(no title)
lucgagan | 2 years ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draft:Playwright_(software)
It is highly demotivating to try to write a quality article for Wikipedia because someone can just reject your days of work in seconds and then leave it in draft forever.
mmiyer|2 years ago
The current version looks fine. Unfortunately reviewing drafts is a very thankless job (~90% of drafts are worthless) so there are never enough reviewers (speaking as an Wikipedia admin who used to review a lot of drafts). The backlog is definitely not something people are happy about, but it isn't easy to solve.
Also, having your drafts reviewed is actually not required. Once you have made 10 edits you can move the draft to the main article space yourself (or directly create articles). The reason why brand new users can't directly create articles is that whey they used to be able to, a ~third of all new articles ended up being deleted immediately because they were spam/gibberish/vandalism, which ends up both being a lot of work for reviewers, and very discouraging to those new users.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Draft:Playwright_...
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Notability
denton-scratch|2 years ago
[Edit] I wonder if Curb Safe Charmer automated his review using something like this?
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02894-x
andrybak|2 years ago
[deleted]
pradn|2 years ago
I've written dozens of articles starting from a few sentences and slowly expanding it over the course of a few days. I simply make sure the topic is notable enough and that every sentence is cited.
raybb|2 years ago
Generally the hardest and most annoying part about a case like this is wikipedia's desire for reliable sources which generally means newspapers or academic sources. You can have something super well known, around forever, and often mentioned but it can be hard to find sources writing about it directly. For example, I wrote the Wikipedia article for high touch (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-touch) and it was quite annoying to try to find sources. Similarly I wrote one for "smell training" (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smell_training) and the requirements are even higher for anything related to medicine.
Anyway, I'm not gonna say I advise you to do this. But if you're really confident that the article meets the notability guidelines you can also create the article in mainspace (instead of draft). If someone tries to delete it then the guidelines are a little different (vs reviewing drafts) because they have to be sure that there aren't sources to make it notable (not just that you didn't use them). Often times people will actually find sources and add them to the article rather than just complain you don't have good enough ones.
PS: I'm sure someone will come and explain why I'm wrong here but this has generally been my experience.
ghaff|2 years ago
Which is one of the main ironies associated with Wikipedia notability. Something or someone written about in some small-town newspaper or an obscure journal that five people have read can be considered more notable than something with a fairly big online footprint but nothing canonical.
For that matter, there's a ton of pre-web information that just doesn't really much exist outside of primary sources.
raybb|2 years ago
ta988|2 years ago
capitainenemo|2 years ago
What's interesting is this is more a phenomenon on the English wikipedia, so if you're disappointed that a search for information on a FOSS project is turning up nothing on en.wikipedia.org, try just switching en for fr or de (both relatively large) and then using google translate or your browser's built-in translate [firefox] to get the info you need.
Sad. And yeah, I feel deletionists are out of control on english wikipedia.
tivert|2 years ago
It only gets worse. Try getting into a content dispute sometime.
crazygringo|2 years ago
I don't know how Wikipedia works -- is there not a way to submit a smaller/stub page or something, and then once it passes review for notability, then you fill out the rest?
Does Wikipedia expect people to put in days of work before an article gets approved? I hope that's not the case.
laurent_du|2 years ago
qingcharles|2 years ago
I hate when things get mature and enshittify.
swalling|2 years ago
The previous system of doing post-publish review of new articles had an even worse backlog because it let a huge volume of shit into the front door.
The root cause of this is Wikipedia’s huge influence in Google SEO and knowledge graph. As the open web is dying, it’s one of the few reliable ways to dump information straight to the top of Google SERPs. When I write new Wikipedia articles it is often indexed to the first page of results in minutes.
denton-scratch|2 years ago
I don't create articles these days; it's too much like hard work.
You used to be able to create an article by making a redlink wikilink somewhere, and then clicking it - that would take you to an editor. The new article would appear in mainspace. Do you have to "volunteer" to appear in mainspace? Are all new articles deemed to be "draft", and subject to review nowadays? Or are some users allowed to create new articles in mainspace, and others not? If so, what are the criteria?
goostavos|2 years ago
lucgagan|2 years ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Playwright_(software)
Thanks!
unknown|2 years ago
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