"Imagine how nerve-racking — terrifying, even — tweeting would be if it [tweeting] was immutable and irrevocable?" Twitter reportedly told the OSF. "No one user is more deserving of that ability than another. Indeed, deleting a tweet is an expression of the user’s voice." [1]
Curious how Big Internet protects individual privacy when it suits them (Twitter, above, many other when NSA back-office feeds were disclosed) and is against it when doesn't (Google on Right to be forgotten, Kotaku on hacking Ashley Madison).
How do these flexible standards fit with the movement's protection of privacy (WP:BLP and the NSA case)? And does it help to have notable proponents of the movement condemning "Right to be forgotten" (which be it noted is far narrower than Google or its mouthpieces implied)?
All the best: Rich Farmbrough, 16:39, 24 August 2015 (UTC).
Well there are a bunch of things going on here. First lets dispose of "an inalienable right that is self-evident and God-given". There is no society and no religion or denomination that does not alienate the right right to free speech to some extent. Indeed two of the ten commandments limit speech. Now we have various questions of "when to speak and when be silent" some of these are morally simple, some are morally difficult. For example someone knowing a secret that would have turned the Cold War into a hot war, if bruited about would have a moral imperative to be silent. Conversely someone discovering a cheap and effective treatment for colo-rectal cancer would have a pretty clear moral imperative to speak. However if we know something to the detriment of a person, we are in a grey area. The greyness is darkened or lightened by the surrounding culture and legal framework (as well as the extent of our knowledge). For example a revelation of adultery in some cultures will put the adulterators in clear mortal peril. In particular I think it's worth comparing the law regarding employment in the UK and the US, in general terms. Effectively in the US an employer can discharge his employees on whim - excluding certain narrow restrictions. Conversely in the UK it is hard (at least theoretically) to fire someone, unless certain fairly narrow conditions are met. In effect your "high minded employee" is high mined by legal coercion. There are many cases of people losing their jobs in the US that would never happen in the UK - "donglegate" is a good example. If you read the book "Arrest-proofing Yourself" you will see many cases where people have been passed over for employment, or fired, because of an arrest which was totally without foundation and did not result in any charges let alone conviction. This is possible because of the combination of a liberal publishing of arrest data, and a liberal scope to fire people. Now I was perhaps guilty of making too many points in my original post. Let me separate them here:
All the best: Rich Farmbrough, 15:31, 27 August 2015 (UTC).
The editing participation numbers for July are UP IN THE USUAL PLACE. Continuing a trend, the key metric, Very Active Editors (100+ edits in the month), is up once again in 2015. The July 2015 count (3,399) not only topped anemic July 2014 (3,024), but also beat July 2013, July 2012, and July 2011 — that is, a five year high for the month of July. No month has had a higher count of Very Active Editors on English-WP since August 2012. This further illustrates the lack of any provable connection between falling site traffic due to the Google Knowledge Box and rejiggering of some of their search results on the one hand and core editing participation at En-WP on the other.
The same general pattern for all projects combined is showing, with the losses showing in terrible July 2014 not only completely erased in July 2015, but with the July 2013 figure being eclipsed as well. Just about every language Wikipedia with 100 or more Very Active Editors showed a gain over previous month figures for 2014, with the Italian WP being the sole instance of decline. The growth of Spanish WP was particularly worthy of note, with the July Very Active Editor count at Es-WP (513) narrowly missing the all time high (July 2009, 522).
If WMF was actually tracking account names of Very Active Editors each month, we could observe whether there is new growth taking place or whether older, somewhat active editors are becoming more active. As it stands now, we can only guess. This is a longstanding complaint of mine, of course. —Tim Davenport /// Carrite (talk) 16:15, 25 August 2015 (UTC)
Hello Jimbo, I notice a high level of WP:OWN and WP:BLP-abuse by established authors and even a couple of admins (latest one in a long list is EvergreenFir) when it comes to anything feminism involves itself in or something which is related to feminism.
