DCarltonsm
My Talk.
I LOve MY TALK
Your recent contribution(s) to Wikipedia did not provide specific references or sources. Keeping Wikipedia accurate and verifiable is very important, and as you might be aware there is currently a drive to improve the quality of Wikipedia by encouraging editors to cite the sources they used when adding content. Editors may choose to remove material you have contributed if it is not verifiable. Please provide specific references in your contributions to any books, articles, websites or other reliable sources that will allow people to verify the content. You can use a citation method listed at inline citations that best suits each article. Larry V (talk | e-mail) 07:18, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
Edit summaries
editHi, please don't label your edit summaries with things like "Here's Source" when you're not actually adding a source for your edits. It's misleading and some editors will likely interpret it as vandalism. | Mr. Darcy talk 23:41, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
- Please. Stop. This is your last warning. If you continue to repeatedly insert unsourced and questionable material into articles without citing a reliable source, with or without misleading edit summaries such as you have been using, you will be blocked. Thank you, —bbatsell ¿? 15:59, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
Blocked for 24 hours
editI have blocked you for 24 hours per this edit after you were repeatedly warned against adding unsourced information to the article. The fact that you are using misleading edit summaries like "sourced" was what pushed this one over the edge. I'd suggest you take the time you are not editing to read Wikipedia's policies on verifiability and reliable sources. You need to actually source this information before you add it to the article. Continuing to add this infomation to the article without a source is disruptive and will just earn you a longer block.--Isotope23 20:39, 24 January 2007 (UTC)
January 2007
editPlease stop. If you continue to ignore our policies by introducing inappropriate pages, such as Sourced to Wikipedia, you will be blocked. →AzaToth 20:14, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
Sourced information
editI think what we mean is whenever you edit Wikipedia, you need to have a source to back up what you write. Say you find some info about the history of a subway system. All you need to do is create a link to the place you found it. THe easiest way is to put the web address in [ ] signs. and it makes something that looks like [1]. You can also check this page for more ways to source things. If you need more help, just put {{helpme}} on your page and someone will be there shortly. --wL<speak·check·chill> 20:25, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
Please stop
editIf you have a reliable source, such as a newspaper article, about the travels of the R68s, please cite it. Otherwise, the detailed breakdown of where the R68 was introduced first and what lines it was moved to should not be included, since it is not verifiable: someone reading the article cannot know whether it is correct. --NE2 20:26, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
You cannot unprotect this page, since you are not a Wikipedia administrator. Removing the "protected" notice does not make the page unprotected. Larry V (talk | e-mail) 01:20, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Your edit to Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages
editI was curious about why you added the text
<sup></sup>
to Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages (diff), and why you marked it as minor. If you want to test the Wikitext markup language, feel free to do so at the sandbox; check out Wikipedia:How to edit a page for an overview. Happy editing! GracenotesT § 04:46, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Your unsourced edits
editPlease stop. If you continue to add unsourced or original content, as you did to R68 (New York City Subway car) and New York City Subway rolling stock, you will be blocked from editing Wikipedia. Larry V (talk | e-mail) 20:07, 27 January 2007 (UTC)