User talk:Jon Kolbert/Archive 4

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Archive 1 Archive 2 Archive 3 Archive 4 Archive 5

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Using visual editor.

I am a new user here. Could you please tell me how to add a picture using visual editor? Hradyansh 21 (talk) 10:38, 17 October 2018 (UTC)

Hi Jon Kolbert. Can I ask why you made this addition to this wikipedia approaching midnight one night last week? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Matheson and what your affiliation to Mr. Matheson is? This would appear to be harrasment. "Mr Matheson was arrested by Police for committing an indecent act, with another man who was not his partner, in a public place. The Police reported this incident to the Procurator Fiscal. In a further development Mr Matheson was not prosecuted by the Procurator Fiscal citing insufficient evidence a criminal act was committed. In January 2013 Mr Matheson issued a public apology to his partner for this transgression."

NPR Newsletter No.14 21 October 2018

Chart of the New Pages Patrol backlog for the past 6 months.

Hello Jon Kolbert, thank you for your work reviewing New Pages!

Backlog

As of 21 October 2018, there are 3650 unreviewed articles and the backlog now stretches back 51 days.

Community Wishlist Proposal
Project updates
  • ORES predictions are now built-in to the feed. These automatically predict the class of an article as well as whether it may be spam, vandalism, or an attack page, and can be filtered by these criteria now allowing reviewers to better target articles that they prefer to review.
  • There are now tools being tested to automatically detect copyright violations in the feed. This detector may not be accurate all the time, though, so it shouldn't be relied on 100% and will only start working on new revisions to pages, not older pages in the backlog.
New scripts

Go here to remove your name if you wish to opt-out of future mailings. — Insertcleverphrasehere (or here) 20:49, 21 October 2018 (UTC)

NPR Newsletter No.15 16 November 2018

Chart of the New Pages Patrol backlog for the past 6 months.

Hello Jon Kolbert,

Community Wishlist Survey – NPP needs you – Vote NOW
  • Community Wishlist Voting takes place 16 to 30 November for the Page Curation and New Pages Feed improvements, and other software requests. The NPP community is hoping for a good turnout in support of the requests to Santa for the tools we need. This is very important as we have been asking the Foundation for these upgrades for 4 years.
If this proposal does not make it into the top ten, it is likely that the tools will be given no support at all for the foreseeable future. So please put in a vote today.
We are counting on significant support not only from our own ranks, but from everyone who is concerned with maintaining a Wikipedia that is free of vandalism, promotion, flagrant financial exploitation and other pollution.
With all 650 reviewers voting for these urgently needed improvements, our requests would be unlikely to fail. See also The Signpost Special report: 'NPP: This could be heaven or this could be hell for new users – and for the reviewers', and if you are not sure what the wish list is all about, take a sneak peek at an article in this month's upcoming issue of The Signpost which unfortunately due to staff holidays and an impending US holiday will probably not be published until after voting has closed.

Go here to remove your name if you wish to opt-out of future mailings. Insertcleverphrasehere (or here)18:37, 16 November 2018 (UTC)

ArbCom 2018 election voter message

Hello, Jon Kolbert. Voting in the 2018 Arbitration Committee elections is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 3 December. All users who registered an account before Sunday, 28 October 2018, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Thursday, 1 November 2018 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.

The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.

If you wish to participate in the 2018 election, please review the candidates and submit your choices on the voting page. MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 18:42, 19 November 2018 (UTC)

HTTPS request for Maisfutebol links

As you can see, https://maisfutebol.iol.pt/ added encryption to their website. The only change needed to the links is the removal of www and the addition of an s to http. SLBedit (talk) 04:06, 25 November 2018 (UTC)

KolbertBot 4

Jon if I go through the bot diffs and find broken archive URLs due to indiscriminate search/replaces I will not be a happy camper. Partly because we already discussed it in the brfa and partly because it will create a ton of work for me my bot to clean up (it's not a fully automated fix). The solution to skipping archive URLs is trivial. -- GreenC 05:17, 7 December 2018 (UTC)

KolbertBot errors

Hi there, just wanted to let you know about errors caused by recent bot edits, at Scotch College, Adelaide (removed a useful part of a citation, including ref tag) and George Allen (American politician) (removed part of a sentence and a useful part of a citation, including ref tag). I've fixed the errors but thought I'd give you a heads-up. Cheers, Jessicapierce (talk) 20:52, 9 December 2018 (UTC)

@Jessicapierce: Hi there! Thanks for the message, that is definitely strange. I will re-run the bot on the page to see if the error reoccurs. Jon Kolbert (talk) 21:01, 9 December 2018 (UTC)
Sounds good, thank you for the reply and your expertise on these things! And just to update, I found similar errors at The Knocks and Heckler (ref tags removed); Massey Hall (ref tag and part of a sentence removed); and Paranoia (A Day to Remember song) (removed ref tag and part of section header, which broke a table). Jessicapierce (talk) 21:03, 9 December 2018 (UTC)
@Jessicapierce: I seem to have found the issue, which has been corrected. It had to do with the "abchannel" parameter and what string was expected after it. I will go through and correct those - if you see any feel free to revert them - I will do the same. Thanks again for the note! Jon Kolbert (talk) 21:07, 9 December 2018 (UTC)

Soccerbase...

