Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-05 Thread Samuel Klein
On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 7:26 AM, Carcharothcarcharot...@googlemail.com wrote:
 That's a very good idea.

+1

The name strikes me as the biggest drawback of the current system.


 Carcharoth

 On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 11:36 AM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 I think there's a terminology issue.

 We cannot refer to this as a trust system, however Wikitrust brands it.
 We just can't. It misleads too many, and implies too much.

 Call it a text tracing system or a gadget to highlight text origins
 instead. It's a lot less glamorous, sounds alot less dramatic, doesn't get
 the dollars - but it's got zero capability of misleading.

 FT2

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 8:37 PM, James Alexander jameso...@gmail.comwrote:

 How would the blame maps work with people editing around vandalism? For
 example someone either blanks the page or does extensive vandalism to it
 (especially over the course of a couple days or a couple users). I would
 imagine it would be fairly easy if the bad contributions just got
 rolledback
 but would the old blamemaps still be reinstated if someone went in and
 manually copy/pasted the old version (or something very close) in or would
 the system count it as a new contribution?

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 3:12 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

  2009/8/31 David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com:
 
   I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
   interface without adequate testing.
 
 
  It appears we're not and Wired completely jumped the gun. There is no
  timeframe for release of this thing even as an optional extra.
 
 
  - d.
 
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-05 Thread Sage Ross
On Sat, Sep 5, 2009 at 12:33 AM, Samuel Kleinmeta...@gmail.com wrote:


 The name strikes me as the biggest drawback of the current system.


I think de Alfaro put it well himself in his quote from Information Week:

'Despite its name, WikiTrust can't directly measure whether text is
trustworthy. It can only measure user agreement, said de Alfaro.
That's what it does. '

http://www.informationweek.com/news/internet/security/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=219500669

-Sage

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread James Alexander
How would the blame maps work with people editing around vandalism? For
example someone either blanks the page or does extensive vandalism to it
(especially over the course of a couple days or a couple users). I would
imagine it would be fairly easy if the bad contributions just got rolledback
but would the old blamemaps still be reinstated if someone went in and
manually copy/pasted the old version (or something very close) in or would
the system count it as a new contribution?

On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 3:12 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

 2009/8/31 David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com:

  I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
  interface without adequate testing.


 It appears we're not and Wired completely jumped the gun. There is no
 timeframe for release of this thing even as an optional extra.


 - d.

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-- 
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread FT2
I think there's a terminology issue.

We cannot refer to this as a trust system, however Wikitrust brands it.
We just can't. It misleads too many, and implies too much.

Call it a text tracing system or a gadget to highlight text origins
instead. It's a lot less glamorous, sounds alot less dramatic, doesn't get
the dollars - but it's got zero capability of misleading.

FT2

On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 8:37 PM, James Alexander jameso...@gmail.comwrote:

 How would the blame maps work with people editing around vandalism? For
 example someone either blanks the page or does extensive vandalism to it
 (especially over the course of a couple days or a couple users). I would
 imagine it would be fairly easy if the bad contributions just got
 rolledback
 but would the old blamemaps still be reinstated if someone went in and
 manually copy/pasted the old version (or something very close) in or would
 the system count it as a new contribution?

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 3:12 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

  2009/8/31 David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com:
 
   I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
   interface without adequate testing.
 
 
  It appears we're not and Wired completely jumped the gun. There is no
  timeframe for release of this thing even as an optional extra.
 
 
  - d.
 
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread Carcharoth
That's a very good idea.

Carcharoth

On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 11:36 AM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 I think there's a terminology issue.

 We cannot refer to this as a trust system, however Wikitrust brands it.
 We just can't. It misleads too many, and implies too much.

 Call it a text tracing system or a gadget to highlight text origins
 instead. It's a lot less glamorous, sounds alot less dramatic, doesn't get
 the dollars - but it's got zero capability of misleading.

 FT2

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 8:37 PM, James Alexander jameso...@gmail.comwrote:

 How would the blame maps work with people editing around vandalism? For
 example someone either blanks the page or does extensive vandalism to it
 (especially over the course of a couple days or a couple users). I would
 imagine it would be fairly easy if the bad contributions just got
 rolledback
 but would the old blamemaps still be reinstated if someone went in and
 manually copy/pasted the old version (or something very close) in or would
 the system count it as a new contribution?

