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As telnet links were actually enabled following arguments about their contribution to MUD related articles, I'll reinstate it as an inline link. A copy of the discussion from 2005 is below. There is a lot of other stuff on HELP DESK, etc. on how to use telnet links in articles, but I didn't spot anything in the MoS which seemed to apply. --
Aelmon (
talk)
20:31, 21 February 2014 (UTC)reply
Discussion from 9 years ago notwithstanding, telnet links really aren't appropriate. Including them is essentially treating Wikipedia as if it were The Mud Connector or Top Mud Sites, i.e. a promotional directory for players to use to find games, and to make a long story short that is the sort of behavior that gave MUDs a bad name of Wikipedia for most of a decade. It also isn't doing any favors to an article that has zero
WP:GNG-satisfying citations to make it look any more promotional than the general language of the article already does. So I am asking you to revert your addition of the telnet link.
—chaos5023 (
talk)
04:02, 22 February 2014 (UTC)reply
Telnet links
It seems that while external links to IRC servers (e.g. -
[1]) and FTP servers (e.g. -
[2]) link correctly, links to telnet servers (e.g. -
[3]) do not get handled properly. I'd like to think this is a simple thing to fix, hence my posting it here. Comments? —
Locke Cole12:13, 18 December 2005 (UTC)reply
telnet is an obsolete protocol, and should not be encouraged to be used, there shouldn't be any links to telnet-servers from wikipedia at all →
AzaToth13:33, 18 December 2005 (UTC)reply
IRC and FTP are obsolete as well, so the "it's obsolete" argument doesn't really hold a whole lot of weight for me. As for links to telnet servers, while they continue to disappear, there are still bulletin boards (for example) that operate on the internet that may be worth linking to. —
Locke Cole13:51, 18 December 2005 (UTC)reply
So we shouldn't be linking to servers that only support HTTP/1.0 either? How is whether or not the protocol is considered deprecated at all relevant to anything? (and AFAIK IRC at least hasn't been deprecated by anything) —
Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason14:03, 18 December 2005 (UTC)reply
Some might argue that IM has largely replaced IRC (especially where the IM protocol supports having groups of people together ala an IRC channel). But that's really besides the point and not something I want to debate: whether or not it's obsolete is irrelevant. Afterall, I note that the old gopher protocol is supported:
[4]. So can something be done for poor old telnet? :P —
Locke Cole14:15, 18 December 2005 (UTC)reply
Define obsolete... Telnet is still is use, remote Linux shells, finantial institutions MUD games etc still use them, as well as remote administration of routers, printers and what not. Now granted there are no longer a huge number of public telnet services available, but still. It's usefull if you want to provide a direct link to for example a MUD like
telnet://discworld.imaginary.com or whatnot...--
Sherool(talk)14:43, 18 December 2005 (UTC)reply
Yeah, in my case I was specifically thinking of MUD servers that are open to the public. And like I mention above, for whatever reason, the
Gopher protocol is still supported. So telnet seems like a given. :P —
Locke Cole06:18, 21 December 2005 (UTC)reply