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Debating "Deletionism" At Wikipedia

Posted by timothy on Sun Sep 21, 2008 08:38 PM
from the edit-this-story-one-comment-at-a-time dept.
Ian Lamont writes "In a strange turn of events, the Wikipedia entry for Deletionpedia — an online archive of deleted Wikipedia articles — is now being considered for deletion. The entry for Deletionpedia was created shortly after the publication of an Industry Standard article and a discussion on Slashdot this week. Almost immediately, it was nominated for deletion, which has sparked a running debate about the importance of the Wikipedia entry, Deletionpedia, and the sources that reference it. For the time being, you can read the current version of the Deletionpedia entry, while the Wikipedia editors carry on the debate."
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[+] Technology: Saving Geek Lore and Other Wikipedia Castoffs 281 comments
Ian Lamont notes an Industry Standard feature on Deletionpedia — a collection of 63,559 deleted Wikipedia pages that range from "vanity entries" or obscure points of reference to heavily edited topics that Wikipedia editors eventually deemed fan fiction, inadequately sourced, or otherwise lacking. Looking through the collection of removed articles, it's apparent that entertaining minutiae are often the target of Wikipedia editors: "Geek lore seems to be a particular target for deletion, with the deleted page of the month a comprehensive guide to 'Weapons of the Imperium (Warhammer 40,000)'. Deletionpedia provides links back to the Wikipedia deletion discussions, which are a lesson in magnification of minutiae; the Warhammer page was removed due to philosophical disagreements over what can be considered credible source material, while a page listing every chalkboard gag in The Simpsons opening credits spent 691 days on the site before being deleted as 'fancruft.'" Note that while Deletionpedia uses MediaWiki, it doesn't have wiki functionality — readers can't alter or update archived entries.
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  • Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)

    by freyyr890 (1019088) on Sunday September 21 2008, @08:40PM (#25098779) Homepage
    So that's like... meta-deletion?
    • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by omeomi (675045) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:09PM (#25098997) Homepage
      I've said it before, and I'll say it again. There are too many deletion-happy admins at Wikipedia speedy deleting way too many pages that people have put a lot of effort into. And the deletion review process is a crock. The people who regularly check in on deletion review pages are the same people who delete as many pages as they can, so they will almost always vote for a page to stay deleted. Anybody else who speaks up in support of a page will get ignored because they're not one of the group, and if they're not an active Wikipedia member, they'll get labeled a sock-puppet, whether or not there's any evidence whatsoever that they are not a real person. And in my experience, the admins consider online-sources to be non-notable, and print sources to be too difficult to track down, so it's a catch-22. It makes creating pages on Wikipedia far more effort than it's worth.
      • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Teancum (67324) <robert_horning&netzero,net> on Sunday September 21 2008, @10:05PM (#25099367) Homepage Journal

        There seems to be a group of folks who like to "purify" a community website, and to be honest I don't even know what makes these kind of folks tick.

        I tend to be an inclusionist/separatist in my attitude toward wiki projects and content. By this I mean that content ought to be given time to develop, even if it seems crazy and off the wall. By being a separatist, I think the mergist viewpoint is full of logical errors and that most calls to merge two articles together are mainly a variant of deletionists who think that such petty articles about obscure topics need to go... but with the "good vibes" that somehow the topic will be covered in some huge all-encompassing article.

        There are some things that do need to go on occasion, but I've also seen some of the most creative applications of Wiki technology get developed when somebody pushes the edge of a project and develops something way out of bounds. Indeed some of these extreme projects have become out right independent Wikimedia projects of their own, including things like Wikibooks, Wikinews, and even Wiktionary that all had their origins on Wikipedia until some deletionist decided to kick them off.

        This phenomena unfortunately isn't even limited to Wikipedia and the WMF sister projects either, but is widespread in nearly any wiki project I've been involved with. Indeed, I've found that the relatively flat peer-editing model of Wikipedia tends to keep the worst of these issues in check as opposed to much worse sorts of community editing models like the Open Directory Project.

