I don't like this, because without clarification it could be misread as saying that the test of what is encyclopedic now is whether the event will be encyclopedic when it occurs.
I'd like to see this wording tuned to emphasis that what must be encyclopedic is not the future event, but the present preparations.
Event number 1. A modern-day Miller predicts the end of the world on June 8th. By the end of May, hundreds of thousands of followers have given away their belongings and assembled on Mt. Tamalpais awaiting the rapture. At the appointed time, the sun rises as usual on a beautiful California day. Miller declares that his calculations were off and the correct date is two years away, and he and his followers depart.
Event number 2. A modern-day Miller predicts the end of the world on June 8th in his blog. Almost nobody listens, but on June 6th he and half-a-dozen friends bring sleeping bags, sandwiches, and a cooler of beer to Mt. Tam. On June 8th they ascend to heaven and the world ends.
As of June 6th, event number 1 would merit an article and event number 2 would not not. After June 8th, event number 1 still merits an article. (In the case of event number 2 the issue would be moot).
The question is not "is the end of the world notable?"
The question is not "is the sun rising notable?"
The question is "is the gathering of hundreds of thousands of believers notable."
The question is never the presumed notability of the future event itself. The question is always the notability of what is actually happening now. Dpbsmith (talk) 14:32, 30 December 2005 (UTC)
As a sidenote to Wikipedia is not a democracy, how about "Wikipedia is not a nomic?" Morwen - Talk 18:30, 30 December 2005 (UTC)
Recommend adding this under "Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information." Please discuss if you feel this addition is inappropriate. I have seen many articles that suffer from describing the strategies and tactics of video games in an overly precise way that is irrelevant to most readers. Argyrios 09:25, 2 January 2006 (UTC)
Then, please, where in Wiki (which, as I understand it, is supposed to be making the global Information available to the Global (on-line) population) is ? Surely there is somewhere, and what would allow Wiki entries to be transferred to. --SockpuppetSamuelson 15:26, 4 January 2006 (UTC)
"Lists or repositories of loosely associated topics such as quotations, aphorisms or persons" - how does this tally with Wikepedia many articles containing Lists of people based solely on their occupation, beliefs, names, etc? Isn't that what categories are for? MartinRe 10:54, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
As two different editors have tried to shorten this heading to Wikipedia is not censored, I figured I would open a discussion here to see if in fact there is a consensus to make that change. -- Dalbury(Talk) 19:54, 4 January 2006 (UTC)
Agreed with Kaldari. The section already deals with censorship for reasons other than the "protection" of minors; only the title needs to be changed. The section specifically deals with censorship of what is deemed morally offensive, though -- we do not need to explicitly extend the policy to deal with political issues such as Taiwan or Kashmir independence.
Strongly disagree with Rossami. Censorship is not the same thing as editorial discretion. Censorship is the suppression of information for the purpose of stifling particular views (or, rarely, particular authors -- e.g. the censorship of Jewish authors in Nazi Germany). The goal of censorship is to make some view or information inaccessible, usually as a way of exerting power over the speaker or audience. We don't seek to stifle views here; we seek to represent them neutrally. --FOo 18:25, 5 January 2006 (UTC)
Not Censored For the Protection of Minors seems best. Wikipedia is in some cases censored. We monitor content to make sure it doesn't violate copyright, it fits in with a an encyclopedia, and is well written. What we don't do is go through it and make sure everything is okay for a 8 year old kid to read. You probably won't want go give the kids unlimited access to Wikipedia, and when a parent gets pissed after little johnny is caught looking at a page on anatomy, I want to be able to point him to this article in the FAQ. Saying it may contain "sexually explicit content" makes us sound like a porn site, instead of what we are: an encyclopedia, with some articles on sexuality.Brokenfrog 07:52, 12 January 2006 (UTC)
Here is a recent example of how the title of this section has been used to disregard or deny what the section actually says (taken from a recent template deletion debate):
Clearly the current section title is problematic. As much as I hate polls, it doesn't look like the current discussion is leading anywhere. Perhaps by guaging more people's opinions, we can figure out which section title will be acceptable to the most people. Kaldari 23:13, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
As far as I am concerned, "censorship" is the deliberate removal of material which is seen as inappropriate for use by others. I.e. most editorial decisions. Wikipedia may not be censored for the protection of minors, but it certainly is censored. Pretending that (for example) autofellatio images were not censored (against the wishes of ultra-anti-censorship editors) is self-delusion. Keep the "minors" in the section title, relax, and spend your time building a useful encyclopedia instead. --Audiovideo 02:31, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
If one title is too broad, and another title too narrow, then is it possible that the policy needs to be split into two or more policies that each has an title that fits well? DanielDemaret 21:25, 4 March 2006 (UTC)
Could I propose this section. We have recent evidence that information which is unhelpful to right-wing interests is in fact being excluded, and maybe a policy against it would be helpful. Benjamin Gatti 05:43, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
This statement is sourced seven ways to Sunday, [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] originates from Congressman and Chairman Ed Markey and the NRC at an NRC Authorization Hearing April 17, 1985, [6] I introduced the item on the talk page about a month ago. [7] , and yet consensus continues to exclude it as here [8]- on the basis of original research, original conclusions, and unverifiable information.
