User talk:Wehpudicabok

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~AlienSix(WeComeAlive) 08:22, 12 July 2011 (UTC) 

Clock drift
Edit summaries as terse as "grammar" should probably supported by more research, e.g.
 * Clock drift refers to several related phenomena ...

which was just a click away when you edited. --Jerzy•t 03:24, 2 March 2012 (UTC)

Here's my take:
 * Fair enough. How about "Clock drift, multiple phenomena where a clock..." instead?  I've seen so many people treat "phenomena" as singular that I changed it without thinking.  I think emphasizing the plural would help readability.  Wehpudicabok (talk) 04:07, 2 March 2012 (UTC)
 * Here i am, responding a full month later; how embarrassing! And i failed to provide the relevant link.... I reverted at Leap second. You now suggest adopting language from the pg i objected to you having ignored, but i am not embarrassed to refuse to embrace other shortcomings (of both pages) without fixing them, if we are going beyond the specifics of your edit.
 * The lead of our Clock drift article is defective -- starting immediately after the mention of the article's topic, with the lexicographic word "refers" (which is appropriate in the leads of a Dab page only bcz a Dab page is not about the topic that appears in its title, but about that word and the senses in which it can be used. Beyond that, if i had been responding more broadly, i'd have had to concede to you that "clock drift" refers to one thing, and clock drift is that one thing, namely imprecision (or limited precision) in clocks. (I think these articles could implicitly reflect focus on either imprecise match between the measurement and what is measured -- as in the first sent in the first sect after the lead --, or between independent measurements of the same thing -- as in the lead. But I doubt that the implicit choice needs to be explicit, if only it were consistent within the article.)
 * My instinct is that entries in the "See also" section of Leap second are a navigational, rather than an informational, mechanism -- like the entries in Dabs, where we are explicit that the first question is "does the link succeed in speaking for itself?", and if the answer is "no", implicitly the second is "how little is needed to keep the average user from feeling they've been a fool of by following the link?" So my opening response is
 * Really? Why not "*Clock drift, imprecision"
 * --Jerzy•t 20:07, 2 April 2012 (UTC)

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Help me!
Please help me with... On Talk:Sinfest, there's a discussion where another editor is claiming that coverage of the content of a webcomic could potentially fall under WP:BLP if reporting what the comic depicts could be defamatory toward the author. (For reference, the comic has incorporated antisemitic conspiracy theories directly into its plotline, something the current version of the Wikipedia article on it no longer mentions.) I strongly disagree with this editor, since the name of the author of the comic is not in dispute and the rest of the article is about the comic itself, not the author, but I'm only an occasional editor and don't have a ton of familiarity with BLP. Can someone please explain to me whether BLP covers works of fiction in this way? Wehpudicabok (talk) 05:11, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
 * Yes, the BLP has been interpreted that way by some editors. You and your counterparty will have to hash out exactly what it means for certain facts to be potentially defamatory. The decision should be based as much as possible on what some independent reporter has said about it; you don't want it to be based on your opinion or on an implication.  — jmcgnh (talk) (contribs) 06:01, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
 * Thank you for clarifying the BLP policy! I'm still uncertain what to do about the article, however. We can't really base a decision on independent reporting on Sinfest, because there isn't really any, not anymore. As far as I can tell, no reliable sources have covered Sinfest in a long time; the citations that established its notability are generally around two decades old. Wehpudicabok (talk) 06:06, 25 June 2024 (UTC)

July 2024
Hello, I'm CommunityNotesContributor. I noticed that you added or changed content in an article, Views of Elon Musk, but you didn't provide a reliable source. I've now added a reliable source to the claim, so as to avoid original research or unverifiable content. Please remember to includes references to reliable sources in future. Thanks, CNC (talk) 11:30, 18 July 2024 (UTC)


 * Ah, my bad. Thank you for helping! I'll do better next time. Wehpudicabok (talk) 19:01, 18 July 2024 (UTC)