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I edit, therefore I exist?
Feel free to ask a questionI'm a professional writer and editor, so I'm good to ask for advice about Wikipedia edits. Except when I've changed an article, I won't change the page you're working on, unless you ask. I suggested to libraries they put scratch sheets on the inside covers, so people can vent. You can criticize an article on its "Discussion" page. Express your concerns! Why did I delete something that's completely true?Probably because it wasn't cited. Even if you saw something with your own eyes, especially if it contradicts what other editors wrote, your statement has much stronger support with a WP:RELIABLE reference. Without that, a month from now some editor will come along and just remove it — having no idea where the idea came from. Did my message imply vandalism?Vandalism is not a well-defined Wiki concept. It means both "threw paint all over the furniture" and "tipped something over by accident". If you mean well, then it's a "good faith edit". Don't get wrapped around the word, deal with the issue. Reasons for my edits are often found in WP:LINKSTOAVOID and WP:SPAM. Related information is in WP:SOURCE and WP:SOAP. (In particular that citations need to be reliable, but not advertising, and not promotion.) Stars and all that
This editor is a Veteran Editor III, and is entitled to display this Silver Editor Star.
How to...How to find reference sourcesGoogle Books [1] can be very useful. (Published books are often good sources.) Project Gutenberg can be useful for older references. (Many top downloads from [2] still lack Wiki articles.) Avoid using blogs and social sites such as MySpace. Links to sites that are mostly for promotion or sales, such as amazon.com will be deleted. See Links normally to be avoided. How not to do a lyrics referenceAs of November, 2009, there are no known online English "warehouse" lyrics sites that may be used as Wikipedia links.[3] They all have material that potentially violates copyright. Strictly speaking, even a band's official page may be violating copyright, since the Web site owners may not own the songs. You can quote part of a song (not the whole song). Do not provide an online link for your quote. Pages with only lyrics published before 1923 in the US are allowed — the copyright has expired. How to check editing historyThe features of the main history report are described in Help: Page history. 1) To see recent edits for an article:
2) To see (or to cite) changes between edits:
3) To see who made the most edits, and when they first and last edited:
4) To find which versions of an article a phrase appears in (phrase can be the name of an editor):
Versions containing the phrase have OOO, those that don’t, XXX. Skipped versions have ???. The report may be stopped or a link clicked at any time. How to count visitors to an articleWonder whether your good work is seen? Here's an incentive to create those new articles you've been thinking about. This tool reports how times an article is accessed daily: [4]. I assumed that most articles are rarely viewed, but that isn't the case. How to deal with an editor who repeatedly won't respond (blocking)Escalate editing conflicts slowly. Without preparation, requests to block an editor will fail.
1. Make your change, explaining it in the “Edit summary” textbox. On your next edit... 2. Check for discussion on the talk page. Amplify your reasoning there, or in the Edit summary. (If you add to the talk page, write “See discussion” in your Edit summary.) Next… 3. Get a coffee. Check MySpace. Listen to a couple of good tunes. Give the other editor several minutes to think, to consider their position, to revise their response. Waiting a day won't kill anyone — get up out of your seat and stretch your legs. Next… 4. If the editor is still replacing their changes without explanation, then politely describe the situation on their talk page. Cite specific references. E.g., [[WP:SPAM#External_link_spamming]] is preferable to [[WP:SPAM]]. Focus the discussion. Next… 5. If you cannot draw the editor into a discussion, or get them to explain in “Edit summary”… The editor should know you are considering treating their edits as vandalism. Write another message to their talk page.
Where wikilinking becomes ineffectiveWP:CONTEXT is good helping editors decide what types of links to include, but it does not explain that links, in real-world practice, are far, far less effective than perceived on a large website. True, considering a website with just a couple dozen pages -- and no other way to get to the children pages -- the links are heavily used! Wikipedia is a different situation.
That includes internal Wikilinking and external links. So, for those hoping to divert traffic to their Website ... in a long article with a dozen links, forget it. (External links in footnote references won't be clicked at all.) Every couple weeks as a webmaster, I get a request to "make as many links to and from an article" in a knowledgebase as possible, the assumption being that more people will read the article. In practice, what Webtrends and other analysis tools show is that readers quickly become "saturated" with links on a page, even to the extent that they will ignore a link in bold red in an article "PLEASE READ THIS". Any more, and the number of readers clicking ("click-throughs") doesn't increase significantly, if at all. The strategy is to pick the best ten links. (The best articles, the most important issues — whatever the criteria may be.) The fewer, the more each link will get. I.e., each link in an article with three links will get clicked more often than each link in an article with ten. Manage the article's links carefully! There is another pragmatic issue: How many readers scroll down a screen ("below the fold"). There is emotional debate about this. (Notice how AOL director [5] misconstrues her reference [6].) At any rate, some substantial number of readers do not scroll past the first screen, and most do not scroll to the bottom. This suggests: Links placed toward the bottom of an article are far less likely to be seen than ones at the top, and even more unlikely to be used.
In sum. An article in my knowledgebases that got 10% click-throughs to other articles was rare. 1-2% was typical. Links are labor intensive for editors and little-used. They can make articles difficult to read for the majority of readers. I.e., in their current, limited technical form, overuse is a lose/lose situation. MySpace external links(v 1.1) Wikipedia explicitly names MySpace as an external link to be avoided.[7] There are exceptions, but not many. That's what the guideline is for: it's not saying external links to MySpace are basically ok, it's saying they are basically not. Here are guidelines to evaulate MySpace links (and also links to other social sites). MySpace links should be deleted
Things that do not make a difference Other considerations Trivia and Popular CultureAfter acting on your curiosity to investigate a term you just heard, there's an impulse to mention it in the Wiki article. Fight that impulse. Wikipedia isn't and can't be a cross-reference to every use of a word in the media. A couple points of summary of the WP:TRIVIA guideline:
I remove trivia: 1) When the article doesn't have much to do with the trivia (e.g., a cartoon animal named after the real animal of the Wiki article), 2) When the trivia just mentions the term in passing (e.g., "The Aardvark Girls" yell "Julius Caesar" in their international smash hit "Nail Polish"), and 3) When it appears that the trivia misunderstands the concept. WP:TRIVIA does not suggest automatically deleting entire trivia sections in all cases, but it also says the information should be suitable. If a trivia section is entirely one line quotes from movies, manga, and books, then it may be entirely unsuitable. |
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