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User:Timeshifter/Archive 1

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This is Archive 1 for User:Timeshifter. Not everything from my user page is archived. Much is deleted.

Note: Some of the info on this archive page is out-of-date.

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{{editabuselinks}}

    Iraq War casualty photos

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    Please see Casualties of the Iraq War. Here are some image categories linked below. There are very few photos on wikipedia, or on U.S.-military-associated websites, that show badly wounded Iraqis, Americans, etc..

    People need to see some images showing some of the harrowing Iraqi casualties of the war. I can't find any good ones on wikipedia. I mean photos such as the ones I found recently here:

    I found those photo pages while browsing around looking for some more images for Casualties of the conflict in Iraq since 2003. Here is a non-bloody photo below, Image:VS-1.6 anti-tank mine.jpg, that is harrowing nevertheless:

    Staff Sgt. Kevin Jessen checks the underside of two anti-tank mines found in a village outside Ad Dujayl, Iraq.

    Wikipedia is not censored. See WP:NOTCENSORED. So we can put almost any casualty image we want on wikipedia. Let us show the reality of war with some bloody photos of casualties from all sides.

    I have been showing the images in this section at the 300-pixel-wide size of the infoboxes in many articles.

    Here is about the rawest image I could find on wikipedia so far: Image:Army.mil-2007-03-27-114351.jpg.

    A soldier carries a wounded Iraqi child into the Charlie Medical Centre at Camp Ramadi, Iraq, on March 20, 2007.

    Please encourage people to upload more casualty photos.

    There is a disturbing May 2007 New York Times slideshow of American casualties after an IED bombing. It is linked from the story here:

    Casualty photos:

    Lists and charts.

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    Quotes from guidelines and policies may become out of date as they are revised. Please go to the sources for the latest versions.

    Lists, charts. Conflicting notability guidelines

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    Quote below from WP:NOT#DIR policy:

    Of course, there is nothing wrong with having lists if their entries are famous because they are associated with or significantly contributed to the list topic, for example Nixon's Enemies List. Wikipedia also includes reference tables and tabular information for quick reference. This site search, and this one, pull up thousands of examples of lists and comparison tables. Merged groups of small articles based on a core topic are certainly permitted.

    Quote below from Wikipedia:Notability guideline:

    Notability guidelines give guidance on whether a topic is notable enough to be included in Wikipedia as a separate article, but do not specifically regulate the content of articles, which is governed by other guidelines such as those on using reliable sources and on handling trivia. The particular topics and facts within an article are not each required to meet the standard of the notability guidelines. List articles, though, should include only notable entries; for example, only notable writers should be in List of English writers.

    The last sentence in the above quote was probably tacked on later as a not-well-thought-out quick and temporary solution to some problem articles.

    Some thoughtful discussion is archived here:

    There has probably been a lot more discussion since then. I haven't been keeping up with it.

    Lists, charts. Wikipedia guidelines and policies.

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    Wikipedia:WikiProject Lists

    List alt font awesomeThis user proudly participates in WikiProject Lists.


    Please watchlist this page linked just below, and vote to keep worthy lists and charts:

    Lists of lists.

    This site search, and this one, pull up thousands of examples of wikipedia lists and comparison tables.

    Templates.

    Relevant guideline/policy pages.

    Lists and charts. Problems

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    Humor: Wikipedia:Don't be a fanatic and Wikipedia:Don't-give-a-fuckism and Wikipedia:No angry mastodons

    The battle between good (inclusionists in general) and evil (deletionists in general) continues!

    ;)
    See: Category:Wikipedians by Wikipedia philosophy
    See: Conflicting Wikipedia philosophies
    This user is a member of the AWWDMBJAWGCA
    WAIFDSPBATDMTAD
    .

    Imagine if someone, or a whole blanking crew, parachuted into a wikipedia article you and others had spent many hours, days, months, or years working on, and then stated that some misinterpreted, out-of-context, wikipedia guideline/policy allowed them to delete large parts of the article and/or source links. Usually it is a sleep-deprived editor, or crew of editors, on some kind of "mission from god". Don't just get mad, get the facts!

    Lists and charts. Pragmatic solutions

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    My thoughts after much study of the wikipedia guidelines/policies quoted on my user page here. Many lists inevitability become long enough to require some weeding out of some of the entries. In that case the page editors often have to make some rules as to which entries are allowed on the list/chart page. Another alternative is to break up the lists/charts and to create spinout articles.

