The Wikipedia Review: A forum for discussion and criticism of Wikipedia
Wikipedia Review Op-Ed Pages

Welcome, Guest! ( Log In | Register )

> General Discussion? What's that all about?

This subforum is for general discussion of Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects. For a glossary of terms frequently used in such discussions, please refer to Wikipedia:Glossary. For a glossary of musical terms, see here. Other useful links:

Akahele.orgWikipedia-WatchWikitruthWP:ANWikiEN-L/Foundation-L (mailing lists) • Citizendium forums

17 Pages V  1 2 3 > »   
Reply to this topicStart new topic
> Vandalism is usually caught in a few seconds, or not
Rating  4
thekohser
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:27pm
Post #1


Member
*********

Group: Regulars
Posts: 10,274
Joined: Thu 1st Feb 2007, 10:21pm
Member No.: 911



Here's one about 7 months old:
QUOTE
She is also as the last name suggests the mother of Peter Matt. He is widely known as one of the biggest users in Australia.



Here's one about 2.5 years old:
QUOTE
Ioannis "Noucleous" Makris is a widelly known, controversial figure of the Greek society. He is a Doctor with a Phd in Genetics from King's College in London and subsequently a famous club owner in Athens, Greece. He is usually reffered to as "Noucleous" due to his extensive and concise knowledge in several fields. He has been a participant in several Greek TV shows and currently holds the Chair of the Committee of the "Knowledge Games and Answers" based in Vouliagmeni, Greece.



Here's one about 3.5 years old:
QUOTE
He is the founder and front man for the Jeremy Vogt Band. Vogt is also widely known in the Indianapolis music scene for being an ardent supporter of original music. Vogt's debut album, People in Strange Places, (2005) has received critical acclaim in Indianapolis and throughout central Indiana.

(As if central Indiana has a music scene!) biggrin.gif


That's all I have for you today, loyal Wikipedians. Get to work! I'd help you, but I'm banned!

User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Text
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:30pm
Post #2


Senior Member
****

Group: Contributors
Posts: 441
Joined: Sun 1st Nov 2009, 3:08pm
Member No.: 15,107



QUOTE
Get to work!


Jimbo wants an encyclopedia, Jimbo can do it himself
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Obesity
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:34pm
Post #3


I taste as good as skinny feels.
*****

Group: Regulars
Posts: 737
Joined: Sat 5th Jul 2008, 8:02pm
From: Gropecunt Lane
Member No.: 6,909



To be fair to WP apologists, did anyone ever claim that vandalism to obscure articles is caught "within seconds"?

Usually when someone explains WP to the uninitiated, they explain that vandalism to prominent subjects such as the President of the United States are promptly reversed.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Eva Destruction
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:35pm
Post #4


Fat Cat
******

Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,735
Joined: Sun 30th Sep 2007, 7:22pm
Member No.: 3,301

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(thekohser @ Tue 5th January 2010, 9:27pm) *

(As if central Indiana has a music scene!) biggrin.gif

FWIW, central Indiana has quite a significant music scene; the huge number of students in Bloomington, outside easy travelling distance of anywhere else, makes enough of a captive market to keep a very noisy indie scene afloat, and Indianapolis's location halfway between Nashville and Chicago means pretty much every touring show stops off there.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Malleus
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:37pm
Post #5


Fat Cat
******

Group: Contributors
Posts: 1,682
Joined: Mon 27th Oct 2008, 3:48pm
From: United Kingdom
Member No.: 8,716

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Obesity @ Tue 5th January 2010, 9:34pm) *

To be fair to WP apologists, did anyone ever claim that vandalism to obscure articles is caught "within seconds"?

Usually when someone explains WP to the uninitiated, they explain that vandalism to prominent subjects such as the President of the United States are promptly reversed.

... or even at all. Perhaps an agument for not having articles that nobody except the author and maybe the subject give a flying fuck about.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Eva Destruction
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:45pm
Post #6


Fat Cat
******

Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,735
Joined: Sun 30th Sep 2007, 7:22pm
Member No.: 3,301

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Malleus @ Tue 5th January 2010, 9:37pm) *

... or even at all. Perhaps an agument for not having articles that nobody except the author and maybe the subject give a flying fuck about.

As opposed to vacuum-tube computers and sticking ferrets up your trousers? "Nobody gives a fuck" is subjective; as someone once pointed out, the strength of Wikipedia's model (and it does have strengths, despite the obvious weaknesses) is that it allows subjects that are important to the small group interested in them, but wouldn't be covered in a print book. Often the "nobody gives a fuck" articles are in better shape, as they don't attract the hordes of crackpots.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
maggot3
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:45pm
Post #7


Senior Member
****

Group: Contributors
Posts: 251
Joined: Wed 21st May 2008, 5:48pm
Member No.: 6,260

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



It's usually either caught within a few seconds or not noticed for a long time, outside of very popular articles, due to most "vandalism patrollers" just checking Special:RecentChanges. I'd be curious if anybody has ever actually claimed that vandalism is "reversed in seconds" (outside of media statements), so I can laugh at them.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
thekohser
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:47pm
Post #8


Member
*********

Group: Regulars
Posts: 10,274
Joined: Thu 1st Feb 2007, 10:21pm
Member No.: 911



QUOTE(Obesity @ Tue 5th January 2010, 4:34pm) *

To be fair to WP apologists, did anyone ever claim that vandalism to obscure articles is caught "within seconds"?

Usually when someone explains WP to the uninitiated, they explain that vandalism to prominent subjects such as the President of the United States are promptly reversed.


You mean articles like the 100 for the United States senators?

Deliberate errors on those articles are fixed, on average, in 24 hours, a study proved.

And, yes, I think I could find about a dozen different Wikipedia apologists who claim that vandalism to all Wikipedia articles is caught very quickly. You must not know the Yahoo! Answers community very well. wink.gif

This post has been edited by thekohser: Wed 6th January 2010, 12:14am
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Eva Destruction
post Tue 5th January 2010, 9:47pm
Post #9


Fat Cat
******

Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,735
Joined: Sun 30th Sep 2007, 7:22pm
Member No.: 3,301

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(thekohser @ Tue 5th January 2010, 9:47pm) *

You must not know the Yahoo! Answers community very well. wink.gif

You say that like it's a bad thing
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Malleus
post Tue 5th January 2010, 10:12pm
Post #10


Fat Cat
******

Group: Contributors
Posts: 1,682
Joined: Mon 27th Oct 2008, 3:48pm
From: United Kingdom
Member No.: 8,716

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Eva Destruction @ Tue 5th January 2010, 9:45pm) *

QUOTE(Malleus @ Tue 5th January 2010, 9:37pm) *

... or even at all. Perhaps an agument for not having articles that nobody except the author and maybe the subject give a flying fuck about.

As opposed to vacuum-tube computers and sticking ferrets up your trousers? "Nobody gives a fuck" is subjective; as someone once pointed out, the strength of Wikipedia's model (and it does have strengths, despite the obvious weaknesses) is that it allows subjects that are important to the small group interested in them, but wouldn't be covered in a print book. Often the "nobody gives a fuck" articles are in better shape, as they don't attract the hordes of crackpots.

Early computers, witches, and sticking ferrets down your trousers are important topics, and I would notice vandalism.

... by which i meant that if someone cares about an article they will have it watclisted. The red flag articles are those that no active editor is watching, but of course which they are is secret. "Security by obscurity" has never worked.

This post has been edited by Malleus: Tue 5th January 2010, 10:18pm
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Trick cyclist
post Tue 5th January 2010, 10:57pm
Post #11


Fortunately Denmark palmed Norway off to Sweden in 1814
****

Group: Inactive
Posts: 321
Joined: Sat 28th Nov 2009, 1:46am
Member No.: 15,636



Sometimes vandalism lasts a day or two. Here's a recent example that really should have been caught by a new change patroller:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...oldid=330998932


QUOTE(Malleus @ Tue 5th January 2010, 10:12pm) *

The red flag articles are those that no active editor is watching, but of course which they are is secret.

How on earth would anyone know which they are? Surely it would take a developer to find out exactly who is watching a given article then it would be laborious to find ot which of them are active. And even if an active editor has something on his watchlist what if he doesnt in fact care any more and has just not bothered to unwatch it?
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
John Limey
post Tue 5th January 2010, 11:17pm
Post #12


Senior Member
****

Group: Regulars
Posts: 387
Joined: Wed 8th Jul 2009, 3:04pm
Member No.: 12,473



QUOTE(Trick cyclist @ Tue 5th January 2010, 10:57pm) *

Sometimes vandalism lasts a day or two. Here's a recent example that really should have been caught by a new change patroller:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...oldid=330998932


QUOTE(Malleus @ Tue 5th January 2010, 10:12pm) *

The red flag articles are those that no active editor is watching, but of course which they are is secret.

How on earth would anyone know which they are? Surely it would take a developer to find out exactly who is watching a given article then it would be laborious to find ot which of them are active. And even if an active editor has something on his watchlist what if he doesnt in fact care any more and has just not bothered to unwatch it?


Umm, Special:UnwatchedPages. There's also http://toolserver.org/~mzmcbride/cgi-bin/watcher.py
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Juliancolton
post Tue 5th January 2010, 11:34pm
Post #13


Member
***

Group: Contributors
Posts: 102
Joined: Thu 28th May 2009, 5:38pm
Member No.: 11,925

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Limey @ Tue 5th January 2010, 6:17pm) *

Umm, Special:UnwatchedPages. There's also http://toolserver.org/~mzmcbride/cgi-bin/watcher.py

Note, however, that the watcher tool only works for pages with more than 30 watchers (unless you have special access), which more-or-less eliminates most of the mainspace.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Malleus
post Tue 5th January 2010, 11:44pm
Post #14


Fat Cat
******

Group: Contributors
Posts: 1,682
Joined: Mon 27th Oct 2008, 3:48pm
From: United Kingdom
Member No.: 8,716

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Juliancolton @ Tue 5th January 2010, 11:34pm) *

QUOTE(Limey @ Tue 5th January 2010, 6:17pm) *

Umm, Special:UnwatchedPages. There's also http://toolserver.org/~mzmcbride/cgi-bin/watcher.py

Note, however, that the watcher tool only works for pages with more than 30 watchers (unless you have special access), which more-or-less eliminates most of the mainspace.

Quite. The unwatched pages a'e a secret because if we knew what they were, we'd vandalise them, knowing that nobody would notice. As I said, security by obscurity just doesn't work.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Eva Destruction
post Tue 5th January 2010, 11:59pm
Post #15


Fat Cat
******

Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,735
Joined: Sun 30th Sep 2007, 7:22pm
Member No.: 3,301

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Malleus @ Tue 5th January 2010, 11:44pm) *

Quite. The unwatched pages a'e a secret because if we knew what they were, we'd vandalise them, knowing that nobody would notice.

Or more accurately, the unwatched pages are a secret because Special/UnwatchedPages crashed in 2007 and Brion never got round to fixing it. (You can see the first 5000 entries just fine, but if you're interested in any article further down the alphabet than Adrenergic receptor you're shit out of luck.)

This post has been edited by Eva Destruction: Tue 5th January 2010, 11:59pm
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Push the button
post Wed 6th January 2010, 12:01am
Post #16


Member
***

Group: Contributors
Posts: 107
Joined: Wed 25th Mar 2009, 8:53am
Member No.: 10,967

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Juliancolton @ Tue 5th January 2010, 11:34pm) *

Note, however, that the watcher tool only works for pages with more than 30 watchers (unless you have special access), which more-or-less eliminates most of the mainspace.

I disagree - I think most mainspace pages have less watchers, or active watchers, than you think, or you would imagine they should have simply by virtue of being in the mainspace.

Not scientific, I know, but I just picked the contributiosn of an editor chosen at random from recent changes and looked at the number of watchers of the last ten articles they edited. 6 of the ten were BLP, and of those four had less than 30 watchers. The other 2 had 38 and 58, or thereabouts. Of the 4 non-BLP articles, 3 had less than 30 watchers, and the other 1 had around 32 watchers.

Clearly not a scientific thing, but going further I think the number of watchers an article has doesn't necessarily equate to the same number of people being aware of changes to it - either (i) they've got a load of articles on their watchlist - some people automatically add every article they edit to it - in which case they won't necessarily notice or care about a change to an article on their watchlist, or (ii) they simply don't look at their watchlist, perhaps because they no longer edit Wikipedia.

I guess what I'm saying that number of watchers of an article doesn't necessarily equate to number of people actually watching changes to an article.

This post has been edited by Push the button: Wed 6th January 2010, 12:03am
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Sarcasticidealist
post Wed 6th January 2010, 12:04am
Post #17


Head exploded.
******

Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,662
Joined: Tue 22nd Jan 2008, 1:54am
From: Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
Member No.: 4,536

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Push the button @ Tue 5th January 2010, 8:01pm) *
I disagree - I think most mainspace pages have less watchers, or active watchers, than you think, or you would imagine they should have simply by virtue of being in the mainspace.
I'm pretty sure you're actually agreeing with Julian there - his point was that most mainspace articles have fewer than thirty watchers.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Push the button
post Wed 6th January 2010, 12:08am
Post #18


Member
***

Group: Contributors
Posts: 107
Joined: Wed 25th Mar 2009, 8:53am
Member No.: 10,967

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(Sarcasticidealist @ Wed 6th January 2010, 12:04am) *

QUOTE(Push the button @ Tue 5th January 2010, 8:01pm) *
I disagree - I think most mainspace pages have less watchers, or active watchers, than you think, or you would imagine they should have simply by virtue of being in the mainspace.
I'm pretty sure you're actually agreeing with Julian there - his point was that most mainspace articles have fewer than thirty watchers.

Could be, working my way through the tautology of it, in which case I'm glad my non-scientific sampling could prove both his points and mine at the same time!

This post has been edited by Push the button: Wed 6th January 2010, 12:11am
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
thekohser
post Wed 6th January 2010, 12:19am
Post #19


Member
*********

Group: Regulars
Posts: 10,274
Joined: Thu 1st Feb 2007, 10:21pm
Member No.: 911



It's also interesting to note that absolutely no action has been taken on any of the three articles I pointed out. This is good. Hasten the day.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Push the button
post Wed 6th January 2010, 12:29am
Post #20


Member
***

Group: Contributors
Posts: 107
Joined: Wed 25th Mar 2009, 8:53am
Member No.: 10,967

WP user page - talk
check - contribs



QUOTE(thekohser @ Wed 6th January 2010, 12:19am) *

It's also interesting to note that absolutely no action has been taken on any of the three articles I pointed out. This is good. Hasten the day.

It's not really going to hasten whilst you're talking about articles which have each received a grand total of 8 viewings this month (ignoring the one that Alison's just deleted), though, is it. It just proves that the speed of vandalism's capture is a factor of its impact...

This post has been edited by Push the button: Wed 6th January 2010, 12:29am
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post

17 Pages V  1 2 3 > » 
Reply to this topicStart new topic
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:

 

-   Lo-Fi Version Time is now: 23rd 5 13, 12:39am