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Sticky Prod for BLPs bites the dust. -
     
 
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> Sticky Prod for BLPs bites the dust.
Doc glasgow
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I thought there was a consensus for a BLP prod for new articles. It was the one bit of good news to come out of the unsourced BLP fiasco - new BLPs must be sourced to stay on wikipedia.

However, it seems the discontents with their unending and unfollowable debates have watered it down to the point of uselessness, as the onus is back on the prodder - and only the unverifiable stuff gets deleted (status-quo in effect).

See my response.

QUOTE
I take my eyes off this for a few days, because it is being talked to death and I find the whole thing has been hijacked.

The supposed consensus closing states:

QUOTE
A new PROD-like process should be designed to handle new unsourced BLPs (those written after the final approval of the process). Modifying the current PROD for this purpose has been soundly rejected. The BLP PROD should, in general, not be removable without sufficient addition of sources. What "sufficient" constitutes must be determined by the community. In addition, there appears to be a consensus that the nominator should make a good faith effort to look for sources before nominating. (emphasis added)


That defeats the entire purpose.

Currently, if I find an unsourced article and decide to look for sources and can find none, I can prod or afd the article as being "unverifiable" (not unverified but actually not capable of verification. If no one can verify it in the timeframe of seven days, AfD will then delete it. That's the current system.

The problem with that is that too often no one was prepared to do the source checking, hence the backlog, hence the problem, hence the speedy deletions.

The idea of a stickyprod was that (for new articles) we were going to say (as nicely as we could) "source this, or it dies". If people want a BLP article to stay on wikipedia, they must source it, or someone must, within a seven day period.

The problem with requiring the prodder to look for sources is that it puts us back to square one. That is, if no-one is willing to check for sources, the article ends up staying. We only delete those articles shown to be unverifiable, whilst the unsourced languish until someone sources them, or tries to and fails.

A sticky prod with this caveat is pointless. We've got mechanisms already to remove material that someone believes to be unverifiable. What we were about was shifting the burden for new BLPs onto those wishing to retain.

I'm also left asking. What if someone like me simply prods new unreferenced BLPs and doesn't volunteer to check for sourcing? If someone sources them, certainly they can deprod. But what happens otherwise? Do the articles get kept because the prodder "didn't the work required?"

Sticking prod with an onus on the prodder is a waste of time, and not in line with the consensus that was clear. Seems to me that a we had a consensus, and so some of us moved on, while others, who didn't like that, kept talking till they talked it into something completely different.

The consensus we had would certainly have satisfied me that speedy deletion should not be used. However, this pointless exercise takes us back to square one. Not good at all.--Scott Mac (Doc) 15:52, 7 March 2010 (UTC)


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QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 11:00am) *

I thought there was a consensus for a BLP prod for new articles. It was the one bit of good news to come out of the unsourced BLP fiasco - new BLPs must be sourced to stay on wikipedia.

However, it seems the discontents with their unending and unfollowable debates have watered it down to the point of uselessness, as the onus is back on the prodder - and only the unverifiable stuff gets deleted (status-quo in effect).

See my response.

I hope you are incorrect. I fear you are not incorrect.
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I dunno, this close might actually not be the worst thing in the world. There was a general agreement for the hard-line deletionists to go off and occupy themselves with something else for three months. Theoretically, people would be sourcing the articles in the meantime. If the backlog disappears because of their work, great. If the backlog doesn't, well, it would be that much easier to force the sticky prod through, in addition to something else if necessary.

In addition, I agree with Lar.
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QUOTE(NuclearWarfare @ Sun 7th March 2010, 4:35pm) *

There was a general agreement for the hard-line deletionists to go off and occupy themselves with something else for three months.

Is that a euphemism for "go fuck themselves" ?

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QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 4:00pm) *

I thought there was a consensus for a BLP prod for new articles. It was the one bit of good news to come out of the unsourced BLP fiasco - new BLPs must be sourced to stay on wikipedia.

However, it seems the discontents with their unending and unfollowable debates have watered it down to the point of uselessness, as the onus is back on the prodder - and only the unverifiable stuff gets deleted (status-quo in effect).

See my response.



