Revision as of 13:08, 5 February 2008 editDoc glasgow (talk | contribs)26,084 edits →A further failure: r← Previous edit | Revision as of 13:52, 5 February 2008 edit undoUtgard Loki (talk | contribs)2,260 edits →BreakNext edit → | ||
Line 366: | Line 366: | ||
***There are some 600+ channels with Misplaced Pages or some variation in the name, anyone can start one, James can have it closed but obviously rarely does so. In fact, last year Mackensen created #wikipedia-en-functionaries which is open to anyone, its just that no one ever goes there. Geogre could create a new channel tonight if he wanted to, appoint his own chanops and set his own rules on logging, transparency and dispute resolution. But there is no way to make people use it. ] 22:12, 4 February 2008 (UTC) | ***There are some 600+ channels with Misplaced Pages or some variation in the name, anyone can start one, James can have it closed but obviously rarely does so. In fact, last year Mackensen created #wikipedia-en-functionaries which is open to anyone, its just that no one ever goes there. Geogre could create a new channel tonight if he wanted to, appoint his own chanops and set his own rules on logging, transparency and dispute resolution. But there is no way to make people use it. ] 22:12, 4 February 2008 (UTC) | ||
::::Thats what I figured. My questions were more for pointing out holes than for requesting new information. <sup>]]</sup> 22:19, 4 February 2008 (UTC) | ::::Thats what I figured. My questions were more for pointing out holes than for requesting new information. <sup>]]</sup> 22:19, 4 February 2008 (UTC) | ||
**Thatcher, you don't think that ''perhaps'' the Misplaced Pages page ''telling people'' that the admins channel is there and that it's for admins has had anything at all to do with the population there, do you? If so, and if all the rest of what you say is true, then why would it be "endorsed by Misplaced Pages" by advertising if it's not subject to anything but the whim of one person? Also, isn't that person a Wikipedian and therefore subject to restrictions by ArbCom? ] (]) 13:52, 5 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::''Freenode have said they would recognize a new top level contact if the community agreed to a selection process and then selected someone other than James'' In case anyone is unclear of the scope we are dealling with here, I would point out that "community" here does equal en.WP. JamesF is the top-level contact for wikimedia associated channels in all languages, so any sort of new selection process would presumably not involve en.WP exclusively.--<i><font color="#9966FF">]</font><font color="#CC99CC" size="2">SB</font></i> 22:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC) | :::::''Freenode have said they would recognize a new top level contact if the community agreed to a selection process and then selected someone other than James'' In case anyone is unclear of the scope we are dealling with here, I would point out that "community" here does equal en.WP. JamesF is the top-level contact for wikimedia associated channels in all languages, so any sort of new selection process would presumably not involve en.WP exclusively.--<i><font color="#9966FF">]</font><font color="#CC99CC" size="2">SB</font></i> 22:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC) | ||
Revision as of 13:52, 5 February 2008
- Misplaced Pages talk:Requests for arbitration/IRC/Proposed decision/Archive 1
- Misplaced Pages talk:Requests for arbitration/IRC/Proposed decision/Archive 2
Arbitrators hearing this case
- Per longstanding policy, members of the Arbitration committee whose terms expire on 31 December 2007 may participate in this case at their discretion. Newly appointed members are considered recused from any case accepted before their appointment began, but may activate themselves on any open case. Thatcher 00:28, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
- Mackensen has withdrawn from the case, asking that all his votes be stricken. Thatcher 00:07, 25 January 2008 (UTC)
Arbitrators active on this case
- To update this listing, edit this template and scroll down until you find the right list of arbitrators. If updates to this listing do not immediately show, try purging the cache.
Difference between motion to dismiss and motion to close?
About a week ago, Paul August started a motion to dismiss the case: "As the continuance of this case is doing more harm than good, this case is dismissed." Now Uninvited Company has started a motion to close the case. See here: "Noting that voting is deadlocked and discussion is stalled, I move to close.". Could someone clarify the difference here? Presumably dismissing the case would mean nothing happens, but closing the case would mean that what was passing at the time of closing would pass?
The notes at the top of the page say "Only items that receive a majority "support" vote will be passed." - as the support vote here is seven, does it matter that not all the active arbitrators have voted? If that is the case, I make it: principles 1 (dispute resolution, +10), 2 or 2.1 (reversion, +10), 3.2 (disruption by administrators, +10), 4 (WP:OWN, +7), 5 (decorum, +9), 6 (fair criticism, +9), 9 (provocative actions, +7), 15 (bad blood, +7), 17 (IRC, +7); finding of fact 4 (Giano, +8); and remedy 6 (IRC, +7). Some of the findings of fact and remedies are close to passing. Notably principle 10 (forward looking, +6), and 12.2 (Warlike behavior using administrative tools, +6), finding of fact 8 (Tony Sidaway, +5), and remedy 2.2 (Giano namespace ban, +5), but presumably, from his motion to close, UC doesn't think that any further progress can be made on those and other non-passing parts? Carcharoth (talk) 01:17, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Not commenting on any other aspect at this point, but the distinction between "motion to dismiss" and "motion to close" as you have identified it is correct. If a case is dismissed, there is no decision except for anything contained in the motion to dismiss itself. If a case is closed, then a decision is issued containing whatever proposals were supported by a majority of the active arbitrators. Newyorkbrad (talk) 01:27, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
Missing ArbCom members
Here's a suggestion for running the committee more efficiently, inspired by this case.
There are 12 active members supposedly involved in this arbitration (excluding two who are recused). Yet only 10 have voted (fewer on most proposals). That means that a super-majority, 7/10, is required rather than a simple majority (6/10 or 7/12). If arbitrators who aren't voting would declare themselves inactive or recused, or if all active arbitrators would vote, then perhaps it would be easier to get things passed. Even simpler would be to have the majority of votes on each provision decide the question. "Active" arbitrators who aren't voting still skew the result and make it harder for the truly active arbitrators to settle cases. ·:· Will Beback ·:· 02:33, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- We are in the process of deciding how to handle this issue. It is important since Jimbo urged Committee members to resign from the Committee if they are not able to stay active. And if that does not happen then he wants us to have a method to remove them so they can be replaced by users that have the time to contribute. Part of our discussion involves how to measure activity level. Voting on cases is the first and most important measure. FloNight (talk) 02:41, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I don't know where you are getting your numbers, Will Beback. All 12 active arbitrators have made at least one motion and/or vote on the page. The voting stage of an arbitration that has lasted five weeks really isn't the time to change the entire structure under which the Arbitration Committee has operated for several years. Perhaps you might wish to make this suggestion for future cases on WT:RFAR, though, so that the community and the arbitrators can weigh in on it in a neutral venue. Risker (talk) 02:44, 1 February 2008 (UTC) Edited to add: Just to be clear, Will Beback, your proposal would mean that if only one arbitrator proposed and voted on a proposed FoF, Principle or Remedy, and s/he voted in favour of it, then it would automatically pass. That seems entirely inappropriate to me. Risker (talk) 04:44, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with Risker. For the record, the two most inactive (no offence intended) arbitrators in this case have been Paul August (motion to dismiss) and Blnguyen (four votes on 23 January). Both have been (minimally) active in other areas (watching other cases and at requests for arbitration), but they haven't gone totally inactive. Paul's non-voting can be explained by his motion to dismiss - he is under no obligation to vote in a case that he thinks should be dismissed. And I'd just give Blnguyen some time. It also seems clear from his voting so far that his votes are unlikely to affect the case much. I would also note that FloNight has been active, making notes to propose new versions, but has not done so yet. And that FT2 placed some placeholders a long time ago that haven't been filled in. As FT2 said, this one is going to take time - we just need to be patient. Also, arbitrators who don't appear to be that active on the case pages may be actively contributing to discussions on the mailing list or other arbcom discussion venues. Carcharoth (talk) 06:04, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
I have urged all members of the committee to make a support, oppose, or abstain vote on all measures presently under consideration. I have also urged those members who have opposed most of the substantive proposals to offer alternatives to them. The Uninvited Co., Inc. 16:44, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
Bauder's vendetta
I am starting this section to highlight the instances I have raised in the past few days as well as what Bish pointed out above in which arbitrator Fred Bauder (whose term has expired and is only participating because this case was accepted last December) engaged in verbal assaults, baiting, and biased remedy that borders disruption. Bish and I have supplied similar diffs that clearly demonstrated that Bauder has been on a crusade to drive out widely-respected mainspace contributors Giano and Geogre from the project at least since 2006. The timestamp of this controversial proposed remediesMisplaced Pages:Requests_for_arbitration/Giano/Proposed_decision#Geogre_desysopped, more or less resulted in Geogre unsuccessful arbCom bid in December 2006. (should I say Bauder sabotaged Geogre's campaign?) This instance compunds with his blatant bias in this arbcom case (insulting and baiting Giano) signals that he should recuse from the case in order to keep arbCom's integrity, credibility, and community's trust intact. I have said so in the past and I'm going to repeat again it is not a surprise to see him seize this opportunity (most likely his last arbCom case in his tenure) to seek revenge in his personal vendetta Of course, given this ideal opportunity, Bauder will not step down voluntarily. But I still want to strongly appeal that Bauder step down immediately (or at least recuse from the case) and that other arbCom members take the initiative to remove Bauder’s insults from the proposed decision page. And for anyone who feels the same, feel free to use this section as a petition. Let the community's voice be heard.--Certified.Gangsta (talk) 09:53, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Strong Endorse. Mr. Bauder has repeatedly demonstrated poor judgment and a lack of integrity by failing to recuse himself from cases where he holds a clear bias. Seabhcan provides a prime example of this. By openly and aggressively pursuing personal and political vendettas, as shown above, he also exhibits conduct grossly unbecoming of an Arbitrator. This lame duck, needs to be dismissed from this case and his prior comments and decisions struck, before he is allowed to bring further discredit and disgrace to the committee.--R.D.H. (Ghost In The Machine) (talk) 10:49, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
Peace please everyone
Arbs are called to pass verdicts on user behaviour. It couldn't be that this one has simply reached a conclusion about long-standing problems with certain users, and you disagree with those conclusions?? Now, I think Fred's comments are not particularly helpful in de-escalating this dispute - but I'd have to say the rhetoric of certain others has been even less so. Judges snarling at the accused is certainly unseemly, but the accused and their supporters hurling insults from the dock is predictable and boring. When the ref makes a call you dislike, calling him biased, and screaming insults is not good. The problem here has been that too many people are forgetting that the point of dispute resolution in Misplaced Pages is to seek calm ways of resolving the dispute - not new ways of waging polemical warfare, and castigating all who disagree with you as evil, and portraying yourself as a perpetual victim of bullies. Unfortunately, I am fast reaching the conclusion that certain people have no interest in resolving disputes, only in scoring points and causing drama. If that's the case, then inevitably those people need to change their ways or be removed from Misplaced Pages. Please, let all, whatever their view on the issues, seek to de-escalate the hostilities that we might calmly seek ways of moving forward. If the parties who wish the case closed can do that, they might find many of us willing to support closure. But making closure into a battlepoint, simply means that remedies against such behaviour are going to be necessary, either now or very soon.--Doc 11:17, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that this section and its title (referring to Fred) are extremely unhelpful. Equally, though, it is divisive to support an attitude that remedies such as year-long bans from the Misplaced Pages namespace are even remotely helpful to resolving a situation like this (and you are the one that put the emphasis on resolving). Statements like "inevitably those people need to change their ways or be removed from Misplaced Pages" conflict with your later "let all seek to de-escalate the hostilities that we might calmly seek ways of moving forward" To be frank, Arbcom should be focused on resolving the disruptive conduct in other cases that causes clear and present harm (like the homeopathy and nationalist editors situations, and others). Giano's actions, while they may cause drama and disruption, are not in the same league. Certain arbitrators should be calm and diplomatic (and some, to their credit, are), and should engage with the concerns and address them, rather than throwing the book at someone just because their patience runs out with the way they do things. In other words, the reaction of some sections of arbcom is disproportionate and unhelpful. It is clear that losing content contributors is harmful (which is what arbcom was and maybe still is in danger of doing). Excessive and wrongful blocking is harmful. Inappropriate deletions and undeletions can be harmful. But, really, absolutely honestly and without bias, putting aside all the outraged feelings and personalities, how harmful is Giano's behaviour? If everyone ignored him (and some others) the next time something like this happened, or concentrated on calming things down and addressing the concerns raised (instead of filing an arbitration case) then the "bad blood" might be lessened and things might improve. I've said as much to Giano on his talk page - the next time he has concerns like this, where he may feel so outraged that he could get into an edit war, bring it up on his talk page and let others comment first on what needs doing and how. Carcharoth (talk) 12:05, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that many comments made on this case page are not helping us get to the root of the issue in the case. The purpose of this case was to address the editor conduct issues in IRC channels and Misplaced Pages that are stopping Misplaced Pages from having a pleasant working environment that encourages consensus based decisions based on collaboration. Misplaced Pages is not a battleground, and I expect all users to follow the appropriate means of dispute resolution. Despite prior warnings and sanctions, some parties in this case have chosen to make Misplaced Pages a battleground and do not show any sign of agreeing to stop. I think that this is extremely unfortunate and concerns me for the users themselves and the Community. When I vote to support a finding of facts about an established user, or sanctions placed on them, it is not done lightly by me but only after coming to the conclusion that it is in the overall best interest of the Community. FloNight♥♥♥ 12:49, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Are you saying that Giano has chosen to make Misplaced Pages a battleground? In the last case I was serious when I said that a separate case against Giano would be best to address that. Addressing a complex issue like that against the backdrop of this IRC case was never going to be easy. As for "a pleasant working environment that encourages consensus based decisions based on collaboration" - I've never had any problem working with Giano in article space or Misplaced Pages space. Those who think others are justified in finding such problems should actually try working with Giano on something. It is actually rather easy to work collaboratively with him. I've also been able to talk productively with Tony Sidaway, Geogre, David Gerard and Phil Sandifer, among others. There are some people, though, that I do find it difficult (for whatever reason) to talk (on Misplaced Pages) and work with. Now, make a list of the incidents Giano has been involved in - which of them, after the initial fuss was over, resulted in an obstruction of the consensus process? Sometimes a pleasant working environment just doesn't cut it, and criticism is needed (as one of the passing principles states in this case). Sure, not always criticism the way Giano does it, but at root here there is nothing more needed than to have more diplomacy available when situations like this happen. In my opinion, and with hindsight, a formal arbitration case on the edit war itself was not really needed (all that was needed was for the IRC issues to be resolved), and the arbitration committee should be able to see the bigger picture and recognise that. Carcharoth (talk) 13:16, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm taking a l-on-n-g view of the situation having watched it unfold over several years. The parties in this case have not been able to conform to the standards set out in our policies despite that fact that they are well aware of Misplaced Pages rules and practices. As highly vested members of the Community, they are role models for newer users. Across the board, we need to hold these members to a higher standard of conduct not lower. Some parties have agreed by words or actions to turn over a new leaf. Others have not. The parties conduct going forward will determine their fate either way. FloNight♥♥♥ 13:40, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Thank-you. For what it is worth, I agree with the final warning remedy you have proposed. It seems the best way forward. I'd quibble about the wording (eg. "are likely to result in further sanctions" - added the word in italics as this is already a sanction), and point out that others have also failed to "conduct disputes in a civil and constructive manner", but then that is what the "all parties cautioned" thing is about. BTW, you do realise that one of your colleagues (the bainer) has been included in that broad sweep covering the 13 named parties to this case? You did mean to include all 13, right? Carcharoth (talk) 13:53, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I suspect those that the committee has in view know who they are.