This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Hearfourmewesique (talk | contribs) at 18:17, 14 August 2011 (Reverted 1 edit by Gerardw (talk): Not irrelevant, just poorly written, but it looks like a legitimate plea for admin revision of sources. (TW)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
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Active discussions
Break of AGF and NPA by User:Bzuk
Resolved – —Darkwind (talk) 19:14, 13 August 2011 (UTC)The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
- Bzuk (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Republic P-47 Thunderbolt (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
After I removed a non-sensical sentence from Republic P-47 Thunderbolt, I was accused of vandalism and threatened by User:Bzuk. I subsequently started a dicussion on the talk page; User:Bzuk added nothing to the question, but adds further insults threats.
Please advise: Is User:Bzuk justified in accusing me of vandalism and making threats without even taking part in the discussion? --91.10.41.53 (talk) 16:49, 7 August 2011 (UTC)
- It was inappropriate on the part of both Bzuk and yourself to edit war over the disputed sentence. There is no "right side" in an edit war, but you should have discussed a solution to the dispute rather than repeatedly removing the sentence. Bzuk warning you for vandalism was inappropriate, IMO. I saw absolutely nothing to suggest that you were acting in bad faith at all, much less committing vandalism. Also, when 91 started a discussion on the talk page, Bzuk's comments were hostile and inflammatory, including threats of a block. In addition, this comment removal by Bzuk was not appropriate, per WP:TPO, as the removed comment was not a personal attack. All this being said, 91, your part was arguably just as problematic. You edit warred, and you left several unconstructive and inflammatory comments to the same discussion.
- In sum, you both acted inappropriately. If you can acknowledge this, preferably redact your uncivil comments or at least resolve to work civilly from now on, I see no reason why you can't work this content dispute out to a satisfactory solution for all parties. Swarm 20:45, 7 August 2011 (UTC)
- This is a very convoluted and complex back-and-forth that recently took place. Refer to my edit history for the time sequence. Here is the pertinent sequence of events, with my comments:
- User: 91.10.41.53 makes a derogatory comment regarding another user. as it is on my "watchlist", I note there is conflict ensuing)
- seeing no talk discussion, the original version of the article is restored
- caution given on user's talk page
- User reacts with comment, stop templating me, indicative of some knowledge of wiki process/protocol
- Next edit has the edit comment given: revert back to earlier version of the article, take any issues to talk first, eliminate NPOV)
- two edits in succession, bring back all the original edits with comments (First of all, stop the piggy-backing)((Sorry, it's just rubbish, see discussion.) Polite and responding to initial call to talk
- Original version of article restored, note that talk page discussion now started
- My Comment: Perhaps hasty but a further caution elevated to level 4 placed on user talk page, and "There is no catering to the drive-by editing faction and the type of edit comments and examples of disruptive edits that were recently made, will lead to the inevitable blocking of this IP."
- Response: I assume if you would have to anything about the issue, you would have, so this is a clear personal attack
- Repeat of accusation that there is a personal attack made. Response: This continuing disruptive behaviour is now being referred to admins. Stop it now.
- Comment made on Admin's page
- Comment aadded on talk page "Thank you for clarifying that Bzuk edited in a non-sensical paragraph!" Comment stricken with repsonse:" knock off the personal comments", comment again later re-added with comment: (Stop faking my comments! (Or if you want to "warring", remove all but the last of your comments and apologize.)
- Talk page suggestion given, looks okay, made slight copy edit, but already being added to article with small errors in links and comment "remove disruptive edit by User:Bzuk."
- My revision added to article to add a note to readers about change of manufacturer, edit slightly refined into a second sentence with another "it" given, however, not interested in any more changes, I leave the edit as is
- 3R warning given to both parties, I explain my position once and leave it
On my part, I can appreciate the IP's frustration with my efforts to use a BRD approach and jumped to the conclusion that he was inflaming the situation, but did not understand the need for trying to denigrate any editors in the process. FWiW Bzuk (talk) 21:32, 7 August 2011 (UTC). See: lame effort at reconciliation FWiW Bzuk (talk) 21:48, 7 August 2011 (UTC).
- Concur with Swarm. With regards to redaction, it's better to strike them out rather than just remove them. Given Bzuk's good faith response, I don't think any additional action is required on their part. Gerardw (talk) 22:56, 7 August 2011 (UTC)
- Yep, thank you for your very reasonable response, Bzuk. Swarm 05:09, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
Charges of "spamming" and unspecified "policy violations"
- Camelbinky (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Gyrobo (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject New York (edit | project page | history | links | watch | logs), User talk:DanielPenfield (edit | user page | history | links | watch | logs)
- On Thursday, August 4, I made a series of strawman additions to all of the Upstate New York county articles (for example: , , , , , , etc.). These consisted of a "Budget" section with a bulleted list for outlays, another for receipts, and a fully-cited statement of the county-specific sales tax. Note that it is easy to verify that precedents exist for this type of section in articles about government entities: United States federal budget, California#State finances, Government of Texas#State Budget, Government of Florida#Budget, Illinois#Taxes, Contra Costa County, California#County budget problems, New Jersey#Fiscal policy, Economy of Virginia#Taxation.
- On Saturday, August 6, Special:Contributions/Camelbinky reverted, without explanation, and contrary to WP:REVEXP, a subset of these articles (to wit: , , , , , , , , , , )
- I subsequently restored most, but apparently not all of the original changes (to wit: , , , , , , , , , )
- Special:Contributions/Camelbinky then left an insulting message in this edit, claiming that "County budget sections are violations of policy" without citing any policy whatsoever and then leveling the charge of "spamming these sections onto articles" and concluding that "You were reverted for a reason, putting them back was not a good idea without discussing" while conveniently overlooking the fact that he or she did not have the courtesy to provide a reason for the original revert. (Note that WP:REVEXP accurately states that "A reversion is a complete rejection of the work of another editor and if the reversion is not adequately supported then the reverted editor may find it difficult to assume good faith.")
