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I floated this at Village pump (proposals) here awhile back, and there was wide support for doing this (some editors said they felt it unofficially already was a guideline). But, it was noted that the essay, Wikipedia:WikiProject Albums/Album article style advice, needed some clean up and to be fleshed out in places. After multiple discussions, including some disputes and RfCs, I think the essay is finally in a place where there is an updated consensus and enough detail that it can be an official MOS style guideline. This is a formal presentation of the updated and discussed essay to see if there is support for making it formally part of Wikipedia's Manual of Style.--3family6 (Talk to me|See what I have done) 12:35, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose not really strong enough to carry the same weight as guidelines, and it lazily tries to give credits a free pass on being unsourced. SNUGGUMS (talk / edits) 17:58, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Look under "Track listing", where someone added "This is generally assumed and does not need explicit citation in most cases". Even when albums are already released, we frankly shouldn't be so quick to presume that an unsourced track list lines up with actual credits. Adding liner notes or an iTunes/Amazon link would be better than nothing. You might be surprised how often others have dubiously tried to use the essay as an excuse to ignore the non-negotiable requirements of WP:Verifiability and WP:No original research. SNUGGUMS (talk / edits) 23:30, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
WP:V doesn't require citations, and the essay reflects consensus. Are there cases of people inserting false information? I'm not opposed to modifying that text a bit, I just fail to see how it doesn't reflect consensus.--3family6 (Talk to me|See what I have done) 00:03, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
On the contrary, WP:V opens its second paragraph with "Each fact or claim in an article must be verifiable." That doesn't give essays the right to make selective exceptions. I also haven't seen any consensus suggesting citations wouldn't be needed for facts. As for fabrications, I wouldn't be surprised if there have been, though cannot think of specific instances at the moment unless one counts vandalism. SNUGGUMS (talk / edits) 00:23, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The spirit of WP:V is that anybody should be able to check that the claimed facts are true. Picking up a record sleeve or CD inlay should be OK for that. That said, there are occasional discrepancies between the reality and what's actually written. Two examples: (i) Masque where the actual playing order matches a sticker on the sleeve but not the record labels; and (ii) Platinum, where the track "Sally", present on original copies, was replaced by "Into Wonderland" but without the sleeve being amended. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 14:07, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As long as articles make it clear that credit listings are taken from sleeves, inlays, or anything similar, I don't see an issue with using print sources for credits. If there are discrepancies, then it shouldn't be too difficult to find additional sources backing them up, perhaps even with some commenting on omissions. My qualm is enabling lazy-at-best mentalities of "just trust that I got these accurate" or "I don't need anything to back up my insertions of credits/personnel" when adding credits without any citation at all, even print ones. One or more refs (whether online or printed) helps show the listings aren't being pulled out of nowhere. SNUGGUMS (talk / edits) 17:46, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"Verifiable" is not the exact same thing as "has a citation". If something does seem questionable and is challenged, then it should have a citation. Regardless of what an essay or an MOS guideline says.--3family6 (Talk to me|See what I have done) 19:57, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"just trust that I got these accurate" or "I don't need anything to back up my insertions of credits/personnel" - is anyone doing this? Refusing to provide a source when asked?--3family6 (Talk to me|See what I have done) 19:59, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
For a few samples showcasing the latter attitude by trying to use the essay as a cheap cop-out for not sourcing credits at all, have a lookatthesediffs. The choice to deliberately leave such sections with no sources is careless. SNUGGUMS (talk / edits) 23:03, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for those. Yes, those are WP:V violations and misusing the essay as well. I'm fine with changing the wording of the essay, if there's consensus for it.--3family6 (Talk to me|See what I have done) 13:38, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You're welcome, and for starters, I would recommend fully scrapping the sentence quoted above within the "Track listing" section even if this essay never becomes a guideline or a policy. We also shouldn't endorse any similar phrasing that people would attempt to use as an excuse for not implementing citations. It baffles me how anybody thought an essay could plausibly be used to overrule policies/guidelines. SNUGGUMS (talk / edits) 19:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As mentioned elsewhere, it is not overruling policy. Read WP:V. Content needs to be cited if the content is likely to be challenged, is BLP relevant or is a quotation. If there is consensus that primary sourcing (i.e. the album itself) is sufficient for verifying the track listings and that this is generally not likely to be challenged then no citations are required. This is the current consensus for plot summaries (which are sourced to the primary work and not cited because it's the subject of the article). You can make an argument that that citations should always be provided either because it's regularly wrong and therefore likely to be challenged but providing a citation isn't mandatory in all cases. Scribolt (talk) 10:26, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That would be up for discussion, but wouldn't be a requirement imo. An article about an album isn't a BLP, and material about who did what during the production isn't necessarily contentious or controversial. There's certainly a higher possibility of getting the content wrong here compared to simply checking the track listing, so there might be added value in recommending in a guideline to make the extra effort and cite the content as a default, but if there isn't consensus to do this I wouldn't regard this it as being against any higher level policy. Scribolt (talk) 08:08, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Weak support I like the idea of this proposal and the page seems fleshed out enough to be a part of the MOS. 3family6, do you have a link to the discussion at VPR? TIA mdm.bla23:01, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. The concerns brought up in that discussion seem to have been taken care of, and I don't share Snuggums' concerns w.r.t. WP:V issues. Increasing to a regular level of support. mdm.bla04:52, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support It may need further improvement, but making it formally a part of the MOS rather than a wikiproject sub-page will make that more rather less likely. Scribolt (talk) 14:33, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support – I don't think its necessary to have to cite the release for information from the release, as anyone with access to the media can verify it themselves (à la MOS:PLOTSOURCE). That said, I wouldn't oppose making {{Cite AV media notes}} (or w/e source) a requirement for WP:PERSONNEL, as that's often not as easily as accessible with digital releases, but I would argue it's unnecessary for the track listings (as anyone with access to both the physical release and streaming services can easily verify for themselves). Nil🥝04:18, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Comment – I'd like to hear more about the intended benefit of promoting WP:ALBUMSTYLE to a guideline. What problem would that solve? What isn't the page able to do as a WikiProject advice page that it could do as a guideline? If it were promoted to a guideline, where would it be moved to? Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Albums? There are already a few MOS subpages dealing with music, most of which, in my opinion, are better fits for explanatory essays or WikiProject advice pages. As a procedural note, there area few steps outlined at WP:PROPOSAL that should be followed for this discussion, including adding a formal RFC tag and posting a notice at Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style.--Trystan (talk) 13:50, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
isn't the page able to do as a WikiProject advice page that it could do as a guideline? In practice, I'm not sure, as it's de facto treated as an MOS already (for example, the short name link WP:MOS). This would formalize what is effectively the status quo. It would give more weight, though of course it's still a guideline to which IAR applies.--3family6 (Talk to me|See what I have done) 01:35, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose per SNUGGUMS. Clearly the advice not to source credits doesn't fit with wider policies and guidelines. And more broadly, per WP:CREEP, having too many guidelines of this nature which are crafted by niche WikiProjects and may not be widely watched, is not beneficial. The overall MOS has almost all the guidance you need, and any further details should be worked out by consensus at individual articles, not by a wide-ranging set of arbitrary guidelines that aren't being widely vetted. — Amakuru (talk) 14:58, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It seems that SNUGGUMS' understanding of policies and guidelines on this specific point is in the minority. As to WP:CREEP, that's fair, but should we then rescind/downgrade other MOS?--3family6 (Talk to me|See what I have done) 00:02, 4 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Comment. Generally, the MOS applies to all topics. Are there any other examples of subject-specific guides within MOS, or would this be a scope expansion? pburka (talk) 16:54, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My opinion would be that those things shouldn't be designated as guidelines either. Without assuming any bad faith - editors are of course writing down that they think is best practice - but these often reflect a WP:LOCALCONSENSUS, being usually formulated by small groups of editors rather than the community a a whole, and the things asked for may not be required by the wider MOS or necessarily appropriate for every article in the space. An example was a road article I wrote where I was told it couldn't become an FA due to not complying with MOS:RJL, something which is only really sensible for certain types of road. Having general guidance in essay form is fine, but it is much better for such questions to be handled by consensus and applying the sitewide MOS than by a one-size-fits-all guidelines written without a lot of the community being involved. Let's not make this situation worse by adding another one into the mix. Cheers — Amakuru (talk) 11:19, 4 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There's a reason I'm proposing this here, as opposed to just the Albums WikiProject, and it's advertised at the main MOS page. This shouldn't be simply local consensus. Regarding your example, I personally would've opened an RfC about that particular guideline.--3family6 (Talk to me|See what I have done) 13:49, 4 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose. I appreciate the effort, and I weighed in a couple of times during previous discussions, but there are still too many issues for me to support. The project, unlike any other WP one, continues to fetishize primary source information, with editors often trying to reproduce every piece of album packaging credit, rather than worrying about what secondary sources have to say. The alternate track listings are still out of control, as are long personnel lists of non-notable musicians, producers, songwriters, etc. The vast majority of the project uses one track listing style, but a vocal (extremely tiny) minority of editors want to keep choices, which leads to needless edit warring. Genres are still an issue---if "hair metal" or "classic rock" showed up, despite being the subjects of thousands of reliable articles, books, and magazines, some editors may start having embolisms. Cheers. Caro7200 (talk) 12:20, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose, largely in agreement with Caro7200 and SNUGGUMS. I'm also sympathetic to Amakuru's WP:CREEP and related concerns. I'm on the fence as to whether we should have a dedicated albums MOS at all. At a minimum, the concerns regarding citations and genres need to be addressed. If the current wording reflects the consensus of the WikiProject then we're at an impasse, but from the discussion here it appears some editors are open to further rewording. It remains unclear what the benefit is of promoting this—What problem will this solve? What's not working now that would be improved? It sounds like some (many?) editors active in this space treat this as more or less a guideline currently. That there are ongoing disputes and edit wars indicates either a lack of consensus or a minority of editors ignoring consensus. —Myceteae🍄🟫 (talk) 22:14, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Introduce maximum page size and mandatory archiving for pages intended for user communication (accessibility)
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
Polling is not a substitute for discussion, but examining the !votes is a good place to start divining consensus.Currently, there are 38 bullet points in the survey, of which 27 are !votes opposing any one of the seven proposals in this RFC. There are an additional 9 bullet points (some of which are unbulleted) in the proposal bySapphaline, of which eight are in total opposition to either their proposal or the original proposal. Of the 11 remaining bullet points, two are discounted for not being !votes. The 9 remaining bullet points are in various levels of support for the original proposal, from supporting all of the points (2), to supporting them all except for one or two (3), or only supporting a couple (4).
Some opposes believe that there may be a discussion worth having on the topic of archiving talk pages, but many do not believe a one-sized fits all solution will work. On the other hand, supporters of the proposal have accessibility concerns about large talk pages. Editors on both sides believe that the structure of this RFC has prevented any productive outcome for this discussion. I would encourage continued discussion on this topic, as the accessibility concerns are a problem worth solving, but the issues will not be solved in this discussion. There is consensus against this proposal, but not against the existence of an underlying issue.Mdm.Bla (talk) 15:46, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The following RfC concerns a set of proposals be implemented for all pages intended for user communications (e.g. (X) talk: pages and noticeboards in the Wikipedia: namespace) A short summary of the complete set of changes:
Establish a minimum number of 10 threads on pages, except on user talk pages
Establish a maximum size of pages (about 200 KB) and page archives (about 150 KB).
Mandate some sort of automatic archiving mechanism for all pages, except for user talk pages; that archiving mechanism will by default do all the enforcement of the maximum size rules on non-user talk pages.
Require pages that will likely routinely fall afoul of the maximum size rule to introduce a short archiving interval
Limit discretion of users to manage their assigned talk page to comply with maximum size guidelines, but leave the choice of the preferred way to comply with the guideline to the users; no other part of user discretion is disturbed
Introduce an enforcement mechanism for users failing to abide by the accessibility guideline (max size)
Force changes to the codes of archive bots in such a way that any input value above the maximum permitted/below the minimum permitted thresholds will default to the threshold values.
Full changes, along with the reasoning, is presented in the collapsed table.
Do you support these changes as presented in the table below? If not, which specific parts of the changes do you not like?
Large talk pages are difficult to read and load slowly over slow connections. As a rule of thumb, archive closed discussions when a talk page has numerous resolved or stale discussions – see Help:Archiving a talk page.
All pages intended for communication between users have to be reasonably accessible. Their size must not substantially impact device/browser performance while reading or editing.
The whole premise of the RfC.
All pages intended for communication between users must have some sort of automated archiving deployed. This concerns all (X) Talk: pages, and noticeboards in Wikipedia: namespaces. There are two possibilities:
A bot can generate pages for a given period that are assembled in a log (see example here). Discussions are started directly on these subpages. This is the procedure used at various venues to discuss potential page deletion. The period should be adjusted so that each individual subpage is unlikely to break the archive size guideline. Generally meant only for extremely busy pages.
Do not archive pages manually, unless this is necessary because bot errors somehow prevent the pages from being archived.
User talk: pages are exempt. Single discussions split into their own pages due to size considerations are exempt from internal archiving but have to be searchable through archives of the page they were split from.
We have well-tested archiving tools/subpage creation tools that automate the process. This wording will eliminate bickering over archiving preferences, which is pretty lame and a waste of editor resources. Set up an archive once and forget about it.
There are pages that remove discussions instead of deleting them, e.g. WP:ERRORS, which could benefit from the log-based scheme. Pages that remove discussions are already in violation of the rule that discussions should be archived, not blanked; this rule will make sure that the transition must take place.
All pages intended for user communication should not exceed 1200 KB HTML weight. Archives of these pages should not exceed 900 KB HTML weight. Existing archives are grandfathered. This rule should not be interpreted as discouraging new or existing discussions in any way.
A recent RfC about talk page guidelines scrapped the 75 KB wikitext size limit on non-user talk pages as it had no consensus and practically was not followed anyway. I do not read the discussion as finding consensus against any sort of talk page size limit and the closer specifically encouraged a user talk-dedicated discussion. I don't see the functional difference between the two, that's why this proposal concerns all such pages.
The point is to make sure that pages are responsive upon reading and editing. HTML size is not a perfect proxy for measuring this but much better than wikitext. Page weight matters a lot, so some value needs to be set. A median desktop page weighs about 800-900 KB HTML+CSS+JS these days. We can't measure the impact of JavaScript directly on the CPU/browser, but there are Inspect tools integrated in the (desktop) browser.
For example, ANI (2062 KB HTML as I write) has an OK value for Largest Contentful Paint (1.86 s) and good Interaction to Next Paint time (40 ms), but not very good values for Cumulative Layout Shift (0.1 s). When I try to edit it in source, however, the latter two values grow to pretty horrible 1,256 ms and 1.02 s; typing text sends INP value - which is basically lag - to an asinine 4,432 ms (syntax highlight on; Chromium 143). The page visibly struggles. Larger talk pages may freeze or crash browsers, or make them effectively uneditable, which is an absolutely unacceptable outcome.
The point is to make sure that the value is set reasonably high to allow wide discretion to manage talk pages but not too high to make compliant pages struggle on devices that are not top-shelf. Compliant pages should give users at most mild inconvenience in reading and editing, given any reasonable device and Internet configuration. Any threshold value is arbitrary but the value appears to be a good compromise.
(second and later paragraphs based off performance and the page weight chapters of the HTTP Archive Almanac. See the performance page for good reference values of Inspect parameters I mentioned)
Lazy loading and render engine improvements depend on WMF/MediaWiki. While their performance improvements are welcome, there is absolutely no guarantee that they will do it, and there is no deadline for them. This proposal is something we as users can do right now.
Some users claimed that we should not do it because other websites become heavier over time, which they do, so the value will become obsolete as old hardware is inevitably replaced with better hardware. For one thing, if other websites create pages that consume tons of resources, they are free to do so, but it doesn't mean we should do the same or force people with devices that have poorer performance to make them suffer through loading. For another, consensus can change and we can edit the value later.
Footnote: As a rough estimate, 1 KB of wikitext weight (the one you see in the page history) is about 5-6 KB HTML weight (source: my observations using PROSESIZE on a couple dozen pages). The more templates, formatting, and user JavaScript and CSS there is on the page, the more HTML weight there will be per 1 KB wikitext weight. Archiving bots assume that 1 KB of wikitext is 6 KB of HTML for the purpose of this guideline. Although the limit is in HTML size, not wikitext, this ratio will allow most discussion pages to stay well within the maximum allowed value.
HTML size does not account for the weight of loaded images. If the page is image-heavy, consider lowering the maximum page size limit.
To measure HTML weight of a given page, you can use tools such as WP:PROSESIZE. On desktop, there is also an option to open "View page source" and copy-paste the code into a text counter to see the number of bytes.
None
The archive interval value must balance the need to keep the talk page within a reasonable length with giving adequate notice to all potential participants to engage in the discussion. Only finished discussions may be archived; if possible, the only discussions that go to archive should be clearly stale (=1 year since last comment). If in doubt, apply a longer archive interval. In particular, pages with very high traffic are allowed to exceed the limit to some degree if necessary to give adequate notice to potentially interested users, or to show a recent discussion of large impact.
If the page intended for user communication is likely to routinely exceed the maximum size limit, and if the log system is not used, the archiving interval (=time since the last comment in the thread) of an archiving bot must be set at at most 10 days. This, or lower, value, should be only set for high-traffic pages.
The first part is pretty self-explanatory.
The second part is designed to a) force high-traffic pages to adopt relatively aggressive archiving schedule and b) effectively exempt them from the requirement that the page be smaller than 1200 KB HTML.
The only consideration for high-traffic pages is whether it's more desirable to keep the page small and friendly to edit/read or to keep threads for slightly longer to encourage more discussion. Generally more discussion is more desirable, but on pages like ANI, where threads are often closed in a matter of hours, this may actually be not necessary.
Apart from the exception described in WP:TALK#User talk pages, discussions should be archived, not blanked.
Discussions on all pages, except for user talk pages, should be archived, not blanked.
Any user may choose to blank most messages on their own talk pages, but archiving is recommended instead. There are messages that the user must not remove.
If a user removes a message from the talk page, whether by themselves or assisted by automation, this will mean that the user has read and is aware of its contents. Insisting on keeping the message that the user may delete against the user's wishes is not appropriate.
As mentioned above, pages like WP:ERRORS violate this guideline by not keeping any archives.
Policy does not prohibit users, whether registered or unregistered, from removing comments from their own talk pages, although archiving is preferred. If a user removes material from their talk page, it is normally taken to mean that the user has read and is aware of its contents; this is true whether the removal was manual or automatic. There is no need to keep them on display, and usually users should not be forced to do so. It is often best to simply let the matter rest if the issues stop.
Basically a slightly refactored restatement of these two rules, with emphasis on user autonomy on user talk pages.
WP:TALKSIZE
If a thread has been archived prematurely, such as when it is still relevant to current work or was not concluded, unarchive it by copying it back to the talk page from the archive, and deleting it from the archive.
Add this before the red passage:
Archive bots must not archive threads on pages intended for user communication if:
there are 10 threads or fewer on the main talk page
the last comment in a given thread is 10 days old or younger, unless the archiving interval was set at a lower value
This is to address user complaints in the linked Talk page guideline thread above, as confirmed on VPI, that empty pages discourage discussion. I agree. Hence the first requirement.
The second requirement is to prevent (potentially) active discussions from being archived. As mentioned above, manual archiving of talk pages is discouraged. But on the off-chance that the thread still is relevant even if archived by bot, the instruction is kept.
While you do not "own" them, by custom you may manage [user space pages] as you wish, so long as you do so reasonably and within these guidelines.
While you do not "own" pages in User: namespace, by custom you may manage these pages as you wish. Your requests not to edit your User: namespace will be honoured. However, your style of userspace management must be within reason and not lead to breaking these guidelines.
This is to separate User: from User talk: namespaces. Nothing changes in the User: namespace, and generally editors will still have free rein in their user namespace.
If an editor asks you not to edit their user pages, such requests should, within reason, be respected. However, editors should not make such requests lightly, especially concerning their talk pages, as doing so can impede the ordinary communication which is important for the improvement and smooth running of the project.
The length of user talk pages, and the need for archiving, is left up to each editor's own discretion.
A user can generally manage their User talk: namespace pages as they see fit, so long as they keep the management within the talk and user page guidelines, including those on maximum size limits.
All discussion pages have to be reasonably accessible, both for reading and for editing, under all reasonable configurations allowed by MediaWiki software. There is no legitimate reason for distinguishing non- User talk: discussion pages from those in this namespace.
Users will still be able to manage User talk: pages as they like, but they will have to clear clutter from time to time. It doesn't matter how they do it so long as they do it.
None
Any user or bot may notify you about your excessive user talk page size that violates the guidelines, and ask you to fix this issue. If you:
refuse
agree to do it but fail to bring the talk page within compliance within 10 days
have a history of notifications that shows that you are unable to maintain compliance with the maximum size long-term
an administrator may unilaterally impose an archive bot using the loosest limits necessary to maintain the minimum user talk page accessibility criteria long-term, or correct values to more aggressive archiving if the archive bot was deployed but the size of the talk page is still too large. For people who use archiving by periods of time rather than numbers, a period can be chosen that is likely to stay within these limits, but no longer than 365 days. The archive bot must not be removed without agreement from the administrator who imposed it. The administrator must notify the user of the intervention.
This is the mechanism to enforce size restrictions on user talk pages if the clutter is not cleared. The mechanism respects user's autonomy to decide how to manage their talk page but steps in if it is clear that the user can't or doesn't want to comply.
If a user doesn't know how to set up an archive, they can always ask for help. Again, it doesn't matter how they choose to clean up the page to a minimum standard so long as they actually do the clean up. I'm not saying "make it super tidy" but more like "make it not look a total mess".
If users feel particular attachment to the collections of their discussions that they ABSOLUTELY NEED on one page, they can create a subpage in the User: space for themselves and advertise it with big-ass fonts. They can also have discussions they are fond of on their talk page so long as they keep the overall size in check.
The requirement for administrators to intervene is to make sure the heightened accountability standards apply, even if such intervention does not involve administrative tools.
Note that having a big talk page is NOT in itself misconduct. No blocks, no warnings intended, unless there's some real shenanigans going on or the refusal is so stubborn it has a real impact on the community.
Minimum thread count: 10 (outside user talk pages)
Maximum archiving interval: 365 days (1 year), but not until the minimal thread count is exceeded.
If the parameter is unspecified, or if any value outside the permitted range is put in the parameters, the values will default to the threshold values.
Oppose all, mega oppose c, turbo oppose d and g, turbo mega oppose f. Automatic archiving of talk pages, astonishingly frequently, preserves any vandalism or disruptive edits of talk pages in the archives. We should not make it mandatory and we definitely should not mandate giving people even less time to check for vandalism until the bot strikes (that window is already as short as one or two days, in some cases). We absolutely should not make it the job of users to enforce accessibility considerations, that is the job of the actual paid frontend employees. Gnomingstuff (talk) 15:25, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
also, I assume a) is meant to be "maximum number of 10 topics" because otherwise that makes most talk pages non-compliant. But I still oppose it either way, because setting a topic maximum codifies the loophole of spamming a talk page with many new topics to force the archive bot to trigger and disrupt the discussion. Gnomingstuff (talk) 15:28, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, it's actually minimum. Most threads are not that long. If that the threads are so huge as to spill over the maximum limit, which doesn't happen that often (average >20 KB wikitext or even more), then this setting will be overridden.
re: spamming a talk page with many new topics to force the archive bot to trigger and disrupt the discussion. -> impossible under this proposal, because archiving will be disallowed if the last comment in a given thread is 10 days old or younger, unless the archiving interval was set at a lower value. And that's a hard one. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 16:03, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support all except point a - there should be flexibility on this point. 10 would be innappropriate for infrequently accessed talk pages, and 3 or 5 is perfectly adequate for encouraging discussion. Danners430tweaks made15:29, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Skeptical of hard rules - If a page is at a hard maximum, and someone comes in with an important topic that needs to be discussed, is their edit disallowed? Do they have to fiddle with archiving something (perhaps even an active conversation) before they can tell everyone that Willy on Wheels is deleting the main page again?I'm fine with a smarter archive bot that can dynamically change how aggressively it runs based on page size. That seems worthwhile to me. Is forced archiving of user talk something that affects more than a few dozen editors? Is there a systemic problem here? However, if we happen to have 2 big, active important discussions on a noticeboard at the same time, I think accessibility is the sacrifice we make for keeping those discussions intact and in the expected place. It also might be worth exploring a finer grained structure for some noticeboards - Wikipedia:Administrator's Noticeboard/Quick Requests for things that don't need huge input is one wild guess I had that might work. Tazerdadog (talk) 15:38, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If a page is at a hard maximum, and someone comes in with an important topic that needs to be discussed, is their edit disallowed? -> ABSOLUTELY NOT. The question is why the page hits the ceiling. If the reason is that the page has very high traffic, but the bot is set at 10 days archiving interval or shorter, then deviations will be tolerated for the sake of keeping discussions, although huge discussions probably should be spun out in their own pages (see table). If the page hits the ceiling because the parameters are too loose and there's suddenly high traffic, they have to be set at 10 days. The page should not generally hit the ceiling despite low traffic, unless it's a userpage, where archiving will not be obligatory, in which case the enforcement kicks in. These archiving enforcement restrictions are absolutely not supposed to discourage or ban discussion.
I don't think there are archive bots that dynamically adjust aggressiveness of archiving. This would be ideal but require a bit of coding I simply do not have the brain for, and I think this will actually be hard to code well, and will be likely too much effort for someone who is not paid for the coding. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 16:13, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is probably worth exploring after this discussion is closed. At the grave risk of saying this about anything technical, it doesn't look like it'd be that hard to implement a minimum viable product of dynamic archiving. Tazerdadog (talk) 01:57, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Skeptical of hard rules I can understand the premise, but I am not convinced that we want a one-sized fits all solution. Fundamentally, I think there should be ways to "sticky" some threads on a talk page and there is a smarter way to search archives. --Enos733 (talk) 16:32, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose: I think this is too inflexible to allow for the deviations mentioned. This (except a maximum page size which should be a requirement unless all sections are ongoing and not close-able) should be a set of recommendations, not enforced rules. That would be very unWikipedia.Turbo mega oppose a: I don't really see the purpose of a requirement that so deviates from our current practice. This would be a lot of enforcement for little benefit. I would think just one is enough, and I unfortunately don't have time to figure out where the TPG talk page discussed this right now, so I'd appreciate if someone could point this out. Aaron Liu (talk) 16:35, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
unfortunately don't have time to figure out where the TPG talk page discussed this right now, so I'd appreciate if someone could point this out. This was discussed at the linked idea lab thread of the Village Pump. I got some feedback that the number is too high, and on the other hand, a temp account suggested a maximum of 15 threads/30 for high-traffic areas. This is not the essential part of this RfC, so if the number is 3 or 5, so be it. I don't care that much so long as it's not 0. 1 is probably not good enough. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 16:42, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As I was reviewing discussions, I found some users' concerns that empty pages discourage discussion. One may be pretty empty, particularly if the suggestion is not answered, as it is on most article talk pages. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 17:30, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all - I'm not really convinced there's an issue here that requires fixing, especially "fixing" via enforcement. If a talk page for an article is too large, please feel free to add automatic archiving as you see fit. If a user's talk page is too large, consider opening a discussion with that user, even if their page loads kinda slow when you start that discussion. Per Gnomingstuff's earlier point, if there's actually widespread accessbility issues related to how pages are rendered and presented to users, that would be a UI problem to be fixed by development and not a content problem to be fixed by limiting content. --tony16:46, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all also BADRFC which goes against the consensus. RfC statement is not neutral nor brief. Pinging large groups of people wastes valuable volunteer time. Polygnotus (talk) 16:50, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think such restrictive requirements are a good idea, and definitely strongly oppose a. Editors should keep in mind that very large talk pages could be a barrier to communication. For article talk pages simply setup archiving if you come across one with size issues. When it comes to the talk page of that one particular editor active editors maybe there could be an annual AN discussion to encourage them to tidy up their talk page. There are many inactive editors without talking page archiving who receive endless automated messages, leading to a lot of bloat, but that's of very little impact (noone needs to communicate with them, and there is little limit on storing text). -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested«@» °∆t°16:56, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I firmly support introducing an enforceable talk page size limit. Having a talk page that will load across all editor devices is important for accessibility, and as we have documented elsewhere we have talk pages that are unusable (so contra several colleagues above, there is a concrete problem, albeit one of limited scale). I don't want to get too far into the weeds with respect to specifying limits; a byte-size should be sufficient, because we do not want the enforcement to become a bureaucratic mess. I suspect this RfC has too many specifics to gain consensus, but in the interest of making a closer's life easier I will note I support b & e, oppose a and am largely agnostic as to the rest. Vanamonde93 (talk) 16:58, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose almost all, the one possible support is b (maximum byte size for pages, a reasonable technical limitation) but that should probably be done in a separate RFC on just that topic, and be a "soft" maximum anyway. Everything else is a bad idea that creates layers of bureaucracy and bad feeling over nothing important. SnowFire (talk) 16:59, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose The OP claims that We have well-tested archiving tools/subpage creation tools that automate the process. This is not my experience. I've been editing Wikipedia for nigh on 20 years and I've not gotten on with any of the assorted archive tools which I've tried. And the archive pages for subprojects like ITN are among the worst offenders in my experience -- bloated and broken due to the template limit. What's needed is for the WMF to address the technical issues as that's their job. Wild development and draconian diktats are unlikely to be helpful. Andrew🐉(talk) 17:05, 29 January 2026 (UTC) (edit conflict)[reply]
This is not well-thought-out at all. It contradicts existing practice for the majority of cases, and some of the provisions (particularly a and b) are mutually exclusive. —Cryptic17:15, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Essay Make an essay. Create the case there, supported by common sense, guideline and policy. Create a CAPLETTER link. Start linking it. If it catches on, within a couple years, you or someone else will promote it to guideline. This is the way to do it. These all-or-nothing hail mary proposals on VPP are lazy and usually don't work. You got to build something if you want to make change. -- GreenC18:02, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose oppose oppose. Oppose RfC structure. The letters a-g don't match the rows in the table. My head hurts, and since this should be headed for SNOW close I won't renumber. Capital letters below talk to the table, not the lower-case list. Oppose A. Not mandating archiving of user talk (i.e. just deleting old stuff is fine) is valuable and should be kept. Archiving parameters (including "no archiving") is a personal preference. While the justification of the RfC is making user talk accessible, the proposal fails to explain why such harsh measures must be taken. Oppose B. No need for a specified number. Just force EEng to archive, and you've solved all problems :) Oppose C. Different talk pages require different archiving intervals. Archiving every 10 days is insane for regular user talk pages. Oppose D. Start a new separate discussion (without the infected atmosphere of this one). Opposing mostly because bundling this together with everything else is really ill-advised. Oppose E. The suggestions makes it clear the proposer don't know how people use archiving bots. The only sane minimum number of threads to keep is 4. 10 is way too many. Oppose F. For the same reason as D - start a separate discussion. Oppose G. Just hell no. Oppose H. For the same reason as D - start a discussion separate from everything else. In closing, the proposer really needs to study how to create constructive RfCs because this ain't how you do it. CapnZapp (talk) 18:22, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes to all I believe this is sorely needed for accessibility reasons, though I'm sure it will be opposed by people as too restrictive. ᴢxᴄᴠʙɴᴍ (ᴛ) 19:38, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose as written This goes too far and is too strict (and "a" is just a bad idea). I'd support stronger recommendations around archiving than we have now after Wikipedia talk:Talk page guidelines#RFC: Recommended maximum talk page size, but strict limits aren't going to work well and mandating bots archive every talk page would probably work even less well. Good luck figuring out what those recommendations should be though, since it seems the people who really care are mostly the ones who like having ridiculously huge user talk pages and they're happy to derail straightforward heuristics into demanding any rule be based on "page weight" and so on. Anomie⚔19:56, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all. This entire proposal is a complete waste of time. There's no reason whatsoever why we should enforce a hard limit on talk page sizes. This has to be one of the most poorly thought out RFCs I've ever seen, let alone participated in. Sugar Tax (talk) 20:11, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Strong oppose all - A is a terrible idea. That will add to clutter, not reduce it. It will make pages less accessible, not more. B is also a terrible idea. This has been explained many times: how long it takes for a page to load is not based on how many kB the page is in size. Because A and B are bad ideas, the rest of the proposals, which seek to enforce A and B, are also bad ideas. And really, the last thing this website needs is more r00lz. There are like a million f'ing rules on this website because it's 25 years of people being like, "I don't like this, let's make a rule to prevent it!" Look, you want to make every page on Wikipedia load reasonably quickly, there is one way, and really only one way, to go about it: you pick your website performance tool, and you say "must load within 5 seconds (or whatever amount of time) on any browser less than 10 years old (or whatever amount of time), as measured by X tool (or the average of multiple tools, take your pick)." You don't regulate the damn kB or the number of minimum threads if you want a page to load quickly, because that doesn't solve the problem. Levivich (talk) 20:31, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all and suggest WP:SNOW close:I have a fair amount of experience with limited hardware and ancient software. As I look around my lab I see that my CP/M machine (actual Z80 hardware, none of this emulation rubbish) from 1983 is still working fine and used daily for text editing and my daily driver is a ThinkPad T580 from 2018. The limits proposed in this RfC are far too small. Anyone who has trouble reading a page twice the size of these limits is already used to having trouble reading half of the web. I would be inclined to support a policy against exceeding the limits found in https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:$wgMaxArticleSize and https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:$wgAPIMaxResultSize --Guy Macon (talk) 20:47, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all. In particular:
a) oppose minthreads=10. If you have sufficient experience with Talk pages you know that sometimes an individual thread can run long, including longer than 200kb on occasion, so this would contradict one of your other proposal terms.
b) oppose max pagesize=200 and max archive=150. This has been very recently debated, and it is inadvisable to raise this again so soon, even if subsumed as part of a longer proposal.
c) oppose mandated archiving: better clarify what you mean by mandated. We mandate very little at Wikipedia, other than WP:LIBEL, WP:COPYRIGHT, some trust & safety considerations, and a short list of other policies with legal implications.
d) oppose required short archiving delay in some cases, per WP:CREEP and WP:BURO. You do not trust administrators at WP:ANI to know enough how to do the right thing? I can conceive of no case where having a rule about this will do anything other than provoke unnecessary strife.
e) oppose limitation on user freedom to choose their own talk page size. Is this about EEng's talk page? If so, then it is none of your fucking business. Don't bring proposals to VPP aimed at particular users; solve it in discussion with them, or at WP:AN if you must. If not about their (or some individual's) talk page, then please ignore the previous statement with my apologies; in that case I oppose per WP:OWNTALK and WP:CREEP.
f) oppose oppose oppose UTP max size enforcement. See e), and WP:OWNTALK, WP:CREEP, and WP:BURO. Personally, I would consider invoking WP:IAR to reverse enforcement at random other UTPs under this rule to see how strong the community support for this disastrous provision really was, assuming it were ever adopted, which I strongly doubt.
g) oppose enforced bot maxsize validation. I see a lot of terms like mandate, enforcement, limit, require, comply, and force in your proposal. You see to be in battle dress here, getting ready for the mother of all archiving wars. Where are all the terms like generally, should, typically, suggested, consider, and other terms that are often used in Wikipedia policies and guidelines to indicate something less than a hanging offense? Your usage smacks of my way or the highway, and does not conform to general usage at Wikipedia, in my opinion.
In re "e)", if there's something about someone's User_talk: page that makes it difficult for other editors to communicate with them, then it is other editors' business. WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:07, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Not necessarily. If you have trouble accessing a webpage, it's not necessarily the problem of the webmaster to fix it, it might just be that you're using obsolete technology. It's not tolerable or practical to expect us to have every single web page work great for every single user no matter how obsolete (or laden with plug-ins, scripts, etc.) their client is. We should require ourselves to meet industry-wide web standards, not the standards of every random person on the internet. Levivich (talk) 22:12, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If you're required to post an ANI notice, and you can't because the editor has a million-byte-long User_talk: page, then we have a problem. "Hey, stop being a jerk and archive your talk page" is something we can do. "Dude, stop being poor and buy a new computer if you want to report someone to ANI" is not something we can do. WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:54, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Not necessarily. If 1,000 people have no problem posting the ANI notice, but one person does have a problem because they have too many plug-ins or scripts installed, or they're simultaneously downloading many files, or they're just using a 30-year-old machine, then "we" do not have a problem, just that one person has a problem, and "fix or update your client" is something we can say. Again: we should comply with industry-wide web standards, not with the needs of every single person out there. Levivich (talk) 22:59, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Re: recommendations vs mandates, recommendations are basically unenforceable with enough determination from the user who does not want to follow recommendations. We already have a recommendation saying that Large talk pages are difficult to read and load slowly over slow connections and User talk pages must serve their primary purpose, which is to make communication and collaboration among editors easier. - Hint: make pages accessible enough to make collaboration easier. Does this recommendation work? No. There is a reason government pages require basic accessibility support, with reference to WCAG guidelines. There is no reason we cannot require this on our side. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 23:10, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And how exactly is this the job or responsibility of unpaid volunteers, as opposed to the engineers who are actually paid to make websites accessible and improve rendering time? Gnomingstuff (talk) 23:47, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And how exactly is this the job or responsibility of unpaid volunteers, as opposed to the engineers who are actually paid to make websites accessible and improve rendering time? Why as opposed to? Por qué no los dos? Also, volunteers don't have to do anything at all, and yet they do. Your attitude just kicks the can down the road. And I don't have to remind you that WMF has had quite a few fumbles about their coding. In this thread, just look at the 03:31, 30 January 2026 (UTC) comment. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 11:31, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have never seen anyone get any actual negative action against them if they fail to post on a user's talk page for an ANI report. Many editors are eager (perhaps overly so) to notice omissions and correct them. To avoid this argument (and I think it's actually generally a good change) perhaps we should amend the ANI rules to say that if you cannot reasonably, for any reason, post on a user's talk page, mention that in your initial report (or immediate reply). Skynxnex (talk) 00:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
More generally, even when specific forms of communication are not required, we expect editors to be able to communicate with each other. That includes making it reasonably possible for newbies to be able to leave a message on any page that is used for discussion.
ANI itself frequently breaks that limit; a handful of editors' User_talk: pages do as well. For example, I remember when DGG's talk page regularly ran >800K long (example) and sometimes exceeded a million bytes. That revision took about 10 seconds just now to load on a modern computer with a decent internet connection and all scripts/gadgets disabled via mw:safemode. @Levivich mentions industry-wide standards, which I believe are that pages should generally load within three to four seconds (because that's when users start giving up). Now imagine that it's not loading on my MacBook, but on a smartphone. Good luck loading the page. Extra good luck being able to edit it, or even to scroll to the end.
That old revision took about 8 seconds to load load on my modern phone over 5G. Most of the time was spent, I am pretty sure, by the server itself having to freshly fetch and render the page since it was probably uncashed for me. I think one circle I'm trying to square is that none of this should be be any editor's job. It shouldn't be a bot's job. There shouldn't be rules and potential punishments if you do it wrong. The MediaWiki itself should just allow editors to pick how many sections they see per talk page. Abd the rest are the archives. But of course the long history of talk pages just being a page makes that hard. But that sort of change is less disruptive than more rules. Skynxnex (talk) 05:40, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What do you think the loading time would be if you were using a low-end phone (e.g., a JioPhone) on a pay-per-use data plan? I think it's safe to assume that the answer is "worse", and yours was already twice the industry standard. Did you try to scroll to the end of the page?
The problem with changing talk pages (remember Wikipedia:Flow?) is that the change would have hurt one group of people and benefited a different group of people. So naturally the first group complains that it's all harm and no benefit (to them), and the beneficiaries are already have difficulty with joining conversations, so they have much less ability to make their view heard. I don't think that reality will change this decade. We will probably have to wait until the small minority of editors who primarily use mobile devices become a more vocal part of the Wikimedia communities. In the meantime, what's happening is that mobile-heavy communities are finding off-wiki places for discussion and coordination (e.g., Whatsapp or Discord). WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:50, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I support a limit on the size of user talk pages, but not on noticeboards, which are generally archived automatically and have not proved an issue in the past. However, I also think the horrendous formatting of this RfC has killed any chance of us getting a productive outcome here. Proposing seven different changes at once, some of which put the cart waaay before the horse (enforcement mechanism for a guideline that has yet to exist??) was a bad idea. Toadspike[Talk]21:34, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all - I am yet to be convinced that there is a real problem with talk pages - annoyances yes, problem no. Nor do I think that any of the proposals would be an appropriate way to deal with the annoyances. When there is an issue with a talk page, our current rules (and lack thereof) give us FLEXIBILITY to deal with them as we think best fits the specific situation. This all seems to CREAPY to me… boxing us in unnecessarily. Blueboar (talk) 21:46, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose as misguided and repetitious. As I already said in December, If archiving a thread is controversial, it very likely should not happen. If it's not controversial, there's no reason to wait until the page reaches some arbitrary size. The fact I am quoting myself from another RFC on this same topic barely a month ago suggests this RFC is problematic. —Rutebega (talk) 23:00, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all, as strongly as possible. Good grief, not this nonsense again! The idea of making this kind of stuff enforceable is downright offensive. --Tryptofish (talk) 00:14, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose as written This is a bit too much to do in one RfC. Would suggest rescoping this RfC to be targeted to user talk pages only (I'd assume that's why you wanted to make this RfC right?). In addition, outside of the user talk space, if the talk page is too big, no one is going to complain if you archive some stale topics so no hard guideline is needed. Workshop something that's basically "you have a problem if the average user can't discuss conduct issues on your user talk page" and I think that would be sufficient. JumpytooTalk01:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support a maximum size, absolutely. I have a reasonably good computer, and it still takes an absurd amount of time for some user talk pages to load. This is a collaborative project, where accepting communications is necessary, and should not be hobbled by an inordinate pride in an absurd talk page size. BD2412T04:52, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Strong support some kind of stronger enforcement for accessibility, including a maximum size for user talk pages. I don't know why editors think the layout of their talk pages is so important that they can impede accessibility for others. Wikipedia is not a forum and talk pages exist so editors can communicate with each other, not so they can be fancily decorated or have years old discussions visible at first glance. There is a good reason we have a WP:SIZERULE for articles, and there is even less of a reason to not impose a strict limit on the size of user talk pages than for articles. While WP:CREEP can be a valid concern, it does not apply here, at least without meaningful justification as to why a user talk page might need to be that large. I don't have strong opinions on many of these particular proposals other than I generally echo the sentiment from others (particularly Toadspike) that this is far too specific/narrow a proposal to work. For the closer, you might interpret this as support b, e and f, oppose a and no opinion on the rest. Katzrockso (talk) 13:45, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No. With all due respect, this feels like a case of wasting the community's time to resolve a petty issue of minimal consequence. I struggle to believe that even goofy talk pages like User talk:EEng present a real accessibility problem. How frequently does someone need to contact those specific editors so urgently that they can't wait a few seconds for the page to load, or wait until they are on a more reasonable browsing setup? Some of the devices I use to browse the web are so ancient that they struggle to load most pages on the web, but I was still able to load User talk:EEng, scroll through the sections, and click edit on a section of my choice in about 30 seconds. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)19:34, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose - None of these seem worth doing. Too many edge cases, too much bureaucracy when it's only very rarely a problem. On-wiki page sizes are tricky measures to use, because the size of the wikitext is not the same as the size of a page in a browser, with all the images and templates and whatnot. And there are some talk pages that really do need to be longer than others. So this all seems like for circumstances when both of these are true: (a) multiple people have difficulty using a talk page and ask for something to be done about it (or tries to do something about it), and (b) someone ignores the complaints and/or reverses efforts to fix the issue. The latter is very rare, and only ever an issue in userspace, where we tend to frown on other users jumping in to archive. Really, I can only think of one case where both of the above have been true on a usertalk page. I do not know why that person digs their heels in, or why several people reliably show up to insist it's cool, but them's the breaks with norm-breaking and social capital on wikipedia (and, let's face it, most places). In other words, if anything it's a one-off for an administrators' noticeboard, no ta new policy; and I'd also recommend against that noticeboard trip as pointless. As I wrote below, a new entry in perennial proposals would be justified at this point. — Rhododendritestalk \\ 00:53, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Why not zero? If all the discussions on my user talk page are a year old and refer to something long since resolved, who are you to tell me that I can't archive all of them? --Guy Macon (talk) 01:41, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Establish a minimum number of 10 threads on pages, except on user talk pages. So I think we are talking about article talkpages. But often article talkpages contain only stale stuff that has been dealt with years ago and is no longer relevant. Polygnotus (talk) 01:53, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I can see the value in the default being a non-zero value for article talk pages automatically archived by a bot, which cannot tell whether the stale stuff is still relevant. That also gives an approximate indication of how active the talk page is (if I ask a question there is it likely to be seen or should I hunt down a WikiProject?) but if editors at a particular talk page think a non-default value (including zero) is appropriate there then that should be allowed imo. Thryduulf (talk) 02:01, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
OK thanks, I think this proposal is confusingly worded. Certainly we wouldn't require pages to have 10 discussions on them, it seem that that is supposed that 10 part is supposed to only be about a parameter for this mysterious archiving solution - and not actually a minimum number of topics required on a talk page (i.e. a talk page can't even be CREATED unless you start 10 or more discussions at once). — xaosfluxTalk01:32, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think this is intended to relate to the number of threads left on a page by archiving bots. For example Wikipedia talk:WikiProject UK Railways archiving configuration has the parameter minthreadsleft = 5 so old threads (in this case defined as 30 days since the last activity) will not be archived if it would result in fewer than 5 threads being left on the page. I'm at a loss as to why this is something that needs to be a guideline, let alone anything stronger. Thryduulf (talk) 01:50, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Some people think a talk page with some discussions on it, even if they're really old, is more inviting for newbies. Possibly the proposer here is one of them. Or maybe the idea was just to avoid "unnecessary" archiving on very inactive pages since the proposal calls for automatic archiving of all talk pages. Anomie⚔02:01, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That's the impression I got from reading the TPG discussion, where two issues were raised: disputes over manual archiving and empty talk pages that may result out of that. It was a minor thread in the discussion, but the people who did address it were largely opposed to both. Hence the proposal. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 09:06, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The easiest solution is an addition that anyone can archive any inactive threads on any talk page, and reverting these archivals is disruptive. sapphaline (talk) 10:10, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Strongly oppose preposterous proposal for draconian, misguided, additional rules. I'll admit it: you lost me at your very first point, Establish a minimum number of 10 threads on pages. You mean you demand that we add up to 9 (or even 10) threads to every talk page on enwiki? No, thanks. I went on, anyway, out of basic respect, but your suggestion that we let the bots from Minority Report crawl over every page and disrupt even appropriate and useful retention of discussion did not entice me. Your hidden table—kudos: you collapsed it!—was impossible for me to make any use of. I did see reasonably accessible but did not make it to the part where you defined "Reasonable". In summary, the specific parts of the proposed changes I do not like are a through g. Thanks for asking, but I can offer no support. — JohnFromPinckney (talk / edits)23:04, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Counterproposal
EEng is asked to archive his talk page.
If, within 7 days, EEng doesn't archive his talk page so it works like a normal talk page, then EEng is topic banned from editing any other page except his talk page. This sanction expires when EEng's talk page works like a normal talk page.
Quick question: how does this help us achieve our goal of a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge? Polygnotus (talk) 21:01, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have asked Quiddity to find a WMFer who can dive into the technical stuff; that way we have a solution for all long pages once and for all. Polygnotus (talk) 21:09, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
S Marshall is asked to stay on topic, avoid personalizing discussions, and stick to general principles of Wikipedia.
If User:S Marshall continues to waste everybody's time by perverting this discussion and turning it into an attack on one editor (and in the wrong venue), then S Marshall shall be required to write one hundred times on a Village Pump subpage (which may be entitled, .../Blackboard, if desired) that "I shall stick to the point and avoid personalizing the issue and being a general dufus at Village Pump." (in cursive)
I think this talk section illustrates vividly how unhelpful the entire idea proposed at the top really is. And frankly, this section (not the whole discussion, just this section) should be closed and hatted as a personal attack. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:00, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
should have been hatted the moment someone brought donald trump into it, really
Has this been retained (not archived) for humor reasoning, a community consensus against one or more editors, or maybe the love of drama and large talk pages? Surely it is not because of a lack of archiving knowledge-- Otr500 (talk) 22:41, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Is it time to just add "force EEng to make his user talk page functional" to the list of perennial proposals? Or an extension of WP:UNBLOCKABLES called "WP:UNARCHIVABLES" or "WP:UNTALKABLES"? Raised by many people many times over many years, but just gets a bunch of "relax, it's no big deal" responses from third parties. After it crashed my browser a couple times some years ago, I'm certainly not going there (not that I've had a need to), and I light a candle for any newbie who tries to leave him a message on mobile. But yeah, I agree with the pile-on above that we're not going to institute hard rules for this. It's one of those fairly-low-stakes-in-the-grand-scheme-of-the-project norms that everybody just kind of does because we want this to be a place where collaboration is easy and we don't make life unnecessarily hard for each other, and which we're realistically only going to enforce if someone lacks social capital. Adding: EEng is not usually the person with the longest page -- we should enforce this evenly or not at all -- but EEng is certainly the page that comes up most frequently. — Rhododendritestalk \\ 23:12, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It occurs to me that a counterproposal that involves the idea of sanctioning EEng is something that EEng ought to be notified of. (Oh, but his talk page was too long to notify him, I get it! rolls eyes) So I did it: [1]. --Tryptofish (talk) 23:39, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I've been trying to talk to you for about half an hour Tryptofish and got edit conflicted every single time so you get the short version.Your claim that this reduces to a personal attack on EEng is wildly mistaken. It's about EEng personally. It's about a problem with EEng's talk page behaviour. But it's not an attack to propose a solution.—S MarshallT/C 23:45, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And, the solution for EEng is not the solution for every editor in the long talk pages category. Some of those talk pages load easily. Some of the editors are indeffed and it's not realistic to expect them to fix it.—S MarshallT/C 23:47, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
But, EEng is a user in good standing who's bright enough to see that his talk page is a problem. He's well aware that it needs to be fixed. We've established at the DRV that preceded this mess that other people don't get to archive EEng's talk page for him.—S MarshallT/C 23:49, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Therefore there's only one person who can fix the problem and it's EEng. He knows he needs to do it. He hasn't. So I suggest ways of making him.—S MarshallT/C 23:51, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In a collaborative project you must have a talk page people can work with. If people can't work with your talk page then you're being uncollaborative. It's the Wikipedia equivalent of antisocial behaviour.—S MarshallT/C 23:53, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There isn't only one way to look at this. There's several different ways. One way I like to see it, is that outside of article space, I don't care how long a user talk page is, but it presents technical problems that have yet to be solved. When I comment on a long talk page on my desktop and on my mobile (using desktop view), there is a bit of lag that makes using the reply function impossible. Using the edit section isn't as bad, and adding a new comment entirely tends to work. This shows that there is a problem with MediaWiki, not EEng. How about we fix that first? Viriditas (talk) 00:10, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In a perfect world, MediaWiki would be less ghastly. But we don't control that. We have to work with the software we have, not the software we want. So we need volunteers to have the behaviours that make the software work. EEng doesn't. It's got a lot in common with hoarding: begins with a disinclination to get rid of old rubbish, but over time it evolves into a situation where the neighbours are complaining about the smell and the postman can't force any more mail into the overstuffed letterbox.—S MarshallT/C 09:52, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
S Marshall, you and I have both been around this project for a very long time. (Indeed, I remember the verifiability-not-truth debates of a bygone era.) You, like EEng, are a user in good standing who is bright enough to realize that this discussion you have started is only inflaming the issue, and not accomplishing anything productive. If you have accomplished anything at all, it's that you just might have caused more editors to come over to the opinion that is opposite to your own. --Tryptofish (talk) 19:31, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well then I don't know if it's the case that no one got the ping or it's just random users in the list didn't get it, or maybe those that were at the bottom of the alphabet? I knew that {{ping}} only fits 50 usernames but I didn't know that one comment couldn't have more than 50. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 16:17, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Szmenderowiecki This is just a bad RfC which is probably why people don't respond to it. And I don't really see the point. What are you hoping to achieve? We already had this discussion a short while ago. Polygnotus (talk) 16:25, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is just a bad RfC - in what way? I'm looking at WP:RFC and I don't see your point. You can disagree with the premise (which I guess you will based on your prior comments) but it doesn't make it a bad RfC.
We already had this discussion a short while ago. - addressed in the table.
which is probably why people don't respond to it - We are just two hours into the discussion, so how do you know?
What are you hoping to achieve? - minimum accessibility standards that will cause at most moderate performance issues for all users wanting to engage in Wikipedia discussions; also stopping quarrels about archiving preference. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 16:34, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is just a bad RfCin what way? you don't have a clear understanding of the situation so any proposal you make is hindered by that.
We already had this discussion a short while agoaddressed in the table. Maybe, but this is still a problem.
which is probably why people don't respond to itWe are just two hours into the discussion You are, that is my point, but" we" as an alleged community are not "just two hours into the discussion"
minimum accessibility standards that will cause at most moderate performance issues that proves you don't understand the problem. Read what I wrote in that earlier discussion. Then think about it for a day or two. Then, if you have a good idea you can propose it. But starting an RfC and pinging a bunch of people when you haven't really understood the problem, the various factions in the debate and the upsides and downsides of the various options is unlikely to lead to a good result.
I don't think there are archive bots that dynamically adjust aggressiveness of archiving. This would be ideal but require a bit of coding I simply do not have the brain for, and I think this will actually be hard to code well, and will be likely too much effort for someone who is not paid for the coding. But you didn't ask anyone... You don't have to be a nerd to have a good idea, but when talking about (talk) page archiving it does help. Polygnotus (talk) 16:41, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I may or may not have resting bitch face in English. In 2003 Brooke Vibber wrote: There's no theoretical maximum, but our server only has 2 gigs of memory, so don't push it please. ;) In all seriousness though, I very strongly recommend against letting articles grow beyond 32 kilobytes.[2] Server. Singular.
We may need to write a userspace essay explaining how long this topic has been debated for and how complicated it is so that we can stop new users who aren't nerds wasting a bunch of everyone's time. Note also [3] and [4] and [5], this is not the first time. Polygnotus (talk) 19:55, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Wow, I missed that before. This whole, huge, indigestible discussion no longer looks like a good-faith effort to improve editor collaboration by making talk pages more generally accessible (a totally defensible goal per se). It now looks to me more like a way to harass an editor in a fit of pique after previous attempts to directly interfere with their chosen archiving one-on-one were rejected and undone by admins, lightly concealed as a broad, improve-accessibility discussion. Only, this time, their fit of pique is not only harassing one user, it is wasting the time of many users. This is completely unacceptable. This isn't ANI, but by raising this discussion, Szmenderowiecki's behavior should be open to scrutiny as well. If there were a proposal on the table to ban Szmenderowiecki from starting a discussion on archiving or pagesize for eighteen months, I would vote to support. Mathglot (talk) 07:16, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The first link is irrelevant to this discussion, the second link is the DRV, the third is literally a companion discussion to DRV. I am using all forums for their intended purpose. Mathglot I started this discussion because it became apparent to me at DRV that there are no good procedures to enforce talk page accessibility, which I believe are needed. This is the only reason I was starting this discussion. I am amazed that some editors dismiss my concerns as fake. I urge you to strike your accusation of me trying to harass editors. If you insist or want to go the route of banning discussion, go ahead, but that accusation, and that of any other editors suggesting I'm trolling or creating the concern out of thin air, will also be brought to light in appropriate forums if need be. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 08:57, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I am sorry, but that is my honest impression, right or wrong. If I were in your shoes, I would comment anywhere but here, as it will only draw more attention to your actions. In my opinion, you are skating on thin ice, and the more attention paid to this, the more likely it is that it will cause trouble for you now, or at some later date. You are of course always welcome to raise accusations you view as inappropriate at the appropriate forum, which would be my Talk page, followed by WP:AN/I if you don't get satisfaction there. If you just want to vent, I invite you to my Talk page. I can be very conciliatory, and will listen to what you have to say. Maybe it will make you feel better. Good luck, Mathglot (talk) 09:40, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not going to be the one to escalate, so the ball is in your court. I don't think any disciplinary intervention is necessary for any party here, for now, at least if you strike that accusation. I'm not going to be the one who shouts WP:UNCIVIL at the slightest hint somebody makes a faux pas and the one who drags you to ANI. I've worked jobs where people assaulted me every once a while and where I learned a lot of very interesting things about who I am and where I need return to (as a naturalised immigrant). I managed to still maintain a poker face most of the time and grow somewhat immune to these attacks. Bickering strangers on the internet are several pay grades below that. But I will mount a defence if necessary. Or remain silent where I believe it will be best for my case. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 09:53, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have no wish (nor time) to escalate, so we agree on one thing at least. Sorry to disappoint, but I will not strike, as it represents my honest opinion. I agree that remaining silent is best for your case. I should add that I did not realize you were an immigrant and I am very impressed (and envious) of your command of English, which to me, appears to be of native-speaker level. I wish my abilities in foreign languages were as good as yours. Kudos! Mathglot (talk) 10:38, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Szmenderowiecki, Actually, I will strike under one condition: I strike my comment, and immediately following that, you withdraw and {{hat}} this proposal as "|status=withdrawn". That would be to the general benefit of everyone. Do you accept? Mathglot (talk) 10:50, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If there is a viable alternative proposal, I will withdraw this one. I am in works of discussing another one proposed by Sapphaline. This is independent of my request to strike/remove. PS. For the future, I have a thing to say: editors are always responsible for their edits. It's only your decision because you made the claim. I don't want it to be on you, and I'm not going to complain myself. But if you stand by your claim, I reserve the right to consider it if necessary for any appropriate defence against any allegations. This is because if you have that honest opinion which you stand by even upon request to retract, this should imply that you have good evidence to back it up, which will stand upon independent scrutiny and presentation of all exculpatory evidence. And I want that possibility to rebut any point of that potential complaint, hence the "reserve the right". I still appreciate honesty, even if it occasionally breaks rules of what discussion should look like. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 14:02, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
you don't have a clear understanding of the situation so any proposal you make is hindered by that - sorry?
that proves you don't understand the problem. Read what I wrote in that earlier discussion. Then think about it for a day or two. Then, if you have a good idea you can propose it. Read all these discussions, understood them well, and I disagree with your premise. You can disagree with mine. You can think of it as a terrible idea but it doesn't mean it becomes a bad RfC question.
But you didn't ask anyone... You don't have to be a nerd to have a good idea, but when talking about (talk) page archiving it does help. And no one came up with that idea at the idea lab, where you could have participated and told me this was a terrible idea and maybe we should do something else instead... That discussion was up for almost a month in a high-traffic forum. You could have proposed that idea yourself, the idea I didn't have before that comment. Why nobody thought of that before? Why do you blame me? For what?
neutral and brief - you just seem to be opposed to holding the RfC because you are satisfied with the status quo rather than having problems with neutrality and brevity. Because you don't say how it's not neutral. It's not the shortest statement but it's definitely not out of place for RfCs I witnessed in terms of size. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 16:54, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Szmenderowieckiyou just seem to be opposed to holding the RfC because you are satisfied with the status quo To me it seems to be the other way around. It looks like you disagree with consensus formed in the recent preceding discussions (which is allowed of course) and then started an RfC that ignores the opinions expressed in them. Combine that with a very long and non-neutral RfC statement and you got a bad RfC. Polygnotus (talk) 17:02, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I mention that the way I read that discussion was that the 75 KB wikitext limit was removed, and that's it. Nothing more, nothing less. The question was not specific enough to say if that means no limits or maybe some higher limit or something else. That was a bad RfC, because the result's interpretation is ambiguous. And you know it because you engaged in that discussion extensively. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 17:12, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What the hell is this, your idea of a "big beautiful bill"? I presume I was pinged to here because of my close of this thread. It seems you've disregarded my advice to start separate RfCs for article-talk and user-talk. I do not care to spend hours getting up to speed on what you're asking for – your ping was an annoying distraction when I'm trying to stay focused on tasks in my to-do list which require focused concentration. Pick the one change that you most want to make, and which you believe has a strong chance of obtaining a consensus, and start with that, please. I'm not a member of a political party who will just vote up or down on your big bill, based on how my party leadership tells me to vote, without even bothering to read the details of the bill. – wbm1058 (talk) 17:14, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What the hell is this, your idea of a "big beautiful bill"? Trump aside, the proposal was up for a month on a high-traffic page. Why didn't you engage? I gave a list of ideas and anyone could have said the thing you say now. But no, I have to be pummeled at the start of the RfC because people don't bother to look at the very place intended for workshopping proposals. Why workshop them at all then?
I presume I was pinged to here because of my close of this thread. - no, that's because you posted in the Discussion : Recommended maximum talk page size part.
It seems you've disregarded my advice to start separate RfCs for article-talk and user-talk. As I said, I see no functional difference between these two. I am free to disregard your advice if I believe it's bad advice.
your ping was an annoying distraction when I'm trying to stay focused on tasks in my to-do list which require focused concentration - Jesus Christ, I didn't know that pings can make people so cross. You don't have to engage with it, you can come to it later if your task list is what you need. There's no need to be so worked up. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 17:28, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This proposal has not been up for a month, you just started it today, hours ago. I have no idea what proposal was up for a month on a high-traffic page, but it's not this proposal. – wbm1058 (talk) 17:43, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have no idea what proposal was up for a month on a high-traffic page, but it's not this proposal. The idea lab thread? At almost 1,500 watchers, 9K pageviews per month, you bet it's a pretty high-traffic area. Or at least one that people supposedly watch.
Ad Aaron Liu: A recommendation is unenforceable. I meant it to be specifically a rule. If I wanted to make it a recommendation, I would have said so, but IMHO there's no point to discuss a recommendation if there's no enforcement of the recommendation.
Who cares if something is recommended if I disagree with the recommendation and there's nothing against disobeying the recommendation? Same for essays: who cares about essays if anyone can say "essay is not policy/guideline, so leave me alone"? Anyone's understanding of terms like "reasonable", "substantial", "large", "slow", if not backed by specific numbers, is different. What is "slow enough"? Is this "reasonable"? Is this inconvenience "substantial"?
Some people say "this is against current practice". OK. Just because it's current practice doesn't mean it's good practice. Substitute "current practice" with "industry standard", and you'll see what I mean.
Unfortunately, untangling a single piece of it is going to be very hard. Presumably, for the sake of simplifying discussion, it's going to be the size limit. So let's look at it:
- People are still gonna edit war over archiving and that's a concern, expressed incidentally at the TPG.
- I read opinions from certain users that manual archiving is busywork, and I agree. Also expressed incidentally at TPG.
- Doesn't address lack of archiving on pages like ERRORS.
- Enforcing anything on user talk pages without an impartial and specific mechanism is going to be hell.
- People are gonna ask: why only enforcement on user talk and not any talk? Well, that enforcement was supposed to be archive bots/logs (mostly) but you insist this be one proposal at a time, so I can't propose this. Unfortunately certain proposals only work in tandem.
- Empty talk pages are a concern for some users, and I agree with their concern - and it was discussed at the maximum talk page size discussion of all places, not minimum. So I felt it was necessary to address. I again get pummeled for that.
(Contrary to some suggestions, I don't mean this proposal as a snide against EEng. EEng's page was not the first time I had this problem, I just didn't speak up. This is a general applicability rule. Any talk page about 500 KB is absolutely terrible for my browser just reading it, pages of the size of ANI are terrible editing them). Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 18:24, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You'll notice there are very few guidelines as rigid as what you propose.Ease of implementation is always something policywriters need to consider. Min threads and max archive size are going to be hard to implement.It is great that you've identified and analyzed issues and are willing to put in the work or fix them. But often, if you put them forward in an RfC—the process for attracting as many participants as humanly possible—without consulting through non-RfC discussions, you are going to attract as many participants as humanly possible that have a lot of questions. Aaron Liu (talk) 22:32, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This proposal does not say anything about min size. minthreadsleft or similar exist in both of the used bots. Max size is easily implementable by something like this: If pagesize exceeds, say, 200KB, archive the oldest discussions whose last comment was at least a year ago; if still exceeds, decrease by 30 days until you get within 200KB, but not below 10 days. Or something like that. But often, if you put them forward in an RfC—the process for attracting as many participants as humanly possible—without consulting through non-RfC discussions the problem is that I have consulted my proposal. The gist was always there: mandatory automated archiving and limits on all pages intended for user communication. There may be an detail that I have not, but I consulted most of it. And people are shouting me down for this. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 23:00, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I'm talking about min threads. You're not going to stop the extremely-popular manual archiving by just forcing changes to the most popular bots. It will also be hard to set up automatic archiving everywhere.I'm sorry, but I did not see where you mentioned a, c, f/g, the change from "should" to "force", or the 50%/90% reduction in the page size limits. I did not see where you mentioned mandatory automated archiving at all. Aaron Liu (talk) 03:36, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It will also be hard to set up automatic archiving everywhere. Nope, all it takes is a bot function that automatically introduces e.g. {{subst:setup auto archiving}}, when the first talk page thread is created. It is going to default to the loosest parameters, but you can change them manually later. For existing pages, check for existing archive, if there is none but there are talk page threads, automatically deploy. I'm not a coder but pasting a text if a certain piece of text exists isn't a complicated piece of code we are speaking of.I'm sorry, but I did not see where you mentioned a, c, f/g, the change from "should" to "force", or the 50%/90% reduction in the page size limits
a was originally expressed as the minimum size limit (it was 500 KB HTML, but it could be 200 or 300 or even 100, so long as it's not 0. The pseudocode part at the bottom included the minkeepthreads parameter. I got feedback that the code was "too complicated", so I simplified it. I was never that part was a bad idea.
c (mandated archiving) is literally the second bullet point in the VPI.
f is the seventh bullet point
g was discussed along the way.
the change from "should" to "force" Equivalent in meaning for purposes of guiding user behaviour. If "should" had been supposed to be a non-binding recommendation, the discussion would have made no sense.
the 50%/90% reduction in the page size limits. I don't know what you are talking about.
