Archive:The Big Speedydelete: Difference between revisions

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imported>Larry Sanger
imported>Larry Sanger
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To mark an article for deletion, simply place <code><nowiki>{{speedydelete|Big Speedydelete|~~~~</nowiki></code> at the ''top line'' of the article (before anything else on the page).  "Big Speedydelete" means that you're marking it for the general reasons we're giving for the Big Speedydelete (see just below).  The <nowiki>~~~~</nowiki> code signs your name and date.  It's as simple as that.
To mark an article for deletion, simply place <code><nowiki>{{speedydelete|Big Speedydelete|~~~~</nowiki></code> at the ''top line'' of the article (before anything else on the page).  "Big Speedydelete" means that you're marking it for the general reasons we're giving for the Big Speedydelete (see just below).  The <nowiki>~~~~</nowiki> code signs your name and date.  It's as simple as that.


But which articles to mark?  Generally, mark [[CZ:Article Deletion Policy#Articles deletable by constables acting on their own recognizance|articles deletable by constables acting on their own recognizance]].  ''See that page for the canonical list of deletable articles.''  This means, generally speaking, that we'll be tagging and/or deleting these articles:
'''But which articles to mark?''' Generally, mark [[CZ:Article Deletion Policy#Articles deletable by constables acting on their own recognizance|articles deletable by constables acting on their own recognizance]].  ''See that page for the canonical list of deletable articles.''  This means, generally speaking, that we'll be tagging and/or deleting these articles:


* Wikipedia-sourced articles that nobody ever really worked on
* '''Wikipedia-sourced articles that nobody ever really worked on'''
* blanked pages
* '''blanked pages'''
* really, really short articles
* '''really, really short articles'''
* pages that are ''really obviously'' worthless (e.g., vandalism)
* '''pages that are ''really obviously'' worthless (e.g., vandalism)'''
* copyright violations
* '''copyright violations'''


'''How can you tell whether an article fits one of these categories?'''
'''How can you tell whether an article fits one of these categories?'''


* Wikipedia-sourced articles that nobody ever really worked on: you'll probably be able to tell just by looking if a page comes from Wikipedia.  If it's well-developed, longish, not marked "CZ Live."  But '''you must check the page history.'''  There's no substitute for doing that.  Compare the first and the most recent entries.  If there have been only one or two edits, which were very minor (e.g., adding or deleting categories), tag it for deletion.  That goes for articles marked "CZ Live" that have had no edits in the past week.  People can re-upload the articles from WP if they want to work on them.
* '''Wikipedia-sourced articles that nobody ever really worked on:''' you'll probably be able to tell just by looking if a page comes from Wikipedia.  If it's well-developed, longish, not marked "CZ Live."  But '''you must check the page history.'''  There's no substitute for doing that.  Compare the first and the most recent entries.  If there have been only one or two edits, which were very minor (e.g., adding or deleting categories), tag it for deletion.  That goes for articles marked "CZ Live" that have had no edits in the past week.  People can re-upload the articles from WP if they want to work on them.
* blanked pages: check the page history just in case the page was somehow inadvertantly blanked
* '''blanked pages:''' check the page history just in case the page was somehow inadvertantly blanked
* really, really short articles: it consists of two sentences or less, or 50 words or less, which have been left on the wiki for more than two hours
* '''really, really short articles:''' it consists of two sentences or less, or 50 words or less, which have been left on the wiki for more than two hours
* pages that are ''really obviously'' worthless (e.g., vandalism): this is a "know it when you see it" kind of thing; it must be something of the sort you can't imagine other good-faith, competent contributors disagreeing about
* '''pages that are ''really obviously'' worthless (e.g., vandalism):''' this is a "know it when you see it" kind of thing; it must be something of the sort you can't imagine other good-faith, competent contributors disagreeing about
* copyright violations: don't bother checking for this now
* '''copyright violations:''' don't bother checking for this now


== How to delete marked articles ==
== How to delete marked articles ==

Revision as of 12:24, 17 February 2007

Why the Big Speedydelete?

When we did the big delete in January, we were left with bunches of articles that were from Wikipedia, tagged for example with Category:Philosophy Workgroup (Top), but otherwise completely untouched. There are also many articles that someone made a tiny spelling correction to back in November, and which have never been touched since. These articles are diluting the database, so they should be deleted--especially since we can always upload the latest Wikipedia version. There is other "cruft," e.g., from vandals, that is cluttering the article database. This also needs to be deleted.

The result will be a cleaned-up and more honest representation of what we've done. Also, if we do a good job with this deletion, we can then remove "CZ Live" tags from our active articles, because all articles that are in our database will be CZ Live!

How to play the game

Basically, we'll have anyone--authors or editors--signing up to tag articles with a {{speedydelete}} template. They'll be able to sign up for individual letters of the alphabet. For example, if I sign up for the "X" articles, I am committing to tagging (or deleting) all the articles tha begin with "X". When tagging work is finished, constables will look at just the articles tagged with the template, briefly confirm that the article is deletable, and delete it.

If any article is inadvertantly and incorrectly deleted, it can be restored. Simply ask a constable to restore it; you can write to constables@citizendium.org.

Sign up sheet

Authors and editors can sign up as "markers" to mark articles as deletable, while constables can sign up as "deleters" to actually do the deletion. If a constable wants to mark and delete at the same time, he/she should sign up in both categories. Your putting your name after a letter means that you take responsibility for all the articles that begin with that letter.
To sign up, simply edit this page and place ~~~ in the appropriate place. You then take responsibility for that whole letter! If you need help, let somebody know--use the talk page.


A
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

B
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

C
Marker: James F. Perry
Constable/deleter:

D
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

E
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

F
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

G
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

H
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

I
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

J
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

K
Marker: Larry Sanger
Constable/deleter: Larry Sanger

L
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

M
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

N
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

O
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

P
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

Q
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

R
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

S
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

T
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

U
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

V
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

W
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

X
Marker: Larry Sanger
Constable/deleter: Larry Sanger

Y
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

Z
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

All other articles, if any
Marker:
Constable/deleter:

How to mark articles for deletion, and which to mark

To mark an article for deletion, simply place {{speedydelete|Big Speedydelete|~~~~ at the top line of the article (before anything else on the page). "Big Speedydelete" means that you're marking it for the general reasons we're giving for the Big Speedydelete (see just below). The ~~~~ code signs your name and date. It's as simple as that.

But which articles to mark? Generally, mark articles deletable by constables acting on their own recognizance. See that page for the canonical list of deletable articles. This means, generally speaking, that we'll be tagging and/or deleting these articles:

  • Wikipedia-sourced articles that nobody ever really worked on
  • blanked pages
  • really, really short articles
  • pages that are really obviously worthless (e.g., vandalism)
  • copyright violations

How can you tell whether an article fits one of these categories?

  • Wikipedia-sourced articles that nobody ever really worked on: you'll probably be able to tell just by looking if a page comes from Wikipedia. If it's well-developed, longish, not marked "CZ Live." But you must check the page history. There's no substitute for doing that. Compare the first and the most recent entries. If there have been only one or two edits, which were very minor (e.g., adding or deleting categories), tag it for deletion. That goes for articles marked "CZ Live" that have had no edits in the past week. People can re-upload the articles from WP if they want to work on them.
  • blanked pages: check the page history just in case the page was somehow inadvertantly blanked
  • really, really short articles: it consists of two sentences or less, or 50 words or less, which have been left on the wiki for more than two hours
  • pages that are really obviously worthless (e.g., vandalism): this is a "know it when you see it" kind of thing; it must be something of the sort you can't imagine other good-faith, competent contributors disagreeing about
  • copyright violations: don't bother checking for this now

How to delete marked articles