Multiversal Omnipedia:Why create an account?

From Multiversal Omnipedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

User Name

If you create an account, you can pick a username. Edits you make while logged in will be assigned to that name. That means you get full credit for your contributions in the page history (when not logged in, the edits are just assigned to your (potentially random) IP address). You can also view all your contributions by clicking the "My contributions" link, which is visible only when you are logged in.

You will have your own user page where you can write a bit about yourself. While the Multiversal Omnipedia is not a homepage provider, you can use this to display a few pictures, write about your hobbies, etc. Many users use their user page to maintain a list of the articles they are most proud of, or to collect other valuable information from MOA.

You will have a permanent user talk page you can use to communicate with other users. You will be notified whenever someone writes a message on your talk page. If you choose to give an e-mail address, other users will be able to contact you by e-mail. This feature is anonymous; the user who emails you will not know your e-mail address.

Reputation and privacy

You don't need to reveal your offline identity, but having an account gives you a fixed identity that other users will recognize. While we welcome anonymous contributions, logging in lets you build trust and respect through a history of good edits. It's also easier to communicate and collaborate with an editor if we know who you are (at least, who you are on Wikipedia). It is also easier for veteran users to assume good faith from new users that take the effort to create an account. You may well be afforded a great deal less leeway if you do not go to the trouble of making up a username.

Please understand that MOA may be vandalized, spammed, and have information uploaded by people who just want to advertise. MOA needs a way to distinguish reliable contributors and sources.

If you are not logged in, all your edits are publicly associated with your IP address at the time of that edit. If you log in, all your edits are publicly associated with your account name, and are internally associated with your IP address.

You are actually more anonymous logged in than you are as an "anonymous" editor, due to the hiding of your IP.

The privacy implications of this vary, depending on the nature of your Internet Service Provider, local laws and regulations, and the nature and quantity of your edits to MOA. Be aware that MOA technologies and policies may change.

New editing options

There are many features of the MediaWiki software (which powers MOA) that are available only to registered users. For example, one of these features is being able to mark edits as minor. Minor edits can be filtered from the list of "Recent changes". Marking edits which are not minor as such is considered very rude, so mark an edit as minor only if it is a small change, such as a grammar correction. Anonymous members don't have the privilege to mark edits as minor because the person behind the IP Address could be anyone, so a basis of trust cannot be built.

One very important feature which active contributors will likely use a lot are watchlists. You will get a new link "Watch this page" on every page you view. If you click that link, a page will be added to your watchlist. This list is basically a filtered view of the "Recent changes" page which shows only changes that were recently made to items in your watchlist. This way you can keep track of pages you work on without having to follow all changes.

Only registered users are allowed to rename pages, a feature that is very important to maintain structure and consistency on Wikipedia.

Also, you must be logged in if you want to upload images.

Many user preferences

Aside from these features, you can customize the way MediaWiki behaves in great detail by altering your Preferences at Special:Preferences. There you can change the following display settings:

  • Under skin: choose between various options as to the appearance of the website.
  • Under math: how mathematical formulae are displayed.
  • Under files: how large image thumbnails are displayed

And various editing preferences:

  • How you sign your name
  • How large the editing box should be
  • How pages should be displayed in recent changes
  • ... and many others (they're pretty self-explanatory).

Administrator status

Administrators (sometimes known as sysops, short for System Operator) can delete and restore pages, protect them from being edited, edit protected pages, and block users for violation of our policies.

For obvious reasons, only signed-in users can become administrators. Usually it is sufficient to have done some semi-regular work on MOA for a few months without clashing too much with others.

If you are a signed-in user and want to be an administrator, contact one of the existing Administrators for information.


Personal tools
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox