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Comment Re:"protecting against misinformation" - Laughable (Score 1) 188

My experience with over a decade of editing on Wikipedia is that obsessive pedantry over minor topic points is the exception rather than the rule. Most such conflicts occur with articles that are frequently subject to edit wars. If you run into something like this, the suggested course of action is to take it to the article talk page for a better explanation. Style Nazis, on the other hand, are rampant. They will battle endlessly over the smallest of variances.

Comment Layers of Complexity (Score 2) 123

Yeah, it seems over time the trend in software technology is to add more and more layers where computing systems can break. As a result they often do. Sure you get more efficiencies out of the tech, but troubleshooting is a lot more difficult. You get a break in a major production system and many dozens of people join in the call, when actually you only need the one or two knowledgeable about the particular layer that broke. Twenty year old technology is often far more reliable.

Comment Featured Article Standard (Score 1) 31

The true quantity for measuring Wikipedia are their Featured Articles, because those are held to a much higher production standard. At present, the English Wikipedia has 5,710 featured articles, or about 0.1% of the total. That being said, independent studies have found Wikipedia articles to be generally reliable. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

Comment Symbols depend on context (Score 1) 495

In Switzerland, giving somebody the V-for-victory symbol is the same as flipping someone the bird in the US. The Norwegians were shocked when they saw Bush waving the symbol for Satan to a crowd; what Texans call "hook 'em horns". Does that make them hate symbols now? No not really. It's not what you say, it's how you say it.

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