Wikipedia talk:BRD misuse

Latest comment: 3 years ago by Geo Swan in topic Call for discussion
WikiProject iconEssays Low‑impact
WikiProject iconThis page is within the scope of WikiProject Wikipedia essays, a collaborative effort to organise and monitor the impact of Wikipedia essays. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion. For a listing of essays see the essay directory.
LowThis page has been rated as Low-impact on the project's impact scale.
Note icon
The above rating was automatically assessed using data on pageviews, watchers, and incoming links.

Ninjas edit

There should be a word, polite or otherwise, for Editors whose sole activity is to revert other users' edits. It's like they watch Recent Changes and just go, "Undo, Undo, Undo!" When I look at their Contributions, it's just a list of reversions and if you go to their Talk Page, you'll see a list of angry Editors asking what the heck happened. I understand reverting vandalism but, seriously, some of this stuff is just about placement of commas. Liz Read! Talk! 00:38, 12 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

BRD misuse is good enough to only counter an argument but at the meantime it also helps build up an illusion that "BRD is not a disrupt" (Your proposal falls into this pattern but it is better than nothing.), so BRD misuse is not exactly what we mean. Currently, BRD supports the claim that bold revert is not bold, so the troll can revert arbitrary edit according to their likings, and they can get you to talk, pick bones from an egg..etc. It is perfectly fine, in fact, it is GOOD because of BRD. It doesn't matter if you edit is finally admitted, they get away. <--- This should cover everything, I will be highly appreciated if you can spot them precisely.
Lastly, if you really want to fix that, then it seems to me that deletion on BRD is necessary instead of branching ideas off from BRD. --14.198.220.253 (talk) 19:04, 14 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

Should be BRD disrupt edit

When you say "misuse", it is implied that BRD is just. However, BRD *assumes* that (B)old and (R)evert are two things, clearly doesn't. The consequence is that some editors boldly revert many edits under the name of BRD, tedious discussion is inevitable thanks to their justified ignorance(or disrupt), BRD is not a rule, not an ideal, it is disruption. --14.198.220.253 (talk) 18:29, 14 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

This wouldn't have anything to do with your edit warring, as documented at User talk:14.198.220.253, would it? Wikipedia is not going to change our edit war policy just because you want to be allowed to edit war, even if you do post your dissatisfaction with WP:EDITWAR in multiple places.[1][2][3] --Guy Macon (talk) 22:46, 14 November 2013 (UTC)Reply
This wouldn't have anything to do with your edit warring, as documented at User talk:14.198.220.253, would it?
Yes, you are right, it doesn't. Are you trying to guess my intent and use WP:PA or engage in edit war? I hope you understand that it is Wikipedia, please WP:FOC. --14.198.220.253 (talk) 06:52, 15 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

Call for discussion edit

While I agree with some of the points of this essay the following passages seem problematic to me.

You ask what points they want you to respond to and they say, "All of them!" So, you go through with the tedious task of responding to every single trivial point they make and click "Publish changes".
Five minutes later, you look at the talkpage to see another ten-page essay. Again, the cycle continues. You respond in a few sentences and perhaps the person themselves even responds in a few sentences, but the conversation goes on and on and on, in such a way that it's clear that it's more of an intellectual game, like a staring contest, to see who will give up first, rather than an actual rational, meaningful discussion.

The assumption here seems to be that this essay's author is writing for readers who know their interpretations of policy are correct.

We owe it to ourselves, and we owe it to the project, to consider the possibility that the individual who seems to have gone on at tedious length might be making valid points after all. I am working on an essay of my own, User:Geo Swan/opinions/Teachable moments.

The wikipedia's rules are complicated, can be ambiguous or even contradictory, and are in a constant state of flux. Further there is no wikipedia school, no training course. We all received "on the job training". So we owe it to one another to listen to one another. Sometimes people who learned English as a second language, or have dyslexia, may nevertheless be worth paying attention. Geo Swan (talk) 06:17, 10 August 2020 (UTC)Reply