Hello
I want to understand this uptades of my collection:
All of them are listed as N#43609 , and I can't know which are these coins
Could someone explain this to me?
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Hello
I want to understand this uptades of my collection:
All of them are listed as N#43609 , and I can't know which are these coins
Could someone explain this to me?
What is written in the further details when you click on the individual texts?

This seems to happen when the item page -where your object is registered- gets deleted.
I noticed that I also have a bunch of items now on the “Unidentified” page. I don't know why… In my case from the purchase value I was able to find out what they were: most of them were satirical reproductions of famous US and UK coins (so tokens). It seems a bunch were deleted, I don't know when or why…
This appears to me:
According to my notes, some of them should be Roman or Greek coins, but I can't locate it exactly
@Jarcek in which context would pages be deleted and collection not be moved to replacement page?
I purged some old items that were rejected by referees or cancelled by users. My guess that you added some of those into your collection.
My recent modification requests were not rejected... and these are very recent updates of my collection...
I understand the importance of the site constantly updating itself, and of users continuing to research, create, and organize periods, issuers, and coins with increasing precision. This is fundamental.
However, the way this is done ends up being a problem for those with large collections, like myself. Often, I can't tell which coin has been altered or removed; it all becomes very complex. I, like other collectors, use Numista as a basis for organizing my collection, and this ends up being quite detrimental.
We can't identify or understand where the coins are from, who the issuers are, or even which coin has been modified. There should be a mechanism that, at the moment of removal or alteration, shows which coin it was, who the previous issuer was, and the number N#, so that we can have real control over the collection. Otherwise, we are forced to do audits every week, since the changes are constant.
I understand that the site needs to evolve, but it's also important that there is concern for the user, especially for those who consider this excellent site their main reference. I, for example, add new coins every day, research issuers frequently, and when a coin is modified, I need to understand why that change was made, what changed, and the reason for it, so that we can deepen our studies.
I suggest that some change or a different way of optimizing this process be considered, so that there is clearer and more transparent communication between the Numista and the users.
Hello,
I specifically picked only rejected items that were old, at least half a year old. I apologise for any inconvenience, I thought half a year is enough time for a user to react to a rejection from a referee.
In my case the token pages that have been deleted were previously accepted by the referee (i created them myself). They have just disappeared fro the catalogue. Would it help if i can find approximate creation date so you can track what happened with them?
Those would have to come from duplicate deletions, completely separate from the purge.
For me it's very hard to know what happened, I noticed that I lost 3 issuers (2304 to 2301). I have more than 48.000 coins and all the issuers are in different boxes. due to this changes I took a look on the updates, but I can't even know what changed
What time zone are you in @Cristiano Becker ?
EDIT: I figured it out, but I was unable to restore the items based on time.
Die verwendete Zeitzone ist UTC+2:00.
Die aktuelle Zeit ist 15:05.