...support https (e.g. this external link when clicked on has the https at the beginning by default. Thanks, Iggy (Swan) 22:22, 10 December 2018 (UTC)

@Iggy the Swan: Thanks for the note! I'm changing how KolbertBot searches and finds links, so the HTTPS task is out of commission for the time being. That said, I have added the article to the bot's list. Jon Kolbert (talk) 02:51, 11 December 2018 (UTC)

Declined speedy deletion request

Just to let you know, I declined your request for G6 speedy deletion of 2017 New Brunswick New Democratic Party leadership election as being in the way of an uncontroversial page move. The only page I could see that might be moved there would have been New Brunswick New Democratic Party leadership election, 2017, and it is already at the correct title according to how all the other articles on that subject are named. If you had some other move in mind, ask again, and this time use the template {{Db-move|page to be moved|reason}} to make it clear what you have in mind. -- MelanieN (talk) 01:23, 11 December 2018 (UTC)

(talk page stalker) MelanieN, per the recent RfC on election titles, they should be renamed to year-first. Kolbert's G6 request was correct. ♠PMC(talk) 01:58, 11 December 2018 (UTC)
@MelanieN and Premeditated Chaos: Hello! Yeah I was planning on moving it to the new title per that RfC - but it looks like it is all sorted now. Thanks! Jon Kolbert (talk) 02:52, 11 December 2018 (UTC)
Man, they sure snuck THAT one through! :-( OK, Jon Kolbert, sorry for the misunderstanding. But in the future it would help if you would make such requests in the format I suggested above, which indicates what you intend to move there and why. In fact, if you do, the admin who closes it can do the entire move with a single click. -- MelanieN (talk) 03:54, 11 December 2018 (UTC)
@MelanieN: For sure! Thanks for the note and have a good evening :) Jon Kolbert (talk) 03:58, 11 December 2018 (UTC)

KolbertBot breaking archive URLs

Jon, the bot is breaking archive URLs:

There are more possibly many more. I could spend hours trying to manually find and restore these (sigh). The problem now is even if they are restored, KolbertBot has free reign to break them again, undoing the fix. Can you provide a solution that does not damage archive URLs. -- GreenC 17:24, 12 December 2018 (UTC)

@GreenC: I have taken a look at your diffs and the only page that seems to be affected was the 2018 Laos dam collapse which was later repaired with a WebCite link. Nothing has changed with the webcitation links and that will not change. Both [7] and [8] are very functional. I have only very recently seen these "archive.today" links etc - why aren't we consistently using web.archive.org wherever possible? The regex is designed to accommodate archive links, and while hiccups may happen there are more bound to happen if we keep using archive services which switch domains every few months. I remember archive.is, archive.fo, archive.today - who knows how many more there are (or will be).
I think the more sustainable and reasonable approach would be to strip the URL of the unnecessary data BEFORE archiving to avoid this situation altogether. I can provide the necessary regex to you in order to accomplish this task - cleaning the URLs up before sending them to get archived. Jon Kolbert (talk) 20:21, 12 December 2018 (UTC)
Jon we have over 20 archive providers on Enwiki see WP:WEBARCHIVES. There are millions of non-Wayback archive links. They exist because Wayback doesn't have everything. And not everyone wants to use Wayback, people have preferences. Also, it's simple to avoid almost all of the archive providers by checking that "/" or "?url=" are the characters immediately preceding the URL with a regex lookback. This will avoid almost all of them, no need to hard code domain names. Archives are created by everyone -- manually, bots, scripts, tools, external systems, etc - there is no way to strip off codes before-hand.
#1 and #2 are webcitation, I accidentally included those. I know they work because in the URL https://www.webcitation.org/6CKWAdKBp anything after that code is ignored by Webite, all it needs is that code. The only reason the ?url= section exists is to satisfy internal Wikipedia requirements that a URL be part of the archive URL to avoid hiding blacklisted domains from the edit filters ie. web shortening is disallowed.
2018 Laos dam collapse was repaired by my bot because it is processing all of the articles touched by KolbertBot in an attempt to discover and fix any problems. In this case it was able to find a replacement at Wayback, but that is typically not the case, thus all the other archive.is links are still broken and need to be fixed manually ie. the archive.is link restored. -- GreenC 21:15, 12 December 2018 (UTC)
@GreenC: Okay. I have added the necessary adjustments. As a side note, I don't understand why GreenC Bot would remove an archive URL that redirects to a seemingly working archive. Thanks Jon Kolbert (talk) 22:01, 12 December 2018 (UTC)
I do however think it's fair to require any bot-added archive URLs to remove any unneeded junk for the URLs before archival. It's a relatively simple addition that could help keep links clean and free of referral data. I understand there are manually-added archives as well, but between PrimeBot and KolbertBot actively removing that data from external links there should be minimal instances of archive links cluttered with referral data. Jon Kolbert (talk) 22:05, 12 December 2018 (UTC)
I manually check every archive link before deleting, this one checked out OK to delete. When I manually checked it a few hours ago, there was no archive at that time. The archive was created about 15 minutes prior to your initial reply above. Good luck passing that requirement! Thank you for modifying your bot. Regards, -- GreenC 22:25, 12 December 2018 (UTC)
@GreenC: No worries! Just so I understand how your bot works, what "triggers" an attempt to archive a link using a service such as archive.is. Is that something your bot does or is that isolated to IABot? Jon Kolbert (talk) 22:28, 12 December 2018 (UTC)

