Hoi,
I am in two minds about this one. Yes, the sco.wikipedia is a fiasco.
However, when we concentrate on what is bad, there will be people who will
obsess with using this mechanism on other Wikipedias. The Cebuano
Wikipedia comes to mind, Waray-Waray.
Given language constructs, with a little bit of luck we can replace
languages structures that are wrong. We can ask the people of Abstract
Wikipedia to consider this. For them it is an exercise that is relatively
easy (only one language other than English) and it solves an actual
problem. How do you like this suggestion?
Thanks,
GerardM
On Thu, 27 Aug 2020 at 20:33, Michael Everson <everson(a)evertype.com> wrote:
On the Scots Language Forum on Wikipedia the following
was said:
One reads that a group of volunteers will endeavor to correct the Scots
Wikipedia pages.
Might it be a good idea if they were to flag the pages they have
corrected, or judged to be devoid of unreliable language, so visitors know
whether a page can be trusted or not ?
A response was made:
We certainly need a process for this. I think Wikipedia can do a lot of
flagging with automatic bots.
There are two parties to this. One is WikiMedia and the various volunteer
admins, who have the tools and technical knowledge to deal with critical
incidents like this. The other is the Scots language 'community'. The
online discussion yesterday was mostly among the former, but they were
clearly looking for guidance from the latter on what to do
==========
Can this be facilitated?
Michael
_______________________________________________
Langcom mailing list
Langcom(a)lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/langcom