Revision as of 08:15, 27 November 2006 editTrialsanderrors (talk | contribs)Administrators17,564 edits Jet Air Service, a freight forwarder - Deletion endorsed.← Previous edit | Revision as of 08:19, 27 November 2006 edit undoTrialsanderrors (talk | contribs)Administrators17,564 edits GetWiki - Deletion overturned, relisted at AfD.Next edit → | ||
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This is an unusual one. The debate was closed as Delete by {{admin|Cyde}}, and the article almost immediately restored by {{admin|Davidcannon}}, who had voted Keep in the AfD on the grounds that this "powers Wikinfo", but leaving the AfD header at Delete. I can't find any trace of David having notified Cyde or anyone else. Maybe he did and I just didn't see it. Cyde's close noted (correctly) that powering WikInfo does not, in and of itself, override the cited reasons for delete (lack of notability, lack of reliable secondary sources). I vote to '''endorse closure''' and delete - this software still only scores 140 unique Googles and none appear to be reliable sources. <b>]</b> <small>(])</small> 12:48, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
:'''Note''': recreated by {{User|Robert Buzink}} at 11:56, November 24, 2006 (UTC). --] | ] 14:11, 24 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Endorse closure''', powering Wikinfo ≈ ]? I suppose not. <tt>].]</tt> 13:29, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*This isn't an unusual one, this is no different from your standard out-of-process recreation which I have speedied per ] G4. Editors wishing to dispute closures take them to deletion review, admins wishing to dispute closures do exactly the same damn thing, thank you very much. '''Endorse closure''', with no reference to third-party sources the case for keeping relies on Wikinfo, and there is no explanation of why Wikinfo confers notability on the subject that powers it. Notable businesses don't confer notability on their suppliers, notable actors don't confer notability on their make-up artists. For that matter, the case for Wikinfo's notability is exceedingly weak, but that's not what's under review here. --]<sup>]</sup> 13:44, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Overturn''' - It's iffy on whether or not it's notable, but deciding that question isn't really the primary purpose of deletion review. Several things bother me - (1) the closing admin's comment was more like a vote than a judgment of where the consensus was. He said, "The result was Deleted, powering Wikinfo really doesn't establish sufficient notability." It is fully within the purview of the closing admin to ignore an ''apparant'' consensus in the face of sockpuppetry or an obvious policy violation, for example, however, disregarding the lack of consensus because you disagree with it is not a good thing. (2) The best argument for keeping it - from David Cannon - came late in the game. EVERY SINGLE PERSON who offered an opinion after David Cannon spoke supported keeping the article. That alone would suggest to me that a keep would seem to be in order. (3) That said, the decision of BOTH the restoring admin and the second deleting admin to potentially start a wheel war rather than bringing the dispute to the appropriate forum is troubling. ] 14:03, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
:* I disagree. The arguments for keep were founded on the fact that ''one'' moderately notorious Wiki uses this software. That was what David said, and that is what "per David Cannon" means. The fact that ''one'' possibly-notable website is powered by this software does not, as Cyde rightly said, trump the lack of secondary sources. And undeletion ''without review'' by an admin who had already voted is highly irregular. As to the fact that all the votes after David were keep, I'm afraid that lights up my offsite solicitation radar. <b>]</b> <small>(])</small> 14:22, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
:* Applying ] G4 is not wheel warring. It is done dozens of times a week <small>(statistic brought to you by the ])</small>, just not so often with administrators who ought to know better. --]<sup>]</sup> 18:08, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
::*The thing that you need to understand is that other people feel just as strongly that their position is correct as you feel that yours is correct. David Cannon, presumably, felt that he was correcting (to him) a patently incorrect closure. The whole idea of not revert warring or not wheel warring is that YOU need to choose to be the one to not continue it. Both you and he, IMHO, were wrong to reverse an action without discussion. The appropriate action in either case would be to bring it here for discussion. ] 18:46, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::*This is plainly not an obviously wrong deletion, so the reason behind recreation is irrelevant. Articles recreated despite legitimate deletions may be speedy re-deleted; whether an admin or a non-admin recreates it makes no difference. Administrators are not higher beings and are not exempt from policy. --]<sup>]</sup> 19:21, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*How about we simply '''redirect''' this to ]? (]) 14:08, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*Ugh. Ok, '''endorse second deletion''' as an inappropriate recreation, because ''everyone'' has to use DRV, not just peons. Second, '''relist''' would have been a probable outcome of a well argued DRV case (which was not made). Third: '''Redirect''' to ], per Radiant!, and let the single sentence necessary for describing the software go there. The closing was iffy enough for a relist, but no one gets to recreate out of process, and the supposed "wheel war" that BigDT fears would have been solely with the person recreating against procedure. ] 16:17, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
