User talk:Postdlf/Archive12

Latest comment: 17 years ago by Fluffy999 in topic Thanks

Image tagging for Image:Catherine_Bach.jpg

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Plot summaries as copyvio

Hi, would you be willing to contribute to the discussion I've started at Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style (writing about fiction)#Plot summaries as copyvio and see if we can bring more attention to the problem of in-fictional-universe articles? —Angr 20:16, 6 January 2007 (UTC)

Whitney Museum

hello, I was wondering if you take photo requests. would you be interested in taking pictures of the Whitney Museum? we don't have any that show the outside. one of the zig-zag on I think the Madison Avenue side would be really perfect for the Whitney article and the Marcel Breuer aricle. best, DVD+ R/W 23:27, 6 January 2007 (UTC)

I'll see what I can do. Cheers, Postdlf 04:26, 7 January 2007 (UTC)

The greatest game that was ever played

Love the deletion-log and user-page notices! DMacks 07:21, 11 January 2007 (UTC)

Categories for deletion: january 4

Yep, i really have no opinion on if the pages were renamed or not. Basically, i couldn't have stated my opinion any better than Avt tor did. dposse 13:16, 11 January 2007 (UTC)

Photos of Seattle Underground

Hi, I'm working on an article about the Seattle Underground for a non-commercial magazine of a small pen-and-paper-roleplaying club in Vienna, Austria. The photos taken by you and used in the wikipedia-article would be great to illustrate my article. Since they are released under the GFDL I would be allowed to use them only if I add a full copy of the license in the magazine, if I understand it correctly. Since the GFDL is a rather long text (I guess about 2 printed A4-pages) and our magazine usually has only 20 pages, this seems to be a lot of efford. So my question is if you would allow me to use them and just mention that you are the author and that they are under the GFDL (I could add a link to http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.txt for instance)? --de:Benutzer:Lychee 12:33, 12 January 2007 (UTC)

I'd be happy to discuss it with you; please e-mail me (use the link "e-mail this user" in the menu bar). Postdlf 15:19, 12 January 2007 (UTC)

Sockpuppet "Simpledays"

I think User:Simpledays is a sock-puppet of User:Gardez Bien who was kept adding a number of things of dubious quality into the intros of a bunch of Maryland, DC, and Virginia articles about a month ago. Most have to do with the cession of land from Maryland into DC. See Maryland, Prince George's County, Maryland, Montgomery County, Maryland, and Virginia and their respective Talk pages. Check Washington, DC's talk page too for some history on it. Jkatzen 20:45, 12 January 2007 (UTC)

Findlaw v. Justia, redux

We're discussing again whether to change the template(s) and external links at Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_U.S._Supreme_Court_cases#Wikisource.2C_.7B.7BSCOTUSCase.7D.7D.2C_and_linking. If you could weigh in, it'd be appreciated.--Kchase T 20:31, 15 January 2007 (UTC)

Iman (model)

Why did you removed Iman from the supermodels category?--futurebird 15:16, 20 January 2007 (UTC)

Because the category was deleted and protected against recreation. Postdlf 18:48, 20 January 2007 (UTC)

Do you think this would clarify?

I noticed that on the "peso" page, you deleted the reference to "Forerunners of the U.S. dollar" and said that it was ambiguous. I agree that it is somewhat ambiguous but thought I might place a clarification in the header. I wanted to ask you this to ensure that the information was accurate.

Thanks, Coinman62 03:29, 22 January 2007 (UTC)

____

After performing some research today, I made some changes on the "peso" article and the "Silver dollar" article.

Brian Jones (poet)

Thanks for your contribution. I was in the middle of expanding the article and that saved me the trouble of adding those two cats!--Poetlister 23:16, 24 January 2007 (UTC)

Block of User:IETIntern

Hi there. I'm one of the many people on the unblock-en-l appeal emailing list (not an admin, but experienced editor).

We got an appeal for your block of IETIntern (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · nuke contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log); it turns out that they are a staffmember (intern, but staffmember) at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. While they did violate the Wikipedia conflict of interest policy (WP:COI), they were not aware of that, and we have pointed that out to them and their supervisors. The materials they posted were apparently all used with permission of the SFMOMA administration, though there are some legitimate suitability and licensing issues with actually using it.

While I'm not sure how the discussions will end up with the nature of their future edits, the particulars of the block (copyvio) are apparently the relatively rare actual case of used with permission. You obviously had no way of knowing that at the time, the block was completely appropriate given the info you had, but we do have some more info in hand now. If you aren't on the unblock-en-l list I can either forward the email or find you an archive if you would like.

Could you reconsider the block, now that the copyvio issue is resolved? Thank you. Georgewilliamherbert 01:14, 26 January 2007 (UTC)

Were you able to actually verify that they were a staffmember with authorization from SFMOMA? There are additional concerns. The user had initially registered under a different account, Mauricio e (talk · contribs), and switched to the IETIntern username only after warnings about copyright infringements were left on the talk page of that first user account, which doesn't exactly support the assumption of good faith. The user had also tried to replace the Wikipedia article on the museum with the content of the museum's website, which is a problem whether or not they had permission to use that content. Thoughts? Postdlf 01:20, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
The emails came from the SFMOMA's email domain and internal mail server, and the header info looks good. I think the identity is legit.
The content suitability for Wikipedia issue is one of the ones I pointed out to them and their supervisor, who sent another email. They haven't responded yet.
It looks pretty clear to me that they're not Wikipedia-aware, but their communications were open about what they'd tried to do and polite. I think it's likely that they'll listen and talk to us rather than just restart the questionable edits. If I'm wrong then a reblock isn't that difficult.
Thanks for your response. Georgewilliamherbert 01:41, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
Fair enough; I'll unblock the IETIntern account. Postdlf 01:42, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
They did respond in email a bit later, and acknowledged the issues and agreed to work with us and WP policy. I will keep up a dialog with them until it's clear that there's not likely to be any more problems there. Thanks. Georgewilliamherbert 02:32, 26 January 2007 (UTC)

states

Courts: I have been putting all articles dealing with state law and state courts and their judges under the 'foo law' sub-category for each US 'foo' state. This at least puts everything involving law and its administration in one place. While the courts are of course part of 'government', in some states their articles were so dominating the government category, that the executive and legislative articles were losing out. I can certainly see putting a 'see also' notice at the top of each 'government of foo' category to point to the 'foo law' category.

Communications: Communications, of course, encompasses media, and also telephone (area codes) and mail (zip codes) and internet, etc. I see no differenece to be made at the US level versus the state level. Not sure that media is of such overwhelming importance at the state level, however, that it needs to be in multiple places or at the state level.

Thanks Hmains 23:52, 26 January 2007 (UTC)

While I don't have any strong objections to also including the court categories and articles under the state law categories, I don't understand your reasoning for excluding them from the government categories, as the judiciary is one of the three branches of every state government, as well as the federal. "Dominating" a category is not a reason for removing articles from that category if that is where they belong. Many states still need subcategories such as Category:Wisconsin state courts to collect all the individual court and judge articles together, so that is one way to reduce the direct presence of the court articles in the government cats, but the state courts absolutely must be grouped within the state government categories in one of those ways. Please do not remove any more. Postdlf 20:47, 28 January 2007 (UTC)

Roe

Hi, I left a message today for Eastlaw, and also thought I'd leave a message for you, about the ongoing featured article review of Roe v. Wade. The review page is here. If you feel like commenting, it would be appreciated.Ferrylodge 05:10, 28 January 2007 (UTC)

Spider-Man 4

Good work protecting Spider-Man 4. Thanks. If there's an actual article to be made after Spider-Man 3 is released, I'll come to you. Ace Class Shadow; My talk. 02:32, 31 January 2007 (UTC)

Of course, there is actual news about the film now... [1]... from actual sources, even!  :) Enough for an article? Who can say... Jenolen speak it! 04:20, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
I personally wouldn't. Luckily for me, the fine folks at WP:DRV are the ones who will have to bother with that when the time comes. I'm content to just enforce precedent in this case. Postdlf 04:24, 31 January 2007 (UTC)

Thank You

Thank You good sir, you seem to be deleting many of the articles that I have tagged for deletion today, and I appreciate your hard work and dedication to Wikipedia. Your efforts to keep wikipedia clean are not going unnoticed. I am proud to work with you to keep Wikipedia a clean and reliable source for information. Sincerely Carlo V. Sexron Carlo V. Sexron 03:50, 31 January 2007 (UTC)

