[WikiEN-l] Vandalism instance

2013-11-12 Thread Matt
Hi!
I wanted to point out a single instance of vandalism on the following
page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Gris

The infobox contains the following line:

| awards= he married 4 potatoes

The last recorded instance of this page that doesn't contain this
vandalism had the following line instead:

| awards= 

I would have fixed this myself, but I use Tor, so I am unable to do so.
Thanks. 


Matt Pagan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Futuristcorporation

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Vandalism instance

2013-11-12 Thread Matt
Hi James, 
Thanks for responding. I apologize if this mailing list is the wrong
place for this, but I'm having trouble with the English Wikipedia
Unblock Ticket Request System. I submitted an unblock request, which
was accpeted, but now I'm having trouble with the email confirmation.
When I copy into my browser the link I received from the automated email
response, I face the following message: 

The action you requested could not be performed: Please use the link
provided to you in your email to access this page. This security step
assures us that we are still talking to the same person. Thank you.

I'd greatly appreciate any suggestions on how to proceed from here. It
would make me quite sad if my unblock request was not looked at
becuase I could not get past the email confirmation link.  


 Thanks Matt, it looks like someone got it before I could. I imagine
 you know already but, just in case, if you find yourself wanting to
 edit
 frequently from tor you may want to consider asking for
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:IP_block_exemption on your
 account. Not the simplest for sure but may life easier so you don't
 have to worry about it.
 
 James
 
 
 On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 6:01 PM, Matt matt at pagan.io wrote:
 
  Hi!
  I wanted to point out a single instance of vandalism on the
  following
  page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Gris
 
  The infobox contains the following line:
 
  | awards= he married 4 potatoes
 
  The last recorded instance of this page that doesn't contain this
  vandalism had the following line instead:
 
  | awards=
 
  I would have fixed this myself, but I use Tor, so I am unable to do
  so. Thanks.
 
 
  Matt Pagan
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Futuristcorporation
 
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Vandalism instance

2013-11-12 Thread Matt
On Nov 12, 2013 10:07 PM, Matt matt at pagan.io wrote:

 Hi James,
 Thanks for responding. I apologize if this mailing list is the wrong
 place for this, but I'm having trouble with the English Wikipedia
 Unblock Ticket Request System. I submitted an unblock request, which
 was accpeted, but now I'm having trouble with the email confirmation.
 When I copy into my browser the link I received from the automated
 email response, I face the following message:

 The action you requested could not be performed: Please use the link
 provided to you in your email to access this page. This security step
 assures us that we are still talking to the same person. Thank you.

 I'd greatly appreciate any suggestions on how to proceed from here.
 It would make me quite sad if my unblock request was not looked at
 becuase I could not get past the email confirmation link.

 At the moment utrs is transferring from the toolserver to labs. That
 shouldn't make a difference, but maybe it did. Could you try
 requesting a new confirmation link by opening a new ticket on utrs?
 If it fails again, feel free to come back to this list.

Thanks Martijn:

I just submitted my unblock request a second time and received the same
error message when I followed the link in my email: 

The action you requested could not be performed: Please use the link
provided to you in your email to access this page. This security step
assures us that we are still talking to the same person. Thank you.


P.S.: I tried not to break the thread this time. Hopefully it worked. 

Matt Pagan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Futuristcorporation

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Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of EN wiki admins

2010-05-27 Thread Matt Jacobs
 Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 20:04:43 -0400
 From: Gwern Branwen gwe...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] declining numbers of EN wiki admins
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Message-ID:
aanlktilwklp_wogqqaw9dzzdqgukswbcut-rtzvbv...@mail.gmail.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

 On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 7:34 PM, David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com
 wrote:
  Are you saying that a _declining_ number of administrators means a
  _growth_ in bureaucracy? ?It would normally mean the opposite, either
  a loss of control, or that the ordinary members were taking the
  function upon themselves. ?What I see is a greater degree of control
  and uniformity, not driven by those in formal positions of authority.

 If you assume that administrators are identical to the bureaucracy or
 some non-shrinking proportion thereof, then that does look like a
 falsehood.