:* Um ... '''second that Ugh'''. Is that a good !vote? :-) I'd like to agree with Geogre, because I think I agree with the reasoning completely, from the questionable AfD to the unjustified recreation, but I'm not quite clear what he settled on. ] <sup>]</sup> 21:11, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
:*'''Clarification''': Endorse. Create a redirect ''de novo.'' The rest was my attempt at wagging my finger at people who recreate or undelete legitimately deleted articles because they disagree with the result. If an IP does that, we quickly suspect bad faith and put them on the hit list. If an admin does it, it's not substantially a better action, IMO. This page is for everyone. Granted, some folks don't know it's here, so they may be innocent in intent, but it's still the wrong way to go. ] 04:15, 22 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Endorse deletion''' per George. ] 21:01, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Relist''' The recreation was completely out of process and shouldn't have happened, but he does have a point that there was not really a consensus to delete. --] 21:15, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Redirect''' to ] sounds good; then and now, I still don't think this merits its own article. It's just not a very big subject. So what if there's a fork of MediaWiki used to power a site? There's ''lots'' of forks of all sorts of different free software. --] 22:06, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Overturn''' - 50-50 really isn't grounds for deletion, and its level of notability isn't out of step with a lot of the rest of our content, so I see no reason to delete despite a lack of consensus to delete. ] 22:20, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Overturn''' - there was certainly no consensus to delete. 50 percent does not constitute any kind of consensus, and similar percentages have normally resulted in a "No consensus" verdict. I realize that I took the wrong turn when I undeleted the article - twice - and apologize for doing so, but I still believe that the article does not merit to deletion. As a compromise, I would be willing to accept merger with ], provided that all pertinent information is copied. ] 22:46, 21 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Endorse''', as most of the 'keep' votes were, frankly, ludicrous, the close was within admin's discression. Would settle for a '''relist'''ing (someone please let me know if it's relisted at AFD). ]<i>::</i><small>]</small> 11:43, 22 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*In summary: | |||
*:Deletes were variations on ], ], and ]. | |||
*:Keeps were ] and ]. | |||
*I think that says it all. Original close not that much of a stretch with discreation. After all, 50/50 is meaningless, since AfD is ''not a vote'', hence a strict supermajority is not required, especially when keep proposals don't demonstrate any sound reasoning for doing so. '''Endorse''' both closure and further deletions. DC's recreation is an abuse of positions - admins have to use DRv too, you know. ] <small></small> 19:50, 22 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Endorse''' deletion whilst some of the deletes were pretty terse, the keeps seemed to be variations of keep because we have other stuff which is worse, notability by association, or it's survived for this long so it must be ok. Not a vote and the keeps seem pretty weak, certainly within the bounds of reasonable discretion by the closing admin. --] 20:33, 22 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*'''Overturn''' per David Cannon. There was absolutely no consensus to delete, and notability criteria are guidelines, not hard-and-fast policy, and as well, subjective in their interpretation by individual editors and administrators. Consensus should be achieved whenever possible, and when there is no consensus, there should be no deletion. It's as simple as that. metaspheres 21:49, 23 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
**Notability is a corollary to ], which ''is'' hard-and-fast policy. In fact, it (along with ] and ]) are '''above''' policy, and are '''not negotiable'''. Notability is not subjective, because the world at large decides if something is notable. ] <small>] </small> 22:39, 23 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
***Above policy? Oh, really? As in, above the law? What the hell kind of language is this? Has Misplaced Pages suddenly mutated into the ] or ]??? And last time I checked, '''everything''' is negotiable and subject to consensus, so please refrain from stating blatant untruths. See ]. metaspheres 00:10, 24 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
****Evidently you didn't look hard enough. I draw your attention to the following, present on all three of ], ] and ] (emphasis added): "''The ] upon which are based are '''non-negotiable''' and cannot be superseded by other policies or guidelines, '''or by editors' consensus'''''". There's