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2010-02-04 23:19:26   Are you Andrew Amoroso? If so, why don't you create an account with that name? —WilliamLewis


2010-02-04 23:43:30   I am not. —LawReviewEditor

  • Then why don't you introduce yourself? Howdy! My name's Evan, pleased to meet you! I hear good things about the Law School and that rankings are really heading upwards. The wiki is a community effort, so most people here use the name they go by in real life as a way of fostering community. You might have noticed when you signed up the form suggested you use your real name. That's not to say everybody does; we are pretty open about odd names (look at mine!), but it does raise an eyebrow when you respond to a friendly inquiry with a terse three word, six letter reply. It doesn't seem neighborly, and this is, after all, a community composed mostly of neighbors. It seems odd that you'd introduce yourself to your neighbors as "Ms. or Mr. Editor". At any rate, I just stopped in to welcome you to the wiki. —Evan 'JabberWokky' Edwards (and yes, that's the nickname even my wife calls me).

2010-02-04 23:47:56   How about you create an account using your name, then? It's the standard way of doing things around here and it would prevent people from confusing you with people you aren't. =) —WilliamLewis


2010-02-05 00:01:12   That's very fair. Because the Law Review is run by a different staff every year, it seemed convenient to set up an institutional user name for continuity's sake. That said, hi, I'm Roey. —LawReviewEditor

  • Ah, okay. That tends to produce problems in the other way around. Not only does it make it difficult for the editing community to work with you (since there could be a different face behind "the mask" each time you login, and you don't know if it's who you were talking to before), but it also causes a lack of accountability. Each individual edit is tracked (click the "info" button), and if there is an unknown plurality of people behind an account, you can't communicate with the person who made the edit — in fact, you can't know who made the edit. Since discussion is critical to cooperative editing, it can raise all kinds of issues. Think about it this way: imagine if everybody on staff used one single email address and never added their name to the bottom of emails they sent out and deleted emails when they read them (so only one person read whatever new email happened to be in the box when they logged in). You could never communicate between each other, since you all use one single email account. Community based editing is similar: discussion and accountability kind of rests on being able to know that you're talking to somebody you're working with. It also allows you to edit the rest of the wiki without stamping the "Law Review Seal of Approval" to every word you type. William pointed you to the "Importance of using your RealName" entry, and it's good reading for some other related issues. While role accounts aren't strictly disallowed (again, the community here is friendly and operates on principals of openness), you should be aware they can and have caused problems in the past, so they have some social stigma associated with them. Regardless, none of this is intended to dissuade you from participation — your contributions to the entry about the UCD Law Review publication are very appreciated, and I'd love to see the Law School in general see more information added to it. —Evan 'JabberWokky' Edwards
  • Hey Roey! I hope your 3L year is going well, and it's good to see some representation of the Law Review on here. As Evan said, it clarifies things a lot when you post under your own name. You (and future generations of LR editors) can make a profile for yourself where you note that you're an editor on the LR, so we'll both have the record of who made the edits and know that it's got that LR seal of approval. —TomGarberson P.S. You doing any moot court competitions this year?