And it is going exactly how one would imagine.
Wikipediocrats can't do science. Like their seed population. But hey, they give it a good go.....
A useless meat sack wrote:You should start examining some of the elements of your hypothesis more closely.
And to be clear, you don't think that applies to someone claiming "Wikipedia is largely built out for major articles and is in more of a sustaining mode" or "early offerings of primitive AI, along the lines of ChatGPT, can replace most of the editing functions being done manually"?
Is Wikipedia in "sustainability mode" out of choice, or due to an acute labour shortage? *checks quality ratings of Level 1 and 2 Vital articles*. Oh no, wait, I think I got the answer! Good old close examination wins again. Hard to argue Wikipedia is contentedly sustaining itself by choice when only 11 of its 150 most important articles have reached their own self certified standard of being their "best work".
As I suspected, this tool fails the Thesaurus attack.
"Eat a bag of dicks and die in a fire." <-- That's a problem.
"Consume a satchel of Richards and expire in flames." <-- Okie dokie
Hmmm. Further research most definitely not required. The witty retort of subject B is not a problem because it would naturally help retain users, eager to bask in the superior intellect of their enemy turned mentor.
We call this the Eric Corbet phenomenon down at the lab. The Vigilant phenomenon, the feeling of dread, depression and disgust as you observe a tired old dog pissing itself while it ever so gently gums at your leg, is quite a different thing entirely.
A giraffe wrote:Perhaps a future area of study might be to look at the origin of the toxic comments. My guess is that newer users are more likely to leave toxic comments because they are unaware of the conduct expectations, have less time invested, and have not yet been warned/blocked for their behaviour
Your "guess" is coincidentally an extremely common view held by the Wikipedians. It very successfully permeated out into the world as Wikipedia went mainstream, because it is quite persuasive to the layman and those who have never spent much time in the guts of Wikipedia. And of course, it being a commonly held view suited Wikipedians, who were very happy to be absolved of blame for the theory that it was the toxicity of established editors that was behind the deceleration and reversal of Wikipedia's editor numbers.
But there is good news for all guessers.
This myth was busted by a study done all way back in 2015. A literal Ice Age ago in Wikipedia years. It's findings were extremely revealing....
"Perhaps surprisingly, approximately 30% of attacks come from registered users with over a 100 contributions." In other words, a third of all personal attacks come from regular Wikipedia editors who contribute several edits per month. Personal attacks seem to be baked into Wikipedia culture.
The researchers also found that an outsized percentage of attacks come from a very small number of "highly toxic" Wikipedia contributors. A whopping 9% of attacks in 2015 came from just 34 users who had made 20 or more personal attacks during the year. "Significant progress could be made by moderating a relatively small number of frequent attackers," the researchers note. This finding bolsters the idea that problems in online communities often come from a small minority of highly vocal users.
.....
The algorithm was also able to identify a phenomenon often called the "pile-on." They found that attacking comments are 22 times more likely to occur close to another attacking comment. "Personal attacks cluster together in time," the researchers write. "Perhaps because one personal attack triggers another."
....
It means that an algorithm might be able to identify a pile-on before it really blows up, and moderators could come in to de-escalate before things get really ugly.
Depressingly, the study also found that very few personal attacks are moderated. Only 17.9% of personal attacks lead to a warning or ban. Attackers are more likely to be moderated if they have launched a number of attacks or have been moderated before. But still, this is an abysmal rate of moderation for the most obvious and blatant form of abuse that can happen in a community.
For probably quite understandable reasons, this study is not very well know on Wikipedia. It is of course well known to academics and indeed the Foundation, who hoped to use it as a means to create an automated moderation tool. And that is perhaps the only context I have seen it discussed on Wikipedia or its sister site Wikipediocracy, to lampoon those who would try try use technology to improve the Wikipedia environment. What fools they are!
Anyway, as we all know, those studies are totally out of date now. Civility is taken more seriously. Or seriously. OK they know of it now, and are capable of using the term in a non-derogatory way. Those results would not be replicated today.
Or would they?
*consults short term memory*
1, 2, 3, 4,.......Cullen328, Drmies, 32, 33, 34.
Oh dear.
A self certified Wikipedia fossils expert wrote:That said, the confrontational nature of Wikipedia (which is inevitable by its design) is invariably going to put a lot of people off, regardless of whether the comments they get are toxic or not.
....but you do get that this specific study was about measuring the effects of toxic comments? And that it has seemingly proven "regardless of" is not remotely the right form of words here. Replace it with "but it does seem to matter" and you might convince people that you arguing with experts on Wikipedia pages is a good thing for humanity.
And fun fact. A revert button is like a pointy stick. It can be used for extreme violence or litter picking. Some fool back in the pre-history of Wikipedia seems to have wrongly assumed humans who willingly volunteered to create and maintain a public park, with the help of a free handy "How To Use Your Pointy Stick" leaflet and a friendly janitor or two wandering the park, could be trusted to handle a pointy stick. For the good of humanity.
On behalf of all humans, you have been such a disappointment, Hemiauchenia.
Now go get your stick, and stick it in your eye. Your Japseye.
Not even born with the brains of monkeys these people.
Now where did I put my Thesaurus.....