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Revision as of 03:09, 16 December 2014 editStephen G. Brown (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers13,730 edits User:Pass a Method← Previous edit Revision as of 03:14, 16 December 2014 edit undoStephen G. Brown (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers13,730 edits User:Pass a Method: Discussion is now closedNext edit →
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:'''Side note:''' Euryalus clarified a part of what he meant in his "06:05, 14 December 2014 (UTC)" post above, seen on my talk page. And to add on to my "15:10, 14 December 2014 (UTC)" comment, anyone who clicks on the North Atlanticist Usonian username will see the WP:Sockpuppet tag I added to that account unless it is removed, but, as , that tag no longer points to Pass a Method's sockpuppeting because '''his WP:Sockpuppeting archives are currently associated with the Pass a Method username...not the North Atlanticist Usonian username.''' So I am likely to do something to remedy that. And if a person wants to check the history of an article by using the "Edits by user" option to see if or how much Pass a Method has edited that article (which is what I did when collecting evidence against Pass a Method for WP:Sockpuppeting), that history will come up empty regardless because contributions are no longer incorporated into that username; editors will instead have to type in "North Atlanticist Usonian." But what of the editors who don't know of Pass a Method's username change? I suppose I will have to alert them to it. Sigh. Anyway, I am dropping all of this for now. I might look into getting the name reversed in the future, however, and, if I do, I will go about that more efficiently than this attempt. ] (]) 21:45, 15 December 2014 (UTC) :'''Side note:''' Euryalus clarified a part of what he meant in his "06:05, 14 December 2014 (UTC)" post above, seen on my talk page. And to add on to my "15:10, 14 December 2014 (UTC)" comment, anyone who clicks on the North Atlanticist Usonian username will see the WP:Sockpuppet tag I added to that account unless it is removed, but, as , that tag no longer points to Pass a Method's sockpuppeting because '''his WP:Sockpuppeting archives are currently associated with the Pass a Method username...not the North Atlanticist Usonian username.''' So I am likely to do something to remedy that. And if a person wants to check the history of an article by using the "Edits by user" option to see if or how much Pass a Method has edited that article (which is what I did when collecting evidence against Pass a Method for WP:Sockpuppeting), that history will come up empty regardless because contributions are no longer incorporated into that username; editors will instead have to type in "North Atlanticist Usonian." But what of the editors who don't know of Pass a Method's username change? I suppose I will have to alert them to it. Sigh. Anyway, I am dropping all of this for now. I might look into getting the name reversed in the future, however, and, if I do, I will go about that more efficiently than this attempt. ] (]) 21:45, 15 December 2014 (UTC)


::Yes, it is time to drop it. This discussion is officially closed. ] (]) 03:09, 16 December 2014 (UTC) ::Yes, it is time to drop it. This discussion is officially closed. ] (]) 03:14, 16 December 2014 (UTC)


== User:Anup to User:Anup (usurp) == == User:Anup to User:Anup (usurp) ==

Revision as of 03:14, 16 December 2014


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Underlining

May I ask you to do the same with the óther sections in the article? And also with Bulgarian lexis? Or at least to tell me how I can do it myself, I am not really a formatting genius... VMORO 15:35, Mar 20, 2005 (UTC)~

Could I ask why you're adopting underlining? The Misplaced Pages standard when referring to a word rather than the thing it denotes is to use italics. Underlining looks ugly and could mislead people into thinking that it indicated a link - and even in the case of links, many users set their browser to suppress the underlining, for aesthetic reasons. Maybe the problem is that you think the "italic" version of Cyrillic looks too different from the upright version, but many other articles use it. rossb 10:41, 21 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I've used underlining in this case because of the Cyrillic script. I've been reading and writing Cyrillic for longer than most people have been alive, so for me italicized Cyrillic presents no problem. However, italicized Cyrillic is difficult for anyone who is new or unaccustomed to it. We've already discussed this on Talk:Bulgarian_language, including possible solutions. Notice, for instance, how these Cyrillic letters appear in italics and other formats: вдигятопол, вдигятопол, вдигятопол, вдигятопол, вдигятопол.
We did the Bulgarian language page using italics at first, but the result was terrible ... and unreadible. You are welcome to do it a different way if you can think of a better one, but my opinion as a long-time professional typographer is that underlining is a vast improvement over italics in this case.
That other articles use Cyrillic italics does not strike me as a valid argument. Any article intended to be read by people who do not regularly use Cyrillic should not use Cyrillic italics, unless it's a discussion about Cyrillic italics. All those other articles should be changed.
As to users who set their browser to suppress underlining ... then they will simply see regular Cyrillic in contrast to the surrounding Roman text. It will be still much easier for them to read, and the appearance of the page will still be superior to one filled with a lot of Cyrillic italics.
The same holds true for words in any other language that uses some unusual letters. Italics tend to make them unreadable. For example, the Azerbaijani name for their own country: Azərbaycan Respublikası vs. Azərbaycan Respublikası ... italics kill the schwa. —Stephen 12:06, 21 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I take your point about the unfamiliarity of italic Cyrillic. The m for T is pretty confusing, and on holiday in Ukraine last year I was quite puzzled as to what the backwards s might be. But I wonder why you rejected bold as an alternative? Certainly whenever I see underlining on a web page, I have an urge to click on it. More generally, since you're proposing something potentially affecting a number of articles, shouldn't this be discussed on Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy)? By the way the italic schwa looks fine on my browswer (the much-maligned MSIE)rossb 13:19, 21 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Well, the second thing we tried on the Bulgarian page after rejecting italics was ... bold. It was certainly an improvement as far as legibility, but it was grotesque ... too ugly for words. As far as I can see, the choice is between underlining and a font change.
It won't hurt anything if you click on an underlined word, and the lack of action will be a good indication that it's not a link. People quickly learn not to click on RED links (because they don't go anywhere worthwhile), and they will figure out underlined words just as quickly.
You must have a really good font if you can see an italic schwa. The fonts that came with my Windows 2000 and Word 2000 don't have that letter, or any other unusual Roman italics.
I have never visited the Village Pump, but I agree that it should be discussed, so that something can be done about the other pages. One page in particular that I've noticed is the Common phrases in various languages ... all those italics make it illegible and unusable, besides the way it looks. Italics on a monitor are even worse than italics on paper, and even on paper they should be used with extreme discretion and vanishingly seldom. Underlining is a far better tool, both for legibility and for esthetic appearance.
Stephen 16:52, 21 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Killer language

Hello, Stephen. I'm hoping you can take a look at Killer language. That article was marked for cleanup in mid October, but it isn't showing on October's cleanup list. I'm not sure if it ever was listed. Google gives 1,090 hits for "killer language," so I assume it is a term that is in actual use. Is there useful material in that article? Should it be cleaned up or should it redirect elsewhere? Thank you. SWAdair | Talk 06:50, 7 Apr 2005 (UTC)

