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==Templates 90% of slow articles==
I have reconfirmed that use of large templates is slowing the reformatting, or edit-preview, of major articles, as over 90% of the total delay. For a long edit-preview, divide by 10 to find the non-template speed improvement: article "Israel" with edit-preview of 40 seconds would drop to 4-second edit-preview with no templates. While most of the articles are slowed when having over 70 {]}, {]}, {]} or {]} templates, some articles are slowed more by other large templates. For example, article "]" (which has an edit-preview of 18 seconds average) has relatively few citation templates, so other templates account for over 60% of the total template-generated delay in "Miami" where ] runs almost 4 seconds, even though the typical huge top "{infobox settlement}" runs within only 1 second. I have noticed some other articles where citations were only half the problem, and other large templates delayed the edit-preview beyond the ideal 7-second response. I guess the general message is: all large templates have the potential to slow edit-preview of articles, not just citation templates. Meanwhile, plans to improve the speed of citation templates are still stuck in approval stages, for almost 2 months now. It took a long time to reach the slow edit-preview, and it has taken years to gain no approval for faster templates. -] (]) 17:50, 24 August 2012 (UTC)
*I'll confirm that I had at least a 20-second edit preview. But have you figured out how much of this is due to the size of the templates or the trouble of transcluding them, and how much due to assembling and formatting that very long list of "templates used in this preview" and the protection status of each, view source links, etc.? (I'm not sure if this is a valid test, but putting the whole article in "display:none" style reduced my display time by less than half.<sup></sup>) Maybe that function could be relegated to some specialized Special: page and not included every time you preview an edit? ] (]) 21:03, 24 August 2012 (UTC)
**Not a valid test. The parser doesn't look ahead and say "well he doesn't want to see it, let's serve up nothing and go for a smoke break". All the same grinding and gnashing happens, and the same content is delivered to your browser. It is your own browser that interprets style directives (you could use local Javascript to turn display: on again), so what you are seeing is the time saved by not asking your own browser to render the page contents. Since all our readers generally ''do'' want to see the page, you've sort-of done a reverse (or perverse?) test that shows the time they ''do'' have to take. ] (]) 23:43, 24 August 2012 (UTC)
***D'oh, I shoulda known that! Definitely there in the source. ] (]) 13:24, 25 August 2012 (UTC)
* '''Repeated large templates are slow, not total templates:''' The average of article "]" shows only a 1.5-second edit-preview (using button "Show&nbsp;preview"), despite the use of 41 templates, to format almost 20 scroll-screens of page text with 25 images, where almost everything is a wikilink, but still just 1.5 seconds for the edit-preview or reformat of the entire article, positioning 25 images/icons. That article "]" even uses the huge, but efficient ], but only once with just one {Cite_web}, so the result was a mere 1.5 seconds to reformat. When large templates are used over 70 times per page, then the slow-down becomes more obvious. That is the reasoning behind new ], to format simple, common citations 10x-12x times faster than {cite_web} or {cite_news}, as in pop-culture articles which do not use ] or author-to-title links. -] (]) 00:00, 25 August 2012 (UTC)
**And this is something we have known (as a community) for years, yet we still have opposition to improvements, often from those who are in blissful ignorance, but sometimes from those who surely should know better. '']&nbsp;]'', <small>01:44, 25 August 2012 (UTC).</small><br />
*** Well, I am thinking since removing citation templates would be a violation of ] without prior consensus, then changing short cites to use {]}, in the same format as ] of {cite_web}, is the easy alternative. Any short citation could be expanded, for more parameters, by returning to {cite_news} or {cite_journal}, but meanwhile, the major pop-culture articles would reformat, or edit-preview, almost 4x times faster since {cite_quick} is 10x-12x times faster than the others. For popular medical articles, with complex citations, then {]} could be used, as 4-5x faster than {cite_journal} but still support ] and other parameters. -] 02:28, 25 August 2012 (UTC)
**** I've previously commented on the ] to many articles; these in turn become very large navboxes. I ] ''"a neutral bright line putting a limit on templates. I think that limiting navboxes to linking 50 articles or less is more than fair, and limiting them to 25 is reasonable."'' Unfortunately, interest in the problem was solely political. But I'll point out that ] links to (and is linked by) 100 different communities in Miami-Dade County, and is an example of the sort of template I wanted to see replaced by a list article or Category. ] (]) 13:38, 25 August 2012 (UTC)
*** Where has this nonsense about ''opposition to improvements'' come from? Far from there being opposition to improvements, there are quite a few people actively pushing ] which seems to be a ''distinct'' improvement. The ''only'' significant opposition has been to the templates that Wikid77 made and started using, and that was precisely because they ''were not'' improvements. They broke quite a lot of stuff.<p>Thanks to M. Starling, Scribunto is now on the test2 server, per ]. I've set up {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/Citation_templates_test|a citation templates test page with a lot of templates in it}} there, that exercises a lot of our various citation, and cross-linkage, templates. Scribunto works to the extent that we can actually implement our citation templates in LUA. I have. Look how short {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/Template:Cite_book|Template:cite book}} is. All of the logic is in the LUA module (which as you can see by the test pages, incorporates a fair fraction of the functionality of the English Misplaced Pages's {{tl|Citation/core}}) ''without'' having templates that transclude templates that transclude templates and closing braces coming out of one's ears. ''This'' is the improvement that people are working on, and I've yet to see it (sensibly) opposed.<p>If you want something to compare, look at ] and ] here versus {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/The_Beatles#Citations|The Beatles#Citations}} and {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/The_Beatles#Sources|The Beatles#Sources}} on the test2 wiki, which is the same wikitext (albeit that the infobox and a few other templates are missing &mdash; I'm just about to do a LUA version of {{tl|Allmusic}} for it.).<p>] (]) 21:14, 25 August 2012 (UTC)
****Excellent work, thanks. That looks very promising (although I think we are still stuck with a mess when interpreting template arguments with problems handling <code>=</code> and <code>|</code> and more?). Has it been possible to estimate actual performance improvements yet? <small>Do you mean ''T.'' Starling in above?</small> ] (]) 03:32, 26 August 2012 (UTC)
*****M. isn't an initial, and that's not really an ''interpretation'' problem.<p>Scribunto doesn't change the ''wikitext syntax''. So we'll still have to use <code>1=</code> and so forth whenever there's an <code>=</code> character in a template argument, as now. What Scribunto changes is the potential implementation of templates, drastically, to one that works more speedily. In our current system, {{tl|cite book}} expands into {{tl|citation/core}}, which then has to be re-parsed and in turn expands into {{tl|citation/make link}} and {{tl|citation/identifier}}, which then have to be re-parsed and in turn expand into {{tl|hide in print}} and {{tl|only in print}}. In the Scribunto version of things, this is the entirety of {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/Template:Cite_book|Template:Cite book}}: <source lang=html5 enclose=span><includeonly>{{#invoke:citation|citation|CitationClass=book}}</includeonly><noinclude>{{documentation}}</noinclude></source> That's it. There's one level of template expansion. The same goes for infoboxes. In our current scheme, {{tl|infobox radar}} expands to {{tl|infobox}} which after re-parsing in turn expands to other templates such as {{tl|infobox/row}}. Again, the Scribunto equivalent has one level. The Scribunto equivalent of {{tl|infobox country}} is also interesting for other reasons. The template is again one line long: <source lang=html5 enclose=span><includeonly>{{#invoke:infobox_country|country}}</includeonly><noinclude>{{documentation}}</noinclude></source> The Lua module ''that the infobox implementor has to write'' is {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/Module:Infobox_country|Module:Infobox country}}. That's not complete, but the missing parts are simply more of the same. See how simple in structure it is! Ask yourself whether you, assuming/pretending that you don't know Lua, could implement the rest of the fields in the infobox that I haven't implemented by just following the pattern of what's already there.<p>As for performance improvements, see what I wrote on the Technical Village Pump. {{plainlink|1=//test2.wikipedia.org/United_States?action=purge|2=United States?action=purge}} loads in ~10 seconds on the test2 wiki (and it has an infobox template to process now). Compare that to {{plainlink|1={{fullurl:United_States|action=purge}}|2=United States?action=purge}} here. Or just open them up side by side in tabs and see which one completes first. &#9786;<p>Somewhere in ] there's a template that in the current system expands to 28 levels deep &hellip;.<p>] (]) 11:16, 26 August 2012 (UTC)
******Thanks again, although I have read some of the docs for Scribunto and Lua and understand that standard template syntax is used to invoke a Lua module (I was expressing disappointment that there is no magic way to clean that up due to backwards compatibility requirements). I just tried the purge and got 15 and 35 seconds for test2 and here, respectively. There are a lot of confounding factors such as the time required to purge a similar page with no templates, the hardware used for test2 and for here, and the current workload on each site, so we'll need to see how things work out when implemented here. I agree that a Lua module is ''much'' better than MediaWiki template voodoo. ] (]) 12:04, 26 August 2012 (UTC)
*******Those and several others. This is why I pointed out on the Pump that these are not (yet) like-for-like comparisons. But one of the things that having this on the test2 wiki gives us is the ability to have like-for-like comparisons. Copy over a hundred or so articles that make heavy uses of citation, infobox, conversion, co&ouml;rdinate, and other templates; Scribble the appropriate templates; and compare and check. This is the whole ''testing'' thing that Wikid77 missed out on last time and seems to be missing out on this time. ] (]) 17:16, 26 August 2012 (UTC)
********Well, that was the early phase and I did not "miss out" on testing, as I updated several articles in early July, which revisions now work fine. However, beware people falsely claiming "broken articles" when just a few links fail, or the errors were already in the articles, as broken articles before changing citations. Note that "]" has a few broken citations using "coauthors=" rather than last2/last3 for author-title links with {{tl|sfn}}. Those were pre-existing errors in "India" not caused by the ], nor ] which works fine. -] 03:16, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
*********"Just a few links" being the entire ] system, amongst others. More misleading terms here are your classifying template parameters, that you've just decided to not support, as "errors". Again, this is where you are completely wrongheaded. A drop in replacement ''has to be capable of being dropped in''. That means supporting things like <code>coauthors</code> (and indeed <code>coauthor</code> &mdash; I've provided both in the Scribbled templates.) because uses of them exist. Ironically, but in demonstration of the point that you simply skip over the testing and checking parts, ] has no citation that uses <code>coauthors</code> and hasn't had since July. Fortunately, one of the other articles copied over to the test2 wiki does.<p>To all of M. Wales' talk page watchers: If you have a favourite obscure citation template parameter that you want to ensure will continue to work with Scribbled citation templates, feel free to do as {{user|Allen3}} has done and drop in a test case, copied from an actual current use in an article for preference, at the bottom of {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/Citation_templates_test|Citation templates test}}. The goal here is to support all of the existing functionality, ], so that we have something ready to drop in when the time comes, as well as so that M. Starling has something akin to real use to profile and debug; rather than to arbitrarily throw away functionality and declare "fast citations". &#9786;<p>] (]) 08:49, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
*******Here's an interesting datum that ''is'' a like-for-like test, because it's on the same wiki: I copied ] over to the test2 wiki. It turns out that it uses {{tl|citation}} directly, a ''lot''. I hadn't Scribbled that template at the time. On the test2 wiki it took somewhere over 50 seconds for the page to display using the old non-Scribbled template. I Scribbled {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/Template:Citation|Template:Citation}} and that reduced the time for {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/India|India}} to approximately 20 seconds. ] (]) 14:28, 27 August 2012 (UTC)
********Interesting. I have some questions that I'll ask here rather than inject noise into the VPT discussion. I'm hoping you might ask Tim to provide some info on the 20 seconds: how much of that is Template:Citation, and is there a stand-out bottleneck apart from Citation? Is the Scribunto/Lua in use at test2 running at full speed (or is it running with some kind of debug/profiling code)? This is just my curiosity, but some info added at VPT (or a dedicated page somewhere?) would be interesting. ] (]) 01:54, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
*********I have no special access to M. Starling, and if you want to ask xem something it's best done directly rather than through me. I'm one of the people writing Scribbled templates, and articles that use those templates. That puts me in the r&ocirc;le of Complaining End User Who Wants To Do Unexpected Things And Have Everything Work Just Like In The Doco as far as M. Starling is concerned. &#9786;<p>But there's a figure for how much time is spent by Lua given in a comment in the generated HTML. I just re-purged {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/India|India}} and looked at the figure. It reported 5.797s, out of just under 20s in total by my count, spent in Lua, and that's presumably the total for ''every'' Scribbled template, which includes {{tl|citation}}, {{tl|notelist}}, {{tl|infobox country}}, and several others at this stage. (The remaining things to get a proper like-for-like comparison up and running are some missing fields in the country infobox, some CSS generation in citations, a few navboxes and ancillary non-Scribbled templates, and {{tl|convert}}. Conversion might add significant time on. The missing country infobox fields probably won't. They're just a tedious exercise in decoding what multiply nested <source lang=html5 enclose=none>{{#if}}</source> in the original are supposed to be doing. The non-Scribbled templates are fairly flat in the first place, which is why they don't need to be Scribbled.)<p>As for the other question: I'm ''guessing'', since M. Starling has said that xe's going to profile things, that the test2 server has some form of profiling enabled.<p>] (]) 08:49, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
********One edit-preview of test2.wikipedia "India" ran only 14 seconds with the ] Module:Citation, which is comparable to using ], or 5-6x times faster than template-based {Citation} formatting. However, Module:Citation is still being revised, so it might become slower after it is expanded closer to {cite_web} or {citation} operation, with all 9 author names and ''"et&nbsp;al."'' formatting. -] 03:16, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
*********You're trying to grasp at straws, there. {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/Module:Citation|Module:Citation}} supported "all" 9 author names right from the start, when citation template support was first added to it, long before I even copied ] across for testing. What you saw, supports "more than all". ] (]) 08:49, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
{{od}}
:* There are no "straws" and again, you misunderstand the full options in the current {cite_web}, which I have studied for years. When I mentioned the 9 author names and ''"et&nbsp;al''." formatting, I was referring to option "display-authors=3" which truncates the listed authors to 3 names. The Lua version in test2.wiki Module:Citation has not supported the parameter "display-authors=3" which works as follows here:
::* 1: {&#123;cite_web | title=Web Page | last1=Jones |first=Tim |last2=Hood|first2=Kay<br>|last3=Thirder|first3=T. |last4=Forth|first4=Fred}}&nbsp;&rarr;<br>'''Result:''' {{cite_web | title=Web Page | last1=Jones |first=Tim |last2=Hood|first2=Kay |last3=Thirder|first3=T. |last4=Forth|first4=Fred}}
::* 2: {&#123;cite_web | title=Web Page | last1=Jones |first=Tim |last2=Hood|first2=Kay<br>|last3=Thirder|first3=T. |last4=Forth|first4=Fred |display-authors=3}}&nbsp;&rarr;<br>'''Result:''' {{cite_web | title=Web Page | last1=Jones |first=Tim |last2=Hood|first2=Kay |last3=Thirder|first3=T. |last4=Forth|first4=Fred |display-authors=3}}
:: What you imagine as me being "misleading" is me trying to explain all the numerous parameters which the Lua version does not support yet. Remember, there are 23 forks of {cite_web}, as {cite_book}, {cite_journal}, {cite_news}, {cite_video}, {cite_encyclopedia}, {cite_podcast}, {cite_magazine}, {cite_url}, etc. There are many more parameters which must be added to the Lua forks, which will slow the processing even further, compared to the faster templates {]} and {]}. So, now the problem becomes how to get the Lua version to run even faster. -] (]) 06:14, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

