we have now is experts owning articles, sometimes. It can get very ugly, in both directions, it depends on how popular the expert is. We block and ban them, or we enable their ownership, both happen. A judge who happens to be an expert in a controversial field where there is significant controversy would likely recuse if a case involving that field arose.... It is, indeed, the opposite of what we might think at first. _______________________________________________ WikiEN-l mailing list WikiEN-l@lists.wikimedia.org To unsubscribe from this mailing list, visit: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l