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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Waiting edit requests to the global block notice  
1 comment  




2 Call talk pages "Talk"  
117 comments  




3 Coordinated SOPA reaction in early 2012 RfC  
161 comments  


3.1  Background information  





3.2  Proposal  





3.3  Need  





3.4  Statement in opposition  





3.5  Rebuttal to opposition  





3.6  Response to Geoff  





3.7  "Internet search engine"  





3.8  Personal statements from proposal authors  





3.9  Discussion  





3.10  Committee meets on Wednesday  





3.11  Don't do it  





3.12  SOPA markup postponed until January  





3.13  Legal question  





3.14  Other organisations doing blackouts  





3.15  Jimbo Wales' opinion  





3.16  Reddit's January 18th Blackout  





3.17  Wikipedia:SOPA initiative/Action  







4 ACC e-mail feature  
18 comments  


4.1  Clarification  







5 SOPA  
3 comments  




6 Bold moves that end up as de facto successful  
11 comments  




7 News that Wikipedia will be closed on January 18 2012  
9 comments  




8 Adding rollback edits to your watchlist  
11 comments  




9 Alternate accounts editing user script pages  
3 comments  




10 H.J. De Blij  
3 comments  




11 "Quantify" Wikipedia traffic data  
8 comments  




12 User preference to automaticlly use https  
11 comments  




13 English Wikipedia fork  
11 comments  




14 SOPA IS IMPORTANT - have a continual pronouncement on pages re internet restriction (vs. one shot)  
6 comments  




15 Suggestion for how to stimulate improved content  
5 comments  




16 Contents summaries for all ref desks on one page  
9 comments  




17 Create a category for CORRELATIVE / SIMILAR CONCEPTS  
5 comments  




18 WikiProject History: time for an end?  
10 comments  




19 wikimail  
1 comment  




20 sort articles by " NUMBER OF WORDS"  
11 comments  




21 Automatic warning when creating section heading exactly matching an existing section heading  
9 comments  




22 page full of images  
2 comments  




23 Proposal: Articles about extant corporations  
26 comments  


23.1  Articles about Extant Corporations WP:AEC  





23.2  Reform of WP:CORP  





23.3  {{Hatchetjob}}  





23.4  General discussion  







24 Potential student project  
17 comments  




25 Binding content discussions  
126 comments  


25.1  Reflections from the Ireland-names example  





25.2  Binding content discussions. Section break  





25.3  Binding content discussions. Section break 2  
















Wikipedia:Village pump (proposals)/Archive 84







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< Wikipedia:Village pump (proposals)

  • Technical
  • Proposals (persistent)
  • Idea lab
  • WMF
  • Miscellaneous
  • This page contains discussions that have been archived from Village pump (proposals). Please do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to revive any of these discussions, either start a new thread or use the talk page associated with that topic.


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    Waiting edit requests to the global block notice

    There are two waiting edit requests at MediaWiki talk:Globalblocking-blocked.Jasper Deng (talk) 05:18, 16 January 2012 (UTC)

    Call talk pages "Talk"

    Consensus is in favor of changing the discussion link to Talk. Those in favor cite many reasons why this change will stimulate new editor participation, while most who oppose only state personal preference. They 'ayes' have it. Edokter (talk) — 16:30, 9 January 2012 (UTC)

    The discussion consensus was enacted in this edittoMediaWiki:Talk. Cunard (talk) 08:55, 16 January 2012 (UTC)

    RfC tag added on 09:01, 4 December 2011 (UTC).

    Hi. A lot of Wikipedia instructions tell people to post "on the talk page". However, it isn't obvious where this means, since the page is not labelled "talk page" but is labelled "discussion". This is very confusing, especially for someone unfamiliar with all the Wikipedia rules. Wny not change the text on the tab from "Discussion" to "Talk page" to match all the instructions? (By instructions I am referring to everything you get when you click Help, as well as so many of the templates used to tell posters why their edit was not accepted and how to fix it. (184.147.120.119 (talk) 23:07, 2 December 2011 (UTC))


    Just a note: the page which will need to be changed is MediaWiki:Talk. sonia♫ 09:48, 4 December 2011 (UTC)

    At 17:14, 8 December 2011 (UTC) I changed the title of the post from 'Call talk pages "Talk Page"' to 'Call talk pages "Talk"', because there is a massive consensus among people supporting this change for using 'Talk' in specific and some opposition to 'Talk Page' in specific. Sven Manguard Wha? 17:14, 8 December 2011 (UTC)

    Many people at first do not know what "wiki" means, and they also learn what "talk page" means. -Wikid77 13:32, 6 December 2011 (UTC)
    So you're saying that new users should just learn random things about how Wikipedia works before contributing? Just because people learn what "talk page" means later does not mean we should expect people to take the time to figure that out before they get impatient and just give up. /ƒETCHCOMMS/ 01:42, 7 December 2011 (UTC)
    P.S. I also oppose this in some matter, such as the word "discussion" being more, eh, mature than "talk". My vote is now neutral. yrtneg talk contr 23:19, 13 December 2011 (UTC)
    The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

    Coordinated SOPA reaction in early 2012 RfC


    Please see also Wikipedia:SOPA initiative/Action, where the WMF requests clarity to help it set up systems to support community consensus.
    Relevant discussion atWikipedia:SOPA initiative#Concrete proposals workshop

    It was announced on December 16, 2011 that a floor vote on SOPA is delayed, likely until early 2012. While the threat of this legislation still looms, the brief reprieve gives our community time to reach a meaningful consensus about whether to take action, and what action to take.

    Background information

    The Stop Online Piracy Act ("SOPA", H.R.3261) is a piece of proposed federal legislation in the United States. The bill would expand the ability of law enforcement and copyright holders to fight online trafficking in copyrighted intellectual property and counterfeit goods. It has seen widespread opposition from all corners of the Internet, and poses a unique threat to Wikipedia's continued operation.

    Two proposals for a response from the Wikipedia community have been advanced so far (first proposal, second proposal), but neither was conducted with enough lead-time to reach a meaningful consensus.

    Proposal

    Here is a proposal that we believe strikes a reasonable compromise, chosen as a moderate sampling of the ideas posted on Wikipedia:SOPA initiative:

    This gets the message across clearly, explains how to help, is targeted to people who have the ability to effect change, shows that the protest was a community decision, and doesn't reduce the utility of Wikipedia for readers.

    To set this proposal in the context of similar actions in the past, see this summary.

    Need

    While most of us understand the power that Wikipedia has in this situation and the size of our audience, some are still skeptical that a citizen response can change the course of this legislation. Rep. Zoe Lofgren, member of the House Judiciary Committee addressed this concern on Reddit:

    My best assessment is that most members of the House who do not serve on the Judiciary Committee have not yet focused on SOPA. People should realize that incredible power they have to impact the thinking of their own Representative on the subject. For example, a very intelligent colleague who is not on the Committee approached me today asking about the bill. Why? He had received an urgent and forthright telephone call from a small business person in his district who is tremendously opposed. He wanted to know more about our Open Act Alternative. This is the power that each of you have with your own Representative. --Rep. Zoe Lofgren

    Statement in opposition

    (replacement oppose statement by User: Wehwalt)

    I have replaced the original oppose statement, by the proponent, as it omitted a number of points made by opposers. Accordingly, while nominally having both sides presented, it actually failed to do so.

    No one has shown that SOPA is a threat to Wikipedia. That is, events after its passage would cause the site to shut down or significantly impair its functioning. When pressed, Geoff Bingham, corporate counsel to WMF (that is, they are the client, to whom his duty runs, not us) said that we might be deemed an internet search engine This seems to contradict the plain meaning of the statute, which refers to internet search engine returning a list of sites elsewhere on the internet in return to a user query. We do not send people elsewhere on the internet. For the position Geoff expresses to prevail (he qualifies his position by many a “could” and “might”), the language in the statute would have to be considered meaningless--and by the rules of statutory construction, courts dislike concluding that Congress inserted language, and meant nothing by it. All that is perfectly proper; it is routine for those arguing that a statute is wrong to present what is called in the law the “parade of horribles”. Suffice it to say that for most statutes, the parade of horribles presented by opponents resembles your favorite post-nuclear scenario.

    Let’s say I’m wrong and SOPA is applicable to Wikipedia. What does that mean? Well, it means if a rights holder sued a foreign infringing site (that is, a site that neither has an office nor a designated person who can be served with legal process in the US, who commits various infringing acts), and won the Federal Court lawsuit, we might be asked to take down links to that site. In most cases, these are torrent farms which give the latest episode of HBO’s hits or new movies. Few are reliable sites. In practice, what I suspect is that the site would be placed on the spam blacklist at meta and people would search to ensure we weren’t relying on the content. Unlikely, that.

    If we sourced to such a site, we would find another site for the citation. I find it very unlikely, despite the parade of horribles presented by advocates, that we would lose any content. There is no reliable source from some obscure African nation which “just happens” to be a foreign infringing site.

    Absent the existential threat to Wikipedia, which many have claimed but none survived the cold light of day, we should not do this thing. Keep in mind that having the 5th-most trafficked website in the world advocate for a cause is a tempting platform, and many have already flooded in to make the decision for us. Keep in mind that this is something we can do at most once with any conviction (we may already have shot our bolt with the coverage of Jimbo’s call). The second time, even for a real threat, it’s just “There goes Wikipedia again.” (and soon “There goes Wikipedia”) To say that this will end the Internet as we know it, as some supporters have, is dramatic, and not supported by the facts. However, it may be a step towards making Wikipedia less-well-regarded. Editors should feel free to advocate in the manner they deem best as individuals. However, a strike is a bad idea.

    Let’s keep in mind that SOPA is widely supported because there is a very real problem with anything copyrighted showing up on the internet, free, and being downloaded. Many of these sites are offshore, and rightsholders cannot effectively get in touch with them to get the content taken down. They are, at best, playing whack-a-mole. That is a problem that is going to be addressed legislatively in some way.

    But let’s say we went ahead and did this crazy thing. What then? Will people searching for information go and drop everything and call their congressman. No. They will say a word the civility hawks around here wouldn’t like, and go on to find the information, either from a mirror site or elsewhere. And they will remember they don’t need Wikipedia to find information. In an earlier post, I recalled James Hogan’s science fiction novel, The Two Faces of Tomorrow. In it, a self-aware computer was tested by having its power shut off. Eventually, it managed to wire around the switch. So will our public, and as a political player we will be trusted less.

    Rebuttal to opposition

    Because in 2009 I wrote strategy:Proposal:Wikipedia is a Web search engine, I disagree with Wehwalt. Any serious educational or academic user does not cite Wikipedia directly, but only its sources; thus, to us, Wikipedia is a resource that delivers HTML links to references in response to a search term. WMF lawyers might dispute this, perhaps even win, because the law doesn't always make sense, but let's not kid ourselves - how often is a law interpreted more narrowly than what it looks like?

    A court order does not simply mean that we "are asked to take down links to the site"; it means that there must be consequences of some sort for failing to do so. Wikipedia was unable to prevent postings of the AACS key when that controversy was current, despite some admins believing them to be illegal and taking action to block them. They turned up all over the place, in articles, discussions, as screenshots of T-shirt sites, in RGB color values for a "free speech flag" (see article) - it was simply impracticable. So we're not being set up to experience some "minor" act of distasteful censorship, but rather, for the legal sanctions of failure. And there's no way to stop that in an encyclopedia that anyone can edit.

    Response to Geoff

    (added post, response to Geoff) I’d first like to apologize to the community for a number of grammar and style errors in my above post. I would have changed them, but with a reply on table, that doesn’t seem appropriate.

    I’m grateful to Geoff for responding, as his time here has value, unlike mine. He also is putting his name and reputation on the line, I’m just posting (or being a troll, in some eyes). As a lawyer who has concentrated in certain areas (not intellectual property!) I know that the hardest person to persuade is the lawyer from another field who drops in, makes elementary mistakes, and just doesn’t get “the big picture”. If that suits me, I apologize for it. However, I don’t think I would pound the drum like this without having some reason.

    A poster below disparages Geoff’s reply on the ground he has ignored technical definitions of the word “indexed” with respect to search engines, which operate to exclude Wikipedia. If Geoff has more to say on this (I will understand if he does not, his time is valuable and taken up with matters which would benefit the project), I’d be grateful for a response. If “indexed” is clearly defined or understood to have a meaning, which excludes Wikipedia, let’s wrap this up and get back to wrapping presents for Jimbo.

    At the present time, if I read Geoff’s response correctly, we are called upon to take action. And why? Out of fear of sloppy legislative drafting. I grant his point that it is possible to make an argument that we are a search engine, that we do provide external links in many articles, and so some well-paid and articulate attorney can make a case that we are a search engine. The lawyer might not actually believe it (the practice of law involves advocating for clients, although a lawyer’s personal views might differ) but the case could be made.

    But come on, is the search engine argument a winning one? Really? Not just one that is plausible, one that can win, or at least have a solid chance thereof, in court? That Wikipedia is a search engine? Really?

    I think the difficulty with Geoff’s post, leaving aside the question of “indexed” which may dispose of the whole thing, is in his argument that we may fit the part of the definition of search engine in that it may be claimed that our primary purpose is “gathering and reporting, in response to a user query, indexed information or Web sites available elsewhere on the Internet.”

    This seems dubious. Many of our articles, especially at the higher grades, have few online sources, working from scholarly books and other print reliable sources. My latest project, Cross of Gold speech has nearly no online references, but is almost entirely sourced to well-regarded books on the Gilded Age. We give the reader information, not distinguishing between offline and online information. Yes, we do contain information available elsewhere (i.e., off Wiki) on the internet, but really, is a judge going to rule that it is our one and only “primary purpose”? That this is the raison d'être of Wikipedia, the reason it has become the 5th most trafficked website in the world? Because we are (arguably) an external search engine? I would respectfully suggest that this is unlikely to be a winning argument, not in a court of law. Really, do you think any judge is going to rule that Wikipedia’s single primary purpose is being a search engine for sites outside our domain? I’ve seen judges do many ill-advised things in my time, so I never say never. However, if we are to live in fear of what seems an unnatural interpretation of the statute--we might as well hide in the basement until they come for us.

    I do not say Geoff is wrong in calling SOPA a threat. Indeed, I am certain that we are in agreement on much of this. I recall a saying that everyone’s in danger when the legislature’s in session. But there doesn’t seem to be much here. Yes, SOPA bears watching, unexpected things can come out of manager’s amendments and conference committees. But right now the threat is not existential. It’s at best--or, if you prefer, at worst--foggy.

    @Geoff--regarding last statement, well said. Have a good flight and best wishes of the season.--Wehwalt (talk) 19:45, 23 December 2011 (UTC)

    "Internet search engine"

    I want to thank Wehwalt for his thoughtful essay. As I noted in my blog, I think the biggest flaw in SOPA for Wikimedia is the loose definition of "internet search engine." Because this has been discussed above and elsewhere, let me explain in a little more detail why, in my opinion, rights owners will argue that that statutory definition covers us.

    Under the new SOPA version (before the markup), the full definition of "internet search engine" (Sec. 101(15)) read as follows:

    "The term 'Internet search engine'--
    (A) means a service made available via the Internet whose primary function is gathering and reporting, in response to a user query, indexed information or Web sites available elsewhere on the Internet; and
    (B) does not include a service that retains a third party that is subject to service of process in the United States to gather, index, or report information available elsewhere on the Internet."

    Section (A) arguably applies to Wikipedia because Wikipedia is:

    (1) "a service made available via the Internet" [There should be no dispute here.]
    (2) "whose primary function is gathering and reporting ... indexed information ... available elsewhere on the Internet"[1] [Rights owners may argue that the primary function on Wikipedia is gathering and reporting information in articles (which constitute "indexed information") that are primarily sourced through information available elsewhere on the Internet as evidenced by our reference links at the bottom of our articles.]
    (3) "in response to a user query" [Users employ our own search function, i.e., user query, to find Wikipedia articles (or "indexed information")]

    (Section (B) does not appear applicable to Wikipedia.)

