User:JWSchmidt/Blog/17 March 2007
This page is part of JWSchmidt's Wikiversity blog Feel free to add comments. |
16 August 2015 - Wiki Studies |
16 April 2011 - Openness |
29 January 2011 - Drama Queens |
13 June 2010 - Bull |
5 April 2010 - Breaches |
22 September - Experts |
27 January - Your Banned |
14 January 2009 - Wikiversity Bans |
14 November - Custodianship |
19 October - Review Part II |
10 October - My vacation |
16 September - Moulton |
15 September - Forking |
7 September - Distorting |
27 August - Wikipedia studies |
1 March 2008 - The real world |
12 January - Fair Use and the GFDL |
2 January 2008 - Wiki Council |
---- start 2008 ---- |
31 December - Participatory Learning |
19 December - Foundation Changes |
1 December - Changing the GFDL? |
13 November - What is Wikiversity? |
10 November - Expert editors (part II) |
14 October 2007 - Vandal Wiki |
20 September - Collaborative video interface |
4 September - Open Source Crusade |
31 August - CheckUser |
4 August - Collaborative videos |
20 July - Options for video-in-wiki |
1 July - Networking Web 2.0 Websites |
7 June 2007 - GFDL violations |
27 May - Wikiversity namespace |
22 May 2007 - Wikiversity tagline |
20 May - The newbie game |
16 May - Tangled Hierarchies |
12 May - Navigation boxes |
11 May 2007 - Forced editing |
9 May - Wikipedia Learning |
6 May - Music collaborations |
25 Mar - Reliable Sources |
17 Mar - Version flagging |
11 Mar - Research policy discussion |
10 Mar 2007 - Credentials |
3 Mar - Free media files |
28 Feb - Delete or develop? |
27 Feb 2007 - Main Page |
25 Feb - Science and Protoscience |
23 Feb - Complementing Wikipedia |
21 Feb - Copyleft media files |
19 Feb - Gratis versus Libre |
18 Feb 2007 - Referees |
16 Feb - MediaWiki interface |
15 Feb - Content development projects |
14 Feb - Scope of Research |
13 Feb 2007 - Review Board |
12 Feb - Rounded corners |
11 Feb - Open vs free content |
10 Feb - Research guidelines |
9 Feb - Learning resource diversity |
8 February - Wikiversity referees. |
7 February 2007 - Wikio. |
5 February - Research policy. |
2 February - Portal cleanup done. |
31 January - Reliable sources. |
29 January - Learning projects and materials. |
27 January - Recording voice chat. |
25 January - Animated GIF files with GIMP. |
23 January - User page cleanup. |
21 January 2007 - List of portals. |
20 January - 2 more portals. "Courses" |
19 Jan, - Portals and templates. |
18 January site statistics - 20,000 pages. |
18 January - Creating and organizing portals. |
17 January - Categories of Wikiversity schools. |
16 Jan. - Featured content development projects. |
15 January - Wikiversity status at 5 months. |
14 January - The "Topic:" namespace |
13 January - Featured content |
13 January - Wikiversity Bugs |
12 January 2007 - Start of the blog |
---- start 2007 ---- |
24 October, 2006 - Wikiversity history |
26 April, 2005 - Wiki reality games |
17 March, 2004 - Semantic prosthetic |
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Stable versions
Anyone who has spent time dealing with vandalism has probably thought about ways to limit vandalism and ways to help detect vandalism. One recent helpful innovation is the change to the recent changes tool that shows the number of characters added or removed by each edit. Last summer Jimmy Wales wrote about plans for "version flagging", a proposed new wiki editing process in which there would be a distinction between wiki page versions shown to the public and the newest page versions produced by some editors. The idea being to let everyone edit the wiki pages, but allow the community to review some edits before the edits go public. "Some editors" in this case means wiki editors who do not register a user name or editors who only recently created their user account.
Rumor had it that the German Wikipedia would be the first to test some kind of system for allowing edits to protected articles, review of those edits, and approval of the edits by long-term registered users (here "long-term" means about four days). This system was to apply to the relatively few articles that are protected or semi-protected. This blog post marks the start of my attempt to find out if anything has or will come of this proposal.
The Wikipedia Signpost of 20 March 2007 reported that a contractor was hired to work on "stable versions". The project seems to be moving towards a system where people browsing Wikipedia will be able to request that they see only only reviewed versions of pages.
April 28: With a bit of luck, it can undergo the review process and perhaps be tested on a Wikipedia soon - Rob Church (blog)