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Purple.

Blue

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Thank you for the wonderful additions. Ebikeguy (talk) 02:06, 21 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

My appreciation for help and guidance from veteran fellow Wikipedians

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Pandelver to PhGustaf:

Thank you!

Best wishes and happy editing, PhGustaf (talk) 01:33, 2 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

Sorry for being inattentive...I can't help...with translations. Goo luck. PhGustaf (talk) 19:30, 2 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

PhGustaf, I didn't think a day or two to reply was inattentive at all; we're not 24 hours Wikipedians. Thank you for helping in all the ways you can. And if you hear of who among programmers of Wikipedia or those brainstorming future policy for greater multilinguality in harnessing resources, especially those already within the Wikipediac fold such as in Wikimedia, are working, do keep me in mind to let me know! And best of luck in all your endeavors, here and elsewhere.

Warmest regards PhGustaf, Pandelver (talk) 04:55, 3 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

Pandelver to SineBot:

How wonderful! SineBot, are you a fully automated identity, a Wikipedia electronic-only program? Please tell, out of your own consciousness (not because anyone makes you do so!).

Pandelver to WoodyWerm:
Thank you, Woody(?), I have also given you thanks on your own talk page, appreciate your attentive response
Pandelver to RHaworth:
Thank you also, RHaworth! :)

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WikiCup 2013 February newsletter

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Round 1 is now over. The top 64 scorers have progressed to round 2, where they have been randomly split into eight pools of eight. At the end of April, the top two from each pool, as well as the 16 highest scorers from those remaining, will progress to round 3. Commiserations to those eliminated; if you're interested in still being involved in the WikiCup, able and willing reviewers will always be needed, and if you're interested in getting involved with other collaborative projects, take a look at the WikiWomen's Month discussed below.

Round 1 saw 21 competitors with over 100 points, which is fantastic; that suggests that this year's competition is going to be highly competative. Our lower scores indicate this, too: A score of 19 was required to reach round 2, which was significantly higher than the 11 points required in 2012 and 8 points required in 2011. The score needed to reach round 3 will be higher, and may depend on pool groupings. In 2011, 41 points secured a round 3 place, while in 2012, 65 was needed. Our top three scorers in round 1 were:

  1.   Sturmvogel_66 (submissions), primarily for an array of warship GAs.
  2.   Miyagawa (submissions), primarily for an array of did you knows and good articles, some of which were awarded bonus points.
  3.   Casliber (submissions), due in no small part to Canis Minor, a featured article awarded a total of 340 points. A joint submission with   Keilana (submissions), this is the highest scoring single article yet submitted in this year's competition.

Other contributors of note include:

Featured topics have still played no part in this year's competition, but once again, a curious contribution has been offered by   The C of E (submissions): did you know that there is a Shit Brook in Shropshire? With April Fools' Day during the next round, there will probably be a good chance of more unusual articles...

March sees the WikiWomen's History Month, a series of collaborative efforts to aid the women's history WikiProject to coincide with Women's History Month and International Women's Day. A number of WikiCup participants have already started to take part. The project has a to-do list of articles needing work on the topic of women's history. Those interested in helping out with the project can find articles in need of attention there, or, alternatively, add articles to the list. Those interested in collaborating on articles on women's history are also welcome to use the WikiCup talk page to find others willing to lend a helping hand. Another collaboration currently running is an an effort from WikiCup participants to coordinate a number of Easter-themed did you know articles. Contributions are welcome!

A few final administrative issues. From now on, submission pages will need only a link to the article and a link to the nomination page, or, in the case of good article reviews, a link to the review only. See your submissions' page for details. This will hopefully make updating submission pages a little less tedious. If you are concerned that your nomination—whether it is at good article candidates, a featured process, or anywhere else—will not receive the necessary reviews, please list it on Wikipedia:WikiCup/Reviews. Questions are welcome on Wikipedia talk:WikiCup, and the judges are reachable on their talk pages or by email. Good luck! If you wish to start or stop receiving this newsletter, please feel free to add or remove yourself from Wikipedia:WikiCup/Newsletter/Send. J Milburn (talkemail) and The ed17 (talkemail) J Milburn (talk) 01:06, 1 March 2013 (UTC)Reply

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Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited Chasing the dragon, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page British. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.

