User:Fabrickator/questionable edits
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September/October 2019 edits
[edit]I have determined that the following edits, shown "roughly" in reverse chronological order, made starting from about 9/27/2019. were patt of a "link spam" scheme (see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/clemency.com), which attempted to give some degree of credibility to the editor and to distract from the purpose, e.g. by attempting to have some of the edits appear to be addressing legitimate issues and otherwise challenging whole or partial reverts of the edits.
Links to contributions for suspected bad actors are:
- Special:Contributions/2601:197:4400:34F0:5CD3:736E:1254:DC62/64
- Special:Contributions/2800:A4:24FF:6C00:D0F2:DF4B:19C2:B96F/64
- Special:Contributions/71.234.182.106
- Special:Contributions/Zexono
Limited liability company (Limited liability company) | 14:27, 8 May 2020 | 2 edits, revert | yet to be reverted | |
Legality of incest in the United States (history) | 19:11, 17 October 2019 | 1 edit: delete 2 citations | new source replaced 1 of the sources, original good source reinstated by Fabrickator | fixed 2020‑04‑25 |
Ages of consent in the United States (history) | 19:09, 17 October 2019 | 1 edit: delete 1 citation | original spammy source (criminaldefenselawyer.com) reinstated by Guarapiranga | fixed 2020‑10‑17 |
Embezzlement (history) | 19:07, 17 October 2019 | 1 edit: delete 1 citation | spammy source (criminaldefenselawyer.com) does not need to be replaced | leave as is |
Hate crime (history) | 19:06, 17 October 2019 | 1 edit: delete 1 citation | original spammy source (criminaldefenselawyer.com) should be replaced with alternate source | |
National Thanksgiving Turkey Presentation (history) | 14:04, 16 October 2019 | 1 edit: add content and 1 citation, revert | partially reverted by KH-1, remaining content is okay | fixed 2019‑10‑17 |
Commutation (law) (history) | 19:45, 9 October 2019 | 1 edit: add 1 citation, revert | reverted by KH-1, partially unreverted by Arllaw, re-reverted by Fabrickator | fixed 2019‑10‑19 |
Bankruptcy (history) | 21:17,‑8‑October‑2019 | 2 edits | reverted by Nick Moyes | fixed 2019‑10‑08 |
Family law (history) | 21:16, 8 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by Wtuhu | fixed 2019-10-09 |
Personal injury (history) | 21:13, 8 October 2019 | 2 edits, revert | yet to be reverted | ??? |
Personal injury lawyer (history) | 21:13, 8 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by Nick Moyes | fixed 2019-10-09 |
Contingent fee (history) | 21:12, 8 October 2019 | 1 edit, revert | reverted by Wtuhu | fixed 2019-10-13 |
Limited liability company (history) | 21:10, 8 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by Wtuhu | fixed 2019-10-09 |
Defamation (history) | 21:09, 8 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by [e5ad] unreverted by Coolcaesar, re-reverted by Fabrickator | fixed 2019-10-12 |
Fair use (history) | 21:08, 8 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by Nick Moyes | fixed 2019-10-08 |
Ages of consent in the United States (history) | 21:13, 7 October 2019 | 2 edits | reverted by Nick Moyes | fixed 2019-10-08 |
Embezzlement (history) | 21:09, 7 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by Nick Moyes | fixed 2019-10-08 |
Hate crime (history) | 21:06, 7 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by Nick Moyes | fixed 2019-10-08 |
Suspended sentence (history) | 18:55, 7 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by KH-1 | fixed 2019-10-09 |
Death sentence with reprieve (history) | 18:44, 7 October 2019 | 1 edit, revert | 1 edit, reverted; re-added 20:28, 15 October 2019 and re-reverted by KH-1 | fixed 2019-10-09 |
List of common misconceptions (history) | 19:42, 1 October 2019 | 1 edit dropping two "yourdictionary" entries, no basis for this change, revert | reverted by Fabrickator | fixed 2019-10-15 |
Bournemouth (history) | 19:34, 1 October 2019 | 1 edit entered twice | reverted by Britmax and Charlesdrakew | fixed 2019-10-01 |
