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Democracy And Inquiry, And Da Mockrazy Of WP |
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Jonny Cache |
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Dymanic [Sic] Page —Brain a liitle scattered right now, and the Trick-Or-Treaters (TOT's) will be knocking down our door anon — there's a joke there somewhere about anonymous tots in φunny costumes, but no time for WikiPuns now — so I'll need to use this page as a sorting shelf for tracking down the references that I have in mind, starting with whatever I can find right off and working my way.bak to the primary sources. Jon Awbrey Awbrey, S.M., and Awbrey, J.L. (May 2001), "Conceptual Barriers to Creating Integrative Universities", Organization : The Interdisciplinary Journal of Organization, Theory, and Society 8(2), Sage Publications, London, UK, pp. 269–284. Abstract. Awbrey, S.M., and Awbrey, J.L. (September 1999), "Organizations of Learning or Learning Organizations : The Challenge of Creating Integrative Universities for the Next Century", Second International Conference of the Journal 'Organization', Re-Organizing Knowledge, Trans-Forming Institutions : Knowing, Knowledge, and the University in the 21st Century, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA. Eprint. Awbrey, J.L., and Awbrey, S.M. (Autumn 1995), "Interpretation as Action : The Risk of Inquiry", Inquiry : Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 15(1), pp. 40–52. Eprint. Awbrey, S.M., and Scott, D.K., { various papers to sort out later} Awbrey, S.M., and Scott, D.K., "Educating Critical Thinkers for a Democratic Society", Eprint. This post has been edited by Jonny Cache:
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Jonny Cache |
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Eureka! Here is one of the quotes I was looking for — QUOTE(Awbrey, S.M., and Scott, D.K. @ Aug 1993) The importance of preparing individuals for their role as citizens in a democratic society is well documented. However, the reverse assertion is less broadly understood. That is, a democratic environment, in which dialogue and critical thinking are prized, is not only facilitative of but vital to the full development of intelligence. Philosopher Hilary Putnam (1992) refers to what he calls the epistemological justification of democracy which he attributes to John Dewey, "The claim, then, is this: Democracy is not just one form of social life among other workable forms of social life; it is the precondition for the full application of intelligence to the solution of social problems" (p. 180)¹. ¹ Putnam, H. (1992), Renewing Philosophy, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA. Source. Awbrey, S.M., and Scott, D.K. (August 1993), "Educating Critical Thinkers for a Democratic Society", presented at 'Critical Thinking : The Reform of Education and the New Global Economic Realities', Thirteenth Annual International Conference of The Center for Critical Thinking, Rohnert, CA. Archived, ERIC Document ED4703251. Eprint. Jon Awbrey This post has been edited by Jonny Cache:
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Jonny Cache |
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QUOTE(Moulton @ Thu 1st November 2007, 10:49am) QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 1st November 2007, 10:22am) QUOTE(Susan Awbrey and David Scott @ Aug 1993) Philosopher Hilary Putnam (1992) refers to what he calls the epistemological justification of democracy which he attributes to John Dewey, "The claim, then, is this: Democracy is not just one form of social life among other workable forms of social life; it is the precondition for the full application of intelligence to the solution of social problems.