- Special:Contributions/Camelbinky subsequently publicized the accusations that "Our NY county articles are being spammed with unencyclopedic section headers" and that "I have tried reverting those counties but have been reverted by same spammer" in this edit.
- Special:Contributions/Gyrobo then reverted all of what I restored for a second time (e.g., ) and reverted the untouched remaining original edits for good measure (e.g., ), again using the "undo" feature rather than providing "a valid and informative explanation" in the edit summaries and added the charge that the additions "provide nothing useful" to the WikiProject New York talk page).
- Outraged at the accusation of "spamming" "unencyclopedic" content that "provide nothing useful", I left a phrase-by-phrase rebuttal of these false, and, quite frankly, malicious charges in these fully-cited edits.
- Special:Contributions/Gyrobo subsequently left a condescending follow-up seemingly demanding "justification" for adding a budget section to county articles at all: "Instead of creating a large table refuting how Camelbinky came across to you, it would be more productive to discuss why the data you've copied and pasted into each article should remain there." in this edit. He also repeated the charge of WP:UNENCYCLOPEDIC and made outlandish claims of "put the onus on other editors to thoroughly research county government operations" and "there's no guarantee that someone who actually did that would end up organizing the data that way" which run completely contrary to WP:IMPERFECT and WP:Misplaced Pages is a work in progress.
- Special:Contributions/Gyrobo then left what appeared to be a magnanimous appeal to WP:Here to build an encyclopedia in this edit and a "generous" offer to let the changes stand. (Note that as of this writing, nobody has restored the changes.) On second glance, it appears to me to be a whitewash that is also intended to further discredit me by:
- Characterizing the additions as "controversial changes" and as something "the rest of us really don't understand".
- Characterizing my phrase-by-phrase rebuttal as "Questioning the intentions of other editors, and throwing random policies, guidelines and essays into a discussion, without really relating them to the topic at hand"
To make it clear: I am no longer interested in whether my additions are retained or not. However, I believe I am well within my rights to insist that Special:Contributions/Camelbinky and Special:Contributions/Gyrobo publicly retract the following accusations:
- That my additions were "violations of policy" and "unencyclopedic" and that I was "spamming these sections onto articles" as claimed in User_talk:DanielPenfield#County budget sections are violations of policy
- That I "thr random policies, guidelines and essays into a discussion, without really relating them to the topic at hand" as claimed about my phrase-by-phrase rebuttal in User_talk:DanielPenfield#Reminder
- That "Our NY county articles are being spammed with unencyclopedic section headers", "I have been reverted by same spammer", "information DanielPenfield keeps adding to these articles provides nothing useful", and "additions you've been adding to county articles have no encyclopedic value" in Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_New_York#Unencyclopedic budget section headings
I would also like to see Special:Contributions/Camelbinky and Special:Contributions/Gyrobo publicly state that they will permanently abandon the use of the specious WP:UNENCYCLOPEDIC and WP:USELESS claims (in any form, including "provides nothing useful") as "justification" for deleting content from Misplaced Pages.
- -- DanielPenfield (talk) 22:08, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
- You really can't use this board to force an apology from anyone. Trust me, I've tried. If you want Camelbinky and Gyrobo to apologize you should discuss your edits with them and explain calmly why you think they are beneficial.
- -- DanielPenfield (talk) 22:08, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
- To be honest, I can see the rationale to revert these edits; they mostly just add empty framework without any real material. The referenced material on the taxes is good, but the framework on the rest of the budget is lacking in any detail. This technically isn't spamming, but when you do this across a wide range of pages within a short period of time it can be seen as disruptive. If you want to create sections on municipality budgets you should be prepared to write something in them. ThemFromSpace 22:33, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
- I really don't have anything to add to this, other than to recap it from my perspective. DanielPenfield, by his own admission, added empty "strawman" section headers to roughly fifty articles. Camelbinky reverted some of these, but DanielPenfield reverted those reversions, all without explanation. Camelbinky then left DanielPenfield a message explaining his reasoning for the initial reversions, and began a discussion on WPNY. I agreed with Camelbinky's assessment of DanielPenfield's additions as nonconstructive, and then used rollback on all instances of them. WP:ROLLBACK allows widespread reversions in situations like these, because the discussion leading to it was centralized. Rather than engage Camelbinky and myself over the merits of his edits, DanielPenfield immediately Wikilawyered, made what could be considered personal attacks on Camelbinky, and accused me of edit warring. When I asked DanielPenfield to calmly discuss his additions, he responded by filing this. I did not accuse anybody of anything, and I stand by what I did say. My opinion is that from the outset of this discussion, DanielPenfield has been combative and difficult to form consensus with. --Gyrobo (talk) 22:48, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
- In response to User:Themfromspace: The problem with Misplaced Pages is that everybody "skims" what I write and responds with these nonsequiturs. I am looking for a retraction of the malicious and libelous accusations from Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject New York#Unencyclopedic budget section headings, User_talk:DanielPenfield#County budget sections are violations of policy, and User_talk:DanielPenfield#Reminder, nothing more, nothing less. Also, your definition of "disruptive" does not appear to match Misplaced Pages:Disruptive editing. And it looks to me like you are imposing a higher standard than WP:IMPERFECT and WP:Misplaced Pages is a work in progress require and your higher standard is in direct conflict with WP:PRESERVE which states "As long as any of the facts or ideas added to the article would belong in a "finished" article, they should be retained.". -- DanielPenfield (talk) 23:03, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
(edit conflict)Strawman implies intentionality making articles weaker -- that's not how things are done on Misplaced Pages. There are templates for things like references needed, and you can always make suggestions on the talk page, but putting non-constructive text on an article isn't good. Note that WP:REVEXP is a non-binding essay, not a policy. It would have been nicer if Camelbinky had left a single explanation somewhere when he did the multiple reverts, but other than that, it's have to find much wrong with his behavior. Nothing about Gyrobo's actions seems improper to me. Gerardw (talk) 23:10, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
- Again, looks nobody wants to read what I wrote all that closely or click through the links to verify that the claim of "spamming" and WP:UNENCYCLOPEDIC is false (not to mention that WP:UNENCYCLOPEDIC and WP:USELESS are specious arguments). BTW, Straw man proposal clearly states "A "straw-man proposal" is a brainstormed simple proposal intended to generate discussion of its disadvantages and to provoke the generation of new and better proposals. -- DanielPenfield (talk) 23:24, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