    This above parsing of the legislative language demonstrates at least the sloppiness in the legislative drafting, and, given the ambiguities such drafting give rise to, we can expect adverse rights owners to seek to take advantage. If legislators wished to exclude Wikipedia-type sites, they could have done so using more specific language. They have not, and that worries me. Geoffbrigham (talk) 00:18, 22 December 2011 (UTC)

  • ^ It is unclear whether the phrase "available elsewhere on the Internet" modifies the phrase "indexed information" as opposed to modifying only "Web sites." I am assuming it modifies both phrases, though there is arguable ambiguity on this point.
  • In response to some of the arguments (most of which I find quite fair in their presentation), allow me to quickly say the following (before I hop on a plane):
    (1) The primary reason to oppose SOPA is its effect on the Internet and the precedent it creates for further censorship once the government gets comfortable with pulling down entire sites. That is, our focus should not necessarily be on only the definition of "internet search engine." Our site relies on other sites to provide us sources, so, in my opinion, an attack on those sites is indirectly an attack on us.
    (2) As I said in my blog, one of the most serious issues with SOPA (Section 103) appears to be addressed from a Wikipedia viewpoint with the amendment introduced before the mark-up. The chances are now slim that any rights owner would argue we are an "Internet site dedicated to theft of U.S. property" under that provision.
    (3) I understand conflicting views on the interpretation of "internet search engine," and, believe me, I will argue vigorously that the definition does not apply to us if we are challenged in court. That said, I don't always trust prosecutors and judges - who sometimes look for ways to put round pegs into square holes without much technical expertise - to interpret the poorly-drafted definition of "internet search engine," especially when such proceedings are at the urging of well-financed and motivated rights owners. In the end, we might be required to incur significant costs in courts to defend our position if the government does not exercise proper discretion. A clean definition would prevent that. In short, I'm concerned about the power and money of rights owners and how they may improperly affect government policy in this regard.
    Again many thanks to all for their different opinions. I have tried to be balanced in my presentations and blog because I believe the community needs to understand the impact of SOPA without hyperbole, but obviously I welcome thoughtful disagreement which helps provide additional perspective. Happy holidays to all. Geoffbrigham (talk) 19:18, 23 December 2011 (UTC)

    Personal statements from proposal authors

    Ian Baker: While I work for WMF as a developer, this proposal is made by myself as an individual. I am aware that the Foundation officially opposes SOPA, but am in no way representing the Foundation when I write this. I care about Wikipedia deeply, and am therefore very concerned about this bill's imminent passage. raindrift (talk) 00:09, 19 December 2011 (UTC)

    Jimbo Wales: I have sought to assist Ian in trying to make this proposal mild and widely acceptable. We do not have a lot of time for debate, as markup is set to begin again on December 21st and this could still make it to the floor of the House quite quickly.--Jimbo Wales (talk) 12:28, 17 December 2011 (UTC)

    The above comment signed by Jimbo, was not added here by Jimbo. fredgandt 00:20, 19 December 2011 (UTC)

    Sorry about that. It's from this userspace draft raindrift (talk) 01:10, 19 December 2011 (UTC)

    Discussion

    But I like cheese. --Hobbes Goodyear (talk) 01:59, 19 December 2011 (UTC)
    Of the three SOPA-related action proposals thus far put forth, this is by far the best-articulated, and most immediately practicable one. It is respectful of the community, addresses all major the previously-raised objections, and is compatible with NPOV. It also—and I consider this crucial—includes a strong emphasis on creating high-value action on the part of the Wikipedia community and readership. The Tumblr auto-calling system mentioned in the proposal was a massive success, without which SOPA might have sailed through without the scrutiny that it is now receiving, and which it so needed. Without the tumblr action, our community might not even have the opportunity that we now have to draw further attention to this deeply-flawed legislation.AaronMuszalski (talk) 19:19, 19 December 2011 (UTC) AaronMuszalski (talkcontribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
    Not to besmirch the work Jimmy Wales does on behalf of the project, which I do very much appreciate, but I really must chime in here. The link you provide purporting to show that Mr. Wales "contribute(s) to articles to this day" shows no such thing. Oh, he changed a URL on one piece in mid-November, etc. But he basically engages in Talk pages, Noticeboard pages, and other matters relating to the apparatus, not the content. Once in a while there is a contentious BLP that brings editorial action, but that's ultimately a function of project maintenance and defense rather than content creation. That's neither here nor there, there are many people who do these things — some productively, some not. But it is a misrepresentation to contend otherwise. Carrite (talk) 17:31, 21 December 2011 (UTC)
    Support I am an European, but I believe that any similar law aimed directly against the freedoms of people merit similar response. Wikipedia is global project and as such it should defend itself on a global level no matter government of which country is attempting to propose change which could affect it. Petrb (talk) 09:09, 20 December 2011 (UTC)

    UPDATE Jimbo Wales has stated on his page this is not a problem so I would withdraw my objection on my above stated grounds and change my vote. Mugginsx (talk) 21:07, 26 December 2011 (UTC)

    I am really worried that we will end up doing nothing at all, not because we decided to, but for the sole reason that we discuss it until it is too late without ever reaching any kind of consensus either way and/or that the discussions are all over the place and about so many different proposals so there is no way to even determine whether there is consensus for/against a particular action.
    And for those who haven't already, I suggest reading/commenting on the "concrete proposals" at Wikipedia:SOPA initiative#Concret proposals workshop. (which I thought was supposed to be the centralized location for discussion, but apparently it's not). -MsBatfish (talk) 20:27, 21 December 2011 (UTC)
    This will probably get censored/deleted again (oh the irony), but what the hell, I love exposing hyprocites:
    Pay the fuck attention kiddies, this little event that you're basically shitting your pants over...oh, hey, guess what, IT ALREADY HAPPENED! No, srsly, it ALREADY THE FUCK HAPPENED! Woah! TWICE in fact that I can recall off the top of my head just in the past 15 years!
    I mean, hurr de durr, where were your stupid asses in NINETEEN NINETY SIX when Congress passed the CDA, the Communications Decency Act, which, by the way, was like 38 shades WORSE than this current bill you're all spastic and frothing over.
    And make no mistake, Congress WILL pass it into law, they're getting a FIFTY SEVEN MILLION dollar bribe to do it, essentially. And they've no problems at all with that knowing that their "big brother" the Supreme Court will simply step in right afterwards and fix their epic fucking mess...they get to keep all that bribe money of course and the MPAA/RIAA will be out FIFTY MILLION dollars...win-win all around!
    They do this all the time, it's practically their job description, there's actually been a whole slew of these idiot "laws" in the past 25 years, every single one deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court within a year of their passing through Congress, usually due to lawsuits from the ACLU and/or the EFF.
    The last two major ones were the CDA, Communications Decency Act and the COPA, Children's Online Protection Act. This new bill is basically the exact same thing, just reworded slightly. Same old shit, different acronym.
    Honestly, I can't believe I'm the ONLY one to point this out! I mean, hello, 1996! Blue Ribbon Campaign?! Surely I couldn't have been the ~only~ person online back in 1996! Tha'fawk...they sure are breeding you kids stupid these days.
    Mmmm, should probably mention, in the event that a really fucked up law does come to pass, it usually takes the Supreme Court about a year or so to completely boot fuck it...BUT, when they're sued they usually file injunctions and shit that prevent them from actually putting the law into effect at all...so even though the law could effectively be completely passed...yeah, that doesn't mean they can actually act on it.
    It is pretty hilarious though, first it was "decency", then it was "won't someone think of the children?" and now we've got "scary pirates" in the latest incarnation, but it's all the *SAME* fawking bill, just slightly reworded and with new acronyms, CDA... COPA... and now SOPA. I mean, what, do they think the Supreme Court isn't gonna notice it's the EXACT SAME BILL THEY ALREADY BOOT STOMPED?! *rolls eyes* It really is just for the money when you get right down to it.
    That's the current version of my Anti-SOPA Idiocy rant...feel free to repost/edit/plagiarize at your discretion elsewhere, the important thing is just getting it circulated.
    --InvertedCupcake (talk) 22:38, 21 December 2011 (UTC) InvertedCupcake (talkcontribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
    There was no wikipedia in 1996. And yeah, you were pretty much one of the few people online back then. Choyoołʼįįhí:Seb az86556 > haneʼ 12:42, 22 December 2011 (UTC)
    You're probably right, and yes, I did oppose the CDA in 1996. But the problem with relying on the Supreme Court is that it has not always been a foolproof barricade against unconstitutional censorship. They're a safety net, but it's best not to fall off the tightrope in the first place because you might just miss. The other problem is that between Tipper Gore and Clinton's willingness to sign the CDA I ended up voting Ralph Nader in 2000, then watched as Bush turned out to be more of an incompetent, liar, money-burner, and out-and-out war criminal than I ever thought possible. I don't want this to go to Obama, because if he gets blackmailed into signing it somehow, I won't know how to respond. Wnt (talk) 23:21, 31 December 2011 (UTC)
    Oh come on, "editing strike"? Who the hell will care or even know about it? Wikipedia is an encyclopedia not a playground for editors. There is a real world outside Wikipedia, and it pays to remember it and stand up for it.--Anon 09:52, 12 January 2012 (UTC)
    Who cares if people don't come to know about it. See WP:NOT. --lTopGunl (talk) 16:54, 12 January 2012 (UTC)
    As you can see from the amount of support on this page, lots of people care, including Jimmy Wales. From WP:NOT: a widely accepted standard that all editors should normally follow. It's a content guideline for editors, nobody is proposing we change the content.--Anon 22:00, 13 January 2012 (UTC)

    Committee meets on Wednesday

    Could we at least send some letter to the committee by Wednesday (when they reconvene!), asking for them to at least carve an exception for WP? It'd kind of suck to have to move the servers to Iceland next year, if we could have just politely asked right now. :-P --Kim Bruning (talk) 22:23, 19 December 2011 (UTC)

    Due to limited amount of time we have, if we pursue the open letter course, I would recommend the follow:
    1. Have Jimbo Wales or another member of the WMF craft an open letter to the Committee. The letter should be hosted on the web.
    2. Use Twitter to inform Committee members about the open letter.
    3. Convince a Congressperson (via Twitter) to mention Wikipedia and its concerns during the markup session.
    --Michaeldsuarez (talk) 22:59, 19 December 2011 (UTC)
    Congratulations to the two above editors for laying it out clearly: SOPA can do whatever it wants to the 'net as a whole, provided some exception for WP. Not joking, I much rather read clear positions tan the few holier than thou I've read above. - Nabla (talk) 02:09, 20 December 2011 (UTC)
    How would that work? If it's actually specific to WP, that wipes out our ability to fork, which would do away with Wikipedia being a "free encyclopedia", which is kind of important... --Yair rand (talk) 04:36, 20 December 2011 (UTC)
    Best not to try for those kind of earmarks. With the House as it is, it likely won't get much traction. Better to change something broader, like narrowing the rules to apply as close as to what the bill was originally intended for (not what it's become).Jinnai 05:40, 20 December 2011 (UTC)

    Don't do it

    SOPA is an important issue, and I generally support any effort to derail it's possible passage. That being said, don't do this. Just... don't. Wikipedia should remain as apart as possible from any and all real world politics. Delving into the political field is the province of the Wikimedia Foundation (and, by extension, of Jimbo Wales himself). The editorial community of all of Wikimedia's properties should retain their neutrality, let alone their place as editors. If it's acceptable for the community, as a Wikipedia community, to become directly involved in politics then we have absolutely zero credibility when it comes to editorial decisions regarding any article with any political content to it.
    — V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 09:14, 21 December 2011 (UTC)

    Although I support doing a SOPA blackout, this brings up a good point - should we have a disclaimer on the SOPA page stating that because of talk of doing this, we may have a bias on the issue? Pvvni (talk)

    SOPA markup postponed until January

    http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2134110/sopa-hearing-postponedPreviously, markup was scheduled to resume on December 21st, but now it's rescheduled for January. --Michaeldsuarez (talk) 15:13, 21 December 2011 (UTC)

    Legal question

    How could political advocacy of the sort proposed here impact our tax status? Mugginsx pointed out this issue at WP:SOPA. Thanks. Lagrange613 05:26, 22 December 2011 (UTC)

    I am glad at least two persons have concerns here besides me. Just what does everyone here think is going to happen if all of a sudden tax status changes? Are they going to pay the taxes to keep this afloat? They don't even believe the Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren of the very same judiciary committee who states calling in and sending letters to your particular Congressman as well as the Committee is WORKING. I am sure that they think they are helping but what they really are doing is unintentional plotting the possible end of Wikipedia! Please check this out yourself. It is all online.

    http://www.irs.gov/charities/charitable/article/0,,id=96099,00.html

    To be tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, an organization must be organized and operated exclusively for exempt purposes set forth in section 501(c)(3), and none of its earnings may inure to any private shareholder or individual. In addition, it may not be an action organization, i.e., it may not attempt to influence legislation as a substantial part of its activities and it may not participate in any campaign activity for or against political candidates.

    For a general overview of this and different foundations irs status look here at Wiki: 501(c) organization.

    For Wikipedia status look here: Wikimedia Foundation .

    ANSWER FROM JIMBO WALES: Copied below from User talk:Jimbo Wales page where he has posted an answer to this concern. I defer to his judgment. Mugginsx (talk) 11:52, 22 December 2011 (UTC)

    The key here is the "substantial part" test. It's complicated and I'm not an expert, but as an example, a typical test is to look at spending on lobbying, and the general rule here is that it must be less than 5% of total revenues. We have good advisers, and the Foundation isn't going to do anything that jeopardizes its tax status. Fear about that ought not to restrict community action in this area!--Jimbo Wales (talk) 11:42, 22 December 2011 (UTC)

    Other organisations doing blackouts

    Looks like some other internet folks might be planning a blackout on Jan 23. http://www.extremetech.com/computing/111543-google-amazon-facebook-and-twitter-considering-nuclear-option-to-protest-sopa --Kim Bruning (talk) 07:58, 4 January 2012 (UTC)

    Reddit has just announced they will black out on the 18th. Shall we coordinate?

    --Kim Bruning (talk) 01:05, 11 January 2012 (UTC)

    Coordinating this with Reddit would serve to magnify the impact - so, yes, absolutely. UltraExactZZ Said ~ Did 19:21, 11 January 2012 (UTC)

    Jimbo Wales' opinion

    Since the Wikipedia:SOPA_initiative doesn't receive much attention, here's some links to the opinions he had expressed there:

    --Michaeldsuarez (talk) 21:15, 9 January 2012 (UTC)

    Reddit's January 18th Blackout

    Earlier today reddit announced that they'll be blacking out the site for 12 hours on the 18th. If we do choose to move ahead with any action, it may be beneficial for us to sync the dates that these actions occur. Media outlets will then see that it's not just one rogue site out there that's doing this, but rather several working together toward a common goal. I think we should seriously consider taking action alongside them at this time. Pvvni (talk)

    Wikipedia:SOPA_initiative#Reddit_going_black_on_the_18th. --Michaeldsuarez (talk) 15:19, 11 January 2012 (UTC)

    I want to state, in the strongest possible terms, my unequivocal support for blacking out WMF sites in solidarity/conjunction/coordination with reddit and anyone else who steps up to make January 18 a date to remember. I do not believe the threat SOPA poses is existential, remote, or minor. I believe that, like democracy itself, those who fail to take action at the top of the slippery slope will find it ever harder to stop once they are headed into the abyss. This is not a question of crying wolf. WMF is obligated to take action to protect itself in the face of threats to its mission, much less existence. The community must likewise take action to inspire a political response to defeat SOPA and PIPA. I don't see room for waffling. I see the need for courage and leadership from one of the great websites in the world.

    Ronald Reagan is quoted often for saying "extremism in defense of liberty is no vice." Folks, liberty is precious. Ask those who are without it. Allowing this kind of constriction around the throat of liberty is intolerable in my view. I support strong, direct action calculated towards education and intended to inspire everyone who is affected by the blackout to act politically to change the direction of the legislation. It must be killed.

    Geoff has done a fine job in parsing the language from a legal perspective, and I doff my cap for his efforts. At an event for lawyers this evening, I was astonished at how few relatively informed people I know had even heard of SOPA, much less considered it on the merits, much less been inspired to take any action about it. I utterly disagree with those who trivialize this legislation or the need for a response. I also believe categorically that the situations where such action is necessary will likely be infrequent. But a challenge to Section 230 of the CDA, or legislative attempts to restrict the internet in the name of bogus IP concerns, or technical threats to WMF's independence on the web? No way.

    Count me as one who proudly stood up to say #STOPSOPA on #J18. @bradpatrick --Brad Patrick (talk) 05:30, 13 January 2012 (UTC)

    I couldn't agree more. We should do it. On the 18th. To show the support of the tech community on the day their members are testifying in congress. This is a big fight, and one of the first ones that has actually threatened the internet in any meaningful way. So, for 12 hours, 9am-9pm, we should have click-through on every page, if not a full blackout. Provide links to information, how to contact congressional reps (geo-targeted), simple talking points, and a note that PIPA (Senate version) shares many of SOPA's (House version) problems. Ocaasi t|c 06:26, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
    I would be very interested in substantiation of WMF "threats to its ... existence". Most especially in view of the analysis that Wikipedia wouldn't even be affected by SOPA, or at very very worst might have to remove some links. Much of the misinformation I have seen strikes me indeed as "crying wolf", in the interests of panicking the village. -- Seth Finkelstein (talk) 08:03, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
    "I would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice! And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue!" [7] barry goldwaer Slowking4 †@1₭ 13:35, 14 January 2012 (UTC)

    Wikipedia:SOPA initiative/Action

    In order to ensure that it has time to set up any systems that may be needed to support community consensus, the Wikimedia Foundation is requesting input from the community to help it determine what action is likely to be taken and when. Please help out there. Thanks! --Maggie Dennis (WMF) (talk) 18:39, 13 January 2012 (UTC)

    It's getting quite tiresome to have to chase this issue across the website. One could be forgiven for wondering whether the proponents aren't just asking the question again and again in the hopes of getting above the 60-70% support they've gotten on Jimbo's talk and here. One could be forgiven for thinking there's something wrong with that. Lagrange613 07:48, 14 January 2012 (UTC)

    The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page, such as the current discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

    ACC e-mail feature

    Hi. I'm Addihockey10, and I'm pretty active on ACC. If you don't know what that is, we review account requests from blocked users or users who can't create the account themselves for whatever reason. I'm going to get straight to the point, sometimes we get requests like "JimBob77" and there is an existing account named "JimBob76". We think it might be the same guy, and it probably is, but we're a little blind as we have no way to confirm it is in fact JimBob76 for password reset closes. I'd like to propose a feature where we can crosscheck the e-mail that the user submitted in the ACC request to the e-mail registered in the database for JimBob76. In order to comply with the privacy policy, we're only requesting that it returns "E-mail match" or "E-mail does not match". Ideally, these are the two options that could work.

    1. Make a special page only available to accountcreators where you can insert the e-mail of the request and it'll return whether it matches or not. This will be logged.

    2. Make a page where the ACC tool can automatically submit an e-mail check request if there is a similar account (automatically determined by the tool), and returns whether it matches or not. This shouldn't have to be logged, as a log will probably be available for an extended period of time in the ACC tool.