      • by Rutefoot (1338385) on Sunday September 21 2008, @10:07PM (#25099387)
        A couple years ago a wiki page was created about a friend of mine who ran a website, in addition to a wiki page about the website itself. It appeared to have been made by some fan who never made themselves known.

        It wasn't long of course before these deletion-happy admins nominated it for speedy deletion. The decision was proving to be unanimous. And, I for one didn't blame them. A wiki page for an administrator of a website seemed rather silly.

        My friend agreed. He didn't feel that he really should be on the site and decided to go to the deletion page and weigh in on the issue. He told the wiki admins who he was and that he wanted the page deleted thinking this would solidify the consensus that had for the most part already been reached. I think the quote was something along the lines of "I don't want to be on your gay-ass site, so I'd appreciate it if you just hurried up and deleted it before I leave you all with a fist-sized, mushroom-shaped bruise on all of your faces."

        Not surprisingly, all of the admins had a change of heart and all decided they wanted to keep the page.
        • by ymgve (457563) on Monday September 22 2008, @12:56AM (#25100313) Homepage


          "A couple years ago a wiki page was created about a friend of mine who ran a website, in addition to a wiki page about the website itself. It appeared to have been made by some fan who never made themselves known.

          It wasn't long of course before these deletion-happy admins nominated it for speedy deletion. The decision was proving to be unanimous. And, I for one didn't blame them. A wiki page for an administrator of a website seemed rather silly.

          My friend agreed. He didn't feel that he really should be on the site and decided to go to the deletion page and weigh in on the issue. He told the wiki admins who he was and that he wanted the page deleted thinking this would solidify the consensus that had for the most part already been reached. I think the quote was something along the lines of "I don't want to be on your gay-ass site, so I'd appreciate it if you just hurried up and deleted it before I leave you all with a fist-sized, mushroom-shaped bruise on all of your faces."

          Not surprisingly, all of the admins had a change of heart and all decided they wanted to keep the page."

          [citation needed]

        • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:37PM (#25099201)

          If you saw some of the absolute crap that comes in as new articles on an hourly basis, you would quickly see the merit of deleting at least a few things. I've lost count of how many articles about garage bands that formed a month ago, childish "_____ is the coolest person ever!!!", vanity articles, and loony diatribes that I've marked for speedy deletion.

          • "garage bands" (Score:5, Insightful)

            by globaljustin (574257) <jeffersonhuxley@@@gmail...com> on Monday September 22 2008, @12:05AM (#25100077)

            Leave those new band wikipedia entries alone.

            I'm a music writer, and I'm also section editor of an online music/movie reivew website. The section I edit is the "new artist" section (we call it FIND).

            My job is to find all the information I can about new bands. Here's the problem:

            1. often press releases are insufficient or leave out pertinent, possibly negative information (understandable, that's what p.r. people are for)

            2. band websites are often run by labels. labels don't give each artist the same ammount of attention, and often really good bands fall through the cracks because of it. many 'official' band websites are 'under construction' for years

            3. myspace is unreliable...it's good to hear some tracks and keep up with show dates but like press release, sometimes important info that a journalist needs to know is left out

            wikipedia is an invaluable starting point for the research I do...save the 'indie' band entries!

        • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by sailingmishap (1236532) on Sunday September 21 2008, @10:10PM (#25099403)

          Deleting ANYTHING from wikipedia is stupid. If something is PROVEN to be inaccurate, then that's another story.

          Prove it's true. Otherwise it gets deleted. That's not deletionism, that's not fanaticism, it's intellectual honesty. If it's good enough for the last two centuries of scientific and historical academia, it's good enough for me. I don't want an article on how the Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe just because no one can prove it's not true.

          • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Jane_Dozey (759010) on Sunday September 21 2008, @10:27PM (#25099521)

            I've written a couple of articles about places of interest in a notable city in England. They've been deleted each time as the "moderators" don't know the city and think the places are of little note. Talk to the residents and visitors though and it's a different story. While there are submissions worthy of deletion it should *not* be up to the elite, and quite often uninformed, few to judge this.

        • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21 2008, @10:02PM (#25099357)

          Notable to you no. Notable to someone who lives in the town, yes. Wikipedia isn't to be judged by how it relates to your own small world. If it is irrelevant to you then leave well alone, rather than trying to force others to conform to your own standards.

          If the size of Wikipedia reduces it usefulness to you then the problem is that the search engine you are using is broken. Don't fix a broken search engine by slashing and burning the target of the search until it fits within the engine's limitations. Fix the search algorithm instead.

          • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Nazlfrag (1035012) on Monday September 22 2008, @01:38AM (#25100487) Journal

            I think he agrees with you, in that the notability guidelines are next to useless. If a perfectly useful and valid in all other respects page can be made, who cares if it is notable at all? One could argue that anything meeting the requirements for a source is notable, as the source proves someone somewhere finds it a topic worthy of being notable.

        • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)

          by infonography (566403) on Monday September 22 2008, @12:11AM (#25100101) Homepage

          The neutrality [slashdot.org] of this section is disputed.

          Please see the discussion on the talk page [slashdot.org].

          Please do not remove this message until the dispute is resolved. [slashdot.org]

        • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)

          by philspear (1142299) on Monday September 22 2008, @12:30AM (#25100177)

          After that ridiculous incident, I stopped relying on Wikipedia for anything substantive. Its accuracy can not be assured due to the bureaucratic toolboxes that moderate the site.

          We really do need that perfectly moderated and unbiased information website which provides you with the complete truth and is never wrong. I hear the Chinese government is working on one, but in the meantime there's this news channel called Fox which is fair and balanced. I mean, that's their catchphrase, so you know it's true!

          • Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 22 2008, @02:35AM (#25100739)
            Garbage.

            Article history and talk page history are oddly prone to being reset. Particularly by petty admins. Or, let's be honest, moderators.

            >Also, there are no "mods" on Wikipedia. There are Administrators, but they don't moderate content except in very unusual circumstances
            Read it. Then think about what you just wrote. You know, there is a reason why GP got a +5 and you rate at most a +3.

  • by DirtySouthAfrican (984664) on Sunday September 21 2008, @08:42PM (#25098787) Homepage
    The politically correct term is "Intelligent Unpublishing".
        • Re:Deletionism? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Nazlfrag (1035012) on Monday September 22 2008, @01:45AM (#25100521) Journal

          You're not taking that analogy literally enough. Think of the point behind book burnings - to destroy and censor information deemed unfit to be in print or published. Deleting web pages fits this perfectly.

  • Easy. (Score:5, Informative)

    by Chairboy (88841) on Sunday September 21 2008, @08:43PM (#25098795) Homepage

    Is the website notable? Has the mainstream media reported on it? Does it meet the requirements listed in WP:WEB, the guideline for website notability?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Notability_(web) [wikipedia.org]

    This should be all anyone needs to know to !vote on the issue. There is no 'special pass' for things that have been on Slashdot, or are about Wikipedia.

    • Easy...to game (Score:5, Interesting)

      by smitty_one_each (243267) * on Sunday September 21 2008, @08:46PM (#25098821) Homepage Journal
      So you're saying that all you have to do is pass some 'notability' threshold, or buy the necessary media coverage (don't bore me with claims of journalistic integrity), and you're done?
      Great. We all know what kind of site Wikipedia has evolved into, we just haven't settled on the price.
        • Nope. (Score:5, Insightful)

          by ubernostrum (219442) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:01PM (#25098927) Homepage

          Wikipedia's notability guideline (note it's not actually an official policy) has all sorts of loopholes built in to it to allow a clique of editors to kill something they don't like. In this case, they would argue that Deletionpedia was not really notable in and of itself, but was only notable because of some notable incident which might be worthy of having a separate article (but that article would likely never be written, or would itself be deleted on some other grounds).