I had not seen this article before. It's an interesting outlook, if a bit strained. It discusses a problem that is both real and very serious, but I don't see how this view (of ascribing the death of one language to the "actions" of another, rather than to the laws, policies and practices of governments and societies) could be useful or effective. To solve the problem of dying languages, attitudes and laws have to be changed, and blaming English seems pointless to me. And in recent years, attitudes have indeed been changing (I'm not sure why), and minority dialects and languages are suddenly becoming respectable.
I suppose we could keep the article around for a while, since it seems to be popular. I'll clean it up a bit. —Stephen 09:32, 7 Apr 2005 (UTC)
  • Thank you. That article has been on my 2Bchecked list for a while. I'm just now getting around to working on the 2Bchecked list. Thank goodness you edit regularly -- it wasn't difficult to find you when I went looking for a linguist. Happy editing! SWAdair | Talk 09:44, 7 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Thanks

Hi Stephen,

I just wanted to quickly thank you for your attentiveness in the Azerbaijan entry not allowing vandal Rovoam to get along with his sneaky vandalism. He introduced his "traditional" vandalism in this edit () (just above the "Line 66"), which unfortunately went unnoticed by User:Picapica (), but you fixed it promptly ). In the past Rovoam tried to introduce similar sneaky vandalisms in Azerbaijanis (e.g. ), Azeri (e.g. ) and many other Azerbaijan-related and even unrelated entries, such as Ottoman Empire (e.g. ) or Ottoman Turks (e.g. ).

This person has been literally terrorizing various Azerbaijan and Turkey-related entries in WP, adding sneaky and blatant vandalisms of anti-Azeri and anti-Turk character. I am grateful to you along with many other editors, who track down and neutralize all his spurious edits.--Tabib 13:35, Jun 21, 2005 (UTC)

  • You’re welcome, Tabib. We’re experience similar problems with some of the Slavic pages, especially those concerning the languages and peoples of Bulgaria and former Yugoslavia. Where I’m from, such ethnic and cultural bigotry was dealt with and virtually eliminated decades ago, and today we find it difficult to believe that these attitudes are still rampant in large parts of the world. —Stephen 06:46, 22 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Unicode fonts

There has been a lot of discussion about {{unicode fonts}} and the order in which the fonts should be listed. What happens is that the browser (usually IE) scans the list and uses the first font it finds which is currently installed. This is why the rarer fonts are listed first: if a user has installed one of these it will be used. If you front-load the list with the more common, less populated, fonts then those users who have installed the less common better-populated fonts do not gain the benefit.

The article you asked about, Bulgarian language, looks fine to me. I note with interest that it actually uses {{unicode}} for "(Ѣ, ѣ)" and "(Ѫ, ѫ)": how do those now look to you?

That must be because you have some of those unusual fonts installed. I inserted the {{Unicode}} template into the Bulgarian page precisely so I could see the letters. Since the fonts were switched around, all I see in the above four letters are big, blank boxes. —Stephen 7 July 2005 13:12 (UTC)

If you are working extensively in cyrillic, there might be benefit in co-opting {{cyrillic}} (which currently REDIRECTs to {{Cyrillic alphabet}} for some reason) to specify fonts which are rich in cyrillic characters (as with {{polytonic}} for greek): would that help? HTH HAND --Phil | Talk July 7, 2005 10:59 (UTC)

Hmm. Perhaps I will make a new template using the "Unicode fonts" font order before they got switched around. The problem will be finding all of the instances of {{Unicode}} that I have inserted. I think there are quite a few of them...it will take a long time to find and change them.
As I understand it, Windows (or whatever program it is that handles this) only considers the first couple of fonts in a list. Fonts deep in the list might as well be taken out, because they are ignored. If you don’t have a font that comes early in the list, then you get the default font, which I believe is usually Times New Roman. However it works, these lists do not work on my machine unless my fonts are at the head of the list...and I only have the standard Windows set. —Stephen 7 July 2005 13:12 (UTC)

I have Code2000 which appears fairly close to the front of the list: maybe this would help since it claims to have good coverage of Cyrillic. You could also try here. --Phil | Talk July 7, 2005 15:39 (UTC)

Messages

Per Amatulić's suggestion, I am no longer active on this wiki. Please leave any messages at nv:Choyoołʼįįhí bichʼįʼ yáshtiʼ:Stephen G. Brown. —Stephen (talk) 05:38, 1 8 J u n e 2 0 1 2 (UTC)

Your submission at Articles for creation: Conioselinum scopulorum has been accepted

Conioselinum scopulorum, which you submitted to Articles for creation, has been created.
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Thank you for helping improve Misplaced Pages!

(tJosve05a (c) 21:37, 23 August 2014 (UTC)



Cases: Final 'for'? (non-benefactive)

Dear Stephen, thank you for your substantial contribution to the Misplaced Pages pages on grammatical cases. Case (and prepositions) is a topic I've been enthusiastic about for almost twenty years.

I would be grateful if you could answer this question of mine, and perhaps supply an article in the Misplaced Pages: in sentences like "They're heading for Alpha", "This train is bound for Beta", "I'm looking/searching for Gamma", "Now for something completely different", for seems to express direction (?) or intention (?) (rather than destination, as to does). Could "for" correspond to the "final" case in other languages? The WP article states: "... used for marking final cause ("for a house"). Semitic languages had that case, but all of them lost it ..." Well, as I see it, 'cause' is the opposite of 'final', so the only possible interpretation would be something like 'for a good cause, specifically, for the house'. Quite implausible.

More generally ... is it my impression, or the case marked by/translatable with non-benefactive "for" actually passes mostly undetected in the literature, as if the label "final case" stood for something very unusual across languages (as unusual and peculiar as the sociative case, for example), so very different from 'direction/intention'?

Thank you for your time and trouble, and please keep up the good work. Viktor Laszlo (talk) 12:40, 24 August 2014 (UTC)

I think you’re talking about the causal-final case. It means "for the purpose of", "for the reason that", and it is also used for price to be paid for goods. In Hungarian, the causal-final case ending is -ért: elküldtem a boltba kenyérért (for bread, for the purpose of bread).
You might be correct that "heading for" and "is bound for" express direction. In Russian, this would be "в" + accusative (to Alpha, to Beta). In Spanish, it would be "a" + accusative (to Alpha, to Beta). In Portuguese, "para" + accusative (to Alpha, to Beta). But "looking/searching for" is a little different, and in Russian, Spanish, and Portuguese, the construction would be different from those used for "heading for" and "is bound for" (just the simple accusative, usually without a preposition).
"Now for something completely different" is again different from any of the other examples.
I do not see that any of these examples could be considered causal-final case. I don’t think that these examples in Hungarian would take the -ért ending. —Stephen (talk) 13:42, 24 August 2014 (UTC)
Stephen, thank you for your prompt reply. My point is this. I don't consider myself a generativist at all, but I often act like one. I assume there is one grammar, and this is realized in different ways in different languages.
My interpretation of language is this: whether what surfaces is a preposition, a noun ending, or zero, I take semantics to be the same across languages, as a postulate. So I take for granted that the same semantic nuances can be expressed in Samoan as in Nivkh. I'm interested in the logico-semantic values of sentence constituents, irrespective of how they are realized in different languages. Call me mad, but I postulate that the sociative case in Without a dime, she wound up in her mother-in-law's house at Christmas with her kids does exist in every language, though it may surface in very different ways or not at all.
I like to think of my approaches as intrinsically practical. If I know in advance that "3 dollars" is not an accusative (just because in English and Italian it happens to surface with no preposition preceding it), perhaps I'll manage to spare myself a few pages of ramblings from an improvized grammarian that wonders why "3 dollars" can't easily be made the subject of the passivized version of It cost me 3 dollars. It was the question that was wrong. Syntacticians shouldn't judge from appearances.
In other words, preposition or no preposition, ending or no ending, linguists that talk about "morphosyntax" (instead of "syntax") refuse to believe that for the house is three words. True, for can occur at the end of a sentence... Still, I only see one word in for the house. Would you agree that endings are postpositions in Hungarian as they are in Japanese?
By transitivity, in an ideal world, "for the bread" (from your example) should be called "causal-final" in English. And English should be considered to have cases (like all other languages, for that matter).
Lots of prepositions take the accusative across languages especially when they express movement. In Italian, no accusative (on the surface?).
However, I can say "Vado alla stazione" (TO the station = my destination) vs. "Scusi, per la stazione?" (asking for directions)!
In conclusion, were you to consider for the station in English as one word with three morphs, how would you label it? directive case? propositive? anhelative? (not an attempt at being humorous -- just a way to make my point clearer).
Thank you. Viktor Laszlo (talk) 14:17, 25 August 2014 (UTC)


