Revision as of 16:51, 10 August 2009 view sourceKralizec! (talk | contribs)Edit filter managers, Administrators35,851 edits →Anon IPs who blank the info about them on their talk page: reblock with editing-of-own-talk-page disabled← Previous edit | Revision as of 22:00, 10 August 2009 view source BozMo (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users14,164 edits →Anon IPs who blank the info about them on their talk page: wellNext edit → | ||
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Presumably with Anon IPs who deliberately keep blanking their talk page with all the notices about them being a school or similar doing a semi-protect on the talk page would be a good way forward? Seems to make sense, perhaps we should add it? --] ] 16:36, 10 August 2009 (UTC) | Presumably with Anon IPs who deliberately keep blanking their talk page with all the notices about them being a school or similar doing a semi-protect on the talk page would be a good way forward? Seems to make sense, perhaps we should add it? --] ] 16:36, 10 August 2009 (UTC) | ||
:Assuming that the blocked anonymous editor is removing one of the three things they are not allowed to remove from their own talk page (as per ]), the easiest thing to do would be to re-block him or her, but with the "allow this user to edit own talk page while blocked" box unchecked (as per ]). Not only is it faster than manually protecting the talk page, but then the admin can be sure that the page protection expires at the same time as the block. — ] (]) 16:51, 10 August 2009 (UTC) | :Assuming that the blocked anonymous editor is removing one of the three things they are not allowed to remove from their own talk page (as per ]), the easiest thing to do would be to re-block him or her, but with the "allow this user to edit own talk page while blocked" box unchecked (as per ]). Not only is it faster than manually protecting the talk page, but then the admin can be sure that the page protection expires at the same time as the block. — ] (]) 16:51, 10 August 2009 (UTC) | ||
::However for a school what you propose has the disadvantage of affecting other edits by that IP. If one user of a shared IP keeps doing one silly thing blocking the thing makes more sense than blcoking the IP. --] ] 22:00, 10 August 2009 (UTC) |
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Disputed: Admins are allowed revert to prior edit-warring free version
Archaic d00d (talk · contribs) has removed the following sentence from the policy regarding protection in cases of edit-warring:
- Administrators may also revert to an old version of the page predating the edit war if such a clear point exists.
This sentence was added by Hiding (talk · contribs) in September 2008 in reflection of common practice. Archaid d00d removed it based on an old discussion from May 2008 of what he thinks is consensus. I disagree with this assertion because I think the latter change and the fact that it has been in the policy unchallenged since then reflects consensus at least since that time. As the user is unwilling to discuss the changes first, I want to use this to request further input as to whether this sentence should be part of the policy. See also this discussion on my talk page. Regards SoWhy 11:43, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- I think that the fact it remained unchallenged (according to Wikiblame) for almost a year means that some sort of consensus exists. I however find it peculiar that such bold phrasing remained here for so long (I expected it to be a non-written practice). My own opinion is that admins should be very careful if reverting -especially in article space- however they should trust their judgment if the current version is clearly not the version that had consensus before the edit war started. -- Luk 11:55, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- This absolutely is common practice, and I do this occasionally. For example when an edit warrior requests page protection at WP:RFPP, conveniently when his revision is current, I sometimes rollback the warrior and then protect the page. However, I don't think it's necessary to have this explicitly authorized in the policy this way, and I don't like the prescriptive language. It should be something more like this:
- When protecting due to content disputes, consider reverting to a stable revision prior to the dispute.
- --causa sui 17:09, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- The reason I removed the sentence is because the archives http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia_talk:Protection_policy/Archive_8#Protecting_the_current_version_rewards_revert_warriors showed a very clear consensus against giving admins discretion.
- I think the reason this sentence lasted so long is because people read it from the perspective of the previous sentence, (about BPL, vandalism etc) and interpreted it to mean admins could choose a stable point before hand if such things are clearly present. Since silence is the weakest form of consensus and such a strong consensus was shown previously I reverted.
- 1.Admins should have no discretion, apart from the obvious exceptions, as per the overwhelming thrust of wiki policy.
- 2.When does an edit war "clearly" begin? With an edit that will be reverted? Or when that edit is reverted? If multiple editors are involved does that obscure such a point? Do unrelated edits during the period that admin has deemed to be in the edit war obscure such a clear point?
- 3.It cannot be assumed that stable pre-edit war versions reflect current consensus, assume that a new event occurs that is notable enough for inclusion (in terms of the consensus), like Usain Bolt makes a new 100m record. Some people believe he cheated, so an edit war ensues, then the admin sweeps in and reverts to the pre-edit war version in the belief that it better reflects consensus.
- 4.The policy is open to abuse from editors. If an embarrassing and notable revelation about a politician occurs at an election time, staffers for the politician can just start an edit war and even if their version isn't the one preserved when the music stops have an added chance of reversion to a pre edit war version of events.
- 5.As per point 2, I believe it's a judgement call to say when an edit war starts, but it's no doubt a judgement call about whether admins use the discretionary power that the word "may" gives them. This leaves the admin open to calls of bias, and can take the focus off building consensus in the talk page to arguing with the admin.
- 6. If Admins have no (or very little) discretion, their decisions can be better accepted by users. Whenever they use discretion disgruntled users can call "bias", and whenever they don't the same thing could happen (if more people knew about this policy). It would make life easier for admins, and increase community acceptance if this policy did not exist. I agree maybe admins could wait a random length of time to protect, so that users can't wiki-lawyer their version preserved by tacitically requesting page protection, but that's the most discretion I believe in.
- 7. I do however, believe, in one more exception. The initial reason for the inclusion of this policy was "common practise, especially on policy pages". I can see the merits of applying this policy to "policy pages", but instead of MAY it should be MUST.Archaic d00d (talk) 22:13, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- These are old-hat arguments in favor of a prescriptive reading of policy. To take this point by point:
- 1. The overwhelming thrust of Misplaced Pages policy is that everyone is to use common sense and critical thinking at all times. See WP:5, WP:POLICY and WP:IAR. The open nature of Wikpedia, that relies on the good-faith of its contributors, is what makes Misplaced Pages work-- not any firm set of rules. I assure you that the consensus on this is exactly the opposite of what you are proposing.
- 2. It's much easier to determine this on a case-by-case basis than to try to come up with some clear bureaucratic definition. That's why we leave it up to the good-faith efforts of the protecting administrator to sort it out.
- 3. That cannot be assumed, of course, but it can be determined by the administrator. Besides, protection is not an endorsement of the current revision.
- 4. By its open nature, Misplaced Pages is open to abuse by anyone. Yet we seem to be doing pretty well. If you think someone did something wrong, you should challenge them by arguing that it harmed the project. Don't amend the rules to make them prescriptive. They aren't.
