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The deletion procedure on Wikipedia, Wikipedia:Articles for deletion, has recently come under harsh criticism from many users on Wikipedia, and there seems to be a general opinion in the community that it has to be somehow replaced or changed. This page is an effort to coordinate the different discussions and make it into a coherent, readable format.
Anyone can edit Wikipedia. They can create, extend, correct, change, revamp, trim and rename pages freely. The only thing they can't do is freely delete pages. Unlike these other types of editing, deleting a page is more severe, and harder to correct for mistakes or vandalism.
This is because removing a page from Wikipedia removes the history of the page. Even if the page text is somehow restored, the edit history of all the contributors is still lost, which can violate Wikipedia's GFDL rules.
To prevent this, from very early on in Wikipedia, page deletion was reserved only to editors who (in theory) are less likely to delete pages by mistake or vandalism. These select few are called admins. Over time, rules have developed about how and when editors become admins, and rules about how and when admins can use their privileged ability to delete. There are also many special additions to the Wikipedia software engine to handle listing, reviewing, and restoring of deleted pages.
As a method of allowing ordinary editors to still participate in this exclusive activity, the Votes for Deletion (VfD) system, now renamed as Articles for Deletion(AfD), evolved. This is a forum (now a series of forums based on types of pages), where anyone can suggest pages be deleted, and others agree or disagree.
Wikipedia:Articles for Deletion works on the system that one user lists the page he wants deleted on a subpage of the main deletion page, he puts a template on the page specifying that the page is under consideration for deletion and then a vote/discussion takes place where a consensus decision is attempted. Eventually, an admin reviews the whole discussion, and may delete the page.
Although there are many editors that spend a lot of their time in Wikipedia participating in AfD, most also think the system can be improved in some way. This may be because AfD is dissimilar to the way the rest of Wikipedia works: without classes of editors, without voting, and without its own special centralized system.
These are areas being brainstormed by the community. They are not complete, specific proposals, nor are they necessarily mutually exclusive, but categories for ideas.
Heavily revising the procedures for the current system, for instance moving votes to talk pages and introducing binary voting, ie either delete or keep.
Understanding where the system is breaking down, streamline AfD by eliminating much of the guesswork and opinion/adjudication required by the process. Withdrawn at the request of Amorrow, please see this article's Talk Page. (Note: Xaa is being stalked by Amorrow, and wishes to avoid further confrontations.)
Variation on the version system sketch, whereby randomly selected editors have the ability to say that a version is better or worse than it could be, the random selection of editors being changed every 2 hours, with better (determined by scores for versions they have worked on) editors having more chance of being selected, and no AfD
If you wish to make general comments or participate in the discussion, you can do so here. If you wish to comment on a proposal, please do so at the page relevant to the proposal in question.