Sussex (history) | 19:28, 1 October 2019 | 1 edit: delete citation | need definition for "South Saxons" | ??? |
Perjury (history) | 19:18, 1 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by Nick Moyes | fixed 2019-10-08 |
Paul Manafort (history) | 16:30, 1 October 2019 | 1 edit: add 1 citation | reverted by KH-1 | fixed 2019-10-07 |
Recipients of Clinton pardons (history) | 16:08, 1 October 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by KH-1, re-added 20:16, 15 October 2019 and then re-reverted by KH-1 | fixed 2019-10-07 |
Recipients of Trump clemency (history) | 22:05,‑28‑September‑2019 | 1 edit: add 3 citations, revert 2 | reverted by Arllaw, Fabrickator | fixed 2019-10-18 |
WACS-TV (history) | 02:47, 28 September 2019 | 1 edit: add citation | ok, but only shows that WACS is part of GPB | ??? |
Uturoa (history) | 02:37, 28 September 2019 | 1 edit | reverted by Fabrickator | fixed 2019-10-15 |
Pardon (history) | 15:23, 27 September 2019 | 2 edits | reverted/corrected by Fabrickator | ??? |
The deleted ExpertLaw link What is Chapter 13 Bankruptcy replaced the link in the October 17, 2017 revision to TaiebLaw "Chapter 13 Bankruptcy" page.
The clemency.com link was added in the Paul Manafort October 9, 2019 revision and the prior revision. The added reference violates policy and should be deleted, and may have other policy issues.
The deleted ExpertLaw link Defamation: Libel and Slander was added in the Defamation October 31, 2017 revision by 2601:401:503:62b0:d577:292d:2ced:528b in conjunction with a major revision of Defamation. Fabrickator (talk) 21:24, 12 October 2019 (UTC)
Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche
[edit]In the edit of 10:51, 9 March 2022 by 134.219.227.24, the claims that Elisabeth had edited Nietzche's works to highlight racist and eugenicist themes, were "severely contested", e.g. in Robert C. Holub's book "Nietzsche's Jewish Problem", i.e. questioning the extent to which his sister had materially altered Nietzsche's alleged anti-semitic views. Brian Leiter raises some doubt as to whether it is accurate to state that this perspective has become widely held and challenges the validity of this claim in his review of Holub's book at Nietzsche’s Hatred of "Jew Hatred". Fabrickator (talk) 21:00, 24 September 2023 (UTC)
The deleted ExpertLaw link What is Family Law was added in the Family Law October 31, 2017 revision.
The link clemency.com was added in the [1] Paul Manafort October 1, 2019 revision, and deleted by Ost31/Monkbot on October 1, 2019 and October 7, 2019. The deleted reference was redundant and may have had other policy issues.
This edit made several changes:
- add a citation to clemency.com, which violates policy
- wikify "pardon"
- add a valid citation to Standards for Consideration of Clemency Petitioners
- add a citation to Pardons Granted by President Donald Trump for Joe Arpaio, but it's full list of persons pardoned
Leave in the "Standards for Consideration of Clemency Petitioners" citation, drop the others. Fabrickator (talk) 05:06, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
- It looks like at least some of the objectionable content was changed or removed on edit of 17:55, 14 November 2020. Fabrickator (talk) 22:16, 12 October 2023 (UTC)
Possibly inappropriate deletion of "criminal defense lawyer" citations from Hate crime (mentioned previously on this page, maybe reconsider the objection to criminal defense lawyer site). Fabrickator (talk) 03:10, 31 July 2020 (UTC)
joke edits
[edit]I've become rather less concerned with certain types of questionable edits. This perspective applies to articles with critical content and those articles that have had bogus content that has been posted for an extended period of time. IMO, fixing such edits has the bad effect of enabling bad WP policy. So rather than fix these edits, I will be inclined merely to note them as joke edits. Note that posting these here is for amusement purposes only, and should not be considered a request or suggestion to actually fix them (in fact, it's really the opposite).