Okay, I understand what you mean. Yes, the case endings in Turkic and Uralic languages appear to have come from earlier postpositions. I think it is not so clear where the Indo-European case endings came from. With analytical languages such as English that use prepositions or postpositions exclusively, and no noun cases, no one ever bothers with trying to classify the pre-/postpositions the way they do with case endings. It would be possible to do it, of course, but I’m not sure this method would be well received by grammarians and school teachers. The Athabaskan languages have myriad postpositions (I have never tried to count them all), and if each one were to be described the way we do case endings, Navajo would have a large number of cases. Besides these, Athabaskan languages also have a lot of postpositions that are only used as verb prefixes, and it would be tricky to described the Navajo verbs that contain postpositional prefixes in terms of noun cases. Languages such as Navajo, Yup’ik, and Ojibwe are exceedingly verb heavy, and there are few nouns. Their verbs are already complex, with numerous aspects (momentane, continuative, durative, conclusive, repetitive, semelfactive, diversative, reversative, seriative, conative, transitional, cursive) and modes (imperfective, perfective, usitative, iterative, progressive, future, optative), as well as three numbers and four persons (regularly, with another five persons possible when needed ... if you add the complexities of noun case to the postpositional prefixes, the verbs start to be terrifying. But yes, it would be possible to do it, I think. —Stephen (talk) 20:15, 25 August 2014 (UTC)
Is this the appropriate "place" for a talk with so many questions? I tried sending you a private message through the WP but, evidently, this is the only way it works. And I'm lucky you replied in the first place. (Didn't happen elsewhere)
Please give me an example of a postposition that is only used as a verb prefix. I'm not at all familiar with North American languages, so I would need a sentence with glosses (or just the glosses and the translation, please), in a way as to at least enable me to understand your point. I no longer have access to university books (and I'm still alive, somehow), so all I can rely on is Google, I guess.
A postposition is supposed to occur exclusively after a noun or an adjective, isn't it? that's how it works in Japanese. If you say a particle only comes before a verb, wouldn't it be logical to conclude it's not a postp. but only a prefix?
Anyway, you've given me a ton of food for thought, I'm afraid I need a break. Viktor Laszlo (talk) 22:27, 25 August 2014 (UTC)
Athabaskan postpositions usually include a pronoun, even if used after a noun, as in ił (with): shił (with me), nił (with you), bił (with him/her/it/them). The verbal postposition ba- (the "b" representing the 3rd-person pronoun, and the 1st-person form would be sha-) means "to" or "on" (on a temporary or loan basis): tʼááłáʼí béeso shaʼníʼaah ("lend me a dollar", or literally: one dollar --- (imperfective mode, singular subject); nihitóshjeeh bada’siitʼą́ ("we lent him our barrel", or literally: our-barrel ---- (perfective mode, plural subject). —Stephen (talk) 23:40, 25 August 2014 (UTC)

Hi Stephen

Hi Stephen, I work for the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs and am trying to get the department involved in improving content about New Mexico on WIkipedia. I haven't found any active Wikipedians in NM. I am at a training workshop in Maryland about leading Misplaced Pages workshops and am looking at Navajo Misplaced Pages, where it looks like you are an admin. Do you live in the region? I'm just trying to see what kind of people and resources we could put together. Please let me know if you are around or have any ideas for me. Mimi.roberts (talk) 14:54, 31 August 2014 (UTC)

No, I live in Texas. The other admin, ‎Seb az86556, lives in Arizona. I know a number of Navajo who live in NM, but they are not Wikipedians to my knowledge. On Facebook, the Navajo language group has over 13,000 members, including a lot from NM, but I don’t encounter them much on Misplaced Pages. Native Innovation Inc., with Jay Manyreboots, has been developing the Diné keyboard app for iPhone, iPad, Android, etc., as well as a Diné Bizaad mobile dictonary iOS App. See video in Navajo language. I don’t know if any of this will be helpful to you.
We would love to have more and better content about Yootó Hahoodzo on Navajo Misplaced Pages. —Stephen (talk) 19:46, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
Promethean KUNO tablets now come with the Diné Bizaad keyboard for 1:1 Classrooms. The cost is similar to that of an iPad. —Stephen (talk) 02:25, 4 September 2014 (UTC)

User:Pass a Method

And you moved User:Pass a Method's username and associated user pages to User:North Atlanticist Usonian, why? What at all makes you think that was appropriate to do? All it does it makes you look like Pass a Method, or connected to him in some way. Flyer22 (talk) 12:16, 3 December 2014 (UTC) I struck those two lines because I forgot that you are a WP:Administrator. My mind was temporarily under the impression that you are new, and blocked out my checking the earliest date of your account.

Anyway, I take it that you got a message from Pass a Method asking him to change his username? How was it appropriate for you to then do so, given that he is a problematic WP:Sockpuppet and otherwise problematic editor? Flyer22 (talk) 12:20, 3 December 2014 (UTC)

Maybe WP:Administrator Adjwilley, who has significant experience with just how problematic Pass a Method is, can shed some light on how appropriate these name moves were. And, for the record, yes, these name moves just registered to me. If I noticed them before, they didn't really click in my head until now. Flyer22 (talk) 12:27, 3 December 2014 (UTC)

