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Wikipedia:Wikiquette alerts/archive16
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Resolved.
I've noticed a disturbing pattern with this user and animation articles. This user feels that it is their duty to delete anything that doesn't meet his or her "standards." I tried to edit the synopsis of the Lisa's Wedding article and it was immediately reverted, with the user in question claiming it was an "unneeded detail." [1] Now granted, my response to him/her wasn't civil, but I apologized for it [2] and asked the user why it was reverted. The user then responded that my edit was "unnecessary" although the user conceded that it did clarify the context of the paragraph somewhat. I then told the user that it was not up to one person to decide editing standards on Wikipedia, and that perhaps their contributions (while good) might be better served at a site where their work is not mercilessly edited. Even after my apology, this user still had the gall to tell me to start my own website where "I could add as much crap as I like." This user needs to take their anger elsewhere.--Folksong 03:11, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- Note: I had struck out the word crap, so that shouldn't count. As well, this seems to be more of a content dispute than anything as the user talks more about that one line than my alleged incivility. -- Scorpion0422 03:19, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- Let's see how well that defence holds up about striking out the word "crap". It's not so much about a content dispute, but the fact that you escalate disputes with many users that you disagree with. This doesn't seem to be an isolated incident, but a pattern over time. Why don't we point out some of your greatest hits such as the classic "you're a retard", "not a real Simpsons fan" and the recent you don't understand how wrestling works!--Folksong 03:29, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- I have already been reprimanded for two of those three comments and the third is taken completely out of context. I was explaining to the user in question that a user was opposing something in an FLC and they had admitted that they didn't know much about the WWE. At least use the correct quotes. And lets not forget that you have been FAR more uncivil in this dispute than I have, even if you did apologize. -- Scorpion0422 03:32, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- Now, I'm not your enemy here, in fact I'm your friend. But there's a trend going on here, and I'll leave the final decision up to the good people who manage this section.--Folksong 03:46, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
It sounds like you are both willing to talk. In the scheme of things that's doesn't seem big but you've each been editing Wikipedia for a while so you know that's actually huge. I don't see any discussion of the edits on the talk page and it sounds like you're both in agreement that a civil and open discussion would be the right way to move forward. Is that something you could both explicitly agree to? Gruber76 04:52, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- I started a discussion with this user on their talk page as referred to earlier. Apparently, he did a drive-by on my talk page taking some culpability for the situation, but still implying that this entire situation is my creation. If this individual feels so strongly about the article, it's theirs, but this guy/girl insists on having everything their way and looking at Scorp's talk page, seems to be making new enemies each day.--Folksong 00:45, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
- Also there must be a discussion somewhere that covers what level of detail is good for episodes of the Simpsons or other similar series - perhaps asking at a wikiproject or other regular editors of similar pages, sbandrews (t) 19:10, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Plots of TV episodes should be brief, since a detailed plot would be a copyright violation. --Maitch 10:18, 11 June 2007 (UTC)
I find this user's attitude disturbing at Talk:List of tributaries of Imperial China. He reverts articles to the way he wants to without consensus.
Assault11's first clearly shows his biased attitude towards the article and its related articles.
Currently, the article is under dispute whether to include a sentence about Goguryeo's tributary status with China. The editors are trying to work towards a consensus and have taken several measures including an RfC and a request for a third opinion. User:Arcayne has commented, yet he feels that he has been treated rudely by Assault.
Assault has been making the work toward consensus extremely difficult. He will not respond to any questions as to what he wants and will ignore everything. He simply wants his own way. Assault11 is hardly listening to anybody, including admins. He also deletes warning tags from his talk page.
I am requesting that an editor or administrator talk to him. Good friend100 23:15, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
- I merely reverted the article back to the status quo. You, on the other hand, never gained consensus to add in your points - which have been proved to be factually incorrect (see talk page).
- Secondly, what does the List of tributaries of Imperial China got to do with the Koguryo dispute? Nothing. I have apologized for my behavior regarding my first edit (see Tariqabjotu's talk page). And there was never a RfC conducted for List of tributaries of Imperial China. Regarding Arcayne, I reserve the right to cease further discussions and to protect my own user/talk page if I felt that I was being subject to personal ad hominem attacks [3].
- Do not act all innocent Good friend100, it is you who constantly ignored pleas to change your POV. Just a brief look at the Koguryo, List of tributaries of Imperial China and your talk page reveals a large number of editors who've disagreed with your false reasonings. Even Korean editors like Wangkon936 (see Koguryo talk) requested that you familiarize with the Chinese tributary system before making outlandish claims. Assault11 00:12, 11 June 2007 (UTC)
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- In fact, there is a request on RfC [4]. Be more attentive before claiming all sorts of things. Anyways, I'm not here to bring the argument to this page. I am requesting that Assault be checked on his civility.
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- You seem to have an issue when somebody posts warnings or demands on your talk page. Its not vandalism, as you put it. I am not acting innocent. I DID change the biased sentence on the article, yet you don't even care. Again, you are making the consensus process extremely difficult because of your stubborness and your biased approach to the subject.
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- Perhaps you forgot to read the instructions for filing a formal RfC [5].
- I am allowed to remove warnings as I deem inappropriate - particularly the ones from you, where one warning was 2 days old. Biased according to you - and you only. You even had your dates wrong regarding the ending of tributary relations. Of those involved in the discussion, none of the parties supports your view. Assault11 00:42, 11 June 2007 (UTC)
Stale.
I've had a lot of issues with User:XLR8TION and at this point trying to properly reason with him would be out of the question. The issue in question deals with the ancestry of Sammy Davis, Jr.'s mother. Although Davis publicly stated during his lifetime that she was Puerto Rican, biographers now agree that she was in fact Cuban and that Davis lied about this to protect his career due to the unpopular sentiments at the time towards communist Cuba. This fact is stated in several books including The Life of Sammy Davis, Jr. by Gary Fishgall[6] and In Black and White: The Life of Sammy Davis, Jr. By Wil Haygoods [7]. The latter which is an award-winning book[8] that will even form the basis for the screenplay of Davis' biopic to be produced by Denzel Washington.[9] The problem is any time I try and edit the article he swoops right in and reverts it labeling me disgruntled. The fact is she wasn't Puerto Rican, she was Cuban (more proof:[10]and a TIME magazine article for good measure, [11]). WP:VERIFY states that material added to Wikipedia has already been published by a reliable source, I think I have met that threshold with the links I have provided. What I would like is to edit the article stating his Cuban ancestry as fact with a mention as why he choose to say he was Puerto Rican due to the political sensitivities of the time, and without being reverted. So hopefully a neutral party can come in and take a look at this with a fresh eye. Thank you. 74.225.36.136 20:31, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- One approach. which would adhere to WP:NPOV would be to say, "While Davis claimed _____, other researchers/sources claim ____."
- The :) "fact of the matter" is he said ____ and others said _____. Just state those facts and let the readers decide. If the sources are as strong as you are presnting them to be, without saying "THIS IS THE TRUTH!" it should be pretty obvious what is the truth! :)
- You can't mention "why he chose that." What you can say, if it is contained in the sources you've mentioned, is other people's theories as to why he did it. If Sethie has the time and inclination, he'll pop over and take a look. Sethie 06:36, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
Resolved.