Deletion was never the right strategy for dealing with this (politically speaking). There are too many hardcore inclusionists to ever allow for massive deletion, and too many Wikipedians who are convinced it will cause the encyclopedia irreparable harm. Similarly, politically-speaking, massive semiprotection will never take off. There are too many people who, strangely, think that this violates the "encyclopedia anyone can edit". Where does this leave people who want to deal with the BLP issue?

The strategy which, to some extent, we have articulated at On Wikipedia, and which I think holds a better hope for success is to in another direction. Look at Gale's Biography Resource Center, the largest and most comprehensive collection of biographies in existence. At the bottom of every single entry, you find a little link "Update this biography (listee only)" or similar. Even Gale, a multi-billion dollar company with more than 1,200 full-time employees (and no anyone can edit policy) realizes that it can not possibly maintain all of the biographies in its database, so it responds by trying to involve the people most directly affected by them, the subjects. There are certain vocal Wikipedians who oppose this, claiming that promotion and autobiography are greater threats to Wikipedia than defamation by outsiders resulting in detention by law enforcement (cf. Taner Akcam), but they really are a minority (and roughly the same group who want you to believe that Wikipedia is the only real source of truth and substantially more reliable than the New York Times or peer-reviewed journals which are just repeating the views of the powerful).

So, I will say again (though the idea has thus far gained no traction), that trying to involve subjects has to be a plank in a BLP strategy. Second, WP:BLP needs to be revised into a stronger form, that emphasizes protecting the subject. It should begin "First of all, do no harm". We need to establish a firm presumption in favor of the subject. At present, this does not exist. The type of people who comment here tend to take a presumption in favor of the subject for granted, but in practice, many Wikipedians presume exactly the opposite, and WP:BLP does not clearly establish such a presumption. Writing one explicitly into policy must be the first goal of BLP advocates, and the public statements of Jimmy Wales clearly show that he would support such a course of action.

So, to those of you who actually have any sort of voice on Wikipedia and care about BLP issues, I propose the following course of action:
1. Write the words "First of all do no harm" (or equivalent) into the lead of the BLP policy and make it clear that the greatest BLP danger is defamation, not promotionalism or whitewashing.
2. Provide a better mechanism than the current OTRS system to bring subjects into the discourse.
3. See where that takes you.

To be sure, this plan is insufficient on its own, but Rome wasn't built in a day. Establishing the presumption in favor of the subject is absolutely crucial to going further. Making it easier for subjects to be involved in the process will also simultaneously fix some BLP problems and make them more apparent to outsiders. From this point, it might be possible to proceed gradually towards other changes such as deletion or semiprotection.

By moving towards a deletion policy without first establishing the groundwork, I think BLP advocates have, in fact, set their cause back. There is only enough political capital around to fight so many battles, and in the end the deletion fight accomplished essentially nothing, and there will be a backlash.

Finally, one final recommendation to those of you out there. Take a page out of Ralph Reed's playbook. Yes, at the moment the ArbCom and Wales are fairly sympathetic on BLP issues, but you have to organize at a lower level as well. Focus on administrators. Oppose all RfAs for candidates who are not sympathetic on BLP issues. Make sure that everyone with Oversight permissions has the right views on BLP. Hell, establish a mailing list of people you know you can trust and use it to drive turnout at BLP AfDs and on important RfAs, ArbCom elections, etc.
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QUOTE(John Limey @ Mon 8th March 2010, 7:27am) *

Deletion was never the right strategy for dealing with this (politically speaking). There are too many hardcore inclusionists to ever allow for massive deletion, and too many Wikipedians who are convinced it will cause the encyclopedia irreparable harm. Similarly, politically-speaking, massive semiprotection will never take off. There are too many people who, strangely, think that this violates the "encyclopedia anyone can edit". Where does this leave people who want to deal with the BLP issue?


I saw deletion (and flagged revs), were they implemented, as a sign to the masses that times had changed. A clear signal that the old days are over.

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QUOTE(Kevin @ Sun 7th March 2010, 10:00pm) *

QUOTE(John Limey @ Mon 8th March 2010, 7:27am) *

Deletion was never the right strategy for dealing with this (politically speaking). There are too many hardcore inclusionists to ever allow for massive deletion, and too many Wikipedians who are convinced it will cause the encyclopedia irreparable harm. Similarly, politically-speaking, massive semiprotection will never take off. There are too many people who, strangely, think that this violates the "encyclopedia anyone can edit". Where does this leave people who want to deal with the BLP issue?