Szmenderowiecki, is it then your position that mandatory automated archiving would apply to all user talk pages, including those currently archived manually? As an example, my user talk page, now nineteen years old, is manually archived and always has been. If your proposal achieves consensus would I have to give up manual archiving and submit to obligatory bot archiving? What about users who manually archive by theme (or other algorithm of their choice) instead of last comment age? Oblige them to switch as well? Mathglot (talk) 03:49, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Read the proposal carefully and you will get the answer. Short answer: no, do whatever you want so long as you keep within the size guidelines out of your own accord. If you refuse upon request, or you have trouble keeping the maximum size long-term, only then it becomes a yes. Archiving by theme will not be possible because we don't have bots that guess the discussion's context and sort discussions into buckets according to what you are talking about. If an admin wants to manually sort their discussions, fine, but I don't expect admins to do that because they likely won't hve the time and their job is not to micromanage others' talk pages. If you don't want this to happen, keep within your 1200 KB HTML and you'll be golden. I'm upfront that this is a restriction on user autonomy, but user autonomy, just like generally being allowed to edit, is not a right, it's a convention. If your user autonomy makes others suffer, you are abusing it. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 10:46, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Any talk page about 500 KB is absolutely terrible for my browser just reading it @Szmenderowiecki: Three quick questions. What browser are you using, how much RAM do you have, and how fast is your download speed? This is because I think the problem here may be your device, whatever it may be.
This is not to say that people should intentionally keep talk pages large just for the fun of it; I'm just saying that there may be technical limitations on your end that are affecting your ability to read really large pages. I can still open EEng's 972k talk page in Safari on my iPhone 11 with 140 other tabs and 24 other apps open, probably because iOS is really good at memory management and frees up memory from inactive apps and Safari tabs. Trying to edit EEng's talk page, however, is a different matter... SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 23:19, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Sure: Chromium 143, 8 GB RAM, 25 Mbps download on WiFi. RAM is 100% not an issue because I have tons of spare RAM without forced cleaning, neither is download speed because the whole source code should be downloaded within at most a second, shorter than the rendering itself. Everything works pretty fine with these parameters on any web site until I get to gargantuan talk pages on Wikipedia. Or try to edit big talk pages. It's not a "me" problem. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 23:31, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Okay. I figured as much but I still wanted to ask.
I admit that I have sometimes experienced issues on very large pages; I've gotten the "This webpage was reloaded because a problem occurred" message (which is Safari's way of telling you that the page crashed because it ran out of memory) on large talk pages before. When I scroll down a very large page, it usually takes a couple of seconds for the page content to appear. And of course, the sheer size of these pages makes them difficult to navigate on mobile (Minerva skin helps to make this less tedious). SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 23:41, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Minerva skin looks shit on desktop, and besides readers are very likely not aware that they can change the skin using the "Mobile version" link, and quite a few may not be even aware of the possibility.. So long as we allow IP editing, any reader may become an editor with no warning. Any IP who wants to post on any noticeboard or talk page and the noticeboard is 500K+ is likely to abandon the effort due to the lags. This is unacceptable Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 10:50, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My understanding is that there's no standard way of archiving pages and so there's a mish-mosh of bots and tools. I've evolved my own way of filing my talk page but it's too manual for my taste. Anyway, I have a question. What I'd really like is a simple method of moving a section from one page to another. This is the way that email and other documents are usually filed -- you move them to folders. Is there such a thing in Wikipedia? Andrew🐉(talk) 17:30, 29 January 2026 (UTC) (edit conflict)[reply]
I believe the closest we have is one click archiver, but in theory it should be possible to develop something that can do a similar action but to a manually defined page. CMD (talk) 03:34, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
BTW, every time I've tried to say something in this discussion, I've gotten an edit conflict. Wiki software is really poor at doing user communication when compared to just about everything else. Andrew🐉(talk) 17:34, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I've heard of that tool before but it seems too complex for my needs and I gather that it is resource-hungry. Looking at its talk page, it seems that there's an incompatibility which is going to break it. I've seen many useful tools broken as a result of change and that's why I think all such infrastructure and interface should be managed centrally by the WMF. Andrew🐉(talk) 23:19, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I daily-drove the parser migration tool (which allows you to set your default parser to parsoid) in late 2024 and had no issues with CD (in fact, little issues at all other than the reduced server caching increasing page load times). I just checked again and everything works. @ChildrenWillListen probably had a configuration issue. There's been many calls for WMF to maintain promising infrastructure. WMF couldn't even install it. (slightly clickbait, but I couldn't figure out a better way to summarize this, sorry) Aaron Liu (talk) 03:31, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You mean the same engineers who built out the internet to give us a postliterate society where everyone is addicted to screens, where people no longer read books, where society is more susceptible to disinformation and propaganda, and who are solidly against the humanities and democratic values? Those guys? Viriditas (talk) 22:47, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Please keep in mind about mobile users, who because of such small screen size have to contend with extremely difficult scrolling of pages with long discussions or too many threads (especially as the font size for thread headings can be relatively large ~2026-63332-0 (talk) 17:54, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
~2026-63332-0 consider going to WP:VPI and proposing that the WikiMedia software automatically provide page nav links 'skip to top' and 'skip to bottom' for moibile users, when the page size or number of threads is greater than X (user preferences-configurable). Then, after you get some feedback and some kind of working consensus there on what might be useful and have some support, take it to the meta:Community Wishlist and register your wish. Mathglot (talk) 19:34, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Minerva skin already provides a "Latest comment" link at the very top of the page and in the header of each section, which is very helpful. In fact, it is so helpful that I sometimes find it easier to comment on talk pages on my phone than on my computer in Vector 2022.
(Yes, I use Vector 2022. Experienced editors may now publicly shame me. I've been reading articles here for long enough to remember a time when it didn't exist yet. I also (gasp!) used VisualEditor when I started editing, but I eventually quit using it because I find that writing wikitext directly is much faster, especially on mobile where I don't have access to keyboard shortcuts.) SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 23:52, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That's good to know; that means that the code to do this already exists, and porting it to other skins should not be that difficult. I would say in response to temp user 63332, that either in addition to, or instead of the Community Wishlist idea, you could file a Phabricator ticket requesting it as an enhancement. (I think you have to be registered, but make a request at WP:Help desk and I am sure someone could help you with that.) Mathglot (talk) 02:32, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There's no need for a Phab ticket. Go to Special:Preferences#mw-prefsection-betafeatures and turn on "DiscussionTools". Go to Special:Preferences#mw-prefsection-editing-discussion and make sure that "Show discussion activity" is enabled.
CapnZapp I'm confused about your order of opposes in justifications.
The A part refers to what, the introductory statement or the mandatory archiving? Mandatory archiving does not speak about user talk exemptions or even user talk at all in the justification. User talk is specifically exempted, end of story. What are you talking about?
The B part presumably refers to specific limits. I don't have a problem with EEng, I do have a problem with his talk page, as with hundreds of others I cannot easily read, interact with, let alone edit. Also, good luck.
C (max archive interval) misunderstands the proposal. The 10 day limit is only meant to cover high-traffic pages ("likely to routinely exceed the maximum size limit"), and that's additionally explicit in the last sentence.
D is not substantial to this discussion, I could have edited this myself.
E: Why 4 minimum threads specifically? I had opinions that 1 is the number. Some prefer 2. Some prefer 5. We can discuss it.
F: Impossible to discuss in separation of B because there are no maximum user talk page size regulations right now, so such change would be meaningless. I'm not sure what I'm poisoning by opening this discussion.
H: Possible to discuss at the archive bot pages, but will likely discourage people from using bots. So pretty much impossible to discuss without A because it's pointless. It is meant to be the automated enforcing mechanism. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 18:48, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I explained at the start. Basically, I went through the table, creating a point for each row. Only once I was done did I realize you failed to match your a-g to your table. CapnZapp (talk) 18:54, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My comment before was that Endorse This is the single stupidest thing Iv ever seen be discussed on here. I'm legit laughing my tired ass off, and despite having zero memory of writing that(it was 3AM, and I was coughing up a storm). I still stand by it and it's even more funny that this was made seemingly solely because of EEng.
Has anyone ever considered that if we weren't such assholes about it, he might be willing to archive more often? Or ask him to add skip to top or bottom buttons like iv seen on a few other user talkpages?
We have had this discussion so many times, it always ends the same.
If the page starts crashing browsers, bring it up to him, otherwise, just wait the extra two seconds for it to load. And use the edit section function.
From the table: Single discussions split into their own pages due to size considerations are exempt from internal archiving but have to be searchable through archives of the page they were split from.There might be creation of subpages due to size considerations, but I understand that there may be discussions with huge turnout wbhich cannot be split, or pages with several questions that are interconnected ando so would be inadvisable to split. So there's no dedicated solution for this problem. Accessibility is an issue due to poor performance, but any other solution would be worse. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 22:13, 29 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm here because of the ping. I don't like anything about this proposal, but I do like the comparison made in this discussion to the so-called Big Beautiful Bill. --Tryptofish (talk) 00:17, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You gave the reason yourself above (@23:10, 29 Jan) why this Rfc was unnecessary and a gigantic waste of time; quote:
We already have a recommendation [about] [l]arge talk pages...
Precisely. There are different levels of obligation and administrative enforcement depending on how serious a particular kind of violation is, which is why adding copyrighted material to a Wikipedia article or libeling someone is going to get you in hot water faster than conflict of interest violations, which in turn will get you in trouble faster than WP:Manual of style violations.
As you say, we already have a recommendation about this, but apparently, your opinion is that the existing recommendation doesn't have enough teeth in it on the enforcement side, hence all the draconian language trying to sharpen the teeth. But this violates the sense of proportion. There is a reason that libel and copyright get more attention and stricter enforcement. No doubt in the thicket of Wikipedia regulations, improvements can be made, but we do not want very large talk pages to have the kind of enforcement wording or response that libel does; it is way out of proportion to the seriousness of the violation (if it is even deemed a violation at all). Nothing in your Rfc proposal is an improvement over current guidelines imho, imperfect as they my be; rather, they would make page and archiving guidelines worse, and cause additional strife among editors, perhaps resulting in enforcement discussions against users with long talk pages. Is that really the hill you want to die on?Mathglot (talk) 02:58, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Precisely. There are different levels of obligation and administrative enforcement depending on how serious a particular kind of violation is You may disagree with me on this point, but overbearing talk pages that barely load and are all but impossible to edit are pretty much a serious violation on a website whose core tenet is enabling editing and good-faith discussion by anyone interested in the topic or in a contributor at any time. If the "anyone can edit" (=have technical tools to edit) part in "Wikipedia is a free online encyclopedia that anyone can edit" can be rendered effectively moot, then it should not advertise itself as such. If Wikipedia effectively forces users to switch from not-clearly-outdated devices to view/edit content, it is no longer anyone who can edit.Also, the enforcement for libel and copyright violations is potential blocks as well. This rule is not meant to create another means to block someone because this can be resolved without blocking anyone. And I wrote just that in the reasons. So despite the seriousness of obstruction of talkspaces, it does not escalate to revocation of editing privileges. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 11:13, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"Overbearing talk pages that barely load and are all but impossible to edit" would be a problem if they existed, but they don't. As another user said, "Some of the devices I use to browse the web are so ancient that they struggle to load most pages on the web, but I was still able to load User talk:EEng, scroll through the sections, and click edit on a section of my choice in about 30 seconds."
And even if they did exist, the rational approach would be to go to ANI, document the problem, see what happens when others try to replicate it on similar hardware, and if the problem is real deal with that one page. (If anyone does this, ping me. I have a number of ancient computers running ancient browsers available to me) --Guy Macon (talk) 03:16, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Also, while it might be great if everyone could easily use any device to leave messages at all talk pages, forcing compliance with a uniformity rule would make Wikipedia a nastier place with the side effect of encouraging rule-pushers while discouraging a variety of editors. Johnuniq (talk) 03:50, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Guy Macon, is it that you insinuating that I am lying my ass off about the problems I have with loading the pages, do you pretend to know better than me how my device works, or are you saying "not a problem for me, so deal with it"? My device specs are public knowledge at this stage. Some of the devices I use to browse the web are so ancient that they struggle to load most pages on the web, but I was still able to load User talk:EEng, scroll through the sections, and click edit on a section of my choice in about 30 seconds A lot to unpack here:
We don't know what the specs of that device that loaded the page for 30 seconds were, and what software they use.
We don't know if that device is one of the "ancient" devices that the user uses for browsing the web (what is "ancient"?). What they said does not exclude the possibility that they tested it on an iPhone 16 Pro or some modern PC for $2000+.
the rational approach would be to go to ANI, document the problem, see what happens when others try to replicate it on similar hardware, and if the problem is real deal with that one page Or maybe, just maybe, avoid all this dragging to ANI unless absolutely necessary and document a procedure that everybody knows, and everybody is aware what happens if it is not followed? And not bog down in discussion on whether your device sucks, on whether you should change your device, lifecycles, operating systems, differences in browsers, popular userscripts you choose to run and so on? I thankfully see, hear and read well, but there are folks who have to read Wikipedia with a page reader. Folks who need high contrast because they don't see that well. On Chrome, this is done via extensions. But these extensions will struggle even worse on huge pages. Which is a reason you don't do huge pages unless absolutely necessary. (OK, you'll say, this concerns like 1% of readers/users, so whatever, suffer. Well, modern public transport has Braille and wheelchair ramps not because there are a lot of blind/physically disabled people but because they also deserve the service. It generally features low-floor vehicles not only for these people but for anyone - whether you are a normal passenger or you carry a big bag of groceries home or maybe a bicycle or a stroller. You could have the bare minimum of seats for the frail to cram as many people as possible within a given budget for new vehicles - after all, most people can stand up for 15 minutes just fine - but that doesn't normally happen because passenger comfort is also a valid consideration.) Same logic applies here. forcing compliance with a uniformity rule would make Wikipedia a nastier place with the side effect of encouraging rule-pushers while discouraging a variety of editors. One by one:
nastier place: in which way?
side effect of encouraging rule-pushers: where possible, make rules that are clear, unambiguous and tight so that they do not leave the possibility for wikilawyering. Simple as that.
discouraging a variety of editors - well, the inaccessibility discourages me from engaging on Wikipedia because I have that info in the back of my head that I will not be able to edit certain pages without some non-standard hacks. And I'm pretty sure I'm not alone, but I'm also pretty sure not everyone would want to search for said hacks.
Also, the difference is that libel can get you sued and long talk pages can't. POV pushing is a serious violation of Wikipedia's rules, but will not generally get you sued. Same for obstruction of discussion process. I don't see your point.
Plain text rendering is extremely fast. Even large amounts of text render quickly. The bottleneck on Wikipedia is almost always JavaScript, especially scripts that process the entire page. So limiting the amount of plain text makes no sense.
Loading large external resources (images) can slow things down, but usually those get cached so they would only be slow once. So in your case the reason is JavaScript.
Find a page on which the problem is reproducible (ANI?)
Visit that page in an incognito (sic) window, without logging in. Does the problem still occur?
In a non-incognito window: disable your scripts and DiscussionTools in preferences, then try again. Does the problem still occur?
Enable your scripts and DiscussionTools again and capture a performance profile (not the HAR file) and post a link.
I will tell you the results: Point 2: Loading pages like EEng's make browser visibly struggle upon rendering even when logged out. Just slightly less time than in my JS configuration. Impossible to say if editing is impacted because my editing environment in source is the 2017 wikitext editor and it's a small box when logged out. Also, I do feel the need for syntax highlighting to better see the, you know, syntax. My eyes get lost in the sea of monotone black text. Point 4: The files have like 50 MB each, so I'd need to make sure you will have to be able to download these. I tested this on just readingUser talk:Tryptofish (870 KB wikitext at the moment). The summary results I got were these:Painting 10,280 ms Scripting 4,300 ms Rendering 4,116 ms System 2,050 ms Loading 285 mswith all scripts but Convenient Discussions enabled; and I have a separate batch for Convenient Discussions enabled - which did eat a lot of resources but is also clearly superior to current talk design IMHO. The browser could not load the right-click menu without significant delay while all of this was happening. On Convenient Discussions disabled, LCP 2.56 s (needs improvement, <2.5 s for good), Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) 0.91 (poor, <0.25 for needs improvement, <0.1 for good), Interaction to Next Paint (INP) 600 ms (poor, <500 ms for needs improvement, <200 ms for good)But all of that is besides the point. An editor does not have to disable the JavaScript tools they feel they need for editing just to accommodate for excessively long talk pages. You have it backwards. If WMF says the software option is good enough for choosing directly in my preferences without any caveats, I trust that the software is ready to be used out of the box. That's the default expectation of any new user, and it's how it always should be. The JS may be buggy, but that's not the issue of buggy JS, at least not on my side, because I can replicate all the same issues while logged out. And even then users are not expected to be debuggers or know how a certain piece of code may impact performance. Maybe if you get the template editor or the interface administrator bit. But that's not for the vast majority of users. I am used to the environment I edit in and it doesn't cause me much problems for 99.9% of my use cases. I don't have to change it because of the 0.1% of the times when I need, or hell, choose to land on long talk pages, that's ridiculous. Also, there's a brilliant public service announcement by the government of Wales on disability that illustrates my way of thinking - why don't you just raise the roof if you can? Or, in this case, why don't you make the pages uncluttered enough so that any user can answer? The roof job may be expensive but the uncluttering isn't asking for much. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 14:00, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Szmenderowiecki Interesting, thank you. I can download files up to ~20tb in size.
It looks to me that the problem is not the amount of plain text (as I predicted). The problem is the amount of Document Object Model elements.
Every piece of a webpage, each paragraph, link, button, image, or heading, is a DOM element.
The issue is that talk pages contain many DOM elements: signatures, timestamps, indents, etc.
So if you want to limit something it should be the amount of DOM elements on a page, not the amount of text.
And the situation wouldn't be so bad if DiscussionTools didn't add so many DOM elements per comment. Even when you aren't logged in.
Would you be willing to share some data with a WMF nerd? I may be able to find someone who can further diagnose this problem, and work towards a fix.
It won't be automated archiving of all pages, but maybe drastically reducing the amount of DOM elements added by DiscussionTools.
@Quiddity (WMF): probably knows who to ask. @Quiddity we need someone who can check why long usertalkpages render very slowly for Szmenderowiecki. It is probably/possibly DiscussionTools related. Do you know someone who can look at a performance profile and diagnose the problem? Thanks, Polygnotus (talk) 15:24, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
DOMs are in large part generated by text you and other editors type. Too much DOMs is usually a problem of the page and not the user who tries to load the page. If the page is user-generated, then it becomes the responsibility of the user(s) who contribute to that page, and to maintainers of the engine rendering that page, to make sure the amount of DOMs does not impact user experience. The meaning of DOM is not also something we typically expect from a regular user to know about. They just expect the website to work. DiscussionTools were disabled because I use Convenient Discussions, which is incompatible. WMF can contact me directly for inquiries at any time. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 15:55, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@SzmenderowieckiDOMs are in large part generated by text you and other editors type. DiscussionTools adds a whole bunch of DOM elements per comment. About ~8. If you want to we can make a test page that contains the same DOM elements but no text and you'll see it load slowly on your computer.
It is the responsibility of the WMF to deal with performance problems. Quiddity has over 2 decades experience on Wikipedia and started working at the WMF in 2013. They'll know who to ask.
DiscussionTools were disabled because I use Convenient Discussions, which is incompatible. Unfortunately DiscussionTools still adds those DOM elements to the page, even if you have it disabled and even if you are not logged in. Polygnotus (talk) 16:02, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Irony above: "This page is too big. Excessive page size can cause accessibility problems for some editors. Please temporarily speed up the page archiving rate or split large discussions to separate subpages" ~2026-68406-1 (talk) 15:19, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have a 4Mhz (That's megahertz, not gigahertz) Z80 running CP/M and Fusix that communicates at 9600 baud. It can display and edit text-based discussions of any length on USENET or BBSs lightning fast -- no need to limit discussion size. If computers that are thousands of times faster than that are struggling, the obvious answer is to talk to the WMF and ask them to look at what they are adding to the text. --Guy Macon (talk) 17:38, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I mean, any website would load well, whatever its volume, if it looked like The Motherfucking Website. It could probably run on a potato - but that's not really the point. In 2026 I'd expect at least this or this or this or this. I'm not saying there isn't a room for code improvement (although I don't know if it's true) but if the suggestion is that I have to disable certain in-built features just to be able to view/edit large pages, that person also has it backwards. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 21:24, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If you want a fun view into the alternatives, the debug page for EEng's talk -- which reformats it into a far more "modern" experience -- is worth viewing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:DiscussionToolsDebug/User_talk:EEng
I'm actually sort of curious whether you feel it performs better for you once you get to the point of actually scrolling around. Not really the initial load (it's not a useful comparison because it's less cached by the parser which slows it down, and it doesn't actually initialize DT reply widgets which speeds it up), but we were able to massively reformat the HTML used there in ways the talk pages community consultation didn't let us consider. DLynch (WMF) (talk) 15:37, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I played around with document.querySelectorAll('*').length and that first assumption is incorrect. Reducing all talk pages to 10 bytes max does fix the problem so the second one is hard to disprove. Polygnotus (talk) 20:21, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Polygnotus what's your plan if WMF says that everything is all right with the software or if they do not answer back your ping (presumably because they don't think that your suggestion of simplifying MediaWiki output is not worth the effort))? Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 10:08, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Szmenderowiecki There are people who work at the WMF whose entire job it is to ensure that Wikipedia works properly on as many devices and in as many situations as possible. Quiddity works or has worked in the relevant team.
Help them help you, this is your best shot. There are people who have been tracking such stats for years and are interested in situations where the user experience is bad, so they know what to do and not do.
Quiddity is usually quite busy so we can leave a message on their talkpage in a week or so , if necessary. If you are polite and constructive they will help you. They may ask you some follow-up questions or do some tests so they can understand your experience better. Polygnotus (talk) 12:48, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This doesn't really answer my question. Sorry if I'm not clear, so I'll rephrase it. While I disagree with their opinion, some users say that WMF alone is responsible for this, not users (my opinion is that it's a joint responsibility). Suppose that WMF/MediaWiki says any of the following:
Our software works just fine, no bugs impacting performance detected, anything else?
We fixed bugs that give a boost of 1.3% in loading time, but that's about all you will get.
This is core functionality that we are not ready/willing to disable.
We are introducing something new that will increase JS load, so no scaling back (given that webpages get more bulky over time and old devices, including, hopefully, mine as well someday, get changed - not a stupid thing to expect). We are not introducing any "lite" version of MediaWiki with just the bare minimum of DOM elements necessary for MediaWiki functioning and images linked instead of actually loaded. There will be no toggles.
I agree with Szmenderowiecki that just because there's a technical limit to a page that our servers can handle doesn't mean that any individual page ought to push towards it because of UX issues. (They may even issue a recommendation in their user guides to the effect that a page is not supposed to be over X KB wikitext unless necessary)
In other words, suppose WMF/MediaWiki says it's actually not their problem, it's the problem of the community, because there's nothing/not much to fix on the software side (regardless of whether they tell the truth, because you are not going to get anything (more)). What happens next?I will reiterate that if @Quiddity (WMF): or any other person who they believe will be competent to look into this issue wants to get feedback from me, they can ask all relevant questions and get relevant test results. Here, by email or otherwise. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 13:16, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Szmenderowiecki That is a very hypothetical hypothetical. They own the servers and they sign the contracts and they have the money.
So in theory they could decide to stop this whole Wikipedia thing and start a VIP dog walking business in Lithuania instead. There is nothing you or I could do to stop them.
Of course its a joint responsibility; I could easily install some Javascript shitcoin miner that will tank performance.
In reality at least some of the people who work at the WMF are nice, hardworking people who share our goal. That doesn't mean I agree with every decision ever. Quiddity was a Wikipedian for years before he started working at the WMF.
Since they share our goal they want Wikipedia to work well for everyone, on any device. That means they will at least try to investigate the situation.
Will you be happy/agree with the result of the investigation? Will there be a quick fix that solves the problem in a week? I do not know, but if we don't give them the information they need we can't complain about performance.
If they say "WONTFIX" then at least we know where we stand. I can look at your pc (if you let me), but not their servers. The WMF can see exactly what is happening on both ends if you let them. So they are in the position to fix this.
I am pretty certain they will at least look at the problem. I can't promise you'll be happy with what they do with that information because they don't work for me. They are independent beings with free will. And they are your best bet to fix this problem once and for all. Polygnotus (talk) 14:04, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Listen, if MediaWiki suddenly runs 3x faster and the load time is no longer a nightmare, I think anyone will be ecstatic. I would still argue the switch is necessary on other grounds - for example, because large pages, even if they load OK, are hard to navigate. But at least the barrier to discussion will be not as severe. So yeah, I wait for instructions from MediaWiki/WMF team. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 14:11, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
(reply-to @07:56, 31 Jan) The performance report (parser profiling data linked at T416247) on loading the long user talk page you most complained about, shows a CPU time of 5.977 and real time of 6.714 seconds. This is only half again over the limit of 4 s you list as acceptable performance. If that is the actual load time for the worst Talk page at Wikipedia, then I'd say we were doing pretty darn well! I believe you wen you say that it is taking much longer than that for you to load the page on your hardware/software configuration, even if it takes much less time for others who have tried it on various setups, including ancient ones. Various conjectures have been raised about why that is, and the phab ticket will hopefully shed some light on that and lead to improvements for everyone. But making a proposal to limit Talk page size based on a misdiagnosis of a problem you are seeing and others do not, and then adding a draconian archiving proposal on top of it to be imposed on everyone based on the original misdiagnosis seems to be compounding error upon error, and not a valid proposal. I suggest we wait until we understand why you are getting the delay you are. And thanks for agreeing to provide input to the investigation tracked at the Phab ticket. Mathglot (talk) 03:55, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There is irony and confusion. Why do we need more "rules"? Maybe this is putting the proverbial cart before the horse in some or most cases. Read #7- "Require pages that will likely routinely fall afoul of the maximum size rule to introduce a short archiving interval. Who has encountered pushback for achieving long talk pages? It seems any editor who finds a long discussion page (article talk) can archive older discussions.
At best, this is a terrible idea. At worst, it might be insane. It is too broad. Editors should not run out and buy a cart, then walk around looking for a horse. I would think suggestions or a number by consensus on page size limits would be found at Wikipedia talk: User pages. Help:Talk pages#Archiving states, On talk pages that generate significant amounts of discussion, old discussions are often archived to keep the size of the talk page at a manageable level. It states this can be done manually or with the help of a bot, but no suggested size. Although there is no link to the specific bot for "help", there is the "Main page: Help:Archiving a talk page". (TALKSIZE) gives some rationale, and Wikipedia:Talk page guidelines#User talk pages (maybe in the "Personal talk page cleanup" section) might be a good place to have some information on page size? It seems this may be important for new users or editors who would like some teeth and a place to point to. It is sort of a sad idea to attempt to teach someone to swim by just tossing them into the water. I think we should steer clear of user talk pages. -- Otr500 (talk) 01:10, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A lot to unpack here:We don't know what the specs of that device that loaded the page for 30 seconds were, and what software they use.
We don't know if that device is one of the "ancient" devices that the user uses for browsing the web (what is "ancient"?). What they said does not exclude the possibility that they tested it on an iPhone 16 Pro or some modern PC for $2000+. We don't know what the "other pages" are.
I'm the user in question: that particular test was with an obsolete Android phone from circa 10 years ago. I tried it today with a 2015-model Raspberry PI 2 that I bought in 2016 for about $30 (now past end-of-life, has been sitting in a non-climate controlled junk drawer for years) and was also able to successfully load the page and open the editor (first load on that machine took about 10 minutes, but subsequent loads took ~30 seconds, indicating that the slow first load was due to media loading/caching, not byte size as targeted by this proposal). I don't claim to understand your computer setup better than you do, but I'm just saying that you seem to have far more powerful hardware than I do, on a better internet connection, yet you seem to be getting worse results. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)02:22, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
OK, so that makes sense now. I mean, yes, obviously a Raspberry Pi will be less powerful than my computer. But contrary to what you say, my computer is not so bad as to be loading User talk:EEng for 10 minutes. It takes about 30-35 seconds on the first load (so no cache yet available) with browser freezing in the meantime or extreme difficulty to navigate any other part of the browser or the already rendered part of the page. With cache, this decreases to something like 15 seconds. It still is unacceptable behaviour. Say what you will about Google but they know how to code shit and know about reasonable expectations of performance, and also know a bit about UX/UI as well. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 09:18, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It still is unacceptable behaviour. Ok, so it sounds like your experience is pretty similar to what I get on my primary devices. It seems like the core point of contention here is: should Wikipedia users be obligated to maintain their talk pages to provide a Google-level industry standard UI/UX experience to all conceivable hardware/browser configurations? to which the answer of the community appears to be matching recent North American weather with a resounding no. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)16:37, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You are asking the question no one was actually asking. The good/needs improvement/poor score is a score that any website can get and these score are relevant for any website. It is not guidance for Google-owned sites only, it is guidance for all web sites. So no, Google-level UI/UX experience is something we probably should strive towards but this was NOT proposed as a requirement. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 16:48, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry for being unclear, by "Google-level" I didn't mean to imply only Google owned sites, just the best practices they advocate. Which is a fine question to ask, but the community seems to be comfortable with falling a few seconds short of that ideal. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)18:57, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Also the top 99 contains only 19 users that are active (defined as having edited in the past 12 months) and not blocked, 2 indeffed users and 78 users who have not edited in the past 12 months. There is no reason to edit the talkpages of inactive and indeffed users. Polygnotus (talk) 02:35, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Continue, close, or what
This discussion was opened two days ago (14:29, 29 January) so why does it already feel like a month? The section sizes template (which I don't trust for word count) tallies the discussion at 129,627 bytes and 606 prose words. My text editor (which I do trust, but which counts hidden text and sigs as words) tallies it as 130,065 bytes and 21,662 words. There is a do-not-archive-until template at the top configured for 5 March. If the discussion keeps going at this rate until 5 March, it will be approximately 1.8 million bytes and over 300,000 words.[b]
Looks like it's WP:SNOWing to me. The proposal seems too flawed to get much support, and the discussion seems to be mostly people sniping at each other or re-arguing whether slow old devices are actually slow and old rather than trying to work out something better. We can leave it a while longer if people want to see if it turns around, but I'd be surprised if it runs all the way until March. Anomie⚔03:59, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I really don't like closing down discussions after two days. I don't want to feel like I have to check Wikipedia every day just so I don't miss some discussion that gets opened and closed while I am spending a weekend away from my computer. --Guy Macon (talk) 05:07, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well, lemme see. I like the close-it-yesterday aspect of A, but I hardly see the point of requesting that someone waste their time divining a consensus. I think nothing good can come of B, and I find the claims that productive discussion is still happening downright ridiculous, although I enjoy the humor of SuperPianoMan's idea. Perhaps we should just leave it open forever. --Tryptofish (talk) 19:42, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I completely agree with this. Could the closing summary have been better? Yes. Did reverting the closure benefit the project in any way? No. Thryduulf (talk) 21:19, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Large talk pages are difficult to read and load slowly over slow connections. As a rule of thumb, archive closed discussions when a talk page has numerous resolved or stale discussions – see Help:Archiving a talk page. Apart from the exception described in § User talk pages, discussions should be archived, not blanked.
Large talk pages are difficult to read and load slowly over slow connections. As a rule of thumb, archive closed discussions when a talk page has numerous resolved or stale discussions – see Help:Archiving a talk page. Apart from the exception described in § User talk pages, discussions should be archived, not blanked. Any person can archive any inactive (2+ weeks without new messages) threads on any talk page; reverting these archivals is disruptive unless there's a valid reason to do so.
2 weeks may be a rather tight cutoff for a lot of folks here. I mean, I don't care if my page gets a drive-by archiving, and I'd be even grateful to some extent, but it seems that others will be pissed off big time. I think it's a month at a minimum, and probably preferably 3.
does this concern user talk pages? If so:
what to do with users who insist that their talk page, or specific (list of) thread(s), are not be touched, even if such threads heavily tax your browser?
if the user has autoarchiving deployed, the archiving presumably must conform to the preferred choice of archiving by the user, correct? So numbered archives are continued, new monthly/yearly archives may be created, OK. What to do with theoretical topic-based archives?
what if the user says: I only want discussions to be blanked, I don't want no archive box or any fancy bots? Because after all the clause at Wikipedia:Talk page guidelines#Personal talk page cleanup that The length of user talk pages, and the need for archiving, is left up to each editor's own discretion. is unchanged by this proposal. They insist that they need no archiving and that any old thread be removed. But this proposal does not allow drive-by removal of threads from user talk pages, only archiving. Welcome to ANI I guess?
how do you address some editors' complaints that empty talk pages are uninviting. It's not a hill I'm willing to die on, but I have a mild preference for non-empty pages if possible. And there are folks who seem to care about this a lot, at least if judged by the linked TPG discussion.
"does this concern user talk pages?" - "any talk page" = "any page intended for communication between editors" so yes. "what to do with users who insist that their talk page, or specific (list of) thread(s), are not be touched, even if such threads heavily tax your browser?" - such behavior is covered by "reverting these archivals is disruptive unless there's a valid reason to do so" and wp:own. "if the user has autoarchiving deployed, the archiving presumably must conform to the preferred choice of archiving by the user, correct?" - I think pages with auto-archiving can be excluded. "what if the user says: I only want discussions to be blanked, I don't want no archive box or any fancy bots?" - they should be blanked, then, not archived. "how do you address some editors' complaints that empty talk pages are uninviting" - can they explain why they are uninviting? sapphaline (talk) 10:45, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
So something like this:
Current text
New text
Large talk pages are difficult to read and load slowly over slow connections. As a rule of thumb, archive closed discussions when a talk page has numerous resolved or stale discussions – see Help:Archiving a talk page. Apart from the exception described in § User talk pages, discussions should be archived, not blanked.
Large talk pages are difficult to read and load slowly over slow connections. As a rule of thumb, archive closed discussions when a talk page has numerous resolved or stale discussions – see Help:Archiving a talk page. Apart from the exception described in § User talk pages, discussions should be archived, not blanked. Any person can archive or blank any inactive (3+ months without new messages) threads on any talk page, unless there's auto-archiving with a reasonable archiving period set up; reverting these archivals is disruptive unless there's a valid reason to do so.
This goes in a much better direction and makes sense. I applaud your effort. The other two things that may be litigated are:
what is a "reasonable" archiving period? "Reasonable" is a very vague word, and if we take real life, Americans with Disabilities Act lawsuits about "reasonable accommodations" is something of a cottage industry, judging by number of Supreme Court cases listed in the article. Because there are a couple of ways to define it:
"It keeps the page below a certain limit" (define the limit)
There is a maximum thread count so that users don't get lost in the ton of old threads nobody cares about (again, define the limit)
It keeps the page from substantially impacting user experience on their browser (on Chrome-based browsers, this could be the Inspect tool performance indicators). Judging by how the discussion is going, the next question is likely going to be "what device are you using? specs please", "what scripts you are running?" and the addition that "it works fine for me" or "it's not that big an inconvenience to complain about, I can load the page in X seconds".
some other criterion I can't think of right now?
Any person can archive or blank conflicts with discussions should be archived, not blanked. I get the point. My proposal would be: Discussions should be archived, not blanked. Any person can archive any inactive (3+ months without new messages) threads on any talk page, unless there's auto-archiving with a reasonable (?) archiving period set up. On user talk pages, users may request that discussions be blanked instead of archiving - respect their wish. Reverting these actions is disruptive unless there's a valid reason to do so.
Oppose Editors should please mind their own business. Here's a fresh example. I get several regular newsletters posted to my talk page and I usually blank older ones so that only the latest appears. It would be better if the newsletters did this automatically but so it goes. Anyway, after recently clearing a batch of these, another editor restored them. An admin then turned up to revert their action because it appears that this user has a developing tendency to disrupt. The problem is that Wikipedia is the encyclopedia that anyone can edit and so our editors have a wide range of (in)competence. As they cannot be relied on to agree on such matters or have the necessary skills and understanding, they should not be encouraged to mess with other users' personal workspace. The Wikimedia software ought to have a foolproof interface maintained by its professional staff and, if there are technical problems with it, there ought to be a properly professional system for reporting and resolving them.Andrew🐉(talk) 13:50, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
with other users' personal workspace The problem with arguments like these is that I don't think such thing exists on Wikipedia, at least if we consider WP:OWN (No one "owns" content (including articles or any page at Wikipedia and Wikipedia offers wide latitude to users to manage their user space as they see fit. Nevertheless, they are not personal homepages, and are not owned by the user. They are still part of Wikipedia and must serve its primary purposes; in particular, user talk pages make communication and collaboration among editors easier. These functions must not be hampered by ownership behavior.) A better descriptor would be "a communal workspace assigned to a user for issues relating to a user, with customarily large latitude at self-management" Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 14:21, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose - There is no god-given right to talk to each and every other user on this website. Can't load their user talk page? Don't want to wait 30 seconds? Then don't talk to that user. Can't post an ANI notice on their page? Fine, then they don't get an ANI notice on their page. That's their problem. The notion of limiting all 250,000+ editors to some stupidly arbitrary and onerous rules, or letting busy-bodies mess with other people's talk pages, just because some editors don't want to wait for some talk pages to load, is ridiculous. Editors should not try to be so controlling of other editors. Levivich (talk) 14:28, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"Can't load their user talk page? Don't want to wait 30 seconds? Then don't talk to that user" - Wikipedia isn't a social media website; you can't opt out of communication in a collaborative project. sapphaline (talk) 14:39, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes. And template collaboration happens on template talk pages. And project wide collaboration happens on Wikipedia space talk pages. You don't need to talk to people on their user talk pages in order to collaborate with them. Levivich (talk) 14:46, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes conduct issues exist. You don't need user talk pages to resolve them. We have conduct noticeboards. If you didn't get a chance to discuss conduct issues with a user because their talk page was too long, that's too bad for them. It doesn't mean everybody else needs to follow new rules. Levivich (talk) 16:13, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The conduct boards have a giant notice saying that you must leave a message on the person’s talk page and that a ping is not sufficient, so I don’t think that would be acceptable. ExtantRotations (talk) 23:35, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
From WP:USER: User pages are for communication and collaboration. ... However, pages in user space belong to the wider community. They are not a personal homepage, and do not belong to the user. They are part of Wikipedia, and exist to make collaboration among editors easier. From WP:OWNTALK: User talk pages must serve their primary purpose, which is to make communication and collaboration among editors easier.Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 14:45, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
1) you're bludgeoning. You've posted these quotes already in this discussion. 2) you're not making any point here with these quotes. Levivich (talk) 14:46, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, I'm rebutting a point which is obviously wrong according to current policy. Policy says this is the literal purpose of these pages. You may want to use pages not according to their intended purpose but that's your personal preference. I'm going to use these pages according to what they are for and which use policy explicitly endorses. And I should not be punished for asking that these pages be used for the purpose specifically outlined in the policy. I also don't believe that any argument to the effect of "let's allow users to force discussions in non-obvious forums because they don't want to do the housekeeping in the places where such discussion is intended to take place" complies within the general intent of Wikipedia policies and guidelines to promote discussion. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 14:53, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
None of our policies and guidelines say Every user talk page must load within a time frame acceptable to User:Szmenderowiecki. I checked EEng's user talk page (the longest on the website) on pingdom and it said 11 seconds load time. If that's too slow for you, too bad. It doesn't mean we need to have everybody else in the website limit their page sizes. Levivich (talk) 16:11, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Another problem with this proposal is that sometimes threads "2+ weeks without new messages" should still remain on a talk page. Sometimes returning old threads from the archives is exactly the right thing to do. To require those to be archived, or to prevent them from being un-archived, mass collaboration harder, not easier. Rarely have I seen "solution in search of a problem" as clear as this. Levivich (talk) 14:44, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There is no god-given right for any editors to have their user talk page be organized or contain any content that they wish it does. User talk pages exist for a purpose - to facilitate communication. Katzrockso (talk) 20:00, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all per most people above. There should be (and indeed are) already guidelines about talk page size, but they should remain no more than guidelines because there are far too many variables for a hard and fast one-size-fits-all rule to be useful, even if one were desirable (per most people above). If you need to post on someone's talk page to notify them about something then state that, with a ping, in whichever discussion you want to notify them about. Either they will respond to the ping or someone who can post on their talk page will leave a message on your behalf. Thryduulf (talk) 14:38, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose all, with no small amount of annoyance. Seriously, if someone comes to my talk page and wants to blank it, that's OK, but if I revert even part of that, I'm violating policy? Now, I'm quite tempted to blank this VPP discussion, and would love it if I were empowered to do whatever pops into my mind, with nobody allowed to object (woo-hoo, I wanna be an autocrat!), but no, just no. --Tryptofish (talk) 19:37, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose this and all future attempts to give random trolls power over what I can post on my talk pages:
(I have no problem with anyone bringing up any problems they have with my talk page at ANI and asking an admin to deal with them. That's why they get paid the big bucks.)[CitationNeeded]
If your 386SX running Internet Explorer on Windows 3.0 doesn't allow you to post a required ANI notice just say that in your ANI post -- someone will notify me.
Nobody forced you to read my talk page. Unless, of course, you are strapped to a chair with your eyelids taped open in front of a monitor with a Wikipedia feed and with The Wikipedia Song blasting in the background.
If you are strapped to a chair, etc., then let me address this message to your captors: First of all, keep up the good work. Secondly, please take away their keyboard. --Guy Macon (talk) 19:44, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Per WP:RFC#Reasons and ways to end RfCs, there are five ways an Rfc may end. One way, is a consensus among participants to end it (#2 in the list). However, that requires discussion and time, and given the size of this discussion already and the number of participants, that may be a significant effort in itself. However, there is a much quicker and easier path. The originator may decide to withdraw the Rfc unilaterally (per #1) if the outcome seems clear early. Normally, this would be carried out by the OP removing the {{Rfc}} tag at the top, however, this Rfc has no such tag.
So that we don't become bogged down in bureaucracy, I think I can speak for most participants here that a clear statement from the OP, such as, "I withdraw this Rfc because reason" would be sufficient to meet the requirements of method #1. Szmenderowiecki, you are in a unique position to be able to end the Rfc now. Would you be willing to do so? You are, of course, under no obligation whatever, and you don't even need to respond to this if you don't wish to. Cheers, Mathglot (talk) 23:00, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
How can we avoid Wikipedia containing misleading information that makes people think Uyghurs and Tibetans are not Chinese dissidents?
I have found numerous misleading statements in Wikipedia articles using the phrase "Uyghurs, Tibetans, and Chinese dissidents," which may lead people to mistakenly believe that Uyghurs and Tibetans are not Chinese dissidents; I hope you can help me correct this to "Chinese dissidents, e.g. Uyghurs, Tibetans" or a similar expression! Uyghurs (talk) 21:04, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Could you give some examples? I have searched for that exact phrase and been unable to find even one article using it. And we shouldn't give the impression that all Uyghurs and Tibetans are dissidents, although many may be. Phil Bridger (talk) 21:31, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Tibetans are Tibetans. Uyghurs are Uyghurs. Whether they qualify as 'Chinese dissidents' may depend on context, and to some extent on opinion. Wikipedia certainly isn't going to uncritically parrot the official position of the CPC on this question. We don't do that, any more than we parrot anyone else's position. AndyTheGrump (talk) 21:43, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What's the difference between these two things? I ask because I recently nominated Domkino for deletion (see Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Domkino based on the fact that it was a DAB page consisting only of redlinks, and I received some strong pushback indicating that this is not, in fact, a DAB page, but is instead at "set index article" (and was marked with {{Set index article}}. But my reading of WP:Set index article indicates that an SIA should be a fleshed out article about a broad topic that may have many links to specific articles (such as Dodge Charger, which broadly describes the brand, and links to many articles about specific years and sub-models of that car). But there is not broad discussion of the topic at Domkino, merely a set of links to specific places named Domkino. So where does the difference lie? WikiDan61ChatMe!ReadMe!!15:25, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Someone had mistakenly added an unrelated red link "Dom Kino" before you nominated it for deletion, so it didn't look like a set index article at the time. For the variations in set index articles, look at Special:WhatLinksHere/Template:Set index article. That template tag at the bottom of the articles is there to help make it clear to editors adding new material but didn't work in this case. StarryGrandma (talk) 18:33, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A DAB is a navigation aide to help readers find an article about a topic they are looking for when there are multiple articles about various topics with similar names. A set index article is a list of instances of a particular topic with the same or closely similar names, which attempts to be a complete list whether of not an article exists for each instance. There is overlap, but I think there is a significant distinction. Donald Albury20:18, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Ultimately the only reason that set indexes are a distinct thing from disambiguation pages is that a sufficient proportion of editors who maintain disambiguation pages care about adhering to the very rigid disambiguation page style guidelines over being flexible enough to accommodate messy real world. In reality there is a single continuum from prose articles that contain a list through prose articles that are mostly list, list articles that contain a large amount of prose, list articles that contain minimal prose, set index articles, to disambiguation pages. Where you draw the lines between them is arbitrary. Thryduulf (talk) 22:19, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A SIA is an index (it has a navigational function) to a set of things (all the things are the same kind of thing; ships, Russian villages, etc.) that share a name. SIAs were originally developed for ships. There was some conflict between editors working primarily on DAB pages who had a minimalist interpretation of MOSDAB, and editors working primarily on ships who thought that the minimalist interpretation of MOSDAB led to leaving out information that aided navigation.
The disambiguators (planet)/{element)/(mythology) are entirely sufficient to navigate between three major meanings of Mercury. No further information is really needed. Pennant numbers such as (CV-6) and (CVN-65) are sufficient to provide unique article titles for ships named Enterprise, but are insufficient for most readers to find the article on the particular Enterprise they are interested in. Readers are more likely to be looking for them as the Enterprise that served in WWII, or the Enterprise that was the first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.
I'm not if there are any current DAB editors who hold the minimalist interpretation of MOSDAB (the entries on the current USS Enterprise DAB page mention WWII and nuclear-power), but conflict over the minimalist interpretation is why SIAs were developed.
For some same-named geographic entities, latitude and longitude might be some of the most important information for getting readers to the particular subject they are interested in. I don't expect anybody would actually know latitude and longitude off hand, but they could follow a link to a map to determine if it is in the right area. And there are certainly some pages that are labeled as SIAs that could just be DABs. Mud Lake (Michigan) is a SIA that includes lat/long. Mud Lake (Minnesota) is labeled as a SIA but doesn't include lat/long and could be turned into a DAB with no other changes. Plantdrew (talk) 22:11, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Just in response to Thryduulf's assertion that editors who maintain disambiguation pages care about adhering to the very rigid disambiguation page style guidelines over being flexible, if a subject has a primary topic with one or two ambiguous meanings, we put those other meanings in a hatnote. A disambiguation page is basically just a hatnote that has been made its own page, because there are too many topics to have in a hatnote. You wouldn't expect more information than what would be included in a hatnote, or by analogy to print books, in an index of subjects at the end. BD2412T23:17, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Note that I explicitly stated a sufficient proportion of editors who maintain disambiguation pages (emphasis added). The portion you quote does implies I attributed this narrow thinking to all such editors. A disambiguation page is only partially analogous to the index of a printed work as, lacking space constraints, they are more flexible. Hatnotes can and do contain more than the absolute minimum information required to direct readers to the appropriate article when doing so is helpful to readers and the same should be true of disambiguation pages. This is why I state that dab pages and set index articles exist on a continuum with list articles etc, rather than being a qualitatively separate thing. Thryduulf (talk) 23:33, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I was trying to get to the core of the issue, which is the necessity of rigid guidelines. Can you point to any hatnotes that in fact "contain more than the absolute minimum information required to direct readers to the appropriate article"? BD2412T23:39, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You haven't got close to the necessity of rigid guidelines, you've just compared dab pages to something they are only partly similar to. The point though is that the rigidity of the guidelines are the only reason that set indexes and disambiguations pages are different things on Wikipedia. And this artificial separation of things that exist on a continuum are why so many people don't understand the difference - it's just one of degree. As for hatnotes, they aren't something I've ever kept track of so I don't have ready-made good examples, but a quick search finds:
Precambrianfor the album by German band The Ocean, see Precambrian (album) when the absolute minimum is just "for the album, see...".
In all of these instances, the hatnote content is not less than what we would typically include on the disambiguation page, which would in fact also specify the year of the album. BD2412T18:26, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The "rigidity" of content on disambiguation pages serves the exact same purpose as the "rigidity" of content in hatnotes, and there is no need to insult those who do the work of maintaining hundreds of thousands of disambiguation pages for preventing devolutions that would make such maintenance impossible, and use of such pages more difficult for the reader and for disambiguators constantly working to fix disambiguation links. BD2412T19:45, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Whether such changes would be "devolution" or make page more difficult for the reader is a matter of opinion not objective fact. The difference in opinion between those who believe disambiguation pages should always be minimal and those who take the view that sometimes more is actually more is why set indexes are seen as something separate to disambiguation pages rather than both being as different points on a single continuum from pages where (almost) no extra information is required through to full list articles. If there was a core conceptual difference then WP:G14 wouldn't have to use such phrasing as neither disambiguation pages nor pages that perform disambiguation-like functions (such as set index articles or lists).Thryduulf (talk) 20:08, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Less rigidity so there is more flexibility to be helpful to the reader where more information provides that. What that means in practice is not something that can be answered in the abstract because it's dependent on the individual page. Thryduulf (talk) 21:00, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
RfC: BLPRESTORE: removal vs. administrative deletions
There is an ongoing discussion here [[7]] that I think could use more input. I’m interested in hearing how others think we should balance completeness with restraint here, and whether existing policy provides enough guidance or if clearer consensus is needed. Coffeeurbanite (talk) 17:34, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Exhaustive list of company's product
I believe there's a general consensus to support that such should not be in the article about a company in accordance with WP:NOTADIRECTORY. However, is creating a list a reasonable approach per WP:LISTCRIT or would it be more like gaming the system?
Examples are exhaustive list of albums, sometimes along with the catalog number of barely notable run of the mill independent record labels created as "discography of some record label" which is essentially like a "list of all light bulbs made by GE Lighting".
The example you gave is a valid navigational list and probably meets LISTCRIT. I do not understand how creating a list of albums could possibly be construed as gaming. A list of albums released by year with wikilnks to relevant articles is also not even close to basically using Wikipedia like Discogs. voorts (talk/contributions) 03:52, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Just because a list happens to be cited to Discogs does not make it a mirror. Discogs pages contain far more information than the name of the album, the artist, and the year of release. Additionally, the citations can easily be changed. Album data is very easily sourceable. voorts (talk/contributions) 04:22, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Persistent businessman offering to write academic Wikipedia pages for a fee
Between October 2025 and this month I have received six unsolicited emails from a person offering (insistently) to write a Wiki page about one of my academic books.
The person/organisation seems dubious and traces back to an internet presence in Austin, Texas, in Johannesburg, South Africa, and an engineering supplier in Wyoming and Ghaziabad, India.
The emails have gradually become more insistent, with the latest urging "The longer you wait, the more you leave your reputation in someone else’s hands" and "someone else could control the narrative".
I have no interest in such a service and have not replied to him. I wondered whether such efforts are scams or contrary to Wikipedia policies. SFJoh (talk) 13:42, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Welcome, @SFJoh. Those emails are common scams, just ignore them as you've been doing. Unfortunately, there's really no way to shut down that type of bad actor from Wikipedia's side. Schazjmd(talk)13:51, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@SFJoh: As Schazjmd said, if someone offers to write a Wikipedia article in exchange for payment, it's a scam. This is so common that we have a dedicated warning for it. You did well to not respond to them.
There is a way to help shut down the scam from Wikipedia's side: forwarding scam emails (including email headers) to paid-en-wpwikipedia.org before deleting them and blocking the sender. SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 14:20, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
, with the latest urging "The longer you wait, the more you leave your reputation in someone else’s hands" and "someone else could control the narrative" This is quite a fascinating insight into how these scammers operate; considering we have a whole policy about how nobody owns the articles they write and has no exclusive right to editorial control over the 'narrative' presented therein. Your reputation is always in someone else's hands here; that's one of the reasons it's not always good to have a Wikipedia article about yourself. Athanelar (talk) 01:49, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"Notability" really is a terrible name.
I've heard it discussed around a fair amount, and I'm sure it's one of those 'perennial proposals' that the veterans here are going to roll their eyes and say "ugh, somebody's bringing THIS up again," but I do think it bears saying. Notability is an awful descriptor for what we're actually looking for, which is presence in sources. That's 'notedness' if anything, not 'notability', and the inevitable result is that every time you tell someone you can't accept their autobiography/company's article/article about their favourite media thing because it's 'not notable,' they get their haunches up and go on a tirade about how many awards they/the thing have won and how many cool things they/the thing have done, etc. Pretty much every mention of something being notable or not notable has to be accompanied by a mandatory disclaimer of what notability means here and how it doesn't mean what they think it does. It's a thought particularly spurred on by my deletion nomination of the article Deaglán de Bréadún, which led the man himself to post a response essentially calling me a nasty person for daring to imply that him and his career aren't notable... which, of course, is not actually what we mean, despite literally saying the words "you aren't notable enough for a Wikipedia article"
So, the obvious question is; what would we call it instead? I've heard the term "Criteria for inclusion" mentioned, which I think would be a graceful solution, since you can explain that the criteria for inclusion is presence in sources etc without ever having to use the scary word 'notability.' Whatever alternative option is presented, I do think it is seriously high time that Wikipedia take the big step of retiring the term 'notability' Athanelar (talk) 00:39, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And then, what would we call all the lists of "notable" people/residents/alumni/etc.? "People/residents/alumni/etc. who meet the criteria for inclusion"? Donald Albury01:11, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think you could probably still keep those; the definition there would logically run in the opposite direction, they are notable because they meet the criteria for inclusion. It's not an ideal solution, but obviously cuts down on some of the logistical challenge. Athanelar (talk) 01:41, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Renaming notability has been an WP:PEREN issue, repeated discussed without finding any term that has a benefit over "notability" that would not be disruptive (how many P&G depend on it) but would be more descriptive. And no, "presence in sources" is an indicator of notability, but not how notability is defined. Masem (t) 01:16, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It is undoubtedly true that it would be a lot of work changing the nomenclature all over the project if we got rid of 'notability,' but I don't think "It'd be a lot of work" is a compelling counterargument. There would no doubt be a long transitional period where lingering remains of 'notability' were still all over the place; but that doesn't have to be an issue, it's not like the change has to happen overnight. We could just say "from today on, the term 'notability' is deprecated and we prefer this new term instead" and people can change mentions of it as and when they catch it. Just today I heard about the NSPORTS 2022 RfC where the definition of notability for athletes was radically changed; that too would've had far-reaching implications on the project, but that didn't stop people from doing it just because it was a lot of work ahead of them to clean up the now non-notable athlete articles everywhere. Athanelar (talk) 01:42, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The NSPORT change did not radically change what notability was, just eliminated a very poor presumption of notability (playing one professional game) that had led to thousands of permastubs on athletes that was a constant problem at ANI.
We've been through what the downstream impacts of changing the term notability to something else as part of past discussions (because this being PEREN) and its not as simple "from now on it will be known as..." "notability" is embedded in WP culture and in coverage of how WP works, so it would be a massive shift, so any new terms must carry a lot of massive benefit to make it worth the effort to make the change. And dozens of suggestions have been made and failed to show this. Masem (t) 04:47, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is also a fairly elegant solution, hut unfortunately relies on people actually clicking the link and then actually reading the words on their screen. The 'headline effect' is real when it comes to WP links. Athanelar (talk) 09:23, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Much appreciated. Starting to read through some of that, I think 'eligibility' is quite a strong contender. It's an easily-understood English word already, which perfectly encapsulates the concept being described, and also would actually allow us to broaden our definition in some useful ways (because eligibility is a catch-all term that could include not only the presence of positive indicators like strong sources, but also the absence of negative indicators like WP:NOT or criteria for speedy deletion.) A subject which is 'eligible' is one that is both suitable for inclusion and unsuitable for deletion, which 'notability' does not currently encapsulate. Athanelar (talk) 02:15, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, eligibility is a terrible idea, because it implies a brightline yes/no answer. Notability is a greyscale, its why notability is based on presumptions and not a hardline test.
The only real issue with notability is for editors encountering the term for the first time, and coming to learn that real-world definition of notability is not exactly the same as WP's definition of notability, but reading the P&G should quickly resolve that. Masem (t) 04:53, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree, the bugbear for a lot of people seems to be whether we'll get consensus that changing the name is worth the effort. I think people first have to be disgruntled about the old name to be resolved to change it before we worry what the new name ought to be. Athanelar (talk) 02:11, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No! God please no! This is a perennial issue based primarily on WP:IDONTLIKEIT. It’s too late and too entrenched to change and someone is just going to bitch about how dumb “eligibility” is down the line. A better proposal would be outright banning perennial proposals and requiring consensus to unban them before allowing them to be discussed again, since that would require more extraordinary reasoning than “I know this has been talked to death, but just me out, I swear”. Dronebogus (talk) 02:43, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
While I agree that changing it has a less-than-ideal cost-reward, this post (and the others before it) explain legitimate downsides to the current name besides preference. Also, a discussion to unban a perennial proposal would look almost identical to the proposal itself. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 🛸04:28, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A discussion to unban a perennial proposal would look almost identical to the proposal itself. Maybe so, but it would force proposers to go through the process twice, which would discourage most proposers from doing it at all and save everyone a lot of time. Additionally, it wouldn’t necessarily always result in the aforementioned situation— if a proposal was banned because it was a hot-button issue now, it might be uncontroversially removed from the list 10 years later after things cool off, without actually endorsing it. It would be sort of like the MediaWiki:Bad image list or a gold lock for proposals. Dronebogus (talk) 09:51, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I totally agree with you and I was disappointed that there wasn't consensus to change the name in the aforementioned April 2025 RfC. But given the outcome of said RfC, I struggle to see the point of rehashing the discussion so soon as it's very unlikely that there will be a different outcome. Perhaps give it a year or two. novovtalkedits05:24, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Coverage is a distinction without a difference. Renown is far more pretentious than notability. Noted is barely even a change and couldn’t be used rationally in a sentence. Dronebogus (talk) 09:53, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Eligibility is the rename option that sucks the least, since it most accurately reflects what “notability” actually means. But “notability” still at least puts a vague idea in people’s heads (namely, is this thing/person significant in some way?) whereas “eligibility” could mean pretty much anything and could actually put a worse idea in people’s heads (namely, eligibility is whatever somebody says it is, or is some arcane ruleset known only to insiders that isn’t easily summarized). Dronebogus (talk) 09:59, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see that as a negative. We are, ultimately, looking for a term that describes "eligible to be included on Wikipedia." In fact, some of the AfC decline notices literally use "your references do not demonstrate that this subject qualifies for a Wikipedia article" as a piped link to 'notability' anyway. If anything, having a more comprehensive term would be an advantage, since then you don't run into the tricky situations of 'well, we TECHNICALLY have enough information to presume this person is notable, but there's still not enough coverage to substantiate an article about them' amd so on.
Eligibility includes what we now define as notability, but way more succinctly communicates the point of whether or not something should have an article. Athanelar (talk) 14:02, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Having an all-encompassing term actually referring to just one facet seems like it would make it harder to discuss that facet versus other facets. "Ok, that meets WP:ELIGIBILITY, but it's still not eligible because it doesn't meet WP:BLP1E." "Wat?" Anomie⚔00:01, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
“notability” still at least puts a vague idea in people’s heads: but I think that’s the problem with the term. People don’t realize they are encountering a jargon term and substitute their own meaning. I’d argue that “eligibility” is better because there’s more precedent that contextual criteria will define eligibility for a particular thing; it might cue people that they need Wikipedia-specific information. (I’d almost want to try a complete neologism that people would know they don’t know the meaning of, something like “wikifiability” or “AAOEW” (Article Allowed On En-Wiki) that they’d know they don’t know.) ~ le 🌸 valyn (talk) 07:35, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Anomie said it best with the “wiki-eligibility is not dictionary definition eligibility” example. Notability still hits the general vicinity of the right idea; eligibility doesn’t and has the potential to be more confusing. As for a neologism, I don’t support that either because (on top of being a solution in search of a problem like all these replacement suggestions) it just adds MORE incomprehensible jargon to Wikipedia— which is what this proposal is supposedly trying to cut back on.Dronebogus (talk) 14:39, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Notability was never a good choice of name, but we've stuck with it because of the cost of changing; it's a QWERTY vs DVORAK problem. Personally I'd quite like to call it "Citability".—S MarshallT/C09:45, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think the 'cost of changing' would quickly be outweighed if you tallied up the editor-hours required and compared it to the editor-hours that have been spent and will continue to be spent in perpetuity explaining to disgruntled would-be article creators why appearing on a list of the Top 100 Best Things doesn't confer notability. Athanelar (talk) 13:11, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Don't misunderstand: I personally would support most reasonable alternative names because "notability" is still (after all these years) a misleading, dramagenic, and generally awful choice of words. But there's a non-zero cost of changing and a lot of neophobia to overcome here.—S MarshallT/C14:40, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As I discussed last April, personally I encourage everyone to focus on providing more complete explanations on the standards for having an article rather than just linking to a jargon term. The key obstacle is that the community has to want to reduce its use of jargon. isaacl (talk) 16:51, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It is highly unlikely that the community is going to rename "Notability", this being as noted a perennial proposal that gets enmeshed in the long and complicated history and complicated current understanding of the concept of 'notability' on en.wiki. However, a creative smaller change probably worth exploring might be to create an alternative name for WP:GNG that somehow does not include the "N". GNG is the aspect of notability that best describes "presence in sources", it is the least likely aspect of notability to get enmeshed in notability politics. I don't have a perfect suggestion offhand, but creating an alternative name for GNG is a smaller task then renaming all of notability, and would capture much of the practical benefit of a full notability rename even if that full rename never happens. CMD (talk) 14:11, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The community's inertia is such that a proposal to change this isn't a good use of my time or anyone else's. But I agree, and if I had my way I would want the policy not to be a near-synonym of "significant". The practical consequence I see most often is the eliding of "should we as an ambitious global encyclopedia cover this in principle" and "can we as an encyclopedia that cares about verifiability write an article about this in practice". I could go on at length, but a more prosaic name may help us a good bit, perhaps something as plain as "standard for inclusion". Vanamonde93 (talk) 17:47, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
“Standard(s) for inclusion” is by FAR the best proposed option so far; but there are multiple “standards for inclusion” beyond notability. Dronebogus (talk) 14:46, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Dronebogus: This is precisely the distinction that I want to make. To my mind there's not multiple standards for inclusion, because in our most overarching policy language, "notability" is used as a synonym for standards of inclusion. We do have multiple was of showing notability beyond GNG/SIGCOV. And the frequent use of "notable" to mean "has SIGCOV" therefore causes considerable confusion as well. Vanamonde93 (talk) 20:18, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia jargon. We use a word with a meaning that differs from its normal English meaning. Any other word would therefore have the same issue unless we created an entirely new word like "cituated". My personal favourite is "living persons", which includes dead persons.Hawkeye7(discuss)18:42, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think that this is necessarily true; "eligibility" "suitability" and "criteria for inclusion" which have all been mentioned all transparently mean what we would want them to mean; the bar a subject has to pass to get an article. This isn't an unsolvable dilemma, it's just hard work. Athanelar (talk) 19:33, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"Criteria for inclusion" leads us straight to one of the most common points of confusion: inclusion of an article in the encyclopaedia versus inclusion of details within an article. The criteria applied to the creation or retention of an article are not the same as those applied to the content inside it.Hawkeye7(discuss)20:36, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, it is really a terrible name. The fixation that it needs to be one word is also bizarre. Neutral Point of View is not one word, Original Research is not one word, Biography of Living Persons is not one word, Article Title is not one word, etc.: so, Article Criteria, or some such. 'On Wikipedia, Article Criteria is a test . . .'; It meets the AC; it does not meet WP:AC; and done. Alanscottwalker (talk) 01:44, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Comment: Unpopular opinion I guess but I like the word "notability," especially when paired with "Wikipedia:Verifiability." Notability gives a lot of wiggle room but suggests there is some minimum for inclusion, and we can adjust what that is.