    Thanks. --Addihockey10 e-mail 06:20, 14 January 2012 (UTC)

    I believe that option 1 is more privacy-oriented as it doesn't automatically check, say a popular username is similar we would just create and we don't need to perform the e-mail check. --Addihockey10 e-mail 06:24, 14 January 2012 (UTC)

    Clarification

    After consideration, here's the modified proposal:

    The request to confirm whether the e-mail and username match will only be permitted to come from the ACC toolserver.
    The only users who will have access to this tool, are the ACC tool admins whom are all identified to the WMF. If a non-tool admin is handling one of the requests where an e-mail check should be applied to confirm whether the old account is indeed the one registered to the ACC request, it shall be deferred to tool admins.
    Usage: It should only be used in unclear cases where it would be needed to determine the account owner. In the extremely rare case of abuse the Audit subcommittee or ombudsman will have access to logs of these checks.
    What results would be returned: It would only show "Match" or "Does not match" for results. If you insert "John_Doe" and e-mail john_doe43@gmail.com it will not return that User:John_Doe43 has that e-mail registered. This should clear things up, please poke me if you have any questions. --Addihockey10 e-mail 22:36, 15 January 2012 (UTC)

    SOPA

    News outlets are reporting WP's going black on January 18. but all I see on the issue at enWP is at Wikipedia:SOPA initiative, where (as of this writing) no decision has been come to. So are the news outlets incorrect, or am I missing something? (Or perhaps they're talking about some other language Wikipedia??)—msh210 21:28, 16 January 2012 (UTC)

    Jimmy Wales seems to have made statements indicating that we're going on full blackout; I think he's just predicting how the RFC will be closed and planning accordingly. --Rschen7754 21:30, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    Ah, I see. Thanks.—msh210 21:32, 16 January 2012 (UTC)

    Bold moves that end up as de facto successful

    Several times I've seen a controversial page move performed without prior discussion. WP:RM says that potentially controversial moves should be discussed first. If there's no prior discussion, WP:BRD suggests that moving the page back and initiating a discussion is the right approach, but when I did that at Campaign for "santorum" neologism‎ it was promptly moved again, then moved back, and then move-protected because of the move edit war. I would prefer it if there were a policy-based argument that said something like: "if a move is made and is regarded as controversial, it should be reversed and a discussion opened at WP:RM, and should not be moved again without consensus". Ideally this should also allow a request for move protection to be made, with the caveat that the protecting admin should always move it back to the original version. I'm aware of the wrong version arguments, and generally agree with them, but I think there's a case to be made for treating the name a little more conservatively. The problem with the current approach is that WP:RM does not agree to a move unless there is a clear consensus to the move, so a controversial move can be done successfully if the move is made and then taken to WP:RM. This is an incentive to bypass discussion, so I think our approach needs to be changed. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 16:29, 8 January 2012 (UTC)

    What should happen if the bold move isn't noticed for a long time? This actually happened to yoghurt, and they've been arguing over the "h" ever since. WP:ENGVAR says to go to the "original" version. Some people say that it started without the h, so it should be moved back. Others argue that it's had the h for longer and is now "established" at the new title. Title disputes are messy; the wrong version helps quell the edit war as fast as possible, without having to figure out what to do in some bizarre corner-case like yoghurt. I do agree that someone pushing something through by being the more obnoxious party to the dispute is distasteful, but I just don't think there's any general way to solve that problem. --NYKevin @370, i.e. 07:52, 10 January 2012 (UTC)
    I agree that long delays are problematic, but would it actually be helpful in a case like that if the policy were clear -- it should go back to the original version until there is consensus? There may not be a general way to solve the problem, as you say, but I think this might help. Failing that, perhaps a time limit of a week could be suggested. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 10:44, 10 January 2012 (UTC)
    Though it doesn't say exactly what you're looking for because it's about closing requested moves, so the timing if after the move has been initiated, note that at WP:RM/CI we have the related instruction: "However, sometimes a requested move is filed in response to a recent move from a long existing name that cannot be undone without administrative help. Therefore, if the closer feels that no consensus has been reached, they may move the article back to the most recent stable name. If the most recent stable name is itself a matter of dispute, closers are expected to use their own judgment in determining the proper destination."--Fuhghettaboutit (talk) 11:26, 10 January 2012 (UTC)
    I hadn't realized that; that's pretty much what I was looking for. How about changing those instructions to say the closer "should" (or perhaps "usually should") move the article back? That would address it. I would also suggest adding some text to WP:RM that makes this clear to editors going there in response to a controversial move. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 12:25, 10 January 2012 (UTC)
    When I added in the language (in slightly different form) at the instruction guideline I remember there had been a few discussions at WT:RM about these types of moves being a problem, even with users doing the move and then a second edit to the redirect to make sure that only an admin had the ability to make the move back. You might want to trawl the archives a bit to see the various dicussions and bring up proposed changes there.--Fuhghettaboutit (talk) 13:39, 10 January 2012 (UTC)
    Two points:
    • BRD doesn't suggest moving the page back as any sort of necessary or even desirable action. "The talk page is open to all editors, not just bold ones. The first person to start a discussion is the person who is best following BRD." The "R" step is strictly optional, and it's kinder to the database to skip it, especially if there's a chance that the new name will be adopted. You don't need to reverse a page move to be able to discuss it at RM.
    • ENGVAR is irrelevant; you should be following the actual policy on this point, which is at WP:TITLECHANGES. Although it generally takes a very conservative approach, it does not authorize reverting page moves during discussions. Neither the article titles policy nor RM actually endorse the sort of "first-mover advantage" that you are worrying about. The folks at RM are actually smart enough to figure out whether the current name is the name described as the no-consensus default at AT. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:47, 11 January 2012 (UTC)
    NYKevin, FYI... Yogurt is settled, and, I predict, for good. --Born2cycle (talk) 05:37, 12 January 2012 (UTC)
    Wow, IIRC it was on ANI a few weeks ago (and was closed without result as extremely lame). There's still going to be some residual grumbling for a while, though (e.g. right now they're arguing over which spelling(s) to mention in the lead). --NYKevin @912, i.e. 20:53, 12 January 2012 (UTC)

    I strongly support this in principle. It’s not right that an editor or editors should have to go through a formal RM procedure to revert a unilateral bold move, and this can happen if technical difficulties prevent a revert without admin support (e.g. at Shishapangma) or if the bold mover repeatedly moves without discussing. The burden should be on the mover. Also, a bold move can be followed by a filibuster to prevent the page being moved back. Having a policy or guideline that says contested moves should be reverted, then discussed, would help ensure that the editor in favor of the move provides convincing reasons for the move. Perhaps it could be implemented by adding a statement in the Wikipedia:Moving a page instructions along the lines of “If an editor questions a move, the page should be moved back to its previous title and the merits of the possible titles should be discussed.”--Wikimedes (talk) 21:23, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

    I do also support the general principle that bold moves (controversial or potentially controversial page move performed without prior discussion) should not end up as de facto successful. I fully agree with Wikimedes that the burden should be on the mover; the example at Shishapangma shows that it is very time-consuming to move back a title, even with a large consensus in favor. Such time-consuming discussions are also discouraging good-faith editors to move back other boldly moved pages. I don't think that the time between the bold move and the revert is so relevant, as some moves for little visited articles can remain unnoticed during months (or even years).--Pseudois (talk) 07:43, 26 January 2012 (UTC)

    News that Wikipedia will be closed on January 18 2012

    I heard on Radio Four today (January 17 2012) that Wikipedia will be closed for one day on Jan 18 2012. I have not seen much about this on Wikipedia - not even in the Main Page. Can I advertise that Wikipedia does more to publicise this? It could even have a tag heading frequently viewed articles telling people about this temporary closure. ACEOREVIVED (talk) 16:05, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

    There should be a banner at the top of the page linking to http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/English_Wikipedia_anti-SOPA_blackout Selery (talk) 16:52, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Probably banner was blocked by Adblock or something similar Bulwersator (talk) 17:04, 17 January 2012 (UTC)


    All seems OK now. When I logged in just now, I did get a tag saying "Please note that in less than ten hours, Wikipedia will be closed for a day to protest against SOPA". ACEOREVIVED (talk) 20:20, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

    It now says that in less than nine hours, Wikipedia will be blocked to protest against SOPA and PIPA. ACEOREVIVED (talk) 20:50, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

    It will be interesting to see what effect the Law of Unintended Consequences has in this instance. See also: "MPAA blasts 'dangerous' anti-SOPA blackouts as 'stunts'" Regards, RJH (talk) 23:04, 17 January 2012 (UTC)


    Hurrah - I can still edit Wikipedia, even though it is now 12: 18 a.m. United Kingdom time! The blackout must be based on time in North America. ACEOREVIVED (talk) 00:19, 18 January 2012 (UTC)

    It's 12am EST (5am GMT IIRC) when the period starts and ends. --MASEM (t) 00:21, 18 January 2012 (UTC)
    2 plus hours--68.9.119.69 (talk) 02:50, 18 January 2012 (UTC)

    Adding rollback edits to your watchlist

    I propose an option in "My Preferences" to add pages you rollback to your watchlist. I like to watch pages I have rollbacked (at least for a short while) and I have to manually add them to my watchlist each time. I raised this point here last year but I got no response. —Bruce1eetalk 10:06, 13 January 2012 (UTC)

    That's a good idea, but I think you should ask for it on WP:VPT instead of here, where few of the developers who can make it happen will see it. Selery (talk) 15:59, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
    OTOH, the developers would probably want to see consensus that the feature is actually wanted by the community (rather than just a few users) before spending time on it. Anomie 17:24, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
    Devs already discussed this in mediazilla:4488 but nothing was implemented so far.
    Meanwhile you can add this code to your common.js (for all skins except Standard Classic, Cologne Blue & Nostalgia).
    //auto watch rollbacked pages
    if( wgAction == 'rollback' ) $('#ca-watch a').click();
    
    AlexSm 18:18, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
    Thanks for the js Alex, I'll try it out. —Bruce1eetalk 06:31, 14 January 2012 (UTC)
    I added the above to my vector.js and cleared my browser cache, but it's not working for me. Does this work with the vector skin? You say it doesn't work with Standard – what is Standard? —Bruce1eetalk 06:18, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    The code above works only if use normal [rollback] links and then taken to the page with Rollback-success message. It will not work with some other "rollback" types (Twinkle? Popups?). In particular, it's not compatible with the gadget "after rolling back an edit, automatically open the contributions of the user rolled back" (mw:MediaWiki:Gadget-modrollback.js). — AlexSm 17:03, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    "Standard" is the "internal" name for obsolete "Classic" skin: in preferences the "preview" link for "Classic" is ...&useskin=standard; sorry for the confusion. — AlexSm 17:03, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    I am using the standard rollback button and I get the "Action complete" screen, but the article is not watchlisted. I have Twinkle enabled but I don't use the Twinkle rollback because it is too slow for me. And I don't have the "After rolling back an edit, automatically open the contributions of the user rolled back" gadget ticked. I don't know why this js is not working for me. —Bruce1eetalk 06:10, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    In case that script is executing too early you can try this instead:
    $(function(){
     if( mw.config.get('wgAction') == 'rollback' ){
       $('#ca-watch a').click();
     }
    })
    
    If this doesn't help then on the rollback page you could try to open JavaScript Console in Chrome (Ctrl-J) and then on "console" tab excute some statements to find what the issue is:
    mw.config.get('wgAction')
    $('#ca-watch')
    $('#ca-watch a')
    $('#ca-watch a').click()
    AlexSm 18:37, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Your revised script works – it's doing exactly what I want. Thank you. —Bruce1eetalk 05:23, 19 January 2012 (UTC)

    Alternate accounts editing user script pages

    Hi I think that alternate accounts of users should be able to edit their main user's user script pages.--Breawycker public (talk) main account (talk) 20:18, 19 January 2012 (UTC)

    The system doesn't know that it's an alternative account, for all intents and purposes it's a completely different person & account, so there would have to be a system of linking accounts created that was literal and technical as opposed to just a userpage note, so as to prevent impersonation. Doesn't seem worth it for such a minor gain that will effect very few people--Jac16888 Talk 20:29, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    This convenience is obviously not worth added complexity and potential risks. — AlexSm 20:33, 19 January 2012 (UTC)

    H.J. De Blij

    Hi. I noticed the page H.J. De Blij has not been rated by the geography department. Can someone rate it? Considering he is one of the top Geographers in his field, it should recieve a high rating. Hoyle Casino Man (talk) 18:31, 20 January 2012 (UTC)

    You're more likely to get a response from editors that can help you with this at WT:GEOGRAPHY, the talk page for the Geography WikiProject; they take care of the assessment of articles on explorers and geographers if I'm not mistaken. - ʄɭoʏɗiaɲ τ ¢ 19:30, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    Ok, thank you! Hoyle Casino Man (talk) 22:02, 20 January 2012 (UTC)

    "Quantify" Wikipedia traffic data

    Wikipedia should "quantify" its traffic data on Quantcast like so many other sites have done. Quantcast is considered the "de facto standard of web audience measurement" and is much more accurate than Alexa if sites "quantify", or opt for exact statistics and numbers by utilizing the company's direct measurement tool. It's very easy to do and would take the WMF less than a minute to implement. Benefits would be, of course, more reliable and accurate traffic data, as well as page view data not available under current estimated data methods. I realize this proposal may seem silly and/or pointless but I would very much like to see it done. Here's Wikipedia's page on the site: [8]. Kinaro(say hello) (what's been done) 00:34, 20 January 2012 (UTC)

    Not likely to happen, since it requires external JS to be served to visitors. As I understand it, that both introduces a reliance on a third-party service (which IIRC those who decide such things try to avoid) and is considered a leak of private information contrary to Wikimedia's privacy policy. Anomie 03:16, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    I suppose I understand what you're saying, though I fail to see how this minor reliance on a third-party service would cause any issues. Also, what private information? Why shouldn't we be able to see an accurate count of Wikipedia's visitors? Kinaro(say hello) (what's been done) 04:39, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    The issue is enabling a third party to track every individual's use of Wikipedia. This would break the bond of trust with the readers. If the quantcast server isn't run by Wikimedia, there's no guarantee that the information will only be used in line with Wikimedia's goals. The Quantcast page you link to says "Estimate only" (and their measurements can't include users without Javascript), yet the stats server gives raw hit numbers, so on the face of it your explanation is the wrong way round. MartinPoulter (talk) 13:38, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    "more reliable and accurate traffic data, as well as page view data not available under current estimated data methods" data is available, but it is not published Bulwersator (talk) 14:07, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    I think knowing how often one article is linked from or to another would be very useful. I can see the amount of data involved would be quite large but I believe it is manageable. I don't believe Javascript would be needed for any of this. Dmcq (talk) 14:22, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    Eeeee... What? This data is available, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:WhatLinksHere/Wikipedia:Village_pump_%28proposals%29 Bulwersator (talk) 14:36, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    I'm sure Dmcq actually means how often one article is clicked through to or from another. Mark Hurd (talk) 12:13, 21 January 2012 (UTC)

    User preference to automaticlly use https

    I think that there should be a user preference to automatically use the secure server (https) when logged in. I like to use it but I find it a pain to always type in https and reload the page. It would really help a lot of people if there was user preference like that. P.S. Is this the appropriate place or is technical the appropriate place? Ramaksoud2000 (talk to me) 02:08, 13 January 2012 (UTC)

    Please do not use images or templates in your signature; see WP:SIG for details. Please also go back and remove the template from any pages you've already "signed" with it. Thanks.
    As for your question, there is no preference, and it would be somewhat insecure as you would have to be logged in to the insecure http site for the preference to take effect. If you're using Firefox, look into HTTPS Everywhere. Anomie 03:56, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
    If you are referring to the secure server it should be kept to prevent link rot. – Allen4names 05:18, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
    Actually I was referring to http://en.wikipedia.org, and all subpages still available through http. Why not simply redirect them to https? Grondemar 02:45, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    PHP provides a rapid and simple solution to check for and redirect to https for any page visited without its use (i.e. if visiting a page at http... that can be visited at https..., the redirect kicks in). Would be a trivial fixfredgandt 02:56, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    You're not thinking of the readers. They typically don't log in or even have accounts. They (mostly) don't benefit from HTTPS, but it does slow them down at least a little; if they lack broadband it could be a deal-breaker. The unsecure server will be around for a while, I'm afraid. --NYKevin @210, i.e. 04:02, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    No please you don't know what all pain is behind the ssl protocol. Feature which point login page as default to https, then in case users needed, it would have option to switch back to port 80 would make sense. But redirecting all pages to https is really to much load for our poor squid and apaches. What's wrong on http? Most of people who use wikipedia only read it, so it makes a lot of sense that http should be a default type of connection, most of users should use. Re secure.wikimedia I think that best thing we could do with that, is disabling it permanently, by redirecting it to https://sitename.wiki[pm]edia.org Petrb (talk) 13:11, 23 January 2012 (UTC)

    English Wikipedia fork

    Hi all. Looks like a part of our community is going to force a full and global blackout of the entire English Wikipedia on Wednesday, ignoring all those that think that it is against Wikipedia main goals, that compromises neutrality, all those who voted for a soft blackout or against the full blackout. I think that we need to create a Wikipedia alternative to protect us against the seize of free knowledge under false community consensus. Best regards. emijrp (talk) 12:25, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

    You're calling the poll which had the most supporters of any single question in our entire history, a "false consensus"? You're welcome to that opinion, obviously, but I doubt it's one that's widely held. Of course, your Right to Fork is as inviolate as it ever has been. Good luck with that. Happymelon 12:59, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    You have to read Wikipedia:Consensus (specially "This means that decision-making involves an effort to incorporate all editors' legitimate concerns, while respecting Wikipedia's norms.") and Wikipedia:Polling is not a substitute for discussion. Several issues have been raised in the SOPA discussion against a full blackout. A soft blackout would be a consensus solution (to do something). emijrp (talk) 13:29, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    We long ago grew too large to expect a near-unanimous consensus on large issues like this, although our written policies still describe the site as it was in 2005 instead of describing the site as it is today. I think that the options in the vote did give all voters a chance to express their concerns. The vote for a full blackout was 763 to 104; the vote for a soft blackout was 94 to 100. I think those numbers speak for themselves in terms of which option is preferred by the majority of voters. — Carl (CBM · talk) 13:45, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Polling may not be a substitute for discussion, but thankfully, it's a substitute for endless discussions, which is what the SOPA thing became. —Tom Morris (talk) 16:47, 25 January 2012 (UTC)
    You can use the time constructively improving http://simple.wikipedia.org which needs help more than enwiki. 16:55, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    It looks like Distributed Proofreaders will still be up. I know where I'll be... Regards, RJH (talk) 21:03, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