I saw deletion (and flagged revs), were they implemented, as a sign to the masses that times had changed. A clear signal that the old days are over.


Revolutions don't happen on Wikipedia. There's too much inertia. Big changes never succeed. You have to go gradually step by step. Menshevik not Bolshevik. Ho Chi Minh not Jomini.
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QUOTE(John Limey @ Sun 7th March 2010, 10:07pm) *

QUOTE(Kevin @ Sun 7th March 2010, 10:00pm) *

QUOTE(John Limey @ Mon 8th March 2010, 7:27am) *

Deletion was never the right strategy for dealing with this (politically speaking). There are too many hardcore inclusionists to ever allow for massive deletion, and too many Wikipedians who are convinced it will cause the encyclopedia irreparable harm. Similarly, politically-speaking, massive semiprotection will never take off. There are too many people who, strangely, think that this violates the "encyclopedia anyone can edit". Where does this leave people who want to deal with the BLP issue?


I saw deletion (and flagged revs), were they implemented, as a sign to the masses that times had changed. A clear signal that the old days are over.


Revolutions don't happen on Wikipedia. There's too much inertia. Big changes never succeed. You have to go gradually step by step. Menshevik not Bolshevik. Ho Chi Minh not Jomini.

Only the WMF board could revolutionize da 'pedia, though it would probably take the barrel of a gun against the forehead to initiate.
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QUOTE(John Limey @ Mon 8th March 2010, 8:07am) *

QUOTE(Kevin @ Sun 7th March 2010, 10:00pm) *

QUOTE(John Limey @ Mon 8th March 2010, 7:27am) *

Deletion was never the right strategy for dealing with this (politically speaking). There are too many hardcore inclusionists to ever allow for massive deletion, and too many Wikipedians who are convinced it will cause the encyclopedia irreparable harm. Similarly, politically-speaking, massive semiprotection will never take off. There are too many people who, strangely, think that this violates the "encyclopedia anyone can edit". Where does this leave people who want to deal with the BLP issue?


I saw deletion (and flagged revs), were they implemented, as a sign to the masses that times had changed. A clear signal that the old days are over.


Revolutions don't happen on Wikipedia. There's too much inertia. Big changes never succeed. You have to go gradually step by step. Menshevik not Bolshevik. Ho Chi Minh not Jomini.


Yes, I realise how ridiculous it all looks now.
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QUOTE(Kevin @ Sun 7th March 2010, 10:15pm) *


Yes, I realise how ridiculous it all looks now.


Well, you did get things started, the problem was sustaining them, and that's where the real challenge ahead lies.
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Doc glasgow
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I'm almost giving up hope. An effective speedy prod was a very small step in this battle.

But we've now got PM Anderson and DGG denying that there's any consensus at all. Sticky prod "in principle" but (according to DGG) it can mean anything and any timescale (=nothing and never).

I'm sick of re-fighting the same wars. These people just grind you down with the same old nonsense.

Here's the horror show
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QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 10:29pm) *

I'm almost giving up hope. An effective speedy prod was a very small step in this battle.

But we've now got PM Anderson and DGG denying that there's any consensus at all. Sticky prod "in principle" but (according to DGG) it can mean anything and any timescale (=nothing and never).

I'm sick of re-fighting the same wars. These people just grind you down with the same old nonsense.

Here's the horror show

Dear old DGG, a man in severe need of a serious smack round the head with a blunt object.
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QUOTE(RMHED @ Sun 7th March 2010, 10:39pm) *

QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 10:29pm) *

I'm almost giving up hope. An effective speedy prod was a very small step in this battle.

But we've now got PM Anderson and DGG denying that there's any consensus at all. Sticky prod "in principle" but (according to DGG) it can mean anything and any timescale (=nothing and never).

I'm sick of re-fighting the same wars. These people just grind you down with the same old nonsense.

Here's the horror show

Dear old DGG, a man in severe need of a serious smack round the head with a blunt object.


I never advocate violence. A feather duster will have to suffice.
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[Mod note: off-topic posts moved to the Politics forum.]
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QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 11:00am) *

I thought there was a consensus for a BLP prod for new articles. It was the one bit of good news to come out of the unsourced BLP fiasco — new BLPs must be sourced to stay on Wikipedia.