- 04:58 15 July 2023 edit
- properly-written text is changed to erroneous text
- 21:05 25 September 2020 edit (reverted) (all Desertambition edits)
- original states that age of consent in U.S. ranges from 16 to 18
- revised version states that age of consent in U.S. ranges from "between 18 and older"
- 11:11 19 December 2020 edit (all Madelibelove edits)
- revised version states New Mexico age of consent is 17 rather than 16
- New Mexico age of consent is discussed on talk page, 'U.S. v. Christy' establishes New Mexico age of consent is 16; as a published opinion (i.e. an appeal), this is a "gold standard"
- 11:25, 17 August 2021 edit (all Enthusiast01 edits)
- According to this edit, in the case in which a state which does not establish an age of consent by statutethe "common law" applies. The implication is that "statutory rape" can exist even in the absence of a statute.
- 05:26 15 June 2020 edit (all Manabimasu edits)
- original states that type is Not-for-profit/Private/Government Lobbyist
- revised version states that type is "Reciprocal inter-insurance exchange"
- no basis; AAA is not in the insurance business, it is a federation of local organizations, some of which may perhaps be insurance companies
- see also Talk:American Automobile Association § question about change to type
- 05:26 15 June 2020 edit (all 103.79.251.67 edits)
- services provided are not sourced and questionable
- sounds like advertising
- notes for "List of AAA Regional Clubs" are now misplaced in the "AAA Roadside Assistance" section
- Dubious content added by User:Mbeaubien on 31 October 2023
- Offensive views on LGBT were removed in these edits.
- Source is available at Sun-Herald article titled Council condemns sodomy ruling
- Reactions to Lawrence v. Texas (cites above article)
- The Geography of Equal Protection (citation to source discussing Gulfport proclamation initiated by Billy Hewes)
- Urban Bias, Rural Sexual Minorities, and the Courts (citation to August 13, 2003 story in Clarion Ledger regarding the same proclamation)
- Homophobic Gulfport City Councilman introduces anti-gay resolution with inaccurate facts
- Senators try to resurrect voter ID bill (Hewes objected to provision allowing for "no excuses" absentee voting)
- This edit of 06:01 6 October 2020 changed the text from the "late 20th century" to the "late 19th century", based on an interpretation that this was the period of formation of the organization, rather than a period when fraternal organizations were in decline, the confusion resulting from an omitted comma.
- The Deborah Dash citation does not support this claim (nor does the other citation).
- A source that includes some near-verbatim content is B'nai B'rith in Encyclopedia Judaica 2nd edition
- ... the organization’s historic roots are in a system of fraternal lodges and units (chapters), in the late 20th century, as fraternal organizations were in decline throughout the U.S., the organization began evolving into a dual system ...
- Note however, that aside from the erroneous citation, the original edit which inserted the content (18:09 3 February 2012 edit) didn't really get it quite right.
- Be aware that reference to a "dual system" refers to members who may not actively participate in the organization, i.e. they affiliate with the organization only by payment of dues.
- Created on 2 August 2023 by User:MIKHEIL and subsequently edited to the 20:02, 2 August 2023 version
- Then there's this "request to create a Wikipedia article" posted on 3 October 2023 by User:Elizzzzz.
- Take a look at these edits by 2401:BA80:A306:E72C:34DD:C1C:9E8D:24D6:
- 00:24, 24 September 2023: Boygar Razikashvili
- 00:23, 24 September 2023: Culture of Georgia (country)
- 00:22, 24 September 2023: List of people from Georgia (U.S. state)
- 00:19, 24 September 2023: List of Georgians
- 00:17, 24 September 2023: Vazha-Pshavela
So to summarize, within 60 days after an article is created about some person we have no prior record of, links are created from 4 different articles and then there is a followup request to create an article about the "family". Good joke!
