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_ Articles _ Effective Vandalism -- Experimentation Results

Posted by: karmafist

While I don't think it's a good long term strategy, vandalism is a good way to chip away at the credibility of Wikipedia, thus chipping away at the power of the corrupt people who control it.

I did some experiments with another sock, Broad Street, and here's what I found( the contribs are at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Broad_Street)



-Make It Fake, and Plausible: Remember Seigenthaler? While that wasn't true, there it wasn't inplausible -- looking at it, you wouldn't say at first glance "this is fake"

-Don't use cultural memes: Everything went swimmingly until I started to use the Colbert Elephant Meme.
People know that's false, so the plausibility goes out the window.

-Make edits slowly: Two days I had three edits, and nobody noticed. The next day I had five, and they caught on.

-Don't have edit summaries: They tend to draw attention, but that's not a hard and fast rule.

-Press the random button and go for lesser known articles: The reversion will be alot faster at say, George W. Bush, than some count from the 18th Century or some long lost theory.

-Remember the IP you're using: They can check that.


Best case scenario -- several new Siegenthaler Crises are made, thus destroying the credibility of Wikipedia, and its funding, forcing it to either become a corporate shill or charging users for an account(thus removing any pretense of being a "free and unbiased encyclopedia") or forcing them to reform.

Worst case scenario -- the majority of articles on Wikipedia are either protected or abandoned(again, removing the "free" pretense), and all new users are seen as potential suspects, creating an atmosphere where they are unlikely to become wiki-addicts and possibly spread the word of the poor behavior of the Cabalists.

Posted by: JohnA

I wonder if anyone can tell deliberate vandalism designed to bring down Wikipedia from just old-fashioned deliberate vandalism because you're an asshole and the world is watching. Or what passes in Wikipedia as "NPOV".

Its rather like shitting into a sewage farm - yes you're being naughty but who's to notice the difference?

My prediction: what will bring down Wikipedia will not be rampant vandalism or Slimvirgin or Danny's behavior but A BETTER, MORE COMPELLING, ONLINE ENCYCLOPEDIA.

There, I've said it.

Posted by: karmafist

QUOTE(JohnA @ Thu 10th August 2006, 3:46pm) *

I wonder if anyone can tell deliberate vandalism designed to bring down Wikipedia from just old-fashioned deliberate vandalism because you're an asshole and the world is watching. Or what passes in Wikipedia as "NPOV".

Its rather like shitting into a sewage farm - yes you're being naughty but who's to notice the difference?

My prediction: what will bring down Wikipedia will not be rampant vandalism or Slimvirgin or Danny's behavior but A BETTER, MORE COMPELLING, ONLINE ENCYCLOPEDIA.

There, I've said it.


I wish I had the resources that Jimbo has to make a fork, but I don't, so that's not a feasible option for me. If you could make a wiki competitor to Wikipedia, i'd join you in a second. Kurt Weber tried awhile ago, but that fizzled out.

Your sewage farm analogy is a good one, but let me expand on it -- does the public at large currently smell that sewage? Or does it smell different to them?

If it's indisputably sewage to the majority of the public, Wikipedia will crumble, either completely(due to lack of donations) or as an encyclopedia, and it'd just become the world's biggest chat forum/meme farm/sophisticated version of myspace ,which is fine with me -- just as long as the corrupt parts of it are destroyed one way or another.

Posted by: EuroSceptic

Humm, what would you change on a wikifork?

Posted by: JohnA

QUOTE(karmafist @ Thu 10th August 2006, 9:38pm) *

QUOTE(JohnA @ Thu 10th August 2006, 3:46pm) *

I wonder if anyone can tell deliberate vandalism designed to bring down Wikipedia from just old-fashioned deliberate vandalism because you're an asshole and the world is watching. Or what passes in Wikipedia as "NPOV".

Its rather like shitting into a sewage farm - yes you're being naughty but who's to notice the difference?

My prediction: what will bring down Wikipedia will not be rampant vandalism or Slimvirgin or Danny's behavior but A BETTER, MORE COMPELLING, ONLINE ENCYCLOPEDIA.

There, I've said it.


I wish I had the resources that Jimbo has to make a fork, but I don't, so that's not a feasible option for me. If you could make a wiki competitor to Wikipedia, i'd join you in a second. Kurt Weber tried awhile ago, but that fizzled out.

Your sewage farm analogy is a good one, but let me expand on it -- does the public at large currently smell that sewage? Or does it smell different to them?

If it's indisputably sewage to the majority of the public, Wikipedia will crumble, either completely(due to lack of donations) or as an encyclopedia, and it'd just become the world's biggest chat forum/meme farm/sophisticated version of myspace ,which is fine with me -- just as long as the corrupt parts of it are destroyed one way or another.


Mediocrity doesn't smell of anything or taste of anything. But there's lots of it available at no cost.

The greatest barrier to creating a proper online encyclopedia is the software required to encapsulate the process of encyclopedia article production and publication.

The second greatest barrier is admitting that 99.9% of us are not experts at anything, and while we are good at finding stuff, the great majority of us can't write an encyclopedic article, as Wikipedia amply demonstrates.

But the first barrier is the main barrier. Without proper software and infrastructure to enforce the proper quality system, we'd end up producing another Wikipedia.

Above all, in order for an online general reference encyclopedia to flourish, it must be fruitful for all participants - satisfying intellectually, rewarding financially and reputationally. I don't see very many people saying in job interviews that they contribute articles to Wikipedia (because it would be a dealbreaker), but if someone had contributed articles to, say, Encyclopedia Britannica, then they'd be sure to mention it.

Contributing to a proper online encyclopedia should attract experts rather than repel them.

As a final thought, if I were to set up an Encyclopedia, Rule 1 would be: Full Names only, no anonymity.

Posted by: karmafist

QUOTE(EuroSceptic @ Thu 10th August 2006, 4:51pm) *

Humm, what would you change on a wikifork?


The biggest thing is a clear method of establishing policy, most likely a legislature.

Posted by: EuroSceptic

QUOTE(karmafist @ Thu 10th August 2006, 10:42pm) *

QUOTE(EuroSceptic @ Thu 10th August 2006, 4:51pm) *

Humm, what would you change on a wikifork?


The biggest thing is a clear method of establishing policy, most likely a legislature.

Humm, more like a democracy. And that also for content?

Posted by: karmafist

QUOTE(EuroSceptic @ Thu 10th August 2006, 8:58pm) *

QUOTE(karmafist @ Thu 10th August 2006, 10:42pm) *

QUOTE(EuroSceptic @ Thu 10th August 2006, 4:51pm) *

Humm, what would you change on a wikifork?


The biggest thing is a clear method of establishing policy, most likely a legislature.

Humm, more like a democracy. And that also for content?

Nope, just the governance and whenever there's a dispute. Wikipedia had a form of Democracy that would work called Sociocracy, but the Ochlocracy/Aristocracy blend overtook that for all intents and purposes.

Posted by: Daniel Brandt

What would I change on a wikifork?

I'd install a good local search engine so that I can block all bots and scrapers. Then I'd be entitled to bragging rights that if you use my my search and my fork, neither Google nor AOL nor anyone else will be storing all your search terms forever, because we are cool and we don't keep search records, and we keep out those nasty corporations that want to track you forever, and then eventually sell you out to Homeland Security.

And yes, no anonymity for editors.

Posted by: JohnA

QUOTE(Daniel Brandt @ Fri 11th August 2006, 7:10am) *

What would I change on a wikifork?

I'd install a good local search engine so that I can block all bots and scrapers. Then I'd be entitled to bragging rights that if you use my my search and my fork, neither Google nor AOL nor anyone else will be storing all your search terms forever, because we are cool and we don't keep search records, and we keep out those nasty corporations that want to track you forever, and then eventually sell you out to Homeland Security.