I got a request from Pass a Method on en.wiktionary asking for a username change. It was a routine request as far as I could tell. That was over two months ago. If I recall correctly, I checked his SUL info and it looked normal. Are you saying that his account has been flagged and restricted from having a username change? I have never heard of anything like that. Where do you post that kind of information when you want to bar a user from getting a namechange? —Stephen (talk) 13:07, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
WP:Edit conflict: Your moving his username came days after this matter; clearly, Pass a Method was watching, and thinks that documentation of his WP:Sockpuppeting should be less easy to locate. Your username moves made it so that his contributions do not show up as Pass a Method; so, for example, his contributions don't show up at Misplaced Pages:Sockpuppet investigations/Pass a Method/Archive when clicking on the contributions link there for the Pass a Method account, except for the diff links. Whatever reason he gave to you for moving his username, such as a privacy reason, I'm certain that it was simply him trying to evade scrutiny once again. Bbb23, John Carter, DoRD, Ponyo, DeltaQuad and Mike V -- other WP:Administrators and/or WP:CheckUsers who are familiar with Pass a Method and/or looked into the Pass a Method WP:Sockpuppeting cases -- do you mind offering your opinions on this matter? And if the Pass a Method account had been indefinitely blocked at the time of these username moves, which it should have been, would these moves have been as likely to be made? Flyer22 (talk) 13:18, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
I don’t know anything about that matter you mentioned. I don’t know what you mean by my opinion on the matter. On Wiktionary, if we get a user who is using socks without permission, we block his account and all of the socks. If Pass a method’s account had been indefinitely blocked, I would have noticed that and refused his request. —Stephen (talk) 13:31, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
I haven't meant anything about your opinion on the matter until now; above, I was asking for others' opinions (which is why I linked their usernames). And by "until now," I mean that I agree with you on blocking those who have violated the WP:Sockpuppet policy. I pointed you to Misplaced Pages:Sockpuppet investigations/Pass a Method/Archive, which documents Pass a Method having violated that policy more than once. Given that, and that he'd activated Misplaced Pages:WikiProject User scripts/Scripts/WikiBreak Enforcer to enforce a self-imposed WP:Wikibreak until the year 2020, his account should have long been indefinitely blocked. And it frustrates me that it has not yet been indefinitely blocked. As seen in the Pass a Method WP:Sockpuppet archives, I asked that his account be indefinitely blocked. WP:Administrators thinking/stating that there is no need to indefinitely block him because of that self-imposed 2020 WP:Wikibreak is wholly insufficient, and this name change matter shows why. That stated, I did have his user page tagged as a WP:Sockpuppet before you made the username moves. Flyer22 (talk) 13:41, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
His account was blocked once for WP:Sockpuppeting, and that was by King of Hearts on April 10, 2014; since that time, his WP:Sockpuppet accounts have been blocked but not the master account (Pass a Method). That master account should be indefinitely blocked, not only so that Pass a Method no longer has any power over it, unless it's user page/talk page access, but also so that the account is logged as a WP:Sockpuppet master that should remain blocked...unless he successfully appeals via WP:Standard offer. Flyer22 (talk) 13:53, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
Tagging his name as a WP:Sockpuppet did not appear in his SUL info, if I recall correctly. I don’t know how tagging his name is supposed to reach admins in other wikis. If this were Wiktionary, we would have blocked his account as soon as the sockpuppet offence was discovered. If he has taken a voluntary leave of absense for five years, his account should be blocked. In 2020, he can ask that it be unblocked, or he could open a new account. I don’t see how you can notify admins on other wikis about something like this unless you block the account. My suggestion is to block his account until 2020. —Stephen (talk) 13:58, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
I see that by "SUL info," you mean Misplaced Pages:Unified login (WP:SUL). So you are stating that you moved his username across Wikis because of SUL info? Or was his request specific about having a name change across Wikis? Did his Misplaced Pages block log show up in the SUL info? And if it did, you made the username moves because he was not indefinitely blocked? As for wiktionary.org, I see that he has been blocked a few times there as well. I'd rather that he be indefinitely blocked here at the English Misplaced Pages, but not before his account is moved back to the Pass a Method username here at the English Misplaced Pages. Flyer22 (talk) 14:20, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
I granted his request on the basis of his statement that: "I'm planning on creating a global account. Since i'm most active on wiktionary, my first step would be to do that here." I always check the SUL info for both the original name and the new name. Since this was over two months ago, I don’t remember anything specific about the SUL info, but I saw nother there that alarmed me. If you want the username change to be reversed, I can do that. —Stephen (talk) 14:29, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
Looking again at his SUL info, I see that he has not made any edits on any wiki since this username change was made. All of his edits were made before the namechange. —Stephen (talk) 14:37, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
If that is the case, then there is a reasonable chance that this might have been some sort of attempt to game the system as per WP:GAME. I can understand how you might have done a global username change without going into a lot of possibly extraordinary research. But, under the circumstances you indicated above, I also have some questions why the request might have been made. Barring the (possible, but unlikely) death of that editor, or other form of incapacity in the short term, I cannot see any reason for the change to have been made other than questionable ones. Under the circumstances, I think that maybe, in the short term, changing the name back on this particular wiki might be reasonable, and also, maybe, filing some sort of request at the appropriate policy or guideline to discuss this matter and see what if any changes might be reasonable to avoid such circumstances in the future. John Carter (talk) 15:32, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
I don’t have any idea about his reasons for the change beyond what he stated. If I reverse the name change, it is a global change. I don’t know of a way to change it only on this one wiki, and if the account is ever to be used again, I think it would be confusing to have the account under different names on different wikis. So just to be clear, you are requesting that I reverse the name change now, is that right? I want to make sure we’re on the same page with this. —Stephen (talk) 15:50, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
If it would have to be a global name change, which I didn't know, I guess I probably wouldn't request a universal reversal of the name change, because the editor's user rights weren't apparently restricted on other WMF sites like this one and they would have a reasonable right to change their names on sites they are actively participating in. I can wish that were not the case, but wishing doesn't mean much in circumstances like this one. John Carter (talk) 16:04, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
Then perhaps you could just monitor his activity in the SUL info from time to time. As I said, he has not been active on any wiki since Sept. 30, 2014, so it appears that he is keeping his word about taking an extended break. You can see at a glance if there is ever any new activity. —Stephen (talk) 16:25, 3 December 2014 (UTC)

Gee, you learn something new every day. I had no idea anyone except an en.wiki bureaucrat could change a user name. Apparently, Stephen, who is not even an admin here (lucky him) has something called a global-rename right so he can affect user names here without being a crat. I didn't see anywhere in the policy where it mentions any of this. As an aside, I also didn't see anything in the policy that specifically precludes a problematic editor from changing his user name, although there is the wonderful weasel word "discretion". I don't know about all the wikis, but the user, whatever his name is, hasn't edited here since the change. In fact, he hasn't edited here since February of this year, months before the change. I, too, see no reason for the name change except to avoid scrutiny. The issue is whether that's enough to reverse it. I leave that to others to decide. As an aside to Stephen, sock masters are not always indefinitely blocked here. Puppets almost always are. Pass a method, a master, was not indefinitely blocked. There's a fair amount of discretion in the admin and/or SPI clerk in the decision on how to long to block a master. BTW, nice meeting you, Stephen.--Bbb23 (talk) 16:34, 3 December 2014 (UTC)