However, it seems the discontents with their unending and unfollowable debates have watered it down to the point of uselessness, as the onus is back on the prodder — and only the unverifiable stuff gets deleted (status quo in effect).


Just One Question (JOQ). Did you want us to slap you all at once — or one at a time? (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/fool.gif)

Jon (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/dry.gif)
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QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Sun 7th March 2010, 11:48pm) *

QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 11:00am) *

I thought there was a consensus for a BLP prod for new articles. It was the one bit of good news to come out of the unsourced BLP fiasco — new BLPs must be sourced to stay on Wikipedia.

However, it seems the discontents with their unending and unfollowable debates have watered it down to the point of uselessness, as the onus is back on the prodder — and only the unverifiable stuff gets deleted (status quo in effect).


Just One Question (JOQ). Did you want us to slap you all at once — or one at a time? (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/fool.gif)

Jon (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/dry.gif)

Ditto. You can't beat the 'pediots if you fight by their rules, you gotta fight dirty to win.

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QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 5:29pm) *

I'm sick of re-fighting the same wars. These people just grind you down with the same old nonsense.

I'm sorry you're frustrated with Wikipedia. But, according to the "addictive participation equals success" model that Kelly Martin (I believe rightly) posits, you are just contributing to the same system by being a part of it.

Why don't we all just try off-Wikipedia techniques for the rest of 2010?

How about a sit-in at the Wikimedia Foundation headquarters? How about a hunger strike? You're going to need the media to help facilitate any changes.
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QUOTE(thekohser @ Sun 7th March 2010, 7:01pm) *

QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 5:29pm) *

I'm sick of re-fighting the same wars. These people just grind you down with the same old nonsense.

I'm sorry you're frustrated with Wikipedia. But, according to the "addictive participation equals success" model that Kelly Martin (I believe rightly) posits, you are just contributing to the same system by being a part of it.

Why don't we all just try off-Wikipedia techniques for the rest of 2010?

How about a sit-in at the Wikimedia Foundation headquarters? How about a hunger strike? You're going to need the media to help facilitate any changes.

Million BLP victim march?
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QUOTE(SB_Johnny @ Sun 7th March 2010, 5:04pm) *

QUOTE(thekohser @ Sun 7th March 2010, 7:01pm) *

QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 5:29pm) *

I'm sick of re-fighting the same wars. These people just grind you down with the same old nonsense.

I'm sorry you're frustrated with Wikipedia. But, according to the "addictive participation equals success" model that Kelly Martin (I believe rightly) posits, you are just contributing to the same system by being a part of it.

Why don't we all just try off-Wikipedia techniques for the rest of 2010?

How about a sit-in at the Wikimedia Foundation headquarters? How about a hunger strike? You're going to need the media to help facilitate any changes.

Million BLP victim march?

Yeah. It will only be 400,000 but like the other one, we can CALL it a million, cause it sounds cooler.
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Why not go for the whole 6 billion or so and be done with it?
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QUOTE(thekohser @ Mon 8th March 2010, 12:01am) *

QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sun 7th March 2010, 5:29pm) *

I'm sick of re-fighting the same wars. These people just grind you down with the same old nonsense.

I'm sorry you're frustrated with Wikipedia. But, according to the "addictive participation equals success" model that Kelly Martin (I believe rightly) posits, you are just contributing to the same system by being a part of it.

Why don't we all just try off-Wikipedia techniques for the rest of 2010?

How about a sit-in at the Wikimedia Foundation headquarters? How about a hunger strike? You're going to need the media to help facilitate any changes.

Or 1 assault rifle + a visit to the WMF office + going postal = change
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This Pmanderson (T-C-L-K-R-D) person is a classic example of the WP anti-humanity obstructionist, throwing out strawman after strawman after strawman, showing no capability for non-binary thinking whatsoever, and ignoring pretty much anything that contradicts his "I must be allowed to do whatever I please" pseudo-philosophy. Meanwhile, he does no work on BLP's at all, judging by his contribs, but if his treatment of non-living subjects is any indication, that's a Very Good Thing.

It wouldn't surprise me to learn that he's a closet Randroid, but of course I say that about nearly everyone over there... (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/ermm.gif)

This is from his user page:
QUOTE
Wiki-Crusaders

We've seen these all too often; somebody notices that an aspect of Wikipedia (usually one he does not use himself) can be abused - and calls a Crusade:

* Userboxes are evil; ban all userboxes.
* Admins can be abusive; desysop all admins.
* Anon accounts vandalize; semi-protect all articles.
* Editors can be nitwits; protect all articles.

