I thought one of the main reasons we are making Wikidata is so that you can 
update a value there, and then everywhere it is used will be automatically 
updated. If we find a more precise measurement for the depth of an ocean 
trench, then I just want to update it on Wikidata, and then every article that 
references it will be updated. I don't want to have to update it on Wikidata 
and then go do a null edit on every article that uses that information.

> From: [email protected]
> Date: Thu, 4 Apr 2013 22:13:24 +0200
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [Wikidata-l] Page history and properties
> 
> > don't see what value we'd gain from storing that extra metadata. Every
> > scenario I can think of where you care about past states of the database is
> > already handled by the compare selected revisions feature.
> 
> If that is so simple, can the {{#property:xxx}} call in a wikipedia
> simply resolve to the revision that was valid at the point in time
> equivalent to a given revision? It seem like you say you already have
> the code to do that when creating the wikidata item description.
> 
> I disgree that this is an issue for mediawiki core, since it is a
> question of how the Wikidata-specific property function works.
> 
> Gregor
> 
> 
> PS: I admit that Denny has found an example to where an image seems to
> be changing in content on commons, but I still believe this is a rare
> case. Any wiki-statistician that can supply exact number for these
> cases?
> 
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