What do Putnam or Dewey say about the relationship between Majority Rule vs Consensus Building in regards to the solution of vexing social problems? It occurs to me that the paradoxes of Condorcet and Arrow reveal the necessity for deeper thinking about solving the problem of devising a satisfactory socio-political choice among competing alternatives. From my pers-pective, Peirce is the sun whose light Dewey and Putnam but reflect, as in a glass, or a moon. This is actually the very issue that dragged me willy, but mostly nilly into Wikipedia, on account of the fact that Peirce articulated a very careful, detailed, and subtle Social Theory Of Inquiry (STOI) that is commonly dis-articulated as a Consensus Theory Of Truth (CTOT). To be succinct, STOI ≠CTOT, far φreakin from it! I remember that it was various folks on the Peirce List griping about the abject ignorance of Wikipedia articles on Peirce matters — and the recalcitrant ignorance of particular editors who refused to budge when anyone who knew better tried to correct them — that brought me some of my earliest words of Wikipedia's existence. But I didn't bother looking to see what all the fuss was about until the selfsame nonsense began to litter the shores of my Google searches. But I will have to break for more coffee and look up a few links … Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) This post has been edited by Jonny Cache:
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AB |
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QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 1st November 2007, 2:22pm) Eureka! Here is one of the quotes I was looking for — QUOTE(Awbrey, S.M., and Scott, D.K. @ Aug 1993) The importance of preparing individuals for their role as citizens in a democratic society is well documented. However, the reverse assertion is less broadly understood. That is, a democratic environment, in which dialogue and critical thinking are prized, is not only facilitative of but vital to the full development of intelligence. Philosopher Hilary Putnam (1992) refers to what he calls the epistemological justification of democracy which he attributes to John Dewey, "The claim, then, is this: Democracy is not just one form of social life among other workable forms of social life; it is the precondition for the full application of intelligence to the solution of social problems" (p. 180)¹. ¹ Putnam, H. (1992), Renewing Philosophy, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA. Source. Awbrey, S.M., and Scott, D.K. (August 1993), "Educating Critical Thinkers for a Democratic Society", presented at 'Critical Thinking : The Reform of Education and the New Global Economic Realities', Thirteenth Annual International Conference of The Center for Critical Thinking, Rohnert, CA. Archived, ERIC Document ED4703251. Eprint. Jon Awbrey QUOTE('Thomas Jefferson') A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine. QUOTE('Father Gassalasca Jape') What, what! Dom Pedro, you desire to go Back to Brazil to end your days in quiet? Why, what assurance have you 'twould be so? 'Tis not so long since you were in a riot, And your dear subjects showed a will to fly at Your throat and shake you like a rat. You know That empires are ungrateful; are you certain Republics are less handy to get hurt in?
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Jonny Cache |
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QUOTE(AB @ Thu 1st November 2007, 12:32pm) QUOTE('Thomas Jefferson') A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine.
QUOTE('Father Gassalasca Jape') What, what! Dom Pedro, you desire to go    Back to Brazil to end your days in quiet? Why, what assurance have you 'twould be so?    'Tis not so long since you were in a riot,    And your dear subjects showed a will to fly at Your throat and shake you like a rat. You know That empires are ungrateful; are you certain Republics are less handy to get hurt in?
AB, The item on the table is not the nature of democracy, but the relation between democracy and inquiry. Inquiry is a general but handy term that encompasses everything from everyday problem solving to scientific method, while deftly side-stepping those Fire In The Night Feyerabendians who raise such a whoop and a holler as to whether there's a method to the divine madness of science or not. Jon Awbrey This post has been edited by Jonny Cache:
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QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Thu 1st November 2007, 4:51pm) I think we might be over-emphasizing the "mob" aspect of democracies. Modern democracies are usually characterized by free information flow, numerous independent power centers, and plentiful opportunities to make course corrections. Democracies in this sense should be good hosts and sponsors of inquiry.
Thanks, Spiel, that's more on track with what Peirce, Dewey, and Putnam were saying. Not to mention Ben Franklin & Co. I hope nobody was thinking Wikipedia when I said Democracy. Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) This post has been edited by Jonny Cache:
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AB |
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QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:51pm) I think we might be over-emphasizing the "mob" aspect of democracies. Modern democracies are usually characterized by free information flow, numerous independent power centers and plentiful opportunities to make course corrections. Democracies in this sense should be good hosts and sponsors of inquiry. You realise in most so-called democracies, not to mention most every government in the world, most laws were written by people who are now dead. Hence, we have a world full of necrocracies. In any case, what free information flow? Pretty much anywhere you go, there is some sort of restriction on defamatory speech. In some places, it is stronger than others. For example, anti-defamation laws are stronger in the UK, Australia, and Canada than in the US. There are also related laws regarding privacy or false light in many places. Then there's copyright, in some cases restricting not only your right to write things that someone else happens to have already written, but also restricting technology that has the potential to be used to violate copyright, even if it has other uses. And then the US considers strong cryptography a weapon which cannot be exported. Fortunately, OpenBSD is based in Canada, from which strong cryptography can be exported.