If you follow the NUREG link, you can find a power point presentation to a youth group cited as its source.(NUREG-1150 -> [[9]])(Diff=[10]).
Benjamin Gatti 07:39, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
Actually, Wikipedia is an anarchy if you go by the definition that anarchists use. We certainly have eshewed hierarchy and centralized authority in favor of voluntary association, cooperation, and self-governance. Perhaps we should clarify this section title by changing it to Wikipedia is not an unstructured anarchy. Just a thought. Kaldari 21:59, 9 January 2006 (UTC)
Somebody added the section "Wikipedia is not a moot court" to the article. Has this been discussed here? Or should it be reverted? --EngineerScotty 05:15, 13 January 2006 (UTC)
I agree with Neutrality that Wikipedia's policies do not exist for the sake of punishment but instead are to help the community work toward true consensus and collaboration. I hope people aren't arguing wikipedia policies are a moot court...? zen master T 04:37, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
I suspect 3 shortcuts is plenty. If there is a good reason for having them, perhaps someone else can restore them. However, they're making the policy template look very bloated and ugly. Stevage 01:17, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
There has always been a summary at the top, but a while ago I just turned that summary into a box. Therefore it's probably not a good idea to delete the summary altogether. Anyway, I'm changing the wording from the rather mysterious "Therefore there are some things that Wikipedia is not" to "Please avoid the temptation to use Wikipedia for other purposes, or to treat it as something it is not". That's really the essence of this policy after all, isn't it? Stevage 01:17, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
Some editors, myself included, have criticized the current title of the section on censorship. Although the section addresses a broad range of censorship issues, the section title only mentions one type of censorship, specifically censorship "for the protection of minors". Other section titles have been proposed, but no consensus has been reached on how the title should be changed, if at all. In order to guage people's opinions on the matter, I would like to conduct a poll of what section titles people think are acceptable. Because several options are possible, I would like to implement this poll under approval voting methodology, i.e. vote for as many options as you approve of, but do not vote against any options. That should make guaging opinion quick and easy and keep the poll from devolving into a huge debate. Here are the current options (feel free to add more if they are serious proposals):
Again, not a democratic decision but just to see if the 71% that voted for any change support the change to "not censored" (which had a plurality in the last poll). —Cuiviénen (Cuivië) 05:27, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
There is discussion in Talk:Movable Type over whether the changelog in article Movable Type is appropriate. It seems pretty obvious to me that it is not, but there is disagreement. Is it possible to pursue consensus that changelogs in general are not appropriate, and add a bullet point to the "not an indiscriminate collection of information" list of examples? —Quarl (talk) 2006-01-15 09:06Z
Program X is a product of Company C. It does this whizzy thing and that whizzy thing and is used by quite a few people. For actual information, see the company website at http://www.example.com/
I disagree. Every other software article seems to get along fine without a changelog. —Quarl (talk) 2006-01-25 05:40Z
Also, perhaps a more generic statement would be "Wikipedia is not Freshmeat." Freshmeat is where things like abbreviated changelogs, new version announcements, etc. go. —Quarl (talk) 2006-01-25 05:41Z
How does Wikipedia is not MySpace differ from Wikipedia is not a free host or webspace provider? And, why put it under What the Wikipedia community is not instead of What Wikipedia is not? -- Dalbury(Talk) 17:20, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
It is a sad commentary on the state of the Wikipedia community that you feel this is needed. I'm not saying you're wrong, but I don't think putting this in the policy will deter anyone from being disruptive. Adding this to the policy probably isn't instruction creep, but seems analogous to it. -- Dalbury(Talk) 17:20, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
I've made a small change to the Wikipedia is not a dictionary, changing "Wikipedia is not in the business of saying how words, idioms, etc., are used" to "Wikipedia is not in the business of saying how words, idioms, etc., should be used." I also added emphasis to "it may be important [...] to describe just how a word is used".
