Hi, As of Oct 2015 and even older, we have a serious problem about misusing of Wiki policies by 2 partial Muslim users in WikiFa to make vandalism. Recently one another user joined them. But many high level users including semi-admin users (ویکیبان means users have the accessibility of Wiki Guard) protected the contents of two articles through rollbacks and reverses. Concurrently I was discussing with these 2 users in the talk page. They have many fallacies too. In Oct 2015 , 3 admins didn't participate in the request for WP:THIRD opinion by ping. Again no admin participated in the WP:RFC in May and June 2016. The partial users claimed repetitvely the contents of the articles are original research (however the contents are based on secondary sources). The solution is in the clear answer of three questions :
Note : The Farsi version of WP:MOSISLAM was completely distorted as of 2010 and was not the exact translation of the English version policy core and I translated it precisely (referred to the En Wiki permanent link in the edit summary) and the user reverted and warned me in my talk page and I reverted as vandalism back. He apologised and said he hadn't paid enough attention accurately to my correct edit and he said nothing about stopping vandalism in the articles : Farsi WP:MOSISLAM diff page
Note : I had other different historic and even religious historic contributions to Islamic articles too such as Islam, Smarkand Kufic Quran and ... which that time I was not partial in the view of these partial users but now they accused me to be partial and one of them (Bruno) had made many WP:distuptive edits either in talks and in the edit summary of articles and said many lies against me (personal attacks) and no admin even warned him. However I was right and admins could not warn me too (you may check my talk page too) but they didn't see the disruptions of the user Bruno too.
These 3 partial users remove the contents and sources only as original research : fa:کاربر:Sa.vakilian (Especially this user) and fa:کاربر:طاها and recently fa:کاربر:Bruno joined them.
Wiki is not a practice for WP:Democrocy but these Muslim users in the talk pages claim that they are 3 and I am just one in the discussions. This way the list of protector users is as below and I don't know why admins who protected the article twice and other protector users (those approved my contributions to be not original) wouldn't participate in the talks but they still protect the article :
And more... and admins :
The controversial articles :
What's the controversial contents? what were the sources?
fa:حمله اعراب به ایران (fa:Special:Diff/17357567/17361563) again in this article the user tries to remove the reliable source. In this case there is no new topic(section nor article) but there is an authorized sacred text shows clearly Ali advised Umar in the Muslim conquest of Persia (the only claimed thing in the article which is supported by the secondary reliable translate source of Nahjolbalaghe) and the partial user says that using of primary sources are forbidden anyway. The translate source is a famous high level official clergy such as Ansarian here and other official famous clergies too.
AFAIK we can use the reliable primary sources without interpretation or combination :
Any interpretation of primary source material requires a reliable secondary source for that interpretation. A primary source may only be used on Wikipedia to make straightforward, descriptive statements of facts that can be verified by any educated person with access to the primary source but without further, specialized knowledge. For example, an article about a novel may cite passages to describe the plot, but any interpretation needs a secondary source. Do not analyze, evaluate, interpret, or synthesize material found in a primary source yourself; instead, refer to reliable secondary sources that do so. Do not base an entire article on primary sources, and be cautious about basing large passages on them.
Sometimes I spend time to grow wiki (and there is a long list of translation TODOs) to help the free knowledge spread and have a better world impartially and it's very encouraging when I see people protect Wiki but when I see some users do any vandalism they want and no one prevent them , it is really discouraging. There are many users from other languages, concurrently, contributing to English and their language thus supervising the quality of important policies in other language Wikis will help to the quality of English Wiki, This is my response to the Wiki invitation https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:IdeaLab/Inspire
Tnx, my username is symbolic not fanatic I'm just from Earth --(fa:کاربر:IranianNationalist) IranianNationalist (talk) 06:30, 17 June 2016 (UTC)
The book Candid Creatures: How Camera Traps Reveal the Mysteries of Nature, by Roland Kays, has a collection of animal self-photographs captured by means of camera traps.
The book reminded me of recent discussions on this talk page about a monkey self-photograph. —Wavelength (talk) 20:26, 18 June 2016 (UTC) and 21:14, 18 June 2016 (UTC)
This is a reminder to readers to focus on Wikimania 2016, in Esino Lario, Province of Lecco, Lombardy Region, Italy, on June 22–23 (pre-conference), 24–26 (main conference) and 27–28 (post-conference), 2016. This week is preparation. -Wikid77 (talk) 05:31, 17 June 2016 (UTC)
I see it has been raining in Esino Lario today (Saturday), but the weather forecast is for dry, cool nights with mild days, around 58–79 °F (14–26 °C) for the week (see: Google: weather Esino Lario, Italy). -Wikid77 (talk) 15:29, 18 June 2016 (UTC)
I see the 2015 documentary took nearly 6 months to prepare:
On Wikimedia Commons, some 2015 session videos were posted, but I guess Youtube videos would be posted sooner. -Wikid77 (talk) 00:38/00:49, 20 June 2016 (UTC)
Hi Jimbo, just a quick question about your interpretation of fair use images of the recently deceased. We've had a few examples lately at WP:ITN (Reg Grundy, Sally Brampton, Jo Cox &c.) where a "fair use" image has been uploaded within moments of the passing of the individual in question, claiming fair use. A lengthy discussion has taken place at FFD during the course of which I managed to persuade a third party to release an image of Brampton under Creative Commons. A common argument has been propounded: "If this individual has died and no free image has been available up until now, it is safe to assume we can use a fair use image. As such, we can use a fair use image until such a time a free image is available". This seems to be now commonly accepted, in particular in the case of Cox who, despite being a very prominent and active MP, no free images appear to be currently available. As you are closer to WMF and have been actively engaged in the Cox image discussion, I wondered if you were able to give some guidance here. After all, if the "now they're dead, we can upload an image" argument seems to negate the use for "Pictures of deceased persons, in articles about that person, provided that ever obtaining a free close substitute is not reasonably likely. " (my emphasis) element of the Wikipedia:Non-free content criteria "policy with legal considerations". The Rambling Man (talk) 17:19, 18 June 2016 (UTC)
At this moment, a site-wide banner says: "You are invited to participate in a discussion regarding the safety of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) for human consumption." I invite all participants to perform a WWW search for GMO Myths and Truths and to study carefully the information in the pages listed in the search results. —Wavelength (talk) 16:38, 20 June 2016 (UTC)
I was interested in seeing if anyone has a subscription to The Times and could therefore read this recent article they ran about The People's Operator, as well as hearing Mr. Wales' response to it. Everymorning (talk) 00:41, 22 June 2016 (UTC)
Hello, I would like to ask, did Kremlin buy the ru-wiki or something? The russian wiki is clearly being used for Kremlin propaganda purposes, especially when describing the events that took place in Ukraine in 2014. Talking about the Crimea annexation and Donbass invasion, all Ukranian sovereign territories that are now being occupied by Russia. The russian wiki barely mentions russian military when describing those events. It's like making an article about WW2, without mentioning the German Army or Hitler. I tried to write in the "talk" pages for those articles, but was immediately blocked by moderators like Seryo93 and HOBOPOCC. 94.139.128.230 (talk) 21:20, 18 June 2016 (UTC)
If u read wiki-articles on Crimea Annexation and the War in Donbass, almost in every language, the main reason that is described for those events is the russian military intervention. The only exception is russian wiki. Russian wiki describes those events as Ukranian inner affairs. Which is ludicrious. Imaging an article about WW2 in USSR like this " suddenly in 1941 in USSR a lot of people started dying because of a lot of shooting and bombing, a lot of buildings and property were destroyed because a wide spread usage of explosives being used at that period"... without mentioning even once the cause of the destruction, the german army!!! This is what the russians are doing with Crimea Annexation and War in Donbass articles at ru-wiki. And the are protecting those articles very tightly, they erase any comments or remarks on the "talk" page. This is ridiculous. Especially moderators Seryo93 and HOBOPOCC.94.139.128.112 (talk) 04:44, 19 June 2016 (UTC)