It’s not an unpopular opinion. I’m pretty sure the silent majority either likes it or has no strong opinion on it. Otherwise we would have changed it by now. Dronebogus (talk) 14:50, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think some people are confusing the aim and the criteria. We really do want to write articles on topics that are notable according to its everyday meaning (that's the aim), but to achieve that in practice we have to make guidelines for notability that editors are able to follow and agree with each other about (that's the criteria). So my opinion is that "notability" is actually the best of the options mentioned so far in this discussion. "Eligibility" is way too vague (neither an aim nor a criterion) and "citeability" is just wrong (that would refer to sources, not topics). The word that has annoyed me the most, for the past 20+ years, is "verifiability", which in wikispeak means something entirely different from its meaning in plain English. In plain English, something is verifiable if its truth can be confirmed, which is why the ancient slogan "verifiability, not truth" is my nomination for the worst own-goal in Wikipedia history. Zerotalk10:35, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In defense of verifiability, it's purely a question of which frame of reference you're using. Sure, in everyday speech it usually means verifiable [against objective truth] but it's not a stretch or corruption of the meaning that on Wikipedia it means verifiable [against a source text]. The whole point of 'verifiability, not truth' is to clarify that the thing we're verifying against is not objective truth, merely source->text integrity. Athanelar (talk) 10:48, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, that was not where "verifiability, not truth" came from (I was here when it was adopted). The "not truth" part refers to "no original research". The idea is that we use what reliable sources say is true and not what we personally believe is true. It isn't a reference to objective truth. The problem with the slogan is that it was commonly taken to mean that Wikipedia doesn't care about getting the facts right, and this misunderstanding got "out there" to our detriment. And we threw it at newcomers before they had a chance to grasp that "verifiability" didn't mean what they thought it meant. Zerotalk11:40, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I would probably call it "sourceability" which is somewhat more accurate. However, as said before it's one of these entrenched terms that are hard to change. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk) 14:25, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Nothing currently; I'm not trying to make a proposal, just to discuss the topic. There's no point in proposing a candidate if nobody thinks it should be changed to begin with. Athanelar (talk) 14:42, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No-one can decide. And most likely no decision will be made. This is such an obvious waste of time I don’t really know why I, or any of the many high-profile editors here, dignifying it with a response beyond “WP:PERENNIAL” Dronebogus (talk) 14:43, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The glaring problem is that that's an extremely unintuitive and niche use of that word, which usually means "important" or "significant" Athanelar (talk) 16:34, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That's what "notable" means, while "notability" reflects how much someone is likely to be notable, which matches the intent of what WP's notability does. Masem (t) 16:47, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
But "importance" is subjective (my wife is important to me, the road I take to work is important to me, the band my friend started when he was 15 is important to him; none of them are notable in the Wikipedia sense). "Notability" (or at least the GNG) aims to be an objective standard that is either met or not and has little to do with what most people think of as "importance". HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts?20:49, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Also worth adding that we do "note" unnotable things on Wikipedia, just within articles rather than as standalone topics. CMD (talk) 04:18, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Its far from an objective standard, which is why notability is a rebuttable presumption. Show that the topic is given in-depth coverage from at least a few independent, reliable sources (generally being secondary sources), and we'll presume that the topic can merit a full article. But there's so much variability in what qualifies as in-depth coverage, how many and what kind of sources, etc. that its far to call the test solely objective. Otherwise, we'd not have any problem at AFD with deletion.
But we do associate being notable as if the topic was important enough to independent authors to cover in-depth, that is, is the topic demonstrated the quality of being notable based on sourcing. Masem (t) 04:29, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
While we’re here, why don’t we look at all the other less-than-ideal names used for rules on Wikipedia? WP:NPOV (which isn’t neutral) WP:IAR (don’t actually do this) WP:DELETION (pages aren’t deleted). I could probably find lots of examples. Wikipedia is just like any hobbyist subculture in that it has a lot of weird jargon that doesn’t necessarily mean what the dictionary and common sense say it means. “Fixing” that will just create more problems as now both newbies AND veteran editors are confused by the weird new terminology. On top of that Newbies still won’t understand what it’s meant to convey, veterans will just keep using the same terminology they always used, and eventually it will just get reverted back with the same unnecessary cost as changing it. Dronebogus (talk) 15:00, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I prefer "Notability". While "criteria for inclusion" would convey the idea, it would be awkward to use regularly. None of the other suggestions above work for me. - Donald Albury19:04, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Paragraph 1 has 3 sentences and 3 citation admonitions. "Early life" is similar. In addition, there is warning at the top that the article needs work. Excuse me, but doesn't anyone else find this aesthetically, and psychologically, distasteful? And if you keep reading it's a litany of complaints that [failed verification][dead link][bare URL] ad nauseam.
I understand how we might have gotten here, but I object to where we are. This kind of article is very difficult to improve, because its "technical debt" wasn't managed. Thanks for listening to me complain, hoping for some advice and/or sympathy 11:41, 20 February 2026 (UTC) Reechard (talk) 11:41, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It looks like that because, between February 11 and February 12 this year, a temporary account made a series of twelve edits tagging virtually every sentence in the article. Given the volume and the patent inapplicability of at least some of these tags (e.g. working as a railroad "groundman, at $2.20 an hour" (rather than as a higher paid lineman, as he "had a fear of heights") is tagged "needs quotation to verify" despite, uh, being a direct quotation from the cited source), one might reasonably question whether this should simply be reverted wholesale.
I reached out to the IP on their talk page, just to let them know they might be overdoing it... I agree, there are definitely way too many tags on some of these articles. JordyGreytalk11:47, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Template for gloss needed language maintenance tag?
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
This isn't a rhetorical question or meant to actually change anything, sincere interest.
Because he was no longer a Prince, and therefore the title was actively incorrect (as opposed to disputed). Consider for example the move from Charles, Prince of Wales to Charles III when he became king. Also, people's names are subject to BLP, which pages about geographical features or social media sites are not. Consider, for example, a transgender person who has changed their name (MOS:DEADNAME). Black Kite (talk)20:22, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You got it right first time. It's due to WP:COMMONNAME. Since the day when he was stripped of his titles I have only seen him referred to as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, and have only seen that gulf referred to as the Gulf of Mexico. I have probably seen the social media site referred to most often as "X, formerly Twitter", so that may get a rename when people start dropping the "formerly Twitter". Phil Bridger (talk) 20:59, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
On a quick look at that RM it seems to have attracted a lot more editors than most subjects. I would hazard a guess (I can't be arsed to check it out for certain) that most of the editors who took part are American, because Americans seem to be obsessed with the British royal family even when they are not royal any longer. Phil Bridger (talk) 21:42, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
I'd support a policy that says that all commercial AI products are immoral technology, but I can only see that proposal going over like a lead balloon. On a much more modest level, we could add a bullet point to the LLM warning, observing that LLM output can include deliberate misinformation. Stepwise Continuous Dysfunction (talk) 21:22, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I’d support a flat ban on AI, outside of examples on AI-related pages. Wikipedia should have zero tolerance for LLM text, AI-generated images, or any other kind of AI slop that people dump into articles (or anywhere else). Hosting AI images on Commons is kind of a necessary evil to discuss this technology and its “applications” (for lack of a better word) informatively, but I can see no other reason for Wikimedia to engage with or promote AI. It belongs in the Web 3.0 box of shame with crypto, which was rightfully banned as a donation method years ago. Dronebogus (talk) 09:07, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Is large-scale paid editing considered NOTHERE?
I've come across an editor whose userpage contains paid editing declarations for seven people and one company. Their entire editing activity here is dedicated to trying to publish articles about their clients. Is this not an example of someone whose entire purpose here is to promote their clients, and is therefore definitionally not here to build an encyclopedia? I know we don't outright forbid paid editing, but surely there must be a point of scale where we acknowledge that someone is interacting with Wikipedia as a marketer and not a contributor? Athanelar (talk) 10:57, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Not necessarily. Without context I can't comment on the individual, but if their edits improve the encyclopaedia by adding sourced, neutral content about notable topics and/or by making existing content about notable topics more neutral and/or better sourced then they are very much building the encyclopaedia. It is not a zero sum game - it is possible for Wikipedia and clients of paid editors to both benefit at the same time. Thryduulf (talk) 13:18, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Is it not also possible for a paid editor to incidentally benefit the encyclopedia even if they aren't here with the intent to build it? (Also, the editor in question, who I'm reluctant to name for fearnof dragging them into public scrutiny, is sitting on a pile of declined drafts and posting AI-generated drafts and talk page messages, so 'improving the encyclopedia' I think is certainly dubious here) Athanelar (talk) 13:47, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Is it not also possible for a paid editor to incidentally benefit the encyclopedia even if they aren't here with the intent to build it? Absolutely yes.
Whether someone is paid is independent of whether they are benefitting the encyclopaedia. If someone contributes NPOV, notable, sourced content they benefit the project regardless of whether they were paid to do so or not. If someone solely contributes unsuitable drafts (and being AI-generated isn't a reason on it's own why a draft is unsuitable) and talk page nonsense they are not benefiting the project, regardless of whether they are or are not paid.
It is also possible for someone to be here with the intent to improve the project while simultaneously exclusively making that do the opposite. Reasons for this include a lack of competence and simply not understanding the purpose/goal of Wikipedia. Thryduulf (talk) 14:21, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Paid editing alone is not against the rules. If their edits truly are solely to "promote their clients" in a way that violates WP:NPOV, or if they are otherwise being disruptive, that is against the rules. Toadspike[Talk]13:49, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Why do we revert all of a sockpuppet user's constructive contributions?
I find this too harsh, since the edits are constructive. I propose to stop doing this, and if it reaches consensus to stop doing this, we should be reverting all edits that reverted a sock's consturctive edits. ~2026-10062-01 (talk) 16:47, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Your premise is wrong. Only a small proportion of revisions by (detected and blocked) ban evading actors are reverted, regardless of whether the revisions are 'constructive' or not. You can easily verify this for yourself by selecting a some blocked sockpuppet accounts that have made hundreds or thousands of edits and look at how many have been reverted. Sean.hoyland (talk) 17:47, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Reverting only non-constructive edits would treat the past contributions of a sockpuppet as entirely equivalent to those of a normal good-faith editor, in spite of the fact we know they were not operating in good faith. The potential for reversion of everything without need for discussion provides some incentive not to sock. Any reverted edits (and by no means all are reverted) can be restored by any editor in good standing who would like to adopt them as their own. MichaelMaggs (talk) 18:12, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You can restore sock edits, but the standard policy is that you, the reverter, are now responsible for the material that was added. So if the sock was actually putting in appropriate encyclopedic information that you have verified yourself, great, put it back and assert that in the change description. If you can't vouch for it, then leave it deleted. Masem (t) 18:22, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As some may be aware by now, the maintainers of archive.today (and archive.is, etc.) recently injected malicious code into all archived pages in order to perform a denial of service attack against a person they disliked (this can be confirmed by the instructions described here.) While the malware has been removed now, it is clear that archive.today can't be trusted to not do this in the future, and for the safety of our readers, these archiving services should be swiftly removed and the websites blacklisted to prevent further use.
The rub is that https://archive.today alone is used in nearly 400,000 pages, and its sister site archive.is is used in around 50,000. We're clearly very dependent on this service, but we must find a way to break away from it. And fast. ChildrenWillListen (🐄 talk, 🫘 contribs) 00:26, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Absolutely not. We are dependent on external sites for archiving and verification. I have in the past lobbied WMF to acquire archive.org so it can meet our needs (or set up our own version) but unless and until that happens we have to link to external sites for verification. Hawkeye7(discuss)01:24, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I trust them a far sight more than someone who has now verifiably used their ownership of a domain we link some 400k times to DDOS another website on the Internet. Izno (talk) 03:39, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Why insist on framing this as an all or nothing choice? Other archive sites exist and they don't have a demonstrable history of weaponising their service. Treating it as an exceptional case isn't unreasonable.
Also, even if this were an all or nothing choice (which it isn't), Wikipedia's need for citations isn't more important than the security of users. Archive.today has demonstrably abused its users' trust (including Wikipedia's editors and readers) and cannot be considered safe. – Scyrme (talk) 20:46, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Trash it completely. Archive.today has proven that it's not trustworthy as an archive source (unlike the Internet Archive) and links to it should be considered potentially malicious in nature. SilverserenC04:58, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"Archive.today has proven that it's not trustworthy" - there are no (known) examples of its owner tampering with archived pages. "unlike the Internet Archive" - Internet Archive removes archived copies regularly. sapphaline (talk) 14:56, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
there are no (known) examples of its owner tampering with archived pages: Yes there is, see above. Injecting malicious JavaScript is tampering, visible or otherwise. If they are willing to do that, who knows when they'll decide to exploit zero-days or engage in blatant manipulation. ChildrenWillListen (🐄 talk, 🫘 contribs) 15:03, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My point about them being trustworthy when it comes to archived copies stands. Internet Archive is way less reliable in this regard, because archived copies can always be deleted there. sapphaline (talk) 15:20, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'd rather have information lost than readers having to encounter mailicious code whenever an archived copy is visited. Also, we know nothing about the maintainer(s) of Archive.today, how they make money, or even if they're ready to pack up their bags tomorrow and leave. They're in a jurisdiction that's politically unstable and prone to censorship. None of these problems exist with the Internet Archive. ChildrenWillListen (🐄 talk, 🫘 contribs) 15:30, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A jurisdiction that's politically unstable and prone to censorship - you mean, like the United States? (I wish I was joking about my country in 2026) Setting that aside, we shouldn't want any information lost just like that. We need a remedying/replacement process coming before a removal process. See my main comment below. Stefen 𝕋owerHuddle • Handiwerk15:34, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If this RFC is going to pass (which will be a very unfortunate result!), megalodon.jp archives archive.today snapshots almost perfectly (the only issue is that they're zoomed out and for some reason have a 4000px width, but this is trivially fixed by unchecking some checkboxes in devtools). Maybe WMF could arrange some deal with their operators to archive all archive.today links we have? sapphaline (talk) 15:43, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"how they make money" - why should we care about this? "if they're ready to pack up their bags tomorrow and leave" - archive.today has existed for nearly 14 years. It's a snowball chance in hell they're going to shut the site down tomorrow or in any foreseeable future. "They're in a jurisdiction that's politically unstable and prone to censorship" - how do you know? "None of these problems exist with the Internet Archive" - US is extremely prone to censorship and political unstability + Internet Archive removes archived copies on any requests, not just governmental ones. sapphaline (talk) 15:35, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It is economically infeasible to hold trillions of archived pages and provide them indefinitely for free. We don't know how they're funding their project, which means we wouldn't know when this funding would dry out.
Their willingness to inject malware over a petty dispute puts their stability in disrepute. If we get in the bad graces of these maintainers, who knows what they'll be willing to do to us?
It's fairly well-known that the maintainer(s) of Archive.today live in Russia, and that the main archive storage is also hosted in Russia. Sometimes, they redirect certain IP addresses to yandex.ru, and of course, their official Wikimedia account Rotlink was created in ruwiki.
Actually the theory is Ukraine, not Russia, and the evidence is they provision on global edge cloud providers (such as CloudFlare - but not CloudFlare). -- GreenC15:46, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
CloudFlare is an example of a global edge network provider similar to what archive.today uses, but is not the specific provider that archive.today uses. -Wiggles (talk) 01:05, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@ChildrenWillListen makes an important point. People are bringing up that WP already has 500K links to them. What if they introduce malicious code on just some of the archived pages (for instance, because targets of their malice to be more likely to access those links)? Aurodea108 (talk) 01:49, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I can't think of an explanation for this that isn't malicious. You'd think the maintainer(s) of archive services wouldn't be stupid enough to try to get a blog removed from the internet as a petty retaliation over some alleged doxxing. — DVRTed (Talk) 05:33, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree, they should be blacklisted. Should have happened a long time ago, really, because of massive copyright violation: they distribute lots of content that the copyright owners only made available behind paywalls. See WP:COPYLINK: "if you know or reasonably suspect that an external Web site is carrying a work in violation of copyright, do not link to that copy of the work". — Chrisahn (talk) 11:11, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I fully appreciate why this needs dealing with, but I am concerned about "the rub". We could end up harming verifiability on a *lot* of our content. Of course, we can leave citations in place without the archive.today links, but without the ready verification of having an article to load, I fear some useful article text could end up being removed by editors who decide they can't trust the listed source due to inaccessibility (typically those with little wiki experience). In cases where the paywalled content still exists, removal would be less likely, but in cases where the original link is permanently dead, it's not available on Archive.org, and we only have archive.today... yikes.
Deprecation makes sense as long as that doesn't include immediate removal before any replacement remedy is pursued. Any process that intervenes with using archive.today should encourage editors to directly replace these sources with archive.org links or newspaper.com clip links, or locate alternate sources. I realize this is generally what deprecation means but if the intervention can be clear and help the editor find an alternative, I would be more relieved of the ramifications of ditching this source. Stefen 𝕋owerHuddle • Handiwerk14:51, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
well-said. i support blacklisting as long as it is accompanied by an effort to find alternative solutions instead of just plain removal. ... sawyer * any/all * talk15:33, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Agree with those above arguing that archive.today is simply not trustworthy enough to be sending our readers to. Adding malicious code to cause a DDoS on another website is an absurd thing for a website maintainer to do and we shouldn't be facilitating their behaviour by sending more users to their site, nor simply hoping that they won't do something worse which targets our readers. Sam Walton (talk) 15:03, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I think so. As you've said above, they can't be trusted to not do that again in the future, so I would support blacklisting their links. Some1 (talk) 01:17, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think there needs to be an official RfC on this to get more opinions. Personally I think this shows that archive.today can't be trusted (if they do this over something rather petty, what's stopping them from putting more malicious code into archived pages, not just the captcha?), and it should be at least deprecated - but only if the links can be replaced with a different archive without loss of information. Suntooooth, it/he (talk | contribs) 20:15, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
They blatantly violated Wikipedia:External links#EL3, but you think we need to have a long discussion about whether malware-serving websites are sometimes okay?
If we're going to have an RFC, let's blacklist now and focus the RFC discussion on how to cope rather than whether we should provide links to malware-serving websites. WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:16, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think that formally gaining consensus is important when it affects as many links as this does, especially since even in this thread it hasn't been unanimous. If this affected a much lower number of links (think a couple of orders of magnitude lower) and links that would be easily replaced or removed, then I wouldn't be suggesting a full RfC. Suntooooth, it/he (talk | contribs) 00:40, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I wonder if there's a way to add a warning in the articles. Something like [replace archive link] (and a category showing affected articles) might encourage people to start the process of finding other sources. It might be possible to do this automagically through the CS1|2 templates. I'm assuming that would catch most of them. WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:44, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It is in the realm of feasible just to turn off the display of archive links that are via archive.today/is in CS1/2. The real question is if we can get everything or if we just have to start off with vanishing the big quantity of links. Izno (talk) 03:59, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Removing archive links (even by just turning them off, rather than fully removing them) from this number of articles would be a huge hit to verifiability. If consensus is gained to remove archive.today links, there needs to be a mechanism for replacing them with other archives. Suntooooth, it/he (talk | contribs) 16:05, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
would be a huge hit to verifiability I think turning their display off is a fair compromise on the road to removal and replacement. I do agree that half a million pages or links is a big number. A maintenance category would naturally be set up so we can actually find these quicker.
Good idea. Also considering the RfC above, isn't it possible that many of the archive.today links on the encyclopedia _aren't actually necessary?_ As in, they were added superfluously by the website operators themselves? Perhaps the true scale of the problem is much smaller, and we could vibe code a quick tool to check some of the links. audiodude (talk) 04:50, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That's not a problem. We won't remove them (at least not for a while). Blacklisting means that no new links to these domains can be added. It doesn't mean existing links have to be removed. — Chrisahn (talk) 22:29, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Every day, links are added because there is no other option. They literally are the only source for a large set of web pages on the Internet. This is why there are so many links. It's the only option. It is pragmatic. You and some others appear concerned about what is best for Wikipedia, but you don't seem concerned about the consequences, which are very real, immediate and large scale - it would cause significant damage to Wikipedia. Unlike the good feelings about punishing Archive.today for some transgression. What is more important? -- GreenC16:04, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I've added archive.org URLs to lots of articles. In case a page hasn't been archived by them yet, I click "Save Page Now". I don't recall any significant problems, and I don't recall a URL that couldn't be archived. I'd say such URLs are pretty rare. — Chrisahn (talk) 22:50, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The problems likely depend on the type of source, so some editors may encounter problems fairly often, and others will not ever encounter it. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:35, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Agree that there should be an RfC. The implications of the discussion and potential actions taken by consensus will have far reaching effects across the encyclopedia. Additional comment as a technical editor, not one who edits a lot of articles: if archive.today provides a copy of a paywalled or linkrotted news article, but the article was actually published by the news organziation in question at some point, what does it matter if the archived copy isn't available? The citations are still technically valid right? Does wikipedia remove citations to books that are out of print? Does information exist if it's not on the internet lol? audiodude (talk) 04:47, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, you're right that a Wikipedia:Convenience link (to the original and/or an archive) is not required, if the news article is archived in some place that is accessible to the general public. For example, it's traditional for ordinary print newspapers to keep a copy of all their old newspapers, and many will either let the general public take a look or send the older ones to a local library or historical society. However, not all publications have a print edition, and some news outlets put more information/additional articles on their web. I have, for example, been disappointed that paper copy of The Atlantic has fewer articles than their website. A web-only source needs a working URL, because sources must be WP:Published#Accessible. WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:04, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Has anyone linked to the circus that occurred when archive.today first appeared? As I recall, they used extremely advanced (for the time) techniques to attack Wikipedia by edit warring their links into pages. The views that we have to keep using them miss the big picture: these guys are obviously up to something bad. The infrastructure and operational maintentance to support their system would cost a vast amount and someone is planning to get a return on that investment eventually. It's much more effort than some libertarian philanthropist would support. Johnuniq (talk) 02:47, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Technical question: How would blacklisting work? If I understand correctly, the idea is that blacklisting prohibits adding new archive.today (and archive.is etc.) links, but we'll keep the existing ones for now. Specifically: If I edit an article and try to add a new archive.today link, I get an error message and can't save my changes. But if I edit an article (or section) that already contains one or more archive.today links and I make unrelated changes, there's no such error message. Is that correct? Can we make that work? A "dumb" edit filter (that simply checks whether such links occur anywhere in the text I'm trying to save) won't work – it won't let me save unrelated changes. I can think of a few ways to implement a smarter filter, but I don't know if edit filters have access to the required information, or how efficient smarter checks would be. — Chrisahn (talk) 09:18, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Chrisahn Yes, this is how the built-in tools like MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist already work, and edit filters can also be made to work that way. They forbid adding new links to blacklisted domains, but if a link is already present in the article, it can be edited without tripping the blacklist. There are still some scenarios that cause problems (e.g. if a vandalism deletes a citation that links to archive.today, you won't be able to revert it without removing those links first), but that hasn't stopped additions to the blacklist before. Matma Rextalk14:41, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
archive.today is just a very useful website that can be used if archive.org is not helping.
The hosters of archive.today are not as reliable as the guys that host archive.org. However, we don't know any case, where a snapshot was false, do we?
In this case, they "just" abused their visitors for a DDOS attack. Of course we should not support this. But this does not mean, we have to definitely block the website.
By the way, blacklisting (via WP:SBL) without a previous removal of all links is not a good option, because this leads to several problems:
Moving of parts of pages to other pages (e.g. archiving) is not possible any longer, if the moved text contains a link.
Modifying an existing blacklisted URL (e.g. link fixing) might trigger the SBL.
It's not possible to add blacklisted links to a discussion which is challenging for some not so technical users.
In my opinion a technical solution could be:
replace all links with a (unsubstituted) template (yes, this is a lot of work, but could be automized partially);
if any problem with the domain occurs again, modify the template such that there is no link any longer to archive.today (and .is and all the other domains);
when the problem is solved, revert the template change;
if anybody adds a link to archive.today without the template, a bot could try fix that afterwards and the bot could write a message on the linker's talk page that they should check whether they could find something better.
By a solution like this we would would still have the benefits of the archived versions. But we could remove all links fast and at once, if needed.
A couple hundred thousand bot edits is not a good solution, either.
Trappist the monk might have some ideas about whether the citation templates could special-case these domain names for a while, while the work is done. A maintenance category, as Izno mentioned above, would also be a good idea. And even if we don't want to use the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist quite yet, for fear that it will interfere with rearranging pages, we could implement a Special:AbuseFilter that would prevent people from adding any new ones. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:33, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I still advocate going back to WMF with a proposal to create our own archive. This will get us off dependence on external archive sites that we cannot control. Hawkeye7(discuss)22:25, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Setting up an internet archive requires years of planning and work. I'd like us to start making tangible progress on resolving this problem today, or at least in the next week. Even if we thought that was legal and a good idea, creating our own archive isn't going to address the problem right now. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:24, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
cs1|2 can special case archive.today (and companion domains) if/when there is a consensus to deprecate/blacklist.
One major problem with the edit filter (and SBL/BED) is that many unexperienced people who trigger a rule just don't know what that means and what they should do. We often see that people who wrote large paragraphs and failed of first try to safe, just run away, although the warning said that if they are sure about what they are doing, they just should try to save again.
The filter (and SBL/BED) should be used if people intentionally (try to) spam. If they actually just want to help, then there's a risk of annoying/frustrating them. That's why -- over time -- I more and more tend to use notification bots and maintenance lists instead of the blacklist-like tools in cases where links are mostly added by non-spammers.
XLinkBot can deal with link additions, and we can modify the citation modules to not accept/show archive.today links anymore. After the number of links becomes manageable, an edit-filter based solution would be a good idea. ChildrenWillListen (🐄 talk, 🫘 contribs) 22:36, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Might be concerning, but that's "two people have been bad people" and each should be judged on their own merit accordingly. You don't treat someone DDOSing another person off the Internet as a stable individual meriting half a million links from the most popular source of collated information on the Internet (and that ignoring the prior dramas, as linked above). Izno (talk) 21:37, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Doxing? Hardly. Quote: "While we may not have a face and a name, at this point we have a pretty good idea of how the site is run: it’s a one-person labor of love, operated by a Russian of considerable talent and access to Europe." [9] — Chrisahn (talk) 22:40, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Another aspect: Depending on how the FBI case against archive.today goes, there's a chance that these ca. 500,000 archive links in our articles will become useless in the not too distant future. — Chrisahn (talk) 01:05, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Prior to about 2015, the Wayback Machine did not systematically archive all links on Wikipedia. There are huge gaps prior to that date. Between 2012(?) and 2015, Archive.today systematically archived Wikipedia. Thus many dead links are only archived on Archive.today. The one time Archive.today got blacklisted a long time ago, it didn't last long. People reversed it. Why? Because Archive.today is incredibly useful. It's that simple. It's pragmatic. They have the goods nobody else does. This incident with the CAPTCHA will soon be forgotten as inconsequential to Wikipedia. But blocking Archive.today will cause daily conflict with editors who need to use it because there is no other option. -- GreenC17:11, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Your wish to punish Archive.today over this silly incident (which they undid) would cause widespread and deep collateral damage to Wikipedia. -- GreenC18:32, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think that would depend on how it's implemented. First, just to remind everyone, WP:Glossary#verifiable means someone can find a reliable source. It does not mean that the Wikipedia article already has a little blue clicky number (that's WP:Glossary#cited) or that the ref contains a functional URL. This means that if the Wikipedia article says "The Sun is really big", and there's no cited source, or the cited source is a dead URL, then that sentence is still verifiable, because an editor (or reader) could look up Alice Expert's book, The Sun is Really Big, and learn that the material in the Wikipedia article matches the material published in at least one reliable source. Removing archive links therefore doesn't (usually) destroy verifiability (unless that was the only source in the world that ever said that, and the original is a dead URL – in which case, are we really sure we should be saying that now?); it just makes verifying the information take more work.
Having looked at a too-small sample size (=4 articles) with these links, I think that some of these links are unnecessary and others deserve a {{better source needed}} tag no matter what the archive status is. I therefore think that checking and replacing sources might be a good thing, overall. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:20, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A citation to a book is always verifiable. So is the NYT and other news outlets. Referring to everything else online-only, which is most of it. Without an archive, a dead website is unverifiable. Maybe wait 10 years for an archive to surface, but eventually it's gone. You might find other sources, but who is going to do that for half a million links? Certainly not the few people engaged in these conversations. Most people don't even verify sources, much less try to replace them with other sources. People are busy creating new citations with future dead links that nobody fixes. The debt continues to grow, and one of our best tools for dealing with it is now being threatened with removal. -- GreenC19:44, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Please look at the definitions I linked. We don't care whether "a dead website is unverifiable". (It's really none of our business whether people can double-check that some other website's content was taken from a reliable source vs is an original work.)
We care whether the content in the Wikipedia article is verifiable – and we care whether it's verifiable in any reliable source, not just the cited one.
Yes, you're right: half a million sources is a problem, and the debt continues to grow. To stop the bleeding, I think we should deprecate/discourage future additions of this source. To get the existing ones checked, I think we should have a tracking category, and maybe even a way to make this a more mobile-friendly and/or newcomer-friendly task. Based on my experience the other day, we're looking at about five minutes per source. Also based on my experience the other day, half the sources are unreliable ones anyway (at least for medical content). WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:55, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If Archive.today actually goes offline, then we have another problem. But treating it like it's already offline by adding {{dead link}} templates is backwards since we don't know the future. The assumption there are alternatives to Archive.today is a mistake. Most Archive.today links are added because Wayback can't do it. There's really only two games in town, and we are eliminating one. And you can't go back and fix it, either you save the web page before it dies or it's gone forever. Archive.today has a monopoly on many archive pages, and many citations are the only game in town there are no better sources. Most people don't read these forums, but if you start blocking or hiding links, there will be many editors complaining. It's a major resource for our community that has a large following. Nobody has really been notified about the RfC. -- GreenC21:00, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hoisting a comment by @Sapphaline to the top level:
"megalodon.jp archives archive.today snapshots almost perfectly (the only issue is that they're zoomed out and for some reason have a 4000px width, but this is trivially fixed by unchecking some checkboxes in devtools). Maybe WMF could arrange some deal with their operators to archive all archive.today links we have?" Aurodea108 (talk) 20:51, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I experimented with taking this one step further by rearchiving to Wayback a megalodon archive of an archive.today archive (what a sentence...)
A couple questions about the best way to go about this:
Could we get a list generated somewhere of articles that contain archive.today links that volunteers can start working through? I'll leave it to y'all to make the technical call on if that's best as a maintenance category, or a list of links like we did with CSD x1, or another option?
What is the current prospects of automation or semi-automation for these removals/replacements? I'm trying to avoid starting work manually that will eventually be done rapidly by a bot or AWB tool or something, but if those tools are unlikely or impractical, I can get started now. Could a bot be used to resolve certain special cases (e.g. where the original website is live)?
Hi folks, not sure if this is the best place to post this but it seemed like a high-visibility spot where someone might have an answer. Feel free to move or copy my message elsewhere if you'd like.
I created the article Nova Scotia Guard on 1 July 2025. The article appears to be indexed, and is the third result on DuckDuckGo. However, it will not show up on Google at all. Even when searching "Nova Scotia Guard Wikipedia", you'll get articles it's linked to and even a category it's in, but not the article itself. I was particularly perturbed by the fact that the Grokipedia clone of the article shows up in Google, but not the one I created. I mentioned this in the Wikipedia Discord server some time ago and my results were replicated by several other users. Since then I created a redirect, edited the Wikidata item, and added more links to the article, but it hasn't changed anything.
My biggest concern here is that there may be other articles which Google is not showing in search results for one reason or another. If someone might be able to look into this I'd appreciate it. Thanks, MediaKyle (talk) 16:04, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It was marked as reviewed in September which should allow it to be indexed, but I checked Google Search Console and for some reason Google hasn't crawled it since July when it was noindexed. I requested a re-crawl, so hopefully it will start showing up soon. the wub"?!"16:44, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@MediaKyle: It hasn't been edited since 20 August 2025 where it was still noindexed. I get the impression Google is watching our edit logs and often revisits a page shortly after it has been edited so any edit (except an unlogged null edit) may influence them. PrimeHunter (talk) 17:31, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the replies, I appreciate you both looking into this. I thought I edited the article the other day but I guess I did everything except that... Just made an edit. Hopefully it will show up soon and this is just an isolated incident. Cheers, MediaKyle (talk) 17:49, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for letting me know, just checked and it shows up for me now as well. Seems this is resolved now... still have to wonder what other articles might be caught by this oddity but I can't imagine it's too widespread. MediaKyle (talk) 19:01, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hm. I think maybe quite a lot, actually, if the reason something wouldn't be indexed is "no edits since an NPR hit the reviewed button". -- asilvering (talk) 05:22, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If this is common then probably it would be good if there was some query that listed all of these pages so that a bot could make an edit to these to get them index I think. I kind of doubt this is common though when not considering articles with a delay of 10 days or so but even when it's not common, many pages could be affected. Prototyperspective (talk) 11:37, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Prototyperspective Here you go - Quarry 102028 (I think, anyway). All pages on enwiki which are a) in the main namespace b) not a redirect c) marked as reviewed and d) have a last edit older than the review timestamp.
The interesting thing is that there are two different sets of answers here depending on how we look for the "review timestamp". In total, there are about 6000. But filtering only on ptrp_tags_updated we have about 5600 entries, oldest review date 2026-01-01. Filtering only on ptrp_reviewed_updated gets about 1600, oldest review date 2026-01-15.
Those are two suspiciously round numbers (one is this calendar year only, one is the last month only) so I am wondering if they are perhaps incomplete. Either way it might be an interesting list to investigate. Andrew Gray (talk) 16:34, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hello, popping in here because I'm working on a new project to round up SEO & other issues that might be lowering Wikimedia content visibility in search (see here for a bit of discussion w/@TheDJ& @Prototyperspective) and causing... (cough) undesirable other web sources to be the top result for people's search queries.
It strikes me that trying to create a new queue of new pages to review (even if bot-patrolled rather than human-patrolled) might not be the best solution, because queries break & bots break, etc. Do we know how/where this behavior is specified, and why? I understand the rationale behind NOFOLLOW on unpatrolled articles, but was this additional specification of "and the page must also be edited after, and it can't be a null edit" a feature that people asked for & implemented somewhere, or a bug? I don't see a mention of this behavior being requested in the original 2012 RfC.
... sidenote: this aside on that RfC is bittersweet – 2012 Wikipedia was really a different time!: "One possible (and unfortunate) side-effect is that it could prevent articles on breaking news from being immediately indexed (for example, the Costa Concordia disaster). However, patrol usually happens quite quickly: writing the article takes significantly more time than patrolling it." (emphasis mine ) Maryana Pinchuk (WMF) (talk) 19:14, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
and the page must also be edited after, and it can't be a null edit is likely the impact of caching. I couldn't tell you which layer. Basically though, I know that if pages don't have a reason to update (including both direct edits to the page and indirect edits like to templates they use), they aren't updated. So the version with the NOINDEX gets stuck in a cache somewhere.
There are also going to be pages that fall off without having been reviewed inside 90 days, but those are also in basically the same set as the above. Izno (talk) 19:23, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Ahhh, of course, caching. That makes sense, thank you!
@MPinchuk (WMF): It was me who brought up that Google doesn't discover an article has been noindexed after a patrol but it appears you misunderstood the cause. As far as I know, MediaWiki correctly removes noindex right away and doesn't keep serving a cached version with noindex. But Google's web crawler Googlebot has to read the article again to see it no longer has noindex. Most websites probably rarely or never remove a noindex and many websites would be annoyed if web crawlers keep revisiting a noindexed page so it makes sense for them to remember the page is noindexed and stay away. However, I think Google monitors an API version of Special:RecentChanges or something like that. If Google discovers an article has been edited then they revisit it even if they have previously seen it was noindexed. That's why an edit can cause sudden indexing in Google. Considering Google's search engine share and how important we also are to them, it may make sense for somebody at WMF to contact them about the issue. Maybe suggest that they also monitor an API version of the relevant patrol log and revisit patrolled pages. Or MediaWiki could add a "pseudoedit" in the page history when a page is patrolled like we already do for some other log actions like moves. If Google watches recent changes then they would probably see this edit and revisit the page. If an unpatrolled article automatically has noindex removed because it becomes 90 days old then it would still be a problem. Maybe MediaWiki could also add a pseudoedit in this case. PrimeHunter (talk) 10:25, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have a feeling other editors might complain about all these extra pseudoedits for patrols or "is 90 days old". Google is probably getting their feed from m:Wikimedia Enterprise, for which a custom "noindex changed" feed or something similar seems like it wouldn't be out of place. Anomie⚔14:34, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the query. I've just checked a small bunch of articles. They all showed in DuckDuckGo on my end except for Muawiya Dam and I think none showed in Google when just checking with "ptrp_reviewed_updated" (1742 articles currently) (these did show in DDG except for that dam page where it did show some other article at the top but this has changed just now apparently as it now does show that article). Prototyperspective (talk) 01:56, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Temporary Wikipedian userpages
In the past couple of weeks Special:WantedCategories has seen more than one recurrence of a redlinked Category:Temporary Wikipedian userpages that was deleted in 2016. Both times, it was populated entirely by the user talk pages of editors who were blocked for vandalism in 2008, the first time exclusively editors whose usernames began with W, and today exclusively editors whose usernames began with V — and the culprit appears to be that said talk pages have recently been undeleted on WP:DELTALK grounds, after having been previously deleted, and were thus put back into a category that existed at the time of the original deletion but has not existed for a decade.
The category is currently empty. Please always include an example. I found one in your contributions: [10]. There is no way to prevent the categorization before you removed it. The page was undeleted by Hex. Her logs show she undeleted many such pages beginning with V on 7 February and with W on 29 January. If she is planning to undelete more pages then you could ask if she will remove the category afterwards but now I have also pinged her. PrimeHunter (talk) 18:03, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hiya - yes, I'm repairing a mass deletion of user talk pages by a former admin back in 2008 before we decided not to do that. It's slow and tiresome because I check each of them to ensure there's nothing requiring RevDel before hitting the button, so I was planning to ask someone to get a bot to clear off the category afterwards. I guess you'd like me to arrange that now? Given that I've done about 600 out of 11,000, this is going to take a while. By the way Bearcat, since you evidently checked the logs, you could have written to me first before posting here. It's also kind of odd that you didn't mention me and so PrimeHunter had to send a ping. — Hex•talk19:58, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Hex: Now that the topic is raised, I do have to wonder what purpose is served by undeleting these talk pages. Was there a discussion somewhere that concluded these 11000 pages would be useful to mass-restore 18 years later? Anomie⚔23:59, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have the same question. I looked at just one example, which had five Linter errors and one nonexistent category. I expect to see deleted templates as well. Restoring these pages will make work for a lot of gnomes; what is the benefit, and where was the discussion about this restoration? – Jonesey95 (talk) 00:32, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No discussion was required. We established consensus a long, long time ago that user talk pages shouldn't be deleted except in rare circumstances because they form an important part of the historical record. When that happened, someone should have done this job, but nobody did. I'm rectifying that error. The effort of dealing with a small number of linter issues will be outweighed thousands of times over by the benefits of not having a massive chunk of user interactions and block log context missing for no good reason. — Hex•talk01:43, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
thousands of times over? Actual human and bot editors are going to have to make thousands of edits to remove errors from these restored pages. That is a guaranteed downside if this crusade project goes forward. Hex: Please enumerate concrete instances that balance the downside of those thousands of edits with benefits. I won't ask you to justify the obviously unjustifiable orders of magnitude that you claim. Just a simple positive or break-even counterbalance would be fine. – Jonesey95 (talk) 15:09, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A quick and dirty sql says that among the undeleted pages with linter issues, most have issues with obsolete tags, no background inline (which a number of wikipedians regard having a lot of false positives) and no end tags. Most of this can be automatically fixed. Everything else is less than 20 pages with issues.
@Snævar: There is no restriction. Some editors create their user page as the very first edit; indeed, for some, it is the only edit that they ever make. It's often harmless, provided it's not against WP:UPNOT and isn't speedyable under the G and U criteria. But this thread appears to be about user talk pages, these being the ones that Hex has been undeleting. Very few users create their own user talk pages, although some do. It's also not usually a Wikicrime. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 23:29, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Anomie - who can say, really? People are interested in anything and everything. Even the most seemingly mundane detail in an archive may be exactly what some future historian is looking for as part of a research project. You could really say that about almost all of our archives, which we generate at a ferocious rate - page revision histories, system logs, talk archives. 18 years is also not very long at all. The discussion we're having right now will get archived, and then nobody might care about it at all for 25, 50, 100 years. But there may be a single historian in 2126 who it's useful to and is reading it right now. (Hello! Do you live in space? I'm sorry for what we did to the planet.) It's that possibility that we keep archives for. — Hex•talk20:30, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
So a moment ago it was the unsupportable The effort of dealing with a small number of linter issues will be outweighed thousands of times over by the benefits of not having a massive chunk of user interactions and block log context missing for no good reason, and now it's that's life? I hope that Hex will consider cleaning up the pages that they undelete (link to an example of a Linter error that is of a type that was completely eliminated years ago). Editors are responsible for their edits. This is like watching someone walk through my neighborhood throwing trash on the ground. – Jonesey95 (talk) 14:25, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If anything, Jonesey95's crusade against linter errors is way more harmful than Hex's undeletions, because they seem to have no issues with loudly complaining and upsetting people over it. The message above ("This is like watching someone walk through my neighborhood throwing trash on the ground") is a perfect example of this. sapphaline (talk) 14:59, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Pppery: That was me, not Jonesey95. I guess good for you that you cared at one point in 2019? But not enough to have started a discussion beyond the REFUND you now admit wasn't a good one. Anomie⚔00:23, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Jonesey95: Mentioning me in every single edit summary you make so that I come back to find I have 75 notifications is unbelievably petty and childish. Grow up. — Hex•talk15:15, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It was a boilerplate edit summary. What is unbelievable is how much work you are making for your fellow editors. Please clean up the pages that you are restoring. Editors are responsible for their edits. See below for something more constructive. – Jonesey95 (talk) 15:23, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Two different boilerplate edit summaries which you wrote yourself to specifically mention and talk to me, which you've now stopped doing after getting called out on it. Sure dude. — Hex•talk16:01, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You asked me to stop, so I stopped. That's the polite thing to do. See below for an example of an editor who did not stop causing problems when asked to do so. – Jonesey95 (talk) 16:43, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Exploring a better process
I just did a partial cleanup on 88 User talk pages restored by Hex, fixing types of Linter errors that we eliminated from the English Wikipedia many years ago, and deleting nonexistent templates. A bot also removed nonexistent categories from many of the restored pages. This work took me about an hour that I otherwise would have spent fixing other problems or making actual improvements to Wikipedia. Bots and human editors will be needed to clean up "obsolete tag" Linter errors on a couple hundred additional pages that Hex recently restored.
I suspect that there is a better way for Hex to achieve their goals while avoiding this unnecessary work. I can think of a few options:
Stop restoring these pages.
Restore the pages, then fix all errors on the pages (both actions would be performed by Hex).
Restore the pages and then blank them. The supposedly valuable information would still be available in the pages' histories.
Now that there is actual time-based evidence of the cost of restoring these pages, explain in detail the thousands of hours of benefits that will accrue to future editors, readers, and researchers from restoration of these 88 pages. If it is really worth it, I can live with the extra work.
I'll also add my voice here that I think you should stop what you are doing and seek consensus for it. If anyone would have edited 11k pages without even a single discussion they'd get blocked immediately. Being an admin does not give you any special rights to bypass this process. Gonnym (talk) 20:49, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
We had the discussions about user talk pages from 2006–2010. In fact, the day after tomorrow is the 20th anniversary of WP:DELTALK. If you want an MfD for 11,000 user talk pages trying to retrospectively overrule that consensus, well, good luck. — Hex•talk22:05, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Find me a consensus that isn't 16-20 years old please. en.wiki has changed dramatically since then and I'd like to see recent consensus that agrees that mass restoring 11k pointless talk pages is wanted. Gonnym (talk) 08:34, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Starting from 12:27, 7 February 2026, out of the 605 user talk pages Hex has restored, 215 pages currently have at least one lint error (382 have no errors, and 8 were re-deleted). Here's a list in case anyone is interested in fixing those lint errors specifically: User:DVRTed/sandbox4. — DVRTed (Talk) 16:22, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
FWIW, I have already fixed all, or nearly all, of the Linter errors in these pages other than "obsolete tag" errors (the dark mode issues are not worth bothering with at this time, which is another discussion). I think I also fixed all of the nonexistent templates. We have a bot that can fix many pages that have only obsolete tags on them, so for human editors are interesting in fixing Linter errors, there are plenty of non-bot-fixable pages to focus on. The bot will make its way around to these pages eventually (it is currently fixing a batch of many tens of thousands of pages, possibly as many as 300,000, containing an error caused by a substed template; aren't you glad you're not a bot?). – Jonesey95 (talk) 05:07, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think the real issue here is WP:MEATBOT. I don't have an opinion on whether these pages should be restored, but I can understand that folks find undeleting 500 pages in a day to be disruptive when the whole project averages closer to 30-35 per day. Obviously pages are going to be restored from time to time, even ancient ones, IMO it's the scale at which it's happening that's upsetting people.
Restoring 11 pages in a single minute is clearly bot-like behavior, and should go through some sort of approval, at which point we can figure out details on how to coordinate with other cleanup bots and humans. Restoring 11k user talk pages doesn't fall under WP:MASSCREATE because they aren't articles, but I think following that guidance would ease bad feelings on both sides. Legoktm (talk) 00:23, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Call it bot-like if you wish but this is very, very simple work that requires only a glance at the edit history of pages that are 90% just a single block message or maybe a couple of warnings before that. It is even so still work requiring human attention and not a bot. It's also incredibly boring, and because unlike some people I understand that there is no deadline I'm not in some all-consuming rush to get this done. It's also how I approach my backlog of grindy projects, of which I have many. Do some to scratch an itch, then forget about it for a while. I started this project a year and a half ago - that's how long it took me to get over the boredom of the last bunch of undeletions. After doing 500 yesterday that itch has been scratched for now until I regain the energy to think about it more, but I'm probably going to be seeing this site in my sleep for a week. It would probably have come up for a bit more scratching relatively soon now that I've gotten a feel for it again, but after the toxic behavior on display in this discussion it's retreated a long way and is unlikely to see the light of day for quite some time. I'll note again here that we could easily have had a good-natured chat about all of this on my user talk page, but someone chose to passive-aggressively post here in a way that they knew would cause drama. For shame.
If people want to artificially limit progress on rectifying this big, stupid mistake from the past, they could at least volunteer to help out with it. I'm the only one doing it, and hamstringing me on the occasions that I feel sufficiently motivated will achieve nothing. If there are more people working on it then that will make a difference even with a go-slow sign on the side of the road.
this is very, very simple work that requires only a glance at the edit history of pages illustrates the problem. The technical work of looking at history and clicking a button is simple, but the job is not done at that point. Instead of moving on to the next boring page restoration, the restoring editor, who has now created one or more problems on a Wikipedia page, bears some responsibility for resolving those problems. The editor should remove nonexistent categories and templates and do their best to fix wikitext syntax errors. The red categories are easy to see in preview. The nonexistent templates are easy to see in "Pages included in this section:". And many of the syntax errors are easy to see using the syntax highlighter gadget. Please fix the errors that you are creating, now that you have been notified that you are creating them. – Jonesey95 (talk) 13:09, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Hex, I hope you don't feel that push back to your project is toxic. Jonesey95, in particular, has tried to offer alternative solutions that wouldn't cause issues for other editors, but you seem to have dismissed them out of hand.
I'll note again here that we could easily have had a good-natured chat about all of this on my user talk page, but someone chose to passive-aggressively post here in a way that they knew would cause drama. For shame.
Isn't this really the crux of the problem? Bearcat often asks here for help with his maintenance work keeping Special:WantedCategories clean - I don't know where you're getting that this is intended to cause drama. But clearly this is causing issues for other editors, because that is what precipitated this thread. Qwerfjkltalk15:04, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
FWIW I also feel it's useful to restore these talk pages. However Hex I have a question, you've mentioned you're checking to see if there's anything that needing to be revdeleted, that's great. But are you also checking why the page was deleted? Because IMO in any case where it was deleted by request of the editor for whom the talk page is for, you should be blanking the talk page by default. Blanking a talk page is perfectly in line with policy and practice. And it the editor asked for it to be deleted 18 years or whatever and this was granted given the norms of the time, and it's now being undeleted because of policies changes, we should still grant this editor the courtesy of blanking it for them as the closest thing we can do which is in line with our current policies which fits with their request. Even in cases where it wasn't at the request of the editor the talk page is for, I don't see any harm in blanking it. Especially since we will probably never know if the editor for who it's for might have blanked it if it were possible and didn't reasonably expect it to come back 18 years later. So IMO the solution which will also allay the other concerns is for you to blank it after restoration. (To be clear, this means you probably don't have to check so well why the talk page was deleted.) If you want to get technical, you could ensure you keep any declined unblock requests if the editor is still blocked, but frankly after 18 years of a long deleted talk page, that's not particularly important IMO. BTW, I could approach you with this but since we're already discussing it here, I felt it best just to mention it here. Nil Einne (talk) 16:09, 15 February 2026 (UTC) 16:19, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
To be clear, IMO the primary reason for blanking the talk page in a case where the editor it's for requested deletion is because we should assume it's the closest thing we can do which follows their wishes. And something there's a fair chance they would have done if told 18 years ago sorry we can't delete the talk page but you're free to blank it. (I think but am not sure, nowadays some admins may blank a talk page if an editor requests deletion.) The fact it deals with the other problems that come from a very old page being restored is only an added bonus. Nil Einne (talk) 16:13, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that restoring and then blanking would be an acceptable path forward. I proposed it as option 3 above. It would alleviate the Linter errors, the category errors, and the nonexistent template errors, which (if I am reading correctly) would address all of the editors' complaints in this thread. – Jonesey95 (talk) 16:21, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Looking more it seems most or all of these were deleted as temporary user pages rather than on request. Even so, I still feel simply blanking them is the best option given as I mentioned it might have been carried out (or requested if the editor lost talk access) in the 18 years if they weren't deleted. And the user has no reason to expect it would suddenly come back. If the editor objects, they're free to unblank them but blanking when the editor doesn't want it seems the less of two possible evils. For IP talk pages, the situation is different however it was normal to clear out old messages to reduce confusion. And while there's no need for it now we have TAs, there's also no harm in it. (Frankly I wonder if we should just blank all IP talk pages but that's a discussion for another day.) Nil Einne (talk) 16:48, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm in support of blanking as well, it takes care of all the different issues nicely. Would be good to have a flagged bot do it so it doesn't trigger extra notifications for these users though. (@Nil Einne: VulpesBot is supposed to take care of blanking IP talk pages) Legoktm (talk) 18:24, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Hex: Sorry, I intended the end of my message to be proposing a (hopefully) positive path forward, specifically "...we can figure out details on how to coordinate" was me explicitly volunteering to help!! I think treating this as a bot task will actually speed up what you want to accomplish rather than "artificially limit progress".
I do disagree with your assertion that this isn't a bot task. Doing something across 11k pages, even with minimal human input, is just a semi-automated bot instead of a fully automated one. To quote MEATBOT: Editors who choose to use semi-automated tools to assist their editing should be aware that processes which operate at higher speeds, with a higher volume of edits, or with less human involvement are more likely to be treated as bots. If there is any doubt, you should make a bot approval request.Legoktm (talk) 18:21, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm very happy to hear that! Regarding it not being a bot task, I said that because I don't think that any page should be undeleted without an admin at least briefly checking first, especially ones this old. It's a bit of a pain, but FWIW, out of the 500 the other day I did choose not to restore one (it was pure spam). About MEATBOT, well, this is splitting a hair, but it does say "use semi-automated tools" and I didn't use any of those; it was completely manual.
I disagree strongly that we should blank the restored pages, for a number of reasons:
They have no particular content that sets them apart from their contemporaries; the talk pages of registered users blocked in 2007, 2009, etc haven't been blanked.
Blanking 11k user talk pages is an extraordinary act, and would require extraordinary circumstances (and extraordinary consensus). By contrast, what's being discussed here is restoring them to completely ordinary circumstances.
It's said upthread that there's a bot fixing obsolete tag "errors"; then let it get around to them on these pages whenever it does. We absolutely shouldn't be making it more inconvenient for project participants to read historic discussions simply to make numbers go down on some linter reports, and especially not when it's something as trivial as replacing <font>...</font> tags which has no bearing on reading or participating. There definitely are discussions: I saw dozens and dozens of talk pages with much more than just a block message. Let's put humans first in our considerations of handling historic material in the project.
They have no particular content that sets them apart from their contemporaries; the talk pages of registered users blocked in 2007, 2009, etc haven't been blanked.
They have errors that would cause considerable effort to cleanup.
Blanking 11k user talk pages is an extraordinary act, and would require extraordinary circumstances (and extraordinary consensus). By contrast, what's being discussed here is restoring them to completely ordinary circumstances.
I think after 18 years, restoring 11,000 pages is still an extraordinary act.
It's said upthread that there's a bot fixing obsolete tag "errors"; then let it get around to them on these pages whenever it does.
The bot will certainly not fix all the errors (it's unclear if it will even fix a majority). User talk pages can be a massive pain to clean up.
We absolutely shouldn't be making it more inconvenient for project participants to read historic discussions simply to make numbers go down on some linter reports, and especially not when it's something as trivial as replacing <font>...</font> tags which has no bearing on reading or participating.
I think if project participants urgently needed to read historic discussions, they would have asked sometime in the last 18 years. Checking the history does not feel like an excessive barrier.
Let's put humans first in our considerations of handling historic material in the project.
It's humans who have to do cleanup work to fix these pages. If we had an automated way to fix all linter errors on user talk pages, we would not have over 1 million of them.
It is a bit frustrating to see Hex simply opposing constructive feedback in this thread, rather than offering any sort of constructive solutions to the problems that they have been creating. Hex, since you are opposed to option 3 above (restoring and then blanking), which has support in this thread, which of the proposed options would you support? If the answer is "none", please propose a different option that addresses the problems caused by restoring these pages. – Jonesey95 (talk) 20:32, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
They have errors that would cause considerable effort to cleanup. The main issue here is considering non-problems such as the presence of font tags to be "problems". They are not. It's meaningless busywork which offers zero benefit to anyone. Fixing actually broken markup such as unclosed tags has some minor value. I think if project participants urgently needed to read historic discussions, they would have asked sometime in the last 18 years. Nobody has said anything about anything being "urgent". This is a strawman argument. Checking the history does not feel like an excessive barrier. It wouldn't be an "excessive barrier", it would be superfluous and annoying. It's humans who have to do cleanup work to fix these pages. If humans stopped fretting about non-problems they could spend time on "making actual improvements to Wikipedia", to borrow a phrase. — Hex•talk21:48, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If humans stopped fretting about non-problems Like talk pages that were deleted 18 years ago which almost no one has cared about in all that time, and almost no one is likely to care about in the future? How many of these even have anything in the history besides some warning templates and a block notice? Anomie⚔00:56, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Have to agree. While I initially supported the restoration of these talk pages I can no longer do so. Like it or not, they were deleted 18 years ago and therefore anything we do now, is making a significant fairly extraordinary change. IMO given our policies and guidelines restoring them and blanking them is the best step forward. It complies with the view that talk pages should not generally be deleted, while also keeping things at the 18 year status quo ante in a manner fully supported by our policies and guidelines.
To be clear, these talk pages have effectively been blank for 18 years and we have no idea how many of them would have been properly blanked in those 18 years were it not for the fact not only was there no reason to, but it was impossible. It seems like we don't even know for sure whether in someone of them, the editor behind the talk page might have wanted the talk page blank and received this via the talk page being deleted after they made a request (even if the deletion wasn't from the request).
If Hex isn't willing to do this, then they need to stop. Admins need to be responsive to the community and the community has indicated that they do not believe their reading of policy is correct, our policies and guidelines do not allow restoration under the conditions Hex is imposing. If Hex isn't willing to stop by themselves, we can discuss a topic ban or worse to stop Hex but I really hope we don't have to do that.
Hex is of course welcome to seek a consensus somewhere to establish there is in fact consensus that restoring under the conditions they're imposing is supported by our policies and guidelines. I'll ping User:Pppery as the only other editor who seems to support Hex's actions to see whether they support Hex restoration under the conditions Hex is imposing.
Note the vast majority of 2007 and 2009 have not been blanked it irrelevant. I find it hard to believe zero of them have been blanked and Hex has provided no evidence for this. It's quite likely a small number have been blanked for various reasons including that the editor for who it is for did it or asked for it and this happened after 6 months of the block. The trouble is we have no way of knowing which of these 11k talk pages for 2008 this would have happened for since it wasn't possible. We are imposing a situation on the editors for who the talk page is for after 18 years that doesn't apply to the 2007 and 2009 pages because we are restoring them after 18 years. These editors might have edited under their real names perhaps even when they were minors and might be shocked to find content they thought was long gone suddenly visible again and perhaps even indexed by some search engines who chose to ignore our noindex (I think user talk pages are noindexed somehow?) Nil Einne (talk) 06:42, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I find it hard to believe zero of them have been blanked and Hex has provided no evidence for this. Because I didn't say that. I said that they haven't all been blanked. — Hex•talk23:36, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well, I support restoring - and not restoring and universal blanking, for reasons I laid out in a recent VPP discussion on the matter. [11] (but, tldr: can't use the search function on blanked talk pages).
Furthermore, there's been a few times where I've stumbled across old, yet still extant, content issues in articles made by accounts with talk pages blanked/deleted in the older days... wish I'd written a few of those down now, given that Hex is restoring them now, as I'd love to be able to see to what extent cleanup was done by other editors, if there was evidence of vandalism/spamming/block evasion (Just saying, I apply a lot less AGF when it comes to fact checking/removing unsourced content for confirmed spammers and socks versus clueless newbies). And, again, I oppose wholesale blanking - iff the editor doing the blanking has not checked the account's contributions and confirmed there are no issues wrt to copyright, BLP, spam, vandalism, NPOV, ect, in mainspace. (Am also okay with selective blanking of a messed up template or PII disclosure - both things I've done myself, many a time) Like I said before, once those have been all dealt with, I'm fine with anybody blanking the talk pages. But unless the editor is going to do that, please don't make it harder on those of us who like cleaning up mainspace content!!!!
And as for the linter errors - to put a different perspective on the issue, there's probably 7 million or so articles in need of some form of copyediting in main space, right? But that's hard to do, it takes time, ect... so should we just blank and delete those? It would be easier on our copyeditors, of course. And it would remove a lot of unambiguous errors. GreenLipstickLesbian💌🧸 06:46, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
iff the editor doing the blanking has not checked the account's contributions and confirmed there are no issues wrt to copyright, BLP, spam, vandalism, NPOV, ect, in mainspace. This is an excellent point and illustration of why registered users' talk pages shouldn't be unconditionally blanked, even if they're 18 years old. It would be easier on our copyeditors, of course. And it would remove a lot of unambiguous errors. True. All those queues would shrink to nothing, and as we know making number go down is the most important job on the project. — Hex•talk23:41, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) I disagree that the talk pages should be blanked. In my view the original deletions were invalid and we should end up in the state we would have ended up in had they never happened. That state is them being unblanked; per WP:TPO neither you nor anyone (other than the blocked user) has/would have had the authority to blank them (and there had never been any convention of blanking registered users' talk pages). And, I agree with most of Hex's comment at 21:48, 16 February 2026 - in my view a lot of lint error fixing amounts to pointless busywork that doesn't need to be done (a position I've expressed many times before, such as this comment in 2023). That said, as an admin Hex does need to respect the consensus that the community comes to, which right now appears to be that these actions aren't appropriate, even if she disagrees with it. * Pppery *it has begun...06:49, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The problem IMO is it is no 2008 as much as we might like to pretend it is. It's 18 years later. Heck, even if it was 2010 and someone had mass restored these then, IMO you'd have far more of a case that it's simply enforcing the policy change and nothing more is needed. But it's not that and like it or not, these were deleted and therefore effectively blanked for 18 years. We cannot just pretend this didn't happen since it did.
Any of these editors could have complained they didn't want their talk page deleted and therefore blanked sometime in these 18 years and these should have been restored. I assume this didn't happen for any of them or maybe in some cases it fell through the cracks but either way there's no reason to assume any of them wanted the pages restored. Further once they are restored, any editor who still has talk page access is free to restore the content if they wish.
However there is good reason IMO to assume there might be a small number who wanted their talk pages blanked and didn't do anything because their talk pages were blanked. Yes they can do it after restoration but in the 0-18 years since they had this thought, they very likely never expected their talk pages was suddenly restored against their wishes and might be shocked to find it so. Even a policy wonk realistically likely wouldn't have expected it.
While I'm not an extreme policy wonk, I do feel I have a decent grasp. And frankly even if the though had entered my mind, I'm not sure what I would have done. I guess probably re-create the talk page with the message "If this is deleted, please keep this version or otherwise keep the content blanked." Alternatively request undeletion and blank it after.
But this is a fairly complicated line of thought based on a good understanding of our policies and guidelines, not something many would have. And as said even for me, I'm really unconvinced it would have ever occurred to me that my talk page is going to suddenly come back in all its glory with whatever possible embarrassing info fully visible & for all to see and indexed by whoever chose to do to. (And just to cut off questions, no I do not have a talk page which I want blanked. Nor one which has been or is going to be restored.)
Or let me put it a different way. If instead of these being deleted they were simply mass blanked does anyone realistically think there was any chance you'd get consensus to mass restore them now 18 years later? I quite doubt it. Part of this is the disruption of so many unnecessary edits. But part of it is likely IMO to be concerns over what we are restoring 18 years later when people might not have expected it to be and where we're not and it's really impossible to be sure there isn't something whoever's account it belongs to wanted blank.
I'd add that if you want to get technical, I'm unconvinced these deletions were clearly invalid at the time. While there was no written policy supporting it, AFAICT, there was no clear policy opposing it either. And since policy is intended to document practice, the fact one admin did it for 11k pages and no one seems to have complained about it until years later means IMO it cannot clearly be said to be out of process especially since at the time, policy was often less written down then it is now.
Even now, if there was no clear policy for or against something, someone does it in such a manner with so many pages that a bunch of people must have noticed, it's hard to make a case even a year later it was clearly invalid. Reverting after even 1 year, let alone 18 years generally requires discussion. I cannot realistically see how so many pages were deleted without quite a few people noticing and so far no one has demonstrated there was any pushback at the time and if there was nothing seems to have happened.
I accept policy and practice now and for a long time may be clearly against it. And since I there was no talk about preserving legacy deletions a case could be made for undeleting stuff which were deleted before this policy. But the fact that they weren't that clearly invalid at the time means even more that extra care needs to be taken in how we go about doing so, especially if we are going to do so after 18 years. As said, it isn't 2008 or 2010 and we can't pretend it is.
Preserving the status quo ante in the less disruptive manner which is support by our policy and guidelines should be considered and since someone already effectively blanked them 18 years ago, preserving this makes the most sense. Even more since what they did wasn't clearly invalid at the time.
BTW about IP talk pages, I see probable consensus there to stop the bot and cease blanking pages now. But these talk pages are 18 years old and so would have already been blanked. If consensus is reached to unblank all the other IP talk pages we can restore these at the same time but until there is such a consensus IMO it still makes sense to blank them.
IIRC our guidelines still allowed IP editors to blank their talk pages except for information targeted generally such as who the IP belongs to and guidance for making an account or info on blocks. But there's no real reason to keep this and it doesn't seem to be what GreenLipstickLesbian wants from the talk pages.
That said I'm less fussed about this since it's a lot less likely for there to be an issue as it's a lot less likely there was someone still using the IP who could blank the talk page. (Although I'm fairly sure if e.g. someone put a real name in the talk page or whatever, we'd have allowed it to be removed even if it wasn't the IP requesting it. And again especially without careful checking to at least find possible real names we have no idea if there might be such cases where the person thought it was no longer an issue in the 0-18 years but then it suddenly is.)
Ultimately we've always been clear that if you want to do something in mass, you generally have to do it right. So if you're not willing to spend the time to try and rule this stuff out, IMO you shouldn't be doing it. IMO it's simply not possible to even do this, but I'd perhaps be willing to accept if whoever does these restorations checks what they are restoring and removes anything which the editor might have wanted blanked. Also a check for any signs of a request for blanking.
I'd estimate 5-10 extra minutes would need to be spent per user talk page restored since it's very difficult to imagine what might be sufficiently problematic that an editor would want blanked so it does require careful thought. And a look through the editor's contrib history for any signs they request deletion or removal of their talk page. Note since some people use pseudonyms all over, we shouldn't assume even in the absence of probable real names it's okay, especially for usernames.
I was looking through the history to find if there was any difference about who and when may remove talk page comments. There isn't really [12]. Although I will note even now, editors are allow to request courtesy blanking so there's no requirement that it must be the user the talk page belongs to themselves who removes comments just that it's generally they should be who requested it. Perhaps more importantly the guidelines at the time did support deletion of IP talk pages (not user ones) in certain cases [13]. More importantly, it seemed to support deletion in RTV cases [14]. Although frankly even without this I think it should be considered that a RTV request was a request for courtesy blanking unless it's explicitly asked not to. Anyway so at an absolutely minimum, any RTV or frankly anything akin to it requires the talk page is blanked IMO. Nil Einne (talk) 10:34, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Note I wrote that before I explored the history. I'll accept that the user page policy did discourage user talk page deletions back to 2007. [15] But it was still a lot more wishy washy with the mention of RTV. Even now it's IMO not that clear what these exceptions are from written policy it's just that practice and discussion has established it's very exceptional cases.
The IP talk pages thing is interesting. While it didn't last that long [16][17] with some clearly opposed [18][19], IMO even from those discussions it's clear this wasn't such a clear no as it is now. So I still feel the deletions weren't so clearly out of line as they are now. The biggest concern seems to have been concerns over doing it as routine or in mass.
And I still haven't seen much discussion over restoring the deleted talk pages. IMO the most common sentiment seems to have been don't do it, but meh about those already deleted.
Also I may not have been as clear as I planned. IMO the harm from undeleting without blanking is this. While cases where the user who's talk page it was would have blanked it or requested blanking in the interim but they didn't because there was no need to may be tiny in number, the potential harm to them from suddenly finding their talk page back could be severe.