I queried editors of Misplaced Pages talk:Usernames for administrator attention to weigh in on this matter, instead of asking for opinions at WP:ANI. But WP:ANI might be my next step on this matter. I don't see how the name change has to be a global one. And considering how problematic Pass a Method is, and is still affecting the Pass a Method account, I maintain that this account should be moved back to the Pass a Method username and indefinitely blocked. I'm convinced that this username move is one of Pass a Method's "avoid scrutiny" tactics, just like his "self-imposed WP:Wikibreak until the year 2020" matter was. When he activated that self-imposed WP:Wikibreak, it was so that he could get around his topic ban and avoid scrutiny by editing as a different account (an account that I caught as the WP:Sockpuppet it was/is). Flyer22 (talk) 16:48, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
I struck my commentary above that Stephen G. Brown is a WP:Administrator. Flyer22 (talk) 17:15, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
In 2005 and 2006 we had a severe problem with a persistent sockmaster named EddieSegoura who was carrying out an enormous amount of crosswiki vandalism, including impersonating other editors, admins, and even Jimmy Wales (all while jumping from computer to computer in a New York library to hide his tracks), and ever since that time we have been unforgiving with dishonest sockpuppetry on en.wiktionary and we block them indefinitely at the first sign of trouble.
As for the name change, the software does not have any place to list specific wikis. I have to enter the old name, the new name, the reason, whether or not to move the user pages, and whether or not to suppress redirects. That’s it. When I hit the submit button, it changes the name globally.
I don’t know why Pass a method chose to rename his account at that time. Perhaps he was thinking that he would still be active on other wikis than the en.wiki. That would be my guess. It appears that there is disagreement about whether we have the right to revert this name now. I don’t want to revert it based only on your lone request. I would like to have a clear decision by your admins. I still think that you should just block his account here if you are suspicious of Pass a method’s intentions. But if your admins decide they want it reversed, just let me know and I will revert the names globally. —Stephen (talk) 17:37, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
Because I decided to take a break from this matter to let others weigh in without more WP:Too long, didn't read interference, I just read your latest reply on this matter above. As is clear, out of all of the WP:Administrators and/or WP:CheckUsers I pinged above, only two weighed in. In other words, no one hardly cares about this topic. After all, out of all of these people, other than Adjwilley and John Carter, I am the only one who "has to" continually interact with Pass a Method when he edits problematically on Misplaced Pages, whether he's editing as Pass a Method or as a WP:Sockpuppet. And like I noted here, Bbb23 had some run-ins with him, and has blocked him before. As for others weighing in, I'll go to WP:ANI with this matter now, and see if anyone there cares to weigh in on this case. There must be a way for a WP:Administrator to reverse the name change without affecting the other Wikis. Flyer22 (talk) 20:38, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
Taken to WP:ANI, as seen here. Flyer22 (talk) 21:02, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
Since the discussion, I have found out that it is possible to do a local rename without affecting other Wikis. However, I as a global renamer cannot do it. I don’t have access to the old software that works on a local level. You would have to put in a request to the metawiki Stewards at m:Steward_requests/Username_changes. They’re the only ones who can still do a local rename. —Stephen (talk) 21:46, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
So what is your opinion on what was stated at WP:ANI? It's now seen here: Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive865#WP:Sockpuppet master User:Pass a Method having changed his username across Wikis. It's ridiculous to me that only one WP:Administrator -- Euryalus -- there commented on that matter. But like I stated above, it's not like they've had the frustrating interactions I've had with Pass a Method and "have to" put up with him every time he pops back up. Flyer22 (talk) 01:33, 11 December 2014 (UTC)
Very little interest in the matter, it seems. I think it is illogical to deliberately make anyone have a different username on one wiki. I think the matter should be dropped. If Pass a Method causes any further problems, I think you should block him indefinitely. In my opinion, blocking for a certain time, then indefinitely if necessary, should be the first options considered. —Stephen (talk) 04:03, 11 December 2014 (UTC)
Hi Flyer22, saw the ping. En-wiki admins seem a bit thin on the ground lately, so apologies for the limited ANI response. There was a medium-length discussion on issues with global renaming here but the endpoint was simply to accept its inevitability. As presently constituted, it does open doors for problematic editors to escape some scrutiny. And annoyingly, there's nothing much in the rename documentation that addresses the risk - it seems not to have even been contemplated.
So what next? We might raise this the conversation at WP:BN to get more expert opinions than mine. But as the previous bureaucrat thread indicates, it is unclear if anything can or will be done to change the policy, or to address this specific or the general concern. -- Euryalus (talk) 05:52, 11 December 2014 (UTC)
Stephen G. Brown, I am not a WP:Administrator. I don't have the power to block Pass a Method. And if I were one, I would not have blocked him; this is because, given our past tempestuous history, that would make me WP:Involved. However, what is illogical to me is that the Pass a Method account is not indefinitely blocked here at Misplaced Pages, and now, because of this obvious username move he employed to avoid scrutiny, he can't be blocked under that username. I don't care how it is done, but he should be named Pass a Method here on Misplaced Pages, and that user account should be indefinitely blocked. Editors turning a blind eye on this matter is silly to me. I reiterate that the Pass a Method account should have been indefinitely blocked by a WP:Administrator when I brought up the matter during his WP:Sockpuppet cases. If any of them had done that, it's very likely that this rename would not have happened. That is, if his indefinitely blocked status would have shown up to you in the SUL info. I mention indefinite blocking in this case because I don't see why Pass a Method deserves any more chances. So now we're at the point that WP:Administrators and WP:CheckUsers are not doing a thing about this obvious "Ha, ha, I'm avoiding scrutiny" mess. I should not have to wait for Pass a Method to WP:Sockpuppet again to get something done about this, especially since that account is now under a new name. He is surely WP:Sockpuppeting again anyway.
Euryalus, thanks for your help. No need to ping me to this talk page, however, since Stephen G. Brown's talk page is currently on my WP:Watchlist. Flyer22 (talk) 07:34, 11 December 2014 (UTC)
Hi all. Stephen G. Brown, are you OK with moving the user back to their previous username? It will notify them so they can edit from their new (old) username after the move, and it would probably be best for the sake of transparency here.
I have no idea why enwiki wouldn't block the sockmaster account. When looking at Special:CentralAuth, there isn't some magical *drama* indicator beside a specific wiki if that user has been involved in shenanigans there. The best we can do is check block logs on projects where they are most active, but in general, if they are not currently blocked anywhere then we (stewards and global renamers) will action the request.
Account naming is now done from a global perspective, so I am unwilling to locally revert the rename on enwiki - if anything that would make it easier for him to avoid detection elsewhere. Hopefully Stephen G. Brown will be OK with reverting the rename globally, which will solve this problem. @Bbb23: the policies you are looking for are at m:Global rename policy and m:Global renamers :-) Ajraddatz (Talk) 07:36, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