- 5. Yes, there will always be argument about what the best thing to do is. We don't solve that problem by making a bureaucratic rulebook that does the thinking for us. In this case, the cure is worse than the disease.
- 6. Users can accept the decisions of administrators because the administrators will say "Sorry, I don't make the rules, the rules forced my hand." How is that better than making administrators responsible for their actions? If you give administrators leeway, then you can challenge what they do. If you force their hands, then they will be required to do things against their better judgement and the victims of this slavish worship of bureaucratic rules will have no recourse. We give administrators discretion because it gives us an outlet for peer-reviewing their use of sysop tools.
- 7. It is common practice and not just on policy pages.
- --causa sui 22:29, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- Old hat means an appeal to modernity, unconvincing.
- 1. There are multiple overwhelming thrusts to wikipedia policy, so let's both be right. If an admin is applying critical thinking, why doesn't he/she simply CHOOSE the best version, it's the natural extension of what you are advocating.
- 2. A case by case basis gives admins too much power, and infinite exposure to allegations of bad faith.
- 3. It can't be assumed nor determined in many cases. Does the exclusion or inclusion of new, or newly added, information reflect waht the consensus would be? Who can know? Certianly noone who compares it to a "pre-edit war" version. IF admins could determine consensus, well then why don't they just choose the version? "Besides, protection is not an endorsement of the current revision." Seems to me that protection is an endorsement, if the admin determines what consensus was and reverts to it.
- 4. I'm challenging this one, and I think admins are being prescriptive with this policy.
- 5. The cure is worse than the disease? The disease is edit warring (and not the type severe enough to be blocked), and the cure is admins having power to choose versions, and other editors an ability to temporarily censor wiki. I think the cure is worse.
- 6. Yes, because admins are just other editors with some powers. It's "no big deal" remember? If we enable admins to use their "better judgement" we will have the rule of admins and not the rule of policy. There is recourse, change the policy.
- 7. Well, it had stiff opposition in the archives. But I can see the merits of a specific policy exmemption.Archaic d00d (talk) 22:56, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- If this is a referendum on the open, non-prescriptive nature of Misplaced Pages policy, you should be starting that on WP:VPP and the talk pages for WP:POLICY, WP:NOT and so on. I'm sorry but you cannot make this kind of policy change here, given the overwhelming and long-standing consensus behind it all the way back to Jimbo's statement of principles and the first rules to consider. We get lots of arguments from people who think that Misplaced Pages rules should be made more bureaucratic and constraining and they're shot down nearly every time, with good reason. I appreciate that you have good intentions but I would strongly urge you to try to understand the logic behind why we do it this way and not that way. --causa sui 23:04, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- Atleast we aren't having 7 points of disagreement. I'm not against wikipedia being non-prescritpive. I am simply opposed to admins having the power to determine consensus, choose versions etc or the idea of making a page protected is some kind of endorsement. Sure wikipedia is doing pretty well, but it doesn't mean I shouldn't argue with something I disagree with. Have a look at this for me, if you wouldn't mind, and you'll see that there seemed to be a consensus pretty much agreeing with what I just said.Archaic d00d (talk) 23:27, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- I think there are some plausible arguments here for why an administrator should avoid doing this. I wouldn't object to putting something about the rationale for why it should be avoided into the article. What I don't want to see is a commandment. --causa sui 23:46, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- Atleast we aren't having 7 points of disagreement. I'm not against wikipedia being non-prescritpive. I am simply opposed to admins having the power to determine consensus, choose versions etc or the idea of making a page protected is some kind of endorsement. Sure wikipedia is doing pretty well, but it doesn't mean I shouldn't argue with something I disagree with. Have a look at this for me, if you wouldn't mind, and you'll see that there seemed to be a consensus pretty much agreeing with what I just said.Archaic d00d (talk) 23:27, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- If this is a referendum on the open, non-prescriptive nature of Misplaced Pages policy, you should be starting that on WP:VPP and the talk pages for WP:POLICY, WP:NOT and so on. I'm sorry but you cannot make this kind of policy change here, given the overwhelming and long-standing consensus behind it all the way back to Jimbo's statement of principles and the first rules to consider. We get lots of arguments from people who think that Misplaced Pages rules should be made more bureaucratic and constraining and they're shot down nearly every time, with good reason. I appreciate that you have good intentions but I would strongly urge you to try to understand the logic behind why we do it this way and not that way. --causa sui 23:04, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
(undent) Ryan Delaney is on the right track. In general, admins having the power to choose a revision to protect is dangerous, since it can be used badly. Even the suggestion of impropriety is damaging. Now, it shouldn't be arbitrarily denied: there are situations where it might be useful. I ask you to consider rules-ignoring. Admins do have a certain amount of rule-ignoring power in admin actions in the way that all users have that power for other actions, but they are held to higher standards, and every action can be challenged (so admins don't "rule"). Most of the time, admins should be following the good practice of not changing the protected revision, though. Since most of the time admins should follow the good practice, the policy shouldn't encourage or otherwise endorse those actions, but it also must not prohibit them. {{Nihiltres|talk|edits}} 03:34, 1 June 2009 (UTC) (iPod edit)
- I agree, of course, and I think this is really key. For some reason, a lot of people look at WP:IAR and they only read the part that says "ignore the rules" and they somehow miss the part that says "if the rules prevent you from improving the encyclopedia." "Ignore all rules" does not mean "Do whatever you want!" or give anyone license to run around willy-nilly. It only means you can do the right thing even if the rules try to tell you that you can't. It doesn't mean that no-one can challenge those actions on the basis of whether they actually did improve the encyclopedia or not. Since an accountability system without firm rules allows us to challenge every single use of sysop rights, and the administrators had better be ready with an explanation for why what they did helped the project, there's no reason to rely on firm rules. --causa sui 03:38, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
Clarity section break
An uninterested party reverting to a pre-war version is never a worse principle than randomly protecting whatever current version, but is often better.
