FYI: German media just reports that there will be no Quadriga awards this year due to the broad discussion about Vladimir Putin's nomination. That is, no one will be awarded the prize. Vaclav Havel had threatened to give back his award. --Aschmidt (talk) 12:01, 16 July 2011 (UTC)
Hellow Jimmy! I've been doing signatures on Inkscape in order to improve some pages. I found your signature at this page http://forum.nationstates.net/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=66256&start=25, and I need to know if this is your real signature in order to put it on your wikipedia bio. This is the work I've made so you can see it.] Oh and congratulations for creating Wikipedia! good job Jimmy!. (Sorry for my bad english, I'm learning it) --Dabit100 (talk) 20:35, 14 July 2011 (UTC)
Comment: Jimbo, please note the signature remains on Wikipedia here, linked to here. I will leave it to you or an admin to remove those and leave a message for the presumably well-intended creator. imo signatures should be limited to those attached to widely available public documents, such as the signers of the US Declaration of Independence. Living authors who have signed thousands of books at book-signings might merit a disussion, but living people are in general problematical. No one's going to try to steal John Hancock's identity, but someone attempting to cash in by providing a 'signed edition' of a book by a living or recently-deceased author might find this useful. 75.60.7.172 (talk) 15:27, 15 July 2011 (UTC)
Comment: Presidential signatures and the like (valuable collectible autographs) are far different from Jimbo's signature - at some point we should have this codified in WP:BLP which is, finally, getting some teeth. Cheers. Collect (talk) 11:44, 15 July 2011 (UTC)
I could probably be convinced that for any dead people it is a reasonable piece of information to record. But for living people it seems equally reasonable to keep this piece of artwork private/unrecorded until after their death :) --Errant (chat!) 20:36, 15 July 2011 (UTC)
There is seemingly a perennial push around Wikipedia in various forums to make the "labeling" of anyone as anything banned by policy, as if it is somehow defamation to call a person a Jew or gay (personally I wouldnt be offended being called gay though I am not, and I am a Jew). Putting aside instances where the person cant, except in tabloids, be proven to be gay or lesbian for example (being African-American is a bit easier to spot and less controversial one must assume). The idea that Adam Sandler and Sandy Koufax should not have "Jewish" in the infobox or lead is hilarious. I bring this up due to California now making gay and lesbian history and I feel if our educational institutions feel that history and "labeling" of individuals has merit for the scientific study of history, who are we to argue? Letting our readers know who is gay, lesbian, Jewish, Chinese, whatever is not stigmatizing them, it is instead letting other people of those persuasions be proud the people "like them" have done amazing things. Im just curious as to your opinion.Camelbinky (talk) 05:18, 16 July 2011 (UTC)
1. Sex orientation is substantially different from nationality. 2. Unless a person specifically self-idenitifies as a member of any group, it is not up to Wikipedia to categorize them as being in that group. 3. Conflating the two is of no value to the project - Wikipedia ought not care whether or not California now mandates Lesbian/Gay/Bi/Transsexual History is of no more import than if Monaco did it as far as the encyclopedia is concerned. 4. Such categorization, in fact, has been a cause of a great many BLP issues in the past, and it would be nice if ArbCom chose the Cirt case to put this all to bed once and for all. Cheers. Collect (talk) 08:38, 16 July 2011 (UTC)
Camelbinky may be referring to a proposal I made here to remove the "religion" parameter from the infobox person template (following this discussion at the BLP noticeboard). Well-reasoned comments are of course welcome there. Delicious carbuncle (talk) 14:22, 16 July 2011 (UTC)
So is this about "who is a Jew?" or is it about the initial question (e.g. "even if someone is a Jew, gay, Antarctican, should this always be mentioned?") — I answered that one: No. Just because someone happens to be some XYZ doesn't mean it needs to be mentioned, just like we don't mention a woman's breast-waist-size unless she's a model. For any other woman, it's unimportant. Choyoołʼįįhí:Seb az86556 > haneʼ 03:20, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
Anent this discourse and the new ArbCom case to be open, I posted [1] (typos later corrected) concerning my personal opinions about BLPs and, indeed, all Wikipedia articles. Cheers. Collect (talk) 11:31, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
Because the overall Wikipedia is a confederation of languages (and simple language), there is still the option to "do it all over again" within Wikipedia, by a forum-based variation of Wikipedia (as a Wikipedia-2), which perhaps might have your Jimbo-view-of-the-world ideas, embedded upfront, as better-enforced guidelines. You have discussed numerous new ideas about running Wikipedia, so I was imagining a not-Simple but rather, a civilized Wikipedia where a pattern of rude reverts would quickly lead to editing restrictions, rather than WP:GAMING to pretend that numerous rude reverts are helpful to collaboration. The overall rules, in this Wikipedia-2, would not require years of consensus, but rather be defined fairly soon based on the Jimbo view-of-the-world, as converted into workable guidelines. The Wikipedia-2 (WP2) could start as direct links to English Wikipedia articles, but new article revisions would eclipse the original WP versions (as seen under WP2), to allow updates based on civilized collaboration and forum-style discussions, as enforced by the instant new rules where people would not "camp out" on articles for years. Also, the "Top 10,000 articles" would be short, 500-word overviews, with alternate links to the 10,000 full articles for people who want to spent hours reading each subject. However, I also think users should be allowed (reasonable) freedom of speech, freedom of association, and freedom of assembly, so that the "government" would be restrained