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Are they all crazy at German Wikipedia?, Wondering after a specific incident |
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Law Lord |
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(I am posting this here instead of the German forum, since my German is rusty and I prefer an outside view.) I rarely (never) edit deWiki but a sudden piece of interesting information about the late Hans Diller came to my attention. As far as I could tell, an article on him was only present at deWiki. I inserted the info (in German). A user reverted. I asked for the reasoning. None was given. It seems said user thought that it is good for the mutual respect that instead of participating in a discussen about an article, you write your admin friends in private and have them threathen anybody you disagree with. So, asking again made this being entered on my user page: QUOTE Please stop your editing without references, which, by the way, looks like „on the wrong side of the enyclopaedic border“. And if you revert that again, I'd have to stop you by efficient means.
The poster was a German administrator, and he has a very anti-French image on his user page. I posted a request on the bottom of his user page for the removal of said image: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benutzer_Disk...hateful_contentThis led to immidiate reaction by 3 different user, none of them adressing the issue but rather "shooting back" at me. The 3rd one write in German calling me a "troll" and stating I have no interest in "encyclopedic coopoeration" and asking for my immidate block. Certainly, the culture at deWiki is very different from enWiki. Any thoughts? Cheers, Law Lord
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CharlotteWebb |
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Law Lord |
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Well, the French version makes fun of particular French topics in a way the English does not. I doubt it is something most frWiki users have on the user pages.
Anyway, this is a German user, and he has added a subtext to the image on the user page ... Not sure it is great to make fun of other nationalities like that.
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Law Lord |
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Wow, they are crazy at German wikipedia. Account blocked indefinitely at 19. September 2009, 14:40 UTC. For "lack of intent for encyclopaedic cooperation". Review my entire user contributions (very short) and tell me more. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/blink.gif)
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CharlotteWebb |
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QUOTE(Law Lord @ Sat 19th September 2009, 2:42pm) Well, the French version makes fun of particular French topics in a way the English does not. I doubt it is something most frWiki users have on the user pages.
Actually enwiki has all the same commune-stubs. I think Blofeld took care of that years ago. I wouldn't have known Jehovah's "Witnesses" were over-represented on the french site, or geckos for that matter. Learn something new every day... QUOTE Anyway, this is a German user, and he has added a subtext to the image on the user page ... Not sure it is great to make fun of other nationalities like that.
Because blood is thicker than skin, or something like that? (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/dry.gif)
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Somey |
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QUOTE(Law Lord @ Sat 19th September 2009, 9:42am) Well, the French version makes fun of particular French topics in a way the English does not. I doubt it is something most frWiki users have on the user pages. I don't want to seem overly sardonic here, but you're not doing this the "Wiki Way." The Wiki Way demands that you create your own version of the image (or chart or whatever), lampooning the German Wikipedia's content, which (you could say) is mostly comprised of articles about beer, sausages, and really bad Polka music. Then, you get as many French users as possible to display your version on their user pages, until finally one of the Germans notices it (which should take about 45 minutes or so). Then, of course, rather than simply agree that such things are insulting and remove them from both sites, they would have to "up the ante," probably by creating a userbox template. This would then lead to more templates, insult-categories, attack articles, and so on. This "tit-for-tat" would then continue for about 15 years or so, until all of the users who started the whole nasty business have left the two sites in question, and the people who came along to replace them finally realize how moronic the whole thing is.
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Jim |
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QUOTE Wikipedia policy does not allow for blocking (''German: sperren'') of people just because you disagree with them. -- A bold statement, if ever I saw one - if only it were always true... (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/tongue.gif) This post has been edited by Jim:
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written by he who wrote it |
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QUOTE(Law Lord @ Sat 19th September 2009, 2:42pm) Well, the French version makes fun of particular French topics in a way the English does not. I doubt it is something most frWiki users have on the user pages.
Anyway, this is a German user, and he has added a subtext to the image on the user page ... Not sure it is great to make fun of other nationalities like that.
It was created by a French user and is in fact used on a number of French user pages. I don't think it's any more hateful than a non-Anglophone using the original English version.
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Law Lord |
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QUOTE(written by he who wrote it @ Sat 19th September 2009, 6:47pm) I don't think it's any more hateful than a non-Anglophone using the original English version.
There is the German/French historic dimension, which I think makes it different. Though my point with this thread was not so much the image but rather the user and administrator behaviour towards (rather against) me. I made an edit to an article, which was reverted. I did not re-make it but sought an explanation. Then they blocked me. QUOTE(Dr. Blofeld @ Sat 19th September 2009, 6:48pm) I've created an article for you at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_DillerGive German wikipedia a big finger and expand my article on english wikipedia without intervention!!!! (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/evilgrin.gif) (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/evilgrin.gif) (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/evilgrin.gif) Absolutely. Just wondering how to appeal blocks on deWiki. Judging from the apparent need for treatment exhibited by at least 2 administrators there, they probably have no unblock procedure. Probably, unblocks are prohibited. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/rolleyes.gif)
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gomi |
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QUOTE(Somey @ Sat 19th September 2009, 8:59am) This "tit-for-tat" would then continue for about 15 years or so, until all of the users who started the whole nasty business have left the two sites in question, and the people who came along to replace them finally realize how moronic the whole thing is. Somey, Somey ... you must read history. The tit-for-tat would last for 15 years or so, at which time as the German Wikipedia users would begin the secret manufacture of weapons ... for defensive purposes only. The French Wikipedians would build a giant but incomplete wall of defense against the aggression and hostility of the German Wikipedia. At some point another provocation would occur, and the German Wikipedians would all start invading the French Wikipedia, subverting its administrators and banning its minorities. The German Wikipedia would then turn on the English Wikipedia, who would then require help from Simple English Wikipedia to sort things out. "History doesn't repeat itself, but sometimes it rhymes" -- Mark Twain (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/biggrin.gif)
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Law Lord |
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Well, having made 1 minor controversial edit and then asking somebody to remove an image from an user page is not much for an indefinite block. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/fear.gif) I would appeal but it seems their excellent system for appeal only allow users who are NOT blocked to appeal blocks. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/laugh.gif)
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Milton Roe |
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QUOTE(Law Lord @ Sat 19th September 2009, 2:26pm) Well, having made 1 minor controversial edit and then asking somebody to remove an image from an user page is not much for an indefinite block. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/fear.gif) I would appeal but it seems their excellent system for appeal only allow users who are NOT blocked to appeal blocks. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/laugh.gif) en.wiki was that way for a long time. I suppose it makes sense that de.wiki would continue the fine military tribunal tradition. The Germans are either at your feet, or at your throat. In this case, you didn't exactly establish dominance right away, did you?
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Gandoman |
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The German Wikipedia does have certain cultural differences from the English one. For one, it's more authoritarian. While the English Wikipedia at least attempts to keep up the appearance of assuming good faith, the German one has a policy called Sei grausam ("be horrible"), which says that if someone is out of line, it's better to just come down with the banhammer as quickly as possible. Basically, admins are the bosses, and if someone disagrees with any action performed by an admin or contributor with more seniority, they're likely to get booted real quick.
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CharlotteWebb |
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QUOTE(Gandoman @ Sun 20th September 2009, 10:13am) The German Wikipedia does have certain cultural differences from the English one. For one, it's more authoritarian. While the English Wikipedia at least attempts to keep up the appearance of assuming good faith, the German one has a policy called Sei grausam ("be horrible"), which says that if someone is out of line, it's better to just come down with the banhammer as quickly as possible. Basically, admins are the bosses, and if someone disagrees with any action performed by an admin or contributor with more seniority, they're likely to get booted real quick. It opens with a hopefully apocryphal quote by Larry Sanger, about making projects more attractive to experts/academics by driving out all those "mediocre" editors who work for a living and are thus disruptive by default.
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Peter Damian |
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QUOTE(Gandoman @ Sun 20th September 2009, 11:13am) The German Wikipedia does have certain cultural differences from the English one. For one, it's more authoritarian. While the English Wikipedia at least attempts to keep up the appearance of assuming good faith, the German one has a policy called Sei grausam ("be horrible"), which says that if someone is out of line, it's better to just come down with the banhammer as quickly as possible. Basically, admins are the bosses, and if someone disagrees with any action performed by an admin or contributor with more seniority, they're likely to get booted real quick. Interesting they have the same word for troll http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troll_(Netzkultur)
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dogbiscuit |
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QUOTE(CharlotteWebb @ Sun 20th September 2009, 12:28pm) QUOTE(Gandoman @ Sun 20th September 2009, 10:13am) The German Wikipedia does have certain cultural differences from the English one. For one, it's more authoritarian. While the English Wikipedia at least attempts to keep up the appearance of assuming good faith, the German one has a policy called Sei grausam ("be horrible"), which says that if someone is out of line, it's better to just come down with the banhammer as quickly as possible. Basically, admins are the bosses, and if someone disagrees with any action performed by an admin or contributor with more seniority, they're likely to get booted real quick. It opens with a hopefully apocryphal quote by Larry Sanger, about making projects more attractive to experts/academics by driving out all those "mediocre" editors who work for a living and are thus disruptive by default. ...which seems reasonable, aside from the knowledge that self-appointed guardians of the Internet isn't necessarily a recipe for success. I noticed that the well-meaning crowd of FreeCycle have had a major schism with their founding founder who wanted to retain control and was booting out admins left right and centre. They did the fork thing and now we have Freegle instead.
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Law Lord |
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QUOTE(Gandoman @ Sun 20th September 2009, 12:13pm) Basically, admins are the bosses, and if someone disagrees with any action performed by an admin or contributor with more seniority, they're likely to get booted real quick.
Definitely that is how it works; which is why I stand by my previous conclusion that these people are in need of treatment. They are also bad people because they refuse treatment and continue their sick ways. However, having a sectarian cultural interface is probably difficult to treat? I understand now, what it is in German spirit that has resulted in some very poor choices over the course of recent history. How sad that this is reflected so clearly by the behaviour of the members of deWiki. When these people (deWiki people) make so poor choices in simple human interaction (rendering themselves the Herrenvolk and every outsider an inferior) it certainly poses the question: how can anybody trust the validity of anything they write at all?
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Cedric |
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QUOTE(Gandoman @ Sun 20th September 2009, 5:13am) The German Wikipedia does have certain cultural differences from the English one. For one, it's more authoritarian. While the English Wikipedia at least attempts to keep up the appearance of assuming good faith, the German one has a policy called Sei grausam ("be horrible"), which says that if someone is out of line, it's better to just come down with the banhammer as quickly as possible. Basically, admins are the bosses, and if someone disagrees with any action performed by an admin or contributor with more seniority, they're likely to get booted real quick. Sounds like the sort of place Abraham Lincoln referred to "where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocrisy".
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Law Lord |
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QUOTE(Cedric @ Sun 20th September 2009, 4:03pm) Sounds like the sort of place Abraham Lincoln referred to "where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocrisy".
You said it better than I could.
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Somey |
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QUOTE(Law Lord @ Sun 20th September 2009, 7:10am) I understand now, what it is in German spirit that has resulted in some very poor choices over the course of recent history. How sad that this is reflected so clearly by the behaviour of the members of deWiki. To be fair, I doubt that a cultural emphasis on efficiency, order, and "security" normally results in a mass tendency towards racism, religious persecution, or the devaluation of human life - at least not in most societies. It probably does result in authoritarianism though, along with a rigidly hierarchical power structure and a near-obsession with rules, making it an ideal proving ground for Wikipedianism. Germans are NOT stupid people; most of them know that the mistakes of the past must (or at least should) never be repeated. Unfortunately, they've yet to realize what a mistake Wikipedia is... Hopefully, time will fix that. QUOTE When these people (deWiki people) make so poor choices in simple human interaction ...(snip)... it certainly poses the question: how can anybody trust the validity of anything they write at all? Well, THAT you could say of almost any culture that produces a Wikimedia project. Each national/ethnic culture has its own idiosyncrasies, and any encyclopedia-like websites produced by those cultures will reflect them. That's just another reason why people should want their encyclopedias to be produced by properly-trained, unbiased academics and publishers, rather than cultures.
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Somey |
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QUOTE(Random832 @ Sun 20th September 2009, 11:43pm) Though that in turn requires one to take it as read that an individual born after 1945 should take "responsibility" for the events of WWII (which is of course distinct from the responsibility to do their part to prevent such things from happening again) There's a scene in The Reader (which takes place in a university lecture hall, of course) that touches on this. It suggested that Germans born after 1945 were, more than anything, quite angry at their forebears for putting them in the position of having to rebuild both the country's physical devastation and their national reputation within the civilized world. (As one would expect, I suppose.) But what we were originally talking about in this thread wasn't really anti-semitism or genocide or even out-of-control military expansionism - we were actually talking about France-bashing, and there are plenty of Americans and English folks who do that (among others). Most of it is unwarranted, IMO. There's a spy novel I like to recommend called The Spies of Warsaw by Alan Furst, in which a (note: SPOILERS!!!) French attache in 1938 Warsaw all but proves that the Germans are going to send their tanks through the Ardennes Forest in Belgium to invade France, rather than challenge the Maginot Line, but the French General Staff ignores him because Marshal Petain's reputation depends on that not being a possibility. There's a legitimate argument that if it hadn't been for Petain's insistence on this, the Germans could have been stopped in Northern France, and it would have been a simple matter for British and American forces to land on the continent and help drive them back into Germany. OTOH, if that had happened, it's also possible that the Nazi regime might have made peace with the French, and even survived long enough to develop atomic bombs. So who knows - maybe Petain did everybody a favor. Ahh, the vagaries of history... (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/rolleyes.gif)
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Herschelkrustofsky |
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QUOTE(Somey @ Sun 20th September 2009, 10:26pm) There's a spy novel I like to recommend called The Spies of Warsaw by Alan Furst, in which a (note: SPOILERS!!!) French attache in 1938 Warsaw all but proves that the Germans are going to send their tanks through the Ardennes Forest in Belgium to invade France, rather than challenge the Maginot Line, but the French General Staff ignores him because Marshal Petain's reputation depends on that not being a possibility. There's a legitimate argument that if it hadn't been for Petain's insistence on this, the Germans could have been stopped in Northern France, and it would have been a simple matter for British and American forces to land on the continent and help drive them back into Germany.
Well, that's interesting, because at least on the surface you seem to agree with LaRouche on this point: QUOTE I have warned against the silly, but popularized myth, the myth that it was France's preoccupation with the development of the Maginot Line which facilitated the German victory on that occasion. The rout of the greater part of France's military forces then, was chiefly the contribution of a pro-Synarchist "Fifth Column" inside the leading French military and other institutions, in the sense of the role of the "Fifth Column" which had just previously produced the victory of the fascist dictator Franco in 1930s Spain. The Synarchist influences from inside France's institutions left the gate wide open for what should have been considered the probable German course of action. ...That "Fifth Column" inside 1940 France was what is known as the same Synarchist International later represented by the regimes of Nazi-occupied France, as represented by the offshoot of Lazard Freres-related banking groups known as Banque Worms. This circle within France, had been the pivotal element of the post-Versailles Treaty drive toward the use of fascism as a tool for creating a globalized system, echoing the ultramontane imperial system of the Venetian financier-oligarchy and Norman chivalry, and also the Napoleonic model. (1)
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InkBlot |
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Am I missing a joke here, or is my German worse than I think (and really, I'm not sure it's possible for me to think any worse of my German and still admit I know any)? Looking at the edit which began all this, it, um, looks to be a penis joke. Which would kinda explain the reaction, at least to me. Sooooooooooo....... (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/blink.gif)
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Herschelkrustofsky |
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QUOTE(Law Lord @ Sat 19th September 2009, 7:53am) Wow, they are crazy at German wikipedia. Account blocked indefinitely at 19. September 2009, 14:40 UTC. For "lack of intent for encyclopaedic cooperation". Review my entire user contributions (very short) and tell me more. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/blink.gif) Actually, Charlotte is right, and your history of contributions doesn't demonstrate much intent beyond basic goofiness.
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Law Lord |
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QUOTE(InkBlot @ Thu 24th September 2009, 1:33am) Looking at the edit which began all this, it, um, looks to be a penis joke. Which would kinda explain the reaction, at least to me. Sooooooooooo....... (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/blink.gif) Not a joke but a statement of fact, which was reverted, after which I edited the article no further. So no, not really any reasonable explanation for the reaction from the deWiki common herd. I wish that could explain it since then the reaction would at least make some sense.
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Law Lord |
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QUOTE(Herschelkrustofsky @ Thu 24th September 2009, 2:17am) Actually, Charlotte is right, and your history of contributions doesn't demonstrate much intent beyond basic goofiness.
You think it is "basic goofiness" to ask an administrator to remove an anti-French image? Or to discuss article content? I think you are probably quite active on deWiki. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/rolleyes.gif)
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Herschelkrustofsky |
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QUOTE(Law Lord @ Wed 23rd September 2009, 5:26pm) QUOTE(InkBlot @ Thu 24th September 2009, 1:33am) Looking at the edit which began all this, it, um, looks to be a penis joke. Which would kinda explain the reaction, at least to me. Sooooooooooo....... (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/blink.gif) Not a joke but a statement of fact, which was reverted, after which I edited the article no further. If, hypothetically, we were to buy your claim that it was not a joke, then it's Original Researchâ„¢.
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