GuildWiki talk:You are valuable

I seriously question the merit of this "policy", which appears to have been enacted without discussion. Policy should govern user conduct, not user importance. It is also redundant with AGF. It is silly of me to point out something so obvious, but users are only as valuable as the value of their edits. There is no reason to value vandals and trolls, for example. gr3g 00:14, 31 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Pfft. At least a Troll miniature can get me an easy 20k! ^^
 * But back on the point, I'm pretty much in agreement with the point you've made, but I think this policy was enacted for newly joined contributors to look at and think "Ah, I'm welcome here" instead of "Damn, I don't have a chance with those wiki-Gnomes here!". &mdash; Rapta  [[image:Rapta_Icon1.gif|19px]] (talk|contribs) 00:23, 31 August 2006 (CDT)
 * We (both normal users and sysops) place great importance in recognising that we're all important. We're pretty non hieratical here and I think this policy is designed to reflect that. Everybody's comments are important and everybody can suggest and enact change here. We have very few protected pages and admins normally only exercise their "power" for maintenance duties. This isn't a heavily moderated community, we simply try to respect all other contributors and expect them to do the same, even when we have disagreements. That might seem overly idealistic but it basically seems to work, it's the reason why I've spent so much time here, I find it's an enjoyable community to be a part of, I hope you do to! ;) --Xasxas256 00:25, 31 August 2006 (CDT)
 * While that is fine as an essay, it is very questionable as a policy. The same sort of situation exists in most open content wikis. Wikipedia is perhaps the biggest exception, but it did start out this way. It can be policy to require contributors to assume good faith whenever there is a dispute, as that is a matter of conduct. It cannot be policy to make all contributors valuable, as this value emerges over a history of contributions. Don't you see the epistemological impossibility in declaring "thou shalt be important"? At the very least rename it to "Your contributions are welcome" or "Thanks for participating in the wiki" or something like that. It is essentially what the article says anyway. Cf. Wikipedia:Don't be shy gr3g 01:36, 31 August 2006 (CDT)
 * I don't understand the problem. Users are valuable. That's what "your contribs are welcome" and "thanks for helping the wiki" mean, only it has a much more authoritative tone and less conversation-like. No, I don't see the problem with "Thou shalt be important". If a new user comes in, has no history of edits, creates a massive page of key information, all of which is an exact and precise presentation of the actual game, why should his/her history matter? Just because I've made 100+, 200+, or 500+ edits doesn't grant me anything special than if I made 1 edit so far. This wiki is growing and keeps growing. One small edit or one massive crusade, it's all helpful to us and the crusading user is just as important as the little guy who just checks sp&grammar. It is policy to treat all users equally, meaning that no one's voice here is bigger than anyone else's, even if they've used their voice 5000x more. That's what the policy is about; equality, fairness, and respect to all opinions, to judge them on an objective scale of usefulness and exactness. It is about user conduct; their conduct to each other. And yes vandals come around and trolls are annoying but should any of them turn on a new leaf and actually begin to contribute, we will not say "you were bad, we won't value your contributions". --Vortexsam 01:58, 31 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Yes, users are valuable, but not as a result of policy. I am not questioning the content of this page: merely its worth as a policy. gr3g 02:12, 31 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Are you suggesting that it shouldn't be policy? --Vortexsam 13:27, 31 August 2006 (CDT)
 * He's got two points. First, you can't really have a policy saying "you are" something.  You are or you aren't.  A policy doesn't change it.  As he said, you can have a policy outlining rules of conduct.  Second, this article isn't even a policy (considering the definition of "policy") but instead is just encouragement to get people to contribute.  --Fyren 14:04, 31 August 2006 (CDT)


 * I fail to see what the desired outcome of this discussion is. Do you want it renamed? Reworked? Un-policied? Removed entirely? I really don't see what the issue is. I always thought of this as a reminder to users that they are indeed as valuable as the next. I do not mind the fact it's a policy. It actually is a policy if you think about it. The fact all users here are to be seen just as valuable as sysops, admins, and regular users. In other words, users shouldn't assume greater power or trust from others compared to an anon just cause he/she's signed up. In the same way admins shouldn't be all "holier than thou" against regular users. It's a good policy and I think we should keep it as it is. &mdash; Galil  14:38, 31 August 2006 (CDT)