Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Reddit released its "spoiler tags" feature in January 2017. [166] The feature warns users of potential spoilers in posts and pixelates preview images. [166] Reddit unveiled changes to its public front page, called r/popular, in 2017; [101] the change creates a front page free of potentially adult-oriented content for unregistered users. [101]
Wikipedia articles may include spoilers and no spoiler warnings. A spoiler is a piece of information about a narrative work (such as a book, film, television series, or a video game) that reveals plot points or twists. Articles on the Internet sometimes feature a spoiler warning to alert readers to spoilers in the text, which they may then ...
Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this page. This is the talk page for addressing revised guidelines for Wikipedia:Spoiler warning, in response to the RfC on Wikipedia:Spoiler warning/RfC. A separate talk page has been started to discuss guideline revisions due to the ...
No that is not the "spirit of the Wiki policy". Wiki policy makes no distinction between "Spoilers" and any other content. As this page says: "Spoilers are no different from any other content and should not be deleted solely because they are spoilers." Paul August ☎ 17:18, 19 November 2017 (UTC)
This claim holds that spoiler tags are a violation of Wikipedia's policy of "Neutral point of view", or "NPOV". This claim is held on the grounds that they are specifically geared
A spoiler is an element of a disseminated summary or description of a media narrative that reveals significant plot elements, with the implication that the experience of discovering the plot naturally, as the creator intended it, has been robbed ("spoiled") of its full effect.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Wikipedia: SPOILERS
This pairwise comparison means that spoilers can only occur when there is a Condorcet cycle, where there is no single candidate preferred to all others. [ 36 ] [ 37 ] [ 38 ] Theoretical models suggest that somewhere between 90% and 99% of real-world elections have a Condorcet winner, [ 37 ] [ 38 ] and the first Condorcet cycle in a ranked ...