Please see Media freedom in Russia and [3] for an example of the extent to which Russia controls Wikipedia. EllenCT (talk) 13:58, 19 June 2016 (UTC)
Listen, the best example is that the russian "Crimea Annexation"page is called "Crimea joining with Russian Federation". The events that are presented in the article is that the Crimea seceded from Ukraine, and then joined Russia. When in reality the russian troops with no insignia occupied the peninsula, blocked the ukranian forces, then had an illegal referendum and after positive result they annexed the peninsula. This is the objective truth, and this is how those events should be described: "Russian military occupation", "illegal referendum" and "Annexation". This is the objective truth no matter which language you use. But the russian wiki barely mentions the russian military, and claims that Crimea first seceded from Ukraine, and then joined Russia. Which is not true. It first was occupied by russia, and after illegal referendum was annexed. This event in our world can't be described as "normal" or "legal", when one country invades another without warning and annexes part of its territory. If USA tomorrow invades Mexico, occupies Tijuana,and after promising the local population green cards and american salaries, I'm pretty sure that 99 percent of the residents of Tijuana will vote for joining USA. But the Mexico state will never accept this and under international law the referendum will have no legal power, and Tijuana will be considered as "occupied" or "annexed" by USA, and not legally "seceded" from Mexico and "joined" the USA. See my point? This is the same with the Crimea story. You realy should look into that, and don't let ur great project Wikipedia to be used as russian propaganda channel.94.139.128.112 (talk) 21:21, 19 June 2016 (UTC)
The enwiki Donbass-invasion page is huge, with over 720 cites[!], while the Crimea-annexation page had 390 cites. See pages:
Other pages could be checked, as years ago the NAZI concentration camp pages (Bergen Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Treblinka) had been thin on the Ukrainian WP, but some ruwiki or ukwiki cites are in English, so wonder who would be slanting text. -Wikid77 (talk) 02:00, 20 June 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo, as a relatively new editor here, I want to second Tobby72's opinion that there is a strong anti-Russian bias in many articles at English Wiki. Considering that mainstream media in most English speaking countries is strongly biased anti-Russian, perhaps it's to be expected that the Russian viewpoint is treated as WP:FRINGE, and editors are striving to get such views represented at all. Meanwhile, intelligence agencies and corporations all over the world are trying to figure out how to influence Wikipedia, I don't believe it's just the Russians. JerryRussell (talk) 21:11, 22 June 2016 (UTC)
Why not contact the many content contributors you've lost over the years to the nasty editing environment. I dealt with several of the harassers but could never get any help. Years later some had been banned. Others remain. But the God king is badly out of touch with the experiences of the average editor. Really Jimbo you owe a lot of apologies to a lot of people who suffered and who you refused to help. Denial and defensivenss weren't the answers the project needed. Nor was sweeping problems under the rug. Floridarmy (talk) 16:46, 23 June 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo, should the Foundation participate in EFF's Day of Action on June 21 protesting the Department of Justice's proposed change to Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure to allow any government-friendly magistrate in any international law enforcement forum to authorize undisclosed remote searches of unlimited numbers of computers with a single warrant? EllenCT (talk) 13:58, 19 June 2016 (UTC)
An extremely detailed review of facts will show how Jimbo is not the problem but instead, for years, has advocated easier wp:RfA processes to authorize more admins to help users overcome harassment (or other problems for admin powers), but numerous good people have been rejected at wp:RfA, and the relatively few admins have ruthlessly hacked away at problems, blocked new users, and locked (or deleted) templates to lock-in bugs for years. More admins would allow more assistance for thousands of users, as "safety in numbers" with more admins to balance the power plays.
One RfA wannabe said he was certified to fix jet airliners but "could never become an admin" with the 2013 RfA rules. I have 2 degrees in computer science but have no permission to fix Lua script templates (some of which I helped develop before admin-locked). When the world was confused about the actual innocence of Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito in the 2007 murder of Meredith Kercher, Jimbo asked for more admins to please help moderate, unblock new users, or check prior admin actions, but guess how many admins were able to help Jimbo: NONE. Meanwhile, I was wp:topic banned about their slanted Meredith Kercher murder articles, but I can talk about how those articles were saved to provide wp:NPOV text: as for months Jimbo was the only force for reason, reading new sources, moderating talkpages, advising admins to refrain their harassment, and suggesting to reduce details in debated text.
So, @Floridarmy: I suggest to review the prior 7 years to see Jimbo has advocated to reduce harassment, increase civility, and give more people admin powers to combat tyranny against other users. Any questions about that? I strongly believe there is safety in numbers among groups of qualified people. -Wikid77 (talk) 11:00, revised 14:14, 24 June 2016 (UTC)
Hence, the wp:developers are studying ways to mega-reformat all pages every month (remember when "fork" was a bad word, and now it will be the way to get a new feature into thousands of pages before the end of next year). Many people do not understand "configuration management" on such a vast mega-scale (wikisearching the template-formatted output rather than static input pages) and are clueless about the avalanche of pages to come. We now see Google ever more unable to keep up with topics in pop culture, even from last year, because subdividing the billions of topics by category-search is the only way to index related pages without ignoring all the other topics people want to read ("no match found" for some famous songs from years ago, or a viral video).
However, meanwhile, so many Wikipedia users are being left helpless (or mistreated) because there are too few admins available to moderate problems among the "20 million topics" which people want to write, and many of those people see WP as a nasty editing environment where help comes too late, or not at all. Many notable topics are being deleted because people cannot get help writing those pages, while the limited admins see themselves as "deleters" not as "helpers" to userfy pages and explain policies. -Wikid77 (talk) 06:34, 25 June 2016 (UTC)
That is an interesting case as the page-protection of "Islamic calendar" to lock-in a painting of Mohammad. In such cases of controversial images, I would have expected the "no-consensus" result would be to remove the picture. Perhaps an RfC should be run to see if most people would agree to omit photos which inflame extreme controversy. Also, that page "Islamic calendar" seems overstuffed with excessive text, such as section "Converting Hijri to Gregorian date or vice versa" which should be a separate article page IMHO. -Wikid77 (talk) 10:19, 26 June 2016 (UTC)
You are all aware that this subthread was started by banned user Vote (X) for Change, right? --NeilN talk to me 15:18, 28 June 2016 (UTC)
As noted in the prior thread, we could consider a forked version of Wikipedia, but I think there then would be numerous follow-on debates over the proposed new policies which could further delay for many months, plus risk a new avenue for hack-edits or vandalism, unless the forked WP soon restricted editing of pages.
Meanwhile, the key issue of needing more active admins to moderate pages and revert/block bad edits would remain a crucial problem on the current Wikipedia. So, the forking of WP would not soon decide debates about disputed topics nor inappropriate photos (especially since many controversial images are hosted on Wikimedia Commons). Consequently, we are back to Jimbo's long-term advice to make wp:RfCs for adminship easier (which I think has been getting easier now), so more admins can moderate the debates to semi-protect pages, remove images, or block users who harrass others to force the results. -Wikid77 (talk) 03:51, 28 June 2016 (UTC)
Editing News #2—2016 Read this in another language • Subscription list for this multilingual newsletter
It's quick and easy to insert a references list.