== Speeding Miami to 6 seconds from 18 ==
By a combination of faster techniques, the full article "]" can be improved to edit-preview in 6 seconds, rather than the 18-second reformat of recent months. The article "Miami" has been an interesting example, as a popular page viewed 4,500 times per day, because slow citations are only a fourth of the total reformat time, while other templates cause the majority of slowness. There are 4 techniques which apply here: preformatted template sections ("cached sections"), fewer bottom navboxes, fast-citation templates, and the "efficiency dividend" when running quicker pages:
:* '''Preformatted template sections''' ("cached sections") - This was one of the tactics discussed last month, where a slow-template section could be run separately, and the generated results would be stored as if "]" in a subpage. For "Miami", the cached section is {]} which was developed from running the 4-second ] and copying the results into a custom-formatted subpage. Because the {weather_box} template is extremely complex (also listing ], snow, or humidity), rather than fight to make the complexity faster, the easy bypass is to cache the results into a subpage /preformatted, for instant inclusion in "Miami".
:* '''Fewer navboxes:''' As typical for popular articles, "Miami" had over 9 bottom navboxes, where 7 were only remotely related to Miami, and are listed now by title-link only, not embedded as navboxes of "107" links each. That shaved about 2 seconds off the total reformat time.
:* '''Fast-citation template {cite_quick}:''' Because the article was written using mostly {cite_web} or {cite_news} templates, then ] could be used to format cites 10x-12x faster. This is very typical of pop-culture articles, such as films, celebrities, or news events, and {cite_quick} can shave another 4 seconds off the edit-preview time.
:* '''Efficiency dividend:''' As noted last month, when a page is streamlined to run much faster, then the overall speed is further quickened by avoiding busy-server delays which affect the slower articles even more. In this case, the dividend is about 1.5 seconds, as if the original 18-second article could have displayed in 16.5 seconds in an "ideal world of no other users" which slow the servers during those dedicated 16.5 seconds.
All together, the total speed improvement of edit-preview becomes:
::* 18 seconds - 4 (weatherbox) - 2 (navboxes) - 4 (cites) - 1.5 (dividend) = 6.5 seconds.
Because the busy servers (Monday-Friday) still affect even quick articles, then the 6.5-second edit-preview will occasionally stretch to 7 or 8 seconds, but reformat times of 10 seconds would be rare, and the original 18-second edit-preview would basically be long-gone from "Miami". The only catch is to gain approval to use {]} in major articles, as part of the ] {Cite} template family, as intended. Then, repeat similar changes in other popular articles, and soon, many major large articles could be edited and previewed within a comfortable time period, within about 7 seconds. ] -] 08:57, 25 August 2012 (UTC)
:Excellent. I do prefer your "Smart citations" to a cite fork though. One more suggestion, embed the footnotes in the {{Tlx|Footnotes}} and make that a subpage too. '']&nbsp;]'', <small>13:57, 25 August 2012 (UTC).</small><br />
* '''Cite_web/smart only 4x faster while Cite_quick 12x:''' The inescapable advantage of {]} is the 10x-12x faster speed compared to {]} as only 4x faster than {cite_web}. Perhaps there are other speed techniques which could be used to make those templates faster. Meanwhile, for {cite_web/smart}, I think I have used "every trick in the book" to keep it from slowing to only 3x faster. In fact, a {cite_journal/smart} is likely to be only 3x faster because {cite_journal} entries tend to use more parameters, and all of those will slow performance even more. Hence, the tactic for popular medical articles would be to use fast {Fcite_journal} as 5x-6x faster, because that would be almost 2x faster than a proposed {cite_journal/smart}. However, the potential to have a subpage as "article/footnotes/preformatted" is an excellent idea for some of the mega-articles in the top 500 most-viewed articles, such as "]", to allow it to be edit-previewed as a shorter page, or reformatted with any image size, within a few seconds, rather than over 27 seconds with "Template include size too large". That footnotes tactic is so awesome, it will be like magic when editing "United States" again. -] (]) 17:46, 25 August 2012 (UTC)

