@midgephoto @nixCraft Back on a real keyboard :) For more infos, years ago I added a one-line summary to a TV series episode which i CC from the official web site of the serie. Apparently, it was not allowed.
If it would happen now (which it wont, because I don't edit anymore, no time to loose for this result), I think I'd ask if I should ask chatgpt to rephrase the one line sentence. It was that stupid.
More recently, @tth added a page for a fictional person (tv, book, I don't remember), which is very well known. The page got deleted.
Add to that the "we need more external sources" clusterfluck, with "uhoh no, we don't like internet pages as sources", like "ah no, the info you took from the *official* page of XXX is not good enough".
Hence, you have more and more people like me who go read-only on WP.
And the deletion of pages because whatever indicates it's *not* an encyclopedia. An En should cover anything and everything...
That's a glaring copyright fault.
An encyclopedia - take Britannica as an example - shouldn't cover _everything_ nor _anything_.
NOTABLE and ENCYCLOPEDIC are the keys.
I agree there are people who get tedious about sources, although I'd prefer a printed page or indexed journal to a website in most cases.
Now I had a page deleted and a lot of annoyance following on the topic of antivaccinationists, on the grounds, by a bunch of them that there was no such thing.
@midgephoto @nixCraft @tth britannica is space limited. Wikipedia is not really (nit by text anyway).
And for the copyright... it was like "sun: big yellow sphere" as copied from the website.
Here it was: mostly stopped editing after that.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tanked&diff=prev&oldid=844080461
Not editing does seem like the common rule nowadays around me.