I did check the wikis for evidence of blocking before I did the rename (it was not blocked anywhere). It appears that User:Pass a method was an editor in good standing and that he had the right to request a rename. I can revert the rename, but it is troubling that the only requests for the revert come from one or two editors on this one wiki who are not admins. I don’t see any signs of mischief with the new name (there has been no activity at all since the rename) and I don’t see why one name would be any easier to monitor than another name (since both names are known). It just strikes me that if the admins here don’t feel that the account deserves to be blocked, even for a month or two, then this user surely has the right to have his rename. If en.wikipedia could make a more authoritative request to revert the name, from several local administrators, I would feel easier about it, but there does not appear to be any interest in the matter. As I suggested to Flyer22, why don’t we just wait and see what happens. If he starts causing problems, that would be the time to block him (a much better solution if he really is a problem editor). Maybe you could put the matter to a vote at your Misplaced Pages:Village pump. Otherwise, it feels a lot like vigilantism to me. —Stephen (talk) 10:17, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
I fail to see how it is "troubling that the only requests for the revert come from one or two editors on this one wiki who are not admins." We are talking about a highly problematic editor here -- Pass a Method. And you are acting as though the fact that he was not indefinitely blocked means that he is a possibly good editor and/or deserves another chance. It does not. The main reason that his account was not indefinitely blocked is because of the aforementioned "self-imposed WP:Wikibreak until the year 2020" aspect. Not only has he been highly problematic on Misplaced Pages, but he has also been highly problematic on Wiktionary, which I already linked to above in my "14:20, 3 December 2014 (UTC)" post. Bbb23 already stated above that master accounts are not always indefinitely blocked. That stated, it is very likely that had Pass a Method not thrown that "self-imposed WP:Wikibreak until the year 2020" quirk in, and then WP:Sockpuppeted and got repeatedly caught WP:Sockpuppeting, the Pass a Method account would have been indefinitely blocked. Ponyo, who also seems to want to cut Pass a Method slack, told me on his talk page (User talk:Ponyo) that the reason he did not indefinitely block Pass a Method is because of that self-imposed WP:Wikibreak. Surely, that self-imposed WP:Wikibreak is why others are taking a laid back approach to this matter, as if the self-imposed WP:Wikibreak solves everything. It does not. If Pass a Method wants to edit Misplaced Pages freely again, it should be through the proper course -- not WP:Sockpuppeting or waiting until 2020 to edit again as though that makes his editing Misplaced Pages all fine and dandy. Pass a Method was a highly problematic editor before his WP:Sockpuppeting, and I can ping (WP:Echo) various editors here to this talk page attesting to that. His WP:Sockpuppeting was only so that he could continue being a nuisance, away from the scrutiny.
You speak of WP:Administrators. Bbb23 is a WP:Administrator, knows that Pass a Method is problematic, has blocked Pass a Method before, and has expressed above that this name change seems like Pass a Method is attempting to avoid scrutiny. John Carter is a former WP:Administrator, also has first-hand experience with just how problematic Pass a Method is, and has clearly indicated that the rename is Pass a Method avoiding scrutiny. Euryalus is a WP:Administrator, does not have past experience with Pass a Method, but has expressed that the rename is problematic. And yet you are implying that my wanting it very clear to editors on Misplaced Pages that the Pass a Method account is a highly problematic editor/WP:Sockpuppet master (though not a very good one, since he can never fool me) is simply me engaging in vigilantism? I guess that my catching all sorts of WP:Sockpuppets and reverting WP:Vandalism is simply vigilantism. I'm so wrong to do any of that. So wrong to want to keep these highly problematic editors off Misplaced Pages. Yes, I am tired of dealing with Pass a Method. That doesn't mean that I'm simply being biased by stating that his username should remain Pass a Method on Misplaced Pages and that the account should be indefinitely blocked on Misplaced Pages. I think that Euryalus would be willing to indefinitely block the Pass a Method account. If WP:Administrator Adjwilley didn't feel that blocking Pass a Method would make him WP:Involved, I think that he would have indefinitely blocked Pass a Method by now. How much Pass a Method troublemaking should I point to before you get the point that I am not talking about a good editor when I speak of Pass a Method? How many WP:Administrators commenting negatively on his editing is it going to take for you to get the point on that? Why do you think that WP:Administrators' words on this matter carry more weight? You told me where to go to get the username changed back to Pass a Method on Misplaced Pages; I did, as seen here, and now you are wavering...for reasons that I cannot understand. Flyer22 (talk) 11:20, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
"a highly problematic editor here"... but that is something that only you and the admins of en.wiki know. I don’t know anything about that. All I know is what I’ve already said above. "acting as though the fact that he was not indefinitely blocked means that he is a possibly good editor"... all I know about him is that he is not blocked on any wiki. That puts him and you on equal footing as far as I know. He could just as well request that I rename you. You’re making an assumption that I know what you know and that my experiences with Pass a method are like yours. I don’t. I don’t know of anything that Pass a method has done wrong except for what you have told me. You and the admins of en.wikipedia are the ones who know him and you (including your admins) should take responsibility for the request that you are making. As I said above, your admins do not seem to show any interest in this, and I don’t see the logic of what you are asking. Why can’t you get a consensus opinion on this from your admins? "name change seems like Pass a Method is attempting to avoid scrutiny"... as I said above, I do not see that at all. You know his old name and his new name, how is he going to avoid scrutiny? You keep saying it, but I think it’s a non sequitur. "I guess that my catching all sorts of WP:Sockpuppets and reverting WP:Vandalism"... I don’t know anything about that, or about you. I only have your statements about Pass a method and your statements about yourself. I imagine that Pass a method would say the opposite. That’s why all of this argument that you keep making to me is irrelevant. It’s just hearsay. I can’t judge the veracity or importance of any of it. The only people who know are the editors and admins of en.wikipedia, which is why I keep telling you that if you want to do this, you have to show that you have the agreement of the en.wikipedia admins. You drop a lot of names, but I don’t remember reading that any of them stated that they are admins and that they want the rename to be reverted. You should have a vote somewhere so that we can see if the en.wikipedia admins agree with you. —Stephen (talk) 20:41, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
I'm here because again I was pinged. First, this is only the second comment I've made to this thread. Second, from skimming the thread, it looks like a typical Misplaced Pages going-around-in-circles discussion. Third, I don't believe I've said - at least not here - that PAM's requested name change was to avoid scrutiny. Fourth, I've already mentioned that sock masters are not always indefinitely blocked on this wiki. Fifth, the only part of the policy for renaming that might be problematic in this instance is the following bullet point: "The user is not seeking the rename to conceal or obfuscate bad conduct." I don't know how global renamers are supposed to evaluate this point. Stephen says he didn't see anything to indicate that the user was in bad standing, but I don't know what that entails. Obviously, PAM's history here was problematic. Finally, as a practical matter, I'm not sure why Flyer22 is making such a big deal out of this given that there's been no editing by PAM since the rename (I assume that's still true).--Bbb23 (talk) 15:52, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
FWIW, although I am not at all sure, considering the global username was changed after the last known edit, the point you raise may be valid, either as an attempt to conceal misconduct on the basis of perhaps attempting in the future further misconduct, or perhaps simply to put a prettier gravestone on the potentially intentionally terminated editing of that party. I honestly don't know that there is any reason to think the editor has necessarily returned yet. However, I regret to say that the new name, North Atlanticist Usonian, is not necessarily consistent with the editor's prior location, which as far as I remember seems to have been from Britain (User:Flyer22 probably knows the details better than me there). If this is an indication that the editor has relocated to perhaps North America, which would make it even harder to identify sockpuppets on its own, this could rather easily be a further attempt at obfuscation. It'll be hard enough to identify any potential sockpuppets as is, should there ever be any. A geography change, if there has been one, would make it even harder. John Carter (talk) 16:14, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