With ''no change'' in the article wikitext ''at all'', {{plainlink|//test2.wikipedia.org/United_States|United States}} on the test2 wiki using Scribunto loads (with a cache purge of course) in 10 seconds. The infobox might slow it down a bit once added; but not, I suspect, by 13 seconds or more. And of course infobox templates are candidates for Scribunto, too. ] (]) 02:29, 26 August 2012 (UTC)
* With ''no change'' in the article wikitext except using {]}, "United States" reformats here in only 8 seconds, with the main infobox and all other templates still in use. Again, the primary advantage of {]} is the 10x-12x faster speed compared to {]} as only 4x faster than {cite_web}. However, {cite_web/smart} should be the upgrade version for {cite_web}, for use in the remainder of the 1.1 million cite-web articles which are not viewed, or edited, so often. -] 14:16, 26 August 2012 (UTC)
** &hellip; which is a misleading way of saying ''with'' changes to the wikitext, because of all of the citation fields that your proposals ''intentionally'' don't support but that are used in that very article and that would outright lose displayed citation information if one ''didn't'' change the wikitext; such as <code>doi=</code> (used in 2 templates), <code>quote=</code> (used in 1 template), <code>edition=</code> (used in 2 templates), and <code>month=</code> (used in 16 templates) for starters. You ''did'' learn from ] and actually make sure that your purported go-faster system ''wasn't breaking things'' this time around, ne? ] (]) 17:00, 26 August 2012 (UTC)
::: Well, I did learn to beware people "crying wolf" when there are already problems with {cite_web}. Do not be fooled into thinking other templates are "not broken" when they also fail to process parameters. However, compare the following:
:::* {&#123;cite web|title=See which parameters disappear | editor1 = Eddy | article=Parametercheck |Date=1 May 1944}}
:::* '''Cite_web result:''' {{cite web|title=See which parameters disappear | editor1 = Eddy | article=Parametercheck |Date=1 May 1944}}
:::* '''Fcite_web result:''' {{Fcite web|title=See which parameters disappear | editor1 = Eddy | article=Parametercheck |Date=1 May 1944}}
::: At least {Fcite_web} notes the incorrect parameters. The goal is to edit-preview faster, to see the results faster, and adjust the parameters. Because {Fcite_web} is faster, it has more time to check for invalid parameters and warn the user. -] 08:59, 27 August 2012 (UTC)

:Is anyone's time on Misplaced Pages, either as an editor or as a passerby reader, so constrained that shaving 12 seconds really makes a difference to anyone? Is this really the life we want to live in where we care about such inane things? Do we not have better ways of improving the encyclopedia instead of taking what works and trying to change it only for the sake of faster loading times? And at the expense of making the site user friendly and constructive.] (]) 00:50, 27 August 2012 (UTC)
:: '''Everyone's time:''' Here, the "shaving 12 seconds" is a small example, and many of the problems with major articles are 20-40 seconds longer to edit-preview, or view with imagesize set other than 220px. When the delay reaches 60 seconds, then the entire edit could be lost, although rare, due to ]. Plus, numerous people have been caring about such "inane things" for many decades, in far more detail with split-second timings; see article "]" for more there. When response time is faster, then a template has more time to check the user's text and suggest improvements, since the user will likely see the result within a few seconds, not 18, or 29, or 52 seconds later. -] 08:59, 27 Aug., revised 02:20, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

=== Speeding other articles ===
Because there are many large templates in Misplaced Pages, various articles will be slowed by different large templates, so improving just citation templates, or ], will not solve all speed problems. Another major template which can slow processing (when used over 300x times) is the shortened-footnote ], which uses footnote function <nowiki>{{#tag:ref|...}}</nowiki> to generate ref-tags in a subtemplate. In articles using measurements, the ] has been fast enough for most articles, but it runs 30-40 conversions per second, and that might be too slow in large tables of measurements. In rare cases, other conversion templates could be used to format hundreds of numbers, faster, in measurement tables. I guess the main point is to be aware how articles could format, or edit-preview, 10x times faster without large templates; so if an article is running slower than a few seconds, there are likely some templates that could be made faster, to have a faster article. Otherwise, we can consider putting data as hand-formatted into tables without extra templates, when the speed is an issue. -] (]) 06:41, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

== Incivility ==

I am uninvolved in this issue, but i cam across ], in particular the comment . Thats not a death threat but I would think that is grossly uncivil to a congenial colloborative effort. To make matters worse, at the ANI thread the NPA "puke-brain" is reiterated. An admin seems to be working on it at ], but i thought this could be of interest to you. It would be something to look at in an effort to clean/improve the atmosphere. Disputes are quite normal, but that is not a dispute.] (]) 04:15, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