We've seen all of these; the last usually in some modified form , because even our Crusaders do sometimes edit articles.

These Crusades have a number of common features:

* A declaration the sky is falling
* An utter absence of evidence that our normal procedures aren't dealing with the abuses.
* The EVIL practice X is usually something which makes no substantive difference to article space, but which some editors find useful.
* Reasoning of the form: "I don't do X (use userboxes/edit anonymously...); why should you have the right to do X? After all, it can be abused."

After six months or so, either it doesn't pass, and somehow the sky manages not to fall; or it does pass, some established editors are harassed, a large number of newbies are driven away, and we watch our expansion slow further - but there's never any great improvement to the encyclopedia....

The "NPOV" way of phrasing the foregoing would be something like, "I know there are problems, but I'm going to pretend otherwise because it suits my purposes to do so, and I'm also going to mischaracterize any opposing view in the most absurd fashion imaginable, and laugh at you for letting me get away with it."

This is the sort of person who makes WP "policy."
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QUOTE(Somey @ Mon 8th March 2010, 12:22am) *

This is the sort of person who makes WP "policy."

This is the sort of person who would benefit from a close encounter with a pickaxe handle.
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QUOTE(RMHED @ Sun 7th March 2010, 6:46pm) *
This is the sort of person who would benefit from a close encounter with a pickaxe handle.

This might be a good time to point out that officially, The Wikipedia Review does not condone physical violence, no matter how much the smug little bastard(s) appear to deserve it. (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/hrmph.gif)

I wonder if "Ostrichism" might be a good word for this sort of attitude? (Pmanderson's, not RHMED's.) It's basically head-in-the-sand, cover-the-eyes-and-ears, denialism. There's also an element of "any amount under 5 percent means everything is A-OK," with the related notion that those who say, "any non-negligible amount is unacceptable when the means to achieve negligibility exists," are somehow being unreasonable.

Unless he's saying that 3-5 percent actually is negligible, which seems monstrous when you consider the numbers involved (i.e., 3 percent of 400,000 articles equals 12,000 BLPs that contain significant and potentially damaging falsehoods, or are actively under some sort of attack, at any given time, and the actual fgure may be closer to 20,000). Given that he doesn't do work on BLPs himself, though, I suppose it's conceivable that he means exactly that!

Anyway, I just looked up "Ostrichism" on WP and it's not there, though I did learn that "Ostrich" is supposedly the name for the impossible par-six hole-in-one in golf, so I guess WP was good for something today.
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The most pragmatic way to go forward, as I see it, is to simply tend their own gardens. I've got five to seven BLPs on my watchlist; as soon as I got them to GA, I did another review and then semi-protected them. No one is going to raise a fuss about them, and the changes are monitored.

In some ways I think part of the problem is the crusaders (any side of the issue) who go on a bot spree. They often end up hurting their own cause.
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QUOTE(Somey @ Sun 7th March 2010, 8:42pm) *
Anyway, I just looked up "Ostrichism" on WP and it's not there, though I did learn that "Ostrich" is supposedly the name for the impossible par-six hole-in-one in golf, so I guess WP was good for something today.

Usually people look up words in a dictionary (though Wiktionary omits "ostrichism" as well, currently). (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/tongue.gif)

From the Oxford English Dictionary:
QUOTE
ostrichism, n.

The action of (figuratively) hiding one's head in the sand; the practice or policy of refusing to face reality or accept facts.

1834 Tait's Mag. 1 59/1 The Marquis adopted the celebrated system of ostrichism, and hid his head. 1938 Amer. Econ. Rev. 28 21 We must avoid the ‘ostrichism’ of defining away problems by simply assuming to be constant, factors subject to imminent change. 1944 J. S. HUXLEY On Living in Revol. 3 The fact that a world war existed and the ostrichism of our reactions to it were most obvious in the case of Spain. 1960 Spectator 15 July 106 A new wave of ostrichism in regard to defence is sweeping the country. 1993 Population & Devel. Rev. 19 612 Even the optimistic, once they shed all trace of ostrichism and face the facts, find that they have to be cautious.
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John Limey
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QUOTE(BelovedFox @ Mon 8th March 2010, 5:02am) *

The most pragmatic way to go forward, as I see it, is to simply tend their own gardens. I've got five to seven BLPs on my watchlist; as soon as I got them to GA, I did another review and then semi-protected them. No one is going to raise a fuss about them, and the changes are monitored.