            • Re:Nope. (Score:5, Insightful)

              by lysergic.acid (845423) on Sunday September 21 2008, @10:26PM (#25099511) Homepage

              i actually find all this scorn for Wikipedia and its mods/admins quite amusing.

              there are lots of accusations of personal biases, clique-mentality, elitism, and other very human traits. but i wonder if those making these complaints ever bothered to ask themselves whether these problems are endemic to the Wikipedia community or if they're problems which are inherent with any editorial process and that it's only because of Wikipedia's community-driven nature that these problems of objectivity are actually exposed and open to public scrutiny & debate.

              i guess with any kind of progressive movement there will be rearguard reactions to oppose it. however, in this case i think that the complaints being leveled are actually quite valid. it's just that Wikipedia is being unfairly singled out simply because of its open/collaborative nature.

              if you only have 20-30 person conventional editorial staff these problems would be a non-issue simply because the people who disagree with the company's official editorial opinion would simply be fired or probably just would not have been hired in the first place. all of the editorial politics are handled behind closed doors and any issues would be solved by a simple executive decision from the chief editor.

              but once you involve the public in the editorial process then you're opening it to infinitely many viewpoints and a greater diversity of opinions. this invites open discussion and eliminates the risk of corporate politics influencing editorial decisions. but the same virtues that make Wikipedia a great alternative to the largely consolidated mainstream media also give rise to controversy as its open nature is more likely to draw public criticism.

              the more people that take part in a debate, the more disagreements will arise, and the harder it will be to satisfy everyone involved. but i don't see this as a flaw with collaborative publishing. it reveals an often missed (or concealed) dimension to print publishing, particularly that of reference works.

              • Re:Nope. (Score:5, Insightful)

                by Eskarel (565631) on Monday September 22 2008, @01:31AM (#25100455)
                There is an aspect of humanity to Wikipedia's problems.

                It's also true that that sort of thing is present in all editorial processes.

                My biggest complaint with Wikipedia(aside from the fact that there seems to be no official method of discouraging the worst of this behavior) is really that there seems to be a core group of Wikipedians who have a vision for what they think Wikipedia ought to be, and that this vision is completely at odds with what people actually use Wikipedia for.

                Wikipedia is never going to be an on-line version of Britannica. This is mostly because the world doesn't need an on-line version of Britannica, and that if it did, Britannica would be perfectly capable of doing it themselves.

                What the world needs is a place where you can look up all the stuff that doesn't get into encyclopaedia's. A lot of this stuff is trivial and non-notable, and of course there's some issues with reliability and truth, but that's what the citation system is for.

                Wikipedia can be that place where you can find out all the alternate points of view, look at what they use as citations(if anything) and judge them. It can do this because realistically it doesn't cost them anything to host information no one looks at and any information people are interested in is fundamentally notable by the very definition of the word.

                Wikipedia can, and should, host pages on pretty much everything that can't be proven false. Anything that also can't be proven true, should be marked as such, but there is no harm, and possible a lot of good in it being there.

                Certainly some things ought to be deleted, or at least sidelined, but that should mostly be about crap writing as opposed to something not being important. If someone sends something in which is totally unreadable, and no one is sufficiently interested in updating it, by all means delete it, but if someone puts together a well written, well thought out article about something that you think doesn't matter, let it lie.

        • by Geoffrey.landis (926948) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:27PM (#25099135) Homepage

          Don't even have to buy it. From doing a Google News search, it looks to me like the controversy over deleting the Deletionpedia entry is going to make it notable even if it didn't start out that way.

          In fact, the fact that the controversy over deleting the deletionpedia page is itself notable makes me very tempted to write a Wikipedia article "Deletionpedia Deletion Controversy"...

