I agree, having a high number of edit does not signify creating high
quality content - it may only attest to the high use of semi-automated
tools for minor edits.
I also don't dispute that anon's can contribute high quality content,
and they do a lot of edits. My point was:
* anon's don't contribute significantly to most content on Wikipedia
that gets peer reviewed (as Pierre noted, by that time they've probably
registered anyway);
* hence majority of Wikipedia's GA+ content is not written by anonymous
editors (but the GA+ content is only a small percentage of Wikipedia's
total content);
--
Piotr Konieczny
"To be defeated and not submit, is victory; to be victorious and rest on one's
laurels, is defeat." --Józef Pilsudski
On 10/30/2012 8:41 PM, Laura Hale wrote:
On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 11:18 AM, Pierre-Carl Langlais
<langlais.qobuz(a)gmail.com <mailto:langlais.qobuz@gmail.com>> wrote:
Therefore, does occasional editors matter ? I should say yes. For
instance, on the French wikipedia some new editor did a brilliant
job on [[Napoléon III]]. Once the article became an FA, he stopped
being active : to him, its main, ponctual, work was over.
The different types of editing should be understood. I might have an
interest in [[Lauren Jackson]] and actively maintain the article about
her during her competitive career. That's all I might do on Wikipedia
is work on that one article, where I've substantially improved that
one article.
On the other hand, I might be a big fan of the [[Canberra Capitals]],
[[Seattle Storm]] or [[Australia women's national basketball team]]
and work on editing inside the main article and all articles that
relate to it, but not to articles about the Bullen Boomers, Chicago
Sky or women's basketball.
At the same time, I could be an editor that likes women's sport so I
edit everything in and around that topic. This would include Lauren
Jackson, women's basketball, the Chicago Sky in addition to Mia Hamm,
[[Florence Griffith-Joyner]], [[Cambodia women's national football team]].
At each level, there are potential issues for how to approach it for
content improvements: How much you do, when you do it, etc. It gets
interesting when you start looking at editing nodes (not for the whole
Wikipedia necessarily) but for specific topic areas. You can begin to
see this pattern more clearly. I can tell you based on my own
observations that the broad group tends to not do substantial content
additions but article maintenance, category additions, etc. They
appear everywhere, may even have high edit counts but if you look at
the content added, it isn't much.
--
twitter: purplepopple
blog:
ozziesport.com <http://ozziesport.com>
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