    I'm moving this to a subpage of my own. I think we need a stable and reliable mirror of English Wikipedia 24/7. emijrp (talk) 19:19, 20 January 2012 (UTC)

    See Wikipedia:Mirrors and forks, we've already got a thousand useless forks that make it a pain in the ass to research anything on the internet anymore. Don't take your marbles and go home just because the outcome wasn't what you wanted. - ʄɭoʏɗiaɲ τ ¢ 19:27, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    If there is a stable and reliable Wikipedia mirror, paste a link please. Most of them are spammy and closed every day. emijrp (talk) 19:37, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    There's a reason for that: Wikipedia is constantly changing, and that involves pulling a ton of data to the mirror site every day. It's expensive to host, and not technically easy. — The Hand That Feeds You:Bite 18:49, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    What are you describing is a mirror, but not a fork. He/she is looking for a fork - something to do (mostly) a clear cut of the original and then starting that as a basis. mabdul 23:53, 25 January 2012 (UTC)

    SOPA IS IMPORTANT - have a continual pronouncement on pages re internet restriction (vs. one shot)

    we must deal with this internet liberty issue in favor of freedom, which is what separates us from China, & other intolerable living situations - SOPA/PIPA will obviously be reformed, to deal with the piracy issue in a huge way - we should *STAY VIGILANT* until it is resolved in favor of The People, by adding the SOPA/free speech awareness banner (even a 'bar': thin & black) to the top of ALL pages keeping EVERYONE abreast of the internet free speech / piracy issue until it is resolved.

    thanks.

    lakitu (talk) 02:30, 22 January 2012 (UTC)

    CHOLERA IS IMPORTANT... should we display a permanent banner informing the world about that issue too? How about another banner warning visitors about Global warming? I can imagine there are hundreds of seriously pressing issue we can protest and advertise. How far down the page should the top of the articles be before we consider them too far down? fredgandt 02:42, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    ...and would we need a banner about that?Nolelover Talk·Contribs 02:52, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    Preferably two. fredgandt 02:54, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    Support running a banner about cholera awareness. I'm glad the original poster suggested it, it's about time. Franamax (talk) 06:22, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    While I find the proposal unworkable and unwise, it seems to have been made in good faith and perhaps deserves a more serious response than the above. No one can reasonably suggest that either cholera or global warming pose an immediate threat to the continued existence of Wikipedia, so it's really a bit silly to make such analogies. @Factotum/lakitu: the limits of English Wikipedia lie in language, not geographical boundaries, so it's a false premise to suggest that "we" are separated from China or any other country. It's a global project. There are reasons why an "awareness banner" might be unhelpful or even counterproductive, not the least of which is that editors here are deeply divided over the notion that SOPA is a threat and, even among those who agree that it is, over what to do about it. But thanks for making the suggestion. You obviously care about Wikipedia, and that's a good thing. Rivertorch (talk) 19:16, 25 January 2012 (UTC)

    Suggestion for how to stimulate improved content

    Don't think this has been suggested before - couldn't find evidence anyhow - apologies if it's been dealt with already.

    A common experience when looking up a topic in Wikipedia is the feeling that one has learned something but not found all the information one would have wanted on a particular topic. Often, this is largely because the editors of that page have come at the topic from a particular angle (no criticism, that's just how humans work!). If only the editors of that topic knew what it was I (and other users, obviously) needed to know, they could soon update the content to reflect the broader viewpoint required for that topic.

    Why not have, at the bottom of every article, an area where users can a) add questions they'd like to see answered in the text of that article, and b) see questions other users have already posed? Each time an edit is made that answers one of the questions in this list, that question could be removed from the list by admin. Admin could also remove questions that are not pertinent to or appropriate for that article.

    Perhaps there are technical issues about adding user-modifiable text to the displayed webpage? Just thought I'd see what people think, anyway. — Preceding unsigned comment added by ‎Mesbailey (talkcontribs) 03:23, January 23, 2012

    We already have talk pages and the feedback tool thing. Talk pages do exactly what you propose, just not at the bottom of the article. fredgandt 03:53, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    There's a new version of the Article Feedback tool rolling out slowly across the pedia (more useful than the ratings version), so something like this is coming to fruition. --Izno (talk) 04:45, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    A "Make a suggestion" link next to the feedback tool, which would send readers to a feedback box which would then add to the talk page, would work quite well. Pesky (talkstalk!) 09:43, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    I've seen the feedback users are giving using the new Article Feedback Tool, and it is indeed quite useful. Questions they'd like answered, suggestions for improvement. But these comments do need filtering and prioritization, since some of them are random insults and nonsense - which is why they're going to be presented through some alternate interface and not on the main article page or the talk page. Dcoetzee 01:41, 25 January 2012 (UTC)


    My first response to this proposal was that such questions might be better fitted on the talk pages than at the end of the articles per se. However, after a little thought, I did appreciate that the problem here is that the talk pages often have a tag stating that the purposes of them is to discuss the article as it exists in Wikipedia, not the topic in general. Perhaps we could sub-divide the talk pages into two sections - one to discuss the articles as they exist in Wikipedia, the other to ask the type of questions which the initiator of this proposal appeared to have in mind. ACEOREVIVED (talk) 16:10, 25 January 2012 (UTC)

    Contents summaries for all ref desks on one page

    May I suggest we create a page that gathers just the question lists (ie. the "Contents" boxes) at the top of all of the ref desks on one page? That way people who like multiple ref desks, and people who mostly want to edit mainspace, but like to have a quick check of the desks, can browse them all in one go. So in other words, the page would consist of 7 boxes full of question titles, and possibly (if there's room) of the help desk's question headings as well. IBE (talk) 10:28, 23 January 2012 (UTC)

    If I understand you correctly: You want the section headings for all the ref desks presented as a set of (linked) lists?
    This could be done by user script quite simply. I'm not suggesting that it shouldn't be done another way, just presenting that option. fredgandt 23:44, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    Just wp:transclude all of the reference desks on a single page, just like Wp:XfD today does for deletion discussions. Yoenit (talk) 09:25, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
    I almost suggested the same thing, but seriously, that's going to be a massive page. fredgandt 09:29, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
    A bot maintains Wikipedia:Dashboard/Help noticeboards. I guess it could maintain Wikipedia:Dashboard/Reference desks without too much rewriting. -- John of Reading (talk) 09:56, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
    Transcluding with the actual transcluded material hidden behind {{collapse top}}? Unfortunately (and this may be a more general bug) clicking on a TOC link for a section that is inside a collapsed block does not cause the block to expand automatically, but rather does nothing (see my experiment at User:DMacks/transclude-test). DMacks (talk) 16:39, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
    Yup, I've noticed that. Annoying! Pesky (talkstalk!) 21:31, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
    Filed as Bugzilla:33937 if you want to track it. DMacks (talk) 22:33, 24 January 2012 (UTC)

    Wikipedia:Reference desk/all ---— Gadget850 (Ed) talk 22:38, 24 January 2012 (UTC)

    Create a category for CORRELATIVE / SIMILAR CONCEPTS

    To my limited experience and knowledge, I found there are quite a lot of correlated concepts among different stream of knowledge. Like “ nothing comes from nothing” is correlated to some ideas from “Modern physics”. Another example is - matter is merely a vacuum fluctuation (seems not updated in wikipedia yet, assume it is part of the content under Matter), it correlated with the Buddha’s concept – form is void, void is form (it means anything with a physical state is void). Add a “correlative concepts”/"similar concepts"(hyper link) next to the paragraph or the name of those concepts with the correlated idea.(now we have similar things like "see also") What’s more to do is to provide a category to collect all the "correlative concepts"/"similar concepts"(or the“see also”) and arrange them according to the alphabet headings of the titles of the correlative articles/paragraphs/sentences/key words.

    Original research is not allowed on wikipedia. Yoenit (talk) 19:05, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    So, even the action is linking two existing articles is counted as original research?? ohh, i just think it could be an inspiring thing if everyone suggest what they see similar concepts cross-disciplinarily...--42.2.43.151 (talk) 03:16, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    I'm not sure I understand your examples. But currently, if two topics are related, there are many ways of linking them. For example, they might be discussed within the article prose, using links to provide pathways for more information. If there's substantial material to be covered, new sections can be created, as in at Water#In_culture, or Entropy#Interdisciplinary_applications_of_entropy. Your Nothing comes from nothing#Modern physics example also shows this. If you're thinking of something that has the effect of marginal side-notes in a textbook cross-referencing other topics, consider footnotes, which aren't just for references. See Logarithm#Notes for an example usage. Leonxlin (talk) 04:17, 23 January 2012 (UTC)

    yea, what if there is a page which list all these interdisciplinary concepts. then we can easy and all-rounded to know interdisciplinary and cross disciplinary knowledge. seems concepts / knowledge have no borders to meet their partners (similar concepts), but the current classification of knowledge cannot show these concepts found their relatives in a whole picture. It's important to show it in a whole picture i think, as knowledge can actually grow horizontally, not only vertically (vertically is meant going more detailed and more detailed). but the two direction is important too i know. --42.2.43.151 (talk) 16:40, 23 January 2012 (UTC)

    Wikiversity exists. And I recently created {{uw-wikiversity}} to encourage original research-focussed editors to import their articles to Wikiversity and edit.

    What if the there's an article talking about matter is merely a vacuum fluctuation, and put a "see also" hyper link to another article about Buddhism - Form is void, void if form - anything has a physical state is considered as void. Assume this connection had no one created before, no reference can be found. That means it's the first hand discovery by users/editors. Can it put in Wikiversity,? it's just new discovery of 2 concepts having similar qualities, and it is partly quite subjective, that's why diversification of linkages is very welcome under this proposal.--42.2.43.151 (talk) 04:50, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

    WikiProject History: time for an end?

    I am not sure that WikiProject History is on the road to revitalization at anytime soon. I would like to suggest that the project either be redirected to something of a mini-WikiProject Council or just outright deleted, as it is no longer active or incredibly useful. My first choice would be to tag it as "Historical," but would that just make it an unreachable part of the past that's still obvious to viewers of the website? A mini-WikiProject Council of History-inclined Wikipedians could help increase collaborative efforts between History-related WikiProjects, but would deletion be the most efficient alternative now? DCItalk 22:25, 22 January 2012 (UTC)

    ehh what? Why on earth would you want to delete it? Tag it as inactive or semi-active if want (done in {{WikiProject status}}), but deletion is out of the question. Yoenit (talk) 23:54, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    Deletion is sometimes an option given the general amount of activity a WikiProject has had previously.
    However, DCI, given the large amount of content discussed on the talk pages, I would be inclined to mark it inactive, or possibly repurpose it to act as a host to history minded Wikipedians to discuss various issues, as you suggest. --Izno (talk) 04:42, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    Okay. Thanks for your feedback; I will certainly not mark it for deletion! DCItalk 00:55, 25 January 2012 (UTC)
    I have to say I'm fairly shocked that WPHist would have so little activity that this course of action could suggest itself. Where are all the historians? Maybe any of us who know a historian should get on their case about it? --Trovatore (talk) 01:09, 25 January 2012 (UTC)
    I would assume historians are like any other profession: Some will focus in World War II, some on socio-economic differences during the 60s, and some on historic China. These people will naturally seek out the WikiProjects which are most pertinent to them. I think it is safe to assume that nearly all historians are like this, as most people are... --Izno (talk) 13:47, 26 January 2012 (UTC)
    Where is there any evidence that the WikiProject is inactive? Please see Revision history of Wikipedia talk:WikiProject History and Wikipedia:WikiProject History/Outreach/Members. Maybe things are organized so well that only a few points need to be discussed.
    Wavelength (talk) 01:24, 25 January 2012 (UTC)
    Most of these are notifications on the talk page, many of which have not gotten replies. Others are proposals/responses to proposals that I've written up in relation to the inactivity issue. A-class reviews had been sitting around since 2009 (in comparison to very active ones like WikiProject Military history), but I cleared them out a few weeks ago, after another editor suggested that they are too old. A newer nomination had no reviewers. Projects with slightly smaller scopes, such as Military history, have been far more active. This is why I am suggesting that a new course of action be taken in regard to this inactive WikiProject. DCItalk 03:09, 25 January 2012 (UTC)
    There are two courses of action we follow with inactive projects: we delete the ones that never got going, and we tag formerly-active ones with {{historical}}. Ever since I first encountered it, this project has been quiet, far quieter than ones such as Military History or the project where I'm active. Seems to me that there's a good middle ground amount of specificity for project scope. Make it too precise, like the Weird Al wikiproject, and it's not going to attract enough people with knowledge about it. Make it too broad, like this project, and people won't really have anything in common. Make it somewhere in the middle, like Military History, and you're able to draw people together without excluding them. Nyttend (talk) 01:30, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
    Wikipedia:WikiProject Mathematics is pretty bloody broad in scope (mathematicians from different fields can barely understand one another, a fact that may not be intuitive to outsiders) but somehow manages to chug along. No one to my knowledge has suggested breaking it up into, say, algebra, analysis, geometry/topology, and logic projects (there is a Wikipedia:WikiProject Logic but it's not limited to mathematical logic). So I don't really see why history should be any different. But of course there's no point in me moaning about it; historians either find the project useful or they don't, and if they don't there's not much I can do about it. --Trovatore (talk) 01:46, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

    wikimail

    Hi

    I think that there is a genuine demand for an email provider that promises NOT to use your private emails for marketing purposes. Can you provide it?— Preceding unsigned comment added by 94.169.34.5 (talkcontribs)

    While that's a nice idea, it doesn't really fall within the purpose of Wikipedia. Our purpose here is to build and encyclopedia, and so everything we do should contribute to that. Resources are stretched as they are - having an email provider would be an unnecessary strain. There is a feature available for emailing users, here. ItsZippy (talkcontributions) 21:56, 26 January 2012 (UTC)

    sort articles by " NUMBER OF WORDS"

    I would like to give a suggestion to your website. Could we sort the articles by " NUMBER OF WORDS"? For example, by 100 words, 300 words, 1000 words, 1500 words, etc. Most of the time for some user, they just want to know the general information or the subject of an article only. There isn't necessary to read the whole article to get the little information. Sorting by number of words is classified articles into different categories, for lesser words - e.g. 100 words of an article which is talking about Taoism, so readers may know what they need are just some main / key ideas ( without redundant history backgrounds). for more words, it could include more evident or findings for the subject. For even more words, it could include origins, history etc. So , all in all, just sort by different ways of summarization of knowledge.

    Thank you!! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 42.2.43.151 (talk) 02:26, 20 January 2012 (UTC)

    You don't have to read past the lead at the top. Normally people do try and put the more relevant stuff first. Are you thinking perhaps of a facility for phones where you want to restrict the amount downloaded? Anyway going further this idea could be expanded further - have a joystick pushing forward gets you deeper down with lots more detail, back and you zoom up for an overview, perhaps turn left for simpler language and less assumptions whereas turning right assumes the reader knows more of the background and can use more jargon. For editors pressing the fire button will get rid of vandalisms by identifying the edit that last changed the bit pointed at. Zap zap zap, yeah that would be satisfying for dealing with them. Dmcq (talk) 05:11, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    A bit sarky, Dmcq. Essentially is what we do by our choice of articles. For example, English law merely mentions murder; homicide in English law would provide (once complete) a few hundred words; Murder in English law a whole article, but whose lead might be about the summary in the previously named article. Grandiose (me, talk, contribs) 13:54, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    Saying what you want is the best way of getting it. Perhaps in the future computers will be smart enough to do what I said. Already we have chat rooms where messages are automatically translated into the language of the person reading the discussion so people don't even have to speak the same language. Your example doesn't satisfy the business about less words, I think what they really are asking for is a cut off which will still display something without eating into their account, that's something I believe some mobile phone service provide already by processing the pages before sending them down but I'm not into that area. Dmcq (talk) 14:29, 20 January 2012 (UTC)--42.2.43.151 (talk) 01:18, 22 January 2012 (UTC)

    The best way of getting it, and also the best information we want as well. for example, when we search Albert Einstein, in the first beginning paragraphs, i don't even can see his major achievement like Theory of relativity, E = mc square. But i know that is difficult to force other's to think what i think which is more important. i just try to give an suggestion to ask users to make their beginning passage as essence as possible. essence is slightly different to general information. when articles are limited by words, i thought it can let users to think what is important to put their information. And like Dmcq said, mobile phone can apply " lesser word scheme " quite well, but the reason is not quite related the download limitation,i think, it's the phone screen's limitation, it's not that user friendly to read and move around such a big picture in a such a small screen (compared to desktop computer)all in all, sorting by words categories seems a bit far from my original purpose - essence your information. i don't know, i need to think more of that.--42.2.43.151 (talk) 01:18, 22 January 2012 (UTC)

    The theory of relativity is mentioned in the very first sentence. Have another look. Also you can normally adjust the format of pages for mobiles so the text just goes down the screen instead of needing to pan over a large screen, there will be some option of the browser to do that and Wikipedia behaves quite well in Opera mobile for instance. There's still room for improvement but it's mainly problems in the content because of the editor generated content rather than the site itself, probably there should be a bit of a drive to deal with such things, also some extra work could be done to make tables behave better. Dmcq (talk) 13:07, 21 January 2012 (UTC)
    Grandiose's example is a complete one to show the result of what this proposal would be archived. it shows different versions of articles would come out. That's another direction from mine, but that's ok. All this inspired me to know that readers can choose what they want more effectively in some cases. --42.2.43.151 (talk) 01:18, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    but this indicated another situation is that not only numbers of words should be sort, it should also include key words searching option next to / under numbers of words searching option.--42.2.43.151 (talk) 04:35, 22 January 2012 (UTC)

    Dmcq's suggestions about " lesser words policy" on mobile phone is almost like that, i'm not that capable with technology thing. As mobile phone is getting online everywhere, what we absorb is not huge amount of info, like Einstein said, "Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler."

