Talk:Main Page

Sources / Propaganda
-- Petri Krohn 07:09, 19 August 2012 (EST)
 * What happened in Houla? – video by al Jazeera

We Need Translator(s) on the Team
Talk on the main page? A good enough place for this point. In my whole network is one admitted Arabic-speaker who was willing to help, and has, greatly, reading notes and signs and understanding what people are saying. He's been too busy to help lately, and there should be more than one around. AFAIK, among all three active members at the moment, we have no more than that.

Any ideas how to find preferably a couple of part-time volunteers to spread the load (or sometimes get two readings)? I feel like anyone would have more insights than me, with my level of social skills and out-getting. --Caustic Logic 21:06, 11 September 2012 (EST)

The Shut-Down
Yay, the site is back! Petri says it wasn't just on my end, and the lack of edits for about a day backs that up. Any details/lessons etc. on what happened, perhaps CE can fill us in. If it's mundane enough, then maybe not. Will get back to work here tonight. --Caustic Logic 09:57, 15 September 2012 (EST)
 * The whole service with all hosted wiki's was down for about 28 hours, most likely had nothing to do with us. I suspect hardware/connection problem on their side. There's a thread on the support forum but no explanation so far. Well, it's for free. :o) Lesson: I was able to puzzle the stuff together and get it running on my local machine, but without the pics you guys uploaded. Will download them all as they come. This wiki will survive the service if it has to. --CE 19:39, 15 September 2012 (EST)
 * Belated note: Excellent work, CE! Thanks! I've got all my own images saved here too, if that helps. Text, not so much. --Caustic Logic 23:20, 27 September 2012 (EST)

The Big Shut-Down
The whole site died, and now it's re-born here. Hallelujah! CE is stupendous! --Caustic Logic (talk) 10:21, 2 November 2012 (UTC)

I'm back! -- Petri Krohn (talk) 18:59, 1 November 2012 (UTC)

P.S. – I cannot see any edits in my contributions. Make one now to see log.


 * I make one now. An edit? I'll add this, and edit it, and then see if I can see what you mean. :) I can't yet see the "upload new file" link, and I have a lot of images to start uploading. --Caustic Logic (talk) 10:21, 2 November 2012 (UTC)


 * Found it. No promises how much uploading I'll do tonight. --Caustic Logic (talk) 10:35, 2 November 2012 (UTC)

There are still images missing in a couple of articles. Please take a look at this special page: Pages with broken file links Some seem to be fine, no idea why they're on the list, but some are not (Jihad Raslan, Sari Saoud, Daraya, etc) --CE (talk) 14:01, 16 December 2012 (UTC)

*wipes sweat off* ;o) --CE (talk) 03:58, 26 January 2013 (UTC)

M-dash turns into question mark!
Did something go wrong in the transfer? The m-dashes on may talk page have mutated into question marks. The last edit was 17 October 2012. Was it before or after the transfer? -- Petri Krohn (talk) 02:17, 22 April 2013 (UTC)


 * This wiki was created on Nov 1. Your user talk page was among those I forgot to back-up. We saved those from the Google cache and I restored them by sending them through crappy html->wiki parsers, remember? Seems like I didn't catch those question marks. --CE (talk) 02:35, 22 April 2013 (UTC)

Missing images
A large number of images are still missing, some of them important, like this one: File:Thomson_witness_Houla.png. (Used in Houla:Alleged witnesses for a government/Shabiha attack.) -- Petri Krohn (talk) 22:26, 12 May 2013 (UTC)

Front page, Menu and "Other research"
As it is developing (you're on a roll, CL) I wonder how we manage which articles should go on the front page and the menu, and if we should delete them from the "other research" page or if that should contain all articles in a kind of sitemap. I don't consider it to be helpful to cluster the menu on the left with a huge number of articles (titles there should be short to not waste layout space anyway), so I suggest we keep that brief ... maybe even briefer than it is now. I could add an area for "developing" articles, maybe in a different color top right, to the front page. But that would imply that the other, older articles aren't developing anymore. As to when an article is front-page-worthy ... maybe a "nomination" by the lead author (or anyone) including short summary would be good, here ... of course you're free to add it yourself but if you do so, be careful with the layout I handicrafted ... that's a bit fragile. :o) Thoughts? --CE 21:04, 17 September 2012 (EST)
 * A site map is a good idea, but other research should be separate. Those shaved off should ideally be more listed and available after, somehow. I think a page for all pages would be in order soon, prominently linked up-front. As for the front page, I don't know. Four main ones, maybe six, ideally updated sometimes to reflect what's exciting (even if the subject is old)... --Caustic Logic 21:39, 17 September 2012 (EST)
 * Yes, a sitemap with everything more than a stub, and additionally a "suggested and rudimentary research" page as it is now. That's good. I'd like to have something on the front page, in addition to the main articles, which shows visitors that things are happening and makes them come back ... and maybe even contribute (seen that I renamed "community portal" to "How to contribute" and added some "warm words"?). Maybe a "new and developing" thingy ... will think about it. --CE 22:01, 17 September 2012 (EST)


 * Checking out the special pages, it occurs to me there's no need to make a special 'all pages' page at all. Couldn't the ready-made all-pages and/or popular pagesor whatever is useful be linked prominently up front? I'm also hashing over ideas to make the main page, and the main Houla massacre page, more attractive as destinations, prior to seeding the links wider. For the main page, maybe two boxes, one for prime massacres, explained in context their vying for top slot: (eg: Jisr Al Shughur, the early whatever, Houla, the big ugly oneand turning point, Tremseh, the failed eclipse, etc.) and one box for 'other,' top three or so. Plus featured article, maybe external links, etc. Some thoughts. --Caustic Logic 18:54, 22 October 2012 (EST)


 * That's a good idea, including special pages should be no problem. Home/popular/all as upper menu, the "other research" down on the main page? Keep thinking. :o) --CE 20:26, 22 October 2012 (EST)

Here's my opinion FWIW about the front page: I left after stopping by and looking for recent developments in Syria over the last year or so (independent of my log-in troubles). If I came to ACLOS today and wanted to read the collective wisdom on the convoy attack, I would conclude nothing had been written. Yes, I know there's the all pages thing, but I don't know how exactly you would label that page. I'm sure other people that come here are as dim as me, so you should take that into account. If nothing else, make a section labeled 'Hot' or 'Current' with the applicable page links and a disclaimer that it's a work in progress. The older 'feature' topics are interesting, but 99% of the people unfamiliar with the ACLOS layout coming here today to read up on the convoy attack should have no trouble at all navigating to that page. I'm thinking of independent journalists or bloggers that visit hundreds of sites looking for incident-level aggregation. This format is perfect for that, but after five seconds looking at this main page, I would conclude you had nothing and LEAVE. If I understand the intent of this, it should primarily provide a reference for well-known facts, followed by a reference of media-provided (but something less than proven factual) information, followed by commentary on media information, followed by informed opinion or speculation. This is all somewhere in everyone's great contributions, but it takes too much time to figure it out, much less discern the various levels of 'proof' we need to deal with.

A dumbed-down example might be a journalist (or casual blogger) trying to get up to speed on the convoy attack. This Wiki should serve them whether they are trying to be truly impartial and 100% factual (what is unquestionably fact) and what other journalists/bloggers have written and how we view those media sources (pro/anti-something, left/right, .gov spew or alt media suspicion). The lowest level is our (hopefully informed, educated) suspicions or opinions. Someone writing a pro-Assad or pro-Rebel piece should be able to come here and quickly and easily figure out what fits in each bucket and navigate through the ones they prefer. More inquisitive readers may prefer to see all the buckets, but with some guidance about what they're looking at. I hate to make this overly complicated, but that's what I think is sorely missing from the internet and what this Wiki has an opportunity to provide. It makes no difference if people don't chose to link to ALCOS, as long as they can rely on it for the big bucket of facts and some organization to support their focus (which doesn't necessarily have to mean 'bias'). I think it would be wonderful if people relied on this Wiki as the reference it could be. "Oh yeah, I remember the xxx issue was mentioned in the context of the Urum al-Kubra attack. It's on the ACLOS site" and then they should be able to find it quickly when they come here. I know that this is basically what we're trying to do here (for free, in our spare time), but it just feels like we're having an interesting, friendly discussion on the Talk page and not delivering value to anyone other than maybe voyeurs into our discussions. What I don't see is something so compelling as a reference that a journalist would find the information organized and useful AND be compelled to add something they found. What does everyone think - is that too ambitious? You all are doing a great job that requires a massive amount of time and effort. I'm just not getting the sense that an outsider would see this as anything more than an interesting blog with intelligent contributors. It should be a long-lived authoritative reference, but something that contains almost everything on the subject. There is nothing like that on the internet today. Plenty of news aggregators and blog aggregators, but nothing like those as well as a real-time encyclopedia and reference of opinions. Maybe I'm making this way too complicated, but this site should be way more important and authoritative than it seems to be now, especially since the resource of the alt press are so limited. --PavewayIV (talk) 05:42, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * Have similar overall feeling, but unsure how that may happen, also taking time and real-life constraints. I myself read it from "recent changes" tab, or by searching from "all pages" tab for the relevant page when there is something new to add. Our pages likely won't come on top of google search, at least quickly enough after the event, unless we manage to say something extraordinary. Something with far larger everyday traffic (mass media, bellingcat, and than, maybe, something in Fort Russ/MoA/Saker category) will occupy first many pages in a search. Ourselves, will be difficult to find, unless somebody is familiar and appreciating to begin with, and knows where/how to look. How that can be changed/improved, in practice, unsure. This requires an inspiration and time to do. It's great that CL posts well written readable accounts once in a while. When/if this is picked up, people may see something. Also some of us use social media and there are some highlights. May be we can try to explain better  how we work and how it can be found, on the front page. Maybe more entry points into our pages highlighted too, so more is seen if clicked, and one can click his/her way into it. Can't see that we have enough time to do something on the front page very often. Barely enough time for some brief comments on the issues.  --Resup (talk) 09:21, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * It needs updated for sure. One note could say check recent changes or new pages. But it needs the incidents updated too. I may update it this weekend, with PavewayIV's valid points in mind. --Caustic Logic (talk) 11:42, 30 September 2016 (UTC)