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QUOTE(AB @ Thu 1st November 2007, 3:28pm) QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:51pm) I think we might be over-emphasizing the "mob" aspect of democracies. Modern democracies are usually characterized by free information flow, numerous independent power centers and plentiful opportunities to make course corrections. Democracies in this sense should be good hosts and sponsors of inquiry. You realise in most so-called democracies, not to mention most every government in the world, most laws were written by people who are now dead. Hence, we have a world full of necrocracies. In any case, what free information flow? Pretty much anywhere you go, there is some sort of restriction on defamatory speech. In some places, it is stronger than others. For example, anti-defamation laws are stronger in the UK, Australia, and Canada than in the US. There are also related laws regarding privacy or false light in many places. Then there's copyright, in some cases restricting not only your right to write things that someone else happens to have already written, but also restricting technology that has the potential to be used to violate copyright, even if it has other uses. And then the US considers strong cryptography a weapon which cannot be exported. Fortunately, OpenBSD is based in Canada, from which strong cryptography can be exported. These are hardly draconian restrictions on information flow. The specific merit of each of these restrictions can be debated and we might frequently come out on the same side. I indicated above that one element of a democracy is the presence of frequent opportunities to make course corrections. This should address your concern about rule from the grave. None of the nation states you cite are prefect democracies, but they are pretty good concerning information flow. Now let's give Jonny and company the needed space to conduct a more focused discussion on "Democracy and Inquiry."
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QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Thu 1st November 2007, 11:27pm) These are hardly draconian restrictions on information flow. Why does everyone keep assuming I am pro free speech? I am strongly pro-privacy, and rather anti-defamation too, particularly when it comes to websites with large numbers of readers. Often, protecting people's privacy and reputation involves censorship, so I am clearly not in favour of free speech.
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QUOTE(Amarkov @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 12:12am) Democracy would work pretty well on Wikipedia, actually. A lot of good things happened back when there were votes. But then people seemed to get this strange idea that not voting was a long tradition. Now if you try to decide something by voting, someone will swoop down, delete your poll, and say "CONSENSUS NOT NUMBERS!" And people have begun to ditch even the pretense that Wikipedian consensus takes into account the opinions of those who disagree with the "correct" viewpoint. See, consensus does not justify unethical action. Just because the WP community has a consensus in favour of defamation does not mean that defamation is okay. Also, when bans become a way of rewriting the dictionary to redefine consensus in a way that excludes some people's opinions, the word becomes rather meaningless. Also, in order for voting to be Sybil attack proof, votes would have to be weighted according to how many good articles / featured articles the user had written or helped to write. (And, seeing as how the credit would often have to be divided among multiple editors, it could get complex.) This would solve the sockpuppetry problem by making it irrelevant, so people could use as many sockpuppets as they liked.
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QUOTE(AB @ Thu 1st November 2007, 5:32pm) QUOTE(Amarkov @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 12:12am) Democracy would work pretty well on Wikipedia, actually. A lot of good things happened back when there were votes. But then people seemed to get this strange idea that not voting was a long tradition. Now if you try to decide something by voting, someone will swoop down, delete your poll, and say "CONSENSUS NOT NUMBERS!" And people have begun to ditch even the pretense that Wikipedian consensus takes into account the opinions of those who disagree with the "correct" viewpoint. See, consensus does not justify unethical action. Just because the WP community has a consensus in favour of defamation does not mean that defamation is okay. Also, when bans become a way of rewriting the dictionary to redefine consensus in a way that excludes some people's opinions, the word becomes rather meaningless. Also, in order for voting to be Sybil attack proof, votes would have to be weighted according to how many good articles / featured articles the user had written or helped to write. (And, seeing as how the credit would often have to be divided among multiple editors, it could get complex.) This would solve the sockpuppetry problem by making it irrelevant, so people could use as many sockpuppets as they liked. I don't claim that a pure voting system would be perfect (although I certainly don't think that weighting votes based on how many featured articles one has is good). But it would certainly be better than people pretending to listen to the community and then doing whatever they want to.