guidelines, there's policy, and then there's the Big Three. ] <small>] </small> 02:12, 24 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
*****And I draw your attention to ] as well as statements from Jimbo which contradict your false assertions. Policy only goes so far and you're literally taking it too far to the point of absurdity. In this case you can even ask Jimbo and I think he'd agree. And kindly refrain from labelling legitimate sentences as "personal attacks" for Christ sake. The whole tone of this proceeding is surreal and bizarre, and quite frankly would drive any sane person away from Misplaced Pages. I urge you to stop. metaspheres 04:21, 24 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::::* NPOV is non-negotiable. Period. IAR absolutely does not bypass that fundamental rule, and ] comes nowhere close. <b>]</b> <small>(])</small> 14:04, 24 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::::*Indeed. IAR applies to everything, ''including itself''. You should not that it says to ''ignore'' all rules, not to ''defy'' all rules. You are free to ignore ] when editing the 'Pedia, however someone will likely take the opposite position and ignore IAR. I would like to know what possible statements from Jimbo you could be referring to. ] <small>] </small> 20:40, 24 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
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Revision as of 08:19, 27 November 2006
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- Full reviews may be found in this page history. For a summary, see Misplaced Pages:Deletion review/Recently concluded (2006 November)
21st November 2006
Kiwi!
Misplaced Pages would be a better encyclopedia if this article was not deleted. There was a spirited debate in the AfD discussion, with a very narrow 60/40 split of opinion. Chicago god 05:57, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Closer comment - I stand by my decision. Many of the keep advocates were socks, and another didn't give a rationale. Some said "What's wrong?" and didn't reply to the concerns expressed by the "Delete" advocates. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 06:09, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion Absolutely a valid AfD closure, considering how many of the keep !votes were from socks, and that the points brought up by those urging deletion went unanswered by those arguing for retention (though I definitely see strong claims of notability). -- Kicking222 06:23, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Comment - There is one sock (who voted to keep twice using the same IP) and one completely unsigned keep. The rest of the keeps look legitimate to me. And as far as I can tell, every valid delete point was answered in the AfD or through article updates: notability added, sources added, and original research removed. Is the delete, at the very least, not questionable? Chicago god 06:52, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Keep comments include "Come on, keep it. I don't even see the reason for deleting it.", "Kiwi isn't just cute. It has a message.", "There should be a wiki page for it if people want to know more about it.", "What's not to like?" and "Don't let the lame nazi censors delete it.". So, I make it around 12 reasoned deletes grounded in policy, and keeps grounded purely in WP:ILIKEIT. Looks like a perfectly valid AfD to me. Endorse. Chris talk back 07:45, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- 3 of the 5 lame 'keep comments' that you just mentioned were from sock and unsigned users, which I agree should be disqualified. The reasoned deletes boil down to three criteria: notability, sources, and original research -- which were all answered in the AfD or through article updates. Chicago god 08:23, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion, valid interpretation of the debate. This article was original research and that was not remedied by the time of deletion. Misplaced Pages policy makes it difficult to document crap off teh Internet here; there are other places where there are no policy problems. Try one of those? Guy (Help!) 09:37, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion, AfD closed properly, sockpuppet votes are to be discounted. - Mailer Diablo 20:29, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
Misplaced Pages:Long term abuse/HeadleyDown
- Misplaced Pages:Long term abuse/HeadleyDown (edit | ] | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) — (AfD)
Significant POV sneaky vandal's LTA page, deleted by user:Pathoschild under the impression he was "inactive". But this was very misinformed. The vandal concerned is a chronic sock user, and has a habit when socks are identified of merely switching to new socks with new names and IPs. This LTA page under his "best known name" (the name Arbcom and many users know him as) is used to allow documentation of this vandal and information for admins, and counters his chronic abandonment of old discovered accounts and switching to new ones. At this time he is far from inactive, is presently back to his old tricks, and apparently seems to have (under a new name) yet another bunch of people knocking on arbcom's door. Please restore urgently, together with any other accidental related deletions, such as his user page/s, catefgories for HeadleyDown socks, etc which might have been deleted —The preceding unsigned comment was added by FT2 (talk • contribs) .