in how quickly users could be blocked. This would involve to what extent the author of a book would be allowed into talk-page discussions, perhaps with a WP:COI notice in some cases. The idea is to protect a right-to-speak freedom, where restrictions would be clearly noted, rather than the "Athens council" sentences Socrates to "drink the hemlock" for saying the wrong things. Progress could be compared between the current WP (enwiki) and the WP2, to see if the new policies would actually foster better updates, as faster than the old policies on enwiki. I am still trying to find ways to enable your major ideas to have a faster impact, without fighting an entrenched crowd perhaps being misled by troublemakers using the slow movement of English Wikipedia as a game to thwart real progress. You might be tired of discussing such "Wikipedia-2" concepts, but this is just in case you have any new thoughts about it. -Wikid77 (talk) 16:49, revised 01:06, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
If this idea ever gets off the ground:
--Σ talkcontribs 05:51, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
Two words: Network effect. The major reason why Wikipedia has been a success and Citizentdiumdmdmum a failure, aside from the uber clumsiness of the latter' name, is that Wikipedia came first and the, uh, other one, later. Yes, Cittizzzendddium has/had a lot of problems. But then, looking at it honestly, so does Wikipedia. C's problems dragged it down all the way to the bottom and made it unviable. Wikipedia survived and prospered despite it's problem. In some ways this is like the story of the Dvorak and QWERTY keyboards (except not really, since Dvorak faked his own tests). I'm mostly pointing this out to argue that just because Citizentiudmdss failed does not mean that Wikipedia cannot learn from it and improve as a result. Look at Microsoft (another possible case of network effects) - they're notorious/admired for taking some of their competitors good-but-clumsy ideas for their own and putting them to good use. Let's not get full of hubris here.Volunteer Marek (talk) 05:59, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
I am at a loss as to how taking Wikipedia and removing its rules on a) reliable sourcing and b) neutral point of view, as espoused by the original poster, would be an improvement, though I can see why the original poster (who isn't long off yet another lengthy block) would see that as a positive move. Chris Cunningham (user:thumperward) - talk 12:54, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
I've often suggested 2 English Wikipedias. One without diacritics, for english readers & one with diacritics, for those with mother-country pride. GoodDay (talk) 13:02, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
The problem with WP isn't that large - we just need to impose more accountability and/or restraint on those who take out other contributors' edits when there is nothing wrong with them under policy. Deletionists have too much power and damage the usefulness of WP for everyone else. Wnt (talk) 15:23, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
You mean like this. Yeah I agree. That editor could have spent a few minutes sourcing it, instead he chose to delete valid content. Well a a project which attempted to use the cream of wikipedia to produce a high quality encyclopedia failed miserably. @ Jimbo. You weren't embarrassed by my American Express gold dress joke were you. Just the American Express and Las Vegas made me think of it.. I'm not sure what sort of humor you like or dislike. ♦ Dr. Blofeld 08:48, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
I'm sure I'll be chastised by other's for "forum shopping" and "canvassing" and whatever else they can charge me with but given that I recall your very passionate views on swearing and how it is uncalled for I thought I'd let you know that apparently AN/I and many admins think "Fuck off and troll elsewhere, you patronising ignoramus" can be justified due to it being a "heated discussion" and other's were "rude" (thought I saw no one else swear) (and I apologize for swearing, but figured you should see the full sentence). I was not involved in the original discussion in which the swearing occured, but knowing that this wasnt the first time said user had used such language I brought it to AN/I. I thought the defence he was getting was deplorable and thought you should see what happens around here. I know you are busy, and you get blamed for these things happening around here as if you have time to deal with them, and I dont blame you and dont expect you to handle anything. Just frustrated and felt I could vent to you. Thank you for always having an ear (or eyes in this case to read) and always having wise words to allow me to see things from other directions. (and of course now I've opened myself up to accusations of "sucking up").Camelbinky (talk) 19:56, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
Hi. I have seen you are 5927th place in most edits (8069). Nice! Here:
PS: Will you block me if I said I have, umm, disrupted Wikipedia? A user who has been editing Wikipedia since Thursday, October 28, 2010. 22:01, 17 July 2011 (UTC)
Jasper Deng (talk) 22:30, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
Jimbo Wales, do you allow people to {{trout}} you? Or rather, are you ok with people doing so, even if you don't have {{troutme}} on your user page? LikeLakers2 (talk) 12:41, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
=3 (copied from whale template instead of using the template tag because I didn't want it to use alot of space.) LikeLakers2 (talk) 20:20, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
I believe you should have a look at this: WP:BLPN#Jay_Brannan. Especially read the comments this person has made in the edit summaries like, "Wikipedia you are ruining my life". I hope it doesn't, say, lead to a suicide. Alex Harvey (talk) 14:07, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
Hmmm, OK. Well, as to how relevant his sexuality is, I'd say somewhat, since he writes about relationships and sex and so forth, not exclusively, but sometimes, and his being gay informs that (e.g., a song about fellatio, etc.). If he was a tennis player or something It'd be different, I guess.
