Geoff Burling wrote:
On Fri, 16 Dec 2005, Stan Shebs wrote:
Heh, I guarantee you that I could create a ichthyological whopper, pun intended, with pictures and citations from some of the rarer books in my personal library, and it will slip right by you, plus everyone else who doesn't happen to have those books to check. I bet I could even get it into the day's DYK!
But if you don't know enough to evaluate, say, the plausibility of an article about the popular home aquarium fish Melanocetus, I'm not going to take that as evidence you should not be editing the encyclopedia; it just means that no one person can know enough to be able to make accurate quick judgments on each new article. We need better teamwork, not just individual prowess.
One tool that I'm a little surprised that isn't used more often is to check whether any links exist to a supicious article. While this property is not entirely foolproof (a prankster can insert links either before or immediately after creating the article), this lack of reference to relevant articles will convince me to at least flag the article until I can find a way to conclusively prove its validity -- or arguable importance.
Of course, this leads to the question if an article cannot be found by a casual reader then why should we care. Or maybe the Seigenthaler incident has already answered that.
When there are no links to an article, the subject is more likely to find the article than anybody else. - He'll put his name in the searchbox just to see if he's listed. Why can't that kind of low llevel vanity exist in high places?
Ec