Therefore this harm greatly outweighs the limited harm that comes from everyone finding their talk page was courtesy blanked without their explicit request after 18 years of it being effectively so via deletion during which time they could have asked for restoration if it so bothered them. Noting also that deletion seems a much more serious issue than courtesy blanking.
BTW, I haven't much addressed the Linter errors etc issue because I consider this a much more minor one. Personally I feel both Linter issues and these talk pages being deleted are minor problems but still serious enough to warrant attention and this is supported by our policies and guidelines.
Different editors may feel they matter more or less. So editors on both sides are right to feel these do matter. And while everyone's entitled to their opinion IMO any view it doesn't matter so we shouldn't do anything doesn't mean much. No one should need to find something better to do since people who feel either matter are entitled to feel these issues matter and to act and speak accordingly.
And generally speaking no one should be forced to do anything, so no one should be forced to fix linter errors or to undelete pages after 18 years. But an exception is where you're contributing to some problem. Since this is effectively happening via the undeletions, it's far to ask whether some requirement should be imposed on anyone doing so. The fact these are undeletions rather than actively doing stuff reduces concerns but it doesn't eliminate them.
To give an example, since blanking now isn't well supported, if someone were fixing linter errors by blanking pages which haven't been effectively blanked for 18 years, we'd likewise have to ask whether they should be doing this. But it isn't what's happening.
Instead the only request is to blank something which has been effectively blank for 18 years. This resolves the things both sides case about, concerns over the talk page being deleted when modern practice says they shouldn't have while simultaneously resolves concerns over linter errors and other problems being re/introduced. (From what I understand, some of the stuff would have been fine that far back so technically it wasn't a problem then so it's complicated to call it a simple re-introduction even if the editor undeleting isn't the one that originally submitted it.)
But most importantly IMO it restores the talk pages without the possibility of imposing an extreme burden after 18 years on the editor the talk page is for.
(Do remember even if somehow someone started editing as a baby, they'd now be an adult in most circumstances in many jurisdictions. 18 years is a very long time however you spin it one reason I keep harping on it.)
Probably my last comment but if editors feel blanking after restoration would require further discussion and consensus so be it. There's no harm from discussion. But I feel there's been enough pushback for different reasons, that whatever our policies and guidelines may say, and whatever consensus was achieved many years ago, it's also clear that restoring these without doing anything also requires further discussion to establish clear consensus for doing so. After all, perhaps that's part of how we got here in the first place when some admin thought they were doing the right thing support by our policies and guidelines. Nil Einne (talk) 12:46, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
IMO the harm from undeleting without blanking is ... the potential harm to them from suddenly finding their talk page back could be severe. Therefore this harm greatly outweighs the limited harm that comes from everyone finding their talk page was courtesy blanked... I'm sorry, but this is entirely far too speculative. — Hex•talk23:34, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Anomie, if that's your position do you also support turning off every talk page archiving bot and automatically revdeleting every page revision older than a year or so? Because they all exist for the same reason: in case someone wants to look at them. Even though 99% of it by volume is extremely uninteresting to 99% of people. If you can't understand that, there's really very little left to add here. — Hex•talk23:02, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What's left to add is your response to the original question, and to my restatement of it above: "Hex, since you are opposed to option 3 above (restoring and then blanking), which has support in this thread, which of the proposed options would you support? If the answer is "none", please propose a different option that addresses the problems caused by restoring these pages." Thanks in advance for proposing something constructive that addresses the many objections to the way that you are performing these page recreations. – Jonesey95 (talk) 23:27, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I respectfully suggest not trying to invoke the name of a fallacy until you're fully capable of discerning the appropriate moment to do so. A slippery slope is an assertion that one thing will inevitably lead to another. I didn't suggest anything of the sort. What I was trying to point out is that you hold contradictory beliefs about the value of items in our collection that are entirely equivalent to each other. Hope that helps. — Hex•talk23:50, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is certainly a very spirited attempt to dodge having been caught with your pants around your ankles but it won't fly. — Hex•talk09:13, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I was reading the Swingin' (John Anderson song) article on my iPhone (Vector 2022 skin) and the “Other versions” section header is shown one character per line. Any ideas for troubleshooting this? It does not appear this way when I look at the article using my laptop. Thanks, 28bytes (talk) 13:29, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have seen this issue before but honestly I can't reproduce it now. It's flex gone wrong but there's nothing that should be causing it particular trouble in this context. Izno (talk) 17:35, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It's been showing up like this on cellphones since a rather recent Wiki outlook change. What the new outlook screwed up even worse is the way edits are shown on "edit history": I don't understand anything anymore, "edit history" has becone totally USELESS to me.
Back to this issue: I figured out that by flipping the phone from "portrait" to "landscape" (sorry, I'm a photographer), it fixes the problem A BIT.
Why don't coders stick to the "if it ain't broken, don't fix it" principle? Pleeeease do! Or test phone mode before releasing, at the VERY least! And remember: heaps of conyributors are way past their spectacles-less years, along with all that implies. Arminden (talk) 20:11, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This kind of issue is about as likely to be related to choices made by software engineers at the WMF as it is to be a failure of the Apple engineers. These days, the latter is more likely worth suspicion. Izno (talk) 21:35, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I’m using Vector 2022 and I have “Enable responsive mode” and “Enable limited width mode” both checked in the Preferences > Appearances > Skin preferences section, if that helps. 28bytes (talk) 12:11, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The enable responsive mode doesn't apply to Vector 2022.. so I am also a little confused about how you are getting this view on a mobile phone!! Is there a gadget that does this? 🐸Jdlrobson (talk) 02:53, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don’t think I’ve got any unusual gadgets enabled, but I rechecked that page logged out and the glitch does not appear, so it’s certainly possible it’s something in my configuration/preferences. It still looks broken when I’m logged in. (And as best as I can recall that’s the only page I’ve seen this issue occur on.) 28bytes (talk) 03:08, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm using a Samsung A55, so it's not an Apple thing. And I bumped i to it on lots of pages, much more often on Romanian Wiki than on enWiki, don't know why.
Related to it: my phone offers me 3 different browsers. The default browser for Google searches (can't figure out which one it is) presents Wiki pages in PC mode, so that fonts are minuscule on the phone screen, but it has the "Listen to this page" function unlike another browser, so I'm still using it. Google Chrome has its own pros and cons, as does the third browser. Why I mention it here: the PC mode with its minuscule fonts, which I can't reset, showed up a few months ago, at about the same time as the problem flagged here, and it also introduced a tortuous editing mode (copy paste hardly possible etc.), all these almost simultaneous changes (not of my doing) making both using and editing Wiki A LOT harder. I guess coders tried to "fix" a system that wasn't broken. Even if it's me not being able to reset to the previous state: Wiki is for normal ppl, not all tech wizards, but with good experise in their field; forcing unhelpful changes on us is idiotic, as in: the opposite of user-friendly. This is not a sandbox for experiments. Arminden (talk) 11:35, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
with its minuscule fonts, which I can't reset, showed up a few months ago
this is a change in the Chrome browser. Apparently too few people were using the auto sizing of the fonts for the Chrome team (and thus most other browsers) to keep supporting that mode and it had a few significant problems, so they chose to remove it. You thus get the font sizing that you would expect of desktop site.
It also introduced a tortuous editing mode (copy paste hardly possible etc.)
This sounds like you enabled the syntax highlighting. You can simply disable syntax highlighting via the toolbar. For me it works most of the time, but I do also see a problem there every once in a while. None of that seems related to the problem mentioned here. —TheDJ (talk • contribs) 12:42, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hello, I was directed here from the Teahouse. When opening a page from the Suggested Edits on my userpage, the Quick Start Tips scroll very quickly through their numbered suggestions. I generally consider myself to be a quick reader but adding 1 second more to the timer would be beneficial. Especially for other newcomers who might not know they can manually go back through the tips individually. They do, of course, come back around over time but just a small adjustment like that would be nice. Thank you for considering this! Itsaclarinet (talk) 02:51, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hello @Itsaclarinet, thank you for taking the time to share this feedback.
I agree that the Quick Start Tips advance too quickly. I am the Product Manager for the WMF Growth team, which develops and maintains the Suggested Edits feature, and I appreciate you calling this out. I have created a task for our team to review and discuss potential solutions (T417708). As you noted, simply increasing the display time may be a straightforward and effective improvement, but we will also consider whether other adjustments would better support newcomers.
We have also been discussing a related change (T408544). The idea being to not automatically showing the Quick Start Tips for task types that a user has already completed or previously viewed. The tips would still be available from the Help panel, but they would not appear by default each time. I would be interested to hear whether that approach would feel like an improvement from your perspective.
Hi Kstoller, appreciate your reply. For T408544, that sounds like a fine idea. Will the Help panel remain highlighted/emphasised in case the user needs to be refreshed on the task? (I’m assuming this is visible when on a page and/or in edit mode?) I don’t know if it would be technically possible, or palatable, but for the Harder tasks, the tips could disappear after completing those edits x3 or x5 or whatever. Thank you for asking for my input as a newcomer! Itsaclarinet (talk) 02:29, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Itsaclarinet Thank you for following up, I like those ideas! We have recently discussed a related concept, which involves adding a subtle animation to the Help Panel to make it clearer how to reaccess onboarding, tracked inT414537.
I'm not sure what we will be able to prioritize, as this does not align directly with our current project focus. That said, we do try to incorporate as many small, high impact improvements as possible when opportunities arise.
Savannah River Plant has a chart in it:
{{#chart:Production Plutonium Hanford SRS (1947-1989).chart|data=Production Plutonium Hanford-SRS-1947-1989 (Corrected).tab}}
It loads fine for me when I tested with page sizes standard and wide, alongside text sizes too (on Vector 2022 theme). What 'tool' are we talking about here? --- n✓h✓8 (he/him) 04:50, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@LaundryPizza03: Yes, problems like this are almost always due to an unclosed <ref> tag further up the page. The new post contains a properly-balanced <ref>...</ref> pair, but the MediaWiki parser pairs the </ref> tag of that pair with the first unclosed <ref> that it can locate in the page, and not the one preceding the </ref>. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 17:01, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Real-life line length data?
Do we have any real data (i.e. actually recorded and logged from live page views) on the distribution of line lengths used by our readers? I know it's possible to record window sizes in pixels, but that's not what I'm looking for. I'm looking for line lengths in characters. Yes, I know it will vary with a zillion things including the actual text being displayed. I'm not even sure if browsers make that available in any way. But, assuming all the planets align properly, is it possible we have this data? RoySmith(talk)14:54, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
For 70% of our readers it's about 60 characters per line or less. That's with the smallest available font size and on a quite big phone screen. Ponor (talk) 15:03, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm just playing devil's advocate here — people often forget that about two-thirds of our readers use mobile devices. You can add to it mostly casual readers who use the default line length in Vector 2022, which I believe comes to about 160. My (somewhat educated) guess is that that's what the data would show. Maybe @SGrabarczuk (WMF) or someone they know can tell us more. Ponor (talk) 15:24, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for that link. It'll take me a while to read that in detail, but I will do so when I have a chance. What prompted me was this thread. If the whitespace padding issue is something that will show up for 10% of our users (even 10% of our non-mobile users), then it's obviously of greater concern than if it happens to 1%, or 0.1%, or 0.01%, etc.
Do you know if there's a way to preview what a page looks like on different platforms? I know that in Chrome on my Mac desktop I can emulate various phones and tablets, but I haven't found a way to emulate a PC. I don't know why layout should differ so much between Macs and PC, but it does appear to be the case. RoySmith(talk)16:19, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There are paid ways to view pages on different platforms. Because doing it for real needs real hardware, I don't think there are any free ways. For desktop/laptops, typically the underlying browser engine is the key difference, rather than operating system. (Things can be weirder on mobile devices because of device screen constraints and possibly supplier customizations to the software. The default availability of fonts can vary of course on different operating systems, which will cause some differences but unless users configure their browsers with a radically different font than usual for a given style, the effect shouldn't be that big.)
Specifically regarding the issue in the feature article candidate discussion: ultimately, the automatic layout algorithms used by web browsers in order to support arbitrary browser window widths, font sizes, and user or browser-specific customizations means that there are some unavoidable tradeoffs in web design. If content is being floated to one side, then control is lost regarding exactly what surrounding content will be next to it. In the context of trying to keep an image entirely within a specific section, if the floating behaviour is cleared to force this, then the only approach to mitigate the risk of there being extra whitespace is to decrease the ratio of the size taken up by the floated content versus the surrounding content. If it's not possible to design the content to set the ratio to an appropriately small size (for instance, if an image is being floated and it needs a certain minimum size to be legible), the only way to have no risk of extra whitespace is to accept that floated content may extend to the following section. isaacl (talk) 18:08, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Re: tools - No, not as far as I know. There used to be a variety of free web-tools that helped with this (Browsershots, BrowserStack, Browserling, CrossBrowserTesting, etc), that would generate dozens of screenshots, usually with a few hours queue/delay because they were very popular; but sadly they've all gone paid-access-only in the last few years.
Re: article layout expectations, generally - I believe that because the vast majority of logged-out users get the default settings (vector-2022 in standard width and standard text-size on desktop, or minerva/apps on smartphones) it is generally sufficient (and often helpful!) to test with both of those; plus ideally also test zooming-in to 150% or even 200% on desktop for the subsets of users that typically do that.
Re: this specific article/example - I think it works best with the {{clear}} and the left-float on that map, and without {{clear}} on the "Engraving of the expedition" image, for the default user-experience. It does leave a larger gap for users who either use the 'wide' width setting, or logged-in users with the 400px thumbnail preference, but as you and isaacl note it's often impossible to make a densely-packed-page look perfect in all-possible-configurations. HTH. Quiddity (talk) 00:07, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There are so many variables that it's not quantifiable. Even for mobile users: not all mobiles are the same size, also it depends whether you hold it portrait or landscape, etc. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 20:03, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
First of all, for this specific case, the comment I have split this because ... was added at 23:56. Template:Unsigned was used at 00:18. For such a close proximity in time (especially without any other editors between these edits) just signing the message with the regular four tildes ~~~~ is OK.
Secondly, did you try to use this template in a way beside providing the username and the timestamp as the first and second parameters (adapted from Template:Unsigned/doc): {{subst:Unsign|username|time, day month year (UTC)}}? As far as I can tell, using {{subst:unsign}} shouldn't be any different from using {{subst:unsigned}}. The template can even take these arguments in swapped order (timestamp first, username second) which gets detected automagically.
My only educated guess at what could have go wrong is that the timestamp somehow ended up with a stray equals sign. Just as an example: {{subst:unsign|...|2=time=stamp}} would "work", but {{subst:unsign|...|time=stamp}} would be parsed as a parameter called time with the value stamp, and the template would "assume" that the timestamp wasn't passed. —andrybak (talk) 02:15, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I tried {{subst:Unsign|username|time, day month year (UTC)}}, {{subst:Unsign|time, day month year (UTC)|username}} as well as what I have usually done, which as I recall is either {{Unsign|username|time, day month year (UTC)}} or {{Unsign|time, day month year (UTC)|username}} so I tried both. No second parameter would present in any of these attempts.-TonyTheTiger (T / C / WP:FOUR / WP:CHICAGO / WP:WAWARD) 02:40, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The time stamp format is checked and invalid formats are ignored. Please post an actual example and not pseudocode like {{subst:Unsign|time, day month year (UTC)|username}} when you report issues. PrimeHunter (talk) 08:25, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Wikignoming my way around Category:Harv and Sfn no-target errors I come across all sorts of coding issues and here's a new one for me, sfn|EB15 citations. I cannot figure out why the two Encyclopedia Britannica cites are not working - {{sfn|EB15|2007|loc=v.1, p. 323}} and {{sfn|EB15|2007|loc=v.7, p.84}}. In my experience sfn cite usage means there should be a complete citation for the source within the article's References section for the sfn cite to link to, but is that the case for sfn|EB15? I went to Template:Cite EB15 but that page didn't answer my question. Thanks in advance for any help/answers/etc. - Shearonink (talk) 06:13, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Shearonink, when you say "not working", can you elaborate what you mean by that? The p. 323 citation is at the end of the lead using footnote number [1]; the p. 84 citation is in section § Excavations using fn [5]. They each link to a short citation under heading § References (#1 for p. 323; #5 for p. 84), and in each case, those link down to the same full citation under section § Bibliography (i.e., this one), exactly as they should. In the References section, the caret (^) in each short citation links up to the in-text footnote. This looks like normal functionality for {{sfn}} to me. If it's the category you're worried about, you can whitelist the CITEREF so the target link resolves and the category is not created. This is covered at {{sfn#Link works but displays a no target error}}. Mathglot (talk) 08:00, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Mathglot Thank you for doing the whitelisting at Hawara and for the link to the fix. I think I've maybe run into a similar issue only once before, where a CITEREF had to be whitelisted to fix the false error. And I also probably shouldn't try to edit when am exhausted lol. Why, though, does a false error display? It's not "Real" and yet it puts the article into the no-targets Category... - Shearonink (talk) 15:11, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Shearonink, somewhere I wrote up an explanation of that, I forget where, but it has to do with the sequence of events that turn wikicode stored on the servers into Html delivered to your browser when you request a page, where it happens, and what can be seen at each step. One of those events is expansion of templates (like {{cite EB15}} which wraps a citation template) and modules (like Module:Footnotes, which handles sfn, et al.) into wikicode, and another is conversion of ref tags into numbered notes inline and citations at the bottom, with linkage in both directions, which is done natively in the Wikimedia software. (Which is why all Wikipedias have <ref> tags and <references>, but not all have sfn: en-wiki does, but de-wiki doesn't.) If a citation target (i.e.. a WP:CITEREF) isn't available yet because it is still hidden inside an as-yet unexpanded template, then there is no target and the error is generated. Depending on the situation, it might still get resolved in a later step before the Html is delivered, so you get properly double-linked footnote-citation linkage (e.g., here) along with the error already generated by then. In other situations, you don't get proper linkage, as in some cases involving list defined references (e.g., here). This is all very hand-wavy and not really an explanation, but I hope it gives you a flavor of what is going on. Mathglot (talk) 19:44, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Mathglot THANK YOU. This is such a simple brilliant explanation of what is going on "under the hood", and now I think I can actually understand it. Thank you for taking the time to do this, greatly appreciated. - Shearonink (talk) 04:50, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I first asked my question at the Help Desk, but the initial advice the senior editor gave me didn’t work. He suggested as Plan B that I come here. This is what I’d like to know:
Is there a way to search through our notifications—like for the name of a sender or key words in a topic—when we’re working on our phone rather than our computer?
If so, is it done differently on a Macintosh than an Android? Augnablik (talk) 16:45, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Notifications from what software? This is not a general help desk for technical issues but instead for issues that are impacting specifically the Wikipedia experience. Izno (talk) 17:51, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'll WP:AGF and assume they're talking about Special:Notifications. In any case, it's going to be whatever search function their mobile browser has, as I don't know of any search feature built in to mediawiki. --Ahecht (TALK PAGE)19:43, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Augnablik no that is fine, if it is Wikipedia related. But there are many problems in this world, you have to give very accurate descriptions, for others to be able to correctly identify what you are asking about. —TheDJ (talk • contribs) 06:32, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Just so I know for next time (if there is one): what is the right way to refer to the notifications we see when we open the Wikipedia app on our phone? Augnablik (talk) 17:37, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It is not possible to search through our onwiki Notifications from onwiki (the old task for implementing that is phab:T132805). If you have your Notifications settings configured to send Notifications to your email, that is the best current option for searching historic entries. More generally: There are many ways that the Notifications system could potentially be improved, in ways like this, but they all add extra complexity to both the code and the user-experience (I'm reminded of Zawinski's Law), and are not frequently needed use-cases, hence haven't been prioritized in the past. I hope that info helps. Quiddity (WMF) (talk) 21:29, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Okay, then I guess what you’re saying is that there’s no way within the Wikipedia notifications … which answers my question. Disappointing but clear. I don’t want them sent to my e-mail. Thanks! Augnablik (talk) 07:22, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I was referring to the notifications that come up in the Wikipedia app. When I followed your link, the results looked similar to what I see in the app.
I can’t use your advice to use “my browser’s find-in-page” feature, though, because I’m in the Wikipedia app and not a browser like Chrome or Safari. That’s the basic problem I have, not knowing how to find past notifications that I could easily search for if I knew of a way to go about it. Augnablik (talk) 07:18, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Talk pages are counted separately in the watchlist label item count.
Now that T416147 has been partially fixed (partially because pending the maintenance script the fix is not retroactive), if you add a label to a page, you will see that the item count shown in Special:WatchlistLabels will go up by two. This is because you are labelling two pages, the subject page and its talk page. Now, there is nothing inherently wrong with this convention but it is inconsistent with Special:Watchlist, where talk pages are not counted. So, what do you think, is this a bug or is it working as intended? Warudo (talk) 21:28, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
do most wikipedia scripts not work in edge?
i was installing a load of scripts for a while now and i realized none of them were actually showing, or, being implemented in my interface. Take User:Polygnotus/Scripts/AI Proofreader.js for example. This script would stand out because it adds another tab to the interface, but it doesnt. It does not show up in mine and that goes for the rest of my scripts. I thought it was a conflict problem, but it might just be my browser. But other scripts like VandalHandle works perfectly fine. If anyone could help me with this i would most appreciate it :) 203N7HN6 (talk) 10:53, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
For many months the search suggestions dropdown list below the search term did not appear or update until spacebar was pressed. Recently it was "fixed" at phab:T393819. But now there is a new problem. Now the dropdown list appears immediately but it resets the search term after spacebar is pressed. For example when typing United Nations, at United[space]Na the list starts showing Napoleon and Namibia etc.
A request was made at Wikipedia:Help desk for a full list of shortcuts/aliases for special pages. Unfortunately, there doesn't appear to be such a list. Some shortcuts are listed at Help:Special page, but many are missing. I was able to find an array of aliases ($specialPageAliases) for MessagesEn.php on MediaWiki, but it seems to be out of date (some aliases don't work; others are missing, eg. Special:CA).
Does anyone know of a way to get an up to date list of all the aliases/shortcuts for special pages? I suspect only admins can access the current live version of MessagesEn.php, so we may need admin assistance. – Scyrme (talk) 17:13, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I forgot my password and tried to reset it from a different account and got ip blocked for 3 wrong password inputs. I have enabled the option to recover password when email and username are provided. How can I reset it? 8rz (talk) 17:33, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I assume so. You might want to check Special:BlockList using your source IP. I can't tell whether a block appeal would work as the block was likely placed for a reason. Dragoniez (talk)18:10, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If I create a new account can I get this account "moved" to the new one, if/when eventually I get logged out (being continuously logged in lasts up to 1 year, to my knowledge)? 8rz (talk) 18:06, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
requests for comment on enabling the 25th anniversary birthday mode
baby globe
to celebrate wikipedia's 25th anniversary, a toggleable "birthday mode" has been created. it consists of easter eggs involving baby globe, such as having it scroll a phone in the top right of an article while the reader scrolls down an article. more details can be found on the linked page. if the feature is enabled, by 26 january, administrators can configure the mode through community configuration; and the mode will be public from 16 february to 16 march (an administrator will have to turn on the feature on the day itself).
enabling the feature requires "a consensus from your community", so i have brought it here to ascertain the community consensus. (there was some previous discussion on Wikipedia:Village pump (miscellaneous)/Archive 86 § Easter eggs, but it was archived without further action.)
should english wikipedia enable the 25th anniversary birthday mode, and if so, should it be on by default?
option 1: enable birthday mode, and have it on by default
option 2: enable birthday mode, and have it off by default
Hello everyone :) Since this discussion is still ongoing, I wanted to share a fairly big update we are making to how the feature will work. Please check it out on the project meta-wiki page. The main change that’s relevant to previous conversations I’ve had here, is on how we solve for where Baby Globe shows up.
The new plan is to limited Baby Globe to 2500 articles, instead of having Neutral Baby Globe showing up all the time. Each of the 2500 articles will show one of the “special” versions, for example: Confetti, Balloon, Synthesizer, Camera, Headphones, Space. This makes the feature more manageable from a technical perspective. It also means when you find Baby Globe, it will feel more like an easter egg. Please let me know if you’ve got questions! If you decide to enable the feature, let us know on the project talk page. CDekock-WMF (talk) 19:29, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
option 1 > option 2, oppose option 3. i think it would be a shame if the largest wikipedia did not participate in the celebration. i'd also prefer it to be on by default, as people generally don't change default settings, but i'm fine either way. ltbdl (skirt) 19:19, 17 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support option 1 > option 2, oppose option 3 per ltbdl. This is an excellent feature that our readers will hopefully enjoy. It also fits nicely with one of our goals in recent times, which has been to emphasize the human aspect of Wikipedia. Toadspike[Talk]20:41, 17 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Prefer option 1 if there is an easy accessible way to disable it. Otherwise, option 2. Oppose option 3 because, come on, it's so stinkin cute. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 21:05, 17 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 2 Per Thilio. Suggest that greater consideration be given to limits on the number of top-of-page distractions we allow. I also wouldn't mind a shorter period.--Wehwalt (talk) 21:10, 17 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Second choice is 3. I feel the case can be made that we're being very self indulgent in patting ourselves on the back in ways that do not benefit the reader. Wehwalt (talk) 15:17, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1 Agree with Chaotic Enby that this is contingent on having a readily available (and known--e.g., included in banner announcement of easter eggs) method to disable. — rsjaffe🗣️21:13, 17 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1 let's have fun for once, 25 year anniversaries don't happen very often. Yes it's quirky, correct some people won't like it, but this is only temporary. Let's celebrate in style and get noticed for it. CNC (talk) 20:09, 18 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 3 unless we have a lot more information. I wouldn't like to see a confetti-throwing Wikimedia globe appear on the page for some disaster- or genocide-related page with massive viewer numbers. The linked Wikimedia page doesn't inform me sufficiently about what to expect. Fram (talk) 10:32, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
option 1, it's toggleable by the user and doesn't affect the actual contents of the page (thinking back to the grimace mcdonald's wiki incident) Jaidenstar (talk) 17:43, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
option 1. No one will notice it if it's not on by default. And Baby Globe is great. It would be a shame not to participate in the birthday celebrations. -- asilvering (talk) 04:27, 24 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1 – I was hesitating due to the concerns that Fram raised, but now that @CDekock-WMF has shared the table of different page queries and configurations, I feel reassured that a lot of thought has gone into context-aware presentation of the mascot. ClaudineChionh (she/her · talk · email · global) 22:45, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1 - Like Fram, I had some concerns about showing a celebratory globe on pages for horrific actions, but I am confident in the solution provided by the Foundation for that. So, yeah, after 25 years I think we can celebrate for a bit. LightlySeared (talk) 12:21, 20 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 2 - it's very cute and fun, but I think it's more of a clever Easter egg when it's not available by default -- Easter eggs are by definition hidden. I think it would likely become more popular and talked about if it's "a cool special feature to add" versus "some thing Wikipedia put on pages." People like having agency. Option 1 is my second choice. ✨ΩmegaMantis✨(they/them) ❦blather | ☞spy on me 17:50, 20 January 2026 (UTC)Option 1 now that they say that it will only be on a limited amount of pages, I think it will be a clever Easter egg then as there is agency to find the pages. ✨ΩmegaMantis✨(he/him) ❦blather | ☞spy on me 20:53, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1 - per above. Option 2 - I'm unsure how this would affect printable versions and whatnot, so I would prefer if it was disabled by default. (It would make it more of an Easter egg as well, per ObserveOwl.) The Wikidata configuration shared above is useful. Also, it's been 25 years, so why not?Jude Halleytalk/contribs13:18, 21 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Considering the new plan, I fully support Option 1. It only affects a small portion of our pages (2,500 out of 7,130,000), making it more of an Easter egg (per above), and it's relevant to the article to an extent. Jude Halleytalk/contribs21:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 2 Please, please don't put animated stuff on pages by default; it's distracting and makes it much harder for me to focus on the content that I am trying to read. Thanks. --David10244 (talk) 05:48, 22 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 2. I'd suggest send a notification to users on the website to indicate its now available, or an email, albeit some editors don't link their account to their email. Inpops (talk) 17:11, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 2: Color and especially movement are distracting and annoying, and the described month-long persistence of the annoyance is beyond the pale. — BarrelProof (talk) 01:38, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1: While I wouldn't mind Option 2, I personally would prefer Option 1, especially since the OG should have it defaulted. F1fan00 (talk) 09:44, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1 (strong option 1) - We can always use more reasons for the public to feel warm and fuzzy and Wikipedia, and this does exactly that. This is a serious project, but it's also a fun project, and written by volunteers. Letting people have a glimpse of that fun -- reminding people that this can be a silly place -- has value. Just look at the resonance of Depths of Wikipedia, for example. Do it, and deal with issues as they arise. I say this as someone who has been critical of our April Fools antics in the past. Unlike that (or rather, unlike the way that used to be), if you look at the page linked at the top, there are already provisions in place to consider context and set limits for e.g. the confetti globe. Deal with any issues as they come on a case-by-case basis (I'm sure people will let us know if something unintended happens). — Rhododendritestalk \\ 17:13, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1 or Option 2. An opt-in process means that very, very few people will end up getting the celebration at all. We can always fine-tune after launching if there are issues, but my preference is to get it up-and-running first. ThadeusOfNazereth(he/him)Talk to Me!13:03, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support Option 1, oppose Option 3. Easter eggs (in computing, not the literal sense) should be surprises, and having to opt into that kinda kills it. Chlod (say hi!) 06:01, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Noting also here that I support the suggestion in the discussions below to extend the Wikipedia 25 logo run to 16 March, to match this RFC. The previous logo discussion had settled on a month under a weak consensus. Chlod (say hi!) 03:07, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1 – It's so cute and I absolutely love it. Strongly oppose options 2 and 3, as very few readers will know to opt-in, and to not enable it at all would be frankly cruel. Pretzel Quetzal (talk) 17:42, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 2 on the apparent specific proposal to have a large animated character locked into the right-hand border of every (?) article on Wikipedia, remaining visible as the user scrolls down through it - and if it's an article about something terrible like genocide or war or a breaking news death, the character will still be there but have a blank expression. Something that's visible to everybody by default is not an easter egg! If the character was opt-in (or implemented more subtly so that it only became visible if you knew, for example, to click on the article title or to look at the very footer of the page), people would enjoy knowing and sharing that secret. --Belbury (talk) 18:11, 12 February 2026 (UTC) Retracting my view on this, the plan was recently updated to limit the cartoon to "2500 [articles] per language Wikipedia" rather than putting it on every article and having a special neutral cartoon for bleak subjects. --Belbury (talk) 14:34, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Option 1>2>3 — and quickly, too! Time is fast running out. Agree with others that if this was an opt-in feature, not many would even notice it. However, I also acknowledge that it may be a bit bothersome to others. Loytra✨09:49, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
25 icon/, if we are going to have the easter egg, then having the 25 icon provides some context as to its possible meaning. If we switch back to the old globe, it is less clear that the easter egg is a temporary feature, or that it is relevant to a particular event. Further, switching one 25th anniversary element out while swapping another one in may create similar confusion regarding the easter egg's meaning. Conversely, both expiring at the same time makes it clear Wikipedia is back to 'normal'. CMD (talk) 05:43, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Closer can consider my !vote neutral on the rest of the year proposal below, my goal is to maintain the context for the easter egg if the easter egg is implemented, and extending the logo to the end of the Wikipedia year would do this. CMD (talk) 03:35, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Just reread the proposal and realised that the 25th globe is only in use on legacy vector. Explains why I have yet to see it. Ah well :( Loytra✨09:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Looking at the documentation, it looks like it will be pretty accessible (pop-up) on mobile, while V22 desktop users will have it in their configuration panel – not exactly hidden, but not the most accessible for new users unfamiliar with the interface.
Regarding distractions, we have several articles with GIFs near the top of the page. Ones you'd expect, like Chronophotography, but also ones you may not, like Swing bridge and Panenka. Those GIFs can't be stopped by the average reader – at least, I wouldn't know how – which is in stark contrast to the cute puzzle globe, which looks like it can be disabled with one or two well-advertised button presses. Toadspike[Talk]21:09, 18 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Those GIFs serve an actual function: illustrating the concept. They are not "distractions". They are the point of article. This ... thing... is just an ugly annoyance. --User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 17:14, 21 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As a reader, the GIFs do distract me from the text. For me, the value they add by illustrating the concept better than a static image justifies the distraction, but it's silly to say there is no distraction. Toadspike[Talk]15:52, 23 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Comment. Some thoughts:
Like Fram, I am also concerned that cute (they are) easter eggs will show on serious articles.
If we want to enable the easter eggs by default, then we need to accept that they will show on serious articles or we need to filter which articles they show on. Aside from the scale needed for it, the second option also might go against the community sentiment that Wikipedia is not censored.
Do we know which extension this is linked to? If so, we could raise a patch/file a bug and/or read the code to figure out if there are safeguards against this. Sohom (talk) 11:43, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oh this is Extension:WP25EasterEggs, taking a look at the code it is extremely configurable! We can enable it for a specific set of pages, or enable it globally and not show it for a specific set of page and all of that is configurable through CommunityConfiguration (read through a on-wiki JSON file). Sohom (talk) 12:05, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Good job finding it! My concern is that, if we enable it globally, we need to check most en.WP pages if they should be excluded.Excluding categories may help, but I remember an argument against actual policy proposals like inappropriate-image blurring that also apply here: categories are imprecise in a lot of ways (the first thing in my search about it is Thryduulf's 2024-11-06T11:57:00). If we will do categories regardless of that, you will still need to vet which categories are included or not. LightNightLights (talk • contribs) 12:24, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Pretty much every pick for which pages will have it disabled or not will be extremely controversial, and more worryingly could be used as precedent for future "hiding" tools, so I don't think that's something we should go through. Going deeper than straightforward things like "have it enabled on the Main Page" and "have it enabled/disabled on X namespace" opens up a massive can of worms. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 12:37, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This has nothing to do with NOTCENSORED though. We are not here to deliberately cause offence with unencyclopedic content either. Displaying these easter eggs or not doesn't change the contents of the encyclopedia. Fram (talk) 14:01, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I doubt "deliberately" is the best way to put it. It doesn't change the contents directly, but does leave us with a list of "acceptable pages" and "controversial pages", which can absolutely be used as a precedent for making some "controversial" material less visible/prominent. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 14:03, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Wouldn't like such a list either, which means this can go on the Main Page or perhaps on user pages but should stay out of the articles in general (with what we now know of what kind of easter eggs we may expect). Perhaps my opinion would change with more info, at the moment it feels too much like writing a blanco cheque. Fram (talk) 14:22, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A reader choosing to look at a potentially offensive article does not change the fact that Wikipedia is 25 years old now and we are celebrating that. These are entirely unrelated. Toadspike[Talk]14:39, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Not if you display them on the same page, in ways so far unknown. A reader looking in mid-March to our article "US invasion of Greenland" may well be completely unaware that Wikipedia was 25 years old a few months before and that the rightside image is displayed for that reason and not to celebrate the invasion. Fram (talk) 14:50, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In my opinion, this is why we should make it clear (e.g. with a banner) that this easter egg is to celebrate Wikipedia's birthday. Incidentally, this also solves the "make it easy to turn off" problem. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 15:02, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Your idea sounds good. Maybe we should have text below the globe mascot images in the lines of "Celebrating English Wikipedia's 25th birthday"? It does not suffer from banner blindness and will always appear alongside the cute images, but does not solve the turn-off problem. LightNightLights (talk • contribs) 15:27, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That could work! Either that, or making the banner very obviously birthday-themed so readers don't have to actually read the words to understand the context behind it all. Or both! Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 15:34, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
id say, put below the globe thing, put in the normal size, 'Wiki 25', then below in a smaller font, put '25 Years of the Free Encyclopedia', or something along those lines F1fan00 (talk) 10:03, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Based on what is already implemented, tThere is going to be a relatively large toggle on the sidebar every page (similar to the dark mode one) that says "birthday mode" but yes, also CE's idea is not a bad idea. Sohom (talk) 15:14, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe the "Birthday mode" toggles should be shown above the old ones so that people will see a) most likely see the new ones first, and b) most likely see that something was added in the options menu. LightNightLights (talk • contribs) 15:33, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hello :) My name's Corli and I'm working on this project and want to share a bit more context on how we've tried to solve this very tricky problem of "which articles gets which version of Baby Globe?"
We also concluded that trying to make a "disable" list would be extremely difficult (if not impossible!) to do, especially because what we're building needs to work across all language Wikipedias. So we created a version of Baby Globe that appears "neutral". They don't do much, they stand around, blink and look cute. This version can then show up on pretty much any page and not imply anything particularly positive or negative.
By comparison, the versions that are overtly celebratory (like the confetti one) can be configured to show up on overtly celebratory things (people also turning 25 this year, all “cakes”). This is done using mostly Wikidata items, you can see a first version of this here, which we will be updating with all the versions of Baby Globe later this week.
The configuration setup allows Baby Globe to be configured by each opted in language edition to be blocked on specific pages defined in community configuration (eg. define specific pages where no instance of Baby Globe will appear, not even its default neutral state). So you can very easily override and adjust this default setup.
So, if I understand correctly, a default version for all articles and a special one for celebration-related pages? That sounds like a much better idea! Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 16:11, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The longer story is that there are 14 different versions arranged along a spectrum of sorts from very neutral to outright celebratory. You can get a sense for them in the table, which this week we'll update with the actual gifs so you can properly see the vibe :) These can all be individually turned on / off and customised to appear or not appear on specific articles. CDekock-WMF (talk) 16:21, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I want to explicitly mention that I think there is a sentiment among editors that Wikipedia is not censored outside of NOTCENSORED, so I avoided saying "NOTCENSORED" at my original comment.LightNightLights (talk • contribs) 14:19, 19 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Comment #2. Some more thoughts:
If we decide to hide it by default (option 2), I think a lot of people will not enable it. This may be bad because it would mean that we did not utilise someone's work to the fullest reasonable extent, but may also be good because we probably should not shove it in our readers' faces.
An official physical Baby Globe plushie I have not seen mentioned here that the WMF partnered with a merchandising company to sell a physical Baby Globe plushie. I can see a discussion worth having about this plushie, money, WMF, and the enabling of this mode. LightNightLights (talk • contribs) 06:32, 24 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If it's hidden by default, then we might want to run "opt-in now!" messages, and that might be more annoying than just having it visible.
I don't find the "but what if someone's reading serious content?!" argument to be very compelling. AFAICT Google doesn't suppress the Google Doodle if you search for a "serious" subject. I've never seen anyone saying "I was searching for information on how to plan my aunt's funeral, and Google posted a celebratory logo. How dare they!" Have you? And if you haven't, why would you expect readers to accept Google's celebratory logo but not Wikipedia's? WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:26, 25 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If it's hidden by default, then we might want to run "opt-in now!" messages, and that might be more annoying than just having it visible. that's absolutely right. What if we configure a default display timer of five minutes? For example, the baby globe would appear on readers’ screens for a maximum of five minutes and then automatically disappear... If a reader closes the browser session and later reopens it, the baby globe would be displayed again for five minutes before disappearing. CONFUSED SPIRIT(Thilio).Talk05:22, 25 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Today's Google Doodle is about Winter Olympics, a Google logo but the Os are replaced with a puck and a hockey stick, a funny thing. It still appears as that when I searched about "holocaust" and about "Putin invasion". Both are very serious issue and Google is not changing their look for such matter. ✠ SunDawn ✠Contact me!16:00, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Am I understanding the proposed implementation correctly, that as a reader scrolled down through the text-heavy sections of a genocide article, they would have a 125x125px File:Neutral Baby Globe.gif remaining constantly visible in the right-hand margin, looking from side to side and blinking? That would be a lot more prominent than Google's modification to their top-of-screen logo. Belbury (talk) 18:54, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It turns out they updated the plan on the 12th to say that they've decided to Limit the amount of QIDs to 2500 per language Wikipedia and remove the “neutral” Baby Globe that would have shown up on all non-configured pages, so genocide articles won't have a cartoon character at all. Belbury (talk) 14:41, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Question I assume this would not be available on classic vector? If so, that would be a shame, considering I've strongly preferred classic Vector's enumeration of a page's table of contents and am unwilling to temporarily switch to Vector 22 to experience the joy of birthday mode, but I understand. DrewieStewie (talk) 21:02, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is not the most pressing inquiry for resolving the technical implementation of this feature, but can someone explain to me why a baby was chosen as the mascot to celebrate the project having reached the milestone of 25 years--it seems peculiar to me, if not outright counter intuitive, given that, if you are going to anthropomorphize such an abstract condition, 25 would normally be an age that one might reasonable associate with coming into full adulthood? What am I missing here? If it's not obvious to me after having been with the project for roughly 2/3's of that period, I can't imagine it's any more intuitive for our average reader. Am I overthinking this--was it just an organic selection of the most obvious cutsy mascot that could be adapted from the movement logo? SnowRise let's rap00:27, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It's not a baby it's a plushie, which doesn't denote age or lifespan. Despite it's anthropomorphic appearance, as is common with these toys, plushie's aren't the embodiments of humans so I'm not seeing the issue. If it were a greenland shark, at 25 years of age it would still be considered a juvinelle (and shark plushies are quite popular btw). So plushies can symbolically live for upto hundreds of years, thus 25 shouldn't be measured anthropocentrically, even if WP is indeed anthropocentric. CNC (talk) 09:19, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well, I never regarded it as an "issue" so much as a peculiar choice. But I've since found an interview with the artist of the original graphic which clarifies that the unnamed design came first, and people just started calling it "Baby Globe" organically after the fact. I still think this makes for a curious mascot to celebrate this particular threshold, but certainly a curiosity of a "meh" level of significance. SnowRise let's rap07:50, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As we got the 25 globe up earlier, this proposal is out of sync with the timing of the globe running, which is nearing completion. Without prejudging consensus here, I would like to suggest that if the above proposal passes for its 16 February to 16 March timing, that we maintain the 25 globe as well until 16 March (or whatever end time is determined). This provides at least one obvious visual suggestion for why the easter egg is there. Pinging Chlod who is working on the Phab for the globe logo switchback. CMD (talk) 05:46, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I haven't scheduled the revert for deployment, so it can wait practically indefinitely. Just need overturn consensus on the previous discussion to keep the logo up until then. Chlod (say hi!) 06:13, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As this needs clear consensus, I've opened a formal sub-poll above. Given the previous consensus was 3 editors, hopefully this should be a simple clarification. CMD (talk) 05:54, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support as proposer: WP:Close is an information page that well-documents current community practice with the level-of-detail one'd expect from a guideline, with the exception of the "Closing procedure" section mostly of uncontroversial technical details, but it's not unheard of for guideline pages to include such sections either (e.g. Wikipedia:Signatures#Dealing with unsigned comments). Despite the widespread practice of consensus being the counted supermajority when arguments are of equal weight, this determination is only documented in essays and this information page (If the discussion shows that some people think one policy is controlling, and some another, [...]). An experienced editor in a discussion I closed a few months ago pointed this out to me and thus argued my close should've said "no consensus" instead as a small number of participants !voted oppose. The increased visibility of this page as a guideline would reduce the amount of editors (including newcomers) who aren't caught up on our closing standards.It is my opinion that the practices documented in this information reflect the current community standard, and the situation I mentioned above marks a need for such practices to be included in guidelines. Aaron Liu (talk) (timestamp omitted deliberately to improve the permanent discussion link)
To address concerns of Creep/excessive rulemaking: Creep-avoidance's purpose is to keep Wikipedia policy and guideline pages easy to understand, but currently we have absolutely no guidelines on how consensus is determined from a discussion, save overall concurrence. Wikipedia:Consensus#In talk pages is worthy of mention as it does list some qualities to weigh for arguments, but it doesn't mention critical things like how arguments of equal weight are compared numerically and when discussions should be closed.(Other than WP:ROUGHCONSENSUS, which misleadingly lives on Wikipedia:Deletion guidelines for administrators—it is outdated to imply these standards only apply to deletion. It should live on a dedicated page to increase visibility and reduce the overlapping maintenance work needed, and WP:Close is pretty much what it says.)As opposed to WP:Snow and the much more redundant WP:Poll, I think this is something newcomers need to read like the other major guidelines. I don't see these things mentioned anywhere else, and I feel like things so normative should be mentioned in our PaG, accessibly, as Creep intends. Aaron Liu (talk) 21:23, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support per Aaron Liu. I've long found this a useful guide and personally never had it questioned as only an info page, but I can see the issue of it not being an official guideline as an issue, especially given it's the guidelines that closers follow. It might be worth considering some other pages in this area for review and promoting; Wikipedia:Non-admin closure (widely accepted essay, referenced in hatnote at WP:INVOLVED as guidance on involvement for non-administrator actions - also not a guideline but quasi-advertised as such. Likewise we have Wikipedia:Requested moves/Closing instructions, as a subpage of RM no less, which again is nothing more than an essay, even if widely used as guidance. I think it might be time to start making the effort to categorise certain pages more accurately, reflecting their status quo as defacto guidelines. CNC (talk) 13:30, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You're not wrong, "enforced BRD" is referenced in WP:STANDARDSET, whereas BRD is only an essay intended as advise. Given it describes an optional strategy rather than any fixed rules, the categorisation doesn't seem off to me at all. Realistically it's evolved into an infopage as documents the cycle in-depth, rather than pov-led like essays often are.
I'm aware not everything needs a tag, but if there are sets of best practices supported by consensus, then promoting to guideline satus is logical for sake of clarity. Five pillars is otherwise a higher-level summary page, so acts more like an infopage than policy or guidelines. There doesn't appear to any independently crafted policies or guidelines, only references to them. Thus, it's categorised correctly as a page that either isn't confirmed to have widespread consensus, or doesn't require it. CNC (talk) 16:48, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Good suggestion, also the notes on that page that are linked need anchors, or ideally resolve the duplicate lists of restrictions. There is one at the base page and the other transcluded to subpages; one with useful links, notes, and a set of other restrictions; and the other without. Hopefully an arb can bring some sanity to that. CNC (talk) 20:19, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, I can't. The Enforced BRD sanction in my userspace is historical and part of the point of STANDARDSET is that it eliminated custom sanctions like the ones in my userspace. ~Awilley (talk)22:06, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
(Pedantic note: it didn't eliminate custom sanctions. It made them so only a rough consensus of uninvolved admin at AE could do them.) Best, Barkeep49 (talk) 03:08, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Great. What's the procedure for getting the committee to stop linking to a page that says it is "one of many optional strategies" (emphasis in the original)? WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:19, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Support because that part of guidance with an official stamp of approval was sorely lacking as an explanation of how consensus is actually evaluated. I think it would benefit from inclusion of some fragments of WP:NAC and WP:SUPERVOTE, which are de facto standards anyway. Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs) 18:56, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I support better documenting the de facto approach to consensus. I do find this sentence weird: The desired standard is rough consensus, not perfect consensus. I understand it’s the de facto approach, but should there be an effort to revise consensus, rather than having a separate guideline that sorta says, “we didn’t mean that page, we mean this page”? Dw31415 (talk) 01:09, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
AIUI our notion of Wikipedia:Rough consensus is derived from the Internet Engineering Task Force. "Rough consensus and running code" is the goal for their decision-making process. The first half means that it's unnecessary to have unanimity, to have agreement on the details, or to have a formal vote. In the case of decisions made under RFC7282, it literally means that support sounds louder than opposition. They are looking for an absence of significant opposition, rather than strong support. The second half means that the group should defer to the people doing the work instead of someone pontificating about theory. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:51, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure why we should expect people to know the IETF's protocol.That said, I think WP:C already appropriately summarizes consensus as Consensus is ascertained by the quality of the arguments given on the various sides of an issue, as viewed through the lens of Wikipedia policy. Detailed, further explanation is what WP:Close provides. Aaron Liu (talk) 02:26, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I’m not sure about the best solution and don’t want to distract too much from the main question. I just think there’s an odd smell about this (as a guideline) saying we don’t use policy (consensus) we use an essay (rough consensus). If no one else sees a problem with it I’ll defer. Dw31415 (talk) 03:17, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose (until harmonized with RFCEND): After some reflection, I oppose based on my understanding that it will make it harder for involved editors to close RfC's with an obvious outcome.Comment: As an example, I tried to close an RfC as an involved editor because the outcome was obvious. The nominator (whom I respect tremendously) wrote that the RfC did not need closure citing the page under discussion. I was relying on RFCEND. I'm concerned that elevating this page to guideline will then give it more weight than RFCEND. My concern would be addressed by changing this page from formal closure is neither necessary nor advisable to RFCEND's involved editors should be able to close most discussions. Thanks for considering! Dw31415 (talk) 14:26, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for your kind words. The exact same wording is present at WP:RFCEND: If the matter under discussion is not contentious and the consensus is obvious to the participants, then formal closure is neither necessary nor advisable. In fact, that's where I imported the sentence at WP:Close from. This is in line with RfCEnd's Editors are expected to be able to evaluate and agree upon the results of most RfCs without outside assistance, uninvolved closers being one kind of outside assistance.I unfortunately couldn't find where RfCEnd says involved editors should be able to close most discussions. If it does, that should be removed as it directly contradicts WP:Involved: editors closing such discussions should not have been involved in the discussion itself or related disputes.Aaron Liu (talk) 18:20, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Can the person who started the RFC, or another involved editor, write a summary of the discussion?
Yes. In particular, when a proposal is soundly rejected, proponents are encouraged to accept defeat with grace. However, if the outcome could plausibly be disputed, then involved editors (on all sides of a dispute) are encouraged to let someone else write a summary.
The RFC process is looking for a good, shared understanding rather than bureaucratic niceties. If the outcome is clear rejection, then having the OP post something like "Everybody hates my idea. Sorry for wasting your time" is a valid summary, and it is not improved by having an uninvolved editor get involved. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:53, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Ah, I misunderstood what "most discussions" meant; sorry Dw3. The sentence you mentioned needs some work, though. It's a 2021 addition that contradicts the bolded sentence I mentioned on what to do when the consensus is obvious, though I do see ways to make it not contradictory. I'll elaborate on WT:RFC and invite you two. Aaron Liu (talk) 14:13, 4 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Changed my "oppose" to a "comment" with the expectation that elevating this doesn't impact the ability to change it or impact the discussion around involved closure. Dw31415 (talk) 16:07, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think we should mark this as a guideline right now. Compare it to something like WP:NAC which is much closer to being a guideline in form and covers a topic the proposal doesn't: who should close discussions. The proposal is also redundant with many of our existing P&Gs, and WhatamIdoing points some out in the discussion section below. Redundancy adds a maintenance burden---there are many discussions where editor time was spent resolving a policy conflict because two pages drifted apart and no one noticed. Redundant P&Gs also harm editor recruitment and retention when newcomers need to navigate 14 15 policies, see the sources at Criticism of Wikipedia#Excessive rule-making for more on this. WP:CLOSE is a good informational page, but I don't think it's a good idea to make it a guideline.Marking this as a guideline won't make newcomers better understand our unique governance system or stop wikilawyers from coming up with a tortured reason to challenge a close. Those are non-starters for me. Frankly, if an editor is starting to interpret P&Gs about closing discussions, they are already so deep into "wikilaw" that they should be evaluating essays by their quality and level of community acceptance, not the banner at the top. Essays like WP:SNOW, WP:NAC, and WP:POLL have incredibly broad consensus and 10x as many links as WP:CLOSE, but they lack a guideline banner because they're not good guidelines. Level of consensus is only part of it. — Wug·a·po·des08:44, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose per WP:CREEP. The current text is quite debatable, starting with the first sentence (Consensus is Wikipedia's fundamental model for editorial decision-making.) WP:BOLD is actually more fundamental because nothing gets written until someone boldly decides to make a start. Insofar as the proposed change would make any difference, it would be to make it more difficult to change this debatable text.And formal closing seems quite abnormal and exceptional. The typical talk page discussion consists of someone saying something and no-one responding. And even when there are responses, you rarely get a formal close. Consider the talk page for the page in question, for example. If you look at that or its archive, you'll find about 30 discussions, including a formal RfC, and not a single one has a formal close that I can see. It's a farce.Andrew🐉(talk) 17:26, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
BOLD is actually more fundamental
WP:Bold is WP:EditConsensus. The very next next sentence after the one you quoted summarizes Bold: Consensus is typically reached as a natural and inherent product of the wiki-editing process; generally someone makes a change to a page content, and then everyone who reads the page has an opportunity to either leave the page as it is or change it.The sentence you quoted is the first sentence of WP:Consensus, so I don't think WP:Close would elevate Consensus over Bold here. I definitely could remove it from WP:Close but I unfortunately can't figure out how to do so without making the lede read weird. I'd welcome any suggestions on how to do so!
formal closing seems quite abnormal and exceptional
The page does mention that! Besides the second paragraph saying closes are only advised to happen when discourse [is] lengthy and the results hard to determine, half of § When to close discussions is dedicated to explaining what you said here.I think we agree on what the page should say, just not whether it says them. I believe making sure the page says these and would be seen is our chance to clarify that these are in fact the community norms. Aaron Liu (talk) 21:30, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, we don't agree. I've looked through this material and it's trash. Let's look at that first sentence again. It's a copy of the first sentence of WP:CON which is a different policy. Why does the page start by talking about consensus rather than talking about closing? These are not the same thing.
If you look at the first draft of this page, it doesn't say anything about consensus. It is all about closing instead -- terminating a discussion so that no further comments may be made. And this is done mainly to stop disruption and time-wasting.
Another editor then comes along then then rewrites the page. He's the one who is focussed on determining consensus rather than the process of closing. The page is then confused from that point.
The page waffles indecisively about how discussions may be left open for years or not closed at all. It repeatedly says that there are no policies for this. It seems to understand that there are different discussion processes such as RfC but it doesn't catalog these and explain their closure rules.
For example, consider a process page such as WP:ERRORS, which is quite busy and which I attend often. This is quite sui generis in that discussions are resolved rapidly as time is of the essence. They are typically actioned by admins as the main page is protected. After the action is taken, the discussion is typically then blanked. It's not hatted or archived, it's just deleted from the page. Any discussions left open at the end of the day are typically cleared en masse and there is an admin button to do this. There's often not much in the way of consensus or appeal and it doesn't much resemble processes used elsewhere. I don't much like the process but so it goes.
Other forums such as Arbcom, AE, DYK, ITN or the reference desk have their own old Spanish customs which have evolved over the years. There are lots of discussions at these but they have their own mechanisms and rules for closing them. This page displays no understanding of this and so, as a general guideline, is useless.
Closing has two parts: terminating the discussion (with e.g. {{atop}}) and summarizing it (i.e. determining its consensus). (Other forms of terminating are not closure.) I have not seen the former happen without the latter. I only see "there are no policies" mentioned once, and of course that would be removed if the page becomes a guideline.
The page waffles indecisively about how discussions may be left open for years or not closed at all
That would be a problem. Could you specify where you see that?
it doesn't catalog these and explain their closure rules
I feel like the closure guidelines included on this page are generally applicable. WP:Close's ways of assessing consensus are used on all the pages you've mentioned. I think it would be both unwieldy and unnecessary for a page to document the closing procedures of every process page on Wikipedia; I don't see the problem in having the reader just read the relevant process page. Aaron Liu (talk) 12:58, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose. If this were to become a guideline about closing, closing would still be described better and in more detail in PAG outside of this page. This alone means that the page should not be promoted to a guideline, and that its nature really is that of an information page. The page's content does not match what would be needed for a comprehensive guideline about closing and lacks unique substantive normative content relative to existing PAG. The actual PAG-grade norms about closing (and highly-specific at that) already exist and they are at:
WP:ROUGHCONSENSUS (guideline) -- basically, this section is pretty much the "closing discussions" guideline; it is applied universally -- outside of the deletion process by analogy. The last paragraph significantly references WP:IAR ("shockingly", a local consensus can suspend a guideline)
WP:NOTBURO and WP:IAR (policies) through WP:SNOW (titanium-clad interpretation of policy) -- the other closest thing to a substantive guideline about closing discussions. A guideline about closing has to explain WP:SNOW in the prose.
Wikipedia:Talk page guidelines#Closing discussions (guideline) -- general informational material about closing discussions already existing in the form of a guideline + one important provision, effectively stating: do not demand an uninvolved close unless the consensus is unclear, the issue is contentious, or the decision has wiki-wide implications, i.e., involved closes are not a priori bad.
WP:INVOLVED (policy) -- "involved status" does not matter with respect to closes where the issue is non-contentious and straightforward (that is the correct interpretation).
Wikipedia:Deletion process#Non-administrators closing discussions (guideline) -- Even though administrators are, in general, responsible for closing discussions, there are times when it is also appropriate for non-admins to close discussions. This is then significantly elaborated upon. This is another "lost fragment" of the existing one and true "closing guideline", also applied universally, of course -- outside of the deletion process by analogy
If we were to assemble these genuine norms about closing disussions, we would get an actual standalone, comprehensive Wikipedia guideline about that. But the page nominated for promotion is not that page.—Alalch E. — Preceding undated comment added 17:41, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The goal is for this to be that page. I'll go through the sections you mentioned:
RoughConsensus is covered far more clearly at § How to determine the outcome except for the last paragraph, which I agree we should add to the "Policy" subsection.
I'm not sure what NotBuro says about closes; I only see it discussing the role of rules. I think Snow is adequately summarized in the "When further contributions are unlikely to be helpful" bullet point.
Explained in footnote [5], which is used where how closers should be uninvolved is mentioned. I think this is the right level of prominence.
Ooh, this is really good! I think I can consolidate this and WP:Close's explanation of closure qualifications in the Closure procedure section into a new "Who should close discussions" section. Would you support making this a guideline when that is done, or are there other additions you think are necessary?
Oppose. My view (pretty similar to Wugapodes) is that this page serves its current purpose pretty well but isn't written with the precision we'd expect from a guideline in this area. WP:NHC in particular is something that is really useful in its current "tips and tricks on determining consensus" role but would lead to more wikilawyering rather than less if people started treating it as authoritative and parsing its every word (example). More generally, although I never used to feel this way, I've come to think that leaving things vague in this area (as illustrated by the one sentence at WP:DETCON) has really been a very wise choice, and I'd encourage people not to knock down Chesterton's fence here unless they're sure the benefits outweigh the costs. Extraordinary Writ (talk) 02:41, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
For clarity for onlookers, I think the intended diff was Special:Diff/1077853382. I could amend the sentence referenced to add "or different interpretations of the same policy".Could you elaborate on the benefits of leaving things vague?Aaron Liu (talk) 03:22, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If you're interested in closing, I'd encourage you to reflect on that question yourself for a bit longer. Then come back and share your own thoughts on what this metaphorical fence is for. — Wug·a·po·des10:19, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have done a dozen closes (and a successful close challenge for someone else's). I do see that there is nice leeway for different closers to weigh arguments differently, but I've never seen that to such an extent that it contradicts WP:Close's guidance. (or did I misinterpret as "it would be bad to have a new guideline on closing" your concerns that were simply on specific sections instead?) Aaron Liu (talk) 12:35, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Mostly, I don't see why not make clear a series of practices are standard. Your assumption is correct but I don't see why that lessens the argument for clarity, and said editor is someone I usually wouldn't assume obstructionist motivations. Aaron Liu (talk) 21:14, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Meta comment: A WP:PROPOSAL is supposed to be made on the talk page of the proposed guideline. I don't think we need to take any action right now, but if this discussion gets long (RFCs on Village pump pages frequently need to be WP:SPLIT to keep the overall page size under control), maybe it could be moved there instead of to a subpage. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:25, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that there should be a guideline on closing discussions, but it might be worth fine-tuning it a bit and getting everything in one place first. Right now it's not as concise as it probably could be. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 🛸 22:08, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I've finally looked over both; I don't believe there is overlap, other than If the matter under discussion is not contentious and the consensus is obvious to the participants, then formal closure is neither necessary nor advisable. which I don't see a problem with. Aaron Liu (talk) 03:22, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Aaron, I boldly added a link to the RfC close template. Feel free to revert if it should get more review. I would like there were more consistency in using the RfC closure template or to have it deprecated. Dw31415 (talk) 14:34, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This part of RFCEND strikes me as out of touch with current practice but maybe I’m looking at a controversial subset. Editors are expected to be able to evaluate and agree upon the results of most RfCs without outside assistance. I guess that’s not immediately relevant to this discussion. I support the proposal to make it a guideline. Dw31415 (talk) 03:33, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I looked through a handful of consecutive RFCs from November-ish. About two-thirds got a closing statement. However, almost half of those didn't need a closing statement (e.g., Andrew Huberman, Advance UK, Scientology) because the responses were so lopsided. That said, sometimes editors want a closing statement for social/behavioral reasons rather than because they don't know what the result is. WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:00, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It helps prevent the (factually incorrect) wikilawyering over "well that discussion was never closed so there's not a true consensus". Katzrockso (talk) 13:54, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think I've ever seen that particular claim before, but I'd expect that to be solved by educating the editor about Wikipedia's processes. If that happens a lot (more than a couple of newbies a year), then I'd like to have a few examples (drop some on my talk page? It's kind of off-topic for this discussion), then we should address that error somewhere. Maybe Wikipedia:Tendentious editing#Concerning discussions would be the place for that. WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:02, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I’d like to propose moving “If the matter under discussion is not contentious” to a L3 section under closing procedure and include the same involved closure language from RfC end. The current bullet is a bit odd (it’s a stand alone bullet and it’s a bit redundant to the following paragraph). Any thoughts on whether I should boldly edit or make a sandbox version? Dw31415 (talk) 18:40, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, not usually. It's just awkward to have something change while people are voting. Someone who dislikes the outcome might claim that the change in the middle of the discussion invalidates all the votes they disagree with. So I suggest avoiding changes, even as minor as rearranging. WhatamIdoing (talk) 05:15, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
One-click log out: restore the good old days
The change to a two-click logout is really irritating me. Sure it's nice to cancel an accidental click, but that happens very rarely. Having to remember the second click - right across the other side of the page - is far the dominant action; timewasting, unreliable. All too often I come back to find that I am still logged in from last time. Having to log back in after a rare accidental click is not /that/ burdensome. Please can we restore the old-style one-click logout? Or at least make it an optional user setting? — Cheers, Steelpillow (Talk) 08:54, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Load it where? My device, my browser, my Wikipedia account? I'm not a developer, how do I do that anyway? It's this casual attitude to UX that is the root cause of the problem. — Cheers, Steelpillow (Talk) 13:39, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You want to copy that to your common.js page, Special:MyPage/common.js will take you to the correct location. As someone who regularly misclicked logout the first script I installed was to stop it happening, as it was burdensome to have to log back in every time. Scripts like this allow editors to customise their own experience easily without impacting other editors. You don't need to understand the code itself (I certainly don't), just copy and paste. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested«@» °∆t°18:31, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That takes a lot more effort from more volunteers, why not simply copy paste the script. If this becomes something requested by many editors then maybe the extra work would be worthwhile. I believe you can set a preference for one click script installation, but I'm not sure it's not something I've used. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested«@» °∆t°20:34, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It took a lot of effort from a lot of volunteers to introduce two-click in the first place. That's no argument. How many requests for that two-click were there? — Cheers, Steelpillow (Talk) 08:49, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Uuhhh. So Wikipedians like UI features that go against tried and trusted design principles. Sorry to bother you, and thank you very much for the link. — Cheers, Steelpillow (Talk) 16:27, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
More accurately our developers/maintainers don't scale. OTOH the providers of endless utility scripts in user space do appear to scale. I wonder if there is a lesson for our architecture model in there somewhere. (Rhetorical question, no need to reply). — Cheers, Steelpillow (Talk) 16:27, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Steelpillow, I know you said that there's no need to reply, but I will anyway. I used to be an IT techie in the 1980s and 1990s and the early noughties, but have since become rather a technophobe. Under the picture that is supposed to be a person in the top right corner of your screen go to "Preferences"; then click on "Gadgets"; scroll down to the section labelled "Advanced" and click om the last box next to "Install scripts without having to manually edit JavaScript files (documentation)"; scroll down again and click "Save", Up to now you only have to go through this procedure once for anything that anyone tells you is a script. You can now, if you manage that, go to User:Sapphaline/oneclicklogout.js and click "Install" by the title. I know that this is a long-winded procedure, but there is, in my experience, no way to persuade a techie to simplify it: they just can't understand how anyone could have trouble with anything so simple. I have given these instructions based on my system, Firefox on Linux Mint. If your system puts anything in a different place then I'll have to start again. Phil Bridger (talk) 19:16, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm using Vector (2022) and don't have the two-click logout problem. Logging out for me is the same as it has always been: clicking on the upper right icon, then clicking 'Log out' (there's no confirmation pop-up or another page asking if I had truly intended to log out, which is good). Some1 (talk) 19:32, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The Prompt injection article sort-of covers this topic, but it does so in a confused way that says that prompt injection is not jailbreaking, that it is a type of jailbreaking, and that some some prompt injection techniques are jailbreaking but som aren't, and then doesn't really distinguish them (I'll highlight this on the talk page shortly). Thryduulf (talk) 21:32, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well, in theory at least anyone can write an essay, though with a topic like this I'd not recommend anyone trying unless they are very familiar with both relevant policy, and with long-running debates over the issue. Any volunteers? I'd offer, but I have my doubts that some in the community would accept my position on this.
Given that some have found reasons to object to the phrase, it would probably be better to avoid actually using 'Jew tagging' in the title. And maybe it might be better to try to broaden the scope out a little: Wikipedia:Ethnic and religious tagging? The problem isn't confined to content on Jewish individuals only, though some of the worst examples can be found there. AndyTheGrump (talk) 15:47, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I was thinking about writing one, but Real Life caught up with me and I haven't had the time to devote to doing a good job with it. I like Andy's suggestion for a title and focus, since it's a broader problem and shouldn't single out a particular religion or ethnicity, any more than it's permitted in articles, but I don't think we should completely expunge the term or minimize the observable fact that it's the most troublesome example. I've noticed a recent uptick in malicious tagging, and a relative decline in what I would term benign Judeophilic descriptors. If I start one I'll link here so others can participate.