It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these opt-out instructions. Thanks, DPL bot (talk) 08:59, 21 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

Yes, this link was intended. Thank you, too. Disambiguation pages often include substantive Wikipedia encyclopedic information as well as mere link lists, especially in their first paragraphs and any summary descriptions provided for items in their lists. Pandelver (talk) 17:18, 26 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

Dingoes

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While experts seem to agree that Australian dingoes and NGSDs are wild true dogs, can we be so confident about all Canis lupus dingo? The Thai dog seems to be just an ordinary street dog, even though experts class them as C.l. dingo based on their skull shapes and so on. Chrisrus (talk) 14:32, 16 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

Ah, we are surely in agreement here, Chrisrus:

You point out a Venn diagram kind of subsets untidiness as well as, shifting those subsets, potential overlap (with changing domicile venue) over time messiness. In this case, (C l. dingo set) contains those which are (true wild dog subsets) and may also contain (Thai dingo/dog as another subset which may not (some or all) be simultaneously a member of the (true wild dog subset)) though its members may originate with members of (true wild dog subset within C. l. dingo set) or its members may move, through feral to long-term 'naturalized wildering ->attributed nativity' wildness as a matter of either human popular, conventional, or strict evolutionary parsing by geoduration, behavioral, epignetic, physio-anatomical distinctiveness. . . you join a human domicile quickly, but when are you or your descendants wild again if you leave one, eh? I suspect what you point out does get ambiguously used in what this article has been calling 'expert' reference: C. l. d. is recognized in comparison with f. as 'true' 'wild', but yes a few have become home friends, comensals, adopted family or captives or bred by humans, and in a moment's context we may wish to know whether we are saying they are part of the subspecies which is 'wild' in general tax or are leaving or have left that subset, or rather, which meaning is being used by the subset name.

If you'd like to add something about the situation of the historical or present Thai population in this regard, mention them and any other varieties you consider borderline or ambiguous cases and qualify the TWD set in relation to the C. l. d. set and subsets in this article, please go right ahead.

And since, of the 3 dogs currently listed in the Thai Dog disambiguation page, only the dingo does not have its own page, while the other two are at the same tax level, did you want to be the one to create and fill that out better, including more of the relevant attributes and history surrounding what you point out, so it does not only continue as a subheading under other articles, its largest text (and are there photos anywhere yet?) being under the C. l. d. article, Chrisrus? Pandelver (talk) 06:33, 17 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

Let's just get this straight. I understand that while the term "wild dog" has many referents, in expert usage, the only ones that they use the term for which is actually a true dog happen to all be C.l.dingo, but that not all of them are wild.
According to http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/4106MK0C87L._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg, C.l.dingo is a product of the prehistoric Austronesian diaspora. Austronesian people such as Indonesians and Philipinos and such must have originated on or near the continent and then spread out to different Islands, taking their dogs with them, where they still are to this day. Those that stayed in Thailand are still normal dogs, and that's apparently why there is little scientific interest in them. Those on other islands went other directions, and those on New Guinea and Australia eventually went wild but not until long after the whole process started. So they are default domesticated animals, albeit quite primitive and not very domesticated as Pekingese for example or modern breeds, but that to equate all c.l. dingo with wildness is very common idea but not right.
It wasn't until Corbett went to Thailand and did his study of hundreds of specimins (by the way he got them from the butcher) that he finally published that they were closely related to the only very famous C.l.dingo, the Australian dingo, and that that must have been their place of origin or close to it. But this is not to say that he was trying to say anything about the Thai native dog in terms of it's wildness. It was all based on skull shapes and bones and estrus cycle and such. Thai dogs are the same comensal village dogs or street dogs that you see elsewhere, not found fending for themselves indepentant of people like Aus Dingoes or NGSDs.
You're right, however, that this does tend to make a mess of things. For his purposes, Corbett doesn't use "lupus", he calls them Canis dingo and has his own different subspecies names that he uses. He can tell a coastal Aus dingo from a desert one from a skull fragment at a glance. Seen from his perspective, this makes sense for cataloging specimins. He's the one who employed by the government to figure out the net effect of the predator on different livestock populations in his native Australia, whether the rabbits they kill make up for the calves they take, and so on, so everything with him stems from that POV. This explains why of all the old dog subspecies taxa that they used to use, one for bulldogs, one for poodles, one for sheepdogs, one or hounds, and so on, dingo is the only one still in use. But meanwhile the rest of the world dropped all that when they unadvisedly made the domestic dog a subspecies of wolf. Now there's no room to maneuver.
There's no substitute for taxonomy, but to me, it's not real, just a necessary contrivance, no realer than the Dewey decimal system. Not everything fits nicely and there are always gray areas. What's real to me are the smooth branches of clades, and the actual history of how all creatures got to be what they are. But Wikipedia articles have clear lines between them, just like the labels and specimen jars and boxes and drawers and their labels that taxonimists have to have. So we have to make it work but not to force it and admit when it doesn't make much sense as it is bound to do at times. Chrisrus (talk) 06:19, 17 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