As a philosophical exercise, consider five hypothetical cases. In each, the subject is categorized as a member of the XYZ religion. All five are novelists, and it'd be reasonable to say that their XYZishness informs their work -- a lot of their characters are XYZers and they use terms from XYZ lingo and so forth -- so all things being equal it's worth noting. Each of the five sends a request to Wikipedia to remove the description of them as an XYZer, but each gives a different reason:
For #1 and #2, of course we would accede to the person's wishes. For #3, I don't know -- it would depend, I guess. But for #4 and #5? Not to sure about that, but I dunno. Maybe. It's in interesting question. If one's answer is "accept", this raises some further interesting questions, though. (BTW and FWIW I'd say that Brannan's position includes a bit of #4 and #5.) Herostratus (talk) 23:44, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
It almost seems that this site is trying to compete with Wikipedia directly. This came up at the AN/I Noticeboard (I've since replied, that permalink is the diff. for what concerns me); namely, when an article is put up for deletion, there is now some weird bot running around notifying users that the article is being "preserved" on WikiAlpha. In other words, they are illegitimately using a bot on Wikipedia to advertise their own Wiki site.
In my opinion, this must be stopped. Also disconcerting is the fact that WikiAlpha looks almost identical to Wikipedia. If it wasn't for the logo in the top left and seeing that I am unable to post because I'm not logged in there (apparently anonymous editing is forbidden), I wouldn't have known the difference.
Is there something we can do about this issue beyond what admins. can? Can they be stopped from promoting themselves on our wiki network? Your input at AN/I would be welcomed on this and anything related. CycloneGU (talk) 04:17, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
"You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons License." Also, they're trying to release it all in the Public Domain. Jasper Deng (talk) 05:42, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
I don't normally comment on Jimbo's talk page, but I was seeing several people above weren't aware of the previous disputes, so I felt I had to list them here. The licensing dispute was discussed at WP:VPM with involvement from WikiAlpha admins. They acknowledged a licensing problem and stated they would work to fix it. Jasper, the comment you quoted from Moonriddengirl was directly related to this first discussion. They were again discussed at AN/I regarding the email spam, and they (then) pledged to stop it. Cue the current discussion where it appears they are again using the email system to notify users of copied articles. elektrikSHOOS (talk) 06:49, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
I think some people have missed the hazard this idea poses to Wikipedia's mission. To give an example, suppose I wanted to set up a cheapo biotech stock information site with market data, commentary, and (reviewed and reworked) Wikipedia articles in a tab for each company. Then some deletionist goes on a spree and half the companies are deemed "not notable" (not at all implausible). Does that mean that everything I've done with that Wikipedia text immediately has to be deleted off my site, because it's "unattributed"? I hope not, but if so, then for any writer to copy text from Wikipedia - even with an attribution "to Wikipedia" - is really no different than copying text off a random Web page with an unknown author! Even if you check the article's existence, it's not safe to use, because the text could have been added by someone whose edit was revdeled or selective deleted on account of unrelated text that was present in the article at the time. Of course, Wikipedia also would be in violation of the same copyright terms in that instance...
I say: (1) authors ought to be safe to cite Wikipedia whether an article is deleted or not, because an admin acting properly like Moonriddengirl should help to ensure that attribution information is available to any third party (2) To avoid the risk that a legal case would disagree, Wikipedia should develop software to automatically provide a full list of editors on demand for any deleted article, no matter what the reason for deletion, except for authors using the "right to vanish" who would be deemed as making a request not to be attributed in the CC license. Wnt (talk) 17:03, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
I realize that all the content on Wikipedia is covered by the CC-BY-SA 3.0 License and GFDL. My question is this. If someone copies information from here that is a violation of Wikipedia policies, like Verifiability or especially BLP, once it leaves Wikipedia, it won't be readily fixed or improved. So, my question is, what sort of responsibility do they have at that point, or do we have at that point? -- Avanu (talk) 15:43, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
I have proposed to split Category:Actors into actors and actresses in the same way male and female singers are split. However, there seems to be dispute that actress is no longer an acceptable term. I said to me Judi Dench will always be an English actress and it would seem natural to categorize her as a Category:English actresses. I need some input here as to what is desirable.♦ Dr. Blofeld 17:19, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
I agree, hence my surprise to be told that it is now politically incorrect to refer to actresses as such. Please copy your comments to the WP:Actors discussion as at the end of this a decision will be made whether or not to update femal actor articles and remove the term "actress".♦ Dr. Blofeld 20:27, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
Comment: The British use actor for male and female (Judi Dench is an actor), Americans use actor and actress (Judi Dench is a actress). There's no need for any Americans to insult the British by claiming this is political correctness gone mad or to imply SAG is an international organization which sets international customs and style guides. There's also no need for anyone British to insist on calling an American an actor instead of an actress. Two countries separated by a common language and all that. Is mutual respect too much to ask for? 75.59.207.233 (talk) 16:35, 19 July 2011 (UTC)
All my usual sources on American and British style are conspicuously silent on the topic. I would argue, with unashamed British biases, that in the best tradition of classical liberalism, what is not forbidden is in the realm of individual judgement.