- Per your own statement regarding what a straw-man proposal is, you should have made a proposal. Misplaced Pages:Village pump (proposals) would be more appropriate than just going through and adding the empty section headers to every article. Perhaps in such a discussion others would have been able to point out to you the drawbacks and help you flesh out your proposal to where it would not have met with opposition.Camelbinky (talk) 00:09, 9 August 2011 (UTC)
- In this edit and this edit you accuse me of WP:SPAMing and unspecified "policy violations". Are you or are you not going to retract this malicious and libelous allegation? -- DanielPenfield (talk) 00:35, 9 August 2011 (UTC)
- In regard to "libelous", please see WP:No legal threats#Perceived legal threats. Dial it down, please. Beyond My Ken (talk) 01:06, 9 August 2011 (UTC)
- Per your own statement regarding what a straw-man proposal is, you should have made a proposal. Misplaced Pages:Village pump (proposals) would be more appropriate than just going through and adding the empty section headers to every article. Perhaps in such a discussion others would have been able to point out to you the drawbacks and help you flesh out your proposal to where it would not have met with opposition.Camelbinky (talk) 00:09, 9 August 2011 (UTC)
(←) There were a few instances where Camelbinky's behavior was inappropriate throughout this ordeal. If you're going to mass revert someone with no edit summary, you need to start a discussion somewhere. Daniel was initially reverted without any explanation whatsoever. Camelbinky's later comment on Daniel's talk page was unhelpful, particularly, "spamming", which is an inflammatory bad faith accusation. Also, their comment, "You were reverted for a reason, putting them back was not a good idea", was not appropriate, remembering that no reason whatsoever was given, and they did not provide a link to the discussion. I don't see any major problems with Gyrobo's conduct. Content-wise, I'm more inclined to agree with Gyrobo and Camelbinky, and per WP:SILENT and WP:BRD they are 100% justified in reverting those actions. However, Daniel's contributing, and discussing, in good faith, and has provided detailed and intricate arguments, and the other two users would do well to extend the same courtesy. Regards, Swarm 03:07, 9 August 2011 (UTC)
- First off, my behavior was not inappropriate. I am under no obligation to provide an edit summary, those are completely voluntary at my discretion to provide or not. When there are multiple issues with the person's additions and they look and feel like obvious problem to the average user (which they appear to have consensus that they were not appropriate additions) and I have to revert on multiple pages then I do not see a reason to explain. Second, using the word "spamming", I'm sorry I dont see any other word for what was put on all those pages, perhaps I will invest in a thesaurus. As you point out BRD I'd like to point out the purpose of BRD, be BOLD, which Daniel did, Revert which I did, then instead of discussing Daniel reverted my revert, I am the one that started the discussion which should have been the onus of Daniel. Which he should have done before doing any edits in the first place anyway, these were edits the Community should have discussed first. When I said "Our NY county articles" I was including the ENTIRE community, including Daniel. No ownership. Detailed and intricate arguments? Of what? Of how I'm a dick? I'm willing to stipulate for the record that I'm a dick, but that's not a matter for this board actually, despite the name of this noticeboard. Gyrobo and I are the only two who put forth why, according to policy, the additions should not stand. All Daniel did was provide snippets of policy out of context to show why I'm a dick.Camelbinky (talk) 00:55, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- WP policy is to leave edit summaries, per WP:EDIT. Gerardw (talk) 01:50, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- Does not say it is mandatory and I'm willing to put it forth at the Village pump to see if the Community feels that is how it should be applied, because it is not applied as mandatory and it does not matter the literal wording of a policy. Policy is simply the best consensus written version that could be made of what the community has done in the past; to put it succinctly "policy is descriptive, not proscriptive". I dont have to leave edit summaries, and if someone wants to slap my wrist for not leaving them go ahead and try. Ridiculous this discussion is about leaving an edit summary about a revert on an edit we all have agreed should not have been made. And when you do a copy and paste edit on around 50 articles, each edit which should not have been done, that is called spamming. If there's a better word, please enlighten me. However, this is ridiculous. Nothing was done wrong. I explained myself in a discussion at the NY wikiproject, I did the step in BRD that Daniel refused to do. This discussion is useless and as far as I'm concerned done with. I wont be watching because nothing will happen.Camelbinky (talk) 02:49, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- WP policy is to leave edit summaries, per WP:EDIT. Gerardw (talk) 01:50, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- First off, my behavior was not inappropriate. I am under no obligation to provide an edit summary, those are completely voluntary at my discretion to provide or not. When there are multiple issues with the person's additions and they look and feel like obvious problem to the average user (which they appear to have consensus that they were not appropriate additions) and I have to revert on multiple pages then I do not see a reason to explain. Second, using the word "spamming", I'm sorry I dont see any other word for what was put on all those pages, perhaps I will invest in a thesaurus. As you point out BRD I'd like to point out the purpose of BRD, be BOLD, which Daniel did, Revert which I did, then instead of discussing Daniel reverted my revert, I am the one that started the discussion which should have been the onus of Daniel. Which he should have done before doing any edits in the first place anyway, these were edits the Community should have discussed first. When I said "Our NY county articles" I was including the ENTIRE community, including Daniel. No ownership. Detailed and intricate arguments? Of what? Of how I'm a dick? I'm willing to stipulate for the record that I'm a dick, but that's not a matter for this board actually, despite the name of this noticeboard. Gyrobo and I are the only two who put forth why, according to policy, the additions should not stand. All Daniel did was provide snippets of policy out of context to show why I'm a dick.Camelbinky (talk) 00:55, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
(←) I never said that you were required to leave an edit summary. I said, "If you're going to mass revert someone with no edit summary, you need to start a discussion somewhere." That is not an opinion, that is an explict provision of WP:EDIT: "Be helpful: explain your changes." Deliberately failing to explain your edits is, plain and simple, disruption, and I strongly encourage you to start a straw poll about how the community feels about the question: "Is explaining your edits mandatory?" Swarm 23:51, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
Andy Dingley
Andy Dingley (talk · contribs) has, in the past dozen hours or so:
- Called my edit removing a link that fails numerous guidelines "unconstructive."