KolbertBot breaking UTM parameters example

It's kind of ironic but this bot break the tracking url example on this page UTM_parameters — Preceding unsigned comment added by Dockurt2k (talkcontribs) 21:32, 13 December 2018 (UTC)

@Dockurt2k: Haha, the one page the bot shouldn't work. I've added KolbertBot to the nobots template. Thanks for your note!

NPR Newsletter No.16 15 December 2018

Hello Jon Kolbert,

Reviewer of the Year

This year's award for the Reviewer of the Year goes to Onel5969. Around on Wikipedia since 2011, their staggering number of 26,554 reviews over the past twelve months makes them, together with an additional total of 275,285 edits, one of Wikipedia's most prolific users.

Thanks are also extended for their work to JTtheOG (15,059 reviews), Boleyn (12,760 reviews), Cwmhiraeth (9,001 reviews), Semmendinger (8,440 reviews), PRehse (8,092 reviews), Arthistorian1977 (5,306 reviews), Abishe (4,153 reviews), Barkeep49 (4,016 reviews), and Elmidae (3,615 reviews).
Cwmhiraeth, Semmendinger, Barkeep49, and Elmidae have been New Page Reviewers for less than a year — Barkeep49 for only seven months, while Boleyn, with an edit count of 250,000 since she joined Wikipedia in 2008, has been a bastion of New Page Patrol for many years.

See also the list of top 100 reviewers.

Less good news, and an appeal for some help

The backlog is now approaching 5,000, and still rising. There are around 640 holders of the NPR flag, most of whom appear to be inactive. The 10% of the reviewers who do 90% of the work could do with some support especially as some of them are now taking a well deserved break.


Really good news - NPR wins the Community Wishlist Survey 2019

At #1 position, the Community Wishlist poll closed on 3 December with a resounding success for NPP, reminding the WMF and the volunteer communities just how critical NPP is to maintaining a clean encyclopedia and the need for improved tools to do it. A big 'thank you' to everyone who supported the NPP proposals. See the results.


Training video

Due to a number of changes having been made to the feed since this three-minute video was created, we have been asked by the WMF for feedback on the video with a view to getting it brought up to date to reflect the new features of the system. Please leave your comments here, particularly mentioning how helpful you find it for new reviewers.


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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 21:14, 14 December 2018 (UTC)

HTTPS request for CMVM links

CMVM website (https://www.cmvm.pt/en/Pages/homepage.aspx) now supports HTTPS. Please change links such as http://web3.cmvm.pt to https://web3.cmvm.pt. (And don't forget my HTTPS request on Maisfutebol.) SLBedit (talk) 20:44, 16 December 2018 (UTC)

Article moves

Hi Jon. There is a bot run planned to move all the articles, so you don't have to do them manually! Cheers, Number 57 06:59, 4 December 2018 (UTC)

Actually, given the speed you were doing it at, I guess you may have been doing them via a bot? You're welcome to continue if you like - any that have already been moved will just be ignored by the bot. Cheers, Number 57 08:21, 4 December 2018 (UTC)
@Number 57: Hey there! I was using regex to move the pages based off of a list of articles I created. I wasn't aware a bot run was planned, so I'll leave it to the bot now. Do you have a link to the bot task and how it will be selecting which articles to edit? Thanks. Jon Kolbert (talk) 15:42, 4 December 2018 (UTC)
Yes, it's at Wikipedia:Bots/Requests for approval/TheSandBot. It's using a list of election articles I created - this is linked to (in a few sections) at the bottom of the page. Cheers, Number 57 18:28, 4 December 2018 (UTC)
@Number 57: The page doesn't load when I try to load it, I get a loading error saying it took longer than 60 seconds. I'm just going to run through the list I have because I may have articles not on that list. Jon Kolbert (talk) 22:13, 4 December 2018 (UTC)

I think the lists you're using may be incomplete as I noticed that you don't seem to be moving all the articles in a set (for example, see Category:Elections in the Falkland Islands, Category:General elections in Gibraltar or Category:Elections in the Turks and Caicos Islands). Cheers, Number 57 16:27, 5 December 2018 (UTC)

@Number 57: I used the parent category Category:Elections in the United Kingdom by year - anything that didn't fall under that umbrella would have been missed, which would explain some inconsistent sets. Jon Kolbert (talk) 20:56, 8 December 2018 (UTC)

Hello again. Any chance you could do a quick batch of moves using your regex method – those in Category:Local and municipal elections in Denmark that haven't been moved to the correct titles?

