Top Mud Sites Forum Return to TopMudSites.com
Go Back   Top Mud Sites Forum > MUD Players and General Discussion > Tavern of the Blue Hand
Click here to Register


This is a discussion on "In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned." in the Top Mud Sites Tavern of the Blue Hand forum :

Originally Posted by Milawe There is no "against Wikipedia". It's not a an entity. The entity of Wikipedia did not create this issue. Its guidelines and policies being used as a corporal sword +15 by a few was the problem. I absolutely don't regret asking MUDders for help, though I definitely didn't ask anyone to go participate in the AfD discussion. We did ask for them to look at it and suggest to us what we could do. This resulted in Wikipedia administrators who were acting in good faith coming to actually telling us what ...



You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our MUD community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

If you are a registered member of the old TMS forums, please click here
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 01-07-2009, 12:12 PM   #121
Delerak
Senior Member
 
Delerak's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Name: Dan
Location: Florida
Home MUD: Retired Mudder
Posts: 649
Delerak is on a distinguished road
Send a message via ICQ to Delerak Send a message via AIM to Delerak Send a message via MSN to Delerak Send a message via Yahoo to Delerak
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Milawe View Post
There is no "against Wikipedia". It's not a an entity. The entity of Wikipedia did not create this issue. Its guidelines and policies being used as a corporal sword +15 by a few was the problem. I absolutely don't regret asking MUDders for help, though I definitely didn't ask anyone to go participate in the AfD discussion. We did ask for them to look at it and suggest to us what we could do. This resulted in Wikipedia administrators who were acting in good faith coming to actually telling us what to do, how to do it, and started me down the path of learning the ins and outs of Wikipedia.
Did you honestly believe that wikipedia would be the perfect online encyclopedia? So you're saying it's unfair that the site has admins that don't care about your mud or your article? Really?

Quote:
If it's a pool of knowledge, then it doesn't hurt to have more knowledge. Whereas it does hurt to have less knowledge.
Pointless knowledge that only matters to a select few people that I can count on both of my hands doesn't count.

Quote:
You're making me giggle with the KB comment. You DO realize how cheap memory is now, right? You can get a terabyte of storage for $99. That's 1,073,741,824 KBs, so it's $0.000000092 for 1 KB of space. That's the whole reason that one of Wikipedia's policy is this
Of course I realize how cheap memory is, it was sarcasm. My point was that having an article on Threshold in wikipedia is as pointless as having it anywhere else. Muds have a small cult following of players and that's all they have. This is why it shouldn't matter what wikipedia does to the little articles similar to MUDs or anything else similar to them.
Delerak is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-07-2009, 12:15 PM   #122
Delerak
Senior Member
 
Delerak's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Name: Dan
Location: Florida
Home MUD: Retired Mudder
Posts: 649
Delerak is on a distinguished road
Send a message via ICQ to Delerak Send a message via AIM to Delerak Send a message via MSN to Delerak Send a message via Yahoo to Delerak
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by MudMann View Post
Thing to take from this for people who give a damn

- We need an independant MUD resource
- We need plenty of coverage of MUD's, independant reviews
- Drum up support and ask Magazines or official press to do reviews. Loads of them have Retro sections, and clearly there are MUD players at magazines such as TOTAL PC GAMING
- Won't happen because MUDs have too much of a cult following. People become biased to the MUDs they play.
- This won't happen either, the genre is too small and scattered. There are too many small time muds running and not enough people working together to do something like this.
- Good luck with this one.
Delerak is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-07-2009, 01:56 PM   #123
Milawe
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: USA
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Home MUD: Primordiax
Home MUD: Archons of Avenshar
Posts: 524
Milawe will become famous soon enoughMilawe will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Delerak View Post
Did you honestly believe that wikipedia would be the perfect online encyclopedia? So you're saying it's unfair that the site has admins that don't care about your mud or your article? Really?
Hmm. I think you may be arguing yourself in circles here. If they didn't care about our mud or our article, it would have very likely rested in its little corner of Wikipedia, left alone to rot along with things like polymorphism, Darkness Falls, and half a dozen muds I'm not going to name lest I help wiki-hatchet-warriors find them before their time. Also, if the admins didn't care, I somehow think it wouldn't have resulted in one of the longest AfDs in the history of Wikipedia, and the story has been picked up by people who have never once logged into Threshold. It seems like, perhaps, a lot of people care. Obviously, you don't care except to post about how much you don't care.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Delerak View Post
Pointless knowledge that only matters to a select few people that I can count on both of my hands doesn't count.
What big hands you have! You can't assume that other muds reflect your own user-base or generate the same interest that yours does. I definitely don't assume that our usage is the same as Aardwolf, Achaea, Medievia, Gemstone III, Discworld, or mushes and mucks that have userbases much bigger than ours.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Delerak View Post
Of course I realize how cheap memory is, it was sarcasm. My point was that having an article on Threshold in wikipedia is as pointless as having it anywhere else. Muds have a small cult following of players and that's all they have. This is why it shouldn't matter what wikipedia does to the little articles similar to MUDs or anything else similar to them.
I wonder if muds have a smaller cult following than say amigurumi, Long Shot, or Jem and the Misfits. Again, I don't think you should use the usage of your own mud to judge how big or small the genre is.
Milawe is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-07-2009, 02:22 PM   #124
Milawe
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: USA
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Home MUD: Primordiax
Home MUD: Archons of Avenshar
Posts: 524
Milawe will become famous soon enoughMilawe will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Delerak View Post
- Won't happen because MUDs have too much of a cult following. People become biased to the MUDs they play.
I think that it's more likely that the project would face extreme difficulty due to warring admins (much like Wikipedia's editors) than players being biased to the MUDs they play. I know that I recently refused to be a part of a project that would have probably benefited our MUD financially because I was really wary of the person who was spearheading the project. The guy doesn't even have his own mud, just a reputation. Let me say, also, that this incident has been a learning experience for me as well, and I doubt I would have refused to be a part of that project after having gone through this. It makes me review my opinion of the guy that I once had pretty good discussions with, and we fell out when both our tempers started to fray on a subject we ultimately agree on.

