On 3/31/07, Phil Sandifer <Snowspinner(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Many of the proposals to "fix" Wikipedia of
late have seemed to take
as a premise that what we've done is wrong. I, personally, disagree.
I think we've got a pretty good encyclopedia. It needs work, but it's
good enough to go public with, which, thank God, since we went public
with it. Sensible users can use it well.
But if we really do want to speed up its improvement (which I can
take or leave, but everyone else seems desperate to take it)...
Why don't we lock new article creation in the main namespace entirely
for three months? Or six months? Demand that people fix existing
articles.
Anything that's absolutely vital that comes into being in those
months will still be possible to write about in a few months, so
there's no real rush. And a lot of the crap that we create by reflex
will not get created and be pleasantly forgotten about. (Brian
Peppers, anyone?) And we could easily make the red page text read
something like "On XX/XX/XXXX suspended new article creation until XX/
XX/XXXX in order to better work on existing articles. If this is an
important topic that has developed since we made this decision, you
can probably find information on it by looking at existing articles
on related topics."
We've suggested doing it for a day here and there. The heck with
that. Let's do it for a long period of time so that the culture of
fixing what we have becomes entrenched.
Or, I mean, we could decide that everything we've worked on this far
is actually crap and create drastic proposals for how we could start
over.
-Phil
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Personally, I wouldn't have a problem with this. It's a lot easier to fix
the 1,5 million articles we have if there's not constantly new stuff pouring
in. But people will turn to Wikipedia if there's a new hurricane or massive
flood or to read about a country's new prime minister or president.
These are the type of articles that need to be created and kept up-to-date
as they happen for maximal effect. If we were to do this for a significant
amount of time, we'd be severely lacking in articles about current events.
How do you think we should handle that?