- 13 September 2020 edits (all 181.165.68.96 edits)
- mysterious discovery of O'Gorman's actual birth date!
- 11:54, 28 October 2020 (all Deisenbe edits)
- Tilden Garnett Tate is credited as author instead of Tilden Garnett Baylor
- alternate source: The John Brown Raid: His Capture, Trial, Execution and Comments] (Spirit of Jefferson, January 18, 1898, col. 2)
- same error introduced in #John Brown's Fort
- 2 October 2020 edits (all Coolcaesar edits)
- original explains that a Chevron station is operated in each state "to maintain ownership of the mark"
- revised version explains that the stations are operated in each state because "American trademark law operates under a use-it-or-lose-it rule"
- the existing citation already explains that use of the trademark is required to retain rights to the name
- the editor explains that he is "fixing this mess", trying to distract us from the fact that this is a gratuitous change
- 19 June 2021 edit (all Uncle Bash007 edits)
- erroneous claim that Chevron was founded in 1984 plus sentence made ungrammatical
- 20:48 25 November 2020 edit (reverted by 00:36, 31 March 2021 edit) (all 2601:19b:880:3660:b5ee:eb96:a9ce:3147/64 edits)
- added entry does not conform to page criteria for list of chinatowns
- San Luis Obispo
- This whole article starts to look like a joke. Anyway, compare to 31 August 2012 version
- Reverted text added in 2009: 5 July 2024 version
- edit summary explains that "strong secondary sources are needed" per WP:NOR.
- The text in question is Thomas' published opinion, providing his interpretation of the facts and the law, either direct quotes or paraphrased. His position did not prevail; it's implicit that his position is therefore incorrect. While there might be some academic criticism of his position, there's nothing about this requiring a secondary source to rephrase or reprint it for this content to be included in the article.
- In short, the deleted text accurately represents Thomas' opinion and can be verified by the citation provided. There is no violation of NOR.
Changes of 8 August 2023: IP user revisions of 8 August 2023
My contention is that that fixing problems like this one is counter-productive, doing so merely masks the severity of the problem. The best hope for fixing the underlying problem is to leave stinky changes like this one intact. It may well get fixed; then again, it may remain in this form for an extended period of time, serving to demonstrate that this editing model doesn't really work so well.
- 23:11, 6 April 2021 edits (reverted) (all Marcshaikh edits)
- 17:18, 5 October 2021 edit (extraneous text added)
- bogus edit of 26 May 2021 by 128.65.103.66
- denies defamation against individuals is a crime under Chinese law
- questionable edit of 22 October 2024 by 2600:1700:1c5f:0:446d:420d:4bd9:8339
- unexplained change to claim of being last (presidential) candidate to win ??? without winning Door County
- 08:24, 11 April 2021 (reverted by 19:25, 14 April 2021 edit) (all 77.243.26.83 edits)
- edits ending 19:25, 21 April 2021 (all INFJMcLovin edits)
- drops content that has been present since 2012 (insertion of Kirschen's comments about how his cartoons help people to see his point of view)
Per the edit of 13:18, 12 September 2024, providing voters with transportation to the polls constitutes paying people to vote and is therefore a violation of Federal law.
This link (Why Busing Voters to the Polling Station is Paying People to Vote), which was cited as part of the edit, seems to be quite confusing, but it actually indicates that the courts do not currently consider providing free transportation to the polls to be a violation of Federal election law, and if that's the case, then this is pretty much all moot.
In any case, the seemingly incoherent theory of providing free transportation to the polls as being illegal is both incoherent and not supported by other sources, so it should just be pulled, or perhaps cited in terms of incoherent theories of election fraud.
