Hello Bapopik, and welcome to Wikipedia! Here are some recommended guidelines to help you get involved. Please feel free to contact me if you need help with anything. Best of luck and happy editing! Budgiekiller 07:35, 10 August 2006 (UTC)Reply
Getting started
Getting your info out there
Getting more Wikipedia rules
Getting help
Getting along
Getting technical

your recent edits

edit
Thank you for contributing to Wikipedia! You recently added an external link to a blog in an article. It has been removed because the link pointed to a non-encyclopedic source. Please refer to Wikipedia's policy on external links for more information.

(also, this is obviously YOUR blog as you share the same domain name. this is a faux-pas on wikipedia: it is impossible to honor NPOV when this is the case. sorry.) JoeSmack Talk 18:42, 25 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Hi Barry. The reason I reverted your link was a) because it was a blog and not a more reliable source, like say, a peer reviewed journal or historical document, which are far more empirical and reputable (verifiable, objective, etc). b) is that the web link you provided was barrypopik.com while your user name is Bapopik. I think I presumed correctly that you are affiliated with the source in question, which runs into a conflict of interest. As you might imagine, people the world over love to use wikipedia to promote themselves in one way or another - and I'm not saying thats you - but it means we have to keep a no-exceptions-policy on content of this nature being added to wikipedia; it just can't be held in a neutral point-of-view, a pillar wikipedia is founded on. If you have a more primary source other than your website (and by your pedigree I'm guessing you do), that would be perfectly fine to cite and add such information. Any other questions, feel free to contact me. (WP:COI, WP:RS, WP:NPOV, WP:5P). JoeSmack Talk 18:16, 26 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
Oh, and the original research-policy sums up more of this situation too. JoeSmack Talk 18:28, 26 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
And again, more info, pulled directly from the original research policy, which I think is the most poignant:

Citing oneself: This policy does not prohibit editors with specialist knowledge from adding their knowledge to Wikipedia, but it does prohibit them from drawing on their personal knowledge without citing their sources. If an editor has published the results of his or her research in a reliable publication, then s/he may cite that source while writing in the third person and complying with our NPOV policy. See also Wikipedia's guidelines on conflict of interest.

JoeSmack Talk 18:39, 26 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
I still don't know what Wikipedia article you're referring to. My website is a collection of historical citations. They were found by me, analyzed by me, and usually peer-reviewed by other scholars. Again, other people have credited me, and it is insane that I cannot credit myself for my work.Barry
If you cite the historical citations instead of your own work (far more WP:NPOV) then it would be fine. The links on wikipedia to your website/blog (you can see all of them here: [1] - kinda neat feature) should actually probably be substituted with more primary/reliable sources than a webpage in a similar manner. Again, for crediting yourself, see the policy on neutral point-of-view, conflict of interest and original research and I think you'll find the answer. If you'd like in depth questions about the policies, their respective talk pages are an excellent place for this too. Hope I've helped! JoeSmack Talk 03:35, 28 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

No, you haven't helped at all. You've discouraged me from editing the Wikipedia, and hundreds of entries on food and drink and slang (all my specialties, where my scholarly expertise is well known) remain incorrect and incomplete.

For example, Paul McFedries does a website called "Word Spy." It's cited on Wikipedia 128 times. His site is not "peer reviewed," but few doubt that it's a good source for new words. The same is the case for Grant Barrett and Double Tongued Word Wrester. Are you saying that it's OK for other people to cite Word Spy and DTTW, but McFedries and Barrett can't do that themselves, even though they're recognized scholars? Yes, I guess that's exactly what you're saying. Or you're saying that they should condense their work into the Wikipedia (for free, without credit) and just give selected historical citations from their websites, not the full story? Either way, it makes no sense and you have not helped anyone at all. Barry


Ok, listen. I'm not here to be a bad guy. I'm not a cop. I'm not some guy sitting in an ivory tower on a throne. I have just as much power, authority and whatever as you and everyone else. I'm just trying to help keep 1.5+ million articles from being full of spam, unencyclopedic, and other nefarious links. Sometimes people get reeeeally upset that their links don't conform to the WP:EL policy, and I can understand that. I'm not trying to piss anyone off or keep their stuff away from wikipedia because of some stupid reason - it's just policy. I'm just as frustrated as you.

I'm not saying anyone else's links couldn't be wrong and getting away with it. I'm not saying that you aren't an expert historian/etymologist/philologist (I read a lot of the site, interesting stuff). All I'm saying, is that if you can link to the primary sources (WP:RS, WP:NPOV, WP:V) as opposed to your website (WP:COI, WP:OR, WP:POV, WP:EL) it would be best. I won't intervene any further, because I've told you all there is to know about the situation, and I trust you. Really.

I'm sorry I haven't been helpful, but you can still contact me with questions or what have you on my talk page any time. JoeSmack Talk 05:41, 29 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

I'll give you an example. You took off my work on "Sloppy Joe." The "Sloppy Joe" entry sucks. There are two links--to unreliable, commercial sites. That's great? That can stay?

I had posted my "sloppy joe" work to the American Dialect Society and my Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink colleagues, and you know what? I was wrong--"sloppy joe" is cited in 1940 and I had 1941. So I corrected my work. But it's not going to appear anytime soon on Wikipedia, because that would be self-promotion?

Again, thanks a lot for de-linking my work and leaving the commercial sites. I'm a penniless food scholar, and you sure made things better, didn't you? Barry

May 2016

edit

  Please stop your disruptive editing. If you continue to add soapboxing, promotional or advertising material to Wikipedia, as you did at Hot Dog, you may be blocked from editing. You've evidently been doing this for years and have been made well aware of this practice not being allowed here with the warnings still on your Talk Page. JesseRafe (talk) 20:17, 4 May 2016 (UTC)Reply

Use of your own website

edit

I see now that you have used your own website a few times to provide etymologies in a non-disruptive manner, such as in Subway Series, Statue of Liberty play, and Margarita. These are good inline citations. But referencing yourself, your own website, or listing your "work" without context in an External links section is seriously frowned upon. Please note that only good sources, as I mentioned in the Star Wars Day article are to be used on Wikipedia, not unsourced or theoretical etymologies. Thanks! JesseRafe (talk) 20:27, 4 May 2016 (UTC)Reply

I haven't written for the Wikipedia since about 2006! I haven't even added a word to my own Wikipedia page, ever.

Gerald Cphen and I published a peer-reviewed book on "The Big Apple" in 2011, but it still doesn't appear on my page or the Big Apple page because I haven't been writing for Wikipedia!

The reasons I don't write for Wikipedia are because what I do is sometimes deemed "original research" (even though my website is entirely full of citations), because I can't cite my own website, and because I get into arguments with people like you, who suddenly decided to delete everything.

Just a few times, I decided to write on the Talk page, provide information, and others can add it or not, as they see fit. The Uncle Sam page, for example, was and is terrible. It states that "Uncle Sam" is in the "Yankee Doodle" lyrics in 1775, but this is not true. The recent discovery of an "Uncle Sam" in 1810 put a final nail in the War of 1812 Samuel Wilson origin. That was finally added, but the entry is still poorly written and doesn't have the recent work of War of 1812 scholar Donald Hickey and the New York Times article that was published this month. My website absolutely should be cited, instead of an ancient Straight Dope article, for example. But I don't write for Wikipedia.

I wrote on the "Colored People's Time" talk page with the earliest cite (my website also looks at Jewish Time), and someone added that. It was cited in print over 50 years earlier than what WIkipedia had.

Someone added my work on Marfa, and while I found the cite that proves the Jules Verne origin, I found a host of other important citations. I should be given named credit for my work, but you took my name off.

Gerald Cohen and I also wrote a book on the hot dog. The National Hot Dog & Sausage Council recognizes me as a "hot dog" scholar, and my website provides all of the relevant cites--something found nowhere else. You removed the link.

My "Great White Way" work was originally published 25 years ago in Comments on Etymology. I added it to my website in 2004. I found the first 1902 cite and the Shep Friedman credit--and I traveled to Fort Worth to visit his grave. You removed the link to Wikipedia and it now credits someone who plagiarized my work.

This all brings us to "May the Fourth be with you." I again found the earliest cites--more than one. I also found the the earliest cite for "Star Wars Day" (1994). I also provided trademark information. This is stuff Wikipedia readers should know. I haven't written for WIkipedia in 10 years, but I mentioned the new material on the Talk page--and you went ballistic on me! You even called me "sad."

I make no money. I have Crohn's Disease. I give away my work for free. I am friends with/a contributor to the OED, Dictionary of American Regional English, Historical Dictionary of Slang, Yale Book of Quotations, Quote Investigator, Word Spy, World Wide Words, Word Origins, Word Detective, A Way with Words, American Dialect Society, American Name Society, and more. I have a lot of wonderful stuff to add to Wikipedia on hundreds of entries. I don't deserve this.

Congratulations to you, in all your destructive madness. Wikipedia readers lose! Barry (talk) 07:05, 5 May 2016 (UTC)Reply