The objections above are equally objections to random protection, except one: an admin, the person who decides to lock the page, also decides to revert to some revision. That is irrelevant: the protecting admin could arbitrarily choose a user on Recent Changes, and still yield better results than leaving the random current version. It might as well be the admin, who is already doing the protection, who is no worse than an arbitrary Recent-Changes user, and who should already be an uninvolved party. —Centrx→talk • 04:19, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- I disagree that reverting to a pre-war version is never worse in principle and have provided some examples, mostly pertaining to the release of new information (that is notable enough for inclusion). If there is a policy that admins can, or should, revert to pre-war versions then it's easy for editors to game wikipedia to keep the information out for a length of time. It's also hard to say exactly when an edit war starts, and should unrelated edits down in the edit war's time period be arbitrarily overwritten?Archaic d00d (talk) 05:42, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- New information in an edit war will be randomly included or excluded by the random protection. —Centrx→talk • 02:34, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- You seem to think that the open nature of the policy leaves the door open for bad-faith editing by administrators. This is both true and false. It's true in the sense that the policy isn't prescriptive and so administrators can -- in fact, are expected to -- use their judgement at all times. (This isn't a problem because we don't have any bad faith administrators.) On the other hand, it's also false, and this is the most important point: if an administrator does something bad, you can always challenge it on the grounds that what they did harmed the project. You don't have to be able to cite some policy the administrator "violated" in order to do this. Ignore all rules is a two-sided coin: Just like it's possible to do the right thing despite the appearance that some rule forbids it, it's possible to do a wrong thing despite there being no rule against it. There is nothing stopping you from challenging any use of sysop rights, and there's nothing stopping another administrator from reversing it if he or she finds your good-faith rationale that it damaged the project to be convincing, whether it actually violated some policy somewhere or not. So why is there all this obsession with making the rules prescriptive? It doesn't accomplish anything we didn't already have without firm rules, and it only creates barriers to doing the right thing in those rare cases where policy conflicts with best practices. --causa sui 08:16, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- That seems very idealistic to me. In practice I doubt you'd get very far with a complaint against an admin (or a request to other admins to undo his actions) if he acted within the letter and spirit of the rules. We ought to say explicitly in the rules that admins can and should use their discretion when deciding which version of a page to protect. Particularly if the subject has been the subject of past consensus. In other cases I don't think there can be any universal objective test that can't be manipulated in the sort of way Ad00d describes (certainly "protect the existing version" is clearly wrong if we want to discourage people from editwarring) - admins have to get their hands (or rather their brains) dirty and think a bit.--Kotniski (talk) 12:42, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- It depends what you mean by "complaint". The complaint should be against the action, not the admin who undertook it: if an action is detrimental to the project, any admin is within the "letter and spirit of the rules" to undo it, without any prejudice on the original admin. You wouldn't get very far in launching a complaint against the original admin, but that's not the point. We already do say very clearly that admin discression is allowed and encouraged. The way to avoid people gaming the system is to avoid giving them prescriptive rules to game, and rely on the application of Common Sense. Happy‑melon 13:00, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- I very much agree with all of that except "we say very clearly". It isn't at all clear, even to admins themselves, that they are allowed and encouraged to use judgement in this situation. (Note how they sometimes smugly announce that they are protecting The Wrong Version - meaning "I don't care what's right, and I'm right not to care what's right.")--Kotniski (talk) 16:14, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- I think the problem is that we give one "very clear" message at WP:IAR and then try to water it down on pages like this, which is the source of the confusion. Happy‑melon 19:11, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- I very much agree with all of that except "we say very clearly". It isn't at all clear, even to admins themselves, that they are allowed and encouraged to use judgement in this situation. (Note how they sometimes smugly announce that they are protecting The Wrong Version - meaning "I don't care what's right, and I'm right not to care what's right.")--Kotniski (talk) 16:14, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Yes, it is idealistic. So is the idea of an encyclopedia anyone can edit. Both work, and have worked, since the very beginning here. You are absolutely right that it would be difficult to make an objection to a use of sysop rights that was within the letter and spirit of the rules, and that is an excellent argument against having rules. --causa sui 18:20, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- It depends what you mean by "complaint". The complaint should be against the action, not the admin who undertook it: if an action is detrimental to the project, any admin is within the "letter and spirit of the rules" to undo it, without any prejudice on the original admin. You wouldn't get very far in launching a complaint against the original admin, but that's not the point. We already do say very clearly that admin discression is allowed and encouraged. The way to avoid people gaming the system is to avoid giving them prescriptive rules to game, and rely on the application of Common Sense. Happy‑melon 13:00, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- That seems very idealistic to me. In practice I doubt you'd get very far with a complaint against an admin (or a request to other admins to undo his actions) if he acted within the letter and spirit of the rules. We ought to say explicitly in the rules that admins can and should use their discretion when deciding which version of a page to protect. Particularly if the subject has been the subject of past consensus. In other cases I don't think there can be any universal objective test that can't be manipulated in the sort of way Ad00d describes (certainly "protect the existing version" is clearly wrong if we want to discourage people from editwarring) - admins have to get their hands (or rather their brains) dirty and think a bit.--Kotniski (talk) 12:42, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
Comment: IMO the removed bit of policy merely clarified how WP:IAR is sometimes used in this context, reflecting practice. It's probably better to be clear about that: admins sometimes can and do revert to a stable pre-edit war version rather than merely leaving whatever's current, if that's in the interest of the encyclopedia's readers. That seems perfectly sensible: admins shouldn't have prior involvement with the issue, so we'll trust their judgement enough to say that if they think it necessary, they are allowed to revert to a prior version. Remember that such action is only temporary, whilst the matter is resolved on the talk page - it shouldn't (but inevitably sometimes does) prejudice the outcome of that discussion. However, it would probably be helpful to expand that policy bit slightly, warning admins only to do this if it really seems necessary. Reference to prior consensus might help clarify the intent. Example:
Administrators may also revert to a version of the page pre-dating the edit war if a prior consensus exists, especially if insufficient discussion has taken place over major changes. However this is not the norm and editors asking for page protection because they believe their version is the consensus version should not expect that version to be protected. Administrators should balance the benefit to readers of reverting to a prior consensus version against the harm this may do to discussion about changes. Explaining any such action on the talk page is highly advised. Where a prior version is reverted to, this should not prejudice discussion about changes.