    An interesting proposal, but I fear it may be reinventing the wheel. We already have a system of sorting articles into stubs, start class and articles beyond start class - would this not give the type of information for which the proposer is seeking? ACEOREVIVED (talk) 09:13, 26 January 2012 (UTC)

    But that's only available in articles with stub added. right? But under my proposal, longer articles is also can be sorted as well. Depends on what readers want.--42.2.43.151 (talk) 05:54, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

    It is not just available on articles that are stubs - start class articles (the next category up from stubs) are also inidicated this way. Experienced Wikipedians may remind me whether we sort articles into categories beyond that (I do seem to recall we also indicate good articles and featured articles in this way). ACEOREVIVED (talk) 09:11, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

    Automatic warning when creating section heading exactly matching an existing section heading

    When creating a section heading, I feel it would be beneficial if the parser would direct us to a "are you sure?" page that we must agree to before continuing the save. Since the table of contents and section links are basically useless when on whatever page there are more than one section with the same heading, this might help to stop some of the doppelgängers ever happening and thus make navigation simpler.

    Further to this, it might be even nicerer to have automatic anchoring, for any precisely similar section headings that are created even after the warning/alert (alert is perhaps a better word).

    I realise that {{anchor}}s exist to solve parts of this issue, but they must be added by hand and known of by any editor who wishes to take advantage of them. To know where all the anchors are would be a logistical nightmare (what links here?, have fun with that). For ease and common simplicity, surely the parser should take care of all this stuff for us.

    So I propose that:

    I expect there are many technical issues and editorial considerations here, but Rome wasn't built in a day (gotta start somewhere). fredgandt 22:10, 22 January 2012 (UTC)

    You've fallen into this trap before I think: when you start a new section (using the "+" link) you get a URL with "&section=new". This lets the parser handle just the new section text when you preview. Asking the parser to look at other parts of the page requires parsing the entire page, regardless of how large and funky it is. This fundamentally breaks the whole concept of section-by-section editing, so I don't see how can it be built in as an automatic feature of the software. Franamax (talk) 08:53, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    Sorry, I missed your "on saving" bit. I could see duplicate-header detection being an optional gadget, same as the thing that prompts you for an edit summary, so it probably is doable on a technical basis. Why not code up such a gadget yourself? It's easy enough to set up your own test wiki with the exact same software we run here. Franamax (talk) 08:59, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    • That would be a good idea; here's a corollary for it, too: Don't give Wikilove messages all the same blinkin' name! Make the sender choose a section header. By the time you've been given a few kittens / cups of tea / wossnames, it's a real PITA! You type a nice reply to the most recent kitten-sender, hit the save button, and your page displays the first kittie-message on reloading, not the one you've just replied to! @Franamax: I'm sure there must be a way of achieving this without the parser having to parse the entire page, it just may not be immediately apparent. Maybe parse a "sub-page" kinda hidden thingie which has only section headers in it? Pesky (talkstalk!) 08:57, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    I think a very short and simple php script could check the page for matching section headings while parsing any save made to that page. It would be the sort of script that could be chucked into the mix without (I think) any major confusions. A more complex method (from a development aspect) could be to have a database store the section headings present in all pages, then if a new section heading is created, it is compared with the DB entry for that page. Potentially faster (not that either would be slow) and cleaner (no http requests for a copy of the page in order to check it), but would require almost an entire new extension to be built. One practical upshot of the DB method would be having the DB of section headings for every page (constantly updated (every page edit)) to be used in whatever other way could be imagined. Applied to searching, that extra knowledge could make a huge difference. Just thinking out loud now. fredgandt 23:36, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    Definitely agree with this idea. A script would only need to check text between = characters to see whether the exact same string of text could already be found between equals signs on that specific page. Nyttend (talk) 01:22, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
    +1 good idea! Would also be useful for article talk-pages that are susceptible to repeated controversies (rename or merge requests, the N+1'th edit-request today, etc.). DMacks (talk) 01:32, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
    I agree. This seems to happen a lot of user talk pages too.   Will Beback  talk  01:37, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

    page full of images

    Would like there to be a page that has lots of images of the same thing on it, eg: for an owl covered in images of owls, or different for different objects Trellis Reserve (talk) 14:03, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

    Is this a proposal for gallery-pages? That exists on Commons. Choyoołʼįįhí:Seb az86556 > haneʼ 14:10, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

    Proposal: Articles about extant corporations

    There's been some discussion recently over paid editing, the creation of a Wikiproject addressing this and the proposal of another, and so forth. Jimbo recently talked to Bell Pottinger (described here). It's a complicated and contentious issue, and if I'm understanding the debate correctly, PR firms are offering the following types of cases where their intervention is needed or useful:

    It'd be silly to take this entirely at face value (because for one thing "neutral and fair" depends on your point of view, and it's only human for one's point of view may be influenced by who is cutting one's paycheck). BUT, these are valid concerns and, when they do occur, serious problems (the first two anyway). Because they are valid concerns and serious problems, these are good reasons (or excuses if you prefer) for PR firms and paid agents to claim a moral right to edit the Wikipedia and a practical need to do so.

    For my part, I'm against paid agents being allowed to edit the Wikipedia. (There is the question of whether as practical matter it's better, tactically, to allow this as opposed to driving it all underground; that's a different issue and outside the scope of this thread.) So, is there another way, rather than allowing or welcoming paid agents, to address these concerns?

    Yes, possibly, and I have some concrete suggestions. This is not going to happen right away but it's something worth talking about, maybe. What I'm proposing is:

    Details below.

    Articles about Extant Corporations WP:AEC

    Articles about Extant Corporations. (This would include non-profit organizations and almost all businesses, even single stores and restaurants, since those are almost always incorporated. But some or many single-person businesses aren't incorporated. It could be "Articles about Extant Organizations" instead, which would be similar but not embracing exactly the same sets.)

    Various details to be worked out but the basic thrust would be similar to WP:BLP. Corporations aren't exactly like people so there'd have to be some changes from WP:BLP, but it could be expressed with a similar summary:

    With a corresponding tag for article talk pages:

    This implies the creation, manning, and efficient operation of a "biographies of extant corporations noticeboard", which seems doable. The Foundation would possibly (maybe) take a hand in promoting and perhaps even monitoring this effort if it gains any traction.

    Reform of WP:CORP

    While this remains on the table, it's secondary and peripheral, and is a distraction from the main point, so I'm making it less visible. Discussion remains open though. Herostratus (talk) 15:42, 21 January 2012 (UTC)

    Loosening notability requirements

    WP:CORP could be made less stringent. Perhaps something along the lines of requiring just one reliable independent ref, and the requirement only proving that the entity exists, and maybe that other material from the article could come from non-independent sources -- the company's web site, for instance. Or something like that.

    This would be helpful to corporations, especially corporations whose Google profile is not so good, since the Wikipedia article would likely rise to the top or near and per WP:AEC it would probably be reasonably positive, usually.

    Since proof of existence is a simple bright-line test, this would also obviate a lot of contentious discussions about whether a particular entity is or is not notable, which discussions probably sometimes draw in in covert or overt paid agents, which is what we're trying to avoid.

    Granted "being helpful to corporations" isn't really part of our core mission, but remember the point here is to get the PR industry off our case and out of our Wikipedia, and this helps this by removing both a philosophical argument for their involvement and a practical reason for same, to some extent.

    {{Hatchetjob}}

    While this remains on the table, it's secondary and peripheral, and is a distraction from the main point, so I'm making it less visible. Discussion remains open though. Herostratus (talk) 15:42, 21 January 2012 (UTC)

    Converse of {{advert}}

    We have {{advert}}, which says

    But we don't have the converse, something like this:

    With the matching category Category:Articles with a derogatory tone (or something) as the converse of the existing Category:Articles with a promotional tone.

    A step beyond this but arguably necessary would be the deployment of corresponding warning templates on the order of

    Welcome to Wikipedia. Everyone is welcome to contribute constructively to the encyclopedia. However, please do not add derogatory material to articles or other Wikipedia pages. Scandal-mongering and using Wikipedia as investigative journalism are against Wikipedia policy and not permitted. Take a look at the welcome page to learn more about Wikipedia. Thank you.

    on up to

    This is your last warning. The next time you use Wikipedia for unwarranted vilification of entities, you may be blocked from editing without further notice.

    and beyond.

    General discussion

    For my part, I don't especially like these proposals on the merits. But I'm a social democrat and while I appreciate the cool things that corporations make and do, for-profit corporations are amoral entities and their social impact is mixed and they need plenty of oversight. That's my opinion, and a more pro-business person might feel that these are good proposals on the merits. It comes down to a philosophical opinion on what an article about a corporate entity should be: more of a listing of their vital statistics and description of their products and so forth, or more a description of their role in society, or whatever. We're not Frontline but we're not the Chamber of Commerce either, and threading that needle is difficult and contentious.

    However, I'm not not suggesting this on the merits, but as I said for two reasons:

    If this proposal doesn't gain traction, it doesn't mean that these concerns won't be addressed. It just means that they'll be addressed by agents of the corporations themselves, directly. This is problematic as it threatens our reputation, the morale of the volunteers, and our actual neutrality, in my opinion.

    There's no force on earth that will stop paid agents from editing the Wikipedia, of course. The point is to strip it of its raison d'etre and reduce the need for it. Herostratus (talk) 17:46, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

    I find the proposal repugnant and impractical. This privileges corporation and analogous entities in a very Citizens United way, not for any noble purpose, but merely to keep PR professionals from having to act like responsible Wikipedia editors. Given the tens of millions of corporations in the U.S. alone, the change to WP:CORP by itself could lead to the creation of an entire industry of "put YOUR company into Wikipedia" spamming specialists who would technically be acting within the rules. I see no burning need to whore Wikipedia out to the paid intellectual <insulting five-letter word to be found in the King James version of the Bible removed>s of the PR industry, just because these highly-paid alleged professionals are too damned lazy or stupid to figure out our interface. As an occasional journalist, I also greatly resent the false, even slanderous use of "investigative journalism" as a synonym for "hatchet job"! --Orange Mike | Talk 18:16, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    An absolute disgrace. This is a license to turn Wikipedia ino a censored marketing tool, and is far more damaging than SOPA could ever be.Nigel Ish (talk) 20:31, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    To allow paid editing or advocacy through means that are legitimized, puts Wikipedia at risk. While not all paid editing is with evil intent, it opens the door for abuse. Phearson (talk) 23:14, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Your solution seems analogous to keeping your front door unlocked so burglars won't force the lock when they come to rob your stuff. Yoenit (talk) 23:47, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    OK, but look. It says here, for instance, that a corporation was described as "wanting to kill you" (and the citation was an extremely unreliable source). And this was there for quite a while. And nobody noticed it, or cared. But the corporation noticed it. And they cared. But they couldn't change it (because they don't know how to edit or engage with the Wikipedia properly). So they hired paid agents. I don't like paid agents roaming the database. But if the alternative is that entities will be described as "wanting to kill you" (if it's not justified; it might be in some cases), then bring them on. I think many Wikipedians would agree: bring them on. You want that? People depend on these entities for their livelihoods, you know. It's real important. Why shouldn't they have the same consideration as provided under WP:BLP, or at least some modified version. If we can't solve our problems ourselves, they will perforce be solved by other means -- other means that bring their own problems. Herostratus (talk) 05:19, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    Let me get this straight: I'm not familiar with the specific case, but you're saying the corporation "cared" but didn't know either how to edit or how to engage with WP. Well, first off, corporations don't care; despite bizarre court rulings suggesting otherwise, corporations are not human or mammalian or even alive, so they're incapable of caring or indeed of having feelings of any kind. As for the people affiliated with the corporation who cared—well, I'm finding it a little hard to imagine that they were capable of using a web browser to find their corporation's article yet were utterly stymied by the links reading "edit this page", "discussion", and "Contact Wikipedia" that appeared above and alongside that article. I have sometimes described myself as an AGF extremist, but I have to tell you I don't believe that for one second. In any event, put me down as opposing this proposal in the strongest terms. You seem to be suggesting we invite the wolf into the fold because otherwise it'll just sneak in anyway. Good grief. We have policies (NOR, NPOV, V) to deal with bad content; we do not need to give corporations special consideration on top of that. "Unwarranted vilification of entities"? Do you have any idea how dystopian that sounds? Also, the likening of "investigative journalism" to advertising is absurd. Rivertorch (talk) 06:49, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    We have NPOV policy to deal with people slanting an article. The proposer seems to at the same time want corporations to be in Wikipedia when they have no notability, and yet for us to treat them with kid gloves like BLP. They have not read the bit in BLP about the strong need for verifiability as well which goes with the kid gloves bit. We definitely do not need loads of corporations noted when they are not notable. From my reading of that case of Bell Pottinger it seems to me their problem was they assumed bad faith so they tried to do things in an underhand way and so acted in bad faith themselves. If they'd done things in a straightforward manner in the first place there wouldn't have been a problem. It does not sound to me from what that says that they have learnt anything either except to be more careful, their attitudes seem unchanged, lets jut hope they follow the policies in future rather than trying to be more devious in 'how best they can use us'. Dmcq (talk) 11:34, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    You're ignoring something that applies to straight BLPs as well: BLP victims are typically not familiar with Wikipedia. Therefore, they might not know any methods of fixing the problem other than underhanded ones--that's what unfamiliarity means, they don't know. They might not even be familiar enough with Wikipedia to know that something is underhanded.
    A persistent problem with BLPs is that the BLP victim violates the rules to fix his BLP, and a lot of attention is given to banning or blocking him while little attention is giving to fixing his BLP or preventing BLP violations. Pointing out "oh, they assumed bad faith" or "they weren't straightforward" or other examples of misbehavior is an example of this--they don't know Wikipedia, how in the world would we expect them to know about AGF? All they know is that someone is telling lies about them--to an outsider, that looks like reason to assume bad faith. So they violate the rules to fix the lies and people like you jump on them because you care more about the rule violation than the fact that we are spreading lies. Ken Arromdee (talk) 16:44, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    We are not talking about BLP here. I fully agree that for BLP we should take extra special precautions. I even do that if they are dead never mind the living bit. But this is about organizations and in particular that complaint was about a PR organization and moreover one where the head man still doesn't see anything wrong with what they did. Dmcq (talk) 05:24, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    I'm a paid editor that's been involved in the linked projects and the general effort to make this dynamic better. I think the three bullets up top are very good as problem statements (I would add the desire to make pre-existing articles more complete), but not sure these are the right solutions. A few comments:
    • Negative POV is often less scrutinized than positive POV, but policy already addresses both equally. It's more of a cultural and motivational problem.
  • I don't think it makes sense to erode WP:CORP simply because it's difficult to enforce. However I will say there are a lot of very large notable companies who simply aren't in the news much.
  • The biggest problem is PR people don't read or even know about the existence of policies, so creating more policy for them won't change anything, since they won't read it.
  • I'm not sure if this was intentional but I do appreciate the language of "hiring a professional." I think PR needs to recognized Wikipedia as an expertise and there needs to be experts that can be a guardian of ethics, protect them from themselves and know policy.
  • Bell Pottinger basically said they didn't know how to edit Wikipedia ethically. Why do PR people keep accepting work they have no expertise on?
    King4057 (talk) 16:49, 19 January 2012 (UTC)

    The proposal above is yet another reason why Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad is one of the worst US Supreme Court decisions of all time, in that it created "corporate personhood" without a corresponding check on the power of a "person" which was effectively immortal and, often, richer than Croesus. We treat the biographies of living persons differently from other articles for the simple, humanistic reason that real life-and-blood people can be conceivable be harmed by irresponsible editing of those article. Corporations, on the other hand, have vast resources at their beck and call, and can counter any inadvertant inaccurcies with public relations, advertising and as much "spin" as they're willing to pay for. There's no compelling reason for us to institute a corporate equivalent of our BLP policy, and every reason to be on guard for their attempts to warp our neutral articles to their liking with paid editing. This may not be David vs. Goliath, but there's certainly no reason to give the corporations our assistance in skewing our articles in their favor. Beyond My Ken (talk) 06:35, 21 January 2012 (UTC)

    Most corporations don't have vast resources. Upper Crust Pizzeria doesn't. They've got 20 stores, but they're not Exxon-Mobile. This is typical. Is it right and fair that half their article should consist basically of attacks? Maybe it is. But I'm just asking. (And "real life-and-blood people can be conceivably be harmed" by this sort of thing, yes. Upper Crust Pizzeria is not owned and staffed by robots.)
    I hatted the peripheral and distracting sub-proposals, to clarify that the main proposition is:
    1. A notice on the talk pages of these articles, directing people with a problem to a noticeboard where they can seek relief.
    2. And the creation and manning of such a noticeboard.
    3. And a policy supporting the noticeboard, to the general effect of "negative information which is unsourced or improperly sourced should be removed without discussion". It could be hedged all around with various caveats about how this doesn't mean the article has to be a puff piece, or whatever.
    What's wrong with these three simple things? Who could be against this? Herostratus (talk) 15:42, 21 January 2012 (UTC)
    While I support making it easier for businesses to challenge unsourced or unreliably sourced negative information, I also want to be sure that we're not allowing them to to exclude serious but unproven allegations just because the allegations have yet to be proven conclusively. Also, we'd want to prohibit the selective inclusion or exclusion of reliably sourced information in a way that violates NPOV, such as listing their product in an article as "a product that is specifically designed to clean up spilled water is the Big Mop by Mops Inc" while not specifically mentioning their competitors and alternative solutions if competitors and alternative solutions are available. So I support this proposal in the sense that it can help with NPOV and requiring reliable sources, but I want to be sure that we don't go too far in allowing the exclusion of allegations and/or competitors' products. Pinetalk 23:02, 21 January 2012 (UTC)

    Question why is this proposal for corporations and not businesses in general? Why not also include forms of business like LLPs which are likely to be used by small businesses? Pinetalk 23:07, 21 January 2012 (UTC)