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Whatamidoing (WMF) (talk), 21:09, 30 June 2016 (UTC)
Note: The content below is a repost of a comment I made here a week ago which no one responded to before it was archived. I hope to get a response from someone, preferably Mr. Wales, this time around.
I was interested in seeing if anyone has a subscription to The Times and could therefore read this recent article they ran about The People's Operator, as well as hearing Mr. Wales' response to it. Everymorning (talk) 19:12, 30 June 2016 (UTC)
This fellow remains censored from Wikipedia. Maybe now that he has an obituary in the New York Times you can include him? One of many subjects censored improperly by the gangs of bullies that roam here. Not right Jimmy, not right. Floridarmy (talk) 03:39, 28 June 2016 (UTC)
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/27/us/gerald-walpin-watchdog-fired-over-americorps-inquiry-dies-at-84.html# Floridarmy (talk) 03:40, 28 June 2016 (UTC)
So you thought the corrected calculations in {convert/2} came at the cost of a complete fork of the Lua script Module:Convert, but instead {convert/2} actually worked as a mere wp:wrapper template (or frontend) to {convert}, as so versatile and maintenance-free, that {convert/2} had calculated the correct precision with either the Lua {convert} or the prior markup-based {convert/old} during the past 4 years. But beyond correcting the calculations from {convert}, the {convert/2} wrapper could also correctly calculate 2 separate conversions spread across a sentence. An example would be a change in length, as 2 related values, old and new, within a sentence. See example:
Jimbo, do you see the isomorphism between arguments in [6] and talk page discussions as e.g. per [7]? Do you see the isomorphism between those and scripts of interacting agents in Lincos (artificial language)? Do you think a Lincos Wikipedia would be more valuable than Wikidata? Why or why not?
By the way, how was Wikimania this year? What was your favorite part? EllenCT (talk) 21:12, 30 June 2016 (UTC)
Meanwhile, I'm thinking my favorite part of the conference was you, Jimbo speaking like a 27-year-old (or even a college senior!), so ready to improve the world, and I had to do a double-take to check it was really you sounding so young again. Perhaps that is why people encourage your health, as you only live twice, to have 2 lifetimes, if you observe your health. In the session videos, I noted the Wikiproject Medicine strives for reliability, and I was stunned to hear the WP medical articles have become the preferred medical source for whole groups of readers. So I guess that is another accomplishment, to have facilitated such a change in the Internet medical world within 15 years. Keep it going, retire after age 90, and use the next 45 years to further transform the world. Let's hope these next years will be easier. -Wikid77 (talk) 09:51, 2 July 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo, would you please see [8] and [9]. How can we move forward on searching recent changes and making a unified WP:BACKLOG list? Do the people you are asking for endowment money know we don't have enough to do those things yet? How can the community help you make such improvements? EllenCT (talk) 15:19, 30 June 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo, if a benefactor who has not been involved in anti-competitive hiring practices agrees to donate $50 million, I will name my planned unified backlog list after them. Does that help? EllenCT (talk) 16:56, 30 June 2016 (UTC)
It seems like a toolserver fork of the wp:WikiBlame tool could search beyond one page, to check several pages in the wp:Recent_changes list, or perhaps a similar tool already exists. The 1-page Blame tool is connected under "View History" as see: "Search recent history" of User_talk:Jimbo. Also if spam-links have been suspected for days, then a wp:wikisearch of the internal wikitext could be run by quoted company name, as search: insource:"Acme donuts" (or similar). -Wikid77 (talk) 22:21, 3 July 2016 (UTC)
A related issue, for all wp:wikisearches, is the hunt for text containing unusual special characters (such as tilde "~") which the CirrusSearch might not be able to match during a search request. For years, even Google Search had been unable to match "2+2=4" due to a alphabetic-text bias which did not consider "+" nor "=" as significant text on a page, and as a mathematician, I just could not believe such anti-math bias continued for years. Consequently, I consider many of today's search engines to be in their infancy, even after 3 decades of should-do-better issues. -Wikid77 (talk) 02:31, 5 July 2016 (UTC)
Please restore my user and talk pages. Thank you. TimothyAxoy (talk) 17:32, 5 July 2016 (UTC)
Some concerns were raised here recently about alleged bias in the Russian (and possibly in the Ukranian) Wikipedia with respect to the recent conflict between the two countries. As promised, I spoke to people at Wikimania about this, and wanted to report back on what I heard. All remarks reported back under "Chatham House Rule".
The basic summary is that the people I spoke to (from all sides of the conflict) seem to agree that any notion that the Russian government has agents actively working to control what is in Russian Wikipedia directly are not likely true. Remember, the Russians have bravely stood against censorship threats for some time now and believe strongly in the open principles of Wikipedia.
It was pointed out in a way that I think people will find obvious from our experiences here in English Wikipedia that to directly enter Wikipedia as a propagandist on a high profile topic would be extremely problematic and difficult. Lots of people are watching and debating, and the debate centers around making sure to follow high quality sources. An agent would have to follow that train, and it's hard to see how any one person not known to the community for years could have a strong impact on that.
And here is the key: it's a lot easier to simply control the sources. This is a deeper philosophical problem that can't be solved by simply banning a handful of propagandists.
I am reminded of a conversation I had some years ago with the editor of a magazine in Russia. He was very skeptical of Wikipedia and said "If I want to change something in Wikipedia to be untrue, why don't I just offer $500 each to a group of Wikipedians to make it happen." I replied that it would be very hard to do that because news of it would inevitably leak out quite quickly and the users who agreed to do such a thing would be banned by the rest of the community quite quickly. No one person has enough power to make something like that happen. I also responded that it would be much easier to simply bribe him, the editor of a magazine, because due to the hierarchical nature of decisions in that context, he actually does have the power.
Speaking roughly, the situation right now in Russia is that the media is very largely reporting events in Ukraine very differently from the rest of the world's press. Many Russian people believe that the Western press is unfairly biased against Russia. This is the core root of the problem of different reporting in Russian Wikipedia versus other languages, not infiltration.
The solution to this has to come from within Wikipedia. I am unable to find the link at the moment but reference was made in a positive way to a Wikimedia Foundation funded project on conflict resolution in Ukraine, as well as to meetings and friendships between Russian and Ukrainian Wikipedians.
