The correct place for them is not in an article. We are a free-content encyclopedia above all else, and should remain encyclopedic. A spoiler warning is a rather juvenile artifact of culture. I could see it on usenet or forums, but if someone came to an encyclopedia, then they should expect information. We are not here to coddle people, we are here to be useful.
There are some things consensus can't trump, foundation policy and the core values we keep (the 5 Pillars page give a nice overview). No matter how much the fanboys want to try and assert some OWNership of stories about their chosen work, they dont get to flout the encyclopedia part.
On 6/20/07, Ken Arromdee arromdee@rahul.net wrote:
[[Wikipedia_talk:Spoiler]]
Is it really fair to delete 45000 spoiler warnings and claim that the failure to undelete them is "consensus"? (Especially when it turns out there actually were hundreds restored, but they kept getting deleted anyway)
This is not the dead issue people have claimed it is, and 45000 is just the last number anyone's bothered to count. It seems blatantly obvious to me that nobody's going to be able to restore 45000 spoiler warnings; deleting them is easy, but restoring one is impossible without reading the whole article to figure out where the right place for them is. Particularly without AWB-like software. And creating "consensus" by unilaterally making an impossible-to-reverse mass change should disturb anyone, regardless of their opinion on spoiler warnings.
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