:I was going to refrain from further comment, but "Thats not a death threat but I would think that is grossly uncivil to a congenial colloborative effort"? Really? Of course it isn't a death threat - nobody has suggested it was. Why do you feel the need to point out that it isn't? And yes, it was grossly uncivil - it was intended to be. Again, nobody - including me - has suggested otherwise. You seem however to have conveniently omitted the context however, where "congenial colloborative effort" was clearly not the objective of the person I directed it at. Instead, we had a 'contributor' insisting that a mass murderer was not a terrorist despite the fact that not only had he been convicted of terrorism, but ''his own defence lawyer'' had described him as such (and no, he wasn't saying that Misplaced Pages shouldn't ''describe him as a terrorist'', he was asserting that he wasn't one). Likewise, he was asserting that the mass murder of 69 individuals - mostly teenagers - wasn't 'an atrocity'. While I clearly shouldn't have blown my top like that, to pretend that this was some sort of 'content dispute' is a gross misrepresentation. Sadly though, yet again the petty amateur bureaucrats of Misplaced Pages seem intent on burying their heads in the sand, and pretending that all would be right in the world if we were more polite to each other. It doesn't work like that. Misplaced Pages has a serious (and almost certainly growing) problem with 'contributors' who exploit the 'rules' to their advantage while they spin articles to suit their own obnoxious agendas. In this case the 'contributor' even openly asserted on his own talk page that he "''consider Misplaced Pages to be an intrinsically evil concept and a malevolent entity, a cancer on truth and on legitimate academic studies. Its concept of verifiability is the core of its evil. I am not here because I want to contribute to Misplaced Pages - I am here because I oppose everything Misplaced Pages stands for. A good writer does not bury truth because suitable sources are not immediately to hand, a good writer does not promote lies simply because sources exist that present those lies as if they were truth. But I recognise that few people have such high moral standards - or the courage or the knowledge to carry through with them".'' . No sign of "colloborative effort" there. No sign of anything but someone who doesn't give a damn about anything but his own toxic worldview. We should not be 'collaborating' with such individuals at all. I for one refuse to. So yeah, I said things I shouldn't have, and probably deserve to be blocked for it (frankly, I'm burnt out and don't really care that much either way), but don't try to kid yourselves that blocking one particularly obnoxious long-term troll and one foul-mouthed grump is going to solve the problem. While AN/I and the rest concerns itself with enforcing an entirely bogus 'civility' amongst contributors, a significant proportion of such 'contributors' are filling Misplaced Pages with hate filled bigotry concerning the rest of the world. As I said at AN/I, this is cognitive dissonance at its most obvious - a petty concern for internal civility combined with an abject refusal to recognise what is going on in our articles. ''Every'' article that touches on issues of ethnic or religious conflict for example has its collection of POV-pushers working behind the scenes to spin things their way, and almost all of them soon learn how to exploit a system that 'assumes good faith' even when confronted with self-evident malevolence. Obsessing about 'enforcing the rules' while ignoring how such rules are being exploited plays right into the hands of the bigots - and let's not forget that Anders Behring Breivik, the mass-murderer that was being whitewashed by this person we were supposed to be 'collaborating' with is a great fan of Misplaced Pages - I'm sure he found it of great use as a source for excuses and 'justifications' for his activities. It there is one thing that Misplaced Pages doesn't lack for example, it is deranged Islamophobic trolls, out to convince the world that a vast all-encompassing conspiracy is out to conquer the world, enslave our women, murder our children, and in all probability (if they are to be believed) drink our blood. Are we supposed to 'collaborate' with such individuals? I seem to recall that previous 'collaborations' with those pushing similar conspiracy theories didn't work out too well... ] (]) 05:36, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

:i fully agree with andy here. wiki is slowly but steadily being filled up with islamophobic editors, '''giving wikipedia a highly negative media publicity''', especially due to the breivik trial (see e.g. )--<small><span style="border:1px solid blue;padding:1px;background:blue;">]</span></small> 05:54, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

::You, Andy, and a number of others I could name here, are usually uncannily right in these situations about the character and motives of the person you harangue. (I don't know about this instance.) (1) Sometimes you're not. (2) That language and behavior is unnecessary, so on those rare occasions when you're wrong it is an unnecessary gross mistreatment of another editor. (3) Whether you're right or wrong, it always consumes large amounts of other people's time. Show some consideration to the rest of us and take it somewhere other than the article talk page. --] (]) 05:57, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

::I'm not involved in this conflict, just want to point out that "atrocity" does strike me as a POV term. As for "he wasn't saying that Misplaced Pages shouldn't ''describe him as a terrorist'', he was asserting that he wasn't one", I don't see any evidence that that's the case. His comments on the Anders Breivik talk page were all focused on the use of the term in the article, not in general. I disagree with him on that point - reliable sources call him a terrorist, so it's fine - but rather than debate the issue, it looks like the editors in question quickly resorted to nasty personal attacks. Whatever Meowy's motivations were, telling him to "fuck off and die", among other things, is not in the least justifiable. ] (]) 06:11, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:::The guy was an obvious troll, with a block log the length of your arm, and was trying to provoke - unfortunately he provoked two good Wikipedians (who really do care about the quality of the encyclopedia and how it progresses) into using injudicious words. I'm a great supporter of civility, but the context and circumstances matter too - we're not all robotic automatons who can keep emotion completely out of our dealing with others, especially not when they are trolls and are picking on a very sensitive topic to start a fight. -- ] (]) 09:38, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

* Arguing that the murder of 69 people wasn't an atrocity is extreme. Note the editor's own comments here: : "'' consider Misplaced Pages to be an intrinsically evil concept and a malevolent entity, a cancer on truth and on legitimate academic studies. Its concept of verifiability is the core of its evil. I am not here because I want to contribute to Misplaced Pages - I am here because I oppose everything Misplaced Pages stands for.''" The incivility was uncalled for and unnecessarily inflamed the situation; I would have suggested filing at ANI instead. ] (]) 09:41, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

**In the old days, I would have just personally blocked the troll on sight, and that would have been the end of that. One of the things that makes wikis work is precisely the ability of the community to tell people to knock off the nonsense or get blocked.
**If you go back to the disastrous culture of unmoderated Usenet groups, you can see what happens if it is too difficult to block trolls from participation. What happens is that good people reach the end of their good humor and lash out. The social environment degrades to people screaming at each other and it becomes quite hard to tell the good people from the bad. If someone says that they "consider Misplaced Pages to be an intrinsically evil concept" then the solution is not to get emotional and lash out at them in anger, but to realize that '''telling''' them to fuck off is not nearly as satisfying as maintaining a good sense of humor while '''making''' them fuck off (with a permanent ban). We have better things to do!--] (]) 12:00, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:::Agree (and better put than what I said). ] (]) 12:07, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:::*Yep, me too, and thankfully someone at ANI did quickly indef block the troll - trouble is, they instantly got told "''That was just about the worst possible decision to make in this matter''" -- ] (]) 12:11, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::*Well, it was. It suggested that we can't talk stuff out, we have to shut someone up. ] (]) 14:39, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::::I don't think it suggested any such thing. We can both be eternally open to talking stuff out with anyone who is putting forward a remotely reasonable (but perhaps badly mistaken) perspective. But there really is such a thing as trolling, and it is often better to simply cut our losses and not have huge internal drama to get rid of someone who is being patently ridiculous. Not every possible conversation is actually worth having. Calling Misplaced Pages an "intrinsically evil concept" while claiming that murdering 69 people is not an atrocity is just not worth arguing about. Good judgment requires both a certain amount of patience with the absurd '''and''' a willingness to insist on firm limits. Neither "you can't criticize Misplaced Pages" nor "You can say anything you want no matter how crazy or abusive" is a sensible policy.--] (]) 14:51, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:::::::I don't wish to defend all of Meowy's claims. He may have a (theoretical) point on atrocity, and we can easily discuss what qualities an act must have, what limits must be crossed, before we call something an atrocity, but that's beside the point. (I have my own opinions on Breivik, and they are perfectly conventional--even more so since I became a father again.) I just don't think that it warranted an indefinite block issued so quickly. Meowy's first edit on that talk page was yesterday, and if he were that disruptive we have better mechanisms in place than an indef block, handed out five and a half hours later. We are generally much more conscious of more proper procedures. I will admit that I am inclined to take the now-famous diff with a grain of salt sooner than others (without wanting to argue that the kangaroo comment was ''not'' stupid, because it was--and I wish he'd apologize for it), and I will also admit that I think Meowy may have done more good than harm. And in the interest of disclosure: Meowy's talk page should prove that I have confronted him in the past about certain aspects of his behavior. I am not a friend of his or a supporter of all his work--but I do think that the block was too quick, and that he is not just a troll.<p>Sorry for taking up so much space here; that's not a habit of mine, and I'll drop it right now. Have a great day, Jimbo. ] (]) 15:24, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::::::I have to disagree with you here, Drmies. I would agree that if we were only talking about the Breivik article, an indefinite block would have come too quickly. However, why should someone who openly says that the entire project is "inherently evil" be allowed to stay? That is not someone here to improve the project. People who believe in the project disagree all the time about the best way to do so (and that's a good thing). Disagreeing with the very existence of the project means you should go somewhere else and do something else. <font face="Lucida Calligraphy">]<font color="#008888">of</font>]</font> 15:42, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::::::::If I may be so bold, why should editors that violated the very spirit of wikipedia(by running or participating in a mailing list) be allowed to stay here? At which point should the project itself(Sysops, editors, etc) decide that it is better off without a certain editor(s)? --] 16:30, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::::::::I think it depends on the actions of the user in question. Simply holding the opinion that "the Misplaced Pages is evil" should not be grounds for blocking or banning, that's straying a bit too close to a Thoughtcrime IMO. Punish the ''act'', not the ''thought''. ] (]) 17:24, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::::::::I agree with you, Tarc. Plus, LadyofShalott, if the statement re evil stood alone, then your "disagreeing with the very existence" interpretation would be just fine. But the statement was not in a vacuum, the user followed immediately up with explaining that verifiable sources can reflect non-truths, and truths can be without supporting RSs, so then, his statements about "evil", considering his whole context, boil down to an argument against the wisdom in essay ], and that is nothing more than a boring rehash of an issue discussed many times, and so shouldn't put anyone up in arms. ] (]) 13:53, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
*Meowy's basic claim - ''"Terrorist" is a pov term and should not be used in Misplaced Pages articles.'' - was clearly wrong, though apparently another editor agreed with it, claiming, per radical BLP, that consensus was unnecessary. A transcription-monkey approach, using "terrorist" and "far right" and any other term whenever but only if the sources use it, is most neutral and informative. Nonetheless, it's surprising to see the distortion of articles caused by an overzealous concern for BLP so abruptly and harshly rejected that the person is blocked merely for arguing it. I would see this as setting a bad precedent for blocking people merely because of their opinions on policy, while not necessarily addressing the underlying conflict between accuracy and "being nice to subjects". ] (]) 13:28, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
*:Meowy wasn't blocked just for that. -- ] (]) 13:32, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