Rd232 13:35, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Yes, I think we need something like this. I'm not sure about the second sentence though - it seems to give an admin the right to ignore past consensus if they feel like it, which is a discretion they should certainly not have. Nor do I see how "reverting to a prior consensus version" might be expected to do harm to discussion about changes (I probably will if you explain what you mean). And factors other than past consensus need to be mentioned too.--Kotniski (talk) 16:20, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- I don't see what you mean about the second sentence - it doesn't say anything about admin rights, it's addressed to editors asking for protection. Reverting to a prior consensus version can harm a discussion because some editors may be influenced by such judgement on what the consensus was, and may also feel that this means changes are being discouraged. Particularly for newbies it's hard to avoid that impression I think, so some care is called for. What factors other than past consensus need to be mentioned? (Don't forget the context of the para this issue is in - it mentions eg BLP issues in the first sentence of that para.) Rd232 16:39, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- About the second sentence, saying "this is not the norm" and "editors should not expect" sounds like words that an admin might fling back in an editor's face if the admin doesn't feel like looking into the claim of past consensus. Obviously just believing something doesn't enable you to expect others to automatically take your word for it, so I consider the sentence redundant. About the third/fourth sentences, I would rather say something like this: "when reverting to a prior consensus version, the admininstrator should make it clear on the talk page that this is not a final decision, and that discussion of proposed changes to that version is encouraged to continue". It seems to be not so much a need for balance as a need to clarify what's being done.--Kotniski (talk) 17:41, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- I don't see what you mean about the second sentence - it doesn't say anything about admin rights, it's addressed to editors asking for protection. Reverting to a prior consensus version can harm a discussion because some editors may be influenced by such judgement on what the consensus was, and may also feel that this means changes are being discouraged. Particularly for newbies it's hard to avoid that impression I think, so some care is called for. What factors other than past consensus need to be mentioned? (Don't forget the context of the para this issue is in - it mentions eg BLP issues in the first sentence of that para.) Rd232 16:39, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- The problem here is there is too much legal jargon that creates the impression that it's making pronouncements and authorizations. The problem with making the policy constraining is that, as Kotniski (talk · contribs) showed above, every time you think you are forbidding something bad, you are also authorizing something that might also be bad. Leaving out the lawspeak means you aren't authorizing anything and so the administrator will never be able to hide under policy to justify doing something stupid, even if it appeared to be authorized by policy. Try this:
- When protecting a page that has been the topic of severe edit warring, consider reverting to a stable version prior to the dispute .
- --causa sui 18:34, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- That seems to obscure policy by refocussing it as a guideline for admins. What "legal jargon" are you referring to? Rd232 18:38, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
I'm not sure what you mean by "guideline for admins" exactly. --causa sui 18:44, 1 June 2009 (UTC)- I thought about it, and I think I get what you're saying. You want to emphasize the priority of policy over guideline, I think as explained on WP:POLICY: "Our policies are considered standards that should be followed, whereas our guidelines are more advisory in nature." Yes, I think that I want the policy to be advisory rather than a standard to be followed on this issue. Here, compare these two questions:
- Should administrators use page protection to establish their preferred revision in a content dispute in which they are a party?
- Should administrators use page protection to restore a stable or consensus revision in a content dispute in which they are not a party?
- One of those questions is very easy and is very much "a standard that should be followed". The other isn't, and it's something that we need to let administrators decide for themselves on a case by case basis. It's highly problematic, and besides it's unnecessary, to answer question #2 with the same force as we answer question #1. --causa sui 18:55, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Er no that's not what I meant at all. I just meant that instead of being written as something addressed to everyone ("this is what may happen / what admins may do") it's addressed to admins ("this is what you should think about"). Also for the two questions you raise, 1 is entirely straightforward (don't abuse admin tools), while the latter is what we're talking about - almost. The question hasn't (until now) been "should admins restore a consensus version", but "should admins be permitted to restore a consensus version if they think it's appropriate" (and if so how should that be phrased in protection policy). Rd232 19:58, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Now I'm confused again. Is there some case where an administrator should do X, but should not be allowed to do X? --causa sui 20:12, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Er, I think you need to go to bed or something. It's pretty clearly the difference between saying "Admins should generally/always restore a consensus version" and "Admins are allowed to restore a consensus verion but don't have to". Rd232 20:21, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'm happy to discuss this, so long as we can be polite about it. --causa sui 20:37, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well maybe I should have put a smiley face, I just meant it was hard to understand your misunderstanding. Rd232 20:58, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- All right. If you put it that way, I definitely prefer the second version, if I had to pick between the two. --causa sui 22:04, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Um, I wasn't proposing them as alternatives. I thought we were talking about the latter idea, and exactly how to phrase that, and suddenly the former idea popped up, which confused me. Some miscommunication here, which I think started with my initial throwaway "guideline" remark. Sorry. Rd232 08:16, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- All right. If you put it that way, I definitely prefer the second version, if I had to pick between the two. --causa sui 22:04, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well maybe I should have put a smiley face, I just meant it was hard to understand your misunderstanding. Rd232 20:58, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'm happy to discuss this, so long as we can be polite about it. --causa sui 20:37, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Er, I think you need to go to bed or something. It's pretty clearly the difference between saying "Admins should generally/always restore a consensus version" and "Admins are allowed to restore a consensus verion but don't have to". Rd232 20:21, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Now I'm confused again. Is there some case where an administrator should do X, but should not be allowed to do X? --causa sui 20:12, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well, problem is, the more discretion you give an admin, the more the admin automatically does become a party to the dispute by protecting a particular version. That's presumably why we have this "protect the current version" concept. However, that concept is seriously flawed (it rewards edit warring), and thus we need to find something better. But the something better we find must make it quite clear what the role of the admin is - and it has to be something like the role of the admin closing an AfD discussion. I.e. the admin is bound by consensus - that's absolutely fundamental - but may have to use delicate judgement to decide what consensus is.--Kotniski (talk) 19:06, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- On the one hand yes, there's a similarity to closing AfDs. On the other hand, an AfD outcome is a lot more lasting as a decision; version displayed whilst page is protected for purposes of discussion is inherently temporary. I think we shouldn't actively encourage admins to do this (identify a prior consensus version), but it's very reasonable to explicitly permit it (where the admin is uninvolved, obviously - that goes without saying, since involved admins shouldn't be doing page protection). And because of the temporariness of it, as long as the admin is uninvolved, it doesn't matter that much whether they make the right call, because it's only temporary anyway. Rd232 19:58, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Here's some problems I'd like addressed in any proposal :
- A pre-existing consensus is meaningless when new information is added, so how do admins decide in that case?
- If admins are allowed to roll back (or change current version), what happens to unrelated good faith edits on the article in that time period?