Featured Article
Ok, I build in the randomly-chosen featured article (and removed the one Douma article). That's really nice, you can even give the items a weight which regulates how likely they are chosen, default of 1, but I didn't use that (only mentioned as reminder to myself). So far i've added four articles, I suggest we keep track on them here. The blurbs could certainly be better, feel free to sharpen them (should be around that length, though). Or add more articles here and/(or i'll do so) to the page. (three dots at the end get added automatically) --CE 00:06, 19 September 2012 (EST)


 * This is pretty sweet! Blurbs, not bad, but could be better. Later. --Caustic Logic 08:46, 19 September 2012 (EST)

I've added all those I was working on. Didn't really finish them except here, so hopefully good enough. Feel free to repair or tweak anything wrong. And, hey, is there a way to assign pictures to these so they're more eye-catching and the variety is enhanced? --Caustic Logic 14:05, 7 October 2012 (EST)
 * Nice, will take care of that later. At the moment it's just one textblock with a link, but images shouldn't be a big problem, will think about it on occasion. --CE 16:52, 7 October 2012 (EST)
 * Tweaked a bit and shortened here and there to not blow up the layout. Will implement in a minute. --CE 01:58, 8 October 2012 (EST)

Nato attack starts in two weeks
-- Petri Krohn (talk) 12:04, 27 March 2013 (UTC)
 * Ex-UN observer: 'Level the playing field' in Syria
 * And Kofi Annan says no way. One of these two men is an African, and had dead babies in Taldou shaken at a camera as Jihadists cursed his "peace" initiative. At least one of these two men heard directly from Syrians in Taldou who saw what happens when the rebels get a "level playing field" even for one afternoon in one town. I'm not convinced either way what's going to happen here. But if it came down to the Genral's advice vs. the African's, :( --Caustic Logic (talk) 12:25, 27 March 2013 (UTC)


 * I think the BBC video is beyond disbelief. This is the head of the UN monitoring mission in Syria, Maj Gen Robert Mood calling for a no-fly-zone to "level the playing" for the rebels/terrorists to take over. The BBC could have used any other fucking talking head to make this criminal call for a criminal war of aggression, yet they chose him. If Gen Mood had any integrity he should have refused. Now, by openly showing his bias, he totally destroys any semblance of neutrality the UN team or UN investigations may have had up to now. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 12:36, 27 March 2013 (UTC)
 * I can't see the video here, but clearly this is bad for the UN's reputation, which isn't that great to begin with. It looks like a UN team might go in to inspect three alleged CW incidents. If all goes smooth, they'll be out within a month or so. Maybe two weeks after that. I hear the Qataris, Saudis and Turks have doubled arms shipments, largely out of Jordan, with the US only there to make sure "militants" don't get them (??). Plan - big push on Damascus from two sides.  --Caustic Logic (talk) 05:59, 28 March 2013 (UTC)
 * This is an absolute must-see video. Try some other system, Windows. Read this help page. Try if you can see the other Hardtalk clips. I see no reason why this BBC production would be blocked in the US – I see it in Finland.
 * CE: can you think of some way of making an audio recording. I am having difficulties with Linux. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 07:44, 28 March 2013 (UTC)
 * I can get a new computer or OS, then I can get the right Flash player. (plausible now) Otherwise, I'm screwed. I can'tdo the Safari backdoor download, unless it can start playing and loading. Noone posted it on Youtube yet that I see. If you can play it, a couple options: if you have Safari, look up how to download (under "activity...) or use any audio recording program, run your line out (speakers/headphones) into the input, watch your levels (feedback) and record. --Caustic Logic (talk) 09:07, 28 March 2013 (UTC)
 * Here is a link to the video on BBC iPlayer. Unfortunately iPlayer is only available in the UK. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 10:01, 28 March 2013 (UTC)