I'm just wondering if my comments here were uncivil or attacks in any ways. I'd appreciate a comment to my talk page, or here, rather than involvement in the discussion there. It's close enough to getting off track as it is. I can see how my comments might have been taken as irritating, or possibly condescending, but I don't think I made any actual attack. FrozenPurpleCube 17:01, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
- I dont think you made an attack - when user nabla said 'attack me' s/he realy should have said 'attack my argument' which is what you did. His/her point being that s/he showed you the weakness of his/her argument and you then attacked that weakness - a below the belt attack? :) I don't consider you have been uncivil on the page, regards sbandrews (t) 21:17, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
- I concur with sbandrews; no problem with civility or personal attacks in your comments at that discussion at this time. --Parzival418 Hello 10:33, 11 June 2007 (UTC)
Resolved.
Most recent exchange:
216.201.33.24: "... I DO NOT want to hear anymore whining from anyone about the fact that their webiste is a source."
Me: "Please do not refer to what others are saying as "whining". It is uncivil and inappropriate."
216.201.33.24: "Joie it is perfectly appropriate and civil, now do you have something to contribute that is useful to the article or are you going to continue complaining about the fact that other editors on here are out of patience with your antics? I assure you I am running out of patience with you, if you want me to be civil then cut the victim act and contribute and I will be nicer to you."
Bear in mind while no one has chastised me or expressed any impatience with me, several users have rebuked 216.201.33.24:
In response to a 3O that I requested, Anomie said:
- "216.255.40.133, you really should check WP:CIVIL. Also, comments such as "Therefoe I must conclude that you can not handle the truth" do come close to violating WP:NPA."
MaryKDerr commented; for some reason, MaryKDerr thought that I might have thought that she and the anon user were the same person:
- "I am *not* the user who is personally attacking you here, ad hominem attacks just make my heart sink..."
The 3O that I requested referred to 216.201.33.24 as having a "major pro-POV" and noted my efforts to maintain NPOV. Several users agree that the article needs work. 216.201.33.24 has openly acknowledged that they wrote one of the paragraphs that another user found to be POV (search page for phrase "I wrote".) This user is resistant to proposed changes, and has recently become rude and threatening.
216.201.33.24 has begun to demand that I make my concerns clear; accusing me of "trolling" because I refuse to engage with them (amid their insults). I believe their view is inaccurate, as I was the person who began the discussion, with the hopes of doing exactly what they were talking about - discussing content. I became less willing to discuss content after their insults and threats came in greater number and strength. I was hoping they would calm down so we could get back to the content, but it has only gotten worse. Joie de Vivre 00:26, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
- User 216.201.33.24 is clearly in violation of WP:CIVIL and WP:NPA. That IP has never edited the article or any other page than the talk page you mentioned. I recommend ignoring all comments from that editor and just replying with a statement that the incivil personal attacks are not acceptable and that no dialog about the article is possible until the communications become polite and respectful. Then leave it at that. If the editor starts making changes to the article (which he/she has not done yet, then you would have to respond to those changes, by accepting, reverting or discussing for consensus (see Wikipedia:BOLD, revert, discuss cycle).
- But even in that situation, until the offending IP editor is willing to enter comments that are civil and do not contain insults, avoid direct two-way conversation. Just state your disapproval of the incivil behaviors and then address your comments to the other editors on the article. To attain consensus you don't have to convince a dissenting editor to change their mind, you just need a general agreement among the editors in the discussion, and support for your edits with solid references. Bottom line, if somone acts anti-social like that the best thing to do is to disengage. Don't take it personally or let them get you down, just brush it off and stay positive. --Parzival418 Hello 05:12, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
Resolved.
Unfortunately, a user named Marty Goldberg has made a career out of modifying any revisions to the Wikipedia page "William Cheung". He cites POV and non-references, however he revises my contributions with just that. In particular, he was very resistent to the historically documented fact that Cheung was an instructor of Bruce Lee, despite the plethora of available evidence. Further, he appears to delight in a firm insistance that GM Cheung and Emin Bozetepe were involved in a "fight", and this individual has a thusfar unmitigating need to express his POV and interpretations as to the conclusiveness of this sorry, fleeting, and embarrasing incident. I have cited numerous sources to support my contention that the need to display: "My fighter beat up your fighter" is unsubstantiated by any evidence, uncorroborated by witnesses, and pure, unadulterated beans. Nevertheless, Marty Goldberg has edited, deleted, and re-corrupted this page no less than 25 times today 6/11/07. I will bring in others who will lend their rational thought to this, however this individual is detremental, slanderous, and is propagating untruths, as I have aforementioned.
As the protocol appears to be involving a third party, I suspect Mr. Goldberg might enlist those with a similar mindset such as his and merely perpetuate this juvenile war of words. As I could also dispatch individuals to disabuse this person of his penchant for slander and historical revisionism, I would rather seek administrative relief before I involve other parties. I would like a resolution to this please.
Most Sincerely,
Michael Kenneth Maison (KM)
- Very specifically, this user has been told multiple times by multiple editors over the past month that his attempted contributions to William Cheung and Leung Ting and Emin Boztepe violate NPOV, lack actual references (he has actually provided none except to copy advertisements from Cheung's website word for word as entry material), and do not follow an encyclopedic format. This is not a place for political minded editing and bickering in leau of actual encyclopedic material contributions. Every effort has been made by the major contributors of that article and the Wikipedia Martial Arts Project to explain the situation to him. I (today), as well as another editor (last week) have even tried to rewrite his material in a NPOV manner so it could be included (see William Cheung talk page), and this was still not good enough. He has simply responded with accusations, derogatory comments (see the page history), and continued re-addition of the same material. Now he's threatening to "dispatch individuals" in person and to use in edit war here? --Marty Goldberg 04:10, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
This user is quite simply purporting falsehoods, categorically false statements. My citations are numerous, from many sources, and very few from Websites of William Cheung. That is the first deceptive comment. He provides a version of a version of video, that laymen can agree is edited, reveals very little, and has been deemed inconclusive by most rational individuals. Yet, this "video" is presented as a "challenge fight", with the fundamental objective as declaring a "victor", in a most sophmoric attempt at "one upsmanship." This is substantially been disregarded, although this user continues to tout it's "superiority" in false, misleading manner. This is not in the spirit of journalism, martial arts, or plain human decorum. There have been two individuals who have refuted these comments; most people don't care; yet he states that a multitude of Wikipedia intelligencia "have attempted to explain the situation to me." His emotional pandering refers to one other individual besides him. POV, poor sources, or other principles axiomatic to responsible journalism cannot be selectively enforced nor violated, a common-sense principle that Mr. Goldberg evidently does not endorse. My derogatory comments are nothing more than having referenced material vanish with some arbitrary and close-minded categorical editing of my posts. It's selective rule-enforcement,and it's plain wrong.
