Flagged Revisions

Flagged Revisions, also known as FlaggedRevs, is a software extension to the MediaWiki wiki software that allows moderation of edits to Wiki pages. It was developed by the Wikimedia Foundation for use on Wikipedia and similar wikis hosted on its servers. The term is also sometimes used for the editorial policies related to operation of that extension when active.

FlaggedRevs
Original author(s)Aaron Schulz, Joerg Baach
Developer(s)Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Repositoryphabricator.wikimedia.org/diffusion/EFLR
TypeMediaWiki extension
LicenseGPL-2.0-or-later
Websitewww.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:FlaggedRevs

Detail

Flagged revisions was a planned editorial policy of English Wikipedia aimed at "imposing a layer of editorial review on articles about living people".[1] Wikipedia's co-founder, Jimmy Wales, originally urged Wikipedia to adopt the policy in January 2009 after the Wikipedia pages of Robert Byrd and Edward Kennedy were both vandalized to state, incorrectly, that they were dead.[2] It was announced in August 2009, after a poll found that 80% of the users were in favor of it.[3] It provides for "experienced volunteer editors" to approve changes to some articles.[3][4][5] It is already in use in the German Wikipedia,[1] where all articles are subject to this policy.[5] In the English Wikipedia, a two-months initial trial took place in 2010.[3] It was considered a possibility that all articles would be covered by this feature in the future, just like in the German Wikipedia.[5] The New York Times remarked that the new policy divides Wikipedia users in two classes: "experienced, trusted editors, and everyone else—altering Wikipedia's implicit notion that everyone has an equal right to edit entries".[1] Brennon Slattery of PCWorld reported that "some bloggers" received the announced changes as a "failure" of the philosophy behind Wikipedia.[5] According to the chairman of the Wikimedia Foundation board at the time, with this policy there is less tolerance for "inaccurate or fudged" articles.[1] The feature is based on a plug-in for the MediaWiki software that prevents recent changes to wiki articles from being displayed to all readers until they have been ratified by editors with special permissions.

On June 14, 2010, English Wikipedia began a 2-month trial of a similar feature known as pending changes.[6] After a discussion among English Wikipedia editors in May 2011, this feature was initially removed from all articles,[7] but consensus in a 2012 discussion decided that the feature would be implemented.[8]

gollark: GTech™ has determined that Hare literal apioform.
gollark: Last I heard fishing wasn't very intellectually engaging. I'm sure they'd be able to.
gollark: The brain has something like 100 petaflops of compute, plus or minus a few orders of magnitude.
gollark: Just run it mentally?
gollark: Very efficient.

References

  1. Cohen, Noam (24 August 2009), "Wikipedia to Limit Changes to Articles on People", The New York Times, retrieved 2010-03-09
  2. Snyder, Chris (26 January 2009). "Jimmy Wales Pushes For Flagged Revisions After Fake Death Reports". Wired. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  3. Modine, Austin (25 August 2009), "Wikipedia to crack down on celebrity Wikideaths", The Register, retrieved 2010-03-09
  4. Beaumont, Claudine (26 August 2009), "Wikipedia ends unrestricted editing of articles - Telegraph", The Daily Telegraph, retrieved 2009-09-02
  5. Slattery, Brennon (26 August 2009), "Wikipedia Changes Editing Policy", PC World, archived from the original on 7 June 2011, retrieved 2010-03-09
  6. phoebe and HaeB (2010-06-07). ""Pending changes" trial to start on June 14".
  7. "Wikipedia:Pending changes/Request for Comment February 2011". June 10, 2011. Wikimedia Foundation. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  8. "Wikipedia:Pending changes/Request for Comment 2012". Wikimedia Foundation. Missing or empty |url= (help)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.