In the end, though, this incident actually gives me a lot of hope that a project, if run correctly, divorced from having ties to any one particular mud, and done with the intent of providing an academic site (thus, not really treading on TMS or TMC's toes), can succeed. There were people involved in the KEEP side of the AfD that I'm pretty sure strongly dislike the lead developer and owner of Threshold and wouldn't pee on the mud's server if it was on fire to put it out, yet they put aside personal dislikes to participate in the issue. (This is not to say that the people who didn't participate in the AfD couldn't see through their dislikes. I understand that people have very different ideas about what should be on Wikipedia.) So if a serious historical project was created that needed very little help from mud admins for maintaining it, I think it could very well succeed despite all the strong personalities in the community.
Milawe is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-07-2009, 10:17 PM   #125
DonathinFrye
Senior Member
 
DonathinFrye's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Name: Donathin Frye
Location: Chicago
Home MUD: Atonement RPI
Home MUD: Godwars II
Posts: 423
DonathinFrye is on a distinguished road
Send a message via AIM to DonathinFrye
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Greetings. This is Donathin, from the wikipedia discussion on Threshold's entry - some of you will remember me as a past TMS user. Whatever the result of this is, I'd encourage you to continue to work on getting Treshold's entry improved and properly resourced. However, be careful of your tone on the Wikipedia site. I know how passionate we can get about our games, but we have to give respect if we wish to receive respect; you know the inclination of administrators in charge of online communities to shut down and not hear newbies (respectively) who vocally attack their product. This is not to say that anger cannot be justified here, only that I doubt it will be effective. The wiki page is safe on a user page where it can be independently improved and eventually re-stated, even should the current review turn out to support the motion to delete.

I can understand the frustration, but significant MUDs -do- have a place on wikipedia; they are a large part of the history of gaming, and Wikipedia is ideally meant to accumulate knowledge of such niche topics. Wikipedia is not meant to be shallow, but they do desire it to be of high quality. I see no reason that Threshold cannot obtain that, if heads can be kept cool and continued work is done. Everything else is only an obstacle, something I've learned from being an editor on Wikipedia myself.
DonathinFrye is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-07-2009, 11:27 PM   #126
Milawe
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: USA
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Home MUD: Primordiax
Home MUD: Archons of Avenshar
Posts: 524
Milawe will become famous soon enoughMilawe will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Thanks, Donathain. It's very obvious that certain things don't fit into the Wiki culture, and I think Threshold's already taking steps to adjust his writing style. Appreciate the help, though, because it is a culture that is steeped in some very interesting protocol. It's pretty hard to navigate around if you don't have help. (Or at least it is for me.)

Anyway, thanks again for the tips and the warning.
Milawe is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 01:45 AM   #127
Neurolysis
New Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 8
Neurolysis is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Samson View Post
What's even worse is now that the article is deleted, there's no record of the reversion wars by the admins that led to it. So they can now run around claiming it was always just a tiny little stub of an article and there's no proof unless someone screen cap'd the pages ( I didn't ).