Finally, the gentleman appears paranoid. As the protocol for conflict dictates, individuals should obtain a 3rd party mediator. I happen to know many people familiar with this issue, some of who have direct knowledge. It is those individuals whose input I sought to "dispatch", never anyone "in person" as the continued emotional pandering of this "martial artist" would like you to believe. It's almost like he believes he has a "literary license" to accuse those who disagree with HIS points of view, to emotionally pander in order to get his way, and most objectionably, to continue to promulgate falsehoods in the spirit of journalistic integrity. Who in the name of goodness does he think he is?
P.S. I think we should keep the "whine" in Sonoma Valley.
M K Maison
- Once again, this editor's inability to behave rationally (WP:Civility) is demonstrated here with more derogatory and personal attacks. It is also easily seen in the history of the edit pages, my talk page (in which another editor removed a derogatory comment of his), and the previous pages listed. Multiple editors have talked to him, which is also easily verified by those page's history pages, talk pages, and his own talk page. Any attempt to enforce NPOV has been met with accusations and claims of "literary license", biasness and, and further derogatory statements about what people are supposedly thinking or feeling. Likewise, he can't seem to grasp the idea of a controversy and approaching it from a position of neutrality, instead seeking to edit in one position's comments over the other when a balance is to be maintained per NPOV. --Marty Goldberg 05:46, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment from third party. Even in the above report, User:MichaelMaison shows lack of good faith, lack of civility, and a makes several personal attack comments. Related article and user talk pages show this is an ongoing pattern. This diff shows a purely uncivil attack comment posted by User:MichaelMaison on the talk page of Marty Goldberg. The comment was appropriately removed by a third party, User:A Link to the Past. That diff shows an even higher temperature of emnity and more direct personal attack than the comments MichaelMaison wrote on this page where he expected the community to read them.
So, what to do? I suggest simply ignoring his complicated arguments and uncivil comments, and focusing completely on the content of the articles. Since the articles are about martial arts, a good analogy would be the art of Aikido. Change the direction of the discussion away from personal confrontation, into the process of consensus. There appear to be other interested editors; they will be needed to create consensus and prevent ongoing insertions of POV material by reverting when needed and allowing the tendentious editor to grapple with WP:3RR. When he posts an uncivil comment, simply reply by stating that it is uncivil and ask him to remove or strike out any personal attacks. Then ignore it, don't take it personally, don't reply in detail or try to convince him that he is wrong. If he edits the article inappropriately, revert it, and provide supporting references if you can find them. If he reverts again, follow the Wikipedia:BOLD, revert, discuss cycle, but don't address him personally in your discussion. Most importantly, invite other editors (from related article talk pages if necessary) to contribute so that you don't get into a one-on-one reversion war. If there are multiple editors involved, the consensus can be clear. MichaelMaison says that he has others who will support his edits, but on the pages you linked I did not see anyone agree with him. That means if multiple editors have consensus and he is opposing the consensus, he will not be able to insert unreferenced POV information into the articles. He also says he has "numerous" citations from third party sources, but he has not added them to the article so we don't know if they exist. It would be best if you could continue to find additional reliable sources to support your edits. As they are now, those articles have very few references, and especially since they are Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons, the issue of third party sources is even more crucial. (I recommend reading that policy page in detail).
Further, I suggest suspending all communication between the two of you on your talk pages. Don't post anything on his talk page. If he posts on yours, if his comment is civil and in regards to the article, just thank him and tell him you'll reply on the article talk page, then do so if you wish. If his post on your page is not civil, you can remove it, or another option is to use <s> ... </s> to strike out his words, then reply simply by stating that his comments are uncivil and you will not reply unless you are addressed respectfully. This method has the advantage of keeping visible the uncivil comments and your calm response.
Avoid direct confrontation and ignore the attacks, other than to point out they are violations of policy and community and that you will not converse without mutual respect. That way, it's no fun to attack you. And your edits to the articles, when they are referenced and have consensus from other editors, also cannot be attacked. --Parzival418 Hello 07:41, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
Pre-emptive disambiguation of Dungeons & Dragons articles
Resolved. Pak21 10:01, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
User:Dm2ortiz has recently moved a large number of Dungeons & Dragons articles from being at "<name>" to "<name> (module)", even though almost most these titles are never likely to need disambiguation (eg Mystery of the Snow Pearls). I thought this was unnecessary, and brought the subject up at WikiProject Dungeons & Dragons (as the original moves were tagged as "WikiProject Dungeons & Dragons"). Four editors there (including myself) agreed that the disambiguation was not necessary, so I reverted the moves (as well as other articles created by Dm2ortiz). However, Dm2ortiz has now moved many of these articles back again, with an edit summary referencing exactly the same discussion. I am unsure what to do next, and would appreciate any advice. --Pak21 07:28, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
- It seems to me you have a pretty clear consensus at the Wikiproject to remove the word module from the page names, since it's not needed at this time. There's also discussion that if disambiguation were needed later, there might be different methods that would better suit the aims of the project. So it seems to me that editors from the project are justified to revert the changes again. In the edit summary state that this is being done by consensus and link to a section on the project talk page for further discussion. It would be best if the same editor does not do the reverting each time so it's clear that it's not an edit war between two individuals, in other words, you could mention in the project discussion you believe there is a consensus to revert again, but that you don't want an edit war, so you are not going to do it right now but that you support the next reversion if someone else wants to do it. If he continues to revert contrary to the consensus, that could be considered Wikipedia:Disruptive editing or he might violate WP:3RR. The point is I guess, if he is a loner going against consensus, then he is not entitled to impose his will on the community of editors working on the project. If there is not consensus yet though, for example if there were a few editors also agreeing with his perspective, then further discussion would be needed before reverting the page moves. That's not an official statement, just my personal understanding of how the policies apply to the situation. --Parzival418 Hello 08:07, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Thanks. Dm2ortiz brought the subject up again at WP:D&D where other editors have come down strongly on the side of no pre-emptive disambiguation. I'll wait Dm2ortiz's suggested week and then move the articles back unless there is any significant support for his position. Cheers --Pak21 10:01, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
Stale.
User:S.Örvarr.S and myself have come to the conclusion that User:Haukurth is persistently—and purposely—being pedantic to frustrate other users. For example, on the Icelandic language talk page he has made several derogatory comments, and indeed was involved in an edit war over a single simple greeting. To quote but a few examples:
- I have never in my life heard anyone say "Góða daginn". — using this as justification that the greeting "góða daginn" does not exist.
- Calling S.Örvarr.S a kjánaprik (“silly stick”).
And in a separate debate:
- Well, your Icelandic is certainly a lot better but your English is rather worse. For example you have pre-aspiration in the word 'apple'. I personally don't see any point in reading the English cognates at all.
Obviously to see this in context, you need to see the whole debate. I don’t know how to go about addressed the user without causing further dispute or personal attacks. Advice would be appreciated. Max Naylor 11:26, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
- This all looks quite mild to me. I would advise you to focus on editing, and ignore comments you feel are beside the point. IronDuke 01:28, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
Introducing POV and making aggressive & harassing edits and reversions
Resolved.
I've been having an edit war with User_talk:Gustav_von_Humpelschmumpel on Talk:Jeronimo Bassano and Lanier family tree. He has been introducing POV by attempting to undermine one authority on the family's Jewish origins, David Lasocki, as a review of his edits will show. I keep trying to impose balance in that section, but he keeps editing and reverting, basically taking over his "turf" and imposing his POV. He made certain to provide the university affiliation of his preferred commentator, but edited out the title and university affiliation of Lasocki, the other point of view. Then, he chased me over to Lanier family tree and made a completely unjustified reversion of a verifiable fact which was supported by a genealogical link. I hope this can come to a good conclusion with some outside advice and input, because frankly I am not going to continue editing on Wikipedia if he continues this aggressive and impolite behavior.--139.80.18.108 03:07, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
- This user came to the page basically immediately accusing me of bias- he has now resorted to completely inventing accusations (User_talk:Blnguyen#Request_for_Sanctions_Against_a_User). I believe both ips are the same person and are User:Andrewudstraw who seemed to cause some issues in 2006 [12] ("Sure you do. One neoconservative watches the back of another. I too read Talk:Neoconservativism and see how you operate" to User:MONGO). Gustav von Humpelschmumpel 09:52, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
- Also the reversion to Lanier family tree was completely justified as it was just unsourced family trivia. Gustav von Humpelschmumpel 09:55, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
Gustav von Humpelschmumpel can make all the personal attacks he wants (calling another person an "ass" when reverting on the Talk:Jeronimo Bassano page shows his attitude); it will still not change the POV problems with the edits he made. I invite others to simply look at the page, what he has done to it through his edits, and come to their own conclusions. Further, the Lanier family tree reversion he made was unjustified because the genealogical link provided in the original entry was proof that a descendant of this family married another Italian Piva in 1994. Perhaps this is not noteworthy enough for Wikipedia, but many articles do have a trivia section.--139.80.18.108 22:20, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
- Again, I never called anyone an "ass". Thankyou Gustav von Humpelschmumpel 23:55, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
I think a calmer approach is needed. Personally, I would prefer my marriage not to be featured in Wikipedia, even in a section on my family tree. This introduces some privacy issues; maybe even identity theft problems could happen. It's bad enough that my information is in the free genealogy website on the web. Is it appropriate for me to object? I don't have an opinion on the whole disagreement over the Jewish issue, although it would be good to have lots of sources because I believe others in my family--my brother is fanatical about our genealogy--will find this topic interesting. Can we get some short quotes from each of these sources into the article? Jeronimo Bassano isn't very long, as articles go. --Andy 22:54, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
- Come on that is clearly you editing under an ip- stop being a WP:DICK. Gustav von Humpelschmumpel 23:54, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
Far be it from me to actually agree with your edits (did you read what I wrote?). Calling me a dick doesn't help your case very much.--Andy 01:04, 14 June 2007 (UTC)
- Sorry but I think you are just trying to get out of the fact that you blatantly made a false accusation that I called you an "ass" under an ip and I spotted it was actually you. Gustav von Humpelschmumpel 01:06, 14 June 2007 (UTC)
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- I've looked through these articles and I do not see any improper behavior by Gustav von Humpelschmumpel, other than a small indiscretion just above in the way he quoted the essay WP:DICK. His edits seem to be according to policy. There is no sign in the talk page history that he deleted other user's comments or called anyone an "ass." If that text exists, please show a link to the history or diff to show it. I was not able to find anything like that. On the other hand, the IP editor has made some antagonistic comments, especially of concern since the accusations seem to be fabricated. There also is some indication that it's possible the IP may be a sockpuppet as Gustav von Humpelschmumpel mentioned. If the negative behavior continues, it might be helpful to file a report at WP:SSP; however, that takes work and time so unless the problem increases, it's probably best to ignore it.
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- I did not go into the details of the editing conflict, because that's not the purpose of this page. If you would like help with an editing dispute about content, try Wikipedia:Third opinion or Wikipedia:Editor assistance. --Parzival418 Hello 01:43, 14 June 2007 (UTC)
Resolved.
I have alerted the user to Help:Minor edit, but was greeted with a personal attack and would rather not be involved with him directly. He continious to mark almost all edits as minor when they clearly are not: Special:Contributions/Suidafrikaan. Deon Steyn 07:22, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
- There is a user preference setting that causes all edits to be marked as minor by default. Maybe he has that checked unintentionally. --Parzival418 Hello 08:59, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
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- I see it now yes, that doesn't seem very smart? Either way, his edits aren't marked correctly, but I don't want to set him off, because he has accused me of persecuting him :-) --Deon Steyn 09:55, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Well there are some uses for that, such as when doing many edits in a row that are all spelling corrections or something, that some people like to do. For substanital edits, it's preferred not to mark them minor, but if he's making trouble for you I suggest just ignoring it. If he is uncivil in debates about content edits, that would be different and you might have to find a better solution. For this though, take the easy way out. --Parzival418 Hello 17:50, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
Stale.
I have repeatedly reverted these edits, requesting that the individual stop, as the points removed are not personal attacks or otherwise inappropriate. I don't know what to do next, however it is frustrating that this individual thinks that a proper way to avoid discussion they do not like is to simply censor it. I have not reverted their last removal. Darker Dreams 13:34, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
Resolved.
I am not a regular wikipedian, nor an expert on this particular topic, so apologies if I am not going about this the right way. I believe the section on the Iranian theory on the origin of the Croats on the above mentioned page has too strong a point of view. The references used are either obscure and indecipherable (this has nothing to do with them being in Croatian of course), or in the case of footnote 3, are strongly nationalistic and of dubious neutrality. The section does not talk to the latter section on genetic evidence which more or less refutes it. My understanding of the history of the peoples of the Balkans is that such a strong 'Iranian theory' has been largely put to bed by academics, and I think this article would benefit from some reference to this. Perhaps someone reading this will be more knowledgeable about the topic and would be able to clean up this article? Saamah 17:26, 16 June 2007 (UTC)
- This is the wrong place to post your request. It's good to protect the NPOV as youmentioned. You can edit the article yourself, or you can post your comments on the talk page of the article. There, you will find editors discussing the article and you can work with them to improve it. To learn about how to edit Wikipedia articles, please visit the main help page table of contents. --Parzival418 Hello 19:43, 16 June 2007 (UTC)
Resolved.
