Help:Writing and Editing for the JFA Wiki
Draft WIP
Revised 20:12, 3 August 2019 (PDT)
Because we are using the Mediawiki software platform, the same platform used by Wikipedia, some of the links on this page will direct you to documentation on the Mediawiki site or the Wikipedia site.
The JFA wiki offers a unique opportunity to contribute to the Animal Rights and Vegan movement by lending your writing and research skills to provide information useful to the community. We hope you will participate, and can't wait to see your contributions! You also have a chance to grow with us and become a trusted writer, bypassing moderation.
Contents
Creating an Account
You are welcome to make small edits anonymously, but for anything more substantial, you should create an account and verify your email address. This will allow you to:
- Choose an appropriate user name, which will be reserved just for you on this site.
- Create your own user page, to collaborate, share information about yourself, or just practice editing and publishing in your own sandbox.
- Communicate with other editors via your own talk page. You can also opt in to exchanging emails with other users.
- Use your watchlist to monitor changes made to pages that interest you, and be notified via email when a page you are watching is edited.
- Facilitate the ability of other editors to communicate with you.
- Use custom preferences to change the look and behavior of the JFA Wiki.
- View a convenient list of all your contributions (edits).
- Be eligible for consideration as a trusted contributor that can bypass moderation.
Please use a Firstname.Lastname format for your username. For example, Jane.Doe. Your username cannot be changed after an account is created. After you create your account, you will receive an email asking you to verify your email address. Some important features won't be available until your email address is verified.
Approval, Moderation and Collaboration
All edits require approval (a process called moderation) before they become part of page history and become visible to other users. Because of the moderation process, vandalism is pointless.
All contributions to JFA Wiki may be edited and substantially altered by other users. Your contributions could also be deleted. The following may result in you being blocked from further participation:
- Reversing edits, made by moderators, managing editors, or copy editors.
- Submitting content that violates these guidelines.
Editing
JFA Wiki provides the two editing tools that are often found on wiki sites, the source editor and the visual editor. You begin editing a page by clicking or tapping on Edit Source for the default editor or Edit for the visual editor, at the near the top-right of a page, or beside each Section Heading. Depending on your preference settings and whether you are an anonymous user one or both buttons may appear.
Default Editor
If you have edited a Wikipedia page you have used this editor. When you need to use some type of formatting, such as for new headings or bolding of text, you do this using wiki syntax or the buttons in the edit toolbar above the editing zone. See Help Editing for help. Most of what's on this page applies to this wiki except for Starting a New Page— see #Starting a New Article on this page for that. For help formatting, see Mediawiki Help Formatting.
Visual Editor
The Visual Editor provides more of a "what you see is what you get" editing experience. This editor was developed by the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) to provide a way of editing does not require editors to learn wiki markup. The Visual Editor allows people to edit pages without having to learn wikitext markup.
Experienced editors still may prefer editing wikitext because they find it faster and more precise. Even editors who enable Visual Editor will have the wikitext option available from the toolbar for each page and section. The Visual Editor is fairly stable, but it still has some bugs and missing features. See the Visual Editor User Guide for help.
Content Guidelines
The new site already has lots of useful information, especially in providing talking points for replying to objections to animal rights and veganism. But a wiki takes an encyclopedic approach, which calls for articles on a wide range of related topics. For the JFA Wiki, this means topics that are germane to animal rights and vegan advocacy.
How We Differ
As an example of how we differ from Wikipedia and other wikis, consider our article on chickens compared to Wikipedia's. Wikipedia provides general information that is well worth the read. But instead of trying to duplicate the information on Wikipedia, our article provides information on the aspects of chickens useful for advocacy. This includes summarized information on chicken sentience and cognition, the way we harm chickens, humane labels and certifications, nutritional information on chicken meat and eggs, and environmental harms associated with chicken production. As the site grows, it's likely that future articles will provide more detailed information in each of these areas.
Also, the JFA Wiki is not:
- A home for opinion pieces, although this may be allowed later in a special section of the site.
- A news website There are some good news websites available.
- A recipe website. Some amazing recipe site can be found.
Tone
A scholarly, academic tone is used on this site.
Avoid:
- Hyperbole and exaggeration.
- Scare quotes. Scare quotes convey cynicism, which, unlike skepticism, is a liability.
- Overly emotional language.
- Ultimatums. “A man convinced against his will is of the same opinion still.” — Ben Franklin
- Criticism of those in the movement who advocate strategies and tactics with which we disagree. Such criticism is sometimes justified, but it seems that plenty of energy is already being spent on such efforts.
- Questioning a person’s or organization’s motives, especially those in the movement. Questioning motives requires a higher standard of evidence than questioning their position on a topic.
The following are prohibited:
- Ad hominem attacks.
- Racist, sexist, classist, homophobic, ageist, ableist, or demeaning language.
- Hate speech.
- Anything with an assumption, implicit or explicit, that animals are here for human exploitation.
Public Doman
Understand that you agree to irrevocably release anything you write for this site to the public domain. Everytime you edit and save changes, you are provided with a notice to this effect.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see JFA Wiki:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Research
Seek to use the highest quality sources available. Do not misrepresent a source. Primary sources are preferred for factual data.
For interpretations of highly technical research or other data, secondary sources from objective experts can be more convincing primary sources, One research study rarely provides positive proof, so objective expert testimony can be more meaningful, not to mention more convincing.
Credible Sources
Sources should be credible to the target audience. For credibility with non-vegans, validated sources, to whatever extent possible and where appropriate, should not originate within the animal rights and vegan communities. Relying on experts in the animal rights or veganism movement is discouraged for establishing the veracity of positions widely doubted or not understood by those not in the movement.
For example, citing an organization named Animal Rights League, particularly for factual information, is not convincing to those who do not believe in animal rights, no matter how factual the information presented. These organizations include:
- Any organization that is primarily an animal rights organization, an animal welfare organization, or a vegan organization.
- Any organization whose name indicates it is an animal rights organization, an animal welfare organization, or a vegan organization.
According to a study on belief-revision policies, what one does with the information “depends substantially on her attitude towards the source of information: her assessment of the reliability of the source.”4
Sources friendly to opposing views can often be used to lend credence to a point. Example: “Even the National Dairy Association acknowledges . . .” The USDA, with its abundance of information (and as a friend of animal agriculture), is often a good source. If a quality source for a factual statement cannot be found, the statement should not be used. No exceptions. Plagiarism is not acceptable. When in doubt, credit the source. Using someone’s words without quotation marks is plagiarism even if you cite the source.
Starting a New Article
The focus in the near-term will be the general foundational articles that need to be written to fully realize the site's mission of being an encyclopedic resource. If you wish to write for the wiki, we hope you will choose one of these articles, or suggest an article which might also be considered foundational. Please consider what new article you would like to work on then email your.friends@justiceforanimals.org and we will create a draft for that article.