The Chicago Manual of Style, which uses frequent examples to illustrate its instructions, does indicate how one might tie oneself in knots about the matter. One of the illustrations says, in part —
A noun functioning as a subject (nominative case) is the actor or the person or thing about which an assertion is made in a clause, as in the governor delivered a speech ...
Does the grammatical sense of actor as a descriptor constitute guidance about the performer? Has political correctness mandated the modifier ‘person’? Is it Governor Geraldine Brown or Governess Geraldine Brown? If it’s Governor, why not also actor Geraldine Brown? Good grief. A frightfully stiff and schizophrenic approach to pedantry.
I did, however find a marvellous bit of prose that was really quite instructive as well in The Economist Style Guide —
It may be no tragedy that policemen are now almost always police officers and firemen firefighters, but to call chairmen chairs serves chiefly to remind everyone that the world of committees and those who make it go round are largely devoid of humour. Avoid also chairpersons (chairwoman is permissible), humankind and the person in the street – ugly expressions all. It is no more demeaning to women to use the words actress, ballerina or seamstress than goddess, princess or queen. (Similarly, you should feel as free to separate Siamese twins or welsh on debts – at your own risk – as you would to go on a Dutch treat, pass through french windows, or play Russian roulette. Note, though, that you risk being dogged by catty language police.) If you believe it is “exclusionary” or insulting to women to use he in a general sense, you can rephrase some sentences in the plural. Thus Instruct the reader without lecturing him may be put as Instruct readers without lecturing them. But some sentences resist this treatment: Find a good teacher and take his advice is not easily rendered gender-neutral. So do not be ashamed of sometimes using man to include women, or making he do for she. And, so long as you are not insensitive in other ways, few women will be offended if you restrain yourself from putting or she after every he.
It may be no tragedy that policemen are now almost always police officers and firemen firefighters, but to call chairmen chairs serves chiefly to remind everyone that the world of committees and those who make it go round are largely devoid of humour. Avoid also chairpersons (chairwoman is permissible), humankind and the person in the street – ugly expressions all.
It is no more demeaning to women to use the words actress, ballerina or seamstress than goddess, princess or queen. (Similarly, you should feel as free to separate Siamese twins or welsh on debts – at your own risk – as you would to go on a Dutch treat, pass through french windows, or play Russian roulette. Note, though, that you risk being dogged by catty language police.)
If you believe it is “exclusionary” or insulting to women to use he in a general sense, you can rephrase some sentences in the plural. Thus Instruct the reader without lecturing him may be put as Instruct readers without lecturing them. But some sentences resist this treatment: Find a good teacher and take his advice is not easily rendered gender-neutral. So do not be ashamed of sometimes using man to include women, or making he do for she.
And, so long as you are not insensitive in other ways, few women will be offended if you restrain yourself from putting or she after every he.
My own opinion: it is sad to witness language tortured and litigiously prosecuted to serve egos and ideology rather than the conscious purpose for which it is used by the writer. Regards, Peter S Strempel | Talk 05:10, 21 July 2011 (UTC)
I started Sean Hoare based on the fact I believe him to be notable in his own right based on his past achievements as a journalist. Yet it is proposed to be merged based on "ONEVENT". Input here is required to decide whether to keep or merge.♦ Dr. Blofeld 13:13, 19 July 2011 (UTC)
Marcus Bachmann has become a magnet for mostly negative material about the subject. As of 10:33, 20 July 2011 (UTC) there are currently 19 sources in the article, which are mostly about the criticism his clinic has received. Aside from a brief mention about his early life in one AP article, there are virtually no biographical sources on the subject beside his own personal web page. Looking through the paid news abstracts, prior to the controversy over his wife's political beliefs and his business practice, I can find no sources about the subject, except for a letter to an editor he wrote a long time ago. This is someone who has attempted to stay out of the news for a very long time. Granted, the spotlight is on him because he is the husband of Michele Bachmann, but the current biography article reads like an attack on his religion, his business, and his political beliefs. Viriditas (talk) 10:33, 20 July 2011 (UTC)
He-said-she-said is not "honest political reporting". It boggles the mind that anyone remotely familiar with this practice as extolled in the US media would consider it to be a good thing. But well done for playing the "censorship" card, because obviously people who disagree with you are censors. Chris Cunningham (user:thumperward) - talk 14:35, 21 July 2011 (UTC)
The discussion immediately above this one immediately degenerated into a discussion of whether or not it was appropriate for someone to post on my talk page offering information about something going on in Wikipedia and giving their own opinion.