"it looks like a typical Misplaced Pages going-around-in-circles discussion"... yes, that is what it is. We are wasting a lot of time and getting nowhere. I can’t see how this rename could conceivably conceal misconduct, since his old name redirects to his new name, and both names are known here. All of his edits show up in the contributions of his new name. In my own experience with sockpupperers, they will make new identities quickly as the need arises. If PAM wants to obfuscate, he must create a new username that is not linked to his older names. It is possible, even likely, that he is editing regularly here, but under a new username that none of you are aware of yet. His old username, Pass a Method, is dead in the water ... he can’t use it. His more recent username North Atlanticist Usonian is already well known, and all of his old edits appear under this name. If he starts using this username, it will be immediately recognized. There is no way for him to conceal anything by having this rename. He probably already has another username that nobody knows about.
We are wasting a lot of time on something that I am convinced is pointless. If the name stays, you know what it is. If it is reverted, it changes nothing. I repeat that I do not understand what the benefit will be if the name is reverted. I think it makes no difference whatsoever. If PAM wants to conceal his identity and continue sockpuppeting, his route is by creating new usernames. Requesting renames will not help him in that regard. If he is really as bad as Flyer22 says he is, you should just block him. Blocking his current username is no different than reverting and then blocking his old username. If he is as bad as Flyer22 says, I would be surprised if he ever uses this username again. Why would he?
Flyer22, I only have your claims. If I asked PAM, I’m sure he would say that he is wonderful and that you are the problem. Only editors who have been involved with this matter really know what is going on. I don’t know anything about PAM or you, and I’m not in a position to judge either of you. You need to get a vote of your admins, and if you can show that your admins want this revert, I can do it ... but it will have no effect whatsoever. Whether he uses PAM or Usonian, the name is known and his old edits are attached to the name. Even if you block him, he can just create a new identity. I think you’re beating a dead horse, and I don’t see that the admins of en.wikipedia are interested in this matter. —Stephen (talk) 20:41, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
Bbb23, you stated in your above "16:34, 3 December 2014 (UTC)" post "I, too, see no reason for the name change except to avoid scrutiny." I stated in my above "11:20, 13 December 2014 (UTC)" post that you "hae expressed ... that this name change seems like Pass a Method is attempting to avoid scrutiny." That is consistent with your post. But, still, you are not sure why I'm supposedly making a big deal out of this. It's troubling to me to state or imply that because Pass a Method has not been editing Misplaced Pages or Wiktionary (which I don't at all believe is true in the case of his editing Misplaced Pages), the name change is okay; this is especially problematic to me given that he can resume editing Misplaced Pages in 2020 as though he's an occasionally problematic editor but is a net benefit, as though he's only WP:Sockpuppeted once, as though his WP:Sockpuppeting has only been a minor infraction. Yes, let's let all the indefinitely blocked editors change their usernames; there's no problem with that at all. What's that? Pass a Method was not indefinitely blocked? So that means that the name change was perfectly fine? No, that's not what it means. What it means is that Pass a Method has consistently gamed the system, starting with that self-imposed 2020 Wikibreak (that was not even a Wikibreak), and editors are letting him get away with it. I know how Pass a Method works, better than any editor on Misplaced Pages. In his WP:Sockpuppet cases, look at some of the sneaky techniques he employed to make sure that he was not caught. And yet I caught him, more than once. Essentially stating that I need to catch him doing something wrong one more time before his username is returned to the Pass a Method title and/or before he is indefinitely blocked makes no sense to me. I'm doing what I can to make sure that it is less easy for this editor to resume editing Misplaced Pages, and others are making it easier for him to resume editing Misplaced Pages. Giving him another chance that is wholeheartedly undeserved. Instead of being indefinitely blocked as the mess of an editor he is, he can continue editing Misplaced Pages as Pass a Method or as North Atlanticist Usonian. Stephen G. Brown made a mistake, and is unwilling to correct that mistake. I'll make sure to mark this incident and discussion as one of the many failures of Misplaced Pages.
Ajraddatz, thank you for your time. And, John Carter, thanks again for trying to help. Because of your past interactions with Pass a Method, you're the only editor here weighing in on this discussion who completely understands where I am coming from on this matter. I suppose that Adjwilley, who has just as much experience as you do with Pass a Method, is not weighing in on this because he's tired of commenting on Pass a Method. Whatever the case, as long as Pass a Method is able to access Misplaced Pages, he will never be done with Misplaced Pages.
Stephen G. Brown, you stated "is old username, Pass a Method, is dead in the water ... he can’t use it. His more recent username North Atlanticist Usonian is already well known." No, it is not well known. That is why he changed it. Many Misplaced Pages editors have made username changes to avoid scrutiny. One benefit of doing so is that they are not recognized when editing in a familiar space. Those who recognize the username as problematic are less likely to check on their edits or revert them under that new username...unless they know that editor is the same editor. Very experienced Misplaced Pages editors know this. You only have my claims regarding how problematic Pass a Method is? What???? No, you have Pass a Method's editing history, including his topic ban and Misplaced Pages:Sockpuppet investigations/Pass a Method/Archive. You have his problematic Wiktionary editing. It was not a ghost acting up in the way he's repeatedly acted up, as is well documented by the complaints in his Misplaced Pages talk page edit history, now mostly in his archives. Editors can claim I am problematic all that they want to, including by pointing to my block log (a block log matter that was already cleared up by a WP:CheckUser and by that same WP:CheckUser and other WP:Administrators in the case of an unjustified 2014 block earlier this year), but my editing speaks for itself (as is also currently noted by others on my user talk page). But, hey, stick to what you think is right, even in the face of valid evidence that it is not...right? Flyer22 (talk) 21:39, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
Flyer22, I couldn't bring myself to read your entire wall of text, so I'll just make a few comments and then bow out of this. First, you're right, I did say it, although I also said that in and of itself that doesn't mean the name change should be reversed. In any event, my apologies for not reading my own post more carefully. Second, I think you should at a minimum drop the issue on Stephen's talk page. If you want to go to an administrative forum (I haven't checked whether you've already done that) and argue in favor of reversal, fine. Finally, at this point, if I had to "vote" as an admin what to do, I'd vote against a reversal.--Bbb23 (talk) 23:23, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
Since you apparently "couldn't bring to read entire wall of text," then you apparently missed that I did "drop the issue on Stephen's talk page" page in that supposed wall of text that you supposedly couldn't bring yourself to read. Flyer22 (talk) 00:05, 14 December 2014 (UTC)
And you aren't aware that I took this matter to WP:ANI, even though you frequent WP:ANI, and I pinged you in the discussion that took place there? Sure, you aren't. But nice way to protect the supposed rights of a highly problematic editor. Flyer22 (talk) 00:15, 14 December 2014 (UTC)
Heh, you're correct that I missed all that. The only thing you're sort of incorrect about is I don't "frequent" WP:ANI all that much (I used to but got tired of it). I could also do without the sarcasm. This is my final comment.--Bbb23 (talk) 01:03, 14 December 2014 (UTC)
I wonder if anything you've stated above has to do with me recently disagreeing with your odd interpretation of a WP:REVERT and therefore WP:3RR. When I disagreed there in that editor's block case, I'd hoped that you wouldn't take the matter as disrespectful and then let that affect future interactions with me. And, hey, maybe you haven't. Either way, if I had been blocked for what that editor was blocked for, I would have gotten that overturned similar to how my 2014 block was overturned. Flyer22 (talk) 15:10, 14 December 2014 (UTC)

