Talk:Glossary

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    Revision as of 13:24, 14 January 2004 by 142.177.8.70 (talk) (point stands - censoring debate with non-English native speakers is incompatible with Consumerium's goals, and refusing to let them learn terms relevant to that, makes a project hostile, as the SEW is)

    The Consumerium glossary is those terms which must be understood or broadened or narrowed in the Wiktionary to enable Consumerium's mission.

    No no and no. Wiktionary is not for debating connotations (meanings of some word), though it is common courtesy to give all definitions of meaning when starting a new page there.Juxo 15:12 Jun 19, 2003 (EEST)
    Ah, but what meaning comes *first*? Which is implied as most common? There are politics in dictionaries. I agree however that the glossary is not only those terms, and that Wiktionary is not the sole or even best place to enable the Consumerium mission (against Consumerism without values "u" hold dear). And I totally agree that Wiktionary should not believe Consumerium is altering the meanings of words in any way other than by changing public impression and priority. But hopefully we *will* do that.

    Re: the glossary and collaborating with essential projects and not enemy projects.

    Forget Wiktionary, we need Simple English. There are now good articles on time horizon, contact network, power network, social network, social capital here, which mention only the features of it we need to talk about to do work here. Full articles in Simple English will hopefully appear on all the concepts in the glossary, right? These can just appear normally since we aren't using any word in any sense other than its normal sense. There's no distortion involved here, just certain articles we want to get corrected faster than others.
    Unfortunately, despite the fact that these exact concepts are the ones required to discuss governance with non-English speaking users, or if you are conspiracy-minded, because those are the concepts required to get them out of an unequal power relationship and dealing as equals with sysops, the articles on contact network, power network and social network were all deleted by User:Angela or some other relatively unaccountable sysop... so the Simple English Wikipedia is not a reliable place to collaborate on, maybe especially not, concepts absolutely essential to our governance, to allow us to do consensus decision-making even with people from quite different cultures. We can't get into, or trust, an inquisitor culture...
    Try http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/contact%20network. Still there! Angela 06:48, 13 Jan 2004 (EET)
    The point stands. If those who are 'linguistically inferior' to you English-speaking imperialists cannot discuss such notions as a social network or power network without censorship or being targetted as a "vandal" (a word that Tim Starling throws around as if he wasn't one himself), then, the SEW remains a very poor place for us to send Consumerium contributors. While Angela would like nothing better than for her to use the SEW as her own contact network and creative network, enslaving the SEW to her whims and her limited comprehension, this is incompatible with our own values here. We must discuss social networks and power networks with those who do not share much language with us, else, we will not end up with a very fair picture of the activity of corporations in, say, the developing world. We also wish those who understand these concepts as real to be very encouraged and heartened by our projects, not censored, told they are "vandals" and treated imperialistically as they are on the SEW under Angela's regime. We advocate regime change at SEW as much as at Wikimedia, for the saem reasons.
    They raised some IP blocks, but, they'll probably block 'em again as soon as a personal friend of the GodKing is offended, and they simply don't have a real workable definition of Simple English that would serve the purposes they claim to serve. So now I recommend we work only on our own glossary, and if they want to nab some text, fine, let 'em, its all GFDL anyway. It would have been nice to be able to fully define something at the SEW and then refer only to a more focused definition here, but, that is just not reliable with the present sysop power structure there, even if it's slightly less oppressive than it was yesterday.
    False alarm. THey have actually deliberately blocked entire ISPs in an attempt not to hear things they don't like, but which are provably true. So they are worse than before, actually. A small clique rules those projects. It is no longer the inclusive project it was, and we should assist instead those who seek m:regime change, such as David F. Prenatt.

    A programming language rarely has more than 30-50 verbs and about a hundred reserved nouns. So this can't get too large. Not if it's to get into all those dictionaries. It must be a small virus.

    30-50 verbs?.. I can't think of even 20: (define, add/change/remove, repeat, fetch, link, compare, convert, read, write... whatelseisthere) but maybe I'm just not a qualified programmer. How many verbs does the w:Universal Turing machine have? Juxo 15:12 Jun 19, 2003 (EEST)

    This is the most important file! Especially safe, fair, done.