I'd like to make it very clear: it is always ok for people to talk to me - even to give me their opinions. It's even ok for people to ask me to take an action that I'm not going to take. In some but not all cases, it will even be ok for me to agree or disagree with someone's opinion, or to take some appropriate action.
There are cases where me even offering my opinion would be inappropriate - for example if someone asks me about a matter of religion or politics outside the scope of Wikipedia, I think I shouldn't generally answer, unless it is a matter somehow touching on the fundamental values driving my work. (For example: I think the Chinese government should not filter the Internet regarding Liu Xiaobo, and I think it's ok for me to say that. It is less ok for me to say whether or not I, personally, approve or disapprove of Liu Xiaobo - since that question has nothing to do with Wikipedia.)
And of course there are actions that people might ask me to do, which would be inappropriate for me to do, and which I won't do. It's still ok for people to ask me.
The reason I'm going on and on about this is that I really dislike what happens all too often - people come here to have a conversation with me, and are immediately attacked as if they are forum shopping or what have you. That's not a good thing.--Jimbo Wales (talk) 17:19, 21 July 2011 (UTC)
I am working on an article for the book Reality is Broken by Jane McGonigal at User:Ryan Vesey/Reality is Broken. It might be a while before I finish it (I don't want to dive too deep into the external sources before I finish the book), but I thought you might like to contribute to the article since you were quoted on the back of the book. Ryan Vesey Review me! 02:15, 22 July 2011 (UTC)
I thought I'd finally drop you a line. Maybe you can answer a question I have. I ran for admin recently, and successfully, though I was saddened that you wouldn't come by and support a fellow editor from Alabama. (I even support your hometown economy: only last week a friend and I drank a gallon of good Kölsch from y'all's brewery.) But never mind my sadness--I'll get over it. My real question, though, is that they always promise a t-shirt to new admins; it's been two months now and I still haven't gotten anything. Could you look into it, please? Thanks! Happy days, Drmies (talk) 02:54, 22 July 2011 (UTC)
Mr. Wales a lot of muck is thrown at Wikipedia, can you arrange for someone competent to look at it please. <link to blatant personal attack redacted>.Yogesh Khandke (talk) 11:11, 24 July 2011 (UTC)
Jimbo, you won't be surprised to learn that there is discussion in multiple venues about redirecting the article on the person accused of the very recent shootings in Norway to the main article. I won't say that this happens every time there is an event like this, but it feels like it does. I would like to suggest that these kinds of debates are largely unnecessary and could be easily avoided if there were a policy or guideline that simply stated whether we should default to having the information in the main article or in a separate article. (My preference would be to always start the section in the main article and move it out only when it became clear that it was necessary to do so, after some reasonable length of time such as one month, but my opinion is irrelevant to this suggestion.) Knowing how your talk page works, I'm just going to leave this here and see if anyone picks up on my suggestion. Delicious carbuncle (talk) 19:11, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
Question for Jimbo Jimbo when you conceived of this project, you know this encyclopedia, was it your aim to create a resource that is driven by the quest to put as much information into cyberspace as possible and to do at the speed of light? There are several topics of discussion across the project at this time, two on this very page (DYK reform and this) which suggest that we're coming to a bit of an impasse between editors who strive for just that type of project (speed and quantity), and others who are much more concerned with the quality of the work we are doing. Personally, I'm afraid that something has gone seriously wrong here, that somehow people are signing up to this project with the aim, not of creating a reliable reference source, but of competing with media organizations in the 24 hour news cycle, and competing with every possible information archive in the world in sheer size. There seems to be an ideological drive to create more and more and more new articles, as opposed to making sure that what we already have out there is top notch. Likewise there is an ideological drive to keep apace with the news cycle as notable events unfold, despite the fact that news coverage in the first 48 hours, heck the first few weeks, often shows a very mutable and ever changing narrative surrounding those events. What is the point of being an encyclopedia, that is the type of tertiary source that should be trusted above all others, if we are not exercising the patience required to let the real "facts" of a situation solidify? Is it that important for us to compete with the news cycle? If it is I suggest this is not an encyclopedia, and the project needs to rethink its identity.Griswaldo (talk) 13:29, 24 July 2011 (UTC)