It seems to me that, since WP is descriptive, not proscriptive (as usage guides tend to be), it is legitimate (and helpful) "to describe just how a word is used" (especially when that word has multiple senses that cannot be adequately addressed in a disambiguation page) as long as we do not state or imply that one particular usage is the "correct" or "real" usage or definition in all contexts. This came to my attention over at Talk:Myth and Talk:Mythology, but also applies (in addition to the examples of nation & freedom given) to notions such as theory.
Thoughts? JHCC (talk) 17:12, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
I don't know if this(Filmsite.org) would fall under an advertising label and shouldn't be here. If so, how would I lable these things or go about getting them fixed in the future? Thanks Chris M. 05:30, 23 January 2006 (UTC)
This guy is looks like using their userpage as personal promotion and personal Homepage. Is just curious that he used their own photo to illustrate Wikipedia Disc jockey article, and added himself in APOCALYPSE pRODUCTION cREW. Wikimedia is not personal host, right? --Rick Browser 22:41, 23 January 2006 (UTC)
(A suggestion)
Wikipedia is not a massive multiplayer game. If you feel you're not interested or capable of writing real encyclopedic material, don't use this service. Just voting on WP:AFD, writing comments on talk pages, chatting with other members or having a vanity personal page doesn't make you an encyclopedist. Go read some books, learn something useful, then come back to contribute something real. --84.228.107.148 08:52, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
Does Wikipedia is not a Memorial mean that we should never list non-notable casualties of battles, terrorist attacks, or natural disasters? If so, it should state that. If not, it should state that as well. Right now it is quite ambiguous as to what constitutes a "memorial", and different editors interpret it differently, leading to things like Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Casualties of the 7 July 2005 London bombings (2nd nomination) and Wikipedia:Deletion review#Casualties of the September 11, 2001 Attacks: City of New York. Kaldari 23:04, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
(the following was initially copied from Wikipedia talk:Edit summary)
My watchlist is starting to get a substantial number of edit summaries that start with "Popups-assisted . . .". The way I see it, this is a misuse of the edit summary to promote some software, helpful though it may be, and sets a bad precedent. Interested editors may want to read the discussion at Wikipedia talk:Tools/Navigation popups#Misusing edit summaries. —Michael Z. 2006-01-22 23:06 Z
I've never perceived these as being promotional. I've always perceived them as Rossami does: these are identified as bot-assisted edits to show that they should be reality-checked by a human to make sure they don't contain robotic-type mistakes, like the perennial incidents in which spelling checkers "correct" personal names in embarrassing ways (Google on "Jeff Jackboot" for one such case). Dpbsmith (talk) 20:13, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
It's fine to identify them, but put the link promoting the software at the end of the edit summary, to improve the readability of the actual summaries of the edits. The example with "... using Popops." is much better than the currently-used link. —Michael Z. 2006-01-27 22:11 Z
Saying that Wikipedia is not a democracy because consensus is arrived at through discussion rather than voting seems very misleading to me. Democracy is not necessarily the same as "majority rule." It just means a government by the people. The consensus process is in many ways more democratic than the voting process.
When people say "Wikipedia is not a democracy," it reminds me of my elementary school teachers when they sought to assert their authority. The implication is that there is one person calling the shots and that people should just put up with it. This is actually the opposite of what we want to say about Wikipedia, isn't it? It seems to me that the point Wikipedians want to make with this phrase is that you can't just use the brute force of a majority opinion to decide what stays and what goes. Instead, you have to listen to people and reason it out until consensus is reached.
If I'm right in this interpretation, how would people feel about changing the wording to something like "Wikipedia is not based on majority rule"? This could then be followed by a short explanation of the consensus process or a link to the consensus page.
