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Hi - Though I can understand the reasons you downgraded the comments on templates and categories on be bold, I feel that it is still necessary to highlight the fact that be bold should rarely if ever apply to them, and have altered the article back accordingly. The principle of being bold is a good one in general, and works very well with articles. It works far less well in other namespaces, however, and that is why the "Be bold" page has evolved over the years to reflect that fact. As someone who spends a lot of time clearing up damage caused by people being bold at TFD, SFD, and CFD, I can tell you clearly that being bold has little if any place in category or template space. It causes nothing but considerable amounts of cleanup work for others.that is the reason why the "Be bold" page has evolved over the years to specifically call attention to the fact that they need special care. Suddenly undoing the gradual changes which have taken this page from a rough guideline to something actually workable is a Bad Thing, and one which is likely to cause far more harm than good to Wikipedia. Grutness...wha? 00:35, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
Discouraging people from being bold in making changes to templates and categories before finding some form of consensus for the changes is not discouraging editing, it is exercising common sense. Discouraging people from editing other people's comments on talk pages and from editing other people's user pages is also exercising common sense. I've no objection to people being bold in correcting and adding to articles - that is what this page has been about all along. I'm just trying to reduce the work on clean-up, which is largely caused by people who don't find consensus before editing items that clearly need a consen. Grutness...wha? 04:27, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
Not a red herring at all. Your average new user learns "Be bold" just about before learning anything else about Wikipedia and regards all other policies and guidelines as an add-on to it. Stating from the outset that it applies only in certain cases is vitally important to the smooth working of Wikipedia. As I said before, as one of the "wikignomes" who spends most of his time on the various cleanup pages, I see a lot of this from the coalface, and it is often not a pretty sight. As to templates, they cause major server-load problems if they are used on multiple articles, as many of them are. As such, editing them can cause serious problems to Wikipedia, as can the need to revert any unnecessary changes. This is the primary reason why some heavily-used templates are deliberately protected to prevent editing. Categories also cause problems, since redirects do not work properly with them, so any creation of problematical categories or moving of category pages from one name to another can cause major headaches. That is the main reason why I have mentioned them frequently, though I have also mentioned User pages and other non-article-space pages frequently. Recall that, up until a couple of days ago, the text of the "Be Bold" page specifically concentrated on being bold with articles alone. This was for very good reasons - and those reasons don't change just because someone decided to alter the text. (Oh, and as to "needing a consen", I was having problems with WP refusing to save pages, giving me edit conflicts with myself, and all sorts of other problems. The fact that my comments were readable at all is a miracle!) Grutness...wha? 07:17, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
Evidently, from your comment in talk CSD, you don't agree with suspending I6.
But the locus for this discussion has been WT:FAIR#Way forward, and there does seem to be consensus that this suspension is the appropriate thing to do, while attempts are made to clean up the tag mountain in ways that will minimise collateral damage, and bruising inflicted on ordinary Wikipedians.
If you don't agree, please enter into the discussion at WT:FAIR#Way forward.
In the meantime, it would be appropriate to suspend I6, pending this discussion.
Will you back out your revert, and leave I6 suspended, at least for the time being? Jheald 11:17, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
Hi. Can I ask why you reverted my addition of a proposal tag to WP:OTRS. As I have noted on the talk page, and at the pump, the page is not policy, and OTRS volunteers do not have special powers here. If you want them to have special powers, you need to run this through as a proposed policy to be discussed, or get the Wikimedia Foundation to officially appoint you all as special super-users on this project. --Barberio 16:19, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
I instruct and direct you to read Meta:OTRS/introduction, specifically "Remember that you do not and cannot speak for Wikipedia or for the Wikimedia Foundation". If in the future any OTRS volunteers continue to claim they represent the Foundation, I will request that they be removed from the OTRS. --Barberio 13:14, 11 June 2007 (UTC)
Thanks a lot!--Rambutan (talk) 14:15, 11 June 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for doing that...I had been trying to figure out how to get rid of that non-notable bio (just because you're in the news, doesn't make you worth having an article about you), and the redirect worked perfectly. Just hope the "We must have an article of every person in the news ever" crew doesn't notice. Regards, ^demon[omg plz] 17:25, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
Splitting some rather off-topic discussion to here:
See this: I happened to be looking at the move log when he did it. ViridaeTalk 02:16, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
Have you seen this? http://www.aboutus.org/UniversalWikiEditButton
and this? http://www.aboutus.org/Portal:ConsensusPolls
There's active work happening right now with and on Consensus Polls. Thought you might be interested after your work on this last fall here at wikipedia. peace, Tedernst | talk
It's a bit more difficult to use consensus polling for an image than for text. In any event, we've made a lot of progress and are now focusing on the reasons why a UniversalWikiEditButton is a good thing. If we can agree on what it's for, and the fact that this is version 0.1 of the icon, we're hoping to be able to come to agreement without worrying too much about having the "perfect" icon. Tedernst | talk
Hi, I think that the full protection of this article was a good shout, since it has bought us some time. However, we cannot leave it fully protected for much longer since we want the rest of the article to be developed. Also, whenever the protection is lifted Dezidor is going to come straight back and put the name in. The problem is not with the page but with the user. Consequently, my suggestion is that I place a formal warning for disruptive editing on his talk page and lift the protection at the same time. If he continues to reinsert the name then I suggest a final warning followed by a short ban, with escalating bans if necessary. What do you think, please? TerriersFan 16:54, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
Congratulations on getting the article on the front page! Rebecca 08:40, 16 June 2007 (UTC)
Qué? THAT sentence? Blocked for incivility? I don't get it. Please explain what's uncivil about it—it may be moderately tactless, perhaps, but blockably incivil?—becaue I'm very much inclined to unblock. Best wishes, Bishonen | talk 14:54, 16 June 2007 (UTC).