- How much more powerful than an editor should an admin be? and why?Archaic d00d (talk) 21:59, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- These are certainly difficult and complex questions that need discussing. In the special case where there was prior consensus that is still relevant, I disagree with Rd's view - mine is that consensus is the foundation for our decision making, and it is absolutely unacceptable for an admin to fail to uphold it when it exists. Those special cases where such prior consensus exists should be the easy ones - those where it doesn't, as noted by Archaic, are more problematic and need more thought.--Kotniski (talk) 08:01, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- (edit conflict) - so to clarify, you think admins should be required to uphold prior consensus when imposing page protection? That's a defensible position but it's a much more radical change than what, until now, we were discussing here, which was explicitly permitting admins to do that, if they thought it necessary, as opposed to implicitly permitting it (via WP:IAR). As to your final thought - where prior consensus can't reasonably be construed, admins should only act if there is an issue relating BLP, libel, etc (which the policy already says). Rd232 08:23, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well, in answer to your first question, yes, and I think it's more than just defensible, it's absolutely fundamental. And to your second point, no, I still disagree. Admins must act - page protection itself is an act - and having a principle that they should always protect whatever version they find on top, while superficially attractive, is obviously (when you think about it) a reward for aggressive edit warriors. I'm not saying there are easy answers, but we must do better than that.--Kotniski (talk) 09:05, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- Fine, but that's a conversation for another day (or at least another section). Make a proposal for that if you like. Rd232 09:46, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well, in answer to your first question, yes, and I think it's more than just defensible, it's absolutely fundamental. And to your second point, no, I still disagree. Admins must act - page protection itself is an act - and having a principle that they should always protect whatever version they find on top, while superficially attractive, is obviously (when you think about it) a reward for aggressive edit warriors. I'm not saying there are easy answers, but we must do better than that.--Kotniski (talk) 09:05, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- (edit conflict) - so to clarify, you think admins should be required to uphold prior consensus when imposing page protection? That's a defensible position but it's a much more radical change than what, until now, we were discussing here, which was explicitly permitting admins to do that, if they thought it necessary, as opposed to implicitly permitting it (via WP:IAR). As to your final thought - where prior consensus can't reasonably be construed, admins should only act if there is an issue relating BLP, libel, etc (which the policy already says). Rd232 08:23, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- These are certainly difficult and complex questions that need discussing. In the special case where there was prior consensus that is still relevant, I disagree with Rd's view - mine is that consensus is the foundation for our decision making, and it is absolutely unacceptable for an admin to fail to uphold it when it exists. Those special cases where such prior consensus exists should be the easy ones - those where it doesn't, as noted by Archaic, are more problematic and need more thought.--Kotniski (talk) 08:01, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- On the one hand yes, there's a similarity to closing AfDs. On the other hand, an AfD outcome is a lot more lasting as a decision; version displayed whilst page is protected for purposes of discussion is inherently temporary. I think we shouldn't actively encourage admins to do this (identify a prior consensus version), but it's very reasonable to explicitly permit it (where the admin is uninvolved, obviously - that goes without saying, since involved admins shouldn't be doing page protection). And because of the temporariness of it, as long as the admin is uninvolved, it doesn't matter that much whether they make the right call, because it's only temporary anyway. Rd232 19:58, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- Er no that's not what I meant at all. I just meant that instead of being written as something addressed to everyone ("this is what may happen / what admins may do") it's addressed to admins ("this is what you should think about"). Also for the two questions you raise, 1 is entirely straightforward (don't abuse admin tools), while the latter is what we're talking about - almost. The question hasn't (until now) been "should admins restore a consensus version", but "should admins be permitted to restore a consensus version if they think it's appropriate" (and if so how should that be phrased in protection policy). Rd232 19:58, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
- That seems to obscure policy by refocussing it as a guideline for admins. What "legal jargon" are you referring to? Rd232 18:38, 1 June 2009 (UTC)
(outdent)
- "A pre-existing consensus is meaningless when new information is added" - no, that's precisely when it's meaningful: if there's an edit war about new information, it needs more discussion before being added.
- Unrelated good faith edits are a problem, which is one reason why this shouldn't be the norm (but there are solutions, eg putting a diff on the talk page so they can be re-added later)
- We're only talking about reverting to a prior version
- Admins should only be doing this if they're uninvolved, and the reason for letting them do this (as opposed to encouraging or requiring) when dealing with an edit war by imposing protection is that sometimes it's clearly in the interests of the readers to have a prior stable version, rather than a current disputed proposal. Rd232 08:16, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- I've been mulling over this, and I'm starting to think that maybe the best solution is to just say nothing about it either way. Would this satisfy everyone? --causa sui 02:46, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- Not really; it would give the impression that admins can do whatever they damn well like. So (a) a small minority of them might actually start doing what they damn well like; (b) the majority of them, acting in good faith, would have nothing to point to in justification of what they've done, thus giving the appearance to involved editors that they are just doing what they damn well like.--Kotniski (talk) 07:54, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- Agreed - I think it's better to briefly say it's discouraged but that sometimes it's necessary in the interests of the readers (or words to that effect). And again, even if they replace the current version with "la la la you're a bunch of edit-warring muppets", this is only temporary until either (a) discussion concludes or (b) somebody complains and gets an egregious error or abuse overturned. Rd232 08:16, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- Not really; it would give the impression that admins can do whatever they damn well like. So (a) a small minority of them might actually start doing what they damn well like; (b) the majority of them, acting in good faith, would have nothing to point to in justification of what they've done, thus giving the appearance to involved editors that they are just doing what they damn well like.--Kotniski (talk) 07:54, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- (B) is really the biggest problem here because it's so manifestly false. (This is surreal.) They would have nothing to point to to justify their actions? How about a rationale for why it helped the project? I wonder if this is just so blindingly obvious that people can't see it right in front of their faces. --causa sui 10:16, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- They would have nothing explicitly written in policy to point to. WP:IAR is a problematic fallback, frequently misunderstood by newbies. It can easily create an appearance of arbitrariness; having some written, agreed guidance avoids that. Rd232 10:49, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'm not talking about appealing to IAR. I'm saying that if someone wants to know why you did something, it's better to explain to them why, rather than saying "Policy says I can do it, and that settles it." Prescriptive policy is a thought terminating cliche, and that's why WP:POLICY, WP:5 etc are so abundantly clear that policy is not prescriptive. --causa sui 10:51, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- Yeah, but people don't see it that way. If policy were completely non-prescriptive, we wouldn't call it policy, and we wouldn't be having this sort of discussion - proposals to change the way we do things would be made in other forms than proposals to change the wording of policy/guideline pages. (I agree that would be much better, but saying it's true doesn't make it true.)