- Called me a single purpose account, even though I've worked on various articles since 2006.
- Claims he discovered this particular talk page though means other than following me on my contributions page, but he came into the middle of a conversation I was that he had no previous involvement in only to counter me.
- Reported me for "edit warring" for reverting twice (which was just as much as he reverted).
- Continually dismisses my edits as robot like, and continually suggests or implies I should be replaced with a robot script (1, 2, 3, 4), not in a helpful manner but a dismissive one. I have shown an example on his talk page of where I left a link a bot would have removed, and provided justification for including the link.
- Claims that some bookspam I'm removing is a cited source when it is not (1, 2) (the bookspam in question may be seen in the first link).
I have brought up him calling me a SPA multiple times, and he has not apologized, but continued to call me bot-like. I have pointed out repeatedly that the book in question was not being cited, and another editor has explained that the link for the book is spam. I have explained to him in the edit warring noticeboard that I've only reverted twice (just as much as him).
This user has shown no/little respect for other users, and is contrary to the point of illogic and obstruction of the site's goals. Ian.thomson (talk) 02:43, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- I am pleased to see Andy Dingley's conceited words and deeds being called to account. Eddaido (talk) 04:22, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- I presume this is a response to the pig's ear you made at Preselector gearbox, where you confused it with epicyclic gearbox and rewrote the whole article on that basis? Or was it when I corrected you at Commons for creating a non-existent van manufacturer called commons:category:Bradford vehicles? Andy Dingley (talk) 23:37, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- His conceit lies in his belief that his opinions - in particular the cases mentioned above - are correct! Eddaido (talk) 07:15, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
- Ian, how do you justify In case you ever come back ... Consider this your final warning to be an appropriate reaction to a new editor? I would remind you again of WP:AGF. Andy Dingley (talk) 23:35, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- I agree with Ian's edits; the user clearly had a COI and was spamming their books all over the place. It's difficult to assume good-faith in such instances. OhNoitsJamie 23:39, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- Given your hysterical over-reaction to another new editor at digital curation (a new editor who behaved exactly as we ask them to), you're hardly a good example of how to behave towards new editors. Andy Dingley (talk) 23:41, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- I justify it thusly: I'm not weak on spam, even if I don't catch everything. And Andy, why is it that you can't defend your actions at all, that you have to go and draw attention to other users? Seems to show that you've got a problem. That you have editors coming out of nowhere to agree that your behavior is unacceptable but noone is helping you in your attempts at character assassination shows that you've got to learn to be more kind to your fellow users. I've dealt with a lot of bookspam (I edit a lot of religion related articles, and ministers, new-age gurus, and freethinkers of all sorts want their opinions heard), so pardon me if I don't feel like explaining the concept to someone who apparently doesn't get it. You could just apologize, back off, and change your ways, but you argue. If you want to prove me wrong, apologize for your behavior (not just to me but to others you've mistreated), accept responsibility for your actions, and change your ways. Ian.thomson (talk) 23:49, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- That's exactly what I expected from Andy. Not much else to say. OhNoitsJamie 03:57, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
- Actually Jamie, I'm sorry we've any dispute over this, because I see a lot of your edits removing spam and vandalism and generally they're all good stuff. In this case though, you were wrong. You were wrong because it's a useful link from a potentially useful new editor (who not surprisingly, has since disappeared). Secondly, they didn't spam the link at all, they already did what we ask them to. Fine, you made a mistake, it happens. Raising it at COI though...
