Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Wikipedia proposals

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Legobot (talk | contribs) at 14:01, 22 August 2025 (Added: Wikipedia:Village pump (proposals).). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Latest comment: 11 days ago by Interstellarity

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Wikipedia:Village pump (proposals)

Last year, we implemented a process of admin elections. However, there was little discussion on if we should include bureaucrat elections, which I personally think that we should. I am implementing this RfC to ask the community what they think of implementing these kinds of elections, maybe like every year or 2. Should we implement bureaucrat elections the same way we do with admin elections? Interstellarity (talk) 13:02, 22 August 2025 (UTC)

Wikipedia:Village pump (policy)

We had an RFC earlier this year around how to handle LLM/AI generated comments. That resulted in WP:HATGPT after further discussion at WT:TPG. Recently, an editor started a requested move using LLM generated content. I ran that content through two different AI/LLM detection utilities: GPT Zero says "highly confident", and 100% AI generated; Quillbot stated 72% of the text was likely AI generated.

Should HATGPT be expanded to allow for the closure of discussions seeking community input (RFC/VPR/CENT/RFAR/AFD/RM/TFD/RFD/FFD/etc) that are started utilizing content that registers as being majority written by AI?

I was tempted to just start an RFC on this, but if there's alternate proposals or an existing WP:PAG that already covers this, I'm all ears. =) —Locke Coletc 00:38, 12 August 2025 (UTC)

Wikipedia:Village pump (proposals)

Should the icons in the message box module be updated from the current Ambox ones to the Codex ones? 13:56, 11 August 2025 (UTC)

Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Elections and Referendums

There's been an ongoing debate on pages for elections in the US about what kind of sourcing you need to move a candidate from the "Filed paperwork" or "Potential" section to "Declared." A lot of editors seem to agree that an FEC filing is not enough, because it is very common for people to file with the FEC without ever actually campaigning. Ideally, we want to cite a news article that says the candidate is running. However, it's easy to find candidates who've filed with the FEC and launched a campaign website but who haven't been mentioned in any news articles. Moreover, some news articles say that a candidate is running purely because they've filed with the FEC, even though the candidate has no online campaign presence and the author of the news article doesn't seem to have reached out to them to confirm they're actually running. In my eyes, there are three proposals for how to deal with this:

1. Maintain the current system. A candidate can only be moved to "Declared" if there is an article from a reliable news source that says they're running.

2. Allow someone to be listed in "Declared" if they have filed with the FEC or the relevant state/local elections agency.

3. Allow someone to be listed in "Declared" with two citations: first, a filing with the FEC or the relevant state/local elections agency, and second, a self-published source from the candidate that says they're running--e.g. a campaign website, campaign social media account, or fundraising page where the candidate explicitly says they're running (so "I'm exploring a candidacy" or something like that wouldn't be good enough).

Which do you think is the best path? BottleOfChocolateMilk (talk) 15:57, 25 July 2025 (UTC)