This is hardly all that can be said about this. I still think it would be quite interesting to see two or three core articles carefully translated in a high quality way from Russian and Ukrainian to English.--Jimbo Wales (talk) 08:47, 2 July 2016 (UTC)
With enwiki we have {{globalize}} to emphasize an article page should improve a broader wp:NPOV coverage with other world views, and that would encourage use of sources outside of state-controlled, or cultural-bias, sources. Especially, within a key section of an article, then any bias could be challenged to improve a specific section of slanted text, as with the globalize-tag below:
In that example globalize-tag above, the attention of fix-it editors could be pinpointed into a crucial section, to widen the viewpoints. For example, if a U.S. college student were accused of a crime in Italy, then the text could be expected to be nearly half-based on U.S. source cites, rather than all Italian court documents with the false rationale that U.S. sources would be overly pro-American while only Italian sources could be trusted to publish the "true" facts as established by Italian court decisions. Likewise if an Italian cruise ship capsized off the coast of Italy, with some U.S. passengers onboard, then the text could be expected to cite nearly half Italian sources to globalize the perspective on which details to highlight in coverage of the related events. For each other-language Wikipedia, a similar {globalize} template should be developed to help balance the text for wider, cross-world viewpoints. As we have seen on enwiki, some articles have been extremely biased for months/years by an effort to suppress source cites from other nations. -Wikid77 (talk) 04:18, 3 July 2016 (UTC)
As a follow-up, about balancing reference sources, if the subject were a multinational topic, then sources should be cited from several nations, such as coverage of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, as a topic involving many nations. Otherwise, sources from just a few nations might provide sufficient broad coverage of the related events. -Wikid77 (talk) 22:00, 3 July 2016 (UTC)
As a current example, if WP decides to have an article about Wisconsin (U.S.) student Beau Solomon, found in the Tiber River in Rome,(see: nyt) then the text should be half based on U.S. reliable sources and half on Italian documents, to avoid cultural bias in the coverage. -Wikid77 (talk) 22:33, 4 July 2016, +source 16:26, 5 July 2016 (UTC)
As usual, Jimbo, it seems you have noted an extremely major problem in WP article bias, with each nation's sources having various perspectives. Hence, the related bias problems include the following:
All such biases from cultures, organizations or terminology could potentially slant the wording of articles. The term "{{Globalize}}" might not fully address alternative views within one nation. -Wikid77 (talk) 15:42, 6 July 2016 (UTC)
The enwiki editors have used many sources to pinpoint details, in page "Hillary Clinton email controversy" but seem to have lost focus (dwelling on level of Secret classification) as missing the original issue of whether Clinton's email messages can all be retrieved eventually, for public review, per the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), such as read from a long-term archive.
The FBI (link: [11]) found the server(s) setup did not have long-term archival of email (where they found some old deleted messages in disk free space or "slack space"), and other State Dept personnel also failed to archive the related email as required by U.S. federal law, and meanwhile, an extensive analysis by newspaper The Washington Post (link: [12]), of so-called classified emails (or "up-classified") had confirmed what Clinton stated about ~2,100 emails not being classified, at the time, and instead written and sent by about 300 other personnel in various government branches, several of whom the newspaper interviewed (from partially redacted email) to confirm none of them used the tactic of stripping classified headers to send as non-classified email. Plus the 2 dozen emails ranked as "Top Secret" were withheld from the press for security and could not be cross-checked by the public for actual secrecy of content.
Instead of those broad perspectives, considering the related emails by hundreds of U.S. government employees and archives, the WP page seems to dwell on what Hillary Clinton said about the emails, rather than what did the emails say, who wrote them, and how many email messages were properly archived per FOIA regulations. The overall effect seems to be a bias in perspective, where the Wikipedia page cannot address the major issues because of the general focus on other details. So the Clinton-email article page has not yet mentioned the U.S. State Department's classified network ClassNet nor the DoD-State SIPRNet nor top-secret JWICS nor Clinton's use of hardcopy pages to read classified text, nor communication with foreign dignitaries as non-classified text. This situation is just an excellent example of perspective bias, beyond any bias in data presented by a nation's news media. -Wikid77 (talk) 01:37, 9 July 2016 +sources Wikid77 (talk) 09:05, 9 July 2016 (UTC)
A related, but minor, problem is the terminology bias when using the word "email" where the U.S. State Department also uses the term "cable" to indicate a message (after "trans-Atlantic cable"). That terminology difference could deter searches for related pages, but not a bias due to national control of sources. -Wikid77 (talk) 00:15, 12 July 2016 (UTC)
As this page (by his leave) often acts as a noticeboard for friendly notices...
There is currently a request for comment open to add a new user-right package with a set of content-related admin tools (NOT block or protect), requested through RfA-like process. I welcome everyone's thoughts on this. - jc37 01:41, 9 July 2016 (UTC)
There's 0% realistic chance of the proposal succeeding, so it's really flogging a dead horse. All various forms of unbundling have been utterly discussed to death; it's not gonna happen until Jimbo or WMF steps in, or possibly when Wikipedia disappears up its own bumhole, when it finally runs out of admins (and, possibly at the last minute, wakes up to the need to change).
One solution would be for Wales to enact his stated belief that adminship is "no big deal", but I think Wales' BOLD spirit has been eroded by the need to be a conservative public face. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.20.193.222 (talk) 16:00, 12 July 2016 (UTC)
Do you mind if i watch ur talk and periodically maintain it Just to help after u have done such great things! VarunFEB2003 (talk) 14:03, 13 July 2016 (UTC)
The old arXiv blog was a lot more fun to read than the present one. Count Iblis (talk) 20:40, 15 July 2016 (UTC)
Hey Jimbo do you think I am improving as an editor?[15]
EllenCT (talk) 02:58, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
The page "Gerald Walpin" was undeleted on 6 July 2016 per the June DRV, two weeks after the SUV accident in Manhattan. We found sources about him given awards or honors as a prominent NYC attorney, which could be added to the page. Vehicle stats estimate annual 4,700 U.S. pedestrian deaths in recent years, or average 91 killed per week, as up 15% since 2009, possibly due to increased mobile phone use in U.S. as "distracted walking" or distracted driving as trying to phone (read or text?) at intersections. Safety campaigns have advised, "Pick your head up and put the phone down" at crosswalks. Walpin was hit before noon and died in the hospital that day. -Wikid77 (talk) 14:47, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
Several other-language Wikipedias also have some pages about concrete barriers and barricades to deter traffic accidents and protect pedestrian walkways. There are numerous options to block vehicles, including many decorative concrete barriers as shown on Swedish Wikipedia (page: sv:Betongsugga) as safer rounded "bounce-off" obstacles, beyond the industrial Jersey barriers to be used around the Republican National Convention (RNC) in Cleveland, Ohio. Even a rectangular park bench can trip a person along sharp corners, so rounded barriers are also people-friendly for crowds. In the U.S. many (confused) people have driven into buildings or stores (several in stolen trucks to rob a store then ditch the truck), perhaps every day of the year. Many beach towns have dangerous walkways along the seawall boulevards or fast beach highways, where bicycles and pedestrians are at great risk. I think Alabama has decided to close some entire beach-area roads for exclusive use by bicycles and pedestrians, possibly because the severe, deadly risk from (distracted) vehicle traffic cannot be controlled any other way. Also, any roadside barriers, which would protect pedestrians along roadways, also create an impact hazard for distracted drivers (or bicycles), so there is a balance trade-off of pedestrian-versus-driver safety. However, the WP pages about barricades (in each language) could offer more about moving temporary barriers (by forklift?) to protect street festivals or farmer's markets during the active days. The RNC in Cleveland is installing staggered rows of Jersey barriers, as so many obstacles that even a large heavy truck would be stopped (or ruined), but allow pedestrians, bicycles, carts or prams to weave between the islands of barriers. These barriers are an important subject which WP is covering, and could help change the way the world will design roadways and festival areas in the future. -Wikid77 (talk) 15:31, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