The only record remaining is a mess of an AfD discussion which as far as I could see didn't even run it's entire course.
Other admins can see it. I guess you could say we have a permanent recycle bin.
Neurolysis is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 07:10 AM   #128
Maelgrim
Member
 
Maelgrim's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Western Australia
Posts: 35
Maelgrim is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Slightly tongue in cheek here, but I'm assuming with all of this there's no WP:COMMONBLOODYSENSE.
Maelgrim is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 02:35 PM   #129
Samson
Member
 
Samson's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: United Socialist States of America
Home MUD: SmaugMuds.org
Home MUD: Arthmoor MUD Hosting
Posts: 236
Samson is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Neurolysis View Post
Other admins can see it. I guess you could say we have a permanent recycle bin.
You'll excuse me while I proceed to laugh my ass off. [steps away]

OK, done. Thanks for brightening up my day with that bit of silliness.

Other admins being able to see it means nothing to the rest of us. It's the same as if I and the other admins on MudBytes depublished several high profile posts and then went around making claims about how they weren't appropriate to the forum because of the replies they got. People would rightly claim there's no proof of any of it unless the audit trail is visible to all.

You've done the same. Delisted an article. It's sitting in an admins-only bin somewhere. You guys can point to it and claim X is a sockputted of Y's meatpuppet for Z all day long and cite bogus edits as your reasoning but nobody can back that up now because of it all being swept under the rug and hidden from view.

I think it's even further ridiculous that when caught exercising improper action, the fallback is now WP:IAR ( Ignore all rules ) which seems like an awfully convenient get out of jail free card for the elitests in charge.
Samson is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 04:27 PM   #130
Samson
Member
 
Samson's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: United Socialist States of America
Home MUD: SmaugMuds.org
Home MUD: Arthmoor MUD Hosting
Posts: 236
Samson is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
I'm saying that proving canvassing via IRC is impossible because the logs are private and even if you participated in the conversation, you would need to use not just your posts, but the posts of other people. Per RfArb/Durova, you would need permission from all parties who participated, and to use them you'd've had to c&p them locally. You are allowed to be reasonably suspicious of irc invites, but unless you have the chat logs and permission from all involved, you cannot say that canvassing was taking place via IRC. -Jéské Couriano
Oh how the irony and corruption continue to grow! Yes, explain to the world how to hide future canvassing by sitting in an IRC channel and invoke copyright on the conversation and deny permission for the logs to be used as evidence. Brilliant.
Samson is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 08:13 PM   #131
Threshold
Senior Member
 
Threshold's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Posts: 904
Threshold is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Dr. McCoy: "He's dead Jim!"
Capt. Kirk: "No, Bones, he's not. Wikipedia says you're not a reliable source."
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA.

That's awesome.
Threshold is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 08:22 PM   #132
ShadowsDawn
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 42
ShadowsDawn is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

IRC... private??? ROFL WOOOOW. That's funny. Now where was this stated?
ShadowsDawn is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 09:05 PM   #133
Samson
Member
 
Samson's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: United Socialist States of America
Home MUD: SmaugMuds.org
Home MUD: Arthmoor MUD Hosting
Posts: 236
Samson is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Wikipediaeletion review/Log/2009 January 7 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Buried about 60% of the way down the page. Just hunt for stuff in the quoted text, it'll show. Apparently it's all based on some "incident" they had in 2007 about someone using IRC logs as evidence in some dispute. Naturally of course people objected. I mean, they need SOMEWHERE to hide, right?

And yes, the ridiculousness of IRC being private was why I laughed my ass off about it. Until I realized they're being dead serious about it being private and copyrighted and all that. Now I'm just dumbfoudned by it.
Samson is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 09:41 PM   #134
ShadowsDawn
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 42
ShadowsDawn is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Do you have a hammer? I have a strong urge to bludgeon myself after reading such stupidity. IRC not available to public? Hmm try telling that to the channel I sit in that's on the same server as #wikipedia-en
ShadowsDawn is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 10:23 PM   #135
Milawe
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: USA
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Home MUD: Primordiax
Home MUD: Archons of Avenshar
Posts: 524
Milawe will become famous soon enoughMilawe will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Well, he's not saying it's private exactly, because that would make it even worse canvassing than it was. He's saying that we're not allowed to post logs on Wikipedia because IRC owns the copyright to all those logs. Technically, I guess TMS owns the copyrights to our posts (I'll be honest and say I don't remember the ToS of the site), but it's an open forum. I guess Lasher could technically ask those guys on Wikipedia to remove quotes from this forum seeing as they're "copyrighted" by TMS as well. Who knows!
Milawe is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 10:31 PM   #136
Threshold
Senior Member
 
Threshold's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Posts: 904
Threshold is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

We really cannot expect logic from those people.