--Kotniski (talk) 11:06, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- There's a big misunderstanding about what all this means. For some reason people here seem to think that if policy isn't prescriptive then that means that you can do whatever you want. Obviously, nobody is in favor of that. I'd rather focus on my other point for now, since it's less reliant on technical vocabulary that we don't have clearly defined for the purposes of this conversation. --causa sui 11:10, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- Yeah, but people don't see it that way. If policy were completely non-prescriptive, we wouldn't call it policy, and we wouldn't be having this sort of discussion - proposals to change the way we do things would be made in other forms than proposals to change the wording of policy/guideline pages. (I agree that would be much better, but saying it's true doesn't make it true.)--Kotniski (talk) 11:06, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'm not talking about appealing to IAR. I'm saying that if someone wants to know why you did something, it's better to explain to them why, rather than saying "Policy says I can do it, and that settles it." Prescriptive policy is a thought terminating cliche, and that's why WP:POLICY, WP:5 etc are so abundantly clear that policy is not prescriptive. --causa sui 10:51, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- They would have nothing explicitly written in policy to point to. WP:IAR is a problematic fallback, frequently misunderstood by newbies. It can easily create an appearance of arbitrariness; having some written, agreed guidance avoids that. Rd232 10:49, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- (B) is really the biggest problem here because it's so manifestly false. (This is surreal.) They would have nothing to point to to justify their actions? How about a rationale for why it helped the project? I wonder if this is just so blindingly obvious that people can't see it right in front of their faces. --causa sui 10:16, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
- There are two serious problems here: one is that the best version before the dispute may go back very far indeed. It might apply if there was a recent dispute--but some articles have been disputed for years. More important, no two admins will see this the same way, and it's going to start depending on who gets there first. that is of course one way to settle conflict disputes, sort of like the situation at AfD. On the other hand, if we protect after something horrible was done, which is usually the case, it depends how soon we get there--if we get there fast, the bad version will be the one left standing. If we get there later, someone will change it to the better. Frankly, I've sometime been just a little slow to respond to requests for this very reason. If we're going to make it flexible, we need better guidelines than the ones now in the policy after the edit war over it. "When it helps the project" is a bad rule, since that's just where the disagreement usually is in a reasonably good faith content dispute. DGG (talk) 03:10, 21 June 2009 (UTC)
- What do you suggest? I proposed a more concrete set of guidelines below on this page, but people seem to recoil in horror at the suggestion that admins should follow any kind of system. (The theory is that if they act randomly then that will be "fair" to all sides, but I can't agree with that - firstly because it's evidently "fairer" to the side that edit warred the most, and edit warring is not something we want to encourage with such rewards; and secondly because there's no way of knowing how randomly the admin really did act - as you say, the admin might well have been waiting until a particular version was on top before protecting.)--Kotniski (talk) 07:15, 21 June 2009 (UTC)
- We need fewer guidelines, not more, since we cannot predict every eventuality here. The idea that we need to prescribe rules is rather arrogant IMHO, implying that we can somehow know better what to do here on the policy page with our crystal balls than admins in the field. ⟳ausa کui 11:01, 21 June 2009 (UTC)
- There is that way of looking at it, but on the other hand, if admins are given no guidance, they won't know what criteria they're expected to apply, leading to a lot of acrimonious debate between admins trying hard to do the right thing and users accusing them of overstepping (or understepping) their authority. Anyway, we seem to be starting to repeat the last debate, so unless anyone has any concrete new proposals, there probably isn't much point in carrying on at the moment.--Kotniski (talk) 06:47, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
- Guidance is one thing. Rules are a completely different animal. ⟳ausa کui 08:33, 23 June 2009 (UTC)
- There is that way of looking at it, but on the other hand, if admins are given no guidance, they won't know what criteria they're expected to apply, leading to a lot of acrimonious debate between admins trying hard to do the right thing and users accusing them of overstepping (or understepping) their authority. Anyway, we seem to be starting to repeat the last debate, so unless anyone has any concrete new proposals, there probably isn't much point in carrying on at the moment.--Kotniski (talk) 06:47, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
Common sense request
I think this line needs to be more strongly worded:
"Administrators should not protect or unprotect a page to further their own position in a content dispute."
I believe it should say this.
"Administrators should never, under any circumstances, fully protect a page which they have edited even once either on the talk page or the mainspace. They should go through the request channels used by regular users."
I was involved in a dispute with an admin who thought that I was wrong and reverted my changes and fully protected the article to her version until she was convinced I was right. It was condescending. It was an incredible abuse of power. It was wrong. It made me feel like a worthless pile of dirt. Admins should never, ever, do that. Wrad (talk) 14:02, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- I dunno, maybe the admin did wrong in that situation, maybe not, but I don't think we can lay down a categorical rule like you propose. It would tie admins' hands too much in some cases, most obviously when they're battling vandalism.--Kotniski (talk) 14:45, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- (ec)I think it would be a little unreasonable to expect an administrator to examine thousands of edits on an article before they fully protect the article to see if at one time they may have fixed a typo or added a sentence. The case you cite is an example of a blatant abuse of power even as the policy is currently worded, and I agree that as you portray it, admins should never, ever do that. That does not mean, however, that an admin who happened to have edited a page in the past, but is not a party to the current content dispute over which other users are edit warring should be barred from protecting that page. If the admin is involved in the dispute, they should never take any administrative action. That applies to blocks, page protections, deletions, etc. and is a commonly held norm on Misplaced Pages. The proposed strengthening of the policy would bring this to an insane level as an administrator who fixed a typo on a page three years ago would be barred from protecting the page even if they have absolutely no connection to the dispute. I think the current wording is completely sufficient to protect against what an admin put you through, as the admin in question was undoubtedly in violation of policy (assuming all of the relevant information is provided above; can't comment on that as I cannot investigate the particular case with the information provided) but if you insist on strengthening the wording, I would say:
An administrator should never fully protect an article if they are involved in a content dispute on that article or have expressed their opinion regarding the content dispute on that article. Administrators should also avoid fully protecting articles when the article is subject to a content dispute which involve users they are involved with in disputes elsewhere on Misplaced Pages.
- I just believe the proposed wording you provide above not only doesn't address the problem you have experienced but also would place an incredible amount of burden on any administrator responding to a request for page protection. The Seeker 4 Talk 14:47, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- Fair enough. I just think it should be very clear that it is wrong to revert and then fully protect an article if you're an admin. That's exactly what this admin did. She said "I don't agree with these edits", reverted, and then fully protected. What power do I have, as a regular, editor of Misplaced Pages, against such steamrolling? I tried to get help afterwards and everyone just told me to calm down, rather than doing anything against the admin. I had to call in an RfC and get tons of opinions on my side before the almighty admin finally swallowed the pill and unprotected it. I think your rewording is fair. I think I would add this at the end, though, In these cases, admins should go through the request channels used by regular users. Wrad (talk) 15:15, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- I think a more concise wording would be:
An administrator should never fully protect an article if they are involved in a content dispute on that article, have expressed their opinion regarding a content dispute on that article, or when the article is subject to a content dispute which involves users they are involved with in disputes elsewhere on Misplaced Pages.