A. Admin noticeboards are useless for new/newish users...they often bring legitimate complaints about the improper behavior of more established users and they are almost always treated either utterly contemptuously, ignored, or "boomeranged" (a concept/practice that needs to be highly curtailed)..this chases away newish editors from Wikipedia (I've seen it happen many times with my own eyes in only a few months time).. B. these noticeboards are patrolled by the same 4 admins (I exaggerate only slightly) who largely display this bias...again, chasing away new editors.. C. blocks are utterly arbitrary in both instatement and length...I've seen blocks for similar behavior mostly directed toward new editors that were for a period of hours or a period of weeks or a full month.. D. unblock requests are patrolled by the same 4 largely block happy admins (I exaggerate only slightly).. This all amounts to new editors being 'bitten' like crazy at Wikipedia currently...(and I'm talking about good-faith contributors or people with obvious potential to be good contributors). I've tried in the recent past to put forth some ideas/proposals via the established channels but a small group that is part of this established status quo follows me around and sees via various strategies that the conversation is ended..I do believe what's described above needs to be examined by the foundation as the people responsible for these problems are also largely in charge of seeing to any changes to the status quo due to the inherent mechanisms of Wikipedia..Sincerely, 68.48.241.158 (talk) 15:46, 9 July 2016 (UTC)
Indeed. That's why bringing things to Noticeboards is often unproductive. Same editors from the talk page who are being a problem just follow you there and create walls of text to keep neutral parties from wanting to participate in the drama or a discussion that is TL;DR. --David Tornheim (talk) 12:02, 11 July 2016 (UTC)
^He's correct, Mr. Wales, I have been harassed/blocked/stalked for even daring to make posts like the OP I made here on your talk page..the above admin's posts in this thread are alarming and indicative of the problem being discussed, so in that sense it's beneficial to see them here..68.48.241.158 (talk) 00:01, 12 July 2016 (UTC)
I once tried to broach the very idea you suggest; then was not its time, but I do agree. In my opinion, Wikipedia needs an organ that functions on a level par with the Inspector General's relationship with the government it serves. Best regards.--John Cline (talk) 08:51, 12 July 2016 (UTC)
For a brief case study: incredibly, the issues I describe in the OP exactly played out just again to me. See my contribution history beginning July 15th at 10:48 going forward until blocked. You would have to read the entire initial ANI thread for context, the new ANI thread I was forced to then create and the activity on my talk page related to these..(notice the inability of most involved to even be able to properly comprehend the situation at hand due to apparent lazy/poor reading skills..) Anyway, potentially helpful to examine...(perhaps watch my account too as I expect continued retaliation)..and probably several editors will quickly be here to mischaracterize the situation so look at it all yourself (you'll note the usual suspects also referencing my previous blocks, none of which were proper..but, again, as I explained above it would just be logistically impossible for me to explain all that here)..68.48.241.158 (talk) 18:55, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
Although the wp:ANI sanction-decision process has been difficult to reform, the wp:developers could create software gadgets to impose a broader judgment process by the operation of voting tools. Beyond the distraction of creating a wp:FLOW message system, after the slow wp:LiquidThreads, the WMF could actually implement tools with new features to invite a quorum of uninvolved users to decide the fate of new editors who oppose wp:TAGTEAMs of entrenched editors trying to force false consensus of decisions. The WMF would merely develop a voting tool, released to allow any targeted user to request a broad vote, and then finally a larger "mob" would help decide issues rather than just an insider team. Such use of computer tools, to broaden decision procedures, has been used for decades in other organizations to break deadlocks where organizations could not otherwise improve decision systems. -Wikid77 (talk) 22:52, 13 July 2016 (UTC)
See Wikipedia:Quickpolls. This was piloted back in 2005 but discontinued six months later. --MuZemike 06:08, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
Another way the wp:developers could radically alter WP edit-battles would be by implementing some per-user, per-page edit-limit tools, such that the suspected editors would be restricted to only "10 edits" per week/month to the specific page(s). In prior years, WP has had problems with editors pruning pages to remove crucial details by soon making 100 minor "innocent" edits, to perform "death by a thousand cuts" to cleverly slant an article by partially removing many opposing facts. A related problem is rapidly edit-conflicting a page (to deter other editors) by edit-saving various small changes every minute to conflict-out other users for many minutes or an hour. To improve tool efficiency, such per-user edit-limits could be based on user complaints of excessive edits, rather than limit every user who edits a chosen page. At the limit, rather than an admin needing to warn (or block) the editor, instead the edit-limit tool would deny access to edit-mode of the page (perhaps as a combination of usernames and related IP addresses). Obviously such edit-limits could be bypassed (with effort), but in general, computer-run limits tend to have the expected effect on curtailing the unwanted user actions. -Wikid77 (talk) 15:13, 15 July 2016 (UTC)
After many questionable claims of U.S. police "bias" against blacks (not proven by facts), there has been a growing collection of wp:RS reliable sources (on the Internet) to remind people how police, for decades, have killed far more whites than others (hello?). However, due to racial tensions in the U.S. (and related regions), we need more encyclopedic text to provide a fuller view of the issues, such as "why" U.S. police have killed more whites than others, plus comparisons of anecdotal evidence to show how unarmed people of other races have also been killed by U.S. police (similar to the rare black shootings), while also emphasize how many police are killed by suspects rather than the other way round. One of the sources of confusion has been the inclusion of Latinos (under "Hispanics") as termed "white" when reporting confrontations with law enforcement officials. This whole subject needs careful study, to avoid the dismal public conclusion, "Hey, Wikipedia seemed to attract informed people, but how sad the racists have taken control" (let's avoid that result). Meanwhile, one source began to illustrate the dangers of claiming "police bias" as with the 2015 data showing 990 shootings (Washington Post: 2015, or 2016), with 948 male but just 42 female in 2015 (as 22-to-1, 948/42), as if the police have an imagined anti-male hatred bias to target men 22x more than women (not true), when actually other factors affect why men are confronted by police much more than women (not as gender bias). Previously, there had been few sources to cover these conclusions, but now in 2016 more sources are being published to dispel such myths of U.S. police bias, and WP will be able to give fuller, encyclopedic coverage tied to sources, plus include how many police officers are killed in comparison. -Wikid77 (talk) 16:20, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
As many people have said, this isn't really the right place for this discussion. The only thing that I'll note is that a serious analysis needs to compare like-for-like by controlling as many confounding variables as possible. But this is difficult and certainly beyond the scope of our work as encyclopedists and well into the realm of original research. Other than as a generally well-informed member of the general public, this is not a question of particular interest to me, so I'd appreciate that if there aren't any specifically Wikipedia related dilemmas for us to puzzle over, this discussion move elsewhere (including, perhaps, off-wiki).--Jimbo Wales (talk) 18:31, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
Are there any ideas for improving the editing environment and neutrality of articles on controversial topics? --Bob K31416 (talk) 18:57, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
See a thought piece on the problem at Wikipedia:Advocacy articles where several possible courses of action are mentioned. One suggestion is to recognize that certain articles can not be made "neutral" without including contradictory language within the article, thus one solution might include in such dichotomized areas two distinct articles, with a firewall between them, and mentioning to the reader that the article has two distinct points of view, rather than fudging contradictory claims in a stew of some sort. Collect (talk) 23:21, 19 July 2016 (UTC) .
Is there a page on Wikipedia that lists bans and unbans you've personally imposed? This would go back to the 2003-05 period of time. If not, I'm specifically interested in the ban(s) and unban(s) of User:JoeM. Thanks.--Bbb23 (talk) 18:00, 22 July 2016 (UTC)
Russia has a new set of electronic surveillance laws, named after Irina Yarovaya, who proposed them.
