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Welcome

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Hello, PaulMcKenney, and welcome to Wikipedia. Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. If you are stuck, and looking for help, please come to the New contributors' help page, where experienced Wikipedians can answer any queries you have! Or, you can just type {{helpme}} and your question on this page, and someone will show up shortly to answer. Here are a few good links for newcomers:

We hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! By the way, you can sign your name on talk and vote pages using four tildes, like this: ~~~~. If you have any questions, see the help pages, add a question to the village pump or ask me on my talk page. Again, welcome! Active Banana (bananaphone 19:42, 28 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Potential conflict of interest

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Based on your insertion of content [1] citing PaulMcKenny (your user name):

Welcome to Wikipedia. If you are affiliated with some of the people, places or things you have written about on Wikipedia, you may have a conflict of interest. In keeping with Wikipedia's neutral point of view policy, edits where there is a conflict of interest, or where such a conflict might reasonably be inferred, are strongly discouraged. If you have a conflict of interest, you should avoid or exercise great caution when:

  1. editing or creating articles related to you, your organization, or its competitors, as well as projects and products they are involved with;
  2. participating in deletion discussions about articles related to your organization or its competitors; and
  3. linking to the Wikipedia article or website of your organization in other articles (see Wikipedia:Spam).

Please familiarize yourself with relevant policies and guidelines, especially those pertaining to neutral point of view, verifiability of information, and autobiographies.

For information on how to contribute to Wikipedia when you have a conflict of interest, please see our frequently asked questions for organizations. Thank you. Active Banana (bananaphone 19:44, 28 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]

As one of the creators of RCU [2] our guidelines state that you should refrain from editing the article directly. It is recommended that you post your suggestions on the article talk page, clearly identifying your affilition with the subject of the article, and let a third party editor determine if and how to incorporate your suggestions. Active Banana (bananaphone 14:04, 29 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Response to suggestion of conflict of interest.

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Hello, Active Banana, and thank you for your efforts on Wikipedia. You mentioned some COI concerns about my edits adding citations to the read-copy-update (RCU) page, and I hope that the following alleviates your concerns:

  • My user name (PaulMcKenney) is my real name (Paul E. McKenney). I am not contributing "on the sly".
  • I have been contributing to the RCU page since 2004, and this is the first time that a COI concern has been brought to my attention, which should indicate that I am doing a good job of handling any COI issues. Of course, if you are aware of any specific complaints, please do let me know.
  • I am indeed one of the inventors of RCU. I am also co-maintainer of the RCU implementation in the Linux kernel and a contributor to user-level RCU implementations that Mathieu Desnoyers maintains. If it would help, I would of course be happy to declare all of this on the RCU talk page.
  • I did not create the RCU page, though I am a significant long-term contributor (in terms of bytes, not number of updates). When I first encountered this page in 2004, it was fragmentary and misleading. I have updated and maintained it primarily out of self-defense: it is far better to improve the page than to deal with the consequences of its being incomplete or inaccurate.
  • I am not using Wikipedia to promote RCU. RCU stands on its own merits, evidenced by more than 3,000 uses of its API within the Linux kernel, as well as its use in DYNIX/ptx, K42, and elsewhere.
  • RCU is part of the concurrency curriculum at a number of universities, including U. of Toronto, U. of Kansas, U. of Rochester, UCLA, Yale, and MIT, to name but a few. RCU is therefore a legitimate topic in parallel programming.

PaulMcKenney (talk) 21:46, 2 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]

A barnstar for you!

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The Original Barnstar
Work on Parallel Programming is nice. Velvel2 (talk) 09:10, 1 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Introduction to the article about RCU's

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Hello Paul, I've just rewritten the introduction to Read-copy-update. I know you're the creator and the maintainer of this mechanism in the Linux kernel, therefore, if you have some spare time, I'd appreciate to know what you think about it. Kind regards, Fabio Maria De Francesco (talk) 05:34, 26 June 2020 (UTC)[reply]