Per the edit of 02:53, 9 October 2024, a questionable edit.
The following edits (all unsourced as far as I am aware) are largely subjective or otherwise unlikely to be able to be verified.
- 200 edits between 21:24, 22 October 2011 and 21:47, 26 November 2011
- 145 edits by 71.105.29.94 (talk · contribs)
- 37 revisions ending 01:37, 14 September 2011 (all reverted)
- 3 revisions ending 02:26, 15 September 2011 (all reverted)
- revision of 13:49, 15 September 2011 (reverted)
- 25 revisions ending 02:46, 21 September 2011
- 11 revisions ending 00:22, 25 September 2011
- 3 revisions ending 19:29, 25 September 2011
- 2 revisions ending 02:32, 29 September 2011
- 27 revisions ending 01:51, 3 October 2011
- 21 revisions ending 22:27, 8 October 2011
- 6 revisions ending 23:26, 9 October 2011
- 3 revisions ending 03:18, 11 October 2011
- 6 revisions ending 21:24, 22 October 2011
- 23 edits by 71.105.26.52 (talk · contribs)
- 145 edits by 71.105.29.94 (talk · contribs)
- 04:44, 30 March 2021 edits (all 2409:4073:210a:98b5:c8a4:22c7:35b9:50c0/64 edits)
- nonsense text edit
- 15:38, 21 November 2022 edit (all 69.113.172.228 edits)
- no change to citations to support change to description of the fire brigade composition
History of communication
[edit]- 15:38, 7 October 2022 edit
- Seemingly obvious case of vandalism that has gone unreverted for over a year.
Honor killing in the United States
[edit]- 03:45, 13 November 2023 edit (all Goose0919 edits)
- This change conflates multiple things:
- "children" (i.e. biological relationship to parents) with "minors"
- basis of honor killing (most commonly, relationship with someone outside of the religion, rather than being underage)
- possibly, minimum age for sex and minimum age for marriage
- not even an explicit allegation of actual sexual contact
- This change conflates multiple things:
- 8 December 2020 edits (all 24.7.56.99 edits)
- The fact that there were "Theatres I and II" along with the street name are extraneous detail.
- The associated citation is also extraneous; most likely, the theater's complete name would be found in the court filings cited, and whether this movie showed on one or two screens, who cares?
- The part about Jackie Onassis is also extraneous; while Johnny Carson's viewing of the movie may have made it acceptable, Jackie's walking out on the movie tells us something about Jackie, but did not appear to either create or quell objections to the movie.
- 21:52, 29 March 2006 edit (all 152.163.100.138 edits)
- unsupported claim of becoming co-host on 60/20 by known joke editor
- claim is still present in current article
- 11:15, 28 October 2020 edit (all Deisenbe edits)
- Same error as introduced in edit of #Charles Town, West Virginia
- 17:16, 24 February 2018 (all 67.61.0.130 edits)
- edit deletes part of line from Jump Jim Crow "standard English" lyrics
- 19:07, 1 November 2022
- I called out this questionable edit on the article's talk page in January 2023, a couple of months after the edit. I'm curious how long it will take for somebody to actually revert this "typo".
- 18:21, 12 May 2006 (all TruthbringerToronto edits)
- edit adds "Echo Group" to list of credit agencies
- 20:45, 19 February 2021 (all 74.123.69.194 edits)
- edit adds "www.trustscience.com" to list of credit agencies
- 01:10 4 July 2021edit by Funstar88 (all Funstar88 edits)
- source provided is unrelated to claim of selection of spouse for purposes other than marital harmony
- In a series of edits starting on 7 October 2020 edit, pre-existing content (with citations to diverse sources) was removed and replaced with citations to State-by-State Marriage "Age of Consent" Laws, a source which consolidates information from various sources but which fails to cite its sources. Although FindLaw may generally be a reputable source, the absence of such citations is problematic. In any case, here is the last version prior to this change.