We need better guidelines about restricting article titles, including name slurs, where the article title popularizes the phrase which is being disputed, such as a title with "Johnny's wife-beating accusations" or "Celebrity-name cocaine". This is a confusing issue, because it is related to "begging the question" of wiki-publicity of phrases. People should not be allowed to name articles which imply a connection which is not held by mainstream sources. We cannot create an article named "Einstein's flat-earth views" or "Microsoft's excellent software" or any such POV-slanted, misleading title, and this issue has taken months for many people to comprehend. End soapbox. -Wikid77 06:49, 25 July 2011 (UTC)
I got to thinking about this question when I was invited to join in using Google Plus, Google's answer to Facebook (which if you have not been invited already, I would love to be the one to invite you! I believe you still have to be invited by a current user, it hasnt gone totally public as far as I've noticed). We have seen Myspace get eclipsed by Facebook to where they are predicting Myspace will be shut down next year, and now we see talk that Google Plus may be the serious competition to Facebook now (and I agree, I enjoy the extras more). So, have you ever seen anything that has made you think "wow, if someone ever did X, it could really do some damage to Wikipedia editor count or reader count", were you ever "worried" that Conservapedia for instance might threaten Wikipedia's popularity for instance? Would there ever come a time were you would encourage the Foundation to put out tv commercial's for instance, if a serious competitor did ever cut into Wikipedia.Camelbinky (talk) 07:23, 24 July 2011 (UTC)
Wikipedia will either have to evolve, and that requires a willingness to make changes to its fundamental policies, or it will eventually go extinct. I see a big reticence to address problems raised on the policy pages (take e.g. the discussions on "not truth"). It's similar to the evolution of life on Earth. Compare the "not truth" doctrine to the rule to not use oxygen. Life on Earth did well without using oxygen until the Great Oxygenation Event: "The rising oxygen levels may have wiped out a huge portion of the Earth's anaerobic inhabitants at the time. From their perspective it was a catastrophe (hence the name). Cyanobacteria, by producing oxygen, were essentially responsible for what was likely the largest extinction event in Earth's history." Count Iblis (talk) 18:29, 24 July 2011 (UTC)
Hello Jimbo, I just wanted to let you know that I've just restored Zhi Gang Sha, an article you deleted as an expired PROD, because the PROD was contested at WP:REFUND. Salvio Let's talk about it! 17:17, 24 July 2011 (UTC)
hi jimbo wales — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sdtfs (talk • contribs) 02:13, 25 July 2011 (UTC)
An article of mine, Ghumdan Palace was recently pulled from the main page because the hook was "considered" to contain weasel words and the sourcing was suspect. The problem is, generally the quality of DYKs are substandard and issues could be identified with most DYKs. As some have mentioned previously, the fact that now editors self review other articles just so they can push their DYK through, issues are appearing to go increasingly undetected and we lack any real system which maintains quality for those nominated; we can't rely on just a few individuals to ensure every hook and article is satisfactory. If DYK has now become as problematic as this I think its time it underwent reform. As I remember one editor putting it "DYK is like a microcosm of everything that's bad about wikipedia articles, POV, plagiarism, needs copyediting, non RS and sometimes non notable/utterly uninteresting subjects, not to mention boring hooks." Why I don't necessarily agree 100% with this and think some DYKs are of a high standard and a pleasure to read, I agree that there is a major inconsistency and at times is embarrassing that these articles are on the main page right? So what do we do? Do we scrap the entire DYK process or do we modify it so articles have to undergo a formal review before they hit the main page? My feeling is that there are far too many articles going through with little consideration of maintaining a high quality. The main page of wikipedia is by far the most visited and I feel it should be representative only our best content. I am one of the top contributors to DYK myself and even I can admit to the problems with it. I would rarely bother with it if it wasn't for the fact I enjoy collaboration with several others and like having a bank of half decent articles I've written for looking back over. I think its time it was changed and given a new lease of life.♦ Dr. Blofeld 11:41, 22 July 2011 (UTC)
Here's what I would change first: "DYK is only for articles that have been created, or expanded fivefold or more, or newly sourced BLPs that have been expanded at least twofold over the past five days." From an editorial perspective, that rule makes zero sense. I suppose it was originally designed as an incentive system for people to create new articles, or to expand stubs. But there is nothing about the reader's perspective on "Did you know" that would recommend limiting to just those articles.
The net result is, too often, all the problems discussed above. An article which has only existed for 5 days, or which has hurriedly been expanded in the last 5 days, is an article which has not stood the test of time.
I would change it to this: "DYK is almost exclusively for featured articles. Generally, an article should have existed for at least one year, and should have been edited by at least 20 different editors. There can be exceptions, but any DYK hook from an article not of feature article quality should be subjected to a much higher level of scrutiny."