And yes, no anonymity for editors.


Why do that? If you want people to reference your encyclopedia then having Google index it would definitely be a good thing. The bots and scrapers would be stopped through the simple remedy called assertion of copyright. The reason why Wikipedia is so popular is because of the extraordinary reach of the search engines.

You have a problem with Google storing search terms, that's a separate problem unrelated to this issue.

Posted by: everyking

When you reach this level, Karmafist, it's evident you no longer care about the encyclopedia at all--the personal factor has overwhelmed it entirely. I think that's absolutely shameful and disgusting. Everyone knows how cautious an approach I take to blocking people, so let me say that I wholeheartedly endorse your ban and hope they catch any of those socks you've got crawling around, too.

Posted by: Ben

I agree with everyking.

Posted by: Somey

If I'm not mistaken, since posting that sewage-analogy business on the 10th, Mr. Karmafist has had something of a change of heart, agreed to be more "constructive" and so forth on Wikipedia, and has even been unblocked... That isn't to say he's sold out, of course. But maybe he was coming off a bit negatively, even by WR standards, and he decided to give the whole "engagement strategy" thing one more shot.

I often wonder - what would happen to me if I started editing Wikipedia? Probably nothing particularly bad, to be honest, since I'd probably avoid controversial subjects and be a stickler for accuracy and grammatical correctness. (I might even become a "Cite Nazi"... Wouldn't that be fun...)

I guess what I'm trying to say is that there's constructive activity on Wikipedia, and destructive activity on Wikipedia, but I'm against both kinds. The best advice I can (and generally do) give people is to just avoid like the plague!

Just my $0.02, as they say.

Posted by: JohnA

The first stage in beating addiction is realising you have a problem

Posted by: karmafist

QUOTE(everyking @ Sun 13th August 2006, 7:47am) *

When you reach this level, Karmafist, it's evident you no longer care about the encyclopedia at all--the personal factor has overwhelmed it entirely. I think that's absolutely shameful and disgusting. Everyone knows how cautious an approach I take to blocking people, so let me say that I wholeheartedly endorse your ban and hope they catch any of those socks you've got crawling around, too.



Everyking, if you don't have Stockholm Syndrome, I don't know who does.

Those people have blocked you on a regular basis for what must be going on two years now, and yet you still defend them!

You're just one of many people that have been hurt and demeaned by Wikipedia, I know a few other Stockholm Syndrome cases on Wikipedia, and that's just for starters -- a friend of mine the other day said he was thinking of killing himself because of Wikipedia.

The encyclopedia is irrelevant positively or negatively to me, nobody should ever be hurt, let alone kill themselves, because of a website, and I will do whatever I have to prevent that, "wikipedia's rules" notwithstanding.

Posted by: karmafist

QUOTE(Somey @ Mon 21st August 2006, 4:34pm) *

If I'm not mistaken, since posting that sewage-analogy business on the 10th, Mr. Karmafist has had something of a change of heart, agreed to be more "constructive" and so forth on Wikipedia, and has even been unblocked... That isn't to say he's sold out, of course. But maybe he was coming off a bit negatively, even by WR standards, and he decided to give the whole "engagement strategy" thing one more shot.



Actually, no. A friend of mine made me make a promise not to vandalize again, and like many active Wikipedians; he's got great potential clouded by this addiction and he looks up to me -- If I betrayed his trust, I don't know what the consequences of that would be in reality(Wikipedia seems to be the center of his life right now), and I couldn't live with that.

To me, vandalism is nothing compared to letting this friend of mine down.



QUOTE(JohnA @ Mon 21st August 2006, 5:20pm) *

The first stage in beating addiction is realising you have a problem


First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.

-Gandhi


I'll beat the addiction after I finish step 4.