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 3:12 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

  2009/8/31 David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com:
 
   I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
   interface without adequate testing.
 
 
  It appears we're not and Wired completely jumped the gun. There is no
  timeframe for release of this thing even as an optional extra.
 
 
  - d.
 
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread Andrew Gray
2009/8/31 James Alexander jameso...@gmail.com:
 How would the blame maps work with people editing around vandalism? For
 example someone either blanks the page or does extensive vandalism to it
 (especially over the course of a couple days or a couple users). I would
 imagine it would be fairly easy if the bad contributions just got rolledback
 but would the old blamemaps still be reinstated if someone went in and
 manually copy/pasted the old version (or something very close) in or would
 the system count it as a new contribution?

I haven't been following this in any particular detail - I have no
intent of using the system! - but this is certainly an issue they have
thought of and planned for; they currently describe the system as
robust to cut-and-pase, delete-and-reinsert, and most type of
attacks...

I suspect the papers linked at the bottom here -
http://wikitrust.soe.ucsc.edu/index.php/Main_Page - go into a bit more
detail about the algorithm.

-- 
- Andrew Gray
  andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread Nathan Russell
I think there's a real risk here, to be even more blunt.

Calling it a trust system risks someone looking at a piece of text and
saying oh, look, this is trusted, so i can
-rely on this as advice before doing something dangerous/in making a
medical decision/etc
-use this as my sole source in writing my college paper
-take for granted the claim this text makes that a living person
cheated on his spouse (or worse possibilities
-assume this means WP as a group/the foundation itself makes the claim
that *I* cheated on someone
... and then, when the claim proves to be false, become angry and go
after the Foundation?  Not necessarily legally, though  I fear
that if they make an assumption this text is highlighted as high
trust, so it can be trusted, and are told that this is the meaning on
a help page, we could be liable.

Nathan

On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 6:36 AM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 I think there's a terminology issue.

 We cannot refer to this as a trust system, however Wikitrust brands it.
 We just can't. It misleads too many, and implies too much.

 Call it a text tracing system or a gadget to highlight text origins
 instead. It's a lot less glamorous, sounds alot less dramatic, doesn't get
 the dollars - but it's got zero capability of misleading.

 FT2

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 8:37 PM, James Alexander jameso...@gmail.comwrote:

 How would the blame maps work with people editing around vandalism? For
 example someone either blanks the page or does extensive vandalism to it
 (especially over the course of a couple days or a couple users). I would
 imagine it would be fairly easy if the bad contributions just got
 rolledback
 but would the old blamemaps still be reinstated if someone went in and
 manually copy/pasted the old version (or something very close) in or would
 the system count it as a new contribution?

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 3:12 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

  2009/8/31 David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com:
 
   I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
   interface without adequate testing.
 
 
  It appears we're not and Wired completely jumped the gun. There is no
  timeframe for release of this thing even as an optional extra.
 
 
  - d.
 
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread Steve Bennett
On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 8:36 PM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
It's a lot less glamorous, sounds alot less dramatic, doesn't get
 the dollars - but it's got zero capability of misleading.

To be honest, what exactly is the point of this thing? I've seen this
kind of thing a couple of times when academics have been doing
research. But what's the use case? What are users supposed to do with
the knowledge? Is it important? Should end-users care?

All I can see is a moderately handy tool for editors who do a lot of
patrolling, to save them a bit of time. Other than that, it just makes
the page text hard to read, imho.

Or have I missed some radical advancement in the tech?

Steve

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread FT2
I'd use it in a flash. I often find it helpful when examining an article
(for edit warriors and vandals, or dodgy editorship), to trace back where a
given wording was introduced.

I can also see it would be immensely useful to me, to be able to see which
wordings were being warred over or changed recently and which were more
stable or historically unchanged.

As I also know a number of users, it may further help me in evaluating a
text, to have a quick way (hover information) to say okay, these are
texts introduced by users I know and consider decent responsible editors, so
I don't have to spend time on them and can focus on these sections.

However I would be relying on my own experience and using it as a tool to
assist and help me shortcut doing things I do already, not as a bible of
reliability, a substitute for reliable sources, or as a measure of implicit
trust.

FT2


On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 3:09 PM, Steve Bennett stevag...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 8:36 PM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 It's a lot less glamorous, sounds alot less dramatic, doesn't get
  the dollars - but it's got zero capability of misleading.