- The trouble with reverting vandalism is that after a while it skews your view of other editors. Not every addition is spam. Not every IP editor is a vandal. Look into the abyss for too long though and the abyss starts to look back into you - you see everyone outside the cabal as a threat to be resisted. This is a wrong principle, and it was wrong in the specific case here. Andy Dingley (talk) 23:23, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- That's exactly what I expected from Andy. Not much else to say. OhNoitsJamie 03:57, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
- I justify it thusly: I'm not weak on spam, even if I don't catch everything. And Andy, why is it that you can't defend your actions at all, that you have to go and draw attention to other users? Seems to show that you've got a problem. That you have editors coming out of nowhere to agree that your behavior is unacceptable but noone is helping you in your attempts at character assassination shows that you've got to learn to be more kind to your fellow users. I've dealt with a lot of bookspam (I edit a lot of religion related articles, and ministers, new-age gurus, and freethinkers of all sorts want their opinions heard), so pardon me if I don't feel like explaining the concept to someone who apparently doesn't get it. You could just apologize, back off, and change your ways, but you argue. If you want to prove me wrong, apologize for your behavior (not just to me but to others you've mistreated), accept responsibility for your actions, and change your ways. Ian.thomson (talk) 23:49, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- Given your hysterical over-reaction to another new editor at digital curation (a new editor who behaved exactly as we ask them to), you're hardly a good example of how to behave towards new editors. Andy Dingley (talk) 23:41, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- Hear! Hear! Eddaido (talk) 07:17, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
- Dingley's out-of-left-field comments directed at me were based on him not reading my own comments very carefully. Hard to tell if it was a true personal attack, or just a need for a new lens prescription. ←Baseball Bugs carrots→ 12:06, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
- Andy Dingley (talk · contribs) occasionally resorts to a robust turn of phrase when exasperated by obdurate stupidity. Don't we all? As my very modest contributions are often in a field to which Andy also contributes, I have some length of experience of his work here. I find that he always has the best interests of the project in mind. I fully agree with his support of new editors who happen to actually know something against excessive pettifogging enforcement of what they think are 'rules' by overzealous policekids. How about climbing down off your indignation and improving content somewhere instead, like I would prefer to be doing instead of wasting my time with this storm in a teacup. Globbet (talk) 00:06, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- I initially assumed good faith and considered your comments sarcasm, but looking over your past conversations with Andy Dingley, I'm having extreme difficulty with that. How about you and him develop a sense of civility (one of the site's founding principles)? "Obdurate stupidity?" What exactly are you refering to here? Are you refering to me removing what other users concluded was book spam, me issuing a final warning to the book's author after she had already had four other warnings related to the book, or what? Aside from the bookspam issue, I have not dissed Andy's contributions to articlespace, but regardless of the quality of his work, WP:CIVIL is not a guideline, it is POLICY. It is one of the five pillars of this site and one of the things that determine if someone is qualified to work on this project (civility is what makes it a project instead of a battleground).
- At any rate, the only person defending Andy Dingley has called stupid those of us Andy has insulted. Shows the sort of company he keeps, eh? Ian.thomson (talk) 01:03, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- OK, I apologise for "obdurate stupidity". It was meant as a generalisation, but in retrospect it is hard to see how you would not take it as meaning you, and it is far too strong in this instance anyway. Since we are here at Wikiquette assistance, the issue is not one of content but of behaviour and attitude. In general terms, learning to become an editor has been made a difficult and disheartening process by all the rules (I am not inclined to study the precise local jargon) and their often peremptory and arbitrary application by those (not necessarily applicable here) too young and inexperienced to have developed humility and good judgement. This is what I find exasperating. It is basically a question of WP:BITE. You may not think it applies in this instance, and you may be right, for all I know. As I see it, editors whose primary contribution is in policing need to be very careful not to dissuade potential good editors, when I find so much of the content remains so feeble and the pace of improvement so pathetic - so much so in my field of engineering that I begin to think the task is a hopeless one. While everyone has their own form of contribution to make, to me, creation and expansion of good quality articles is still the prime task at hand, and I am ashamed for the project when obstacles are placed in the path of that, albeit in good faith. While he can (and does) speak for himself, I think Andy thinks the same way. I am disappointed that you should think I have a history of incivility. Globbet (talk) 09:16, 13 August 2011 (UTC)edited 09:46, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- You're right about Dingley being "too young and inexperienced to have developed humility and good judgement." Give it time. ←Baseball Bugs carrots→ 15:21, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- Considering his 180-degrees-wrong interpretation of comments I made over on commons, Ding-Dong might be suffering from the same level of obdurateness. ←Baseball Bugs carrots→ 04:40, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- Thanks for the nostalgia trip Bugs, I haven't heard that insult since I was about nine.
- re your actions at Commons, they're in relation to your threat that, If you block me again, I'll have to ask that all the images I uploaded here be deleted, on the grounds that they are all copyright violations - i.e. you were prepared to lie over image copyright, just to disrupt Commons. Andy Dingley (talk) 23:18, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- Which insult in particular? You need to be more specific. Anyway, as you may have observed, I did make good on my threat and all my images are now deleted on bogus copyright violation claims, as per the Alexander Liptak methodology. The reason I called the so-called leaders there "clueless" is that they don't see the implications of what they did when they let him get away with it. It would render the "irrevocable" rule unenforceable and obsolete. If you think that's just fine, I don't know what to tell you. ←Baseball Bugs carrots→ 23:30, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- OK, I apologise for "obdurate stupidity". It was meant as a generalisation, but in retrospect it is hard to see how you would not take it as meaning you, and it is far too strong in this instance anyway. Since we are here at Wikiquette assistance, the issue is not one of content but of behaviour and attitude. In general terms, learning to become an editor has been made a difficult and disheartening process by all the rules (I am not inclined to study the precise local jargon) and their often peremptory and arbitrary application by those (not necessarily applicable here) too young and inexperienced to have developed humility and good judgement. This is what I find exasperating. It is basically a question of WP:BITE. You may not think it applies in this instance, and you may be right, for all I know. As I see it, editors whose primary contribution is in policing need to be very careful not to dissuade potential good editors, when I find so much of the content remains so feeble and the pace of improvement so pathetic - so much so in my field of engineering that I begin to think the task is a hopeless one. While everyone has their own form of contribution to make, to me, creation and expansion of good quality articles is still the prime task at hand, and I am ashamed for the project when obstacles are placed in the path of that, albeit in good faith. While he can (and does) speak for himself, I think Andy thinks the same way. I am disappointed that you should think I have a history of incivility. Globbet (talk) 09:16, 13 August 2011 (UTC)edited 09:46, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- Andy Dingley (talk · contribs) occasionally resorts to a robust turn of phrase when exasperated by obdurate stupidity. Don't we all? As my very modest contributions are often in a field to which Andy also contributes, I have some length of experience of his work here. I find that he always has the best interests of the project in mind. I fully agree with his support of new editors who happen to actually know something against excessive pettifogging enforcement of what they think are 'rules' by overzealous policekids. How about climbing down off your indignation and improving content somewhere instead, like I would prefer to be doing instead of wasting my time with this storm in a teacup. Globbet (talk) 00:06, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
Everyone here's human (except the real bots). That's why we have WP:CIVIL. WP:BITE is important, but it is an extension of WP:CIVIL, which applies to any user regardless of how long they've been on. Ian.thomson (talk) 17:41, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- I see that I'm now being threatened with AN/I (Oooh!) by Ian, after he has now removed the book reference six times, three of them just today. What an interesting view of policy and the value of useful editing you must have.
