On Oct 1, 2011, at 6:55 AM, Maggie wrote:
Wikipedia is set up so that only people who look for
these articles/pictures will know about voting procedures. So of course if there is a
vote, the majority would probably be overall positive unless serious canvassing went on to
let people who care about the other side know about it so it evens out. Canvassing is set
up to prevent this--I believe it's actually a way of biasing the community to serve
only the community, and not the readers. Because the readers are--the world. Telling
people about the topic is just like how any election goes. I guess unless you are in some
sort of fake election where people are led to believe that their votes actually count.
Maggie, I can relate to the frustration you're expressing. But I'd like to draw a
distinction between the Canvassing guideline itself (which I consider a helpful and
insightful document, that illuminates important collaborative practices) and the way
accusations of Canvassing may be made in certain contexts.
The Canvassing guideline is an important part of our world. If you haven't read it
recently, I highly recommend it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:CANVASS
It is often quoted by people who, I think, *haven't* read it closely, and used to
criticize behavior that is actually constructive. That is a problem, but it's not a
problem with the guideline itself.
-Pete