Dylan Seaward deletion ... wow you are fast

I just had time to Google "Dylan Seaward" and was about to add {db-hoax} but the article was already gone! Wow you are fast! Re: (Deletion log); 16:13 . . Postdlf (Talk | contribs) (deleted "Dylan Seaward": nonsense; content was: '== Dylan Seaward ==Dylan is the main character in the 1846 book Curious Dylan, where he portrays a crazed fish child who has a crack addiction. The...' (and the only contributor was '[[Special:Contribut) Dzubint 16:18, 31 January 2007 (UTC)

cat:PETA supporters

good luck with that one. i don't think the swelling has fully gone down for me from my encounter with the hornet's nest of Wikipedia:WikiProject Animal rights. --lquilter 14:43, 1 February 2007 (UTC)

cat:Court cases litigated by the American Civil Liberties Union

Hey Postdlf - I see that you made a helpful intervention on the ACLU court cases cat not too long ago. I just realized that the category is actually mis-applied, as well; there are a lot of amicus-only cases listed (e.g., Goodridge). I've taken some of the misapplied cats off & will be going thru it only very slowly. You may want to take a hack at it too. --lquilter 04:18, 2 February 2007 (UTC)

Possibly unfree Image:Playboy February 2005.jpg

An image that you uploaded or altered, Image:Playboy February 2005.jpg, has been listed at Wikipedia:Possibly unfree images because its copyright status is disputed. If the image's copyright status cannot be verified, it may be deleted. Please go to its page for more information if you are interested in it not being deleted. Thank you. Valrith 04:48, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
Please be so kind in the future not to replace boilerplate garbage that I have removed from my own talk page, particularly when you've gotten yourself confused about what you meant to say—you're not disputing its "copyright status," but rather the fair use rationale for its usage, for which you should have tagged the image with Template:Fair use disputed. Either way, I really don't care about the image at all. Postdlf 03:04, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
The "boilerplate garbage" is standard Wikipedia procedure, part of which is NOT removing such warnings from talk pages, including your own. Valrith 06:49, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
These notices serve as notices to uploaders so they can contest or otherwise discuss the image problems if they so choose. On the other hand, removing vandalism warnings is disfavored because it serves to obscure that an account is a consistent problem. As a courtesy, I'm asking you now for the last time—don't restore anything to my talk page again that I've removed. You'd also do yourself a favor to reconsider your approach to established users (not to mention admins), who don't appreciate such heavyhanded treatment. Postdlf 20:59, 3 February 2007 (UTC)

CHICOTW GAonhold

 
Wikipedia:WikiProject Chicago/Chicago Collaboration of the Week
 
Chicago Tribune is the current Chicago COTW
In the past you have edited Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. It was the CHICOTW in the recent past. It has been placed on Good article on hold status thanks in part to your efforts. See its GA review and help us raise it towards the good article and eventually featured article classification level. The article was given good article on hold status on February 2, 2007. It will be reevaluated in between 2 and 7 days from this date. Recall that during its tenure as CHICOTW we achieved the following Improvement. See our CHICOTW Improvement History.
Contributing editors: AKeen, L Glidewell, NatusRoma, TheQuandry*, TonyTheTiger.
 
Good article nominee/Good article on hold
 

TonyTheTiger 23:09, 5 February 2007 (UTC)

Category system "ownership"

Am I alone in thinking that User:Hmains exhibits ownership/control issues with regards to Wikipedia's category system? I am becoming increasingly alarmed by the unitary decisions/changes he is making. Stevie is the man! TalkWork 18:48, 6 February 2007 (UTC)

Well, I have not yet seen him continue to make a change after it's been the subject of complaints, so I don't know that it's necessarily an issue of ownership. He just makes a lot of changes, many of which others have viewed as mistakes or simply not constructive. Postdlf 19:51, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
I see what you're saying. I feel that what Hmains is doing in U.S. state category hierarchies is unitary and not entirely constructive (e.g., improper nesting/separation of related subcategories). I'm thinking that Wikipedia needs some kind of "convention" to decide how state and city category hierarchies are to be structured, so that the decisions are no longer unitary in nature. I love the "be bold" philosophy of Wikipedia, but somehow I become very uncomfortable when this philosophy is applied toward categories, and that's because we're getting into how subjects are best searchable, and when one person decides it, and we don't know the rationale for the decisions, I think we are getting on a slippery slope. Stevie is the man! TalkWork 17:39, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