    Well, right, it could be "Organizations" instead of "Corporations" (although I think that LLPs could be shoehorned into "corporation". "Businesses" would be no good since that leaves out not-profits maybe. "Organizations" though would (I suppose) include political parties and possibly bands and so forth so I dunno about that. A minor point of semantics though. Herostratus (talk) 05:57, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    I'd support changing this to "organizations." Political parties and bands could have unreliable or unsourced criticism directed at them just as easily as any other type of organization. This doesn't mean that we should remove bad news or credible accusations from articles just because an organization wants us to censor the bad news when the news is backed up by reliable sources, but we also shouldn't be including every unreliable or unsourced negative news and rumor. We need to achieve balance. Pinetalk 06:28, 23 January 2012 (UTC)

    No. Fifelfoo (talk) 02:01, 22 January 2012 (UTC)

    Just.... no? Well, while that's succinct, I gather that you preference is for paid agents to be roaming the database instead? Herostratus (talk) 05:57, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    Given the choice between professional PR agents and the naïve corporate affiliated people who try to write their own articles, the PR agents at least do a more consistent and usable job, with greater potential for improvement. But very few of them ever fully internalize the basic concept that while they are automatically thinking in terms of what the subject wishes to communicate to the public, an encyclopedia article must think in terms of what the public might wish to know.
    Yet, we are greatly deficient in usable content in this subject area--perhaps more so than any other broad field. I can think of several approaches. The minimum is to consistently watch what they do ,and fix it--but to do this effectively requires legalizing it,and enforcing the standard that they declare their identity. Perhaps we need to modify our policy on anonymity to the extent that anyone editing for pay or part of a job, declare their true identity and affiliation. This would at least provide a better way or tracking the articles, The second, might be to accept articles on corporate entities in the form of infoboxes, which could then be rewritten by people who understand our rules--this would at least provide the basic information and have the side benefit of providing a channel through which we could look at them. The third, which has the advantage that we are already doing it, is to actively work with the various professional agencies on their field to raise their standardsof work here. DGG ( talk ) 10:18, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    Well, I guess I just fundamentally disagree about the "PR agents at least do a more consistent and usable job, with greater potential for improvement". What PR agents know is how to slant things subtly, gladhand, offer treats (like references (but only the references they want you to use)), and so forth. Of course they know all these tricks. They're professionals! Better some hack job that can be detected and reverted. In my opinion welcoming PR agents into the fold is a dagger to the heart of the volunteer ethos. I for my part am not willing to contend with paid professionals as a hobby. But I'm getting the impression that this is distinctly minority view, so... Herostratus (talk) 13:24, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
    I agree with Herostratus that PR agents are untrustworthy. They typically have a conflict of interest, and there have been reports of PR agents bragging about the changes that they've been able to make on WP. I don't oppose them working here, but I would want full disclosure of who's paying them and for what purpose, and I hope that their actions could be flagged for especially rigorous oversight by other editors. Pinetalk 09:54, 25 January 2012 (UTC)
    Oh I think there's quite a few general editors around on Wikipedia who are pretty good at slanting things without being professionals! And some seem to put in more time on their hobby horse than any professional would. Disclosure though is what I would hope for from any professional. Dmcq (talk) 01:58, 29 January 2012 (UTC)

    Potential student project

    I am applying for a summer student to do a Wikipedia Medicine research project through my department. One potentially project I am looking at is having them review all the edits made to Wikiproject Medicine articles.[9] The student will go through each edit and

    1. determine if the edit is okay and revert it/fix it if it is not
    2. determine which edits are made from IP/new users verses long term edits
    3. calculate the percentage of positive/negative edits from each group
    4. they will be going over edits more than one day old and thus we will be able to determine how good Wikipedia is at repairing itself.

    I am thinking of collecting a weeks worth of edits. If I am able to get approval and funding from UBC I am hoping to run a second round collecting the same data but with "pending changes" turned on for a week on all medical articles. This students would be handling all pending changes to all medical articles and will be collecting the same data as before. This will allow us to determine if:

    1. pending changes affects the numbers of IPs editing
    2. to what degree pending changes reduces the visibility of poor quality content.

    The proposed student will be either between first and second year or second and third year medicine and will be working 40 hours per week for 6-8 weeks during the summer. This is still a rough draft thus appreciate comments? Would also need someone who can create a bot to apply PC to the articles in question if we get to that point. --Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 13:44, 21 January 2012 (UTC)

    Seems to me that this would require turning whole swathes of an Encyclopedia into a semi private test facility. Whatever work is done should be for the benefit of Wikipedia, not an outside research project. Asking that pending changes be applied to (what one can imagine is) a large number of articles for study purposes, is in my view an unacceptable use of page protection tools. fredgandt 14:14, 21 January 2012 (UTC)
    People here have asked for data regarding if pending changes works or not. This is a proposal for a trail to determine this. The number of articles in question is about 24,000. Concerns raised regarding PC in the past have been 1)does PC turn people away 2)how much time is required to manage PC 3)how much poor content does it prevent going live. We can determine all of this. We could try it with a one day trial to determine if the effects are large before looking at doing a week. Since this project primarily / only benefits Wikipedia it is going to be a hard sell to my department. But just the effort will raise awareness regarding Wikipedia. I find the comment regarding "outside research project" strange as I am trying to get funding for an inside research project. --Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 14:24, 21 January 2012 (UTC)
    There was some trial of pending changes a while ago, did it come up with figures and what happened about it all does somebody know?
    Well one would certainly need the trial to last for a while to get over any transitory effects, also one would need to monitor some similar pages say on biology or sport as the numbers of vandals and good editors may vary anyway e.g. when other countries have a summer holiday. Dmcq (talk) 14:44, 21 January 2012 (UTC)
    Yes i have seen a bit of an overview from before will try to dig it up latter if someone does not beat me too it. This trial would just be on medicine pages as that is where the founding is coming from and my only interest. Would be great to have others run trials on other topics though.Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 14:54, 21 January 2012 (UTC)

    (Reply to User:Fred Gandt). This is pretty clearly a project intended to benefit Wikipedia, so please try to conduct discussion on the basis of an assumption of good faith. Phil Bridger (talk) 19:33, 21 January 2012 (UTC)
    You are assuming that I was conducting it any other way. Please follow your own advice. fredgandt 02:45, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    I was not assuming anything, but basing my comment on the evidence of what you wrote. Claiming that this is not being proposed for the benefit of Wikipedia is an explicit failure to assume good faith. Phil Bridger (talk) 11:06, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    Whether or not I misunderstood the intentions of the proposal, I am insulted by your patronizing suggestion that I in any way didn't assume good faith. As I read the proposal it seemed to be a suggestion that some medical students would privatize a subject in order to study it (etc.). I however at no point considered the proposal to be made in anything but good faith (the tone is obviously serious and considered); I just disagreed with the proposal (as I understood it). Your implication that I did not assume good faith was rude (to me) and unwarranted. Even my Mother doesn't know what I am thinking. You didn't assume good faith in my response to the proposal. I didn't assume anything. I respond and wait. It has paid off. The proposal is now clearer to me. fredgandt 17:41, 22 January 2012 (UTC)

    Have you run this by your IRB already, or is this at concept stage? Will the student be writing a paper, or is this a pure WP project? (We heavily frown on external experiments run on us lab rats)
    My first concern is the expertise of your selected student, expecially if they are handling PCs, 2nd-3rd year meds sounds better. The equal ranking concern is how well they can learn that they are not in charge of anything at all. I think you should change your design so that they are also analyzing responses to their own edits.
    Setting up PC on 24,000 articles is a tall order, is the function even enabled anymore? Can you select a smaller subset for the trial? Say 2-3,000 articles? Getting an adminbot approved to turn on PC may take the entire summer just to get through BRFA. Franamax (talk) 06:07, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    What the student would do would be collecting data for Wikipedia. I guess I should say they would be dealing with PC when it is on so that this would not generate extra work for the community ( a concern previously raised ). Yes PC is still enables (if you are an admin you can see it under the protect opinion). If by write a paper you mean write an article for the signpost yes. I unfortunately do not think anyone cares about the effect of PC on Wikipedia but us thus seriously doubt we could find an academic journal.Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 14:18, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    I see clearer now that what you are proposing is a re-evaluation of the potential usefulness of the pending changes system. I'm actually a big fan of the idea. There are issues that kinda fly in the face of open editing though. One has to wonder if Wikipedia would be what it is today if there hadn't been the opportunity for any passing Tom, Dick, or Harry to add their little bit. But that is the question isn't it? And with this study you intend to find out? If pending changes was ever going to work well, I feel the judgement of those editors proven by track record would be superior to the judgement of outsiders (however well versed in the subject they might be). Certainly though, if a re-evaluation of PC is what you're after, and a way can be found to do it without disrupting the Encyclopedia too much, I might support it. 20000 pages is far too many to play with though. A longer running test on a far smaller subcategory would (in my opinion) be far less disruptive (and possibly thus, far more fruitful). fredgandt 17:41, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    (*grumble*)
    Yes, there is data from the previous trial. You can see some of it at Wikipedia:Pending changes/Metrics/Anonymous edit quality. Yes, the data proves that PC works for permitting new and unregistered editors to make improvements (about a third of the edits to these articles) while preventing vandalism and other bad edits from ever seeing the light of day (about two-thirds of the edits). NB that the articles in question were selected primarily from among semi-protected BLPs, i.e., articles known to have had problems in the past. The ratio of good:bad edits is likely to be (much) higher if you're randomly selecting articles.
    Doc James, the better way to run this trial is to randomly assign half the articles to PC and half to current status during the same week. This eliminates problems with unexpected media exposure, holidays, etc., and also halves the workload. WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:52, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    Thanks for that. I just had a quick look around and I just don't see any metrics to answer the questions I'd have wanted to answer. In particular there is no comparable sample chosen with pending changes not used and they should count ordinary editors to see the effect on them as well and if possible I'd like to have an idea of the number of watchers for each article. I think I'd have just stuck it on a random sample of other pages too for the trial period to see the effect where there wasn't a preexisting problem. I'd have thought there would be some good statisticians around on Wikipedia who could have helped with setting up the trial and interpreting the results. Dmcq (talk) 09:10, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    By putting pending changes on a group of articles and reviewing all the edit made, than by not having pending changes on a group of articles and reviewing all the edits made one can determine if pending changes affects the number of edits made by IPs / new users. We would also divide the list of articles in half such that (half have pending changes the first week and half do not, than the second week they are switched so that one can hopefully take into account a change in editing volume from week to week even though there is not much of one). We are than comparing articles to themselves (each article will be its own control).--Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 19:02, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
    I strongly oppose running this trial. First, the subject is inappropriate, as the content of or medical articles is well-watched, and has been repeated evaluated by outside evaluators as having very high quality, If we were to do such a test, there are many areas much more susceptible to problematic edits--PC was introduced at first as a proposal for BLPs, and was used as such; BLPs in certain fields particularly, such as entertainment and politics, have a much higher frequency of problems ,
    More generally, I think we've discussed this enough.There is already an excellent trial running: the German Wikipedia. On the one hand, their articles have a higher quality of writing--on he other, they are by our standards very often inadequately documented. Perhaps a more detailed analysis of the differences here might be the more productive approach. It does however, require a degree of fluency in German uncommon in the US.
    Even more generally, regardless of what might have been the case two or three years ago, quality is not now our most pressing problem The overall quality of Wikipedia is well accepted--that is, the overall quality as judged by appropriate standards for a quick reference site, not the standards for an academic treatise. and the public now seems to understand that such is the appropriate standard. Our problems are rather the attraction and especially the retention of new editors and the introduction of spam articles for both companies and non-profit organizations. Patrolled Changes is irrelevant to the problem of new spam articles, and almost certainly counter-productive in terms of editor attraction and retention. What we need to solve, are the currently critical problems.
    Overall, I well recall the tens of thousands of hours for us all devoted to this problem: for us discussing it, for our testing it and explaining it, for the programmers attempting to meet the constraints of our high editing rate. During the trial, the difficulties were such that I at least simply refrained from editing any article under the trial despite my admin status which meant anything I edited would be automatically approved by the system. (The effect of the deWP system is such that I no longer attempt to do even simple error-fixing there--which I must admit is all I'm generally capable of in that language. --that's part of the basis on which i anticipate a similar discouraging effect here.) I think the best way of distracting us from positive work on the problems of Wikipedia would be to reintroduce the subject. I'm glad the programmers made the final decision--their disgust at working so hard on what was not implemented led them to refuse to work further unless we would commit, and since we would not commit without proof that it worked better, this put an end to it. DGG ( talk ) 10:02, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    Yes this was sort of the response I expected.Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 02:20, 25 January 2012 (UTC)

    Binding content discussions

    The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

    I table a proposal to the Wikipedia community that I hope you will support. Since May, I have been rather active in attempts to reform the dispute resolution processes. Back in June, I proposed the creation of the dispute resolution noticeboard, which has been reasonably successful in its aims to provide an open style of addressing content disputes.

    Since then, I have been working on a few other ideas. While I want to come up with a way to tackle POV pushing, my current proposal is Wikipedia:Binding RFCs, a method for resolving intractable content disputes. The proposal explains how the process would work, but in essence, it's a two part discussion which would be closed by three users, an admin, a user experienced in the subject area, and a user experienced in dispute resolution. I envision the discussion structure would somewhat resemble the recent RFC on the verifiability policy, but with some changes, part one of the discussion would only be to present evidence in favour of X proposal or Y proposal (policies, reliable sources, past precedent etc) and the second part being an AfD styled discussion, with comments weighed depending on strength of argument.

    I'm happy to answer any questions relating to my proposal and clarify any details. I feel the proposal page itself explains how the process would work, thus I have not rehashed it here. I think that this differs as opposed to other binding content proposals because it puts the power to resolve these issues in the hands of the community. I encourage comments on this and hope this is something the community will support. Regards, Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 07:14, 21 December 2011 (UTC)

    Essentially, an editorial board staffed by the DR people? That's not putting decisions in the hand of the community, that's putting them in the hand of a cabal. Now there is nothing wrong with decisions being made by cabals (every area has its regulars)... but binding ones? Dangerous stuff. Binding decisions, if they should ever be taken, should only be taken by people vetted by the community as a whole. There is already an arbitration committee for handling "binding" decision; and no, I don't think we need an editorial committee to rule over actual content. This is not the idea I have of a wiki, and definitely not the one I have of Wikipedia. CharlieEchoTango (contact) 07:34, 21 December 2011 (UTC)
    I think you completely misread my proposal. At the moment, AfDs, RFCs and many other discussions are closed by admins. This proposal would not create a cabal at all. It would mean that instead that three independent users would close the discussions, as opposed to one. The suggestion of a user experienced in th area (say a WikiProject participant of the topic) may be able to add perspective, and a user experienced in DR would help ensure that other venues of DR were tried first. There could be a requirement for these users to be admins, though I note a few discussions that were closed by non-admins well (ie the Ireland article names RFC a month or so ago). But I want to emphasize this is not a creation of a new content committee, I agree that's a bad idea. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 08:16, 21 December 2011 (UTC)
    Hmm, yes I did indeed misread the proposal. Disregard, and apologies. CharlieEchoTango (contact) 16:25, 21 December 2011 (UTC)
    Random comment "To table" something in America means to remove it from discussion, which is quite the opposite in Britain. Just a friendly reminder for future discussions so we damn Americans can follow. Angryapathy (talk) 18:54, 3 January 2012 (UTC)
    Eh, to me, it meant, well "to table" as in, "to bring a proposal to the table" but your comment is noted. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 21:13, 3 January 2012 (UTC)
    American and British usages are exactly opposite. On one side of the pond it means to take up and on the other side it means to lay aside. Diplomats are schooled to avoid the phrase because it has led to some embarrassing misunderstandings. The two dialects deceptively similar, with countless booby traps like this. ~ Ningauble (talk) 18:24, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    Steve, I still think this is a bad idea. Editors that were once active in one area of Wikipedia may have switched to another area of wikipedia. Also, requiring 3 people to close a discussion can drag out discussions unnecessarily.Curb Chain (talk) 19:12, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    • Ya know, part of th problem with many current discussions is a lack of knowledge by the community that they exist. I would think that using watchlist notices advertising the creation of a binding discussion would attract the attention of more editors than something like an AN thread. I also do think that having three closers will deliver a more balanced result as opposed to just one closer. That said, we won't know unless we try. I've in fact been discussing this with arbitrator Casliber as an alternative to Remedy 5.1 of the Abortion case, as I feel it would be a good test case, but realise this process needs to get the support of the community first. Thus, I am asking for the support of the community. If the test case goes well, then great. If it crashes and burns, then at least we know it doesn't work, but we won't know if we don't try. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 19:44, 21 December 2011 (UTC)
      • And if the discussion is binding people might well be keener to take part. And if the RFC is binding we could probably at least list it at WP:CENT. -- Eraserhead1 <talk> 22:25, 1 January 2012 (UTC)
    • That strikes me as exactly the kind of reason I don't want such majority votes. I think it was the wrong close, one likely made for political reasons, and one which introduced more instability by making a snap decision. I still don't understand quite how this was arranged..... Wnt (talk) 18:56, 4 January 2012 (UTC)
    • I disagree that it is forum shopping, I am merely trying to get more input. If you feel it is not crafted well, you feel free to make changes. I don't see anyone else trying to improve DR, but if you think you can do better, than be my guest. I don't claim to have all the answers but at least I am trying. I'd welcome constructive comments and ideas but do not take kindly to comments that amount to "X and Y are crappy proposals". And DRN isn't the problem, it's a lack of people to deal with the issues (read- not enough mediators) Is it perfect? No. Could it be better? Of course. But has it helped people? You betcha. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 10:37, 9 January 2012 (UTC)
      • Merely posting a notice here is not forum shopping. However, presenting this discussion, which is held in a rather irregular place for policy adoption (if you look at Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Wikipedia policies and guidelines), as proof of support [10] is testing the boundaries of forum-shopping, particularly when there have been more comments on the proposal's talk page than here. Also switching the place of the CENT-advertised RfC [11] is not exactly kosher either. ASCIIn2Bme (talk) 11:00, 9 January 2012 (UTC)
        • Eh, discussion is needed. If I was posting in multiple places that I wanted people to support, that'd be forum shopping. Anyways, discussion has been rather slow. What I'm after is more comments on the process, suggestions and ideas so we can make it viable, and go from there. The proposal possibly isn't 100% yet, so I'd welcome comments. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 20:20, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
    Why doesn't it? I probably should. In anycase, the 3 people giving the final say on an issue of how content should be? The first problem I already see with this is how this will change editing for everyone simply because a decision had been already made. This is the nature of wiki. You can't assume that 3 people can be the judicial system of content on wikipedia.Curb Chain (talk) 12:03, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Firstly you aren't going to get a single arbitrator to agree with you - and secondly because it would impede on their ability to tackle behavioural issues. -- Eraserhead1 <talk> 23:49, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    The problem I see with this proposal is how it is trying to allow another decision making process on wikipedia to take place, contrary to the communitywide decision making process of consensus. I see, if this was to go ahead, one decision making process used for non consensus issues, and everything else goes through WP:CONSENSUS. What is the point of that? Who decides a discussions must go through a binding RfC?Curb Chain (talk) 00:01, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    I really have to disagree here. Think of it this way. Pretty much all discussions on Wikipedia are closed by one or more users. RFAs are closed by a bureaucrat after 7 days of discussions, where they evaluate the consensus in the discussion. XFDs also run for 7 days and are closed by an uninvolved admin, who closes the discussion as per the consensus. This is pretty much what would happen here as well, except we increase the amount of closers from one to three. These users would not make unilateral decisions, but evaluate consensus. That's the norm, and I too would disagree with a community process where three users decide an issue unilaterally. That is not the case here. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 21:41, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    We do know what a binding RFC would look like. We have had several examples of them. Each one was different according to the needs of the community involved in the dispute, but they have shared common features. --RA (talk) 23:46, 15 January 2012 (UTC)
    I'll create a mock-up, then let you decide. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 03:44, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Speaking as someone who mediated an Israel/Palestine case for a few months back in 2008 over one word, the I/P dispute outlines exactly why such a process is needed. Everyone agreeing on something is never going to happen. Structure is important to such discussions, and is something I intend to demonstrate (when I get a chance). As for doing more harm than good, I'd make the argument that endless arguments on such matters (many examples from I/P disputes, for example) drives away more editors than a binding discussion would. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 03:42, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Nonsense. The centralized discussion (Wikipedia:Legality_of_Israeli_settlements) was an enormous if imperfect success. It's probably one of the most significant improvements in the topic area that has taken place since Wikipedia started. It largely put an end to pointless disruptive discussions and edit warring in articles all over the topic area about this issue, but far more importantly, policy compliance has been increased in a very large number of articles. The only people edit warring the content out now are vandals who are reverted on sight and blocked by admins. The issue was not contentious at all in reliable source world and what the sources say is not going to change. It was contentious in Wikipedia because of many editor's inability and disruptive unwillingness to simply follow policy. That is exactly why these kind of discussions with binding decisions are necessary. Sean.hoyland - talk 06:53, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    This happens without RfC's. Our many policies and guidelines coverover what what the community deems to be best practice. Using a separate venue analogous to a judicial branch of government is contrary to WP:BUREAUCRACY and WP:CONSENSUS.Curb Chain (talk) 19:24, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    So why did it take 10 years for the world's largest country to have a title which satisfied WP:COMMONNAME and WP:POVTITLE? -- Eraserhead1 <talk> 23:55, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    That is entirely political. There are problems in the real world where people don't agree. As in real life, calling the People's Repulic Of China "China" is a political move, especially in the presence of Taiwan or certain Taiwanese nationalists. The situation on Wikipedia is the mirror of the real world.Curb Chain (talk) 20:56, 20 January 2012 (UTC)