- 20:12, 24 March 2021 edit (all X-Editor edits)
- reports Michael Moore praised Boulder "Soopers" shooter for having assimilated into U.S. culture by right-wing news media
- Moore was facetiously referring to assimilation into U.S. gun culture
- WP:Perennial sources § Mediaite advises caution if no other reliable sources support a given statement.
- This is really a neutral point of view issue.
- 15:08 2 March 2006 edit (all 152.163.100.138 edits)
- unsupported claim as to "evenly distributed" black and white population, which seems to be actually disputed, at least by current sources
- erroneous claim is still present in current article
- contributor was fairly prolific; made about 2000 edit over a 2-year period from 2004 to 2006
- 08:55, 24 November 2020 edit (all 107.77.205.158 edits)
- edit adds middle name "Hongwon"
- no pre-existing evidence of this middle name found
- edits from 4 May 2021 to 19 May 2021 (all 2600:8804:5607:b900:dd8f:3c78:3e01:f453/64 edits)
- 18:02, 19 May 2021: removal of salary expenditures
- 05:39 4 May 2021: removal of link to Editorial: Dishonor Society and budgetary expenditures
- 18:41 25 November 2008 edit (all Thethirteen edits)
- edit removes "hoax" tag previously added by SmackBot
- note the citation for the last sentence of OBC (secret society) § History, accessible at archive.org or DigitalNC
- this citation is apparently bogus as the cited source makes no mention of secret societies or other relevant content
- other citations in this article also appear to be bogus
- 07:07, 7 November 2022 edit
- claims to remove "decades old anecdotal report that is no longer accurate"
- the report[1] is about 10 years old
- at least one current source shows property crime rate is lower, but violent crime rate remains comparatively high
- in any case, the historical perspective provided is certainly still relevant
- 8 May 2014 edits
- deletes names of the participants charged in this crime
- some links:
The edit in question is Special:Diff/958750420/958751420.
The issue:
The following comprehensible content
since it was accepted that California was permitted to forbid certain aliens from owning land, it should also be accepted that the state was empowered to modify its laws in order to preclude individuals from circumventing the relevant statutes.
was changed to:
since California was accepted to be allowed to forbid certain aliens from owning land, the state should also be accepted to be empowered to modify its laws to preclude individuals from circumventing the relevant statutes.
So it was seemingly edited by somebody who couldn't make sense of the pre-existing text.
- 24 May 2021 edits (all 207.255.118.25 edits)
- nonsense changes
- 01:07, 31 October 2022 edit (all InvadingInvader edits)
- awkward emphasis on Pennsylvania's status as a commonwealth
- resolved 18 July 2024 edit by John
- 02:25, 6 April 2021 edit (all 67.2.23.255 edits)
- death_date and death_place dropped from infobox without explanation
- 9 October 2004 edit
- joke about "correspondences between society or the state and the individual human body" has been ongoing for 17 years
- 31 December 2020 edit (all Tom.Reding edits)
- let's see how long it takes for somebody else to revert this abomination
There are a few reasons why I call the sourcing of these claims an "abomination" ... With regard to the claims:
- It's "definitional" to specify what "behavior/character reputation" means.
- It seems to be rather arbitrary to distinguish based on a purported presence or absence of objective criteria.
- The last part of the claim merely cites examples.
The sources themselves are not freely available. Not that this is unusual, but for many people, it means that they're not going to access the source. Additionally, there are no page numbers, so assuming the source has been obtained, the reader is left to determine the exact location by themselves.
In other words, this claim is not very interesting and the sourcing is unhelpful. It's really not worth the bytes used. Fabrickator (talk) 14:49, 3 March 2021 (UTC)
I suggest that Reputation was reasonable up until the 14:36, 9 October 2015 edit (view all 162.206.141.210 edits).