Closings

Yep, I figured that out for the second day of closing. Thanks. Do I need to fix that page? >Radiant< 08:25, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

Someone else already took care of it.[2] Cheers, Postdlf 15:43, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

Xxxchurch

Hey, thanks for your edits to Xxxchurch. I'm aware that URLs can change - mostly I just stuck them all in there as a quick-and-dirty way to get some references in there so that there would stop being so much controversy over whether the page qualified as notable (it just got undeleted after what I believe is the THIRD AfD discussion). Anyway, thx. Plymouths 00:09, 11 February 2007 (UTC)

Image:Make way for ducklings statue.jpg

The design for "Make Way for Ducklings" was created by Nancy Schon at the behest of Suzanne DeMonchaux, an urban planner from Boston. Funding for the sculpture came from a non-profit citizen's advocacy group and installation was arranged by the city of Boston. The sculpture is placed on public property and the work has been declared by the Boston Art Commission to be a piece of public art. Since a property release is not required for photographing public property, I think that Wikipedia does not have to claim fair use for this photo. ˉˉanetode╦╩ 20:40, 12 February 2007 (UTC)

Whether you're permitted to take the photograph is a separate issue from what you are permitted to do with your photograph afterwards. Could you mass produce and sell prints of your photograph with no risk of litigation? You seem to be claiming that the City of Boston has effectively dedicated the sculpture to the public domain, which may or may not be true, and doesn't necessarily follow from the sculpture being funded by a non-profit org or placed in a public place. Absent specific information as to its current copyright status, or any information on whatever license the City may have granted to the public regarding the sculpture, we should leave the fair use tag in place. If you still disagree with me, I will post the issue on Wikipedia talk:Fair use to get more comments. Postdlf 20:51, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
With regard to the question of commercial use, there is at least one photographer who is doing just that [3]. I searched for specific information on the sculpture's copyright and found several indications (though no explicit licensing details) that the sculpture was dedicated to the public domain due to its installation on public property and being specifically referred to as "public art". I know that at least in one case, Letter Edged in Black Press, Inc. v. Public Building Commission of Chicago (which dealt with the Chicago Picasso), that the city was found to have released a sculpture into the public domain by general publication. To be on the safe side I'm going to contact the Boston Art Commission for clarification of the sculpture's copyright status. ˉˉanetode╦╩ 21:15, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
Ok, sounds good. In any event, the image should have information on the sculpture's copyright status, whatever that might be. Postdlf 21:17, 12 February 2007 (UTC)

Oregon Law categories

Hi Postdlf. As you may have noticed, some of us at WikiProject Oregon are just itching to put any SCOTUS cases that involve the State of Oregon into some/any Oregon category. I made this little draft list quite a while ago that I thought could create a way to gather all the cases in one place without making a mess of the categories. (please ignore the improper capitalization) Do you think this a good approach? Or is it better to incorporate into an existing article? Which one? And if I take it live, what categories would it make sense to put it in? At least one Oregon category, I hope. Thanks for looking into it! Katr67 05:21, 15 February 2007 (UTC)

I've been thinking about this for awhile for the states generally, and I think list articles are the best way to go, such as List of Oregon Supreme Court cases reviewed by the Supreme Court of the United States, and/or List of United States Supreme Court decisions involving the State of Oregon, which can then be placed in the state-specific category as well as a SCOTUS subcategory. Categorizing the SCOTUS case articles themselves will cause unnecessary clutter and incorrectly suggest that a SCOTUS decision was simply a matter of state law or that the state court had the last word. The list articles can organize the information and contextualize it in multiple ways, such as chronologically, by legal issue, or by whether the Oregon Supreme Court was reversed or affirmed. Postdlf 05:27, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for the input. If you don't mind, I'll direct the project members to this discussion--a couple of them are much more patient about putting tables together than I am, and I can see that your suggestions would look smashing in a handy table. Do you know of any other states that have lists like this? Katr67 05:54, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
No, not yet. I had been thinking of creating one for my own home state of Ohio. I've worked quite a bit with SCOTUS case lists and tables: here's an example. Postdlf 18:14, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
Hello, came to talk about the Oregon Supreme Court category you were changing around last night. My questions is, with moving all of the justices to that sub, what is left for the main category? The only thing right now is the article about the OSC, and if there is just one sub cat then what is the point. At least that is why when I created the category I included the justices, because there was nothing else. And there will likely be little to add, especially when an item like Oregon v. Guzek is removed. Which I think should be in the OSC cat as it was not only a OSC case first, and thus can be categorized as such since OSC is not a sub of SCOTUS, plus the article was created as an OSC article first with no mention of the SCOTUS appeal, the SCOTUS decision came later. Obviuosly the reason it was created at that time was because of the appeal, but it would have been article without the SCOTUS decision. I'm not trying to own the OSC stuff, as I have done most of the work there, just trying to understand your reasoning as I will be continuing to work on this area to expand it.

