David,
I would have no problem with adding a requirement to notify the original author as part of a requirement for nomination. We should also look at systems where communities possibly affected by a decision are advised of the decision. Posting articles on relevant noticeboards is one way of doing it.
We have a situation where Wikipedian A disagrees with Wikipedian B over all sorts of issues such as schools, webcomics, etc. We have to look at ways of trying to reach some sort of common ground and involving the community as much as possible in the decision. Ultimately, we have to delete some articles that just aren't suitable for Wikipedia and we should have a process where as many people
Ultimately, I have looked at RfAr. As far as I can see most of the cases relate to pushing POV on particular pages. That would continue whether or not we continued with AfD or some other system.
Regards
Keith Old
Keith Old
On 12/9/05, David Gerard fun@thingy.apana.org.au wrote:
Keith Old wrote:
What I think is what would happen is that more articles would end up
being
speedy deleted with the author often not even having a say. Nor would
they
have the chance to improve their articles in response to criticism.
The creator often doesn't have a chance now, because the AFD regulars think it's too much like work to notify them.
Personally, I don't go to Articles for Deletion to win arguments or to
salt
the earth. Nor do the vast majority the hundreds of other people who participate in the process. From my experience most people on AfD are amenable to good argument. We should Assume Good Faith regarding participants in Articles for Deletion.
See current RFAr. It blatantly encourages an atmosphere of bad faith and that's damaging.
- d.
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