- edit of 02:25, 22 December 2018 (all Wikievil666 edits)
- silly objection to use of saw (past tense of see) as a synonym for undergo or experience
- edits of 4 June 2021 (all 2600:1700:7F1:8F0:4CBD:2D43:678A:59A3/64 edits)
- contemporary newspaper accounts show that North Carolina Central University was not considered one of the Triangle's "research institutions" (search Chronicling America for stories containing "research triangle park")
- 10:00, 6 October 2016 edit (reverted)
- 23:37, 24 February 2021 edit (reverted)
- 22:01, 14 March 2021 edit (reverted)
- edits of 1 October 2023
- These edits are more properly described as a silly edits rather than joke edits
- First edit purports to "improve some of the English", but actually makes it considerably more difficult to parse the affected text.
- Second edit removes a {{clarify}} template questioning which claims made have been confirmed, implying that this was resolved by the prior edit, but which does not actually do anything whatsoever to address this concern.
- 06:32, 26 July 2022 edit
- introduce "humorous" misspellings
- 21:55, 6 December 2020 edit
- haha, this is my own joke edit!
- why is this a joke edit?
- the old version was marked with "citation needed" for claim that The Advocate named Sista Otis as "one of the top Indie Artists in the U.S."
- this was essentially a 3-step game of "whisper"...
- 0. column published in The Advocate
- 1. the "Sista Otis" website misrepresents the column from The Advocate (in multiple ways)
- 2. third-party sites misquote the "Sista Otis" website
- 3. Wikipedia picks up the quote from either the "Sista Otis" website or one of these third-party websites
- I added the citation to the article, citing the "Sista Otis" website as the source.
The original source is the Indie Heat column in the June 21, 2005 issue of The Advocate. What the column actually states is
Check these out acts at smaller venues ... Sista Otis and her Wholly Rollers manage to overdeliver. Sista serves up ... 1960's rock ... with .... funk, hip-hop, soul, and urban folk. ... Rollin' Stone [is a standout].
It's definitely a positive review, but there's also definitely no claim that it rates in the top ten across the U.S. or any specific part thereof. Such a discrepancy as exists between the column and the quotes attributed to that column demonstrates the importance of going back to the original source instead of relying on third-party citations (i.e. citations attributing something to another source).
- bogus edit of 9 June 2021 by 95.246.228.108 (all 95.246.228.108 edits)
- erroneous modification of quote from Three Voyages of Captain James Cook Round the World
- 04:55, 21 March 2021 edit (all ThorstenNY edits)
- deleted image of protesters demonstrating against Confederate memorial, claiming it was "obvious vandalism"
- no basis for this assertion
- reverted 27 May 2021
- deleted image of protesters demonstrating against Confederate memorial, claiming it was "obvious vandalism"
- 21:18, 28 September 2020 edit (all Bri edits)
- prior edit cited Newsweek article about increased number of Covid-19 case in North Dakota, associating this increase with the rally held several weeks earlier, from August 7 to August 16
- the "joke edit" reverts this content on the grounds that the number of such cases attributable to the rally is speculative and suggesting that information be posted only when there is "non-speculative" information on how many cases attributable to the rally.
- Reliable sources commonly include speculative information; there is no WP prohibition on speculative content, as long as it's from a reliable source.
- bogus edit of 14:49, 10 November 2021 by 71.241.235.17 (all 71.241.235.17 edits)
- no basis for this change, which has been superseded by subsequent bogus changes to the stated age range
- The 14 June 2014 edit of Trident (gum) claims that Mondelēz obtained the copyright of Trident.
- Presumably it obtained the trademark.
- 19:41, 18 July 2008 edit of Vincent Flemmi indicates Flemmi was apprehended in "Maryland, Virginia" (evidently about 1978) and subsequently died having been imprisoned in Norfolk, Virginia.