- It's already well known that admins shouldn't be reverting and then protecting unless it's a BLP issue or some other sort of blatant vandalism (as opposed to a content dispute), so there's no reason to include anything about that. As for the "in these cases", that's already a given. ···日本穣 18:42, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- So why didn't anybody point that out to this admin? I'm not sure it's as well known as you think. Where were all the the people who knew about this when I had a problem? The user who did this is still an admin and still causes problems. Wrad (talk) 19:03, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- Fair enough. I just think it should be very clear that it is wrong to revert and then fully protect an article if you're an admin. That's exactly what this admin did. She said "I don't agree with these edits", reverted, and then fully protected. What power do I have, as a regular, editor of Misplaced Pages, against such steamrolling? I tried to get help afterwards and everyone just told me to calm down, rather than doing anything against the admin. I had to call in an RfC and get tons of opinions on my side before the almighty admin finally swallowed the pill and unprotected it. I think your rewording is fair. I think I would add this at the end, though, In these cases, admins should go through the request channels used by regular users. Wrad (talk) 15:15, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well, it is hard for anyone to comment about the specific case you were involved in unless you provide links to what actually happened in that case. If you would rather not reveal this information that is perfectly fine, you have no obligation to do so, but understand that no one can comment specifically about your experience without actually being able to investigate what your experience was. Additionally, I support Nihonjoe's version, more concise than mine :-) The Seeker 4 Talk 19:10, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- Yeah, I understand. I think your suggestions for rewording are great. That's about all I can expect, I guess. Wrad (talk) 19:12, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well, it is hard for anyone to comment about the specific case you were involved in unless you provide links to what actually happened in that case. If you would rather not reveal this information that is perfectly fine, you have no obligation to do so, but understand that no one can comment specifically about your experience without actually being able to investigate what your experience was. Additionally, I support Nihonjoe's version, more concise than mine :-) The Seeker 4 Talk 19:10, 5 June 2009 (UTC)
- Absolutely not. This language is too specific, and that will lead to instruction creep. Please do not implement this change without consensus. ⟳ausa کui 00:37, 6 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well, that is why we're having this discussion after all: to gain consensus. No one said anything about throwing it in without that consensus. ···日本穣 00:47, 6 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'm glad to hear it. :-) ⟳ausa کui 00:52, 6 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well maybe if some admins weren't knuckleheads we wouldn't need this. There's a good rule. If you're an admin, don't be a knucklehead. Wrad (talk) 02:26, 6 June 2009 (UTC)
- Hah, I can get behind that one. :-) Unfortunately, no matter how strongly you word the rules or how specific you make them, some admins will always, at least occasionally, act like idiots. There's nothing to do about it except clean up after them. ⟳ausa کui 04:10, 6 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well maybe if some admins weren't knuckleheads we wouldn't need this. There's a good rule. If you're an admin, don't be a knucklehead. Wrad (talk) 02:26, 6 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'm glad to hear it. :-) ⟳ausa کui 00:52, 6 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well, that is why we're having this discussion after all: to gain consensus. No one said anything about throwing it in without that consensus. ···日本穣 00:47, 6 June 2009 (UTC)
- I think the current working is fine; it's a catch-all. The other examples I see are way too wordy and too specific. And it would appear to indicate a perpetual ban on an admin protecting an article they have ever had an opinion on. If an admin had a content dispute that was settled last year, I wouldn't consider them to be biased or in a dispute right now. I also wouldn't consider expressing an opinion to make someone unbiased. You can express an opinion and still uphold policy (this is why I like the protect the current version only argument). As long as they haven't participated in the content dispute on the article, then I'd say they can still do their job just fine. Otherwise we've reduced admins to blind justices who's only job is to patrol policy violations instead of them being editors with a couple extra jobs and responsibilities (that's what we are). -Royalguard11(T) 21:28, 7 June 2009 (UTC)
- I think the current version is fine - it's short and clear. Of course it's sometimes ignored or not enforced, but fiddling with the policy won't change that. It might be useful though to add a sentence after the current one, to say something like "Possible violations of this should be reported to WP:AN." Disembrangler (talk) 10:18, 10 June 2009 (UTC)
Legality of locking pages
I'm wondering where the copyright laws and the licensing comes into play in this matter. It is my understanding (albeit my understanding is limited) that all articles on Misplaced Pages are licensed under the GFDL which is a public domains license. Therefore, the abilities administrators have to lock, edit, and delete pages strikes me as being contrary to those licenses. I assume that this isn't the case, yet I would like to know the rationale behind this policy. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Danemmason (talk • contribs) 01:21, 9 June 2009 (UTC)
- I think you misunderstood the license. The GFDL and CC-BY-SA licenses mean you can make your own derivative works. That does not entitle you under any circumstances to edit Misplaced Pages itself. Page protection is not stopping you from say, copying the content to your own website and making your own derivative (with attibution etc). --⟳ausa کui 19:59, 9 June 2009 (UTC)
- Also, GFDL is not a public domain license as it requires attribution and linking to the full text of the GFDL licensing document itself. ···日本穣 21:11, 9 June 2009 (UTC)
Full protection on userpages
The policy says user pages should never be fully protected unless the user is dead. Why? لennavecia 13:19, 15 June 2009 (UTC)
- Probably stems from the anyone-can-edit principle. imo, admins shouldn't lock their userpage down without some kind of protracted disruption from autoconfirmed users. –xeno 13:29, 15 June 2009 (UTC)
- Agree with xeno. Move-protection is fine (user pages rarely need to be moved). However, the default for editing pages should always be open. If there's heavy vandalism, finite semi-protection or full-protection is fine. --MZMcBride (talk) 17:31, 15 June 2009 (UTC)
- Do you mean user pages, or user talk pages? Also, it only says user pages cannot be fully protected at the user's request. Some user pages, e.g. vandals, are protected because the user abuses them, not because of a request. — Carl (CBM · talk) 17:55, 15 June 2009 (UTC)
- Why fully protect a dead user's page? I suppose 'in memoriam' is probably the understandable excuse, but I've never been very convinced by it. User pages generally need editing like anything else. They have typos, and fair-use images, and bots changing the categories, updating inconvenient links, people removing allegedly inappropriate content, deprecating templates, fixing bugs, making improvements, and more going on. Such edits shouldn't require an admin. -- zzuuzz 18:31, 15 June 2009 (UTC)
Full protection of user pages that are targets of persistent, serious vandalism (from autoconfirmed accounts) is routine - I see it on my watchlist on a regular basis, almost daily. I've added a bit to the policy page to address that, but haven't added anything about other forms of protection or protection for other reasons. Nathan 18:14, 15 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree Nathan's edit here reflects current practice and consensus. — Satori Son 18:38, 15 June 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks, Nathan. Makes more sense. Personally, I don't buy the argument from the Defender of the Wiki tagline. No one needs to be editing my userpage. Regardless, this new wording is a better representation of current practice. لennavecia 01:25, 16 June 2009 (UTC)
- I think you might need to read WP:OWN again. People can edit you userpage, but in practice people shouldn't unless they have a good reason (I worked with WP:GUS for a while and we had to edit userpages, non disruptively of course). The change to the written policy is good and reaffirms admin discretion in these situations, which is basically the underlying principle to the whole policy. -Royalguard11(T) 02:36, 19 June 2009 (UTC)