The idea that an OPEN process viewable to all is more suspect that secret, closed door meetings is absurd. Nobody in their right mind would agree with that. I try to take comfort in knowing they have to be absolutely dishonest and violate their own policies and principles in order to get their way.
Threshold is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-08-2009, 11:57 PM   #137
Threshold
Senior Member
 
Threshold's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Posts: 904
Threshold is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Threshold View Post
We really cannot expect logic from those people.
I should say MOST of those people. There have been a few that truly embodied the oft-quoted, rarely followed WP:GOODFAITH. Neurolysis, J.delanoy, Protonk, LinaMisha, and a few other of the "hard core" Wikipedia folks seem to legitimately want to do what is best.
Threshold is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 01:19 PM   #138
Newworlds
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Name: NewWorlds
Home MUD: New Worlds
Posts: 729
Newworlds will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

I've just reviewed this thread and the original post and am baffled by the moronics. One reason why I hate Wikipedia. It's like a free for all and most information there is suspect. I really hate when people quote it as fact. It is turning more into a STAR or National Inquirer than a true site of information.
Newworlds is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 05:00 PM   #139
Zivilyn
Member
 
Zivilyn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Name: Dave
Location: Oregon
Home MUD: Ansalonmud.com
Posts: 49
Zivilyn is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Hm, Threshold is pulled, but there's games not even released... with entries?
Darkfall - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It's full of 'publicity' type wording 'a huge dynamic world' - whose huge are we talking about?
'The Alfar are the cruel, hate-spawned cousins of the Mirdain'... etc, it's a giant advertisement for an online game that hasn't even been released yet.

I like also how 'scrib' pages are considered a valid source... Um, I can post my own scrib pages as sources if I wish...

They do have lots of references from other sources, I'll give it that, just surprising that they're already considered 'noteworthy' vs a game that was/is around for ages.
Zivilyn is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 05:47 PM   #140
the_logos
Moderator
 
the_logos's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Mill Valley, California
Posts: 2,160
the_logos will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Newworlds View Post
I've just reviewed this thread and the original post and am baffled by the moronics. One reason why I hate Wikipedia. It's like a free for all and most information there is suspect. I really hate when people quote it as fact.
But isn't that one reason Threshold's entry was removed? Among other things, they felt they couldn't trust the sources of info that Threshold's entry pointed to. In other words, they're trying to make the information on Wikipedia less suspect (at least the ones that mean well are).

--matt
the_logos is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 05:57 PM   #141
Newworlds
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Name: NewWorlds
Home MUD: New Worlds
Posts: 729
Newworlds will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
But isn't that one reason Threshold's entry was removed? Among other things, they felt they couldn't trust the sources of info that Threshold's entry pointed to. In other words, they're trying to make the information on Wikipedia less suspect (at least the ones that mean well are).

--matt
That would be like pulling Microsoft's listing after Bill Gates personally wrote the discription. Classic idiocy.
Newworlds is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 06:26 PM   #142
Kylotan
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 137
Kylotan is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

If there weren't any other citations, then it wouldn't be idiocy. You can't complain about Wikipedia's accuracy on one hand and on the other hand say it's fine for people to write about their own companies and products without that then being backed up by cited sources.
Kylotan is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 07:14 PM   #143
Milawe
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: USA
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Home MUD: Primordiax
Home MUD: Archons of Avenshar
Posts: 524
Milawe will become famous soon enoughMilawe will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
But isn't that one reason Threshold's entry was removed? Among other things, they felt they couldn't trust the sources of info that Threshold's entry pointed to. In other words, they're trying to make the information on Wikipedia less suspect (at least the ones that mean well are).

--matt
Possibly if we didn't have other sources that were repeatedly removed as others were putting them up, which is why the admins of Threshold finally got involved. This also resulted in the removal of TMS on the MUDs entry in order to take more references away from the Threshold entry. (It was put back by others.)

It wasn't a matter of "trust" for at least two of the articles since they were published in magazines completely unrelated to muds. If the references for the Threshold article had been left alone, it would have been one of the better referenced muds on Wikipedia. The message seemed clear: Back off. You're not going to be allowed to better this entry, which would make the information on Wikipedia MORE suspect in my opinion.

Now, there could be an argument that MUDs shouldn't be on Wikipedia at all, but that wasn't the case here.
Milawe is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 08:11 PM   #144
the_logos
Moderator
 
the_logos's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Mill Valley, California
Posts: 2,160
the_logos will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Milawe View Post
Possibly if we didn't have other sources that were repeatedly removed as others were putting them up, which is why the admins of Threshold finally got involved. This also resulted in the removal of TMS on the MUDs entry in order to take more references away from the Threshold entry. (It was put back by others.)