—Wavelength (talk) 00:57, 20 July 2016 (UTC) and 23:31, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
Russia is not the only nation whose lawmakers and politicians are heading in this direction, especially when it comes to requiring backdoors for encrypted communications. Time and time again, technologists and civil liberties groups have warned the United States, France, Holland, and a host of other nations that the anti-encryption laws they propose cannot be obeyed without rewriting the laws of mathematics. Politicians have often responded by effectively telling the Internet’s experts “don’t worry, you’ll work out a way.” Let us be clear: government backdoors in encrypted communications make us all less safe, no matter which country is holding the keys.
Technologists have sometimes believed that technical impossibility means that the laws are simply unworkable – that a law that cannot be obeyed is no worse than no law at all. As Russia shows, regulations that no one can comply with aren’t dead-letter laws. Instead, they corrode the rule of law, leaving a rusting wreckage of partial compliance that can be exploited by powers who will use their enforcement powers for darker and more partial ends than justice.
This legislation is especially relevant to the work of editors in these categories.
—Wavelength (talk) 02:28, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
@Harej: does the Feedback Request Service distribute requests with or without human intervention? Can you please point to the location in the FRS bot's source code where the distribution of requests to user talk pages is made? If not, can you please say who maintains that source code at present? Thank you. EllenCT (talk) 16:22, 22 July 2016 (UTC)
@Legoktm: could you please help us understand this? The question originally came up in February, and it's still unanswered. I would love to recommend the FRS, but before I can do that, I need to understand how the requests are distributed: randomly? If so, where is the random number generator invoked in https://github.com/legoktm/harej-bots/blob/master/frsbot.php#L53 et seq? Round robin? By sign-up order per batch (meaning, those listed later on the sign-up lists will tend to get fewer FRS requests)? Are human interventions involved? Can the FRS system be gamed by modifying the order of the sign-up lists? Or by modifying them between the time an RFC is posted and announced by FRSbot? How many users does the FRS inform of each RFC? Can that parameter be changed? If so, where? Where is the documentation for your code? Do you intend to comment your code? Thank you for any help on these questions you can provide. EllenCT (talk) 18:33, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
Hi, I'm not sure how we ended up on Jimbo's talk page, but basically the FRS tries to notify as many people as possible, there is no randomization.
Jimbo, please suppose you wanted to approach the wealthiest families to ask them for endowment grants. Is there any reason to exclude royal families and "autocratic ruling dynasties," whatever those are? EllenCT (talk) 03:21, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
We might also want to discuss the elephant in the room: every time revenues to the WMF go up (as they have every year so far) the WMF ratchets up the spending so as to eat a large portion of the increase. If the WMF had limited year-to-year spending increases for everything other than keeping the servers running to 10% increase per year, we would already have a large enough endowment to run Wikipedia forever without ever again holding a fundraiser. Right now, if someone gave us ten billion dollars with no strings attached next years spending would go up by five to eight billion. --Guy Macon (talk) 03:34, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
The numbers speak for themselves. Everything you mention was being accomplished ten years ago but today the WMF is spending 300 times as much (52596782 ÷ 177670 ≈ 296) to accomplish basically the same job. I could accept a 10X increase, but 300X? How can anyone justify something like that? Is the WMF really accomplishing three hundred times more than it accomplished ten years ago?
References
--Guy Macon (talk) 16:05, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
Indeed, so your arguement is all for a small endowment to cover that, which hardly seems like something that won't get done since they are going to have an endowment and it likely won't be all that small. Alanscottwalker (talk) 01:59, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo, in addition to the return performance question above, regarding going with an established low-management fee endowment fund until the team you are putting together can prove that they can outperform them on paper for at least a few years, I also have asset allocation questions. [22] (from [23]) indicates that real estate investments averaged under 10% of endowment fund investments in the 1980s and 90s, but have since ballooned to become a far more prevalent type of endowment investment, at around 30%. What are your thoughts on this trend in particular, and whether real estate is an appropriate endowment investment in general? EllenCT (talk) 18:25, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo, I agree that donations should not buy influence. Even if there are sufficient wealthy friends who love Wikipedia, as you say, do you see that there is the risk of an appearance of a conflict of interest involved with soliciting endowment donations only from established friends?
Again, I want to urge you to approach the philanthropically inclined wealthy with a systematic process that will not only avoid requesting donations from those who have been involved with controversies in the projects, but also will not favor those with whom you or the Foundation have pre-existing relationships. I have commented in the past about companies that profit by selling ads thanks to the hard work of Foundation volunteers through the use of Wikidata to re-synthesize infoboxes in search results -- a practice which is likely harmful to consumers of medical information, because the most important vital facts as customarily appear in article introductions are far more rarely covered in Wikidata. That is one important reason to avoid the influence of such large corporations, which may be fast friends with the Foundation, and may be the easiest to convince of the value proposition supporting the endowment. Similarly, who is to say that today's friendly tycoon or royal family member might not be tomorrow's labor market abuse poster child or despot crushing people under jackboots, iron fists, and using known false information to send our children to unjust wars in distant lands?
Therefore, I recommend the following process to address endowment fundraising:
Please let me know your thoughts. EllenCT (talk) 20:42, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
Okay here's my job for you, I won't pay you. Okay here it goes: I have a treat for editing my userpage for sockpuppets which is a threat of watching my page here and it's possible the blocking admin there can view my userpage as online stalking. And I don't want that so can you hide my userpage from ALL annons. Since you are a Biomois employee/ Founder of Wikipedia. I think you can do that. Thanks! DatNuttyWikipedian (talk) 17:18, 27 July 2016 (UTC)
Hello, Jimbo. Recently I found that wikimail didn't work - after sending letter wikiinterface showed message that my letter was sent, but recipient didn't get any e-mail. I tried to send a letter to myself and this attempt failed too - I did not get letter to my e-mail box. There are at least 2 tickets about this problem: ticket about the problem in the English Wikipedia and ticket about the problem in the Russian Wikipedia. I tried to reset my e-mail address on the preferences page in the Russian Wikipedia: I managed to delete my e-mail address from the preferences and I got letter about it from [email protected] to my e-mail box. But all my attempts to set new e-mail address in the Russian Wikipedia failed: I did not get any letter to my e-mail box. I managed to confirm my e-mail address on the preferences page in the English Wikipedia. But in the English Wikipedia there is the same problem: when I send a letter to myself I get nothing to my e-mail box. Could you pay your attention to this problem, please? Раммон (talk) 05:56, 28 July 2016 (UTC)
Carol M. Highsmith, a very famous American photographer, is suing Getty Images for $1.35 billion, in effect for copyfraud under 17 U.S. Code § 1202 - Integrity of copyright management information See news stories at Hyproallergic and Techdirt (which has a copy of the suit) and many others.
Carol has donated at least 18,755 photos to the Library of Congress copyright free which Getty is selling without permission on their website. They even were dunning Carol (e.g. $120 per photo) for using her own photos on her own site.
Carol was one of our jury members for WLM-US in 2012 and seems to be very aware of and supportive of Wikimedia's mission. We have at least 1,500 of her photos at Commons. I have to wonder whether some of the folks Getty was dunning got her photos from Commons.
I'd be surprised if Getty is not similarly selling without permission our photos at Commons. For a related example, I noticed a photo of our main page (turned 45 degrees) from around the date that we blacked out, that Getty was selling. I uploaded that pic as an example for the copyfraud article, but for some strange reason a Commons admin (now banned) insisted on deleting it.
I'm not sure if there is anything we can do to support the lawsuit, but it would be in our interest (preventing copyfraud) if she won. Maybe a friend of the court brief?