Yes indeed. Austro-Asian-etal humans "taking their dogs with them" continues AFAIK to be the general assumption, and usually made because of swimming distances imagined as an alternative. Away from Corbett, there's mtDNA and related digging just begun really, not only in the species but regarding plate tectonic timings, so perhaps for a few years we shouldn't expect much more pith to be revealed yet out of what can eventually be sleuthed after-the-fact where canid migrations antedating these human groups is still in the pot being kept open as earlier radiation of both dingo and familiaris have been asserted in recent years. So as for 'getting this straight', in our conversation together we prolly already were fairly so. What would you like to do as editor, then? And hope you received my friendly heads up and inquiry on your page? Pandelver (talk) 06:33, 17 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

btw, when you tell the story of stay-at-home Thai dogs being the untraveled, unchanged-by-new-circumstances-pressure-on-evolution pre-dingoes, you are prolly suggesting the reverse to the path you ascribe to Corbett as assuming 'famous dingo is in AU' so 'Thai must have come from near THERE' - you are suggesting that dingoness might first be evolved in the stay-at-home mainland/coastal/near island landraces which the farther dingoes then resemble as descendants, and maybe with the features we have come to consider dingo emphasized in their modifications! Pandelver (talk) 06:51, 17 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

and oh, sharing your amusement about what Thai animal vendor handled Corbett's first examined specimens, did Corbett say they were tasty, or recommend recipes among the local repertoire? Pandelver (talk) 06:54, 17 July 2015 (UTC) NGSDs may have sampled good recipes for cooked or prepared human, courtesy of human tribes,as they aren't known for eating any raw, I'm also curious, even if it's less likely, if through his examination of digestion and by other means, if Corbett found good recipes for humans among Thai dingoes!. Pandelver (talk) 02:59, 18 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

ChrisRus, thank you for thanking me for adding the Rabbit clan to that list of animals on your Talk page! Pandelver (talk) 04:56, 23 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, on your User page. Pandelver (talk) 04:57, 23 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
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Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited Asmat Museum of Culture and Progress, you added links pointing to the disambiguation pages St. Thomas University, Elmdale and St. Cloud. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.

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Well, DPLbot, my my your report is partly wrong, you have a bug which causes you to say that links to 1 of these 3 DA pages were added, because 2 were indeed added as well as another one but not a link to St. Cloud, but you are self-aware that you may be buggy and say so, which is very nice of you. You have substituted the phrase 'St. Cloud' for 'St. Paul' in speaking to me, and 'St. Paul' does not lead to a DA page. Fortunately, these 3 were properly intended, and the other 1 you imagine doesn't exist. You are already free to create such links yourself! You do me and all of us the service of pointing out where a name or geo reference only leads to a DA page, and I have acted upon that to sharpen 2 of these links to specific articles which I then found listed on those DA pages. We shall leave 1 DA link as is, since the institution we are mentioning is listed on that DA page but does not have its own page yet, so the DA page is the best home to visit for tea at W at present. May I make you a cup, would you like that?