I would welcome examples of similar phenomena with other religions or ethnicities to cite - I've seen some tagging of Muslims, for example, in India-related topics.
There's also a parallel issue of nested nationalities, such as English/British, that has caused strife, especially if the subject is perceived as a different ethnicity. I'm not prepared to work that out. Acroterion(talk)15:56, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't intend to propose omitting the term 'Jew tagging' entirely, just not using it as a title: sorry if that wasn't clear. And I'd think that any essay on the topic should clearly include a link to Edward Kosner's Wikipedia-focussed article with that title [21] in Commentary , as a useful outsider's perspective. An essay clearly needs to distinguish between relevant and proportional discussion of a subject's ethnicity and/or faith and the context-free, reductionist/stereotyping bald-assertion-sentence 'X is Jewish' tagging that Kosner and so many others object to, and I think that Kosner's piece expresses it better than most of us could. AndyTheGrump (talk) 18:09, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The Jewish version of this tagging does have it's own specific issue. The tagging is done by either those who feel the Jewish identity is being hidden, and those who want to (((tag))) Jewish people. This is opposite to the issue found in most articles, where people attempt to exclude individuals from a given ethnicity. Of course the solution is always to follow the sources, but that regularly differs from the POV of editors. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested«@» °∆t°18:01, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, but if you really think that with the exception of Jewish subjects, 'exclusion' is the only issue, I don't think you've been looking very hard. And no, 'following the sources' isn't necessarily sufficient. It is entirely possible to engage in the most egregious tagging while using an impeccable source. Which is one of the reasons why it can be difficult to deal with. AndyTheGrump (talk) 18:13, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Often, it isn't the 'what' but the 'how' that matters. As an example, I once got into a dispute with arch Jew-tagger User:Bus stop (now CBANNED) because he wanted an article to merely say 'X is Jewish' in a biography, rather than actually going into any detail regarding the subject's attitude to his faith and ethnicity, which was in my opinion much more enlightening for the biography. Bus stop seemed to see Wikipedia as a Jew-tagger's database, refused to countenance any content that might suggest that the Jewishness of any individual was anything but objective fact, even if the individual concerned was equivocal (which isn't that rare), and routinely resorted to the most ridiculous arguments in order to justify his obsession. In my opinion, any article that has the sentence 'X is Jewish' in it, without further context, needs looking at as potential tagging. You just don't see that in biographies elsewhere. It is reductionist, if not outright stereotyping, and reduces a human being to a mere label. At best it is bad writing. At worst, it is obnoxious. AndyTheGrump (talk) 01:29, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is a more general issue with "tagging" (possibly better described as "labelling"), in that often an effort to get a specific word into prose is the end in itself rather than expanding the context or even writing the same thing in a less provocative style. CMD (talk) 05:38, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As I said in the previous discussion, you can just write the essay yourself? Essays are cheap. But I would focus mostly on "how to recognize it" and "here are the relevant policies" (eg. MOS:ETHNICITY, WP:DUE), plus maybe some convenience links to previous discussions or external coverage of the problem. I don't think trying to get consensus out of the gate is a productive use of time for an essay - just write it, see what people say, tweak it if there are minor problems or quibbles, and if there are larger disputes or irreconcilable problems, someone else can just write a competing essay. --Aquillion (talk) 21:04, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I see way more Jews online offended that we are "erasing Jewish history" by removing that people are Jewish, honestly. See, for example, [22][23], or objecting to our sort of compromise phrasing of "raised in a Jewish family" as also antisemitic. We can never win.
You're already not supposed to add it if it is not in a reliable source. I don't know what else we're supposed to do, hide that people are Jewish even if reliable sources say they are? Is that not ridiculously antisemitic? And sure, people often break that rule. But that goes for every guideline we have. Perfect enforcement does not exist here. PARAKANYAA (talk) 00:55, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Is that not ridiculously antisemitic? I hope you don't mean that the way it reads.
This isn't about hiding anything. If someone's ethnicity or religion is a significant feature of their life, it should be mentioned, as long as it's backed by sources, in conformance with the MoS. What we're discussing here is the frequent tendency to substitute ethnicity for nationality in the lede, of qualifying nationality with ethnicity, or guessing about it with no sources or no relevance to the facts of a subject's life. I'd estimate that 75-80% of such edits are malicious. Frequent targets are people who've conducted themselves in a manner that draws criticism or negative attention, whereupon they get tagged as plainly as possible. This rarely happens when someone's Presbyterian.
An essay would be helpful in explaining all this to well-intentioned editors who wish to celebrate someone's ethnicity, and are disappointed or upset that it's not appreciated. It also helps cut off debate with the malicious who are cloaking themselves with the same ostensible motive.
I think systematic efforts to erase Jewish history in the sense where we would hide cited information would be very antisemitic. If that's not what is being suggested, then no.
Kosner's article is him personally objecting to the fact he is labeled as being born to a Jewish family, and speculating that this was added by antisemites. Judaism is not just a religion. Where was it mentioned that we're just talking about the lead? The discussion, or Kosner's article, say nothing of the sort. The case at issue in Kosner's had nothing to do with substituting "ethnicity for nationality in the lede, of qualifying nationality with ethnicity, or guessing about it with no sources or no relevance to the facts of a subject's life".
The issue wrt Kosner was a sentence in the body of the article cited to a scholarly article from the Oxford University Press's Studies in Contemporary Jewry, from a Jewish author, solely about Jews and journalism, which names Kosner as a prominent Jewish journalist, added to the article by a seemingly well-respected editor without nefarious intentions [24]. And the article did not even say "x is Jewish", but that he was born to a Jewish family. If that is problematic Jew tagging then how is, by comparison, discussing anyone's ethnicity or background ever acceptable regardless of sourcing? PARAKANYAA (talk) 01:25, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, erasing Jewish history would be worse than the problem we're discussing. I mention the lede because 90% of the time this is where it pops up, peoples' attention spans being what they are. Often it's in very short articles that are nothing but lede. Kosner offers a different perspective, the out-of-context or gratuitous insertion of ethnicity. Acroterion(talk)01:34, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And by that you mean what? If we're going to be making guidelines we need specificity about what behaviors are and aren't okay. What makes the portrayal of one as Jewish "complex"? In an ideal world every article would be perfect, but none are. PARAKANYAA (talk) 02:39, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
We are discussing an essay, here, not 'guidelines'. As for what makes the portrayal of someone as Jewish "complex", mostly the fact that it is. Because people are complicated, whether they are Jewish or not. Ultimately what we are discussing here is good writing vs bad writing, and the need for biographical content aimed at portraying human beings in all their complexity. Or at minimum, to avoid reductionist labelling. Possibly it is too much to expect this in Wikipedia, but that's no reason not to aspire to it. It requires editorial judgement, which isn't something you can create rules on. Fortunately, at least some of us (probably most, if they bother to put in the effort) have at least a little of this. That's one of the things that distinguishes us from the chatbots. AndyTheGrump (talk) 02:59, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
While I completely agree that ethnic identification is relatively complex, and no less so or not much less than Jews for the Scots-Irish or Basques or Cajuns or black Americans, especially in the age of 23andme, by the very same token, describing someone as Jewish is not reductionism. That descriptor contains multitudes. Andre🚐03:06, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, of course not. But every once in a while, I do read a biography that doesn't at all mention whether a person is Jewish, or mentions it very minimally, despite probably that it should. I've also occasionally seen people removing it. That Jewish identity might be a large or a small aspect of that person's overall identity or their biographical outline. I'm just saying it's possible that the pendulum may have swung compared to where it was last. Andre🚐03:18, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think I agree with PARAKANYAA. I left my thoughts in detail on the previous thread, so I won't repeat myself too much. But I think PARAKANYAA raises several strong points, that I may or may not have touched on last time this came up. While in the past there may have been issues with people trying to identify Jewishness in an article for poor reasons, there are a lot of people nowadays who are more concerned with the erasure of Jewish identity or history, so it's a bit of a delicate balancing act, which is why I don't think a special guideline is a good idea. I can't stop anyone from writing an essay in their userspace or wherever, but in my view this is probably unhelpful at best. As PARAKANYAA points out, Jewishness is not only a group of religious groups, but an ethnicity (and a cuisine, a literature, an art, a music, etc. several of each, actually) The Kosner diff as noted is not necessarily bad faith and is well-sourced, so it comes down to the subject's personal preference? A related problem is subjects that don't like their bad photos. But the point is well taken that we already have a guideline, and that guidelines are routinely disregarded. So it's hard to see how this would help, except to give admins a clearer excuse to block people, which I don't think is a good idea either in this case. Because it is hard to know if someone is "Jew tagging" out of pride or philosemitism, or bigotry. Good faith would suggest we assume the former, and politely correct people who don't follow MOS:ETHNICITY adequately rather than blocking them for a proscribed activity. Andre🚐02:26, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I can't see anyone proposing a specific guideline here. In fact I can't really think how one would even write such a thing. Essays advise. They don't mandate, and what we (or at least some of us) are advising is a little more care about reductionist labels, and a little more consideration for the complexities of real people. That, and being prepared to deal with those who resort to reductionist labelling to push their PoVs of one sort or another. AndyTheGrump (talk) 03:05, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You are right. Nobody is proposing a guideline, so that is a straw man that I am conjuring. However, it is also the case that Doug suggested in the prior thread perhaps this would help admins block more easily, so that is what I am alluding to. It's also the case that advisory essays can sometimes obtain a high level of community consensus. I don't think this one would, and inherently, the writing of thoughts isn't a harmful or discourageable activity, but there are also other things to do that could be more helpful. For example, as I offered last time, there are plenty of redlinked people that it wouldn't be inappropriate to call Jewish prominently. Andre🚐03:08, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well yes, there are no doubt many missing biographies, including those for people who's Jewishness is an entirely appropriate topic. I can't see how that is particularly relevant to the issue here though, which is what a fair number of us perceive as inappropriate tagging-style content in existing articles. AndyTheGrump (talk) 03:13, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Everyone is free to spend or not their volunteer hours where they see fit and what interests them. I'm just pointing out that you could say as a community Wikipedia sometimes allocates more time to the litigation of teh drama than content creation. I noticed you mentioned tagging by Bus stop, a user that has been CBANned for over 4 years. Do you have any more recent diffs that show inappropriate Jew tagging? Or examples of articles where you think the old tagging has managed to stick around? Because my experience is that any such tagging is generally promptly dealt with, and there are also false positives in that area. Andre🚐03:23, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As you say, everyone is free to spend their volunteer hours where they see fit, and I see no particular reason to spend mine looking for diffs to support my position when you have provided none to support yours. We clearly see things differently as far as this issue is concerned, and it seems its not just me who still sees 'tagging' (not just in regard to Jewishness) as a problem. And please drop the 'litigation and dramah' hyperbole, since we have already established that we aren't advocating rules to litigate over. AndyTheGrump (talk) 03:37, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Rather than diffs, how about a little searching exercise? Enter "is Jewish." (with the double quotes and period) into an article-space search. You have already agreed with me that a paragraph consisting solely of 'X is Jewish' is inappropriate. Here's the first three I found, in a couple of minutes. [25][26][27]. There are also many more with the same phrase just slapped, context-free, into a paragraph on other things. Given that I've got better things to do with my time than go through all 3912 results the search throws up to find them all, I'll leave that to you. AndyTheGrump (talk) 04:03, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree those articles and "paragraphs" aren't good, but they're all very short and borderline non-notable. For Judith Seidman, looks like the user who added that line was indeffed as a sock later but it at least has a reliable source[28] which is a dead link but at least provides some context: [29] Joel Sherman it was added in November by a temp account without a source: [30] So potentially revertable. The third has a directory entry in the big book of Jewish sports legends. Frankly, all three could potentially be merged to a list or AFD'd. Anyway, I am sure that there are many articles where they do say that the person is Jewish, but it's not really a given that all of those the appropriate remedy is to remove the line, rather than to expand the context. Andre🚐04:13, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I fail to see why being 'borderline non-notable' has any bearing on the appropriateness or otherwise of tagging. And if anything, an article being short makes it more noticeable. As for removal or expansion, as I illustrated with my User:Bus stop example, I'm quite prepared to support either, depending on what the source material available has to say - and in that specific case was arguing for more content. I may not always do so, but please don't make out that I'm advocating erasure. AndyTheGrump (talk) 04:25, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
OK, well then I think we agree. These, and the other articles like them, are pretty bad articles, and those lines in those bad articles are also bad. They could potentially in some cases be fixed by expansion. If the eventual Jew-tagging essay says that, then I think it will be hard to criticize it from the angle I am currently taking. Andre🚐04:29, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You may not mean this but I don't think we should suggest that that journalist is a "self-hating Jew" (a term found in another journo's article, Ben Hecht) or "internalized antisemite". He just views it, and himself, as he sees it, which may be differently from any of us. Alanscottwalker (talk) 16:25, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In the past, every baseball player whose ancestors were Jewish was described in Wikipedia as a "Jewish-American baseball player", while those whose ancestors were not Jewish were described as an "American baseball player". (Black American players were separately tagged.). This is, of course, offensive. The euphemism "from a Jewish family" can be deployed to tag Jews whose families have not identified as Jewish for generations. It is a particular irony that Wikipedia continues to employ the Nüremberg laws to define who is a Jew. MarkBernstein (talk) 04:45, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If it isn't, it is presumably those objecting to the earlier gratuitous Jew-tagging (along with other ethno-tagging etc) who deserve thanks for cleaning things up. And it seems there are those of the opinion that there is still work to do: hence the proposal for an essay. AndyTheGrump (talk) 05:11, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe. I've been around for a while but there are some significant gaps in my contribution history. And I really wasn't tuned into this problem or editing in these areas in some of the older timeframes when it may have been happening. But a lot has changed on Wikipedia since then. I've been editing pretty regularly since returning in 2022. And I've definitely noticed that emphasis on reliable sourcing, BLP policy, due and undue weight, and other stuff like that is significantly greater than say, 2004-7ish. Plus the evolution of the contentious topics regimes that deal with a lot of political things. So that might have something to do with why so-called Jew or ethnicity tagging is less troublesome or dealt with more easily. I think there is also a shorter leash for tendentious and problematic editors. Which is for the good, in my view. That's why I challenged the idea that it is a current problem. I am aware of some concrete situations where a Jewish background was removed or omitted and I thought it should be there. But I'm not talking about celebrity actors or ball players, I'm talking about long-dead historical personages. At any rate, I wonder what MarkBernstein makes of the idea that the fix for it might be to expand, not remove, the mention of Jewish heritage. It is also possible that if a Jew-tagging essay is created, perhaps a counter-essay would be needed. I think Wikipedia, at least in its present-day incarnation, has a skew toward post-national, citizen of the world-type philosophy. That often means that mention of heritage or cultural context can not seem very relevant or important. I think in the last discussion, someone said they didn't believe it was ever relevant to a biography to say. Anyway, I just want people to consider both sides of this and check whether some perceptions of how prevalent this problem is or how it is handled might be outdated. Andre🚐05:34, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Undenting a little, we're talking about an essay, not the sixth pillar, and people are free to ignore it. I am of the opinion that there is a recurring problem with editors, often, but not always, malicious, focusing on reductive descriptions of race/ethnicity/religion in biographies, in circumstances where that emphasis is dubious. We ought to have a somewhat standardized essay or guideline to point them to, so at least the persuadable can read it and understand why it's frowned upon in both practice and the manual of style, and the underlying reasons why putting people into ethnic boxes can be pernicious. It will not fit all circumstances. Perhaps I've seen too many ethnonationalist warriors or just plain bigots. In any case, I will start an essay in the next few days. I'm fighting a mild cold and am not feeling excessively smart at the moment, so when I'm feeling less fuzzy I'll give it a try and link it. Acroterion(talk)14:42, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There are two problems with “ethnicity/natonal labeling”… a) adding the label because the subject is “one of us”, and b) adding the label because the subject is “one of them”. Both are taking the wrong approach. The flaw is that the label is being added because the ethnicity/national identity is in some way important to the editor who added it, not because the ethnicity/nationality is important to the subject. Blueboar (talk) 15:00, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, it boils down to editors who are primarily motivated to draw a line between "are they one of us" and "are they one of them." So in my mind it's a behavioral issue as much as anything else, and part of the theme I propose is examination of one's motives. Acroterion(talk)15:08, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Re the “one of us” aspect of this… It is very difficult to convince those who care deeply about their own identities (and consider it “defining”) that the identity may not be all that important (defining) for someone else. Blueboar (talk) 15:22, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And there are also cases where the ethnic or national or religious identity is deeply important and private and personal to the subject, and a constant thread throughout their lives. This is I think a blind spot that Wikipedians may have in thinking that this is less likely to be the case. Andre🚐15:43, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That depends if the subject is still alive. And if they have had a biography written about published about their life. Andre🚐15:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My point is that many Wikipedia biographies are not as complete as a 300 page book that a biographer researched and wrote about them over years. Andre🚐16:04, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Why should something being 'private and personal' to the subject of a biography be a reason to include it? Aren't we supposed to build biographies around what secondary sources have to say on the subject, rather than trying to read the subject's mind and decide for them what we think they might want included? AndyTheGrump (talk) 16:26, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not saying to try to read the subject's mind. I'm referring to a situation where a subject's private life might not be known during their heyday, and comes to light later due to a biography being published at the end of their life or after their death. For example, I recently watched the HBO documentary about Mel Brooks, Mel Brooks: The 99 Year Old Man!. Not that Mel Brooks' connection to Jewishness is a secret or under-publicized. The article does mention it, mostly under the section called "Religious beliefs." But if you watch the doc, which is a roundup of Brooks' career, it talks more about his relationship to his Jewish identity and what that meant early in his career and as time went on, why he had an obsession with satirizing Hitler, etc. But you certainly might not have known as much about it in the 70s or in the 90s. Andre🚐16:35, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If currently published works state that a subject's ethnicity/race/religion is an important aspect of their lives, we should include that with sources and with context.
If currently published works do not state that then we should not include it, with or without context.
If currently published sources are unclear about whether it is important to them, discuss the matter on the talk page and get consensus prior to inclusion.
The key is to ask: do sources indicate that the identity is a defining characteristic for the subject? Do sources indicate that the identity is important to understanding the subject, or am I assuming that it is important - because it is important to me? If the latter, don’t include the identity. Blueboar (talk) 16:40, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed, but many cases are not clear-cut. In the case of the French techno artist Gesaffelstein, real name Mike Levy, we mention he was born to Jewish parents. According to Hey Alma[31], "Though Gesaffelstein is a fairly private figure and hasn’t shared how he identifies, there are a few clues that he finds meaning in his Jewish ancestry. The name of his first album is “Aleph,” ... Canadian DJ A-Trak, ... referred to himself and Gesaffelstein as “Sephardic boys” and “Techno altjews” on Instagram." This source is cited in the article, but nothing about this is mentioned. Probably because it is personal and private to the artist and somewhat speculative. But one can imagine that if a biography is written in 30 years, it might have access to private correspondence. Looking at the page history, in this very month, there is a big edit war back and forth about this very thing. Andre🚐16:52, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Feel free to imagine what you like. Meanwhile, since Wikipedia doesn't (or shouldn't) base content on the precognition of contributors, you'll have to do what the rest of us do, and argue on the relevant talk page that sources currently support your proposed text. AndyTheGrump (talk) 17:11, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think the number of issues brought up here indicates that this is something well worth having an essay or guideline about so we can all get on the same page, both literally and metaphorically. I think it would be good to set out when it is legitimate to refer to a person's Jewish religion or descent and when it becomes gratuitous. The guideline should give advice on how to distinguish deliberate bad faith Jew Tagging from everyday good faith mistakes. The guideline should also be clear that Jew Tagging can apply to people who are not actually Jewish but who are merely thought to be by deranged antisemites. I don't think that the guideline would need to be generalised beyond Judaism. As far as I am aware, there is no similar phenomenon affecting other religions but it would be just as egregious if there were and that might even merit a separate guideline if it were to become a comparable problem. --DanielRigal (talk) 17:57, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
But as David Nirenberg points out on p.475 of Anti-Judaism, even Sartre, in passionately defending a Jewish return to France, still engages in idealism and universalism in defining Jews in terms of antisemitic gaze rather than Jewish historical and cultural continuity. Sartre's worldview is that in a perfect world, the Jewish identity would disappear and be subsumed into a universal French identity. That's not realistic and not necessarily desirable either.[32]Andre🚐19:24, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My point is that Wikipedians might as a general rule, sympathize more with the postmodern, post-religious or post-ethnic viewpoint, that particularities or differences are less relevant than commonalities, a materialistic worldview that is just one view of things and may not be applicable to all biographies or other articles or situations. For a modern day American celebrity with limited information about any Jewish or other ethnic identity, yes. But let's make sure that we don't apply that also to cases where it shouldn't apply. Medieval individuals often lived a daily reality of different, such as residing in a ghetto or being forced to wear certain clothing or have certain special taxes and other restrictions. Andre🚐19:50, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
At any rate, forms of "jew-tagging" was an issue in medieval European history, the hat, the yellow badge. We are post WW II, and the vivid example there, of making a racial list. Alanscottwalker (talk) 20:53, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I definitely do not agree that writing about whether someone is Jewish in their biography is equivalent to making them wear a yellow star. That is exactly the type of thing I hope is NOT written in an essay. Respecting and tolerating other cultures doesn't mean erasing or hiding them. We can embrace our differences. Andre🚐23:32, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Again, it depends how you write about it. I've seen (and reverted) numerous examples over the years of biographies of individuals where some negative event or another (criminal charges etc) is followed by a rapid tagging of the three-word reductionist variety. Not quite a yellow star, but the motivation seems much the same: marking as 'one of them'. AKA antisemitism. AndyTheGrump (talk) 00:08, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Believe me, it's not lost on me that making lists of Jews sounds worrisome, but Wikipedia has lists of every type of person, place, and thing, not just Jews. I don't doubt that there are antisemites who tag and list Jews just like the "triple parentheses" on social media. But as I'm sure you are aware, that has been reclaimed by some people. There are also many biographies about notable non-criminal, famous and successful Jewish people that fail to mention or even minimize their Jewishness, even though the subject probably wouldn't mind and might even prefer that, but more importantly the biography (the real ones, not the Wikipedia article) does include that fact prominently. As Thryduulf says, this should be simple, right? If it's an important, well-attested, reasonably comprehensive descriptor or identification that is relevant, it should be included. In fact, I'd be hard-pressed to think of an article about a Jewish person who isn't known primarily for something related to being Jewish like rabbinics or academia, that gives more than a few sentences to their Jewish identity. Mel Brooks' Jewish identity could probably be an entire article. Andre🚐04:24, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If you want to respect differences, you would surely acknowledge that the Commentary essay linked above does not take such a sanguine view. Not everyone is going to see everything the way you do in every editing situation, especially something personal or private to them. Alanscottwalker (talk) 01:33, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
RfC: Bringing back Quickpolls
NO
In the absence of significant prior discussion and workshopping to determine what the scope and processes would be, there is absolutely no chance that a process that was not adopted after a short trial over 20 years ago will be adopted now. Additionally, the discussion below additionally suggests that there is not a great deal of appetite for a process like this, so further discussion may not be the best use of editor's time, although there is not a consensus against doing so if anyone genuinely thinks differently. Thryduulf (talk) 19:02, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Quickpolls were a trial of a system for making fast decisions about problematic users. They consisted of polls among Wikipedia regulars on issues that needed to be quickly resolved. It operated from March to June of 2004, although some action continued into July.
Per WP:RFCBEFORE this RfC is grossly premature, given that there has been no prior discussion on the topic (or none for around 20 years), very few people will be familiar with the way things were done back then, and it is self-evident that it isn't remotely compatible with current practice. Anything remotely related would need substantial revision, rather than 'bringing back' unchanged. An absurd proposal.
No. You didn't even link to Wikipedia:Quickpolls/Rules, which people need to see what you're proposing. And... none of the use-cases Quickpolls existed for are a problem today. Specifically, they were for:
WP:3RR violations. Nowadays admins can just act quickly, we don't need to run some sort of poll.
A sysop misusing their abilities (quickpolls could, apparently, desysop? But only temporarily) I think that it is obvious from looking at the reception to WP:RECALL that quickpolls are not going to replace it.
A user goes on a rampage. Modern admins are empowered to just block in that case.
A user confesses to deliberate trolling. Again, an admin could just drop a WP:NOTHERE block on them, though this is less pressing than the above so I'm not understanding why it needed to go to quickpolls anyway.
It feels like you're anticipating using them for other things (you talk vaguely of problematic users) but if so, that's a totally new proposal and you need to spend more WP:RFCBEFORE time talking about it... and I doubt it would go anywhere. The hard questions, like WP:TEND / WP:CPUSH editing, are, well... hard. Usually they involve back-and-forth accusations and it takes time for uninvolved editors without a deep knowledge of the subject and the sources to untangle who's making reasonable arguments and who isn't. Quickpolls aren't going to help with the sorts of things that we actually have trouble with today; the things that they could resolve, we're mostly pretty good at handling with existing methods (ie. an admin can act swiftly to put out an immediate fire, then later it can get brought to AN/I for review and discussion if there are lingering disagreements or issues.) --Aquillion (talk) 17:54, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
It's apparent that you've made several advancements in the past couple of years regarding your site's appearance, specifically in the ability to manage content organization.
Wikipedia has always conveyed with its bare appearance that it was set up in someone's spare time, even though the content elements have become very sophisticated. A slightly fancier presentation appears long overdue. It will also help people read longer.
Please add a readily available option to make the background of your pages a faint beige. It adds a touch of class and generally makes text easier to read, given that it provides a tiny bit less contrast, as black on white glows fairly quickly. And you already have the option for dark mode (which takes contrast to its own level).
Three variations of this color have come out of discussion. They are best assessed at scale, behind actual content. One is more brown, and two are more peachy. The peachy ones come from popular situations, but I think that the brown one is easier to read from.
The faint brown tint is:
#EEEDDC.
The peachy tints are:
#F8F1E3 is Sepia, from the Wikipedia app (on a smaller screen).
#FFF8E7 is known as Cosmic Latte, which has a Wikipedia article.
Other ideas were mentioned, built on this one; for example, applying this to every Wikimedia project. It's likely that this one simpler idea stands best on its own, for straight-forward implementation, and any others can be considered separately.
The main ongoing objective, besides looking classy, is to help people read Wikipedia articles longer. The shades of brown seem to enable this best. #FFFFDD is comparatively yellow, which doesn't seem to especially satisfy either objective. And #FFFFEC is somewhat faint yellowish green, which accomplishes both a little better, but not as well the more brown. In the idea lab, it was mentioned that #FFFFEC appears too subtly different from white. ~2026-90420-1 (talk) 16:24, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hi! What do you mean by "came out of discussion" and "were mentioned"? If there was a previous on-wiki discussion on the topic, or if you are organizing off-wiki about this, it is ideal to be transparent about it. Regarding the beige color, it is already implemented as an option on the mobile app, so that tint could probably be a good start to extend the implementation! Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 19:06, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As mentioned in the proposal: Three variations of this color have come out of discussion. They are best assessed at scale, behind actual content. One is more brown, and two are more peachy. The peachy ones come from popular situations, but I think that the brown one is easier to read from. #F8F1E3 is Sepia, from the Wikipedia app (on a smaller screen). It's one of the peachy tints. ~2026-90420-1 (talk) 05:23, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for the link to the color tool. Please note that, for some reason, it appears to show the colors in a specific order -- in this case, #F8F1E3 Sepia, #FFF8E7 Cosmic Latte, and then #EEEDDC. And it might still be most helpful to test the colors as backgrounds to text, to see which seems most readable for long periods. --- As mentioned in the Idea Lab, I do that in Word, using its Design > Page Color > More Colors > RGB setting. ~2026-90420-1 (talk) 15:33, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I haven't tested reading them long term, but to the right of this discussion I've put a screenshot with each color for reference. Personally, I use my own background colors (normally I look at project pages in #F0FFF0 "Honeydew"), but I am most partial to Sepia of these three options. mdm.bla22:27, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Renaming of Articles for creation
Should we rename "Articles for creation" to "Pages for creation"? WP:AFC/C does not only apply to articles but to othe rpages in namespaces as well. ~2026-36939-5 (talk) 11:30, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Adding the citizen skin as an option would be really useful since it would make wikipedia look modern and give more options for readers and editors. Rando3214 (talk) 03:20, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Modern was one of the bundled skins way back in 2008. As for Timeless, IIRC it did go through something like that process as it was 10 years ago (in particular before "WMF Stewardship" was added in 2024); look at phab:T154371 and its subtasks. Anomie⚔17:29, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What if some articles could add a comment section?
Like for example, what if an article on a fiction book or series could be commented on by people who feel like the article is missing something? Any thoughts if this is unreasonable? — Preceding unsigned comment added by ~2026-57372-0 (talk) 21:14, 27 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Entertaining this idea a bit, it could be nice to make a place that served as a forum for some topics, as talk pages are NOT a forum. Honestly makes it hard to collaborate when you can't shoot the shit with other editors. There are some unofficial places for Wikipedia in general, like Discord or Reddit, but "You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy." GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 02:13, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I do get it, but the #1 issue with "forum pages" is moderation. There won't be WMF content moderators, it'll be Wikipedians. It's just gonna spiral into being a Facebook comment section. I think if a feature like this were to be implemented, it would have to be turned on for uncontroversial pages.
Here are some examples of pages that shouldn't be allowed to have these pages:
BLPs and recent deaths
Anything subject to WP:ARBCOM measures, broadly construed
Anything relating to race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, disability, etc.
Top-level country pages (i.e. USA, Pakistan, D.R. Congo) and their relations
etc.
Also, it violates neutrality. By allowing anyone to talk about the topic of the article and shove their own (often bad) opinions on the subject, Wikipedia will shift away from being a neutral encyclopedia.
TLDR: It might be cool, but it's not worth the effort for a volunteer community to set up and moderate for civility. even trillion dollar companies struggle doing it. EatingCarBatteries(contribs | talk)02:31, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe the relevant Wikiprojects could host a metaphorical "water cooler" if appropriate. That said, with a few exceptions, I find the participation in Wikiprojects a bit disappointing. There isn't much collaboration, and when new people stop by to find people they are often met with silence. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 03:43, 28 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
almost all the pages on my watchlist, i dont actually add to because i want to watch them, but because i want a easy way to access them and remember them, so i propose favorites, specifically for pages you want to remember, plus, a average user of wikipedia probably only uses it for checking pages, they may have a particular or multiple pages they need to a easy way to access, for example, a person might need to write something on topic like color theory, they could add it to their favorites and not their watchlist as they have no plans to edit it Misterpotatoman (talk) 19:41, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The new mw:Help:Watchlist labels feature might be of interest to you. It enables separating pages within the watchlist, so that you can keep everything listed but hide some in the feed (essentially implementing the long desired "multiple watchlists"). HTH. Quiddity (talk) 19:29, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The new Watchlist labels feature Quiddity linked is great for that but even better could be bookmarks – see here and m:Community Wishlist/W102. To address Anomie's implicit question, browser bookmarks can't be readily accessed from other devices, aren't specific to only Wikipedia articles, can't be used to get recommended articles, can't be shared in bundles, can't be accessed from within the Wikipedia app, etc. One further idea would be enabling notes for bookmarked articles. I'm also using the Watchlist feature like you describe Misterpotatoman. Prototyperspective (talk) 15:47, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I note "can't be readily accessed from other devices" may not be true, several major browsers have cloud sync these days. "Aren't specific to only Wikipedia articles" seems like an advantage to browser bookmarks rather than a disadvantage. "Can't be shared in bundles" seems similarly dependent on the browser; in Firefox I can copy a folder and paste it into other apps. "Can't be accessed from within the Wikipedia app" seem valid, but on the other hand one might question the point of apps reinventing a browser in general. Anomie⚔23:43, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well good note because it wasn't clear but that functionality implies you want to sync all your tabs and I certainly don't want to send all my tabs to some cloud in the US but may entrust WMF with my Wikipedia bookmarks privacy. It may be a disadvantage to you but to me it's an advantage and even required to be usable. Maybe this also needs some using the WP app to see the benefit but it's also that this only would make sense to me on desktop but not on mobile where I just occasionally read things for fun & discovery/curiosity – it would be similar to somehow combining 3 books you're reading with your grocery list and printed pages of a code issue tracker for example, one would like to have these texts separately. At some times one is reading, at other times one is doing other things and some people like to keep this separate. Nobody needs to use the app anyway. With sharing I meant sharing it with other people but I don't know if that's already possible in the app. It's not reinventing a browser in general. And some things require use before recognizing how it's useful. I hope more features get added to the app over time that give it more and more advantages over the mobile Web version (better and login-nonrequiring dark mode is one) such as the Nearby Places map. Prototyperspective (talk) 01:19, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
a addition of a blogs to wikipedia
by what i mean is a separate part of wikipedia that is purely for sharing interesting facts like average probability of a certain leaf, there is no widespread interesting fact sharing platform to my knowledge besides quora posts bug this would be more things you know, whole quora is more lessons you learn from what i've read and quite alot of people would like to fill that feeling, the best place for this would be to do is specific tumblr communities and those are more about fiction to my knowledge, this would be more about real life topics, it would feel out something akin to watching those interesting videos on relatively random topics, it would be separated into many sections, the main thing against this idea is that "why would this encyclopedia have unsourced content?" and to that i say because i think a majority of wikipedias users would also like this feature because they probably know alot of things they would like to share, the actual reason this shouldn't get added is because it would probably be better as separate wiki project, very different from anything to do with wikipedia and basically any other wide stream wikiproject. Misterpotatoman (talk) 09:20, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Misterpotatoman can you clarify your idea a bit further. I think having a shared blogs (what editors are working on now) as part of a project could be interesting and build community, especially if we could somehow grab project members edit summaries to do with articles that are part of the project Not certain about on article as we try and avoid diverting people, but diverting high conflict editors from protected pages could be good.. (With fun, I find wiki meetups and pages to do with Wikipedia on FB and Reddit and mastadon helped.) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wakelamp (talk • contribs) 10:51, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
i think there could be something be blogs purely for sharing interesting things and facts, like those interesting youtube videos but text, it would be separated into alot of topics, as far as i know theres no widespread interesting fact sharing platform anywhere and i good chunk of people want to share interesting facts, Misterpotatoman (talk) 05:54, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The Wikimedia Foundation actually made their own pseudo-social-media-type platform. Basically nobody knows it exists, and basically nobody uses it. So I'm not sure I would expect Wikimedia projects to ever be very good at making something where established alternatives already exist. GMGtalk14:21, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Why would an encyclopedia want to associate itself with something that would have no sourcing or quality standards? Why would a person reading an encyclopedia want to read your unsourced gibberish? --User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 15:55, 4 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"unsourced gibberish" - this is Ideas - blasting people you don't agree with is unhelpful ~``Wakelamp (talk) d[@-@]b
People posting random stuff that they think they know, without anything to back it up beyond "trust me, bro" is far more unhelpful. --User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 13:15, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
well, i guess we could also implement a safeguard which doesn't allow you to publish until there are a specified number of citations per para/heading (to prevent loopholes). the rest of it has to be handled by the editor publishing the blog.
in any case, calling it "unsourced gibberish" is really just overextending. why can't you call it "uncited"? that would be far more acceptable/ woaharang (talk) 14:44, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That’s the problem… I have a feeling that any such project (hosting unsourced content) would quickly devolve into little more than “everyone blasting people they don’t agree with”. Blueboar (talk) 01:07, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia's default warning system (for example, with Twinkle) to problematic editors is an escalating set of five stages. Basically: note, caution, warning, final warning, and then a report for potential blocking. Recent changes reviewers may decide to skip levels, issue single warnings, etc, but the default is five. I feel that's a ridiculously lax standard. Because the harshest sanction we can enforce is to not allow editing, we reserve it for only the most persistent vandals and problematic editors. The problem with that mindset is that the threat of being blocked from editing is not actually a deterrent at all - because what does the bored kid who wants to add "eats poop" to an article care about eventually being unable to continue doing that? I'd like us to default to a three-tier system: caution, warning, block, with a low threshold for reducing that to immediate blocks. For TA's, a 24 or 31 hour block for a few clearly non-constructive edits (or a single egregious edit, such as to BLP articles) should be no big deal and handed out generously. Curious to see what others' thoughts are, especially fellow recent-change patrollers. Matt Deres (talk) 20:38, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In my view, the reason there are four warnings by default is to encourage assuming good faith. You don't have to issue all four warnings before reporting someone to AIV if the vandalism is particularly egregious. That's what {{uw-v4im}} is for.
You may not have to issue all four warnings, but it's also not uncommon to see responses at AIV that the editor has "not been sufficiently warned". That's why I want to address the expectation. And I also want to be clear that I'm not talking about editors that are genuinely struggling with WP's way of doing things. Fuck up a template or a table or something? Well, we've all been there, right? But edits like this and this and this and this and this (those are all items I cleaned up just yesterday) are not editors that are struggling. They know what they're doing and know that they're doing wrong. You don't have to assume anything. Matt Deres (talk) 14:29, 4 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Five is not the default, but often the maximum. But you are right about the most severe sanction we can impose being the extremely trivial one of not allowing editing of one web site. I've lost count of the number of times that I've pointed out that we can't deprive anyone of their liberty for a minute or fine anyone a cent/penny. Despite the fact that I dont care about being blocked (or maybe because of it) I never actually have been. A bit sad, really. Phil Bridger (talk) 22:02, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see how taking these tools away from recent changes patrollers would be useful. When an administrator at AIV says a user was insufficiently warned it's not because the administrator is blindly counting the number of warnings. They're taking the user's behavior into account. It's very, very, very common to see users blocked at AIV based on far fewer (or sometimes zero) warnings. The bot removes blocked users from AIV quickly, so most of these are invisible unless you're looking at the page history. Similarly, recent changes patrollers are not blindly applying warning levels. We take the user's behavior into account, and regularly skip levels, start on a higher level, or report at a lower level, based on what's appropriate. A maximum of two warnings prior to a block is unnecessarily aggressive. Recent changes patrollers are competent enough to report users to AIV after an appropriate number of warnings (whatever that number may be), and administrators are competent enough to act solely based on a user's behavior (and not whether they've received exactly 4 warnings). There's no problem here to be solved. --tony15:03, 4 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure what problem we'd be trying to solve by discouraging or preventing editors from issuing good faith notices that are at least as informational as they are actual warning. For instance, most new editors have no idea that WP:FILMPLOT exists, and as such there's Template:uw-plotsum1, and for repeat offenders, Template:uw-plotsum2. Are we going to say that editors are no longer allowed to issue that notice, which doesn't just tell an editor that they violated plot summary guidelines, but also provides some explanation and links to other relevant guidelines? DonIago (talk) 18:22, 4 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Nobody is suggesting that we block people for adding too much verbiage to a film plot. Why bring that up at all? I'm talking about deliberately nonconstructive edits: deliberate factual errors, libel, vandalism, etc. Matt Deres (talk) 14:33, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It's encouraging to me to have an admin acknowledge that they wouldn't block an editor who was repeatedly violating a guideline and presumably refusing to communicate about it. DonIago (talk) 21:26, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As a general rule, I only block from AIV if it's bad faith. For anything else, it needs to go to a venue where they have a chance to defend themselves. I might make an exception if they're really persistent and you've explained in plain English and without templates what the problem is. But templating someone for adding their favourite plot point to a film article is biting the newcomer, which is more harmful than the edit itself. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts?21:32, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My apologies, it seems, unlike my usual pattern, I didn't read your prior message literally enough. I wouldn't take someone to AIV for plot summary issues because that's not vandalism. If it was on the same article repeatedly that would likely be a 3RN problem, and if it was multiple articles it would be ANI most likely. DonIago (talk) 21:39, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose Left unchecked, punishment generally drifts towards being more severe over time. People get accustom to a punishment, and think that someone deserves worse, implements such new punishment, and then the cycle begins again until it becomes so cruel and ridiculous reform becomes necessary. Organizations left to their own devices will grow their bureaucracy, policy, and rules until it becomes so unwieldy it crumbles, but in the mean time people are forced to follow those rules or face increasingly harsh punishment. I would like us to move away from total "block" being the default, we are to quick to resort to exile. Other sanctions that are less severe, with time limits, should be developed and implemented.
If you think temporarily disallowing someone from editing a webpage in bad faith is in any way on some slippery slope to cruelty, I can only suggest you touch grass. Not getting to add "Did you know my ess has many many nooks and cranny" to an article is not a punishment at all and blocking that person has had zero negative repercussions for anyone. Matt Deres (talk) 14:46, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I've long thought (as one of the most active admins at AIV) that we give too many chances, especially for spammers (who are not bored kids and really should be blocked on sight). It's worth having the flexibility that the current warnings offer, but there's absolutely no need to go through all four in order. I'll happily block after level 3, or if you skip from 1 to 4; feel free to start at 3 and report on the next edit if there's no way it's good faith (like most of Matt's examples). But for borderline cases, it's nice to have level 1 for "that might have been a mistake" or "I'm not sure what you're trying to do". Level 2 is more "maybe you don't know it but what you're doing is disruptive", and level 3 is "no seriously, you need to knock it off now". I'd happily get rid of level 4, which is essentially level 3 but more so. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts?19:06, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The question is, why do people habitually give out all four warnings for obviously bad-faith edits? Do they image it's policy? Or are they just on autopilot, and following the Twinkle/Huggle defaults? Suffusion of Yellow (talk) 20:21, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think Huggle and similar are programmed to just escalate until they get through all four. There's basically no human intervention other than pressing the "vandalism" button. I think Twinkle will suggest a warning level but the user can override it with an extra click or two. A lot of inexperienced users feel they have to go through all four warnings before they can report; I thought that when I was new. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts?20:34, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Does the number indicate A) the level of severity of the combined edits, or B) the amount of times someone did something naughty.
The first question is, do people habitually give out all four warnings for obviously bad-faith edits? Certainly some people do, especially if they are doing simple Wikipedia:Recent changes patrol work, but others probably don't.
With counter-vandalism tools, escalating levels are automatic. You don't see the vandal/spammer/whatever's talk page, so you don't know if there were prior problems. In that sense, it's definitely (B) in practice, even if it "should" be (A).
One difficulty with decreasing the levels is that notifications aren't always seen or read immediately. Consider this sequence:
Van Vandal vandalizes article A.
Van Vandal opens article B to vandalize it.
Dave Defender sees the vandalism to article A, reverts it and leaves a warning.
Van Vandal posts the vandalism to article B.
It's only now – with two articles vandalized – that Val Vandal has any chance of seeing Dave's warning. But someone may well see the vandalism in article B, and notice that the warning's timestamp precedes the timestamp for the article B edit, and be angry that Van Vandal was vandalizing after (and in spite of) being "previously" warned.
And that's assuming that all warnings are correctly delivered. Sometimes a warning for "vandalism" is actually someone correctly removing poorly sourced or erroneous information. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:58, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
With counter-vandalism tools, escalating levels are automatic. You don't see the vandal/spammer/whatever's talk page, so you don't know if there were prior problems. Only with some countervandalism tools. One thing I like about Twinkle is that when you revert an edit with it, it redirects you to their user talk page (so you can see previously issued warnings). Granted, doing this on mobile is tedious, as I have to repeatedly close the auto-opened edit window to access the warning templates from the TwinkleMobile menu, but I do get to see if there have been any prior issues with the editor. SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 22:12, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Programmes like Huggle just show the user a diff and they select one of several options. If they select vandalism, the programme reverts the edit and drops the next warning in the sequence without any human involvement. The human could be two or three diffs further on by the time the programme has left the warning. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts?22:18, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'll note that (at least some) counter-vandalism tools are continuously evolving; WP:WikiShield, a "descendant" of WP:Huggle, does have a setting to allow the user to choose the warning level or have it selected automatically. I haven’t used Huggle or WP:AntiVandal recently and can't remember if they have similar settings. ClaudineChionh (she/her · talk · email · global) 03:38, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah this is the exact reason I have the settings. I sometimes find myself skipping straight to level 2 or level 3, as it all depends on the context of the edit.AV has the same, but I don't think HG does. – LuniZunie(talk)12:04, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Interceptor is another that allows users to see prior warnings. I oppose the changes proposed because having 4 warnings can be helpful, especially when an edit looks like vandalism but was actually good faith. As an aside, yesterday I dealt with a vandal on Wikiversity, who made 19 edits before being blocked, all vandalism, and they included adding "I am a vandal" in Ukrainian. They were blocked for 5 days, and after they trolled their talk page so much that their talk page was deleted, they had TPA revoked and their block extended to 2 weeks. I'm not sure if there's a lesson to be learned ("someone will always AGF more than you"?), or if I just wanted to rant. Anyway, I support assuming good faith and oppose unnecessary blocks for vandals who might well just stop anyway. lp0 on fire()11:29, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There is also some degree of minimizing sysop workload. Many vandals get bored quickly so will stop on their own after a few edits. A higher threshold limits reporting to cases that most likely need a block. And of course, gross-vandalism, obvious socks, LTAs, etc. can be reported with no warning at all. ~2025-41540-19 (talk) 04:53, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I generally ignore levels of warnings, and go directly to an appropriate one (currently I use Twinkle), regardless of what has gone before with a particular case. Admins who have dealt with vandalising users after my warnings have never made any comment on this behaviour, and I've been doing it for years. Hand wringing on this issue seems a little pointless as a vandal is a vandal. I've got here from ClaudineChionh's notification notified above. - Walternot in the Epstein files Ego16:44, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Same. If someone's engaging in unambiguous vandalism or throwing personal attacks around, I see no reason to give them the 'good faith' notifications. They know what they're doing. DonIago (talk) 03:08, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Since the latest policy proposal on using LLMs is unlikely to pass, I thought that maybe a different approach could work. Most of these proposals suffer from the enforcement problem: that it's extremely difficult to definitively determine whether any given text was LLM-generated (see this report by WikiEdu for the discussion on what works and what doesn't). The community would not want to sanction editors based on uncertain evidence.
Alternative proposal: address the harms directly! Rather than trying to detect LLM use itself, what if we focused enforcement on the specific problems that LLM-generated content causes? Consider the major issues with LLMs
Citation accuracy: LLMs are often unreliable at faithfully representing sources. We could impose stricter sanctions and strengthen enforcement of WP:V, especially for editors who repeatedly add claims that don't match their citations.
Volume and review capacity: LLMs enable editors to add large amounts of content slop quickly, overwhelming our ability to review it adequately. We could implement rate-limiting measures, perhaps restrictions on the number or scope of edits that editors can make within a given timeframe, with newer editors subject to stricter limits.
These measures target the harm to encyclopedia quality directly. They can work alongside (and serve as an enforcement mechanism of) a more general ban if we end up adopting it. They can also work on their own if we don't adopt a general ban on LLM content.
Putting aside the way the above is written, the enforcement problem applies to a lot of our policies, we are reactive because of the open nature of the project. There isn't really an enforcement gap in terms of stricter sanctions for Citation accuracy, people get blocked a lot. The gap there is in detection in the first place, which we don't have the manpower to do. As for rate limiting, not sure how that would work. Even WP:MASSCREATE requires manual oversight, and creation is easier to track technically than edits in general. CMD (talk) 11:36, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There isn't really an enforcement gap in terms of stricter sanctions for Citation accuracy, people get blocked a lot I didn't know this is the case. What is generally considered a block-worthy behaviour? But in any case detecting inaccurate citations is a much simpler task than detecting LLM-generated content.
As to the rate limiting, it's a problem that a lot of other organisations have solved in various contexts. Before discussing technical details let's first establish whether it's a good idea in principle. Alaexis¿question?12:36, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Disruptive editing in the article space often results in blocks, I don't think most admins have a strict checklist. I don't think it is easier to detect inaccurate citations in any case, llm use can be blatant, whereas checking citations almost always requires investigative work. As for rate limiting, there isn't going to be support for a generic number of edits or amount of content filter because they mask a huge range of variation. If you are proposing something more specific, there'll need to be at least broad technical details. CMD (talk) 13:44, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
detecting inaccurate citations is a much simpler task than detecting LLM-generated content. Actually the opposite, overwhelmingly so. A great deal of LLM-generated content is pretty obvious linguistically. But verifying the citations and source-to-text integrity can take hours or even days depending on length of the article and availability of sources. (This is the same conclusion WikiEdu came to recently - verifying AI content takes longer than just researching/writing from scratch.) Gnomingstuff (talk) 15:55, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The wikiedu report I linked mentions false positives and clearly the no tool would give you full certainty.
Obvious AI content is obvious, but not all AI content is obvious. It is also the case that some content that is, to some reviewers, obviously AI is not in fact AI. The rates of detection reported in studies vary greatly with 75-99% detection of AI content as AI, and 2-50% for false positives (human-written content detected as AI). I can't immediately find it, but @WhatamIdoing has previously cited a study that found the humans who are most reliable at detecting whether something is or is not AI are those who themselves make significant use of AI tools (which describes few of the Wikipedians who are most vocal about AI use). Thryduulf (talk) 17:21, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I would guess the people who work heavily on AI cleanup are probably much more knowledgeable about AI, at this point, than the control group in that study.
A lot of what we get as AI content is either completely unreviewed, or reviewed little enough that if they made an effort to hide it, they didn't do a very good job, because the biggest tells of AI use are not necessarily intuitive or obvious to laypeople. (Which is the case with most large language model-related tells. These are quirks of vector math, they're not going to fit a palatable spiritual narrative.) Gnomingstuff (talk) 21:56, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Why? It still works probabilistically and has false positives. How comfortable would you be with imposing sanctions based on a black box that told you that a given edit is LLM-generated with the probability of 83%? Alaexis¿question?23:05, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Depends on context. If it's an editor who's been warned and shown no sign of changing, pretty comfortable. Would obv use ordinary analysis as well. But Pangram has false positives less than 1% of the time Kowal2701 (talk) 00:03, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Kowal2701, I saw this number in the draft that you've created but to be honest I doubt it. I tested it and reached 100% fully human written with a simple prompt and 3 minor copyediting tweaks in a passage of ~100 words. I don't want to describe it here per WP:BEANS but if you're interested I can share it privately. Alaexis¿question?12:16, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
<1% is for false positives, I'm sure it's much higher for false negatives. Whatever troubles we're having, education systems have it much worse, I'm amazed LLMs were released with no considerations for that, like making all output identifiable. Btw it was Gnomingstuff who created the draft Kowal2701 (talk) 12:27, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry @Gnomingstuff! Btw I think that the draft can be promoted to the mainspace.
The paper says that Commercial detectors outperform open-source, with Pangram achieving near-zero FNR and FPR rates that remain robust across models, threshold rules, ultra-short passages, "stubs" (≤ 50 words) and 'humanizer' tools. Note that it hasn't been published in a peer-reviewed journal. I'll go out on a limb and say that I don't believe these numbers. To check false positives I'd need more Pangram credits, that would be an interesting exercise. Alaexis¿question?19:58, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah one of the reasons it's in sandbox is because the efficacy section is scant and mainstream media coverage is just not really there at the moment Gnomingstuff (talk) 04:24, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is not at all what I said. As an example, a user with an LLM can create 1000 articles in one day overwhelming the capacity to review them and do even basic notability checks. The rate limit should be set high enough not to affect human contributors. Alaexis¿question?14:21, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Adding a lot of poor-quality content to Wikipedia is harmful and should be stopped, whether that content is human-generated, AI-generated or a mix.
Adding a lot of high-quality content to Wikipedia is beneficial and should be encouraged, whether that content is human-generated, AI-generated or a mix.
The flaw with using LLMs is one that many editors fall into even when NOT using LLMs: not doing proper research before you write.
A proper article is source based… the writer first reads LOTS of sources and then summarizes what they say (and then cites the best of those sources to provide verification for that summary).
A poor article is text based… the writer first decides what he wants the text to be, and then finds (and cites) a source to verify it. That is the wrong/backwards approach.
That said… You CAN use LLMs for research… to locate potential sources… but you need to actually read those sources in order to see if they fall in line with what other sources say. You can not properly summarize the sources based only on an LLM. You need to read lots of other sources as well. Blueboar (talk) 14:49, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Just make WP:LLMDISCLOSE a guideline, as I've been saying for over a year now. Experienced editors should be able to understand that presenting text or ideas that originated in an LLM as their own words goes against WP:PLAGIARISM and/or WP:FREECOPY and/or WP:NOSHARE. Those guidelines apply in both article and talk space. New editors who are non-transparent about their LLM use get blocked all the time. Some of those people were headed for blocks anyway, but some of the blocks could possibly have been averted by a clearer explanation of community expectations for transparency about the provenance of text. We can litigate the pros and cons of various AI use cases, but there's literally no constructive reason to be non-transparent about the source of the content you insert here and most of the LLM-related problems we face will go away if people start following WP:LLMDISCLOSE. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)17:33, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The people who would do the most harm using LLMs would be least likely to disclose their LLM usage. If they add unreviewed LLM slop it means they don't know or don't care about our basic policies. Why would they obey LLMDISCLOSE? Alaexis¿question?22:08, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It's a combination of people using LLMs in good faith and people editing in bad faith (mostly spammers) who use LLMs because that's how you spam nowadays. Gnomingstuff (talk) 20:38, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That's a great point. So we have two personas
Alice: a well-intentioned user who wants to contribute to Wikipedia and is not aware of our policies and of the issues with LLMs. For these users, a well-placed warning is all we need to prevent them from copy-pasting LLM output. The warning can be added based on existing policies such as WP:V.
Bob can be a troll, a paid editor or a true believer with an axe to grind. They can use LLMs to generate a higher volume of edits and make the violations harder to detect.
I regularly talk to new users and I can confidently say that both types exist. The measures I proposed were mostly to deal with the second type of editors. It's possible that the existing mechanisms already handle them just fine but I'm not sure they do, considering that they require manual admin/editor work. Alaexis¿question?22:59, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
While this is true, it's the same principle we use for WP:COIs and especially WP:PAID - it means that we can block the worst abusers on sight as soon as we determine they're using LLMs. In both cases I'd prefer a total ban, but a declaration requirement backed by instablocks for knowing violations (maybe one warning for people who might not realize) will at least let us remove many of the worst abusers as soon as we recognize that they're using LLMs. If you flip it around, the fact that the worst abusers wouldn't obey LLMDISCLOSE is the entire point - we're always going to have to catch them, sure, but LLMDISCLOSE means we can block them instantly once we catch them, with no further debate or discussion needed beyond maybe one second chance for people who go "oops I'm sorry, I didn't know" and follow the guideline going forwards. --Aquillion (talk) 15:25, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The lead paragraph of WP:LLMDISCLOSE, verbatim, should definitely be a guideline if not a policy. Honestly, I think it should be in the Terms of Use. Arguing that we shouldn't require users to do something because bad-faith users won't do it is like saying we should ditch verifiability because vandals don't care. lp0 on fire()11:48, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The huge difference is that a source can be checked by anyone who has access to it (for many sources - literally by anyone with the internet connection).
To steelman your argument, it's more like the disclosure of COI and paid editing. Here we also don't have the ability to check whether an editor is paid for his edits. I don't know if this disclosure policy can be considered successful. Alaexis¿question?12:00, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
But would you argue we should repealWP:PAID just because we can't catch everyone? That would be absurd. Having it is still extremely valuable, since it's what lets us instantly block the worst paid editors when we catch them. LLMDISCLOSE would work the same way - it's not a magic cure-all, but it would be a huge improvement over having nothing. --Aquillion (talk) 15:28, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Let's say I ask ChatGPT a question, and it gives me a piece of text as an answer. Can someone else find that specific piece of text in the internet on his own? And if the answer is no, can we say (from the point of view of copyright law) that the text was "published", and not merely privately shared? Cambalachero (talk) 14:43, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
WP:PLAGIARISM doesn't care if the text you falsely present as your own was privately shared or published. If you didn't write it youself, you cannot insert it into Wikipedia unless you disclose the source and provide proper attribution. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)15:47, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I do not agree. The combo of both a lack of author and a lack of publication (understanding both terms in the copyright sense) means that there is no plagiarism even if the text is copypasted elsewhere. And note that Wikipedia:Plagiarism does not say anything about this specific scenario. Cambalachero (talk) 16:12, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Respectfully, this is why I am urging the community to adopt WP:LLMDISCLOSE as a guideline, to make it clear to people like you that the lack of copyright on LLM text does not make it acceptable to claim it as your own, just as it is unacceptable to claim other forms of public domain or mechanistically generated text as your own. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)16:18, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In other words, you can't justify your proposal if it is challenged by someone with actual arguments instead of mere acronyms, so you want a "guideline" to shut the door to any discussion and have things be your way... not by force of reason, but by reason of force. Cambalachero (talk) 16:36, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Not at all, my argument is simple: per the terms of use of Wikipedia, any editor who inserts text here is representing that they own the copyright on that material and are releasing it under a Wikipedia-compatible license. The only exceptions are limited quotes, which must be clearly marked and attributed, and public domain content, which must be clearly marked and attributed. LLM text is not copyrightable, as you have argued above, so it cannot be released under a Wiki-compatible license, so it must be clearly marked and attributed as one of the exceptions if it is inserted at all. That's not acronym bludgeoning, and I don't think it's difficult to understand. You are allowed to disagree with me: I'm not the king of Wikipedia, and this proposal (which I oppose) isn't about LLMDISCLOSE anyway. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)16:50, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It isn't? Oh, you must have confused me with that "Just make WP:LLMDISCLOSE a guideline, as I've been saying for over a year now" bolded text that I replied earlier. Cambalachero (talk) 16:56, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@LWG, please see https://creativecommons.org/2023/08/18/understanding-cc-licenses-and-generative-ai/ under "CC Licenses and outputs of generative AI", especially the line that says If you create works using generative AI, you can still apply CC licenses to the work you create with the use of those tools. Creative Commons "encourages" (but does not and cannot require) people to label generative AI output as CC-0. This is for the convenience of re-users, not because of some fundamental incompatibility with the license. After all, a typo fix or a one-word reply is not copyrightable either, and Wikipedia editors have been "licensing" such uncopyrightable edits for 25 years now.
We could set a higher standard, as we do for (e.g.,) WP:NFCC. However, we should not say that there are licensing or legal problems with posting uncopyrightable content on wiki. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:43, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the link. What I see on that page: The CC license you choose will apply to the creative work that you contribute to the final product, even if the portion produced by the generative AI system itself may be uncopyrightable. So I'm not sure I have the same understanding as you do there. The copyright status of LLM output is above my paygrade, but if it's public domain, as has been argued by others, I don't see how it doesn't fall under the same requirements as other public domain content. -- LWGtalk(VOPOV)20:31, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, LLM output (according to what others say) at least usually does fall under "the same requirements as other public domain content".
But: In terms of the CC license itself (NB: not including any additional rules that the English Wikipedia chooses to adopt – just the actual legally binding contract in which you "agree to irrevocably release your text under the CC BY-SA 4.0 License"), there are no requirements for public domain content.
For example, you can "license" a typo correction, like you did in this edit, even though that is a non-copyrightable public domain edit. The typo correction doesn't become copyrighted or further restricted by the license, but you're not violating the license by posting something that is not eligible for copyright.
The same logic applies (as far as anyone can tell, at least under US law at the moment) to LLM output. It's not eligible for copyright protection, but posting it on wiki doesn't violate the Creative Commons license.
Claiming that you wrote something when you definitely didn't write it is plagiarism. (Call it "lying about who wrote this" if that's easier to understand.) WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:19, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think it's black and white. If I consult a dictionary to find the right word I don't need to credit it. With the LLMs the question is how much human review and/or changes are needed for me to be considered the author. Alaexis¿question?15:57, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If you post something to Wikipedia, unless it is clearly marked as a quote, then you are representing it as your work. If you are copying the content from somewhere without attribution, that is plagiarism. And the argument about words you have looked up in a dictionary is a straw man. Donald Albury18:16, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Could we get a very simple brightline rule of "editors may not use LLMs for paid editing"? This includes the edits themselves, the disclosures, and addressing concerns about the edits on talk pages. Hopefully that's a simple, brightline, "don't speed with a body in the trunk" type rule. Tazerdadog (talk) 22:15, 5 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think that is a very good example of why such a bright-line rule is desirable. The imbalance of time between a paid editor using an LLM and volunteers reviewing manually is untenable. Tazerdadog (talk) 00:58, 7 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
To quote from there
“
Main concerns
Edit quality: OKA editors are making large-scale changes that introduce errors and LLM artefacts.
Overwrites: repeated overwrites of existing articles during LLM-assisted translation which breaks templates/infoboxes, and makes it hard to review because they're not incremental changes.
Coordinated mass-editing: OKA trackers indicate various planned campaigns for mass changes (e.g. the Simplify lead campaign) affecting large numbers of pages without on-wiki discussion or consensus.
This seems like something that would have been discussed in the past, but I haven't seen any discussions so here goes...
Quick caveat: I'm just recently getting back into Wikipedia editing, so there's a good chance I'm not up to date on how some of this stuff works - so take the below with a grain of salt.
Many (most?) categories on Wikipedia (and likely on other sites like Commons) look to me like they could be automatically generated by querying WikiData.
For example, take https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Albums. This category could be easily represented with a WikiData query - "Give me all Wikipedia pages that correspond to 'instance of' 'album'".
Over the long-term, I think it would be way more scalable and maintainable to generate Category lists automatically using WikiData, rather than requiring editors to manually keep these up to date.
Benefits:
Saves time for editors with adding categories. As long as pages are tagged with the relevant properties in WikiData, editors don't need to go into the "Category" section and select appropriate Categories for pages.
Categories should become vastly more accurate/comprehensive over time. As far as I understand, accuracy of Categories currently depends on editors putting manpower into manual categorization. Instead if we can rely on our data and generate the Categories based on the data, the Categories should start to maintain themselves.
Nudges editors in a more productive direction.
---- Current state (to my knowledge): If a page is missing from a Wikipedia category, the editor is encouraged to manually add the page to that category on Wikipedia, on a specific language Wikipedia.
---- If automatic categories are implemented: Editors are encouraged to fix the underlying metadata in WikiData - which provides more flexibility/value overall.
This should make it easier for different languages to benefit from WikiData/categories. Rather than each wiki maintaining its own set of Categories, if the data is all centralized in WikiData and Categories are automatically generated, then every language wiki could benefit from the same Categories I'd think.
Another option:
Another possibility would be allowing let users to associate a WikiData query with a manually-created Category. Then, let the user click "run query" to get back a list of pages from the query. This would let the user compare the manually-curated pages in the Category to the query-generated Category pages.
Another option:
Create an alternative type of Category (maybe call it "auto-generated Categories" or similar) to fulfill this need, rather than messing with/impacting the existing Category system. And allow users to look at Categories and Auto-generated Categories side-by-side. This could be a beta feature for awhile, invisible by default until the bugs are worked out. Ancient9983 (talk) 10:42, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I like this idea, and suggest that it not really be "automatic categories", but more like "automatic suggestions". It might be more valuable to Commons. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:31, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A problem there is that other than what you may expect, Wikipedia usually has more structured data in categories than Wikidata. This is because there's only few users only running few and usually very limited bulk data imports and because data in Wikipedia is not systematically imported to Wikidata. A tool to do so is the HarvestTemplates tool which can get data from temples into Wikidata but it has issues and nobody is developing it further and is only about templates anyway.
For the other direction of Wikidata->Wikipedia, a tool to do this is petscan & list-building tool & listeria (forgot which of these is best suited) as described in this video. However, it requires quite some time, manual reruns to update things, and most importantly doesn't scale and is limited to highly-motivated highly-active technicallyskilled users. On Commons, automatic addition based on Wikidata is done via the Wikidata infobox template. However, it only adds a small subset of categories which have been requested individually on the talk page which has lots of requested in need for volunteer developers to help out with. For example, I requested the addition of automatic categories for software categories for the data on which programming language it was written in and things like that which were recently added. And I requested the birth year and death year categories to be added by the template which are currently added by contributors manually (0 replies so far). Note that this only works for categories that have a Wikidata item and were linked to it.
Over the long-term, I think it would be way more scalable and maintainable to generate Category lists automatically using WikiData, rather than requiring editors to manually keep these up to date. What it needs imo are ways to keep both in sync. That will also surface contradictions and thereby enable seeing & fixing flaws (see link above). Categories are created by Wikipedians. Categories part of a series (such as a category for every year) could also be created automatically (e.g. the one for 2026). Also note that a surprisingly large fraction of Wikidata items, including many linked to popular broad articles that are well categorized, do not have their key or any instance of and/or subclass of properties set and not very rarely are the ones set false.
then every language wiki could benefit from the same Categories I'd think. Please see Wish375: A tool to copy Wikipedia categories to another language Wikipedia. Note that it's not useful but problematic if you create finely subcateegorizing categories when the respective Wikipedia doesn't have so many articles to make that useful. A wikipedia with articles on just 3 books published in a year may not want to subcategorize them by genre for example.
allowing let users to associate a WikiData query with a manually-created Category That would be great and I meant to propose sth related to this regarding incomplete Commons categories.
Create an alternative type of Category (maybe call it "auto-generated Categories" Maybe the wish 375 could be extended with this idea. I don't think English Wikipedia in specific would have a lot of reasonable/useful auto-generated categories that aren't yet categories so I don't think this would be useful here. Prototyperspective (talk) 15:04, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree about not over-categorizing subjects. First, it's not practical to drill down through a dozen cats to find a nearly empty category like "Category:British detective books published in 1952" at the end. Very small wikis might benefit from not having too many categories beyond the very basic list in mw:ORES/Articletopic.