    Reflections from the Ireland-names example

    Apologies in advance for very long post.

    I was very involved in the Ireland-names example: I proposed that the issue be resolved through a binding RFC. Despite that, however, I would be very cautious about bringing binding RFCs into the fold of every-day dispute resolution mechanisms.

    There seems to be a sense here that a proposal like this is an obviously good idea. I would absolutely disagree that. Binding RFCs can lead to deep rifts in editors (as it did on Wikiproject Ireland) and do not lead the the "right" answer (the dispute they resolve are those where there is no "right" answer). This is because they run contrary to normal collaborative and consensus-based practice on Wikipedia and, by their very nature, they strip whole swathes of (constructive and well-intentioned) editors of their voice either indefinitely or for a set amount of time.

    Because of this, anything like a binding RFC is rarely, if ever, a good idea and, therefore, having an explicit process for them would be a bad idea IMO. In practice, if binding RFCs were commonplace, I believe they would quickly fall into something akin to what I call the "tyranny of consensus": decisions where consensus is not allowed to change because, we are told, the existing arrangement is consensus and attempts to change it are, therefore, disruptive. Situations like that are incredibly vexatious and not a good idea, either for dispute resolution or content development. Certainly, I do not believe that commonplace binding RFCs would promote either harmonious relationships or good solutions to difficult questions.

    Despite this, I would suggest that there is no need for a proposal of this sort: the means for binding RFCs already exist — and bindings RFCs do have a place — but their place is under WP:IAR. Under WP:IAR, the existing precedents for binding RFCs already allow for binding solutions to inextricable disputes. However, under the existing arrangement they are entered into only when all other means are exhausted and where participants to the dispute agree mutually that a binding RFC, outside of the normal "rules" of Wikipedia, is the best, probably only, way forward. That is what gives the existing examples of bindings RFCs the strength of legitimacy they need.

    Further, I don't believe it is wise that a proposal for a process that diverges so greatly from core wikipedia policy and current practice should come from the ether. The best policies and guidelines come from already existing practice. They begin as consensus already and are simply formalised into policy. Therefore, I don't think that a proposal like this is a wise idea. An essay or guideline that drew on the lessons of the examples of binding RFCs that we already have may be a good idea. But coming up with a brand new process for something like this, without basing that process on the learning we already have, would, in my opinion, be a bad idea.

    Finally, from my experience on the Ireland example, I would say that the following would are important points to consider for any binding RFC:

    --RA (talk) 22:49, 15 January 2012 (UTC)

    Haven't read your entire comments, but I would see this as a process that is not commonly used. A few requirements would be the use of mediation and one other DR process to have been tried and been unsuccessful at resolving the issue. As for Binding RFCs being a bad idea, well, I would suggest a test case would be the best way forward. I also note that endless discussion can drive away editors, which is pretty bad as well. As for ArbCom, I think that this should be a community process. We're the ones who deal with resolving content issues, and I think we're capable to do so in this sort of situation as well. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 22:58, 15 January 2012 (UTC)
    I didn't say that binding RFCs were a bad idea. In fact, I said they have their place. However, I do believe that having an explicit procedure for binding RFCs is a bad idea. For one reason, I think it would invite binding RFCs where there would be no need for one or where one would not be a good idea. It would also, to some degree, "normalise" binding RFCs, whereas they are in, fact, "not normal" and should remain "not normal".
    WRT "test cases", we already have at several "test cases". Binding RFCs already exist. I suggest that, if you are not aware of these, you should look at them and learn from them. As I wrote, the best examples for new policies and guidelines come from exiting practice. Rather than coming up with something new out of the ether, you should look at how binding RFCs work right now. The oldest example, I think, is Gdansk. We have also had Ireland and Macedonia. All three have worked successfully (in their own terms) — or as well as could be expected.
    WTR to ArbCom, when you do take the trouble to read what I wrote (and I apologies again that it was so long), you'll see that I said that binding RFC need to be a community process. In fact, they need to be one that is initiated by the community in dispute according according to a process they can agree. This is the example set by binding RFCs to date and is one that has worked for them. However, an authority is needed to enforce the outcome. Again, in the examples of binding RFCs that we have to date, that has been ArbCom. --RA (talk) 23:30, 15 January 2012 (UTC)
    Steven, you claim that you want the community involved in a the decision making process when a no consensus is reached in RfC's, because of a lack of participation of the wider community or otherwise. Your proposal is to introduce voting so these disputes get resolved. Or sois there another solution you are thinking of? A cursory look at the proposals here and on the project page does not seem like there are any better solutions. I see a our current unworkable solution, but I see worse proposals to solve it.Curb Chain (talk) 19:06, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    Not raw voting, of course not. I do apologise for not creating a mock-up page as of yet (been crazy busy lately but will try today) but turning it into a vote, not exactly. We have many processes that are an evaluation of consensus that in essence resemble votes. RfA, XfD, requested moves and even this discussion are examples. But they are in fact closed per the consensus of the community. A binding content discussion woul be no different. I'll make creating the mock-up page my first priority today so you can see what I mean. Regards, Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 21:41, 23 January 2012 (UTC)

    Binding content discussions. Section break

    Comment. On first glance this sounds too complicated. There are thousands of content disputes. I think people want quick comments first from admins and arbitrators (we need a lot more of both) on the article talk page. See my userboxes for more info:

    The lack of enough moderators and arbitrators drives away editors and donations. More info.

    This idea for binding content discussions is one proposal of various content dispute arbitration methods. It should be used only after other simpler feedback from admins and arbitrators. Right now admins and arbitrators don't officially comment on content. They should be summoned right away. And they should comment directly on the article talk page. See: User:Timeshifter/Unresolved content disputes. Editors are leaving because of this. --Timeshifter (talk) 11:11, 16 January 2012 (UTC)

    Yah, this is kind of the crux. Content discussions are binding (or should be), in the sense that you shouldn't be editing against the consensus as revealed in those discussions. And if it's not clear what consensus has been revealed in those discussions, then you need an admin to come and sort it out, say what the result it, and make sure it's enforced. Unfortunately, admins are fairly unwilling to do this in the case of ordinary (non-process) page-content discussions, I think because of two strands of muddled thinking: (1) "The fact that there's still disagreement show's that there can't be consensus." Nonsense, of course, since our definition of consensus does not require unanimity; and this is clearly seen when admins close the process discussions (Afd, RM, ...) (2) "Admins are not supposed to decide content disputes." Well they're not supposed to impose their own opinions on content; but that's no reason why they shouldn't assess the result of content-related discussions - as of course they do every day at xfD and RM, which are also content discussions, just a particular type thereof.--Kotniski (talk) 12:10, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    ...but.... the way discussions are closed at the moment is unsatisfactory, particularly for debates about article wording, where multiple possibilities exist. I mean, it works all right for most simple everyday RMs etc., but not for long, complex or fraught debates. Here we need the admin to act not as a one-person jury ("I've looked at the discussion and have decided this"), but someone who can possibly mediate a bit so as to focus the discussion, possibly suggest compromise solutions, or in any case talk to the participants a bit just to be sure he's noted and understood all the arguments and counterarguments correctly. And there doesn't have to be just one admin doing this, either. --Kotniski (talk) 12:19, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    Admins do not have any authority to decide content disputes. And they should not have that authority except as part of a process we set up for settling content disputes. But their opinions and experience are valuable, and admins should be summoned much sooner concerning content disputes. And it should be quick, and above all, done on the article talk page. Oftentimes editors don't understand that WP:NPOV is not necessarily implemented by picking one description of the facts, but by pointing out all significant viewpoints. Admins can explain this quickly, and editors are less likely to believe it is wikilawyering since the admin is new to the discussion. --Timeshifter (talk) 13:21, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    I believe admins do have the authority to decide content disputes (as they do regularly at AfD and RM, which are particular types of content dispute; as well as at RfCs, sometimes, when asked). We don't need to set up a new process; we just have to get people into the habit of asking admins to help reach a settlement when the editors themselves can't work out what they've decided (of course, in most cases this won't be necessary), and admins into the habit of responding positively to such requests, and everyone out of the mindset that "closing" a discussion must be a single God-like act without any interaction with the participants. So what I'm suggesting is fairly similar to what you're suggesting - summon an admin for help in resolving the dispute, but the reason it's useful for it to be an admin rather than any other experienced editor is that admins have the authority (and should be given more of it) to take firm action against those who continue to disrupt the process or edit against consensus.--Kotniski (talk) 17:53, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    Admins should absolutely not be given that authority. It goes against a core belief in Wikipedia that goes all the way back to the dispute between Jimbo Wales and Larry Sanger concerning "experts." AfDs and RMs are not content disputes. One is about deleting an article. One is about changing the name of articles. Neither decide the content of articles. WP:Edit warring is one of the most disruptive of the guidelines because admins are using it arbitrarily to decide content disputes. It should be used first as a warning by an admin, and not used first as a block. Many editors leave Wikipedia due to such abuse by admins who give blocks without warning from an admin. --Timeshifter (talk) 23:58, 16 January 2012 (UTC)
    Yes, sure, blocks should be used only as a last resort. But it's nonsense to suggest that having admins "decide" RMs and AfDs is fine, while having them decide "content disputes" is fundamentally wrong. This is the sort of prevalent muddled thinking I refer to above. RMs and AfDs are simply particular types of content dispute - in the first case about that part of the content of an article that goes above the top line, and in the second case about whether to include the whole content of a given article in the encyclopedia. If other content disputes can't be decided by adjudged consensus, then they'll end up being decided by edit-warring, which is contrary to our fundamental principles.--Kotniski (talk) 09:56, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    I am against single admins making any content decisions. AfDs aren't decided by a single admin. RMs aren't decided by a single admin. They are closing a discussion made by a group of people. If you read my proposal linked from my userbox higher up you will see that at the very end of the process a group of people make content decisions. --Timeshifter (talk) 14:14, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    "Single admins closing discussions made by a group of people" is exactly what I'm suggesting should happen, and sometimes does happen, for discussions about page content.--Kotniski (talk) 14:33, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Arbitration currently is decided by a vote of the arbitrators. That is what should happen concerning content disputes too in the end after all else fails. The arbitrators do not consist of the editors involved in the dispute. See my proposal: User:Timeshifter/Unresolved content disputes. --Timeshifter (talk) 16:13, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    OK, I agree, but the arbitrators should act as a final court of appeal, not of first instance. So first an admin tries to assess the consensus, then (possibly) someone will challenge that decision and take it to (say) the admins' noticeboard, and then finally if the matter is still disputed it should go to ArbCom. I've been saying this sort of thing ever since I started commenting on dispute resolution (which I started doing when I saw first hand how broken the present system is). Basically what's wrong with the system as it is is that it encourages and foments drama and disruption and endless fruitless debate, when it should be stamping on them hard, and focus on getting real resolutions to real problems in real time.--Kotniski (talk) 17:14, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    An admin is no better at assessing "consensus" than anybody else. So I don't want admins assessing consensus more than anybody else. As in Animal Farm: "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others". Go stamp on somebody else hard, but not on Wikipedia. --Timeshifter (talk) 00:41, 18 January 2012 (UTC)
    So who do you think should be assessing consensus? I hardly think ArbCom will have time to consider every AfD, RM and disputed RfC, unless we elect about 100 arbitrators and they divide into subcommittees or something. (Of course we have non-admin closure too, but custom has it that this is only for clear-cut cases - and that admins are asked to review such closures if they're disputed.)--Kotniski (talk) 08:17, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    @TimeShifter, we need to work within the options we have at present. ArbCom had stated over and over that they will not intervene in clear cut content disputes, and are reluctant to comment in regular discussions due to the fact they likely would have to recuse if an issue over conduct came to ArbCom. Admins assess consensus on many issues, such as XfD, RM etc. Bureaucrats assess RfAs. Non-admins can close some clear cut discussions as well. I decided on this approach because the ideas of content committees have been shot down in the past repeatedly, and this seems the best option to address intractable content disputes by the community. Set up a structured discussion with clear possible outcomes, users add material supporting X or Y, and members of the community opine on the discussions. After a period of time, three admins evaluate the consensus and close the discussion. Having three closers is key here. It reduces the possibility for bad closes (three opinions instead of one). I'll work on that mock-up for you all to see. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 21:41, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    Oppose. While certainly voting is not evil, I do think that it shouldn't be used to resolve content disputes. As things are, we've got three stages in an attempt to reach a consensus. 1. We start on the article page, and try to talk things out. 2. We invite uninvolved editors in in an RFC, 3. As a last resort, we ask Arb Com to talk it out. Arb Com doesn't rule on the page itself, but on user behavior. In all of these cases, there is an attempt to reach a flexible consensus.
    Binding RFCs won't do that; you'll make winners and losers, you'd force people to take sides, you invite Wikilawyering, and unless but there's a very clear vote on wording, you're still going to have further arguments over the nature of the vote, only now with the winners being self-righteous and the losers pissed off. Further support or oppose vote cast by a drive-by-editor will have the same weight as the contributions of an editor who takes a great deal of time attempting to reach a compromise. (And the same weight as all the text posted by a single filibuster whose posts make up 95% of the entire discussion, but I'm not sure the benefit from that is worth the detriment of downplaying attempts to reach a consensus.)
    • Perhaps it's just me, but I feel that many of the users voting oppose here may not to understand the proposal, so let me make a few comments here.
    The first point is that this would be a last resort dispute resolution method, reserved for issues that have failed both mediation and other forms of low level dispute resolution, and where conduct is not a primary issue. It's not something that would be used often at all.
    Some here have commented that the style would allow for !voting by disinterested people. Isn't that the whole point? If we only allow comments by people involved in the dispute, we get nowhere, otherwise the dispute would have been resolved without requiring a binding discussion. I also think a watchlist notice would aid in this.
    Some have commented that it will create a win/lose situation for some. Unfortunately, it may have to come to that. The alternative is that discussion continues until the heat death of the universe, and the person who digs their heels in the hardest wins, the rest leave exasperated, and after all that's what we're trying to fix, editor retention. I would much rather a structured discussion based on policy decide outcomes of deadlocked content disputes (generally, naming disputes) rather than the former.
    I also note that none of you have seen the proposed structure of this process. That's partly my fault, but assuming that it will look like a normal RFC is incorrect. I also note that few here actively participate in dispute resolution. It is true that most users are reasonable, and most issues can be resolved through mediation, but some cannot, and that's what this process would be for, when all else fails.
    If there's no clear consensus as a result of a binding content discussion, then the status quo would remain. I don't see a 51% consensus being enacted. Note the closing of a discussion by three, minimising the chances for bad decisions that have possibly occured in past binding discussions. Note, bad != everyone doesn't agree.
    Wikilawyering is always a factor in any discussion, but take the Pro-life/Pro-choice vs Abortion-rights/Anti-abortion titles. There would be a clear outline of what issue the binding RFC is to address, and users would present evidence to back up why outcome X vs Outcome Y is appropriate (policy, backed up by other info). For example, if an argument was made for common name usage, a demonstration of how common it is, and so on. After this, editors would partake in an AFD style discussion, commenting on which they prefer and why based on the information presented, eg, "I prefer X as is the common name as demonstrated in Y sources" or something like that.
    All in all, binding discussions of content should indeed be the exception to the norm, but part of the problem in the past has been a lack of a unified method to hold such a discussion. That's what my proposal is about, bringing structure to these discussions, limiting long-term disruption in intractible disputes. Locking down content isn't a great idea, but it's better than endless heated discussions over X versus Y, which people end up leaving over. That's my opinion, and is the reason I made this proposal. Try it. I don't see any harm in a test case. If it flops, hey, at least we know it doesn't work. If it does, well that's great. But I feel it's a viable solution to a real problem. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 04:11, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Steven, I appreciate that you are well-meaning here but, rather than supposing that those who oppose the proposal do not understand it, I suggest you could consider another possibility: you may not be as conscious of the issues involved in a binding RFC as you may believe you are.
    First, I think you need to acknowledge that binding RFCs already exist. You seem to believe that they do not - and that this is an original idea that merits "trying out" to see if it works. In fact, we have had several examples of binding RFCs. I've linked to some above. I think you should first begin by looking at those examples, see how they came about, if they resolved the dispute and the issue affecting editors involved.
    Some of those who oppose the proposal here (myself included) do so because of our experience with binding RFCs in the past. Here is an important point: it is a policy on binding RFCs that is being opposed, not bindings RFCs. Binding RFCs have their place. The question is would anyone who has been involved in resolving a dispute through a binding RFC believe that they should be a part of the stated toolset of dispute resolution? Certainly, I do not.
    Their place to date has been under WP:IAR and with good reason (not least of which is because every one is different). In contrast, an explicit policy ("a unified method") would run counter, I believe, to the very reasons they have worked in the few examples that we have. Let them happen on a case-by-case basis where there is a strong consensus and an over-riding reason to have them. But "legislating" for them, or prescribing how they should happen, is not a good idea IMO. --RA (talk) 10:13, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    How do you distinguish "binding" RfCs from "non-binding" RfCs? What on earth is the point of having a discussion that leads to a result which is not then binding (i.e. enforceable)? If consensus is not binding, then what is? The only answers I can think of are (a) the decision is made by the best edit-warriors; (b) any sufficiently bloody-minded editor can block any change to the status quo; (c) decisions are made randomly, by admins locking a page in some version. It's not hard to see why any of these three solutions would be worse than having decisions made by (qualified) consensus. Does someone have any other alternative? (And don't say "keep discussing until you reach a solution that everyone can accept", since we know that's not always possible or even desirable, and is effectively just the same as my (b).)--Kotniski (talk) 10:45, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    "If consensus is not binding, then what is?" - Consensus isn't binding by it's very nature. It is consensual. That's the point. If there was consensus then there would be no need for a binding RFC. You are confusing democracy (which Wikipedia is not) with consensus.
    In the cases of binding RFCs that I pointed to, there was no consensus. And there was no hope of consensus ever being reached. So, instead, in stark contrast to normal practice (see WP:IAR), we decided things by democracy (or at least we did in two cases). The RFCs were closed with a decision one way the another, and deemed to be absolutely binding, regardless of whether it attained consensus of not. Even regardless of whether consensus changed or was later reached! In fact, the kibosh was put on all further discussion of the matter.
    The point that I am making is that processes of these kind fit under WP:IAR (as they are right now). Codifying them into policy would invite POV pushing and gaming and provide a disincentive to reaching agreement by consensus. People would reach for it too early, when in fact it needs to be the very last option. Something you never even imagined would be an option.
    Even more importantly, a policy would try to fit binding RFCs to a single codified procedure. In contrast, in each of the examples that we have of binding RFCs, a different procedure was used in each case. Crucially, this was one that was agreed in consensus by the community in dispute according to the needs of resolving their particular dispute. Bindings RFCs are right at the fringe of dispute resolution and therefore straight-racketing them according to one policy, devised out of the ether, is not a good idea. The process needs enormous consensus from the community in conflict (and so needs to come from them), otherwise the result will lack legitimacy. --RA (talk) 14:14, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    You seem to be confusing consensus with unanimity (as someone always does when these matters are discussed). In the sense in which it is used on Wikipedia, consensus does not have to mean unanimity, and therefore not everyone needs to have consented to it, and therefore some people might still want to thwart the decision made, and therefore someone has to stop them from doing so, otherwise the decision would not in fact be made, and the whole idea that our decisions are made by "consensus" would be a myth. Sometimes it eventually comes down to something resembling a majority vote (quite often, in fact), although we sometimes require more than 51% to change something, and we don't look only at numbers. And sometimes we really do have to stop further discussion of a matter, let it stay settled for a certain period, so that people can get on with other important things. (But I agree with you that there can't be a one-size-fits-all procedure for all types of disputes; and that we don't want people to seek enforced resolution of a disagreement too quickly - though too slowly is also bad, as some matters end up consuming vastly excessive amounts of editorial time and attention.) --Kotniski (talk) 14:30, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    "You seem to be confusing consensus with unanimity (as someone always does when these matters are discussed)." - No. I'm not. Indeed, I took the trouble of linking to a dictionary defintion of consensus so that there should there be no such misunderstanding.
    I am talking about situations where there is no widespread agreement. There may be two or more very divided, evenly numbered, and equally "right" divisions in opinion. Those are the situations in which we have used binding RFCs to date. --RA (talk) 15:58, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    Well, the ones you're thinking of, perhaps. But there are RfCs every day, some of which produce more or less conclusive results - it would hardly be respectful to those taking part in those discussionsg to tell them that their opinions count for nothing in the face of a determined edit-warrior or two. --Kotniski (talk) 17:08, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
    I whole heatedly agree with that! I'm shocked at how little action comes out of some RFCs. I'm thinking of RFC/Us in particular but the same can be said for content RFCs. Often, even when there is consensus, nothing happens. Another problem is arriving at consensus in some RFC (again I'm thinking of RFC/U, in particular). The structure of some RFCs often does not lead to action.
    However, I would very strongly contrast that problem with a new policy on "binding RFCs". I would see the current problem as a weakness in the current RFC procedures that needs to be addressed. I would wholeheartedly support a review of those weaknesses and to improve the current system. --RA (talk) 17:29, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

