On 1/5/06, Peter Mackay <peter.mackay(a)bigpond.com> wrote:
From: wikien-l-bounces(a)Wikipedia.org
[mailto:wikien-l-bounces@Wikipedia.org] On Behalf Of Carbonite
On 1/4/06, Peter Mackay <peter.mackay(a)bigpond.com> wrote:
What
I'm concerned about is the attitude that seems to be taken by
some in this discussion is that userbox users are somehow
less worthy
than other Wikipedians.
Have you taken a look at the article space edits of some of
the loudest defenders of userboxes? Would you like getting
lectured about consensus and Wikipedia policy by someone with
20 article edits? If someone isn't here to actually
contribute to the encyclopedia, then I suppose they would be
less worthy.
That's *some* userboxers, not *all* userboxers, wouldn't you agree?
Of course. Any userbox that focuses on a user's skills (Babel boxes)
or expertise should be encouraged.
As for being lectured by people who don't know what they are talking about,
I usually find this an excuse for a good guffaw, rather than something to
grump about.
They'd be more guffaws if a good portion of these users weren't trying
to burn valuable contributors at the stake.
May I suggest that 20 edits from an unpaid volunteer is 20 edits that we
wouldn't have had otherwise, and that encouraging them to do more might be a
more productive avenue than lambasting them. But then again, you've been
around longer than I have, and who am I to lecture you?
If they only made those 20 edits, then I'd agree, but many are making
10x that many edits complaining about their toys being taken away. My
comment wasn't about having an attitude of "I've been here longer, I
know better!", it's about users who view Wikipedia primarily as a
social club where they occasionally edit an article. In my opinion,
someone who makes a vast majority of their edits to their user space
probably is less worthy than those who actually work to improve the
encyclopedia.
Carbonite