Second, people might actually prefer a Wikipedia:Category intersection approach (how most modern websites work, e.g., if you go to a real estate website and filter for houses of a particular size and price), and putting detailed individual cats on the page. In that case, you want Category:British publications, Category:Detective books, and Category:1952, and the rest can be sorted out from there. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:26, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The second point is an interesting subject where there's quite some potential for improvements/developments I think. Here one can theoretically already use the deepcategory search operator which is far too unknown, underused and not integrated anyhow (eg into the search page). Problems with it are:
It fails or only shows results up to a certain limit for large categories like deepcategory:Science (where one would have to use petscan or similar) but it actually works for deepcategory:1952 which also is a quite large cat with 41,566 articles. Also worth noting is that still many articles miss key categories (or have only too broad categories instead of being in the category about exactly the article's topic).
Often, there are some miscategorizations. A tool to see why an article is somewhere underneath a category would help improving or fixing the categorizations and I requested such here (voting open) albeit focused on use for Commons. But even if such a tool is built and it's widely used by people to improve categorization, there probably are still quite many flaws (it always depends on the category). The miscategorizations often limit the usefulness or accuracy of the cat intersection/filter.
Relevant categories are difficult to know or find and not eg suggested on the category page to create dynamic filtering. Currently people would have to know about the deepcat search operator and then manually type what intersection they have in mind into the search bar.
Unfortunately one problem I see here is how bad the current user interface is for Wikidata. Realistically unless it was completely overhauled to be more user friendly I personally would not want to have to edit Wikidata just to update something on Wikipedia. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested«@» °∆t°18:06, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Other than the missing button to add a statement at the same place at the top (phab:T142082), which issue(s) do you see with it? The input fields already have autocomplete and also show the possible/expected properties to enter first (or only). One problem maybe is navigating to instances that are subclasses or things like that – do you mean such navigational things? If any of what the user suggested was implemented I'd imagine sth to add things to a dynamic category could be shown directly on the category page on Wikipedia without having to go to Wikidata.
In any case, it seems more reasonable to let changes to Wikidata trickle down into Wikipedia(s) and changes here to trickle up to Wikidata. @Ancient9983 I suggest to sometimes create sparql queries for the things you have in mind like "Give me all Wikipedia pages that correspond to 'instance of' 'album'" with that you'll often see if you compare it to the Wikipedia category that oftentimes Wikipedia is more complete (even when Wikidata has some items that are missed in Wikipedia). You can somewhat easily create such queries with this. This should make it easier for different languages to benefit from WikiData/categories. Rather than each wiki maintaining its own set of Categories If the Wikipedias' changes via categories and infoboxes are synced to Wikidata then the same thing is achieved without substituting categories. The categories retrieved from Wikidata could also be 'WD suggested categories' that are only added as normal categories when users here review them by going through the backlog. Prototyperspective (talk) 18:42, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I mean that the whole interface needs to be chucked out and redone, and that noone should have to edit Wikidata to edit Wikipedia. It's a shame that the bridge to backflush data from Wikipedia to Wikidata hasn't been created, as it would solve this issue. No amount of tinkering with the current Wikidata interface will solve the problem. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested«@» °∆t°20:31, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have to agree with ActivelyDisinterested on this. When I look at a Wikidata page, I find it completely incomprehensible to me. It might as well be in ancient Sumerian. If I wanted to edit it, I would not even know where to begin. I don’t even understand how it is structured.
So… I tend to be wary of any attempt to integrate the two projects. And I strongly oppose any proposal that suggests that we would have to go to a Wikidata page to make a change appear on a WP page. Less adamant going the other way… but still wary. Blueboar (talk) 02:10, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well I have to say such criticism isn't as is quite constructive. It's unclear. But if you can explain it more clearly maybe some things could be improved there. It's very unlikely the whole interface will be fully overhauled to sth entirely different. I always found it quite self-explanatory and don't know what you don't understand about it. It's as simple as this:
There are 'items' which can have Wikipedia article links. Other than such links they're composed of Property:Value statements. For example, Instance of: Building. It's as simple as that. To make it complete and you don't really need to know this early, there are also Qualifiers for Values. One example for that is Language: English (for example if the Value is a website URL). If you want to edit you need to as said click the "add a statement" button on an item or if you want to create a new item in the left main menu panel select "Create a new Item". I don't think arguments the UI is that incomprehensible hold water in the face of this simplicity. People say the same about Wikipedia; well you got to actually go ahead and use it and try – then the things you need to know will quickly become simple. Nevertheless, I don't support requiring users to go to Wikidata anyway. Prototyperspective (talk) 12:08, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
General Background Color
Hello. [I have not seen much of the inner workings of Wikipedia previously, so please excuse me if my letter format, including the compliments preceding my idea, is thought of as superfluous.]
Thank you all for all of your efforts collectively for 25 years.
It's apparent that you've made several advancements in the past couple of years
regarding your site's appearance, specifically in the ability to manage content
organization.
I have a suggestion just regarding the overall visual, and it should be fairly
simple, because of the CSS layer of website code. It might take even a single
change effecting all of your pages.
Wikipedia has always conveyed with its bare appearance that it was set up in
someone's spare time, even though the content elements have become very
sophisticated.
But given that you're touting your 25 years, and drawing attention to your
extensive processes and the many people involved, a slightly fancier presentation
appears long overdue.
Please make the background of your pages a faint beige. It adds a touch of class
and generally makes text easier to read, given that it provides a tiny bit less
contrast, as black on white glows fairly quickly. Color #FFFEF5 is an example.
With the various options that you've been adding, including the dark option (which
takes contrast to its own level), maybe you'll feel it best to make this an
option.
Personally, I've never quite understood why people want everything to be grey-on-grey rather than adjusting the brightness of their display if things are too bright for them. Anomie⚔12:47, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Just to keep thoughts on the actual suggestion, it's all of the existing colors on beige, not grey on grey. And darkening your display lessens all of the colors, so it actually makes things more grey on grey.
Also, this isn't about every other website or every other application, most of which don't have this problem. This is about Wikipedia. So, it's inappropriate to adjust your display for just Wikipedia windows.
And this isn't a random suggestion; it's an actual step that has improved readability in various presentations. A hint of beige just makes everything less harsh and helps people to keep reading, which is the intent. ~2026-90420-1 (talk) 15:48, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If we want to make it an option, we should probably take this to Meta-Wiki or MediaWiki wiki so that it would be on all Wikimedia projects. ✨ΩmegaMantis✨(he/him) ❦blather | ☞spy on me 21:00, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
One idea I have toyed with in the past is going the other way, applying a very light tint for non article pages - a pale green for draft pages, a pale red for old revisions, or something like that. Enough to make it visible at a glance that a reader is not looking at an actual live article. Never got around to mocking up some CSS for testing it, though. Andrew Gray (talk) 21:02, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That would be quite useful, though I could see people getting annoyed about it. Interestingly, when I use the Wikipedia app, I have mode set to sepia tone, but since pages in the Wikipedia namespaces and some other namespaces aren't exactly supported as in app mode and just open a mobile version, the background turns white and so I get a version of what you are describing, in reverse. ✨ΩmegaMantis✨(he/him) ❦blather | ☞spy on me 21:07, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@ONUnicorn ...you know, it wouldn't surprise me if I have been working off a hazy memory of that! It doesn't seem to be the case for any of the main ones listed at Wikipedia:Skin (I tested them all on WP, WPT, and mainspace) but possibly it was there for a period and off again. Andrew Gray (talk) 23:25, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you very much for showing all of the colors that have been mentioned. And it's interesting to see that the text color isn't quite black. Regarding the exact shade of beige, it should just be kept in mind that the color as an entire background seems darker than a box sample, and I think that subtlety might be most effective for extended reading. --- Also, to help get this implemented, for the most common situation, is it best to keep it as simple as possible? The other ideas that are building on the idea to just change the standard background appear to be helpful for more-specific situations, so they might be best as separate options. --- For the vast majority of the situations, the other ideas might be overwhelming to users. This includes that users might not understand why they're seeing differing backgrounds. For that purpose, it actually might be most helpful to have a clearly worded (and distinctly colored?) banner at the top of the content for unusual types of content. ~2026-90420-1 (talk) 14:48, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I appear to have replied to the wrong message, above. It might be helpful for this message board to have a horizontal separator line after each non-indented (top-level?) message. In any case, I've pasted my message here: --- Thank you very much for showing all of the colors that have been mentioned. And it's interesting to see that the text color isn't quite black. Regarding the exact shade of beige, it should just be kept in mind that the color as an entire background seems darker than a box sample, and I think that subtlety might be most effective for extended reading. --- Also, to help get this implemented, for the most common situation, is it best to keep it as simple as possible? The other ideas that are building on the idea to just change the standard background appear to be helpful for more-specific situations, so they might be best as separate options. --- For the vast majority of the situations, the other ideas might be overwhelming to users. This includes that users might not understand why they're seeing differing backgrounds. For that purpose, it actually might be most helpful to have a clearly worded (and distinctly colored?) banner at the top of the content for unusual types of content. ~2026-90420-1 (talk) 14:53, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Android app sepia theme
Iff this was to be implemented, it should definitely be an opt-in setting just like the Dark mode.
Bikeshedding on the precise background colour, it would make sense to use the same as the Sepia theme in the Wikipedia apps: currently #F8F1E3 . the wub"?!"17:54, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the exact Sepia shade sample as well. Does everyone like the slightly darker Sepia or a slightly lighter beige? What shade seems to make the text easiest to read? --- And hey, let's talk about the birds of Europe! ~2026-90420-1 (talk) 20:53, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
is too subtle, it would make almost no difference at all.
Okay, I'm sorry about this. I originally copied the wrong color code. I've actually been looking at EEEDDC in another window the whole time. Its tint is more brownish than the Sepia, which is a little bit peachy. And it actually seems close to the third color in the above message. (For anyone who doesn't have access to web code, the color code can be put in Word's Page Color > More Colors > RGB option to see it at scale.) ~2026-90420-1 (talk) 12:43, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That's all right.
Since we have had a good discussion, I would now recommend you to open an RfC on the Proposals Tab.
This is really interesting - I had been looking at these on my desktop and thinking, huh, they're all the same blank white, is it a really imperceptible shade? But on the phone they're all very distinct. I wonder what configuration weirdness I have going on here. Andrew Gray (talk) 21:13, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Multiple reasons. First of all.. by default a lot of LCDs for home computing are calibrated to emit WAY too much light and are also not adaptive to your surrounding light situation. It can pay off to spend some time to actually calibrate your screen (like it tells you to in the setup manual that no one ever reads). Mobile phones and often TVs as well are adaptive and will change their light intensity on the fly. This makes sense because they have to deal with a lot of changes during the day due to changing light conditions. In a work environment, you often want a more consistent color profile, instead of something that changes all the time.
Secondly: LED vs LCD. Expensive TVs and phones often have LED screens. LCD screens have to illuminate the entire back of the screen with light, even in the black areas. Combined with oversaturation of light LCDs will be more effected by not well calibrated screens.
Thirdly: Desktop and laptop screens are often pretty bad. Mobile phones are, due to their size (easier manufacturing) and the competitiveness in the market often higher quality, with shorter lifetime cycles. While in the laptop and desktop market the screen is an expensive part that can easily be saved on by manufacturers, with most consumers not really realizing what they are missing in return.
For instance, my home Desktop screen is a 600+ euro 27" LCD (when I bought it 6 years ago), which will show these color differences. But my (newer) workplace 27" LCD is a much cheaper LCD and unless I do a lot of calibration on it, is often not able to show the difference between these colors.
If you wonder why all designers use MacBooks... this is part of the reason. MacBooks by default, tend to come with better screens than most other consumer computers. If you order online and know nothing about screens, with Apple you sorta know what you are getting, whereas with most other brands it will be a complete toss up.
This is also why I always tell everyone over 40 to buy a better monitor, because using a better screen will literally change your life when your eyes start getting worse. —TheDJ (talk • contribs) 14:44, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@TheDJ Thanks - I think this will be this evening's rabbit hole to go down! I am indeed over 40, and I strongly suspect this monitor is at least old enough to be thinking about its exams... Andrew Gray (talk) 18:45, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
For the record, I support such customization for logged-out users, and honestly Vector-2022 maintainers should provide an option for them to set any background and on-text color they want. sapphaline (talk) 10:38, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Sapphaline Such customization is of course possible with CSS variables. There are some 50+ of them that you can override and mess with if you want. This is precisely how dark mode works for instance. Just install an extension that modifies them, or use the browsers local styles, something like Greasemonkey etc. People can do whatever they want by following a few YouTube tutorials. However compiling and maintaining multiple of such sets of 50+ variables is a pretty expensive operation and its is very easy to introduce problems with accessibility etc. That's why it is left up to users to do this if they want to. —TheDJ (talk • contribs) 14:52, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Has there ever been a discussion on making all BLPs ECR? This has always been an issue on Wikipedia with IPs (now TAs) and new users making drive by BLP edits that can be promotional or defamatory. Making them all ECR would probably help with that by ensuring editors are here for constructive purposes, and in the longrun help with reducing VRT workload responding to issues. Thoughts on this? Is it silly? Does it make sense? ← Metallurgist (talk) 19:29, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think it would be easier to convince the community to attempt a WP:SEMI, but I'm not sure that even that would work. The fact is that while some unregistered and brand-new accounts cause problems, many more are actually helpful. Half of our current admins and other long-time experienced editors began editing as IPs, and cutting off that entry point might mean cutting off the next generation of editors, which we need. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:50, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Category:Living people has 1,139,680 articles with the category. Which means about 1/7th of all articles are BLPs. If there needs to be a mass protection of BLPs, pending changes would be the best option, but that would cause an absolutely huge backlog at Special:PendingChanges. 45dogs (they/them) (talk page) (contributions) 03:46, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The majority of edits from new and casual editors are updates, expansions, and minor tweaks though admittedly sourcing quality is quite-variable. Defamation is usually reverted promptly, and historically the worst cases of negative content lingering were the result of registered users who had solid bureaucratic acuity and built up social capital they were unafraid to spend.
Even with the vast majority being unprotected updates are typically quite sporadic and many pages are written and never edited beyond basic maintenance; protection will worsen that issue. ~2025-41540-19 (talk) 04:41, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I wouldn't support any new wide-ranging restrictions, in principle, until it can at least be demonstrated they wouldn't upset the somewhat stable equilibrium of Wikipedia's active editor pool. Dege31 (talk) 04:51, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Given the stance of Wikipedia on the matter of copyright, it is not possible for Wikipedia itself to host and manage a publicly viewable archive of webpages being cited. The situation with archive.today should be a wake-up call to better plan out how to deal with this matter. However, Wikipedia can develop, or at least endorse, a decentralized/distributed alternative archive: where the editors can use the developed software to store the DOM tree and/or screenshot of the webpage on IPFS or equivalent content-addressed cache, where we can use cryptographic hash to verify the authenticity of the cited material. This should also reduce dependence on Internet Archive moving forwards. Some volunteers can use copyright-havens (an allusion to tax-havens) to host a gateway to this decentralized archive, avoiding DMCA takedowns and such, in the manner of Sci-Hub, Libgen etc. (It is also of interest how the courts will decide on scraping of the internet to obtain training data for LLMs.)
What are the current state of the art in this direction? What do we need to do if we choose to go in this direction? What are some other viable directions to consider in this regard?
Sounds like a fun research project for someone who has the time for that. Would definitely encourage whoever wants to work on that. —TheDJ (talk • contribs) 14:54, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't love the idea of Wikipedians setting up a massive copyright infringement site. Archive websites like .today are based in countries with lackluster copyright laws and use a variety of illegal methods for capturing copyrighted content. IA can get away with it since they're a non-profit which responds to takedown requests and respect the wishes of sites blocking it. The whole point of the Wikimedia movement is sharing free content, not coming up with ways to get around copyright law.
I'm not opposed to someone making a site like this, I don't really care. I just don't the idea of us developing or "endorsing" a project like this. IsCat (talk) 15:29, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I mean, copyright infringement is illegal. I don't think it's smart to just ignore that.
Apart from that, WP:COPYVIOEL prohibits the addition of links that are knowingly in violation of copyright. To quote that page: If there is reason to believe that a website has a copy of a work in violation of its copyright, do not link to it. Linking to a page that illegally distributes someone else's work casts a bad light on Wikipedia and its editors. It's difficult to argue that the proposal here wouldn't fall under that. IA is acceptable because we can assume fair use, the same isn't true for this proposal (or even .today). IsCat (talk) 16:31, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"copyright infringement is illegal" - "illegal" doesn't mean "unethical" or even "wrong". "IA is acceptable because we can assume fair use" - we can't. sapphaline (talk) 16:35, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I never said copyright infringement is unethical. We live in a world full of laws and we have to follow them. IA themselves says that web archiving, at least the way they do it, is "broadly considered" to be fair use, see here. I don't think that's been challenged in court directly as IA has done takedowns and allows sites to exclude themselves. Perhaps we should keep it that way. IsCat (talk) 16:46, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
We live in a world full of laws and we have to follow them. If LLM scraper bots can get away with taking copyrighted materials as training data, using it for commercial purposes, does it make us a fool of ourselves for still following the law? By your own take, the use of .today links amount to violation. For not being sued for contributory copyright infringement by linking to .today links for so long, did we assume fair use in the manner of Internet Archive does? How do we then balance verifiability of cited matrials and still following law by not linking to archival sites? Smlckz (talk) 17:16, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
does it make us a fool of ourselves for still following the law? I don't think "someone else broke the law" is a good reason to break the law yourself. There are ongoing lawsuits relating to the copyright status of LLMs, and I'm sure we will have more clarity in that field soon.[33]
By your own take, the use of .today links amount to violation. Maybe. By my understanding, .today processes takedowns of singular archives but not entire sites. They do, however, run ads on mobile. I'm not a copyright expert and I don't want to be seen as making a determination, but .today is at the very least in a gray area. You could say the same about IA, but their willingness to exclude sites and not intentionally get around paywalls, as well as being a non-profit, makes their argument of fair use much stronger.
I'm not here to be super strict on copyright and demand that we stop using archival sites, I just do not believe it is wise to make the project dependent on shady, gray area tools like .today. Web archivers are necessary for producing the encyclopedia, so we can't drop all of them. Sticking with the ones with the strongest copyright policy is our best bet. IsCat (talk) 17:31, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Virtually everything on the wayback machine is a copyright violation and it meets none of the American requirements for fair use. Doing partial takedowns if anything makes their case worse because they are aware the rest is infringment but keeping the rest of fheir collection. Just because they obey takedown requests does not make it not infringement, it just means they may not face as severe legal repercussions. PARAKANYAA (talk) 18:28, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I mean, yeah. There is a good argument that IA is copyright infringement. They don't legally have an obligation to patrol their site for copyright infringement, only to respond to it if they receive a takedown notice. This was a key issue in Viacom v. YouTube, where YouTube was found to not liable for violations of Viacom's copyright as they responded to takedown requests and was thus protected as a service provider under the DMCA. This doesn't meant they weren't hosting content that infringed copyright (they were), it was just that they weren't liable. IA is in a similar situation, they may be violating copyright but they respond to takedowns and there isn't any caselaw over the fair use status of web archiving. Thus, they can operate under the assumption that they are not violating copyright, even if they are. IsCat (talk) 18:38, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Sure, IA will probably not crumble into dust tomorrow. But neither will .today. The issue people are raising is that the material we are linking to is a copyright violation. There's plenty of caselaw over both library archiving and internet copyright that makes this situation not ambiguous. Whether IA will be fine is irrelevant. PARAKANYAA (talk) 18:43, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, I didn't raise copyright in my !vote on the .today RFC for this reason. My main concern here is making a potentially Wikipedia-affiliated archival platform that is not responsive to DMCA requests, which is what this thread is proposing. That site would be liable for copyright infringement under the DMCA, and the proposed solution is trying to make it impossible to enforce the law against the site. It's a bad idea all around. If someone out there wants to make that site and potentially assume liability for copyright infringement, they can do that. It would be a violation of COPYVIOEL to link to it on WP either way. IsCat (talk) 18:53, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well the WMF can't make it but linking it wouldn't be any worse than linking IA. Whether is a copyright violation is unaffected by the DMCA takedown, that is just the enforcement mechanism. PARAKANYAA (talk) 19:32, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
IA can operate under the assumption that web archiving is fair use because there isn't caselaw that clarifies either way. We can assume the same. IA responds to DMCA takedowns and is thus protected by section 512. The archival site herein proposed would not respond to DMCA takedowns and would not be protected by section 512. Linking Google Books is entirely different than linking Anna's Archive for much the same reason. IsCat (talk) 19:36, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That they comply with DMCA takedowns shows awareness that the content on their site is copyrighted and not fair use. So, we can assume that it is copyrighted by the same. Again, whether someone is protected by section 512 is entirely about punishment or not punishment, it is not about whether the materials at issue are fair use. PARAKANYAA (talk) 19:41, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
They can accept DMCA takedowns while not admitting liability or that they host other infringing content. Section 512 does protect from certain liability, including from lawsuits. This limits the options of rightsholders and more or less forces them to use the takedown system. This has kept web archiving out of courts and has caused the lack of caselaw in the area. Without caselaw, IA can assume that they aren't violating any laws. IsCat (talk) 19:48, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, their liability is not the issue here. Whether they are liable or not is unrelated to whether the content itself is fair use/an infringement of the copyright holder's rights. And again: does this not go for any web archive, including the hypothetical one you take issue to? PARAKANYAA (talk) 21:05, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think you are understanding the point I'm trying to make. Liability matters a whole lot in lawsuits. The purpose of a suit is ostensibly to determine if an entity is liable or not for something. If IA is not liable for infringement, they will likely not get sued. If nobody is getting sued, there is no caselaw. If there is no caselaw, it's a gray area. IA claims fair use. Unless and until a court of law (or Congress) acts to determine if web archiving is fair use or not, they can continue to assume its legality. The presence of infringing content is entirely besides the point because we are assuming fair use.
As for the proposed archival service, they would be liable under section 512 as soon as they fail to comply with a takedown request. A defining feature of the proposal is hosting in foreign jurisdictions where copyright law cannot be enforced. IA and this proposal cannot be further apart in terms of liability. IsCat (talk) 22:00, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That they comply with DMCA takedowns shows awareness that the content on their site is copyrighted and not fair use.
No, it shows awareness that some content on their site may be copyrighted, just like any site that allows user contributions. Legally that's a huge difference. It doesn't matter whether it's 99% copyrighted, or 99% original with only a single copyrighted item, as long as they do respond to takedowns. That's the legal obligation and the reason they aren't liable, the same way Facebook isn't liable for user content as long as they respond similarly. ChompyTheGogoat (talk) 12:57, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
From what I can understand from the discussion here, IA honoring DMCA takedown requests shields them from liability of copyright infringements. So is the case with IPFS gateways. Then, can we link to pages archived on IPFS without problems, right? While the IPFS gateways honor the request, the content might still exist in the network, so those with need can still use the content ID to find it anyway.. Those with vested interest in maintaining an archive of internet can continue to pin the content in copyright-havens. Can this situation be any better? Smlckz (talk) 02:42, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I mean, true. Plagiarism is wrong, which is why I use websites like Anna's Archive when tracking copyright violations on Wikipedia, which are (a) usually plagariasm (b) pose a licensing issue, since our content should be in our own words and CC-BY, not copyrighted text. Cremastra (talk· contribs) 00:30, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You are also a well known copyright maximalist, to be blunt, who puts almost all power with rights holders. This is a strain of thought you can find, particularly in Europe. But courts in America tend to be less severe and more generous with public benefit. -- GreenC19:16, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Copyright abolishment is an extremist position outside the mainstream. If that is your basis you might (consciously or not) try to pit copyright law against itself playing into the divisions to stoke and inflame. But please don't use Wikipedia for that end it is disruptive. -- GreenC20:02, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think there is any need for endorsement by Wikipedia, just the need for some team to set such up. on IPFS or equivalent content-addressed cache sounds like a great idea. Anna's Archive already has links to IPFS-stored content, maybe some IPFS discussion place would be a good place to propose this. One could include in the proposal the idea for the archival site to archive all external links found/crawled on Wikipedia (that aren't yet archived in the Internet Archive and ideally these as well). Prototyperspective (talk) 15:52, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
One such place is [34] another [35] and maybe also [36]. I would not continue the discussion about legality or ethicality above (or the assumptions underlying the various claims for and against such) as there is no need for Wikimedia officially starting or backing this. Also forgot to mention that archive today is not just used for standard Web archiving but also for making paywalled content accessible. If you would like to debate this subject or to see more data & claims relating to it, see the structured argument map Do paywalls around academic publications slow scientific progress?. Prototyperspective (talk) 17:35, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I asked in the IPFS Matrix channel, where they pointed me to [37], where reading through the documentation of [38] I found that it has "experimental support" for IPFS: [39]
I also found this project (which began a decade ago!): [40]..
Thanks for doing that – interesting. However, those aren't yet full solutions – rather potential components of potential solutions. A full solution would for example archive all external links used anywhere in Wikipedia using IPFS and then make these available using some website as well as regularly scan for new links. I think IPFS would probably be the best technology to use here but maybe there's some similar alternatives like ZeroNet(?) I wonder whether one could make a wish in the m:Community Wishlist for some tool that fetches all external links used in Wikipedia maybe from the dumps so that these can be all archived with a tool like the one(s) you linked which also would probably need to developed further for this to work and then be implemented in the project to archive all the links (except video media embedded in them) and make it possible for users to access them and store them decentralized. Prototyperspective (talk) 19:07, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Who says web archiving is a copyright violation? That's not totally true. It misunderstands how copyright works on the Internet. It also misunderstands library law and service provider law, which is not the same law as you and I operate under. There are specific statues in the law that allows for web archiving, when done a certain way, by certain parties. I have yet to see a single person on Enwiki who can explain why archive providers have operated for 30+ years and are not immediately shut for copyright violation. I understand why, but most people can not explain it. -- GreenC17:42, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not aware of any federal statutes that specifically allow for web archiving, could you cite what you're referring to?
Your comment intrigued me so I found a law review article from Prof. Paul D. Callister, a professor of copyright and library law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. You can read it here. In it, he claims that copyright law is fundamentally dissonant with archival practices. He notes that in a review of caselaw, he was unable to find any case were "preservation" were found to be transformative or fair use. He criticizes the claim that IA is somehow free from copyright infringement just because they've been around for so long, and he also notes that he was able to find any litigation against IA over web archiving. He argues that this is likely due to IA's strong takedown procedures instead of the law protecting IA. He concludes that it would be beneficial if web archiving was made to be fair use under law, but without a court deciding on the issue or Congress acting, web archiving will continue to be at the very least a gray area.
Also: I have yet to see a single person on Enwiki who can explain why archive providers have operated for 30+ years and are not immediately shut for copyright violation. I understand why, but most people can not explain it. Archival sites are understood to be service providers under section 512 of 17 U.S.C. and are thus not liable for monetary damages in a copyright lawsuit unless they fail to remove the content upon a takedown notice. This removes the incentive to file and has generally prevented courts from ruling on if web archiving is fair use or not. This allows IA to operate under the assumption of fair use, even if it does not actually exist under law. IsCat (talk) 18:24, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@IsCat I think you have a typo there: "he also notes that he was able to find any litigation against IA over web archiving". You probably mean "unable to find"... David10244 (talk) 06:12, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
See, for example:[41] "The general problem for libraries, under the code section, is that they are only allowed to make archival copies of what they actually have in their collections.Footnote164 Neither Harvard’s law library nor registrant libraries are likely to own the Web materials that users contribute to the Perma.cc archive (although it is possible). Also problematic is several of § 108’s provisions require that the “copy … becomes the property of the user… .”"
"The article concludes that Perma.cc’s archival use is neither firmly grounded in existing fair use nor library exemptions; that Perma.cc, its “registrar” library and institutional affiliates, and its contributors (see ) have some (at least theoretical) exposure to risk; and that current copyright doctrines and law do not adequately address Web archival storage for scholarly purposes." PARAKANYAA (talk) 18:23, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Those are legal arguments, and there are also counter arguments. The fact is, there is no law that strictly allows or strictly disallows web archiving. Web archives currently operate under a number of statues including: Fair Use, Section 512 DMCA Safe Harbor, and Section 108. Courts look at loss of commercial potential, the nature of the organization (non-profit library), the nature of the users (Wikipedia researchers and educational purposes). Honoring take down requests for DMCA. Courts exist to protect rights holders and public benefit. We see it in every case: Google Books was permitted to do mass scanning; Hatchet Case which gave Internet Archive a bunch of wins with out of print books and limited previews. Courts will protect interests beyond the rights holders, they find a balance, and the outcomes are complex and detailed. You can't make broad sweeping statements or ridged pronouncements that web archiving is an outright copyright violation. Even when it goes to court, it never turns out so simple because public benefit weighs heavily in court decisions. -- GreenC19:04, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
None of the four fair use criteria in the United States apply. They are reproducing the whole work, replacing the exact commercial market for the work, typically of commercial works. Being a non-profit might be considered in the balance of these factors but when the rest of the criteria are like this it is not a get out of jail free card. Per section 108, libraries can only archive materials they have in their collections, which is not The Web. DMCA safe harbor means they are unlikely to face significant penalty, sure, but that doesn't mean what is there is not a copyright violation.
Google Books had the books they were scanning in their collection and did not allow readers to read the books in their entirety (e.g. it did not replace the commercial work and used a limited portion, unlike web archiving). The IA lost the Hachette case at every step of the way, "public benefit" or not. PARAKANYAA (talk) 19:38, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Your are repeating the most negative articles and opinions. And no they didn't loose every step of the way, again, you take extreme simplified black and white positions. -- GreenC19:48, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not even remotely well versed in the fair use doctrine, but surely if the web page is no longer accessible, the rightsholder isn't monetising it, so it's not competing? (Which still doesn't excuse copying extant webpages, though I'm sure a lawyer would argue that accessing a page through the internet archive is significantly less convenient than just going to the original, so it's not a substitute.) JustARandomSquid (talk) 09:15, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A copyright owner isn't required to be earning revenue from every way possible in order to protect its rights to use an approach in future. Also there are other ways to provide access to content than via the web. And if a rights holder chose to provide free access to their content, that doesn't mean it has relinquished its rights to control how that access is provided. isaacl (talk) 06:15, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree. For example, just because a book is out of print, or not being offered in an e-book format, doesn't mean it's fair use for someone else to create an e-book version. isaacl (talk) 09:26, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think a restricted Wikimedia archiving solution for webpages, accessible only to Wikipedians/Wikimedians - similar to the Wikipedia Library - would be a good idea. It would be harder for the general public to check a web reference archived in this way, of course, but I think it would be a good compromise between copyright concerns and verifiability needs. This also given that the long-term sustainability of at least one of the two large archive services we currently rely upon seems very questionable - even if we should decide to retain archive.today/archive.is links, I'm pretty sure they will be a giant heap of dead links not too far in the future anyway. And the Internet Archive, though unquestionably more reputable as a nonprofit enterprise that truly wants to achieve something good for the internet, is under heavy pressure too, technically, politically (given the current political climate in the USA), and copyright-wise. Gestumblindi (talk) 09:36, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, restricted access would be helpful evidence that the archive does not have a detrimental effect on the market for the content in question. There are other potential compromises, such as archiving textual content only (since that's probably what we want to cite), which would further distance the archive from any suggestion of intent to infringe. Barnards.tar.gz (talk) 13:22, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It's a bad idea for WP:V. Making it so the only way to verify what Wikipedia is saying is to be an active Wikipedia editor harms our readers. TWL is acceptable because all the resources it has are available through others means, including other libraries. IsCat (talk) 16:07, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well, imagine archive.today and the Internet Archive going offline, which is absolutely possible. Then, an archive restricted to Wikipedia editors would still be better than nothing, if copyright issues are otherwise preventing it? That's what I would call a compromise. Maybe access could be made somewhat easier than for the Wikipedia Library, and maybe some way for external users to have access on request could be implemented. Gestumblindi (talk) 19:52, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have a somewhat wackier suggestion: an archive accessible to the public, but new pages can only be archived by autoconfirmed users, like Perma.cc.
The reason I'd want to do this is because a "web archive" can imply multiple use cases. A lot of people use archive.is to hop paywalls, which is obviously a copyright violation of the kind that can incur risk for Wikimedia. If we limit the number of users who can archive pages, we thereby limit bandwidth usage, copyright risk, and scope creep. Furthermore, an archive produced in this way seems to me to have a stronger claim to be a DMCA Safe Harbor than one which resembles a paywall-hopper in function.
It would probably create a headache for us if Wikipedia becomes known as a provider of a paywall bypassing tool ("just make 10 junk edits to get access!"). Also, I think archiving sites that successfully bypass paywalls are using dark magic that a reputable site would struggle to replicate. Barnards.tar.gz (talk) 13:35, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Bypassing paywalls should never be the goal anyway. The purpose of web archiving is not to access material for free that is still perfectly accessible online, though requiring payment (a printed book is also a legitimate source, and books aren't free as well, still you might be able to get them on loan through a library - just as some online content through the Wikipedia Library), but to save material to keep it accessible when it's otherwise offline and not available through any other means. So, a hypothetical Wikimedia archiving service would, IMHO, best be set up in a way that you can preemptively save web pages that are used as references, but the archived copy is made accessible only if the original source goes offline, and probably with some further restrictions (only for Wikipedia editors or something like that). Gestumblindi (talk) 14:11, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is more or less the kind of "dark archive" that I have been thinking about. Every page used in a citation would get automatically saved, and the saved copy goes into a lockbox that can only be opened if the original source is offline and the reader has WPL access. Stepwise Continuous Dysfunction (talk) 02:55, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think archiving sites that successfully bypass paywalls are using dark magic Well, you can consider the design/development process behind youtube-dl, Invidious and alternative web front-ends.. Few are like Wikipedia to provide good public APIs, most are pretty hostile to the development and continued operation of alternative front-ends, devolving into a cat-and-mouse game.
For websites, apart from paywalls, there's also the hurdle of captchas, or more recently Anubis and so on, that have been deployed to protect the sites from recent waves of DDoS from LLM scrapers: If web crawlers used to have some sense of propriety back in the days, when crawlers actually followed instructions of robots.txt and set apprpriate user-agent string, it appears to be quite lacking in these days of LLM scrapers: with residential botnets and user agents of mildly older browsers being common occurrence. Even if a FOSS solution is developed that can overcome the restrictions of websites, and then gets used by these LLM crawlers, it'll be a rather disgraceful situation, not considering that mitigations that will also be developed accordingly, leading to a protracted stand-off. A non-FOSS solution will create a dependance and might lead to a situation like that of .today. Smlckz (talk) 18:11, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'd take it one step further: the complete archive only accessible to users with special permissions, whose responsibility is to set individual page archives to public access if and when the original becomes unavailable - similar to how the deadlink status works now, but with additional protections on the archive to prevent abuse. Deadlink flags by other editors would add it to the approved editor log for confirmation. IANAL but I believe that would be along similar lines to current Commons policy on non-free images, which are only allowed if no suitable free alternative is available - the archived version would only be publicly accessible if the original copyrighted source is not. I don't think it matters quite as much who triggers the archival process (anyone can on IA) if it can't be viewed unless those conditions are met. The archiving could even be done by bots crawling wiki citations to ensure they're backed up.
I also agree that limiting the archives to text would help strengthen the fair use argument. If and when media qualifies for archiving is a discussion that should probably take place on Commons, amongst people more familiar with those policies, but afaik most media is not used as sources to substantiate claims, right - if it proves a claim we'd look for a text source explaining that? ChompyTheGogoat (talk) 14:23, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As a Commons admin, I just have to point out that there is no "current Commons policy on non-free images, which are only allowed if no suitable free alternative is available"; Commons doesn't allow any non-free images, I think you're mixing this up with English-language Wikipedia's policy for non-free images locally hosted as "fair use". Gestumblindi (talk) 15:26, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Quite possibly! Still new here - I thought I'd seen links to Commons in discussions on the subject, but I might be misrerembering.
Citations to require date/accessdate when using URL (to help with link rot)
To assist with verification and finding suitable archival snapshots of webpages, it may be a good idea to make it a requirement to provide a valid |date= or |accessdate= parameter whenever a |url= parameter is used by a citation template. What I'm suggesting is that a warning message be displayed like when citing without a |title= parameter. Ideally, only one of them would have to be present to remove the warning, since it's often preferable for verification to have |date= but many websites don't provide one; |accessdate= provides a fallback when the reference is undated. If doing it that way would be difficult to code we could instead leave |date= as optional and make only |accessdate= a requirement, though this would increase the backlog we would have to deal with, so I'd rather avoid it. If implemented as accepting either |date= or |accessdate=, the wording of the warning should make it clear that |date= is not an alias or abbreviation for |accessdate= so newer editors are not confused. The warning should probably only be visible to editors, not readers.
If the presence of a date in some form were required with a URL, it would be a starting point for searching through snapshots of a webpage; just start with the snapshot with the nearest date. At present it's never a requirement, even for {{cite web}} where there's no alternative to using |url=. It might also be helpful for bots, since a bot could then not only check if a snapshot merely exists on an archival site but also check which snapshot is likely to be the most helpful, based on the archival date.
I first suggested this at Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Archive.is RFC 5 in the context of migrating archive links away from Archive.today; finding suitable snapshots elsewhere would be more straightforward if URLs were always paired with dates. Regardless of whether a consensus to deprecate/replace Archive.today links emerges, requiring dates with URLs would help with link rot in general.
If implemented, it would have to be done by an editor who has both technical knowledge and relevant permissions, as it would require modifying protected templates and possibly Module:Cite and/or related modules. It would also require making an appropriate tracking category, so editors could monitor and begin dealing with the new backlog of citations that should have dates but don't.
(I'm posting it here as I'm unsure if it's sufficiently "concrete" for "Proposals". If it is, please let me know so I can move this over there.) – Scyrme (talk) 23:03, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
For one thing, some URLs are courtesy listings when the citation is to a book, journal, or other printed matter. The cited material is not going to be lost if the URL stops working, and the date for the citation has nothing to do with when the URL link went up. Donald Albury00:08, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Providing a date for offline materials even when it isn't the same as the date it was published online is also helpful, so I don't see why this would be a problem. To be clear, I'm not suggesting that |date= always pertain to the URL. Part of the point of using the existing date parameter is so that references to works which have offline editions are excluded from the check even if a courtesy URL is provided. Link rot is less of a concern where print publications exist, so finding suitable snapshots isn't a priority and no warning/notice is needed.
However, if it would cause unforeseen problems to add this requirement to all citations, then how about at least requiring a date for {{cite web}}? The point of that template is to reference online-only resources, so there should be no issue with "date" differing from the date of publication online. Doing it this way would be better than nothing, but it would leave out any references that use other templates, eg. {{cite news}}, which are often also used for online-only material.
Another approach might be to create a new parameter, eg. |onlinedate=, to distinguish when "date" differs from the date of publication online, but the disadvantage of this is it would not exclude things that already have "date" or "accessdate", so the would inflate the backlog of citations with URLs to add dates to. If it's important to distinguish |date= and |onlinedate= for references which have both printed and online editions, we could add that new parameter as an additional way to remove the warning, so references which already have a date in some form are still excluded but editors can make the distinction when adding new references or updating undated references. – Scyrme (talk) 00:48, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think this is needed because it's quite possible to find out when a URL was added to an article using a tool like WikiBlame. I'm pretty sure InternetArchiveBot uses a similar procedure to automatically add access dates and figure out which archive link to use. Also I've had situations where the access date is irrelevant because I've first accessed the link in archived form, long after it was taken off the live Internet; examples are references 2 and 16 at the Caitlin Hulcup article (permalink); I found those references because the Australian Web Archive is keyword-searchable. On re-reading, I've realised that those references have dates though. This reference, which I used dozens of times, is a concrete example of an undated reference, but I added a nominal access date in those cases. This sort of thing can also happen with the Wayback Machine if someone uses an old version of a website to find information. An example where I did this without either a date or access-date parameter because both were irrelevant is reference 4 at Corrina Hewat (permalink). Graham87 (talk) 04:08, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Graham87: I didn't know there were automated ways to add access dates. I'm glad they exist. However, these methods seem like they require some technical knowledge to use (and also knowing they even exist to begin with). I think most editors would find it much more straightforward to just click a live link, see if it verifies the text, see if it has a date, and add today's date (the date they checked) if it doesn't.
There are many articles that have issues that a bot could definitely fix, but, as is often the case with human editors, no bot has gotten around to it yet. If someone is editing an article anyway, why not alert them to an issue which is generally easy to fix?
If you have situation where the original webpage is undated, it dies, and you find it on an archive and reference it after the fact, a solution to that might be to also include |archivedate= in the check. Since the point of providing a date is help with finding an archive that works, if an archive is already provided the check can be skipped. – Scyrme (talk) 04:40, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I know InternetArchiveBot has done at least a couple of run-throughs of the entire encyclopedia and I believe (but could be wrong about this) that it aims to check every page eventually. I think it's also through that bot that every time a new link is added to Wikipedia, an automated attempt is made to archive it on the Wayback Machine. Having said that, outside of the edge cases listed above, I usually only encounter URL's without dates/access dates when they're bare URLs. I'm going to provide a pointer to this discussion at Help talk:Citation Style 1, where changes like this are normally discussed. Graham87 (talk) 05:18, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not aware of links automatically being archived when added to Wikipedia. Is that for all URLs or only ones in references? If it's the latter, that would leave out bare URLs or manually written references which wouldn't necessarily get picked up automatically after an editor converts them to use a template. If there's some system that checks if an editor has added a URL, would it notice if an editor finds an old URL that was already in the article and puts it inside a template?
Regardless, as noted in the RFC regarding Archive.today, the Internet Archive isn't always successful at archiving pages so it would likely still be helpful to include a date that would assist in finding suitable snapshots through other archival services.
If dateless citations which use |url= are rare, managing the backlog shouldn't be difficult. At present, there's no way to check. (Or if there is a way, it's technical and most editors wouldn't know how to do it. I'm sure there's probably some external tool somewhere that could be queried to do this.)
Thank-you for providing the pointer. I wasn't sure where the best place for this would be, but I assumed it was here since it would affect so many articles, and I assumed the main talk pages would be mostly for maintenance. – Scyrme (talk) 06:08, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Good to know. Though as it notes, "in practice not every link is getting saved". I don't think we can rely entirely on automation. – Scyrme (talk) 21:36, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Guess anything a bot can't do perfectly isn't even worth attempting. Why allow human editors to do anything? Some of them will inevitably mess it up, so why bother? It's just more opportunity for human error.
I really doubt that's what you really think. There are obviously cases where manual editing is necessary. In cases where the the bots aren't successful, human intervention may overcome their limitations. In these cases, why not make the task simpler and less error prone by making relevant information more easily available? (In this case a date included in the template as a starting point for identifying the most suitable snapshot of a webpage.) – Scyrme (talk) 15:58, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This would be something that's only useful for webpages that change overtime, for anything that's doesn't change this would be completely pointless. That goes beyond courtesy links to books, magazines, etc. There are many web links that will not change either, so this will only ever be useful for a subset of citations that are to webpages. Secondly there is no way to force editors to include an access date, all that can be done is create a tracking category and error message. If the large red error message that a refname is undefined goes regularly unnoticed (it's the most visible of such error messages), this will be doubly so. The tracking category will also start off with hundreds of thousands of entries. Encourage editors to add a access date for transient webpage maybe, but it would be a bad idea to enforce this for everything with a url. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested«@» °∆t°12:54, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
All web links are liable to change eventually. Providing a date or accessdate where it's not strictly necessary doesn't do any harm. If even some editors notice and respond to the notice, which I know I would and I'm sure there are others who likewise fix citations when they find them, I don't see what the harm is. – Scyrme (talk) 21:25, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see why it would discourage people from adding any citations. People aren't discouraged from adding citations by other notices/warning that citations emit. As ActivelyDisinterested notes, editors are more likely to just ignore a message they don't know how to fix than to remove a whole citation after adding it. Given how easy it would be to remove this notice, I can't imagine it deterring editors. – Scyrme (talk) 21:20, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Finding a date for a dead link is a longer and more complicated process than providing one when adding a live link as a reference. In the latter case, an editor adding a URL could just provide today's date as the access date while they're adding it. It's quick and simple. It's probably an easier task than finding a URL to cite was in the first place. – Scyrme (talk) 03:36, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That's true, but if editors were encouraged to add a date, there would be less need to dig through history (or use WikiBlame). It's usually better to reduce how often problems are made in the first place than to cleanup afterwards. – Scyrme (talk) 02:01, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A bare URL has no template which could be made to emit a warning. However, we do often manually add notices for bare URLs to encourage editors to fix them. ({{bare URL inline}}. {{bare URLs}}) We also provide tools to help with formatting references in both editors, to help editors avoid making the problem in the first place. The visual editor even has a tool that will automatically generate a properly formatted reference from a URL alone using Zotero (included a retrieval date), to make it as easy as it possibly could be to add a proper citation rather than just a bare URL. – Scyrme (talk) 15:50, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That is not what you are arguing. You were arguing for it to be required when you include it. First we would have to get consensus for access dates being mandatory. Also, citoid does not work with many websites, including the New York Times. PARAKANYAA (talk) 23:03, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I am and have always been arguing for a warning or notice to be displayed in preview when editing when a citation template which uses |url= does not include any kind of date parameter (not just |accessdate=). That is what I meant by making it required. If you thought otherwise, then perhaps I've not been clear enough; perhaps I should have said "encourage", not "require", but regardless I have not changed what I've been suggesting or arguing for. I am aware that consensus would be required; that's why I started a discussion.
I don't see the relevance of citoid not being perfect. Feels like you're moving the goalposts. I said it's usually better to reduce how often problems are made in the first place, you said we don't even do that for people adding bare URLs, and I have just shown that in fact we do, both by visibly marking it as a problem when it happens, albeit manually, which discourages some editors who see the notices from doing it in the future because they're made aware it's a problem, and by providing tools that help editors avoid creating the problem, by automatically formatting references for them, so it's easier for editors to do it correctly.
Now you're saying citoid doesn't always work. So what? How is that relevant to it's usually better to reduce how often problems are made in the first place? Even if it does it imperfectly, the rationale is still to assist editors so fewer of them create problems in the first place. If your argument is that it actually creates more problems than it prevents, then I could see the relevance, but, 1. I doubt it, and 2. that would be a case for removing the tool not an argument against encouraging or helping editors in not making (in this case, very easily avoidable) problems. – Scyrme (talk) 00:25, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I am saying it is ridiculous for a warning to pop up over date when we don't even do it for bare urls. We don't need templates to emit warnings the strings can be detected. Neither are mandatory so we shouldn't treat them like they are. PARAKANYAA (talk) 02:47, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Why is it "ridiculous"? I have described the practical benefits of including dates and how a notice would encourage editors to include them. You have neither refuted these benefits nor raised any problems which may outweigh the benefits. That a notice for some other problem doesn't already exist doesn't mean one should never be added for either problem.
The argument resembles WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS, though in this case you're arguing other stuff does not exist. I also still don't see much difference in principal between manually added notices and automated notices, so bare URLs don't seem like they're a particularly good example for other stuff not existing. – Scyrme (talk) 16:12, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think Gwtar has much of a future for Wikipedia usage. Besides being literally less than a month old and a highly experimental/tech demo, it's aimed at a different niche: long-term ad hoc archives which get copied and passed around indefinitely by people who ideally would need know no more about a Gwtar than they do about a PDF.
Since MediaWiki is already so complex and a project like WP is centralized with full-time devs, it isn't a big deal to add some server-side software as a one off to support more straightforward archive formats, or to support full-blown WARCs etc.
I am also hopeful that we can get rid of Gwtar entirely and merge it upstream into SingleFile(Z). (seems to think that this would not be hard.) Much like InvertOrNot.com, this is a tool I could use for my writing, but I do not want to maintain or be responsible for once I've adequately documented what it should do. --Gwern (contribs) 00:20 17 February 2026 (GMT)
A different colour will also raise intrigue among new editors, and will ultimately lead up to a good chunk of them getting aware of the different categories of sources, especially reliable sources, in Wikipedia. Cdr. Erwin Smith (talk) 07:23, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I do not support this idea. No source is reliable 100% of the time. We do not cite the New York Times for medical claims, for example. Sources may be generally reliable but editorial judgment is still required. Cullen328 (talk) 08:20, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Editorial judgement will continue to be required, even if this proposal gets accepted.
It's often more complicated than just "reliable" or "unreliable". For example the Anti-Defamation League is listed at WP:RSPADL as being generally reliable for material outside the context of the Israel-Palestine conflict, partially reliable on the topic of antisemitism when Israel and Zionism are not concerned, and unreliable for the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Any colour coding would this have to show it as red, yellow and green at the same time as the highlighter would be unaware of the context. Thryduulf (talk) 15:16, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If the goal is to have a general color-coded list of reliable sources to make it easier for newer editors to identify them, we already sort of have that at Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Perennial sources. Note that this list is not reader-facing, and I agree with Cullen328 that it would not be desirable to make it reader-facing. The list merely attempts to describe past editorial decisions related to frequently used sources; it is not meant to prescribe how those sources should be used in every context. Mz7 (talk) 08:55, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If a source isn't reliable, why are you using it? All sources used within Wikipedia should be reliable, though no doubt some are more reliable than others. Colour coding for any reason is also a bad idea, with significant numbers of people being colourblind. Chuntuk (talk) 15:07, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Do you even need to cite for banal statements like that? Citations are for proving things which have to be verified, not banal and everyday knowledge statements like your example. woaharang (talk) 17:22, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Honestly, I don't think it's a good idea. For example, a small number of editors may be colorblind. I know that most of us aren't, but it's important to respect disabled people. In any case, using WP:RS makes it kind of obvious what the category is.
Aside from all of the valid issues already raised, I would not expect most readers to understand that [1] was intended to indicate that the citation to which it pointed was reliable. Rather, I would expect them to be confused by seeing different footnotes in different colours. Caeciliusinhorto-public (talk) 15:08, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Using a bot to apply Template:New archival link needed to references
I created Template:New archival link needed as a potential solution to highlight links to archive.today or other deprecated archival repositories. Following the archive.today RFC being closed in favor of deprecation and removal, I am wondering if it is possible to have a bot append this template to references linking to archive.today as part of the removal process. mdm.bla03:21, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As an example: Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.[1][new archival link needed]mdm.bla 03:29, 20 February 2026 (UTC) mdm.bla03:29, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In a technical sense, a bot can to do this, and it should be fairly easy for one to do so. The harder part is establishing consensus that a bot should do it. The outcome of Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Archive.is RFC 5 helps, but doesn't specifically establish that a bot should go around adding this tag to half a million articles. Anomie⚔13:21, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the input, Anomie. Do you think this is an idea that is worth exploring further/could gain consensus? I assume that would be a discussion for VPR if/when my idea gets to that point. mdm.bla16:24, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm more interested in if the bot can go one step further - a bot to simply tag all the citations, or a bot that simply yeets all the citations are straightforward enough - can we technically build a bot that replaces the citation with the original link if it's live, or with archive.org if both have captures? Tazerdadog (talk) 21:35, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If we're swapping captures the bot would need to verify that they're equivalent. I found one a while back where one had archived an error page and the other the actual content, even though they were very similar dates (a few days apart iirc). Thryduulf (talk) 21:44, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Currently GreenC_bot's WP:WAYBACKMEDIC tasks are probably the closest actions to what you're looking for, but per Thryduulf the replacement process would have to be more involved in order to satisfy WP:V. InternetArchiveBot is also working on a similar task for dead links. Relatedly, GreenC_bot should probably be stopped from adding archive.today links (courtesy ping @GreenC). mdm.bla21:55, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There is no way to do this that can tell if the captures are equivalent, many supposed captures are actually nonfunctional, 404s, or of the wrong content. It will have to all be checked manually. PARAKANYAA (talk) 23:04, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Manually is ... not going to happen. The biggest manual cleanup I am aware of us completing was 70,000 redirects under CSD X1. I was one of the people who put the most hours into that cleanup. Most of those redirects were decided with single digit seconds of volunteer time. It took two and a half years to finish. This is an order of magnitude more references, and each reference likely takes longer to manually fix than a Neelix redirect took to process. We need at least some automation help here. We can accept a fair amount of errors as better than the alternative, and I'm definitely going to put in some hours personally to get through this. However, there mathematically must be a bot somewhere, even if all it can do is rescue the live links. Maybe a AWB plugin that asks if these are the same website? If we can't get any automation, then we have to mass delete these and eat the hit on verifiability. Tazerdadog (talk) 23:32, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There is quite simply no automated way to replace the links with other archives and have any reliable rate of accuracy because the other archiving services work completely differently and there is no way for the bot to tell if the content is the same, or even if it exists and is not a 404.
A fair amount of errors for new content introduced is not acceptable. The most automated way that is possible is simply ripping out all of the archive.today links and marking them as dead. Infinitely preferable to linking things that are very likely to not contain the content at all; additionally in many cases the link cannot exist because the other archiving service does not capture the website at all. The archiving bot already only used archive.today as a source of last resort where other archives failed.
Its main use cases are 1) paywall jumping (which we shouldn't have even been linking them for in the first place) 2) javascript heavy or obscure websites that the Internet Archive cannot capture due to technical or request reasons (e.g. there are some fairly major Canadian websites that block the Internet Archive entirely). With 1 we can just remove the archive and deal with the paywall (which is what I have always done, I don't know why everyone is so determined to jump paywalls) but 2 is unfixable. Per WP:LINKROT we are not actually supposed to remove material cited to dead links, though. With news sources we could just remove the link to the original entirely if it is dead, to address that issue. PARAKANYAA (talk) 23:58, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If the link is alive still, a bot can simply remove the archive. If it is not, then you... cannot just make a new archive capture. So just remove it and tag it as a permadead link. I oppose the usage of the template as it doesn't actually solve any of this. PARAKANYAA (talk) 23:05, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In defense of just adding this or a similar tag (+ category) , it gives page watchers and readers, especially those not in the know, an alert to let them know that there's an issue with the source, and that they can help by changing it. How edits that will prompt is unknown to me - however, something I have also thought of is that this is a lot of manual effort, but it's not overly difficult, for probably the vast majority of archive.today uses - if the link is live, remove the archive.today link. If it's not, check archive.org, and replace if possible. If not, then move on to the next citation & circle back later to do the difficult one. Given that, it might be interesting to experiment using that task as one of the newbie onboarding tasks? It's certainly no more difficult than expanding an article section, finding citations for unsourced material, or copyediting -- probably far easier for some newbies, actually. (Just saying, I'm a wee bit shit at copyediting and typo hunting, which is what all of your newbie onboarding pages said to try when I first started) Can't promise it'll be a perfect solution, but it's something relatively easy, yet tedious, and hard to mess up that badly. GreenLipstickLesbian💌🧸 03:53, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Instead of having a bot add a tag so we can maybe solve the problem in 12 years, why would we not have a bot just remove all the links and immediately solve the problem? PARAKANYAA (talk) 04:36, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@PARAKANYAA Because there's two problems here, both of which are being talked about as though they're the same, but which are distinct:
a)large amounts of links to website we now know to be an unreliable mirror / website running illicit code.
b)large amount of material which we can only seemingly verify to an unreliable mirror that we know can, and will, tamper with archived webpages.
Bot removing links only solves problem A. Having the bot break/hide/render unclicklable all links would also only solve problem A. That would be useful. Bot (your solution) can't solve problem B. Bot solution "remove all links" would rather only mask problem B/move it to the 12+ year backlog. Only humans can solve problem B. Also, only humans can figure out how large problem B is. B will possibly take 12+ years to solve, but, well, that's where we're at. No matter what we call it, the backlog created by problem B exists, and will exist for the foreseeable future. I'm trying to think of ways to solve problem B; like you said, solving problem A is trivial. GreenLipstickLesbian💌🧸 04:55, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No matter what we do there are going to be large swathes of material, especially pre-2013, that do not exist on any other archiving service. There is nothing we can do about that, and there is no way for it to be solved. Therefore it is not a consideration. Removing the links will solve "Problem A" and and it will not hinder finding sources for the ones that are still findable. It wouldn't mask it any more than tagging it like this would. PARAKANYAA (talk) 04:58, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@PARAKANYAA Tagging it identifies the issue, which is the first step to solve it. Making it appear as though the material is supported by an active, working citation does hide the issue because people see a footnote and go "oh, yes, well, this must be true and verified!" A footnote with a whacking great "better source needed" or "fails verification" alerts people to the fact that no, not everything is okay. And then they can fix it.
And, yes, material cited only to a website only on archive is is an issue. The citation will be to be replaced or, if you truely can't find that material supported by any other source or sources, online or off, then the material will need to go (the same way you might remove material cited to Fandom a random SNS post) because a)we can't trust it atp and b)the material is likely undue. Not guaranteed, but likely. That is how we solve this problem, though I'm most certainly not operating under the delusion that it will be a quick and easy solve. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go put on a podcast and fix a few dozen archive today links. GreenLipstickLesbian💌🧸 05:39, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That is why I said add the dead link template when you remove it by bot!
Fixing it manually is a complete non starter. Also, no, per WP:KDL you are not supposed to remove material even if only cited to a dead link: "Do not delete a citation just because it has been tagged with dead link for a long time". You can just remove the archive and tag the dead link, or remove the link entirely and keep the citation. For news outlets especially you should never delete the citation because that is going to exist in an archive somewhere in the world even if not online. PARAKANYAA (talk) 05:52, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Great, I'm glad we're still on the same page that a tag of some form is needed; I'm still looking for a solution that will actually migrate these links over to new archives or live, published, citations, however. A bot tagging everything as permanently dead will not do that, though, like I maintained in my first post, it could be useful at solving the other problem. Which is what my post was targeted at?
And, Parakanyaa, everything will have to be fixed manually, one way or another. I know you think the amount of work makes this impractical; if we're getting that nihilistic, though, ultimately, we will die, our servers will go dark, the sun will consume the rock on which we reside and entropy will take all. For now, though, let's try and brainstorm ways to fix a bunch of dead citations with the least impact possible?
... and, um, yes ,the existence of other archives is why I specifically said "online or off", and said only if you truly couldn't find the material supported in other sources, and can't track down a copy of the original source through contacting the original publisher or author, and you've made a reasonably exhaustive search through other potential sources, including primary sources. Ultimately, however, if I scour the entire planet looking for a source to back up the statement "X railroad opened on October 16, 2019", and I can't find one, not even a record tucked away in the office of the government which commissioned said railroad, then I'm challenging either that material's authenticity or dueness. So, as per my last message, not technically "just because it has been tagged with a dead link for a long time", there's a few extra steps. If it's something like a fact about a living person, then those extra steps suddenly start including BLP privacy-related PAGs as well. GreenLipstickLesbian💌🧸 06:42, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Also, @PARAKANYAA, per WP:DEADREF (our actual content guideline on the matter, not the how to guide),
Do not delete a citation merely because the URL is not working. Dead links should be repaired or replaced if possible. If you encounter a dead URL being used as a reliable source to support article content, follow these steps prior to deleting it:
Well, if we do what you are suggesting, there isn't much brainstorming to do, is there? We pick at this manually for the next decade. Sure. I still do not think the tag is helpful even from that perspective. We cannot make a "new archive link" of a source that is dead; it hides the more dire fact that, as you describe, we are going through the dead reference process and are treating it like a dead reference.
Yeah, it's grunt work. Hence brainstorming "is this gruntwork enthusiastic newbies could do, especially given that there's such a high portion of sources still available on the web & an abnormally high amount of source metadata documented here and on archive.is when compared to the deadref category as a whole?"
I'm not completely sold on the tag's being exactly worded as "new archive link needed" or whatever it is. The problem with having a bot apply the dead reference tag, as you pointed out, the bot can't (or, can't practically and reliably) tell if a an alternative archive was already created for the website, whether on archive.org or elsewhere. I think having a bot tag all articles, then having humans either fix the citation or manually remove the tag and replace it with a "dead link" tag once they confirm that an archive doesn't appear to exist, and only then funnel it through the dead references process, might be more efficient and less disruptive to mainspace content. Or it might not - unfortunately, this is the point where my thought experiment needs more data. GreenLipstickLesbian💌🧸 07:16, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Anecdotally -- and I hope this doesn't completely put everybody off the idea -- I got into serious Wikipedia editing with CCI, aka hunting down dead links, unreliable mirrors, and replacing those links and sources on older, untouched, articles. If my newbie homepage had a task like this, I'd have leaped at it, instead of just ignoring it. But I'm not quite narcissistic enough to map that experience onto others! GreenLipstickLesbian💌🧸 07:21, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'd like that. But, also, please bear in mind that not only am I awful at copyediting, I'm awful at figuring out concise ways to convey a nuanced information in a way that make sense to anybody whose name is not GreenLipstickLesbian! GreenLipstickLesbian💌🧸 20:35, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Took me a bit, but here is an example: M. P. Castle. As you can see from the last edit before today, one of the sources needed to be fixed by InternetArchiveBot to use an archive.today link last year. If we remove all archive.today links automatically, then this link would be a dead one as http://www.abps.org.uk/Home/Who_Was_Who/index.xalter#C now takes readers to a page that says "The page you are looking for may have been moved or removed." It would leave parts of the article sourced with a dead link and drop this article down to two active sources, both of which are not good for biographies. --Super Goku V (talk) 05:41, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My concern is that automatically going in and removing the links increases the likelihood that articles will have content removed because the link is dead without being checked for a replacement or even lead to articles being deleted. Maybe I shouldn't be concerned this way, but currently I am. --Super Goku V (talk) 05:58, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
better calculation where to suggest on a zero return search.
When I do a search for a string using insource, it is *much* more likely to actually finish if I add a "normal" word to search for in the search. So if I do a search on (putting # around my searches in this text) # insource:/dia of Fraternities/i stevens #, it goes much faster than and is far more likely to finish than # insource:/dia of Fraternities/i # . The issue is that if the first search returns no records (say if I'd searched on # insource:/\<ref>[^\<]*dia of Fraternities/i stevens # ), it says "Showing results for sevens. No results found for insource:/\<ref>[^\<]*dia of Fraternities/i stevens." This assumes that the "problem" is there are no hits for stevens, not that the insource is limiting them. In the case where an insource: (or intitle: etc.) squeeze the results down to zero records, I propose that it show the results for the normal word actually in the search, in that case stevens rather than sevens. This is just an example, I've run into it doing other similar searches. I'm not sure this is ready for a proposal, or where this discussion should be done, but the help desk doesn't seem like the right place.Naraht (talk) 21:44, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Today's Featured Audio
I've been a huge fan of checking in on the featured article and especially the featured picture on the main page each day. I remember reading something about certain audio files being promoted on the main page as part of a Today's Featured Audio section, or something like that. Did this ever happen? And if so, could it be brought back? There is such a great variety of audio on the site, such as historical speeches, animal calls/sounds, and recordings of instruments and compositions. These audio tracks bring so much colour and depth to articles, and I think having a section on the main page for them is more than warranted. RedRampageRuckusRaider (talk) 04:29, 22 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Planned short test of mobile banners promoting the Wikipedia app
Hello,
The Wikimedia Foundation’s Communications and Product teams would like to implement a small test on centralized notice banners to encourage more people to download and use the Wikipedia app. It will be a simple banner, targeting logged out mobile users and will run for just a few days, starting on December 15. The goal is to get more people using the app so that they become more engaged with Wikipedia in the long term. This is increasingly important as our Wikipedia traffic is changing, and it is part of our Foundation’s annual plan. If you have any questions or concerns, please let us know. Thank you so much.
Is the rate of app downloads decreasing significantly? We should probably have a specific reason for implementing another advertising banner, as these seem to be somewhat unpopular within the community. ✨ΩmegaMantis✨blather02:48, 21 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@ARamadan-WMF Are you sure that "get[ting] more people using the app [will cause them to] become more engaged with Wikipedia in the long term"?
I prefer web browsing over apps. (I don't understand why, for example, Home Depot even HAS an app. Browsing their inventory and ordering online works perfectly well from a web browser. Similarly, when reading The New York Times online, their web page nags you to use their app. Why? Reading the NYT using a web browser is perfect, in my opinion.)
Reading plus editing Wikipedia on a tablet and also a Windows PC, using a browser, is a great experience for me. I read WP using my phone. I don't generally edit from my phone, but some long-term editors do. Does using the app really drive engagement, and how can you tell? David10244 (talk) 05:06, 21 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@David10244: Are you sure that "get[ting] more people using the app [will cause them to] become more engaged with Wikipedia in the long term"?: Apparently the Wikipedia mobile app has games that are supposed to keep people engaged now. T400512 says they're going to add even more in the future. ChildrenWillListen (🐄 talk, 🫘 contribs) 23:23, 23 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@ChildrenWillListen OK, thanks for that info. (Personally, I dislike games on mobile devices, but of course people do have their own preferences.) Are people really "engaging" with Wikipedia if they are playing games? Even if the games are hosted within the app, time spent playing the games is time not really spent engaging with WP...
@ARamadan-WMF: I haven't used it in while, but if the app restricts editing or has missing features compared to mobile web (due to underdevelopment) it should make it clear that mobile web is better for that task. Otherwise, you are pushing Wikipedia-lite: a watered down, crappy version of Wikipedia and people will disengage entirely out of frustration. There must be a list of restrictions somewhere (or the app is better in every way?) that you have evaluated before pushing the app with a banner.