A separate issue is the distinction between maintaining a democratic process (which I think Wikipedia does) and being an "experiment in democracy." Perhaps people feel it's important to say something like "Wikipedia is not intended as an experiment in democracy"? This could then be explained as: "Wikipedia is first and foremost an encyclopedia. The means employed are democratic, but democracy is not the primary goal." Personally, I don't see the need for this, but at least it would be clearer than what is there now. Sigrid 18:54, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
At the bottom of various country articles I see links to private travel agents. Is this in accordance with Wikipedia policies regarding advertisement? AucamanTalk 08:09, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
I am troubled by the state of much of Wikipedia's coverage of sports-related topics - I think we are too quick to fall into the tone of so-called "sports journalism" rather than an unbiased encyclopedic tone. Although it applies directly to NPOV, I wonder if there might be others who feel a comment about it would be useful on this page... (ESkog)(Talk) 02:31, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
I have come across a problem that occurs on a few articles and that is the quoting of multiple currencies in an example of a price. An example would be a previous incarnation of the Warhammer 40,000 article which at one point had USD, GBP and Euro listed for each price. Would it not be advantageous to have a section in this policy regarding this? In my opinion, if a price must be quoted as an example, it should be in the currency that is most likely in line with the form of English (ie US English, USD. British English, GBP). There could be exceptions such as historical comparisons - ie people can include an old currency value and include a new currency value (as in present day an example being 1000GBP from 1900 being ~100,000GBP now (figures made up). Does anyone else think this should be included? -Localzuk (talk) 18:23, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
I apologise if this has been raised before, but I'm wondering about something. According to "Wikipedia is not censored for the protection of minors": "some articles may include objectionable text, images, or links, provided they do not violate... the law of the U.S. state of Florida, where the servers are hosted." But, according to meta we also have servers in Paris, Amsterdam and Korea. Surely the laws of these countries then also need to be respected? That is, since Wikipedia has servers in these countries, it is subject to the laws of the countries concerned. (Note: as far as I can tell from history the bit about Florida was added for the first time here - don't know whether this was before or after we got servers in places other than Florida). I might be completely off track here, so please do correct me if I'm wrong... Mikker ... 18:52, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
What could be very helpful is exact information about what these laws entail (and which server you are writing from) provided by wikipedia. Personally I believe in complete freedom of information. But were someone to write a detailed article on, say, 'the chemical synthesis of semtex/mustard gas/LSD' (as a description of a practice, not a how-to guide, but detailed enough for an intelligent person with high school chemistry to follow) what would happen? I don't know. I think it is important to ensure the availability of information considered dubious in the fight against censorship. People should know exactly what the law (and by extension wikipedia) permits to ensure that all permited information is made available. Crippled Sloth 15:39, 27 February 2006 (UTC)
I've been working on a project called Wikireason which is an attempt to use a Wiki to structure debates. Would it be appropriate to publicize it on this page? Part of the reason that I ask is that I hoped that the existance of Wikireason would discourage debaters from using Wikipedia as a debating site, since they would have another option. Anyway, the project is still in the beta status, but if you guys think it would be appropriate to list it at the end of the "original thought" or "soapbox" sections, please do so. AdamRetchless 23:33, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
This doesn't seem to be included in the guidelines, and due to new articles and content pouring in, I think its quite plausible. May I inquire an second opinion..? -ZeroTalk 16:34, 14 February 2006 (UTC)
The current version says:
Wikisource's FAQ says that it does accept source code, just not original works by contributors. Which is correct? Whichever is not should be updated. --bmills 05:35, 15 February 2006 (UTC)
So does this mean that astronomical tables are welcome at wikipedia? I'm currently involved in a conversation at Wikipedia:Village pump (miscellaneous)#Astronomical catalogue to which this may be applicable. Thanks! Ewlyahoocom 17:59, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
Anonymous user:129.93.191.160 just added "politicians" to the list of topics for which advertising is discouraged. In principle, I strongly support this expansion. Advertising is advertising regardless of the product being sold. On the other hand, I'm not sure that it fits well with the rest of this section of the WP:NOT page. WP:CORP, in particular, does not apply to politicians. Including politicians in this paragraph as currently written may create more confusion than it clears up.
