User talk:CNoyes~enwiki

Your account will be renamed
Hello,

The developer team at Wikimedia is making some changes to how accounts work, as part of our on-going efforts to provide new and better tools for our users like cross-wiki notifications. These changes will mean you have the same account name everywhere. This will let us give you new features that will help you edit and discuss better, and allow more flexible user permissions for tools. One of the side-effects of this is that user accounts will now have to be unique across all 900 Wikimedia wikis. See the announcement for more information.

Unfortunately, your account clashes with another account also called CNoyes. To make sure that both of you can use all Wikimedia projects in future, we have reserved the name CNoyes~enwiki that only you will have. If you like it, you don't have to do anything. If you do not like it, you can pick out a different name. If you think you might own all of the accounts with this name and this message is in error, please visit Special:MergeAccount to check and attach all of your accounts to prevent them from being renamed.

Your account will still work as before, and you will be credited for all your edits made so far, but you will have to use the new account name when you log in.

Sorry for the inconvenience.

Yours, Keegan Peterzell Community Liaison, Wikimedia Foundation 22:50, 19 March 2015 (UTC)

Renamed
 This account has been renamed as part of single-user login finalisation. If you own this account you can |log in using your previous username and password for more information. If you do not like this account's new name, you can choose your own using this form after logging in: . -- Keegan (WMF) (talk) 11:19, 22 April 2015 (UTC)

December 2020
You may be blocked from editing without further warning the next time you add unsourced material to Wikipedia, as you did at 2020–21 NHL season. – Sabbatino (talk) 14:00, 10 December 2020 (UTC)


 * I think you are referring to the edit where I added "As of late March 2020..." to an existing sentence. The source for that information is at the end of that sentence (same as the existing source). That article was published in March and mentions the league's hiatus, which are the two pieces of information that I added to the sentence. I think that edit is helpful, because readers that don't look at the citations will not realize how out of date that information is. March 2020 was a very different world than now. Is there a different way you suggest I make that edit? Thanks for your advice and helping me understand the right way to make edits.CNoyes~enwiki (talk) 16:05, 10 December 2020 (UTC)
 * Well no. The reference that you added was published on December 9, 2020, which was yesterday and not March like you claim (if that is what you had in mind). MOS:REALTIME (and MOS in general) does not allow to write in present tense (currently, as of December 2020, etc). The WSJ article is just a rehash of multiple rumors and that is pretty much WP:CRYSTAL. So the best solution is to wait for official news from the NHL and not some reporters who have no connection to the league (writing about the league is not connection). – Sabbatino (talk) 19:56, 10 December 2020 (UTC)
 * Sorry for the confusion... I made two edits this morning, and you left this warning on my talk page after the first one. I wanted to make sure I addressed that warning. I don't think that noting the date the league made the statement about the season length requires a source in addition to the one is already there.