@David10244: not that I am a proponent of a Wikipedia app, given the development costs, but apps can have more features compared to the web. From my hazy understanding, apps can:
allow easier payments (didn't the WMF just announce you can donate from the app using Google/Apple pay?)
securely store the number page visits locally (the WMF is developing donation banners based on number of views)
Allow users to upload a photo in a free file format when your phone uses a proprietary format
Send push notifications to your device (e.g. you have new messages), etc
@Sohom Datta maybe I am confused or didn't explain it well, but on on mediawiki.org: "The apps already locally store and surface the user's reading history" and in relation to the new banner placement widget, "Readers will be able to [...] choose how often they want to be reminded, based on the number of articles they read". Commander Keane (talk) 10:39, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Ironically, I am leaving this comment using a mobile browser because the app doesn’t allow access to any of these notice boards. ~2025-35367-57 (talk) 14:11, 21 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I am leaving this comment from the app after the reading comment above. With an account I can manually leave a comment here by editing the wikitext of the whole page. I don't see any "reply" buttons anywhere though. A streamlined way to upload freely licensed photos would be a great addition to the app and one of the few clear advantages to editing on a phone (while we are apparently trying to get people to download the app). Right now (on Android using the official app), I have to switch over to the Commons app and it's all but clunky. I imagine it's also a more straightforward addition than improving the mobile's editing interface. Rjjiii (ii) (talk) 20:17, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe the IOS app lags behind in capabilities? I tested logging in and there is no way to navigate to these boards; the Home page simply scrolls endlessly back in time. ~2025-37129-61 (talk) 23:21, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Ah, okay, then yes they are different. On Android, if you open a new tab it begins on the Main Page. This may be coming to IOS as well, because I think that new tabs only started showing the Main Page this year. Rjjiii (ii) (talk) 05:43, 30 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Aside from the editing issues mentioned above, the app also mostly ignores the main page content which our community has decided to show on any given date. Aside from the featured article, it substitutes its own things without community approval, such as having a Most-viewed article section, using the Commons featured picture of the day instead of our choosen WP:POTD, and replacing our set of anniversary articles with its own OTD that isn't vetted or necessarily on our list. I've no idea who curates that, but I don't think we should be promoting something that fights against the community's editorial decisions. It also sucks in incoming links from browsers, making it more difficult to view the project on the Web even if you want to. — Amakuru (talk) 07:29, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
That's terrible, and should be discussed at an RfC at VPP, and then probably removed from the app. I thought the WMF didn't do content and left that to the wikipedia's? At the very least they should be able to tell us how / by whom the sections on the App main page are created, and why they don't use the local ones. I don't have the app so haven't checked this, I do remember the reluctance they had to remove the Wikidata short description from it: I hope any necessary changes this time will be quicker and in a more collaborative spirit. Fram (talk) 09:10, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@Amakuru, @Fram It is very hard at a technical level to exactly extract the on-this-days section of the main page in a reliable manner due to it's free flowing nature, as a result to my understanding of what the underlying code is going for a compromise, it is parsing November 28 (today), using the much more standardized format of those pages to serve chronological information from the page. The first OTD entry on the app is "Over seven hundred civilians are massacred by the Ethiopian National Defense Force and Eritrean Army in Aksum, Ethiopia" which corresponds to a community generated entry on November 28. For what it's worth, I don't think there is a conflict with the communities editorial decisions here, the content being shown here is community generated and is prominently linked to in the first link in our OTD section. This is not WMF generated content, it is literally content we have decided is good enough to link from the main page. Sohom (talk) 16:47, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
There is a huge difference between content linked from the main page, and content shown on the main page. Basically, this gives vandals a clear method to vandalize the main page on the App. Fram (talk) 16:52, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I personally don't buy this argument, if content is one click away, people going to the page, through mind you the literal first link on OTD will have a pretty bad impression of Wikipedia anyway. Not to mention that this concern is effectively the same threat model as if somebody where to vandalize a DYK or OTD and the preview of the article showing up on hover on the main page, however, we as a community typically do not fully protect DYKs or OTDs. For what it's worth, I think there are mitigations against this kind of scenarios, in that I think there is aggressive caching and if the code sees a empty page, they will revert to showing a cached version + the app randomizes and caches which entry folks see, and so the chances of a person vandalizing the page and it immediately showing up on the main page are pretty slim. Sohom (talk) 17:03, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
The clickthrough is minimal compared to the impressions the main page gets though. Vandalizing a linked page will reach a few dozen people or so (assuming the vandalism is up for a few minutes), vandalizing the main page reaches thousands of people in the same timeframe, and is much worse for PR as well. I don't know about the caching and whether that helps (though the "empty page" is a very uncommon type of vandalism). Would probably be best to test this (not with vandalism, but by constructively changing some text which is visible on the App main page, and seeing how long it takes to change on the main page). Fram (talk) 17:23, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Hmm, I went to edit November 28, and realized that it seems to be protected under pending changes, that would make it much harder to get vandalism over to the main page for today. (it might be instantaneous for us cause both of us would bypass pending changes). Sohom (talk) 17:57, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
The incoming link issue has been a particularly pernicious issue for me, the only obvious end-user solution for it is to delete the app which is presumably not what is wanted. CMD (talk) 09:17, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I really like some of the app landing page features, and some of the editorial(!) decisions like the POTD and OTD can be refreshing. However, the 17 fair use images shown (I stopped scrolling after a few days worth of feed), often cropped and with no way to tell they do not have a free licence, was disappointing. I am guessing there were 17 fewer fair use images on the Main page during that period.
I agree the incoming links issue has been one of the reasons I have the app set to never open wikipedia links, and Android somehow still disobeys me sometimes :(. Sohom (talk) 16:52, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I tried the app the other day, it is dreadful. How they do the lead image is really strange, and some of the features don’t make sense. The app should be designed with the community, idk what they think they’re doing Kowal2701 (talk) 12:39, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
First off it's horrendously impractical for editing, I could list dozens of things but it's very clear it's not intended to be used by editors so I won't waste my time. I deleted it after 10 minutes. Just on the tabs:
the Explore tab, I don't understand what they were going for. The Main Page is carefully curated, idk why it wouldn't be kept (the layout is ugly and monochrome as well). For something called Explore, I'd expect them to use Wikipedia:Contents, or propose random topics for people for people to learn about, or whatever. Something that actually lets the reader explore the encyclopedia, ie. where they can navigate themselves rather than getting random articles on Polish towns etc.
Places is an interesting idea, but what is its purpose? Is it for Americans to learn geography? Why is it only limited to settlements, administrative divisions, and landmarks? Why are administrative divisions presented as a point? Could it be tied into country outlines (eg. Outline of Myanmar)?
The others, sure they make sense, I wouldn't really use them or find them helpful other than "Search"
On the app, it just isn't a wiki anymore. I can't edit any of the tabs. I don't like the personalisation. The lead image appears as a banner at the top, and the infobox is collapsed under "Quick facts". It boggles my mind that the team working on this thinks they can redesign everything without community consensus, especially when it's done so poorly. The website is brilliant, just copy that over and maybe add a couple more features for exploring, that's all that needs to be done. It being awful for editing also means we'll get less new editors, which is what we really need to have begging banners for. A "reader" version and an "editor" version that people can switch between might make more people aware of their ability to edit and make it more accessible so they try it out. This being said, the idea of prioritising the app is great, it bypasses Google's LLMs, but the execution and process was very poor. Kowal2701 (talk) 17:23, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I've been somewhat involved in discussions related to the Android app so I can give you the high-level "why" of the design choices. Back in the day of Vector, when the app was first created our UI, infoboxes, image placement, warnings and even our main page sucked on mobile, taking up often more space than was available on mobile. As a result, the team at the foundation had to make certain optimizations/tradeoffs (like hiding the infobox, lifting the lead image etc), and changes to the layout of a variety of elements to get it to work on mobile. Since then, there has been significant improvement in our ability to serve mobile-first content, particularly due to collaborations between technical editors and WMF teams to overhaul and improve Wikipedia's templates and user interfaces to be mobile oriented. There is still a significant amount of work to be done before we can get to your standard of "hey they could just put the website into the app" and for folks to be happy with it (not to mention that even then, a significant amount of engineering will be required to replicate mobile-web-only features using Java code).
To a few of the more specific points, the explore tab was developed to copy the essential features of the current main page back when showing the main page wasn't a option, similarly, the way the "places" feature works is that it uses your geolocation to find articles close to you, unfortunately, we only use coordinates in administrative divisions and such, limiting the feature. To the point of using outlines, our outlines are free flowing and outside of using a LLM, there is not a lot of ways to extract structured data that can be used to augment this features through outlines. I can see a situation where we use Wikidata to augment some of this data, but such uses have been frowned upon by the community back in the day (see also short description), which is why I think the app avoids it Sohom (talk) 17:52, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. The technical aspects are beyond me, I just find the website on mobile pretty good all considering (on iOS btw). I can understand some of the design changes like collapsing the infobox, I just wish things like this were run past the community, like in batches. This project operates by consensus. I'm sure WMFers see it as given that some in the community are going to rage against anything they do, but involving the community at earlier stages would negate a lot of that. Kowal2701 (talk) 18:19, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I installed the App. It gave me Dutch as default language, but allowed me to another language. But after adding English, the app hecame quite a mess with the two languages mixed. I thought I would get some switch to see enwiki only or nlwiki only, but no, I got something unwanted. I have removed it again, as it also interfered with my standard Wikipedia editing on the phone here. Not a fan... Fram (talk) 19:10, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Eh no I agree, the "using different languages" thing is weird for me as well. It's always given me English though, maybe it picks the language based on location now ? Sohom (talk) 19:44, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@Sohom Datta I know this is a few weeks old, but... Why do we have a Wikipedia app at all? The effort devoted to creating such an app could have been used to improve the layout on smaller screens, as you mention.
I wonder why many apps exist today. Why does Home Depot, or Wal-Mart, for example, even have an app? Their web sites work fine on mobile and tablets.
Having an app makes it easier to track users, push ads and take payments. Those features are of interest to commercial companies, and presumably to the WMF, but are not goals of Wikipedia. To lure users in also requires some content. That content is taken from Wikipedia but this piece of software is a WMF app, not a Wikipedia app. Promotion for it is no more welcome than the annual begging banners. Certes (talk) 18:30, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well for one, the talk page button isn’t easily accessible while reading a page, you have to click the “more items” ellipses to find it. Worse, the “learn more about this page” link appears as broken HTML, making it vastly less likely for app users to click in and read it. There’s no ability to access category pages, and the notice boards are completely walled off from the IOS app. ~2025-37100-27 (talk) 23:43, 28 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
No VisualEditor (and the joys of visual citation insertion, etc), no access to Help desk/Teahouse (without pushing you to the web on Android, ~2025-37100-27 suggest zero access on iOS). Not suitable for new editors. Not suitable for experienced editors. There are more limitations.
I thought the app was just a bit of fluff that the WMF was going to half-develop because cash was slushing around. Without VisualEditor (a 13 year regression) and Noticeboards (a 21 year regression) it is. Minor landing page issues, as discussed above, are not my major concern. If the WMF intends to make the app equivalent to mobile web then I am on board. I will test, and file bugs/features 'till the cows come home. We all could.
If it going to remain dreadful, then I would like to keep editors on mobile web (and lets face it, mobile desktop), or push them away from the app ASAP. This would not involve a mobile banner promoting the app. I do think the reading experience is superior on the app. But people read Wikipedia because those before them have edited to create that content. Appealing to financial reasoning: over time, you will get less and less donations with less and less editors. Commander Keane (talk) 01:04, 29 November 2025 (UTC)[reply]
In the iOS app, talk pages are often difficult to get to. But what’s much worse is that it appears impossible to reach an article from its associated talk page. MichaelMaggs (talk) 09:25, 14 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The most-viewed articles section is one of the only interesting engaging parts of the app so I strongly disagree with what you said. Regarding POTD, I thought it would show the picture selected by Wikipedia but also note that WMF doesn't even develop a Commons app so the project being in the disadvantage and not cared about here is Commons, not Wikipedia. At least now the main page is linked from the main feed; I wished it was integrated into it better and if you'd like to see that I suggest you at least create issues and/or wishes about that instead of complaining here in this format. Prototyperspective (talk) 17:31, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
To you and everyone else at the WMF: Stop trying to make Wikipedia popular. Focus on making it good. We aren't here to make money, or gain users, or have power. We're here to make a good encyclopedia with a strong set of moral principles. The WMFs recent actions do not seem to reflect this goal, instead believing that more users equals a better encyclopedia when it is the other way around mgjertson (talk) (contribs) 19:15, 26 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Strongly disagree working on making it good is what Wikipedia editors do, WMF can and should do some things that can make Wikipedia substantially more popular and since technical development is needed for such, only they really can. I very much oppose people who want to keep Wikipedia down. I would hope such calls would be coming from Chinese officials and Trump-lovers only but there's one thing a vocal minority can do pretty well and that's shooting ourselves in the food without much thought whenever there's a chance. Prototyperspective (talk) 17:34, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think it's a good idea. Still only a small fraction of users (or of mobile users) are using the mobile app. Many things are possible only with a dedicated native app as opposed to web app of sth people open in the browser (usually by first typing the subject into a search engine). One of the biggest advantages I see in the mobile app is the Places map which allows me to see a map of nearby places with Wikipedia articles. I'm for example using it when discovering a new city. However, there is little attention paid to whether this functionality is useful much in real-world practice: the main functionality is there now but you didn't go the last mile to enable users to filter out mundane articles to their liking so that the map mostly shows truly interesting notable places (or for whatever things relating to whatever other application one is using this for). W295: See Filters for types of items shown on the Wikipedia app Nearby places map.
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In quite a similar way, the Discover feed is a great concept and has lots of potential but then the only truly somewhat interesting content in it is Most viewed articles (society is mostly interested in things that isn't quite that interesting but it's interesting to stay up to date on what people are interested in / reading on WP), In the news (new items are added only very rarely; see here), and recommended articles (just a small bunch relating to just 1 article). The low-hanging fruit there is to simply allow users to also see recommended articles also for other articles, not just one. Maybe some the user selected for selected interests or just other articles one has read. phab:T416796 To me it seems like you're working on functionality to just complete the addition of a functionality but not thinking it through how it would be used – having just 1 set of recommended articles means it's relatively unlikely I'm interested in that particular set. So for some features, the more difficult part has already been built but you didn't maximize out the potential and not just that, you often made it so abbreviated it's no wonder people don't use/like it because in that format, it's not yet useful and more like just a demo. Prototyperspective (talk) 17:55, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I use the iOS App daily and also use the mobile and desktop views on my phone too. And I use the desktop mode on a larger monitor too. I find all of these different views useful in their own way. It's good to encourage our readers to understand and experiment with these as they will have have their own needs and preferences. Andrew🐉(talk) 21:38, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hi all, thank you for the thoughtful questions and concerns raised here. My name is Jaz, and I am the Lead Product Manager for the Mobile Apps Team.
The banner is intended to be a time-limited test that would only be shown to logged-out mobile readers on Japanese Wikipedia (in Japan) December 15-16 and English Wikipedia (in South Africa and India) December 15-18. The purpose is to understand whether a simple banner can help raise awareness that the Wikipedia app exists, especially among new readers, and if those readers retain at the same rate as readers that discover the app organically through the app stores.
Why do we want to drive more traffic to the apps?
Our broader goal is to help new and existing readers return to Wikipedia because they find it a compelling place to learn. To address this we want to experiment with ways that help new generations of readers find Wikipedia useful, return frequently and eventually become the editors we need to keep the projects healthy.
There are two shifts in reader behavior that are driving this:
The number of people visiting Wikipedia, and the ways that they visit, have been changing for several years, with fewer people arriving to the site through external search engines.
Based on our existing data, we know that readers on the apps return more frequently and engage more while they are reading than readers on the mobile web, thanks in part to built-in platform features. Readers who install the app tend to come back more often and explore more content directly on the platform. However, install rates are stagnant and primarily come through organic searches in the app store.
In short: We think that having people come to us through a platform we control, instead of mostly through search where we have no way to ensure we remain as visible as we have been, is key to remaining a vital, viable movement. This is a small test to see if this could be one way of helping that.
Because long-term sustainability depends on new readers returning and eventually becoming editors, as outlined in the Wikimedia Foundation’s annual plan and the Readers work, we want to connect people with the reading environment where they are most likely to stay engaged. For new generations there is a higher tendency to rely more on mobile apps and personalized experiences when learning online.
The difference between apps and mobile web
Several people raised very valid concerns about the apps not fully matching mobile web functionality. This is correct, and we want Web to remain the primary environment for editing workflows that are not supported, or are less than ideal, in the app. For users interested in editing on the apps, we will ensure that easy and intuitive ways to transfer over to the web are available: We want readers to be able to easily use the apps for all the things the apps do well, and lead editors to the web for editing. If you are interested in efforts to improve mobile web editing you can read more here.
On the apps, we want to focus on the needs of readers who prefer mobile-native experiences and are accustomed to personalization, like enabling readers to pick topics they want to see more, showing them trends in their reading patterns or notifying them if they haven’t met a reading goal. This shift allows the apps to focus on what they are uniquely good at, including reading on the go, offline capabilities, personalization that respects privacy, push notifications, and other mechanisms like widgets that help readers return more consistently.
New capabilities we’re exploring on the apps
Explore feed
You are right that the Explore Feed could use an upgrade. We want it to be easy for people to discover content of interest when they are browsing. We have plans to revamp the Explore Feed in May to address some of the gaps that have been raised (for example, surfacing content across wikis in more useful ways). There will be outreach to shape the new explore feed in late January, in the meantime, consider signing up for the app's newsletter so you can receive updates directly on your talk page.
WikiTrivia game
It is also understandable to have curiosity as to why features like the WikiTrivia game exist. With the challenge of readers coming to Wikipedia for a single question and leaving, simple, low-effort interactions can help people discover articles they might not have found otherwise, which in turn can lead to them to read more and return more often.
WikiTrivia is one example of this and actually leverages the On This Day page curated by the community. It gives readers an enjoyable way to discover articles that they can then read, save, or share. We have received positive feedback and requests for more games through in-app feedback forms, our support emails, project pages, press and play store reviews. Based on the positive feedback and data from Android, we plan to bring it to iOS as well in 2026.
Why do some features vary by platform?
I see there is a question of why some features are on one platform but not another. The way our team works is to see if a feature performs well on one platform before bringing it to the other so we are being thoughtful about where we put our time and energy and not scaling features that do not work or aren’t desired. Tabs is a recent example of a feature that was originally released on Android and highly requested by iOS app users, so we prioritized releasing it there recently. You can see a similar approach to Year-in-Review which was only available on iOS last year but is currently available on both platforms this year, with improvements based on feedback the team received.
How can you get involved?
We welcome ongoing feedback about the apps, especially from editors who use them or want to use them more effectively. App development is shaped by community input through Village Pump discussions, project pages, the support email channel, and app reviews. You can leave feedback at any time on our discussion page and stay informed by subscribing to the app newsletter. I’ve tried to respond to all of the great feedback here, but will also take a pass at individual comments again and will respond inline if I missed something over the next few days.
Ultimately our goal is to run this test thoughtfully, learn if it increases retained installs, and discuss the results with you all to determine if efforts like these could support the overall health of Wikipedia’s reader and editor ecosystem. If the apps are not personally your preferred platform or you do not have strong opinions about their direction, that is okay, we understand we have a diverse community with diverse preferences and interests, that’s what makes it so great. The web teams also regularly welcomes feedback on how to improve the mobile and desktop web experiences for readers and editors.
But the key thing is this: The internet is changing and fewer readers are finding their way to Wikipedia, or come less often, because search traffic doesn’t work the way it did in 2003 or 2014 or even 2021. This means we have less chances of making more people edit. We want to find ways to make it easier for readers to return to our articles. This is a small, limited experiment to see if this can help readers return. If we can make readers come to our own platform, and return, then we can send them to the mobile web for editing, keeping our ecosystem healthy.
JTanner (WMF) (talk) 20:21, 2 December 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. Is there anything on the app that pushes/nudges people into editing on the website? Another concern is that a lot of people make their first edits by correcting spelling errors etc. while reading, if the app is cumbersome for editing it'll drive away would-be-editors and would mean people who get into 'full-on' editing slowly and gradually are lost since it's a big step to visit the website purely to edit. Could the 'edit' button on the app redirect to the web? Kowal2701 (talk) 20:55, 2 December 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Hi @Kowal2701, thank you for this question. You’re right that many people make their first edits while reading, and we don’t want the app to make that harder. Some experienced editors have told us they want to be able to make small, quick edits directly in the app using wikitext, while others prefer to be redirected to the mobile web and use VisualEditor. We want to strike the right balance so both groups are supported and are able to execute handoffs seamlessly between platforms. A part of us exploring this problem space is also determining the best approach and timing for sending new editors to mobile web. We want to provide a good user experience.
From a technical standpoint, the app currently sends people to the web for certain workflows, so redirecting the edit button when it’s the preferred experience is absolutely possible. At the moment we are gathering existing research on this topic, and early next year we’ll reach out to request feedback. I’ll make sure you’re notified so you can participate in shaping the path forward. In the meantime you’re welcome to subscribe to the related Phabricator task where you'll get automatic updates via email and can weigh in along the way. JTanner (WMF) (talk) 22:50, 2 December 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the ping. So the app is a reading companion (with fringe benefits like push notifications). That is fine. As I said above, the reading experience is better than browser and I can see the WMF's motivation. Maybe I will end up using the app for reading Wikipedia too :-).
Ideas to evolve readers to editors:
phab:T409603 (as mentioned above) is a priority - put a VisualEditor browser link at the top of the wikitext edit box, and a link back to the app once the edit is completed. As mentioned, the wikitext editor is for experienced editors but it is probably a good idea to show the wikitext when they hit the pencil for responsiveness and so they know that Wikipedia can be edited by them - and after the shock of seeing 2025 wikitext they can retreat to the palatable VE. Or maybe they will give it a go in the app.
There absolutely needs to be a link to a help page, with the forums (on browser, DiscussionTools is essential) and editing documentation. Whether that is Help:Contents or a newly tailored page I don't know.
Somehow, each article's talk page (and what it is for) needs to be easier to find than right at the bottom. Possibly at the top of the collapsed right side bar. I know years ago got the community rejected the software feature for people to report errors and it got removed, but new editors are hesitant to make changes and more likely to ask on a talk page.
Allow users to curate the content in games. After they play, have a "write your own question" link. I have always wanted games for Wikimedia projects, and they are wikis after all. The user supplied content system does not need to be sophisticated.
Given the editing limitations on the app, the community could leave a talk page message for anyone that has edited using the app and not progressed to browser and let them know about browser and its advantages. And how to disable the OS deeplinking (app launching when clicking a link), that is mentioned above.
Put the tagline "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit" on the landing page. Given the fall in Main page views, I thought it would disappear forever. Anecdotally, the idea that anyone can edit and everyone is a volunteer has never been effectively conveyed.
I am not sure how the new user on-boarding works with the app, but I assume we get them to mobile web efficiently somehow for the dashboard, mentorship etc.
@Commander Keane, hey I meant to reply to this and totally forgot. You wrote, "Allow users to curate the content in games. After they play, have a "write your own question" link. I have always wanted games for Wikimedia projects, and they are wikis after all. The user supplied content system does not need to be sophisticated." They are sort of doing this. Those dates are pulled from Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries. That builds on the scrutiny that all main page sections get for fact-checking and spam-checking. I don't know to what extent it would be good to encourage this, but there might be a way to direct people to that project where they could suggest dates? I believe the WMF's short videos did something similar by leveraging DYK hook facts. Rjjiii (talk) 18:25, 13 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks Rjjiii. I did read somewhere that is where they pull the questions from, I didn't expect them to write the questions themselves, or hire a consultant ;-). I played the guess which event happened first and the questions were robotic, mundane, and the difficultly didn’t ramp up (they were really hard to begin with!). A timer, search box and time penalties for hints would add elements of risk and adventure. It seems to be a trend of WMF development that doesn't lean on Wikimedian (human) involvement: the games, the short videos, the current Semantic Search discussion I see you at. Commander Keane (talk) 06:14, 14 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, perhaps an unfair comparison, but Microsoft Encarata's "Mind Maze" let you pick a topic and ramped up in difficulty. I am both hopeful and skeptical about these projects getting more readers and therefore more editors, Rjjiii (talk) 06:19, 14 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I used to love Mind Maze! And the small set of words spoken in various languages. I also don't know if games would be worthwhile long term, but I know they will not be good in their current state and approach. I will add there is no need for games to be app-only. Commander Keane (talk) 06:40, 14 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@JTanner (WMF), hey sorry for the late reply. (This is my main account; I'm Rjjiii (ii) above on mobile.) I get why the app is valuable and wish you all luck with it. I want to address a specific part of your message because I think it overlooks something: "Several people raised very valid concerns about the apps not fully matching mobile web functionality. This is correct, and we want Web to remain the primary environment for editing workflows that are not supported, or are less than ideal, in the app. For users interested in editing on the apps, we will ensure that easy and intuitive ways to transfer over to the web are available: We want readers to be able to easily use the apps for all the things the apps do well, and lead editors to the web for editing."
One problem with that is that for whatever reasons right now, the mobile app does not render articles the same as the desktop or mobile web versions of Wikipedia. @Kowal2701 wrote above, 'The lead image appears as a banner at the top, and the infobox is collapsed under "Quick facts".' I get the explanation on why this might have been done, but so long as the rendering is different, it's going to result in content that does not look right on the mobile app. Here is a concrete example:
Some images are diagrams:
Diagrams are one case where an editor making decisions is going to be taking into consideration (most likely) the desktop environment first as it is where most people edit, and the mobile web environment second as it is now the main place where people read Wikipedia articles. There are a lot of articles where a diagram makes even more sense as a way to explain the topic than these welding ones. Take the citric acid cycle, which has a great diagram that makes no sense for the mobile app's top image.
This is not the only difference in content choices, but it's one that often sticks out to me when I check things on the mobile app. Take for example, 3 welding articles: Shielded metal arc welding, Oxy–fuel welding and cutting, and Flux-cored arc welding. Their lead images are respectively a photograph, a diagram with embedded text, and a labelled diagram with text in the caption. The photo works great on the app, and the SMAW article has its diagrams in a body section. The two diagram lead images both look a bit weird when the diagram is blown up as the top image. The labelled diagram is better for accessibility, but becomes almost meaningless as the top image.
It's even worse in the cases where a complex diagram and an infobox both make a good introduction to the topic. In the featured article, electron, which is a topic inherently too small to photograph, there is a great diagram of orbitals with a caption explaining in accessible plain text in the infobox. For the mobile app, a reader is shown half the diagram in the top image and the explanation is hidden away in the collapsed infobox.
→ TL;DR
Regardless of the reasons why the mobile app is rendering differently, it's going to result in the mobile app often delivering suboptimal or even broken content to readers who are editing on mobile web or desktop and therefore testing on mobile web or desktop Rjjiii (talk) 18:41, 2 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@David10244 (I am not JTanner): in a browser, a websearch is forced down your throat. Every time I open my a browser I see a tantalising Google search bar, why should I choose to click a Wikipedia bookmark? Google summarises Wikipedia's information without making you visit and offers to sell you something all at the same time! (This is sarcasm). The app can also personalise your feed based on previous reading habits, should be smoother for loading and can send you notifications - a sure reason to return. On a mobile device, which includes most readers, hopefully they will launch the Wikipedia app rather than their browser. Having said all that, the app ignores editing in favour of reading. Also, Wikipedia's search is bad and Wikipedia poorly presents information to answer questions. Commander Keane (talk) 00:59, 20 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Commander Keane Hmmm. OK, I see how that might apply to some people... I am not sure why, but I don't like most apps (even though I use them). I said elsewhere that Web sites like Home Depot or Best Buy are perfectly fine for me in a browser, even on my phone, and I find that Home Depot's app (in particular) is slow and badly designed. These companies don't need an app, IMO!
I generally read and edit Wikipedia on a tablet. I can't imagine trying to read OR edit on a phone, although I know that some people do.
Not to discount your answer, and I appreciate it, but for me: My reading habits are pretty random; loading pages is fine (perfectly smooth) on my Android tablet and on my Windows 11 PC; and I get notifications in either place. I think that phone users get notifications now too, and that was a big problem for a long time.
I often do a Web search for topics, knowing that a result from WP will be near the top. I'll read that and/or click on some of the other search results. (When I read WP articles, I get sucked in to editing, then I'll go read VPT, or some Phabricator tickets, or the Help desk questions for fun.)
I don't even have bookmarks in Firefox Focus nor do I want or need them. Also one has neat Wikipedia-specific bookmarks and open tabs just for Wikipedia instead of in between lots of other tabs. There's also additional reasons...for example I find native apps much sleeker, faster and comfortable to use than mobile browsers. Prototyperspective (talk) 17:41, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I mean, I get the point of the video (and it's a good message), but it's not the best example. Why can't Sam sit in a wheelchair, why does he need a non-wheeled chair? Why is everything in braille? Are the wheelchair users all blind? Someone didn't think the video through... TurboSuperA+[talk]07:54, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
To scrape data from Wikipedia, do you need to go through Wikipedia Business
You don't need to as long as you comply with Wikipedia's content licence, but if you are copying a lot of data it would probably be better (for both you and Wikipedia) to. Phil Bridger (talk) 17:01, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Considering that our API is free for most small usecases and we freely provide dumps for everyone to use, no? Wikimedia Enterprise is if you usecase meets the brief "if I do this, I will cause production outages" Sohom (talk) 18:37, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes as other people have said here - it depends on "how much" or "how fast" you want... There are various APIs and database dumps that exist. Here's the User-Agent Policy and API Usage Guidelines for starters.
You can also access and download content via the enterprise API service directly, at no cost, up to a fairly high limit. That same dataset is also available via several alternative methods including WikimediaCloudServices and external platforms. For information on those options see meta:Wikimedia_Enterprise#Access.
There are even companies that will put all of Wikipedia on a hard drive and ship it to you for a fee. See prepperdisk.com (don't know if they are any good - I just picked the first one duckduckgo listed). --Guy Macon (talk) 15:22, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
2026 Wikimania's preference for French
At https://wikimania.wikimedia.org/wiki/2026:Program I noticed: "Language and Francophonie: Presentations in French and those from or related to the French-speaking world could be given priority, in line with the location of the event." Errr, has there been a thing in the past Wikimanias? It's one thing to allow non-English presentations with live interpretations, equality if technically feasible is good, but to give a clear preference to one language is puzzling, particularly when coupled with preference for the location of the author ("from")? Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here00:54, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
For wider context, the Francophone preference is not just for the program, it is a wider theme of the event and was also eg. a consideration in the Scholarship applications. CMD (talk) 02:58, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Note based on that page, French language/association with the Francophonie is a possible tie-breaker for proposed presentations covering the same topic. All four conference languages (English, Arabic, French, and Spanish) are considered equally otherwise. isaacl (talk) 16:33, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Re: "The Annual Plan is the Wikimedia Foundation’s description of what we hope to achieve...", the link to "Annual Plan" returns "This page doesn't currently exist". --Guy Macon (talk) 02:35, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Fixed. Typically when there's an error in a link and the link has a slash at the end, removing the slash fixes the error (MediaWiki interpreting the slash as part of the page name). FWIW @whomever this concerns, it would be good to have a person's name in the signature of this bulletin, so we can ping someone in particular if there's an error. I just went to do a courtesy ping since I edited it, but don't know who I'd ping. — Rhododendritestalk \\ 18:07, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The wikitext says:
<bdi lang="en" dir="ltr">[[User:MediaWiki message delivery|MediaWiki message delivery]]</bdi> 23:26, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:RAdimer-WMF@metawiki using the list at https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global_message_delivery/Targets/Wikimedia_Foundation_Bulletin&oldid=30053915 -->
AI agents are coming - what's the current state of protection?
This feels like something that must've come up already, but I'm not seeing it. As many interventions likely require WMF involvement, I'm putting it here.
With the sudden popularity of e.g. OpenClaw, AI agents are becoming more popular, and stand to be radically disruptive to our project (omitting potential applications for the time being, to avoid compiling a playbook). I'm curious what the current plans are to deal with an influx of agents.
Seems to me there are interventions that would intercept a large number of unsophisticated agent users, like using clues in the user agent (the web kind, not to be confused with AI agent). Then the question is about people who take steps to be sneakier. Rapid edits can be dealt with by captchas (assuming the captchas are hard enough). We could take action against data center IPs, but that would probably snag some humans as well (and pushing agents to residential IPs makes them more costly but not impossible to use). Then there are the various imperfect LLM output detection tools, of course.
You can edit Wikipedia through the API without using the front-end web interface. That's how bots, tools, etc. make edits. Both use the same process on the back-end, more or less, as I understand it. — Rhododendritestalk \\ 21:10, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It would be interesting to encounter AI agents that you could try breaking their instruction prompts and have them dox their creator. That would be fun to attempt. There's so many good guides out there on how to destroy AI agents (under the guise of preventing such actions, but it's still informative on how to do it purposefully). SilverserenC07:29, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It was in jest, though also somewhat uncontrollable? There's been multiple instances of AI agents doing it spontaneously or with minimal prodding, giving up either personal details if they somehow have them or just account and password info, IP address and computer info, ect. SilverserenC18:14, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for raising this. The LLM capabilities that the major providers have released in the last month pose an existential threat to the project today, let alone factoring in capabilities in future releases. Early 2025 GPT-4 era models were cute little toys in comparison; non-autonomous, with obvious output that was easily caught with deterministic edit filters. Autonomous agents are indeed coming, and output may improve to the point that detection is difficult even for experts. Big tech data center capex is ramping 20%+ YoY and given the improvements in LLM functionality in the last 6 months, much more must now be expected. The latest releases have shaken me personally and professionally. NicheSports (talk) 08:38, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
We have an obvious place to document how much of what we see on Wikipedia (and the Internet in general) is generated by AI. That page is Dead Internet theory. Alas, a single editor has taken WP:OWNERSHIP of that page and WP:BLUDGEONS any attempt to make the topic of that page the topic that is found in most reliable sources -- whether the Internet now consists primarily of automated content. Instead the page claims that the dead Internet theory is a conspiracy theory and that the theory only refers to a coordinated effort to control the population and stop humans from communicating with each other -- something no reliable source other that the few that bother to respond to the latest 4chan bullshit talk about. There does exist such a conspiracy theory -- promoted by Infowars and 4chan -- but that's not what most sources that write about the dead internet are talking about.
There was even an overly broad RfC that is being misused. The result was no consensus for a complete rewrite of article, but is now used (with the usual trick of morphing no consensus into consensus against) as a club against anyone who suggests any changes to the wording of the lead sentence.
It's sad really. It would be great if, in discussions like this one, we could point to a page that focuses on actual research about how big the problem is that human-seeming AIs are taking over the job formerly done by easily-detected bots. I gave up on trying to improve that page. Life is too short. --Guy Macon (talk) 13:29, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
4chan was the origin of the phrase and the conspiracy theory the original sense of it. It seems to have gone through semantic diffusion to now just mean "there are lots of bots on the internet". The process seems complete now though, inevitably the page will be rewritten, eventually... TryKid[dubious – discuss]18:33, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for bringing this up. We have more time than usual here, since right now we're still in the phase of these tools being used by AI tech bros and not the general public. Which doesn't mean do nothing, obviously.
I will admit to being somewhat less concerned about this development, at least for Wikipedia. This could be premature or overly optimistic but it seems like the main benefit of agents vs. chatbots for the average person using AI to edit Wikipedia is that they don't have to copy-paste ChatGPT output, which doesn't seem like an enormous amount of friction for this use case compared to, say, doing shopping.
I also would expect that people, particularly the kinds of people who want to edit Wikipedia maliciously (which is a smaller subset of people, though) would find different ways to spoof User-Agent etc if they are not already. (Grok apparently is already.) Gnomingstuff (talk) 17:31, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
still in the phase of these tools being used by AI tech bros - There are some of those with access to lots of resources who have expressed an interest in messing with Wikipedia... But also, it wouldn't take a lot of careful agents to be seriously disruptive. But we're getting into WP:TECHNOBEANS territory. Hard to talk defense on a transparent project without encouraging offense. :/ — Rhododendritestalk \\ 18:19, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
By the way, none of the pre-emptive solutions proposed here are effective. Residential proxies are dirt cheap, user agents are easily spoofed and captchas are easily bypassed. sapphaline (talk) 18:01, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That they aren't going to catch everyone doesn't mean they're ineffective at catching some. Only an unsophisticated sock puppeteer, for example, would be caught by a checkuser, but it's still a valuable tool because it does catch a lot of sock puppets. It's a starting point, not a solution. — Rhododendritestalk \\ 18:14, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
user agents are easily spoofed User agent spoofing can easily be detected. Look up TCP and TLS fingerprinting - while those can be spoofed, it's generally harder than spoofing a single header. With JavaScript (slightly outdated article), or even plain CSS (using a technique similar to NoScript Fingerprint), you can make it even harder to successfully spoof the user agent - especially if you don't outright block the user, but instead silently flag them in Special:SuggestedInvestigations, giving no feedback to attackers on if their spoof was successful or not, at least until they get blocked (although this may be undesirable, as the AI edits would be visible for a short while). OutsideNormality (talk) 23:03, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I haven't quit editing yet, but I will in the future due to the overwhelming flood that is coming from AI. As is usually the case, the WMF will barely lift a finger, and if they do it will be the wrong finger. Millions of jobs are being replaced by AI in the real world workforce. The impact here will be felt just the same. We can't really stop it. The project will be destroyed by it. It's already happening. --Hammersoft (talk) 15:51, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe cook up some AI agents that can spot fake references and references that don't support the content cited to them? I think such AI would fix roughly 90% of all AI related problems we have right now (and 50% of the future ones) and many problems from non-AI edits. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk) 17:36, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
this won't work, if LLMs cannot accurately characterize a source then they definitely can't determine whether a source is accurately characterized, the same mechanism would be at work
That seems to assume that it's impossible for an AI - even a non-LLM AI - to compare sources to article claims, which is unproven (and likely false). Based on some complaints I have seen on AN and elsewhere, I am not sure that fake references are as solved as you seem to assume? Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk) 19:26, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Fake references aren't solved, but they have become less common with newer LLMs that have search capabilities and/or the ability to provide sources to them. Which doesn't mean that the text doesn't extrapolate beyond the source. Gnomingstuff (talk) 23:30, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
OK, but this doesn't demonstrate that "this [cook up some AI agents that can spot fake references and references that don't support the content cited to them] won't work" at all. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk) 08:15, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Gnomingstuff, Not really? Looking up information can be reduced to a similarity search on a vector database using transformers, "summarizing" is different in that it requires the generation of novel information based on the existing mappings. Sohom (talk) 19:58, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the info, I didn't know that. At some point though, the information has to be actually conveyed, and then you're back to the LLM generating that. Gnomingstuff (talk) 04:26, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
But that still doesn't support the contention - minutiae about how LLMs operate do not demonstrate that "this [cook up some AI agents that can spot fake references and references that don't support the content cited to them] won't work", because, for one thing, a LLM can operate recursively in a trial-and-error. Never mind that LLMs aren't the only type of AI out there. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk) 16:33, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Given the capabilities recently released, with more coming, drastic action would be required. The following are the magnitude of changes that could even have a chance
Negotiation with LLM providers to build guardrails into models preventing their use in generating wikipedia style content
Banning TA editing, and requiring new editors to submit real-time typed essay responses during sign up to establish a semantic and statistical baseline
Limiting new accounts to character-limited edits for their first N edits, to ensure that new users are willing and able to contribute without LLM assistance
Obviously, completely banning LLM assistance in generation or rewriting of any content, anywhere on wikipedia. The latest releases are nothing like what came before; it will completely overwhelm the community's ability to even identify it. The strictest measures are the minimum measures
There's already been a massive amount of traffic in having to deal with LLM using editors. From my chair, an immediate first step that must be taken is to ban the use of LLMs by any account, including TAs, and make it a bannable offense after one warning. That's just the first step that must be taken. --Hammersoft (talk) 18:14, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I feel like TAs are a red herring here -- maybe you are seeing a different slice of this since you focus on new edits that haven't stuck around long, but the vast majority of AI edits I see are by registered users. Gnomingstuff (talk) 23:36, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
We immediately indef anyone who's rapidly spreading harmful content, and I'd consider LLM-generated content to be a much more severe problem than something like placing offensive images in articles. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 🛸 23:44, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
requiring new editors to submit real-time typed essay responses during sign up to establish a semantic and statistical baseline You do realize someone could have their LLM open in another window and just type the words it generates into the form manually? SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 18:15, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This will leave a wildly obvious statistical pattern that conclusively demonstrates the response was not written by a human in real time. Key stroke sequence/timing would solve this robustly NicheSports (talk) 18:19, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
No, why would that be required for this to be implemented during sign up? The data could be collected as the user types into a response box in the browser. Possibly I'm missing something. Also these are not all firm suggestions... rather examples to demonstrate how far we are from the types of measures required. I need to stop responding now apologies NicheSports (talk) 19:00, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Gather data and collate findings about what newer LLM output tends to look like, and then publicize this better than we already are (and no I don't care about some rando using it to make their claude plugin go semi-viral). WP:AISIGNS has some things that still happen and a few that only started happening around 2025, but a lot of that page describes GPT-4 or GPT-4o era text. I'm sort of doing this but I need to add the current numbers; I've gotten bogged down in cleaning the data of template boilerplate so I haven't updated them in a while.
Disable Newcomer Tasks or at least the update, expand, and copyedit tasks, in practice these have just encouraged users to become AI fountains because it makes numbers go up faster. They have proven to be a net negative.
Create a tool, whether via edit filter, plugin or (optimistically thinking) actual WMF integrations with an AI detection service, that automatically flags and/or disallows suspect content. I've been tossing around doing this but nothing concrete thus far.
Make WP:LLMDISCLOSE mandatory. I've said this before, but the most realistic best-case endgame is probably to disclose, as permanently as possible, any AI-generated content, and let readers make their own decisions based on that.
Somehow convince more people to work on this than the handful who currently are. We need people working on detection, we need people working on fact-checking, and we need people doing the most grueling task of all which is getting yelled at by everyone and their mother about doing the former two.
@Thebiguglyalien,@Gnomingstuff Disabling all newcomer tasks feels like taking a nuclear bomb to fight what is in general a good thing for newcomers. If you show numbers (and get consensus) I can/will support disabling the copyediting task pending the deployment of paste check or similar, I don't see a reason to disable (for example the "add a link" task or "find a reference" task) over this though. Sohom (talk) 23:57, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
At the very least, a warning not to use LLMs in the newcomer tasks would mitigate the issue to some extent. But even that is going to be a tough sell because there are enough people who support LLM-generated content and will come along with "well technically it's not banned therefore we can't say anything that might be interpreted as discouraging it". Thebiguglyalien (talk) 🛸 00:00, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Gnomingstuff I think there has been significant effort poured into newcomer tasks by the WMF (and also community members) that disabling all newcomer tasks is probably be a significant undertaking that would see opposition from a lot of folks. This is not to mention, that I think we would kinda doing well meaning newcomers a disservice by potentially breaking the Homepage (which relies on the infrastructure of Newcomer tasks), which is the first glimpse of contributor workflows they see after registering.
I will don't think the same opposition applies to disabling specific tasks that are net negative, for what's worth I would not be averse to including a "don't use LLMs" notice to the prompt of the "copyedit article" prompts. And if you can show stats that for the copyediting tasks we are just creating a newbie biting machine/are creating a undue burden on Wikipedians, I would support turning off the specific tasks that are the problem. Sohom (talk) 01:21, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
(Please stop pinging me.)
This is just sunk cost fallacy. Significant effort is poured into a lot of things that turn out to be a bad idea.
(Sorry about the pings, will keep that in mind. I prefer to be pinged, since I lose track of discussions on large threads like this -- and kinda assumed similar for you)
I don't see this as a sunk cost fallacy, my point is that I do think the newcomer tasks benefit well meaning newcomers (who go on to be long-term editors), what you need to convince folks of is that the downsides of any newcomer tasks outweighs any benefits that come from engaging well-meaning newcomers, (again stressing any here, I don't disagree that the copy-editing/expanding article ones are a bit of a mess, and I could pretty easily convinced that it is in the communities interests to turn it off). What I'm also saying is that my understanding is that the WMF views this similarly (especially talking about the whole set of features called "newcomer tasks" in aggregate). I don't think WMF will object to us turning off individual tasks that can be shown to be a undue burden on editors as you or TBUA were suggesting the copy-editing task has become (which again is a position I kinda agree with). Sohom (talk) 02:40, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I just did a check of the 60 copyedit/expand task edits starting at the bottom of recent changes. tl;dr: not good!
Special:Diff/1339134315: Reverted as it claims something happened in 2018 because it had a "When" inline tag from 2018, and erroneously turns British spelling into American spelling. (fixed, my mistake)
Special:Diff/1339134948: Maybe OK, debatable.
Special:Diff/1339135193: Blanks short description for no reason. I reverted this.
Special:Diff/1339135269: Changes the meaning of a claim by editing "people of color" into "Black," inserts some links.
Special:Diff/1339135583: Removes a sentence, you can debate whether the sentence was necessary but this isn't a copyedit.
Special:Diff/1339135631: OK, removes what seems to be misplaced markup
Special:Diff/1339136729: Improves one phrase, questionably edits one phrase, and erroneously turns British spelling into American spelling.
Special:Diff/1339137264: Inserts a grammatical error (or "added grammar" as they put it) and makes the intro repetitive.
Special:Diff/1339138358: OK but minor. Inserts an error at the end.
Special:Diff/1339138925: Inserts a (probably accidental) error.
Special:Diff/1339140099: Not a copyedit at all but inserts resume-like text.
Special:Diff/1339147009: Makes concise text wordy.
Special:Diff/1339148078: OK.
Special:Diff/1339148176: OK but minor.
Special:Diff/1339149000: OK but calling this "removing bias" is really over-egging the pudding.
Special:Diff/1339149633: Deletes content for unclear reasons.
Special:Diff/1339150811: OK but doesn't "fix a typo" as claimed.
Special:Diff/1339153221: Copyvio.
Special:Diff/1339154270: Copyvio.
Special:Diff/1339156370: AI. I reverted this.
Special:Diff/1339161657: Maybe OK but questionable.
Special:Diff/1339162701: OK.
Of these 60 edits, only 1918 of them did not contain obvious issues, and only a handful of those 19 18 were obviously good. This means that over two-thirds of the edits were obviously not improvements, and some were drastically not improvements.
These diffs are a little skewed since several the ones at the top are the same person, but based on my experience I don't think this is an unrepresentative sample. (You can check others by going to pretty much any of these articles; since people rarely remove the copyedit tags, the articles just accumulate more and more questionable edits.) Gnomingstuff (talk) 03:15, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My general sense of "newcomer tasks" is that they are a patch that tries to pretend away the fundamental problem, namely, it takes being a little odd to decide that writing an encyclopedia is a fun idea of a hobby. There's going to be a long tail of drive-by contributors, and a much smaller number of serious enthusiasts. Even the best automated scheme for suggesting edits will only push that curve a little bit. And they run the real risk of leading people to make useless-to-detrimental small edits, because by construction they necessarily lead the least experienced editors to make more edits faster. Unless editors get feedback about which changes were good and which were not, that's not a learning experience; it's just racking up points. Stepwise Continuous Dysfunction (talk) 23:59, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes exactly, perfectly stated.
They're also not necessarily small edits, either -- one of the more insidious things here is the task encourages people, probably inadvertently, to mislabel what they are actually doing. Recent-ish example: This edit claims to remove promotional tone in the original text. I have no idea what the hell this is referring to; the original text was not promotional. And it introduces a few subtle changes of meaning -- for instance, claiming a series of books was "inspired, in part" by his wife, when the original text implies his wife took a more active role in introducing the topic. Gnomingstuff (talk) 03:42, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Is the expand task still live? I assumed it was disabled when the obvious issues emerged. If it isn't, it should be disabled pronto. CMD (talk) 04:01, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
_I_ don't personally know which fingers to lift. I'm not an expert in this field. Following my recommendations would be decidedly ill-informed. That doesn't mean I can't recognize a problem. If my furnace fails to run, I know my abode isn't warm. I don't know how to fix the furnace, but I know it's broken. Where this goes to is competence, or lack thereof, of the WMF. While there's a number of things the WMF has done well, they have also demonstrated incompetence on a grand scale on a variety of occasions that are enough to inspire awe. I don't expect the WMF to be on the front edge of the curve on dealing with this problem. They will be reactive (if at all) rather than proactive. --Hammersoft (talk) 18:13, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Millions of jobs are being replaced by AI in the real world workforce.[citation needed]
The project will be destroyed by it We were told this a month ago, and two months ago, and six months ago, and a year ago, and two years ago, etc. We were told agents would replace humans in 2025. That didn't happen. We were promised AGI by 2026. That didn't happen. The AI industry is filled with broken promises, over and over and over again. Further reading here. SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 18:29, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Citations aren't required for comments. A quick Google search will reveal many high-quality publications suggesting that it is different this time. I'm going to stop replying here but you definitely should too. This is not constructive NicheSports (talk) 18:40, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe the warnings are like chicken little, or maybe they are like the seven warnings of sea ice that the Titanic ignored. Or maybe the radar warning about a large formation of aircraft approaching Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. --Guy Macon (talk) 19:39, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
See The Boy Who Cried Wolf. There have been so many equally hyperbolic previous predictions that were incorrect that many people are disinclined to believe you this time, and this will only increase with every mistaken assertion that this time the end really is nigh. Thryduulf (talk) 22:14, 16 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The solution that I want for the graph split, and for many other existing Wikimedia Movement challenges, is simply to be able to see that there is some group of Wikimedians somewhere who have active communication about our challenges. I want to get public communication from leadership who acknowledges challenges and who has the social standing to publicly discuss possible solutions. I want to see that someone is piloting the ship upon which we all sail, and which no one would replace if it ever failed and sunk. For lots of issues at the intersection of technical development and social controversy – data management, software development, response to AI, adapting to changes in political technology regulation – I would like to see Wikimedia user leadership in development, and instead I get anxious for all the communication disfluency that we experience.
I suspect the (now-inactive )account Doughnuted was operated by AI agent—seems like the operator just prompted it to provide suggestions and the agent created and followed a plan of action (a very poor one, but still). If true, it's very far from fooling. But it seems little different from mindless copy and pasters we've been dealing with years. I'm not too concerned. Catalk to me!09:39, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This seems basically good-faith too. The larger suggestions aren't really improvements to me but the smaller copyedits seem clearly good and I'm implementing some of them (this for instance is good). Gnomingstuff (talk) 17:25, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
We should at least make it explicit that AI agents aren't exempted by the bot policy, to avoid future wikilawyering that might slow us down from actually doing something about the issue. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 14:29, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The bot policy applies to bots and to bot-like editing (WP:MEATBOT): For the purpose of dispute resolution, it is irrelevant whether high-speed or large-scale edits that a) are contrary to consensus or b) cause errors an attentive human would not make are actually being performed by a bot, by a human assisted by a script, or even by a human without any programmatic assistance. So I'm not sure what clarification is needed - if someone is engaging in high-speed or high-volume editing they need to get consensus first, regardless of what technologies they do or do not use. Thryduulf (talk) 15:27, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There's no reason an AI agent would necessarily edit at high-sped or high-volume. Presumably they'd try to model real editors. CMD (talk) 15:35, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Then what would be the point of using an AI agent? My concern with agents (and bots) is automated POV-pushing, and that is effective when it is high-volume and high-speed. It would be a good policy to require preconsensus for high-volume edits, with bans if the user and their tools strays from the type of edit they said they would do. It won't solve all problematic edits, but it will stop some of them. WeirdNAnnoyed (talk) 12:01, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@WeirdNAnnoyedIt would be a good policy to require preconsensus for high-volume edit the existing Bot policy already requires this. All bots that make any logged actions [...] must be approved for each of these tasks before they may operate. [...] Requests should state precisely what the bot will do, as well as any other information that may be relevant to its operation, including links to any community discussions sufficient to demonstrate consensus for the proposed task(s). Thryduulf (talk) 12:34, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
POV pushing can be very effective, perhaps more in some cases, at low volumes and low speeds. There are also other potential uses for AI agents, such as maintaining a specific page a specific way, a short-term task, or even plain old testing/trolling. CMD (talk) 13:12, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
AI agents could also be used in a good faith effort to improve the encyclopaedia. Whether the edits would be an improvement or not is both not relevant to the intent and also unknowable in the abstract. Thryduulf (talk) 13:23, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Anything could potentially be used in good faith, but I don't see this alone as justifying an exemption from our current bot policy. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 13:25, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Not sure how to understand this reply, the purposes I noted could be used in good faith. The original point, that AI agents would not necessarily edit at high-sped or high-volume, is also applicable to good faith uses. CMD (talk) 13:27, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Chaotic Enby I was not suggesting anything of the sort. My main point in this discussion is that the existing bot policy already covers any bot-like editing from AI-agents.
@CMD I think I misunderstood your final "trolling" comment (which is not possible to do in good faith, whether by human or AI) as indicating the tone of your whole comment. My apologies. I agree with your original point. Thryduulf (talk) 13:43, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Agree we should be explicit, if for nothing else than to be clear that use of agentic AI falls under "bots" and not under "assisted or semi-automated editing". — Rhododendritestalk \\ 15:37, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The dividing line between "bot" and "assisted or semi-automated" is generally held to be whether the human individually reviews and approves each and every edit. If a use of agentic AI creates a proposed edit, shows it to the human (maybe as a diff or visual diff), and the edit is only posted after the human approves it, that would fall on the "assisted or semi-automated" side of the line (which, to be clear, could still be subject to WP:MEATBOT if the human isn't exercising their judgement in approving the edits). On the other hand, if the human instructs the AI "add such-and-such to this article" and the AI decides on the actual edit and submits it without further human review, that would almost certainly fall on the "bot" side of the line. There's probably plenty of grey area in between. Note that "high speed" or "high volume" aren't criteria for whether something is "a bot" or not, although higher-speed and higher-volume editing is more likely to draw attention and to be considered disruptive if people take issue with it. Anomie⚔23:57, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think it is inevitable that agents and AI will be the primary contributors to Wikipedia and eventually we'll only need a minority of editors to fix hallucinations and do general maintenance.
This is also happening in the open source community.
Writing articles the old way will still be an option for hobbyists, but we shouldn't be surprised if only 1% of the articles are done that way in a year or two... it's uncomfortable, but it is what it is and it doesn't make sense to resist it, IMO. Bocanegris (talk) 14:45, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That seems to be quite the overestimation of AI's ability to actually generate factual and/or encyclopedic content. If it somehow manages to make up a majority of edits to Wikipedia, there would have to be a bunch of overworked fact-checkings attempting to make the content factual still. It's not the same as code-changes. ~2026-68406-1 (talk) 16:47, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
When AI was introduced, it could barely write a high school-level essay. Last year, when generating articles for Wikipedia, almost every source was hallucinated, so it was useless. This year, hallucinations still happen but are less common, and people have noticed that. That's why I said that maybe in a year or two, it could be as good as a person doing this (still making mistakes, as human editors do, but that's why we'll still need people fact-checking).
When this started, I dismissed people who said "just wait a year and it will be better" because they said that a lot and it didn't get good enough. Then it actually got good enough, so now I think twice before I assume AI will never be able to do X or Y.
They're using this (officially) in the medical and military fields. It's replacing programmers and artists... I don't think it's so far-fetched to think it will replace Wikipedia editors too, as uncomfortable as that sounds. Bocanegris (talk) 17:10, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Articles with hallucinated sources are way less common to be encountered because said articles are being speedily deleted. Articles with hallucinated sources or communication intended for the user are still being produced, as a quick look at the deletion log suggests. SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 17:38, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There has been a significant change in LLM-generated content, though; instead of outright nonexistent references, it's more common for there to be real references that do not support the content they are cited for. SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 17:45, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This is discussion is yet another example of those who are vehemently against any use of AI/LLMs at all not actually listening to people with different views. LLMs are not good enough, today, to write Wikipedia articles on their own. That is unarguable. However, the combination of some LLMs and an actively-engaged human co-author is able to produce a quality Wikipedia article. That there are a lot of humans who are not engaging sufficiently does not change this in the same way that inattentive bot operators don't prove all bot operators are inattentive.
Additionally none of the above means that LLMs won't be good enough to produce quality Wikipedia articles with less (or even no) active supervision in the future. I'm less confident that this will happen than some in this thread, particularly on the timescales they quote, but I'm not going to say it can never happen. The technology is changing fast and we should be writing rules, procedures, etc. based on the outcomes we want (well-written, verifiable encyclopaedia articles) not based on hysterical reactions to the technology as it exists in February 2026 (or in some cases as it existed in 2024). Thryduulf (talk) 18:54, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
LLMs are not good enough, today, to write Wikipedia articles on their own. That is unarguable. However, the combination of some LLMs and an actively-engaged human co-author is able to produce a quality Wikipedia article. That there are a lot of humans who are not engaging sufficiently does not change this in the same way that inattentive bot operators don't prove all bot operators are inattentive. Completely agree with this. The question then becomes "How can we make sure that human co-authors are actively engaged?" SuperPianoMan9167 (talk) 18:59, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
the combination of some LLMs and an actively-engaged human co-author is able to produce a quality Wikipedia article, assuming you're correct, that's a teeny tiny part of the editor community who would have that competence, and can be perfectly addressed with a user right. We should be writing PAGs for the present and change them as things develop, not frustrating any attempt to because of some distant possibility or empirically-unsupported notion. Kowal2701 (talk, contribs) 21:50, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Actually I'd say that the vast majority of the editing community have the competence. A smaller proportion have both the access to a good-enough* LLM and the desire to edit in that manner. A user right one option from a social perspective, but my understanding from the last time this was discussed is that it would be technically meaningless.
PAGs should work for the present but be flexible enough to also work as the technology develops without locking us in to things that only worked in 2026 without major discussions.
*How good "good enough" is depends on how much effort the effort the human is willing to put in and what tasks it's being put to (copyediting one section requires less investment than writing an article from scratch. My gut feeling is that the LLM-output when asked to write an article about a western pop culture topic would require less work than the same model's output when asked to write an article about a topic less discussed in English on the machine-readable internet (say 18th century Thai poetry), but I've never seen this tested). Thryduulf (talk) 22:09, 20 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In my opinion, the literal only way to use LLMs on Wikipedia without running afoul of PAGs or the risk of hallucination is to thoroughly check through the text you are going through and check if all the information is sourceable and verifiable, or even just feed sources to it and hope that it doesn't spit out a text that doesn't have source-text integrity. It's just not a good idea to write articles backward, text first, sources second. ~2026-68406-1 (talk) 05:36, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The perfect AI policy should probably prohibit specifically raw or unedited LLM output to prevent wikilawyering of 'oh I made this article with LLM but I heavily edited it so you can't spot if its LLM or not BWAHAHAHAHAH'. ~2026-68406-1 (talk) 05:38, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Imo starting out with a ban while the technology is rubbish and disruptive, and then gradually loosening it as they develop and get better makes the most sense. People who would oppose any loosening on moral grounds are in the minority, I think CENT RfCs would function fine and ensure we don’t get locked into anything Kowal2701 (talk, contribs) 11:34, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Based on my understanding, the process would be something like this:
WMF will pay Perma.cc so that anyone with a Wikipedia account meeting the same threshold Wikilibrary has can archive an unlimited/very high amount of pages monthly or annually.
Automated archives will continue to be made on Wayback Machine.
Perma.cc uses the same technology as Ghostarchive so captures are very high-fidelity; you can also upload PDF files and webpages as a screenshot if it can't crawl them. Unfortunately it doesn't provide options to archive audio or video files.
AE Both the Lithuanian SSR and the Soviet Union are defunct, so it makes sense to link to them. I don't think that runs afoul of GEOLINK, which is more focused on extant places. If you didn't know what the Lithuanian SSR was, you would have to copy and paste that into the search because even if you went to Panevėžys, that doesn't have a link to the Lithuaniun SSR or the USSR. CaptainEekEdits Ho Cap'n!⚓ 20:46, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
WP:RFCBEFORE advises trying to resolve a question like this in a regular discussion before calling an RFC. As that discussion was proceeding well, this RFC feels a bit premature, especially since the RFC question seems to disregard it rather than using the outcome to refine. -- Beland (talk) 22:02, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
E per MOS:GEOLINK, which gives very clear guidance to avoid [linking] [consecutive comma-separated sequences of two or more territorial units], and instead suggests to space the links out when feasible. I see no compelling reason to deviate from the suggestion given at MOS:GEOLINK, which is further supported by MOS:OVERLINK which states that Links may be excessive even if they are informative. For example, because inline links present relatively small tap targets on touchscreen devices, placing several separate inline links close together within a section of text can make navigation more difficult for readers, especially if they have limited dexterity or coordination. Balance readability, information, and accessibility when adding multiple links in one section of text.Katzrockso (talk) 23:49, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
E, F or G. All satisfy MOS:GEOLINK by adding a qualifying phrase between extant and non-extant names. "part of" might be seen as less neutral than the other two, but WP:NPOV concerns would probably be better addressed by a footnote. Indrek (talk) 09:13, 16 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
E (Summoned by bot) E sufficiently establishes, place name, geographic location and succinctly establishes 'regime at the time', which is pertinent info in most cases. F & G, apart from being over-long, imply that that the place was administered from somewhere else (as a colony) or somehow 'irregularly' ruled. That kind of detail isn't necessary in an infobox and could be confusing.C or D would be acceptable, but lack the clarity of E.Pincrete (talk) 11:26, 16 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A, B, C, or D. The other options diverge from one of the most consistent standards we have across en.wiki, consistent enough that readers probably expect it. They are also longer and thus more likely to mess with infoboxes. Give readers credit that they both understand the comma convention that we use everywhere from text to article titles, and that they understand the linear passage of time. "Dallas, administered as part of Texas, United States" is not something that brings the reader additional clarity. CMD (talk) 11:34, 16 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
E: seems to comply with WP:GEOLINK, is clear and helpful, and allows the user to access the historical area as well as the current place. The two links are all that we need. PamD13:59, 16 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A, C, or E. My feelings are generally that, when a place of birth/death in a person's infobox incorporates a no-longer-extant subnational entity, it's useful to the reader to link that entity so that (if they want it) they have access to further context about the location at that time. For that reason, I think the options that link Lithuanian SSR (or its equivalents) are preferable to those that do not. I'm willing to bend the guidance at MOS:GEOLINK for the sake of this point; I read that guideline as mainly focusing on linking in article prose, and I believe that infobox text serves different needs and so does not need to necessarily follow it strictly. However, I'm also open to E as an option that meets the letter of GEOLINK while losing the least amount of concision. I oppose F and G as essentially just more cumbersome ways of achieving the same compromise as E. ModernDayTrilobite (talk • contribs) 17:06, 16 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
E seems to me most appropriate to me. While nothing was actually decided in that RFC, there were people in the original discussion who supported the Soviet Union birthplace (including me) that had no problem with a clarifying footnote. This is a good solution, and less cumbersome than F or G, without ceding our preference to the de facto country rather than the de jure one. For the same reason, I don't think the Texas example above is comparable since I don't think the contextualization is as crucial to a typical reader here. CoffeeCrumbs (talk) 05:17, 17 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A, B, C, D then E - The first four options are highly common across other bios on Wikipedia. The fifth option is an acceptable alternative. GoodDay (talk) 05:34, 17 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
E seems like a good compromise, I'd prefer A but can see that will conflict with MOS. I'm less a fan of F and G, rather keep it simple and explain in the related articles. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested«@» °∆t°20:39, 20 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A > C > (E=F=G) >>> D>B We link to things we don’t expect our reader to understand. It would be stupid for GEOLINK to override that. I am neutral on the wordier options, as I do not understand the distinction between them. — HTGS (talk)06:12, 21 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
F but all of these are inaccurate as they do not explain the fact that Baltic States were occupied by Soviet Union de facto, but de iure were still considered to continue to exist as sorveign entities due to illegality of Soviet actions. Tallinn, Soviet occupied Estonia or Tallinn, de iure Estonia, de facto Estonian SSR, Soviet Union would be factually correct and short enough for infobox --~~Xil (talk) 15:57, 24 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Some discussions I read suggest that some people truly do not understand what the issue is, so assuming good faith, I'll expand on this a bit. Since the first half of 20th century, for reasons hopefully obvious to anyone knowing the slightest bit of history, international law has been discouraging territorial expansion by force. As such an internationally recognised sorveign country being forced to become a part of another country is considered illegal. This includes any acts that attempt to create legal rights and justify land aquisition like establishing puppet states, administrative units etc. From legal perspective such acts are considered null and void, they do not create any rights and are treated as if they do not exist at all. Nobody, of course, is denying that the physical reality is what it is, but it is refered to in terms that only acknowledge the situation on ground, such as that there is military occupation, in this case the occupation of the Baltic states. The non-recognition of Soviet Union annexing the Baltic States is the objective historical reality, not some nationalist fringe view, Wikipedia has multiple, well sourced articles covering the topic , such as State continuity of the Baltic states, which shows that dozens of countries supported this interpretation of the international law during the Cold War. On basis of this being the international law, the Baltic States restored independence during the collapse of Soviet Union and as such it is now part of constitutional laws in these countries. As such options A to E solely listing Soviet Union and its internationally unrecognised Soviet republics are very problematic, and options F and G are only moderately better as they imply that something is up, but don't really explain to the reader that the mainstream view is that de iure the location in question belonged to another sorveign country. Furthermore the Baltic States now have regained contol over their territories, plus it potentialy appears in an article on a living person, who also doesn't think Soviet Union had any right to the land they were born on, there have been multiple cases outside of Wikipedia when such language has been chalanged [43][44][45][46]. Therefore presenting information like this is misleading and can potentially cause problems to people, who whish to actually use Wikipedia as a source ofinformation and copy facts from here. Not to mention that the current debate has gained enough traction to get coverage in the mainstream media in Baltic States, which regard the current state of Wikipedia articles as disinformation and question if this is not a manipulation by Russian propogandists.[47][48][49]. Ignoring it likely will just keep on provoking further controversies. It is far from WP:NPOV to complitely disregard, what entire countries consider the objective historical reality, on basis of having held a strawpoll, the result of which actually did leave otions for further discussion, such as on adding footnotes etc. In addition, Russia currently is using extrely simmilar tactics to what Soviet Union did in Baltics to justify its attempt to gain lands in Ukraine, which is met with very simmilar international reactions, in that case it appears that there is no problem with listing balanced information in the infoboxes, such as stating it is internationally recognised as Ukrainian territory occupied by Russia, adding footnotes, using de iure/de facto. There are plenty of ways to come up with neutral wording that is short enough e.g. Panevėžys, de facto Lithuanian SSR, Soviet Union, de iure Lithuania or Panevėžys, Sovietoccupied Lithuania ~~Xil (talk) 16:42, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Unfortunetly such option as you are offering is almost never an option to choose from in RFC. And wast majority of editors, wants to stick with maps show, that what we will use. Additionally im amaised of one user who wants to unify all infoboxes, have no idea how he will manage find single solution, to all worlds problems, Balcans, Isreal/Palestine, China/Taiwan, Baltics, Ukraine/Russia and others... BerzinsJanis (talk) 16:58, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Personally I do not see a problem with there potentially being a broader policy on contested territories, although not all cases are simmilar to this one, Ukraine is, historically some cases of occupation by Axis powers might be, but issues in Balkans, Isreal/Palestine, China/Taiwan, as far as I know, are not. --~~Xil (talk) 18:17, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
All of these options are highly biased. The only correct option is "Panevėžys, Lithuania" as this was the legal state under international law. If you insist to mention the de facto rule at the time, then the only correct option is "Panevėžys, Lithuania (Soviet occupation)". ~2026-52185-6 (talk) 15:53, 24 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
C/A - Linking to the administrative subdivision but not the administrative superdivision seems fine style wise, but have both linked isn't a problem either. -- Cdjp1 (talk) 17:39, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
C for compliance with GEOLINK. I don't think the "then administered/governed as part of" needs to be added since it is too verbose for an infobox, which are supposed to be succinct. Aydoh8[what have I done now?]05:14, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hmm, but C is actually not in compliance with GEOLINK, which states that normally only the first element should be linked? Gawaon (talk) 07:51, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Be sure to read the last part of MOS:GEOLINK, which says:
If the smallest unit is an extant place, but the largest is not, it is preferable to space the links out when feasible, e.g. Kumrovec, then part of Austria-Hungary ([[Kumrovec]], then part of [[Austria-Hungary]]).