Mwalcoff has been working on a proposal for Candidates and Elections which is a nice elaboration on the principles of WP:BIO as they apply to politicians but the last I heard that was still in early draft. Rossami (talk) 20:54, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
Recently, AfD has dealt with several lists of slang terms like List of internet slang and List of marijuana slang terms. In those cases, it looks like there will be no consensus to delete, despite WP:NOT - a usage guide (the reason each was placed on AfD). Can (and should) we find a way to modify WP:NOT to draw the line between worthwhile and unencyclopedic slang lists, etc.?--ragesoss 02:44, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
I would like to offer an apology for the edits made by several uncyclopedia contributors who attempted to add a link to the site and who engaged in inappropriate behavior when this edit was reverted. If this sort of thing ever becomes a problem, I and several other administrators at Uncyclopedia are willing to ban those users at our site, which could potentially be a greater deterrent. -- Isra1337@uncyclopedia / Isra1337 04:17, 24 February 2006 (UTC)
An expansion of this is at Wikipedia:Censorship for those interested. Gerard Foley 00:22, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
Possibly a bad section title, but I think the sentiment is one that we need to spell out. There are certain subjects which in one way or the other involve a common un-serious pretense of some kind: the "Pastafarians"' pretense that they believe the Flying Spaghetti Monster to be real; the pretense by Holmesians that John Watson is the "real" author (biographer) of the Holmes stories and Arthur Conan Doyle merely his literary agent, any number of examples from pro wrestling, I'm sure... Inevitably contributors come along and assume that because they are more entertained by the idea of the kayfabe being reality, they can write as if the kayfabe was the reality.
Can we include a section in WP:WWIN that "Wikipedia is not an in-joke"? -- Antaeus Feldspar 18:09, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
I would say that Wikipedia is not a compendium of book reviews (although it could be argued that Amazon.com is such a compendium). Likewise, Wikipedia is not an advertising billboard. I read Dive into Python as at least a book review from a POV fan and possibly as much as an overtly-praising advertisement by those who profit from its sale. I usually focus on writing articles and expanding content rather than getting into the king-of-the-hill battles of policy debates, but this book-review/advertisement appears extraordinarily unencyclopedic to me. Perhaps the author of Dive into Python would like to start a new WikiReview body of work in WikiMedia but Wikipedia is the wrong place for book reviews. For any readers of this comment who think that Dive into Python is a good fit for Wikipedia, consider where such articles would lead when scaled up to the macrocosm: a faux-review article for every product in the world by its manufacturer who lauds praises on their own work under the guise of being presented in an otherwise objective website. Via such a faux-review article on Wikipedia the reader would be expected to reach the following conclusion: this review article on Wikipedia is the sum total result of all of the Wikipedia community's inherent debate in honing articles towards objective truthfulness, so this review must be approaching the truth as a limit over time. —Optikos 03:39, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
Point 2 of "Wikipedia is not a soapbox", refers to an ArbCom ruling that states that "Editors should avoid contributing to articles about themselves or subjects in which they are personally involved, as it is difficult to maintain NPOV".
I fully agree with the statement about "articles about themselves", (as in WP:AUTO), but I have a concern is related to the ambiguos statement "personally involved". As currently stated, this means that a devout Christian should avoid editing the article on Jesus, an ortodox Jew should avoid editing the article on the Tetragrammaton, a card carrying member of the Communist party should avoid editing the article about Karl Marx, etc, etc. I would argue that this is both unenforceabable (how, by whom, and under which standards this could this ever be policed) and against the fundamental principles of this project. I always thought that WP:NPOV, WP:V provide the necessary framework for any of us people being able to usefully contribute, regardless of our bias. I would suggest to either remove the mention to "personally involved" or provide some clarification about what this means. ≈ jossi ≈ t • @ 23:15, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
WP:NOT#Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information states "Wikipedia articles are not: [...] Genealogical entries [...] See m:Wikipeople for a proposed genealogical/biographical dictionary project." There are however a number of genealogical entries on WP such as Family tree of the Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt and Family tree of Ali. Are these against the policy, or is there some reason why the policy does not apply? Esquizombi 04:53, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
This section points to the Carl Hewitt arbitration and quotes "The arbitration committee ruled on February 17, 2006 that: "Editors should avoid contributing to articles about themselves or subjects in which they are personally involved, as it is difficult to maintain NPOV while doing so."