Smallbones(smalltalk) 18:01, 28 July 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo Wales, before anyone thinks it's a good idea to support this lawsuit, once should be making sure their own house is in order first. This article states:
You see, Highsmith is such a wonderful person that she donated a massive collection of her photographs to the Library of Congress -- over 100,000 of them, for them to be released royalty free for the public to use. She didn't put them fully into the public domain, though, instead saying that anyone could use them so long as they gave credit back to her. It was basically a very early kind of version of what's now known as the Creative Commons Attribution License (which didn't exist at the time she made that agreement with the Library of Congress).
I have bolded the pertinent part above. I see over 1,000 of Carol's photographs on Wikimedia Commons, which rely on Commons:Template:PD-Highsmith, which states:
Ms. Highsmith has stipulated that her photographs are in the public domain. Photographs of sculpture or other works of art may be restricted by the copyright of the artist.
LOC states: "Carol M. Highsmith's photographs are in the public domain."
That news article indicates that Ms Highsmith did not release her works into the public domain, but rather requires attribution for her works.
I certainly wouldn't want to be using any of her works from Wikimedia Commons given the legal ramifications of doing so. 115.166.4.231 (talk) 22:47, 28 July 2016 (UTC)
Sorry, Jimbo Wales, just some further comment here. Also, please beware before joining Smallbones on any of his crusades. You seriously need to "not trust and absolutely verify" anything the guy says. Above, he stated that "a Commons admin (now banned)" removed an image from the copyfraud article. Martin H. is the editor who removed Smallbones', quite possibly libellous, original research. The image with that very problematic caption was removed by numerous editors, but Smallbones chose to edit war his original research into the article. The image itself was deleted by AFBorchert on Commons after a lengthy discussion.
Now we see Smallbones inserting into the copyfraud article information on this case. Although it's not a BLP, Smallbones seems to have a serious beef with Getty Images which I think needs to be investigated as he does appear to be using Wikipedia as a playground to settle grudges. 115.166.4.231 (talk) 23:26, 28 July 2016 (UTC)
FWIW, Getty has images of postage stamps from the USPS, clearly marked as copyright by USPS in the images, where their description does not include the information as to the actual copyright owner, and where the image may be used in accordance with USPS conditions which are fully unrelated to paying Getty a single sou. Collect (talk) 13:55, 31 July 2016 (UTC)
We have successfully scrubbed the lede of GMO controversy article of all mention of scientists or academics who have concerns with GMOs. [24] [25], following Monsanto's PR campaign to "enlist academics in the G.M.O. lobbying war".
Will we soon completely dispose of the WP:NPOV requirement to make edits like these easier? We did such a good job giving BP's version of the Deepwater Horizon spill, until some reporter had to call attention to it--as if such POV writing is problematic.[26] --David Tornheim (talk) 17:58, 23 July 2016 (UTC)
@Driftwoodzebulin: and @Alexbrn: Your edits are in the two diffs at the top of this discussion, so you have a right to know that your edits have been mentioned. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:39, 23 July 2016 (UTC)
Is there any policy against simply telephoning Eric Sachs, Monsanto's director of online PR Regulatory Policy & Scientific Affairs and just asking if they've been coordinating activity on Wikipedia? 97.118.166.40 (talk) 01:08, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
Kingofaces43 has filed an action against me at WP:AE. See Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement#David_Tornheim. --David Tornheim (talk) 21:03, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
I don't have anything useful to add to this debate directly at the moment, as I'm not familiar enough with this area to have any ability to make thoughtful judgments. I find much of the above discussion reasonably productive, but other parts of it I find disappointing and not very helpful. "Monsanto must be pleased" is a combative and irrelevant way to start a discussion. I frankly don't care one way or the other if Monsanto is pleased. Perhaps they will be pleased because they have managed to help communicate factual information to the public in the face of crazed pseudo-science. Perhaps they will be pleased because they have managed a coverup of monumental proportions in their ongoing quest to poison the public. Or perhaps (more likely) they are a large large organization with a mixed set of motives, some of which we might rightly approve of, and some of which we might rightly disagree with. My point is, the criteria for good writing in Wikipedia has nothing to do with what Monsanto wants - nor with what critics of Monsanto want.--Jimbo Wales (talk) 11:00, 25 July 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo, Re one of your comments above, "Assume that we all want to improve the encyclopedia and avoid heated rhetoric that tends to cause people to dig in and not listen."
For controversial topics, it seems that most editors dig in and don't listen with or without heated rhetoric, based on their beliefs outside of Wikipedia. It would be nice if someone who is trusted to be neutral and whose comments carry considerable weight, could come in to influence a discussion, instead of having the outcome of the discussion be determined by those with the same belief outside of Wikipedia that are the most determined and have the greatest numbers. --Bob K31416 (talk) 14:57, 30 July 2016 (UTC)
FYI. I appealed the proposed decision of the case against me that was lodged for making this post on the grounds that my evidence of POV-editting (and other evidence) was completely ignored. Appeal here.
I also created a separate action here asking ArbCom:
I look forward to how ArbCom answers these and the other questions I posed. --David Tornheim (talk) 05:40, 27 July 2016 (UTC)
FYI. I reasserted my appeal and added evidence that the reason for increasing punishment was that I had asserted my right of appeal. [40]. --David Tornheim (talk) 00:02, 31 July 2016 (UTC)
Jimbo, this whole issue goes back to the questions of how much paid advocacy editing has occurred in the past, how much is likely actually occurring, the rate at which it is growing, the extent to which it inhibits community progress towards improvements, the extent to which it causes animosity and instruction creep, and the amount of money it would reasonably require if professionals were to supplement the efforts of volunteers to counter it. Is it reasonable to ask Foundation experts to study these specific questions as part of the endowment goal setting process? EllenCT (talk) 16:30, 27 July 2016 (UTC)
Well, Jimmy? Is it worth having measurements to support round numbers? EllenCT (talk) 20:03, 28 July 2016 (UTC)
I think that there is much room for criticism with Genetically modified food controversies. To start with, it is a WP:POV fork from Genetically modified food. The controversies should not even be in a different section, let alone a different article. I've folded controversies into the main text for other articles in the past - it really isn't as hard to do as people seem to think. You just have to look at the content with the frame of mind that for purposes of organization it doesn't matter what point of view it has, just what it is talking about.
The more specific problem is that the current controversies article starts up with and emphasizes things about advocacy groups and perception. But the article is about the issues themselves, not how they are argued. That means taking a step back and asking whether GM food can be made unsafe. As I've said here before, it certainly could be. The example I used was beans into which abrin might be inserted - a fine strategy against insects and fungi, to be sure! But also homicidal. That said, I chose the example because it was obvious, not because it was a good attack - a good attack would be one that is ignored until the health of millions of people is compromised. For example, if you loaded foods with trans fats you could kill millions of people (it's been done before...). Or to be more realistic, suppose you loaded canola oil with an altered balance of fats so that fish fed from it would have "healthier" omega three rich fish oil... and then there was question whether the fish oil was actually a healthy intervention in the diet or counterproductive. Well, that's not entirely unrealistic - though honestly I don't think the GMOs there would make a measurable difference, I can't be sure nothing would go wrong. The thing is though, articles about GMOs shouldn't be edited like we can be sure that nothing will go wrong, that we're never bringing home the Old Al Qaeda store brand of beans from the supermarket. What we know is that GMOs that have passed regulatory review and are widely regarded to be safe are ... widely regarded to be safe. But we should disclose up front the possibility for harmful GMOs, the types of risks people worry about, and reasonable estimations by people of all viewpoints as to how likely (or unlikely) those risks are thought to be.
