User talk:Minun

I noticed that StrategyWiki likes to hack others attempt to transwiki pages from Wikibooks and other wikis. When I attempted to move two different pages to my own wiki, StrategyWiki hacked my attempt (luckily, there still giving my wiki the credit for rescuing the page). And it appears they were doing the same to WikiKnowledge, the above topic, says it all, you TransWikied a page from WikiKnowledge, and please say where did it say the article needed TransWiki-ing Minun 13:30, 30 September 2006 (CDT)
 * Er, what? There's no hacking going on. When we transwiki pages, it's because they aren't wanted on the original site. In the case of many articles from Wikibooks, we transwiki them because Wikibooks is trying to remove all their game walkthroughs (they don't feel they're appropriate there), and instead of losing the data completely, it's copied over here so that people can continue working on it. In the case of the fighting game moves guide, it was almost entirely Procyon's work (so he's entitled to do what he wants with it), and here was again a more appropriate place for it than Wikiknowledge. Regardless of that, all the contributions people make to places like Wikibooks are put under the GFDL license, which (in broad terms) means it can be copied and reproduced anywhere, as long as the list of contributors (i.e. the page history) is kept with it, and the license isn't changed without every author's consent. As I said before, there's no hacking going on here. --DrBob (Talk) 14:08, 30 September 2006 (CDT)
 * Yes! I appreciate you resucing pages that need a new home, but im talking about the ones that have already been transwikied Minun 14:27, 30 September 2006 (CDT)
 * Minun, I'm not going to try to reason with you since all attempts to reason with someone at WikiKnowledge have only been met with irrationality, and based and your ramblings above, I can only assume that you're no different. Your accusation of "hacking" makes absolutely no sense.  How exactly can anyone "hack" what you do on your own wiki site?  I believe you're only creating a commotion here out of some misguided loyalty to Gmcfoley, who by the way, has no rightful ethical claim to the Fighting Moves Guide, even if he's entitled to keep a depricated version of it on his site.  As a personal aside, it seems to me that WikiKnowledge should be renamed GmcfoleyStolenKnowledge since he's really the only one contributing anything substantial to his own site. (And yes Minun, you may constitute that as an attack and mention it on your site discussion page.) Procyon 14:41, 30 September 2006 (CDT)
 * I don't really know much of what "hacking" means, but if "hacking" is the wrong word, lets just say that members of StrategyWiki is just transwiki-ing pages which have already been transwikied Minun 14:51, 30 September 2006 (CDT)
 * If you don't know what a word means, don't use it! As the content is freely licensed, anybody is entitled to copy it to their sites, including us. Sorry for being blunt. --DrBob (Talk) 15:03, 30 September 2006 (CDT)

Minun, there are no limitations on how many times, and where, a page can be transwikied. If two sites feel that particular content is useful, than obviously, as long as the GFDL license is complied with, two sites can copy and provide that information. If it upsets you that StrategyWiki is incorporating the same information that you wish to, your only recourse is to make the material on your site shine and make people want to come to your site because your content is better. You can't simply be angry because now people have a choice between your site and another. That's exactly my problem with Gmcfoley and the Fighting Moves Guide. It bothers me tremendously that he insists on keeping the lists there. I can't coerse him to remove the content even though I feel that he ethically should. All I can do is what I'm doing and making our version of the Moves Lists MUCH BETTER. And I think I'm succeeding at that.

Now that Wikis are popping up in many places, I think it's going to be a case of evolve or die off. Pointless random wiki sites with no purpose will always be outshined by sites like StrategyWiki that have a definitive purpose and seek to be the best container of information about a particular subject that it can be. Sites like WikiKnowledge seem to have no point beyond one person's personal agenda. Procyon 15:23, 30 September 2006 (CDT)