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AB |
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QUOTE(Amarkov @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 12:43am) I don't claim that a pure voting system would be perfect (although I certainly don't think that weighting votes based on how many featured articles one has is good). Voting is susceptible to Sybil attacks, and hence people take measures to stop sockpuppetry. However, the cure is worse than the disease. Sockpuppetry investigations regularly involve the disclosure of private information, not to mention the accusation can be very dehumanising to those who are innocent. Better to find some way to back sockpuppetry irrelevant. QUOTE(Amarkov @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 12:43am) But it would certainly be better than people pretending to listen to the community and then doing whatever they want to. The WP community does not define ethics. While consensus is fine for matters not of great ethical import, if the community asks you to do something you feel is unethical, you should ignore them and do what you think is right.
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AB |
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QUOTE(Moulton @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 1:00am) QUOTE(AB @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:54pm) The WP community does not define ethics. While consensus is fine for matters not of great ethical import, if the community asks you to do something you feel is unethical, you should ignore them and do what you think is right. This practice corresponds to Kohlberg's Sixth Stage of Ethical Reasoning. It's also synonymous with tilting at windmills. You can expect the windmill to unceremoniously pitch you over the precipice and into the chasm. Well, I got banned anyway, just for having been molested as a child. And, looking back at it all, these are my regrets. Ultimately, if you break their rules, it is a very little thing to them. Worst case scenario, they block you and move on... and if they don't, that's their problem. But you, you have to live with what you do. This post has been edited by AB:
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WhispersOfWisdom |
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QUOTE(AB @ Thu 1st November 2007, 7:32pm) QUOTE(Amarkov @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 12:12am) Democracy would work pretty well on Wikipedia, actually. A lot of good things happened back when there were votes. But then people seemed to get this strange idea that not voting was a long tradition. Now if you try to decide something by voting, someone will swoop down, delete your poll, and say "CONSENSUS NOT NUMBERS!" And people have begun to ditch even the pretense that Wikipedian consensus takes into account the opinions of those who disagree with the "correct" viewpoint. See, consensus does not justify unethical action. Just because the WP community has a consensus in favour of defamation does not mean that defamation is okay. Also, when bans become a way of rewriting the dictionary to redefine consensus in a way that excludes some people's opinions, the word becomes rather meaningless. Also, in order for voting to be Sybil attack proof, votes would have to be weighted according to how many good articles / featured articles the user had written or helped to write. (And, seeing as how the credit would often have to be divided among multiple editors, it could get complex.) This would solve the sockpuppetry problem by making it irrelevant, so people could use as many sockpuppets as they liked. That is where the cabal comes in and works like a charm. If I look over your shoulder and you look over mine, then as long as we are on the same team, and share the same ideals, who needs sockpuppets? The more powerful cabals at WP depend on votes coming in on their side. They all make sure to e-mail one another on the outside so as to not be seen canvassing.
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QUOTE(WhispersOfWisdom @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 1:13am) QUOTE(AB @ Thu 1st November 2007, 7:32pm) QUOTE(Amarkov @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 12:12am) Democracy would work pretty well on Wikipedia, actually. A lot of good things happened back when there were votes. But then people seemed to get this strange idea that not voting was a long tradition. Now if you try to decide something by voting, someone will swoop down, delete your poll, and say "CONSENSUS NOT NUMBERS!" And people have begun to ditch even the pretense that Wikipedian consensus takes into account the opinions of those who disagree with the "correct" viewpoint. See, consensus does not justify unethical action. Just because the WP community has a consensus in favour of defamation does not mean that defamation is okay. Also, when bans become a way of rewriting the dictionary to redefine consensus in a way that excludes some people's opinions, the word becomes rather meaningless. Also, in order for voting to be Sybil attack proof, votes would have to be weighted according to how many good articles / featured articles the user had written or helped to write. (And, seeing as how the credit would often have to be divided among multiple editors, it could get complex.) This would solve the sockpuppetry problem by making it irrelevant, so people could use as many sockpuppets as they liked. That is where the cabal comes in and works like a charm. If I look over your shoulder and you look over mine, then as long as we are on the same team, and share the same ideals, who needs sockpuppets? The more powerful cabals at WP depend on votes coming in on their side. They all make sure to e-mail one another on the outside so as to not be seen canvassing. actually they IM each other in real time.
