On Thu, 2006-02-09 at 15:28 -0600, Arthur Pemberton wrote: > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/SexCitationsTecken > > Because I am a very curious person, what exactly is > 'SexCitationsTecken' supposed to mean in English. Clair answered separately: "Roughly translates as "Six citation putting conventions" - it's Swedish. The Swedish language is always fun for English.. including words like "sex" and "bra" in everyday language :) Looks like an innocent wiki page though, listing conventions on how to cite your name." My point was that, without an editor who reads Swedish checking Swedish language pages, there is no way for the rest of us to know if that page is about "six of something" or "sex of something." > Bob noticed this one last week from a search for > "java". Investigation > shows that i) it does not have an author stamp at the bottom, > > Any reason why the wiki itself doesn't show who the initial editor > was, along with the current information about the most recent edit? If > not, could this be added? That page in particular, you mean? I'm assuming it was loaded with the Wiki, since the last edit date is pretty far back. > I went through the entire setup to become a contributor process, but I > can't remember seeing a list of these forbidden content. It woudl > good if this could be more obvioous to editors. A declaration of > expected content for the wiki would be nice. We try. There _is_ a lot of content that one needs to read to be a full contributor, but it's still less than Wikipedia requires. :) http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ForbiddenItems - Karsten -- Karsten Wade, RHCE * Sr. Tech Writer * http://people.redhat.com/kwade/ gpg fingerprint: 2680 DBFD D968 3141 0115 5F1B D992 0E06 AD0E 0C41 Content Services Fedora Documentation Project http://www.redhat.com/docs http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/DocsProject
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