This is about the article G-Unit Feuds, I have tried to improve the layout of this article to enable easier understanding for people who are coming to wikipedia to learn something new. The User Yankees10 has continually been reverting my edits. In my opinion he is being protective of the article beause he claims to have made it himself. There has been other minor disputes between me and this user over the same article about merging with G-Unit, but again he continually removes my tags. I chose to let that one go because I did not want to have to take it further. I would appreciate some help on this situation
Thanks
--The-G-Unit-Boss 17:39, 17 June 2007 (UTC) 17:39, 17 June 2007 (UTC)
- Looking at the first tag revert on G-Unit Feuds, your merge tag should not have been removed, however I do feel that had a discussion taken place it is likely that your merge proposal would have been opposed - my reasoning is that both articles are already of a reasonable length, and since it is a popular subject they are both bound to get longer, better to have sparate articles. As an alternative for you what about placing a condensed version of G-Unit Feuds into the G-Unit article? That said, you do have every right to put a merge tag on the page, and the 3RR rule is there to make sure it isn't removed before a discussion can take place sbandrews (t) 18:15, 17 June 2007 (UTC)
- on the subject of the current debate on section structure I see what you are aiming to do by puttung all the feuds into a section feud, however this has the disadvantage that editors can no longer edit the separate sections individually, so I would side with yankee10 on this issue. sbandrews (t) 18:27, 17 June 2007 (UTC)
Hi, With my version of the article there are still little links-'edit' to edit each section, i.e each feud with a different person, the current article that yankees10 continues to revert to is not clearly structured and is not easy to understand for inexperienced users. Also with feuds it is often difficult to distinguish between feuds that are still continuing and those that have been settled, I have had this conversation with yankees10 but he seems to think that he can tell when a feud is over and prefers to have 'Past Feuds' and 'Feuds'.
Thanks
--The-G-Unit-Boss 17:25, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
- yes, you are right! Can't think why I thought that... There are two issues here, first putting everthing under the heading feud - second distinguishing past and current feuds. I would suggest trying to reach consensus on one issue at a time, show you willingness to compromise by reverting to yankees10 version and opening a discussion on the talk page about what criterion are being used to determine whether a feud is over or not, and then move forward from there... sbandrews (t) 17:54, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
Hi, I am absolutely sure that trying to disscuss this matter with yankees10 will not resolve anything, he is being completely ignorant to the fact that I am only trying to improve the article. When I changed it to my version he reverted and wrote : wow you dont know when to give up, there is no way of persuading him.
Thanks --The-G-Unit-Boss 17:01, 19 June 2007 (UTC)
- In that you may be right, but there is more to the talk page than discussing with your current fellow editor - what you write there will, unlike content you put on the article page, remain for people to read for a long time. So it is a great place to write down what you think should be done to the article - even if your ideas don't get taken up immediately future editors with the same viewpoint can take them up and point to them as evidence of consensus. You started well using the talk page for the merge issue, be bold, use it again, this is just what it is for... sbandrews (t) 07:59, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
Ok, Ill try that, its just that not a lot of people visit the talk page, is there any notice that is available to put on the article which alerts people of disscussion on the talk page?
Thanks
--The-G-Unit-Boss 17:34, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
- Good for you, maybe this tag will do - {{disputed}} - or perhaps -
{{ReversionWar|talk page section name}}. sbandrews (t) 20:19, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
Resolved.
ThAtSo's lack of civility has poisoned the discussion at Talk:Atheism intended to improve the article.
On June 9, the day Atheism was the featured article of the day, I pointed out that a citation in the article (dealing with the relationship between religiousity and intelligence) was not a reliable source. Specifically, it was an article from an obscure, non-peer-reviewed magazine by an unknown author. No editor had actually seen the article, but it was mentioned in Richard Dawkins' book The God Delusion, a diatribe against religion. I explained that instead of using this highly dubious source, we should look for objective sources in peer-reviewed literature. I even went on to Google and Google Scholar to find sources we could use.
Thatso reacted acerbically, with the following comments:
- "This correlation doesn't directly tell us the cause. In other words, it doesn't tell us whether religion encourages people to be stupid and ignorant, or religion just makes better marketing headroads among the stupid and ignorant. No matter how you slice it, though, when you put the facts in such blunt terms, feelings are going to be hurt. That's too bad, but a fact's a fact, and we can't hide them just to spare feelings. That's why, in the end, this section isn't going anywhere" (June 10)
- "Thank you ever so much for your statement of faith. Unfortunately, your unsupported assertion carries no weight in the face of the evidence, so I must reject your conclusion. The truth is objective and cannot be changed by your whims, no matter how strongly you wish otherwise. Finally, it's not up to me to prove the link; there are dozens of studies that prove it for me. Any doubt you express now is itself consistent with that link. After all, any 'belief system' that encourages you to reject proven facts isn't going to help you learn." (June 12)
- "This is getting tedious. I'm not making this stuff up, just referencing the meta-study that you are very much aware of and wish to delete all mention of. It's not my fault that there's a correlation, and it's not my responsibility to somehow personally prove what those studies already prove. This isn't about me, it's about you wanting to hide facts that you consider unpleasant, which just isn't going to happen." (June 13)
- "Please, if you were interested in an objective perspective rooted in the evidence, you'd be an atheist and we wouldn't be having this discussion." (June 18)
Thatso's angry responses and attitude violated WP:NPA (no personal attacks), WP:AGF (assume good faith), WP:NPOV (neutral point of view) and Wikipedia:Civility. I explained this to him on his user talk page. But instead of changing his behavior, ThAtSo tried to turn the tables on me with a frivolous complaint.
User:Devraj5000 whose user page says he wants to "promote atheism in the Wikipedia" went on a rant on the talk page about how atheism is good and religion is bad, so there should be no criticism of atheism in the article. He did this after I had explained WP:NPOV on his user talk page. So I pointed out on Talk:Atheism that he was violating NPOV and should refrain from involvement on the page if he could not take a step back from his personal views. ThAtSo stepped in in Devraj5000's defense by attacking me:
- "I may be new to Wikipedia, but I know it's not kosher to try to scare off contributors with personal attacks. Cut it out or I will report you."
I would appreciate if some people can help explain to ThAtSo why his conduct is so potentially detrimental to the project before he forces me to seek arbitration. -- Mwalcoff 06:21, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
- These comments are both provoked and cherry-picked, intentionally taken out of context so as to mislead. Their context is the discussion page of the article on atheism, where Mwalcoff is bullying atheists by encouraging them not to edit the article. His motivation is that he is a theist who would like to insert a large number of uncited apogetic arguments to bias the article towards his POV, and he needs to remove the people who oppose his changes. I encourage you to go the page and read the whole thing for yourself so you can see what's really going on here. But first, let me show you some of the things he likes to say:
- "If you are too zealous of an atheist to edit this article from an objective perspective, you should not be involved in this article."
- " If you are unable to take a step back from your personal views, you should refrain from editing this article."
- I may be new to Wikipedia, but I know all about bullies in real life and that means I won't back down. ThAtSo 08:54, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment. I've changed the heading of this alert to "Editing dispute at Talk:Atheism" rather than " User:ThAtSo" because it's not reaqlly about his behavior, it's about a disagreement in the content and methods of editing at that article. After reading the long complaint above and then looking at the talk page, I do not see User:ThAtSo writing incivil comments or personal attaks. I do see that both of you are somewhat heated about the topic, and I do suggest that you both take a deep breath and relax a bit before writing your comments. Focus on the content and not on each other.
Regarding the formatting of the report, I should point out that it was not posted according to the instructions for posting alerts, near the top of this page, where it is requested that editors posting alerts not engage in long discussions and descriptions and instead make a concise statement of the problem and provide links to specific examples. I should also point out that it is not appropriate to bring up arbitration at this stage of your discussion, since arbitration is the last step in the dispute resolution process, not the place to start. If you get stuck in the early easy processes, mediation could be an option, but I doubt that will be needed.