    From Wikipedia:Notability (organizations and companies) guideline:

    "Notable means 'worthy of being noted' or 'attracting notice.' It is not synonymous with 'fame' or 'importance.' Please consider notable and demonstrable effects on culture, society, entertainment, athletics, economies, history, literature, science, or education."

    In the specialized world of software, freeware, shareware, open-source, etc. I believe that we can reference the online publications noted by that community. The lists and reviews maintained by CNET, for example.

    So notability comes from CNET, etc., and all the other types of secondary sources. Features are verified by using the primary sources. So, many of the entries may have both secondary and primary sources. Lists without features, notes, and annotation are just directories, and are not allowed on wikipedia unless all the entries have separate wikipedia articles. In that case they are covered by Wikipedia:Categories, lists, and series boxes. I think this is where the blanking crews get confused. They are applying unannotated list guidelines to annotated lists/charts.

    There is NO requirement that an entry has to have a separate wikipedia page. It would be nice if eventually more and more of the entries could have them. But they don't usually start that way. Even lists and charts that now meet featured-article status had to start somewhere.

    It is far more important that readers be able to access the primary source for verifying features, than it is to meet the imagined "linkfarm" standards of uninformed blanking crews on a spam mission from God. So for entries without separate wikipedia pages there need to be primary source links.

    Concerning the determination of notability of software there is this from the Wikipedia:Reliable sources guideline (emphasis added):

    What is a reliable source? Reliable sources are credible published materials with a reliable publication process; their authors are generally regarded as trustworthy, or are authoritative in relation to the subject at hand.
    The reliability of a source depends on context; what is reliable in one topic may not be in another. A publication by a world-renowned mathematician may not be a reliable source on topics of biology. In general, an article should use the most reliable sources available to its editors.

    In the case of software, that would be the many download compilation sites such as CNET, etc. that maintain software lists, reviews, etc..

    {{Not verified}}

    The above template may show up on the list or chart page you are editing if some misguided editor deleted or hid all the source/citation links. In fact, the same editor, or his/her crew, may add the banner, or ask that entries without sourcing or separate wikipedia articles be deleted. Lists and charts need verifiable sourcing just as all wikipedia articles do.

    The editors of many list and chart pages seem to have arrived at similar pragmatic solutions to sourcing. They use embedded inline source links for entries without separate wikipedia articles. See Wikipedia:Embedded citations.

    This way there is no duplication of links back to a website. Thus the appearance of spam linking is avoided. The hallmark of spam linking is multiple links from wikipedia back to a website. There is only one link allowed with this pragmatic sourcing solution. It shortens dialup user load times too. Because a long list of embedded URLs can take longer to load. In some lists where many of the entries have separate wikipedia articles, there are few embedded inline source links needed. Because the source links are in the separate wikipedia articles for the entries.

    Footnoted links are fine too for entries that don't have their own wikipedia page. See Wikipedia:Footnotes.

    Lists, charts. Relevant quotes.

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    Emphasis added to quotes below

    Quote from m:External links Wikimedia Meta-Wiki essay:

    Supporting references or footnotes need not be kept to a minimum, but they should be separated from other external links.

    Quote from Wikipedia:External links#What should be linked guideline:

    What should be linked. Articles about any organization, person, web site, or other entity should link to the official site if any.

    Quote below from WP:Vandalism#Types of vandalism policy:

    Blanking
    Removing all or significant parts of pages, or replacing entire established pages with one's own version without first gaining consensus. Sometimes important verifiable references are deleted with no valid reason(s) given in the summary. However, significant content removals are usually not considered to be vandalism where the reason for the removal of the content is readily apparent by examination of the content itself, or where a non-frivolous explanation for the removal of apparently legitimate content is provided, linked to, or referenced in an edit summary. An example of blanking edits that could be legitimate would be edits that blank all or part of a biography of a living person. Wikipedia is especially concerned about providing accurate and non-biased information on the living, and this may be an effort to remove inaccurate or biased material. Due to the possibility of unexplained good-faith content removal, {{uw-test1}} or {{uw-delete1}}, as appropriate, should normally be used as initial warnings for ordinary content removals not involving any circumstances that would merit stronger warnings.

    Lists, charts. More on notability.