As to Katr67, if you look here, I'm working on an article roughly titled "Oregon law" in my sandbox that should tie everything Oregon law related together if that helps. Aboutmovies 17:46, 15 February 2007 (UTC)

The justices absolutely have to be in their own justice-specific subcategory, to function as articles about people in the larger category scheme—check the parent categories of Category:Oregon Supreme Court justices to see what I mean. As for case articles that were once about OSC decisions such as Guzek, it would be a mistake and a deviation from practice to categorize those by whatever lower courts heard the case prior to the article-defining decision: no court decision articles are categorized in this manner. Whatever importance the OSC decision may have had initially, when the SCOTUS reversed it, it became a mere historical footnote to that SCOTUS decision, with no value as precedent. As mentioned above, a List of Oregon Supreme Court decisions reviewed by the Supreme Court of the United States could go in the OSC category, and organize and explain that information in one place without adding either an incorrect "Oregon Supreme Court case law" category to each SCOTUS case article, or a cumbersome one like what the list article will need.
At any rate, articles should never be categorized for the benefit of a category (i.e., to keep it from being underpopulated), only by what helps the article's subject matter. Postdlf 18:14, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
OK, so if SCOTUS affirms a OSC decision, then can it go into the OSC category, such as Muller v. Oregon, or no? And then with the OSC cat, I guess I need to be more clear. If, as there is right now (minus the OSC article itself), there are no articles, should the OSC cat simply be removed. I have no problem with the justices having their own cat, but if there is nothing on the OSC cat and the justices cat is a sub, shouldn't the justices cat be moved to the Oregon law cat (which OSC is a sub of) and the OSC deleted? Your thoughts?Aboutmovies 22:23, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
Even if it's an affirmance, it still should only be categorized as a SCOTUS decision, because by reviewing it, and by issuing their own opinion, SCOTUS makes the case theirs and the article is always organized on that. The lists I proposed are really the way to bring those decisions under Oregon-specific categories; any good list of notable OSC decisions will necessarily include those which SCOTUS affirmed. Regarding the OSC category, I understand your point about its present state, but why put any effort into deleting it? It will eventually become more populated, so we'd just have to recreate it, and it certainly isn't harming anything at present. I also just made the justice category also accessible through Category:Oregon state court judges. Postdlf 04:23, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
BTW, regarding your Oregon law rough draft, be careful about losing your focus with a bunch of ultimately unrelated lists. That a case "involved the state of Oregon or Oregonians" does not mean that it was about Oregon law. Law of the United States should be the model for how one writes an article about the law of a particular jurisdiction. Perhaps you should focus on separate lists (List of Oregon state court decisions?) instead of the broader topic? Postdlf 18:18, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
Actually, there are no unrelated lists there. The title is tentaivly Oregon law, but the article is (as should be clear by the large amount of non statute or case law information, i.e. what the law is) going to be about anything law related in the state of Oregon. Criminals, failed ballot measures, overturned ballot measures, law schools, old laws, law enforcement, the law making process, etc. Similar in that the casebooks from law school contain overturned cases that are no longer good law in order to tell the broader picture of what law is and the evolution it has been through. It's not just about the ORS, OAR, and case law. Do you have a more approbriate title? I was basing it off the Oregon law category that we have and had no intentions of people mistaking it for what the current law is in the state. Aboutmovies 19:08, 15 February 2007 (UTC)

Annie Parisse image

Hi, Postdlf. You mention in your userpage that you had the opportunity to take a picture with Annie Parisse. As we don't have any free image availlable for this person, would you consider releasing your image under a free licensing and uploading it to Commons? Thanks! --Abu badali (talk) 22:18, 5 March 2007 (UTC)

I'm planning on it, because the pic would be high res and a great portrait of her, but it's a little complicated. The pictures that I have possession of were ones my friend took of me and her, and my friend has the ones I took of him and me, all with his camera. He's been rather slow in discussing it with me, but as soon as I sort out with him which one of us owns what or gives permission for what I'll post a cropped version. Postdlf 23:06, 5 March 2007 (UTC)

Sorry to bother you

I have a few more questions in relation to the Evanescence-like image. Assuming for the moment that an image is clearly free and not particularly large, would it be allowable to use purely as decoration? That is, would improving the appearance of a page benefit the encyclopedia?

I don't know if the old New York Yankees "N Y" logo is still trademarked or copyrighted, but assuming the letter "Y" in that style could be freely used, couldn't something like that be used to connect the various pages about the team, while not implying it is their official logo?

I have no idea how what this note sounds like, but be assured that I'm just trying to understand the issues here, and your responses have been helpful so far. Gimmetrow 03:43, 13 March 2007 (UTC)

Deletion review for Category:Women Writers

You recently commented on this CFD on Women Writers. The debate is now up on deletion review. Please comment. >Radiant< 10:47, 19 March 2007 (UTC)

removal of prod

Hi. I was just browsing around, and came across the article 100 Greatest Stand Ups. I saw that it was prodded by yourself, and rightly so. I agree with your reasoning entirely, and also feel that it should be deleted.

However, when an anonymous IP removed the template without discussion, you reverted the edits. With most other edits, this would be fine, and the done thing. However, it seems that with prodding, taken from the template itself, "If this template is removed, it should not be replaced.". In that case, as far as I am aware, it should go to WP:AFD, as a contested prod. There are quite a few such entries on the most recent page. I would go and add it there myself, but my ISP cuts my bandwidth between 6pm and 11pm, with the current time being 6:56pm where I am. --Dreaded Walrus 18:56, 22 March 2007 (UTC)

As an aside, the article would probably be gone faster if put down the AFD route. --Dreaded Walrus 18:58, 22 March 2007 (UTC)
Oh, and upon reading that back, sorry if I come across as slightly condescending in my tone, it really is unintentional. :) --Dreaded Walrus 18:59, 22 March 2007 (UTC)

Realg187

I know he was being a pain (I had to repeatidly argue with him) but don't you think a indefinate block is a bit harsh? I know tons of blatant vandals who are far more disruptive, but their first blocks start of light (1 week max.) I think we should block him for a week or so and give him a chance to come back and act appropriately. Paul Cyr 13:12, 3 April 2007 (UTC)

He's an unrepentent troll who has not contributed anything to make up for it; those responses to our warnings and explanations were too excruciatingly stupid to be believed. Postdlf 15:33, 3 April 2007 (UTC)
He sent a complaint to unblock-en-l. On first inspection, an indef block of this nature is a violation of Wikipedia block guidelines and unnecessarily harsh punishment. While agreeing that he is posting inappropriate talk page comments repeatedly, and failing to heed normal warnings on his talk page, the actual abuse is nowhere near the threshold required for legitimate first-block-is-indef-block treatement.
I am not going to change the block at this time, as we're holding an email discussion with him about it and I'm waiting to see how they respond now that I have all the facts in hand, but I would like to give you the opportunity now to reconsider the block on your own. We have long term abuse cases treated far more gingerly than this indef block here - this is disproportionate, and gives him no chance to reform and clean up his act. Converting it to a 48-hr or 1-week block would be more consistent with the nature and severity of the crimes, as it were.
Thank you. Georgewilliamherbert 18:51, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
I'll shorten the block to a week based on your comments, but I personally think it's a waste of time. His idiotically persistent replies to the talk page warnings, and his continuation of the same behavior after repeat warnings and explanations, all indicate trolling. Postdlf 21:53, 5 April 2007 (UTC)

The Wrong Mr. Frank

Thank you for spotting the greater error - that it was likely the wrong person, not the wrong birth date. I'd only had one cup of coffee (my last remaining vice), and I reacted without studying the big picture. This will serve to remind me to edit carefully. Cheers! Hurrmic 13:47, 6 April 2007 (UTC)

Need an Admin to look at something.

I've run into a bit of a bottle neck on Squadron Supreme and Squadron Sinister.