As I told you on Twitter, but you are completely ignoring me it seems - there's a lot of cherrypicking and WP:OWNing. A lot of articles see sources blocked which are acceptable in other topics, but when it comes to feminism, suddenly are 'not OK', even if said sources are used before by the blocking editors. Worse yet, several blocking editors have openly declared that 'the narrative for this page has been determined, and it's a dead horse to beat now'. Yeah. Right. Then they mocked other editors by saying 'if you want to change that, edit in reliable sources'. When that's done, then they change and suddenly say 'Hey, this is WP:UNDUE' or 'Not an RS'. In the meanwhile a few hundred books full of RS-links have been blocked and scrapped, yet when you complain about it, the old thing pops up that people say 'WP:UNDUE' when you attempt to give more room to the opposing view of what is being said in the Wiki article. It is really time to clear out this mess, because without it Wikipedia really becomes the opposite of it's goal - a Wiki for everyone to edit which is on the level of a real encyclopedia. Right now, for non-controversial topics it is in general, but for the rest, it is totally not, and especially when it comes to feminism. MicBenSte (talk) 07:55, 27 August 2015 (UTC)
I have edited about Edward Snowden and a 2015 award in Norway and details about his asylum application which are being uncovered (one month before local elections in Norway). After that has happened, one wikipedian who I have previously raised questions about on your page, is making negative waves (SPI). I would like to point out that edit "Looie496 (talk) 16:00, 19 June 2015 (UTC)" has indirectly given me a recommended reading list of wikipedia topics. And now i am being targeted for editing on some of those topics, by the first mentioned wikipedian. --Gazprompt (talk) 23:37, 28 August 2015 (UTC)
"Articles with shorter titles tend to get cited more often than those with longer headers, ..."
—Wavelength (talk) 17:29, 26 August 2015 (UTC)
I was reading the Science NYTimes section yesterday and came across a short essay, The Widening World of Hand-Picked Truths (http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/25/science/the-widening-world-of-hand-picked-truths.html) that made me think a lot about several long-lasting disputes on the project that concern science vs. beliefs based in a person or group's experience and the "truth" they see. Here is one of the ending paragraphs:
I think articles like this are helpful in understanding these are not just content battles on Wikipedia but larger cultural shifts in accepting subjective reality over mainstream objective arguments. Liz Read! Talk! 20:54, 26 August 2015 (UTC)
Here's a biographical article in dire need of improvement with copious available sourcing out there: William Lawrence Scott. Carrite (talk) 18:52, 30 August 2015 (UTC)
WikSearch (at http://wiksearch.com) "is an experimental interface for finding Wikipedia articles". —Wavelength (talk) 19:23, 31 August 2015 (UTC)
Would you allow me to pick your brain on an issue that has arisen with the War in Donbass article? Recently, a site called bs-life.ru (which has been claimed to be a "respected" news site based in Moscow) removed a section from a piece that suggested over 2,000 Russian soldiers had died fighting in Ukraine, a figure that wildly contrasts with much more modest estimates from Western experts. This was reported on by some Ukrainian outlets as the Russian government censoring an accidental leak of their long-denied involvement in that war and this was repeated in a Forbes contributor piece, prompting it to spread to numerous "reliable sources" such as The International Business Times and The Independent. Subsequently it was added as fact to the Wikipedia article on the ongoing conflict. Though it has since been modified to put it at the top of a range, Wikipedia still lends credence to the figure by including it in the article's infobox.
I feel it is crucial that here on Wikipedia we take care in how we handle this kind of information, especially as it concerns an ongoing conflict. One problem is the original source, bs-life.ru, is highly dubious. An Associated Press correspondent in Moscow dismissed the site as fake as did Bloomberg contributor Leonid Bershidsky, who previously ran several major business news outlets in Russia. None of the "reliable sources" reporting this claim have been able to independently verify the original claims made on the site, in part because the site is not providing its alleged sources. It appears the site's design is using a readily available site template unaltered and the site does not list any contact information, staff, or address, but instead has a contact form that has been answered by a single person via e-mail claiming to be a representative of the site. No outlet appears to have found any more details about the operators of the site, including any details about the "representative" of the site. StopFake.org, a site devoted to exposing false reporting on the conflict in Ukraine and typically biased against Russia, has done a detailed work-up declaring the site a fraud and stating the information is fake.
Despite all the above being pointed out in an ongoing discussion on the article's talk page, established editors have insisted that because the casualty figures have been reported by reliable sources they can only be removed if other reliable sources cast the same doubts on these figures. They have also declared criticism of the reliability of this information on the talk page as engaging in "original research" and thus prohibited. For me the reliability of the sources reporting it does not negate the questionable nature of the original source given that its claims have not been independently verified and thus I believe the figures should be removed. Is it your opinion that these other editors are correct and, despite the original source's dubious reliability, the mere fact that reliable sources have repeated the figures means they should be given credence in a prominent part of the article on an ongoing conflict until other reliable sources rebut the claims?--The Devil's Advocate tlk. cntrb. 21:00, 30 August 2015 (UTC)
Here's another scenario I've come across before. The source of the reports in the reliable sources has one fact wrong, and the author or connected person contacts us (through OTRS or other channels) to tell us that there is a mistake, and all our sources are actually wrong. What should we do then? Mdann52 (talk) 21:06, 31 August 2015 (UTC)
"My comment was merely a corollary to the last portion of Jimbo's statement: "It has to be said that encouraging thoughtful editorial judgment does not endorse us simply making up whatever we like, or excluding reliable sources just based on not liking what they say."
A while ago, but not out of memory, there was a controversy over "verifiability, not truth", raising the question of what to do if something is verifiable, but we don't think it's true. There, Jimbo thought that just because something comes from a reliable source doesn't mean that we must include it. I think there's a conflict between that and what Jimbo's saying here; he's basically reversing his stance on "verifiability, not truth". Either "reliable source" trumps "I don't think it's true", or it doesn't. Ken Arromdee (talk) 18:26, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
A few years have passed.... Count Iblis (talk) 15:05, 31 August 2015 (UTC)
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Hi Jimbo,
I've been thinking a lot about what you said, and while I sincerely and deeply appreciate you taking a firm stand against misogyny, I wonder if you can imagine how your words ring hollow when so many more women are harmed by supply side trickle down economics. Do you have any evidence that supply side economics are more reputable than homeopathy? Because it is my considered opinion that, firstly, they are identically reputable, and secondly, that your refusal to repudiate supply side economics damages far more women in far more pernicious ways. I would be remiss if I didn't ask you to say the same things about supply side trickle down as you have said about homeopathy.[13] EllenCT (talk) 06:39, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
Re: Denmark. Homogeneous societies all seem happier than heterogeneous ones. Economics is not specifically the key ingredient. ([14] inter alia) Iceland was still "happy" during economic disaster. Bhutan in 2006 was listed as "very happy" under an absolute monarch. Collect (talk) 22:11, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
My name got mentioned somewhere up there. So... supply side economics? First, you got to be precise what you mean by that. Obviously pretty much every economist in the world thinks that stuff that happens with the supply of goods and services matters. So that by itself doesn't make one a "supply-side economist". In fact, the not-so-well known fact is that there's no such thing as "supply-side economics". The term and the movement were essentially invented by journalists, such as Jude Wanniski. It was never an academic phenomenon nor was it ever accepted by the profession (a few cranks aside).
What is "supply side economics" then? It essentially has two components. One is that increases in incomes/wealth of the rich translate into increases in incomes/wealth for the poor. The answer to whether that is true or not is actually "it depends". Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
The other part is the proposition that cutting taxes stimulates labor supply and capital investment to such an extent that overall revenue actually rises. This is known as the Laffer curve. It's an idea that's sometimes floated around that "tax cuts pay for themselves". This is actually a theoretical possibility - if tax rates are close to 100%, nobody wants to work or invest, so cutting them might increase tax revenue. However real world evidence overwhelmingly suggests that modern economies are nowhere near this "flip point" (see the article). So while theoretically possible, empirical data relegate this proposition to fringe crankery.Volunteer Marek (talk) 16:42, 2 September 2015 (UTC)
@Jimbo Wales: where would you like this moved? [18] and [19] are WP:PRIMARY, not secondary sources. May I suggest Talk:Growth accounting? I want you to know that I intend to hold you to your easily inferred goal to maximize the productivity of women, and I am sure you would expect nothing less of me. If I am mistaken, please let me know. EllenCT (talk) 01:08, 4 September 2015 (UTC)
Hello! You're a founder of Wikipedia, right? Thank you.--Humanlog (talk) 19:51, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
This is interesting. It seems the WMF has relented with regard to Flow and has finally decided to take a more collaborative approach with the community. Of course, what form this work will take will be important and there is no indication how it will work out. However, the fact that, even if fully a year after the Media Viewer debacle, the WMF has decided not to force a massive breaking software change on the communities, is something to be welcomed. BethNaught (talk) 22:36, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
I have been harassed, bullied, blocked, and now about to be banned from creating articles because another editor claims that I am creating articles only to gain a "high score" for article creation (see Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#Dolovis and page creation problems). Such a claim is false and ridiculous, but is being supported by a small aligned group who have been harassing me for years. Since when has the prolific creation of sourced articles on notable topics been deemed a disruptive activity on Wikipedia? I am a good faith editor who firmly believes in the Wikipedia project. No wonder good editors are leaving Wikipedia in droves. Dolovis (talk) 16:07, 2 September 2015 (UTC)
The article on the United States Air Force started as
United States Air Force is the branch of the United States armed forces devoted to aircraft.
this is not about stubs (or as they are called these days, sub-sub-stubs) - or it certainly shouldn't be. It's about creating a large number of NN stubs, creating copyvios and other disruptive editing. I haven't been through Dolovis' contributions so I can't say whether the claims are valid or not, but I have read the claims and they are certainly grounds for concern if they are valid. All the best: Rich Farmbrough, 04:08, 3 September 2015 (UTC).
I first posted this on the talk page of the article Barefoot doctor, what I believe to be a significant article, at least potentially. It doesn't really belong there. I don't know where it belongs, but I believe it deserves a hearing. I copy/pasted it here, to see what you think.
[copy/paste from TalkPage of Barefoot doctor]
"Coco Dong is gone. Coco Dong made one edit, which was reverted, and never attempted to contribute to this project again. His writing was weak. He didn't copy-edit his work, and he left no spaces between sentences. Not ONE space, like many who are accustomed to blogs and email. NONE. Butted each sentence up against the period of the previous sentence. His contribution was his own personal observation. WP:OR, without a doubt. None of these things are acceptable in an encyclopedic article on this project. But his/her voice was authentic. Listening to it, you could almost smell the rice paddies. (Is that a racist remark? It's not intended that way. Maybe rice fields are more Vietnam than China. I don't know.) Coco Dong was never welcomed to en.Wikipedia. No explanation was given for his revert. Maybe I'm maudlin. Maybe not. Coco Dong spoke, wrote, and read at least two languages. Probably more. He could use a computer, or he never would have found this article. I find this unacceptable. In certain precincts there is conversation about encouraging new editors. "Don't bite the newbies!" I've heard more than once. I am a very stubborn, hard-headed person at times, and I got through my first edits/reversions by main force and muleishness. I started out blanking pages. That was not my intent, but I did it enough times that I believe I was blocked for a time. I persisted, and I learned. But I can speak and write (and read) tolerably well. I would argue that this is a LARGE project, with a LARGE need for manpower. I read messages on talk/project pages often which are written not much better than Coco Dong. I would argue that we don't know what training, what knowledge, what native skills and abilities he/she brought to the table, and now, three years later, we aren't likely to. Be patient with our ESL brothers and sisters. Try to spare them a little time. I once knew a family of Dongs. I assumed from the first that Coco Dong was a pseudonym, but possibly not. In south-central China the name may be quite common. "Coco" I don't know about.This is what he/she wrote [5Nov2012]:"+ What the most inportant things that barefoot doctors left fot us is the spirit of being a doctor.People in backcountry treat 'barefoot doctors' as angels because they are a group of people who really take care of poor people and serve them from the bottom of their heart.According to the medical institution in 21 centruy,wards of hospotals are more and more sumptuousness,fee of medicine is more and more high,this inappropriate medical institution makes the relationship between doctors and patients more contradiction.People around the world miss the spiritual core of barefoot doctor———sincere."This is not encyclopedic. It could be polished up and lipsticked, but it would still be WP:OR. But there is value here. I don't know where this belongs. Not on this talk page, either, but SOMEWHERE. We threw away Coco Dong. We shouldn't throw away this sentiment, as well. That's all I'm saying."
Thank you for your time and consideration. Rags (talk) 13:39, 4 September 2015 (UTC)
@Ragityman:, I think you are reading too much into this. It is a shame when a contributor leaves because of Wikipedia, but you welcomed the user and explained civilly why they were reverted: nothing more needed to be done. Per Special:Statistics, there are 26,107,151 accounts registered with Wikipedia at the time of writing. Per Wikipedia:Autoconfirmed, last year only 1.4 million users were autoconfirmed, which usually means making 10 edits, and 4 or more days passing. So 90-something percent of people who register an account with Wikipedia make less than 10 edits, if any. Rubbish computer 17:33, 4 September 2015 (UTC)
@Rubbish computer:, No, you saw my welcome, which I copy/pasted YESTERDAY in case he/she ever revisits his talk page. I say revisits, but the page was uncreated. There was never a welcome. Maybe the policy is to welcome only after autoconfirmed. I don't normally welcome anyone, so I've never bothered to learn. BUT an instant, unexplained revert is a welcome of another sort. @JzG|Guy: no, if this person is a "Dr. Dong", I know nothing about it. What happened to "assume good faith"? Are we getting a little jaded? Maybe someone needs a wiki-break. I never knew anything about a "barefoot doctor" until I found the article yesterday, or the day before. The Dongs I knew were a chef and his family, who ran a Chinese buffet restaurant. You know, Big Ugly Fat Folks Eating Together. Buffet. But I did get the idea from them that there are others named Dong, possibly many others. Rags (talk) 19:17, 4 September 2015 (UTC)
@Ragityman: As they've made helpful edits they can be welcomed. My point about autoconfirmed users is that the vast majority of users make very few, if any, edits, so a huge number leave all the time after making, say, one edit. You sort of have a point, this should have been explained on their talk page. There is an option with Twinkle to welcome users who make various types of edits that get reverted, including original research, so reverting and welcoming is often done. However, if the edit is unacceptable, it should be reverted. Maintaining, expanding and improving the encyclopedia is ultimately the most important thing here.
There is a good study topic: compare retention rates of those whose first improper edits are simply reverted vs those whose first improper edits are reverted and an explanation/welcome posted on the page. -- TRPoD aka The Red Pen of Doom 21:49, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
A now inactive administrator setup a rule where only accounts with 500 edits could edit the talk page of an article. I've been trying to get a grasp on the situation, but out of nowhere the people who've been editing this article all seem to be showing up to defend this rule. They started this after I pointed out this rule they've been abusing to keep out new editors isn't allowed by the ArbCom ruling or discretionary sanctions they've used to justify it.
The only page protections allowed by the rules are full and semi-protection. The rules also explicitly say that new editors should be welcomed. Of course, they are saying all rules should be ignored in order to justify violating the rules.
If that is the case then I hope you can ignore all rules and rescind this unique and unjustified sanction. I have little faith that putting this on any sort of appeal board will result in a fair and open ruling on the subject because of the incredible briskness at which multiple involved editors magically appeared from the void telling me that I shouldn't even bother and that they can guarantee that the appeal won't be successful.
This guarantee is extremely odd in its certainty and certainly chilling to anyone else wanting to edit. Saigo no Yume (talk) 22:15, 7 September 2015 (UTC)
Rules:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Arbitration_Committee/Discretionary_sanctions
Page restrictions7.5
Any uninvolved administrator may impose on any page or set of pages relating to the area of conflict semi-protection, full protection, move protection, revert restrictions, and prohibitions on the addition or removal of certain content (except when consensus for the edit exists). Editors ignoring page restrictions may be sanctioned by any uninvolved administrator. The enforcing administrator must log page restrictions they place.
