On Tue 06 Dec 2016, Dominic Hargreaves dom@earth.li wrote:
As I'm in the process of moving the config for the server in question, I'm looking at whether to migrate the following sites:
http://copenhagen.openguides.org/ http://isle-of-wight.openguides.org/ http://north-devon.openguides.org/wiki/ http://portsmouth.openguides.org/ http://swindon.openguides.org/
These are all sites which seem to have very little genuine content, and (where edits are enabled) are sadly swamped by spam.
Thanks for bringing this up. I wasn't aware some of those sites even still existed! As a local historian, I would argue that keeping some of these online but with the spam removed, edits disabled, and a clear banner saying that they're no longer being updated might be the best way to deal with the issue. For example, this page: http://north-devon.openguides.org/wiki/?Terrace_Tapas_Bar might seem useless, but actually I've made use of similar comments in my own local history articles.
Conversely, the Isle of Wight guide does seem not to have any real content, so I see no reason to keep it.
It's up to you, though, since you're the one who would have to do the work of migration. Another option could be to clean up the spam and then make sure everything's in the Internet Archive before deleting the sites, though this makes it harder for a websearch to reveal the info.
This site:
http://cambridge.openguides.org/
has quite a lot of spam but also a reasonable amount of genuine content, even if not very up-to-date.
I pretty much gave up on spamtrapping on the Cambridge guide because it was non-trivial to update the spamcatcher module. Oxford seems to be doing OK, though - is that all manual or is someone keeping the spamcatcher module up to date? If the latter, could the two guides share a spamcatcher module?
Kake