It wasn't a matter of "trust" for at least two of the articles since they were published in magazines completely unrelated to muds. If the references for the Threshold article had been left alone, it would have been one of the better referenced muds on Wikipedia. The message seemed clear: Back off. You're not going to be allowed to better this entry, which would make the information on Wikipedia MORE suspect in my opinion.
I can't see the deletion thread now, obviously, but weren't the articles on the order of kind of "throw-away" mentions? A paragraph or something? Didn't the Wikipedia editors claim those kind of in-passing references don't really matter? I'm not espousing one viewpoint or the other, just curious. I think either the Aetolia or Imperian pages on Wikipedia were deleted at one point and I never had any idea why. Lusternia and Achaea are still there, but frankly, judging by Lusternia's entry, I wouldn't be surprised to see it removed for the same reasons as Threshold.


Quote:
Now, there could be an argument that MUDs shouldn't be on Wikipedia at all, but that wasn't the case here.
That'd be a very tough argument to make as there are MUDs that even the Wikipedia editors acting in bad faith would have a tough time arguing don't meet Wikipedia's rules for inclusion.

--matt
the_logos is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 10:30 PM   #145
Milawe
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: USA
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Home MUD: Primordiax
Home MUD: Archons of Avenshar
Posts: 524
Milawe will become famous soon enoughMilawe will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
I can't see the deletion thread now, obviously, but weren't the articles on the order of kind of "throw-away" mentions? A paragraph or something? Didn't the Wikipedia editors claim those kind of in-passing references don't really matter? I'm not espousing one viewpoint or the other, just curious. I think either the Aetolia or Imperian pages on Wikipedia were deleted at one point and I never had any idea why. Lusternia and Achaea are still there, but frankly, judging by Lusternia's entry, I wouldn't be surprised to see it removed for the same reasons as Threshold.
I don't really know how to answer this. The people originally engaged in the edit warring were declaring them "throw-away" mentions, though some of the articles were newspaper articles that were full articles on Threshold. Granted, it was not the New York Times, but it's still a substantial article. A few of the ones removed were also ones that were lists, but I see those all over the place for movies and games. They also removed Threshold's TMC review, which was unsolicited and written by a TMC staff member. It was actually the second review that was written on Threshold from TMC. I'm not sure where the first one is anymore. TMS was not only thrown out as a source that Threshold was notable in the mudding community, but it was removed from the actual MUDs article to try to make this point.

I don't know what exactly is going on in Wikipedia except that some editors seem to think it's okay to do everything based on their own judgment and not research. For example, did you know that there was a discussion to remove mention of IRE on the MUDs article? You may not care about personally because, like Threshold, IRE probably gets very little out of being mentioned on Wikipedia, but looking at the entry objectively, how could IRE NOT be included in an article on MUDs and MUD history? I even went to look up a source for IRE and posted it so that it could be used. Even if it is a passing mention, the fact that IRE was mentioned along with Sony is a telling thing, in my opinion.

In the end, that may be the problem with the whole issue. Very much of this is opinion. Whose opinion counts more, then? And that may be the question. I think, though, the only reason that this issue HAS garnered this much attention is because Threshold might very possibly BE notable. You can't force people to pick up a story that doesn't mean anything to them, just as you can't force people to pick up a cause they don't have interest in. I know that I would pitch an absolute fit if someone tried to remove Achaea by claiming that muds in general aren't noticeable, but I might not be as moved to do act for Solace. (No offense to Solace.)

Ultimately, you might be seeing Wikipedia as one entity that is trying to do some "good", but in reality, two people, one of which just happened to be an admin, was making the decisions for the article before it was put up for an AfD by one of those two people.

Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
That'd be a very tough argument to make as there are MUDs that even the Wikipedia editors acting in bad faith would have a tough time arguing don't meet Wikipedia's rules for inclusion.
I'd like to agree with you except that I saw TMS removed from the MUDs article in general. I think if enough administrations and editors got together, it's possible to remove just about anything from Wikipedia. I read about a case where one editor removed (and kept off) the reports of an author's death because it could not be "verified". I'm not sure if his death ever got back on there, but there sure a lot of jokes flying around about it.