If we want to give people incentives to create or expand articles, we should talk about that separately. My view is that rewarding people to do anything other than simply write passionately about something they are really interested in, to the highest possible quality standard they can muster, is a bad idea. It's the folly of rewarding A while hoping for B.--Jimbo Wales (talk) 17:34, 22 July 2011 (UTC)
There is also a relevant RfC about this issue. Graham87 09:57, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
Good article did you knows would seem appropriate and would meet the good article gone through testing requirement and would not replicate FA. My feeling on this is that we should replace did you know of new articles on the main page with did you knows of recently passed good articles. Then I would have a link underneath like in the featured article section, more DYKs of recently created/expanded articles and then I'd demote the DYK for newly expanded article as it currently appears on the main page to a sub page. This way it gives credit to those who've recently had a good article promotion, general quality on the main page would be much improved without obvious blunders and the often embarrassing did you knows would appear on a sub page and be hidden from appearing on the main page. The problemis we can't paint all DYKs with the same brush. There are some very good DYKs which are new GAs anyway which I've seen today, but to keep that sort of level for every entry would be great in my view. Maybe I'm biased I don't know but the deal with DYKs for me has never been an excitement about it appearing on the main page so I could accept that the current system could be demoted to a sub page and replaced with GA DYKs. I've made a proposal for this here.♦ Dr. Blofeld 10:37, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
Changing the scope would seem reasonable - but I think article creators who write good content should continue to be rewarded. I suggest extending the scope but leaving new material in as one of the possible sources for DYK this creating more competition and hopefully a better veting system Agathoclea (talk) 12:29, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
I agree, which is why I've proposed a sub page dedicated entirely to new DYKs which would be featured for much longer, nominators would see a photograph accompanying their hook and there would be more room to view the hooks. Page view stats indicate an extremely small percentage actually visit the DYK hooks anyway. I've lost count how many times I've yawned or shook my head at some of the hooks hitting the main page, at times they are an embarrassment. I think the main page should be reserved only for content which has been given some formal review and quality approval. The DYKs appearing right now are very inconsistent and you never know what to expect. I don't see why a link to a sub page from the main page would be that damaging to the promotion of new content. If all that motivates editors to writing articles is to go "wow my article is on the front page of wikipedia" then I question their purpose on wikipedia. In fact that's part of the problem in that some people are so keen to push their hooks through and get on the main page they may spout and add poor sources just to make it loook of acceptable length. If they are pasisonate about a subject and writing they will do it anyway. One could argue anyway that replacing them on the main page with Good article snippets might encourage more editors to produce GA quality articles and create articles like that and actually give more value to work appearing on the front page. If that is a motivator as you claim then more editors would be inclined to want to get their articles to GA, which is what we want.♦ Dr. Blofeld 13:15, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
Comment We could use some statistics. Which sections of the Main Page do our readers follow out (click on a link to see more)? How many follows on each DYK article over the last month would show us which sorts of articles are popular. I wouldn't expect many readers to follow the Picture of the day or On this day, as they can see them on the Main page, but I would like to know how many readers are interested in DYK, v Today's featured article. Let's see what's working and what's not before discussing whether it should or should not be changed, assuming the section's purpose is to provide something our readers want. Perhaps readers would prefer something else entirely. 99.50.186.100 (talk) 14:47, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
Did you know, the first DYK was on 24 February 2004, a month after the English Wikpedia reached the milestone of 200,000 articles?
While I haven't read the discussion leading to the formation of DYK's, it is understandable that the community would support a mechanism to encourage the creation of new articles at that time. Now that we have over 3.6 million articles, and manage to add about 900 a day, prehaps it is time to use the high profile of the main page to support a different goal. I'm not saying 3.6 million is enough articles, I'm simply saying that sheer article creation is not a goal that needs extra help. I'd prefer to see the main page support a quality goal, rather than a quantity goal.--SPhilbrickT 15:05, 23 July 2011 (UTC)
Many of us, myself included, have questioned the DYK nominations of User:Billy Hathorn, which have led to the current kerfuffle. Most of his hooks have been thin on notable and/or interesting material (a lot of DYKs on obscure and fairly boring local legislators). See here, where I reviewed a Billy Hathorn DYK about a Louisiana state rep. and shot down a weird and not particularly notable hook about the state rep 'gator hunting. The ALT hook he gave me was similarly thin on notability, but unlike the gator huntin' hook didn't appear to poke any "WTF buttons" and the article solidly met the DYK criteria (new date and length, etc) so I felt compelled to pass it[14]. Listen carefully, existing DYK criteria compel us to pass boring-as-sin hooks thin on notability! Creating a new DYK checklist to address the criteria problem is an important first step, but the problem is bigger: we're incentivizing quantity and newness above all, not quality content, and the result is weak articles on the front page. Yes DYK should be overhauled, interesting-ness should be the rule, not a rarity in a haystack of dull, borderline articles designed to meet arbitrary criteria. And Jimmy Wales' proposal for DYK Reform should be heard; it's the best approach I've seen so far. No, this isn't an idiotic Jimbo said... argument ("Argumentum ad Jimbonem"). The principles outlined here should merit a look whether a newb with an I.P. or an ol' wikipedia gray beard brought them up. NickDupree (talk) 00:22, 24 July 2011 (UTC)