Not to worry I am unblocked already. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Giano II (talk • contribs).
This is in reply to Geogre's comment here.
Geogre, Giano moved my comments out of their place in the preceding thread and into a new paragraph, presumably to remove the comments from their context in the prior discussion. I suggest that you read that discussion. I first politely asked Giano not to make comments that could be construed as being uncivil or personal attacks, saying "even if that is not what you intended. We must be sensitive to how others will perceive what we say, even if we are commenting in good faith." After several more comments in which I reiterated my polite exhortations not to make remarks that could be regarded as uncivil, Giano made these edits, following which I said to him that "The problem is not what you are saying but the manner in which you choose to say it... you make the accurate observation that there are no formal processes relating to access to the channel, but you do it while making snide remarks about David Gerard." After all of that, Giano then made this edit, following which I blocked him. The block was not for making that edit alone, but for making that edit after all of the ones preceding it, and after my having warned him - patiently and politely at first, and explicitly acknowledging that he may not have intended to be offensive - not to make further such edits.
I invite you, Geogre, to explain why, in this context, you have chosen to unblock Giano. --bainer (talk) 15:47, 16 June 2007 (UTC)
I feel it is appropriate that I address you directly, here, rather than responding on individual pages elsewhere.
First, I apologize up front, for my very decided attitude on admins blocking in situations where they are personally involved. It is a subject about which I am very positioned. So, to the extent that I may seem to be overreacting in this situation, please understand that is the reason. It sets a bad example. It gives a non admins a poor perception of admins. It perpetuates the idea that admins can consider themselves gods and do what they please without asking anyone. Note that I'm not discussing your specific situation, but rather I am describing the consequence and effect of admins using their tools to block when they are personally involved.
You may very well have felt that there was sufficient cummulative incivility to warrant a block. And, from my perspective, you should have opened an AN/I and requested an uninvolved admin to review the situation. Taking shortcuts, by blocking yourself, casts suspicion on the entire process and makes it harder for other admins when they block.
I appreciate that you felt there was incivility, and to the extent that we can call it harsh, I would agree. I truly do not believe it rose to the level of incivil. Calling someone a fucking arrogant asshole with not enough common sense to blow their nose would be uncivilized. In Giano's case, although they were pointed, and harsh, his comments did rise to anywhere near incivility.
In all fairness, your warning was a bit broad:
Please try to maintain civility, and please do not make comments that could be viewed as personal attacks. (highlightnig mine)
"..this could easily be regarded as a sarcastic aside against Kelly Martin, even if that is not what you intended. We must be sensitive to how others will perceive what we say, even if we are commenting in good faith"
First, just about anything could be taken as incivil or personal attack. It is not a matter of whether it 'can be taken' as a personal attack, it is whether or not it is a personal attack.
Second, sarcasm is not necessarily incivil nor is it necessarily a personal attack. It is sarcasm. For example, I made a sarcastic reply on Bishonen's page. It could be seen as cutting and pointed sarcasm, but I'd hardly consider it a personal attack or incivil.
Third, your warning conflicts itself and is wrong. You said 'we must be sensitive to how others will perceive what we say'. I say *bs*. Certainly I should be aware of how my words might be received. And if the words are emotional to me, I should read them twice before clicking Save Page. But I am not required to word things in such a way as to never offend anyone. And I am not required to word things so that nobody can ever preceive an attack. Yet that is what your warning suggested.
What I am required to do is "not make personal attacks" and "not be uncivil". Sometimes a violation of those is clear, othertimes it is perception/opinion.
And, lastly, "even if that is not what you intended" speaks volumes. If someone did not intend a personal attack, or did not intend to be uncivil, then they should 'not be blocked'. If they were truly incivil or truly violated NPA, then they should be talked to 'in a separate conversation', and probably 'by a separate party', in order to be made aware of how their words violated policy/guidelines.
For what its worth, I don't know you. I don't know anything about the #channel that is being discussed. And, I don't know Giano.
Hopefully something I've said makes sense. Peace in God. Lsi john 17:07, 16 June 2007 (UTC)
Thebainer, I did a double take when I accidentally caught sight your new block warning in the history of Giano's page today, before the discussion above was well over. After your first bad block only yesterday, you really ought to get off his case. Yesterday, you acted as if you didn't know that "Assume good faith" is official policy (though I'm sure you must), and obliviously kept repeating your bad-faith assumptions about Giano's motives—in this case, his motives for moving your badly-placed block message on his page, something for which a good-faith explanation was actually staring you in the face. When other users,, who had no trouble seeing the obvious explanation, unanimously criticized you over this, you gave no further explanation, let alone an apology to Giano. (You would like to see more civility from him; how about trying to lead by example?) You blocked an established editor for incivility, and the diff you gave as a reason showed, on any reasonable reading, no incivility. You didn't post on ANI. I mean... sheesh, there was just a lot wrong with that block.
Today (in my timezone) you begin by planting a warning template on an established user, a deplorable practice. If Giano needs blocking, don't you think that will occur to somebody else among our 1,000 admins? Do you credit yourself with unique insight into Giano's editing, so that you alone are capable of monitoring and upbraiding him? Or, if warning and blocking him doesn't occur to other admins, could that possibly be a hint that he doesn't need blocking? You took one shot; it didn't go well; now please consider leaving it to the rest of the community. Bishonen | talk 17:07, 17 June 2007 (UTC).
User:Thebainer24 is currently listed at WP:UFAA --Steve (Stephen) talk 04:37, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
I've created a page to discuss Melbourne meetup 7. It's a pity we had such a small number last night at meetup 6 after meetup 5 went so well. Metamagician3000 04:30, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
Thanks! I've just started on a little project to get decent, properly referenced articles on all the incumbent state and territory MPs who lack them, and Anderson was one of the first off the bat. How's the case article coming along? Rebecca 13:47, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Thank you for your support and comments at my RfA | ||
Hi Stephen, It still amazes me that otherwise "anonymous" editors take the time to place !votes and comments on RfAs. Whilst I would have normally thanked you at the time of you leaving your message, the importance of my not appearing to be canvassing prevented me from so doing. Now that everything has progressed successfully I can finally thank you. I intend to uphold a style of good adminship and will welcome your further comments at any time in the future, even if they are in the form of admonishment. I will be happy to help as an admin wherever and whenever I can --VS talk 00:14, 28 June 2007 (UTC) |
Hi, I saw you added the nogallery again because of non-free content reasons. This is one of the very few exemptions to that policy. See Wikipedia:Non-free content criteria exemptions. Already decided a while ago when nogallery was implemented. See somewhere in the archives of Wikipedia:Non-free content criteria and the last paragraph of Wikipedia:Non-free content criteria. It makes deleting (or possibly saving) images so much easier when you can already see the thumbnails. Garion96 (talk) 13:28, 6 July 2007 (UTC)
i know it's not a good idea, but what to do? i dont know. Pak21 wont talk about it on any of the image talk pages but insted he is trying hide what he is doing. now he is tring "pad" the consensus by having his mates back him even tho thay have never edited on the DDM page before. could you speek to him about it? ~LG~ —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 74.7.53.146 (talk • contribs).
I think it's absurd that the fair use criteria applies to logos. And I'm the guy who started deleting masses of TIME covers unilaterly. However, I blocked indefinitely while it got sorted out. That's why I put the comments on WP:AN - for full and transparent action, to be reversed if the decision was wrong. I then discovered my wife is pregnant (truly!) and so to be honest I forgot all about the issue... probably not the greatest moment to have blocked a bot.
I should point out that the bot did this.
One last comment: should we be allowing a user to run a bot when they disguise their signature, and don't respond to messages about their bot? - Ta bu shi da yu 08:18, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
Please join in at WT:FAIR and WP:AN/I if you want to join in the discussion of this template. As those discussions specifically relate to the template as it was being applied yesterday, and specifically instance such uses, please don't modify the template while those discussions are running.
On the question of permissible use of cover art, see WP:FAIR on acceptable uses. "Cover art: Cover art for items, when used to identify the items in question in articles or major article sections about the items." Note: "about the items", not "about the cover art". This has been longstanding consensus, based on US law and the Foundation guideline, discussed extensively at WT:FAIR in the last several months, and recently explicitly re-affirmed to be correct in talk there. Jheald 09:51, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
I have semi-protected your page to deal with further vandalism Pfan 22:56, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
That bot keeps playing up. I only recently got told that the L.J. Hooker logo was an orphaned image when was is not. See my user talk page. The bot seems to have stopped now, but seriously: this bot is far too disruptive. It often plays up and people have to go cleaning up after its mess. I blocked it for a short time this time for disruption, Sir Nicholas seems to believe that it's not going to reoccur so I have unblocked. Still... I'm not particularly impressed.