:I think the claims that the mass murder wasn't an atrocity (and that atrocity isn't neutral), the hint that the article is a propaganda article and that wikipedia is intrinsically evil are more likely to be a contributing factors. ] (]) 14:37, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::I must be missing something - where did Meowy claim that mass murder wasn't an atrocity? The point he appeared to be making was that "atrocity" is an emotive and subjective term which doesn't belong in a Misplaced Pages article. ] (]) 17:49, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

Someone above inferred, quite incorrectly, that Meowy might one of those Islamophobic editors. That's not the case. His view of NPOV is indistinguishable from trolling to me, but he was at least consistent in applying it to Islamist organizations as well; see ]. I have the impression he (or she) was someone who simply liked to stir up controversies. ] (]) 15:16, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:An RFC is needed to determine whether ] is a policy any more. It clearly is not enforced evenly, if at all. Serial abusers are given a break because we can't dare be punitive and blocking does no good since they don't care...especially when they are quickly unblocked by sympathetic friends. ] is no longer policy. It's time we accept it and put it in writing. --]]] 18:04, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::Moewy wasn't blocked for incivility, they were blocked for not being here to build an encyclopedia and disruption over a period of time, validated by their own words. I declined the unblock request based on this as well. Andy was incivil, but I started talking with him about that the evening before I declined Moewy's unblock request. The longer I have the bit, the more I dislike civility blocks and avoid them when conduct isn't to the level of ]. I've never seen a pure "civility block" achieve much other than a day or two of peace. I subscribe to the idea that there is ] here, only solutions. While we strive to be as fair as humanly possible, we are not a court of law and at the end of the day the goal is to write an encyclopedia, which means making difficult and painful decisions from time to time, in order to further than goal. ] - ] ] <small><b>]</b></small> 18:34, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:::And letting serial violators of the "policy" promotes writing an encyclopedia...? I'm waiting to see a single excuse for why comments like "fuck of and die you disgusting little heap of shit. Sociopathic scum like you" are at all useful. People can blow their top on occasion and that's understandable. AtG seems to pride himself on being incivil and flaunting the fact that he won't stay blocked for it. What's fair about letting him abuse other editors that he doesn't agree with? Is ] policy or not? --]]] 18:59, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::I agree on eliminating or scaling back WP:CIVIL. I've even called it "Misplaced Pages's War on Drugs" in the past, because the more effort is put into enforcing civility, the more uncivil editors become. ] (]) 19:15, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::Serial incivility is a problem, and not what I was referring to, singular or occasional incidents. But the reality of the situation is that some people are constantly incivil, and blocking them 24, 48, 72 hours and escalating it more each time, solves nothing. Eventually they get indef blocked, so the real decision isn't about how long of a block, but is "At what point do we simply remove someone from Misplaced Pages because they are more trouble than they are worth?". Few will phrase it so bluntly and honestly, but the reality is, that is what we often have to consider, and sometimes the straw that breaks the camel's back isn't the largest straw, just the last. This leaves some to question why someone was indef'ed for a single incident (and scream "admin abuse!") when it was for a series of problems. This is why many admins abhor pulling the (necessary) trigger for an editor that is a constant source of moderate problems and a net negative for the project. Andy's comments weren't just uncivil, they were a personal attack, which is why I'm still discussing it at ANI. Had Meowy been an innocent bystander, Andy would already be blocked, but since he garners no sympathy, gaining a consensus is problematic. Above, even Jimmy is less concerned than had Meowy been an innocent bystander. ] - ] ] <small><b>]</b></small> 19:35, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:::::Andy's comments were uncivil, they were personal attacks, and they were a continuation of years worth of similar behavior. The guy is an asshole. (I'm willing to take my block if you give him his.)
:::::There is no once in a while issue here. AtG continuously makes comments that shouldn't be acceptable if ] was actually a policy. Blocking 2 people shouldn't be a problem. (3 is fine if you want to block me for calling AtG an asshole. I'm fine with that...though think that given the loose interpretation so far, I'm just trying to communicate the way he knows best how to. --]]] 19:40, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::::Andy frustrates me as well, and if I thought a block would make a difference I would gladly mash the button. I'm not one to block somebody just because they have passed a "line in the sand", but instead I try to consider the totality of the circumstance, and then only if it will actually benefit Misplaced Pages. Some admins ''would'' block you for your comment here, but I would instead just ask you strike it, if only because I'm nicely asking you to. Ask anyone, I'm not the block happy type. You made your point, I '''do''' understand your frustration, and I'm not arguing in Andy's defense, just trying to find a solution that benefits Misplaced Pages the greatest amount. ] - ] ] <small><b>]</b></small> 19:53, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:::::::There is not a chance in hell that I will strike my comment if his is left unchecked. I don't understand at all why you are making excuses for his blatantly incivil comments. --]]] 19:55, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
:::::::Maybe if enough people would be willing to 'mash the button' when blatant violations of policies took place, we wouldn't have to worry about situations like this. ] needs to be demoted. There doesn't seem to be another option at this point. --]]] 20:02, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
::::::::Sorry to disappoint you, but I'm not going to block you. As for Andy, I've been on that since the moment it hit ANI, my home away from home, but I have a day job as well, so it is difficult to devote every hour here. If you looked around the various places, you would know that. We all do what we think is right. ] - ] ] <small><b>]</b></small> 22:30, 28 August 2012 (UTC)

== Jonathan Zhu ==

Jonathan Zhu is a professor at Dept. of Media & Communication, City University of Hong Kong. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 13:34, 28 August 2012 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
*Aha! This must be some sort of ] variation. May I play? Erm &hellip; I'll go with the ] Defence, I think. Professor {{plainlink|1=http://kigiran.com/readarticle.php?article_id=41|2={{lang|ru|Батырева Светлана Гарриевна}}}} is head of the ] Museum of Traditional Culture at the Kalmyk Institute of Humanities. We ''are'' playing Oslo Variations, where Grumps are wild, right? ] (]) 15:14, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
** Yellow only counts above the line. Vyborgskaya.&nbsp;] 15:26, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
*** Double. --] (]) 15:35, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
**** Eek. I resign. Carry on.&nbsp;] 16:07, 28 August 2012 (UTC)
: I assume this brand new editor, who might not know English well, was trying to start a new article in the wrong place. ] (]) 07:11, 29 August 2012 (UTC)


