> Why? The NOA is primarily interesting as a measure
of our collaborative
> progress. This is important for ourselves and for others. Personally,
> I've had several discussions about Wikipedia where I was reluctant to
> cite the NOA because of the high number of machine-generated articles,
> others probably feel the same.
>
> I therefore believe we should generally exclude autogenerated articles
> (we can change the wording on Main_Page to reflect this). As it would be
> a 5 minute task for anyone with access to the db, is there any reason
> not to do it?
The NOA is a highly unreliable figure for any purpose,
and there has
been much discussion on reforming it.
If you think collaboration is the key, then a more
general solution is
in order: only count article-space pages that have been edited at least
twice (and thus, have an old revision stored in the 'old' table).
I'm in support of this idea, but I don't know how many others are. Just
cutting out the bots might be the least controversial, and since the
current modus operandi is to try to make decisions by consensus (I prefer
voting) ..
Regards,
Erik