Anthere wrote:
cookfire a écrit:
When reading the eG's message, I was also wondering what is so special about Japanese copyright law that it makes building up a free dictionary harder than in other languages. I must say that I do understand the problem with vandalism. Since the summer the English Wiktionary gets a lot of vandalism and spamvertising too. The months before that the problem was far less. The French, Dutch and Spanish Wiktionaries are relatively calm as far as vandalism is concerned, but maybe the Japanese Wiktionary attracts Chinese spammers as well. What I see as a solution is to create a broad base of sysops, so obvious vandalism and spamvertising can be killed on the spot (and thus only wastes the time of one person). Of course the trick is to find dependable people who are able and want to consacrate a lot of time to the project. It takes a bit of time for them to show up, but they do exist.
Good luck,
Polyglot
It is true having much more sysops would help, but if a few people only come to the place, it will not change anything
A solution might rather be the possibility for combined recent changes
Ant
Hoi,
My preferred solution would be to have the "ultimate wiktionary". This would prevent the current trend towards island projects, it would enhance interoperabilty a lot and, it would make the wiktionary project more usefull to our end users. They are the ones we do it all for.
Thanks, GerardM