The other thing I'm not impressed with is Betacommand's signature. For someone who runs a bot that tags so many images, you'd think that he wouldn't disguise his signature. It confused me the first time he replied to WP:AN (I didn't realise it was him), so I wonder how many new users or at least inexperienced users he's confused.
Overall, things don't look too good in this department. - Ta bu shi da yu 09:30, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
It has been more than three weeks since the last edit, comment, or request on this page. I think it's safe to remove the protection now. HokieRNB 14:49, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
Hi! It just occured to me that there was an old image of Smederevo fortress floating around here, Image:Smederevo 1940.jpg specifically, which was deleted quite a while ago for lack of a fair use rational. I know deleted articles can be recovered if need be, are deleted images also stored somewhere and recoverable? If so, could you undelete it and I'll add a rational? I'd like to use it, if possible.
Oh, and feel free to just reply here, I check often enough anyhow for duplicates to be a little silly. -Bbik★ 17:46, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
Alright then, a specific version to be copied to the page directly, rather than just cleaning up the bit above when I can get to the page. With {{Non-free historic image}}:
The use of this image in Smederevo fortress is covered by fair use laws because:
And my plan for it in the article was to add it in the history section, around the paragraph about WWII. The current condition section may perhaps be better, as a side-by-side comparison, but that section has plenty of images already, and both sections discuss the damage caused during the war. Will that work? -Bbik★ 18:03, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
Frankly, there was no consensus arrived at for this, considering that the positions, most of which were explained well, were about even. Also consider that the tail end of the process looked like an organized flood. I hope you will investigate this. Thanks. Stevie is the man! Talk • Work 18:28, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
Thank you for taking the time to participate at the discussion in my Request for Adminship. Unfortunately the nomination did not succeed, but please rest assured that I am still in full support of the Wikipedia project. I listened carefully to all concerns, and will do my best to incorporate all of the constructive advice that I received, into my future actions on Wikipedia. If you can think of any other ways that I can further improve, please let me know. Best wishes, Elonka 05:40, 5 August 2007 (UTC)
Hi Thebainer, and thank you for fixing the feed list! I got some messages from people saying "please fix it! We want to get all the blog posts from Wikimania", and by the time I looked it was okay because you had fixed it - Yay, and thank you! -- All the best, Nickj (t) 01:25, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
A template you created, Template:Cpoll participant, has been marked for deletion as a deprecated and orphaned template. If, after 14 days, there has been no objection, the template will be deleted. If you wish to object to its deletion, please list your objection here and feel free to remove the {{deprecated}} tag from the template. If you feel the deletion is appropriate, no further action is necessary. Thanks for your attention. --MZMcBride 16:50, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
I've raised this on the Biographies of Living Persons noticeboard here: Wikipedia:Biographies_of_living_persons/Noticeboard#Merle_Terlesky. You may wish to comment. Reginald Perrin 01:22, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
Hello Thebainer,
please send your real-name, your wikiname, your prefered login-name and the public part of your ssh-key to . We plan to create your account soon then. --DaB. 14:30, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
P.S.:Please allways remember that hosting of the picture itself is not possible for legal reason (a few secounds to let Facebook cache it would be ok of corse).
Hi there - I noticed your comment on Edmund Barton's page and linked us to http://www.peo.gov.au/resources/immigration_bill.htm for a source on Barton's comments which by today's standards would be viewed as quite racist. Unfortunately the PEO seems to have made some site changes and as such I am unable to locate the source of the comments made. Are you aware of where they may be found? Thank-you for your time. Timeshift 00:15, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
Hello... How are you ? Are you fine ? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.101.123.76 (talk) 21:26, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
Hello... How are you ? Are you fine ? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.101.123.76 (talk) 21:29, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
First you removed the counter, directing users to Wikipedia_talk:Requests_for_adminship#Counter as if some kind of discussion decided it should be removed. Now, you've removed the counter again, stating the very same discussion is referring to a different counter. Please stop removing the tallies, as there has never been a consensus for its removal, and very many people have expressed a desire for it to stay. - auburnpilot talk 14:48, 10 September 2007 (UTC)
Hi, I reverted your removal of the discussion about Betacommand's RfA, which was mostly a discussion of whether it was canvassing, in which most of the participants felt it was not. I myself feel it qualifies as a "friendly notice". Rather than deleting it, would you please join the discussion? (Not that it will make any difference to the doomed RfA, but I'm not wild about having a valid discussion deleted summarily like that.) Thanks much. -- But|seriously|folks 04:40, 11 September 2007 (UTC)
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