--Doc 13:58, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not so sure. In my experience, it is always best to state these things openly, rather than leave them implicit. The latter generally causes more misunderstandings. This is a strongly worded remedy that has the potential to be brought up at future arbitration cases. Would you be happy if in a future case, say in a year's time, the arbitration committee said that you (a named party to this case) had failed to heed the warning and that consequently they are taking "an unsympathetic view"? It needs to be clear who this applies to. We are also back to the old problem that the remedies are being fiercely debated but no clear findings of fact are being passed. In other words, the arbitration committee are failing to tell us, though the findings of fact, what they think happened here. Carcharoth (talk) 15:02, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I suspect those that the committee has in view know who they are.--Doc 13:58, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Thank-you. For what it is worth, I agree with the final warning remedy you have proposed. It seems the best way forward. I'd quibble about the wording (eg. "are likely to result in further sanctions" - added the word in italics as this is already a sanction), and point out that others have also failed to "conduct disputes in a civil and constructive manner", but then that is what the "all parties cautioned" thing is about. BTW, you do realise that one of your colleagues (the bainer) has been included in that broad sweep covering the 13 named parties to this case? You did mean to include all 13, right? Carcharoth (talk) 13:53, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- The problem here is that ArbCom is not interested in addressing the root causes of anything. The problem isn't Giano (although he doesn't help his case with his tactics), but the problem is ultiamtely what causes excellent contributors to react negatively. When people who make no significant contribution to the project get a free pass for their rampant incivility and abuses while people like Giano get raked over the coals incessantly for at worst acting badly but better than those being railed against, what kind of message does that send? Sure, get angry that Giano's using arguably disruptive methods to send a message, but the only reason we're at that point is because people with next to no worthwhile contributions to the project are not (and from the way this case appears to be going, STILL not) being held accountable. You want root causes? You know where they are, and they don't reside with Giano. --Badlydrawnjeff (talk) 16:09, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
The above user has contributed nothing whatsoever to this project since May, except a dozen edits all, without exception, designed to pursue vendettas and rub salt in old wounds. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Doc glasgow (talk • contribs) 18:05, 1 February 2008 (UTC)Stricken, with apologies to jeff - extremely unhelpful remark by me.--Doc 19:18, 1 February 2008 (UTC)- And that's still more than some of the worst people involved in this charade. You already got your fabricated licks in, Doc, I'm glad you're enjoying the results. --Badlydrawnjeff (talk) 18:46, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Believe it or not, I'm enjoying none of this. I'd sooner be writing an article.--Doc 19:14, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- And that's still more than some of the worst people involved in this charade. You already got your fabricated licks in, Doc, I'm glad you're enjoying the results. --Badlydrawnjeff (talk) 18:46, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Once upon a time I used to be nice and lovely, no one listened. Now at long last issues are being seen if not satisfactorily addressed. If the cost is shooting the messenger then so be it. Giano (talk) 18:54, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- The problem with that is, that if everyone who felt people were not listening to them, jumped up and down screaming, then, in fact, we'd be unable to hear anyone. And the sound of gunshot is even more of distraction. Dispute resolution is for finding resolutions - polemic, rhetoric, paranoia, gunshot and screaming are not conducive. The noise you've made may have got you a hearing (although I doubt it), but the cost to the project is just too high.--Doc 19:14, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I believe Winston Churchill once said something similar of poor Mrs Pankhurst, and of course, we all know what that nice Lady Astor told him she would do to his tea. Anyway enough. Womens rights are very admirable etc., but I prefer the analogy to that other unfortunate. Just bear in mind Doc "faint heart never wun nuffin!" I can live with myself. To the Arbcom, I say: Fear not, from now onwards I shall be modelling myself on their esteemed Fred Bauder. Giano (talk) 19:34, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I was polite and reserved once too. I supported an admin mailing list as long as the archives were open. I didn't explain that a socially fueled power group under the veil of secrecy could bring its own problems - let's try something less extreme first, thinking that it was self evident. For my opinion I was called "incompetent, unprofessional and unreal". It's a fact of life that with some people, the nicer you are to them the more they'll shit on you. Here's another truth: if someone is vicious to you and over time you slowly begin to respond in kind, and then you are sanctioned for incivility but not the people who opened that door, then you can be sure the sanction has absolutely nothing at all to do with "civility". --Duk 19:27, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
:::::*I agree with this observation by Duk. Right on the mark. Mattisse 21:07, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I mostly agree with Badlydrawnjeff. Giano has not helped his position, which many people agree with, but that is somewhat beside the point. The project appears to be taking a step towards the non-codling of old-tyme-valued-contributors, but this change in culture will take time. The sooner those in positions of trust and authority speak forcefully to this the sooner the culture will change. Doc, please comment on content, not on contributor. --Rocksanddirt (talk) 19:11, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Re the firing squad analogy by Giano, isn't it the condemned that is supposed to be wearing the blindfold? LessHeard vanU (talk) 19:15, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
What major disruption?
Drama vs disruption. I see drama as something people can walk away from and chose not to get involved with, and disruption as something more serious. Arbitrators are stating on the proposed decision page that Giano "will continue to cause major disruption for the project". Where is this major disruption? I'm serious here. I see drama, sure, but very little to no actual disruption. Does the definition of "major disruption" change to suit the arbitrators and the context of different cases? Please, if anyone answers this, no vague hand-waving or unclear references to past incidents - clear diffs and evidence of major disruption over and above that caused by other parties to this case, and an indication of the harm that the disruption caused (if it caused no harm, it couldn't have been major). Simply being the focus of several arbitration cases is not in itself being disruptive. If Giano left (or was banned) tomorrow, the disruption and drama would not cease - the problem here is not Giano. Disruption and drama have always occurred on Misplaced Pages - witness the drama caused by Fred's choice of metaphors (now partially refactored, but still referring to a bull in a china shop and bad apples) How are Giano's actions any more drama-inducing than Fred's? Carcharoth (talk) 14:38, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- May I remind everybody that Giano received about two thirds support in the arbitrator elections. I do not think a disruptive editor would receive so much support. People have different styles; intentions are more important than delivery. Jehochman 15:20, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Without commenting on Giano in particular, I must point out the intentions are irrelevant. We are judged on our actions and our intentions are presumed to be in good faith. And any measures taken against people are solely to alter their future actions. If an editors acts in accordance with policy, their intentions are irrelevant. Intentions are the least important factor not the most.--BirgitteSB 15:28, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Intentions are completely relevant. If a newbie makes a mistake while trying to do good work, we do not sink our fangs into them, though we might like to. If a troll uses extremely polite language while attempting to bait another editor, we can apply the cluestick. Jehochman 15:31, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I don't see how those apply to what I am saying. You cannot judge a person on their intentions AND assume good faith. The assumption of good faith only works in an absence of judgment. If you assumes good faith and then judge a person on their good faith intention, you enter into a circle of dysfunction. Hold on I will find a real-life example instead of vague hypotheticals.--BirgitteSB 15:40, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Nevermind, the example I was thinking of was a content case more than a conduct case, but I think something I said at en.WS bears repeating here: I do not care to tread into the quicksand of judging the motivations of a person I have only come into contact with over the internet. Luckily there is no need to do so. All of our policy as well as our past practice here rely judging the content on it own merits with no relevence to what the motivations and prejudices of the contributer might or might not be. I don't care to determine why someone wants to contribute an article from 1871 on what may or may not be called Macedonia. I care to determine that the article existed, was published, is accurately translated under a free licsense, and is accurately labeled. As difficult as it is to spend some months working those issues out, they are things that can be determined definatively. The motivations for choosing to work on one thing instead of others are not. This can follow into issues of conduct as well. Since you cannot truly know a person motivations and intentions, it is best to simply focus on the actions. While reasonable people will regularly disagree on what they believe someone's intentions to be, reasonable people will nearly always be in agreement on whether an action was acceptable or not. And convincing a person to change their internal motivations is near impossible, while convincing them to act in a different manner is relatively easy in comparison. So everything is to be gained by ignoring intentions and focusing on actions.--BirgitteSB 15:56, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Birgitte, in addition to focusing on people's actions, it is important to look at their inaction. The people involved in the creation and running of #admins IRC - specifically Jimbo, Danny, James Forrester and probably some more I don't know - have not seriously participated with the community to resolve this dispute, and it's going on two years now. I'm not talking about behind closed doors, pulling strings and whining to friends with sympathetic ears - I'm talking about serious attempts to resolve this, face to face with the community they are meant to serve. There's no two ways about it; instead of working with the community to resolve these issues, the people at the center of this channel have for the most part hid like cowards behind closed doors. A leader who doesn't have the courage to face their people is no leader at all. Even David 'the mouth' Gerard has slinked off into hiding. An assumption of good faith for the IRC leadership, and #admins in particular, is difficult.
- On the other hand, Giano, Geogre, Bishonen and a few more have shown unbelievable courage. For there hard work they've been insulted, threatened with desysopping, made to feel unwelcome at #admins, threatened some more and blocked, time and time again. Only after two years of work has Jimbo and the arbcom grudgingly begun to address these issues. --Duk 17:23, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- First of all commenting on anyone's actions (or even inactions) is preferable to describing them with epithets. Please do not do that again. Secondly I will agree that inaction always undermines a person's leadership. I also think that there is a crisis of leadership which contributes to problems here. However arbcom can hardly designate leaders. It everyone's responsibility to step-up and speak out when they hear the sort of insults that have been thrown around on IRC and this talk page. Most people will avoid such responsibility and stick to "plausible deniability", but a leader will embrace such a responsibility. The kicker is that you cannot simply take responsibility for defending your friends and those you agree with and expect to be a leader. It is about taking responsibility to speak out against what is unacceptable no matter who the speaker is; no matter who the target is; no matter if it is fair in the grander scheme of things or not. It is past time for people to stop complaining about why others, who they believe should have been leaders, haven't taken care of things and step up themselves. If someone (or everyone) has stopped taking responsibility for a certain area that means there is a void of leadership, not that there is a conspiracy of "leaders" acting in bad faith. You do not need chan-ops to speak out against insults, there are hundreds of admins on en.WP and any one of them could have changed the enviroment of that channel if they had made it their priority. No-one did . You cannot make a short list of those that you blame for not taking leadership there and berate them. It is not so simple. Why haven't you taken responsibilty for policing that channel and using social pressure to change the problamatic behaivors in the past two years? Why should you be absolved of your inaction?--BirgitteSB 19:42, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Why haven't you taken responsibilty for policing that channel --Because I don't use #admins IRC.
- First of all commenting on anyone's actions (or even inactions) is preferable to describing them with epithets. Please do not do that again. Secondly I will agree that inaction always undermines a person's leadership. I also think that there is a crisis of leadership which contributes to problems here. However arbcom can hardly designate leaders. It everyone's responsibility to step-up and speak out when they hear the sort of insults that have been thrown around on IRC and this talk page. Most people will avoid such responsibility and stick to "plausible deniability", but a leader will embrace such a responsibility. The kicker is that you cannot simply take responsibility for defending your friends and those you agree with and expect to be a leader. It is about taking responsibility to speak out against what is unacceptable no matter who the speaker is; no matter who the target is; no matter if it is fair in the grander scheme of things or not. It is past time for people to stop complaining about why others, who they believe should have been leaders, haven't taken care of things and step up themselves. If someone (or everyone) has stopped taking responsibility for a certain area that means there is a void of leadership, not that there is a conspiracy of "leaders" acting in bad faith. You do not need chan-ops to speak out against insults, there are hundreds of admins on en.WP and any one of them could have changed the enviroment of that channel if they had made it their priority. No-one did . You cannot make a short list of those that you blame for not taking leadership there and berate them. It is not so simple. Why haven't you taken responsibilty for policing that channel and using social pressure to change the problamatic behaivors in the past two years? Why should you be absolved of your inaction?--BirgitteSB 19:42, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- and using social pressure to change the problamatic behaivors -- I think process and openness is more important than social pressure.
- Why should you be absolved of your inaction? -- Inaction!? I've been working this problem for more than two years. And I've put a lot of my own ideas on the table for criticism. --Duk 20:35, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- So you are saying that instead of working with the channel to resolve these issues, the people at the center of the opposition to the channel have for the most part called foul from the outside. Anyone more worried about process and openness than the inappropriate language and insults could have joined the channel and provided appropriate summaries (not logs) of relevant discussions on-wiki. I personally can't think of any way this issue could have been resolved without someone actually engaging with the people on IRC and using the channel itself to push for change. When you begin with the premise that the channel is so tainted that you refuse to even set foot on it, you cannot really expect that those who use the channel will be very receptive to your ideas. I can give you marks for the purity of your convictions, but effective solutions are always compromised solutions. Personally I am a pragmatist, so staying out the channel when the issue was important enough to you to work on for two years strikes me as silly. But I don't mean to say that this all your fault :) I just mean to point out that anyone could have taken a different kind of action and possibly brokered a solution. I am trying to show how your remarks above naming several people who failed to take effective action and instead focused on things you found to be ineffective, can really be said of many people. I find it hard to condemn people for inaction (or more accurately lack of effective action}, as harshly as I condemn people for inappropriate actions. However failing to act or choosing a less public action when you have an opportunity to make a difference does little to gain my respect. Not that we don't all do this in some situation or other--BirgitteSB 21:39, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Birgitte, you clearly have some misconceptions about me and about dispute resolution. How dare you tell me that I must address this problem your way, by becoming part of it, that I must work to resolve these problems from 'inside' IRC. To start with, my input began even before #admins was created.
