Misplaced Pages

User:Stephenb

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Retired This user is no longer active on Misplaced Pages as of December 2016 due to deletionists.

Hello, I'm Steve, and I have been a UK editor of Misplaced Pages since June 2005.

I am no longer editing Misplaced Pages regularly, if at all. Why? Deletionists. Simple as that. I'm afraid I no longer believe that Misplaced Pages works for the majority of editors, and that people that follow process dogmatically, rather than pragmatically and with understanding, have too much control.

Topics of interest

I occasionally look in on the magazines category, and related categories (see also Misplaced Pages:Categorization), and seeing whether I can categorise the articles therein a little better.

I often go on RC patrol to relieve stress, using a useful tool called Twinkle. Useful links: Misplaced Pages:Template_messages/User_talk_namespace!

I am also a member of the EastEnders WikiProject but rarely have time to edit in detail.

Some statements of belief

  1. I believe the majority of effort in Misplaced Pages should be to continue to add to the sum total of knowledge by adding and improving articles. Those editors that only look to delete articles or valid information within articles (that are not nonsense, violations of BLP or vandalism), but which do not meet guidelines yet, should be ashamed, as their actions alienate both existing and potential editors and destroy faith in the Misplaced Pages project. It's all too easy to delete articles, less easy to accept that readers may find the content therein useful and therefore may contribute to the encyclopaedia by improving them.
    Further: If Misplaced Pages really is the encyclopaedia that anyone can edit, then we must accept that articles will often get created that do not meet guidelines for notability, fiction or whatever. This being the case, it becomes obvious that there are a significant number of editors who believe that such articles should be present, regardless of whether they have read those guidelines. In this case, the guidelines end up being a tool used by another set of editors who simply want to protect and ensconce those guidelines and delete articles that do not (in their view) meet them, rather than discuss their relative merits and/or allow exceptions. This is starting to cause a significant clash between "deletionists" (who slavishly nominate articles for deletion rather than making positive contributions - i.e. adding content and improving articles) and "everyone else", whether prolific, casual or single-article editors who obviously felt that a particular article ought to be present.
    This slavish following of guidelines as if they were unbreakable or unchangeable rules is at the heart of the problem. Wikipedian "deletionists" should be more tolerant, should attempt to improve (or add tags to request improvement of) articles before citing guidelines to get articles deleted. In addition, a significant debate about these guidelines (how they are managed, debated and how they are brought to editors' attentions), deletions (how they are managed and publicised for articles with significant histories and contributors), and acceptable content for a "free encyclopaedia for everyone to edit" should begin.
    "Notability" has become a war-cry of those who want to restrict the freedom to edit articles about subjects that others do not feel are notable. It is obviously easier in some circumstances to determine whether the subject of an article is worthy of having one - individuals and groups spring to mind - but on other issues, where an object clearly exists and has related information that might be of use to other people, such as individual episodes of TV shows, the case is less clear-cut. Personally, I think in the latter cases, the article should be tagged for notability and left alone for a period - it may well be that the episode or whatever is truly notable for reasons that are not immediately clear.
  2. I believe in going easy on vandalism that is obviously only test editing, but hard on vandalism that is obviously disruptive.
  3. This user doesn't believe in spending time and effort shoving every possible userbox on his page :-)

Legal Stuff

Multi-licensed into the public domain
I agree to multi-license my eligible text contributions, unless otherwise stated, under Misplaced Pages's copyright terms and into the public domain. Please be aware that other contributors might not do the same, so if you want to use my contributions in the public domain, please check the multi-licensing guide.
Misplaced Pages editor
This is a Wikipedia user page.
This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user whom this page is about may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Stephenb.
enThis user is a native speaker of the English language.
This user is a recent changes patroller with Twinkle!

Barnstar

This barnstar was the first I ever got, on the wrong page too, so I have left it here for posterity:

The RickK Anti-Vandalism Barnstar
I Chrislk02 award you this anti vandalism barnstar for you defense and prompt reversions of the Cheese article! Keep up the good work! Chris Kreider - HFF 15:17, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
Categories: