Anthony DiPierro wrote:
As an aside, would the user who clicks the "publish" button find herself legally liable for the content of that article? I certainly could see an argument for that being the case. Whether or not that'd be a good thing or a bad thing is another unanswered question.
Anthony
This problem could probably be avoided by _not_ providing a "publish" button at all, but instead only a "deprecate/delete" voting button, and automatically moving articles from the new-article queue to the main article space after, say, an hour after creation if they are not shot down first. An hour is probably plenty of time, given a queue system to ensure that articles do not fall through the cracks, and the current number of people doing RC patrol.
I like the idea that new articles could be made visible to logged-on users only, until they are moved to the main article space -- the introduction of logged-on-user-only article creation now removes any need to make the article visible to IP-only users creating their own articles. Not making queued articles visible to IP-only readers would also have the effect of making them invisible to web crawlers and real-time proxy-leeching sites, and hence less likely to appear in Wikipedia mirrors.
Similarly, it would be a good idea to avoid backing up new articles on the queue to article database dumps, which would further reduce the possibility of their being picked up by syndicators.
An RSS feed of the new article queue would be useful, too.
-- Neil