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NYB on The Volokh Conspiracy, Some First Thoughts on Wikipedia |
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Somey |
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Not bad, but Mr. Brad should know by now that high search engine rankings, and the impact they have on both content and on article subjects, are only part of the overall objection to Wikipedia. The negative impact on the publishing industry and academia are another, and on traditional culture in general. It's also helping to destroy the diversity of the web, foster an unaccountable anonymity subculture that's potentially dangerous to democracy, and cheapen intellectualism, among other things. Then there's the whole cultishness thing, WRT the actual users... Still, I don't suppose it's worth complaining about - at least he's trying to be fair about the whole thing. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/ermm.gif)
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the fieryangel |
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QUOTE(tarantino @ Tue 12th May 2009, 4:44am) http://www.volokh.com/posts/1242098183.shtmlIra requests: QUOTE I make only one request: that regular Wikipedians who are looking over my shoulder, as well as Wikipedia critics from Wikipedia Review and elsewhere, bear in mind that this is a general-interest audience. Please don't hijack the comment threads with our own internal disputes and debates. No one here wants to read who is a sockpuppet of whom or whether so-and-so's block was fair or not. We have ANI and Wikipedia Review to hash those things out later.
I can't count the number of times I've seen Greg K., Barry Kort or Jon Ambrey make a perfectly logical and well-thought-out comment on a blog only to have them be swamped with Wikipediots making ad hominem attacks and Pro-WP rhetoric attacks ad naseum. If Brad could keep the WP troops in order, none of this would happen. Since he's made this statement, this would seem to confirm this as fact. One of the joys of Web 2.0, Brad, is that (like Wikipedia) any idiot can participate even if they're completely wrong. The only solution is to 1. moderate the comments or 2. turn them off. If only WP would do this for BLP articles and ban those Wikipediots who place BLP violations on other sites as revenge, maybe the rest of the World would follow suit?
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Newyorkbrad |
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QUOTE(Somey @ Tue 12th May 2009, 1:37am) Not bad, but Mr. Brad should know by now that high search engine rankings, and the impact they have on both content and on article subjects, are only part of the overall objection to Wikipedia. The negative impact on the publishing industry and academia are another, and on traditional culture in general. It's also helping to destroy the diversity of the web, foster an unaccountable anonymity subculture that's potentially dangerous to democracy, and cheapen intellectualism, among other things. Then there's the whole cultishness thing, WRT the actual users... Still, I don't suppose it's worth complaining about - at least he's trying to be fair about the whole thing. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/ermm.gif) Also please bear in mind that I couldn't really address every possible critique or criticism of Wikipedia in a 1500-word introduction, or even in a week's worth of posts, which is what I have to work with. As previously promised, in one of my posts I will link to some criticism sites, including this one. I really am trying to be as balanced as I can, although I obviously don't share the entirely negative view of Wikipedia that you express.
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Newyorkbrad |
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QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Tue 12th May 2009, 8:45am) NYB's preemptively chastising, discounting and discouraging replies from WR on another forum is disrespectful to this site. I won't be troubling you over there, Mr. Brad.
I fear I've been unclear there and/or misconstrued here. Replies on VC about the general issues I raise there are most welcome. What I was trying to head off was more along the lines of a long debate in a comment thread, which would be incomprehensible to the general readership over there, about whether User:X deserved to be desysopped, why User:Y shouldn't have been blocked, whether User:Z is government agent, etc. That remark was equally directed at Wikipedians as Reviewers, by the way.
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the fieryangel |
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QUOTE(Newyorkbrad @ Tue 12th May 2009, 11:01am) QUOTE(Somey @ Tue 12th May 2009, 1:37am) Not bad, but Mr. Brad should know by now that high search engine rankings, and the impact they have on both content and on article subjects, are only part of the overall objection to Wikipedia. The negative impact on the publishing industry and academia are another, and on traditional culture in general. It's also helping to destroy the diversity of the web, foster an unaccountable anonymity subculture that's potentially dangerous to democracy, and cheapen intellectualism, among other things. Then there's the whole cultishness thing, WRT the actual users... Still, I don't suppose it's worth complaining about - at least he's trying to be fair about the whole thing. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/ermm.gif) ...although I obviously don't share the entirely negative view of Wikipedia that you express. That's just it, Brad: Somey's view of all of this isn't entirely negative, but centered in the "balanced criticism" mode that both Akahele and you seem to be striving for. He's just not wearing those nice "rose-colored glasses" that the Wikipediots seem to favor...