- I would remind you that I'm still the only one who has bothered to read the book in question, but you want it removed because either the URL offends you, the author of the content offends you, or the content (of a book you haven't read, on a subject you have no interest in) offends you. Despite others favouring its restoration, you're so far against this that 3RR becomes just one of those rules for the little people. You're really going to love it as an Admin. Andy Dingley (talk) 23:18, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
This is all trivial stuff. My interaction with Andy Dingley proves to me that he is prickly only when necessary, and remarkable open to good ideas. I don't see any need for community censure. Binksternet (talk) 23:42, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- Wait a sec - did you just call him what I think you called him? If so, he might need to file his own WQA report! ←Baseball Bugs carrots→ 23:46, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
Regarding the article 'Treschow (D.-N. family)'
Not a Wikiquette issue, referred elsewhere – content dispute Gerardw (talk) 22:37, 13 August 2011 (UTC)- TuriTerj (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Treschow (Dano-Norwegian family) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
The article Treschow (Dano-Norwegian family) has experienced the recent arrival of a user, TuriTerj,
- who in his/her edits shows lacking respect for earlier and other users' contributions, which he/she, often in violent manners, has removed and replaced with his/her own,
- whose behaviour is considered as aggressive,
- and whose contributions seem to be encumbered with lacking objectivity to the subject concerned. (The Treschow family are aristocrats, rich and famous, and such people attract the negative attention of individuals who, when on Misplaced Pages, often have other mainsprings than the purely academical.)
In addition, the user has added incorrect and/or unnuanced information (and my own corrections of them have been removed), e.g. the sentence ‘nobility was abolished in Norway in 1821’.
The mentioned user dominates the article, like he/she owns it, and contributions by others are consistently removed and replaced with his/hers. It has become impossible to work on the article, since this user most likely will remove other contributions.
I will first of all ask about the following:
1) Whether one on basis of the article's revision history (from 1 May) sees indications of the same.
2) How the problem may be solved.
--- Aaemn784 (talk) 12:28, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- It's not a good article; there are no references. Find some that support your edits, use the talk page, and open an WP:RFC to get more editors involved. Gerardw (talk) 01:00, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
- Well, there are some refs now in the Literature and sources section but no inline citations. Translations of those would be a good start, anyone game? --Nuujinn (talk) 01:06, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
- I have thought, and I believe that much of the problem may be solved by presenting to the user TuriTerj the following fundamental principle on Misplaced Pages: respect for the work (efforts, etc.) of other users, and thus that contributions happen mainly as additions to the existing text, and not by removing other users' contributions and replacing them with what oneself has written. I suggest that e.g. an administrator, if recognising the occurrence of such removal of text, may instruct the mentioned user so that similar 'article revolutions' may be avoided.
- --- Aaemn784 (talk) 15:58, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
- This is not a Misplaced Pages principle. In fact, it would lead to an unreadable non-encyclopedic website. Note the text that appears below the save page "If you do not want your writing to be edited, used, and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here." Gerardw (talk) 19:52, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
Aaemn784's edits are of low quality (see the inconsistent narrative in the section "1812 ennoblement"), he removes relevant information, and makes unsourced and misleading claims, e.g. that the family is of noble "origin" (the family is not of noble "origin", but a branch of the family, not the entire family, was historically noble, in the 19th century). Whether the Treschow family is rich or not has nothing to do with the edits in questions, and does absolutely not waive normal quality standards. (The persons who are "rich and famous", assuming he is referring to the ones inhabiting Fritzøehus, and who are using the name Treschow today are not aristocrats in any country, btw., and wouldn't be aristocrats even if Norway had still recognized the existence of the nobility as such. That's another misleading claim.) Aaemn784 has also refused to discuss his problematic edits on the relevant article talk page where I brought up his misleading claims months ago. "The problem may be solved" when User:Aaemn784 starts to discuss his edits. TuriTerj (talk) 11:58, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- Hi.
- You have presented much incorrect information, e.g. that the nobility allegedly was abolished in 1821. It was not. The Nobility Law of 1821 initiated a long-range dissolution of noble privileges and titles, ending in the 1890s. Despite this, you have several times removed my correction and keep claiming that ‘the nobility’ was ‘abolished in 1821’. (However, I see that I could have provided an inline reference.)
- In addition, you seem (this is my impression) very obsessed with making a point of allegedly reductive factors, e.g. the Treschows' ‘subordinate’ position compared with the German family Tresckow (repeated three different places in the article, and even extensively in what is supposed to be a general and short description of a picture). It is neither directly relevant nor especially encyclopedical to compare the Treschows, who are (historically) important within Norway, with some foreign family who happen to have a name which has similar spelling, but different origin. You cannot use a German family's rank in Germany to ‘reduce’ a Norwegian family's rank in Norway unless this happens in a relevant context.