- you begin with the premise that the channel is so tainted that you refuse to even set foot on it -- That was true a long time ago, but there has been progress. Mostly, I just don't use IRC. And you have no place telling me that I must.
- I find it hard to condemn people for inaction -- even when it's their job, when they have the power, when it's their responsibility, and when it's their little pet project that is causing the community all this trouble? And when there are many simple solutions that people have asked for that are within their power to make happen, and instead they ignore the community and go hide? Don't you think these people in leadership positions have a duty to their community? --Duk 11:19, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- I do not mean to tell you, Duk, that you personally must do anything. However I do believe anyone who wishes to succeed in resolving this issue must do certain things in order to accomplish that. I am sorry that you mistook my analysis as a personal command. Your later comments even . . . when it's their responsibility really gets to the point of what I am trying to say here. You cannot assign true responsibility or leadership to people, they can only claim it for themselves. Chan-ops, titles, control, these things can be assigned but only that person themselves can choose to actually use this control to take responsibility. And another person with none of these items of control can easily take responsibility when there is a void. If someone is not taking responsibility for one area it means someone else must step-up. If someone ignores a situation and focuses their energy elsewhere the situation can no longer be considered their project and they can no longer claim a leadership position in that area. I would simply stop calling them a leader rather than condemn them. I would focus on finding new leaders or becoming one myself rather wasting my energy trying to force people I know to have already failed to take leadership to "do their duty". But as I said above I am a pragmatist, I expect an idealist such as yourself and I will disagree quite a bit.--BirgitteSB 15:05, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::My impression is that it is a secret channel not open to everyone, but only open to privileged editors and admins. That admins can invited "privileged" editors of their choice to join, presumably their "pals" to support their view. The fact that such a secret channel exists and that blocking decisions and such are made on it, along with sexist remarks and "socializing" explains (to me, maybe wrongly) why one editor can feel "ganged up" on for no apparent reason, while others are favored and seem untouched, even by Arbitration decisions. An outsider can speculate that the reasons for such discrimination reside in decisions made on the channel, when no explanation is forthcoming in public. It may explain why some editors cannot get any help in the public venues, but rather are ridiculed in such forums as AN/I by Admins that give only flippant reasons for treating an editor in such a way. Mattisse 22:09, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
(outdent)While others discuss intention and good faith, I will return to the issue of disruption. There was an edit war on a single page involving a large number of editors, but it never went beyond that one page until the edit war was actually over. As well, that one page involved an off-wiki process over which Misplaced Pages itself has no direct control - that is, IRC. So what exactly got disrupted? Was it the impression in some people's minds that everything is hunky-dory on #admins? Did editing on the encyclopedia shut down as people watched in shocked horror? Of course not - in fact, the majority of editors and administrators were completely oblivious to the fact that some people were off in the corner having a debate about what that channel is for, what it is like, and how to control improper behaviour there. It was a lopsided debate, as those who have issues were on the talk pages, but those who felt things were a-okay were deleting changes without discussing on the talk page and simply using edit summaries if anything. On other pages, we might well have said the serial deleters were the disruptive ones.
As an aside to Brigitte - there are elements of a content dispute here as well. Some editors wanted to insert a different description of the channel than was there before. They discussed it on the talk page when their edits were being reverted. Their edits were being summarily removed without discussion, the page locked and edited over protection, and the editors proposing the change were generally being ignored on the talk page. If the issue were to be reviewed as you suggest in your post above, those who edited without discussion and protected the page were plenty disruptive all by themselves. Risker (talk) 16:10, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with both Duk and Risker. The disruption problem is a red herring. The root is the status of irc and what should/could be done about it. I stand by my previous comments that until that issue is decided as to what form the relationship of en.wikipeida to #wikipedia-en irc channels the rest of this is a form of polite disruption. --Rocksanddirt (talk) 19:16, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
Moved two threads
...to Misplaced Pages talk:Requests for arbitration/IRC/Tavern. Please continue the lounge discussion there. Door prizes! Durova 23:56, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Any comment I make on this page hastens my inevitable demise! El_C 04:50, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- Hang on. The starts of those threads should be kept here. It was only later that the "tavern banter" started. I've restored them below. Carcharoth (talk) 09:16, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
No, No, NO!
We have not come this far, and at such a price to read this Concerns about the behaviour in IRC have not changed one jot! Has Brad read half the evidence? The comments by Slim Virgin, Bishonen, anyone? People are just as concerned as they ever were. I can understand the Arbcom wanting a hurried sweep under the carpet, for accepting this ill advised case, but not an Arb saying that! Giano (talk) 21:55, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- When people say "people", I am always left asking, what people, and what people define which people are important in the eyes of the people and how informed are such people and have they considered what other people might say to those people in response. People who claim to speak for the people are people that people might wish to question. Eh? That's the intrinsic problem with demagoguery.--Doc 22:23, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
Rest of the thread at Misplaced Pages talk:Requests for arbitration/IRC/Tavern.
I don't think Giano is the only one (on either side) engaging in demagoguery. Carcharoth (talk) 09:16, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- Whilst elected arbs may have some claim to being the representative voice of the people, I think others (on all sides) should not presume.--Doc 11:18, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- "representative voice of the people"? Arbitrators are elected to arbitrate. If we (the en-Misplaced Pages community) want to elect people to be our representative voice, then we should do that. On many matters, the community is quite capable of speaking for itself, rather than having elected representatives speaking for them. Oh, and having read the demagoguery article, I think that this may be an inappropriate phrase to use. The phrase has implications of lying and bad-faith appeals to the public associated with it. Carcharoth (talk) 12:38, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- I didn't say arbs should claim to be representatives, merely that their claim was certainly better than any other self-appointed voice of the people, and so we should all avoid making that claim.--Doc 13:03, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- As Giano received more support than all of the current arbitrators save Brad, I'd say he has more of a claim to the "voice of the people" mantle than any of them except for Brad. You don't get over 300 supports without having touched on some issues that are close to the hearts of "the people", I would think. 71.54.57.168 (talk) 14:03, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- I didn't say arbs should claim to be representatives, merely that their claim was certainly better than any other self-appointed voice of the people, and so we should all avoid making that claim.--Doc 13:03, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- "representative voice of the people"? Arbitrators are elected to arbitrate. If we (the en-Misplaced Pages community) want to elect people to be our representative voice, then we should do that. On many matters, the community is quite capable of speaking for itself, rather than having elected representatives speaking for them. Oh, and having read the demagoguery article, I think that this may be an inappropriate phrase to use. The phrase has implications of lying and bad-faith appeals to the public associated with it. Carcharoth (talk) 12:38, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- The arbitrators were selected, not elected. People conveniently forget that. No remedies for the mess of IRC have been proposed, and this case, if it has a content of any sort, is about 1) IRC behavior having no dispute resolution, 2) An edit war at David Gerard's vanity page, 3) David Gerard's, and many other people's, concept that IRC is private, owned, and not for Misplaced Pages to say anything about, and yet for them to speak of on Misplaced Pages. People like to forget this, too. Saying that all is handled now is precisely the kind of cowardice that was involved the last time we were here. There is a lie going around that "this is all from 18 months ago, and everything is better now." That is, and I say this clearly and loudly and without equivocation, a lie. Misbehavior occurred in December and could not be resolved through any means. Whether the parties disliked each other before that is absolutely irrelevant: the problem is the inability to deal with a dispute. Those two parties were "famous," so all kinds of things happened. How often is an unfamous administrator getting called names or told to go away? We can't know. How many other cases are there, like Kelly's plotting for a "clean kill" of a user on that channel? We can't know. How many Betacommand blocks have happened that way (was that "18 months ago")? We can't know. How many block shoppings have happened there? Have there been none in 18 months? How about the edit war at David Gerard's vanity page: it seemed to happen in the blink of an eye, and yet, mysteriously, there was nothing on Misplaced Pages, at any noticeboard, about it. How, I wonder, did all of these voices of David's opinion (or bidding) suddenly appear? Is that from 18 months ago? Is it licit? We can't know.
- The People spoke in Giano's 300+ votes for ArbCom. If they were all, as I was told is received opinion at ArbCom, "protest votes," then ArbCom members, if they are sane, need to be extremely nervous that 300+ users are regular enough to have franchise at ArbCom elections and want to protest. What if they're not protest votes, though? What if received opinion is wrong? Is it possible? I am sure that the votes I got were also "protest votes," and Jimbo "selected" people three ranks below my vote total for ArbCom, and this was with Kelly and her friends doing all they could to kill votes.
- So, we see, here, an "inside view" from IRC and the two people "outside" are saying quite loudly and clearly that nothing has been remedied. If IRC does not get 1) portable (logs can be posted, if they're a propos), 2) regulated by a policy set that is visible to all before they go there (i.e. on Misplaced Pages), 3) a public forum for discussing allegations of abuse, nothing has been done.
- There is another shocking lie out there. If there were a public forum, I'm told, people might "gang up" on unpopular people. What I see, so far, is that there is no fear there, as Giano and Bishonen are getting the ganging up on. However, if that's the fear, then it's a fear of Misplaced Pages. Consensus is the whole of the law. If someone is not trusted by the community, then that person's remit as an administrator is gone, and that person's license to be on the admins.irc channel damn sure ought to be gone. Let them gang up. That ganging up tells you a lot. It's the stupidest thing I've heard in ages.
- Why, why, why, why, why are IRC junkies fighting like mad or drunk to preserve their hobby? If it's no big deal. If it's boring. If it's all better now. If nothing bad happens there. If all of these things, then what on earth could motivate anyone to fight so hard as to erode public confidence to protect it as it is? The people who hate sunshine laws are generally the corrupt. Geogre (talk) 14:34, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
I simply remind you that I, Tony Sidaway, and Mackensen were all among those "people" who supported Giano for arbcom. Read into that what you will.--Doc 16:48, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- I wasn't yelling at you, Doc. I was hoping that people would realize that the conclusion that "things are all better now" is mysterious in every possible way. The People, such as I know about them, don't know IRC exists until they either get on it or they find twelve people appearing in ten seconds to uphold one side of a dispute. The People who do know about IRC seem to think that it's great, if they use it, and that it's stupid, if they don't. This is not because the latter are ignorant, but they have voted with their modemed feet, as it were. These are precisely the People who need to be heard, because they have formed an opinion. This also means that the people who are using IRC are largely supporters of it by nature. (This includes Bishonen.)
- For the record, I enjoy passtimes and chatting about nothing, and IRC's good for chatting aimlessly. It's just poison for discussing Misplaced Pages, if the discussion isn't duplicated on Misplaced Pages and transparent.
- Anyway, since there is no "issue" without IRC here (unless an edit war is now enough to trigger 4 weeks of ArbCom), I don't know how things can be "settled." I'm not sure what had gotten "upset" to be settled.
- The Arbs are eroding confidence in them every time they accept a case without complaint, every time they let something drag on and on, and, most importantly, when they threaten that there is some private conversation they're having -- like the teacher and principle plotting discipline -- and everyone needs to behave. The more they do this, the more they say, "We can't talk to you: we're having a private conversation," the more they indulge a privately satisfying illusion of power and the more they irritate the hell out of the user base and create resentment.
- I've looked at this thing for weeks now, and I still can't tell what the basis of arbitration is. "Settled" may be a codeword for "stale" or "tiresome," but it's not a case of the problems being solved in any sense. Saying, "We'll get to it someday" is the worst possible answer.
- It's not clear that ArbCom will do it; confidence would improve if such a process started before announcing that all was well, here,
- I don't understand why the community isn't being involved in developing guidelines for IRC usage. That was the only source of my editing David Gerard's page. He just put it there and then announced that it was holy text.
- The actual usefulness of the admins.irc channel has yet to be proven: it wasn't proven when the thing was proposed, and no one has offered anything but hypotheticals since.
- Anyway, the People seem pretty restless, and attempts at absolutism tend to end poorly. Geogre (talk) 21:23, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
People
I think it is clear that the ordinary editor is not able to become "informed" as these "people" merely experience the consequences of the "people" (I guess) you are talking about, Doc. Maybe the levels of "people", since an impenetrable hierarchy appears to exist, needs to become explicit. Having mucked around at the lower levels for nearly two years now, in the dark most of the time, I find the pretense of the "Misplaced Pages" ideals offensive, at this point. I would prefer less pretense and a clearer explanation of what actually goes on here. Because I like to write I have stayed and kept trying but it has been a very ugly experience. It is very hard to try to write and edit articles well in the atmosphere that exists here where most of us are left hanging out to dry without support, while Admin and ArbCon energy goes into the favored few. Mattisse 22:53, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm afraid your comments are too enigmatic for me. What do you mean? And what is the evidence? Sometimes if you can manage in the dark, it is better to stay there. I'm trying to be a content editor now and stuff most of the rest, but vague generalisations and assuming far too much from one or two experiences is precisely the problem here.--Doc 23:00, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
::I am too far down on the totem pole for you to relate to my experiences. I realize I am out of my league even commenting here. As far as vague generalizations, I am sure you do not want to hear the specifics -- especially in the cozy bar room atmosphere of drinking provided above. Mattisse 23:11, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
Rest of the thread at Misplaced Pages talk:Requests for arbitration/IRC/Tavern.
