User:Bahamut0013/Secret pages

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Please remember not to cite essays or proposals as if they were policy.

This essay explores the concept of "secret" and "hidden" pages, which have been controversial at times. This essay is not meant to express support or oppose the idea, but merely to describe what they are, give a history, and examine some of the pros and cons that have been argued.

What is a secret page?

Many

userspace. They usually offer a reward of some kind for finding it, often a barnstar (such as File:Secret page barnstar.svg
). The hidden page is usually accessible by following a link (or possibly many links) somewhere on the user's main userpage or talk page.

Cheating

While every user will set their own rules for the challenge, the following are usually considered cheating:

  • using the Special:AllPages tool to systemically look at every page in a user's userspace.
  • using the
    search bar's
    suggestions to look at every page in a user's userspace.
  • viewing the page's source code for the link.

Variables

Some users will have an attack of the clevers and increase the challenge in one or more of the following ways:

Most newer secret pages also have a section that allows/requires the finders to leave a remark and sign. Most editors offer the code for the reward on the secret page, but some will award them manually.

Finding a secret page challenge

Many can be found by using the search bar for secret page. Others can be found on this list, however, some are false positives (the list was created by searching for key terms like "secret" and "hidden"). A Google search also works well. Often, a user who has completed one challenge will have completed many more, so look on his or her userpages for evidence that they have received such an award and search the awarder's userpages.

Several editors have begun collaborating an effort to bring secret pages to MfD, and their list can be found at Wikipedia:User pages/Secret pages to be deleted.

Policy

As of July 2010, there is no policy expressly allowing or forbidding users to have secret page challenges, nor to attempt the challenge or collect a reward. Like most issues on Wikipedia, there are many opinions, some of them conflicting.

The first known instance of the conflict was at Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:Meldshal42/Secret Page in August 2007. The consensus at that time was Keep, but the page was deleted a year later at the user's request.

The whole concept of secret pages was put on trial in April 2008, sparked after a debate on the Administrators' noticeboard: Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Secret pages, and the discussion yielded no consensus, so no action was taken. However, one detail was almost uniformly agreed upon: secret pages that don't fall in line with userspace policy (such as attack pages) must be dealt with as normal, usually with a deletion discussion and if consensus is built up, deletion by administrators; some pages can be deleted without discussion if it fits the Criteria for speedy deletion. Also, users who engage strictly or mostly in non-article contributions need to be mentored and pushed into a better balance between productive editing and recreation.

The closing admin did note that the mass deletion was not the best, and that future deletion discussions should be done on a case-by-case basis, which was put into effect at Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:DCFan101/Secret Page Challenge. Previously, deletion discussions have had consensus to delete guestbook barnstar template under similar arguments, and could be used as a precedent for this debate. See Wikipedia:Templates for deletion/Log/2008 March 19#Template:The Guestbook Barnstar and Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:Wwesocks/guestbook/barnstar.

The debate was aroused again in late February 2009 when a post was made at

deletion discussion was a waste of time and a rule that could be ignored. Others were merely angry about the sarcastic deletion log summaries, and others about the lack of warning, while feeling that the deletions themselves were in order. The debate ranged between MZM's actions in deletion and the original debate on the existence of secret pages (which was also brought up at Wikipedia talk:What Wikipedia is not). Eventually, Arbitration was requested and accepted: Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/MZMcBride
. The noticeboard thread was closed with no consensus toward content policy, and the arbitration closed with this finding of fact:

Since the Arbitration Committee does not rule on content nor can it establish community consensus, no decisive solution to the debate was made. However, since the case began, a number of secret pages have been successfully deleted at Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion on a case-by-case basis, including Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:21655 Secret page game, Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:Guitarherochristopher/My Hidden Page and Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:Microchip08/Labyrinth; cases like Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:Midnight Comet/Sandbox weren't so clear but did result in deletion. On the other hand, cases like Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:Baseball Bugs/hidden have resulted in keeping.

In September 2009, the debate was posted again at Wikipedia:Village_pump_(proposals)/Archive_52#Hidden_pages, following a rash of deletion nominations, which even included this essay itself. It was eventually archived without any clear decision or consensus. Some discussion at Wikipedia talk:User pages/Archive 6#WP:UP#NOT/11 aka WP:UP#GAMES. "particularly" was archived without any firm consensus, though several editors noted that, in general, less leeway was being offered, regardless of whether the owner was a solid contributor or not. This view seems to be validated with some recent MfDs like Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:Tezero/Secret Page, though Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/User:Tezkag72/Secret Page shows that the issue is still contested.

A poll at Wikipedia talk:User pages#Secret pages: Ok or not? in April 2010 demonstrated waning support for allowing secret pages to remain, but no clear consensus was made as to what should be discouraged or tolerable and what not, and the guideline remained unchanged. Simmering for a while longer, the issue was raised again at Wikipedia_talk:What_Wikipedia_is_not/Archive_34#Does WP:NOTMYSPACE apply to secret pages? in July and noted at RfC for wider attention, citing WP:NOTMYSPACE. On 26 July, Jclemens (talk · contribs) modified Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not in the hopes of resolving policy, but was reverted by Becksguy (talk · contribs) the next day, which was duly restored on the 30th. The discussion was closed with consensus that "secret pages are seen as a distraction from the main purpose of the project, and create an inappropriate ethos."

A mass-deletion attempt at Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Secret pages 2 was overwhelmingly opposed. Some opposed out of objection to the flat-out deletion of secret pages, others for the lack of individual rehabilative attention to wayward editors, others merely for the blanket ban and charges of an ongoing "Witch-hunt".

For

The most common argument for keeping secret pages is that Wikipedia is not a pure encyclopedia, the

easter eggs
.

The essays Wikipedia:Why do you care? and Wikipedia:Laissez-faire support the keep argument.

Against

One of the most common arguments given is that it is a waste of time and resources that could be better used for productive editing. The policy most often cited is that Wikipedia is not a social networking site; though many people point to the userspace guideline:

While Wikipedia is not paper, there is no reason to clog it up with frivolous junk, that's why we have policies forbidding certain types of pages, especially in userspace. Some point out that many of the users who engage in secret pages offer few, if any, productive edits to the

main article space or the encyclopedia as a whole. Some were concerned about a slippery slope of increasing tolerance toward non-productive endeavors on Wikipedia. Some argue that many people who donated money
would not want their money "wasted" in such a manner; however, many of the users who engage in secret page challenges are donators themselves. Others feel that the loss of an editor over a userspace page is likely not an editor that would be missed; that the encyclopedia matters more than individual editors. The motivation of an editor to contribute should not be limited to the community or recreation. While the practice may not be directly harmful in an of itself, it does attract more and more time-wasting activity; as well as validate the users who contribute nothing to the mainspace.

One successful argument was that allowing users to create an additional account for the purposes of hosting or participating in a secret page search is a violation of the policies on

. Previous discussion did yield some positive, but incomplete consensus regarding fake secret userpages, i.e. the "red herrings" that mislead the searchers.

The essay Wikipedia:Why secret pages should be deleted also collects several rationales for deleting secret pages.