I've already been assured that re-listing Threshold after it's written won't be a problem assuming the deletion doesn't get overturned. Maybe it'll face an AfD again, but at least they'll have to unlist us with about 10-15 citations this time, which will probably make it one of the best cited and researched mud articles on Wikipedia. I still think its days will be numbered, but then again, I think Wikipedia's days are numbered as well.
Milawe is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 10:45 PM   #146
Threshold
Senior Member
 
Threshold's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Posts: 904
Threshold is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
But isn't that one reason Threshold's entry was removed? Among other things, they felt they couldn't trust the sources of info that Threshold's entry pointed to.
It was removed for notability. It passed WP:V (verifiability) with flying colors. Incidentally, WP:V used to be the controlling standard. But WP:N (notability) is now being used as a scythe to remove entries because there are so many editors bucking for adminhood, and the easiest way to score "contributions" is to delete articles in the name of "improving the project."

WP:V is a very legitimate concern. WP:N is subjective as heck and doesn't jibe with what Wikiepdia does best: cover obscure topics. WP:NOTPAPER (Wikipedia is not paper) is actually clear on that as well. There is tremendous benefit to covering and documenting obscure topics. But the current dominating force is on a deletion crusade for their own personal benefit, not the benefit of Wikipedia.


Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
That'd be a very tough argument to make as there are MUDs that even the Wikipedia editors acting in bad faith would have a tough time arguing don't meet Wikipedia's rules for inclusion.
The one thing I have learned above all else about Wikipedia is this: never underestimate what Wikipedians acting in bad faith are capable of.

Threshold was deleted, when it had all of this in its favor:
  • Two major gaming magazines (Computer Games Magazine, and Computer Gaming World). You can call them "throw away mentions" if you want, but that's unnecessarily dismissive. For a MUD to get mentioned in a major PC gaming magazine is pretty huge.
  • Staff review from TMC.
  • Staff review from GameCommandos.
  • Praise and a recommendation from CNET Gamecenter.
  • Various awards and rankings from TMC, TMS, TMJ, etc.
  • Endorsement from the most recognized experts in the world as "notable."
  • Factual notability, like 12+ years of existence, over 300,000 characters created, and (correct me if I am wrong) the only commercial role play enforced game in existence, etc.

We are lucky that we even saved that much information. I imagine there are a lot of very notable MUDs that SHOULD have entries on Wikipedia that haven't saved that much about their own history. That's part of the problem. The even larger problem is the fact that right now we are unable to use TMC, TMS, etc. as stand alone sources of information to keeping a MUD entry on Wikipedia. Since those are 2 of the main sources of historical information on MUDs, that is a big problem.

On the plus side, the whole incident has helped us gather even more articles and references that we had lost track of. That will help in the future not only for a Wikipedia entry, but for our game and our company in general. Hopefully this has encouraged other MUD admins to start digging through their own files to gather up historical references about their games. But best of all, it seems to have galvanized us all a little bit. Maybe we can takes some steps as a community to preserve more of our history.

Toward that end, I hope any MUD admin who has a problem like this will let us know about it. If they are worried about canvassing, just send me an email. Most of us don't live on Wikipedia like they do. We aren't checking the AFD alert pages and crap like that. I know I'll be quick to help with research and such if anyone needs it.
Threshold is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-09-2009, 11:42 PM   #147
DonathinFrye
Senior Member
 
DonathinFrye's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Name: Donathin Frye
Location: Chicago
Home MUD: Atonement RPI
Home MUD: Godwars II
Posts: 423
DonathinFrye is on a distinguished road
Send a message via AIM to DonathinFrye
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

A few random musings, and one long thought.

1) Have you actually gotten a larger-than-typical influx of new players at Threshold since this fiasco began?

2) Would Achaea survive the notability scythe? If notability cannot be parented in through IRE, how would it be achieved in such a way to make it more notable than Threshold? An opinion would not be enough, as at the very least you would need to point to specific documented wiki law applicable to keeping Achaea that would distance it from Threshold. Anything less is speculation, and as I can attest to, when wiki admins set out to delete an article for reasons of notability, it can be very difficult to stop this process. Outside of Dragonrealms and the original MUD, I think current conditions could make proving notability for any MUD difficult if it is being attacked by such vigorous admins as those that attacked Threshold.

3) I would not be suprised to see an overturn ruling on the deletion review. Many unbias editors seem to think it appropriate, even more so than those that came out to support the KEEP votes (like me). At either rate, improving the editorial quality and referencing for the page would be a good thing to both preserve it, and to improve it to a level of quality sufficient for what wikipedia should be (and, admittedly, sometimes is).

4) As I've stated above, my only other advice would be to avoid flame wars on wikipedia, even if anger is justified -- their community does not respond to angry posts as well as the MUD community does. This is because most wikipedia communication comes from posts that can be edited, moved, and changed by just about anyone - whereas this community is used to virtual chatting and forum community. When you go to the courts to plead your case, even if the judge is bias and underhanded and the jury is bribed, your best bet is always to show yourself as a respectful and level-headed person. I know how difficult this can be, but it is always in your own best interest.