Oh ok. So if each person looks after 5 to 7 BLPs (we'll say six on average), then we only need 73,000 people to join in on the effort. Slight problem. In the entire history of Wikipedia, there hasn't been a single month when at least 73,000 people made five or more edits, and you really need someone a tad more active than that.

I'd say, you need a "highly active Wikipedian" looking after a BLP (in today's environment) to actually tend the garden. There are roughly 4,000 highly active Wikipedians in any given recent month, so that's about 107 BLPs each to watch. In my opinion, and maybe I'm wrong, that's a bit much for each person to look after, and something tells me that you're not going to convince every single highly active Wikipedian to carefully watch 107 BLPs. That's why something has to change.

By the way, who are you anyway?
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QUOTE(John Limey @ Mon 8th March 2010, 8:03pm) *

I'd say, you need a "highly active Wikipedian" looking after a BLP (in today's environment) to actually tend the garden. There are roughly 4,000 highly active Wikipedians in any given recent month, so that's about 107 BLPs each to watch. In my opinion, and maybe I'm wrong, that's a bit much for each person to look after, and something tells me that you're not going to convince every single highly active Wikipedian to carefully watch 107 BLPs. That's why something has to change.

My watchlist has been well over 9,000 before but I'm not going to pretend I was watching each page in any meaningful fashion, only those which interested me.

I will say it's not terribly difficult to watch 107 articles effectively, especially if half of them are stubs which only occasionally see an edit, good or bad (which seems to be the case with BLPs according to some studies).

A few things which would make it a lot easier:
*A more better watchlist system. One that will let you assign a level of interest/importance to each item, allowing you to filter based upon that. One that can be configured to warn before you eh-what's-this "unwatch" something in the BLP set, etc.
*An intelligent workload-balancer of sorts, so one person doesn't get stuck with the entire U.S. Senate while another need only glance over the medalists from Barcelona '92.
*A slack-picker-upper to redistribute (in a true marxist fashion) when people become backlogged and need help. But hell, without even a bloody minimal revision-flagging system there's no way to discern whether your fellow user has nodded on each edit or nodded right off (because the result looks exactly the same on your screen).
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QUOTE(CharlotteWebb @ Mon 8th March 2010, 4:06pm) *
A few things which would make it a lot easier:
*A more better watchlist system. One that will let you assign a level of interest/importance to each item, allowing you to filter based upon that. One that can be configured to warn before you eh-what's-this "unwatch" something in the BLP set, etc.
*An intelligent workload-balancer of sorts, so one person doesn't get stuck with the entire U.S. Senate while another need only glance over the medalists from Barcelona '92.
*A slack-picker-upper to redistribute (in a true marxist fashion) when people become backlogged and need help. But hell, without even a bloody minimal revision-flagging system there's no way to discern whether your fellow user has nodded on each edit or nodded right off (because the result looks exactly the same on your screen).

Those things would all be nice, but this is all essentially moot, isn't it? You can't demand that 4,000 people watching 100+ articles each over an indefinite period of time. Even if you could get that many people to volunteer for it (and IMO the number of people who would actually volunteer would be well under 200), people get sick, they go on vacation...

Any solution that relies on more manpower is doomed to fail anyway, since there's no defined set of standards, and no internal discipline even if there was one. You'd just be perpetuating the evil, stalling for time in the hope that somehow the problem is just going to magically go away on its own. It's magical thinking (T-H-L-K-D) pure and simple.

What's needed are preventative features, and anything less is just so much hot air. The "sticky prod" tag would have helped because it would have led to a few more BLP deletions that might not otherwise have occurred, but it's still a fractional measure at best, simple and sensible though it may be. But they can't even accept that.

These people want revenge against the human race, at all costs, and nothing is going to change as long as Wikipedia lets them think they're getting it somehow.
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QUOTE(Somey @ Tue 9th March 2010, 4:54am) *

Those things would all be nice, but this is all essentially moot, isn't it? You can't demand that 4,000 people watching 100+ articles each over an indefinite period of time. Even if you could get that many people to volunteer for it (and IMO the number of people who would actually volunteer would be well under 200), people get sick, they go on vacation...