How does that work by the way? Number 57 22:11, 10 December 2018 (UTC)

@Number 57: Sure thing! My method only works with simple renames, but here is the regex for it. I use (([A-z -.]{1,}), ([0-9]{4})) and replace it with $1\n$3 $2 . This puts it in the right format for movepages.py, so I can quickly move them as needed. Jon Kolbert (talk) 22:31, 10 December 2018 (UTC)
Thanks! Unfortunately I didn't understand any of the rest – I am not au fait with anything beyond normal Wikipedia editing and using AWB... Number 57 22:33, 10 December 2018 (UTC)
@Number 57: No problem! If you feed me some more categories I would be happy to do some more moves and help finish the task. Jon Kolbert (talk) 22:35, 10 December 2018 (UTC)

Hi Jon. If you have time, I've found another batch that need to be moved at Category:Papal conclaves (about a third were moved by the bot, but the remainder not). Cheers, Number 57 10:01, 17 December 2018 (UTC)

@Number 57: Done! Jon Kolbert (talk) 20:35, 17 December 2018 (UTC)
Thanks! And sorry, I found another bunch here... Number 57 20:38, 17 December 2018 (UTC)
@Number 57: No problem, finished those as well. Jon Kolbert (talk) 20:48, 17 December 2018 (UTC)
Hi Jon. Another batch listed here; these are all categorised redirects. Thanks! Number 57 18:27, 19 December 2018 (UTC)
@Number 57: Done :-) Jon Kolbert (talk) 19:38, 19 December 2018 (UTC)
Thank you so much! Number 57 20:10, 19 December 2018 (UTC)

Collaboration request

Hey, you. I am planning to work on this entry but as you know my French is non-existent. When you have time, do you want to collaborate together? Alex Shih (talk) 08:43, 31 December 2018 (UTC)

@Alex Shih: Bien sûr mon ami! (of course my friend). Let me see what resources I can find to start off with. Jon Kolbert (talk) 11:44, 31 December 2018 (UTC)

Disambiguation link notification for January 13

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Posted by the MediaWiki message delivery 16:49, 16 January 2019 (UTC)

An invitation to discussion

I kindly invite you to the discussion on Template talk:Infobox election#The Bolding issue to decide whether to bold the winner in the election infobox. Lmmnhn (talk) 19:19, 20 January 2019 (UTC)

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This is a message from the Wikimedia Foundation.

This is a reminder to acknowledge and sign the new Confidentiality agreement for nonpublic information. As you know, your volunteer role in Wikimedia projects gives you access to secure and sensitive information.

The new version includes one major change.

  • There is a change regarding the way personal data may be released. Accordingly, functionaries must notify the Wikimedia Foundation at check-disclosure@wikimedia.org before releasing data, in order to obtain a written approval for doing so. The Foundation will respond within 10 days. However, for emergencies, such as cases involving threats of violence, functionaries may release the personal data without such explicit permission, but they should notify the Foundation immediately following the disclosure. If they choose not to disclose the data, the request for disclosure should be forwarded to the Foundation's emergency email address (emergency@wikimedia.org).

There are also some wording changes that were made to more closely align the language with evolving industry norms, best practices and laws. The most notable of these has been the change of the term "nonpublic information" to "nonpublic personal data". None of these changes are intended to make fundamental changes to the scope or practice of the policy but we know they could appear as such, hence wanted to flag them.

The aforementioned changes require users that have already signed the previous version of the policy to sign the new version as well.

We therefore ask that you to sign the updated version. Signing the agreement is tracked on Phabricator's Legalpad. An online guide is available to help you with signing the agreement: Confidentiality agreement for nonpublic information/How to sign. If you wish you can sign it directly at https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/L37. The exact policy is located here: Access to nonpublic personal data policy. The text of the confidentiality agreement is located here: Confidentiality agreement for nonpublic information

If you have already received this message and signed the updated agreement, you need not sign it again. Once is sufficient. In this case, we ask that you respond to Samuel (WMF) letting him know when (date) and how (method/process of signing) you have signed it so that we can update our own records.

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Posted by the MediaWiki message delivery 17:05, 23 January 2019 (UTC)

Request for HTTPS and rescue of sources

Goal (website) adopted HTTPS. SLBedit (talk) 20:08, 7 January 2019 (UTC)

Could you please change "footballzz.com" and "footballzz.co.uk" domains to "thefinalball.com" (English version of zerozero.pt)? Many articles, templates, etc link to sources using those expired/inactive domains. SLBedit (talk) 21:08, 21 January 2019 (UTC)

@SLBedit: Done the footballzz links and converted them to thefinalball. Thanks for the message! Jon Kolbert (talk) 21:35, 22 January 2019 (UTC)
@SLBedit: As you may have noticed KolbertBot is operational again, regarding Goal (website) I just get redirected to "sportingnews.com" which does not support HTTPS - is this a new change? Jon Kolbert (talk) 02:31, 28 January 2019 (UTC)
No redirect for me (Goal.com loads with IP address 2.19.32.85). It must a problem with the DNS server you are using. SLBedit (talk) 02:35, 28 January 2019 (UTC)