Posted by: everyking

QUOTE(karmafist @ Tue 22nd August 2006, 1:36am) *

QUOTE(everyking @ Sun 13th August 2006, 7:47am) *

When you reach this level, Karmafist, it's evident you no longer care about the encyclopedia at all--the personal factor has overwhelmed it entirely. I think that's absolutely shameful and disgusting. Everyone knows how cautious an approach I take to blocking people, so let me say that I wholeheartedly endorse your ban and hope they catch any of those socks you've got crawling around, too.



Everyking, if you don't have Stockholm Syndrome, I don't know who does.

Those people have blocked you on a regular basis for what must be going on two years now, and yet you still defend them!

You're just one of many people that have been hurt and demeaned by Wikipedia, I know a few other Stockholm Syndrome cases on Wikipedia, and that's just for starters -- a friend of mine the other day said he was thinking of killing himself because of Wikipedia.

The encyclopedia is irrelevant positively or negatively to me, nobody should ever be hurt, let alone kill themselves, because of a website, and I will do whatever I have to prevent that, "wikipedia's rules" notwithstanding.


I don't defend THEM, I defend the integrity of the encyclopedia. In fact I regard it as being ultimately impossible to consistently defend both, because those people are so harmful and parasitic to the encyclopedia--but I also regard it as senseless or unethical to oppose both, which, it seems to me, is what you do by vandalizing the site. Of course people get hurt by editing on Wikipedia, but vandalism accomplishes nothing towards this--in fact it hurts even more people by reducing the quality of the encyclopedia.

Posted by: Somey

I don't mean this as a value judgement, but another way to look at it might be that vandalism gives would-be "cabalists" an easy, and highly visible, means of demonstrating their loyalty to the cause. Fixing "ur so ghey" insertions and page-blankings doesn't require the fixer to know anything, other than how to revert.

So in a way, this ultimately contributes to further insularity and mean-spirited elitism among the admins, especially the newer ones, because they're encouraged to take on an "us vs. them" attitude. Whereas, if there were never any vandalism whatsoever, it would be much more difficult to get noticed -- and thereby promoted.

This is all somewhat theoretical, of course...

Posted by: IronDuke

I agree with Somey. In my view there are two problems with WP: the idiot teenage editors, and the bad admins (these groups overlap). Dealing with the idiot teenage editors will take a big structural change to WP, but one can torture the bad admins more effectively by wikilawyer them to death, subtly altering policy pages, gaming ANI/I, keeping careful records of their unprosecuted misdeeds, and by actualling trying to NPOV their pet articles.

To test this, go find a supported fact (with citations) and try adding it to PETA or Hamas, or virtually any page that SlimVirgin and Jayjg edit (or pick your favorite jackbooted demi-facist admin). If they 3RR, report them, otherwise just make the same edit every 24 hours until they ban the particular sock you're using. Make arguments on the talk page that sound like someone who's been causing trouble lately. Find someone who's been bitching to the admin about being harassed, and poke them a few times.

The admins will quickly escalate into verbal violence, and waste countless hours tracking down everything you've done, and then blame whomever is their favorite puppet-master at the moment. I confess to some pangs of guilt because they are almost always wrong and some bystander gets banned or warned, but it all contributes to making the worst admins miserable, and doesn't affect the good ones much.

This can all be done more-or-less within the WP rules, doesn't hurt what information integrity exists within the "encyclopedic" pages (and anyone who would consider WP encyclopedic on a topic like Hamas should have their head examined), doesn't overly disrupt most well-intentioned editors, but drives the cabal nuts.

Posted by: karmafist

In response to what Everyking said above,


To me, the encyclopedia is a nice bonus, but making sure it does not harm people or is used as a propaganda tool by the wrong hands is a necessity.


I'll do whatever is in my power to stop that while keeping that promise to my friend.


QUOTE(Somey @ Tue 22nd August 2006, 10:28am) *

I don't mean this as a value judgement, but another way to look at it might be that vandalism gives would-be "cabalists" an easy, and highly visible, means of demonstrating their loyalty to the cause. Fixing "ur so ghey" insertions and page-blankings doesn't require the fixer to know anything, other than how to revert.

So in a way, this ultimately contributes to further insularity and mean-spirited elitism among the admins, especially the newer ones, because they're encouraged to take on an "us vs. them" attitude. Whereas, if there were never any vandalism whatsoever, it would be much more difficult to get noticed -- and thereby promoted.

This is all somewhat theoretical, of course...


If there are no new ones, what about the old ones?

Posted by: Somey

QUOTE(karmafist @ Fri 25th August 2006, 10:54pm) *
If there are no new ones, what about the old ones?

You mean, what would the existing admins do if vandalism simply disappeared? I guess that would depend on what they come up with to replace it.

If they didn't replace it, my guess would be that the admins who were promoted primarily for being "vandal-fighters" would sooner or later begin to feel they were superfluous and in over their heads. Many of them would get frustrated or bored, and probably move on to better things, such as painting, book-reading, or learning a musical instrument, assuming they had the patience for stuff like that.

As for the rest, some would become "cite nazis," some would just spend endless hours arguing about policy, some would comb the site looking for copyright violations... and the few who are capable of good proofreading would hopefully spend time doing that. IMO there's no question that the site would improve as a body of reference in the near term, but without an easily-recognizable enemy, people would just get bored with it. It would eventually take all the fun out of being a Wikipedian, because the gamesmanship that's inherent in the system now would go from being "us vs. them" to "us vs. us," which is far less enjoyable.

Again, aside from probably being a moot point, this is all theoretical, and anyone at Wikipedia who's reading this would think I'm nuts (assuming they don't already) for even suggesting the possibility. But that's how the human mind works - if you make it interesting, everyone will want a piece of the action. And if you make it boring, the opposite happens.

Call me wacky!

Posted by: karmafist

QUOTE(Somey @ Sat 26th August 2006, 2:51pm) *

QUOTE(karmafist @ Fri 25th August 2006, 10:54pm) *
If there are no new ones, what about the old ones?

You mean, what would the existing admins do if vandalism simply disappeared? I guess that would depend on what they come up with to replace it.

If they didn't replace it, my guess would be that the admins who were promoted primarily for being "vandal-fighters" would sooner or later begin to feel they were superfluous and in over their heads. Many of them would get frustrated or bored, and probably move on to better things, such as painting, book-reading, or learning a musical instrument, assuming they had the patience for stuff like that.

As for the rest, some would become "cite nazis," some would just spend endless hours arguing about policy, some would comb the site looking for copyright violations... and the few who are capable of good proofreading would hopefully spend time doing that. IMO there's no question that the site would improve as a body of reference in the near term, but without an easily-recognizable enemy, people would just get bored with it. It would eventually take all the fun out of being a Wikipedian, because the gamesmanship that's inherent in the system now would go from being "us vs. them" to "us vs. us," which is far less enjoyable.

Again, aside from probably being a moot point, this is all theoretical, and anyone at Wikipedia who's reading this would think I'm nuts (assuming they don't already) for even suggesting the possibility. But that's how the human mind works - if you make it interesting, everyone will want a piece of the action. And if you make it boring, the opposite happens.

Call me wacky!



Nah, you're not wacky, bud. I just disagree with the "us versus us" assessment, humans unfortunately always generally seem to find a "them" to find, whether it's other humans or nature or even parts of themselves.

Good idea though on the boring part. I'm glad that my friend stepped in, vandalism would seem to be nowhere near as effective as keeping your head down, being fairly bland, and looking like dozens of people.


Posted by: Somey

QUOTE(karmafist @ Sun 27th August 2006, 3:51am) *
I'm glad that my friend stepped in, vandalism would seem to be nowhere near as effective as keeping your head down, being fairly bland, and looking like dozens of people.

I'm glad too, but speaking strictly on my own behalf, another Siegenthaler-like episode would be very helpful -- at least in giving the media another example to cite in stories. That doesn't necessarily mean we should manufacture one, though... I suspect they (i.e., the media) were trying to puff something like that up with the Ken Lay situation, but there wasn't enough substance there, and Lay's family obviously didn't make a big deal over it.

That recent silliness with the Lake Michigan ferries may be the "best" we can expect now - they're just being too vigilant with the biographical articles, which is to their credit, as much as I hate to admit it! We could just sit around and wait for the next "spectacular failure," but there are enough patrollers there now (who know just what to look for) that it might be a rather long wait.

So it's an interesting problem, as I often like to say... I've always advocated concentrating on the systemic flaws and maybe the actions of the dozen or so "worst" admins anyway, but if there is another case of a libelous/untrue statement against a living person making it into main article space for a significant period of time, no reason why the media (and us, of course) shouldn't capitalize on it. They'd certainly do the same with us, I'd expect.

Posted by: LamontStormstar

QUOTE(karmafist @ Mon 21st August 2006, 5:47pm) *

First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.

-Gandhi


I remember that quote from a Taurin Fox artwork.


Anyway, so Karmafist whatever happened with you on Wikipedia? They banned you forever for the whole spreading your manifesto and that's that?


Posted by: Mr.Treason II

QUOTE(karmafist @ Thu 10th August 2006, 6:49pm) *

While I don't think it's a good long term strategy, vandalism is a good way to chip away at the credibility of Wikipedia, thus chipping away at the power of the corrupt people who control it.

I did some experiments with another sock, Broad Street, and here's what I found( the contribs are at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Broad_Street)



-Make It Fake, and Plausible: Remember Seigenthaler? While that wasn't true, there it wasn't inplausible -- looking at it, you wouldn't say at first glance "this is fake"

-Don't use cultural memes: Everything went swimmingly until I started to use the Colbert Elephant Meme.
People know that's false, so the plausibility goes out the window.

-Make edits slowly: Two days I had three edits, and nobody noticed. The next day I had five, and they caught on.

-Don't have edit summaries: They tend to draw attention, but that's not a hard and fast rule.

-Press the random button and go for lesser known articles: The reversion will be alot faster at say, George W. Bush, than some count from the 18th Century or some long lost theory.

-Remember the IP you're using: They can check that.


Best case scenario -- several new Siegenthaler Crises are made, thus destroying the credibility of Wikipedia, and its funding, forcing it to either become a corporate shill or charging users for an account(thus removing any pretense of being a "free and unbiased encyclopedia") or forcing them to reform.

Worst case scenario -- the majority of articles on Wikipedia are either protected or abandoned(again, removing the "free" pretense), and all new users are seen as potential suspects, creating an atmosphere where they are unlikely to become wiki-addicts and possibly spread the word of the poor behavior of the Cabalists.


I give you my full support in dealing with Wikipedia. They block genuinely useful editors like Ecoleetage. NaturalNews has a alternative that will nurture in the hands of people like you.

Posted by: melloden

QUOTE(Mr.Treason II @ Sun 10th July 2011, 5:11pm) *

QUOTE(karmafist @ Thu 10th August 2006, 6:49pm) *

While I don't think it's a good long term strategy, vandalism is a good way to chip away at the credibility of Wikipedia, thus chipping away at the power of the corrupt people who control it.

I did some experiments with another sock, Broad Street, and here's what I found( the contribs are at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Broad_Street)



-Make It Fake, and Plausible: Remember Seigenthaler? While that wasn't true, there it wasn't inplausible -- looking at it, you wouldn't say at first glance "this is fake"

-Don't use cultural memes: Everything went swimmingly until I started to use the Colbert Elephant Meme.
People know that's false, so the plausibility goes out the window.

-Make edits slowly: Two days I had three edits, and nobody noticed. The next day I had five, and they caught on.

-Don't have edit summaries: They tend to draw attention, but that's not a hard and fast rule.

-Press the random button and go for lesser known articles: The reversion will be alot faster at say, George W. Bush, than some count from the 18th Century or some long lost theory.

-Remember the IP you're using: They can check that.


Best case scenario -- several new Siegenthaler Crises are made, thus destroying the credibility of Wikipedia, and its funding, forcing it to either become a corporate shill or charging users for an account(thus removing any pretense of being a "free and unbiased encyclopedia") or forcing them to reform.

Worst case scenario -- the majority of articles on Wikipedia are either protected or abandoned(again, removing the "free" pretense), and all new users are seen as potential suspects, creating an atmosphere where they are unlikely to become wiki-addicts and possibly spread the word of the poor behavior of the Cabalists.


I give you my full support in dealing with Wikipedia. They block genuinely useful editors like Ecoleetage. NaturalNews has a alternative that will nurture in the hands of people like you.

Is there a reason why we're restarting a thread from 2006?

Posted by: carbuncle

QUOTE(Mr.Treason II @ Sun 10th July 2011, 5:11pm) *

I give you my full support in dealing with Wikipedia. They block genuinely useful editors like Ecoleetage. NaturalNews has a alternative that will nurture in the hands of people like you.

Yes, NaturalNews http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/NaturalNews. If you're a fan of David Icke.

Can one of the mods please tell Mr. T II to quit resurrecting old threads?

Posted by: Herschelkrustofsky

T... for II... and II... for T...

No, we can't tell him that. All we can do is close threads if it seems really inappropriate to have them open. I wouldn't sweat it right now.

Posted by: Alison

QUOTE(Herschelkrustofsky @ Sun 10th July 2011, 12:59pm) *

T... for II... and II... for T...

No, we can't tell him that. All we can do is close threads if it seems really inappropriate to have them open. I wouldn't sweat it right now.

Every time I keep thinking it's 'The Joy' who's restarting the thread and I boggle a bit, then realize it's just the same avatar hrmph.gif

Posted by: The Joy

QUOTE(Alison @ Sun 10th July 2011, 5:20pm) *

QUOTE(Herschelkrustofsky @ Sun 10th July 2011, 12:59pm) *

T... for II... and II... for T...

No, we can't tell him that. All we can do is close threads if it seems really inappropriate to have them open. I wouldn't sweat it right now.

Every time I keep thinking it's 'The Joy' who's restarting the thread and I boggle a bit, the realize it's just the same avatar hrmph.gif


Oh, that's what everyone is talking about. I have avatars turned off so I don't see everyone's avatar.

You're a thief, Mr. TT. angry.gif

Posted by: EricBarbour

yecch.gif

Posted by: Milton Roe

QUOTE(Mr.Treason II @ Sun 10th July 2011, 10:11am) *

QUOTE(karmafist @ Thu 10th August 2006, 6:49pm) *




Stop posting to 5 year-old threads, you crazy bastard.

Image

Posted by: Mr.Treason II

QUOTE(Daniel Brandt @ Fri 11th August 2006, 7:10am) *

What would I change on a wikifork?

I'd install a good local search engine so that I can block all bots and scrapers. Then I'd be entitled to bragging rights that if you use my my search and my fork, neither Google nor AOL nor anyone else will be storing all your search terms forever, because we are cool and we don't keep search records, and we keep out those nasty corporations that want to track you forever, and then eventually sell you out to Homeland Security.

And yes, no anonymity for editors.


There is a NaturalPedia made by Natural News. You can get a honest encyclopedia from them (as long as the FDA don't get into it.)

Posted by: victim of censorship

QUOTE(Somey @ Mon 21st August 2006, 3:34pm) *

If I'm not mistaken, since posting that sewage-analogy business on the 10th, Mr. Karmafist has had something of a change of heart, agreed to be more "constructive" and so forth on Wikipedia, and has even been unblocked... That isn't to say he's sold out, of course. But maybe he was coming off a bit negatively, even by WR standards, and he decided to give the whole "engagement strategy" thing one more shot.

I often wonder - what would happen to me if I started editing Wikipedia? Probably nothing particularly bad, to be honest, since I'd probably avoid controversial subjects and be a stickler for accuracy and grammatical correctness. (I might even become a "Cite Nazi"... Wouldn't that be fun...)

I guess what I'm trying to say is that there's constructive activity on Wikipedia, and destructive activity on Wikipedia, but I'm against both kinds. The best advice I can (and generally do) give people is to just avoid like the plague!

Just my $0.02, as they say.



Wikipedia is a cesspool of sewerage the size of lake Michigan, with a black cloud of flies hovering over it.

Posted by: EricBarbour

I was just gonna say.......

If a lad was serious about vandalizing Wikipedia, there's a possibility that I'd run into today.

Found an IP address that was going in and vandalizing sports statistics. Just one or two per day,
very quietly, and claiming they were "corrections". I checked a few of the British football stats
against a copy of the Sky Sports Yearbook that my neighbor happens to own (he's an expatriate
Brit and a big "soccer" fan).
And sure enough, the Wikipedia articles had some carefully-placed errors. Uncaught.

Now mind you, one of the major unspoken reasons why Wikipedia enjoys such popularity is because of
its massive database of sports trivia. About 40% of the whole database, estimated. Males both young
and old enjoy having an easy online reference for stats, especially since yearbooks are costly and
there are no other comprehensive stat websites that are freely available.
There are things like baseball-reference.com and soccerstats.com, but they have limitations,
or charge money for full access.

As a result, Wikipedia gets a lot of love from the sports-fan public.

Imagine the rage, if sports fans found out there were people deliberately introducing errors----
into all those millions of numerical stats on WP. Random errors that are VERY difficult to catch.
Especially since, no doubt, a lot of cash bets are settled with Wikipedia sports data every day.

Just think of it.

Posted by: thekohser

QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Sat 23rd July 2011, 1:41am) *

Imagine the rage, if sports fans found out there were people deliberately introducing errors----
into all those millions of numerical stats on WP. Random errors that are VERY difficult to catch.
Especially since, no doubt, a lot of cash bets are settled with Wikipedia sports data every day.

Just think of it.

Just think if the errors have been inserted by an intern working on orders from Sky Sports Yearbook!

Posted by: It's the blimp, Frank

QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Sat 23rd July 2011, 5:41am) *

Especially since, no doubt, a lot of cash bets are settled with Wikipedia sports data every day.

Just think of it.
A lot of gullible people may rely upon Wikipedia for information, but I have trouble imagining that sports bettors would be so careless.

Posted by: Zoloft

QUOTE(It's the blimp, Frank @ Sat 23rd July 2011, 8:55am) *

QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Sat 23rd July 2011, 5:41am) *

Especially since, no doubt, a lot of cash bets are settled with Wikipedia sports data every day.

Just think of it.
A lot of gullible people may rely upon Wikipedia for information, but I have trouble imagining that sports bettors would be so careless.

I believe he meant 'people making bets with drunken friends at bars.'

Posted by: lilburne

QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Sat 23rd July 2011, 6:41am) *


Now mind you, one of the major unspoken reasons why Wikipedia enjoys such popularity is because of
its massive database of sports trivia. About 40% of the whole database, estimated. Males both young
and old enjoy having an easy online reference for stats, especially since yearbooks are costly and
there are no other comprehensive stat websites that are freely available.
There are things like baseball-reference.com and soccerstats.com, but they have limitations,
or charge money for full access.


Lists of stats are dead enough that even WP editors will be hard pressed to drain any more life from them. So only accuracy is important in those articles.

And there I think we have it. The articles on main subjects, even the biographies are unreadable. I don't suppose I'm alone in that opinion. Even if the article is 100% accurate, the style is so dreary and tedious, that after a paragraph or two one wants to be reading something else. Have they ever done an analysis as to the average time a non-editor spend on a page? I suspect that its a matter of seconds. or IOW the articles are NOT informing anyone about anything.

The challenge to wikipeda will come from dedicated subject websites that are informative and provide a coherent narrative. Chaining quotes from multiple sources without copyright violations, or plagiarism doesn't cut it.