[WikiEN-l] Quality tags
Ral315
en.ral315 at gmail.com
Tue Sep 6 14:55:51 UTC 2005
> * "patrolled" (as in Recent Changes "simple vandalism" patrol)
> * "accurate" (i.e. "I am personally convinced that Everything
> this article says is true and correct."
> * "inaccurate" (contains mistakes, which we *hope* they'll mention on
> the talk page)
These two tags aren't a bad idea; however, accuracy is a subjective term,
often. Is it accurate in the mind of the tagger, or accurate in the mind of
the encyclopedia? Also, the problem with dating occurs, because an article
on, say, [[Ayn Rand]] may be accurate today. But if she writes a new book,
or converts to communism, or kills 5 people in New Hampshire, the article,
while still factually true, needs to be fixed. Tagging would not solve many
problems there.
> * "graffiti" (or "vandalism" = someone has messed up this version,
> but I don't have the time, inclination or ability to undo the damage)
That's what, hopefully, users use IRC for. Alternatively, there are pages
(Administrators' Noticeboard, while not the ideal place, would be a good
start) to report vandalism that has been left unchecked.
> * "balanced" (i.e., nothing has been left out or downplayed)
> * "bias" (tells one side of a story, especially in a raging controversy)
Again, balance and bias is subjective, perhaps even more so than accuracy.
[[George W. Bush]], while usually a great article, is occasionally tagged
with a "neutrality/NPOV" notice. While, occasionally, the progression of
time will result in the article gaining biased information, more often it's
just a disgruntled person, who either supports Bush and doesn't like
information that tends to go against him, or absolutely hates Bush, and is
mad because his/her Xanga blog link about how "bush sux0rs!" keeps getting
removed. Controversy would be even worse if there were an official status
for this.
--
Sincerely,
Ral315
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Ral315
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