It's OK to leave me messages in your confusion in the sense that I am commpassionate about your psychosis, "it's nothing, just little stuff." Grow and be incredible in many wonderful ways, bot! Pandelver (talk) 17:02, 17 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

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You appear to be eligible to vote in the current Arbitration Committee election. The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to enact binding solutions for disputes between editors, primarily related to serious behavioural issues that the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the ability 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, you are welcome to review the candidates' statements and submit your choices on the voting page. For the Election committee, MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 14:25, 24 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

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ArbCom Elections 2016: Voting now open!

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Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Eight-Nation Alliance, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Dagu. Such links are usually incorrect, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of unrelated topics with similar titles. (Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.)

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Thank you, DPL bot, my links to DA pages are typically quite conscious and contextually intentional in explication. Pandelver (talk) 21:42, 26 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

Additions to Tara

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You cannot cite to Wikipedia, Wiktionary, or blogs. Your addition has been removed. Try again with real sources. Skyerise (talk) 13:54, 28 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

Thank you, I shall leave retrying to others at present, you are welcome to take it up if you like. Pandelver (talk) 14:06, 28 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
What may matter is our consorted efforts in delivering veracious content :) Pandelver (talk) 14:07, 28 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
All the finest to you this season and beyond! Pandelver (talk) 14:10, 28 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
I trust, of course, that you have only so far scrupulously reverted the line-items which fail your citation standards. Thank you for your own contributions and for welcoming comprehensive growth of new content with me together! Pandelver (talk) 14:16, 28 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
Nice to meet you. Not sure the couple sentences properly cited will stand by themselves, but I'll look into it... Happy holidays!Skyerise (talk) 16:38, 28 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
I imagine now, stimmed by you Skyerise, that interarticle citation porting. . . what's the history of programming dabs at it over Wikipedia history? Especially as many of our better editors, even valuing W, are the busy ones time constrained in the rest of the world. Pandelver (talk) 17:02, 28 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
Cognizant of content changes needed in the facility, such as commonly 1+Nth variants of a source don't have the initial head. Pandelver (talk) 17:04, 28 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

With regard to etymology sections on Buddhist articles, you should observe caution and use real sources, preferably books and journals. Just so you know, many of the previous etymology sections (some but not all of them now removed) were written by a now-banned user, using flimsy sources and doing what amounted to original research, very much like you are doing. That editor is no longer welcome here. Best not make yourself similarly unwelcome by looking like a duck. Using proper sourcing and avoiding synthesis would definitely make you look less like a duck. Skyerise (talk) 17:59, 30 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

Yes, that's good to know. But since knowledge and its use drives what we do, rather than writers's interests and desires, first, what is your encyclopedic feeling, Skyerise, for whether Buddhist articles, and to start with this one, should have or would benefit, including your content take, beyond procedural, about its worth for the range of readers of this content? Pandelver (talk) 23:58, 30 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
And do you think etymologies should evolve into any other particular directions in this portal area, are there valuable uses which are not yet being served, are their variations in the nature of the etymologies to be delivered, or what else do you see from your experience, your imagination, and your design of this area's future utility? Pandelver (talk) 00:00, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
I'm an editor. I'm not interested in such hypothetical discussions. Don't use Wiki or other user-contributed sites as sources, or blogs - if it's got a place to make comments, it's pretty much out. Pay attention to the citation style. The article you are editing lists sources at the end and then cites to them using {{sfn}} tags. Your additions to the article should maintain that style. If your source doesn't have an author, then — well, that's probably a source you shouldn't be using... So carry on... Skyerise (talk) 15:36, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

Copying within Wikipedia requires attribution

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  Thank you for your contributions to Wikipedia. It appears that you copied or moved text from Kali (asura) into Halahala. While you are welcome to re-use Wikipedia's content, here or elsewhere, Wikipedia's licensing does require that you provide attribution to the original contributor(s). When copying within Wikipedia, this is supplied at minimum in an edit summary at the page into which you've copied content, disclosing the copying and linking to the copied page, e.g., copied content from [[page name]]; see that page's history for attribution. It is good practice, especially if copying is extensive, to also place a properly formatted {{copied}} template on the talk pages of the source and destination. Please provide attribution for this duplication if it has not already been supplied by another editor, and if you have copied material between pages before, even if it was a long time ago, you should provide attribution for that also. You can read more about the procedure and the reasons at Wikipedia:Copying within Wikipedia. Thank you. — Diannaa (talk) 15:08, 29 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