For the record, I agree with Matisse's observation that there are cliquish elements to the behaviour of long-term established users that can make it difficult for editors who lack confidence, or who are not bold, or who are not persistent, to get their foot in the door and become similarly established. This is a difficult social problem to overcome, but one way is to always be friendly to new editors (and Matisse is far from being a new editor), or those starting to get more involved in pages like this. No-one has been overtly exclusionary, but it is the general atmosphere and (ironically) friendliness that can sometimes be disconcerting to those who are less comfortable with that kind of banter. Carcharoth (talk) 09:16, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- In a large community cliques are inevitable. And since sub-areas of the community (and that goes for the FA process, DYK, DRV, and some wikiprojects as much as for "administration") will inevitably have smaller cores of committed regulars, friendships, group trust and mutual support are also inevitable and probably even desirable. The alternative is faceless bureaucracy. This will always leave some people feeling like outsiders - that's regrettable but also a fact of life. Sure, we need to encourage an inclusive attitude in all departments, but there's no possible way we can regulate it or "overcome" the problem - we just need to continually be alert to it and learn to negotiate it.--Doc 11:25, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- And sometimes a faceless bureacracy is more responsive and easier to ask for something to be done. Go figure. Carcharoth (talk) 12:27, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- People will seldom volunteer to work for faceless bureaucracies. Anyway, whatever your ideal, this is simply not something we could create at wikipedia. Not possible, short of removing personality chips from all wikipedians, and banning friendship.--Doc 13:01, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- Support: I don't like e-personalities. Geogre (talk) 14:39, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- People will seldom volunteer to work for faceless bureaucracies. Anyway, whatever your ideal, this is simply not something we could create at wikipedia. Not possible, short of removing personality chips from all wikipedians, and banning friendship.--Doc 13:01, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- And sometimes a faceless bureacracy is more responsive and easier to ask for something to be done. Go figure. Carcharoth (talk) 12:27, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
For the record - another edit war (the case in microcosm)
In case anyone missed it, two of the parties to this case (Doc glasgow and Geogre) were involved in a recent edit war over at the MfD for WP:WEA. Firstly, Doc and Geogre (and others), do try and talk on the talk page for that page about what should be done there, rather than sniping at each other in edit summaries while reverting each other. Secondly, before anyone reacts with shock and horror and rushes to put remedies on this arbitration case, or to change their votes, ask yourself what harm was done. Then ask yourself what harm was done in the edit war at WP:WEA. Then ask yourself what the real underlying issues are. Then try and solve them, or admit that arbcom can't solve the underlying issues. Carcharoth (talk) 03:05, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Not quite. I am not a party, last I looked. And all I did was remove an unfortunate remark of Geogre's where he referred to another user as a "newbie quisling" "arrogant" and "parasite". Geogre and I did not edit war, since he has not tried to reinstate it. A couple of IPs did, probably not understanding what quisling is, and why it is so very offensive. The remarks were simply a over-the-top example of the aggressive and overstated polemical rhetoric that we've seen so often. I removed the attack and, very cautiously, asked Geogre to tone it down . I've tried to walk the de-escalation walk here.--Doc 03:31, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Hang on, Doc. Those aren't all insults or applied to the particular childe. "Arrogant" was of his lecture to me to stop worrying about important things like WEA and go back to work writing articles (and tugging my forelock), and I characterized his argument by saying that we who work on articles are all parasites on Rambot's work (i.e. to him, Rambot is a prized author, and the rest of us are simply poor analogs). As for his being a newbie quisling, I pretty much stand by that as a good, old fashioned insult for someone who shows up recently and does whatever he thinks is going to ingratiate him to the voices of "power." It's strong, and it's mean, and it's an answer to something that was arrogant, dismissive, and insulting to every single Wikipedian with either experience or an alternate point of view. Geogre (talk) 12:52, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Misplaced Pages:Requests for arbitration/IRC#Involved parties. As far as I'm aware, unless the arbitrators specifically pass a finding of fact about who the real parties are to a case (and they should do that more often, though maybe only at the end of a case), then the parties are as listed there. Personally, I think you were involved enough in the 23 December edit war to be involved as a party here. The IP editing was, shall we say, interesting. I did say above that you two should have been using the talk page to discuss things, rather than edit summaries, but I missed the rather sensible thread on Geogre's talk page - which makes my point that as long as people start talking afterwards, a little edit war doesn't matter too much. It is when people stop talking, and continue to edit war, that things are going wrong. Carcharoth (talk) 03:47, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- I repeat, I have only once reverted Geogre, and he has at no time reverted me. In the current climate, I would certainly not have done so, since I would suspect it would have been incredibly harmful. Had Geogre replaced the comments, I would not have reverted him. I, for one, and committed to a policy of de-escalation. To describe this as an edit war between us is silly. And whatever the title says, I have never considered myself a party --Doc 03:55, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- (ec) For the record, the above references to "edit warring" are my personal opinion. It is possible that there was technically no edit warring. Doc has said he objects to me calling it edit warring, and I'm happy to rephrase it as something like "reverting". There has definitely been reverting going on. The use of edit summaries by the IP addresses leaves me cold - do you really think that the rapid response and use of edit summaries like that means anything other than a logged-out user gaming 3RR? Carcharoth (talk) 04:03, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Just a quick comment here. Following an e-mail communication, it seems that the IP editing was probably others (without accounts) following the case. I apologise to both Geogre and Doc and any others with accounts for implying otherwise. Carcharoth (talk) 12:14, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- (ec) For the record, the above references to "edit warring" are my personal opinion. It is possible that there was technically no edit warring. Doc has said he objects to me calling it edit warring, and I'm happy to rephrase it as something like "reverting". There has definitely been reverting going on. The use of edit summaries by the IP addresses leaves me cold - do you really think that the rapid response and use of edit summaries like that means anything other than a logged-out user gaming 3RR? Carcharoth (talk) 04:03, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
For the record - it's a sure sign this case has gone on too long when even the most even-tempered editors, admins and arbitrators start getting a bit punchy. Arbitrators - the ball is in your court to put this baby to bed. Tell us who you think the parties are, finish up your voting, establish a deadline by which you will address the IRC question, and then close this case. No temporary injunctions or other vaguely worded remedies and findings of fact - just bite the bullet and put an end to this. Please. The burr has been under everyone's saddle for quite long enough (with apologies to those who detest mixed metaphors). Risker (talk) 04:50, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Unfortunately, I don't think that will solve anything much. Unless the users concerned change their ways, it will simply delay the inevitable. I'd love to be wrong, though.--Doc 05:03, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- And unless the culture changes, then banning certain editors will just result in other editors replacing them, or eventually developing the same behaviour. Nature abhors a vacuum. See my quote of Birgitte's comment. Carcharoth (talk) 05:09, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- For myself, I'll say that Doc went to my talk page, and I answered there. An edit war broke out because everyone has this unbelievably weird Wiki-time. I went off to do Saturday charges, and, when I came back, I saw Doc's note and answered. I told him that I had a "personal attack" (I'd say "insult") from Aza Toth, so I replied with an insult. If 1 Then 2. Now, mine was maybe more angering, but it's still tat and tit cheek by jowl. Removing both would have been ok with me, but removing one would not. Aza Toth needs to be cautioned about personal attacks, and one way to caution him is to demonstrate where that road leads. Since I don't believe in Victorian parlor rules, that was my view at the time (to say, essentially, 'Oh, you want to insult me? Ok. I know how to do that. Feel better?'). One should be free to engage in the darker side of community, but only when there is a strong need -- not to sneer during the exercise of community consensus building in an Xfd deliberation. Geogre (talk) 12:47, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Tit for tat is nowhere mentioned in WP:NPA. If you find our community norms to be "Victorian parlor rules," perhaps some reflection is called for. One underlying source of this case is the lack of restraint shown by various editors, so it's surprising to see named parties not only continue such behavior but defend it. — Carl (CBM · talk) 13:10, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- More lectures? How nice. Have you actually read NPA lately? Please do. Please show it as somehow "removal of," and then do distinguish between what I said and what you wish I said. I missed the warning you added to Aza Toth's user talk page about personal attacks, perhaps just as you missed what I said. Good luck, and HTH HAND. Geogre (talk) 13:15, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- I can look above to see exactly what you said: "Now, mine was maybe more angering, but it's still tat and tit cheek by jowl." Consider that ordinarily "tit for tat" is not used with a positive connotation. Using the term Victorian to refer to the very mild standards we have for decency here is simply hyperbole. If you felt AzaToth's comments were a personal attack, I am certain you know more productive means to address them than to respond in kind. — Carl (CBM · talk) 13:35, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- No, indeed. You see, unlike many here expressing their shock, I believe in the "mob." I believe in Misplaced Pages. I believe that all of us together, in the jostle, can create. I also believe that there is a place for disagreeable language, and I think that trying to suppress that is what is shocking. At best, it's foolish. At most, it's destructive. I felt that it was a personal attack, indeed, and I think that it's worth demonstrating to someone cloaking with sarcasm that such behavior leads to more. I'm not generally one to pursue people. I am rarely in the mood for a harangue. My question is this: if people like yourself are believers that insulting language demands removal, of all things, or a warning, then where were you when Aza Toth offered his insult? Be consistent. If insults are bad, then they're bad. If they're not, they're not. I tend to think they're sometimes appropriate, sometimes not. I also know quite well that "NPA" says that personal attacks are bad. That's all. It doesn't say that they'll be removed. It doesn't say that the first travelling Bowdler will expunge them for family reading. It doesn't say that there are warnings, blocks, or anything else necessitated by them. I agree with NPA. Insults are bad, which is why, when I was insulted, I responded with an insult. Geogre (talk) 20:18, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- More lectures? How nice. Have you actually read NPA lately? Please do. Please show it as somehow "removal of," and then do distinguish between what I said and what you wish I said. I missed the warning you added to Aza Toth's user talk page about personal attacks, perhaps just as you missed what I said. Good luck, and HTH HAND. Geogre (talk) 13:15, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Tit for tat is nowhere mentioned in WP:NPA. If you find our community norms to be "Victorian parlor rules," perhaps some reflection is called for. One underlying source of this case is the lack of restraint shown by various editors, so it's surprising to see named parties not only continue such behavior but defend it. — Carl (CBM · talk) 13:10, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
I am quite disgusted by this. Truly shocking. And anyone who fails to understand why should read Quisling and consider why one of our most respected writers believes that applying that label to a fellow wikipedian is acceptable, and needs no apology or regret. Why he thinks that is helpful thing to do, when arbcom are asking everyone to calm down and see constructive ways forward. Does he want resolution of this dispute, or does he enjoy inflaming it wherever possible. I was trying hard to find ways to resolve disputes - but it takes too sides to tango, and until people like Geogre can learn from the recent humility of Tony Sidaway and work out where their reverse gear is, there is little point. Utterly dreadful. To think this began because of righteous indignation at a "bitch" remark in iRC! The stench of hypocrisy is startling.--Doc 14:46, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- If you want hypocrisy, Doc, simply look at this reaction to a properly chosen insult and compare it to Tony's telling someone to quit the channel and then being allowed to say that he was the victim. I stand by, incidentally, my characterization of the public persona of that user at that time. He was a new user who was saying whatever seemed most pleasing to whomever he saw as being the side of "power." In my view, that was, indeed, quisling behavior. Is it quite strong? Yes. So are my feelings about those who want to speak for factions so as to give themselves height. There is little as annoying as someone showing up fresh off the boat and telling you that the People Who Count Think X. It's either quisling or the utmost in anti-democratic sentiment coupled with a profound disrespect for others. My term is actually the less inflammatory. Geogre (talk) 20:18, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- If you want to shout and scream at people Doc, do so at the Arbcom. It is a great pity no one saw the origins of this case as "righteous indignation at a "bitch" remark" at the time. Instead, the Arbcom, with wanton stupidity, suddenly seeing an opportunity for spiteful revenge, opened a whole nasty can of worms, and now they want to put the lid back on it while saving their own faces. Even if that means losing some of the projects best writing-editors. I don't think the Arbcom are going to be able to put the lid back on. They have lost huge respect. So, I'm afraid its going to take a lot more than the "humility" of Tony Sidaway to restore that respect and make many of us shut up. We want IRC addressed and addressed now - nothing more - nothing less! Giano (talk) 15:14, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Giano, if you really think that the only problem in this case is IRC and that you and all who agree with you have been paragons of virtue, that is self-deception of the highest order. Sam Korn 15:23, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm afraid the Arbcom have and continue to refuse to face the true problem. It is easier to shout and try to silence those who point out the problem than face up that problem. It seems now that only the Arbcom are failing to realise this. They should resign in shame. Giano (talk) 15:29, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- So your contention is that you are blameless? Sam Korn 15:44, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- I am guilty of showing Misplaced Pages exactlty what sort of Arbcom it has. Giano (talk) 15:47, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- So your contention is that you are blameless? Sam Korn 15:44, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm afraid the Arbcom have and continue to refuse to face the true problem. It is easier to shout and try to silence those who point out the problem than face up that problem. It seems now that only the Arbcom are failing to realise this. They should resign in shame. Giano (talk) 15:29, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- Giano, if you really think that the only problem in this case is IRC and that you and all who agree with you have been paragons of virtue, that is self-deception of the highest order. Sam Korn 15:23, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
I've removed everything apart from Azatoth original !vote. Gentlemen, is this really important enough to fall out about? --Joopercoopers (talk) 15:25, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- That's fine with me, Joopercoopers, although I should think that my first response was a response to the insult in the !vote. I.e. the "vote" was an insult to every one of us who edit Misplaced Pages. The Greeks used to say that a person who insulted a person was simply an irritant, while someone who insulted the Greek people was a criminal. In a sense, his statement that all of us who edit Misplaced Pages are the distasteful "mob" is far worse than any blue tongued tirade anyone could have come up with. Geogre (talk) 20:18, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
Continued evidence of problematic behaviour at #admins
The Arbitration Committee should be aware that there is evidence of continued problematic behaviour at #admins. In this particular case, it directly relates to arbitration enforcement, which I understand is under the purview of this committee. I don't want to mix up any more metaphors today (the one that comes to mind involves Rome and fiddles), but really...isn't this kind of thing exactly what this particular case was supposed to address? Risker (talk) 20:06, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- The problem, in addition, is that we simply don't know about abuses. Because the medium is corrupt (the medium is) (see my old essay for my usage here), we just don't know how many non-famous Wikipedians are being told to "go elsewhere" with their concerns. We don't know how many non-administrators are telling administrators that they should shut up. We don't know how many fresh grudges are going to erupt at Misplaced Pages, because no one is allowed to refer to what happened on IRC, much less prove it with a log. Saying that there always already had been a procedure (that no one knew) for sending logs to ArbCom is silly. You send it, and then 6-12 weeks later perhaps someone will tell you that "things are all better now." No. Nothing has been settled. Saying that "it will be, RSN" is to put us right back where we were when this started. Thatcher had an idea for a noticeboard. That would actually work. Apparently, he was quickly told (where, no one knows but him) that it was a bad idea because everything's already all better and some people might be exposed to the "ganging up" on (that darned "mob" again). I.e. no actual reasoning against, and meanwhile "all is well." As your link shows, it is not. If the arbitrators here are enjoying the case, they can put off solutions, because they'll have a replay soon enough. If this case is disgusting to them, then they'd best get on the stick. Geogre (talk) 20:26, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- D'you know Geogre, I am coming to the conclusion that the Arbs are thinking if they sit back idle, twiddling their thumbs, for long enough, you and I will break IRC's stranglehold on wikipedia for them, we become covered in shit, they take the glory and the the IRC problem is solved for all Giano (talk) 21:19, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
And a further case today as well - this time affecting the Main Page. My goodness, you'd think when IRC #admins was being scrutinized by the community, people would grow up a bit. Risker (talk) 21:55, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- IMHO: It's entirely likely that the things in these examples would have happened anyway - regardless of where the communication took place.. --Versageek 22:03, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- No, quite all right just the usual high spirited games in IRC, we can hardly expect them to be on Misplaced Pages writing pages can we? Giano (talk) 22:07, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- None of those other methods of communication have a page on Misplaced Pages extolling their virtues or encouraging all administrators to participate in it. And none have pages that state quite baldly that Arbcom is part of the process for resolving concerns about inappropriate behaviour. Risker (talk) 22:09, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- I think most people have drawn their own conclusion by now. let's face most of the Arbs spend ages chatting their too. Giano (talk) 22:12, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- I am afraid you are correct, Giano. Indeed, the individuals involved in the deletion of the main page seemed to be nearly bragging about it on AN/I. Strikes me that when someone deleted the main page in the past, a steward was found, and the admin involved was emergency de-sysopped. The fact that there are two separate incidents of this nature in just a few hours, and those are just the incidents that have managed to be reported on AN/I, suggests that this kind of behaviour - which would be bad admin behaviour no matter where it took place - is de rigeur on #admins.