As you can see here, the website has different domains for different languages. I have noticed that HTTPS is missing from many links to (m.)zerozero.pt, (m.)ogol.com.br, (m.)ceroacero.es, (m.)calciozz.it, (m.)leballonrond.fr and (m.)fussballzz.de ("m." is the mobile subdomain, as you know). SLBedit (talk) 04:22, 28 January 2019 (UTC)

Bot: HTTP→HTTPS (v485)

I've found several of the edits created with the Edit Summary shown above have led to incorrect links, and I have reverted several of them in the past few days (eg edits to David Suzuki, North Star Hotel and Windsor, Ontario). I'm not sure what was intended with these edits, but please be more careful with them. Thank you, PKT(alk) 14:19, 28 January 2019 (UTC)

@PKT: Hey there! Thanks for the note. I have gone ahead and adjust the external links in the aforementioned articles as necessary. I have done some testing and have gotten some inconsistent results, I will disable Postmedia links for the bot for now while I contact the Postmedia webmaster and see what's going on because their links are behaving a bit wonky at the moment. Jon Kolbert (talk) 14:41, 28 January 2019 (UTC)
Nicely done, Jon! ....PKT(alk) 14:46, 28 January 2019 (UTC)

Thank you for being one of Wikipedia's top medical contributors!

The 2018 Cure Award
In 2018 you were one of the top ~250 medical editors across any language of Wikipedia. Thank you from Wiki Project Med Foundation for helping bring free, complete, accurate, up-to-date health information to the public. We really appreciate you and the vital work you do! Wiki Project Med Foundation is a user group whose mission is to improve our health content. Consider joining here, there are no associated costs.

Thanks again :-) -- Doc James along with the rest of the team at Wiki Project Med Foundation 17:41, 28 January 2019 (UTC)

This is a message from the Wikimedia Foundation.

This is a reminder to acknowledge and sign the new Confidentiality agreement for nonpublic information. As you know, your volunteer role in Wikimedia projects gives you access to secure and sensitive information.

The new version includes one major change.

  • There is a change regarding the way personal data may be released. Accordingly, functionaries must notify the Wikimedia Foundation at check-disclosure@wikimedia.org before releasing data, in order to obtain a written approval for doing so. The Foundation will respond within 10 days. However, for emergencies, such as cases involving threats of violence, functionaries may release the personal data without such explicit permission, but they should notify the Foundation immediately following the disclosure. If they choose not to disclose the data, the request for disclosure should be forwarded to the Foundation's emergency email address (emergency@wikimedia.org).

There are also some wording changes that were made to more closely align the language with evolving industry norms, best practices and laws. The most notable of these has been the change of the term "nonpublic information" to "nonpublic personal data". None of these changes are intended to make fundamental changes to the scope or practice of the policy but we know they could appear as such, hence wanted to flag them.

The aforementioned changes require users that have already signed the previous version of the policy to sign the new version as well.

We therefore ask that you to sign the updated version. Signing the agreement is tracked on Phabricator's Legalpad. An online guide is available to help you with signing the agreement: Confidentiality agreement for nonpublic information/How to sign. If you wish you can sign it directly at https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/L37. The exact policy is located here: Access to nonpublic personal data policy. The text of the confidentiality agreement is located here: Confidentiality agreement for nonpublic information

If you have already received this message and signed the updated agreement, you need not sign it again. Once is sufficient. In this case, we ask that you respond to Samuel (WMF) letting him know when (date) and how (method/process of signing) you have signed it so that we can update our own records.

Note: please bear in mind that if you still haven’t signed the updated version of the Confidentiality Agreement by February 13, 2019 your rights will be removed.

Thank you for your understanding,

Samuel Guebo (User:Samuel (WMF)), Wikimedia Foundation

Posted by the MediaWiki message delivery 17:49, 30 January 2019 (UTC)'

Soccerbase...

...support https (e.g. this external link when clicked on has the https at the beginning by default. Thanks, Iggy (Swan) 22:22, 10 December 2018 (UTC)

@Iggy the Swan: Thanks for the note! I'm changing how KolbertBot searches and finds links, so the HTTPS task is out of commission for the time being. That said, I have added the article to the bot's list. Jon Kolbert (talk) 02:51, 11 December 2018 (UTC)
I see that KolbertBot has now gone back to the Http→Https task again, I wonder if the Soccerbase website has started yet. Iggy (Swan) 21:13, 29 January 2019 (UTC)

(Retrieved from older discussion)

@Iggy the Swan: Thanks for the poke! I will add it to the list. Jon Kolbert (talk) 04:21, 31 January 2019 (UTC)

Disambiguation link notification for January 31

An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Nicola Di Iorio, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page La Presse (check to confirm | fix with Dab solver).

(Opt-out instructions.) --DPL bot (talk) 09:33, 31 January 2019 (UTC)

Orphaned non-free image File:Canada's Food Guide.jpg

⚠

Thanks for uploading File:Canada's Food Guide.jpg. The image description page currently specifies that the image is non-free and may only be used on Wikipedia under a claim of fair use. However, the image is currently not used in any articles on Wikipedia. If the image was previously in an article, please go to the article and see why it was removed. You may add it back if you think that that will be useful. However, please note that images for which a replacement could be created are not acceptable for use on Wikipedia (see our policy for non-free media).

Note that any non-free images not used in any articles will be deleted after seven days, as described in section F5 of the criteria for speedy deletion. Thank you. --B-bot (talk) 03:28, 2 February 2019 (UTC)

DYK for Grande roue de Montréal

On 6 February 2019, Did you know was updated with a fact from the article Grande roue de Montréal, which you recently created, substantially expanded, or brought to good article status. The fact was ... that the 60-metre-high (200 ft) La Grande roue de Montréal (pictured), built in Montreal for the 375th anniversary of the city, is the tallest Ferris wheel in Canada? The nomination discussion and review may be seen at Template:Did you know nominations/Grande roue de Montréal. You are welcome to check how many page hits the article got while on the front page (here's how, Grande roue de Montréal), and it may be added to the statistics page if the total is over 5,000. Finally, if you know of an interesting fact from another recently created article, then please feel free to suggest it on the Did you know talk page.

Alex Shih (talk) 00:02, 6 February 2019 (UTC)

HTTPS request

eu-football.info, which has tons of links to its unencrypted version, has also added HTTPS. SLBedit (talk) 20:00, 18 February 2019 (UTC)

Your edit that erased a valid entry about Jason Kenny on that subject's talk page.

Name calling me as a propagandist spamming wikipedia is hardly an excuse to delete my valid contributions to that talk page. I provided a link to an actual historical press conference that Jason Kenny said exactly what I had claimed. I question your motivations for having done this destruction. Oldspammer (talk) 23:50, 7 March 2019 (UTC)

Sockpuppet related to 142.179.58.226

You might be interested in Wikipedia:Sockpuppet investigations/Bemben17 — the sockpuppet was using 142.179.58.226, which you blocked globally for being an open proxy. --Closeapple (talk) 10:48, 6 March 2019 (UTC)

@Closeapple: Thanks for the note - I have blocked the accounts on commons for abusing multiple account and opened an SPI there. Jon Kolbert (talk) 08:18, 8 March 2019 (UTC)

NPR Newsletter No.17

Hello Jon Kolbert,

News
Discussions of interest
  • Two elements of CSD G6 have been split into their own criteria: R4 for redirects in the "File:" namespace with the same name as a file or redirect at Wikimedia Commons (Discussion), and G14 for disambiguation pages which disambiguate zero pages, or have "(disambiguation)" in the title but disambiguate a single page (Discussion).
  • {{db-blankdraft}} was merged into G13 (Discussion)
  • A discussion recently closed with no consensus on whether to create a subject-specific notability guideline for theatrical plays.
  • There is an ongoing discussion on a proposal to create subject-specific notability guidelines for chemicals and organism taxa.
Reminders
  • NPR is not a binary keep / delete process. In many cases a redirect may be appropriate. The deletion policy and its associated guideline clearly emphasise that not all unsuitable articles must be deleted. Redirects are not contentious. See a classic example of the templates to use. More templates are listed at the R template index. Reviewers who are not aware, do please take this into consideration before PROD, CSD, and especially AfD because not even all admins are aware of such policies, and many NAC do not have a full knowledge of them.
NPP Tools Report
  • Superlinks – allows you to check an article's history, logs, talk page, NPP flowchart (on unpatrolled pages) and more without navigating away from the article itself.
  • copyvio-check – automatically checks the copyvio percentage of new pages in the background and displays this info with a link to the report in the 'info' panel of the Page curation toolbar.
  • The NPP flowchart now has clickable hyperlinks.

Six Month Queue Data: Today – Low – 2393 High – 4828
Looking for inspiration? There are approximately 1000 female biographies to review.
Stay up to date with even more news – subscribe to The Signpost.


Go here to remove your name if you wish to opt-out of future mailings.

--MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 23:18, 15 March 2019 (UTC)

Ottawa-Gatineau WikiClub mailing list

Hello Jon Kolbert,

You receive this short message because you are a member of the Ottawa-Gatineau WikiClub, and this is to announce that a new mailing list is available to interested Wikimedia projects in the greater Ottawa-Gatineau region.

Registration: https://discussions.wikimedia.ca/lists/listinfo/ottawa-gatineau

Looking forward, Benoit Rochon (talk) 21:22, 29 March 2019 (UTC)

NPR Newsletter No.18

Hello Jon Kolbert,

WMF at work on NPP Improvements

Niharika Kohli, a product manager for the growth team, announced that work is underway in implementing improvements to New Page Patrol as part of the 2019 Community Wishlist and suggests all who are interested watch the project page on meta. Two requested improvements have already been completed. These are:

  • Allow filtering by no citations in page curation
  • Not having CSD and PRODs automatically marked as reviewed, reflecting current consensus among reviewers and current Twinkle functionality.
Reliable Sources for NPP

Rosguill has been compiling a list of reliable sources across countries and industries that can be used by new page patrollers to help judge whether an article topic is notable or not. At this point further discussion is needed about if and how this list should be used. Please consider joining the discussion about how this potentially valuable resource should be developed and used.