I suggest that you invite other editors to offer their comments on the content of the article. That way it can move away being a dispute between just a few people to a wider discussion that can attain consensus. To do that, you could file a Request for Comment at WP:RFC about the article. (To be clear, I am not suggesting an WP:RFC/U which would be for comment about a user - that would not be appropriate in this situation.) You could also invite editors from various Wikiprojects that relate to the topic of the article, such as religion, philosophy, sociology and psychology. Good luck. --Parzival418 Hello 20:20, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
- I disagree with you completely on ThAtSo's behavior. From the beginning of this dispute, ThAtSo's comments have dripped with incivility, personal animosity and refusal to assume good faith on my part. He has even brought that attitude here to this page, in which he accuses me, completely falsely and without evidence, of a sinister motivation. If you go back and read how this dispute unfolded chronologically, including my comments on ThAtSo and Devraj5000's user talk pages, you'll see how I did everything possible to maintain politeness and assume good faith. But my overtures were met with more incivility on ThAtSo's part.
- Note that before coming here, I posted an RFC about the editing dispute. There are two separate issues here: the editing dispute, and ThAtSo's behavior. I can deal with the editing dispute, but ThAtSo's continuing harrassment needs to be stopped.
- I apologize for not reading the instructions more carefully. -- Mwalcoff 22:48, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Thanks for the apology about the instructions. I didn't mean to make a big deal about that.
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- Regarding your comments about User:ThAtSo, I have re-visited Talk:Atheism and read all of his comments plus some of the others. I do see that there is an overall hi level of stress there, between many of the editors on the article, but I just don't see any pattern of harrassment by that one user. I also reviewed your talk page and that of the other two editors you mentioned and I don't see the problem you described. I see that he has stated some strong opinions, but you have done so as well. Some of his comments that you've described as personal attacks, to me just look like disagreements. Maybe some other editors should visit the page and bring their comments - this is just my personal viewpoint.
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- One of the important things to consider is that there is that there are multiple editors on both sides of the dispute and ThAtSo is not any kind of "ringleader". There are some comments by various editors there that one might consider uncivil, and in one case, someone else pointed it out and there was an apology. It's certainly far from consensus, and that's frustrating. But I don't understand why you see the problem as generated by the one user you reported.
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- I recommend that you change your focus and instead of trying to convince a certain person to change their mind, work to find consensus among the editors working on the page. If someone says something uncivil, point it out and ask for it to be withdrawn. If you and the other editors consistently steer the debate away from heated arguments or personal comments and towards referenced facts and reliable sources, it will work out fine. If a user really does have a problem and won't behave according to the community policies, over time that will become more clear and the user will get himself in trouble. So far though, at least to me view, that's not happening in this situation. --Parzival418 Hello 01:58, 19 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Hi Pazival. I'm not out to change ThAtSo's mind. I just wish he would stop being sarcastic, insulting and accusatory. I'll try to ignore him. -- Mwalcoff 02:10, 19 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Sounds like a good plan, I appreciate your willingness to give it a chance. --Parzival418 Hello 05:48, 19 June 2007 (UTC)
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Please visit Request for Comment: List of mind mapping software to help resolve this question (previous debate archived here)
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I've tried multiple times to engage Timeshifter in discussions about proper approaches in handling articles that consist almost entirely of lists of links. Timeshifter's responses have been and continue to be hostile, to the point where I do not want to interact with him at all. I find Timeshifter's behavior counter to many of the policies and guidelines concerning talk space, civility, and consensus-building. I'm looking for approaches other than an RFC/U. See User_talk:Ronz#Timeshifter.27s_behavior Talk:List_of_mind_mapping_software Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Lists#List_of_mind_mapping_software -- Ronz 18:18, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Hello Ronz. Maybe you missed this. Did you see [13] that Timeshifter called us a bunch of page wankers? I guess that's an improvement of sorts. (Requestion 04:58, 9 June 2007 (UTC))
- I did not call you a wanker. I made a joke. --Timeshifter 05:19, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- Hi Ronz. I know how you feel. I've had 2 unpleasant incidents where Timeshifter issued warning templates and threatened to report me to WP:ANI for what most editors consider normal and acceptable editing. I feel that it's highly inappropriate how Timeshifter uses warning templates and ANI threats as a debate
tool weapon. For reference see User_talk:Requestion#List_of_mind_mapping_software. (Requestion 22:06, 7 June 2007 (UTC))
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- Requestion. I replied farther down concerning the admonishments you received from several editors at Wikipedia:External links for your repeated reversions of a guideline page without consensus.--Timeshifter 06:58, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- See also User_talk:Requestion/Archive_1#Wikipedia:External_links for an inappropriate 1RR warning. (Requestion 23:46, 7 June 2007 (UTC))
- Timeshifter threatens to report User:Nposs to the WP:ANI for performing some much needed general and WP:AGF talk page clean up. diff (Requestion 23:52, 7 June 2007 (UTC))
- Actually, you Requestion were repeatedly admonished by several editors at Wikipedia:External Links not to keep reverting the page back to a non-consensus version that you had created. And Nposs was warned not to edit the comments of others. See WP:TALK. --Timeshifter 05:26, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- What does my alleged admonishment have to do with this? Besides, I wasn't the one who got the 24 hour block for 3RR. And before you say it, Bozmo did not make a mistake in issuing it. (Requestion 06:39, 9 June 2007 (UTC))
- The block was reviewed by admins who agreed that it was a mistake. I was unblocked. The admin, BozMo, who initiated the block apologized, "This is annoying for you and I apologise especially since the block is in error (I don't do 3RRs very often, normally just vandalism and spam). Can you now edit? If not email me and I will try to fix it." You left that part out of your above comment. Some would consider that to be deceptive. --Timeshifter 06:53, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- Actually you were trying to WP:GAME the system and did a 5RR. About the unblock; the other admins were wrong but I didn't see the point in pushing the issue. (Requestion 07:09, 9 June 2007 (UTC))
- 3 admins were wrong, and Requestion was right!!! Here are comments from the other 2 admins:
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- I came here via unbloc-review; I can't see why [14] is a revert William M. Connolley 08:38, 18 May 2007 (UTC)
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- I've been looking at this as well and I agree. I see only two reverts, possibly a third, and would support unblocking with a note in the block log to say "false alarm". Sam Blacketer 08:41, 18 May 2007 (UTC)
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- OK, I'm going to Be Bold and do this William M. Connolley 09:23, 18 May 2007 (UTC) [end of admin comments]. --Timeshifter 07:22, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Hi Ronz. I've noticed that User:Timeshifter frequently violates WP:MULTI. It seems unlikely but I wonder if an admin would issue a block for repeated violations? (Requestion 18:48, 7 June 2007 (UTC))
- Actually, it is your blanking team that frequently posts the same misinterpretations of wikipedia guidelines on multiple list and chart pages. It is interesting how you too wikilawyer and accuse others of what you two are actually doing. I believe that is called "projection."--Timeshifter 18:58, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
- Projection? Did I make you start these [15] [16] duplicate threads? Or did I make you do these [17] [18] [19] [20] dups? (Requestion 07:22, 9 June 2007 (UTC))