Diannaa, gladly done, thank you very much, checked as your arm swept me graciously and found you had added in the edit summary. Added further notes in subsequent edit summary on modifications during import and subsequent fittings to surrounding paras, and a See also to Kali (asura). And an edit summary for the Kali (asura) folks. Thank you! Pandelver (talk) 15:38, 29 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
In my own fingers' case, documenting in the sense of claiming any credit or virtue for what I've done amongst everyone else, as you may sense, isn't germane, the courtesy to those and to the topics themselves, though I'm not much with Plato there, elsewhere, is a value I very much endorse, as my first realization on your own talk page abets. Pandelver (talk) 15:50, 29 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
Outside of the institutional W why and then this second reason borne among the humans making these patties, what's your own take not only on the ethics, but on the literary practice and then on how that plays with readers' uses, Diannaa? (I'm reminded by the principles of software programming there's also a housekeeping element, about how well what's cited and updated or discarded over time in one source article isn't live tracked to its descendants. . . AND their changes and selectivities.) On that mechanical point, I expect when we finally implement AI within W to track not only changes but even parallel and convergent evolution of articles' content, not just mechanically, but with nuance, understanding and finesse, much more will be possible, just as linkage will become a different order of animal. So what do you see and want to bring to bear as we go? Pandelver (talk) 15:56, 29 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
What psychobabble! Please put down the ayahuasca! Skyerise (talk) 15:42, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

From HistoryOfIran talk page: Just a note that since software function in its work (translation here) is governed by ownership or licensing, so in the OP's case of Google translate, Google as operative owner of Google translate will technically have a layer of copyright in its output (the translations) too; if you translate on a different site than mega Metro (Google), the programmers and the site owner and owner's rights may be different too, so who has the layer or if it is multiple layers of copyright may not be immediately obvious. All this while we have not yet technologically progressed to where the recipient (even behind the eyes of a photonic viewer of a text, be that you or a camera or scanner) will later be acknowledged as capturing a derivative version, not a pure copy of what was perceived (think how musical notes get played and then heard differently). . . but that higher detail and its scrutiny only arrive tomorrow, likely in many of our lifetimes. Wikimedia already deals with photos of paintings, but with word translations which are always choices of synonyms and different connotations, not just denotations, in contexts, what is understood as a meaning from one layer to the next, and also gets transmitted, shared, reinterpreted in conveyance to others, in future even more without change in media than passing a printout or a site page today, are going to be a more detailed question. Bear in mind, copyright is a relatively modern invention, and infamously China's modernization leaped from ignoring it as an issue bothering them from nations where it had status, while convenient for China, to its desire to now be a leader, not just an equal, in global principles so just as with environmental policy for our common future, and because copyright is wished for its own entities viz a viz the rest of the world, China's tune has drastically changed. In the old days which yesterday China used as its ethics, even having a long printing history, repetition of another author was a compliment. Around the world, before the idea of copyright, creators amd inventors who did not automatically reap rewards, or potential title to them, through copyright, was revered because what they did benefited everyone. Potentially right away. So human use of this concept evolves, and in the early 21st century we are merely at a midpoint it its development. Pandelver (talk) 18:07, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

From Diannaa talk page: Hello Diannaa. Hope you're doing well. I'm having a bit of a brain fart over here. Say I translated a French Wikipedia article into its English version. That wouldn't be considered a violation of copyright, since the words in that French article is already rewritten? In other words, if I add that translation template thingy on the talk page of the article I put the translated stuff in, I should be good, right? HistoryofIran (talk) 23:48, 30 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