== Misplaced Pages 's growing exclusivity == == Misplaced Pages 's growing exclusivity ==

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Misplaced Pages 's growing exclusivity

In the beginning Misplaced Pages was indeed a place where anyone could edit; now, alas, it is increasingly turning into a elitist country club where only those with access to university libraries and extensive (and expensive) prrivate book collections are permitted to contribute to the project. The Internet has long been the preferred place for us amateurs to extract reliable sources which would be used to create new articles. Yet there is a growing tendency here to deem many websites unreliable as regards WP. Let me use as an example the highly-informative Medieval Lands website with which I managed to create well over a hundrdd historical biographies. Now that it's reliability has been questioned and found wanting, a barrier has been erected effectively stopping me from creating new pages. For without this work, which draws from primary sources (difficult if not impossible to find on the 'Net), I cannot continue my work on medieval noblewomen. Moves such as these are merely counter-productive and will only serve to reduce the performance level of previously active editos such as myself. Misplaced Pages is repeatedly shooting itself in the foot and as a matter of course will lose momentum.--Jeanne Boleyn (talk) 07:44, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

It seems to me that its momentum was lost several years ago, and the whole project is now deeply and perhaps irrevocably stagnant and in decay. The basic problem is the ever-growing gulf between those editors who use their experience and knowledge of procedures to disparage and dissuade others, and newer, less experienced and less conscientious editors for whom, essentially, it is no longer fun. WP participation is a hobby, not a duty. If it is no longer a fun activity, no-one will do it. No-one has yet come up with an answer to this, and so the project is becoming fossilised, and will become increasingly irrelevant. Shame really. Ghmyrtle (talk) 08:05, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
What is ironic is that during the time Misplaced Pages was a fun place with much friendly interaction and banter on editors' talk pages, I was actually at the peak of my production as reagrds creating new articles. I am now pretty much restricted to editing in an area which is judged as highly polemic (Northern Ireland), yet I have discovered has netted me the most positive feedback. I was however, thinking of going back to creating and working on articles about noble heiresses but that option is no longer avaialble to me thanks to a few over-zealous Crusader types around here.--Jeanne Boleyn (talk) 08:12, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
Local libraries would probably contain the necessary information and I there is a wikiproject which helps give access to academic resources Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Resource Exchange. Building articles from unreliable sources just doesn't lead to a trustworthy encyclopaedia. There are still many topics which don't require access to academic sources (most likely even the majority of articles). IRWolfie- (talk) 10:15, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
I know that Jeanne lives in an area that does not have ready access to English-language offline sources - and has been accused by another experienced editor here of (quote) "tainting the project" by using online sources that some (not all) deem to be unreliable. So, there may be specific issues involved. But the basic point remains. How do we return WP to the (relatively) pleasant working environment of a few years ago, when there was a simple divide between good editors and vandals - as opposed to now, when there is conflict between those who seek to uphold the very highest standards of scholarship and devotion to rules and guidelines, and the rest of us who get pissed off by overbearing attitudes and are increasingly unlikely to contribute in any way? Ghmyrtle (talk) 10:50, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
I don't agree with the way this is being framed. Two different issues are being lumped together. The first is the difficulty of contributing when articles are often already to a very high standard of quality. The second is "overbearing attitudes" and "devotion to rules and guidelines". The first is an inevitable problem that I'm not bothered by (and I will give an example). The second is worth examining.
Awhile back I started to tell someone in England about George Wallace. A fascinating political animal who... augh I have to go now. Will try to finish this comment tonight!--Jimbo Wales (talk) 11:01, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
The fundamental problem is that Misplaced Pages retains too much power over the presentation of content on a continuing basis, rather than merely facilitating its assembly by volunteers. The site has become one of the top ten websites, routinely topping Google searches, and a great many people, amateur and professional, want to control public perception of specific issues by controlling Misplaced Pages. The remarkable impact of Misplaced Pages on SOPA underscored this. Because content continually accumulates, and especially when continuing development of content simultaneously decreases, over time this aspect of control has grown more prominent relative to content production. The result is that the encyclopedia becomes increasingly unstable as there is more and more incentive for people to battle for control of it, relative to those who want to keep it on an even keel. The way most people encounter this battle is when they start editing and try to add something to an article they've just seen in a news report, and it disappears, often amid a flurry of semi-automated threats and policy invective.
Some things that could, in theory, at least delay its decline:
  • Harness POVs for good. When people scour the sources for additional information that supports their point of view, and add more and more good sources and facts to articles, this is not a bad thing. When they take out any obvious fact you add in minutes to keep people from seeing it, that's the problem. We could reduce the degree of tension by rolling back policies that favor "deletionism", such as overzealous interpretations of BLP that have been used to take obvious things out of articles (like that Breivik was a terrorist). We could be more inclusive and favor a lower standard for retention of articles in AfDs.
  • Give POV content and arguments a place to go. Wikinews once had a "comment" tab to allow people a place to put in their two cents about a story. I think Misplaced Pages could benefit greatly if there were some sort of penumbra readily accessible for articles, where people could unabashedly soapbox on politics, give literary criticism about their interpretation of popular films and so forth. That's the kind of "social networking" you need, not automated gadgets to put a kitten on Jimbo's page every other day.
  • Implement democratic protections. Beginning with some equivalent of a trial by jury, in which editors accused of various policy offenses can be evaluated by a pool of randomly chosen, uninvolved editors. This would reduce the usefulness of efforts to gain control over the admin pool and arbitration, and reduce the rancor of these processes.
  • Back up the data. When I say that, I mean ideologically independent mirrors, where the CC-licensed data is actually received and stored by independent agents who do not have to go along with the deletion of an article or image. We need more and better Misplaced Pages mirrors (including even some that are censored for the taste of various notions of propriety), especially for the vast collection of content on Commons, which is particularly vulnerable. This is not just useful to reduce the amount of pressure placed by those seeking to control Misplaced Pages, but also to prepare for its downfall, which I think it is actually too late to avoid. Wnt (talk) 13:43, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

Part of Jeanne's problem seems just to be with http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ being declared origio non gratus. There should be no reason not to use that as a source, particularly as the starting source for an article that others who do have access to the libraries at Cambridge etc could improve. I think the problem may be that some areas (medicine, current events) need very rigorous sources, but articles about mediaeval heiresses should be able to be at least started from a source like this. Elen of the Roads (talk) 14:41, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

Elen, you have hit the nail on the head. Collaboration is the issue here. When we create an article it henceforth belongs to Misplaced Pages, not ourselves. Anybody can and should edit it, particularly those with access to libraries, academic journals, etc. I find editing on Northern Ireland-related topics rewarding because I enjoy an excellent working relationship with editors who are willing to collaborate by adding info from their own books. This is sadly not the case on historical bios. It's easy for an editor to go around knocking up a template on a series of pages claiming that the sources used aren't good enough when there is nothing stopping that editor from finding the sources and adding them.--Jeanne Boleyn (talk) 14:49, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
I for one agree with a lot of what Jeanne is saying but I think that there are so many flaws in the Misplaced Pages culture of the now its hard to pick just one or 2 things that would turn it around. When the few newcomers show up very few stay because the rules of the place are so hard to learn they make mistakes, those mistakes are deemed vandalism and they are blocked. I have seen this time and time again. Even seasoned editors have been blocked for what amounts to trivial errors by overzealous admins. I also agree with Elen that in some cases using a primary source could be a net positive. Even in some of the science and medical fields there is information that we know is out of date but we can't change because we don't have anything except a primary source. Same with many of the historical articles as mentioned above. What I consider the primary problems though are new user interaction, the immediate assumption that a new user making an edit in error is vandalism, the tendency for admins to block first and ask questions later and the general decreasing amount of civility in the place. Kumioko (talk) 14:57, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
We are working on that, lots of us. WP:WER, WP:TH and individuals on their own, plus I am seeing a change in admin attitude as well as in influx of new admins that appear to be more patient with new users. It is a slow and non-linear process, but there are a great many of us adopting, mentoring, welcoming and monitoring new editors with promise, as well as simply being outspoken on the issues. It takes time, but I sincerely think the boat is pointed in the right direction now. Dennis Brown - © Join WER 18:44, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
All I can say is good luck. I once had high hopes for improving the overall atmosphere and culture of the place to be more inviting and cordial so we would better cooperate to improve articles but I learned slowly and painfully that there are too many who would rather stay with the status quo, where they feel important and comfortable, rather than to make things better and that group of editors seems to control the consensus. Or at least have enough editors of equal interest to ensure there is no consensus to change. Unfortunately I now have a much more pessimistic view of things. Unfortunately unless someone from the foundation or the Wikia company steps in and does something to change some of things from an organization standpoint rather than let the mob decide, which we are clearly unable to do, things will only get worse as time goes on. The projects you point to are good endeavors but their like a rowboat in a hurricane. Kumioko (talk) 21:21, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
By myself, I can do nothing here. By supporting the efforts of others, I can help a great deal get accomplished. I'm not the one with the great ideas, but I'm willing to go out on a limb and publicly support those that do have great ideas. Today, ArbCom is dealing with one more issue, btw. While I didn't elaborate at my RfA in April, these types of changes are precisely why I sought the bit. I already see some positive, tangible changes in several areas, but we have a long way to go. It probably helps that I'm a bit older and I have faced greater challenges in the real world, so the scope of the problems aren't particularly intimidating. And while I'm infinitely flexible in how I achieve these goals, I'm not easily dissuaded from pursuing them. I am actually quite optimistic that in the long run, very good things are on the horizon. Dennis Brown - © Join WER 21:58, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
You are right that there are some significant changes that will be coming out in the next months. Some might be suprising while others will be welcomed and a relief to some of us (I have spies everywhere). Just remember this comment in a couple months. You'll know what I meant. SSShhhhh, Don't tell. :-) Kumioko (talk) 22:08, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
  • Perhaps most editors do not use talk-pages: When I was analyzing the strong participation in the monthly editor levels, I noticed that talk-page edits were rather low, as if people were editing many articles but rarely talking about them. So, discussions about "average editor" incivility should consider that most editors do not "talk" to anyone else. Perhaps a lot of the non-talk activity is with updating numerous sports-article statistics, team members, and lists. However, the rarity of talk-page editors should be understood, because "if one bad apple will spoil the whole bunch" then we have a lot of busy apples who are not talking about anything. I am also wondering about the talk-page edits made as trollish comments, to stir trouble, or outright invite conflicts. Perhaps check the edit-counts of some users, and see if the level of talk-page edits shows a high correlation with trollish types of interaction with other users. Review the monthly counts of talk-page edits, in the later tables of the edit-count statistics:
     · http://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/TablesWikipediaEN.htm
    The reality might be that troublemakers are talking more, while article editors have decided to "duck and cover" while quietly editing thousands of articles and switching subjects when people want to pick a fight. As I recall, the talk-page edit-levels have been fairly constant for several months, but the edit counts do not reflect if the messages have become more bitter, while the relative counts of talk-page messages have remained about the same. -Wikid77 (talk) 22:27, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
I would also add that between me and a couple other editors doing WikiProject Tagging and assessment a fair number of those talk page edits are likely just tagging so I would suggest if its possible to factor those out of the equation as well. I do between 5 and 10 thousand a month myself not counting others. Kumioko (talk) 00:21, 30 August 2012 (UTC)
Many articles' talk pages have become nothing more than battle grounds where insults and put-downs are traded more frequently than useful information which could then be employed to improve the respective articles. As I have already mentioned, my most prolific period as a content editor took place when I was engaging in a lot of friendly banter on other editors' talk pages. When discussing civility it would probably be more conducive to pay more attention to the personal attacks rather than the odd curse word which typically has minimal effect on the receiver unlike the snide and derogatory comments.--Jeanne Boleyn (talk) 11:59, 30 August 2012 (UTC)

Some more disappointments

I return to air some disappointments I see- Jimbo defending Andy's comments basically because the person he was insulting and swearing at wasnt someone we want around. Jimbo, I always held you to the highest standard of someone who had high morals and absolute values. I see this way to much from others at AN/I and other places (is the wikittiquete board even still around?)- as long as the person you insult, bully, wiki-stalk, etc is someone who has done something wrong, you get away with it. That's why we have people openly stating in AN/I "I dont have to defend myself, I just have to bloody the witness" and referencing what defence attorneys in rape cases do... is that the type of mindset we want for our editors? If you're rude make sure you are consistent on it ("That's just the way Andy is, he's got grump in his name for a reason" was one remark in AN/I almost two years ago), you're a "good editor" or at least have a large enough following (usually of other like-minded bullies) who will say that, and you pick on someone who you have "dirt" on. Well that's deplorable. When will Misplaced Pages join the rest of the world in zero tolerance towards cyber bullying? Missouri, NY, and an increasing number of states have laws regarding cyber bullying and they do apply to Misplaced Pages. When the numerous number of editors who go around stalking certain users contributions, swearing at them, harrassing them, or taking the enjoyment of Misplaced Pages out of editing for an editor (which is in fact in the !rules as something that an editor is not to do to another editor and is supposed to be harrassment, if an admin ever enforced it) cause an editor to commit suicide and the news goes viral that "teen commits suicide due to Misplaced Pages bullying" and these conversations on noticeboards and AN/I are taken "out of context" as some here may call it. Call me morbid, but I look for that day and I hope in a wrongful death suit the Foundation is held liable for inaction to prevent what was a foreseeable consequence of editors actions towards other editors, any one of which may have underlying mental, emotional, or age predispositions to being pushed over the edge. This is real. And I fully expect to be personally attacked regarding this post and this post otherwise to be ignored because the topic will be about ME instead. It's what the bullies do, it works, and it is only more evidence that this is a problem.Camelbinky (talk) 17:10, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

Cyberbullying laws do not prevent or prohibit disagreements and arguments on the internet, nor does it make it illegal for the participants in such an altercation to insult or even degrade each other. That wold be an extremely perverse and stifling extension of cyberbully laws, which are aimed at preventing legitimate abuse on the internet. Tarc (talk) 17:16, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
Is that like legitimate rape Tarc? Amazing you'd be the first to comment. The bullies themselves are the first to defend bullying. Cyber bullying laws, in Missouri, do in fact cover insults and degradation which leads to suicide or violence. Alot of what I see on Misplaced Pages, should the same things be said as on Facebook, Twitter, what-have-you, it would fall under Missouri's law, and Misplaced Pages is no different than social media. There will be a day when the news picks up on all of this that happens "behind the scenes" and the light of public scrutiny is held to Wikipedians actions towards their fellow editors.Camelbinky (talk) 17:28, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
" Call me morbid". All right, I will. Camelbinky, you are morbid. And incidentally, I suffer from clinical depression (hence 'Grump'). What would happen if your accusations of me being a 'cyberstalker' were to push me over the edge? Or are you somehow exempt from such considerations? If you want to accuse me of 'cyberstalking' then do it in the appropriate place, rather than posting personal attacks on Jimbo's page. AndyTheGrump (talk) 17:31, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
There is no justice at Misplaced Pages, only solutions. As to your comment " but I look for that day and I hope in a wrongful death suit the Foundation is held liable for inaction to prevent what was a foreseeable consequence of editors actions towards other editors" You are basically hoping someone dies in order to prove your point, which demonstrates a disturbing lack of character. If being here causes this much distress and drives you to such thoughts, perhaps this isn't the proper environment for you to spend your free time. Dennis Brown - © Join WER 19:00, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
I think there have been on-wiki actions that could justify cyber bullying charges, take a look through WP:LTA for details--it's not terribly uncommon to get death threats when doing recent changes patrol. I don't think Andy's recent comments, though contrary to our policies, are in that neighborhood. Mark Arsten (talk) 19:13, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
"Is that like legitimate rape?" - That is quite possibly the worst strawman argument I have ever seen. Congrats. --OnoremDil 19:39, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
I think what User:Camelbinky means is that he anticipates a death under those circumstances might happen, and should it happen, he hopes the Foundation would be on receiving end of wrongful death lawsuit. (That if there wouldn't be followup lawsuit, the Foundation might not see the need to make changes Camelbinky would much prefer to see made today, as a preventative.) To accuse Camelbinky of "hoping someone dies" is offensive and the result of a shallow reading; you should apologize. Ihardlythinkso (talk) 19:50, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
"...and I hope in a wrongful death suit the Foundation is held liable" - You can't have a wrongful death suit without a wrongful death. If he's hoping for the case, he's hoping that someone dies. --OnoremDil 20:02, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
That is indeed distasteful and fro mwhat I have seen of Camelbinky in the case, not surprising. This user is twisting and misrepresenting legitimate law into covering something that it does not; it might help if he actually read the legislation from Missouri to see that it does not support his assertions made in this thread. Tarc (talk) 20:05, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
User:Camelbinky's hope is about a lawsuit following, in the event such a tragic death occurs. (His hope is conditional. You're not seeing that.) Ihardlythinkso (talk) 20:17, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
Before that he says Call me morbid, but I look for that day; seems clear. --Errant 20:19, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
Clear as mud. (You're making a big conclusion, over careless ascription of what is "morbid". Shame.) Don't be ridiculous people ... Camelbinky wishes for no one's death. To assert that carelessly, is both ridiculous and beastly uncivil. Ihardlythinkso (talk) 20:25, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
Either way, his assertion that such interactions could fall under cyberbullying laws are silly. If that were the case, there wouldn't be an internet forum left online. Resolute 20:31, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
  1. "Jimbo defending Andy's comments" - I read Jimbo's comments as indicating that Andy's comments should have been unnecessary (and thus should not have been made). Maybe I'm thinking of different comments to the ones that you're thinking of?
  2. The Wikiquette board is indeed still around. Its usefulness, as ever, is in question.
  3. "I hope in a wrongful death suit the Foundation is held liable for inaction" - on the very rare occasions that I've been in contact with employees of the Foundation about potentially life-threatening situations regarding fellow editors, said employees have been helpful and extremely prompt in responding. Likewise, I've found 99% of Misplaced Pages administrators and other functionaries to be thoughtful and responsive about concerns related to that.
  4. There is no such thing as an "age predisposition to being pushed over the edge".
  5. Several of the people replying to you make rather good points.
  6. Please use more paragraph breaks. --Demiurge1000 (talk) 21:19, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
Regarding Demiurge1000's first point, I don't think Jimbo was defending my comments at all - he was saying the same thing that almost everyone that didn't propose I immediately be boiled in oil/banned for life + 100 years said: that I'd been a complete $%&*@#, and if I'd shown more sense we'd have been rid of the troll quicker. And of course Jimbo is entirely right. I had a bad case of mega-potty-mouth-syndrome, and it wasn't my first, and I should know better. Maybe I should have been banned for this, I'm not the best person to judge, obviously - but I'd sure as hell object to being banned for something I hadn't done. I'd not been cyberstalking the now- banned troll (or the 'entirely unrelated' newly-registered account who's just posted at the Breivik page saying exactly the same things), and unsubstantiated claims that I had been aren't exactly civil in themselves. So again, if anyone wants to make specific allegations in the proper place, feel free to do so. Just don't make vague ones here, and then leave it hanging when asked for specifics. AndyTheGrump (talk) 21:50, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
Interestingly, your sock is a sock, or rather lots of socks, but he's not Meowy, unless he's taken up an interest in Mixed Martial Arts.Elen of the Roads (talk) 22:30, 29 August 2012 (UTC)


Jimbo says: "And we have to recognize that troll-enabling decisions, i.e. an excessive desire to treat every possible difficult person as though they can be reformed, is not helpful. An effective policy of banning trolls is the best way to prevent good users from going ballistic at them - we can say that even while saying that we should never go ballistic at them."

That's only one side of the equation. Trolls on talk pages can be ignored, that's the way to maintain high standards of conduct and effectively deal with trolls. For articles, BRD the substantive edits to articles, state the case, why the edit does not belong, take them to DRN or RfC if they persist -- it's an open wiki, so it's bound to attract multiple POVs. Whoever thought or thinks maintaining NPOV or Civility or the other pillars would, should, or could be easy in such a project, is simply fooling themselves. As for users who persistently cannot keep from "fighting fire with fire", they should, like the trolls, also be banned -- they are trolls or troll feeders, themselves. Alanscottwalker (talk) 12:42, 30 August 2012 (UTC)

Meta does not allow fair but do not delete files uploaded as fair use

Hi. I do not know who to ask but I trust that you or one of the many talk page watchers here can help.

I nominated files uploaded on meta as fair use for deletion with this reason:

"Per m:Non-free_content#Other_projects meta does not allow fair use. Also see the WMF resolution - there is no exception for meta. Speedy deletion per m:Meta:Deletion_policy#Images."

The request was deleted and it was said it should be discussed somewhere. But I do not see what there is to discuss. Can a project refuse to follow the WMF resolution?

Could there perhaps be an exception for meta? --MGA73 (talk) 17:57, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

Hi. I'm not sure where the idea of exceptions is coming from. m:Non-free content seems to be completely non-authoritative and is probably simply inaccurate. Meta-Wiki in particular has long hosted non-free content in some form or another (project logos, for example, specifically can't be released under a free license usually). --MZMcBride (talk) 18:30, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
Yes Wiki logos seems to be an (unwritten?) exception - even on Wikimedia Commons that is not allowed to have an EDP. So I think we should keep all wiki logos separate from this discussion to keep it simple.
So with the exceptions of logos are meta allowed to have non-free files without a formal EDP? I see nothing in the resolution that says that. --MGA73 (talk) 19:29, 29 August 2012 (UTC)
It looks like m:Meta:Fair use died due to inactivity, not due to any failed vote. (Is that correct?) It should presumably be resurrected and voted on properly. --MZMcBride (talk) 21:15, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

Leistungsschutzrecht

Seems the web (and Misplaced Pages in particular) are facing a new threat.... -- Toshio Yamaguchi (tlkctb) 09:32, 30 August 2012 (UTC)

Would it affect Misplaced Pages? The articles only seem to mention search engines and aggregators. the wub "?!" 10:31, 30 August 2012 (UTC)
Yes, but that would also have a significant negative effect on people in Germany using for example Google to research information to add to Misplaced Pages and might have a direct impact on the number of contributions from Germany. -- Toshio Yamaguchi (tlkctb) 10:35, 30 August 2012 (UTC)
I think people in Germany can use proxies, VPNs or tor to enjoy internet freedom.--王小朋友 (talk) 10:43, 30 August 2012 (UTC)
See also Hedemann, F. Leistungsschutzrecht: Misplaced Pages bald ohne Links? which translates to "Leistungsschutzrecht: Misplaced Pages soon without links?" -- Toshio Yamaguchi (tlkctb) 10:41, 30 August 2012 (UTC)
For those who do not read German, this article appears to be based on statements made by Wikimedia Deutschland and (as I understand it) suggests that, because the law prohibits quotations of any length, though links are allowed, it might prohibit the use of the title, as is customary in external links and references, and (even if the legal situation is unclear) it could mean that Wikimedia would get a lot of cease and desist notices. As I understand it, specifically prohibiting quotes of any length would rule out "fair use" for citations (short quotes, titles, etc.). I suppose the main problem, if there is one, would be for editors subject to German law (I suppose the lawyers would have to assess if that that just means German residents or also other German nationals and, possibly, people inserting content that will be available to readers in Germany). --Boson (talk) 12:01, 30 August 2012 (UTC)
This sounds like a very serious assault - worse than SOPA, affecting material more critical to normal article writing. Anything that would damage Google's ability to deliver search results would harm Misplaced Pages as well, because the two sites have similar purposes. It sounds like they want to enforce the ability of publishers to not have their articles indexed on Google - which is very close to them demanding that they not be mentioned let alone summarized on Misplaced Pages. Note that even English Misplaced Pages articles freely use German-language sources, so this is not something that can be fobbed off as de.'s problem! We need people who speak German and know German law to look over the draft () and see if this is in fact a consequence, in what ways it would actually threaten Misplaced Pages and contributors, to see if it is the intended purpose of the bill, and to advise on the probability that it can be stopped. We need the draft and de:Leistungsschutzrecht für Presseverleger translated to English, and we need WMF to support these German editors. Wnt (talk) 15:55, 30 August 2012 (UTC)

How about...

Many book scanning projects, like Google Books, Open Content Alliance, and Internet Archive, aims to build an searchable online library, which is a big step in human history. How about let them upload all their scanned, public domain books to wikicommons, and submit OCRed text to Wikisource, where volunteers can proofread and link the texts, in order to make the step even bigger?

I think you may intersted in the idea of writing an article on a big newpaper to urge book scanning projects to join Wikisource.--王小朋友 (talk) 10:33, 30 August 2012 (UTC)