On 1/31/06, geni <geniice(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On 1/31/06, Jimmy Wales <jwales(a)wikia.com>
wrote:
Steve Bennett wrote:
Wikipedia suffers more from an incorrect deletion
than from an
incorrect keep. Sort of how society suffers more from the execution of
an innocent person than the incorrect non-execution of a guilty one.
I don't agree with your perception of the balance. An incorrect
deletion of an article is nearly nothing to us -- it can be undeleted
instantly by any admin.
No it can't. Or do you wish to rethink the entire role of admins?
If it's a clearly incorrect deletion, it can be undone by any admin.
In my humble opinion this should be accompanied with a notice
somewhere so the decision can be reviewed, but that's different from
saying it can't be done.
SCZenz
If through process the community decides to delete something then it
is understandable that you should have to go through process to get it
undeleted. If it was speedied you can do whatever you like with it.
--
geni