Chiming in as one more diverse viewpoint, particularly since I see with some distress that names are being named - ok, name me, I'm here. I would be saddened to see DYK replaced with yet another FA showcase, even if it's labeled GA quirky facts, or made a parallel of GA (which would be the effect of your proposal to require a year and 20 different editors). It's the only place on the Main Page where we demonstrate our breadth, and FA and GA are always going to demonstrate institutionalized bias, so that would be a serious loss. It's also the only place on the Main Page (except possibly the Featured Picture) where we explicitly try to draw eyes by being interesting. That's an important part of the public face of an encyclopedia. Also, as I have said many times on the project page, I disagree with the underlying assumptions that DYK is badly broken and requires fundamental change. One of those assumptions is that DYK nominators do it for the glory: I believe that's a corrosive example of assuming bad faith, and an accusation much more natural to level at GA and FA participants. In my view we simply have different tastes at play here: some seek accolades from their peers and are willing to spend many, many hours responding to criticisms to get that (GA, FA), some seek to share their work or others' and then move on to create or improve another article (DYK). Different tastes. Your proposal, and to a lesser extent Dr. Blofeld's original post here, proceed from the GA/FA mindset. With all necessary apologies, that isn't the only way to get passionate writing and co-operative editing. As Giano has said, the "many cooks" thing can sometimes drive away passionate and knowledgeable writers - but not always. The thing about Wikipedia is that all types of collaboration co-exist here, including both hundreds of editors working together (as happens on the articles on breaking news stories, for example) and lone nerds crafting articles that then have a category added, or the measurement conversion template added, or are moved to a different capitalisation of the title per MOS - and other than that, the article is left alone as a good job. Requiring an article to be edited by many people is counterproductive - even if it just means some articles won't be shared via the front page, that's a loss. It's also discouraging to a significant portion of those you say you want to encourage, and whom the project as a whole always says it wants to encourage - content creators. DYK is in fact the clearest way in which Wikipedia shows it means that. Moreover, the value of DYK in drawing in editors to make new articles and improve stubs should not be discounted. I have run into so many people for whom that's true. Again with all due apologies to those with different tastes, GA and FA are different games - they involve changing an article and arguing it through a gauntlet. As I raised on the DYK page, maybe it's a competitive thing. DYK is not competitive - the assumption that it is is unjustified, and I have gone so far as to withdraw from DYK to make clear that that's not my motivation. GA and FA intentionally are. The encyclopedia needs both - and it very much needs to offset the pressure of unconscious bias. For those reasons alone, DYK was a very good idea and should be left substantially alone. Yngvadottir (talk) 16:23, 25 July 2011 (UTC)
I wrote about this yesterday, it was archived, I'm sure a coincidence. Please arrange for someone competent to look at this. Yogesh Khandke (talk) 18:21, 25 July 2011 (UTC)
(ce) The significant factor with caste articles is that even when it's not the same group of people, it's nearly identical issues. I pick a few new caste articles to rewrite, and four of five go fine, but on the fifth suddenly folks are barreling out of the woodwork to complain, revert, and generally not actually add anything other than copyvios or quickie "this caste is incredibly awesome and ruled most of India and the God XYZ is from this caste" unrefs. Completely separate castes from different regions, but the methodology, arguments, and chain of events are remarkably the same:
Mr. Wales, anyone will understand that the issue is not money at all. By making silly jokes about it they are obfuscating the issue. The issue is wp:COMPETENCE, these blokes are hurting Wikipedia. Please Mr. Wales have someone good, give it a hard look. Wikipedia is one of the most egalitarian thing that has happened to mankind. India, more than any other place needs Wikipedia. Please take the issue seriously.Yogesh Khandke (talk) 03:29, 26 July 2011 (UTC)
The root problem is really simple and is easy to describe. Focusing on the present day, in 2011, the word Shudra has the same connotation as the word Negro, only worse because it has more to do with religion, the occupation of a whole group of people and their position in society than it has to do with race or ethnicity alone. As Yogesh pointed out somewhere, the article on Barack Obama says in the second sentence "He is the first African American to hold the office", using the politically correct term. However when it comes to Indian castes, some editors who might be using 18th, 19th or 20th century sources, find that the word is used freely there and they insist that it must be used in Wikipedia articles. I have highlighted this problem of racism in colonial-era British sources earlier ([21] [22]) but I've been handed an indefinite topic ban from Indian history immediately afterward so I'm staying away from all the mayhem at ANI and the article talk pages. Zuggernaut (talk) 04:14, 26 July 2011 (UTC)
A caste article got cleaned up, a few editors resisted the changes, create a large sockfarm and tried to revert it back to their preferred version. SPIs got filed and the sockmasters banned. After a few days this attack blog is created and new set of SPAs created to push the link in various wikipedia pages. An ANI discussion was started and the SPAs were blocked. After a few weeks another SPA inserts the same blog link into another discussion at the india noticeboard. Yogesh Khandke promptly takes up the issue and has been giving the blog visibility by posting it in various talk pages. He claims it is a competence issue /admin abuse etc. He has been told to take it to the relevant forum (ANI, AN, DR) multiple times by multiple editors. He refuses to do so and instead posts only in talk pages and notice boards. His problem is he views everything in wikipedia as some sort of Indian vs non-Indian editor struggle and is throwing accusations all around.--Sodabottle (talk) 05:15, 26 July 2011 (UTC)