- Can we move these pages to Meta or something? I agree with wanting to deny recognition, but it is undoubtedly helpful to have some kind of record of the MO of serial disrupters. Guy (Help!) 09:39, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
Endorse Deletion Firstly it's a good idea to ask the deleting admin first in this sort of case, I not you did that after raising this review, but I would suggest ask, wait, bring here if you don't get a response/think the response misses the mark. Secondly can you elaborate on how the page helped people recognise the actitivty (I'd guess the vast majority of people have never read it, yet still recognise the disruption caused without much effort), given the nature of the person where the socks don't have any obvious connection how is a list of previous sock names going to help anyone detect this vandal? I'm quite happy to believe some of the LTA pages had/have some value but vague assertions that it's "important", don't really cut it. Given that your account was only active for about a month prior to the deletion of the page, and the deletion was a couple of months back, I suggest picking up and becoming an expert on this vandal and maintaining that expertise isn't that difficult, so wads of documentation seem irrelvant. Also you claim that the vandal is still currently operating, please elaborate, again this is just a vague assertion, which users do you believe are this particular person and why? We've certainly had those who are the subject of LTA pages (either as the original or an imitator) come and request their recovery in the past (hence actually demonstrating some of the reasoning behind WP:DENY), so it doesn't seem unreasonable to ask for something a bit more concrete before going along with recovery --pgk 12:46, 21 November 2006 (UTC)After some thought and looking a bit closer, I've changed my mind. I'm not going the whole hog to suggest restoration but I do think there is probably a good case for this page, albeit my preferred choice would be to perhaps restore this to userspace, let it get cleaned up to remove the irrelevant stuff like pictures and so on, before making its way back into the main area. --pgk 21:02, 21 November 2006 (UTC)- Preserve somehow. Maybe meta, maybe restore, maybe something else entirely, but this information is very useful, and deleting these pages with even the principles of WP:DENY (which is not and should never be guideline/policy) has shown to be a mistake, given the recent issues with Crawford socks and the decided lack of information available about the situations. When losing this information causes our best and brightest users and admins to make otherwise good-faith decisions mistakenly, it's evidence that getting rid of the information isn't working. --badlydrawnjeff talk 13:33, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Well there was never a LTA page on Crawford, nor I doubt would there have been. The Crawford sock got picked up and dealt with pretty quickly, I would say that is evidence that an LTA page was largely irrelevant. As I say above I agree some information can be useful, but shrine pages are not. Your blanket assertion that it has shwon to be a mistake is a bit premature, I can certainly cite examples of vandals adding lists of their own sockpuppets to LTA pages and in one instance a screen shot of their own vandalism, I can show examples of one user who engaged in large amounts of pagemove vandalism (via socks) trying to get the LTA page on Willy on Wheels pages retrieved (on several occassions). You are welcome to your opinion on WP:DENY but many differ, similarly "don't feed the trolls" (which in my estimation is an equivelant of WP:DENY) is not endorsed by everyone. We need to take a realistic view from case to case WP:DENY isn't a blanket call to delete all information, it is a call to make sure we don't needlessly "glorify" vandalism or become an Encylopedia of rouges. But merely asserting that the page was "useful" does not make it so --pgk 