 To be honest, what exactly is the point of this thing? I've seen this
 kind of thing a couple of times when academics have been doing
 research. But what's the use case? What are users supposed to do with
 the knowledge? Is it important? Should end-users care?

 All I can see is a moderately handy tool for editors who do a lot of
 patrolling, to save them a bit of time. Other than that, it just makes
 the page text hard to read, imho.

 Or have I missed some radical advancement in the tech?

 Steve

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread FT2
The problem is that while long-standing and apparently reputable
author correlate with trust, they are not the same.

The perception that a measure of text source and historicity is in any
way a measure of trust, is a misconception we have to kill at root,
burn, salt over, mercilessly counter, and also impale all those who
defile it. And generally destroy it with prejudice.

Because we dare not allow that gadget to be misinterpreted that way
(even if in knowing hands it can indeed indicate trust or doubt). It's
very tempting, so people will, and they'll read it is in the media...
so we have to bludgeon home it ISN'T.

(There would have been a graphic imagery spoiler, but we deleted
spoilers ages ago)

FT2



On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 5:39 PM, Emily Monroebluecalioc...@me.com wrote:
 ... and then, when the claim proves to be false, become angry and go
 after the Foundation?  Not necessarily legally, though  I fear
 that if they make an assumption this text is highlighted as high
 trust, so it can be trusted, and are told that this is the meaning
 on a help page, we could be liable.

 Yet another one of my fears.

 Emily
 On Sep 1, 2009, at 8:25 AM, Nathan Russell wrote:

 I think there's a real risk here, to be even more blunt.

 Calling it a trust system risks someone looking at a piece of text and
 saying oh, look, this is trusted, so i can
 -rely on this as advice before doing something dangerous/in making a
 medical decision/etc
 -use this as my sole source in writing my college paper
 -take for granted the claim this text makes that a living person
 cheated on his spouse (or worse possibilities
 -assume this means WP as a group/the foundation itself makes the claim
 that *I* cheated on someone
 ... and then, when the claim proves to be false, become angry and go
 after the Foundation?  Not necessarily legally, though  I fear
 that if they make an assumption this text is highlighted as high
 trust, so it can be trusted, and are told that this is the meaning on
 a help page, we could be liable.

 Nathan

 On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 6:36 AM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 I think there's a terminology issue.

 We cannot refer to this as a trust system, however Wikitrust
 brands it.
 We just can't. It misleads too many, and implies too much.

 Call it a text tracing system or a gadget to highlight text
 origins
 instead. It's a lot less glamorous, sounds alot less dramatic,
 doesn't get
 the dollars - but it's got zero capability of misleading.

 FT2

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 8:37 PM, James Alexander
 jameso...@gmail.comwrote:

 How would the blame maps work with people editing around
 vandalism? For
 example someone either blanks the page or does extensive vandalism
 to it
 (especially over the course of a couple days or a couple users). I
 would
 imagine it would be fairly easy if the bad contributions just got
 rolledback
 but would the old blamemaps still be reinstated if someone went in
 and
 manually copy/pasted the old version (or something very close) in
 or would
 the system count it as a new contribution?

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 3:12 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 2009/8/31 David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com:

 I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
 interface without adequate testing.


 It appears we're not and Wired completely jumped the gun. There
 is no
 timeframe for release of this thing even as an optional extra.


 - d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-09-01 Thread David Gerard
2009/9/1 FT2 ft2.w...@gmail.com:

 I think there's a terminology issue.
 We cannot refer to this as a trust system, however Wikitrust brands it.
 We just can't. It misleads too many, and implies too much.
 Call it a text tracing system or a gadget to highlight text origins
 instead. It's a lot less glamorous, sounds alot less dramatic, doesn't get
 the dollars - but it's got zero capability of misleading.


Call it Wikidrama or wikimyspace instead? ;-)

Seriously, you need to propose the name change to Luca and team. The
Wired article is nice publicity for them, but should show them what an
epic disaster the name could be.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread Erik Moeller
2009/8/31 Brion Vibber br...@wikimedia.org:
 On 8/31/09 7:35 AM, Michael Peel wrote:
 We've been planning to get a test setup together since conversations at
 the Berlin developer meetup in April, but actual implementation of it is
 pending coordination with Luca and his team.