Backlog drive coming soon

Look for information on the an upcoming backlog drive in our next newsletter. If you'd like to help plan this drive, join in the discussion on the New Page Patrol talk page.

News
Discussions of interest

Six Month Queue Data: Today – 7242 Low – 2393 High – 7250


Stay up to date with even more news – subscribe to The Signpost.
Go here to remove your name if you wish to opt-out of future mailings.
Delivered by MediaWiki message delivery (talk) on behalf of DannyS712 (talk) at 19:17, 17 May 2019 (UTC)

HTTP to HTTPS

Hi, I was pointed out to your bot that is changing HTTP addresses into HTTPS. Is it working on this list of replacements, right?

With my bot I have been doing a similar job on Italian Wikipedia, based on transformation rules from HTTPS Everywhere and Chromium HSTS preloads. It looks like those are complementary approaches (the data is collected in a different way). I've run the bot only a few days ago and I'm not planning another round on Italian Wikipedia shortly, but if I will run it again it may be a good idea for me to integrate also your list (or if you want to run it on Italian Wikipedia, I would welcome it!). - Laurentius (talk) 07:53, 9 May 2019 (UTC)

@Laurentius: I would be happy to collaborate! I have been rather busy as of late, but I will contact you around the end of the month with more information. Cheers, Jon Kolbert (talk) 21:53, 17 May 2019 (UTC)

Precious anniversary

A year ago ...
tedious repair tasks
... you were recipient
no. 1950 of Precious,
a prize of QAI!

--Gerda Arendt (talk) 07:19, 13 June 2019 (UTC)

New Page Review newsletter July-August 2019

Hello Jon Kolbert,

WMF at work on NPP Improvements

More new features are being added to the feed, including the important red alert for previously deleted pages. This will only work if it is selected in your filters. Best is to 'select all'. Do take a moment to check out all the new features if you have not already done so. If anything is not working as it should, please let us know at NPR. There is now also a live queue of AfC submissions in the New Pages Feed. Feel free to review AfCs, but bear in mind that NPP is an official process and policy and is more important.

QUALITY of REVIEWING

Articles are still not always being checked thoroughly enough. If you are not sure what to do, leave the article for a more experienced reviewer. Please be on the alert for any incongruities in patrolling and help your colleagues where possible; report patrollers and autopatrolled article creators who are ostensibly undeclared paid editors. The displayed ORES alerts offer a greater 'at-a-glance' overview, but the new challenges in detecting unwanted new content and sub-standard reviewing do not necessarily make patrolling any easier, nevertheless the work may have a renewed interest factor of a different kind. A vibrant community of reviewers is always ready to help at NPR.

Backlog

The backlog is still far too high at between 7,000 and 8,000. Of around 700 user rights holders, 80% of the reviewing is being done by just TWO users. In the light of more and more subtle advertising and undeclared paid editing, New Page Reviewing is becoming more critical than ever.

Move to draft

NPR is triage, it is not a clean up clinic. This move feature is not limited to bios so you may have to slightly re-edit the text in the template before you save the move. Anything that is not fit for mainspace but which might have some promise can be draftified - particularly very poor English and machine and other low quality translations.

Notifying users

Remember to use the message feature if you are just tagging an article for maintenance rather than deletion. Otherwise articles are likely to remain perma-tagged. Many creators are SPA and have no intention of returning to Wikipedia. Use the feature too for leaving a friendly note note for the author of a first article you found well made or interesting. Many have told us they find such comments particularly welcoming and encouraging.

PERM

Admins are now taking advantage of the new time-limited user rights feature. If you have recently been accorded NPR, do check your user rights to see if this affects you. Depending on your user account preferences, you may receive automated notifications of your rights changes. Requests for permissions are not mini-RfAs. Helpful comments are welcome if absolutely necessary, but the bot does a lot of the work and the final decision is reserved for admins who do thorough research anyway.

Other news

School and academic holidays will begin soon in various places around the Western world. Be on the lookout for the usual increase in hoax, attack, and other junk pages.

Our next newsletter might be announcing details of a possible election for co-ordinators of NPR. If you think you have what it takes to micro manage NPR, take a look at New Page Review Coordinators - it's a job that requires a lot of time and dedication.


Stay up to date with even more news – subscribe to The Signpost.
Go here to remove your name if you wish to opt-out of future mailings.

MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 04:38, 30 June 2019 (UTC)

Remove fbclid=... from all links

Hi,

I happened to notice that links in 1700 articles (insource:fbclid) include fbclid parameters. I asked about it and some very kind people told me KolbertBot 4 was supposed to be removing them. But maybe the bot has some minor hiccup?

I don't want to nag, probably you already know about it, or maybe you're busy with something else, which would be perfectly fine. This is just a tiny ping just in case something's wrong and you haven't yet noticed.