The template is great. But you also need to provide attribution in an edit summary. i.e. "Attribution: text was copied/translated from fr:Crêpe on December 30, 2022. Please see the history of that page for full attribution." — Diannaa (talk) 00:01, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
P.S. Forgot to say: It's not a copyright violation to copy/translate articles from other-language Wikipedias. Just do the attribution things, — Diannaa (talk) 00:03, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
I see, thank you very much! --HistoryofIran (talk) 00:09, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
Acually, the international law regarding translations and the associated ethics currently exists with some layers of contradictory principles. For example: Canada reserves translation authorization to the orginal text creator (before we get to approval of translation elements): as in https://www.bereskinparr.com/doc/don-t-get-lost-in-translation-copyright-protection-in-translated-works, while "internationally binding regulations (e.g. the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic works), translations, among other alternations, are protected as original works without prejudice to the copyright in the original work." as in https://www.lr-coordination.eu/node/251, showing these URLs in line here as part of describing the state of things, from a major law firm with an intellectual practice to an international communications agency. If Diannaa writes a phrase and permits you to translate it, HistoryofIran, with an a priori consented carte blanche, and you then create a translation for which from most governing jurisdictions on various sides you then hold the copyright, but then Diannaa objects to your particular translation or how you and others use it, some would say Diannaa lost her right to further edit what you produce by the nature of her prior permission; others may say, even legally, that you may have breached her trust in you in the principles with which she granted you a scope of permission. And she may not be concerned until we all see how a third party reacts to the translation you have created, and what use that party makes of your work and of hers which have become somewhat different entity matters by then. So this is both the formal international and national context, and the 'real effect' among intelligent actors involved from which you will choose your practical ethics. As Diannaa recommends in the particular case of W here, attribution is always polite and tends towards propriety in valuing others who are our sources, collaborators, and yes, even those whose translations, because such are always linguistically interpretations, vary from ours, whether guessing a cuneiform semiotic or a Farsi semantic.
As I am not a Farsi speaker, while admiring much Iranian culture, should I end with "عرض کردن"? Pandelver (talk) 17:16, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
Btw, in your example, HistoryOfIran, there are at least 3 layers of copyright, each has its own, so the French W is copyright 2 and your English W is copyright 3; and the tendency over recent centuries is to acknowledge plagiarism across single language (and its dialects and hybrids) into multilanguage re-presentations (viz translations besides changes in media). Each reworking pulls along roots from the previous and also sprouts its own new intellectual property layer with any rights, courtesies and new meanings and significations to others and thus potentially new identities beyond those for which rights and courtesies and implications existed before :) Pandelver (talk) 17:34, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
A lot of what you are saying is not applicable to copying within Wikipedia, which is covered by Wikipedia:Copying within Wikipedia. And it's not helpful advice for any copyright situation regardless, as it is not written very clearly or understandably, so sorry. — Diannaa (talk) 21:27, 31 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

Happy New Year, Pandelver!

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Women in Red

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Hi there, Pandelver, and welcome to Women in Red. It's good to see you intend to contribute articles about women, whether real or fictitious. As far as I can see, you have not yet created any women's biographies. You might therefore find it useful to look through our Primer. Please let me know if you run into any difficulties or need assistance. All the best for 2023 and happy editing!--Ipigott (talk) 09:55, 2 January 2023 (UTC)Reply

Actually, I have created women's biographies at W, started up Ruth Edmonds Hill off head-top, some years ago now, and others, and besides origination, extended women's presence ubiquitously. If you've an interest in library troves, Ruth's other roles and office was in the library of what became the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies though Harvard may have further squished that into the HR Insitute now. As the Radcliffe name was tactically retained when the Cliffies' plebiscite preferred a Harvard diploma when finally offerred, mindful of the generations of living Radcliffe alumnae who would respond better to Radcliffe appeals; as their numbers dwindled, H has paired and often supplanted R.
Good to rejoin your movement having given a helping hand in antecedent forays. May estrogen flow ever more broadly in your waking world with mine this year, Ipigott! Pandelver (talk) 10:03, 2 January 2023 (UTC)Reply
My mistake. I had in fact seen your new articles from a few years back and actually spent a few minutes updating the List of your creations. Ruth Edmonds Hill, for example, is now C class. It's good to see we can now expect you to write more biographies. You'll see from the WiR talk page that we really need to create many more biographies of women. In this connection, fictional and animated characters also count.--Ipigott (talk) 11:13, 2 January 2023 (UTC)Reply

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