Ok this is weird. I'm not registered on wikipedia as an editor, I never edited an article, and even if I will, I will do so constructively.
Yet today I see that I've got "a message" on a wiki page. At first I thought some kind of malware got in my PC, but I still clicked it.
Seems like for the IP I currently have (I have a dynamic IP) "I" received several warnings( on articles I never even visited), with a final warning after which I will be blocked from editing.
I'm not really concerned, because tomorrow I'll probably have a new IP, but this raises some questions:
How do PCs on internet are actually identified?
If some guy gets banned on a site and then I receive his IP, what happens?
Or is Wikipedia just broken?
[EDIT] I'm thinking of pasting a link to an interesting website I discover in each journal, or in some at least.
Link #1:
Very interesting spore-like game in which you compose music by creating tiny waveform creatures which interact.
The only way to tell computers apart on the internet with no additional communication is through their IP address. This is, of course, pretty unreliable over a period of time because of dynamic IPs. Things like this happen.
It's no big deal, really. Just ignore it. It has happened to me too.
I don't even know what I just made.
How's this?
http://seaquence.org/m5gd
http://seaquence.org/t93k
http://seaquence.org/zmt1
[EDIT] Oh I see. I was the lucky drawer for 2^13.