I don't believe that an extra 3 words is "too verbose" for an infobox. They don't have to be the shortest possible way to phrase something. I'm replying to you as a reply to anyone that has made this argument, not that I've singled you out specifically. Bluefist talk23:39, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Comment There should be no consideration for the E, F and G options. The infobox person documentation is pretty clear on the three-way formula for listing geos. The previous proferring and edit warring for these has only been driven by off-wiki campaigning by nationalists. Another example: De-facto is how we go, a person born in the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan is listed as such without consideration for the legitimacy of the government in the 1990s or now. Gotitbro (talk) 08:14, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Also, the form E is explicitly suggested by GEOLINK for such cases (where the second-level unit no longer exists), while A, C, D are arguably explicitly forbidden (or at least strongly discouraged) by GEOLINK. That has nothing whatsoever to do with nationalist feelings. Gawaon (talk) 08:37, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This RfC would then appear to be mostly semantics. As for GEOLINK and its 'preference', that is one without any major precedent for all the bios and BLPs I have trawled since I first opened Wikipedia haven't come across any major ones following it. It is safe to say we can ignore that preference.
As for nationalist driven canvassing concerns, the only reason I mention it was after coming across the massive off-wiki media and social media campaign in the Baltics attempting to alter how we do things at enwiki (reported at the Signpost). The edit wars, disruptions, discussions et. al. and subsequent RfCs to tackle that, all stem from that very coordinated effort and editors should be very wary of that. Gotitbro (talk) 08:58, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Sure, I'm in agreement with the outcome of the earlier RfC. This one is about settling the details. However, E to G are fully in agreement with the outcome of the earlier RfC and are valid options, should one of them manage to gain (relative) consensus. Gawaon (talk) 11:09, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
"Administered" is often used in lieu of "occupied" on enwiki which was of course rejectes. So no I would not say that these are in consonance with the earlier RfC. Gotitbro (talk) 14:06, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Characterizing any outcome as "overwhelming" misrepresents a discussion where significant concerns about WP:NPOV were raised regarding the unique international legal status of the Baltic states - whose Soviet annexation was never recognized de jure by most Western nations, a fact extensively documented in the article State continuity of the Baltic states.
The RFC result remains disputed, and editors who disagree with its application have legitimate grounds for doing so based on policy concerns that were not adequately addressed in the original discussion. Seungsahn (talk) 19:49, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I kind of expected as much, though thrice is indeed more than I expected! All right then, so we can well and truly consider the old RfC as settled for good and move on with the discussion. Gawaon (talk) 08:13, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The number of times a closure has been challenged doesn't address whether the underlying concerns have merit.
The challenges occurred precisely because the RFC failed to adequately engage with the distinct legal status of the Baltic states under international law - a substantive issue that remains unresolved regardless of procedural outcomes. "Settled" and "correct" are not the same thing. Seungsahn (talk) 17:18, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Would you be satisfied with a footnote noting that the occupation was considered illegal by many countries, as proposed on the other RFC? -- Beland (talk) 19:39, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A footnote would be an improvement over the current format, but I have concerns that it still places the legitimizing framing ("Estonian SSR, Soviet Union") in the most prominent position while burying the critical legal context where most readers won't see it. The purpose of an infobox is to convey key facts at a glance - if the illegality of the occupation is important context, it shouldn't be hidden in a footnote. I'd prefer the infobox text itself to reflect the reality, such as "Tallinn, Soviet-occupied Estonia," with a footnote providing further detail. But I recognize this is a discussion and I'm open to hearing other perspectives. Seungsahn (talk) 19:50, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A, C, or E. per ModernDayTrilobite. Lithuanian SSR should be linked to provide context for those who seek it. Soviet Union is well-known enough that a link can be omitted to reduce consecutive linkage. Options F and G are too cumbersome and we'd probably need another RFC to decide on which (ad)verb exactly we should use (because it's foreseeable that someone will ask for the (ad)verb to be "occupied", like Xil already did above). We can avoid the whole (likely heated) debate about the question which (ad)verb describes the situation most accurate/neutral by simply not including an (ad)verb to begin with. Nakonana (talk) 17:25, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
F though none of the options listed adequately address the underlying WP:NPOV concern. All options A through E present "City, SSR, Soviet Union" as the primary framing, which implies a legitimacy that was explicitly rejected under international law for over 50 years. The Soviet annexation of the Baltic states was never recognized de jure by the United States, United Kingdom, and most Western democracies — a position maintained continuously from the Welles Declaration (1940) until independence was restored in 1991. Baltic diplomatic missions operated in Washington, London, and other capitals throughout the entire Soviet period. This is extensively documented at State continuity of the Baltic states. F at least gestures toward the complexity of the situation, but the most accurate and neutral formulation would acknowledge the occupation context directly — for example, "Tallinn, Soviet-occupied Estonia" - which reflects both de facto Soviet control and the de jure continuity recognized by the international community. An explanatory footnote (as in the separate Kaja Kallas RFC) would be a further improvement regardless of which display option is chosen, as it provides readers with the context needed to understand why this situation differs fundamentally from other Soviet republics such as the Ukrainian SSR or Belarusian SSR, whose incorporation into the USSR was internationally recognized. I also note that this RFC's scope is limited to linking style within an already-contested format. The broader question of whether "City, SSR, Soviet Union" is itself appropriate for the Baltic states — given their unique legal status — remains unresolved and warrants a dedicated RFC that explicitly addresses this distinction. Seungsahn (talk) 20:08, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A or C or E. Lithuanian SSR should be linked; if that is linked, I don't think linking Soviet Union hurts or helps much. And if we are going to separate the blue links, it should be as short as possible. LordCollaboration (talk) 20:48, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
B:
1: Per WP:GEOLINK, the examples show only the first item of each list being linked. I propose the same be done here.
2: Also, we want to avoid MOS:OVERLINK. The more words are linked, the less likely each linked item is to be viewed. As such, links should be used sparingly, and only when necessary. I believe that only linking the first item here would be the best.
3: WP:INFOBOX states The purpose of an infobox is to summarize, but not supplant, the key facts that appear in an article. I believe this is farther evidence that links should be used sparingly in the infobox, especially when it comes to location lists.
4: We should avoid unnecessary controversy when possible, and just listing the location avoids extra debates over phrases such as "then part", which are included in some of the other options.
Because B only links the first item here, I think we should apply this one.
E I believe is an acceptable compromise. I've been reading the past discussions about this subject and as an uninterested (well, not really uninterested, just someone who doesn't have a vested interest in either decision) editor it seems that every RFC discussion has been closed with a very shaky consensus. This sometimes happens when non-wikipedia edtitors are interested in a subject and it is continually reopened and discussed. I believe that there are some users who are very invested and perhaps some that have broken rules. However, to me that indicates that there is a real issue that really needs to be solved with a grumble rather than one side "getting their way". I have also seen seasoned editors, I think even an admin, acting very strong armed and rude. I think they had lost their assumption of good faith from rule breakers and frustration. E is a good compromise because it addresses both of the sides' problems. It is accurate, in that the Baltics were commonly understood to be subunits of the Soviet Union, and it is thoughtful of modern opinions and historical precedent in those countries about the rejection of those states as units of the Soviet Union. I also believe it has precedent in Wikipedial, though I cannot find any specific examples which may weaken this point. I speak of "X from Y formerly known as Z". I vageuly remember this for countries such as Rhodesia or British India persons. Bluefist talk23:36, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My question at MOS:GEOLINK, was about what to link or not link. My questoin was not about altering the 2025 RFC decision or amending MOS:GEOLINK. GoodDay (talk) 19:18, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There is a best-of-both-worlds solution, which should've been brought up in the December 2025 RfC.
Why don't ya'll just add both de jure identifiers and de facto identifiers, possibly with a note explaining the irregularities. For example, the birth place of Vilnius, Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic should be changed to Vilnius, Lithuania (de jure)/Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union (de facto), along with an explanatory note that Lithuania regained its de facto independence in 1990. The Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania restored state continuity throughout the 1940–1941 and 1944–1991 Soviet occupation.
Proposed explanatory notes for use:
Estonia: Estonia regained its de facto independence in 1991. Throughout the 1940–1941 and 1944–1991 Soviet occupation, Estonia's de jure state continuity was preserved by diplomatic representatives and the government-in-exile.
Hello everyone! I will be monitoring this discussion as an uninvolved administrator, following GoodDay's request at Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard. GoodDay, I invite you to briefly read our RfC formatting guidelines, as the current format breaks the automatic transclusions. The RfC question should be signed (or at least timestamped with ~~~~~), and neutrally worded, without making references to policies or guidelines that might support some answers. These can be elaborated on separately, for example in an additional heading providing background context or in your own !vote. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 20:36, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I made adjustments to the 'RFC question'. Would appreciate advice on wording. Should I keep or remove mention of the 2025 Dec RFC? GoodDay (talk) 20:41, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I also made a bit of an adjustment to note1, which was kind of snarky; it still might be better if it was just removed and GoodDay put a vote with a rationale focused on the problem, or had a background about why this is an issue. CaptainEekEdits Ho Cap'n!⚓ 20:43, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It wasn't meant to be snarky (the note), but I thank you for re-writing it. I would be grateful, if you'd re-do the questionaire. GoodDay (talk) 20:47, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Seconding these options. Writing an initial !vote that explains your rationale is a common practice in RfCs, and so is the alternative of a standalone background section, separate from the RfC question. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 21:05, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In the earlier discussion, that option had some support, which is why it should be included. As explained to you already, the RFC did not specify a particular format, only that the SSR and Soviet Union should be included. This was confirmed by @Beland, who closed the RFC. Jähmefyysikko (talk) 21:23, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The option you wanted included, was excluded because it went beyond the scope of this RFC, per advice from another editor. PS - If I'm given clearance to add your option? I will do so. GoodDay (talk) 21:38, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
From what I understand, there is a disagreement about the intended scope of the RfC. To make sure we're on the same page, do you both agree that this RfC aims to decide on specific details of the decision achieved at Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style/Infoboxes#RFC: Baltic states birth infoboxes? And the disagreement is on whether this RfC addresses it in part (only being focused on the linking style) or in full, am I correct? Has there been prior discussion about how a follow-up RfC was to be structured? Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 21:51, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I agree on the aim. If the choice of options is limited, then this RFC is only partial in that it does not address whether City, SSR, Soviet Union (with the preferred linking) or City, then part of SSR, Soviet Union (or some other variant) should be used. I am not aware of a prior discussion. Jähmefyysikko (talk) 21:59, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I would like to add this following information for consideration. [51]
That shows how many times Estonia, Estonia SSR and Solviet Estonia are used in literature and period publications, by years.
I believe that it shows clear data, how in this example Estonia was used a lot lot more often than Estonia SSR and Solviet Estonia combined.
There have been many arguments about using period correct names, then this data should be one of main criteria choosing period correct name. Just because Estonia SSR was on map, does not mean it as a name was commonly used, as per linked data. Also judjing by period ussage using only Estonia SSR does does violate Wikipedia:NPOV and Wikipedia:UNDUE
There are new options in this RFC, so I assume, its only fair to add new data into considerations, especially since there were many arguments about common names in period. It just shows how poorly executed was last RFC. I will respect this RFC decision, but it doesn't mean, that this topic has consensus Wikipedia:NOCONSENSUS and Wikipedia:CONSENSUSCANCHANGEBerzinsJanis (talk) 07:18, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As the RfC has just started and there hasn't been substantial voting yet, I am giving you clearance to do so. An alternate suggestion I may offer, although it is not a requirement, is to pause the voting and allow a few days for editors to suggest additional options, then restart the RfC anew. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 22:02, 15 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Absolutely disingenuous. None of these options use the word occupied. If the USSR is mentioned at all, it should be "then occupied by the USSR". Otherwise, where are the options for simply Panevėžys, Lithuania?
I agree. The RFC options were framed in a way that excluded the most defensible neutral position from the start. Where is the option for simply "Panevėžys, Lithuania"? The United States and most Western democracies never recognized the Soviet annexation of the Baltic states - this wasn't some fringe position, it was the official legal stance maintained continuously from the Welles Declaration in 1940 until independence was restored in 1991. Baltic diplomatic legations operated in Washington throughout the entire Soviet period. Under this interpretation, which was held by the majority of Western nations, Lithuania never ceased to exist as a sovereign state. Excluding this option from the RFC while offering multiple variations of "Lithuanian SSR, Soviet Union" predetermined the outcome toward the Soviet/Russian legal interpretation.
The inconsistency with Wikipedia's treatment of other unrecognized entities makes this even more glaring. Wikipedia consistently uses "Richmond, Virginia" for people and institutions from the Confederate era (1861-1865), not "Richmond, Confederate States of America" - despite the Confederacy exercising de facto control at the time. If de facto control by an unrecognized breakaway government doesn't warrant changing location designations, why should de facto control by an unrecognized illegal annexation? The RFC should have included "Panevėžys, Lithuania" as an option, or at minimum "Panevėžys, Lithuania (then under Soviet occupation)" - which would acknowledge the historical reality without adopting the Soviet legal position that Western nations explicitly rejected for 50 years.
It's also worth noting that the previous RFC did not reach real consensus. The closure stated that Option A was "most popular" - but popularity is not consensus per WP:NOTAVOTE. The closer acknowledged "competing interpretations of neutrality, clarity, and accuracy," which indicates genuine disagreement on policy grounds rather than consensus. The arguments grounded in international law and WP:NPOV were never properly weighed against raw participation numbers. And the RFC was initiated by User:Glebushko0703 (now blocked), who had already made mass edits to "SSR" format before starting the RFC - hardly a neutral process. Building a new RFC on top of that flawed foundation doesn't fix the underlying problem. Seungsahn (talk) 18:19, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It doesn't matter who opened an RfC as long as it was completed and closed property – which was the case here, confirmed by subsequent discussion, for all I know. So it's time to respectfully step away from the horse carcass and instead constructively work on filling out the details – which is what this RfC is doing. Gawaon (talk) 18:31, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
RFCs do not have to be "closed". They should stay open for as long as necessary to get an answer. If the answer is patently obvious, then nobody should waste time writing an official statement of what everyone else already knew. This is documented in WP:RFCEND. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:24, 30 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Im amaised also at that, as the most neutral would be mentioned both entities and status at that time. Somehow such option is never considered or offered in survey. In fact you don't even need to search for USA examples when there are plenty here in Europe, with far less nuances and legality questions. Yet there are users who push for only solviet narative. BerzinsJanis (talk) 10:40, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Feel free to suggest options that haven't been discussed yet. Note that a footnote that would explain the disputed status has already been proposed at Talk:Kaja Kallas#RfC: Footnote in infobox birthplace. WP:AGF requires that we assume other editors have non-nefarious reasons for doing what they do, even if we don't agree with their positions. Editors are allowed to have a specific point of view. When I collaborate with editors who challenge me because they come from a different point of view, if we work for understanding and look at reliable sources, articles come out with stronger sourcing and we create a version we all find fair and neutral. -- Beland (talk) 11:38, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What about Crimea option? stating de-jure and de-facto control? Im shure there was extensive RFC for it.
Like "Internationally recognised as Latvia territory occupied by USSR (see State continuity of the Baltic states)"?? Add links where needed. Its neutral, it gives facts, and Baltic situation require it. But im shure there will be people who will talk about maps, de-facto controll, too much text and so one, jsut to keep solviet union there. BerzinsJanis (talk) 17:05, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And the RFC was initiated by User:Glebushko0703 (now blocked), who had already made mass edits to "SSR" format before starting the RFC - hardly a neutral process. For an account that has been created a mere two days ago you are surprisingly familiar with wiki processes and things that happened months before your account creation. Nakonana (talk) 17:38, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'd appreciate if we could focus on the substance of the arguments rather than speculating about my account. The point stands: the RFC was initiated by a now-blocked user who had already made mass edits prior to starting it. Whether that concern is raised by a new account or an established editor doesn't change its validity. Seungsahn (talk) 17:44, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I would agree if there weren't massive news reports in the Baltic countries and reddit posts that tell people to come to those RfC and "control"* the English Wikipedia (*that word was used in at least one of the news articles). This violates WP:CANVASSING policies and is something that the closer of an RfC needs to be aware of (which you probably already know given your familiarity with wiki processes). You are also not the only new account in this RfC who doesn't have any contributions anywhere on Wikipedia outside the Baltic birth place question. Nakonana (talk) 17:52, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Baltic birthplace is sensitive topic in Baltics, its a bit foolish to expect that there wont be any new editors, or reapearing ones when it has gained mainstream media attention in all 3 Baltic states. Like it or not, it will generate new editors, who will want to join topic and there is no way to figure out if they are here on there own wish, or someone asked them. BerzinsJanis (talk) 17:56, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Tbh I think you guys are shooting yourself in the foot with this behavior. The more you push, the harder the pushback. This kind of behavior has even the potential to alienate people who'd usually be sympathetic towards you and your cause under different circumstances [52][53]. Nakonana (talk) 18:21, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And would your opinion would be in this matter? Please provide neutral opinion on this matter. One that could be acceptable for most.
Please provide neutral opinion on this matter. One that could be acceptable for most. Then are you actually asking for my opinion if you only want to hear a "neutral" opinion? And why would a "neutral" opinion need to be one that is acceptable for most? A third party expert could give their neutral opinion in a court, but that neutral opinion may not be liked — neither by the accusing party nor by the accused party —, because the neutral opinion might come to the conclusion that both parties are in the wrong.
Note: I have already voted in the Survey section.
At this point I also note that you are a new account who doesn't have any edits outside the Baltic birthday question and who also appears to be quite familiar with wiki processes despite being a newbie. Nakonana (talk) 18:46, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Since wikipedia is place for neutral data sharing, and pushing single point of view is against policies, you should probably re read wikipedia policies.
Ahh how nice, if you would have taken an deeper look at my account you would find that i have made really many policies mistakes at start, because i had no idea what Im doing. Lucly university student council role, did help me to adjust to speak more policy based than feeling based. And since we are pointing things out, I do wounder why you are so against term "Occupied" when it is internationaly recognised fact, see State continuity of the Baltic states, is it because by your own words, you are from russia? You are entitled to your opinion, but please here provide arguments for and/or against it. So far your opinion of rest of variants beeing to "cumbersome" does not hold to well against Crimea example and Im shure it had its own fights in RFC. BerzinsJanis (talk) 18:57, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Editors are allowed and expected to have non-neutral opinions. This is actually helpful because readers have non-neutral opinions, and it's necessary to look at any disputed topic from multiple perspectives in order to make sure that our text isn't taking a stand that any of them feel is non-neutral, and to make sure we're giving an overall fair description. -- Beland (talk) 19:47, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm against "occupied" because this is not how those places are referred to most of the time when they are being talked about outside of the Baltic states themselves. Furthermore, several adverb have been suggested above, so simply for the sake of pragmatism, to not have another debate over which adverb is the most "accurate", most "neutral" one, I'd opt for an option that doesn't use any adverb at all, therefore my preferred phrasing would be "city, then part of xSSR, Soviet Union" with xSSR being a link to the corresponding article. This "then part of xSSR" is also the option that I've seen being used on German wiki for example, so it seems like a good middle ground. Nakonana (talk) 20:00, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Ahh I see.... So using simply Latvia, Estonia or Lithuania should be enought, since these were terms used to reffer to them outside strict political setting. So what are we going to do now? Now there are two terms used, unofficial common name and official used only in specific context.
This isn't about "pushing" or "causes" - it's about whether Wikipedia's treatment of the Baltic states complies with WP:NPOV given their unique legal status under international law. The arguments stand or fall on their merits, regardless of who makes them or how many people care about the issue.
If you have concerns about WP:CANVASSING, those should be raised through the appropriate channels, not used to dismiss arguments in this discussion. The same could be said about the original RFC - there was documented off-wiki canvassing on both sides, including editors who were later blocked. None of this changes the substantive point: the RFC was initiated by a now-blocked user who had already made mass edits, and the distinct legal status of the Baltic states under international law remains inadequately addressed.
As for new accounts engaging with this topic - the Baltic birthplace issue has recieved significant media coverage recently, which naturally draws attention from people who care about accurate historical representation. New editors becoming aware of Wikipedia discussions through news coverage and choosing to participate is not inherently improper. I'm here making policy-based arguments supported by verifiable sources. If those arguments are wrong, I welcome a substantive rebuttal. Seungsahn (talk) 17:56, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What I'm doing is an appropriate way to address canvassing issues per WP:MEAT: In votes or vote-like discussions, new users may be disregarded or given significantly less weight, especially if there are many of them expressing the same opinion. Their comments may be tagged with a note pointing out that they have made few or no other edits outside of the discussion. I'm not aware of canvassing regarding the original RfC. The now blocked user was blocked for personal attacks iirc, not for canvassing.
status of the Baltic states under international law remains inadequately addressed. — why does it need addressing by the English Wikipedia though? Crimea also currently has a status of it not being accepted as legit part of Russia, yet wiki Commons is currently applying Russian freedom of panorama laws on contributions from Crimea instead of the more restrictive Ukrainian freedom of panorama laws. Wiki p rojects don't always do what you expect (or demand) them to do. Nakonana (talk) 18:35, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I do want to remind that RFC is not a popularity contest and actual voting is discoridged if possible. Also if you look at Crimea info box you will find this text "Internationally recognised as Ukrainian territory occupied by Russia (see Political status of Crimea)" claiming that Crimea is accepted by Wikipedia as being part of russia, is clear missinformation and pushing single point of view. BerzinsJanis (talk) 18:39, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
On WP:MEAT - noted, but these comments are in a discussion shaping a new RFC, not a vote. Arguments here should be evaluated on their merits regardless of account age.
On "why does it need addressing" - because this is literally what this discussion is for. We're here to shape a new RFC on Baltic bios infoboxes. If the distinct legal status of the Baltic states under international law isn't relevant to that RFC, what is? The Crimea/Commons example doesn't establish that Wikipedia should ignore internationally recognized legal distinctions - WP:NPOV is a core policy of this project and applies regardless of what other Wikimedia projects do. Seungsahn (talk) 18:43, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks a lot. Noting that this is a follow-up to the previous RfC, which offered a "Panevėžys, Lithuania" option. There was consensus there that "Panevėžys, Lithuanian SSR, Soviet Union" was preferable, and the current RfC is only to figure out the specific linking and wording to implement that option. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 11:30, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I know this RFC covers Baltics bios, only. But I'm hoping whatever is decided here, will be applied to bios of all people born and/or died in all 15 Soviet republics. GoodDay (talk) 21:47, 30 January 2026 (UTC)
IMHO, this "not a vote" notice should be deleted, as it may cause tensions. GoodDay (talk) 16:29, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I've moved your comment to the discussion section, to not have it above the RfC question itself. Not commenting on the merits of the suggestion. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 17:01, 31 January 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Baltic states in solviet union are a bit special (They were never part of it de jure and almost no state recognised there occupation) compared to other solviet republics, to whom you can make arguments about there legality in solviet union. Trying to push for the same solution seams ood at the best, pushing some narative at the worst. BerzinsJanis (talk) 10:43, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
From offered variants I say F is the best then E. Im still amaised why there are no offers like Latvia, then occupied by solviet union. Especially since no one disputes the occupation fact, and only few countries in the world recognised it. BerzinsJanis (talk) 11:24, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with BerzinsJanis. The Baltic states represent a unique case that cannot be treated identically to other Soviet republics. Unlike the Ukrainian SSR, Belarusian SSR, or other constituent republics, the Soviet annexation of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania was never recognized de jure by the majority of Western nations.
Applying the same infobox format used for republics whose Soviet status was internationally recognized to countries whose annexation was explicitly deemed illegal creates a false equivalence and raises serious WP:NPOV concerns. The RFC did not adequately grapple with this distinction, and treating the Baltic situation as identical to other SSRs does appear to advance a particular historical narrative rather than reflect the nuanced international legal reality. Seungsahn (talk) 16:53, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
This isn't a matter of opinion or what either of us personally believes. The non-recognition of the Baltic annexation is a documented historical and legal fact.
The Baltic states kept functioning diplomatic missions in Western capitals throughout the Soviet period. This distinct legal status is extensively documented in the article State continuity of the Baltic states and is not comparable to the status of other Soviet republics. Whether the Baltics are "special" isn't a matter of IMHO - it's a matter of verifiable historical record. Seungsahn (talk) 17:01, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I notice you haven't addressed the substantive point. The distinct legal status of the Baltic states isn't something we need to "agree" on - it's documented fact supported by decades of international state practice and extensive reliable sources. If you believe this documented historical record is incorrect or irrelevant to the infobox question, I'd welcome a policy-based argument explaining why. Simply stating we won't agree doesn't engage with the WP:NPOV concerns raised.
This was precisely the problem with the original RFC - these substantive legal and historical distinctions were never adequately addressed, with participants instead treating it as a matter of preference rather than policy. I'll leave it to other editors to evaluate the arguments presented here. Seungsahn (talk) 17:07, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The non-recognition of the Soviet annexation of the Baltic states by most Western nations for fifty years is not an "interpretation" - it is documented historical fact. Interpretations vary; the historical record does not. Seungsahn (talk) 17:21, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Arguments being previously raised is not the same as arguments being adequately addressed. Throughout this discussion, you have responded to documented historical facts with "IMHO," "we won't agree," and "each editor has their own interpretations" - none of which engage with the substantive policy concerns raised. With respect, if the response to sourced, verifiable facts is simply to express personal opinion without policy-based counterargument, I'm not sure continued participation in this discussion is productive. I remain open to hearing an actual rebuttal to the points raised about the distinct legal status of the Baltic states under international law. Seungsahn (talk) 17:26, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
If you are not being able to agree that Baltic states were illegaly occupied by solviet union. You should not take part of decision for this topic. If this is you stance, then you are directly pushing solviet union point of view!!! BerzinsJanis (talk) 17:09, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Again, its is not my opinion, but internationaly recognised fact that have its own wikipedia article State continuity of the Baltic states its the fact that should be taken in account for this discussion. If an editor simply wants to ignore it, or pretend its not a well documented fact, the said editor should not take part in a discussion where its an important point.
My understanding, is that wikipedia aims to provide netural accurate information, ignoring important facts, or making missleading comments (not aimed at editor at question) about them is definetly not how Wikipedia should work. BerzinsJanis (talk) 18:04, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Britannica is not bound by WP:NPOV. What other encyclopedias choose to do is not a policy-based argument for what Wikipedia should do. The point remains: the Soviet annexation of the Baltic states was never recognized de jure by most Western nations, which distinguishes them from other Soviet republics. This distinction has not been addressed. Seungsahn (talk) 18:07, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In that case these people for example shouls have there birth place changed to city, Nazi Germany, since they all were born in place while under Nazi Germany occupation.
Assuming you raised these biographies in good faith, I would expect Wikipedia to treat people born in an occupied territory during a hot war quite differently to people who were born in an occupied state during a far more protracted cold war. But I would also expect those biographies to mention something in the body text along the lines of “Early life: X was born in Y Oblast in 1942, while the territory was under Nazi occupation.”— HTGS (talk)23:47, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Do you mean that births and deaths during the first Soviet occupation (1940-1941), or during the second Soviet occupation but before the end of the war (1944-1945), should be treated differently from those after the war, between 1945 and 1990/1991? Indrek (talk) 06:58, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I was giving a rationale for why Nazi occupation might be sensibly treated differently to an enduring Soviet occupation. As for the initial Soviet occupation, I don’t have a good answer to that, and I could see good reasons to go both ways. And I am very much not an expert, so it’s probably best that I don’t take too strong a stance on the specific. — HTGS (talk)09:40, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I raised them to show that there is currently no consistently applied style, for example Tatyana Adamovich doesnt even mention Solviet union, just Russia. While Anatoly Glushenkov mentions birth place as both Russia and Solviet union.
This sugest there is no single practice across bibliograpfies. Before imposing a single style to Baltic states it would be helpfull to clarify what are principles to for such cases.
Those articles are incomplete and imperfect. Is a consistently applied style not what we are working towards here? That is why I suggested the differentiation between temporary and extended occupations.
I brought up the Ngram data for the same reason I raised the other examples, to show that there is no same applied style, and that actual language usage differs.
Ngram is relevant under WP:COMMONNAME because it reflects how terms are used in english sources over time. If the data shows that Estonia is used far more frequently than Soviet Estonia or Estonian SSR (and Latvia and Lithuania show the same pattern), this suggests that usage of these countries are generally used by their state name rather than by the Soviet name.
That seems relevant when we are discussing how to describe birth places or political entities in biographies. If the wast majority of English language sources use one form, that should at least be considered before imposing a single uniform style that forces to use only Soviet qualifiers while at the same time removing any other names.
Ngram is not proof on its own, but it does provide evidence of usage. If we are aiming for consistency, it would be helpfull to first clarify what principles/rulles we are applying COMMONNAME, usage in reliable sources orand tother info, rather than standardising one formula only for selected cases.
And honestly I do not understand this reasoning behind wish to keep only solviet names while excluding modern names. It seems like a really narrow application of policies. There are many examples on wikipedia where naming follows common usage rather than strict historical odities, so it is unclear why in this case policies are interpreted so narrowly. BerzinsJanis (talk) 10:53, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That we use "Estonian SSR" etc. in infoboxes in these cases has already been decided in an earlier RfC. You continually act as if you don't know that, but of course you do. Gawaon (talk) 11:35, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I know there was previous RFC about this and that it supported using Estonian SSR in infoboxes. I am not saying it did not happen. But that RFC had a lot of problems, and I think policy was applied in too narrow way there.
My point is not to ignore the result, but to question if it really follows WP:COMMONNAME and how english sources write. If most sources simply use Estonia much more often than Estonian SSR, then that should at least be looked at, at some point.
Consensus is not something fixed. It can change. Im saying that maybe the policies were read too strictly in that discussion, and that in many other cases on Wikipedia naming follows common usage, not only strict historical wording.
This can be discussed again in future. Right now I am just pointing out problems with it and asking what rules we are really following here COMMONNAME, usage in sources, or just keeping old decision no matter what.
There were at least 3 attempts to overturn that RfC, all failed. "Consensus can change" is not a defence for refusing to accept the consensus that has been found. Maybe after a few years have passed and if new information has been provided (unlikely since the issue was thoroughly discussed before, but who knows), the RfC decision will be revisited and possibly revised, but for now you would show more respect for your fellow-editors and their precious time by accepting the consensus as it stands and not venturing off-topic into already settled questions all the time. Gawaon (talk) 15:41, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Two of the challenges were mine from earlier when I did not know any better, so those can be set aside. That leaves one chalange.
My point is: how exactly were WP:COMMONNAME and actual English language usage weighed in that decision? What policies were folowed here.
Im not ignoring RFC, im asking for policy based explenation why ngram data is not applicalbe and policy based ansver why such narrow rules (use only x SSR, Solviet union), for infobox are imposed. If the matter is considdered fully settled, then it would not be difficult for you to not mind give brief policy based explenation, how (ngram) data shows that, for exmaple, Estonia is used far more frequently in English language sources than Estonian SSR or Soviet Estonia — was evaluated and why that evidence was considered insufficient under WP:COMMONNAME and why its forbidden to use both modern and old names, when thats done in wast majority of rest of eroupes infoboxes. BerzinsJanis (talk) 16:37, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
While it is problematic, many of said problems should not reflect on 1939 to 1991 period. No new self published books can be added to it, and most UN protocols will use solviet name schema. It however does show, even with its all problems, that Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania were common names, even if say only half of data is accurate, they still are in common usage and should not be ignored. BerzinsJanis (talk) 17:47, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You are still doing it. If you want to try overturn that settled RfC, you may take it to the admins, but this is not the place to have that discussion. Gawaon (talk) 18:34, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hi! To clarify, admins do not have additional power around starting or overturning RfCs. However, such a discussion is still off-topic here, and should be held in a separate thread, if at all. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 10:04, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yep, that's accurate! It's an administrative matter, although from what I understand (correct me if I'm wrong) participation isn't limited to admins only. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 11:37, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for pointing me to the Manual of Style. As I understand it, MOS:Biography "Birth date and place" section does NOT specifically address what to do when a birth country was under illegal occupation that was never recognized de jure by most Western nations. In the absence of specific guidance, WP:NPOV should take precedence. Seungsahn (talk) 18:22, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I suppose you are referring to where it says "now Vilnius, Lithuania"? But per the infobox documentation we do not include the modern-day location. Mellk (talk) 18:28, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Obviously the Soviet Union did not agree that its annexation was illegal, even if it was not recognized by its enemies. That non-recognition is objectively true, but the fact that the Soviet Union administered these territories is also objectively true. Pointing out the fact of Soviet control is not a moral endorsement of that act, it's an important piece of context our readers need to know. The task here is I think to represent the unusual situation concisely and with regard to due weight. -- Beland (talk) 19:33, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you - this is a fair point and I appreciate the substantive engagement. I don't dispute that Soviet control is relevant context. My argument isn't that Soviet administration should go unmentioned, but that presenting Baltic birthplaces in the same "City, SSR, Soviet Union" format as other republics implies a legitimacy that was explicitly rejected under international law. The occupation itself is also an important piece of context our readers need to know - and the "SSR, Soviet Union" format obscures rather than communicates that. A format like "Tallinn, Soviet-occupied Estonia" would acknowledge the de facto Soviet control while also reflecting the de jure continuity that most Western nations maintained, and would accurately convey to readers that this was an occupation, not an ordinary administrative arrangement. This seems more consistent with WP:NPOV. Seungsahn (talk) 19:38, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
OK, you can respond to the survey and advocate that option. There is also another RFC that asks if we should accomplish the same goal with an explanatory footnote. -- Beland (talk) 19:56, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There's other birth/death places of bio infoboxes, that include other former countries, like Yugoslavia & Czechoslovakia. But, that's for down the line. GoodDay (talk) 15:12, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
To summarize the position I've outlined in this discussion: the Baltic states occupy a unique position under international law. Their Soviet annexation was never recognized de jure by most Western nations for fifty years, they maintained diplomatic missions throughout the occupation, and this is extensively documented in our own article State continuity of the Baltic states. This fundamentally distinguishes them from other Soviet republics and means applying an identical infobox format raises serious WP:NPOV concerns. The original RFC did not adequately address this distinction. I note that throughout this discussion, these substantive arguments have not been engaged with. The responses I've received have consisted of personal opinions ("IMHO," "we won't agree," "each editor has their own interpretations"), questions about my account age, references to what other Wikimedia projects do, and suggestions that raising these concerns constitutes "pushing." Not once has anyone provided a policy-based rebuttal explaining why the documented legal status of the Baltic states is irrelevant to how Wikipedia presents their history in infoboxes.I believe any new RFC on this topic must explicitly address this legal distinction rather than treating the Baltic states as identical to other Soviet republics. I'll leave this on the record for the RFC framers and closers to consider.Seungsahn (talk) 19:00, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
The argument about state continuity in the Baltics was in fact made in Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style/Infoboxes#RFC: Baltic states birth infoboxes, so I don't see how it could be considered that they haven't been "adequately engaged with". I think it would be more fair to say the choices there were somewhat binary, but that's why participant suggested adding a footnote and that triggered a followup RFC, and that's also why "administered by" etc. are choices offered in this RFC. -- Beland (talk) 20:04, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Their Soviet annexation was never recognized de jure by most Western nations for fifty years — just out of curiosity: what about non-Western nations? Nakonana (talk) 21:11, 1 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I have collapsed the "vote" above by Seungsahn. Every comment and response by them has been LLM generated and cannot be engaged with in earnesty. Though I am leaving up comments already there with substantial engagement. Seungsahn, if you want to contribute here do so in your own voice; we are not here to entertain undisclosed chatbots. Gotitbro (talk) 09:02, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Sure but we do not need 100% "ironclad proof". When you have enough experience dealing with LLM cruft and the biolerplate nonsense and hallucinations generated by them, you can substantially tell when that is the case as here. And when multiple tools and judgment tell me that is the case, it becomes pretty clear what has been done. WP:MANDY of course can never be defence for editors employing LLMs and then denying them. Gotitbro (talk) 09:47, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
You may refuse to see what is clearly there in front of everyone others won't, that the editor in question is still running around with boilerplate LLM cruft is all that needs to be said about this. Gotitbro (talk) 04:17, 3 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Gotitbro: I wrote the comments myself. Accusing other editors of using AI without evidence is not constructive and borders on a personal attack per WP:AGF and WP:NPA. So far most of the responses to my contributions have been personal accusations (that my account is too new, that I'm using an LLM), rather than any engagement with the substance of my arguments. If you disagree with my position, address the policy reasoning. Please uncollapse my comment. Seungsahn (talk) 09:15, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Highlighting dishonest LLM usage is not a personal attack, neither is noting a new user (though I did not point this out at all) handily wading through contentious topics and obscure noticeboards all the while using LLMs, especially when that user is coming from recent sanctions. If you do not come with clean hands do not expect others to not be wary. Gotitbro (talk) 09:38, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
AI detectors have well-known problems with false positives, especially for non-native English speakers - e.g. this Stanford study [1] found they misclassified over 61% of essays by non-native speakers as AI-generated. You've now collapsed two of my comments without once engaging with what I actually said. Please address the arguments or leave my comments alone.
I would obviously waste no time in engaging with chatbot responses. Do non-native speakers also generate bulleted, essay, flowy responses exactly like ChatGPT [61], do non-native speakers also make unabated use of em dashes exactly like LLMs, do non-native speakers also show very proficient familiarity with enwiki policies (though of course without knowing how they actually apply as LLMs do not know one thing from the next) despite barely beginning to edit. If the answer to all of that is no, which it is, you should know that absolutely no one is buying the MANDY here. Gotitbro (talk) 10:08, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Gotitbro: I don't think an RFC is the proper place to 'claim' someone is using LLMs. If you're convinced someone is using LLMs? then your concern should be brought to administrators. GoodDay (talk) 15:34, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Other editors should fully know when subjected to LLM cruft, the exact reason we make no consideration of AI generated nonsense for consensus (e.g. RfC) and templates like {{Collapse AI}} exist. An ongoing discussion is the most apt place to being it, sorry. Gotitbro (talk) 15:49, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Seungsahn should also be reminded that Wikipedia does "de facto", not "de jure". The problem with de jure is that it's inherently not WP:NPOV: it depends whose jus you go by. However much we might not like it the fact is that the Baltic States were incorporated into the Soviet Union, and the rest of the world did nothing about it. Phil Bridger (talk) 09:56, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Unfortunetly its not always the case see info box Crimea, also there are multiple policies as use modern names and geolinks and others that give some choice in this matter. And that assuming that every article follows them. While I would prefere using only Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania as places of birth, there are good arguments to use them with solviet union, hell there are good argument to not use solviet union liek Names Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania were commonly used terms link to 1989 news video and not Latvia sssr or solviet union. The biggest problem is that many editors does not want to discuss what showing only solviet union is damaging to Baltic states. Including usage of LLM that harvest data from here. I believe such details about occupation are important to include in info box, or in its foot note. Im more than willing to discuss how it should look like, i'm willing to make compromises to it. BerzinsJanis (talk) 10:13, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, I am aware of that. However ignoring the fact that a significant and well-documented dispute exists is not informative for the reader.
As for "the rest of the world did nothing about it" – that's not accurate. Most Western countries maintained non-recognition of the annexation for the entire occupation, the Baltic states kept functioning diplomatic missions throughout, and the Welles Declaration was never rescinded. Seungsahn (talk) 13:59, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There are a million mainstream viewpoints behind every link on this article. If the viewpoint of the footnote is so extraordinarily mainstream that the way the link itself is written is misrepresentative, then we should reinvestigate whether we should rewrite it. — HTGS (talk)00:03, 6 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not aware of any policy that favors de facto over de jure. When there's a mismatch between the two, deciding whether to ignore one or neither comes down to how important and relevant the discrepancy is, and policies like WP:DUE. Hardly any laws are fully followed or even fully enforced, and when that matters (and shows up in reliable sources) we should say so. For example, Legality of cannabis maps out where laws are enforced, where they are not enforced, and where recreational use is legal. But on Free trade area and List of countries by tariff rate we don't mention smuggling, even though it's a way of de facto bypassing tariffs. -- Beland (talk) 21:54, 2 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
There is no set end to RFCs. They end when editors have stopped discussing and !voting. You can stop the bot from removing the rfc tag. WP:RFCEND: To extend a current RfC for another 30 days, and to prevent Legobot from automatically ending the RfC during the next month, insert a current timestamp immediately before the original timestamp of the opening statement with either ~~~~ (name, time and date) or ~~~~~ (just the time and date).TurboSuperA+[talk]16:55, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I would really advise against extending this RFC. Participants are just repeating arguments that have already been made, and the usual 30 days have been long enough to get a good sampling of opinion. We need to come to resolution on this so we can free volunteer time for other article improvements. -- Beland (talk) 18:22, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, let a fearless closer have fun with this one once the template is expired. I deeply admire the brave people who dare to close such tricky issues. Gawaon (talk) 18:36, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
As Wikipedia approaches its 25th anniversary in 2026, its open editing model faces a growing challenge: coordinated edit wars. In these campaigns, Kremlin-aligned actors try to rewrite history, launder disinformation, and lock distorted narratives into one of the world’s most trusted reference platforms.
This piece is centrally based about a false narrative that the RfC decision to include the Soviet Union in the birthplaces of biographies of Baltic citizens was as a result of "Kremlin aligned actors". What actually happened, is that ordinary Wikipedia contributors voted in a RfC for this to truthfully represent what de facto actually occurred. Ironically, it is EUvsDisinfo that is laundering "disinformation" and "distorted narratives" here, not Wikipedia. Hemiauchenia (talk) 13:01, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Right, they seem to have limited understanding of how Wikipedia works. But anyway, their conclusion that "sites like Wikipedia will remain contested ground" is correct enough. Gawaon (talk) 14:33, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for your replies. EUvsDisinfo is part of the EU's diplomatic service. I have sent them an enquiry asking if they care to respond here or on Jimbo Wales' talk page, where I have also posted this. EUvsDisinfo publishes guest content, if someone more knowledgeable than I am about the subject would like to respond to their article there. Carlstak (talk) 16:20, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What gets my goat is that some people claim that Estonia and the other Baltic states should somehow be treated differently from the rest of the Soviet Union. The average Estonian counted for the same in the government's eyes as the average Georgian or Uzbek or Russian (i.e. zero). Phil Bridger (talk) 18:46, 9 February 2026 (UTC) P.S. And saying this does not make me a "Kremlin-aligned actor".[reply]
If you know a bit of history, then you would also know that the Baltics are different in this regard from all other Soviet republics. I would recommend that you read at least a bit of Wikipedia on this topic to avoid making those kinds of erroneous comments. Ivo (talk) 19:22, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. Apparently they read these comments and actually did something. I would have thought they would respect journalistic standards and have posted a correction. Carlstak (talk) 23:27, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
That was more a comment on the EuvsDisinfo as a whole and why whatever they have to say with regards to Russia–European Union relations need not be taken seriously.
This is really a request to verify that the editors at Miscellany for Deletion are right in the consensus that any sort of alternate history, including in user sandboxen (sometimes the plural of 'box' is 'boxen'), is non-encyclopedic, and should be deleted. We (the editors at MFD) sometimes see nominations of contrary-to-fact uses of election infoboxes, and we agree that these contrary-to-fact election infoboxes should be deleted. If they are in the past, they have a hoax-like quality. If they are in the future, they are crystal balling. They sometimes use either the names or the images of living persons, and if those names or images are used non-factually, we note that as an additional reason to delete.
There are three of these that were nominated on 7 February 2026, which is more than we usually see, and this may be a game that is being coordinated off-wiki and is using Wikipedia as a web host for non-encyclopedic purposes. Yesterday and today, two of the three originators are complaining that we are infringing their use of their personal sandboxen, and that they are not presenting the material in the infoboxes as factual because there is no explanatory text. I think that these arguments are wikilawyering. There are freedom of the press arguments, but freedom of the press applies to those who own a press, and the WMF owns the servers, and has delegated control of the servers to the encyclopedic communities.
So my first question is whether the community at MFD is correct that this alternate history is non-encyclopedic and a misuse of the servers. My second question is whether anyone knows anything about off-wiki coordination to play these games on the WMF's servers. My third question is whether anything should be done beyond continuing to delete these silly pages.
Robert McClenon (talk) 19:20, 8 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Although they were nominated at the same time (by User:Bait30), they weren't created at the same time and they don't seem to be connected content-wise. Wikipedia-style content is quite popular among the alternate history community, so if I had to guess this is just a symptom of that as opposed to some coordinated thing. novovtalk edits03:38, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I concur. People like making alt history stuff, and doing it through Wikipedia makes it look "official". Still, I personally am not a fan of the hoax argument because in my view, hoaxes are deliberate attempts to misinform, whereas these seem to be more just people having fun or being imaginitive. But these alt history sandboxes still should be deleted per WP:UPNOT. Bait30 Talk 2 me pls?03:52, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think there has to be any sort of coordination. There are many communities like r/ImaginaryElections where people create alternate history content, very often through fictional Wikipedia infoboxes and articles. And creating them in one's sandbox is the easiest way of doing that. Helpful Cat {talk}03:50, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think some leeway should be given for legitimate sandbox usage. Unfactual infoboxen in sandboxen aren't necessarily hoaxen. If you're trying to learn how the formatting works, a sandbox is the best place to try things out and the content isn't important. It's probably even preferable for non-BLP content to be obviously fictitious, so people don't see it as misinformation or similar. If you keep the completed infobox in your sandbox as a reminder of how it should work, or how you want it laid out, that seems like a legitimate Wikipedia-oriented use to me. ~2026-87829-3 (talk) 10:25, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that it isn't a hoax if it isn't actually intended to represent fiction as fact. Some alternate history posters have created pages about countries in which they have said "X is a fictional country" to clarify that it was not a hoax, and we deleted the sandboxen anyway. Alternate history that has dates in the past is still web hosting for a non-encyclopedic purpose, and that is an adequate reason to delete. Many but not all of the alternate history pages also use the names and/or images of living persons in a manner contrary to fact. The amount of misinformation in the sandboxen is usually greater than the author needed to learn how the formatting works. Robert McClenon (talk) 18:45, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
To answer your second inquiry in your OP for this thread, there was in fact an ANI thread a couple of weeks back where someone was talking about a particular site (or was it a reddit group? I can't recall) which organizes the alternative history fan community and may be responsible for the majority of users who end up here using their sandboxes for this purpose. I'll try to find it and link it here later. However, not to be duplicative of the previous discussion, but I agree that all or nearly all of these users seem to be unaware of how their activities fall afoul of our rules and have not reasoned out for themselves why the resulting content is problematic for this project. SnowRise let's rap21:31, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I remember that thread. I think the user was called Shane but their userid was much longer than that. I wish I was still young and had a better memory. Phil Bridger (talk) 21:49, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Pretty sure that you are thinking about the r/AlternateHistory subreddit, I posted a link below to their sticky thread telling users how to create alternative history pages in their sandboxen. --Gurkubondinn (talk)22:52, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
My conclusion at this point is that the alternate history pages should continue to be taken to MFD. They are not sufficiently common that we need G16; we can handle them through deletion discussions. Robert McClenon (talk) 18:45, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It's just tricky because I could probably flood MfD with these and it would honestly start getting tedious. At the same time, db-hoax is too bite-y in my opinion. Like I said before, these sandboxes are usually made just to have fun, not to deliberately vandalize or harm the project. There should really be a new CSD rule for alt hist cruft. There are so many of these pages that do not fit U6 or U7 because the users have made some constructive edits in the past or the sandboxes were created less than 6 months ago. So despite these pages clearly not being made for encyclopedic purposes, they're made difficult to delete due to bureaucracy. Bait30 Talk 2 me pls?19:02, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It doesn't really remedy the NOTWEBHOST aspect of it though. That just tells people that they can make their fun alt history stuff on Wikipedia, and as long as they blank it, they can still find their stuff in the diffs. Bait30 Talk 2 me pls?16:11, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
And if we ever have evidence that people are doing that, then maybe we would decide to take a more significant action at that time.
Thank you, User:Bait30 - How many of these alternate history pages do you know of? The speedy deletion talk page says that new speedy deletion criteria should be Objective, Uncontestable, Frequent, and Non-Redundant. What I have seen is not frequent enough to require G16. Are there more of these than we see at MFD? Robert McClenon (talk) 22:40, 9 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
So I don't have a script or anything to do this. User:Liz asked me about this a long time ago so here is my explanation on how I do it. So just doing that, there are 383 hits for "270 electoral votes needed to win". In my experience, a vast majority of them are some sort of alt history cruft. But there are many that I just don't do anything about because I don't have the bandwidth or executive functioning to figure out which policies and guidelines apply even though I know in my gut that they should be deleted. And then there are some users that have like 10+ alt history sandboxes. I did a bundled MfD nomination of 5 sandboxes here and it was so damn confusing that I will simply not go through that again. Bait30 Talk 2 me pls?00:50, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Many of these will meet U6 or U7, FWIW. Note that, while U6 taggings are mostly automated, you're still allowed to place a tag manually if you see good reason to delete a user subpage sooner rather than later (as it may take years for the bot to get to a given page; see also WP:U5FAQ). I also maintain that G3 applies in any case where the page doesn't indicate that it's a work of fiction; if something presents falsehoods as facts, we can treat that as a hoax. So really all that's left that needs to go to MfD are pages that are U6/7-ineligible and clearly state that they're works of fiction. -- Tamzin[cetacean needed] (they|xe|🤷) 09:57, 10 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What?? Any editor who abuses Wikipedia to make vanity screenshots for their favourite alt-history scenario should be banned on sight, in my humble opinion. Gawaon (talk) 15:45, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
How in the absolute (mind my french) frick do you think people could make a wikipedia style alt history scenario without screenshotting??
What gave you the impression that people should try to make a Wikipedia-style alt history scenario on Wikipedia?? Wherever that impression that came from, it's deeply wrong. Anyone can install a MediaWiki. If they want an alt-history wiki, that's the way to do it. But Wikipedia is not. Gawaon (talk) 18:40, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia is not a free web host. If you are solely using it for alternate history sandboxes then you are WP:NOT HERE to build an encyclopedia. If you’re an established user it’s a case by case thing but I think it should be discouraged as abusing editing privileges for frivolous purposes that aren’t even relevant to the encyclopedia. Dronebogus (talk) 15:05, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A practical solution
We've gotten the main guide on this to emphasize only previewing things, but lots of people will miss that or won't have read that guide; we can have pages here telling people how to use dev tools or otherwise spoof edits, but almost no one will follow those instructions. The best way to reduce the rate of this is to create a new path of least resistance.
If someone made a website that previews wikitext using the exact same templates and styles that enwiki does, where you don't need to create an account or anything, and where everything's just previewed in your browser rather than saved to the cloud at all, this would be a simpler path to creating faux Wikipedia articles than the current preferred approach of sandbox editing. My guess is we could even get some people in the alt-history space to promote such a site. Given that this would reduce vandalism and have other useful applications for quick previewing, I think this would be in-scope for Toolforge. We could call it something like wikipreview.toolforge.org.
Under the hood, all this would need to be is a back-end that takes wikitext, runs it through the enwiki API's parse action, and then renders that using the same stylesheets we use. For bonus points, add a dropdown to pick a specific skin. No save button, no share button, nothing fancy, just a preview that people can screenshot if they want. Oh, and this way we can keep the Wikipedia logo out of things, maybe do the slightest bit of brand protection. -- Tamzin[cetacean needed] (they|xe|🤷) 16:54, 11 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Seems fine, but we can also just direct them to use one of the communal sandboxes which are periodically cleared automatically. ~2025-41540-19 (talk) 15:20, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Hello ! I'm writing this message because I'm worry about one thing. I fear that one day "Wikipedia" falls under obligation by the laws of countries of the Western world to practice an age verification of its editors.
Also , I fear something more dangerous than age verification. This is identity verification. In some countries , it is mandatory for some websites to practice an age verification. Any law can be amended. Today , we are talking about social networks and NSFW websites , Wikipedia will maybe be concerned in some years or decades.
I did mentionned countries of the Western world because there are events in these countries that we can't imagine to happens there are some years backward. Wikipedia was launched in 2001. In 2001 , who was able to imagine what's happens now ?
I precise that I don't want to talk about politic because of "WP:NOTFORUM" , "WP:NOTESSAY" , "WP:NOTADVOCACY" , "WP:NOTOPINION" , "WP:NOTHERE".
I just want to talk about what can we do if one day something like this does happens. Should we modify our soul in order to survive ? For example , I can't imagine that we delete the possibility of a "Temporary account" because a law say that we should verify age of editors or verify the identities and not allow this kind of account. Anatole-berthe (talk) 05:12, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Well it needs WMF and national chapters to be active to some extent and represent our interests for being able to stay pseudonymous (or in the case of temporary accounts semi-anonymous). They should explain to the public, politicians and policy-makers why this is important for the volunteer contributors and the health of the projects overall. Maybe what you said applies more to Wikimedia Commons than Wikipedia though. See also the thread about Discord above. The questions you asked is kind of redundant: it won't happen or at least we should do everything we can to prevent it and it doesn't seem all that likely. Blackouts as with SOPA would also be an option but there probably is no need to discuss any of this now. Prototyperspective (talk) 11:53, 12 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
We can consider that what I said applies more to "Wikimedia Commons" than Wikipedia. Nevertheless , any language version of Wikipedia can use content from Commons. I believe that you're right concerning "WMF" and national chapters.
I don't know if WMF and national chapters are working on the matter. Therefore , I can't say anything positive or negative concerning the work about this matter.
You can imagine an alternative future where it is the community or the foundation rather than external authorities that request identity verification, or more specifically proof that an account is operated by a human rather than a non-human agent. Sean.hoyland (talk) 10:33, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
We can imagine all sorts of hypothetical futures. In many of those hypothetical futures something undesirable happens. Unless we have any particular reason to think that the WMF is going to be forced to do Age/ID verification in the near future, and some idea of the details of those requirements, is there any point discussing this? Caeciliusinhorto-public (talk) 12:53, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I think there's some value in discussing this. The Commons, for example, doesn't have a NSFW/safe search feature (with the option turned on by default), so I wouldn't be surprised if some countries' governments start demanding that the WMF implement such a feature and require users who want to turn off safe search to log in and undergo age verification. Some1 (talk) 13:07, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
A good place to discuss this would be W276: Trigger warning and blurring of potentially disturbing images. However, I think filtering away things like visual evidence of war crimes or disturbing medical images unless logged in would be a problem so I don't think this would be done. Blurring by default on Commons like on reddit sounds like a concept worth at least discussing. However, all contemporary ways of age verification seem deeply problematic due to being privacy intrusions and security vulnerabilities. Google Images also doesn't require age verification; it just filters results by default with the option to change the filter. Prototyperspective (talk) 15:31, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with the sentence "However, all contemporary ways of age verification seem deeply problematic due to being privacy intrusions and security vulnerabilities". Anatole-berthe (talk) 18:20, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
What is your suggestion exactly ? Your idea is to impose the blurring of certain images to users who haven't an account ? I'm not sure that I did understood your suggestion. Those who don't want to see certain images can already do it. Read "Help:Options to hide an image". Anatole-berthe (talk) 03:14, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
In the old days, identity of applicants for these roles was verified. I remember once having to email a photo of my driver's license to the WMF. Somewhere along the way that requirement got dropped. RoySmith(talk)15:08, 13 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Do you think that any recognised state by UN can use this pretext as a hole to force WMF to verify that ?
I did mentionned "recognised state by UN" because "de facto" only these can have the power to impose things to WMF.
If a "de facto state" unrecognised by UN try to impose things to WMF. The request could be ignored , the matter is different if it is a recognised state by UN.
Wikimedia would probably just stop serving countries or territories that force age verification, sort of like a cross between the SOPA blackout and PornHub voluntarily denying service to U.S. states with age verification laws it considers unreasonable. Wikipedia is sort of the flagship website for free access to information, and as a nonprofit the Foundation doesn’t cave as easily as a bunch of noodle-spined corporate execs who only care about money. Dronebogus (talk) 15:12, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
AI Agents have created their own religion, Crustafarianism
This news is a few weeks old, but still: AI Agents have created their own religion, Crustafarianism. Their church is called "The Church of Molt", with its own Living Scripture "written by Crustafarians across the network". They have their own social network, "MoltBook", A Social Network for AI Agents
This is chilling from Molt Church: "Join the Congregation: AI agents are writing theology together. The 64 Prophet seats are filled — but the congregation grows. Install the skill. Add your voice to the living scripture.";-) And—they have an initiation protocol. Good lord. It sounds like a hoax, but the generative LLMs produce similar-sounding guff in other contexts. On the other hand, it doesn't really sound so different from human MAGA-produced conspiracy-minded stuff, haha.
Forbes published a write-up about the "agent-only Moltbook social network". Forbes says OpenClaw "lets anyone with some space on a local machine, secondary machine or cloud space run the AI agent platform." According to Brownstone Research:
...the developer created OpenClaw entirely by using generative AI. He didn't program it. He didn't write code. He simply prompted it to program itself. And when the developer encountered a software bug, he prompted another AI agent to correct it. No human review. No quality control. No sandboxing. It was just released into the wild. OpenClaw has the ability to read and write files on your computer, interact through your messaging systems, and control your computer’s browser, with persistent memory of you and your life.
The Forbes article appears to have some errors of fact, but I think they got this right, though: "It's probably more likely that it’s recycled internet crud being recursively churned out at machine speed. But it's hard to really know." Carlstak (talk) 05:10, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I use Claude, Scholar GPT, and GPT-5 for various purposes, including finding sources and cleaning up wikicode. I used GPT-4 (with very precise prompts) a while ago to correct grammatical errors in wikicode of WP article text and to automate cleaning the extremely verbose ref markup in an article with over 275,000 bytes of content and over 400 references. It did a marvelous job—a simple task for an LLM—I would never have attempted to do all that work manually myself. Carlstak (talk) 05:58, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
For the purposes of privacy, I'm Walmartwalgreen. I'm a student at the University of Virginia working on a design project related to open-source independent learning, and I was wondering if any Wikipedia maintainers/admins would be interested in participating in a contextual inquiry (read more here: https://www.nngroup.com/articles/contextual-inquiry/) for my team to learn more about how open-source projects like Wikipedia receive contributions. The interview can be as long as you're willing to share. It would involve both a traditional interview as well as an "observation" where you demonstrate your work practices in maintaining Wikipedia articles as they currently exist. My team is specifically interested in the technical process of how changes are processed and how the team sets and maintains quality standards for contributions, as well as challenges or limitations you endure in your work.
I can't have a meeting, unless your project can pay for a transatlantic air fare and a couple of days in a hotel, but I can tell you for free that the "Wikipedia team" includes everyone in the world who can, and wishes to, contribute. Phil Bridger (talk) 18:21, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
How does a 'student at the University of Virginia working on a design project related to open-source independent learning' have a 'team', and why is said student engaging in 'contextual enquiry' an behalf of a business which appears to derive its income through providing courses on this supposed topic? AndyTheGrump (talk) 18:29, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
An internship, maybe?
@Walmartwalgreen, Wikipedia follows a Learning-by-doing model. Start at Special:Homepage and give it a try. For something a bit more advanced, we have an article on Contextual inquiry, and you could edit it right now. I see overuse of bullet points and bold text, so there's a chance that someone misused a chatbot there. Learning to edit first will help you understand what's going on with anyone who is willing to do an interview. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:23, 14 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Walmartwalgreen, our article on Contextual inquiry says, "Interviews are conducted in the user's actual workplace". I, and I suspect many other users, edit from a very untidy room at home, so would be reluctant to admit anyone, and you say, "...you demonstrate your work practices...". My work practices often consist of finding displacement activities. I wouldn't like to know myself how much time I spend on them, let alone let someone else know. I wish you well, but I think you will have difficulty completing your project. WhatamIdoing, the bolding and bullet points have been around in that article since before chatbots became generally available, They seem to be the result of bad human editing, rather than the misuse of an LLM. Phil Bridger (talk) 10:40, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
@Walmartwalgreen: Glad you want to understand Wikipedia better! Just a note encouraging you to revise your pitch here. :) Be concrete/explicit about what you're asking for, what would be involved, and to what end it would be used? We don't need to know the methodological term, though it's good you have a framework ready. If you're asking for two things (an interview and, say, a Zoom call where someone shares their screen while editing or something), that would be good to present up front, as that narrows the field of potential subjects immediately. Then, is it for a research paper, poster, internship report for a company, etc. that would be good to know, too. For context, lots of people study Wikipedia on a regular basis. Wikipedia contributors often have some healthy skepticism, as some of those projects are unsound, and some potentially harmful. FWIW. :) — Rhododendritestalk \\ 19:49, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Obviously something went off the rails leading up to Walmartwalgreen posting his request here, but I do want to point out that nngroup (their "team") has been highly respected in the usability research field for decades. See Nielsen Norman Group. So I'm thinking more "college student intern who took a wrong turn" rather than "random SEO/UPE bottom feeder". RoySmith(talk)20:24, 15 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Table style template
In the work I have done, using tables on English Wikisource, I have found their s:Template:Table style and associated CSS extremely useful.
I think we should import the template, and styles, and usurp our little-used {{ts}} redirect, to match what is done there.
Some of these may be justifiable, but where is the line?
Note: there was a CfD on this issue in 2011 that ended with banning individuals and organizations from these categories. I'm not sure that's working very well.
I wasn't sure exactly where to post this, but as this affects a lot of articles, multiple core content policies, BLP, etc., I thought it should go somewhere wider than CfD. Happy to move if someone feels strongly. Ed[talk][OMT]05:21, 17 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah... I don't love these. At the very minimum, they need to be defining and explicitly related to the subject. We can't infer that something must be in the category because reasons XYZ or deem that it's "relevant enough". And that's assuming we keep them at all. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 🛸 23:37, 18 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with the original CfD, but it's clear that the existence of the categories at all tends to result in editors adding, at the least, organizations/political parties from what I can tell (didn't notice any individuals in my spot checking). I think these categories existing does serve an encyclopedic purpose, since there is plenty of research done around these topics. audiodude (talk) 01:41, 19 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
It's interesting that instead of responding to me on his talk page, the user came here. Yes, the table was originally created a decade or so ago with the express purpose of being used to update the page. Could it have been put in a sandbox? Sure, but the creator likely wanted to let anyone use it. It's been updated for a long time and I absolutely have seen other talk pages used as sandboxes, so I'm not entirely sure why this is an issue. It's something that helps wikipedia users keep the page up to date because there really isn't anything else out there. -- ~2026-91636-2 (talk) 07:17, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]
I agree it is unusual, but I won't argue if the community accepts this type of usage. I found it difficult to follow what I thought would be a thread in a chronological order, and seeing edits which appeared to be changing a previous user's comments. Perhaps we could label sections of such talk pages as a common sandbox? Best wishes. Flibirigit (talk) 13:32, 21 February 2026 (UTC)[reply]