 If you assume that administrators reflect rather the number of
 committed long-term contributors, and their numbers wax and wane
 pretty independently of the need for administrators, then that makes
 sense. Little kills enthusiasm and participation as surely as
 bureaucracy. Why are so few even trying for adminship?


My guess is that it's because the bureaucracy has become too intimidating.
I suspect many editors do not want to commit the time and effort to learning
it all.
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Re: [WikiEN-l] A war on external links? Was: Inside Higher Ed: Does Wikipedia Suck?

2010-03-30 Thread Matt Jacobs
 Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2010 12:49:26 +0100
 From: Charles Matthews charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] A war on external links? Was: Inside Higher
Ed: Does Wikipedia Suck?
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org


 Carcharoth wrote:
  That probably misses the flux. How many links are added and then
  almost immediately removed? That won't be picked up in something like
  that, I don't think.
 
 Anyway, the point is not that external links are systematically
 persecuted (they may be patchily persecuted); but that they now have few
 actual rights.

 Charles


And why should links have any particular rights?  External links should be
justified in the same way as any addition to the article.  They may not
require the same verifiability standards, but they should be judged to be a
recommended place for further reading.  In some way or another, they should
add content the editors judge to be useful, and not simply be about the
subject.  Considering that for every good link I've seen inserted, I've also
seen one that was useless or even misleading or libelous, why would they
need any special protection?

I see no reason why we need additional policy and bureaucracy specifically
for links.

Sxeptomaniac
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Re: [WikiEN-l] A war on external links? Was: Inside Higher Ed: Does Wikipedia Suck?

2010-03-30 Thread Matt Jacobs

 Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2010 16:33:36 +0100
 From: Charles Matthews charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] A war on external links? Was: Inside Higher
Ed: Does Wikipedia Suck?
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org

 Matt Jacobs wrote:
  Anyway, the point is not that external links are systematically
  persecuted (they may be patchily persecuted); but that they now have few
  actual rights.
 
  Charles
 
 
 
  And why should links have any particular rights?  External links should
 be
  justified in the same way as any addition to the article.  They may not
  require the same verifiability standards, but they should be judged to be
 a
  recommended place for further reading.  In some way or another, they
 should
  add content the editors judge to be useful, and not simply be about the
  subject.  Considering that for every good link I've seen inserted, I've
 also
  seen one that was useless or even misleading or libelous, why would they
  need any special protection?
 
 The point would be no different from (say) unreferenced content: there
 the distinction between may be removed and must be removed is quite
 important. And there is the right, not of the link but the editor
 adding it, to have good faith assumed: other things being equal,
 assume that the link was added to help develop the encyclopedia. The
 onus is not always on the editor adding to an article to justify
 additions: that is a very unwiki-like attitude, if I may say so.
  I see no reason why we need additional policy and bureaucracy
 specifically
  for links.
 
 
 For one thing, the page WP:EL is very bureaucratic as it stands; the
 good part of it is the maintenance and review section, where templates
 for tagging links regarded as potential problems are mentioned.

 Also, this discussion thread reveals fairly clearly that there are
 differing views on the matter.

 Charles


 I see nothing unwiki-like in suggesting that a person should defend their
additions to an article when disputes arise.  That's a pretty standard
expectation in any collaborative environment.  There's no lack of assumption
of good faith involved in an editor removing an addition if they have reason
to believe it is not beneficial to the article.

Sxeptomaniac
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Re: [WikiEN-l] A war on external links? Was: Inside Higher Ed: Does Wikipedia Suck?

2010-03-30 Thread Matt Jacobs

 Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2010 20:16:48 +0100
 From: Carcharoth carcharot...@googlemail.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] A war on external links? Was: Inside Higher
Ed: DoesWikipedia Suck?
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org

 On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 8:02 PM, Matt Jacobs sxeptoman...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 snip

  ?I see nothing unwiki-like in suggesting that a person should defend
 their
  additions to an article when disputes arise. ?That's a pretty standard
  expectation in any collaborative environment. ?There's no lack of
 assumption
  of good faith involved in an editor removing an addition if they have
 reason
  to believe it is not beneficial to the article.

 But what if the editors can't agree on whether the link benefits the
 article?

 To get specific, I found a resource and was getting ready to add links
 to lots of articles, but pulled back after others didn't seem as
 excited as me about the resource:


 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Village_pump_%28miscellaneous%29/Archive_24#British-Path.C3.A9_news_clips_archive


 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:External_links/Noticeboard/Archive_2#British-Path.C3.A9_news_clips_archive

 It now has 359 links:


 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:LinkSearchlimit=250offset=250target=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.britishpathe.com

 Back in January, there were 130 links (you will have to take my word
 for that, as posted in that discussion, as I didn't take a
 screenshot). So it seems the use of such links (to archived news reel
 clips) can spread without too much pushback or people worrying about
 spamming.

 But if someone had added 200 links in just a few days, that would have
 worried some people.

 Should they have been worried?

 Carcharoth


When a high volume of links to one place are inserted, I can understand why
some people would tend to take a close look: spammers are a major
annoyance.  However, a spammer is usually not going to be able to make a
solid argument for why those links belong, and it will quickly become
apparent if the link offers little in the way of benefit to the articles.

The slightly panicky anti-spam response seems to be more of a problem with
poor judgment, and not easily addressed through rule changes.
Sxeptomaniac






 Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2010 21:57:25 +0100
 From: Charles Matthews charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] A war on external links? Was: Inside Higher
Ed: Does Wikipedia Suck?
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org


 Matt Jacobs wrote:
   I see nothing unwiki-like in suggesting that a person should defend
 their
  additions to an article when disputes arise.  That's a pretty standard
  expectation in any collaborative environment.  There's no lack of
 assumption
  of good faith involved in an editor removing an addition if they have
 reason
  to believe it is not beneficial to the article.
 
 But if they remove it from a generally anti-spam ideological point of
 view, or on the grounds of conflict of interest, then there is such a
 problem of good faith being disregarded. Quiddity has now gone into this
 in greater detail, and WP:EL is _very clearly_ drafted from an anti-spam
 perspective.

 Charles


WP:COI is the most-abused of all the guideline/policy pages on WP, in my
opinion.  It should never, ever be used to win a content disagreement, yet
it frequently is.  Spam is a problem when the links are misleading, not
directly relevant, duplicate more well-known or less commercialized sites,
direct to very unreliable sources, etc.  However, if an editor can't argue
why the link is not useful, then they shouldn't be labeling it spam/COI.
Perhaps WP:EL could stand to be edited, but I consider it more a matter of
poor judgment than anything else.

Sxeptomaniac
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Re: [WikiEN-l] WikiEN-l Digest, Vol 74, Issue 64

2009-09-19 Thread Matt Jacobs


 Date: Fri, 18 Sep 2009 17:47:57 -0500
 From: Emily Monroe
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Newbie and not-so-newbie biting
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org


  Editors/admins who are regularly rude to others are not only
  tolerated by most of the community, they often have a group of
  supporters around them always ready to praise everything they do,
  manipulating RfCs and other voting (sorry, !voting) situations.

 Do you think that civility blocks and bans pre-arbcom will help the
 situation at all?

  If we want to make WP more friendly, we have to make sure admins and
  high-profile editors are actually trying to BE friendly.  If they
  can't handle that, they shouldn't be working in a collaborative
  environment.

 Exactly the reason why I support civility blocks.

 Emily

 I do agree that they need to be applied, but I also think that civility
expectations need to be higher for admins, followed by long-term editors.
These people 1) should know better, and 2) are often newbies' first
experience with WP.  Otherwise, I can see Civility being gamed by groups of
editors in content disputes.  My own experience was that a number of editors
accused me of making personal attacks for calling out a boldfaced lie made
by an admin(!) attempting to undermine my credibility in a dispute.  I think
a first step would be for arbcom to start desysopping admins who are uncivil
on a regular basis.  This would help remove some of the leniency problems,
IMO.



 Date: Sat, 19 Sep 2009 09:50:58 +0100
 From: Charles Matthews
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Newbie and not-so-newbie biting
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org

 Ray Saintonge wrote:
 
  This is not unlike schoolyard bullies who are usually accompanied by a
  swarm of sycophants.
 
 It is certainly true that our systems are at their worst when confronted
 with cynicism within the community. Not surprising, since the essential
 and founding assumptions of Wikipedia were that people are not like
 that. And most really aren't. But this remains an unsolved problem. To
 connect it directly with newbie-biting is a stretch, if not an
 impossible one: there is something in the idea that people on the site
 are assertive beyond the needs of the job because a confident manner is
 self-preservation.

 Charles


I would disagree that the connection is a stretch, as my experience is that
it was directly related.  The editors watched certain articles and would
attack incoming editors who even suggested a change they didn't like.
Attempting to address the attack on any noticeboards would bring choruses of
it's not an attack, it was justified, or further attacks on the editor
using misleading diffs.  One of the group was eventually desysopped for
abusing the tools, but the time and level of drama involved was way
disproportionate to the clear-cut nature of the case.  In most cases the few
censures the group of editors received were ignored among the attaboys from
the usual crowd.

Sxeptomaniac
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Newbie and not-so-newbie biting

2009-09-18 Thread Matt Jacobs
Having been bitten multiple times, I can definitely say the unfriendly
atmosphere has been a problem for a while now.  Editors/admins who are
regularly rude to others are not only tolerated by most of the community,
they often have a group of supporters around them always ready to praise
everything they do, manipulating RfCs and other voting (sorry, !voting)
situations.  A newbie running afoul of these people rarely even gets token
sympathy if they try to get the problem addressed.  The handful of editors
who try to address these situations have to wade through multiple attacks
and allegations just to try and do the right thing.

If we want to make WP more friendly, we have to make sure admins and
high-profile editors are actually trying to BE friendly.  If they can't
handle that, they shouldn't be working in a collaborative environment.

In addition, I believe that templates are 1) often not worded in a friendly
manner, and 2) overused.  Using a template when there isn't a very good
reason to is going to often be perceived as rude, especially if an article
they've worked hard on has just been speedy deleted.

If WP is going to continue to gain editors, it has to do better.
Sxeptomaniac




 Date: Fri, 18 Sep 2009 09:36:24 -0400
 From: Sage Ross
 Subject: [WikiEN-l] Newbie and not-so-newbie biting
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org

 This isn't a new issue by any means, but here's a nice post by someone
 who's been contributing occasionally since 2004, about how daunting
 wikibullying can be for newbies and other editors who aren't
 well-versed in the procedures and processes.


 http://travel-industry.uptake.com/blog/2009/09/04/bullypedia-a-wikipedian-whos-tired-of-getting-beat-up/

 Unfriendliness is built into the system, even when admins and others
 who enforce the rules are perfectly civil and try to be friendly at an
 individual level.

 -Sage


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Re: [WikiEN-l] News agencies are not RSs

2009-06-30 Thread Matt Jacobs
There's a second challenge, in that we don't want to confirm information we
are avoiding releasing by replying with, Shhh. This is being kept quiet.
As I'm sure most here realize, various idiots will then spread such a
response all over Digg and various blogs, therefore defeating the original
purpose.  If they use a unique or unusual response, it's not going to work
as well as just saying the source is unreliable.

Stating that the source was unreliable was actually probably the most
effective route.  I dislike the fact that this was very top-down and the
response was misleading, but would OTRS really have been more effective?

Sxeptomaniac

Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 09:30:04 -0700
 From: Durova
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] News agencies are not RSs
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org

 Agreed.  The challenge is to codify this in a manner that doesn't step upon
 the slippery slope of censorship.

 On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 9:00 AM, Ian Woollard ian.wooll...@gmail.com
 wrote:

  On 30/06/2009, Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com wrote:
   Our usual BLP standards demonstrate respect for unwarranted damage that
   causes hurt feelings, or professional and community standing.  Surely,
  when
   a human life may reasonably be at stake, our responsibility is to be
 more
   careful rather than less careful
 
  Interestingly, that isn't currently part of WP:BLP. I think it needs
  to be codified.
 
  Clearly, when the subject of the BLP's life may be significantly
  endangered, through no fault of their own, from information that may
  be widely published for the first time in the wikipedia, then there's
  a very reasonable case that it shouldn't be published in the
  wikipedia.
 
   -Durova
 
  --
  -Ian Woollard
 
  All the world's a stage... but you'll grow out of it eventually.
 
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 --
 http://durova.blogspot.com/


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Re: [WikiEN-l] Wikipedia:News suppression

2009-06-30 Thread Matt Jacobs

 Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 13:52:14 EDT
 From: wjhon...@aol.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] News agencies are not RSs
 To: wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org, WikiEN-l@lists.wikimedia.org


 Was there rationale given for the stifling ?  That's the issue.  If it's
 reported in Al Jazeera and stifled on Wikipedia is there some explanation
 given for why?

 You failed to read the article earlier.  Al Jazeera also did not report the
event until he was safe.  You are frequently making assumptions as to
motives and supposed double standards without giving any particular
reasoning as to why the assumptions are valid.  It has severely undermined
any argument you are attempting to make.

It also doesn't really matter if WP and the news outlets have been
consistent or not, as it was the right decision to make in this case.  I
can't say I've always been consistent, but it doesn't necessarily make me a
hypocrite when I do manage to make right choices.



 Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 14:07:59 EDT
 From: wjhon...@aol.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Wikipedia:News suppression (was: News agencies
are not RSs)
 To: wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org

 In a message dated 6/30/2009 10:34:24 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
 apoc2...@gmail.com writes:


  The reason to suppress the news
  of David Rohde's kidnapping is not mainly to improve Wikipedia, but to
  protect Rohde.
 

 ---

 Suppressing the news can't be said to improve Wikipedia in any reasonable
 way.


I disagree.  WP would certainly be harmed if it was the only major media
organization to disseminate information the rest kept quiet, and worse if he
had died, whether or not if it could be traced to WP's actions.  We would
have been the assholes more interested in our own overinflated egos than a
man's life, and it would probably be the worst scandal yet, undermining the
site's credibility (further).

Sometimes improving WP means looking a little farther than the few
inches/centimeters to our computer screens.  It means recognizing that life,
particularly human life, is more important than a stupid collection of ones
and zeros on servers somewhere.  WP hasn't always made good choices, but I'm
glad it happened this time.

Sxeptomaniac
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Re: [WikiEN-l] WikiEN-l Digest, Vol 71, Issue 74

2009-06-29 Thread Matt Jacobs

 Message: 6
 Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 17:03:33 +0100
 From: Sam Blacketer sam.blacke...@googlemail.com
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] News agencies are not RSs
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Message-ID:
e75b49f70906290903m485a5e6bo285d4216cc2dc...@mail.gmail.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252

 On Mon, Jun 29, 2009 at 4:55 PM, geni geni...@gmail.com wrote:

  2009/6/29 Gwern Branwen gwe...@gmail.com:
   ?We were really helped by the fact that it hadn?t appeared in a place
   we would regard as a reliable source,? he said. ?I would have had a
   really hard time with it if it had.?
   ...
 
  The question is though is is
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pajhwok_Afghan_News genuinely not a
  reliable source?


 What was that underlying principle which was codified after the Brian
 Peppers deletion debates? Ah yes, 'basic human dignity', now to be found at
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Basic_dignity.

 This case is more about basic common sense. If someone's life may be
 endangered by what is on their wikipedia biography but is not widely
 reported elsewhere, I would expect that anyone sensible would find some way
 of applying policy so as to keep the life-endangering stuff off it. And
 that
 would take precedence over secondary arguments over whether obscure news
 agencies were reliable.

 --
 Sam Blacketer


Thank god common sense won out over the egotism of those who insist they
must know everything as soon as it happens, and also to tell everyone in
every forum possible.  It would be utterly absurd to even take the
self-centered whining regarding censorship seriously.  Waiting several
months for the conclusion of the incident in no way harmed WP.

It really doesn't matter what policy administrators used to keep it quiet,
or even if they abused the rules.  The information had a very real
probability of affecting whether a man lived or died, so that takes obvious
precedence over internal rules on an online website.

Sxeptomaniac
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