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    There are conflicting guidelines on notability of items in lists and charts. But common sense allows article editors to reach a balance. It is obvious that some lists such as List of English writers could not include all writers. Wikipedia editors alone number in the millions! It is equally obvious to many that technology and software lists should include more than just the big corporate products. Some lists even have separate sections for freeware, shareware, and/or open source.

    All 3 of those forms of software are notable in themselves. The topic of the lists are notable. Basic WP:NPOV encyclopedic fairness requires some balancing by the article editors for any list. There has to be a balance between corporate and non-corporate entries on lists. There have to be decisions made as to notability in the community of freeware/shareware/open-source -- versus notability in the corporate press where previous ad money often talks in getting press and reviews. Decisions need to be made as to the number of users using a program, product, or entry. Sometimes long lists may require limiting list/chart entries to certain thresholds of number of users for each category. Also, decisions as to whether an entry is fading into disuse, and therefore unworthy of taking up an entry slot if a list or chart is already long.

    So, editors should not just parachute into a talk page, make a few muddied wikipedia guideline/policy declarations, and then delete/blank large parts of the articles, entries, or sources/citations. All without participating in the long consensus process that preceded them on the talk page. There is no rush.

    Emphasis added to quotes below.

    Quote from Wikipedia:Policies and guidelines policy:

    Avoid bias. Articles should be written from a neutral point of view, representing views fairly, proportionately and without bias.

    Various quotes below from Wikipedia:Notability (organizations and companies) guideline:

    Notable means "worthy of being noted" or "attracting notice". It is not synonymous with "fame" or "importance". Please consider notable and demonstrable effects on culture, society, entertainment, athletics, economies, history, literature, science, or education. Large organizations are likely to have more readily available verifiable information from reliable sources that provide evidence of notability; however, smaller organizations can be notable, just as individuals can be notable, and arbitrary standards should not be used to create a bias favoring larger organizations. ...
    Individual chapters of national and international organizations are usually not notable enough to warrant a separate article unless sufficient notability is established through reliable sources. However, chapter information is welcome for inclusion into wikipedia in list articles as long as only verifiable information is included. ...
    If the product or service is notable, it can be broken out into its own article. If it is not notable, it should not be broken out into its own article but should have whatever verifiable information about it that exists presented within an article that has a broader scope, such as an article that deals with all of the company's products and services.
    If a non-notable product or service has been written about in its own article, be bold and rename, refactor, or merge the article into an article with a broader scope, such as the company's article, creating it if necessary.

    Lists and sourcing.

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    Emphasis added to quotes below.

    Quote below from Wikipedia:Verifiability policy:

    The threshold for inclusion in Wikipedia is verifiability, not truth. "Verifiable" in this context means that any reader should be able to check that material added to Wikipedia has already been published by a reliable source. Editors should provide a reliable source for quotations and for any material that is challenged or is likely to be challenged, or it may be removed.

    Quote below from Wikipedia:Footnotes guideline:

    Wikipedia:Verifiability, a key content policy, says that any uncited information may be removed from an article - and if it is, the burden of proof is on the editor who wishes to re-add the information, to back it up with a citation.
    Footnotes are one way to cite sources. Alternative methods are embedded citations and Harvard referencing (also commonly known as author-date or parenthetical referencing). For more information, see Wikipedia:Citing sources, the main style guide on citations.

    Quote below from Wikipedia:Citing sources guideline:

    Any material that is challenged and for which no source is provided may be removed by any editor.

    Quote below from Wikipedia:No original research#Primary, secondary, and tertiary sources policy:

    Primary sources are documents or people very close to the situation being written about. An eyewitness account of a traffic accident is a primary source. United Nations Security Council resolutions are primary sources. Primary sources that have been published by a reliable source may be used in Wikipedia, but only with care, because it's easy to misuse them. For that reason, anyone—without specialist knowledge—who reads the primary source should be able to verify that the Wikipedia passage agrees with the primary source. Any interpretation of primary source material requires a secondary source.
    Examples of primary sources include archeological artifacts; photographs; newspaper accounts which contain first-hand material, rather than analysis or commentary of other material; historical documents such as diaries, census results, video or transcripts of surveillance, public hearings, trials, or interviews; tabulated results of surveys or questionnaires; written or recorded notes of laboratory and field experiments or observations; and artistic and fictional works such as poems, scripts, screenplays, novels, motion pictures, videos, and television programs.