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QUOTE(Piperdown @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:17pm) QUOTE(WhispersOfWisdom @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 1:13am) QUOTE(AB @ Thu 1st November 2007, 7:32pm) QUOTE(Amarkov @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 12:12am) Democracy would work pretty well on Wikipedia, actually. A lot of good things happened back when there were votes. But then people seemed to get this strange idea that not voting was a long tradition. Now if you try to decide something by voting, someone will swoop down, delete your poll, and say "CONSENSUS NOT NUMBERS!" And people have begun to ditch even the pretense that Wikipedian consensus takes into account the opinions of those who disagree with the "correct" viewpoint. See, consensus does not justify unethical action. Just because the WP community has a consensus in favour of defamation does not mean that defamation is okay. Also, when bans become a way of rewriting the dictionary to redefine consensus in a way that excludes some people's opinions, the word becomes rather meaningless. Also, in order for voting to be Sybil attack proof, votes would have to be weighted according to how many good articles / featured articles the user had written or helped to write. (And, seeing as how the credit would often have to be divided among multiple editors, it could get complex.) This would solve the sockpuppetry problem by making it irrelevant, so people could use as many sockpuppets as they liked. That is where the cabal comes in and works like a charm. If I look over your shoulder and you look over mine, then as long as we are on the same team, and share the same ideals, who needs sockpuppets? The more powerful cabals at WP depend on votes coming in on their side. They all make sure to e-mail one another on the outside so as to not be seen canvassing. actually they IM each other in real time. Correctomundo!
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QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:24pm) Last time I checked, there were approximately 5.7 × 10^6 accounts on the English Wikipedia. Figuring an average of 100 sockpuppets per person, that gives us approximately 5.7 × 10^4 = 57,000 real people registered on the English Wikipedia. I used to do both random-sampled and full population self-selected respondent surveys on association memberships of about that size. Would someone please tell me what they think a reasonable percentage for a quorum would be? Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) Good question. Most often it requires JzG and about 4 or 5 friends in his cabal. Then, he goes to work banning and scaring away anyone with a different point of view than his or the groups. Answer: JzG plus 4. By the way...did he not quit a few weeks ago...again? Must be new meds. This post has been edited by WhispersOfWisdom:
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QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 1:24am) Last time I checked, there were approximately 5.7 × 10^6 accounts on the English Wikipedia. Figuring an average of 100 sockpuppets per person, that gives us approximately 5.7 × 10^4 = 57,000 real people registered on the English Wikipedia. I used to do both random-sampled and full population self-selected respondent surveys on association memberships of about that size. Would someone please tell me what they think a reasonable percentage for a quorum would be? Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) MainSpace Kilobyte Pts voted FOR vs MSKBP vote Against. 3/4's req'd for "consensus". just throwing shit up against the wall, but with NPOV just the facts ma'am numbers that can't be manhandled - except by adding gratuitous fluff to mainspace to give undue weight to your own voting power - but that would take some serious sissyphissing. this would all work in SV's favour, she should lobby for something like this. of course her heavy KB account is in MYSTERIOUS MOTHBALL MODE. with no explanation. der jimbo silencio!
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QUOTE(Piperdown @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 1:12am) cure for puppet shows: either require unique ISP email registration (as per WRev), Especially given the number of cheap dial-up providers, getting multiple ISP emails isn't that hard. University emails, harder, but most people don't have those. Also privacy concerns... but then I suppose it's better to be told up front you don't get to have privacy, if you don't like it don't edit, than to be outed after the fact. QUOTE(Piperdown @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 1:12am) or real name registration by credit card (no charge) ala Amazon.com, which requires that to do "real name" reviews (right, Gary?). You realise a third of the children born into this world do not get birth certificates? Hence, requiring legal ID would increase the already highly prevalent problem of classism. Not to mention even more privacy concerns than above... with the same mitigating factor that it's better to be told up front than outed after the fact. QUOTE(Piperdown @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 1:12am) How to create a WP Democracy: - each WP user gets to vote - each WP's vote is weighted - Vote weighting done by WP editing points score accumateld by that user - editing points earned by mainspace edit changes as measured in"kb"'s added by that user. this shouldn't be too hard to compute by some sort of bot And hence, sockpuppetry would be irrelevant. I like.