These locations change in subsequent edits. FWIW, it appears that there was no official statement as to the actual prison in which he was incarcerated prior to his death (presumably in a hospital somewhere in the vicinity of the prison). Subsequent edits reference "Norfolk, Massachusetts" and "Maryland, Virginia" (a non-existent location, though there is a "Mayland, Virginia") and "Maryland, Maine", but I haven't located a source to support any of this. I suspect that the reference to "Maryland, Maine" is just a joke.
My speculation is that he had been imprisoned in Norfolk, Massachusetts, was perhaps apprehended in the "Maryland/Virginia" area, and then returned to the Norfolk facility where he got sick, was taken to some sort of hospital where he actually died. This would sort of explain the confusion about being imprisoned in Norfolk, Virginia.
- 22:40, 16 April 2021 edit (all Exploredragon edits)
- Explanation provided was correction of grammatical issues in the lede, which seems to refer to the insertion of the word "the" where it is not an improvement. Other changes are simply a matter of word choice.
- 01:07, 6 March 2021 edit {all Causa sui edits)
- purportedly, the citation does not support the deleted claim that Geas did not dispute his role in the killing of Bulger
- New York post story credits Boston Globe; here is quote from October 30, 2018 Boston Globe story:
- People familiar with the investigation suggest that Bulger was murdered by more than one of his fellow inmates, and that Geas didn’t dispute his role in the killing.
- 10:11, 20 July 2021 edit (all 76.120.37.128 edits)
- This is not so much a joke edit as it is an edit that's acknowledged to be based on personal belief. I will distinguish that from personal knowledge. May really belong in a different category than "joke" but I'm not so sure.
- User's contributions are a gold mine of arguably dubious reasons for making changes, or he could be brilliant at applying WP:BOLD. You be the judge!
- 19:57, 24 November 2020 edit {all 96.92.244.165 edits)
- Without explanation, this edit changes the text to make the claim that Stephanie Brown is the second female Robin rather than the first; unable to check the cited source to confirm what it actually states.
Revision as of 18:33, 25 November 2023: includes erroneous number of 50,000 Jewish women serving in the Canadian army during WWII. Per the source provided, the official estimate was 279.
suspected spam websites
[edit]These are just some sites I've noticed that seem to have been added merely as spam, along with affected articles. Ideally, for each site, note which articles had the spam site added, along with a "diff" showing the earliest revision which added it.
vacaytrends.com
voyagers.travel
(diff)
review list for suspected joke editors
[edit]This is intended as a list of users/IP ranges have apparently made joke edits and should continue to be monitored. Darryl Walton
- Darryl Walton (2022-12-13)
- Fluffy89502 (2021-10-11)
- 49.199.243.129 (2021-10-08)
- 49.184.75.49 (2021-10-07)
- Snarcky1996 (2021-08-06)
- Botofpi (2021-03-12 to 2021-05-19)
- 173.186.2.177 (2021-05-12)
- 196.217.174.74 (2021-05-07)
- Dumpling08 (2021-05-06)
- 75.169.162.128 (2021-05-05)
shifting POV on Shia Islam in the United Arab Emirates
[edit]See these edits by ItsTimHortons, reverted by these edits by Ganbaruby.
This was discussed in theTeahouse, but these changes should be considered for reinstatement because there are sources providing support for the reverted changes. Fabrickator (talk) 06:05, 12 May 2021 (UTC)
based off / based on
[edit]Some people focused on copyedits decided that based off should always be replaced with based on. Aside from the "noise" of such edits, they were generally harmless because based off and based on are pretty much interchangeable. A telltale sign of having done such edits is the presence of the phrase based on of, in those cases where the original phrase was based off of.
You can check the contributions of editors who did this, and then marked up these edits indicating a spelling correction from based off to based on. Here are the known editors:
Fabrickator (talk) 05:33, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
Cedar Point
[edit]- Cedar Point
- For those familiar with the various mergers involving Cedar Fair, this edit would seem to be a hoot!
- Am I wrong?