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Wikipedia:WikiProject Computer security/Assessment

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Blank61 (talk | contribs) at 01:36, 9 December 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The WikiProject Computer Security/Assessment is the department of the WikiProject Computer Security that assesses computer security articles. This page lists its members and facilitates its workflow.

Members

If you're interested in assessing articles for WikiProject Computer Security, add your name to the Department list below.

Assessment

  • Editors can add an assessment request to the list below. Instructions are in the source.
  • The list is transcluded to Wikipedia:WikiProject_Computing/Assessment#Open_requests, because the WikiProjects Computer Security and Computing are related.
  • Please also take the initiative to respond to another open request.
  • Please extend a list item when you attend to an article. Instructions are in the source.
  • Deliver your assessment on the talk page of the assessed article.
  • Articles of class Stub, Start, C, and B can be promoted to a higher class.
  • Articles cannot be promoted to class A until they have been subjected to a peer review or a Good Article/Featured Article review.
  • Articles of any class except GA and FA can be demoted to a lower class.
  • Please remove a request from the list when it has been complied with.
  • Please edit the assessment statistics subsection after adding or removing a list item.

Open requests

Lynis — requested by Mathias Hollstein (talk) 01:02, 20 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]

KRACK — requested by Melmann(talk) 12:05, 16 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

PLA Unit 61486 — requested by Blank61 (talk · contribs) (talk) 01:35, 9 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]

South African hacker history

Assessment statistics

information Note: the statistics below are outdated.

  • Number of requests made in 2012: 4
  • Number of assessments delivered in 2012: 1

Quality

In the above table, examples are from:

  • computer security articles (best choice);
  • computing articles (second best choice);
  • other articles (third best choice).

Importance

Label Articles
Top Fundamental concepts, standards, companies, important websites, or anything that forms the basis of all information
High Popular applications, architectures, or anything that covers a general area of knowledge
Mid Core components or anything that fills in more specific information of certain areas
Low Optional add-ons that are not fairly important, or anything that is an obscure piece of trivia

Statistics