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Moulton |
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One |
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QUOTE(Cla68 @ Thu 14th May 2009, 4:07am) QUOTE(Newyorkbrad @ Thu 14th May 2009, 3:26am) QUOTE(Moulton @ Wed 13th May 2009, 10:08am) My third post on Volokh is now up, for those interested. It's more about the BLP issue (and I will continue on that tomorrow as well). Most of the content will be old hat to Wikipedia Reviewers, but my goal is to raise the issues with and get comments from a wider audience. Judging from the number of comments, it appears that that forum has a fairly large number of readers, so your message is reaching a lot of people. It's probably the most popular and influential law blog. [1] Widely known among legal academics, students, and professionals with spare time. I guess it will have to get along without certain butthurt reviewers. This post has been edited by One:
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tarantino |
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QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Thu 14th May 2009, 7:54pm) Aside from a couple of cogent posts by Brandt and Kohs, the commentary on the VC Blog makes Fark and Slashdot look almost intelligent.
Jon Awbrey
This is funny. QUOTE Kooks, on the other hand are motivated to post a lot, and would readily respond to calls on Wikipedia Review and other sites to come to VC to take over a Wikipedia thread. (Sheesh, we even have Daniel Brandt here. Somehow I doubt he posted because he's normally a VC lurker.)
I think that people who spend a great deal of time writing Sailor Moon FAQs and anime fan fiction are a little kooky.
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Jon Awbrey |
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QUOTE(tarantino @ Thu 14th May 2009, 9:13pm) QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Thu 14th May 2009, 7:54pm) Aside from a couple of cogent posts by Brandt and Kohs, the commentary on the VC Blog makes Fark and Slashdot look almost intelligent.
Jon Awbrey
This is funny. QUOTE Kooks, on the other hand are motivated to post a lot, and would readily respond to calls on Wikipedia Review and other sites to come to VC to take over a Wikipedia thread. (Sheesh, we even have Daniel Brandt here. Somehow I doubt he posted because he's normally a VC lurker.)
I think that people who spend a great deal of time writing Sailor Moon FAQs and anime fan fiction are a little kooky. Dies Iræ?The first e-stallment I tried to read looked like the room filled up with Conserva-Mosquitoes, and it got way too hard reading while rotflaffing — all that Bee-Looney about Wikipedia being a hotbed of Liberalism — Last time I sampled it, Brandt and Kohs had posted a lot of hard-knocks analysis and data that everyone else just ignored — big surprise that. Jon (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/hrmph.gif)
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Newyorkbrad |
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QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Thu 14th May 2009, 10:37pm) QUOTE(tarantino @ Thu 14th May 2009, 9:13pm) QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Thu 14th May 2009, 7:54pm) Aside from a couple of cogent posts by Brandt and Kohs, the commentary on the VC Blog makes Fark and Slashdot look almost intelligent.
Jon Awbrey
This is funny. QUOTE Kooks, on the other hand are motivated to post a lot, and would readily respond to calls on Wikipedia Review and other sites to come to VC to take over a Wikipedia thread. (Sheesh, we even have Daniel Brandt here. Somehow I doubt he posted because he's normally a VC lurker.)
I think that people who spend a great deal of time writing Sailor Moon FAQs and anime fan fiction are a little kooky. Dies Iræ?The first e-stallment I tried to read looked like the room filled up with Conserva-Mosquitoes, and it got way too hard reading while rotflaffing — all that Bee-Looney about Wikipedia being a hotbed of Liberalism — Last time I sampled it, Brandt and Kohs had posted a lot of hard-knocks analysis and data that everyone else just ignored — big surprise that. Jon (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/hrmph.gif) As previously promised, before I finish my guest blogging stint in a few days, I'll post links to here (both the board and the blog) and to Akihele, just so none can suggest that the purpose of my blogging there is to sugar-coat anything. I can't promise how many Volokh Conspiracy readers will follow the links, though: you can lead a horse to water, but ....... Apropos of nothing ... In one of the comment threads there, Mr. Brandt criticized the fact that I still haven't posted my real name on Wikipedia yet. Obviously, at this point I've decided to go ahead and make public that IBM=NYB, so at some point I'll probably post my name on my userpage, along with a couple of sentences of real-world bio (I'm a litigation attorney in New York, I'm the Werowance of the Wolfe Pack, etc.). I wonder exactly how long it will take before someone objects that I'm using Wikipedia for self-promotion.
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privatemusings |
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QUOTE(Newyorkbrad @ Fri 15th May 2009, 3:15am) I wonder exactly how long it will take before someone objects that I'm using Wikipedia for self-promotion.
You're using Wikipedia for self-promotion. do I get a prize?
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Jon Awbrey |
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QUOTE(Newyorkbrad @ Thu 14th May 2009, 11:15pm) As previously promised, before I finish my guest blogging stint in a few days, I'll post links to here (both the board and the blog) and to Akahele, just so none can suggest that the purpose of my blogging there is to sugar-coat anything. I can't promise how many Volokh Conspiracy readers will follow the links, though: you can lead a horse to water, but …
Apropos of nothing … In one of the comment threads there, Mr. Brandt criticized the fact that I still haven't posted my real name on Wikipedia yet. Obviously, at this point I've decided to go ahead and make public that IBM=NYB, so at some point I'll probably post my name on my userpage, along with a couple of sentences of real-world bio (I'm a litigation attorney in New York, I'm the Werowance of the Wolfe Pack, etc.). I wonder exactly how long it will take before someone objects that I'm using Wikipedia for self-promotion.
Only Dead In The Head Wikipediots would suggest that a Standard Author Bio amounts to Self-Promotion, but never mind that now … I tried to work up an offering for the VC Blog to share my initially parallel but increasingly divergent experiences with Wikipedia — I think most folks there would find it amusing that one of the events that led to my x-communication from Wikipedia was my objection to the use of "Wiki-Lawyer" as a pejorative term on the grounds that it defamed the legal profession, but never mind that now — still, it looks like that blog, however grounded it may be in one domain of experience, is like so many other Acadimmerungs of Îεφελοκοκκυγία that I have tried to educate in the past, that is, totally oblivious to the realities of Wikiputia, and where folks have their heads so full of gas about the way it's posed to be that they can't really see how it is. And I don't see you adding much to the mix but ever more gas. Jon Awbrey
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Daniel Brandt |
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QUOTE(tarantino @ Thu 14th May 2009, 7:13pm) This is funny. QUOTE Kooks, on the other hand are motivated to post a lot, and would readily respond to calls on Wikipedia Review and other sites to come to VC to take over a Wikipedia thread. (Sheesh, we even have Daniel Brandt here. Somehow I doubt he posted because he's normally a VC lurker.)
I think that people who spend a great deal of time writing Sailor Moon FAQs and anime fan fiction are a little kooky. Arromdee is actually smarter than he looks. Or at least with a better picture he looks smarter than he used to look. In fact, the résumé he deleted says that he has a PhD in computer science. So we know that he's smart enough to tell the difference between a one and a zero. (About that PhD, I'm giving him the benefit of the doubt, since we can no longer ask Essjay to check it out for us.) But his comment was certainly stupid. With five minutes of research, he might have figured out that the reason I read NYB on VC is because NYB announced it, more than once, on that "kook" site Wikipedia Review. And believe it or not, some of the "kooks" here are actually a hell of a lot smarter than Arromdee. I can't write C-language code as well as Arromdee (but I get by), and I don't read comic books and don't follow anime, but at least I'm smart enough to know that I am, generally speaking, smarter than he is in a lot of other areas.
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Jon Awbrey |
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One of the questions that always comes to mind when discussing ArbComics, stand-up or otherwise, is this — How could any Wikipedian, much less a high ranking one, be sooooo clueless about the realities in the trenches of Wikipedia? WikiChecker Data : Newyorkbrad- 21,835 — Total Edits (25 Feb 2006 – 15 May 2009)
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O I C … Jon Awbrey
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Jon Awbrey |
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QUOTE(CharlotteWebb @ Fri 15th May 2009, 11:37am) QUOTE(Brad) from Poe and poetry to pomegranites and Pokemon; from Poland and Portugal to Powell and Posner; from Pol Pot and Potsdam to polarity and pottery.
Well you forgot to mention potent potables. Oh damn, it's been deleted. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/hrmph.gif) Where the People all have Pyorrhea from eating too many Pomegranites … Ja Ja (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/boing.gif)
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Newyorkbrad |
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QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Fri 15th May 2009, 10:24am) One of the questions that always comes to mind when discussing ArbComics, stand-up or otherwise, is this — How could any Wikipedian, much less a high ranking one, be sooooo clueless about the realities in the trenches of Wikipedia? WikiChecker Data : Newyorkbrad- 21,835 — Total Edits (25 Feb 2006 – 15 May 2009)
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O I C … Jon Awbrey Well, yeah. When I started I contributed to mainspace, including having created more than 75 pages, but lately I've been focused primarily on arbitration and related activities. Although I'm not denying the trend you see there, do bear in mind more generally that the pure edit-number data can be misleading. If I create a page in mainspace, that's one edit. If I then vote paragraph-by-paragraph through an arb decision, that can be 20 edits.... I am determined to get back to more article work once the current round of ArbCom cases is wrapped up and my guest-blogging stint on Volokh is completed. And I'm sure Mr. Awbrey will remind me if I forget, because making sure that there are lots of good contributions to Wikipedia mainspace is very important to him. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/smile.gif)
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Jon Awbrey |
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QUOTE(Newyorkbrad @ Fri 15th May 2009, 12:54pm) QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Fri 15th May 2009, 10:24am) One of the questions that always comes to mind when discussing ArbComics, stand-up or otherwise, is this — How could any Wikipedian, much less a high ranking one, be sooooo clueless about the realities in the trenches of Wikipedia? WikiChecker Data : Newyorkbrad- 21,835 — Total Edits (25 Feb 2006 – 15 May 2009)
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O I C … Jon Awbrey Well, yeah. When I started I contributed to mainspace, including having created more than 75 pages, but lately I've been focused primarily on arbitration and related activities. Although I'm not denying the trend you see there, do bear in mind more generally that the pure edit-number data can be misleading. If I create a page in mainspace, that's one edit. If I then vote paragraph-by-paragraph through an arb decision, that can be 20 edits … I am determined to get back to more article work once the current round of ArbCom cases is wrapped up and my guest-blogging stint on Volokh is completed. And I'm sure Mr. Awbrey will remind me if I forget, because making sure that there are lots of good contributions to Wikipedia mainspace is very important to him. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/smile.gif) Do what you like. I am simply stepping through the steps of the inquiry process, that begins by "abducing" an explanation for a surprising observation. The surprising observation is that a presumably intelligent person could continue repeating the same old mythology about Wikipedia — after all these years — in the face of all the contrary evidence that spits in the face of every trooper who spends a long enough time in the trenches. There are as many likely explanations as there are favorite ways of denying the evidence — I simply picked on a likely first guess. Of course, it hardly amounts to a fair test anymore — a Modern Major General slumming in the trenches for a day is just not going to get dressed down for having lacquered brass, now is he? So you really missed out on all that, poor sap … Jon Awbrey
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Jon Awbrey |
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Ira's Song & Dance about BLPs trots out more old saws than I have old wood (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/sleep.gif) So let me just give my first & last hoot on the subject: QUOTE All but the most self-deluded observers of Wikipedia know that none of the above-ballyhooed reform proposals have any chance of being implemented under the current regime. Their sole purpose has been to generate a semi-annual, semi-idiotic flood of media coverage about the Wouldn't It Be Luverlies of Wikipedia's Good Intentions. Jon Awbrey, 15 May 2009, 1:02pmI am putting a copy here because the Conspiracy Blogware is so antique it can take you 10 minutes to find your own posts again. Jon (IMG: http://wikipediareview.com/stimg9x0b4fsr2/1/folder_post_icons/icon9.gif)
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Somey |
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QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Fri 15th May 2009, 12:27pm) QUOTE(NYB) Although I'm not denying the trend you see there, do bear in mind more generally that the pure edit-number data can be misleading. If I create a page in mainspace, that's one edit. If I then vote paragraph-by-paragraph through an arb decision, that can be 20 edits … Do what you like. I am simply stepping through the steps of the inquiry process, that begins by "abducing" an explanation for a surprising observation. If I understand this correctly, Mr. Awbrey is suggesting that Mr. Brad is too far removed from the realities of WP article-editing to fully understand how bad it can be for people with knowledge of a given subject to deal with the cluelessness and general interference than occurs on a fairly regular basis...? That may be, but in Mr. Brad's defense, I've looked at his editing history without the benefit of a statistics generator, and IMO he's actually more like me, just on a different website. It isn't just that he uses the Preview button - he clearly tries to fully prepare articles in advance of their initial posting. That can indicate any number of things - meticulousness, mental organization, and most commonly of all, an attempt to avoid unwanted attention, particularly from people who might challenge the article's content or try to have it deleted. It's almost the opposite of the more attention-seeking narcissistic tendency to create new articles in as many edits as possible. For example, take this relatively early-in-career stub: J. Daniel Mahoney (T-H-L-K-D). The initial edit is here, with all links and such already in place. After that, NYB makes only one edit to the article, to add a "source" template. OTOH, most of Mr. Brad's newly-created articles have been about various Federal judges, so there isn't a lot of variety in the stubs - they all follow a fairly similar format. That makes it a little easier to obtain a low ratio of edits to newly-created articles. Unfortunately, on Wikipedia it's difficult to determine user motivation unless that ratio is very low - I suspect that many non-narcissistic people deliberately use more edits to post a new article than they would otherwise need or want, merely because they don't want to be left in the dust by the edit-countitis sufferers, and they can see that few people really look at the details.
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Jon Awbrey |
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QUOTE(Somey @ Fri 15th May 2009, 2:21pm) For example, take this relatively early-in-career stub: J. Daniel Mahoney (T-H-L-K-D). The initial edit is here, with all links and such already in place. After that, NYB makes only one edit to the article, to add a "source" template. Perfect Illustration of what I'm talking about Here is the entire 3 year edit history of the article, which remains a stub to this day. I'm not saying that it's impossible to find yourself slimmed, er, slammed up against the wall by the Cabal in the neighborhood of that kind of turf — we all know better than that — but it's nowhere near as likely as working on Pseudoscience (T-H-L-K-D), or Sigmund Freud (T-H-L-K-D), or Truth (T-H-L-K-D), or even Charles Sanders Peirce (T-H-L-K-D), if that is where they or their minions stalk you back to. Do you really think I put over 400 edits into an article like Charles Sanders Peirce out of narcissism? Give me a break … Jon Awbrey
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QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Fri 15th May 2009, 1:35pm) Do you really think I put over 400 edits into an article like Charles Sanders Peirce out of narcissism? Heavens no! But you didn't create any of those articles... (This is the creation diff for the Peirce article, btw.) There are all sorts of reasons why people use lots of edits to develop an article - in your case, I'd say it was more of a "practice what you preach" thing, given the communal/collaborative nature of Inquiry as you define it (and as evidenced in the development of the Inquiry (T-H-L-K-D) article itself, I might add, which is one of yours). All I'm saying is that the tendency to want to keep edit-counts to a minimum for newly-created articles can be seen as indicating that the person is trying to avoid attention, which is a fairly evident non-narcissistic impulse. It could also mean that the person is a perfectionist - a mature-depressive tendency - or simply doesn't want to be seen by others as narcissistic, whether or not he/she actually is... but I suspect most people don't engage in that kind of double-bind thinking when they're about to post a WP article.
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Jon Awbrey |
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QUOTE(Somey @ Fri 15th May 2009, 3:37pm) QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Fri 15th May 2009, 1:35pm) Do you really think I put over 400 edits into an article like Charles Sanders Peirce out of narcissism? Heavens no! But you didn't create any of those articles … (This is the creation diff for the Peirce article, btw.) There are all sorts of reasons why people use lots of edits to develop an article — in your case, I'd say it was more of a "practice what you preach" thing, given the communal/collaborative nature of Inquiry as you define it (and as evidenced in the development of the Inquiry (T-H-L-K-D) article itself, I might add, which is one of yours). All I'm saying is that the tendency to want to keep edit-counts to a minimum for newly-created articles can be seen as indicating that the person is trying to avoid attention, which is a fairly evident non-narcissistic impulse. It could also mean that the person is a perfectionist — a mature-depressive tendency — or simply doesn't want to be seen by others as narcissistic, whether or not he/she actually is … but I suspect most people don't engage in that kind of double-bind thinking when they're about to post a WP article. Actually, it wasn't a Creation but a Conversion from a Wiki-Prehistoric Phase of Evilusion, but I don't really see why everything has to turn into a fight about Creationism … Once again, the surprising observation under investigation is that a presumably intelligent person of presumptively good will is still repeating the Litany Of Lies (LOL) that we all know and many of us don't love so much as Wikipediot Doctrine. If it was certain other people doing that, then the above-mentioned presumptions would be way too presumptuous, so we'd naturally have other explanations available to us. The charitable interpretations in this case are: - Ira is extraordinarily blessed or gratuitously lucky.