I'm going to expand on my comment here, as the situation has changed somewhat and I see that an arbitrator is actively discussing the first example on ANI. That is, indeed, what I hope to see - if nobody in the channel itself questions behaviours when they are occurring there, that such behaviour be openly discussed and critiqued on-wiki. The concept of #-admins makes sense; however, the culture of it remains very concerning. We hear about some childishness on #en-wikipedia, but it seldom bleeds into the encyclopedia in any meaningful way. We hear next to nothing about the other channels. I have friends who use #wikipedia-it and #wikipedia-de, and they don't seem to have these issues either. So IRC as a communication mode isn't the problem, in and of itself. What does seem to be the problem is the apparently ineffective means of correcting inappropriate behaviour in this particular channel, and the apparent inability to dissuade administrators from acting impulsively, improperly, or abusively based on discussions in the channel. It's supposed to be the sanity check, for pity's sake. Risker (talk) 23:31, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that the recent incidents that allegedly involved IRC discussions are worrying. I'll repeat what I've said elsewhere - it is very easy to go to IRC and complain about something that has happened on Misplaced Pages (there is lots of evidence to point to). It is far less easy to come to Misplaced Pages and complain about something that has happened in IRC (much less evidence to point to, or less evidence that can be provided in the open). Carcharoth (talk) 12:13, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- The same is true of telephone conversations, text messages, emails, and IM conversations. — Carl (CBM · talk) 14:41, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Of course. And your point is? Carcharoth (talk) 16:21, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- The same is true of telephone conversations, text messages, emails, and IM conversations. — Carl (CBM · talk) 14:41, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that the recent incidents that allegedly involved IRC discussions are worrying. I'll repeat what I've said elsewhere - it is very easy to go to IRC and complain about something that has happened on Misplaced Pages (there is lots of evidence to point to). It is far less easy to come to Misplaced Pages and complain about something that has happened in IRC (much less evidence to point to, or less evidence that can be provided in the open). Carcharoth (talk) 12:13, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Carl's argument is familiar. "Someone could send a nasty letter in the mail, so we shouldn't do anything about this" is surprisingly frequently offered up as a rationale. I don't blame him for saying it now... it's said quite a bit. However, the telephone or e-mail or telegraph or semaphore nastygram wouldn't be called Misplaced Pages and it most especially would not be "officially" unofficially the home of administrators. For everyone who thinks that, for example, an administrator must be so sober as to never call a trollish user a troll, because that's vulgar, there should be three who realize that en.admins.irc should be so carefully worded and sober as to be utterly silent. We don't need our name, and a lie (that it's for administrators), on it. Geogre (talk) 21:39, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- The way to improve WEA is to have a larger number of admins on it, not fewer. My understanding is that there was an IRC channel before WEA was formed, with an opaque name. Are you arguing that would be preferable to the current situation? I can't see how it would be. — Carl (CBM · talk) 21:51, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- If that's your goal, it's easily done. 1) When a person gets promoted to admin, he or she gets a "hostmask" or whatever it is. 2) When someone is demoted, they lose access. There! All better, and yet, mysteriously, there is resistance to that. Weird, isn't it? The prior name was "myfriendsandme" or something like that. It was just a few people, many of whom are no longer administrators because of what they did and the way they viewed other users, and it cut no bait. No one was going to join them. No one was going to rush to be a part of their circle of SuperFriends. The move to "admins" was an effort to make some people Yertle the Turtle and king of the mountain, it seemed to me. The point is that there never was a reason offered for its existence that convinced people. How private is it, if it's all the admins (and some non-admins)? How super entrusted is it, if it's that group? How wise is it, if most admins don't take part? How deliberative is it, if you catch only the same 8 names constantly chatting? How judicious is it, if the moment someone disagrees she's called an "arsehole" and told to go elsewhere? What the hell good is it? What is its advantage over using Misplaced Pages? Shouldn't we answer that question before we have it and allow all these abuses? Shouldn't we have mechanisms for dealing with potential abuse in place first? Saying, "Well, Kelly and James were going to talk to each other anyway" is back to the same old argument: they might have, but they couldn't call themselves the center of the administrative community. Geogre (talk) 22:03, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- The arguments for the IRC channel have been put forward before, by WP:WEA at least. It is already true that anyone who becomes an admin gets access to the channel upon request.
- The idea that we should decide on the benefits of IRC before using it is odd, since people were already using IRC before the channel was created and would continue to do so if the channel was deleted. My impression is that you are taking a few of the worst incidents and trying to tar the entire medium. But we could say the same for WP:ANI or WP:AN, or any other forum for administrator interactions.
- In any case, the arbitrators seem to have decided to address IRC in a different setting than this case. — Carl (CBM · talk) 22:17, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I am afraid you are correct, Giano. Indeed, the individuals involved in the deletion of the main page seemed to be nearly bragging about it on AN/I. Strikes me that when someone deleted the main page in the past, a steward was found, and the admin involved was emergency de-sysopped. The fact that there are two separate incidents of this nature in just a few hours, and those are just the incidents that have managed to be reported on AN/I, suggests that this kind of behaviour - which would be bad admin behaviour no matter where it took place - is de rigeur on #admins.
- I think most people have drawn their own conclusion by now. let's face most of the Arbs spend ages chatting their too. Giano (talk) 22:12, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
Threats/jokes about lynching, ad hominems, etc, on IRC
- [This log quote by Leifern is redacted.
- It was a snip from an IRC log, showing an admin who took some communal flak for dealing with a request by ChrisO (another admin), engaging in gallows humor related to suitable lynchings as punishment, asking others what material would be suitable for it, and stating that ChrisO could have been more forthcoming on certain information which would have helped. A user who is not an admin was briefly also called a "fool" in passing once. The log is short.
- There is no overriding need to post such logs here nor communal sense that we perpetuate off-wiki discussions this way, a summary is sufficient if it must be discussed. The original material is in page history if needed . Post continues as below. FT2 02:53, 5 February 2008 (UTC)]
This appears to be related to an arbitration enforcement that ChrisO asked Kylu to perform for him. ChrisO was then reported for gaming the AE.
I'm not sure what "lynching" is supposed to mean here, or what it means to use a piano wire; but I think this crosses the line of admin decorum and general decency. I don't know where this fits into this arbcom case, but I think this is highly inappropriate --Leifern (talk) 13:22, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- It is part of the culture on IRC to joke around like that. Part of the reason people do it is because it is meant to be a transient medium, like verbal conversations, and there are various written and unwritten rules that logs are not posted. People feel they can relax and say things they wouldn't say on-wiki. Generally, people making off-colour jokes and poor taste comparisons do not think that in IRC these are being recorded for posterity. It is all part of the problem that people often only use IRC, or a channel reaches critical mass, because of this kind of social interaction and joshing. If that atmosphere goes, there will be less people participating in the channel. That could be good and it could be bad. The point is that it needs to be decided whether, given this culture that is an integral part of it, IRC is suitable for Misplaced Pages discussions? Carcharoth (talk) 13:38, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Those admins who have adopted a culture of disparaging editors and discussing them in such terms should be desysoped for good, as they clearly do not have the necessary respect or judgment to exercise their judgment with civility and fairness. --Leifern (talk) 14:01, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm curious if Leifern actually read the first line of the log he posted where it quite clearly states that it was directed towards ChrisO. Afterwards he apologized for dragging me into the quagmire that is Leifern's obstreperous tendency to involve himself in every passing dispute. In an environment that regards "slapping with a trout" as little more than a greeting and contains BOFH humor in great quantity, the one who is involved in passing along channel logs to this user without bothering to explain the actual implications has done all involved a disservice.
- As far as your "being a fool", considering he's now gone out of his way to take simple venting off-wiki, apply on-wiki standards to it, and accuse me of administrative misconduct all in one breath for the sole purpose of involving more people in an already complicated arbitration case, I'm afraid I'm not retracting that one. For that matter, I'm terribly interested to know what admin has twice now brought Leifern's IRC logs from what is a purposefully restricted channel. It appears to me that this action was done simply to further the drama here.
- I'd already mentioned that I'd prefer Leifern just left me alone and left me out of hisr squabbles, yet he seems to be incapable of discontinuing disputes on his own. I'd rather ask that an arbitrator find a decision of enforced noncommunication with/about eachother. ~Kylu (u|t) 14:13, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Kylu wants the right to insult me to my office and deprecate me on a public admin channel, but she wants me to not communicate with her? Also, I am only aware of this IRC channel - what is the other one? What is the basis for her assertion that I want to involve myself in "every passing dispute?" There is none. Also, since there is an arbcom case involving the use of IRC, it is clearly not considered "off-wiki" by the Arbcom, and since it is limited for use by admins, it is clearly related to it. --Leifern (talk) 14:22, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- It appears to me that you have a conflict of interest in the particular situation being described. — Carl (CBM · talk) 14:39, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Why? Does anything justify this kind of incivility? --Leifern (talk) 15:26, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- First of all, you should not have posted logs without the permission of those who appear in them. Even in the most egregious circumstances -- which this is not -- you should at least attempt to obtain permission unless there is some desperate urgency. There wasn't and this was wrong.
- Secondly, I do not read in the above log outrageous incivility. It is quite plainly meant humourously. It is pointed, yes, but it is not ipso facto incivil to express annoyance in an informal setting. Sam Korn 15:33, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I did not hack into anyone's private AIM, YIM, email, or other private conversations, and there is no reason why I should ask for their permission to publish incriminating evidence of their incivility. Expressing annoyance is one thing, talking about stringing someone up with piano wire is another. This distinction should be pretty self-evident. --Leifern (talk) 15:49, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- The conversation above is not incivil. It is expressing annoyance in a pointed manner -- do you really think anyone was considering actually stringing someone up with piano-wire? The whole idea is laughable, which is, of course, the whole point. Someone was annoyed and they were expressing that point with humour. Sam Korn 16:20, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I did not hack into anyone's private AIM, YIM, email, or other private conversations, and there is no reason why I should ask for their permission to publish incriminating evidence of their incivility. Expressing annoyance is one thing, talking about stringing someone up with piano wire is another. This distinction should be pretty self-evident. --Leifern (talk) 15:49, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Why? Does anything justify this kind of incivility? --Leifern (talk) 15:26, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- It appears to me that you have a conflict of interest in the particular situation being described. — Carl (CBM · talk) 14:39, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Kylu wants the right to insult me to my office and deprecate me on a public admin channel, but she wants me to not communicate with her? Also, I am only aware of this IRC channel - what is the other one? What is the basis for her assertion that I want to involve myself in "every passing dispute?" There is none. Also, since there is an arbcom case involving the use of IRC, it is clearly not considered "off-wiki" by the Arbcom, and since it is limited for use by admins, it is clearly related to it. --Leifern (talk) 14:22, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Want to see something interesting? I think Kylu was venting anger harmlessly because hyperbolically. There was no "block this person for me" nor "everyone agree that X should be blocked" nor "I can't believe the idiots who are voting for X's RFA" nor "Help, I'm being attacked personally by the incivil UserX!" These things are the abuses: they coordinate actions without providing reasoning and they seek to put forward non-Misplaced Pages chatter for things that demand on-Misplaced Pages justifications. Kylu should not have been so graphic, and the rest were showing the childishness that IRC fosters, but it's not anything like the Betacommand, Chairboy, Kelly Martin, or Tony Sidaway abuses.
- This said, it is nevertheless an illustration of how bad feelings and bad actions are born on IRC and then disrupt the Misplaced Pages editing environment. The fact that the editor thinks he's being conspired against, and the fact that there is no oversight, and the fact that there is no dispute resolution process, and the fact that there is no regular process that he can follow if he thinks he's getting shafted, proves that this "It's all better now, so we don't need to do anything about IRC" is a flat out lie. It's proof that the, "Bishonen had a grudge, and that's what caused all of this -- nothing to do with IRC" is a lie. It's proof that en.admins.irc is a bad idea poorly executed. en.wikipedia.irc is chatty and ignorable -- open to all -- but there has never yet been a good reason for the existence of a semi-administrative channel, even as the reasons for jettisoning it mount. Geogre (talk) 21:35, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I actually don't think the IRC channel should be jettisoned, but I think that admins should be admonished that childish, brutish, and offensive talk can (and will) be made public, and they should never write anything that embarrasses them. I'm familiar with rants and not above having them myself. But I do my best to avoid to say or write anything that somebody could reasonably take offense to. I also think that over-the-top offensive rants on an official or semi-official Misplaced Pages channel, and particularly among admins who are supposed to be exemplars of good behavior, should be met with sanctions.
- I will also say that I had to confer with WP editors offline to be dissuaded from making an even bigger stink about this, as I actually - albeit briefly - felt threatened. Lynching and piano wire hangings carry a particularly sensitive connotation in the topics I often edit, and it wasn't lost on me that the admins were encouraged to review my archive. My answer to bad behavior is generally not to cut off the medium in which it occurs, but to go after the behavior itself. In my opinion, this kind of behavior speaks of exceedingly bad judgment that is incompatible with the responsibility of an admin. So if it were up to me - which it isn't - I would summarily desysop these admins, and for good. --Leifern (talk) 22:48, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- In view of the dire jeremiads being posted on-wiki, I suggest that a bit of levity, even gallows humor, is understandable. In passing your judgement on the above admins, I expect you realise that you're inviting comparison to your own judgement in posting this obviously harmless, but out-of-context, material here. There might perhaps be queries about the state of your Spider-Man costume. --Tony Sidaway 22:58, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Well, the spider-man thing is funny. I'm all for levity and can certainly appreciate gallows humor; and I noticed that Kylu has apologized to ChrisO, so they can get back to bashing me at the earlies possible opportunity (JUST KIDDING - these guys would NEVER dream of making rude, condescending remarks to me). But ok, I'm willing to accept the premise that the people who engaged in this dialogue are not knaves, but rather fools - the best they can do is crack jokes that a moderately sophisticated 13-year old would ask them to cut out. --Leifern (talk) 23:44, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Admins are only human - considering the amount of crap we have to deal with it's only natural to feel the need to blow off steam occasionally. Dealing with "difficult" users like Leifern is enough to raise anyone's blood pressure. As for how Leifern got access to log files from a private IRC channel, I don't think we have to look too far, considering that FeloniousMonk (talk · contribs) intervened on Leifern's behalf yesterday and quoted (selectively and misleadingly) from the very same IRC channel. The two of them really haven't done themselves any favours in this episode. -- ChrisO (talk) 23:49, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- ChrisO, apparently they were more keen to string you up than me, so I guess the need to blow off steam - as you put it - goes for you, too. And if you're going to make accusations, back them up, or shut up. --Leifern (talk) 00:08, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- OK, I think we all get the picture now. It is about IRC, but not technically to do with this case. Could you continue the discussion about this particular IRC incident somewhere else? Thanks. Carcharoth (talk) 00:50, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- Tell it to ChrisO, who's got a lot of nerve accusing me of sharing IRC logs without a shred of evidence less than 24 hrs after he showed up at my page complaining about "baseless allegations." This is his idea of getting in a few cheap shots to settle a score. FeloniousMonk (talk) 05:46, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- ChrisO, perhaps dealing with "difficult" users like you is enough to raise Leifern's blood pressure. You gamed the WP:AE board; stop trying to make this about your victim, or the whistleblower, or anyone else who happens to notice this and comment. Jayjg 12:53, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- ChrisO, apparently they were more keen to string you up than me, so I guess the need to blow off steam - as you put it - goes for you, too. And if you're going to make accusations, back them up, or shut up. --Leifern (talk) 00:08, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- In view of the dire jeremiads being posted on-wiki, I suggest that a bit of levity, even gallows humor, is understandable. In passing your judgement on the above admins, I expect you realise that you're inviting comparison to your own judgement in posting this obviously harmless, but out-of-context, material here. There might perhaps be queries about the state of your Spider-Man costume. --Tony Sidaway 22:58, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
I'm confused
I've missed something (I'm not following closely). If 7 votes is a majority why are FoF 6 and principles 9 and 12.1 passing? Where are FoF 1 and principle 16? DrKiernan (talk) 14:49, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- FofF 6 and principles 9 and 12.1 all have 7 or more votes and thus are passing. There are several "missing" principles, FoFs and remedies because one of the arbitrators elected to remove them earlier. Incidentally, for the attention of the clerk, I note that it is actually Principle 15 that is passing, not Principle 16; the latter has been deleted. Risker (talk) 14:59, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I've left a message on the Arbcom Clerk noticeboard about the misnumbering; given how active this page has been, it would have been very easy to make an error. I am sure someone will be along shortly to fix it up. Risker (talk) 15:12, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Risker is correct. I want to add that oppose votes do not reduce the number of support votes. Hope that helps. FloNight♥♥♥ 15:06, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, it does. Thanks to you both. DrKiernan (talk) 15:13, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
Motion - disable "e-mail this user"
I would like to move that the arbitration committee instruct the developers to remove the "e-mail this user" function from the software. This is a wiki and all communications should be transparently on-wiki. No? This function, existing within the official software, simply encourages the impression that e-mails are a good method of communication. If people want to send e-mails, fine; but the official software should not encourage it, nor suggest official sanction.
I can point to numerous abuses of this method of communication. I will not breach confidentiality, but only in the last few days:
- I have personally received abuse via the official e-mail function.
- One respected user/admin sent another respected user/admin an email simply saying "jerk".
- I have received e-mail from one party to this case attacking the motives of members of the arbitration committee, and making serious allegations
- I have received "leaks" from members of the arbitration committee.
Now, had any of these incidents taken place on-wiki, they could subject to community sanction, but since they took place through the officially sanctioned e-mail function, they cannot be. E-mail this user is anti-wiki, encourages unsupervised and unaccountable conspiring against respected users behind their back, and is open to abuse: it should be disabled.--Doc 15:46, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Gosh! Number 4 sounds interesting - going to share? Giano (talk) 16:06, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- And your response to the rest?--Doc 16:08, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I disagree. Email this user is obviously useful for users who've been blocked to request unblocking. It would be far more sensible to have sending emails enabled only for blocked users. In addition, the mailing lists, which since the foundation of Misplaced Pages have been the meta-discussion area, should be abolished on the grounds that not all users are capable of using email and therefore would not be able to defend themselves against malicious attacks. Sam Korn 16:09, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- While I don't think it should be disabled, the abuses of the feature identified by Doc are very troubling. Leaks? WTF. childish abuse I expect, but not leaks from those trying to work out solutions to our most serious problems. --Rocksanddirt (talk) 16:15, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- If we all lived in little rooms that could only connect to Misplaced Pages then this might accomplish something. But Misplaced Pages lives on the internet and it is foolish to attempt to limit communications between users. The advantage of the wiki-email feature is that people can contact you without revealing your contact information. If you don't like it, just disable it is your preferences instead of requesting it be removed all together. (1 == 2) 16:17, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I only enabled the e-mail preference when I submitted my RfA. Before that I was quite happy never e-mailing anyone. Now I can use it, it is sometimes useful, but I do find it distracting as I have to remember what I know from on-wiki stuff, and what I have to remember was 'private' stuff. I don't get a lot of e-mail, but there is some forum shopping in there as well. Carcharoth (talk) 16:27, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- If we all lived in little rooms that could only connect to Misplaced Pages then this might accomplish something. But Misplaced Pages lives on the internet and it is foolish to attempt to limit communications between users. The advantage of the wiki-email feature is that people can contact you without revealing your contact information. If you don't like it, just disable it is your preferences instead of requesting it be removed all together. (1 == 2) 16:17, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- (multiple ec) In reference to items number 3 and 4—have you had any previous e-mail exchanges with the members, or would they have had an opportunity to acquire your e-mail through innocuous means, such as seeing it on a mailing list? If so, then disabling the funcion would not have made a difference in that case. Horologium (talk) 16:18, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Perhaps if we just replaced the text "Email this user" with "Lulz and great justice", all would be well in the world. Orderinchaos 16:27, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
Motion to ban cars:
- I have personally received abuse from someone who drove a car to my house.
- Once a respected presedent was shot while in a car.
- People have used cars to get from one place to another to accuse people of things
- People have used cars to leak private information
Lets disable all cars for everyone! (1 == 2) 16:20, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I support this. Gas prices are also too high, and obesity is at an all time high. We could use the exercise of walking or biking everywhere. This has merit. Lara❤Love 16:23, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Regarding banning cars, we did that ages ago. Hiding T 16:27, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- A surprising number of people missed Doc's point completely. Thatcher 16:29, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Oooh! Let's see if I can get this one. "If people want to send e-mails, fine; but the official software should not encourage it, nor suggest official sanction." - that was the point, right? Carcharoth (talk) 16:40, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Alanis Morrisette where are you now? It's like ema-yal, when you've already irc'd. It's the free ride, when you're Willy on Wheels! Hiding T —Preceding comment was added at 16:32, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- A surprising number of people missed Doc's point completely. Thatcher 16:29, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Um, Tony, are you sure that this edit is appropriate? If Doc was joking, he made a very good effort at being serious about it. If he wasn't, then linking to WP:LEVITY seems to misrepresent things, as people assume that the original poster writes the header. Carcharoth (talk) 17:22, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I removed Tony's link. Lets leave that for Doc, if he wants to use a club on the baby seal of humor, if this was meant to be humor. Lawrence § t/e 17:23, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, Doc is satirizing the moral panic about IRC. It's quite fun figuring out to which emails he is referring in his list of "abuses". The worrying number of people who don't recognise its humorous intent prompted me to try and flag it in some way. --Tony Sidaway 17:28, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Weeelll, I think he is being too clever by half if that was his intent. I'll wait to hear him confirm it himself. I think his real point was that IRC is not the only off-wiki form of communication, but that e-mail is built into the software, whereas IRC is not. Carcharoth (talk) 17:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- It's called irony. Its purpose is not to be amusing but to make a serious point. If it needs spelling out, here it is: "Off-wiki forms of communication are helpful. For example, see email. People are bashing IRC as inherently dangerous. Let's point out that other forms of communication are also inherently dangerous, but that doesn't mean we should ban them." Doc just did it in a rather more incisive way than that silly paraphrase suggests. Sam Korn 17:41, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Isn't that what I and others have said elsewhere? If that is all Doc was saying, he could have saved his fingers the bother. That is hardly a new argument. As I've said over at AN, inherently non-transparent forms of communications don't interact well with transparent ones, like Misplaced Pages. What I said there was "The problem is that those who give advice in closed areas don't get shown up for the purveyors of bad advice that they are." I stand by that statement, be it e-mail, telephone, text messages, IM, IRC or whatever. People can build power bases based on bad advice. When they get it wrong, there is no bright light of community review shining on them. That is the inherent danger of mediums like IRC. Geogre has said all this in his essay. None of this is new. How has Doc's ironic satire moved the discussion forward? Carcharoth (talk) 18:38, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. There, I resorted to an ugly cliche. Now do you get the point? Sam Korn 18:44, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I do get the point. I will refrain from sniping at people in my edit summary (irritating habit that). Did you get my point? The baby/bathwater analogy here is better applied to Giano. The pig reference from Tony, I don't get at all. Carcharoth (talk) 18:55, 4 February 2008 (UTC) (I edit conflicted with Sam's removal of his comment - I've restored it so it is obvious what I was replying to, but Sam, feel free to refactor further if needed)
- Part of the reason I removed the comment was that I was irritated. Call it a return to better judgement. As you've restored it, I'll reply. The fact that Giano makes useful contributions is indeed similar to the fact that IRC is useful. It's silly to disregard either. Why do Giano's edits mean IRC should be castrated? Either your point has passed me by or it is completely vacuous. I also don't understand Tony's comment. Sam Korn 19:01, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry for coming across as such an obscurantist. I was referring to what I believed to be a common saying, usually attributed to Mark Twain, that goes: "Never try to teach a pig to sing. It's a waste of your time, and it annoys the pig." The pig here in my view being the ephemeral, chatty, private IRC channels some of use to discuss Misplaced Pages matters, and singing being Carcharoth's aspiration to make all discussion of Misplaced Pages transparent. --Tony Sidaway 19:19, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Got it. And I have learnt something from your post, which is more than can be said for the rest of this page. Sam Korn 19:23, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'd say he's made a very effective statement against the proposals to change all other forms of communications to be "compatible" in some way with a wiki. The wiki is only the medium we use for constructing the encyclopedia. Obsessively exporting standards designed to make working in the open environment of the wiki easy, to forms of communication which are by design and intent quite private, is not productive, and it annoys the pig. --Tony Sidaway 18:46, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I sometimes think I should be on a different language wiki from most Americans. I am pointing out the exact opposite. Sure, IRC can be and is misused (although a lot of the so called evidence is bollocks), but so can e-mail or a chat in the pub - so what? That you can point to abuses is irrelevant: the question is 1) can you sensibly prevent such communication? No. 2) Do abuses make the thing intrinsically bad? No. Hence, the whole discussion is useless. Let's do what we can to minimise abuse (actually not a lot) and them move on. Saying that because there is some abuse we should shut it down is pointless, as 1) you can't shut it down 2) even if you could you'll shut down all the good uses too. If you hand is giving you pain, amputation is seldom a sensible option to debate.--Doc 18:53, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Are you replying to me? I'm not American. And I said on your talk page that shutting down the Misplaced Pages IRC channels is not the point here. The point here is transparency for anything that is official or looks like it is official. OTRS tickets are carefully tracked, right? There is a WP:OTRS page. That is fine. But why the defensive attitude some people have to IRC? Simple. It is a chatting culture they don't want to see changed. Is a chatting culture compatible with Misplaced Pages? Yes, as long as it is transparent. Carcharoth (talk) 19:00, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Transparency and privacy are incompatible. If you conclude that a certain amount of privacy is necessary, a certain amount of transparency must be laid aside. In any case, it isn't perfectly private, because logs are taken by many people (as witnessed here). But to call it "incompatible with the wiki" because it is not open and to thus suggest that it should be restricted somehow (what else is your aim?) is disingenuous in the extreme. Sam Korn 19:06, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Then DO disable e-mail, since it is not transparent either. Anyone who thinks making #admins "transparent" isn't the same as closing it down, is missing the point. Either way, you'll simply drive the discussion elsewhere where there is less transparently and accountability and more self-selection.--Doc 19:09, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Are you replying to me? I'm not American. And I said on your talk page that shutting down the Misplaced Pages IRC channels is not the point here. The point here is transparency for anything that is official or looks like it is official. OTRS tickets are carefully tracked, right? There is a WP:OTRS page. That is fine. But why the defensive attitude some people have to IRC? Simple. It is a chatting culture they don't want to see changed. Is a chatting culture compatible with Misplaced Pages? Yes, as long as it is transparent. Carcharoth (talk) 19:00, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