Last comment here and then will stop clogging up Stephen's talk page.

It seems to me the problem with global renaming is the risk of users who, skirting close to a block for POV-pushing or tendentious editing, simply take a rename and go their merry way, prolonging their disruptive activities and forcing the community to spot them all over again and closely observe the new identity. It may also assist editors seeking to avoid topic bans, because the global rename page is poorly watched and the editor's new name won't be associated with the old one in the topic ban list.

However the answer is not to insist that local admins block users so they can't benefit from a global rename. First, en-wiki rarely indef-blocks sockmasters - to now do otherwise would a policy change without local consensus forced into place by a global policy for which no consensus was required. Second, editors nearing an admin or community restriction might get renamed before a block is applied, thereby escaping sanctions to begin disrupting anew. Third, in this specific case it would be inappropriate to retrospectively block PAM - that was a matter for the admin who resolved the SPI at the time.

Instead: as a suggestion, when a problematic user is renamed the matter might be raised at ANI or similar, and if consensus exists to preserve the old name then that old name is locally restored. That way (in this case) PAM might be called anything they like on most wikis, but remain PAM here on -en because the community has objected to the specific rename.

Just passing thoughts. Will discuss further if required, but perhaps that should be on a different page. -- Euryalus (talk) 06:05, 14 December 2014 (UTC)

Euryalus, thanks again for weighing in. I also thank John Carter for weighing in on the page that Stephen G. Brown pointed us to above (his "21:46, 6 December 2014 (UTC)" post), even though it's turned out that Stephen G. Brown has the final say on this Pass a Method topic. I agree that it's time to stop posting to this talk page about this, since Stephen G. Brown has made up his mind on the matter and will apparently be sticking with that. But as for indefinitely blocking the main accounts of WP:Sockpuppet masters, it's not rare that the English Misplaced Pages does that. They do it often; I've seen it for years. Sure, a first time-offense is commonly given a second chance. But it's routine for the main account of any repeat offender to have that account indefinitely blocked, if they've been caught WP:Sockpuppeting more than twice at least; sometimes if they've been caught WP:Sockpuppeting twice. If Misplaced Pages did not do that, then it would mean that it's hardly doing anything to protect itself from WP:Sockpuppets. WP:Sockpuppet masters are routinely indefinitely blocked, and then tagged as the WP:Sockpuppet masters that they are to protect the community; the indefinite block lets the community know that those editors shouldn't be editing Misplaced Pages, why that's the case, and to keep a lookout for more WP:Sockpuppeting from that person. Above, I was not "insist that local admins block users so they can't benefit from a global rename." I was insisting that Pass a Method be renamed Pass a Method because it is that name that is associated with his problematic editing, and that he then be indefinitely blocked as the WP:Sockpuppet master that he is. I've stated something like this before: On Misplaced Pages, because it's the username that we see to recognize editors, those usernames are like faces, and a rename is like a face change. Of course...a Misplaced Pages username is very much associated with a person. And, of course, many editors seek to avoid scrutiny by editing without that username or discarding that username, as is made clear at that the WP:Sockpuppet page and at the WP:Clean start page. As shown in this recent WP:Sockpuppet case that Bbb23 was involved in, usernames matter an awful lot in terms of WP:Sockpuppetry. Stephen G. Brown is acting as though proof of an editor's bad behavior doesn't matter and is only hearsay, that one has to interact with a problematic editor to know that the editor is problematic, and that the opinions of WP:Administrators necessarily matter more than the opinions of non-WP:Administrators in this case. He is welcome to his beliefs, of course, but I cannot get on board with those beliefs. Flyer22 (talk) 15:10, 14 December 2014 (UTC)
Side note: Euryalus clarified a part of what he meant in his "06:05, 14 December 2014 (UTC)" post above, seen here on my talk page. And to add on to my "15:10, 14 December 2014 (UTC)" comment, anyone who clicks on the North Atlanticist Usonian username will see the WP:Sockpuppet tag I added to that account unless it is removed, but, as currently seen, that tag no longer points to Pass a Method's sockpuppeting because his WP:Sockpuppeting archives are currently associated with the Pass a Method username...not the North Atlanticist Usonian username. So I am likely to do something to remedy that. And if a person wants to check the history of an article by using the "Edits by user" option to see if or how much Pass a Method has edited that article (which is what I did when collecting evidence against Pass a Method for WP:Sockpuppeting), that history will come up empty regardless because contributions are no longer incorporated into that username; editors will instead have to type in "North Atlanticist Usonian." But what of the editors who don't know of Pass a Method's username change? I suppose I will have to alert them to it. Sigh. Anyway, I am dropping all of this for now. I might look into getting the name reversed in the future, however, and, if I do, I will go about that more efficiently than this attempt. Flyer22 (talk) 21:45, 15 December 2014 (UTC)
Yes, it is time to drop it. This discussion is officially closed. —Stephen (talk) 03:14, 16 December 2014 (UTC)

User:Anup to User:Anup (usurp)

Hi, I do not really understand why did you rename/move my user account from 'Anup' to 'Anup (usurp)'? I'm not even sure how does it qualify for being usurped? I was the owner of SUL and had same username on multiple Wikimedia projects. May you please explain your this move? Anupmehra -Let's talk! 20:42, 5 December 2014 (UTC)

Ugh, it appears to be originate form here. Let me explain this, I had User:IndianWikipedian account and I renamed it to User:Anup on multiple projects back in March this year. I've had User:Anup on multiple projects, also the SUL. The account on Wiktionary was unattached and I don't why but wanted it make a part of my SUL. So, I logged in my previous account 'IndianWikipedian' and made a usurpation request on Wiktionary (as I did on other projects to unify my accounts). That's it. Now I'm not sure, why 'User:Anup' was renamed (globally?) to 'Anup (usurp)'? I didn't ask to rename 'User:Anup'. If it could not be possible for me to have User:Anup on Wikitionary, let it be that away. Bring me back 'User:Anup'. Thank you! Anupmehra -Let's talk! 21:12, 5 December 2014 (UTC)
Yes, the software was recently changed from local rename to global rename. As I explained, there was already an old account with the name you want, and it has to be usurped. The first step in usurping the name required moving it to a different name, usually that name followed by (usurp). However, the new global-rename software cannot handle local unattached accounts, it seems, so this old original username must be moved using a special program. We have made a request for this. Please have patience. —Stephen (talk) 18:01, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
I think the local name has been moved and Anup (usurp) is back to Anup again. —Stephen (talk) 18:03, 6 December 2014 (UTC)