As written, this implies that people may not correct errors in articles about themselves, contradicting Wikipedia:Autobiography, which has recently had text added saying that you may correct mistaken facts about yourself. Ken Arromdee 15:38, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
I think we should have a section under this title clarifying that Wikipedia is a serious project to build an encyclopedia, and that recreational use that falls outside this is a bad thing. Suggestions? — Phil Welch (t) (c) 00:16, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
Now that I'm an admin, I see a lot of users demanding 'justice'. While I see what they're trying to get at, when that word is used like that, it seems to make a lot of incorrect assumptions about how wikipedia works. Is there any chance something to that effect could be added to the page? --InShaneee 21:59, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
WP:NOT is often used as rationale in VfD for articles such as List of ethnic slurs, List of sexual slurs, List of political epithets, Rail terminology, List of US railfan jargon, List of UK railfan jargon, etc. These lists consistently defy VfD because they're so damn useful and encyclopedic. I think it's time we acknowledged that, the long-standing version of WP:NOT notwithstanding, WP is sometimes a repository of useful lists of terms when those lists are handled in an encyclopedic manner. Thoughts? --Dante Alighieri | Talk 00:43, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
I have to agree with Splash here. The vast majority of the "List of" type articles are very obviously contrary to the basic definition of Wikipedia: Wikipedia is an encyclopedia. M16 rifle in popular culture is a great example- This whole "article" would best be replaced by a sentence in M16 to the effect of "Due to its extreme popularity, this rifle is very commonly featured in video games." Such lists are a maintenance nightmare, and they don't tend to have any kind of encyclopedic value. To me, they're indiscriminate collections of information, not encyclopedia articles. But I'm not sure there's anything that can be done about it- this type of thing is fairly deletion-resistant at Afd. And not because these articles are useful or encyclopedic- because we have more and more editors who are more interested in trivia than in making an encyclopedia. Friday (talk) 17:25, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
I'm afraid that I agree with Splash here. List of ethnic slurs is not necessarily trivia but it's also not appropriate in the encyclopedia. It's a list of words and their definitions. The content is far more lexical than encyclopedic. That means that it should have been created as an appendix in Wiktionary and would still fit there much better than it fits in Wikipedia. See Wiktionary:Category:Appendices for a number of examples (some good, some not yet - but that's the nature of a wiki.) But as Friday says above, it's extremely difficult to get these articles moved where they belong because of the partisan feelings of the editors involved. Rossami (talk) 18:52, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
I agree with Dante. Lists of these type serve a useful purpose in Wikipedia, and the evidence is not in some a priori analysis of the nature of the contents, but is purely empirical, as Dante points out: these lists have consistently failed AfD. We should find a way to formulate the policy so that it accurately represents reality.
As for Rossami's point that these articles should be in Wiktionary, I have to say that regardless of the theoretical merit of doing that, right now, moving content to Wiktionary is tantamount to consigning it to eternal neglect. There is a reason that Wiktionary isn't as successful as Wikipedia was at its age: efforts to improve the software used to run the Wikis have focused almost entirely on Wikipedia, and there does not seem to be much prospect for new features that will make collaboratively building a dictionary feasible. As it is, they're building a skyscraper with Legos. I heartily object to removing good content from Wikipedia to the information deathtrap that is the current sorry state of Wiktionary. Nohat 03:19, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
I also wanted to take umbrage at the implication that lexicographic information is somehow inherently unencyclopedic. Just as it is possible for any type of information to be unencyclopedic, it is certainly possible that a given piece of lexicographic information is unencyclopedic, but such information is not prima facie unencyclopedic. There are many Wikipedia articles that include lexicographic information for words that are related to the topic of the article, and I would be very much opposed to the suggestion that any instance of that kind of information should be removed to Wiktionary. Nohat 03:33, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
I have been working on this at Wikipedia:Wikipedia is not therapy Fred Bauder 21:42, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
What other merit does "wikipedia is not a dictionary" have? Is it an atavistic rule?DanielDemaret 13:34, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
Should this page state that Wikipedia is not an oligarchy or a dictatorship? While this may seem obvious to some people, I am aware of several critics of Wikipedia, as well as Wikipedians themselves who feel like this project is an oligarchy, controlled primarily by the administrators, stewards, and bureaucrats, or a dictatorship, under the rule of Jimbo Wales. Also, to state that Wikipedia is not an experiment in anarchy, or a democracy, might lead some people reading this page to believe that it is an oligarchy or dictatorship. I'll wait to establish consensus before adding anything to the actual policy page. Andrea Parton 01:34, 4 April 2006 (UTC)
I rv an anon who added two new WP:XXX shortcuts to this page's header with edit sum Are we shortcut-happy on this page?. I think this is clear WP:POINT but the anon does have a point. Is there any compelling reason to provide, on the body of the page itself, multiple shortcuts? This is a different question from whether the redirects themselves should be retained. For obvious reasons, I think, all rd should be retained. But while anyone may choose to link through an rd of his choosing, I don't see any need to offer 5 different shortcuts.