15:07, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- No, there wasn't on Crawford, but the page for Crawford was deleted. We continue to delete these pages, and the information that we can use to make judgements like with the Crawford issue disappears. While I think WP:DENY is silly, I didn't have a firm opinion on the matter until this past week, so I think "usefulness," while not something that's a worthy argument for articles, is entirely necessary when judging issues like this. --badlydrawnjeff talk 15:27, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you that "usefulness" is a valid reason, but a vague assertion of usefulness is no better than a vague assertion of "notability", "non-notability" etc. etc. If something is useful it shouldn't be difficult to specify what about it is useful, if it's full of junk it should either be deleted outright or heavily trimmed to prevent such pages becoming shrines. Some of the LTA pages were clearly of the former (does anyone not know that moving a whole string of pages to "on wheels" is unhelpful? Does anyone see value in a list of 100 usernames where there is no visible connection in the name and so cannot be "useful" in detecting further names). Whilst other LTA pages still exist and indeed there is no reason why others shouldn't exist. As I say it's a case of applying common sense on a case to case basis, to me it's just as silly for someone to say WP:DENY delete, delete as someone saying WP:DENY is rubbish ignore, ignore --pgk 15:47, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- I think we're essentially on the same page here. Sometimes it can be useful, sometimes not. But perhaps an MfD should be the arbiter of that rather than a unilateral action? --badlydrawnjeff talk 16:02, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you that "usefulness" is a valid reason, but a vague assertion of usefulness is no better than a vague assertion of "notability", "non-notability" etc. etc. If something is useful it shouldn't be difficult to specify what about it is useful, if it's full of junk it should either be deleted outright or heavily trimmed to prevent such pages becoming shrines. Some of the LTA pages were clearly of the former (does anyone not know that moving a whole string of pages to "on wheels" is unhelpful? Does anyone see value in a list of 100 usernames where there is no visible connection in the name and so cannot be "useful" in detecting further names). Whilst other LTA pages still exist and indeed there is no reason why others shouldn't exist. As I say it's a case of applying common sense on a case to case basis, to me it's just as silly for someone to say WP:DENY delete, delete as someone saying WP:DENY is rubbish ignore, ignore --pgk 15:47, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
In my view, as the person most aware of both HeadleyDown's actions, and also aware of the traffic related to people spotting him, and noting where he was active, this was a very useful resource that was in ongoing use. Its usefulness far outwieghed the issue of WP:DENY. HeadleyDown doesn't use Misplaced Pages to get a "fame page". he's normally used covert socks, new accounts, and gets off on pretending to be a genuine contributor. At present he's been censured on (I think) between 3 and 5 arbcom hearings, permabanned under multiple accounts, and his response to all this has been to continue the same under new IP, new socks, unconnected (on the surface) to his old ones. He's been doing this now at least 2, possibly 3 years, This page is an essential tool that several users refer to in educating people who want to know more in case he's active on their pages, and documenting where he's active. FT2 18:43, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry to labour this, but you are just asserting a vague notion of usefulness without saying why it is useful, again you stated above he was active right now etc. Come on spill the beans which accounts do you believe are this user. Indeed it's been deleted for nearly 3 months without anyone "noticing".
I also note you created the page on 7 July, your earliest remaining edits to any article are from 11 July. Doesn't sound that complex to me if a brand new user can sign up and right up an LTA page on them. Looking further at the page it contains such useful information as " Known IPs: Any (uses IPs around the world)"," Physical location: Believed Hong Kong or possibly UK". Can you tell me how that information is useful for others to know they are dealing with the same vandal? (OK, I picked the worst two points I could just glancing down, but there is other stuff although arguably not as vague, still no where near being useful in identifying this guy) --pgk 19:21, 21 November 2006 (UTC) Struck through the above, my mistake I misread the date from the earliest contribution it is July 11 but 2004. --pgk 21:02, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- To address "and also aware of the traffic related to people spotting him, and noting where he was active" , to address this 4 other people than you edited the page. One changed some spaces to underscores, one replaced some ip with use of the {{ipvandal}} template, one added a picture (Irrelevant picture) and one tagged it for speedy deletion. --pgk 19:35, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- (Above points discussed with Pgk by email FT2 23:45, 21 November 2006 (UTC))
- (Comment as deleting administrator) I'm sorry if my presumption that the malicious user was inactive was incorrect. I judged this from the edit history, which was only edited meaningfully by FT2 between 07 July 2006 and 23 July 2006. There being no content edits in nearly a month, I assumed it was a temporary vandal spree. Had you asked me directly, I would have restored it immediately and sent it to Miscellany for deletion instead. As it is, I have no opinion on this page. —{admin} Pathoschild 00:28, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
- Understandable and reasonable. I figured once deleted it needed to be requested here rather than via direct approach to deleting editor. If that impression is incorrect then that's something learned today :) FT2 01:30, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
- Restore. I recently went looking for the deleted article, and I didn't understand why I couldn't find it. It had valuable details for identifying the malicious user and understanding the scope and seriousness of their abuse. The difficulty in collecting those details allowed an especially long period of abuse. Given the record, I would not at all be surprised to see the malicious user return; in fact, I expect it -- especially now that the banning administrators have retired or otherwise withdrawn. Without the information on the deleted page, well-meaning editors and administrators will have to start all over again. The intention of WP:DENY is laudable, but at least in this case, incidental recognition would be the lesser of two evils. -- Shunpiker
PircBot
Deleted for being 'none notable software', but it has 100k+ Google hits and it's a commonly deployed IRC bot framework Darksun 02:53, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'd also like to add that PircBot is heavily referenced in the book 'IRC Hacks' by Paul Mutton, published by O'Reilly . --Darksun 02:59, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion of stub which made no claim to notability. No prejudice against a proper article citing reliable secondary sources. I will userfy the stub is that will help. Guy (Help!) 09:40, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion, userfy and recreate if and when it's reliably sourced. ColourBurst 18:44, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
WiktionaryZ
The article deals with a preparatory project for the Ultimate Wiktionary as part of the Wikimedia Project. Andres 01:43, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion if the above is the argument for inclusion. See WP:WEB. --W.marsh 01:57, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- I think the information is important for the Wikimedia contributors. The article should at least be placed in the Misplaced Pages namespace with a redirect from WiktionaryZ. There is an article on the site on several wikipedias, including de:Misplaced Pages:WiktionaryZ. This German article better explains the importance of the site and it is in the Misplaced Pages namespace. Andres 02:15, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- See also the coverage on meta:Category:Ultimate Wiktionary.
Andres 02:19, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse own deletion. In the article namespace, this fails WP:WEB (no media mentions, etc). I would support a move to the project namespace if someone could show how this is relevant to Misplaced Pages, but it doesn't look directly relevant to us, only relevant to Wiktionary, IMO. Kimchi.sg 03:04, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse, given this already exists where it should be, in meta. Maybe put something in Misplaced Pages: namespace if it's relevant to us. Chris talk back 07:51, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse, yes, probably belongs in Meta. Guy (Help!) 09:41, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse, at present doesn't belong in main space. We'd probably as standard respond to a statement such as the above with WP:NOT a crystal ball, or that if it's simply publicity that WP:NOT a vehicle for advertising, I can't see we can hold a wikimedia sponsered project to a lesser standard. --pgk 15:12, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- endorse per above. --mathewguiver 19:00, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse, it's just not notable right now. Maybe if it ever is finished and does become a huge hit, then it can get its own article. --Cyde Weys 22:07, 21 November 2006 (UTC)