- To me, it's not about OWN issues at all. I don't mind constructive or even attempts at constructive editing. What I do mind a lot is vandalism, and the needless work it takes to clean up after it. If the user page associated with my username (not mine :) were protected, I wouldn't mind someone making constructive edits to it. - Taxman 12:52, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- We do need to edit userpages occasionally. To bring this closer to intuition, consider cases of users who have fair-use images displayed in galleries on their userpage (or elsewhere in the userspace). This is a violation of United States copyright law, and so we do need to edit the user pages of people who do this. There are other examples, but the point is that since most people don't edit your user page anyway, we might as well not protect it. ⟳ausa کui 21:26, 19 June 2009 (UTC)
- I think you might need to read WP:OWN again. People can edit you userpage, but in practice people shouldn't unless they have a good reason (I worked with WP:GUS for a while and we had to edit userpages, non disruptively of course). The change to the written policy is good and reaffirms admin discretion in these situations, which is basically the underlying principle to the whole policy. -Royalguard11(T) 02:36, 19 June 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks, Nathan. Makes more sense. Personally, I don't buy the argument from the Defender of the Wiki tagline. No one needs to be editing my userpage. Regardless, this new wording is a better representation of current practice. لennavecia 01:25, 16 June 2009 (UTC)
This is good timing. I strongly disagree that userpages shouldn't be able to be protected. They're not articles so the everything should be able to be edited doesn't really apply. I think if someone doesn't have any non free images, etc on their page, they should be able to request that it be protected or protect it themselves. There is no benefit to Misplaced Pages to have so many user pages be vandalized so often and have so many people spend so much time watching them and reverting the vandalism. No one else needs to edit my userpage and there have been almost no constructive edits to it by someone else since I started with the project in 2003. People's time would be much better spent doing anything else to help the project rather than having to watch userpages for vandalism. Various admins' userpages have been protected for a long time and I believe all of them should be able to be. - Taxman 12:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- FWIW, I will echo Taxman's views. Casliber (talk · contribs) 21:34, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- We'll have to agree to disagree on priciple then, but even the userpage guidelines states As a tradition, Misplaced Pages offers wide latitude to users to manage their user space as they see fit. However, pages in user space still do belong to the community. Userpages are not part of regular content, and therefore have a lower importance. If they are vandalized, it is up to the user or another friendly user to revert. It is not up to policy or any users to prescribe what any user should do during their time. Anyone can work on anything and put in as much time as they want. The day they change that is the day I'm done.
- You mention admins too, and I agree. Admins shouldn't just be locking their userpages forever just because they can.
- If you do want to change policy on editing of userpages then you need a larger consensus. This is not only a protection policy question, it also affects WP:OWN and WP:USER, along with the fundamental anyone can edit principle. You don't believe that applies to userspace, and that goes against the status quo. The onus is on you to show there is consensus to change that. Taxman, you're a 'crat. You know this isn't the right venue. A big change like this needs to be transparent, not hidden on some obscure policy talk page. -Royalguard11(T) 20:04, 4 July 2009 (UTC)
Preemptive protection fallacy
Actually, upon reading this page, I am concerned we have a logic flaw if the page states that we do not engage in preemptive protection when we plainly do in many cases - e.g. the image that appears in the DYK template on the main page, and many templates which are highly visible and often linked. I'd also make a case for BLPs where the page in question has not been vandalised yet but we become aware of a controversial real-life situation (court case, arrest or whatever) which suggests the page may be at high risk of vandalism. Casliber (talk · contribs) 20:56, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I think you are reading the page too literally. Yes, there are exceptions, but generally we want to avoid protecting pages because "they might be vandalized." ⟳ausa کui 21:56, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Perhaps change the wording to:
Pre-emptive full protection of articles is generally contrary to the open nature of Misplaced Pages. (emphasis added)
- Thoughts? ···日本穣 · Talk to Nihonjoe 22:47, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Sounds like a good idea. — Aitias // discussion 22:54, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- No, there is no flaw, this is a general principle and should remain as is per our open nature. The exceptions for high risk images, templates and main page-related pages are documented in the policy. For exceptional cases, there is IAR. We could add 'generally' to any of our policy, but this doesn't make any more sense, and gives less strength. Cenarium (talk) 23:02, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with Cenarium. ⟳ausa کui 01:47, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I also agree with Cenarium. The Main Page can't really be called a "normal page", as it and everything transcluded to the main page are always protected so that our front end looks good at least. Templates that are protected are under WP:HRT (most HRTs fall under technical reasons rather than policy). I don't know about preemptive protection for BLP pages, I don't recall the policy allowing for that (maybe I'm mistaken, BLP is a very far reaching policy and seems to label BLPs as a special class outside the regular rules, and in my opinion it gives way too many special privileges, but that's not the issue we're looking at). -Royalguard11(T) 21:52, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
The part about his exorcism seems dubious at best, they are all from the same source, which is obviously biased, even though it is in good faith. I might recommend striking that section since it also has no connection with any other part of the article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.208.242.2 (talk) 15:53, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
We dont need pornography on wikipedia. Please remove inappropriate images ASAP to keep this site relevant and trustworthy. Where is everyone's common sense? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.76.118.13 (talk) 18:12, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
No silver padlock shown; Talk page semi-locked
The article about Keith Henson is semi-locked, but has no silver padlock on it. Also, even the Talk page is semi-locked and has no silver padlock on it. (semi-)locking Talk pages seems like a scary thing to do. But at least add the silver padlock image to both the article itself and the Talk page, so people (like me) know why we're unable to edit the pages and can only view their sources. --82.171.70.54 (talk) 13:55, 1 August 2009 (UTC)
- If the locking is temporary, for example because the servers are experiencing technical problems, the software should automatically add a silver padlock. Assuming that's possible, of course. --82.171.70.54 (talk) 14:17, 1 August 2009 (UTC)
--82.171.70.54 (talk) 14:48, 1 August 2009 (UTC)
- I left a note with the protecting admin and added the padlocks. Just FYI, the software does provide a note during database locks. –xeno 15:39, 1 August 2009 (UTC)
Anon IPs who blank the info about them on their talk page
Presumably with Anon IPs who deliberately keep blanking their talk page with all the notices about them being a school or similar doing a semi-protect on the talk page would be a good way forward? Seems to make sense, perhaps we should add it? --BozMo talk 16:36, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
- Assuming that the blocked anonymous editor is removing one of the three things they are not allowed to remove from their own talk page (as per WP:BLANKING), the easiest thing to do would be to re-block him or her, but with the "allow this user to edit own talk page while blocked" box unchecked (as per WP:BLOCK#Setting block options). Not only is it faster than manually protecting the talk page, but then the admin can be sure that the page protection expires at the same time as the block. — Kralizec! (talk) 16:51, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
- However for a school what you propose has the disadvantage of affecting other edits by that IP. If one user of a shared IP keeps doing one silly thing blocking the thing makes more sense than blcoking the IP. --BozMo talk 22:00, 10 August 2009 (UTC)