Thread:Jester of chaos/@comment-37044330-20190918223710/@comment-37044330-20191031195911

Valkerone wrote: Atidanx215079 wrote: Could you please delete these pages:

Prometheus (Jump Force) - plagiarized

https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/File:Prometheus1.png - unneeded

https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/File:Prometheus_(Jump_Force).jpg - unneeded This right here is yet another prime case of you demanding for a plagiarized article to be deleted way too soon before any user even gets a chance to rewrite it. And asking for the images to be deleted as well is just adding more salt to the wounds because not only is "unneeded" completely vague and hardly a valid reason for deletion, but at least one of those images there were part of the Approved Evil Articles Navbox. Deleting images that exist in navboxes in turn adds the "Pages with broken file links" to every page featuring the navbox in question, which is confusing for users to figure out what's causing the problem.

And to top all of this off, you delete your messages immediately after Jester follows through with your requests as if you're trying to avoid taking responsibility for any problems that might occur from deleting pages/files/profiles (like what has happened here). Why? Is it to avoid users calling you out for hounding Jester to delete things for ridiculous reasons? It really doesn't help. 1. Way too soon? I seem to remember that in category section of plagiarism, it does explain that the plagiarized page is subject to deletion on sight. That is what the rule says. If the policy of plagiarism causes you problem, you should address it to the fandom.

2. as for images, with more than thousands of images mixed and cluttering the fandom, who is going to take trouble of looking for them once the page is gone? That would be like trying to find neddles in a jungle. Might as well have them gone and re-insert them under new names.

3. blame users for not following through rules of fandom. They are aware of what policies of the fandom are. They should have read rules regarding plagiarism and thought twice before they made their 'pages'.