lol1VNIO, rollbacker, reviewer
— Wikipedian —
I'm only one editor, after all
BornJune 1
Account statistics
Edit count2,806 (non-automated)

I focus mainly on building and maintaining articles.

  • Building is the creation or expansion of articles or sections through reliable sources.
  • Maintaining is the undoing of good- or bad-faith edits that aren't policy-compliant.

Me

Motivation

 
Sailing the sea of Wikipedia!

The main two media for those who long for knowledge (scientia) are books and academic papers. Books are great. Books explain a topic in great detail and contribute a great percentage to the jungle of knowledge. But authoring high-quality books require high dedication, therefore virtually no books are free (as in free beer). This is understandable but frustrating for the Dweller of the forest of books whose philosophy asserts that scientia potentia esse.

And so the Dweller looks to his map and traverses the narrow paths surrounded by thick paper and papyrus trees towards an alternative top-level pathway. The forest of journals preserves all first-hand documentations of novel experiments that the books reference. The Dweller picks the destination labelled "Open access" and finally finds the knowledge they have yearned for. After browsing the index of the journal and finding their desired article, the Dweller is hit with jargon upon jargon. Unlike books, journals assume that the reader has foreknowledge of the topic area to a university level, hence the paper happily uses jargon that are defined by another undefined jargon.

The Dweller borrows the issue at the front desk, hoping to find easier papers to read and cross-reference that way. At the bottom right corner of their view, the Dweller notices the front cover of a magazine that depicts the Wikipedia globe. "Ahoy!! It be yer referencin' work that be written by anyone 'round the globe!"—surely the language must be targetted at a general audience, the Dweller considered. Sailing the sea of Wikipedia and painting their new map purple is much fun. Not only does Wikipedia give an inverted pyramid overview of each jargon, the language is indeed simple to understand. In fact, it is policy who dictates that Wikipedia is not a scientific journal and guideline who advices to Make technical articles understandable.

What's the a catch? Upon arriving at shore, the Dweller is transferred from the Google taxi to the boat marked User:. The shore, titled "Main Page", displays a banner that greets the dweller with "Welcome to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit." Being a rather quirky captain, the Dweller first sails to the bottom of the page to read the legal stuff. For the first time, the Dweller was cautioned with potential inacurate information by the work itself...

Interests

So far, all of my major written contributions lie within the intersection of East Asia and animation. It is not uncommon for there to exist more sources in a foreign language like Japanese in this topic area. I'm native Vietnamese and know some Japanese vocabulary and sentence structure. I translate sources using my own understanding, common sense, and a dictionary (1st priority); and machine translation also (2nd).

I also have lesser-interested interests but that is trivial and is left as an Easter-egg hunt for the reader.

For a long time, my personal duty was to hop on Huggle and revert lots vandalism every day. I still do that at random intervals. That's how I racked up 35 thousand edits.

DYK reviews are done occasionally when there is a particular nomination that interest me.

I'm not retiring until Touhou Project gets good article or greater status and Blue Archive's plot is complete and concise; I regret quiting that game.

The project

Content and editing

"It takes only a moderate commitment to edit, but it takes a serious commitment to write."

—somewhere in the depths of Wikipedia

Entering hiatus from reverting vandalism all the time has really changed my views on Wikipedia. If many editors were just "bad actors", then the number of featured articles would never have exceeded twenty, ever. This is the real world, however, and we have over six thousand amazing printable articles. And seeing immensely broad-concept articles such as Philosophy or Logic recently become featured is very satisfying. I am optimistic and believe all vital articles can be improved until good article or greater. It's a miracle that Wikipedia works in practice because would never have worked on any paper.

But there are only about 60,000 vitals out of 6 million articles. This is where my own guideline on notability comes into play. Basically, a topic is said to be notable iff it can be reviewed and featured on the main page as a did-you-know hook. This is somewhat stricter than the actual WP:Notability guideline but guarantees at least a decent article. Still, there is this crazy obstacle that haunts me and probably others since 2001. Step one to writing any article is searching for reliable sources... That is difficult. I might come back to this after my first good or featured nominations, but I see a dilemma: if there are too many sources, then very broad neutrality has to be maintained (though I might have to study the Philosophy article); if there is a lack of sources, then the article might never see itself becoming featured. The Goldilocks zone is very narrow for my interests.

The scariest thing to me is lost media. Libraries are destroyed, books are burnt, media reader become obsolete, optical discs rot, websites die out. Writing an article isn't just documenting a thing, it's also archiving all available sources on a given topic for future generations. At least archive your web sources, instructions at H:AAS.

I have a hunch that WP:No original research (NOR) is the most important one out of the core content policies. Neutrality is just common sense for something as academic as Wikipedia, while verifiability is par to NOR, sure, but NOR does a better job at explaining reliable sources. This is just one of the niche beliefs of mine. Also, Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Accessibility is beautiful.

Conduct

 
Look at this photograph

First and foremost: civility; suppose a new editor has a very fringe worldview that is informally considered delusional. On the talk page, they provide tinfoil-hat conspiratorial sources that they deem reliable to confirm their belief. Now look from their perspective and see how they feel when someone calls them stupid. What does that do other than enrage them, making them increasingly hostile towards mainstream, which radicalizes them, and, and, and. In fact, calling someone stupid is just admitting you don't have anything against the supposed evidence. Instead, just refute their point. And if they insist and make logical fallacies? That's when you play the last-resort giving-equal-validity-can-create-a-false-balance spell card, which is overpowered. Now, I get that the vast majority of tinfoil-hatted people always act the same way in denying logical reasoning, but my point is do not use ad hominem even against the worst of people. And since this is an online discussion where you have all the time in the world to think, ad hominem makes you look just plain ignorant.

You have an idea
Are you sure that your idea is a good one by common sense and that it improves the encyclopedia?
Don't do itDo it

Politically, I value individual thought very highly. Individual thought heavily implies consensus. Do not let peer pressure deter you from voicing your unpopular opinion that you think is beneficial for the encyclopedia. And with WP:Civility, theoretically, there it doesn't hurt to hear constructive criticism from opponents. The common sense diagram featured in WP:What "Ignore all rules" means can be simplified to just one conditional.

Note that hate speech does not belong on Wikipedia.

Archive your sources.

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