My main point is that any attempt to organize something like this is guaranteed to fail without a revision-flagging system. That does not mean otherwise guaranteed to succeed.

I agree it would require a combination of factors. My suggestions target the logistic issues which I best understand how to address. I consider them necessary rather than sufficient.
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QUOTE(CharlotteWebb @ Mon 8th March 2010, 11:22pm) *
My main point is that any attempt to organize something like this is guaranteed to fail without a revision-flagging system. That does not mean otherwise guaranteed to succeed.

I agree it would require a combination of factors. My suggestions target the logistic issues which I best understand how to address. I consider them necessary rather than sufficient.

Ah, OK. I thought you were losing it there for a minute! (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/blink.gif)
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QUOTE(Somey @ Tue 9th March 2010, 5:48am) *

Ah, OK. I thought you were losing it there for a minute! (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/blink.gif)

It would hardly be the first time.
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"[I]f an editor wants to make an edit that slanders someone, that editor will be legally responsible for any harm or damages -- not Wikipedia, the Foundation, or anyone else involved. ... The Wikipedia community makes the best possible effort to prevent or address this harm"

This rather says it all, doesn't it? (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/ermm.gif)
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QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Thu 11th March 2010, 3:51pm) *
This rather says it all, doesn't it? (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/ermm.gif)

I can think of no better example... (IMG:smilys0b23ax56/default/bored.gif)

And this is a guy (Llyrwich (T-C-L-K-R-D) ) who gives the full name of his baby daughter (but not his own!) on his user page, leading anyone who cares enough to spend 10 seconds on Google directly to his own IRL identity and location. (To be fair, older versions of his user page led to the same information, and none of them have been deleted or oversighted.)

So obviously he doesn't give a shit about his own privacy, or that of his family - why should he care about anyone else's?

Unbelievable.
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"[A] warning about legal responsibility might prevent the majority of this unwanted content"? What sort of drugs is Geoff on these days? These people are the sort that will chain themselves naked to trees to make a point; the threat of a legal judgment for libel means absolutely nothing to them. Besides, I'd imagine that somewhere between 95% and 99% of Wikipedians are "judgment proof" anyway.
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LOL at "slander". I love it when self-appointed legal experts imagine that slander is something you can type out and publish.

Meanwhile, I thought that cats can steal a baby's breath?
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QUOTE(thekohser @ Fri 12th March 2010, 12:11pm) *

LOL at "slander". I love it when self-appointed legal experts imagine that slander is something you can type out and publish.

Meanwhile, I thought that cats can steal a baby's breath?


In my jurisdiction the distinction between slander and libel has been abolished, for legal purposes anyway.
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QUOTE(Kevin @ Fri 12th March 2010, 3:25am) *

QUOTE(thekohser @ Fri 12th March 2010, 12:11pm) *

LOL at "slander". I love it when self-appointed legal experts imagine that slander is something you can type out and publish.

Meanwhile, I thought that cats can steal a baby's breath?


In my jurisdiction the distinction between slander and libel has been abolished, for legal purposes anyway.


There's only sixteen people live in South Australia, so I doubt that abolition is that significant in the grand scheme of things.
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QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Fri 12th March 2010, 6:17am) *

QUOTE(Kevin @ Fri 12th March 2010, 3:25am) *

In my jurisdiction the distinction between slander and libel has been abolished, for legal purposes anyway.


There's only sixteen people live in South Australia, so I doubt that abolition is that significant in the grand scheme of things.
It's been abolished in most Canadian jurisdictions too, so you'll have to add another few dozen people to that count, Doc.
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QUOTE(Sarcasticidealist @ Fri 12th March 2010, 1:28pm) *

QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Fri 12th March 2010, 6:17am) *

QUOTE(Kevin @ Fri 12th March 2010, 3:25am) *

In my jurisdiction the distinction between slander and libel has been abolished, for legal purposes anyway.


There's only sixteen people live in South Australia, so I doubt that abolition is that significant in the grand scheme of things.
It's been abolished in most Canadian jurisdictions too, so you'll have to add another few dozen people to that count, Doc.



Dear, dear, the strange things the colonials choose to do with themselves.... s'pose that's what happens when we stoppusing the privy council to help them do law properly.

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