    Binding content discussions. Section break 2

    Your essentially asking for a certain version of an article be kept. This is just another form of page protection. And your asking editors to vote on the position they like best. This goes against the core base of Wikipedia.Curb Chain (talk) 19:00, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    No, I am not. This sort of thing I see mostly utliized in naming disputes, but it could also be used in other disputes with a small scope. There would not be any X vs Y version of the whole article discussions. As for such a binding RFC being contrary to the core principles of Wikipedia, I would say that we need to consider that discussions where editors dig their heels in until their opposition gives up is not how we want things to go around here. At times, consensus = who gives up last. People leave over this. I hope this process puts a stop to that. You are entitled to your opinion, of course, but so are others. Have a good day. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 20:28, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
    But then you are instituting voting. RfCs have little participation. That is a fact of life. One person proposals a side of a position. There's no consensus or supporters of this single person's opinion. Too bad.Curb Chain (talk) 20:59, 20 January 2012 (UTC)
    Eeh, but my experience of arbitrators is that they're self-satisfied know-it-alls with an exaggerated sense of their own infallibility and of the inferiority of all other forms of human life (no offence). They reach their decisions through a private gossipy mailing list, and are not interested in amending them (except through a long and tortuous process) when mistakes are pointed out. And you can't vote them out - you'll be outnumbered by those who just vote the established arbs back in every time (most voters won't have been paying much attention to the details of any decisions, any more than real-life voters pay attention to the details of the laws that their electees pass). So in practice, ArbCom is no more accountable - less, I would say - than admins (most of whom are at least prepared to talk to editors and explain and perhaps even modify their decisions). But in any case, given there isn't any perfect solution, and that ArbCom has limited capacity, and that two (or three) instances of wise but possibly fallacious judgment are better than one, it seems clear to me that it should go (1) admin decides; (2) possible appeal to other admins; (3) possible appeal to ArbCom. (And if the original admin was way out of line - I mean, really incompetently wrong - ArbCom could then consider that admin's future as well as the issue itself.)--Kotniski (talk) 14:00, 21 January 2012 (UTC)
    1. All statements must include diffs. In my case, a few editors noted that they were "having a hard time finding a single shred of evidence against" me. If I am a "POV-warrior", it will be trivial to include several diffs. Despite an editor requesting whether "anyone here provide a single diff", none were forthcoming.
    2. Some editors noted there was no "due process". Such a process must be fair and timely. One of the reasons the nominator gave for discontinuing Community Bans, was that mine was an "amazing example .. five hours and eleven minutes [..] who finds that rather unfair"[12]
    3. Due process must include consideration of points made. For example, during the little time I had before being banned, I had expressed my concern that the person I was alledged to have harrassed, was actually a sockpuppet. At least one editor commented that there as some "serious explaining to do". Subsequently, it was confirmed that the editor I was supposed to have harassed, was indeed a sockpuppet (one of at least 4) that were being used abusively.[13] At the time, my comment was effectively ignored, as has been my attempted to get any Admin to assess my concerns, subsequently.
    I believe that my case could have been resolved more efficiently if there had been due process, that included a couple of impartial Admins (or whatever). --Iantresman (talk) 18:11, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    Commentary: It seems no one should be needed to assess whether consensus exists or not. Problems begin after a "well-sort-of" consensus is approached, but still has dissenters. I don't think admins are listening to the dissents, and I see too many admins simply excusing bad editorial behaviour. That is, when admins bother pay any attention to a problem at all. I had a problem with an article and got echoing silence. Why not just let it all keep failing that way! What I'd love to see is admins being taken to task for failing to help in the first place. Add to that some binding enforcement to keep editors from posing as admins, (which I have seen from time to time).--Djathinkimacowboy 22:55, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    WP:BRD is the mechanism when to evoke when you have a problem and get echoing silence. This is not a failure. This is actually successful in the 8 years? it has been in existence.Curb Chain (talk) 23:56, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
    Hear hear. I am familiar with one particular editor who, (a) it was acknowledged, was given "leeway", ie. break the rules with impunity, and then I was penalized for complaining "ie. Wikilawyering". (b) When the editor complained that they should be given more freedom to "fight", when I responded that that wasn't the Wikipedia way, I was given a ban for harassing them. (c) I've had an Arbitrator endorse the editor's incivility towards me (d) And when the editor claimed to be a professor, when in fact they were a student, there was no criticism, and another editor continued with the pretence sometime later.
    Sometimes I think it would be useful to raise issues anonymously, so the facts can be assessed without the personalities. --Iantresman (talk) 00:00, 23 January 2012 (UTC) (Original posting date)
    Note to Curb Chain (talk · contribs) (a) "you should not edit or delete the comments of other editors"[14] (b) I assume this was in error, as you gave no explanation in your edit summary,[15] and you did not notify me of your reason. I've restored my comment, which I feel is relevant to the ongoing discussions. --Iantresman (talk) 10:18, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    I think that this is a good proposal, and a needed part of the process. The thing is, we already sometimes have Binding RfCs, it's just that it isn't particularly obvious--in effect, many RfCs that occur after an Arbitration decision are binding RfC's, because an uninvolved admin can easily argue that raising the same topic another time in spite of the RfC is tendentious editing in violation of the sanctions (see, for example, this RfC closeonTalk:Senkaku Islands regarding the naming of that article). I'd love for us to have this process available as an intermediate step between mediation and arbitration, especially in cases where the behavior of participants isn't actually the main problem. While I don't know much about the details, isn't it possible that Tree shaping could have been solved by this approach? I understand the concerns above that binding RfCs can actually increase tensions/battleground mentality in some cases. But having no means whatsoever seems to me to be actually worse. Furthermore, it the current state of affairs gives enormous power to those who have the ability to control their own tongues while maintaining an entrenched position; they may be able to outlast the more neutral editors, and sometimes even push them into outbursts that show up as "behavioral problems" and thus lead to sanctions. Qwyrxian (talk) 03:22, 23 January 2012 (UTC)

    Comment. Something needs to be done. More articles and less editors will mean many lower-quality articles unless content disputes are resolved more efficiently in a less time-consuming and abusive way.

    The English edition of Wikipedia has grown to 6,841,735 articles. See: Template:Numberofarticles and history of Wikipedia.
    Active editors over time.
    The “holy-shit” graph. Active editors (blue) and the one-year retention rate (red) on the English Wikipedia.

    Editors are leaving for various reasons. See: User:Timeshifter/Unresolved content disputes. Some editors are being driven away by the unresolved content disputes. The number of active editors might actually start rising again if we find ways to more efficiently and fairly resolve content disputes. --Timeshifter (talk) 20:13, 23 January 2012 (UTC)

    I'm one who is currently about to leave (possibly not for good) because we just don't have a system in place for making sensible editors' consensus decisions actually happen against the opposition of the drama queens, the edit-warriors and the "nothing must ever change" brigade. Too much of a waste of my time and nerves staying around here.--Kotniski (talk) 23:26, 23 January 2012 (UTC)
    I'm an editor who actually left. I absolutely refused to edit Wikipedia at all for a year or so, and for several years after that refused to log-in, feeling, quite correctly, that it would lead me to get more invested in things than editing as an IP. But I left because I was quite frustrated by the proliferation of rules on Wikipedia, which made it harder to be a casual editor. Getting back to the present, I'm already unhappy with the bright line rules we have, such as the 3RR. Having bright-line rules seems to remove the requirement to assume good faith; using the aforementioned 3RR, I've noticed that on the ANI editors and admins alike can be quite sanctimonious ("You broke the rule, there's no excuse.") which is likely to lead to more bad blood than simply letting a couple of opinionated editors have a pissing contest. In the case of non-binding RFCs where consensus happens, the bulk of the editors can wear down a few opinionated ones. This happened on Arab Spring a few months ago when a couple editors wanted to drag the AI conflict into it, and while they filibustered and revert-warred, the rest of us reached a consensus without them, and simply by our numbers enforced it until they got tired of it. Also it seems to me that this will give administrators power over content when closing a binding RFC where consensus isn't clear. --Quintucket (talk) 12:24, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
    • Forgive me, but I do not see how this proposal could do any of the above, indeed it would do the opposite. We already have voting on content in many talk page discussions where users have differing opinions. This process is by no means a process to just vote, it's one to determine a consensus which often happens with various forms of votes (RfA, XFD, requested moves). This would introduce structure into intractible disputes, and perhaps be the intermediate step between mediation and arbitration. There would be no room for wikilawyering, because users would only be able to present information on option W vs option X vs option Y etc, and then members of the community (as well as the parties) opine on the discussion. The notification of the discussion being in progress (say through a watchlist notice) will help offset this too, because uninvolved users could analyse the information supporting the alternative options and weigh in. That's really how AfD should work as well, because often comments at afd resemble "Delete/Keep - Meets/fails [random policy]." But I think a demo of how a discussion would work will be of use. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 01:47, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
    • WP:CCC != giving POV pushers a free pass and allowing circular discussion to continue until one "side" gives up and the other side "wins". The need is caused by disputes like Senkaku Islands and Abortion. I don't see this as an often used option, but I think it would be a necessary one. Consider, this would be a last resort before ArbCom, after mediation has failed. I invite those opposing to read over the Senkaku Islands dispute, as well as the Abortion arbitration case, and offer an alternative. Admins close discussions all the time. If y'all hate this idea so much, think of an alternative. And an alternative is not "free reign for POV pushers". Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 22:31, 26 January 2012 (UTC)
    • Sorry, but I just don't see the need to permanently lock down an article's content and presentation. That runs afoul of WP:OWN as well as WP:CCC. If you have problems with the behaviour of POV-pushers, you know the way to RFCU. You might see your proposal as an absolute last resort; I see it gradually almost immediately morphing into the first resort for people who think they currently have the numbers but want to nip any possible dissent in the bud. Reyk YO! 23:15, 26 January 2012 (UTC)
    • But it can't be the first resort. A binding content discussion would only be allowed if all other forms of dispute resolution has failed. A prolonged mediation would be a requirement for a binding discussion to even be considered. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 23:18, 26 January 2012 (UTC)
    • And I disagree. I think it would cheapen and demean all prior attempts at dispute resolution. I say "first resort" because it will mean people become less likely to engage meaningfully in the nominal first steps, when that might require compromise. Instead, they could just hold out for a vote. Reyk YO! 23:28, 26 January 2012 (UTC)
    • Since I'm not as adamant as you that there's a problem that needs fixing with mechanisms that aren't already there, I guess my alternative is to leave things as they are. Reyk YO! 23:40, 26 January 2012 (UTC)

    The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page, such as the current discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
    Since the discussion is already closed, can someone please remove the notice that appears on our watchlists? A Quest For Knowledge (talk) 01:34, 30 January 2012 (UTC)
    Done Anomie 02:35, 30 January 2012 (UTC)

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Village_pump_(proposals)/Archive_84&oldid=1141329928"





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