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Exciting adventures of an ODP submission

12 hours listing time - but misspelled keyword...

         

heini

3:20 pm on Jul 31, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Fantastic: submission was accepted in only 12 hours!

Horrible: most important keyword is misspelled!

Puzzling: the cat doesn't have an editor!

Mysterious: what to do now?

choster

3:25 pm on Jul 31, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Use the "update URL" link at the top of the category page to indicate the error. It would appear the category is being maintained by an editor listed in a higher-level category; if so, the correction should be handled with similar alacrity.

[added later]
Just in case this is a question of British (Australian, Canadian, South African, etc.) spelling as opposed to the US, I should note that American spelling is used for category names in most of the directory. An exception is made for subject categories under the Regional [dmoz.org] hierarchy: in English-speaking countries where British spellings are used in print and online media, the local spelling is used for category names. This applies only where the population speaks English-- the Denmark category uses "Transportation" instead of "Transport" and Pakistan uses "Real Estate" instead of "Property" even though the British form is probably more familiar there (q.v. Regional Guidelines: Subject Categories Template [dmoz.org])

In descriptions, some leeway is granted to the editor. When I edit in a subject (non-Regional) taxonomy, I use the spelling and terminology local to the site-- a colourful art exhibit in New Zealand, a colorful one in Canada; a gaol conditions activist group in Scotland, a jail conditions activist group in the US. This is not an explicit rule, however, so it is not unheard of for an Irish editor to call all US cricket teams "organisations" or vice versa baseball fanclubs in Ireland "organizations."