Ryan Delaney wrote:
On 4/10/06, Alphax (Wikipedia email) alphasigmax@gmail.com wrote:
More often than not, people will add stuff to an article, and some time later, another editor will come along and clean it up. Then some more stuff will be added, and some time later, it will get cleaned up again. Very rarely do you see an article /only/ get better (one example I *can* think of is [[Jordanhill railway station]] <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jordanhill_railway_station >), but that was an extraordinary case.
I'm really getting confused now. You just described the whole process of how articles get improved on Wikipedia, and then say that they don't only get improved. I mean, yeah; sometimes people add stuff to Wikipedia that doesn't follow the style guide / is badly written, typos etc / isn't wholly neutral / isn't referenced / etc. And then someone else comes along and makes it better. That's the whole purpose of the collaborative process. Isn't that what it means for an article to "always get better"? Isn't that what we are doing? Maybe I am missing the point here, but...
To put it in the strictest theoretical terms, an Wikipedia with zero edits is worthless. Wikipedia with infinite edits is perfect. I really believe that, mind you -- I believe that after infinite edits, Wikipedia will be perfect. Of course, we'll never get there, but each edit puts us closer. So all this talk about "deterioration" is puzzling to me.
If articles don't deteriorate, why do they get de-featured?
Deterioration happens when:
- Vandalism goes unnoticed, especially sneaky (fact-changing) or blanking-type vandalism - Random crud (aka. "cruft") gets added - Other stuff which we can't quantify yet