Up shot is, a long standing editor is insisting on putting editorial content in references and is falling back on (paraphrase) "It's fact. It's sourced." when the material is removed.

I clipped it out once, along with other POV edits. He obligingly created the "Squad Sinister" article, and popped the "ref"s back into both articles. I clipped it out of both again, with a less than flattering comment about the content. And he's put them back.

At this point I'd like an admin's opinion on 1) both of our conduct and 2) the validity of including those "references".

Right now, if I were to respond to the last batch of talk comments, I believe I'd really put my foot in it (ie tired and likely to comment on more than the content of the edits).

Thanks for taking a look if you can.

- J Greb 08:31, 7 April 2007 (UTC)

I took a quick look at everything earlier today, and at that time it didn't appear to me that you two had reached the level of an uncivil edit war that you can't resolve through further discussion. I think to really judge the dispute I'd have to know more about the subject matter (which I don't have, aside from dim memories of reading the Squadron OHOTMU entries over fifteen years ago), but I can tell you that the other editor appears to be writing too much from an in-universe perspective. All the comments about what was "really" happening in a given story seems to be incorporating retcon information from later stories into the earlier ones, but of course if the reader is not actually presented with this in a story it's not there. Retcons should of course always be described in terms of when, in real life, story information is given, rather than according to the fictional timeline. An example of how to properly handle this would be: "Grandmaster Flash defeats the Spiffy Squadron in Avenged #67 with little apparent effort. A flashback depicted in Avenged #356 retroactively portrays that event as an illusion created by Squadron foe Alexi Ruther." Cheers, Postdlf 01:00, 8 April 2007 (UTC)
Thanks... I was a little concerned I may have pushed things and, as I noted, I was to darn tired last night when the responses came up to trust myself to self-edit. Beyond that I was also getting very frustrated, both with what you point out and the tendency of the appearance of OWNing to creep into half the edits.
Again, thanks for taking a look, - J Greb 01:47, 8 April 2007 (UTC)

New York v. Connecticut

I saw that many months ago you reverted the newer template infobox back to using the table infobox version because NY v. Conn. was an original jurisdiction case. I've updated the Template:SCOTUSCase code to allow for original jurisdiction to be included as well as allowing claim and procedural history to be added as well. With those modifications, is there any reason to not update the case article to use the template infobox? Cheers. --MZMcBride 17:01, 7 April 2007 (UTC)

None at all, as long as it can duplicate what is on the article as is, by omitting the parameters that are decision-specific (as most SCOTUS case articles are) and only including the ones that are relevant to OJ lawsuits. Postdlf 00:47, 8 April 2007 (UTC)
I've modified the template so that if OriginalJurisdiction=yes, the header will change from Holding to Outcome. In addition, if OriginalJurisdiction=yes, you are able to input whatever information you'd like into the SCOTUS field, not just years. Hope that solves all the issues, if not, let me know. Cheers. --MZMcBride 03:32, 8 April 2007 (UTC)

Reasons to keep the article "Jack Hui"

Sorry, I'm not quick enough to let you know those reasons to keep the article. Here are the reasons:

1. The argument provided by user Cyktsui to delete this page is that the case is only suspected. However, the nature of the case is clearly stated in the article: "Hui pleaded not guilty in the first trial on January 12, 2007 and the judge granted a request to delay the trial so that Hui could sit for the Hong Kong Advanced Level Examination.". There is no defamatory, only attributable facts.

2. The subject in question is sufficiently notable, not only because of his suspected indecent assault case, but also his achievement. Googling his Chinese name will result in tons of verifiable information.

3. The article is neutral and independent (As a matter of fact, I don't know Mr.Hui personally) but I know more about him because of the reports of his case from the mass media.

4. The article is informative, and well sourced.

Can you roll it back? Thanks.

- INTELer 17:31, 8 April 2007 (UTC)

I did have second thoughts as soon as I clicked delete; I'll restore it so you can continue to argue for its merits. Postdlf 17:32, 8 April 2007 (UTC)
Thanks! Your action is so speedy, sorry for my slow typing. ^^ - INTELer 17:34, 8 April 2007 (UTC)

Thanks

For your speedy delete, on reflection I did not feel comfortable as the image had children. Thanks.Fluffy999 19:58, 8 April 2007 (UTC)