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QUOTE(WhispersOfWisdom @ Thu 1st November 2007, 9:31pm) QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:24pm) Last time I checked, there were approximately 5.7 × 10^6 accounts on the English Wikipedia. Figuring an average of 100 sockpuppets per person, that gives us approximately 5.7 × 10^4 = 57,000 real people registered on the English Wikipedia. I used to do both random-sampled and full population self-selected respondent surveys on association memberships of about that size. Would someone please tell me what they think a reasonable percentage for a quorum would be? Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) Good question. Most often it requires JzG and about 4 or 5 friends in his cabal. Then, he goes to work banning and scaring away anyone with a different point of view than his or the groups. Answer: JzG plus 4. By the way … did he not quit a few weeks ago … again? Must be new meds. U R 2 Y's 4 Me !!!Yup, that's what it takes for a "community ban". Or 6 out 10 accounters showing up in a 24-hour period on some obscure ANI page is enough to certify that you have "exhausted the patience" of that undemunerable community. But to get a "consensus" that determines the fate of an out-of-the-way article, a half-dozen socks of a single person with the optional nudging and winking of any given Admin that happens to wander by or get recruited to weigh in is usually enough to tip the scales of "justice". Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) This post has been edited by Jonny Cache:
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QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:42pm) QUOTE(WhispersOfWisdom @ Thu 1st November 2007, 9:31pm) QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:24pm) Last time I checked, there were approximately 5.7 × 10^6 accounts on the English Wikipedia. Figuring an average of 100 sockpuppets per person, that gives us approximately 5.7 × 10^4 = 57,000 real people registered on the English Wikipedia. I used to do both random-sampled and full population self-selected respondent surveys on association memberships of about that size. Would someone please tell me what they think a reasonable percentage for a quorum would be? Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) Good question. Most often it requires JzG and about 4 or 5 friends in his cabal. Then, he goes to work banning and scaring away anyone with a different point of view than his or the groups. Answer: JzG plus 4. By the way … did he not quit a few weeks ago … again? Must be new meds. U R 2 Y's 4 Me !!!Yup, that's what it takes for a "community ban". Or 6 out 10 accounters showing up in a 24-hour period on some obscure ANI page is enough to certify that you have "exhausted the patience" of that undemunerable community. But to get a "consensus" that determines the fate of an out-of-the-way article, a half-dozen socks of a single person with the optional nudging and winking of any given Admin that happens to wander by or get recruited to weigh in is usually enough to tip the scales of "justice". Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) Add a closer that got the nod and that is day!
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QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Fri 2nd November 2007, 1:42am) QUOTE(WhispersOfWisdom @ Thu 1st November 2007, 9:31pm) QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 1st November 2007, 8:24pm) Last time I checked, there were approximately 5.7 × 10^6 accounts on the English Wikipedia. Figuring an average of 100 sockpuppets per person, that gives us approximately 5.7 × 10^4 = 57,000 real people registered on the English Wikipedia. I used to do both random-sampled and full population self-selected respondent surveys on association memberships of about that size. Would someone please tell me what they think a reasonable percentage for a quorum would be? Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) Good question. Most often it requires JzG and about 4 or 5 friends in his cabal. Then, he goes to work banning and scaring away anyone with a different point of view than his or the groups. Answer: JzG plus 4. By the way … did he not quit a few weeks ago … again? Must be new meds. U R 2 Y's 4 Me !!!Yup, that's what it takes for a "community ban". Or 6 out 10 accounters showing up in a 24-hour period on some obscure ANI page is enough to certify that you have "exhausted the patience" of that undemunerable community. But to get a "consensus" that determines the fate of an out-of-the-way article, a half-dozen socks of a single person with the optional nudging and winking of any given Admin that happens to wander by or get recruited to weigh in is usually enough to tip the scales of "justice". Jonny (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/cool.gif) I got a Gerard ban. A community of one. With lots of secret lobbying from Slimmy and Gary's sock show. All off-record.
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