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User:Editorofthewiki

This user has rollback rights on the English Wikipedia.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Editorofthewiki is currently: talking in the third person

Please update this if I have my grammar right!

Today is Thursday, December 18, 2025, 15:55 (UTC/GMT).
There are 7,107,674 articles on the English Wikipedia.

My bot, EditorBot, was for approval at Wikipedia:Bots/Requests for approval/EditorBot, but it failed. The Bot account is reserved, however, and whether or not it will ever be used remains a mystery.

Welcome to my user page. You really should be editing right now. So why are you wasting your time reading this sentence? I could just go on an on about myself, but why should I? Since you are still here right now, I will welcome you under this comfy blanket.

Apparently only 56 or soWikipedians have created more articles than me.

About Me

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I started editing under this account shortly after the New Year, 2008, after editing under an IP for a while. My username is derived from that of User:Destroyerofthewiki, a sockpuppet of User:DavidYork71. Instead of destroying the wiki, I want to edit it, and I would have chosen a better username, but all the good ones are taken. I think that I did quite well with what's left, don't you think?

I have been active member of Wikipedia:WikiProject Earthquakes. I don't really have much of a liking of these destructive ruptures, in case you're wondering. They are pretty fun to write about however. My time there has not been wasted: I basically wrote FA 2002 Bou'in-Zahra earthquake (with some copyediting help and some small additions, mostly from User:Ceranthor) and GA 1992 Nicaragua earthquake (also written from scratch--this was speedied while a stub!).

I have also been active writing basketball articles, among other subjects.

I will tell you nothing about my personal life, since I don't know who you are, except I am a male human from the Planet Earth who was born sometime in the 20th century.

I am a bit of a linguist, as demonstrated by my languageboxes below:

enThis user is a native speaker of the English language.
es-2Este usuario puede contribuir con un nivel intermedio de español.
fr-2Cet utilisateur peut contribuer avec un niveau intermédiaire en français.
de-1Dieser Benutzer hat grundlegende Deutschkenntnisse.
simple
3
This user can help out at an advanced level of Simple English.


States and countries visited

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U.S. States visited
Pennsylvania New Jersey Delaware Maryland Virginia North Carolina Florida West Virginia New York Tennessee Connecticut Massachusetts Colorado New Hampshire Maine Rhode Island
Countries visited
United States Dominican Republic Iceland Germany Costa Rica

Toolbox

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  • <ref name=>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title= |curly=y |work=[[The New York Times]] |publisher=[[The New York Times Company]]|date= |accessdate=2025-12-18 |url= }}</ref>
  • <ref name=>{{cite news |title= |curly=y| work = [[Time (magazine)|Time]] |publisher=[[Time Inc.]]|date= |accessdate=2025-12-18 |url= }}</ref>
  • <ref name=>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title= |curly=y| work = [[BBC News]] |publisher=[[British Broadcasting Corporation]]|date= |accessdate=2025-12-18 |url= }}</ref>
  • {{subst:User:Editorofthewiki/Sandbox/map|subst:}}

On other Wikis

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I have accounts on the following sister projects:

Commons
Wikinews
Wiktionary
Wikiquote
Wikibooks
Wikisource
Wikispecies
Wikiversity
Meta-Wiki

Stuff to do

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About Wikipedia

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Basics
Help
Policies, Guides, and Resources

The Community
Things to do
Miscellaneous

Tasks that you can do

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You can help improve the articles listed below! This list updates frequently, so check back here for more tasks to try. (See Wikipedia:Maintenance or the Task Center for further information.)

Fix spelling and grammar
None
Fix wikilinks
None

Help counter systemic bias by creating new articles on important women.

Help improve popular pages, especially those of low quality.


Tower of Wikipedia

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WP:AIV
WP:WARN
WP:ANI
WP:SPI
WP:RCP
WP:RPP
WP:RFA
WP:AFD
WP:XFD
WP:DRV
CAT:SPEEDY
WP:CSD
WP:RM
WP:FA
WP:RFC
WP:RAA
WP:ER
WP:TM
WP:LOP
WP:PNT
WP:BACK
CAT:HELP
WP:VP
WP:HAHA
WP:BARN
WP:RD

Recent Changes

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List of abbreviations (help):
D
Edit made at Wikidata
r
Edit flagged by ORES
N
New page
m
Minor edit
b
Bot edit
(±123)
Page byte size change

18 December 2025


Tip of the Day

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Accuracy, quality and peer review

We strive to make Wikipedia as accurate and as good as possible. If you see something you know is wrong, be bold and fix it. If you see something that seems wrong, leave a note on the article talk page and remove questionable assertions if no supporting evidence is provided. You can also use a verification template to add a citation needed tag after the text in question.

Peer review for accuracy and quality happens constantly through the Recent changes page and watchlists. A review can also be solicited on Wikipedia:Peer review, Wikipedia:Article assessment, and Wikipedia:Good article nominations. If you believe an article is really good, nominate it at Wikipedia:Featured article candidates. More sophisticated approval mechanisms are under constant discussion. Regardless, we do not guarantee accuracy and have a variety of other disclaimers. These are linked from every page, so please do not add more disclaimers to articles!

There is a semi-automated peer review available. The easiest way to install the script is to enable it as a Gadget: go to your user Preferences and check off the MoreMenu, adds Page and User dropdown menus to the toolbar... entry under Appearance and hit save. Each article page will then have a Page and User pull down menu near the top; go to the article; hover on Page; hover on Tools; click on Peer reviewer.

To add this auto-updating template to your user page, use {{totd}}

Today's featured article

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Caesar cipher with a left shift of 3
Caesar cipher with a left shift of 3

A Caesar cipher, also known as Caesar's cipher, the shift cipher, Caesar's code, or the Caesar shift, is one of the simplest and most widely known encryption techniques in cryptography. Named after Julius Caesar, who is said to have used it, it is a type of substitution cipher in which each letter in the plaintext is replaced by a letter some fixed number of positions down the alphabet. For example, with a left shift of 3, D would be replaced by A, E would become B, and so on (pictured). Caesar is believed to have used one in his private correspondence, and a similar one was used by his nephew, Augustus. The encryption step performed by a Caesar cipher is often incorporated as part of more complex schemes, such as the Vigenère cipher, and still has modern application in the ROT13 system. As with all single-alphabet substitution ciphers, the Caesar cipher is easily broken and in modern practice offers essentially no communications security. (Full article...)