    Quote below from Wikipedia:Verifiability policy:

    Material from self-published sources and sources of questionable reliability may be used in articles about themselves, so long as:
    • it is relevant to their notability;
    • it is not contentious;
    • it is not unduly self-serving;
    • it does not involve claims about third parties;
    • it does not involve claims about events not directly related to the subject;
    • there is no reasonable doubt as to who wrote it.

    Reference, note, and footnote methods vary widely. Here are some articles others suggested I look at:

    Note that the detail varies greatly in the various end sections. Also note the 2 different types of footnote coding.

    See also: Template:Summary of casualties of the 2003 invasion of Iraq - It uses the ref/note method so as not to conflict with the referencing used in the article pages into which it is transcluded. See Wikipedia:Footnote3 for more info on this system of referencing.

    Labeling of embedded inline citation links.

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    A relevant guideline concerning labeling of inline citation links. Emphasis added to quotes below.

    Quote below from Wikipedia:Manual of Style (links)#Link titles:

    You should not add a descriptive title to an embedded HTML link within an article. Instead, when giving an embedded link as a source within an article, simply enclose the URL in square brackets, like this. [1]

    It is OK, though, to label links in the end sections of articles.

    Quote below from the same section:

    However, you should add a descriptive title when an external link is offered in the References, Further reading, or External links section.

    A nice cup of tea

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    I wholeheartedly support WP:NPOV. Please join and watchlist some WikiProjects. They help mediate controversial topics, and the more WP:NPOV-oriented members help moderate the more hotheaded members of the various projects. Probably, most editors can get hotheaded at times.

    Also, please watchlist and participate in discussions at wikipedia guideline and policy pages. Some editors will try to edit those pages in ways that favor various POVs and methods of editing. Feel free to revert controversial edits added without consensus. These busy pages are the heart of wikipedia and need all the help they can get. Use the page links in the right sidebar at the top of this talk page to get started.

    Kindness CampaignThis user is a member of the Kindness Campaign.

    Here you go. Have a nice cup of tea. :)

    Wikipedia:A nice cup of tea and a sit down
    A nice cup of tea

    Image categories

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    Maps

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    See the Atlas of Palestine at the wikimedia commons. It is an organized and commented collection of geographical, political and historical maps of Palestine and the Palestinian territories.

    See also the Atlas of Israel and Category:Maps of Israel and Maps of the history of Israel

    The overall wikipedia map index is Category:Maps

    The overall wikimedia commons map index is here:

    For maps of Palestine before the creation of Israel in 1947-48 please see this category:

    For maps of the Palestinian territories after the creation of Israel in 1947-48 please go here:

    Map categories on Wikipedia and the commons.

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    Note the many map categories and subcategories at English wikipedia:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Maps

    Each of the wikipedia sites in various languages has their own category system. They usually prioritize their categories to mainly include images labeled in the language of that wikipedia. If the images have text on them. So people using English wikipedia categories do not have to wade through the many maps labeled in other languages on the commons. Also, non-English wikipedias use their own language to name their categories. So it is usually easier to find images in the category system set up for each other-language wikipedia.

    Most English Wikipedia readers and editors want to click the image they see on Wikipedia, and then immediately see the image categories linked on the local image description page (IDP) that shows up.

    Readers see category links on the bottom of article pages. So it is intuitive for readers to look for category links on the bottom of image pages.

    That way they get to see English-labeled images first without having to wade through all the other-language images on the commons, especially for map labeling. There are also images in English Wikipedia categories that would not be accepted in the commons. Such as Gif images, fair use images, etc..

    From the English Wikipedia category there is often a link to the commons category, too. That is if someone has added that link to the commons category from the Wikipedia category page. The link to the commons category allows readers amd editors to explore more maps as they are added to the commons. Maps labeled in many languages.

    If one starts at the commons, the commons page for a particular image does not list the English wikipedia pages on which that image is being used. But if one clicks an image in an English Wikipedia page, one sees the list of English Wikipedia pages using that image.

    Without that list of English-language Wikipedia pages using an image it would be very difficult to quickly find and replace a particular image on multiple English-language Wikipedia pages with a better image.