          On the other hand, I guess that might be pushing it a little too far, though.

          • by Nazlfrag (1035012) on Monday September 22 2008, @01:56AM (#25100573) Journal

            This just in: New Wikipedia 'Deletionpedia Deletion Contorversy' deletion controversy erupts as the Wikipedia Deletionpedia Deletion description is nominated for deletion. Delegates describe dangerous double dealings during dastardly deceptive deletions.

  • Paradox! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by JackassJedi (1263412) on Sunday September 21 2008, @08:46PM (#25098819)
    But what if an article should ever be deleted from Deletionpedia?

    I sense the LHC is becoming redundant here!
  • by syousef (465911) on Sunday September 21 2008, @08:47PM (#25098833) Journal

    I really love Wikipedia and I sure hope I'm wrong, but I think we've seen Wikipedia at it's peek. As with many ventures that become successful they move from innovation to stability and with that become widely popular which creates new pressures and brings in other interests, and then in turn leads to the degradation of the service as people squabble about how things should be done. I've seen this with special interest groups and clubs of all kinds. It can be particularly difficult to counter. An organisation either survives these things and becomes stronger for the learning the members have done, or else it succumbs to the storm of shite and fades into insignificance.

    • entropy (Score:5, Insightful)

      by bcrowell (177657) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:53PM (#25099301) Homepage

      I agree with you 100% that Wikipedia has peaked. The quality of most articles is dropping over time, because anybody halfway sane doesn't want to pore autistically over a watchlist of cherished articles to make sure they don't succumb to entropy.

      On the other hand, that doesn't mean that every dispute on WP is pointless, or that either side could be right on every issue. One bogus argument that's always posed by people who don't want their articles deleted is that it's not a paper encyclopedia, so there's no reason to keep the whole thing under a certain page count. Well, suppose Fred creates an article on his high school band, Fredsband, which only actually consisted of himself and his golden retriever. Every single time a user searches for "golden retriever," one of the hits is going to be the article on Fredsband. Also, when you have an article that's non-notable, it tends not to be linked to any other articles, and you get these little disjoint subsets of WP that are unhealthy. They can become havens for crackpots, or honeypots for spam links.

          • Re:entropy (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Tangent128 (1112197) on Sunday September 21 2008, @11:37PM (#25099913)
            The existence of, members of, and list of songs by Fred's garage band are all facts, yet you won't see them in the Britannica, as most people wouldn't consider them worth looking at.

            But! Say the council of Anytown decides to compile a local encyclopedia. Fred may well make it in, being of local interest.

            For both the Britannica and the Anytown-pedia, space was a limiting issue. What made Wikipedia so promising was the idea that it didn't have such space limitations- you could include articles on anything. Sadly, they seem to have decided that some objective standard of notability exists, and define it rather narrowly at that.
    • by wiredlogic (135348) on Sunday September 21 2008, @10:40PM (#25099607)

      In fact, the English Wikipedia does appear to be just past it's growth peak [wikipedia.org] right now.

  • by Morgaine (4316) on Sunday September 21 2008, @08:51PM (#25098859)

    Shortly thereafter, the Industry Standard again turned its attention to Deletionpedia, reporting that deletion of the article in Wikipedia about Deletionpedia was itself under discussion, suggesting that the article was not being considered for deletion based on "insignificance of the site" but rather "due to perceived criticism of Wikipedia itself."

    If the highlighted phrase is true, then it indicates that the high priests at Wikipedia are totally beyond control and beyond the pale.

    There is no more important function in a community encyclopedia than self-criticism. It is part of its foundation, a self-referential examination of its integrity and transparency.

    I am really hoping that that line from TFA is false, and that the discussion about deleting the Deletionpedia page from Wikipedia is unambiguously declared invalid by WP editors.