- Ira is blissfully lacking in the relevant experiences.
The relatively small exposure to editing in the trenches is weakly confirmatory of Hype № 2 — it is not itself the Phenom under investigation. Jon Awbrey
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QUOTE(dtobias @ Fri 15th May 2009, 10:38pm) That somebody doesn't come out of their Wikipedia experiences with the same outlook as yours doesn't mean that they (or you) are wrong. Wikipedia is enough of a big and complex thing that people's experiences with it can be as diverse as the proverbial blind men feeling parts of an elephant.
I agree. I'm sure Reviewers notice all of the comments claiming that there's a left-wing bias on Wikipedia. Whatever else that claim is, it's at least an over-simplification. Parts of Wikipedia have a left-wing bias, an Israel bias, a promotional bias, and so forth. Some topics are abandoned garbage heaps, some are vicious partisan battle grounds, and others actually edit harmoniously. The relevant question is whether Wikipedia can correct itself and more closely resemble the encyclopedia it supposedly aspires towards. I think people should harbor healthy skepticism about Wikipedia's chances of improving. At the same time, many casual contributors have had mostly positive experiences editing. Even at this late date they feel they're contributing to a useful compilation. There's nothing wrong with that. This post has been edited by One:
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Jon Awbrey |
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Ï„á½° δΠμοι παθήματα μαθήματα γÎγονε
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QUOTE(One @ Fri 15th May 2009, 9:05pm) QUOTE(dtobias @ Fri 15th May 2009, 10:38pm) That somebody doesn't come out of their Wikipedia experiences with the same outlook as yours doesn't mean that they (or you) are wrong. Wikipedia is enough of a big and complex thing that people's experiences with it can be as diverse as the proverbial blind men feeling parts of an elephant.
I agree. I'm sure Reviewers notice all of the comments claiming that there's a left-wing bias on Wikipedia. Whatever else that claim is, it's at least an over-simplification. Parts of Wikipedia have a left-wing bias, an Israel bias, a promotional bias, and so forth. Some topics are abandoned garbage heaps, some are vicious partisan battle grounds, and others actually edit harmoniously. The relevant question is whether Wikipedia can correct itself and more closely resemble the encyclopedia it supposedly aspires towards. I think people should harbor healthy skepticism about Wikipedia's chances of improving. At the same time, many casual contributors have had mostly positive experiences editing. Even at this late date they feel they're contributing to a useful compilation. There's nothing wrong with that. Let's get something straight about the ass-sym-metrics of the situation — I am not the one who shunned them and shut out their experience. They are the ones who shunned me and shut out my experience. Klar? Jon (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/dry.gif)
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Jon Awbrey |
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Ï„á½° δΠμοι παθήματα μαθήματα γÎγονε
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Seven Days In May —It's rather tricky keeping track of the disconnected blogicles and comments on that site, so I'll make a list here: One Page To Rule Them All- Ira Matetsky (11 May 2009), Some First Thoughts on Wikipedia
- Ira Matetsky (12 May 2009), Wikipedia, the Internet, and Diminished Privacy
- Ira Matetsky (13 May 2009), Wikipedia and the Biography Problem, Part 1
- Ira Matetsky (14 May 2009), Wikipedia and the Biography Problem, Part 2
- Ira Matetsky (15 May 2009), Wikipedia : Who Runs the Place?
- Ira Matetsky (16 May 2009), Some Responses to Comments
- Ira Matetsky (17 May 2009), Wikipedia : Some Concluding Thoughts and an Invitation
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