 * I agree that the video is quite remarkable, but he is talking for nobody but himself. He's not head of UNSMIS or any other UN body anymore and I doubt he even speaks for the Norwegian military despite the funny jacket he wears. And the BBC ... well, fuck them. The rhetoric coming out of the UK on this issue could hardly be more harsh than it is already. Quite surprised they didn't try to frame Putin for Berezovsky's (RIH) suicide. No time to try audio recordings right now - your summary was good. --CE (talk) 12:41, 28 March 2013 (UTC)

South Korea 1948
Here are some interesting photographs for reference and comparison. Look at photos 21 and 22. Should we believe the LIFE image caption, that says that these are "civilians killed by communist rebels"? Or should we assume that these people were massacred by the forces loyal to the Rhee regime? -- Petri Krohn (talk) 05:12, 11 April 2013 (UTC)
 * A House Divided: Photos From Korea’s 1948 Yeosu-Suncheon Rebellion – Life
 * Well, didn't communist rebels in China's hinterland massacre lots of people during the Japanese occupation? Maybe not. The communist and commie-supported guerillas in south Vietnam? They were not blamed for My Lai, IIRC. But we all know Asians are not favorable to Communism when there's a stars-and-stripes option, unless you brutalize it on them. So when a rebellion against the capitalist government breaks out in S. Korea, the commie guerillas/Shabiha/African mercenaries will probably waste their chance massacring civilians who disagree with them. Well, it is possible, depending on the circumstances. But clearly with what we've learned, it's well worth wondering about, at least.  --Caustic Logic (talk) 12:18, 11 April 2013 (UTC)

Navi Pillay
-- Petri Krohn (talk) 10:51, 8 June 2013 (UTC)
 * Navi Pillay: UN has proof Assad is directly orchestrating murder and atrocities – Damien McElroy, The Telegraph, 07 Jun 2013


 * I love how the headline says "proof Assad is directly orchestrating" while the article/Pillay says "evidence implicates him by the actions of his subordinates ... He is very much the commander-in-chief and these are his forces. The evidence points to and implicates him in that way.". The good old "people won't read the article anyway so lets come up with a beefy headline" game. --CE (talk) 12:09, 8 June 2013 (UTC)
 * Or that "actions of his subordinates" means presumed actions, based on things rebels said, and on sloppy and dangerous thinking like murders in a Sunni town = "targeting specific communities perceived as supporting the opposition." I be slapping her for that publicly in less than a day, Link forthcoming. --Caustic Logic (talk) 13:29, 8 June 2013 (UTC)

General Discussion Discussion

 * Moved from Talk:Alleged Chemical Attack, August 21, 2013

Note to everyone: there are now slightly more members than ever here, and this conversation is moving quickly. This means a danger of conflicting edits, which can be a pain to recover from (no problem for me tonight, but I ran into it twice already). I suggest working from a text note pad program, ready to save your new text and re-submit a little quicker next time. Losing an hour's work becuase you took 54 minutes too long writing it is not cool. Better post this quick. --Caustic Logic (talk) 12:04, 22 August 2013 (UTC)


 * On Wikimedia platform edit conflicts should not be a big problem, if you only edit single subsections at a time. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 12:07, 22 August 2013 (UTC)


 * I use Opera browser which remembers what happened so I simply make a mouse gesture to get back to my text should there be an edit conflict. Isn't there an additional field with your text on the "edit conflict" warning page anyway? Oh, and yes, edit only subsections but that's what we both did for Russia and France. :o) --CE (talk) 12:10, 22 August 2013 (UTC)


 * Thanks, guys. It's probably just me that ever has a problem with that. But, hey... I'm way behind here. --Caustic Logic (talk) 10:29, 23 August 2013 (UTC)