Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-16 Thread Ian Woollard
IRC the evidence from the German trial was that it didn't reduce
vandalism attempts much.

Basically, unless it was something specific about the German trial, it
looks like your average vandal is too unsophisticated to understand
that their edits won't go live, or something.

Still, we live in hopes.

On the upside, it does at least mean that the attempts won't go live,
and there's not much hurry to undo them.

On 17/06/2010, Cenarium sysop  wrote:
> One observation on persistently heavily vandalized articles.
>
> It's worth to try pending changes on them. It may, and probably will, reduce
> to some extent the level of vandalism.
>
> If, however, the level of vandalism remains so high that it's
> counter-productive, i.e. wastes community resources for no sensible benefit
> of good edits, then we should use semi-protection.
>
> But we shouldn't think that it can't work and not try.
>
> On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 10:47 PM, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 3:50 PM, Risker  wrote:
>> > Well, part of the objective here is to see whether we get enough
>> > encyclopedia-worthy edits to determine if it is worthwhile removing
>> > protection.
>> [snip]
>>
>> I couldn't disagree more strongly.  If we were making a judgement on
>> the basis of count of good edits to vandalism edits we would conclude
>> that the best solution would be to protect everything— with the
>> paradoxical effect of Wikipedia not existing at all.
>>
>> The reality is that the goodness of a good edit is so good relative to
>> the baddness of a bad edit, mostly because of the tools and resources
>> that we have to deal with bad edits, that we can pretty much disregard
>> the vandalism side of that particular equation entirely.
>> Undo/rollback are easy buttons, and we have many contributors who do
>> nothing but remove obviously bad stuff (and some who, honestly, aren't
>> qualified to do much else!).   Without this truth Wikipedia simply
>> couldn't work.
>>
>>
>> The notion that the basic workload of dealing with simple vandalism
>> (as opposed, say, the timeliness of the corrections or the quality of
>> the articles in the interim) is a significant problem is unsupported
>> by any objective measurement which I've seen, I'd love to see pointers
>> suggesting otherwise. I've always believed that we use protection as a
>> short term measure to preserve the quality of the articles displayed
>> to readers (who are indifferent to our internal process) and the
>> protection policy on Enwp is quite explicit that the purpose of
>> protection is not pre-emptive ([[WP:NO-PREEMPT]]).
>>
>> I think it's characteristic of an 'administrative bias' to assume that
>> protection is intended to be a workload reducer, if you're constantly
>> dealing with the problem cases you're going to overestimate their
>> magnitude.
>>
>> This concern also neglects the reduction in the incentive to vandalize
>> that pending revisions ought to create.  Whatever portion of the
>> incentive to make trouble is related to the high visibility of the
>> trouble should be reduced.
>>
>> Of course, we now have many troublemakers who don't care about
>> visibility at all— they make trouble purely to irritate Wikipedians.
>> But these WillyOnWheels class trouble makers are perfectly happy to
>> make their trouble on less prominent pages which have never enjoyed
>> persistent protection, since even obscure pages are fine for the
>> purpose of irritating Wikipedians.
>>
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-16 Thread Cenarium sysop
One observation on persistently heavily vandalized articles.

It's worth to try pending changes on them. It may, and probably will, reduce
to some extent the level of vandalism.

If, however, the level of vandalism remains so high that it's
counter-productive, i.e. wastes community resources for no sensible benefit
of good edits, then we should use semi-protection.

But we shouldn't think that it can't work and not try.

On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 10:47 PM, Gregory Maxwell wrote:

> On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 3:50 PM, Risker  wrote:
> > Well, part of the objective here is to see whether we get enough
> > encyclopedia-worthy edits to determine if it is worthwhile removing
> > protection.
> [snip]
>
> I couldn't disagree more strongly.  If we were making a judgement on
> the basis of count of good edits to vandalism edits we would conclude
> that the best solution would be to protect everything— with the
> paradoxical effect of Wikipedia not existing at all.
>
> The reality is that the goodness of a good edit is so good relative to
> the baddness of a bad edit, mostly because of the tools and resources
> that we have to deal with bad edits, that we can pretty much disregard
> the vandalism side of that particular equation entirely.
> Undo/rollback are easy buttons, and we have many contributors who do
> nothing but remove obviously bad stuff (and some who, honestly, aren't
> qualified to do much else!).   Without this truth Wikipedia simply
> couldn't work.
>
>
> The notion that the basic workload of dealing with simple vandalism
> (as opposed, say, the timeliness of the corrections or the quality of
> the articles in the interim) is a significant problem is unsupported
> by any objective measurement which I've seen, I'd love to see pointers
> suggesting otherwise. I've always believed that we use protection as a
> short term measure to preserve the quality of the articles displayed
> to readers (who are indifferent to our internal process) and the
> protection policy on Enwp is quite explicit that the purpose of
> protection is not pre-emptive ([[WP:NO-PREEMPT]]).
>
> I think it's characteristic of an 'administrative bias' to assume that
> protection is intended to be a workload reducer, if you're constantly
> dealing with the problem cases you're going to overestimate their
> magnitude.
>
> This concern also neglects the reduction in the incentive to vandalize
> that pending revisions ought to create.  Whatever portion of the
> incentive to make trouble is related to the high visibility of the
> trouble should be reduced.
>
> Of course, we now have many troublemakers who don't care about
> visibility at all— they make trouble purely to irritate Wikipedians.
> But these WillyOnWheels class trouble makers are perfectly happy to
> make their trouble on less prominent pages which have never enjoyed
> persistent protection, since even obscure pages are fine for the
> purpose of irritating Wikipedians.
>
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> To unsubscribe from this mailing list, visit:
> https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l
>
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 3:50 PM, Risker  wrote:
> Well, part of the objective here is to see whether we get enough
> encyclopedia-worthy edits to determine if it is worthwhile removing
> protection.
[snip]

I couldn't disagree more strongly.  If we were making a judgement on
the basis of count of good edits to vandalism edits we would conclude
that the best solution would be to protect everything— with the
paradoxical effect of Wikipedia not existing at all.

The reality is that the goodness of a good edit is so good relative to
the baddness of a bad edit, mostly because of the tools and resources
that we have to deal with bad edits, that we can pretty much disregard
the vandalism side of that particular equation entirely.
Undo/rollback are easy buttons, and we have many contributors who do
nothing but remove obviously bad stuff (and some who, honestly, aren't
qualified to do much else!).   Without this truth Wikipedia simply
couldn't work.


The notion that the basic workload of dealing with simple vandalism
(as opposed, say, the timeliness of the corrections or the quality of
the articles in the interim) is a significant problem is unsupported
by any objective measurement which I've seen, I'd love to see pointers
suggesting otherwise. I've always believed that we use protection as a
short term measure to preserve the quality of the articles displayed
to readers (who are indifferent to our internal process) and the
protection policy on Enwp is quite explicit that the purpose of
protection is not pre-emptive ([[WP:NO-PREEMPT]]).

I think it's characteristic of an 'administrative bias' to assume that
protection is intended to be a workload reducer, if you're constantly
dealing with the problem cases you're going to overestimate their
magnitude.

This concern also neglects the reduction in the incentive to vandalize
that pending revisions ought to create.  Whatever portion of the
incentive to make trouble is related to the high visibility of the
trouble should be reduced.

Of course, we now have many troublemakers who don't care about
visibility at all— they make trouble purely to irritate Wikipedians.
But these WillyOnWheels class trouble makers are perfectly happy to
make their trouble on less prominent pages which have never enjoyed
persistent protection, since even obscure pages are fine for the
purpose of irritating Wikipedians.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Michael Peel

On 15 Jun 2010, at 19:15, Risker wrote:

> On 15 June 2010 04:54, Michael Peel  wrote:
>> From a media contact point of view: one of the first things the media want
>> are examples where it will be used, which is somewhat of a difficult
>> question to answer when a) the community hasn't made its mind up, and b)
>> even if it has, the community can change its mind at any time. ;-)

Taking a couple of pieces of Risker's reply shamelessly out of order...

> The current planned queue for implementation can be found here:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Pending_changes/Queue
> 
> There are plenty of good sound bites in just the first couple of days (World
> War I and II, Ronald McDonald, Winston Churchill, Rush Limbaugh) that would
> have made do quite nicely.

Is this the official (i.e. community-approved) list? I wasn't aware that there 
was a queue at all, although it's very sensible for there to be one so that the 
outcome can be analysed properly. It would have certainly been useful to have 
shared this more widely...

> The objective of this trial isn't to give us good press

I certainly wasn't intending to imply that it was - I made it very clear at the 
start of my paragraph that I was coming from a specific point of view.

With pending changes, the press were going to cover this regardless - what 
we've* been trying to do is get the correct information out so that the media 
coverage is as accurate as possible. That is, for a given value of correct - 
it's difficult to be 100% accurate when things keep changing, or we discover 
new bits and pieces of information. ;-)

* we, in this context, meaning those who are at the end of Wikipedia press 
contact numbers.

I'm as eager as anyone to see how well pending changes works, purely on a 
quantitative basis, regardless of external coverage. I'm also eager to see how 
well it works on the entire spectrum of articles - those that will attract a 
lot of vandalism continuously, those that see bits and pieces at critical 
times, and those that have a mix of vandalism and constructive edits.

Mike
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Risker
On 15 June 2010 14:54, Andrew Gray  wrote:

> On 15 June 2010 19:52, Gregory Maxwell  wrote:
>
> > Though I wouldn't recommend trying it _first_ nor would I recommend
> > trying it while the press is talking about.  Perhaps it would be an
> > intolerable train wreak only because the press is spreading the name
> > of that article around.  It would be unfortunate if we reached
> > incorrect conclusions on the effectiveness of pending vs protected on
> > high traffic articles simply due to some temporary attention skew.
>
> Mmm. If we've got a queue - an idea which I have to say I quite like,
> even if I was initially a bit confused by it - then why not schedule
> in some articles that we expect it not to work very well on? It could
> be it has unexpectedly less terrible effects.
>
>
>
Well, part of the objective here is to see whether we get enough
encyclopedia-worthy edits to determine if it is worthwhile removing
protection. Myself, I'd generally be happy if we saw a 1:10 useful edit to
vandalism ratio on most articles, but most articles aren't going to get that
many edits anyway.  There are some high-viewership articles in the early
going, so we'll see pretty quickly how much of a difference the pending
changes level makes. However, that same ratio isn't particularly workable if
we're talking about an article that starts getting 50 or more edits a day,
especially when the article involved is a {{good}} or {{featured}} article;
remember that even 5 vandalism hits a day is almost invariably sufficient to
semi-protect an article, not just because of the visible vandalism, but also
because it is a huge waste of volunteer time, and it also impedes the
continued improvement and maintenance of articles.

Unfortunately, we don't have a way of keeping track of the number of pending
changes that are (a) rejected as vandalism/BLP problem, (b) accepted
directly into the article or (c) some other variation, such as putting the
proposed edit onto the article talk page for discussion.  I am hoping that
we might be able to track how many pending edits are made by anonymous/newly
registered editors versus autoconfirmed editors, though, and what percentage
of edits by autoconfirmed editors winds up being held because of an earlier
pending revision.

We really do need some hard numbers here, so that the community can make
informed decisions about the results of this trial.

Risker/Anne




I
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Andrew Gray
On 15 June 2010 19:52, Gregory Maxwell  wrote:

> Though I wouldn't recommend trying it _first_ nor would I recommend
> trying it while the press is talking about.  Perhaps it would be an
> intolerable train wreak only because the press is spreading the name
> of that article around.  It would be unfortunate if we reached
> incorrect conclusions on the effectiveness of pending vs protected on
> high traffic articles simply due to some temporary attention skew.

Mmm. If we've got a queue - an idea which I have to say I quite like,
even if I was initially a bit confused by it - then why not schedule
in some articles that we expect it not to work very well on? It could
be it has unexpectedly less terrible effects.

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

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 2:21 PM, Thomas Dalton  wrote:
> On 15 June 2010 19:15, Risker  wrote:
>> The objective of this trial isn't to give us good press, it's to persuade
>> the community that this is a useful and viable tool.
>
> I couldn't disagree more. The objective of this trial is to see if the
> feature is effective. This is a trial, not a marketing campaign. We
> shouldn't be skewing the parameters of the trial to get the result we
> want.

On this point I have to agree. Lets not _speculate_ that GWB would be
a train-wreak. Lets try it, and see if we learn anything from the
experience.   If we already had all the answers we wouldn't have any
problems. ;)


Though I wouldn't recommend trying it _first_ nor would I recommend
trying it while the press is talking about.  Perhaps it would be an
intolerable train wreak only because the press is spreading the name
of that article around.  It would be unfortunate if we reached
incorrect conclusions on the effectiveness of pending vs protected on
high traffic articles simply due to some temporary attention skew.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Thomas Dalton
On 15 June 2010 19:15, Risker  wrote:
> I'm actually becoming increasingly concerned that the notion that the
> [[George W. Bush]] article would be unlocked has to be coming from somewhere
> within the organization, since it's being repeated in every single article
> in the press.  This is not a good sign.

I believe I was the person that suggested the Bush article as an
example when the BBC asked for one. I don't know where the articles
that were published before the BBC article got the example from. I'm
sorry if I was mistaken, but my understand is that this feature is
intended precisely for articles like the Bush one.

> The objective of this trial isn't to give us good press, it's to persuade
> the community that this is a useful and viable tool.

I couldn't disagree more. The objective of this trial is to see if the
feature is effective. This is a trial, not a marketing campaign. We
shouldn't be skewing the parameters of the trial to get the result we
want.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Risker
On 15 June 2010 04:54, Michael Peel  wrote:

>
> On 15 Jun 2010, at 00:39, Risker wrote:
>
> > On 14 June 2010 19:22, David Gerard  wrote:
> >
> >>
> >>
> http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/wikipedia_to_loosen_controls_tonight.php
> >>
> >> Spotted by Nihiltres.
> >>
> >>
> >>
> > 
> > The George Bush page is not going to be part of this trial, because there
> is
> > no reasonable chance that the tiny, tiny percentage of useful edits will
> > make up for all the vandalism and BLP violations that will be added. That
> > was possibly the one thing that everyone working on the encyclopedia end
> of
> > the trial came to agreement on very quickly.
>
> Interesting - really? I was really hoping to see this tried to see whether
> it could work on such an article. Can you link me to the discussion about
> this, please?
>
> From a media contact point of view: one of the first things the media want
> are examples where it will be used, which is somewhat of a difficult
> question to answer when a) the community hasn't made its mind up, and b)
> even if it has, the community can change its mind at any time. ;-)
>

I'm actually becoming increasingly concerned that the notion that the
[[George W. Bush]] article would be unlocked has to be coming from somewhere
within the organization, since it's being repeated in every single article
in the press.  This is not a good sign.

The objective of this trial isn't to give us good press, it's to persuade
the community that this is a useful and viable tool.  Sticking it onto an
article that will probably get more vandalism in an hour than all the rest
of the pending changes articles put together will get in a week is hardly
the way to persuade the community that it's a good investment of volunteer
time and energy.  This extension isn't being sold to the world at large,
it's being sold to the community that will have to work with it.

The current planned queue for implementation can be found here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Pending_changes/Queue

There are plenty of good sound bites in just the first couple of days (World
War I and II, Ronald McDonald, Winston Churchill, Rush Limbaugh) that would
have made do quite nicely.

Risker/Anne
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Thomas Dalton
On 15 June 2010 11:51, Andrew Gray  wrote:
> On 15 June 2010 09:54, Michael Peel  wrote:
>
>> From a media contact point of view: one of the first things the media want 
>> are examples
>> where it will be used, which is somewhat of a difficult question to answer 
>> when a) the
>> community hasn't made its mind up, and b) even if it has, the community can 
>> change
>> its mind at any time. ;-)
>
> Someone proposed the daily FAs, which I think are an excellent idea
> from an exposure perspective, but I don't know whether that got the
> nod or not.

We don't currently protect FAs, do we? I thought we kept them
unprotected and dealt with the inevitable vandalism, as a matter of
principle (we're the encyclopaedia anyone can edit, so our most
prominent article should be editable). I think the consensus is that
pending changes should only be used (at least during the trial) on
articles that would otherwise be protected.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread MuZemike
 From NetworkWorld.com, which I'm not sure they're painting a more 
positive or more negative picutre of pending changes:

http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/62518

-MuZemike

On 6/14/2010 8:46 PM, Ian Woollard wrote:
> On 15/06/2010, MuZemike  wrote:
>
>> Have there been any other media outlets, blogs, etc. who see Pending
>> Changes as a "loosening of controls"? I haven't; perhaps I've been
>> hanging around with the community too much who say it will be more
>> restrictive than before :)
>>  
> To be perfectly honest, I don't think anyone knows, it will probably
> depend on what policies are built around it.
>
>
>> -MuZemike
>>  
>


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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Andrew Gray
On 15 June 2010 09:54, Michael Peel  wrote:

> From a media contact point of view: one of the first things the media want 
> are examples
> where it will be used, which is somewhat of a difficult question to answer 
> when a) the
> community hasn't made its mind up, and b) even if it has, the community can 
> change
> its mind at any time. ;-)

Someone proposed the daily FAs, which I think are an excellent idea
from an exposure perspective, but I don't know whether that got the
nod or not.

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

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Michael Peel

On 15 Jun 2010, at 00:39, Risker wrote:

> On 14 June 2010 19:22, David Gerard  wrote:
> 
>> 
>> http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/wikipedia_to_loosen_controls_tonight.php
>> 
>> Spotted by Nihiltres.
>> 
>> 
>> 
> 
> The George Bush page is not going to be part of this trial, because there is
> no reasonable chance that the tiny, tiny percentage of useful edits will
> make up for all the vandalism and BLP violations that will be added. That
> was possibly the one thing that everyone working on the encyclopedia end of
> the trial came to agreement on very quickly.

Interesting - really? I was really hoping to see this tried to see whether it 
could work on such an article. Can you link me to the discussion about this, 
please?

>From a media contact point of view: one of the first things the media want are 
>examples where it will be used, which is somewhat of a difficult question to 
>answer when a) the community hasn't made its mind up, and b) even if it has, 
>the community can change its mind at any time. ;-)

Thanks,
Mike


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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-15 Thread Michael Peel
BBC News have just run their story on this:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/10312095.stm

Mike

On 15 Jun 2010, at 00:22, David Gerard wrote:

> http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/wikipedia_to_loosen_controls_tonight.php
> 
> Spotted by Nihiltres.
> 
> 
> - d.
> 
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-14 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Gregory Maxwell wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 10:19 PM, William Pietri  wrote:
>   

>> I agree completely that the outcome is really up to the community. But
>> personally, it's my hope that this will open things up. Certainly the
>> articles selected for initial trial of this represent an opening, in
>> that all the users who could edit before still can, and the ones that
>> couldn't can now easily propose edits, ones that are likely to be accepted.
>> 
>
> People should really avoid the poisonous "propose" language.
>
> An edit is an edit. An act in completion by itself.  For it to not
> stick it must be _reverted_, another act— not something passive.
> Perhaps it might sit unflagged for some time... but even in the worst
> case someone with the authority will eventually want their own changes
> to be displayed and at that point they must choose: revert or accept.
>
> Words matter, at least sometimes, and I fear "propose" presents
> problems both for the motivation of new users to contribute and in the
> personal restraint experienced users must display by avoiding the trap
> of OWNing articles.
>
>   
+1


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-14 Thread William Pietri
On 06/14/2010 08:22 PM, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
> An edit is an edit. An act in completion by itself.  For it to not
> stick it must be_reverted_, another act— not something passive.
> Perhaps it might sit unflagged for some time... but even in the worst
> case someone with the authority will eventually want their own changes
> to be displayed and at that point they must choose: revert or accept.
>
> Words matter, at least sometimes, and I fear "propose" presents
> problems both for the motivation of new users to contribute and in the
> personal restraint experienced users must display by avoiding the trap
> of OWNing articles.
>

Agreed 100%. Sorry for misspeaking.

William

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-14 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 10:19 PM, William Pietri  wrote:
> On 06/14/2010 06:46 PM, Ian Woollard wrote:
>> On 15/06/2010, MuZemike  wrote:
>>
>>> >  Have there been any other media outlets, blogs, etc. who see Pending
>>> >  Changes as a "loosening of controls"? I haven't; perhaps I've been
>>> >  hanging around with the community too much who say it will be more
>>> >  restrictive than before:)
>> To be perfectly honest, I don't think anyone knows, it will probably
>> depend on what policies are built around it.
>>
>
> I agree completely that the outcome is really up to the community. But
> personally, it's my hope that this will open things up. Certainly the
> articles selected for initial trial of this represent an opening, in
> that all the users who could edit before still can, and the ones that
> couldn't can now easily propose edits, ones that are likely to be accepted.

People should really avoid the poisonous "propose" language.

An edit is an edit. An act in completion by itself.  For it to not
stick it must be _reverted_, another act— not something passive.
Perhaps it might sit unflagged for some time... but even in the worst
case someone with the authority will eventually want their own changes
to be displayed and at that point they must choose: revert or accept.

Words matter, at least sometimes, and I fear "propose" presents
problems both for the motivation of new users to contribute and in the
personal restraint experienced users must display by avoiding the trap
of OWNing articles.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-14 Thread William Pietri
On 06/14/2010 06:46 PM, Ian Woollard wrote:
> On 15/06/2010, MuZemike  wrote:
>
>> >  Have there been any other media outlets, blogs, etc. who see Pending
>> >  Changes as a "loosening of controls"? I haven't; perhaps I've been
>> >  hanging around with the community too much who say it will be more
>> >  restrictive than before:)
> To be perfectly honest, I don't think anyone knows, it will probably
> depend on what policies are built around it.
>

I agree completely that the outcome is really up to the community. But 
personally, it's my hope that this will open things up. Certainly the 
articles selected for initial trial of this represent an opening, in 
that all the users who could edit before still can, and the ones that 
couldn't can now easily propose edits, ones that are likely to be accepted.

William

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-14 Thread Ian Woollard
On 15/06/2010, MuZemike  wrote:
> Have there been any other media outlets, blogs, etc. who see Pending
> Changes as a "loosening of controls"? I haven't; perhaps I've been
> hanging around with the community too much who say it will be more
> restrictive than before :)

To be perfectly honest, I don't think anyone knows, it will probably
depend on what policies are built around it.

> -MuZemike

-- 
-Ian Woollard

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-14 Thread MuZemike
Have there been any other media outlets, blogs, etc. who see Pending 
Changes as a "loosening of controls"? I haven't; perhaps I've been 
hanging around with the community too much who say it will be more 
restrictive than before :)

-MuZemike

On 6/14/2010 6:39 PM, Risker wrote:
> On 14 June 2010 19:22, David Gerard  wrote:
>
>
>> http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/wikipedia_to_loosen_controls_tonight.php
>>
>> Spotted by Nihiltres.
>>
>>
>>
>>  
> 
> The George Bush page is not going to be part of this trial, because there is
> no reasonable chance that the tiny, tiny percentage of useful edits will
> make up for all the vandalism and BLP violations that will be added. That
> was possibly the one thing that everyone working on the encyclopedia end of
> the trial came to agreement on very quickly.
>
> Risker/Anne
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-14 Thread Risker
On 14 June 2010 19:22, David Gerard  wrote:

>
> http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/wikipedia_to_loosen_controls_tonight.php
>
> Spotted by Nihiltres.
>
>
>

The George Bush page is not going to be part of this trial, because there is
no reasonable chance that the tiny, tiny percentage of useful edits will
make up for all the vandalism and BLP violations that will be added. That
was possibly the one thing that everyone working on the encyclopedia end of
the trial came to agreement on very quickly.

Risker/Anne
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[WikiEN-l] Pending Changes: first press

2010-06-14 Thread David Gerard
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/wikipedia_to_loosen_controls_tonight.php

Spotted by Nihiltres.


- d.

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