  • Delete it (Score:5, Funny)

    by russotto (537200) on Sunday September 21 2008, @08:53PM (#25098877) Journal
    It needs to be deleted, just to ensure that it ends up in Deletionpedia.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:11PM (#25099007)

    Make an Includopedia and a Deletepedia. That way everyone is happy.

  • by Kethinov (636034) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:12PM (#25099021) Homepage Journal

    The debate is over. The result of the discussion was keep. See talk page [wikipedia.org].

  • by lazy_nihilist (1220868) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:32PM (#25099175)
    We apologise again for the fault in the deletion. Those articles mentioning the deletion of the articles that have just been deleted, have been deleted.
  • One thing I noticed in the AfD comments that seems like a pretty good idea was to have any Wikipedia articles that get deleted be instead transwikied to Deletionpedia.

    Naturally, that's not as good as not deleting them from Wikipedia in the first place...but it seems to me that at least it solves the problem of the work being lost entirely when the AfD finishes and the article is sent into the aether.

    Dan Aris

  • by pfunes (98907) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:46PM (#25099259)

    The whole debate is caused - IMHO - by having a bad versioning system as the Wikipedia's backend. Deleting and undeleting whole articles should be as transparent and open as deleting and undeleting paragraphs within an article. The history feature provides such transparency. Currently, instead, deleted articles are zapped: inaccesible, unreadable, unrecoverable. Allowing history access (and an option in "advanced search") for deleted articles would make this issue a lot simpler.

  • by Darkness404 (1287218) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:55PM (#25099313)
    There was once a time that Wikipedia was thought up. The professors laughed at the idea, looking down from their leather chairs and fancy bookcases and said that nothing would be accomplished. That nothing would be accurate, that the wisdom of crowds would never produce an encyclopedia. And thus, Wikipedia was born. Built as a modern day Library of Alexandria, it had mottoes of be bold and to ignore all rules. And for a while it thrived, it took the professors by surprise, it became a haven for knowledge, a temple for facts. It grew quickly and spread into almost every written language. And then, the changes started to happen. The moderators who had so loudly proclaimed to ignore all rules had started to become much like the professors that had previously laughed at their attempts. What had started to destroy censorship now was slowly increasing its spread. Moderators turned on users and banned them for the most silly of reasons, users tried to correct errors and were banned for vandalism. And soon it became impossible to tell who were the editors of Wikipedia or who were the bureaucrats running the print encyclopedias.

    I will end this post with a quote from George Orwell's Animal Farm

    Twelve voices were shouting in anger, and they were all alike. No question, now, what had happened to the faces of the pigs. The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21 2008, @11:24PM (#25099845)

    What really gets me about wikipedia is stuff like I Am Rich [wikipedia.org]. Nominated for deletion, the consensus wound up being to keep it. Not to redirect it but to keep it. Then, the nominator, having failed in his attempt to delete it, merges it, despite consensus to the contrary, into App Store [wikipedia.org]. Later, another user comes along and deletes it, saying it's "not important [wikipedia.org]".

    But wait - it gets better! The same guy nominates Heavy Metal (Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles) [wikipedia.org] for deletion and fails in his attempt. So what does he do? Merges every episode, save that one, into List of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles episodes [wikipedia.org]. You see - this user knows he couldn't get consensus by an AfD so he engages in backroom deals to gain support.

    Of course, none of this tops Torchic [wikipedia.org]. A front page featured article with 20 paragraphs and 46 citations now reduced to redirecting to a list of pokemon, with 2-3 paragraphs (depending on whether or not a one sentence paragraph counts) and no citations. Amazing stuff.