 My understanding is that work has proceeded pretty well on setting it up
 to be able to fetch page history data more cleanly internally, which was
 a prerequisite, so we're hoping to get that going this fall.

To add to what Brion said: The author of the Wired story, Hadley
Leggett, scheduled a call with me earlier this month, but she missed
the call. I didn't have time to follow up with her after that, and she
filed the story without it. This is why there's no WMF quote in the
story.

The gist of it is that:

We're very interested in WikiTrust, primarily for two reasons:

- it allows us to create blamemaps for history pages, so that you can
quickly see who added a specific piece of text. This is very
interesting for anyone who's ever tried to navigate a long version
history to find out who added something.

- it potentially allows us to come up with an algorithmic best recent
revision guess. This is very useful for offline exports.

The trust coloring is clearly the most controversial part of the
technology. However, it's also integral to it, and we think it could
be valuable. If we do integrate it, it would likely be initially as a
user preference. (And of course no view of the article would have it
toggled on by default.) There may also be additional community
consultation required.

Any integration is contingent on the readiness of the technology. It
seems to have matured over the last couple of years, and we're
planning to meet with Luca soon to review the current state of things.
There's no fixed deployment roadmap yet, and the deployment of
FlaggedRevs is our #1 priority.

-- 
Erik Möller
Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread FT2
On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 6:13 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 - it allows us to create blamemaps for history pages, so that you can
 quickly see who added a specific piece of text. This is very
 interesting for anyone who's ever tried to navigate a long version
 history to find out who added something.


Yes. Incredibly useful. What I'd like would be when colors are shown, if you
hover over some text it pops up a hover of the user who wrote it and when it
was written (the revision). This would be a bit like the way Google
Translate pops up the source text. I'd position the popup far left or far
right of the window though so it doesn't obscure the text and annoy one so
much (or have positioning be an option).


 - it potentially allows us to come up with an algorithmic best recent
 revision guess. This is very useful for offline exports.


Makes sense. Also good for anti-vandalism work.




 The trust coloring is clearly the most controversial part of the
 technology. However, it's also integral to it, and we think it could
 be valuable. If we do integrate it, it would likely be initially as a
 user preference. (And of course no view of the article would have it
 toggled on by default.) There may also be additional community
 consultation required.



A show/hide button on the screen, with default status in preferences,
please. And maybe an interface issue to consider, having a narrow top bar
that doesn't scroll, where status, flagged revision etc info can be put that
will always be visible no matter where you are in the article.

FT2
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread Jim Redmond
On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 12:33, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 A simple version of that is already implemented. Go to

 http://wikitrust.soe.ucsc.edu/index.php/Main_Page

 and click the check text tab to see it, hover over a piece of text,
 and click it. The hover shows the username, and by clicking it, you'll
 get a diff. (This may not be the latest code.)


According to their Wikimania presentation (hopefully available soon on
Commons), they've also prepared a Firefox add-on, WikiTrust, which adds a
new trust info tab to the top of mainspace articles.  The trust info
database is still being populated, though, so the trust info itself may be a
little skewed; at the presentation they estimated that the English Wikipedia
trust info database would be finished in about a month.  (Their existing
algorithm is language-independent, so presumably the add-on will work for
non-English wikis as well.)

The Firefox add-on is still classified as experimental, but adventurous
persons can still get it at 
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/11087.

-- 
Jim Redmond
jredm...@gmail.com
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread FT2
On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 6:33 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 2009/8/31 FT2 ft2.w...@gmail.com:
  Yes. Incredibly useful. What I'd like would be when colors are shown, if
 you
  hover over some text it pops up a hover of the user who wrote it and when
 it
  was written (the revision).

 A simple version of that is already implemented. Go to

 http://wikitrust.soe.ucsc.edu/index.php/Main_Page

 and click the check text tab to see it, hover over a piece of text,
 and click it. The hover shows the username, and by clicking it, you'll
 get a diff. (This may not be the latest code.)

  A show/hide button on the screen, with default status in preferences,
  please. And maybe an interface issue to consider, having a narrow top bar
  that doesn't scroll, where status, flagged revision etc info can be put
 that
  will always be visible no matter where you are in the article.

