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User:Викидим

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This user uses the personal pronouns
he, him
This user has written or expanded 2 articles featured in the Did You Know section on the Main Page.
  • My nickname is a Cyrillic projection of a Greek: Βικιδημος portmanteau, something along the lines of Greek: Νικόδημος ("victorious people", cf. Nicodemus). It is intended to mean "[of] wikipeople". If you have hard time finding Cyrillics on your keyboard, feel free to address me as Wikidemus or even Wikidim.
  • I have been writing articles for Wikipedia in multiple languages since either 2005 or 2006, starting too long ago to pinpoint an exact date, and switched mostly to Russian in 2007. Historically I have used multiple accounts, originally to separate my contributions by languages[1] and later by subjects. These were and are used strictly within WP:SOCKLEGIT, with no restrictions applied ever to any one of them, except for this account (and even in this case never even remotely related to the article content). I am currently under no restrictions anywhere in the Wikimedia projects. In an unlikely case a legitimate question will arise, I have no problem discussing my alternate accounts with the local powers that be.
That ship has sailed
  • The editing of Wikipedia in Russian became tiresome for me in 2021 due to an extensive off-wiki coordination of a few colleagues who effectively changed the conflict resolution process very much not to my liking.[2] "Fighting" is not my middle name here,[3] so after some attempts to establish a modus vivendi with the highly cohesive group, I have decided to take a well-deserved indefinite-length wiki-sabbatical at Russian Wikipedia and switched back to other languages, primarily to enwiki,[4] guided by "this too shall pass" principle. As an illustration of the truly Orwellian level of discourse in the modern Russian Wikipedia:[5]
    • The Arbitration Committee of Russian Wikipedia (then - and now - totally controlled by the faction) literally prohibited mentioning in discussions of the membership in the off-wiki chat used for the group's coordination: Decision in AK:1189, see item 7.
    • In practice, this decision is used to prohibit the mentions of the very existence of this chat. For example, in February 2023 I was blocked for literally just using the term "unmentionable group" (Russian: неназываемой группы) on a discussion page, where my whole message was on the subject of "we can all get along if we stop coercing the editors into making the purely political statements". For the curious ones that want to dive into the depth of the Russian soul, the message from the blocking sysop is here, it points as a reason to my original (IMHO, extremely mild) post here

Notes:

  1. ^ This was the only choice prior to the arrival of the unified login.
  2. ^ For the avoidance of doubt, I rarely if ever edit articles on the "hot" political topics.
  3. ^ I have a reasonably-sized real life where I get a fair share of meaningful conflicts that I have to deal with.
  4. ^ I can also be found in frwiki and dewiki.
  5. ^ For the avoidance of doubt, this is not a complaint, as this situation amuses me by laying bare the human behavior worthy of "1984" or "The Trial"; the outlook is much grimmer for the harassed editors that due to poor English are unable to find a refuge here

Tools

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Essays

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These are internal essays that can be referred to in discussions, avoiding the repetition.

To do

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Timed

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History and words

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Architecture

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Material culture

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Law and money

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Music and art

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Electricity

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Science and technology

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Easy (very obscure) personalities

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Places

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Obscure

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Serviceable texts deleted by colleagues

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Throwing them away does not feel right. Will keep them on ice here in case a place that fits is encountered.

Spam

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Misc

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Feedback

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The Original Barnstar
Cabaret service is a very good article. Well done! BoyTheKingCanDance (talk) 07:26, 19 March 2023 (UTC)

Views of pages

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Readers

  1. ^ Cupchik, Gerald C.; Winston, Andrew S. (1996). "Confluence and divergence in empirical aesthetics, philosophy, and mainstream psychology" (PDF). Handbook of perception and cognition: Cognitive ecology. pp. 61–85.