  • by Carbon016 (1129067) on Monday September 22 2008, @02:56AM (#25100825)

    10 WHY IS WIKIPEDIA SO INACCURATE
    20 "Well, let me just delete all the unsourced material to leave it with a balanced summ-"
    30 NO STOP DELETING STUFF KEEP IT IN I CANT BELIEVE YOU EVIL DELETIONISTS WANT TO DESTROY ALL MY HARD WORK
    40 GOTO 10

    I was an editor there for a while until I just couldn't deal with the constant rehashing of "these are the rules/guidelines, they are displayed prominently on all relevant pages" on every single AfD, as well as the stupid drama and the infinite patience the community had with clear vandals ("*USER* IS A FAGGOT NIGGER" = "Please do not make test edits outside of the sandbox"). Users whine about having their 5 page manuscript on their cat's behaviors deleted as a ten second destruction of all their hard work but show total disregard for the infinitely more people patrolling New Pages, AfD, PROD, etc's time being wasted. This is mostly because the system has been built up to have multiple levels of redundant band-aid processes. For example, there are three ways to delete an article:

    If it meets certain criteria that apply to a lot of unsuitable pages, you can "speedy delete" it - since you're not supposed to tag anything if it doesn't clearly meet those criteria, deleting the tag itself is an act of vandalism, you're supposed to copy paste a {{hangon}} template and then justify your reasoning on the talk page. This never works: editors misapply the tag repeatedly, users don't bother to read the template or don't have enough time to write out anything detailed because the article will be deleted quickly.

    Then you've got PROD, which is speedy-lite: you tag it, give a short justification, and if the thing isn't "challenged" by the article's creator or anyone else by removing it, it's deleted after a set period. If it is, you're supposed to always take it to AfD, but many people will just give up because nominating something for AfD is a 15 step process which involves collecting rare plants and taking them to seven pillars, then casting a spell and defeating a goblin in hand to hand combat. People don't browse the PROD queue, so the only people that end up taking off the tag are...surprise! The original creator of the article! PROD is essentially just a series of bets that the original creator won't delete the tag and take it to AfD before the time expires, and the admin isn't tired enough from deleting crap all day that they'll agree with the justification.

    And then there's Articles for Deletion, which consists halfway of stuff that should be handled through either of the two above processes (if they worked properly), short vanity articles that end up having one or two "delete" comments and then are closed, or spiral into large debates in which each editor's opinion is supposed to not be a "vote", but if the closing admin rejects a pure tally, always seem to agree with toward the most simplified, spoon-fed argument. As mentioned above, nominating one is a rather tiring and complex set of edits which involves making three separate template changes on three separate pages, putting in a arbitrary "category" that is never useful to anyone, and writing a hopefully detailed summary of why it should go poof at the same time. This is "Web 2.0", right? Why can't I click a box or a dropdown? Is this a modified "security through obscurity" thing where deletionism is purposefully put through so many different steps that nominating a sequence of articles (never try to nominate more than once at a time, the syntax is a nightmare) is discouraged with the time-wasting complexity of it?

    Plenty of this relies on templates and user-mediated process that would be made completely moot overnight if the MediaWiki developers got off their asses and started working on and implementing features that go beyond "flagged revisions" such as tagging articles for deletion via a tab and dropdown menu, then putting "speedy" articles in a queue where one or two other editors give it a check to make sure it's properly tagged and the article goes poof (without an administrator needin

    • by owlnation (858981) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:16PM (#25099049)
      Wikipedia has competition. The problem is pagerank. Google calculates pagerank on the basis of the site, not individual pages. Wikipedia has a ridiculously overinflated page rank -- especially when you consider many individual entries are total crap.

      In most cases there are better quality pages available, however the Wikipedia page will be in the top 10 of search results, no matter how good or bad it is.

      It's Google that needs competition. That will stop monopolies in a number of areas -- not just Wikipedia.
      • by Darkness404 (1287218) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:28PM (#25099151)
        What I think the poster meant was for there to be a site like Wikipedia that was A) A Wiki and B) Had information about all kinds of things, while still being C) Somewhat serious. And there really isn't any other place. Granted, there are a lot of good Wikis for various things, just about every major game has one, and I use LyricWiki (whenever it isn't down) to check for lyrics. But there isn't one good place to get all kinds of information that is freely editable except for Wikipedia. Also, compared to most other sites Wikipedia is fast to load and doesn't have all the ads.
      • Wikipedia has competition. The problem is pagerank. Google calculates pagerank on the basis of the site, not individual pages. Wikipedia has a ridiculously overinflated page rank -- especially when you consider many individual entries are total crap.
         
        In most cases there are better quality pages available, however the Wikipedia page will be in the top 10 of search results, no matter how good or bad it is.

        Amen.
         
        I've said it before and I'll say it again - you couldn't design a site to spam Google better than Wikipedia. Lots of offsite links, rapid updates, constant changes, and highly internally linked via keywords.
         
        Even if, according to Google itself, the page isn't linked to from offsite - it still receives a high PageRank score.

    • Re:Ugh. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Darkness404 (1287218) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:17PM (#25099067)
      The problem with deleting articles on Wikipedia is that as long as it isn't spam it should honestly have a place in Wikipedia. When it comes down to it, a few kilobytes of information even on every single SourceForge project is unlikely to amount to more than a terabyte or two. I'm all for deleting spam but even small 200-500 word articles on something that isn't spam should be kept. And unlike a print encyclopedia where a few more pages could really add up, I doubt that even a terabyte of HD space or a gigabyte of bandwidth more is going to make much of a difference.
    • by MrMista_B (891430) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:27PM (#25099131)

      People like you are why Wikipedia is a failure if what it had intended to be.

      How many people have to find something relevant or useful in order to stop it from being deleted from Wikipedia?

      A hundered? A thousand? A million?

      Nothing like that. Wikipedia is controlled by those what get off on deleting the work of other's, ignoring 'notability' or 'value' or 'usefulness' or 'relevance' entirely. If these few high priests of Wikipedia deem an article, whether it's about Pokemon or CNN, to be something they have a personal bias against, it will be deleted.

      Frankly, it seems like Wikipedia has about as much credibility these days as Fox News.

      So, that might be an interesting question: Given the fact that Wikipedia is controlled by a very few people with a very narrow view of what's notable, and use that to control what information is contained in Wikipedia, regardless of the truth, veracity, or notability of that information, should Wikipedia be regarded as a source of useful information, or as a propaganda machine to be avoided at all costs?

      It's a painful question to have to ask - at one time, I espoused Wikipedia as, well, one of the best examples of the strengths of the internet.

      More and more, however, I'm finding that, given the nature of those in control of Wikipedia... I just don't know anymore.

      • by owlnation (858981) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:39PM (#25099207)

        Frankly, it seems like Wikipedia has about as much credibility these days as Fox News.

        Hmmm, actually Fox News has more credibility.

        The bias on Fox is overt and wholly transparent. The bias on Wikipedia is covert and secretive, though it is of course even more biased and manipulated than Fox.

    • by Darkness404 (1287218) on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:36PM (#25099187)
      The problem with that is, what does that gain Wikipedia? Nothing. It loses facts. Granted, they might be badly written, or some might be poorly-researched, but deletion doesn't gain Wikipedia anything. Granted, deleting obvious spam written like an advertisement gains Wikipedia something, but deleting articles gains Wikipedia nothing

      Ok, I'll admit, it might save them a few kilobytes of bandwidth or a gigabyte of storage, but honestly, bandwidth and storage are dirt cheap these days.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21 2008, @09:39PM (#25099209)

      Well... it's not your statue, remember it.

    • by Bieeanda (961632) on Monday September 22 2008, @12:38AM (#25100209)
      Aside from being laughably pretentious, that's ignoring the fact that there are clear guidelines for making the parts that don't look like encyclopedia entries, into the same.

      You're shirking your responsibility as an editor to actually edit pages, in favor of lazily deleting out of hand. That, right there, is what's wrong with the Wikipedia.