    Most English Wikipedia map categories also have links to higher-level English Wikipedia categories, and to English Wikipedia subcategories. It is common for a map image to be in several categories. Maps, for example, often show several nations, territories, etc.. So one can hunt around the various map categories and subcategories to find other maps labeled in English for any nation or territory of interest.

    If you are at French wikipedia, the map category names are in French on their local image description page. There are links to the commons categories. This way people have the option to check out more maps at the commons. The commons categories are labeled in English since it is an international resource for many Wikipedia sites in many languages.

    The local map category names are in the language of that particular wikipedia. There are many map categories and subcategories at French wikipedia. See the French wikipedia map category names here:

    http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%C3%A9gorie:Carte_g%C3%A9ographique
    http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%C3%A9gorie:Carte_d%27Asie

    Images in categories

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    A lot of people do not read English. The commons categories are in English. Also, similar articles and images are categorized differently in the various other-language wikipedias. I read French. They do not have the same category trees as in English wikipedia. There are many reasons for this. There is no universal logical category scheme. There is no quick fix to this naming problem concerning categories in many different languages. The category trees are different in the various languages.

    So when people look in a category in their language, they want to see the images for that category, not just the articles. Images are just as important as articles. They want graphics labeled in their language, too, if there is text on the image. Images without text on them still have the problem of the difference in languages for the categories themselves. And finding the correct category in English to look for related images can be impossible for a native French speaker who also speaks fluent English. Because the categorization is oftentimes different in many confusing ways. This confusion has caused many problems that has been discussed many times on commons talk pages.

    Commons images in English wikipedia categories

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    Commons images are frequently categorized on both commons and wikipedia image description pages. There are several good reasons for this.

    The commons image is still stored on commons servers. It is transcluded into the wikipedia image description page.

    When one clicks on a commons image as found in an English wikipedia article one is taken to the English wikipedia image description page with the commons image transluded into that page. If someone has added categories to that page, then one can find related articles on English wikipedia.

    One can't find the related English articles for a commons image by looking at commons categories.

    It is often useful to go up and down image and article category trees on English wikipedia in order to find English articles of interest. With interwiki links to the commons one can even alternate between Wikipedia and commons categories to find many articles and images of interest.

    Even though the commons is categorized in English, its categorization can frequently differ from the categorization on English wikipedia. So English wikipedia image categorization is very useful at times.

    Many commons graphics images are not labeled in English. Maps, charts, and diagrams for example. Many English wikipedia readers do not want to have to wade through many commons images labeled in other languages. They prefer to look first at English-labeled commons images that have been categorized on English wikipedia category pages.

    More on categories

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    I have many category help and guideline pages bookmarked on both the commons and wikipedia.

    From Wikipedia:Categorization#Categories do not form a tree (emphasis added):

    Categories do not form a tree
    Wikipedia's category system. Definitely not a tree structure.
    Each Wikipedia article can appear in more than one category, and each category can appear in more than one parent category. Multiple categorization schemes co-exist simultaneously. In other words, categories do not form a strict hierarchy or tree structure, but a more general directed acyclic graph (or close to it; see below).
    Nevertheless, parts of the category graph will be tree-like, and it may be convenient to think of parts of the category graph as being like multiple overlapping trees. When applying the guidelines above, consider each tree to be independent of the overlapping trees. A person browsing through a hierarchy should find every article that belongs in that hierarchy. This can lead to a good deal of debate as to what the hierarchies actually are. To clarify the structure of the hierarchy and help people browse through it, you can add a classification to each category. For more about this, see Wikipedia:Classification.

    The commons and wikipedia do not base their categories on strict hierarchies like those used for species.

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    This code is good for finding an old, deleted, or redirected page, talk page, old revisions, old diffs, revision histories, etc..

    Copy the code below into any talk or user page. Substitute the old or new article name.

    {{Article|ARTICLE NAME}}

    Here is an example:

    {{Article|Iraq War}}

    Iraq War (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)

    You can also use this code below. "la" must stand for "linkbar article"

    {{la|Iraq War}}

    Iraq War (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)

    If you want small-size text use

    {{lass|Iraq War}}

    Iraq War (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)

    For categories:

    {{lc|CATEGORY NAME}}

    Here is a linkbar example for ‎Category:Maps of the Palestinian territories

    Do not use the "category" word in this code:

    {{lc|Maps of the Palestinian territories}}

    Category:Maps of the Palestinian territories (edit | talk | history | links | watch | logs)

    If you want small text use:

    {{lcss|Maps of the Palestinian territories}}

    Category:Maps of the Palestinian territories (edit | talk | history | links | watch | logs)

    Impolite spam fighters

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    A small minority of spam fighters is very rude and intimidating to new editors.

