Any body help ....I have blog for publiser ...but my trafic is low Sent from my BlackBerry® powered by Sinyal Kuat INDOSAT
-----Original Message----- From: Sue Gardner <sgard...@wikimedia.org> Date: Tue, 3 Mar 2009 00:17:14 To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List<foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org> Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Request for your input: biographies of living people 2009/3/2 philippe <philippe.w...@gmail.com> > > > On Mar 2, 2009, at 5:48 PM, private musings wrote: > > > basically there's a sensible three stage plan to follow to help drive > > quality and minimise 'BLP' harm; > > > > 1) Semi-protext all 'BLP' material > > 2) Allow an 'opt-out' for some subjects (eg. non public figures, or > > those > > not covered in 'dead tree sources' for example) - note this is more > > inclusive than a simple higher threshold for notability > > 3) 'Default to delete' in discussions about BLP material - if we can't > > positively say that it improves the project, it's sensible and > > responsible > > to remove the material in my view. > > > As a general rule, I think pm has given us a common-sense place to > begin discussions about how to cleanup existing BLPs. There will > always be situations that don't fit within this, but as a starting > point for guidelines, I support these. It seems obvious to me from the conversation on this thread that part of the reason the German Wikipedia seems better able to manage its BLPs (assuming that is true - but it seems true) is because there is a smaller number of them. Presumably a smaller number of BLPs = fewer to maintain and problem-solve = a higher quality level overall. (And possibly also, OTRS volunteers who are less stressed out, resulting in a higher level of patience and kindness when complaints do get made.) Assuming that's true, allowing BLP subjects to opt-out seems like it would have a direct positive increase on the quality of remaining BLPs, in addition to eliminating some BLPs entirely. Clearly, there would still be a notability threshold above which people would never be allowed to opt out - there will always be articles about people such as Hillary Clinton and J.K. Rowling and Penelope Cruz. But a decision to significantly raise that threshold, as well as default to deletion upon request, seems like it would have a positive effect on quality. Can I ask: does anyone reading this thread 1) think raising the notability threshold is a bad idea, 2) believe defaulting to deletion upon request is a bad idea, or 3) disagree with the notion that other Wikipedias should shift closer to the German Wikipedia's generally-less-permissive policies and practices, particularly WRT BLPs? _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l