I'm saying this here rather than at the talk page because these are general flaws in Wikipedia I'm seeing over and over. The deprecation of "controversy" sections and articles is being widely ignored, and people are abusing WP:FRINGE to mean that "one side is right and everyone else is fringe". If you know, as an ordinary citizen, that the use of something like GMOs is controversial, then whether they should be or not the two sides of the issue are both mainstream opinions and not fringe, and the debate should be covered earnestly. Wnt (talk) 15:41, 29 July 2016 (UTC)
The United States Copyright Office is reported to be preparing a proposal of changes to copyright law involving libraries.
—Wavelength (talk) 00:49, 30 July 2016 (UTC) and 19:10, 30 July 2016 (UTC) For convenience, here are some relevant links: American Library Association (ALA), Association of Research Libraries (ARL), Internet Archive, Wayback Machine, Digital Public Library of America (DPLA).—Wavelength (talk) 19:10, 30 July 2016 (UTC)
Additional information can be found on these pages.
—Wavelength (talk) 23:44, 30 July 2016 (UTC)
The AE request against David Tornheim has ended with a topic ban for him, David has decided to leave Wikipedia. Let's for argument's sake ignore any fairness issues here, ignore anything that has to do with the personal side and just consider the interest of Wikipedia. So, we only take into account that the GMO articles have to be of high quality, reflecting the sources appropriately and that this has be done without too much drag on the editors in having to deal with problem editors. From this perspective David seems to have been such a problem editor to some degree, and superficially it seems like a good thing that such editors stop editing there. But here we don't take into account that the pool of editors will to some degree reflect the opinions held by the public. If in the public opinion some POV is more strongly reflected than can be justified by the reliable sources, then we'll always end up having to deal with editors who'll argue points that lead to nowhere as far as we're concerned, and that can cause frustration in some cases this gives rise to less than ideal behavior. If we remove such editors then other editors with a similar POV who were just lurking because their POV was already been argued for, will take their place. The danger is then that these other editors will cause more trouble than the editors we removed.
Another problem I see is that without the "wrong POV" being argued for here (suppose that other editors with that POV do not actually step in, or they get blocked due not not being able to articulate their POV in an acceptable way), then the GMO articles lose a bit of their credibility. People who tend to believe in some of the conspiracy-like theories about GMO may believe that Wikipedia is part of the conspiracy by the way Wikipedia deals with people who argue for changes in the article. So, we lose credibility not because of the actual content of the articles but by making it more difficult for people to voice their criticisms on the talk pages. Count Iblis (talk) 22:06, 28 July 2016 (UTC)
About "problems" with David Tornheim. He only tried to insert different, critical but still scientific point of view. But is it fringe and really "different"?. Let's see, what we can find in the wide-cited National Academies report (2016).
" The overall results of short-term and long-term animal studies with rodents and other animals and other data on GE-food nutrient and secondary compound composition convinces many (for example, Bartholomaeus et al., 2013; Ricroch et al., 2013a,b; Van Eenennaam and Young, 2014) but not all involved researchers (for example, Dona and Arvanitoyannis, 2009; Domingo and Bordonaba, 2011; Hilbeck et al., 2015; also see DeFrancesco, 2013) that currently marketed GE foods are as safe as foods from conventionally bred crops."
Can we find in our Genetically modified organism article at least that not all experts are convinced? We can find that there is "scientific consensus" as hard as a brick. Note, how many examples of convinced reviews (3) and non-convinced (4). But may be all non-convinced are freaks? And articles are retracted? No, we don't know knothing about it. But their reviews still are not in use in the article,
But may be there are much more convinced independent scientists? Lets's look for independent reliable article, which tries to find whether majority of scientists are convinced now. And there is review by Domingo (2016) (2016) which in "Recent reviews in the scientific literature on GM plants" part investigates this case over the past five years, and mentions Bartholomaeus et al (convinced), Snell (convinced), Tufarelli et al. (convinced), Bawa and Anilakumar (non-convinced), Kramkowska et al. (non-convinced), Zdziarski et al (very non-convinced) and Domingo himself not very convinced. So who is "problematic editor"? Cathry (talk) 09:29, 29 July 2016 (UTC)
"He only tried to insert different, critical but still scientific point of view"
Jimbo, the community has restricted me from discussing economics, and just a few days ago arbcom has restricted me from raising conflict of interest issues. In the first case, the allegations on WP:ANI included the supposition that I had annoyed you, and in the second case, the fact that I supported David Tornheim when he raised the issue with you was cited as problematic at WP:AE. Do you have any comments about the use of people's communications with you to censor them? Would you prefer that I abide by, defy, or try to appeal the restrictions? EllenCT (talk) 17:28, 29 July 2016 (UTC)
I find it hard to regret decisions, by whomever made, to topic ban editors who then leave Wikipedia. It demonstrates that they were unable to take (ideally constructive) feedback, and even when given free rein to write elsewhere on Wikipedia, chose to take their ball and go home instead. Jclemens (talk) 21:31, 29 July 2016 (UTC)
Hi, I have 2 questions bold here : There is an article with this title "Invasion to Iran by Arabs" (title1) I can explain that title more accurately as "Invasion to Iran by Arab people". Do you assume this as a racist title? This title is for the Farsi version of the article "Muslim conquest of Persia" (title2) which we had to recommend a similar title "Conquest of Persia by Muslims" because the title2 is not so clear when it is translated to Farsi however finally we could find a clear exactly equal title for it same as English (Even Iranicaonline sources are English). I was saying that Arab Conquest means Arabic Conquest such as Islamic Conquest which is Muslim Conquest not Arab invasion.
But the problem is when I compared the :
I just said "Muslim conquest of Persia" is a better and impartial title. Then on the opposite side the user Kouhi accused me to WP:NPA (I never accused him to be a racist but he claims this) and noted me in the WikiFa admin noticeboard and complained there AND I'M BANNED NOW by an inactive admin User:Sahehco immediately without any warning. It is wonderful.
Other users were agree with me even Sa.Vakilian (previously he had contrary viewpoint to me about the Criticism of Quran but this time he is agree with me). Previously you know me about the criticism of the Quran (in that subject after many discussions finally I could be successful).
When I pinged other active admin in my discussion to take a third opinion and no answer presented and next I pinged one another active admin then Sahehco accused me to WP:CANVASS and warned me to avoid pinging other admins. (HURRAY he can warn not only ban)
Do you have similar situation in Wiki En and in Wikimedia?
If a translator is needed this is @Darafsh: an admin.
Recently I'm not so active in Wiki and no reaction I ask about this account but I just want to make you aware of the hard situation we have in other language Wikis. From one side I see Muslim users attach partiality template to the articles like the Criticism of Quran having many different impartial sources and you can't remove the template but many articles like the Quran or Muhammad articles themselves with a lot of religious partial claims and sources(sometimes they have no historical source) are Featured and Good articles and from the other side we have articles like the Invasion to Iran by Arabs and the are partial supernationalists like this who only needs to make his lips wet to make other wiki users banned (previously I hadn't use words like this supernationalist but now that I see this situation I use it). Sometimes impartiality itself is a fault and you will be partial because you said this title is a racist title.
HAND --IranianNationalist (talk) 14:15, 3 August 2016 (UTC)