This page is linked to so often and via so many different rds that I can't see any clear winner; it does seem that unusual spellings and wordings are link targets as often as any shortcut. My preference is for WP:NOT, with WP:WIN the runner up. Are these not sufficient? John Reid 01:23, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
That right there contradicts this article. It looks like Wikipedia is so large, its own rules don't work with eachother. IP Address 17:42, 12 April 2006 (UTC)
It's not a contradiction, it's stubborn users refusing to budge on lists. Can I enlist your for an anti-list cabal? On closer inspection, you're linking to a policy that seems pretty consistent. the problem is that nobody reads that guideline.--Mmx1 17:52, 12 April 2006 (UTC)
Talk:List of songs which refer to Jesus IP Address 05:15, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
Please help build policy at: Wikipedia:Notability (memes). Thank you, --Urthogie 15:30, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
Re: Articles or sections dealing with upcoming items that ARE allowed to be described.
I think the gist of the two snippets below should somehow be merged into the Crystal Ball section, in order to help document how exceptions should be handled:
Concrete examples:
Notes:
-- 62.147.36.129 16:58, 17 April 2006 (UTC)
Based on my suggestion at Wikipedia talk:Requests for adminship, Pegasus1138 just created the proposal page Wikipedia:Wikipedia is not a contest, which warns against one-upmanship in how many edits, FAs, etc. one user or another might have. I'm not necessarily proposing this as yet another "new WIN". I just thought I'd bring it to someone's attention, see how many others out there think this is a good idea. I can see this evolving into a "Wikipedia essay", not necessarily a new policy or guideline. szyslak (t, c, e) 07:55, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
I've removed the following text which was added by User:Bill Sayre: [11]
=== Wikipedia is not communism ===
In Wikipedia, anyone can freely advance in rank, from IP, to normal user, to admin and beyond by making good edits. Vandals are stopped by the good users. The admins have more power than regular users, but aren't an exclusive caste and aren't all-powerful dictators.
This seems like a good-faith addition, but I think there are some problems with it. The section title is witty, but not all that relevant. The idea of "rank" is not one that is likely beneficial to Wikipedia culture (even if it's a pretty common idea). And the dichotomy between "vandals" and "good users" is similarly troublesome - it suggests that vandals can never become productive editors. FreplySpang (talk) 21:52, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
After I made a comment about the vandal, "Wikipedia is Communism," on that talk page, someone answered with something about WP:NOT, that gave me an idea, it was probably too rushed. So I'd have to agree with FreplySpang. Bill Sayre 03:44, 28 April 2006 (UTC)
Andrea Parton 04:16, 28 April 2006 (UTC)
Oh no, the vandal may have been right, but he's still a vandal and one is not supposed to disrupt Wikipedia to make a point. Blanking whole articles and replacing them with "Wikipedia is communism!" and the hammer and sickle graphic was definitely the wrong thing to do. Bill Sayre 21:04, 29 April 2006 (UTC)
Please feel free to redirect me if this is the inappropriate place to ask this. However, I have a question relating to the 'speculation' or 'crystal ball' issue and I'd like as much of an authoritative response as possible -- which doesn't seem to be available in the article as it currently stands. I seek this response both for my own knowledge and because I have the feeling that (unfortunately) I'm getting increasingly involved in a minor conflict with another user over a specific page. (The Audi S4 and my work on its 5th generation)
Here is the case: there is credible information from an industry publication that a redesign of car brand "X" is going to come out in year 2010. Now, for the last four or five previous redesigns over the last 15 or so years, car brand "X" has always released a "special model" one year after it releases it's standard redesign. If I can source the article which says "car brand X redesign is year 2010", is it okay to then go ahead and say ... actually, why don't I just quote the article. Here is what it currently states:
"Despite the recent release of the B7 platform S4 in 2005, it is not too early to begin speculation on the future direction of the S4. According to the industry publication Motor Trend, Audi plans on a complete redesign of the A4 for the 2010 model year.[1] If Audi maintains a historically consistent platform strategy, this would suggest that the B8 S4 will be released in sedan-form in the 2011, with a cabriolet version arriving for the following year."
Now, this seems a tricky issue. The redesign itself is capable of being sourced. There are also 5 historical precedents (5 earlier releases) which all follow this trend. Isn't this okay to have in the article?
I'd really appreciate advice on this issue.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by 141.161.69.68 (talk • contribs) 15:29, 2006 April 25 (UTC)