I've only been on the mailing list a short time, but it's sure opening my eyes to the community and its concerns.
What you're talking about is a type of "moderated articlespace". That could work, and in fact, would be a great idea with a proper system. You'd probably need to have a small team of volunteers willing to act as moderators for each article (of course, people would be moderating much more than a single "protected article"). The current {{protected}} system is good for protecting the article so that only admins can edit it, so if the moderators were admins, that would work. But I don't know how much work that would add for the admins. Perhaps moderators should be granted limited "admin" access to the moderated articles they are working on so they can edit the protected article according to the Talk pages.
Cheers,
DP.
Jake Waskett wrote:
Ok, Jimbo, you're right. Let me amend my earlier statement: on the whole, the system is working, but in a few articles, it is not. Now, the question is this: what can be done about the problem?
One solution that I favour is to have permanent protection on targetted pages, and have a nominated admin apply changes that are agreed upon by vote on the article's talk page.
What do others think?
Jake.
On Monday 07 February 2005 01:48, Jimmy (Jimbo) Wales wrote:
Jake Waskett wrote:
The simple truth is this: if Wiki is to become a credible, serious encyclopaedia, we *must* maintain NPOV. These groups *oppose* NPOV.
Yes!
What can be done about it? The present system is simply *not* *working*. It'll handle the occasional abuse here and there, but the day-by-day, determined, and methodical twisting of articles to suit some activist agenda seems impossible to stop.
I am aware of only 3 instances where this (organized groups trying to undermine NPOV editing) is a problem: LaRouche-related articles, circumcision, and this new thing with the stormfront postings and VfD co-ordination.
I think this is a serious problem, and one which we have long feared. But we need not overreact. The system *is* working in the main, and where there are new problems (such as those aptly described by Slim Virgin in discussion the pseudo-NPOV of the LaRouche edit warriors), we can be confident in our ability to devise new solutions.
--Jimbo
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