5) I see the entire ordeal as an opportunity to strengthen the community, instead of hurt it. The article can be improved and recovered, and now some often forgotten weaknesses of the MUD community have been exposed. Gone are the days of the innovation, largely, the popularity. Perhaps not co-incidentally, gone too are the days of online magazines dedicated to MUDs, professional magazines reviewing them, professorial articles written on them. Gone is the vibe, the underground excitement, the movement and word of mouth. Did all of the absentee, hard-working contributors to the community get too old? Get too tired? Get too comfortable? Probably. I know that I have narrowed my own personal vision of what I could contribute to the community to what I could contribute to a single (and incredible) game. For a time, this (rather historic, in terms of wikipedia length) debate and AfD have brought the community together. Didn't even need to canvass - many read it on the experts' blogs, I found it while surfing around randomly on wikipedia for information on MUD codebases. For those who are still in a position to do something for the community, who still have the energy - accept the challenge. For those of you who are newer MUDers and reading this post, take up the call.

Graphical MMORPGs are inferior games with inferior gameplay and content, but superior graphics/interface. This is what many of us believe. If you believe that, and you have the time and energy to do something about it - start a new wikipedia for just MUDs, band together with others to start writing expert-quality articles on MUDs and MUDing, find new and innovative ways to get our message out to potential new players, fight to get us represented in commercial gaming magazines. Underground music will continue to thrive, independent movies will continue to thrive, non-best-seller books will continue to captivate large audiences of readers. Don't let flash games be the next-gen of underground gaming. That crown was on our heads, and complacency has seen it slip in the past few years.

Do something about it. All I can say.

Last edited by DonathinFrye : 01-09-2009 at 11:47 PM. Reason: minor errors
DonathinFrye is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-10-2009, 12:53 AM   #148
Samson
Member
 
Samson's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: United Socialist States of America
Home MUD: SmaugMuds.org
Home MUD: Arthmoor MUD Hosting
Posts: 236
Samson is on a distinguished road
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
start a new wikipedia for just MUDs, band together with others to start writing expert-quality articles on MUDs and MUDing
Not to leech off the suggestion or anything but one could also avail themselves of the already existing article section over at MudBytes. Articles on MUD history and things of that nature would be more than welcome there. It's not wiki-ware quality but that could change as time goes on assuming people are interested in using the resources we've made available.
Samson is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-10-2009, 02:38 PM   #149
the_logos
Moderator
 
the_logos's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Mill Valley, California
Posts: 2,160
the_logos will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Milawe View Post
They also removed Threshold's TMC review, which was unsolicited and written by a TMC staff member. It was actually the second review that was written on Threshold from TMC. I'm not sure where the first one is anymore. TMS was not only thrown out as a source that Threshold was notable in the mudding community, but it was removed from the actual MUDs article to try to make this point.
Obviously my company is a big supporter of both TMS and by far the biggest supporter of TMC, but I agree with Wikipedia's decision here to be honest. I don't see either TMS or TMC as establishing notability.

Quote:
I don't know what exactly is going on in Wikipedia except that some editors seem to think it's okay to do everything based on their own judgment and not research. For example, did you know that there was a discussion to remove mention of IRE on the MUDs article? You may not care about personally because, like Threshold, IRE probably gets very little out of being mentioned on Wikipedia, but looking at the entry objectively, how could IRE NOT be included in an article on MUDs and MUD history? I even went to look up a source for IRE and posted it so that it could be used. Even if it is a passing mention, the fact that IRE was mentioned along with Sony is a telling thing, in my opinion.
That's kind of funny but I find it hard to care much. The thing IRE is most notable for in the wider games world (pioneering virtual goods sales and inventing the dual currency model) might be hard to prove as I don't think there are any sources that would be considered reliable by Wikipedia that "prove" it did those things.

You're right btw, Wikipedia sends virtually no traffic our way.


Quote:
I'd like to agree with you except that I saw TMS removed from the MUDs article in general.
That's a little strange, although on the one hand it's "just" a set of MUD listings, an unauthoritative ranking system, and a set of forums. On the other hand, it's one of the two major text MUD sites, but it doesn't get much traffic. In the grand scheme of things, maybe it's not very notable. I think it's easy for us (like everyone) to get caught up in what we're doing and assume it's of world-shaking importance to everyone else. I forget who it was earlier in the thread, but the comparison to people who are really into knitting or <pick your niche> probably have similarly strong views about everything in their communities too, but a lot of people might kind of laugh at the idea that a knitting mailing list should be included on Wikipedia as being notable, for instance.

Anyway, just pointing out that it's easy for people in general to overestimate our own importance in the scheme of things since we are all the center of our own little universes.



Quote:
I still think its days will be numbered, but then again, I think Wikipedia's days are numbered as well.
Well, everything's days are numbered in one sense, but I think that you're taking what is a VERY minor issue (seriously, whether a text MUD is included or not may be offensive to us but I don't think it matters very much to Wikipedia as a whole). Wikipedia looks to become more used by human beings, not less though. Quantcast and Compete both show an upwards trajectory. Alexa's is harder to read (and in my opinion Alexa is less reliable than Quantcast or Compete, though still has some use), it shows Wikipedia's traffic as being slightly higher than it was a year ago.

--matt
the_logos is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Old 01-10-2009, 03:03 PM   #150
Milawe
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: USA
Home MUD: Threshold RPG
Home MUD: Primordiax
Home MUD: Archons of Avenshar
Posts: 524
Milawe will become famous soon enoughMilawe will become famous soon enough
Re: In defense of all MUDs. Our genre's noteworthiness is being questioned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
Anyway, just pointing out that it's easy for people in general to overestimate our own importance in the scheme of things since we are all the center of our own little universes.
No offense, but I think you missed the main point of this thread if this is what you got out of it.

You're stating this as if we don't all know that we're a niche hobby. That's kind of not the point. In the end, online gaming is not considered a mainstream hobby period, even if you include all the big-name MMOs and such. Video games in general are considered for kids, so gets very little impact in general. Dungeons and Dragons is hardly mainstream at all, and if you look at Dragonlance's article, it has little to no sources outside of TSR/WoTC materials. It hasn't been in the press for a very long time.

Does that really matter? Wikipedia has a very specific set of rules to govern fictional material and games in order to aid them in being listed.

Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
That's kind of funny but I find it hard to care much.
That's fine, but is it really right to tell people they shouldn't care either? If everyone took on that attitude, then there wouldn't be any attempt to preserve and better document mud history. Even if Threshold's article on Wikipedia becomes nothing more than a fossil in time, at the very least, other muds might be able to start snapping up what's out there now before other sites holding resources are lost.

Quote:
I forget who it was earlier in the thread, but the comparison to people who are really into knitting or <pick your niche> probably have similarly strong views about everything in their communities too, but a lot of people might kind of laugh at the idea that a knitting mailing list should be included on Wikipedia as being notable, for instance.
Funny you should say that since I was looking at the amigurumi article on Wikipedia last night. It's a gigantic movement in Asia that's recently made its way to the US. The problem they're having with sourcing is that most of the source materials are in Japanese, and Wikipedia heavily discourages sources that are not in English. Amigurumi is a sub-set of knitting and crocheting, much like a single mud is a sub-set of mudding in general. The article as it is now would be deleted in a heartbeat, but it'd probably be given a bit more chance to survive if sources could be located.

Quote:
Originally Posted by the_logos View Post
Well, everything's days are numbered in one sense, but I think that you're taking what is a VERY minor issue (seriously, whether a text MUD is included or not may be offensive to us but I don't think it matters very much to Wikipedia as a whole). Wikipedia looks to become more used by human beings, not less though. Quantcast and Compete both show an upwards trajectory. Alexa's is harder to read (and in my opinion Alexa is less reliable than Quantcast or Compete, though still has some use), it shows Wikipedia's traffic as being slightly higher than it was a year ago.
Threshold had a spike in usage this year as well. That's not going to keep our Wikipedia article, though. Looking at things in the long run, if Wikipedia's editors continue this kind of behavior, it won't be long until something bigger and brighter can come its way and make it obsolete. Editors who get sick of the inane system that governs Wikipedia will simply move on to other places, and if content continues to get removed, then it's not hard to imagine that they'll have very little left to work with. We've seen this happen in our own industry where companies have shut down their text muds and moved out of the community once they got their graphical ones up.

Lastly, it may not matter much to Wikipedia as a whole, but with something that (Wikipedia's) size, very little is going to matter much to Wikipedia as a whole. Who it does matter to is the editors who have been touched by this issue as well as people who care about the actual issue such as prominent names in our community who have actually moved beyond muds to other things as well.

As for your comments on TMS, I don't really see it as being any different than Rotten Tomatoes or a dozen other movie sites that are used as resources on Wikipedia all the time. TMS is a ranking site with forums and some articles. It doesn't really pretend to be more than that.
Milawe is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Reply



Thread Tools


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:00 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
LinkBacks Enabled by vBSEO 3.0.0
Style based on a design by Essilor
Copyright Top Mud Sites.com 2007