- You include in the text much general information which can be found by visiting each article concerned. The Treschow article is not supposed to give a general summary of every single topic that the article comes in touch with.
- Examples:
- ‘The agnatic descendants of Michael Treschow are nevertheless included in the Yearbook of the Danish Nobility, which is published by a private organisation.’ (Can easily be found by visiting YDN's article.)
- ‘Also her children bear the surname Treschow, but would not have been considered as noble according to the letters patent, as noble status is inherited only patrilineally.’ (Common knowledge, and available in the topic's general articles, e.g. nobility.)
- ‘Some other Norwegian families are known to have adopted coats of arms (or variations thereof) of unrelated families with similar names.’ (Common knowledge.)
- ‘By the provisions of the patent, the patrilineal descendants of Michael Treschow, including unmarried females, were considered noble.’ (They were not ‘considered’ as noble; they were noble.)
- ‘ wherefore this branch of the family became a part of the untitled nobility ’ (In Denmark and Norway, the nobility is untitled; the others belong to the barons' estate, the counts' estate, etc.)
- Another problem is that you are too bombastic in your interpretation of terms. For example, I wrote ‘family seat’. A family seat is, as a descriptive term, the seat of any family, also farmer families. To this, you wrote in the talk page: ‘The term "family seat" has no legal meaning in Norway today and is misleading, Fritøzehus, completed in 1898, is today inhabited by Stein Erik Hagen and Mille-Marie Treschow, and will presumably be inherited by a member of the (un-noble) Stang family at some point. Fritøzehus has never been a family seat (setegård) in the legal sense, ’ Indeed, Fritzøehus was not a seat farm, and that is why I wrote family seat. A portion of humbleness would have prevented this misunderstanding of yours.
- Otherwise, before expecting that people shall discuss with you, you should adopt a less aggressive way of behaviour on Misplaced Pages. I would normally seek a personal conversation with the editor concerned, but in this case, I found it both uncomfortable and unrealistic.
- You might find the following page useful: How to edit a page: Major edits
1) The Norwegian Treschow family has adopted not only a name which is indistinguishable from that of the German family, but even the coat of arms of this much older family. It's highly relevant and informative to mention this prominently, especially when discussing the coat of arms that they adopted from the German family, and to distinguish it from coats of arms used previously by the members of the Norwegian Treschow family.
2) I don't agree that the information on how noble status is inherited in this case (not universally) is "common knowledge" (it's only common knowledge for persons interested in nobility). The Treschow name is today used by many persons who are not members of what was defined as a noble family in the past, including the heirs to alleged "family seat". This is helpful and relevant information.
3) I don't object to rewording the information on the abolition of noble privileges/status. If you had explained your position in the first case, we could have found a more acceptable wording. However, the accepted position is that the concept of nobility does not exist in Norway today. If that was the case, it would somehow be officially acknowledged (by law, by the Government).
4) The term family seat is misleading for a number of reasons, both because it is the common translation of setegård or a term frequently denoting such a concept, and also because the current residents are mostly not members of the family that was historically noble. It's an expensive building from the turn of the century, but not the "seat" of anyone else than the ones residing there. Describing it as a family seat is anachronistic and misleading.
5) The nobility in Denmark and Norway is not always untitled. Untitled nobility is the common term for, well, the untitled nobility, and I fail to see what's the problem with that expression. The Wedel Jarlsberg family is, for example, a titled family whose head is lensgreve and whose younger members are barons. Multiple Danish families are titled nobles where the title is not tied to an estate/len.
6) The fact that other families have adopted (variations of) the coats of arms of unrelated families was added by yourself as far as I can tell; I merely moved it from the introduction to a more appropriate place in the article and reworded it. TuriTerj (talk) 17:05, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- The question for this page is whether anyone needs help solving civility issues, not content. Please move the discussion to the article talk page. If you need more eyes on it, try WP:RFC. Thanks! Gerardw (talk) 22:37, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
Anglicanus' assumption of bad faith
* Editor Gerardw (t c) has suggested the discussion continue elsewhere. —Darkwind (talk) 19:14, 13 August 2011 (UTC)The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
- Anglicanus (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Googie Withers (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
- Spike Milligan (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
Anglicanus and I disagree about the lede of a biographical article for a British subject usually known by a nickname should be set out. I have tried to explain my position and commented only on the issue and not on the user. Unfortunately I feel his mode of reply, in refusing to enter into proper discussion but blindly reverting and persistently accusing me of disruption, is distinctly unhelpful to resolving the underlying dispute. I have taken it up politely on his talk but it did not produce any change. I hope Anglicanus can understand that there is a difference between "an editor who disagrees with me" and "a disruptive editor". Sam Blacketer (talk) 15:23, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- These claims are completely false. I have already patiently tried - several times - explaining to Sam Blacketer the reasons why people's names are given as they are in these articles but he continues to assert that this is "incorrect" based on nothing except his opinion of what is "ugly" and what is a "correct" name. Frankly, he is being extremely tiresome and hypocritical on this matter. Everything he accuses me of more accurately describes his own behaviour. Anglicanus (talk) 15:49, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- In the two cases cited, the persons concerned are widely known by their nicknames ('Googie' and 'Spike'), The articles will clearly need to give their full names as well. However per English/Irish usage, the nickname is never inserted into the full name - this seems to be US practice, but I've never seen it done with Spike (Or with Edward "Ed" Miliband", as someone tried to do with his article). We should follow common practice, not invent arbitrary rules. AndyTheGrump (talk) 16:00, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- First of all, they are not just their "nicknames" - they became their usual or common names. They are the names which they would no doubt