- You also have been repetitious in the many list and chart talk pages you have parachuted into. To avoid future repetition I put guideline and policy links and quotes at the top of my user page: User:Timeshifter. They concern lists and charts. Quoting wikipedia guideline and policy pages in detail is a good thing, Requestion. As opposed to your misinterpretations of them. --Timeshifter 07:30, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- Could you please provide some diffs for these alleged repetitious copy and paste dups I've made? (Requestion 07:35, 9 June 2007 (UTC))
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- Please don't post any further debate here, this alert is closed. To continue this discussion, please move to one of your talk pages or the article's talk page. Thanks and best wishes. --Parzival418 Hello 08:01, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Hi Ronz. I have to agree with you that User:Timeshifter's behavior is incredibly rude, uncivil, hostile, and disruptive. I feel that it's practically impossible to build any sort of consensus when Timeshift is involved. I apologize in advance for this improperly bumped and indented threaded message. (Requestion 18:39, 7 June 2007 (UTC))
- Actually, you two are in the minority at Talk:List of mind mapping software. Timeshifter (me), Belorud, Quiddity, Argey, and Parzival418 have spoken out against removing/blanking source links from the article. So it looks like parachuting into an article with a group blanking team is not that popular.--Timeshifter 18:42, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
- Minority? Actually there were quite a bit more than just two of us. What do you mean by spoken out? User:Belorud was a single edit SPA. They don't speak out much. (Requestion 06:59, 9 June 2007 (UTC))
- Quite a bit more? I count 4. You are still in the minority. Argey and Belorud were very clear in opposing the blanking of the source links. On May 28, 2007 Belorud wrote: "Defining all external links in Wikipedia 'evil' doesn't make sense to me, especially for a list of software, where actually the links are an important part of information. I'm actually shocked about this behavior of destroying a valuable article by arbitrarily deleting links. I would call this vandalism. As suggested, I had a look at the Wikipedia_talk:External_links discussion, too. Found very different opinions there, but definitely no license to arbitrarily destroy articles." --Timeshifter 07:16, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- Do you know what a single edit SPA is? (Requestion 07:30, 9 June 2007 (UTC))
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- It is interesting that you link to your own talk page where you censored a reply of mine to YOUR request for discussion, and called my reply "harassment". Here is a direct link to that section before you censored it a second time:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Ronz&oldid=136542002#Timeshifter.27s_behavior
- Very curious. But anyway, I have little desire to duplicate discussion on user talk pages that would be better done on article talk pages where others can participate without censorship. I believe I have answered all questions put to me. If not, let me know. --Timeshifter 16:44, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
- Can someone please explain to Timeshifter that bumping and pushing other comments out of the way, like was done above, is incorrect threaded discussion and poor WP:TALK etiquette. I've lost count how many times I've seen Timeshifter do this. (Requestion 17:40, 7 June 2007 (UTC))
- We have discussed this before. I have many years of experience with message boards and email lists. I moderate some. There is nothing wrong with using adequate indentation to make a reply right after the person one is replying to. Especially when the list of other comments is so long that to do otherwise would cause confusion as to who one is replying to. The 2 pages you link to say nothing against what I am doing. Please try to read what you link to. Please stop the gamesmanship. --Timeshifter 17:50, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
- No message board or email list allows you to push, bump, indent, and insert comments like that. Slashdot and Usenet do not allow this. Please show me an example that does. (Requestion 18:05, 7 June 2007 (UTC))
- You obviously have not seen the message boards, wikipedia talk pages, and other wiki talk pages that I have seen then. Or you did not notice what I have noticed. It is common to indent as needed to establish threading. As I have said elsewhere it is not a plot to move ahead, push, bump, etc.. I suggest you read up on the non-medical uses of the word "paranoia." --Timeshifter 18:28, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
- Please note that on WP:TALK, threaded replies are mentioned as an acceptable format. Here is the quote: Thread your post: Use indentation to clearly indicate who you are replying to, as with usual threaded discussions. Normally colons are used, not bullet points (although the latter are commonly used at AfD, CfD, etc., it does makes threading harder). --Parzival418 Hello 19:36, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
- I've reviewed the pages linked above and added a comment at Talk:List_of_mind_mapping_software#Footnoted versus embedded citations.
I do not see examples of hostile behavior by User:Timeshifter. He has made some assertive statements about his understanding of the Wikiguides but I see no personal attacks, disruptive editing, or incivility in his comments. My impression is that Timeshifter is editing according to WP policies in good faith. If you have specific examples of incivil comments from him, you are welcome to provide diffs to make that clear. Unless you have those examples though, I don't see what else we can do here. [I am striking out my initial comments now that I have additional information. I have added a further comment below. --Parzival418 Hello 03:53, 8 June 2007 (UTC)]
- Regarding your comment that you are considering an RFC/U, it's your choice of course, but keep in mind that formal procedures like that are difficult and time consuming. If you are considering that you should read the instruction page first in detail and think about how much work it will take for you to structure your case. Every step of the procedure has to be done just right or you won't make any progress, and even if you do manage to structure the case perfectly, the outcome is not a sure thing. I recommend you put that off and try to resolve your differences without requesting administrative intervention unless the problems heat up a lot more than they have so far. Here are a few pages with some good ideas that could be useful: Wikipedia:Truce, Wikipedia:Resolving disputes, and Wikipedia:Staying cool when the editing gets hot. Best Wishes! --Parzival418 Hello 07:24, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
- Sorry you feel that way. He assumes bad faith and accuses everyone that doesn't agree with him of being a vandal. He even suggests that there is a conspiracy of vandals working together. This is far beyond anything appropriate per WP:TALK, WP:CIVIL, and WP:CON. While he's avoiding WP:NPA by the letter, he's missing the whole purpose of it. Thanks for looking into the matter though. I'm going to continue to avoid and direct contact with him, and minimize what he is fed by me. -- Ronz 15:51, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
(Unindent) I have never used the word "vandal" in reference to you. I used the words "blanking" and "group blanking". I stand by those words. To see the context, people can see: Talk:List of mind mapping software#Group blanking. And here is some related guideline and policy info below. Emphasis added to quotes below. Quote from Wikipedia:External links#What should be linked guideline:
- What should be linked. Articles about any organization, person, web site, or other entity should link to the official site if any.
Quote below from Wikipedia:Vandalism#Types of vandalism policy:
- Blanking
- Removing all or significant parts of pages, or replacing entire established pages with one's own version without first gaining consensus. Sometimes important verifiable references are deleted with no valid reason(s) given in the summary. However, significant content removals are usually not considered to be vandalism where the reason for the removal of the content is readily apparent by examination of the content itself, or where a non-frivolous explanation for the removal of apparently legitimate content is provided, linked to, or referenced in an edit summary. An example of blanking edits that could be legitimate would be edits that blank all or part of a biography of a living person. Wikipedia is especially concerned about providing accurate and non-biased information on the living, and this may be an effort to remove inaccurate or biased material. Due to the possibility of unexplained good-faith content removal, {{uw-test1}} or {{uw-delete1}}, as appropriate, should normally be used as initial warnings for ordinary content removals not involving any circumstances that would merit stronger warnings.
