[WikiEN-l] Googley comments

Emily Monroe bluecaliocean at me.com
Thu Sep 3 23:13:33 UTC 2009


> I like having the "Make a Comment" button at the bottom of each  
> article, as this would mimic what readers are used to seeing at  
> other sites.

Maybe the "Make a Comment" button can link to a page that has check  
boxes that have both positive (Fun to read, easy to understand,  
accurate) and negative (Boring, hard to understand, inaccurate) words  
beside them, then have a text box at the bottom saying "Any other  
comments?". We would get a lot of kids who would, of course, do the  
whole "dirty pedo" thing in the text box, check off all the words,  
etc. At least then, it doesn't end up in the article.

But then, who would read the comments?

Emily
On Sep 3, 2009, at 5:04 PM, WJhonson at aol.com wrote:

> No that was someone's idea, but not mine.
> I like having the "Make a Comment" button at the bottom of each
> article, as this would mimic what readers are used to seeing at other
> sites.
> I don't that this would create a seperate section on the Talk page
> however, as I think this would clutter the Talk page with a lot of
> casual comments.
> When you read the comments on say a YouTube video, you get a lot of
> one-liners and people talking back and forth and so on.
> I don't see this as a way to improve the article, only a way to allow
> casual readers to make comments.
> It seems like just that possibly more-friendly approach might bring
> people into the project as editors as well.
> I'm not sure it would, it's a trial balloon.
>
> Will
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Emily Monroe <bluecaliocean at me.com>
> To: English Wikipedia <wikien-l at lists.wikimedia.org>
> Sent: Thu, Sep 3, 2009 11:20 am
> Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Googley comments
>
>
>
>
>
>> I suppose there would need to be a guideline started to decide what
>> sorts of things are OK for comments.
>
> I thought we were talking about how to make the talk page more
> accessible...
>
> Emily
> On Sep 3, 2009, at 1:19 PM, WJhonson at aol.com wrote:
>
>> In a message dated 9/3/2009 7:21:35 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
>> bluecaliocean at me.com writes:
>>
>>
>>> Yeah, but see, the thing is, you don't "own" the blog. The person
>>> writing it does (well, technically, the blog hosting service does).
>>> They have the right to not have a comment show up. We could use the
>>> same argument on Wikipedia.>>
>>
>> ---------------
>> What?  That Wikipedia puts a "comment on this article" and someone
>> says "I
>> love this person" and "we" or at least someone decides that fan mail
>> is not
>> something we want ?
>>
>> I suppose there would need to be a guideline started to decide what
>> sorts
>> of things are OK for comments.
>>
>> Will
>>
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