 There's definitely a need to consolidate the FlaggedRevs revision tag
 indicator with any WikiTrust UI elements.
 --
 Erik Möller
  Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation



Added a note on it here: 
http://usability.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Releases/Acai#Mini_toolbar_idea

FT2
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread David Goodman
I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
interface without adequate testing. Quality or trust in an article is
not a simple numerical matter, much less a rough scale of a few
categories.  it will take a lot of experimentation with it until the
rest of us can decide if its valid enough to be part of our actual
interface--this is a decision that needs to be made by each community,
and I hope it will be made carefully, before we commit to it.

'What people may want to use as an add on is their affair--what we
offer to them as a gadget is something else. I'm not sure we have any
formal method for approving them, but we ought to. The WMF should not
be prescribing it for us.

That this should be done at the same time as the flagged revisions
test is yet another complication.

David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 2:15 PM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 6:33 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 2009/8/31 FT2 ft2.w...@gmail.com:
  Yes. Incredibly useful. What I'd like would be when colors are shown, if
 you
  hover over some text it pops up a hover of the user who wrote it and when
 it
  was written (the revision).

 A simple version of that is already implemented. Go to

 http://wikitrust.soe.ucsc.edu/index.php/Main_Page

 and click the check text tab to see it, hover over a piece of text,
 and click it. The hover shows the username, and by clicking it, you'll
 get a diff. (This may not be the latest code.)

  A show/hide button on the screen, with default status in preferences,
  please. And maybe an interface issue to consider, having a narrow top bar
  that doesn't scroll, where status, flagged revision etc info can be put
 that
  will always be visible no matter where you are in the article.

 There's definitely a need to consolidate the FlaggedRevs revision tag
 indicator with any WikiTrust UI elements.
 --
 Erik Möller
  Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation



 Added a note on it here: 
 http://usability.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Releases/Acai#Mini_toolbar_idea

 FT2
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread Emily Monroe
 - it allows us to create blamemaps for history pages, so that you  
 can quickly see who added a specific piece of text. This is very  
 interesting for anyone who's ever tried to navigate a long version  
 history to find out who added something.

I have to admit, I'd find this incredibly useful myself.

 What I'd like would be when colors are shown, if you hover over some  
 text it pops up a hover of the user who wrote it and when it was  
 written (the revision).

I'd also find this useful.

Emily
On Aug 31, 2009, at 12:26 PM, FT2 wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 6:13 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org  
 wrote:

 - it allows us to create blamemaps for history pages, so that you can
 quickly see who added a specific piece of text. This is very
 interesting for anyone who's ever tried to navigate a long version
 history to find out who added something.


 Yes. Incredibly useful. What I'd like would be when colors are  
 shown, if you
 hover over some text it pops up a hover of the user who wrote it and  
 when it
 was written (the revision). This would be a bit like the way Google
 Translate pops up the source text. I'd position the popup far left  
 or far
 right of the window though so it doesn't obscure the text and annoy  
 one so
 much (or have positioning be an option).


 - it potentially allows us to come up with an algorithmic best  
 recent
 revision guess. This is very useful for offline exports.


 Makes sense. Also good for anti-vandalism work.




 The trust coloring is clearly the most controversial part of the
 technology. However, it's also integral to it, and we think it could
 be valuable. If we do integrate it, it would likely be initially as a
 user preference. (And of course no view of the article would have it
 toggled on by default.) There may also be additional community
 consultation required.



 A show/hide button on the screen, with default status in  
 preferences,
 please. And maybe an interface issue to consider, having a narrow  
 top bar
 that doesn't scroll, where status, flagged revision etc info can be  
 put that
 will always be visible no matter where you are in the article.

 FT2
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread FT2
True. The moment you give people a tool, many people will simplistically
assume what it does or rely unthinkingly on it.


   - WikiTrust might be described as a way to see how long an edit endured
   and how much trust it seems to have; in most users' hands it'll be its
   colored red/blue so its right/wrong.
   - People won't think, they'll assume and rely.


If it is introduced, then I would suggest introducing it as a gadget for
admins and experienced users, a limited number at first. Communally, it
shouldn't be available to all, but to those who request it and seem to
understand what it shows and how to interpret it (perhaps package it with
rollback or something that gets a little scrutiny of their cluefulness?)

Thats for the future, but no harm thinking ahead. Very wary of what people
will assume it means, and that we're clear it is a tool that needs
considerable experienced interpretation and is *misleading *without it.

