I think it's bad business to get in the habit of setting up official policies that exclude factual, referenced, neutral information from inclusion in Wikipedia.
The natural extension of this tendency will lead to the typical elitist exclusionism that all institutional media typically fall victim to.
Wikipedia is not paper.
On 11/27/06, charles.r.matthews@ntlworld.com < charles.r.matthews@ntlworld.com> wrote:
Steve Block wrote
Steve Bennett wrote:
In general, we should be more selective with what external links we provide, and how we present them.
We already do.
We should distinguish between:
- Sources of the information in the article
These should be placed in the References section, not the External links one.
I looked at [[Wikipedia:Citing sources]] on this, and I don't think that guideline is optimal. It is much better, if you need a weblink as reference for something specific, to make an inline link or make a note. In fact a note is much superior, because you can attach a comment or point up some specific phrase used.
If you just put raw weblinks in a References section, and don't specify the relevance, how can anyone tell that the link is playing a reference role?
Charles
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