[WikiEN-l] Criteria for deletion (was: Afd "votes" with no real reasons given)
Poor, Edmund W
Edmund.W.Poor at abc.com
Fri Sep 16 13:27:27 UTC 2005
The real question is whether admins are mere vote-talliers.
Can users simply:
(1) Tag any article as "unmergeable" for a five-day period, to
(2) Force a vote on whether it should be kept or deleted?
If so, is it the job of the admin simply to count the votes and then
judge whether the percentage constitutes a "consensus" one way or
another?
Apparently this custom has acquired the strength of Policy.
Last month I tested this policy by removing what I felt was a
hastily-applied vfd tag and merging the information into a new article.
The response had all the fervor of a personal attack: how dare I, don't
I know (being an admin), etc.
But here's the point: if I had found out some other way besides seeing
the VFD template, that the article was unsuitable in its current state -
and read the reasons it was deemed unsuitable, I would have DONE EXACTLY
THE SAME.
The only difference is some Deletionist claimed the right to stop all
merges until the end of the 5-day vote.
This is BAD because
1. It requires me to come back to the article 5 days later, and
re-acquaint myself with the matter (twice as much mental preparation
work).
2. It stops everyone else from repairing the article (if all it needs is
a merge and/or redirect).
3. It's un-wiki: the saying "anyone can edit any article, any time" no
longer applies to this.
4. "Be bold" is suspended: I was bold, and get my wings clipped in a Big
Hurry. (I can't remember now whether this resulted in an RFC on my
action, but I worried about this at the time. How can editors be bold,
if they have to worry about being the Target of a Public Hearing just
for merging and redirecting info from a sub-standard article?)
Ed Poor, aka Uncle Ed
> Tony Sidaway [mailto:f.crdfa at gmail.com]
> Sent: Friday, September 16, 2005 7:37 AM
>
> I cannot discard a stated good faith opinion, even if I am
> not sure it was
> well informed. But I would certainly be justified in giving
> it less weight
> than an opinion that clearly showed serious thought, in
> determining whether
> consensus had been reached.
[snip]
> We're not mere clerks tallying votes.
[snip]
> Afd
> participants cannot just run down the list of debates ticking
> keep/delete
> according to their prejudices, and then expect their opinions
> to be given
> equal weight with those who consider the question seriously.
>
>
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