    Guidelines versus policies. Quote of interest (emphasis added):

    "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines."
    -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
    http://www.bartleby.com/100/420.47.html
    http://www.bartleby.com/59/3/foolishconsi.html

    Some of the info from this section has been moved to the archive page:

    Many spam fighters and spam admins need a crash course in civility. See WP:CIVIL.

    Better yet would be to create a new policy that says that unregistered users can not add links to the external link sections of articles, or to lists.

    This policy could be pointed out in the edit window of articles. Since everyone would know of this policy, then anyone could enforce it. There would be much less disruption by rude spam fighters and spam admins who create so much ill will among both newbies and experienced editors.

    This new policy would not be an arbitrary, contradictory policy like the current WP:EL spam policy that is enforced in many cases by almost-robotic spam fighters who rarely actually contribute to articles themselves. They have little understanding of the compromises made to get articles written. These spam fighters parachute into articles and delete links agreed to by the editors of the articles. They also camp out at WP:EL and cause continual disruption.

    The current spam policy is just another example of an ill-conceived, arbitrarily-enforced policy on wikipedia. No inexperienced editor (like most spam fighters and unregistered users) should be using their personal, independent, even quixotic, interpretations of WP:EL to override the considered consensus of the registered editors of an article and their considered interpretations of WP:EL. Not even spam admins with real experience in creating articles (and not just deleting links) should be parachuting into articles and overriding a rough consensus.

    Rude, disruptive spam admins are the root of the problem because they set the example for the other spam fighters.

    If the more cordial spam admins wanted a comprehensive solution to the spam problem, then they would push for the new policy about unregistered users not being allowed to add external links.

    But then some rude spam fighters would lose nearly all of their arbitrary power and the self-gratification that many of these spam fighters evidently seem to get from abusing their power.

    It is hard not to get sucked into wasting time arguing with various groups of tendentious tag team spam fighters. See WP:Wikihounding.

    So wikipedia as a whole, and especially admins outside spam central, need to step in and rein in another group of tendentious tag-team disrupters on wikipedia.

    Words of wisdom

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    In the immortal words of Tony Manero (John Travolta) in Saturday Night Fever:

    Everybody's dumping on everybody.
    Even the humping is dumping. [2]

    Many spam fighters support Microsoft and big commercial interests

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    Return to the table of contents.

    Some of the info from this section and/or related sections has been moved to the archive page:

    There needs to be some sort of equivalent to Wikipedia:WikiProject Israel Palestine Collaboration. Something like

    Wikipedia:WikiProject Lists and Free Software Collaboration

    Lists are just another info presentation format. Just like images, tables, charts, diagrams, bullet points, tables of contents, "see also" sections, paragraphs, sentences, etc.. List policies and guidelines are already covered in detail in various guideline and policy pages.

    Much of the deletionist frenzy concerning lists comes from a minority of rude (see WP:CIVIL) tendentious spam fighters and a few closely-associated admins.

    A simpler solution to spam is to make a policy forbidding unregistered users from adding external links to the external link sections of articles, or to lists. Then all registered users could enforce the policy, and control of articles would go back to the registered editors of the articles.

    Wikipedia as a whole, and especially admins outside spam central, need to step in and rein in this spam-fighting group of tendentious tag-team disrupters on wikipedia. They parachute into many articles and disrupt carefully worked-out consensus agreements, and/or delete large sections of articles that took years to create.

    Free software and freeware articles seem to get messed up often by spam fighters and other deletionists in their evident support of Microsoft and other "notable" monopolies or commercial software.

    All info in articles has to meet wikipedia guidelines. See the table higher up to the right. Lists shouldn't have to meet a higher standard arbitrarily set up and enforced by a few outlaw spam admins and their followers.

    It took multiple WP:ArbCom rulings, and Wikipedia:WikiProject Israel Palestine Collaboration, to finally control several outlaw admins, and those who followed their example, in that topic area.

    User page

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    Your comments

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    This is Archive 1 of Timeshifter's user page. All comments found here from other users are moved to Timeshifter's talk page: