I don't spend a lot of time on on Wikipedia itself these days, but when 
did the project start censoring talk pages, or is 
[[User:Faithlessthewonderboy]] just going ahead and making up his own 
rules.  This came up at [[Talk:Larissa Kelly]] about the /Jeopardy/ 
contestant.  Her Wikipedia article was a topic of discussion during the 
chat portion of a recent program in a way that could be taken as 
criticism of deletionists.  I disagree (but can understand) why some 
people don't want this mentioned in Mainspace, but suppressing this 
harmless discussion on the talk page beggars belief.  This censor seems 
to have the idea that anything which "does not pertain to improving the 
article" should be removed from the article, and that merely being 
trivial is hurtful. 

Talk pages are not article space, and these pages have traditionally 
served as a more relaxed place where there is wide latitude for 
discussion, and where otherwise nasty conflicts can be defused.  While 
there are certain overtly nasty things can and should be removed from a 
talk page, these situations are really the rare exception.  Most issues 
that can be considered trivial or off-topic in the widest sense of those 
terms tend to be talked out quickly, and to be subsequently ignored 
without harm.  When we start suppressing valid criticism from the talk 
pages, we've dug ourselves a deeper hole than I had previously imagined.


Ec

_______________________________________________
WikiEN-l mailing list
[email protected]
To unsubscribe from this mailing list, visit:
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l

Reply via email to