usually use themselves and usually sign with. Secondly, what evidence do you have that the "common practice" you say should be followed doesn't somehow apply to English and Irish people? Surely that would be - by definition - to "invent arbitary rules". Unless you can provide such evidence then your comment is only an unsubstantiated opinion. And it is false to claim that it "never" occurs with British and Irish people as it frequently does so - as with the Edward Heath article and hundreds of others. Anglicanus (talk) 16:26, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- None of that is of the slightest significance - and the Edward Heath article doesn't follow British practice either - or can you provide external reliable sources that show this usage? AndyTheGrump (talk) 16:45, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- All of my comments have been considerably more "significant" than anything you or Sam have so far provided. And you haven't provided any evidence to support "British practice" on this matter. I have discovered that Sam has been arguing for his opinion on this matter at Misplaced Pages talk:Manual of Style (biographies). He is of course, perfectly entitled to do this, but he isn't entitled to insist that his opinion is the "correct" one and that the common practice (which actually is supported in the MOS) is "incorrect". It is very arrogant for any editor to act in this way. Anglicanus (talk) 16:53, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- Can you provide a link to the relevant MOS section? AndyTheGrump (talk) 16:58, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
(Outdent) Our own page nickname makes no British/American distinction and I personally (a Briton) have often seen Forename "Nickname" Surname – until today it had never occurred to me that that may be American usage. If anyone has a Debrett's or similar British style guide to hand, that would be handy. However, since this is posted in "Wikiquette", may I suggest that who is right is not so much our business as whether decorum and etiquette has been/is followed... ✝DBD 19:17, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
- Anglicanus also accused me of disruption after I made an edit, with strong supporting evidence, changing 'Wellbeing' to 'Well-being' leaving the edit summary, "Well-being is perfectly acceptable in British English and is 10 times more common in usage than wellbeing and is also the COD spelling of the word." in the article Church of England. I support Sam Blacketer's complaint. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Naturalhomes (talk • contribs) 00:04, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
I'm not seeing incivility issues here (disagreeing with someone isn't incivil.) There is already a discussion at Wikipedia_talk:Manual_of_Style_(biographies)#Nicknames_in_lead; please continue there. Gerardw (talk) 01:10, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.Incivility and assuming bad faith by User:Roscelese
Closed discussion | ||
---|---|---|
Like the ANI thread, this isn't achieving anything. If any editor in this mess clearly crosses the line, then that can be reported at ANI or similar venues. All we have here is a very long he-said-she-said thread. Sarek's trout was appropriate. Black Kite (t) (c) 18:57, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
I am almost always on the opposite side of a dispute from this user, but it has almost always been amicable and I have never seen her act the way she has in the past couple of days:
I have a lot of respect for this user, but this is persistent and has gone over the line. Given my own history, I'm not in the position to be the civility police, but this behavior from Roscelese is persistent and needs to be brought to the attention of the community. NYyankees51 (talk) 20:06, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
I have filed an ANI report on the anti-Semitism charge. NYyankees51 (talk) 16:47, 13 August 2011 (UTC) I am withdrawing myself from this thread; we're not getting anything constructive done here. I suggest all users do the same before things get any worse. NYyankees51 (talk) 18:45, 13 August 2011 (UTC) The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion. |
User:Legolas2186
- Legolas2186 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Monster Ball Tour (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
I made one constructive edit to the above article (disputed an outlandish and unsourced claim) and was personally attacked by the above user. You can see what the user said here and here. I've decided not to engage the situation anymore, however I don't appreciate the attacks directed towards me and thought I would bring it up here. Thank you. Thankyoubaby (talk) 03:48, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
- Where have you two tried to resolve your disagreement prior to bringing the issue here? --Nuujinn (talk) 15:28, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
User:Obsidian Soul
I have collided with this esteemed user's behaviour considered by me as impolite at AFD started by me. God knows, I hadn't wanted any flame starting the AFD. I have contributed mainly in Ru-Wiki, not here, my contributions there are not considerable, but it isn't a reason to be impolite with me, is it? :) Please help. --Postoronniy-13 (talk) 12:27, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
AGF violation/ad hominem attacks by User:Legolas2186
- Legolas2186 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- User talk:Legolas2186 (edit | user page | history | links | watch | logs)
- Madonna (album) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
The reason
It all started one day when browsing All Music Guide website. Suddenly I noticed that there is mentioned music genre A and music genre B on 1983 album by Madonna. Since All Music Guide is well-respected and reliable, I added an AMG reference as a proof that the above album is not only genre A but also genre B (without a proper reference it is considered as original research, obviously).
Behavior of the user
The particular user reverted the edits of mine and it all seemed as "accidental" vandalism. However, the user even reverted my edits the second time although I asked him to halt the "infobox wars" process. I even tried to resolve the situation by posting one of the generic "warning" templates on his talk page. The disputer seemed to be very friendly and surely can solve issues with grace. He even calls my actions "idiotic" which I find very offensive and disrespectful.
Aside from the irrelevant mini-infobox war, I personally request the etiquette assistance since this kind of disrespectful behavior and language is absolutely unacceptable on Misplaced Pages.
Thank you in advance. ItsAlwaysLupus (talk) 18:23, 13 August 2011 (UTC)
Powered Skateboard Racing League
Sources of reference for Ppowered Skateboard Racing
Articles on Powered Skateboard Racing and on NAPSR, The National Association Of Powered Skateboard Racing author James Eric Hawkins August 12, 2011
www.encinovelobicycle club.com
www.napsar.bz
www.sports@dailynews.com
www.hd.net.com
www.Adrenalina World Tour 2011 marathon
Skateboarders Journal — Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.151.205.48 (talk) 04:20, 14 August 2011 (UTC)