See reductio ad absurdum. And if you still don't get it, I suggest you either opt out of the discussion, or enrol yourself at Misplaced Pages:Irony coaching.--Doc 17:40, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- So do we get to eat the babies, or not? I must say you've been very reticent on this matter. --Tony Sidaway 17:46, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Keeping with the theme, I presume we can only eat the babies if someone first suggests it over #admin. Lawrence § t/e 17:47, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I hope nobody takes my comment as a green light for anthropophagy in general. Let's wait for the arbitration committee to reach a decision on the matter. --Tony Sidaway 18:08, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm an American, and I got the joke. And the point. I agree - the medium doesn't cause poor judgement. On-wiki discussion can be just as much of an echo-chamber if it isn't on some central noticeboard. To take a classic phrase - "Guns don't kill people, people kill people." 18:59, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- If I were you Doc, instead of moaning and winging because the Arb's mailing list is being leaked to you through email, I would consider myself fortunate, I have to have their wishes translated to me through the auspices of their toadies on #admins! Giano (talk) 19:13, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Let me scorch the urban myth before it grows. I have not had, and never have had, leaks from the arbcom mailing list. I have had an arb or two share their thoughts with me - which is certainly not prohibited. I slightly overstated the gravity to make my point. That was silly, I should have guess you'd ignore the point and spin my remarks into another way to disparage the committee.--Doc 19:20, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Of course Doc, anything you say Doc. Why not show them the error of their ways and spill the beans - or do you too quite like your secrets? The Arbs certainly do not need me to disparage them, they acheive that very effectively all on their own. Giano (talk) 19:29, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Gah. This medium is plain text. it is impossible to be cute and ironic in a subtle way. I fully believed that someone had actually leaked inappropriate material from the committee's deliberations to you (doc). That they might discuss issues with you is totally not the same. I read your remarks as a serious condemnation of any off wiki communications. I disagree with that. I fact I think some manner of irc for admins is likely a net benifit, but those involved are not making a good case for it. and giano and georgre make a plausible case that it is a net detriment to the project. so what's a peon (err...regular editor) like me supposed to think about all this? --Rocksanddirt (talk) 20:02, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- The thought that some discussion of matters Misplaced Pages may take place off the wiki appears to worry some editors. Doc's satirical proposal was a way of making us think about the fact that all communication media have their faults. In the case of wiki-based communications, for instance, in my opinion it favors the persistent and the sensational over thoughtful and insightful comment--if you think about it, your reaction to the wording of his proposal amply demonstrates that my observation has some truth. --Tony Sidaway 20:16, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I don't disagree with your point. My point is that plain text is not a good medium for subtle satire, or ironic proposals. I took him at face value. I do think that many folks concerns with off-wiki communications are exacerbated by the questionable behavior that seems to be ongoing with the off-wiki communications. What we really need is a clear decision as to what to do. If the standards of conduct amongst the irc stuff is to be similar to on-wiki, then it is and the chanops have responsibilit to make that happen. If standards are not at all to be similar or related, then we need to divest of any mention that an admins irc channel is in use, and as doc points out below come down hard on bad decisions that are "made without consensus". --Rocksanddirt (talk) 20:47, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- The thought that some discussion of matters Misplaced Pages may take place off the wiki appears to worry some editors. Doc's satirical proposal was a way of making us think about the fact that all communication media have their faults. In the case of wiki-based communications, for instance, in my opinion it favors the persistent and the sensational over thoughtful and insightful comment--if you think about it, your reaction to the wording of his proposal amply demonstrates that my observation has some truth. --Tony Sidaway 20:16, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Let me scorch the urban myth before it grows. I have not had, and never have had, leaks from the arbcom mailing list. I have had an arb or two share their thoughts with me - which is certainly not prohibited. I slightly overstated the gravity to make my point. That was silly, I should have guess you'd ignore the point and spin my remarks into another way to disparage the committee.--Doc 19:20, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- If I were you Doc, instead of moaning and winging because the Arb's mailing list is being leaked to you through email, I would consider myself fortunate, I have to have their wishes translated to me through the auspices of their toadies on #admins! Giano (talk) 19:13, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
So what is to be done about the poor decisions that seem to originate on #admins?
To refocus the discussion back to what Doc Glasgow appears to have intended at the top of this thread (and my comments above) - how do we as a community wish to address what appear to be poor administrative decisions, regardless of whether they are based on discussion on-wiki, in #admins, or just completely out of the blue? It's pretty clear there have been a lovely stack of poor admin decisions and actions relating to communication in #admins in the last 36 hours, and how much of that relates to the medium in which they were made and how much of this relates to admins not being able to analyse situations effectively with resultant bad decisions, remains something worthwhile to discuss. I'm concerned that a chanop's "joke" was taken seriously enough for another admin to "test" on the main page; and that an admin thought it acceptable to test things on the main page, but I'd be no less concerned if the same discussions resulting in the same actions had occurred on user talk pages, or via email exchanges, or on IM. We still come back to the same point, though - what is it about this particular channel that seems to spawn these out-of-step behaviours? Risker (talk) 19:39, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- A stupid decision is a stupid decision regardless of whether it originated on-wiki, by email, on IRC or out of an admin's head. Per Geogre's essay, all on-wiki action should be justified on-wiki, or at least on the mailing list where they are archived and publically visible. Even if the impetus to test whether deleting the main page came from the IRC channel, it's still entirely the responsibility of the sysop who took the action. As to the reason a lot of bad decisions seem to stem from the channel (a thesis about whose veracity I am not wholly convinced), perhaps it is a consequence of the fact that a high proportion of conversation between admins happens there, rather an inherent fault of the medium. Sam Korn 19:48, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I expect you are right Sam . Giano (talk) 19:50, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Oy, how was my edit a stupid decision? 19:55, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- What makes you (or anyone) think that poor admin decisions can be stopped by removing a channel on IRC? IRC doesn't make the decisions. Maybe what we need is better admins, or a stronger tradition of removing admins for poor decision making. I don't know that the problem of admin decision-making has changed in importance - what has changed is the level of scrutiny applied to anything that has roots in IRC. The channel isn't the problem, to put it simply. The decisions are the problem, and it doesn't seem at all unlikely that the same sort of activity could occur based on talkpage discussions.
- The only difference that I can see between talkpage and IRC (aside from the history, which is irrelevant to the process of making a decision) is speed. A decision taken after consultation at IRC can be arrived at much more quickly, because the 'wait' time for affirmative responses is shorter. What can you do to solve or mitigate that problem? Well, nothing - it is again an issue of judgement. 19:54, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- (to Risker) They have been addressed in the past, they are being addressed as we speak, and they will be addressed in the future, all through the normal processes. East718's action and judgement will be scrutinized. Carnildo and Durova were desysopped, Ryan and Maxim apologized. Can you point to any bad admin actions that were based in IRC and not ultimately resolved by the community? (And of course, the issue in this case is not one of bad judgement or bad action on wikipedia, but of incivility.) Thatcher 19:58, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
The solution is simple. Admins are responsible for their own actions unless they can point to an on-wiki consensus which may mitigate a bad decision by "sharing the blame" between participants. If you make a bad decision and there is no on-wiki discussion, you are on your own and personally accountable for the result. It will not matter whether you discussed the matter with no-one, used e-mail, a sekrit mailing list, or a ouija board, if there is no on-wiki discussion it will be treated as your individual call. You may use any method you like for sanity checking, but you alone are responsible for the results if, whether for good or bad reason, you choose not to confer on wiki.--Doc 20:33, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I agree, but this will only be effective if we also have a "community de-admin" system. That can implement some short deadmin's (esentially like the blocking policy we have now). a day or two for the first stupid harmful decision, etc. --Rocksanddirt (talk) 20:39, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Since we don't have that for abuse agreed on-wiki, I fail to see the particular relevance to this debate.--Doc 20:45, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- well....as regarding admin activity over the weekend....we sort of do have it. a couple of admins made some poorly thought out decisions regarding the main page. They have been suitably chastised for their actions (appropriate to the level of disruption, I think). An other left his admin account logged in on a machine that was vandalized by folks in his dorm. The account was deadmined, and blocked based on community discussion, until the whole story was sorted out. I don't know that we need a formal request for de-admin but perhaps a more complete discussion of the remedies and prevention neccessary for irregular admin actions. --Rocksanddirt (talk) 20:53, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Since we don't have that for abuse agreed on-wiki, I fail to see the particular relevance to this debate.--Doc 20:45, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Whom would you have de-adminned, and why? I think the community tends to hyperventilate a lot about little things--not just IRC, but naval-gazing is profoundly interesting to some people here. The really abusive cases have resulted in desysopping by Arbcom. Is there anyone else you have in mind? Also, remember that this case did not originate with private discussion leading to a bad block or deletion, but with an insult among two people that happened to occur in the channel but could just as easily have occurred in e-mail. This did lead then to bad decisions on-wiki, such as edit-warring and David Gerard and Geogre editing a page while protected due to a content dispute. Should they be desysopped? If there was indeed some kind of community de-adminning process, I suspect that there are enough people who would be happy to see either David or Geogre desysopped that neither would have survived. Somehow I don't think that is what you had in mind when you made the suggestion. Thatcher 20:53, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I don't have anyone in mind. just that a discussion explaining to editors and admins that a community discussion might lead to action against an admin as well as action against an editor, not that it all has to be done through an arbcom hearing. I think in this case a week of deadmin for the two of them (david and geogre) might not have been a bad choice, if only to cure the protected page edit war that drove this to arbcom. I'm thinking more of short suspensions of admin tools, not a loss of community trust, but a wake up reminder that admins have a responsibility towards higher behavior. --Rocksanddirt (talk) 21:01, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Whom would you have de-adminned, and why? I think the community tends to hyperventilate a lot about little things--not just IRC, but naval-gazing is profoundly interesting to some people here. The really abusive cases have resulted in desysopping by Arbcom. Is there anyone else you have in mind? Also, remember that this case did not originate with private discussion leading to a bad block or deletion, but with an insult among two people that happened to occur in the channel but could just as easily have occurred in e-mail. This did lead then to bad decisions on-wiki, such as edit-warring and David Gerard and Geogre editing a page while protected due to a content dispute. Should they be desysopped? If there was indeed some kind of community de-adminning process, I suspect that there are enough people who would be happy to see either David or Geogre desysopped that neither would have survived. Somehow I don't think that is what you had in mind when you made the suggestion. Thatcher 20:53, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
I think it's too bad Doc resorted to baiting people here. It's not as if this discussion doesn't have enough bad blood already. The issue is whether we should try and drive conversations about proposed administrative actions back onto Misplaced Pages or not. And if we don't want to, whether the IRC should have some implicit sanction or approval as a place to discuss administrative actions. It seems pretty clear to me that on-wiki discussion is more effective at arriving at a proper result, and is certainly more effective at heading off bad admin decisions. It's also clear to me that discussing administrative actions in a place most admins don't have access to (by choice or by some other circumstance) is a bad thing. No one is talking about shutting anything down, but it certainly makes sense to encourage admins to make use of the talk pages provided here for their work. RxS (talk) 21:16, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Baiting? Try AGF. I was not. My sin was to use irony, which is obviously too subtle for some people. Is on-wiki best, generally yes. Should we encourage it, yes certainly. There's no dispute there. But that neither means the channel is a bad thing, nor that changing its status makes any difference. Everythign that can be said of the channel is true of e-mail, indeed more true. In short, there's really nothing can be done here except bellyache.--Doc 21:21, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- When did Doc bait anyone?
- Furthermore, the main discussion (I think Risker misunderstands...) is not about driving such conversations onto Misplaced Pages. It is about accusations of corrupt machinations occuring in private. The solution proposed is opening the channel up, castrating it, making it impotent. This will but drive such conversation, should it actually occur, somewhere else. Discussing controversial actions on-wiki is a totally different matter to dealing with bad administrative actions. Sam Korn 21:24, 4 February 2008 (UTC) (this comment automatically merged with Doc's)
- Mocking those who disagree with you by making a serious sounding proposal (however satirical) is baiting...you got the reaction I'm sure you expected. Unless you expected everyone to see right through the serious tone. See, eating babies is absurd and so his modest proposal worked, making false claims about Arbcom abuse and suggesting a way to eliminate it is (in this climate) everyday stuff. RxS (talk) 21:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm sorry you don't understand the rhetorical purpose of irony. Sam Korn 21:38, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- And I'm just as sorry that you accept mockery as an accepted part of civil discussion. RxS (talk) 21:45, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I mocked no-one. I'm sorry you can't assume good faith. That, and not IRC, is wikipedia's main poison.--Doc 21:52, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I can assume good faith, and do most of the time. But you're wrong about the main poison here. The main poison is what people consider acceptable means of communication. But oh well...that's never going to change. RxS (talk) 22:33, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Precisely, but the whistling in the wind has now become disruptive.--Doc 08:39, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- I can assume good faith, and do most of the time. But you're wrong about the main poison here. The main poison is what people consider acceptable means of communication. But oh well...that's never going to change. RxS (talk) 22:33, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I mocked no-one. I'm sorry you can't assume good faith. That, and not IRC, is wikipedia's main poison.--Doc 21:52, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- And I'm just as sorry that you accept mockery as an accepted part of civil discussion. RxS (talk) 21:45, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm sorry you don't understand the rhetorical purpose of irony. Sam Korn 21:38, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Mocking those who disagree with you by making a serious sounding proposal (however satirical) is baiting...you got the reaction I'm sure you expected. Unless you expected everyone to see right through the serious tone. See, eating babies is absurd and so his modest proposal worked, making false claims about Arbcom abuse and suggesting a way to eliminate it is (in this climate) everyday stuff. RxS (talk) 21:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
Break
- E-mail this user: The function makes a mockery of "privacy," since it's the #2 way that Arbitration leaks. However, e-mail is preferrable to the IRC, because it has an interestingly clear provenance. If you send me an e-mail saying, "Jerk," I own the e-mail. I can send it along to anyone I want (I might think of other people who would benefit from it), including here. As bad as it is, it is at least clear. There is no "privacy" in it. On the other hand, we have had people here treat the posting of logs (where 9 people are talking and 60 are logging silently) as the height of illegality, as worse than bad blocks.
- If we get rid of the one foot in, one foot out idiocy of IRC, where it is possible to conspire, we can work our way down to the one-on-one of e-mail. For myself, I note that I can turn off "e-mail this user" in my preferences. I cannot turn off "talk about Geogre on IRC," though. I can use a bounce filter on my e-mail, and I have a generous Spam folder.
- Whenever this kind of thing happens, we're seeing a community that is no community. We're seeing people under such stress that they're fracturing. It's a clear sign that the path being followed now is not working. Address IRC's malignity, and we'll probably see less e-mail flying. Address arbitrators with vested interests who don't recuse, and we'll see less leaking. (Hey, if we had ArbCom elections and not selections, that might even make ArbCom more in tune with the user base.) On the list of priorities, "turn off e-mail" is a bit lower than the other abuses. Geogre (talk) 21:27, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- You can't stop people talking to each other, whether on particular IRC channels, through email or by other means. You may as well accept that. What do you want to happen to IRC? Be precise. Sam Korn 21:32, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Indeed. If there are conspiracies in the channel, how will closing the channel stop the conspiracies? The cyberstalking and investigations lists started as cc groups before a host was found for a mailing list, and there are lots of ways of hosting private mailing lists. Do you really think that people intent on hatching a conspiracy will be deterred by the closing of one particular virtual meeting space? I suppose appearances will be maintained if the meeting space does not have "Misplaced Pages" in its name and a descriptive page in project space, but there will be no substantive change. I'm not a fan of doing things for appearance sake that have no substance behind them. At least if the channel is kept open, there will be an opportunity for more sensible people to put a stop to any conspiracies. Closing the channel will only drive them (if "they" exist at all ) underground and into each others' arms.
- I tend to think there are few real conspiracies, mostly people doing dumb things with insufficient reflection and insufficient input.Thatcher 21:49, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Me? I've said it already. It's at my user space, which is where people should draft things to get feedback before going to namespace (something David Gerard doesn't regard as necessary for him, I guess). Take a look, please. Don't believe anyone who tells you that I "hate IRC." I don't. I do think it's a bad place for doing serious business, though. On the other hand, I want en.admins.irc gone until it has community consensus to exist. It did not achieve that when it was created, and despite what David Gerard said, it was not "created by Danny to deal with BLP issues." "BLP" didn't even exist then. Office didn't exist then. It went up for proposal and got bogged down when some people asked why we needed it. Those in favor have held a grudge against these people ever since.
- A set process for reporting abuses on Misplaced Pages needs to be in place. A set process for querying logs needs to be in place on WP, as well. The "ops" should need approval of some sort other than the laying on of hands. The "contact person" with Freenode has to be subject clearly to WP rules. A set of "best practices" should be adopted. (That's what my essay was for, to determine strengths and weaknesses, to set out a set of best practices.) We should have a regular place for submitting logs and an ombudsman or advocate for handling them.
- There is no reason for this nastiness to have gone on this long.
- As for "stop people talking to each other," you mistake me gravely. I want people to talk to each other more, much, much more. I just want them to do so in the open. I want them to do that where the person being talked about gets to know what's going on. I want them to do it where dissent can be heard. I want them to do it where a multitude of voices can be heard. I want them to do it where there is a possibility of thinking and choosing words. I don't want "Misplaced Pages" stuck on a chatroom and have Misplaced Pages actions coming from anything that brain dead and inherently inferior to Misplaced Pages itself. Geogre (talk) 21:53, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Very sensible comments, and I would have to agree with all of your recommendations (with the possible exception of deletion the channel, read on). My question is this: If WMF doesn't own/operate the channel, and has no formal authority over it, how is this level of control to be exercised? What stops someone from setting up a parallel channel without these generally sensible controls? Is there anything special about IRC hosting that WMF can't do it independently? 21:58, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- These things have been discussed to death elsewhere. Very briefly, Freenode recognizes JamesF as the top contact person, so he, in some sense, is the "owner" for all channels that begin with #wikipedia or #wikimedia. (The issue is more complicated than that but let's avoid nitpicking please.) Therefore, in theory, JamesF as a private citizen has final say over channel operators, logging, channel access, and all such similar issues, and could refuse a request from Arbcom or Jimbo to change current policies. Certainly in the past James has refused to change policies at the urging of some vocal wikipedians, but Arbcom or Jimbo has never dealt directly with the issue before (for various longstanding reasons that some people think have never been sensible). Freenode have said they would recognize a new top level contact if the community agreed to a selection process and then selected someone other than James (presumably someone who would be more agreeable to certain requested changes) but no one has yet attempted to advance such a proposal.
- There are some 600+ channels with Misplaced Pages or some variation in the name, anyone can start one, James can have it closed but obviously rarely does so. In fact, last year Mackensen created #wikipedia-en-functionaries which is open to anyone, its just that no one ever goes there. Geogre could create a new channel tonight if he wanted to, appoint his own chanops and set his own rules on logging, transparency and dispute resolution. But there is no way to make people use it. Thatcher 22:12, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Very sensible comments, and I would have to agree with all of your recommendations (with the possible exception of deletion the channel, read on). My question is this: If WMF doesn't own/operate the channel, and has no formal authority over it, how is this level of control to be exercised? What stops someone from setting up a parallel channel without these generally sensible controls? Is there anything special about IRC hosting that WMF can't do it independently? 21:58, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Thats what I figured. My questions were more for pointing out holes than for requesting new information. 22:19, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Thatcher, you don't think that perhaps the Misplaced Pages page telling people that the admins channel is there and that it's for admins has had anything at all to do with the population there, do you? If so, and if all the rest of what you say is true, then why would it be "endorsed by Misplaced Pages" by advertising if it's not subject to anything but the whim of one person? Also, isn't that person a Wikipedian and therefore subject to restrictions by ArbCom? Utgard Loki (talk) 13:52, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- Freenode have said they would recognize a new top level contact if the community agreed to a selection process and then selected someone other than James In case anyone is unclear of the scope we are dealling with here, I would point out that "community" here does equal en.WP. JamesF is the top-level contact for wikimedia associated channels in all languages, so any sort of new selection process would presumably not involve en.WP exclusively.--BirgitteSB 22:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
580 KB and counting...
Has a discussion page ever reached 1MB of text? Carcharoth (talk) 16:41, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Maybe. The Giano case workshop was split into 3 pages and most of the discussion happened there in lieu of the PD talk page. Thatcher 16:46, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- It would be a good idea to chop this page into two or more pieces to improve usability and download speeds, and to reduce bandwidth consumption. Jehochman 16:52, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
We keep this up this page will hit the magic 5000 Never Deletable Threshold. This edit by me is 1263. Lawrence § t/e 16:55, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
I haven't checked, but I suspect the record was set either in the first so-called "Giano" case or in the "Badlydrawnjeff" case. Newyorkbrad (talk) 17:22, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Noting, of course, that records, in this sort of case, are a Bad Thing (tm). But the BDJ case had a workshop of 815KB, and the proposed decision talk page had two archives. In total, that talk was under 500KB. Here, the IRC workshop page (not the talk page) is 577KB. The Giano pages all seem to be rather small in comparison to these two cases. Carcharoth (talk) 17:33, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Can some of the threads on this page be archived? 19:57, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with avruch, lets archive a bit of this. --Rocksanddirt (talk) 20:07, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I comletely agree, it has all become tiresome and tedious in the extreme. Rather like waiting for death. Archive most of it, I cannot imagine anyone reads it. Giano (talk) 20:46, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
WP:WEA redirected
Please see Misplaced Pages:Miscellany for deletion/Wikipedia:wikipedia-en-admins (3rd nomination). The discussion was closed as redirect to WP:IRC, plus directing the opening of an RfC to discuss the other issues. See the full decision by Ryan for details. Obviously this won't completely solve any problems (and may solve none), but it is a slow step along the route to reform if the community thinks reform is needed, and such reform (in concert with the promised ArbCom discussions on dispute resolution and matters of authority regarding IRC issues) may help to avoid editor conduct issues in the future. Whether the Arbitration Committee want to note the redirection of the page where the edit war took place, or otherwise comment on this, is, of course, up to them. Carcharoth (talk) 01:48, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- An RFC has been launched too - see Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/Wikipedia:IRC channels. Regards --Joopercoopers (talk) 09:58, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
Misplaced Pages:Requests for arbitration/IRC/Proposed_decision#Geogre
Right now there are only two findings of fact that are passing. George's and Giano's. Can an arbitrator please respond to some fairly straightforward questions:
- Is it their contention then that these two editors are more "provocative and disruptive" than anyone else involved?
- Since there are no remedies that reflect these findings, what exactly are they in aid of?
Both of the findings that are passing refer to the "timeline" evidence, but bainer's (thebainer's? the thebainer's's??) commentary there implicates both David Gerard and Ryulong considerably more than Geogre's does.
It might be sensible to clear out all the findings that fail (hello clerks!) so as to throw into stark relief the absurdity here.
152.91.9.144 (talk) 07:09, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- In fact, the David Gerard and Tony Sidaway findings are close to passing. They both need one more vote. If those passed, that would bring a nice balance to the case, in my opinion. I too agree that Ryulong technically breached 3RR, but I think the caution to all parties should cover that, though I still would like the committee to state what they mean by "all parties" here. Does that really include the bainer and some others that were peripherally involved? Also, the "what is passing" bit is rather out-of-date now. If the two FoF that I point out above pass, I think that would be ideal. Unfortunately, I have a sinking feeling that the Giano "civility" remedy (the one most likely to fuel ongoing drama and baiting) is close to passing. Any bets that there will be a last-minute switch of votes there to ensure that this passes? :-( Carcharoth (talk) 08:54, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
New remedy at workshop
I realize it's very late in the case, but I put up something new on the workshop and since traffic there is dead, I'm posting a notice here.
Misplaced Pages:Requests_for_arbitration/IRC/Workshop#Giano banned from arbitration
I really think this would solve any substantial "problem behavior" on his part, as the worse there's been has been during the course of arbitration. The Blip (talk) 09:47, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- You gotta love cowardly sock-puppets.--Doc 10:01, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- Per a CU check run at the request of Giano, it is my judgment that it is highly likely this is a sock of a currently indef blocked user Fratboy101 (talk · contribs · count · logs · page moves · block log), (now tagged as such) and I personally don't think we need contributions from it here. I leave it to clerks to decide what to do with this section. ++Lar: t/c 11:58, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- Thank you Lar. Giano (talk) 12:08, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- I removed it. Giano, let me know if you see any other post by him and I remove them. FloNight♥♥♥ 12:11, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- Thank you Lar. Giano (talk) 12:08, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- Per a CU check run at the request of Giano, it is my judgment that it is highly likely this is a sock of a currently indef blocked user Fratboy101 (talk · contribs · count · logs · page moves · block log), (now tagged as such) and I personally don't think we need contributions from it here. I leave it to clerks to decide what to do with this section. ++Lar: t/c 11:58, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
A further failure
Unfortunately this case's resolution fails to address the core issue which is that Giano, while an exceptional editor, can behave with impunity and be taken through arbitration without getting sanctioned for it. If not for his encyclopedic contributions, I strongly suspect he would have had a long ban some time ago. Even the remedy to give him a final warning is being defeated as too soft. The case needs some sort of actual, real remedy because otherwise this is simply going to flare up again in a month or two - warnings haven't worked, blocks are getting reversed whenever an admin is courageous enough to issue a well-deserved one, and this is a serious drain on everyone's time. To borrow from Jean-Luc Picard, the line must be drawn here. Stifle (talk) 11:26, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, I think it is pretty clear a line has been drawn. Whatever remedies pass now, Giano and other concerned cannot fail to know that they are drinking in the Last Chance Saloon now.--Doc 11:38, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- Again, I'm left asking "what behaviour". Seriously. Can someone provide diffs? I asked for diffs last time showing this oh-so-awful behaviour, and none were forthcoming. If it is a pattern of long-term behaviour, that shouldn't be tacked on to a case named "IRC". It should be a case truly named "Giano" (the first one named Giano was not solely about him) and it should give Giano a chance to defend himself against specific charges. The Durova case connection was Giano's posting of logs. This case involved edit warring on a page, even though logs were available to be posted. It is clear that Giano learned his lesson about posting logs. Why not give him a chance to learn his lesson with regards to edit warring on pages? Carcharoth (talk) 12:44, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
More generally, I am convinced that the root of the problem is the behaviour of invested users (and that includes some present, former and retiring Arbitration Committee members). If separate cases were filed concerning Giano, Tony Sidaway, Geogre, Phil Sandifer and David Gerard. I think it would become clearer that all of them, in various ways, flout the conventions of Misplaced Pages and stretch the rules - but that they all have the best interests of the project at heart (however much they might disagree). I could add other names to this list: Doc Glasgow, JzG, are just two. Kelly Martin was one. There is a clear development arc where people who have been around for a long time become: (a) increasingly invested in doing things their way (and feel their long-term presence in some way gives them license to say things others wouldn't - though some have always been like this); and (b) increasingly cranky about how they do it (this is crucial - some long-term users do the same things, but in a civil manner). Of course, the differences between the people I named above are much greater than the similarities, but I do think this is a problem that needs to be addressed. Some old-timers reinvent themselves, some retire gracefully into the background, some carry on as before, some blow up periodically, some blow up permanently and leave, some nurse grudges. All this sort of thing needs to be addressed, and simply focusing on Giano won't help. Oh, and it sets a very bad example to new editors. Carcharoth (talk) 12:44, 5 February 2008 (UTC)
- The critical differenced is between those of us who realise we've pushed too far occasionally and can be cowed, and those who brazenly continue without any critical self-reflection. Look at the parties you've named, and then ask yourself, which are ready to acknowledge their mistakes and, at least occasionally, listen to criticism. Which ones, in the end, seek dispute "resolution", and which simply keep fighting everyone, always.--Doc 13:08, 5 February 2008 (UTC)