No way, an anonymous editor can cite references as well as anyone else and
it is not his bona fides that makes the reference good but the reputation
and authoritativeness of the reference. Anyone who has attended institutions
of higher learning is fully aware that formal qualifications mean next to
nothing and has probably learned that those who cite their degrees and
position as authority in the course of an argument rather than focusing on
evidence which might support their position do so because they are unable to
prevail using the evidence available to them.
Fred
From: NSK <nsk2(a)wikinerds.org>
Organization: Wikinerds
Reply-To: wikipedia-l(a)Wikimedia.org
Date: Tue, 4 Jan 2005 13:50:05 +0200
To: wikipedia-l(a)Wikimedia.org
Subject: Re: [Wikipedia-l] A Solution to Larry Sanger's Criticisms - Project
Has Been Around For A While
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 06:40, Shaun MacPherson wrote:
I think the easiest way to make Wikipedia more
credible is with a Fact and Reference Project
It sounds like a good idea.
But it's not enough: You should also limit somehow the anon contributions and
employ maintainers for each article (this is what I do on most of my
projects). The names (full names) of the authors and maintainers must be
visible in the article, together with 1 or 2-line short bios demonstrating
their expertise (degrees or work experience), as well as a References section
(which should be long - very long).
See my policy here:
http://nerdypc.wikinerds.org/index.php/Help:Editing_process
--
NSK
The Wikinerds Community Federation of Science Wikis
Owner of the Wikinerds Portal
http://portal.wikinerds.org
Owner of the NerdyPC IT Wiki
http://www.nerdypc.org
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