--Timeshifter 16:10, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
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- I am not surprised to find out about User:Timeshifter's violations. This is pretty much consistent with my experiences with this user. It seems wherever he appears, he turns WP into a battleground. ←Humus sapiens ну? 00:14, 8 June 2007 (UTC)
- The admin Humus sapiens has been mentioned many times in WP:ANI discussions by many editors for his numerous violations of wikipedia guidelines and policies. One of his recent violations was his repeated attempts to rename al-Aqsa Intifada without talk page consensus. The page was protected for a long time to stop his repeated renaming attempt. The dispute was taken to Wikipedia:Mediation Cabal/Cases/2007-05-20 Al-Aqsa Intifada. I am a member of Wikipedia:WikiProject Arab-Israeli conflict, Wikipedia:WikiProject Israel, Wikipedia:WikiProject Palestine, Wikipedia:WikiProject Countering systemic bias, and Wikipedia:WikiProject Countering systemic bias/Global perspective. That is why I know of the frequent problems people have with the edits of Humus sapiens. --Timeshifter 05:41, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- I don't know if this was an accident but you added some question marks [21] to User:Humus sapiens' comment. (Requestion 05:52, 9 June 2007 (UTC))
- I fixed it. There was an edit conflict at one point. It looks like some special characters got screwed up somehow. There is still one question mark in the user name, but it was not added in the diff you provided. --Timeshifter 06:11, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
(undent) After seeing more of the activity, I see that I was mistaken in my initial response and that Timeshifter has exhibited some incivil behavior towards the other editors on that article; I have re-edited my initial comment to strike-out that portion. An example of the incivility is at this diff. Towards the end of both paragraphs of that post, his characterizations of the other editors violate WP:CIVIL. Even if the point he is making is true (I don't know if it is or not), there are better ways to make a point without turning it into an insult. I do stand by my earlier comment that an RFC/U is not needed in this situation. The incivility is unpleasant but is not causing the edit dispute at the article which is based on valid differences about how to present the information.
As it happens, I agree with Timeshifter's position in the edit dispute at the article regarding keeping the links under discussion. And I see that while a group of editors there are claiming consensus, there may in fact not yet be consensus, making that a contentious claim. However, after viewing the conversation for a while, I must concur with the original poster of this alert, and some of the editors who added comments later, that Timeshifter would be well served by taking a more polite and respectful approach in his dealings with other editors. I also believe that if he does this, he will attain better results in creating the consensus he seeks in this article or any other. --Parzival418 Hello 03:53, 8 June 2007 (UTC)
- In my opinion the only uncivil thing I said was the word "fanatic" in describing this group. I apologize. If you check their comments across many list and chart talk pages you will find much worse. They have frequently called many sincere editors names such as "linkspammers", "spammers", "linkfarmers", and worse. They rarely assume good faith when they parachute into a page, and make these accusations. They rarely apologize. Note that the person who started this Wikiquette alert, Ronz, used deception here in describing my comment on his talk page as harassment. Ronz also used deception here when he said I called him a vandal. I never did. See my comments higher up. This group is far more uncivil than I have ever been. Making unfounded, deceptive accusations is considered a personal attack, I believe. Please see WP:NPA. --Timeshifter 06:13, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Timeshifter, I appreciate your willingness to acknowledge your lapse at the one diff and apologize about it. That's something that might seem small but is surprisingly rare. I did not mean in my comment above to give the impression that I was passing judgment or that you are causing problems in general. I tried to make that clear by stating an RFC/U is not needed and that your style of communicating is NOT the cause of the edit dispute, which is actually a valid debate about how the content in the article (ie, the links) fits into the Wikipedia polices and guides.
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- You might have a valid point about the behavior of the group of editors you described, but mostly what I've seen is tempers are running somewhat high, and a lot of wikilawyering all around, rather than outright personal attacks or serious insults. The comment you mentioned about harrassment is a question of perspective and has to be seen in the context of all your mutual communications. I've looked at a lot of it already, and I don't have time to continue further, but while I agree your post was not harrassment, I can see how someone might feel that way about it if they were on the receiving end. Regarding Ronz referring to you calling him a "vandal" - I do see that you did not use that term, but you did use the term "blanking." Your reference to the definition of that word was helpful in showing you did not mean it as vandallism, but in general use of the word blanking (especially in edit summaries) has the connotation of vandalism. So while your use of the term may have been appropriate, again, the person on the receiving end of the comment might feel as if he had been called a vandal even if that was not your intention.
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- There is a lot going on here and the editors involved are all knowledgeable on the policies and procedures. I don't believe any of the back and forth discussion about each other's actions or ways of communication will produce any positive results. Everyone involved with this should take a deep breath and step back from the brink. Invite more editors to come to the article to help with consensus, as we started to do with the RFC. When you have more editors, it will be easier to avoid interpersonal contention. If the RFC doesn't bring enough help, then you could also try posting a request for more editors to visit at other forums, such as Editor Assistance or the Village Pump, or you could request some form of mediation, formal or informal as linked in the dispute resolution infobox. You could also just not worry about this article for a while, just let it be - with the cold link references compromise - and move on to articles that don't involve these particular editors. After a while you can revisit the article after things have cooled down or other editors have joined.
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- It seems this alert is pretty much stuck at this point. It's not approaching resolution, and it's too much detail for this page. I suggest that when continuing the debate on the article talk page, all involved editors do everything they can to avoid discussing each others' behaviors and focus only on the article content itself in context of the Wikiguides.
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- Best wishes for a harmonious resolution of your differences and for a good consensus or at least compromise on the article. --Parzival418 Hello 07:17, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- One of the places Ronz initially linked to in his first comment initiating this Wikiquette alert discussion was Talk:List_of_mind_mapping_software. Just so other readers know the gist of the dispute, I suggest they look at the version of the article with clickable, footnoted references that people are referring to. It is at this revision:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_mind_mapping_software&oldid=136992148
- There is a request for comment at:
- Talk:List of mind mapping software#Request for Comment: List of mind mapping software --Timeshifter 07:09, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
This Wikiquette alert is closed.
Interested editors, please visit this link to enter your comments:
Talk:List of mind mapping software#Request for Comment: List of mind mapping software
Thanks... --Parzival418 Hello 07:20, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
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Resolved.
Edit war with User:XGustaX for removing cited material Muntuwandi 05:06, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
- Notice. User:XGustaX deleted the above report from this page as of 22:47, 19 June 2007 with the edit summary "(debate is over)". The alert text has been restored because content entered on this page is for community involvement and should not be removed except in unusual circumstances, with justification. When an alert is resolved, it can be noted here for the record, but not deleted. I have not reviewed the specifics of this alert, but it should be noted that removal of the alert by
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