Talk:One wiki model: Difference between revisions

    From Consumerium development wiki R&D Wiki
    (1) namespace distinction is clear in wikipedia. 2) Who are you and what have you done with 142.177.X.X?)
     
    (no such thing as a "ban" in a wiki - a "ban" is a thing done by the governance org, and it relies on all kinds of information they claim to have but do not have)
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    :What's happened to you [[142.177.X.X]]? If you didn't notice you forgot to mention the ability to [[ban]] users from editing articles? --[[User:Juxo|Juxo]] 17:08, 25 Jan 2005 (EET)
    :What's happened to you [[142.177.X.X]]? If you didn't notice you forgot to mention the ability to [[ban]] users from editing articles? --[[User:Juxo|Juxo]] 17:08, 25 Jan 2005 (EET)
    ::That is not relevant because it is an [[ontological distinction]] - it relies on [[alleged and collective identity]] and bizarre claims like sysops claiming to know the intent of people they call "[[trolls]]" and so on, and "who is writing that" and so forth.  It's nonsense.  We are talking here only about [[operational distinction]]s like the actual [[block IP]] operation.
    ::In other words, there's no such thing as a "ban" in a wiki - a "ban" is a thing done by the governance org, and it relies on all kinds of information they claim to have but do not have, and which have nothing to do with the wiki or the [[one wiki model]].

    Revision as of 21:52, 25 January 2005

    So it is not a pure one wiki model but has tried to keep as much as possible in the main Wikipedia space.

    Main namespace is for encyclopedic articles, all maintenance related stuff and social interaction is dispersed around the other namespaces. --Juxo 17:08, 25 Jan 2005 (EET)

    What's more it does so with few user permissions applying to reading (only the ability to delete pages is a limit on what can be read), and a few more on writing - a sysop can protect pages or revert pages.

    What's happened to you 142.177.X.X? If you didn't notice you forgot to mention the ability to ban users from editing articles? --Juxo 17:08, 25 Jan 2005 (EET)
    That is not relevant because it is an ontological distinction - it relies on alleged and collective identity and bizarre claims like sysops claiming to know the intent of people they call "trolls" and so on, and "who is writing that" and so forth. It's nonsense. We are talking here only about operational distinctions like the actual block IP operation.
    In other words, there's no such thing as a "ban" in a wiki - a "ban" is a thing done by the governance org, and it relies on all kinds of information they claim to have but do not have, and which have nothing to do with the wiki or the one wiki model.