{{ds/editnotice}}
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case/GamerGate#Remedies
"(vii) Discretionary sanctions permit full and semi-page protections, including use of pending changes where warranted, and – once an editor has become aware of sanctions for the topic – any other appropriate remedy may be issued without further warning."
Nowhere does it allow an administrator to stop entire classes of editors from participating in talk page discussions. In fact, the discretionary sanctions rules specifically say NOT to chase away new editors. Saigo no Yume (talk) 22:45, 7 September 2015 (UTC)
Wikipedia is obviously a project in turmoil, on its last legs. If this were a serious, vibrant project, I would expect much better quality trolling. Instead, we have this boring rehash (as well as a boatload full of people who need to learn the first rule of trolls). I give it six months until WMF decides to shut the whole thing down out of boredom. --JBL (talk) 02:37, 8 September 2015 (UTC)
In case folks missed it, see
One thing that is particularly notable here is the repeated use of the term "extortion" e.g. "charging prices of roughly $30 a month for what amounts to a protection and extortion racket" in Fusion.
What is described certainly strikes me as extortion or racketeering but I don't think anybody directly involved in the banning of the socks has used either term yet.
I'm sure there will be more soon. Smallbones(smalltalk) 18:22, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
""give us $30 a month or we will vandalise your article" " Sounds like something SPECTRE would do, only the price would naturally be $1 million not $30 ;-)♦ Dr. Blofeld 06:08, 2 September 2015 (UTC)
The articles created by these socks are almost entirely companies and people too minor for Wikipedia articles. Virtually all have been speedily deleted. A business built on evading Wikipedia notability rules cannot be "driven underground," because by virtue of their business model they must be underground. If brought above ground they fail. Thus the only approach is the one taken by the Foundation. Figureofnine (talk • contribs) 21:05, 2 September 2015 (UTC)
Extortion (also called shakedown, outwrestling, and exaction) is a criminal offense of obtaining money, property, or services from a person, entity, or institution, through coercion. It is sometimes euphemistically referred to as a "protection racket" since the racketeers often phrase their demands as payment for "protection" from (real or hypothetical) threats from unspecified other parties.
Hello Jimmy. I'm watching your "State of the wiki" talk for Wikimania 2015. There you said that "Venezuela government controls almost all the newspapers and television stations". Where did you get that idea?
That is a typical hoax repeated in many places. Here I gathered some info into two tables, using data from Wikipedia articles.
I hope that this data helps to clarify this topic. Regards. emijrp (talk) 14:45, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
If you assess the situation of Venezuela media using Reporters Without Borders (see #Criticisms of RWB) and The Washington Post... Well, then obviously you will have that impression. In the same fashion that you check who controls the Venezuelan newspapers/televisions, you should check who controls that NGOs and newspapers, and their interests.
I wonder if the world was worried about freedom of expression in Venezuela before Chavez/Maduro, when all the media was private in the hands of businessmen and there were no public ones. Obviously not, because the super-neutral mass media and NGOs didn't report about it.
For a real problem for freedom of expression, see Concentration of media ownership. Here is a table with the most linked mass media as references in Wikipedia:
Almost all them owned by rich people, big companies, holdings, banks, etc. I don't see any owned by the poor, do you? Where is their freedom of expression? --emijrp (talk) 16:38, 6 September 2015 (UTC)
Hi there! Thank you for your contributions to Wikipedia.
When editing Wikipedia, there is a field labeled "Edit summary" below the main edit box. It looks like this:
Edit summary (Briefly describe your changes)
Please be sure to provide a summary of every edit you make, even if you write only the briefest of summaries. The summaries are very helpful to people browsing an article's history.
Edit summary content is visible in:
Please use the edit summary to explain your reasoning for the edit, or a summary of what the edit changes. Thanks! sovereign°sentinel (contribs) 09:34, 11 September 2015 (UTC)