FT2





On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 7:23 PM, David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com wrote:

 I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
 interface without adequate testing. Quality or trust in an article is
 not a simple numerical matter, much less a rough scale of a few
 categories.  it will take a lot of experimentation with it until the
 rest of us can decide if its valid enough to be part of our actual
 interface--this is a decision that needs to be made by each community,
 and I hope it will be made carefully, before we commit to it.

 'What people may want to use as an add on is their affair--what we
 offer to them as a gadget is something else. I'm not sure we have any
 formal method for approving them, but we ought to. The WMF should not
 be prescribing it for us.

 That this should be done at the same time as the flagged revisions
 test is yet another complication.

 David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



 On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 2:15 PM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
  On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 6:33 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org
 wrote:
 
  2009/8/31 FT2 ft2.w...@gmail.com:
   Yes. Incredibly useful. What I'd like would be when colors are shown,
 if
  you
   hover over some text it pops up a hover of the user who wrote it and
 when
  it
   was written (the revision).
 
  A simple version of that is already implemented. Go to
 
  http://wikitrust.soe.ucsc.edu/index.php/Main_Page
 
  and click the check text tab to see it, hover over a piece of text,
  and click it. The hover shows the username, and by clicking it, you'll
  get a diff. (This may not be the latest code.)
 
   A show/hide button on the screen, with default status in
 preferences,
   please. And maybe an interface issue to consider, having a narrow top
 bar
   that doesn't scroll, where status, flagged revision etc info can be
 put
  that
   will always be visible no matter where you are in the article.
 
  There's definitely a need to consolidate the FlaggedRevs revision tag
  indicator with any WikiTrust UI elements.
  --
  Erik Möller
   Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation
 
 
 
  Added a note on it here: 
  http://usability.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Releases/Acai#Mini_toolbar_idea
 
 
  FT2
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread David Gerard
2009/8/31 David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com:

 I am a little concerned that we are adopting a metric into our
 interface without adequate testing.


It appears we're not and Wired completely jumped the gun. There is no
timeframe for release of this thing even as an optional extra.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread Carcharoth
On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 7:46 PM, FT2ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:

snip

 If it is introduced, then I would suggest introducing it as a gadget for
 admins and experienced users, a limited number at first. Communally, it
 shouldn't be available to all, but to those who request it and seem to
 understand what it shows and how to interpret it (perhaps package it with
 rollback or something that gets a little scrutiny of their cluefulness?)

I'm not sure why this would be restricted to admins and experienced
users. Does *anyone* else support this view? It would be more logical,
in my view, to either have it or not have it, not some halfway house.

 Thats for the future, but no harm thinking ahead. Very wary of what people
 will assume it means, and that we're clear it is a tool that needs
 considerable experienced interpretation and is *misleading *without it.

Admins and experienced users would be just as capable of misinterpreting it.

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread Amory Meltzer
Not saying I disagree with you, but with that in mind and looking at the
test example, I'd say that the more useful concept isn't the ability to rate
editors - which I could do without, it's a little too anti-AGF imho - but
its usefulness as a metric of how many people have edited a particular
section.  That would give every sentence some measure of Wiki-ness, how
much it had been edited mercilessly.  I for one take dislike seeing masses
of paragraphs written by one or two people and would be far more likely to
comb through and copyedit or look for things within that section, no matter
who wrote it, than one with 10 or 20 editors contributing.  That's the part
that would be worthwhile.

~A


On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 14:46, FT2 ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:

 Very wary of what people
 will assume it means, and that we're clear it is a tool that needs
 considerable experienced interpretation and is *misleading *without it.

 FT2

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikitech-l] Fwd: Wired: Wikipedia to Color Code Untrustworthy Text

2009-08-31 Thread Ian Woollard
On 31/08/2009, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:
 The trust coloring is clearly the most controversial part of the
 technology. However, it's also integral to it, and we think it could
 be valuable. If we do integrate it, it would likely be initially as a
 user preference. (And of course no view of the article would have it
 toggled on by default.) There may also be additional community
 consultation required.

If I understand this correctly, wouldn't trust coloring inevitably
mark all new users and anonymous IPs as untrustworthy?

So, basically, wouldn't trust coloring be a way of failing to assume
good faith for all anonymous IPs and new users, and institutionalising
this in the software?

 --
 Erik Möller
 Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

-- 
-Ian Woollard

All the world's a stage... but you'll grow out of it eventually.

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