Many thanks for your time and efforts and best regards, Jens (84.173.225.148 (talk) 22:00, 30 June 2019 (UTC))

KolbertBot breaks archive.is / archive.today URLs

I just noticed this on something on my watchhlist, and I suspect it's a problem everywhere now. While performing "Task #2 : Remove link referral data", User:KolbertBot removes the referral information from the URLs. Which is fine for most normal URLs, but if the archive URL had referral data, it now doesn't work. Example:

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chinese_People%27s_Liberation_Army_Support_Base_in_Djibouti&curid=54667043&diff=904972637&oldid=903790483

Replaced archive-url=https://archive.today/20181206171026/https://thediplomat.com/2018/12/chinas-djibouti-base-a-one-year-update/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=ebb%2006.12.18&utm_term=Editorial%20-%20Military%20-%20Early%20Bird%20Brief

with

archive-url=https://archive.today/20181206171026/https://thediplomat.com/2018/12/chinas-djibouti-base-a-one-year-update/

Well intentioned, I'm sure, but the new link does not work. Which rather defeats the whole point of having an archive-url to begin with.

Could we consider disabling this feature on "|archive-url" for archive.is / archive.today for the time being? Or somehow preventing the bot from mangling them? PvOberstein (talk) 14:52, 6 July 2019 (UTC)

@PvOberstein, Xaosflux, and Nyttend: Thank you for the notice all, I have just seen this and am out of town this weekend - I will be able to take a closer look by tomorrow evening. Sorry for the trouble. Jon Kolbert (talk) 02:35, 7 July 2019 (UTC)
@Jon Kolbert: Much appreciated, thank you. PvOberstein (talk) 03:20, 7 July 2019 (UTC)

Blocked IP

Can you tell me more about this IP range you blocked? [9] I can't seem to find a detailed record.

This IP editor created the account DanWarpp [10] which is an alternative account of user QuestFour [11]

QuestFour has been warned several times for edit warring. [12]

Most recently they have been warned by Binksternet,[13] with whom they had also come into conflict while editing under the IP. Kolya Butternut (talk) 02:37, 29 August 2019 (UTC)

To me it looks like the IP range was blocked because it was an open proxy, open to abuse by anyone who wished to hide their location. But yes, it's absolutely provable from diffs that many of the proxy addresses were being used by the same person to do the same edit warring on the same articles, followed by sockpuppet DanWarpp who confirmed his connection to 190.2.144.131 by saying "created an account!" A related IP range was also blocked by Jon Kolbert, and was being used by the same persistent edit warrior: Special:Contributions/185.165.240.0/22. FYI. I don't think someone who has been using blocked proxies should be allowed to register a username. Binksternet (talk) 05:24, 29 August 2019 (UTC)

New Page Review newsletter September-October 2019

Hello Jon Kolbert,

Backlog

Instead of reaching a magic 300 as it once did last year, the backlog approaching 6,000 is still far too high. An effort is also needed to ensure that older unsuitable older pages at the back of the queue do not get automatically indexed for Google.

Coordinator

A proposal is taking place here to confirm a nominated user as Coordinator of NPR.

This month's refresher course

Why I Hate Speedy Deleters, a 2008 essay by long since retired Ballonman, is still as valid today. Those of us who patrol large numbers of new pages can be forgiven for making the occasional mistake while others can learn from their 'beginner' errors. Worth reading.

Deletion tags

Do bear in mind that articles in the feed showing the trash can icon (you will need to have 'Nominated for deletion' enabled for this in your filters) may have been tagged by inexperienced or non NPR rights holders using Twinkle. They require your further verification.

Paid editing

Please be sure to look for the tell-tale signs of undisclosed paid editing. Contact the creator if appropriate, and submit the issue to WP:COIN if necessary. WMF policy requires paid editors to connect to their adverts.

Subject-specific notability guidelines' (SNG). Alternatives to deletion
  • Reviewers are requested to familiarise themselves once more with notability guidelines for organisations and companies.
  • Blank-and-Redirect is a solution anchored in policy. Please consider this alternative before PRODing or CSD. Note however, that users will often revert or usurp redirects to re-create deleted articles. Do regularly patrol the redirects in the feed.
Not English
  • A common issue: Pages not in English or poor, unattributed machine translations should not reside in main space even if they are stubs. Please ensure you are familiar with WP:NPPNE. Check in Google for the language and content, and if they do have potential, tag as required, then move to draft. Modify the text of the template as appropriate before sending it.
Tools

Regular reviewers will appreciate the most recent enhancements to the New Pages Feed and features in the Curation tool, and there are still more to come. Due to the wealth of information now displayed by ORES, reviewers are strongly encouraged to use the system now rather than Twinkle; it will also correctly populate the logs.

Stub sorting, by SD0001: A new script is available for adding/removing stub tags. See User:SD0001/StubSorter.js, It features a simple HotCat-style dynamic search field. Many of the reviewers who are using it are finding it an improvement upon other available tools.

Assessment: The script at User:Evad37/rater makes the addition of Wikiproject templates extremely easy. New page creators rarely do this. Reviewers are not obliged to make these edits but they only take a few seconds. They can use the Curation message system to let the creator know what they have done.

DannyS712 bot III is now patrolling certain categories of uncontroversial redirects. Curious? Check out its patrol log.

Go here to remove your name if you wish to opt-out of future mailings.

MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 22:15, 11 September 2019 (UTC)