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"Consensus is a partnership between interested parties working positively for a common goal." -- Jimmy Wales
Ouch
- Misplaced Pages works by building consensus. This is done through polite discussion and negotiation, in an attempt to develop a consensus. If we find that a particular consensus happens often, we write it down as a guideline, to save people the time having to discuss the same principles over and over. Normally consensus is reached via discussion on talk pages. In the rare situations where this doesn't work, it is also possible to use the Misplaced Pages:Dispute resolution processes, which are designed to assist consensus-building...
And so it goes. What does it all mean? If we're trying to be all "descriptive, not prescriptive" and all that stuff, then let's face it, "consensus" is an abused word around here. What is consensus, as it relates to the wiki process, can we explain these without trying to define consensus in terms of itself. I wish I could provide more focused criticism, but my head hurts. 192.75.48.150 20:38, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Does Consensus decision making help any? Note that wikis use consensus per definition. If there is consensus on the state of a page, the page is not changed, if there is not consensus on the state of the page, the page gets changed. It might get several changes before a new consensus is settled upon.
- of course, with all the um, things going on all over the place on wikipedia these days (including talk pages, project namespace pages, wikiprojects and goodness knows what else), this basic, simple concept of consensus gets pushed to the background. But it's still there, and it's still the main mechanism, simply because it's there on every page :-) Kim Bruning 21:33, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Would it make your head feel better if we define it in terms of related concepts? I.e. "consensus is the result of thoughtful dialogue, which takes place both through the editing process itself, and through outside discussion." Actually that's basically how I read the page as it stands, but perhaps it could be clarified to appear less circular. -- Visviva 15:43, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- See also: m:foundation issues #3
- Kim Bruning 18:21, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
This anon has a good point. This page needs to describe the overall consensus process in much more concrete terms. The page treats consensus as the way to deal with conflict, rather than the foundation of how a wiki works. We are missing some of the most basic concepts. I'll give examples of what I think is needed:
- Silence equals consent. This is the ultimate measure of consensus for every page: somebody makes an edit and nobody objects and nobody changes it.
- Experience matters. People need to put some effort into understanding how things work before they try to change things.
- Change happens slowly in small steps. Radical changes to the entire project are near impossible to enforce except by decree by Jimmy Wales or by RFA. Otherwise, the change has to happen slowly by experimentation and dialogue. People with good ideas for change should be encouraged to experiment.
- Multiple ways of doing things can coexist. When there is no clear consensus, people can do things several different ways until one becomes common practice and the other fades into the background. This is often a good way to deal with disagreements.
- Technological changes have an effect on policy. I'll cite as examples how {{CategoryTOC}} changed categorization policy.
- Collaboration is essential. Editors must be open-minded and willing to work with others. Experts have to be able to work with novices. People with opposing political views must be able to work together.
- Quality trumps quantity This is the essential reason why we don't "vote". One good well-thought-out argument is more important than dozens of comments from people who only say "keep" or "delete". Ultimately a consensus is not measured by counting "votes" but by whether conficts get resolved, and they get resolved through creative solutions and force of argument.
- --06:59, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Amen to that. Although I'm not 100% sure all of those would belong here --i.e., really relate directly to consensus -- they do help to elaborate on what m:Foundation issues means by the "wiki process." More and more people are being drawn to Misplaced Pages because of its prominence as an information source, and often become heavily involved without taking the time to understand how the underlying process works. We need more materials to help educate/acculturate this growing throng. -- Visviva 08:41, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- I'm starting to add some of this. -- Samuel Wantman 22:17, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Your edit was a step in the right direction. 192.75.48.150 16:13, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
While we're on the subject
It just struck me as weird that "consensus" is a guideline, whereas "consensus can change" is policy... :) (Radiant) 15:51, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- Oddly, that seems about right to me. :-) -- Visviva 16:58, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- If you walk this path all the way, well, that would be interesting. :-) Kim Bruning 18:26, 19 December 2006 (UTC) Have you noticed any other odd taggings, lately?
- Yeah, several. I'm working on it, though. Any in particular you had in mind? (Radiant) 11:29, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not really, it'd just be interesting if you continue looking at the situation on a general scale. I'm curious if you'll draw the same conclusions I did. :-) Kim Bruning 18:14, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yeah, I am. The two main problems seem to be (1) too much bureaucracy, and (2) many new(ish) editors make incorrect assumptions about how Misplaced Pages works, based on misinterpretation, partial observation or just not based on anything much, and strongly resist having these assumptions challenged. This is both caused by and causing the utter mess that is the Misplaced Pages namespace, and is difficult to work with. For a more concrete issue, it seems that the 3RR has become a net detriment, because the relevant process is downright byzantine, and because it tends to give people the impression that edit warring is acceptable if one sticks to the boundaries, and that it's okay to recruit people for the fourth. (Radiant) 10:04, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not really, it'd just be interesting if you continue looking at the situation on a general scale. I'm curious if you'll draw the same conclusions I did. :-) Kim Bruning 18:14, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- This is odd. I don't see how consensus can be anything but policy, since it is an integral part of the wiki process. As I have mentioned above, I think this page needs to describe that process better, and should be less about resolving disputes and polling. Re-written this way, it would be policy as it is a foundation of Misplaced Pages. A page about how to solve disputes using consensus would be a guideline. -- Samuel Wantman 18:09, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yep. As mentioned above, all of our policies and guidelines depend on this thing called "consensus", but no one really knows what that means. — Omegatron 06:25, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- That's a good idea. >Radiant< 10:24, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Policy
This seems like it should be a policy rather than a guideline. I'll change it in a few days if nobody has a problem, but that's a big change so it's best to wait awhile and discuss here. Just H 02:11, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- There's related discussion on the talk page of WP:CCC. Arguably consensus is such a basic principle that it could be policy. >Radiant< 10:09, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- Arguably, using a Policy to say that a Guideline is not binding is ridiculous.Circeus 19:11, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- I don't think WP:CCC is saying that Misplaced Pages:Consensus is not binding; it's saying that consensus on Misplaced Pages does not constrain itself. So I don't really see the problem with this remaining at guideline status, although I have no particular objection to the change. -- Visviva 15:35, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
- It's just that it's irrelevant to state here as a policy, rather than there, that wikipedia decisions are taken by consensus.Circeus 16:54, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
- I don't think WP:CCC is saying that Misplaced Pages:Consensus is not binding; it's saying that consensus on Misplaced Pages does not constrain itself. So I don't really see the problem with this remaining at guideline status, although I have no particular objection to the change. -- Visviva 15:35, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
- Arguably, using a Policy to say that a Guideline is not binding is ridiculous.Circeus 19:11, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
I'm looking at the talk page for WP:CCC. What discussion are you referring to? Where is the difference between a policy and a guideline explained anyway?
- According to WP:POLICY - none really, but policies "more official and less likely to have exceptions". It's not really made clear what's official and what's not in this context, let alone what would make something more or less official than something else.
- The ticky boxes for both policy and guideline are identical, except:
- Guidelines have blue tickies, policies have green tickies.
- Guidelines are "not set in stone and should be treated with common sense and the occasional exception" in the guideline box, with the last two words linking to WP:IAR. This suggests that policies are set in stone and not amenable to exceptions and common sense.
Missing something? 72.137.20.109 03:58, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not sure that it's accurate to say that policies are not amenable to exceptions and common sense, but it is accurate to say that making exceptions to policies requires a higher burden of proof than making exceptions to guidelines. There are obvious exceptions to the principle of consensus on Misplaced Pages: for example, Office actions and decisions of the Foundation supercede any opinions expressed by consensus; similarly, if there were an apparent consensus to include unsourced information in violation of WP:BLP, that wouldn't fly. These exceptions should probably be included explicitly on the page, but if they are I would support this shifting from "guideline" to "policy". —Josiah Rowe (talk • contribs) 03:47, 18 January 2007 (UTC)
merge proposal
I don't think it's pertinent to have these pages separate when one is basically discussing a specific aspect of the other. While keeping them separate was pertinent when their status was different, it seems irrelevant to keep them separate now, and seems closer to POV-forking (where users have been using WP:CCC to assert that consensus is invalid because it can change at a later date.Circeus 17:18, 20 January 2007 (UTC)
- Agreed. Since "no binding decisions" has had its name change to "consensus can change" it is more obvious that it actually describes a part of the concensus process, and could well be merged here. // habj 23:20, 25 January 2007 (UTC)
- Agreed. CCC should redirect to the appropriate section, though. — Omegatron 00:13, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
Exception
Whether a fact satisifies WP:V and WP:OR is, and always has been, decided by consensus. If this policy will claim that WP:V is not subject to consensus, then in order to avoid trolling wikilawyer editors it is necessary to point out that just because a troll doesn't think that WP:V or WP:OR is met doesn't mean that it actually is not met.
I agree with the spirit of the exception, which is the unverifiable material cannot be included even if a consensus agrees to do so. But if a consensus agrees that the material is verifiable, then it is not OK for a troll to remove it claiming it is not. CMummert · talk 18:03, 20 January 2007 (UTC)
Note that you're talking about a local consensus to include unverifiable changes there. The global consensus (global to the entire project) is that it's not ok to add unverifiable material. I'm not sure why this particular case of global vs local has been chosen, specifically? --Kim Bruning 22:48, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
- I don't know - it was added a few days ago, and I was just trying to clarify what was here before it got "stuck" the way it was. CMummert · talk 23:40, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
What? You still don't get it? Do you want me to draw a picture or something?!
Well, here you go then! ;-)
For review, I applied my -admittedly rusty- vector art skills to actually drawing a flowchart of how consensus works on-wiki. Note that in normal editing on most pages, you generally don't get to the talk page much at all, really.
--Kim Bruning 05:59, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
- Wow, nice picture. Throwing that into the main article certainly wouldn't be a bad idea.--Wizardman 06:11, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
- One quibble. Being unchanged for a long time creates a presumption of consensus but that's only ever an untested presumption. Lack of further edits might only mean that the edit has so far been overlooked. But I'm not sure how to integrate that quibble into your flowchart in a way that makes sense. This will be helpful. Thanks. Rossami (talk)
Shanel was complaining about not knowing where to start, and verily, a proper flowchart has a Start. :-) (Added) --Kim Bruning 06:48, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
Titoxd came up with an idea to get somewhere in the right direction wrt what Rossami has been saying. Is this an improvement? --Kim Bruning 07:03, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
The next step is, of course, to get a good descriptive text to go along with the picture. Years of confuzzlement and confusion have sort of eroded away any original description, if it even ever really existed. I hope some folks will help. I'll put up the diagram for now at least. --Kim Bruning 15:50, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, I've run into what I think is an interesting case of confusing (or conflating) consensus with status-quo. I noted how the flow-chart does return to the beginning (i.e. status quo) and that is significant as well. I had the following thoughts regarding an explanation. Not sure if it goes with or just near the diagram.
- Lack of change, or status-quo, is necessary to establish consensus, but defending the status-quo is the opposite of building consensus. Consensus building is an inclusive process that seeks to involve more people. Defending the status-quo alienates people, and stunts progress. Consensus cannot be actively maintained, it can only be interactively broken and re-established.
- I'm off to work, and this is just my first pass. So please kick it around if you likeDhaluza 11:10, 24 January 2007 (UTC)
- By some coincidence, on a wiki, the status quo on a page happens to coincide with consensus on that page. If you spot the page, and you happen to not agree with the status quo, then there is no longer a consensus :-)
- You are quite right about defending the status quo too... there's a suggested method bold reverse discuss for dealing with that kind of thing. But all of this needs more writing to be done, IMHO. --Kim Bruning 11:50, 24 January 2007 (UTC)
I really like the idea of a flowchart. — Omegatron 00:17, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
- I like it. Makes consensus a lot simpler to work with when there's a flowchart :). Yuser31415 (Editor review two!) 03:02, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
I tried to squeeze things a little tighter so that it could be readable at a smaller size, and ended up completely redoing it, so I uploaded as a different file name. — Omegatron 04:51, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
- Cute. Can you do a jumping arrow thingy so that there's one "consensus" box at the bottom, rather than two of them? >Radiant< 10:00, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
- Actually, I was thinking that it would be better if the arrows both went back up to the original Consensus box to show more clearly that it's a cycle, but it would need to be laid out a little differently, and I didn't know how you draw "unsoldered wires" in a flowchart. Is that what you mean by "jumping arrow"? — Omegatron 15:04, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
- I tried to implement this and make it skinnier in the process. (The skinnier it is, the more legible the text will be without taking up the entire width of the policy page.) The word "implement" fitting in between those two boxes makes it wide. :-) Please try to think of a skinnier alternative layout. — Omegatron 03:35, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Well, it's skinnier, but the crossing lines and placing of the words make it less readable than your last version (the 2nd version on this page is the most readable of the 3 :-) ).
The best way to try and prevent crossing lines is to redesign/ refactor the process to be structured, of course. But that might not be descriptive. Hmph. :-p
Here's some rules that I seem to remember for flowcharts, maybe they're handy: "ovals" should typically only be labled start or stop (I cheated with consensus, because it is the ultimate "stop" point for wikipedia). "Start" may not have any arrows towards it, and may only have one arrow departing. "Stop" may not have any arrows departing. Decisions are associated with the departure point from a diamond. Additional process names are associated with the box from which they start. Crossing lines are evil. --Kim Bruning 05:49, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Hmm, on the basis of flowchart rules above... maybe putting consensus in a box in the center, or a slight variant where the flowchart is all creative and curvy and circular looking. (Tricky to implement, I know :-P)... hmm... --Kim Bruning 06:06, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
I thought it was a bit funny to have consensus at the top. If you begin with consensus, then there's nothing much to do. I see consensus as belonging at the bottom. SmokeyJoe 06:16, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
You begin with the current consensus. You disagree with it (so now there's no full consensus), so you set about to change things to bring it back to consensus. So consensus is both at the beginning and at the end, forming a cycle. That's what Omegatron has been trying to illustrate better, and how he came up with his third attempt. --Kim Bruning 07:22, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- I do prefer the new diagram's graphic layout, but there should be two ovals, one at the top that represents "Previous Consensus" and one at the bottom that represents "New Consensus". The revert path should return to the top, the edit path should lead to the bottom. This illustrates the point that consensus can change, forming an new starting point, as explained in the note at the bottom.. It also better illustrates the subtle but important corollary that consensus does not exist unless the person proposing the change agrees, not whether the person making the revert disagrees. With one consensus box at the top, the consensus change is not as obvious, and the distinction between consensus and status-quo is blurred. Dhaluza 11:39, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Great ideas.
I think this will do wonders for people who think their revert warring is justified or who misuse "consensus" to mean whatever they feel like that particular day. Simple graphics are much harder to wikilawyer than text. We should create flowcharts for all of our policies! :-)
What do you think of the color and linewidths, etc? What about the sideways "Implement"? — Omegatron 06:38, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
- I've found that typically, you know you are in a doomed bureaucratic organisation when people have pretty flowcharts for all their policies. Ut oh. ^^;; --Kim Bruning 06:44, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
- You started it. :-) But I think it's actually a good thing in a wiki-based organization where policies can be subtly changed over time to suit the desires of small numbers of people. A graphical flowchart is much less likely to be messed around with and misinterpreted.
- I agree with the idea of having a "Previous consensus" and "New consensus", but I don't see any way to have a single "New consensus" box without crossing paths. — Omegatron 01:24, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
Yet another version. — Omegatron 02:16, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- Nice! -- Ned Scott 03:01, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- OK, I guess a revision/revert cycle does create a new consensus in a sense, so it is not necessary to return to the top. This would make the diagram cross-over again anyway. The one touch-up I think we should also incorporate is to change the "as you like" in the note on CCC to "as necessary". As you like implies that people can do this on a whim, and there really should be a more substantial purpose for making a change.Dhaluza 10:49, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
I like the diagram, but, should this policy really say that you should go straight from previous consensus to editing? What happend to "discuss changes on the talk page first"? WP:Bold is important, but sometimes its better to talk first. I suggest two routes from “previous consensus” to “Make an edit”. One direct, the other via “Discuss on the discussion page”. SmokeyJoe 23:48, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- Well, there are other paths to consensus, so we should probably just note that this is the path for many good faith but not all. -- Ned Scott 05:43, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
There's a more general image here, by the way. — Omegatron 00:55, 25 April 2007 (UTC)
Interesting! This is for general purpose real world use? I actually do see this process used on talk pages too at times. (though it is much slower than wiki-editing... ^^;;) --Kim Bruning 01:55, 25 April 2007 (UTC)
The quote in the "Consensus vs. supermajority" section
I can not see that this quote has anything to do with supermajority at all! It does not describe supermajority. Either it is a good description of consensus; then it should be included in the first section. If it is not a good description... then it should be removed. // habj 23:47, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
I feel the section is a bit problematic, and have just had a try at improving it. I don't think the quote is sufficiently authoritative. Perhaps its content should be intregrated into the text, as assuming its content is important, it should be reworded, and reduced to a citation. SmokeyJoe 06:28, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- I'm unhappy with the edit SmokeyJoe made here, as it seems to denigrate the quote (which I feel to be a decent description of consensus as it works — when it works — on Misplaced Pages). Also, I'm not certain that the use of the word "supermajority" in the text was a reference to the proposal Misplaced Pages:Supermajority, which I had never even come across; at least, I had always assumed that the use of "supermajority" was just a descriptive term.
- The current version of the section seems to suggest that whenever an unreconciled minority exists, consensus has not been reached. I don't think that's accurate, and this recent ArbCom case would seem to agree. I'll see if I can think up a better wording myself — if you don't like whatever I come up with, feel free to revert me. —Josiah Rowe (talk • contribs) 07:54, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- Well, I gave it a shot — the bit I'm fondest of is splitting the quotation out from "Consensus vs. supermajority" into a section on "Consensus in practice", since that's really what it's about. Also, the quote is more about the difference between consensus and unanimity than the difference between consensus and supermajority.
- I'm less certain about my wording for the "consensus vs. supermajority" section — I hope that some wordsmith may be able to condense what I was trying to say into something clearer. The point, I think, is that although supermajority is different from consensus, it is possible to have a consensus to abide by the will of the supermajority, and in areas such as RfA that's pretty much what happens. Improvements to my awkward wording are invited. —Josiah Rowe (talk • contribs) 08:15, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Hi Josiah. Sorry to have made you unhappy. The quote is given a lot of prominance for an except from an email to a mailing list, don't you think? To be used properly, shouldn't it be attributed to the individual? If it contains some valuable wisdom, but the source was not notable, then it should be rephrased with credit given.
Misplaced Pages:Supermajority has a long history intertwinned with this page. It originated here, was split off, and then rejected.
- Afterthought: I don't object to ignoring the rejected policy. Rejected (perhaps like consensus at wikipedia) is a misused word. There was not a consensus to reject it. People gave up before reaching any agreement. SmokeyJoe 10:38, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
"Consensus does not mean that everyone agrees with the outcome; instead, it means that everyone agrees to abide by the outcome." This is not true in the world I live in. People agree to abide to majority decisions, but they don't claim that this makes them consensus decisions. People can be bullied into abiding a decision, which does not make a not consensus.
It seems to be that "consensus at wikipedia" is a perversion of the word consensus. Consider the definitions from the merriam webster and from the oxford english dictionary:
oed.com
1. Phys. General agreement or concord of different parts or organs of the body in effecting a given purpose; sympathy. Hence transf. of the members or parts of any system of things.
1854 G. BRIMLEY Ess., Comte 320 In the universe..he resolves to see only a vast consensus of forces. 1861 GOLDW. SMITH Lect. Mod. Hist. 24 There is a general connexion between the different parts of a nation's civilization; call it, if you will, a consensus, provided that the notion of a set of physical organs does not slip in with that term. 1870 H. SPENCER Princ. Psychol. I. II. ix. 278 A mutually-dependent set of organs having a consensus of functions.
2. a. Agreement in opinion; the collective unanimous opinion of a number of persons. 1861 Sat. Rev. 21 Dec. 637 Bishop Colenso is..decidedly against what seems to be the consensus of the Protestant missionaries. 1880 Athenæum 10 Apr. 474/3 A consensus had actually been arrived at on the main features involved.
m-w.com
Main Entry: con•sen•sus Pronunciation: k&n-'sen(t)-s&s Function: noun Usage: often attributive Etymology: Latin, from consentire 1 a : general agreement : UNANIMITY <the consensus of their opinion, based on reports...from the border -- John Hersey> b : the judgment arrived at by most of those concerned <the consensus was to go ahead>
2 : group solidarity in sentiment and belief usage The phrase consensus of opinion, which is not actually redundant (see sense 1a; the sense that takes the phrase is slightly older), has been so often claimed to be a redundancy that many writers avoid it. You are safe in using consensus alone when it is clear you mean consensus of opinion, and most writers in fact do so.
In both, the reference to unanimity is strong. In my real world experiences, consensus (when not immediately achieved) may only be achieved after a process of considering a multitude of possible positions, and often only a very weak consensus can be acheived. This may mean that the final resolution includes an acknowledgement of differing opinions, as which point the dissentors formally yield. SmokeyJoe 10:32, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- You are correct that the meaning of "consensus" as used on Misplaced Pages is different (or at least, often different) from its meaning in the English language. I have found that this results in a great deal of confusion and I think it would be better to find a different word. On a related note, the mantra that "decisions on Misplaced Pages are made by consensus" ignores the fact that, often, decisions aren't made at all. All the fancy flowcharts in the world can't change reality. 6SJ7 11:55, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- While I am usually very deferential to the authority of the writers of published dictionaries, in this case they are wrong. The dictionaries are still using an outdated and simplistic definition of the word "consensus". We use it in the sense commonly used by Change Management and Organizational Decision-Making experts - that is, one mode on a spectrum of decision-making modes. I tried to describe that spectrum here but would appreciate a reference if anyone still has the original article where this model was discussed. Rossami (talk) 14:19, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- Even with the strict dictionary definition, the concept of using consensus on a wiki still makes sense. If you come across a page and disagree with it, then there is no consensus anymore, and therefore you may edit it. Note that consensus in this case is "consensus among all those who have seen the page recently" as opposed to "consensus among all 3 million registered users".
- If it helps any, note that there can be many reasons for people to agree with something, even if they are not happy with it. You might agree to a page version because it's perfect. You might agree because you're too lazy. You might agree because it's good enough, and changing it is not worth the effort. You might hate the new version, but want or need to be diplomatic for some reason. You might dislike it, but can live with the changes for now, etc...
- Canonically, the decisions of a tyrannical dictator always have consensus, because everyone who disagrees with them has been shot dead, and those wiser souls who are still alive tremble in fear and dare not oppose. For some reason, I do not actually recommend that particular method of consensus formation for use on wikipedia, but it does serve as an (extreme) illustration.
- Wow, that's very well put. I really like the pat about noting the difference of consensus between "among those who have seen the page recently" and "the entire community/everybody". -- Ned Scott 16:42, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- The second paragraph of what Kim has written above, is in essence the same as that quote from the mailing list. We don't need it in the form of a quote, we need it described in the actual text of the page. // habj 20:18, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Since the word concensus is used in several different meanings, also in this text, maybe we need a section that defines different usages of the word? Currently, there is a piped link in the first sentence to consensus decision-making. Unless we really define consensus the way it is used and explained in that article, it should not be there. There are several other articles you could link to, for instance consensus. For now, I just remove the link. // habj 22:35, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Per AGF
I changed the wording slightly. It used to say "Editors must always assume good faith". I think, per AGF, that users are allowed to cease doing this when there is overwhelming evidence that a user is not acting in good faith, although they must strive forit whenever possible. IronDuke 19:02, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- Sounds very reasonable to me, good idea. -- Ned Scott 19:05, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
- A very important point. — Omegatron 06:33, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
Rough consensus
I've made a first mention of Rough consensus again, but we have a bad definition of it. Note that in that same line, I also state that certain processes may have been somewhat misdesigned if they wish to use consensus (because they do not scale well, and have too many people participating (ie, more than Dunbar's number predicts to be a good idea.) Philip reverted it saying there is no consensus, well... note that this is an objective statement based on predictions made by peer reviewed scientific research (see the links). I don't care how broad a consensus there is for the sky being green. Get proof! :-P --Kim Bruning 11:18, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
Exceptions
What was incorrect about the section? I agree that it should be reworded, but not completely removed. Trebor 16:31, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- I have added it back pending discussion on specific failings or rewording. Rossami (talk) 16:58, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- Apologies, I'd removed it already, but ended up scratching my head a little too long.
- At any rate, local consensus can, may, and should override wiki-wide policy, (I'd almost say duh, it's a consequence of ignore all rules). Note that things like verifiability will still apply anyway, as long as more people come along and look. Office actions can be overridden by sufficiently large numbers of people forming a consensus, though typically at the meta level. Same goes for all the top brass type people. Finally, foundation issues can be modified by consensus at the meta level, but it's a mite tricky to pull off. So while in practice they're very *hard* to override, they still can be. If it needs to be pointed out here that they're *hard* to override, so be it... but at the same time, I want to continue to stress the impression that everything is consensus based. <still scratching head> --Kim Bruning 18:45, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- "local consensus can, may, and should override wiki-wide policy," I'm sorry, but I can't swallow that. In very cases I can think, it's either policy interpretation that is involved, or policy was changed. Policy is Policy, there's little to add.
- I reordered them for now. While the two last are admittedly debatable, the first two, I think, are hardly so.Circeus 18:58, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- On a consensus based wiki, policy is a kind of illusion. What you see written down on pages in the project namespace is a description of what compromises, ideas, and systems people have discovered to work best, anytime they tried to edit as per the chart above. Even when people start out with a vote (like has been experimented with once or twice in the past), the end result still gets smoothed by consensus in wiki-editing. So not only isn't policy policy, in fact it doesn't even exist. (And if you don't believe me, we have a policy that says so explicitly, called Ignore all rules). If this sounds confusing, I might still know one or two better ways to explain it.
- The reason some people started calling certain things policy is that that way they could save a lot of time trying to get newbies to do the right thing. I have always been rather opposed to that move, since it makes things rather confusing later on (as we can see :-P ) .
- --Kim Bruning 19:02, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- Note that the ordering you have now runs from most debatable to least debatable... Verifiability is the smallest scope concept, and only applies on (en.)wikipedia. Office actions are typically done by arbcom, or certain foundation employees. Jimbo and Board can override office (but not in reverse). Finally, even the board must obey the foundation issues in practice, because people typically join on the basis of the foundation issues, and violating them would cause a large number of those people and in fact entire projects to either defect or fork (or both) --Kim Bruning 19:15, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- "policy is a kind of illusion" But a necessary one if we want to avoid descending into chaos, basically. Consensus comes into play when debate is involved, not when policy appears to contradict itself. If you prefer, Consensus can't override the spirit expressed by policy. Misplaced Pages:Five pillars makes points that can hardly be overrun by any consensus,if only because they are extensions of the Meta basic principles.
- "Note that the ordering you have now runs from most debatable to least debatable..." Sorry 'bout that. My edit apparently didn't register the first time around.Circeus 19:24, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- Because, for the most part, content policies at least are pretty much immutable, I rewrote the entry to emphasize that aspect.Circeus 02:00, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- The thrust of it seems OK to me. I softened the language to should, rather than must; these really mean the same thing in the context of a consensus based system. I think the word "cases" might be better as "articles" but it's not that significant. CMummert · talk 02:11, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- Because, for the most part, content policies at least are pretty much immutable, I rewrote the entry to emphasize that aspect.Circeus 02:00, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- Policy is not an illusion, it is consensus. Policy is the current consensus opinion of how to apply the basic principles in practice. WP:IAR is just the corollary to WP:CCC -- since building a better encyclopedia is a basic principle, with a very wide consensus, any policy that stands in the way has a narrower consensus, and that consensus must change. So it is not contradictory at all. Dhaluza 02:34, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- That's a much better way to explain what I'm trying to say. <bows to the superior explainer> --Kim Bruning 10:26, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
Consensus or Agreement ?
- I believe the primitive notion that underpins Misplaced Pages is agreement. Agreement is defined as "a meeting of minds" in contract (common) law. It requires an offer and its acceptance. In the language of common law, one may 'accept' or 'reject' an 'offer'. A counter-offer is just another 'offer'.
- It is equally important to recognise that the flip side of the 'agreement' coin is 'conflict'. ie. People may 'agree' to 'disagree', so disagreement alone is inadequate. Indeed, unless opposing parties choose to agree to 'fight' there is no fight! Without conflict (arising from the diversity of access to Misplaced Pages editors), the articles and even the rules of Misplaced Pages would never grow / adapt. Remember Wale's 'Ignore all rules' policy? ie. Every policy, guideline or any other rule may be ignored if it hinders improving Misplaced Pages.
- Do people think some policy needs to be written on agreement and or conflict? Scholzj2006 01:46, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
Failures?
Just throwing out ideas here, so feel free to shoot me down, but shouldn't there be a section that explains that consensus - god, it cheeses me off when people misspell that - is not perfect as a way of deciding what should be done and may occasionally not work? And that despite this, however, due to its general success and the fact that there is no evidence to support the contention that any other system would be any better, we still use consensus to decide things?
I believe that there have been several ArbCom findings of fact to this effect. Moreschi 13:03, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- "It's the worst system, except for all the others?" --Kim Bruning 13:11, 30 January 2007 (UTC) may Mark Twain forgive me
- Something like that. So, is this a good idea, or not? Moreschi 13:14, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- It's something that we should certainly think about. Maybe try on a separate page first? --Kim Bruning 07:24, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
First draft is at User:Moreschi/Consensus. Cheers, Moreschi 22:06, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
2nd person
Does anyone else think the 2nd person "you" is inappropriate in the WP:CCC text that was merged in? Dhaluza 00:42, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- It probably wasn't as obvious when it was a stand-alone article, but it really sticks out now that it is merged in. Dhaluza 01:00, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- I reworded it and also rephrased this sentence: "You cannot declare a new consensus all by yourself without the participants in the discussion agreeing that the previous consensus does not apply anymore." If consensus has changed, you still may not get others to explicitly say it has changed. What matters is whether other editors act as if it has changed, and whether they revert you when you write that it has changed. So maybe someone can expand that sentence a little.
- Also, the third para in that section is pretty bad. CMummert · talk 01:25, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Nice job! Dhaluza 02:24, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
P.S. I also noticed 1st person "we" in the second paragraph as well. Dhaluza 16:08, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
Two Consensus flow-charts?
Hey, I love the flow-chart for consensus-building, but I feel that there really should be an extra level of process for edits to policies, guidelines, and other documents which have gained consensus of a large section of the community. The flow-chart as it now stands works beautifully for articles, but I feel that the first action when building a new consensus for "massive-consensus" articles like policies and guidelines should be at least a post on the article talk page, if not a notice at the Village Pump as well.
- I personally feel that essays should also be included in this flow-chart, but I don't think that's as crucial as emphasizing that policies and guidelines need an "extra mile" approach to consensus.--Aervanath 04:31, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
You make 2 errors. First, all policies and guidelines are descriptive, not prescriptive. Second policies and guidelines (including this one), can be edited in the same way, and no harm will come of it. Try it! :-) Worst that can happen is that you simply get reverted, and have to take it to talk anyway. --Kim Bruning 07:56, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Oh. Right. Be bold! Thanks for clarifying that!--Aervanath 08:04, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
How long to wait for a consensus?
I can't find anything in the policy that tells us how LONG to wait for a consensus to form. This came up recently in a dispute on the WP:COI talk page, with one user giving a 12-hour deadline to respond to his comments before they reverted the article. If this has not been addressed elsewhere, I propose that following be included in the policy:
How much time should I wait for a consensus to form?
- Consensus can take 5 minutes to 5 years. Generally, if there is still discussion occurring about an issue, then consensus has not been reached. However, if the discussion has stalled, or there have been no additions to the discussion after the initial proposal, then it is appropriate to assume consensus after the corresponding length of time has passed:
- 1) For a lightly-edited article, 24 hours;
- 2) For a heavily-edited article, 3-5 days;
- 3) For Misplaced Pages policy and guidelines, 1 week.
Important Note: If you do wait the requisite length of time before making your desired edits, and someone then reverts the edits that you have made, then DO NOT REVERT THOSE CHANGES; it is a sign that the discussion needs to be re-opened, and a new consensus formed.
- Thoughts? --Aervanath 06:05, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- I tend to give lightly-edited articles more time, not less, on the hypothesis that fewer people are watching it and more people need more time to find and decide to join the conversation. Rossami (talk) 06:37, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- I had been working on the assumption that the heavier the editing, the more editors would be involved, therefore it would take longer to come to a consensus. However, what you say makes sense, too. How about:
- 1) For a heavily-edited article, 3-5 days;
- 2) For a lightly-edited article, 1 week;
- 3) For Misplaced Pages policy and guidelines, 2 weeks.
- More thoughts? --Aervanath 07:09, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
I'm not fond of this thread. If we start talking about how long to wait, people will start wikilawyering when someone objects one day after anything posted. This kind of language is not in the spirit of consensus. Consensus forms when it forms, it changes when people give inspired reasons that are convincing. Quantifying the amount of time involved will just make things worse. -- Samuel Wantman 07:21, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
I realize that. I guess I wasn't clear in my proposal. I'm not looking to provoke wikilawyering (you're right, that is a danger), but to provide a guideline for how long to wait before editing/reverting when there has been NO RESPONSE to your proposal. You can't form a consensus without discussion, so if there's no discussion at all, how long should you wait before just being bold and going for it?
- Hmm. I think this is actually moving away from something that belongs on the concensus page. I'll post a query over at the Village Pump (Policy). Thanks for your input!--Aervanath 07:32, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- How long should you wait if there's no discussion? You should probably just give up. I've posted several proposals that got absolutely zero response. It means that nobody liked it, or nobody bothered to read it, or both. If it is something you can undertake on your own, you can be bold and try it, and see if it remains. I started Misplaced Pages:Classification that way. On the other hand, if after lots of heated discussion, nobody responds to a proposed solution, it often means that everyone can live with it, and you should probably be bold and see if it survives once it is posted. -- Samuel Wantman 08:15, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Actually, I was more sort of thinking along the lines of proposing an edit change on a policy talk page and having no one respond. However, in that case I agree with you that probably the best thing to do is just do the edit and see if someone reverts it. Thanks! --Aervanath 08:27, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
This is already covered. No further wording is needed. --Kim Bruning 08:01, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- True, but it's not really explicit. However, I'm hesitant to make the policy any longer. That would WP:CREEP everyone out, I think. :-P--Aervanath 08:17, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Well, you're right about one thing. Anything you don't explicitly nail down... someone will come along and abuse it. (see this page as the ultimate example of what can go wrong). I don't feel good about writing tiny tiny bureaucratic rules though. :-/ --Kim Bruning 08:27, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- I think you're right not to feel good about it. We shouldn't have to write down all these rules. Basically, most of them come down to "Don't be a jerk" anyway, so if someone starts abusing the process, we can shut them down then.--Aervanath 08:34, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- <Snicker> You been introduced to The trifecta yet? :-) --Kim Bruning 08:46, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- It's already on my talk page. :) Found it last night. --Aervanath 08:57, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- <Snicker> You been introduced to The trifecta yet? :-) --Kim Bruning 08:46, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- I think you're right not to feel good about it. We shouldn't have to write down all these rules. Basically, most of them come down to "Don't be a jerk" anyway, so if someone starts abusing the process, we can shut them down then.--Aervanath 08:34, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- It's rarely a good idea to set firm numbers like time limits, but I agree with the general idea. If a proposal has been made, a long time passes with no response, it's probably fine to be bold and try implementing the proposal. The flipside is that it's a bad idea to make a proposal with a time limit/ultimatum along the lines of "If I don't get a response in X...", particularly if it's a relatively short timeline. It's wrongheaded to assume that because a few hours are passed, nobody cares, especially in an ongoing discussion where people have already given opinions. COI was a funny situation in that it wasn't even a case where a proposal received no responses. There was quite a bit of discussion and objection to proposed edits, but one editor seemed to think that if the others had an obligation to continue the conversation even though they had given their opinion, and that a lull in the discussion was an indication that everyone else stopped caring and it was OK to ignore the objections and edit away. I'm always leery of editors who insist "nobody is responding to me" or "not discussed on talk page" when it has been discussed...but they just don't like the responses.
- I don't know if Consensus is the best place for an addition along those lines, or if it would be more appropriate somewhere else (assuming it doesn't exist already). --Milo H Minderbinder 14:22, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- I agree with that - the test of consensus is whether your changes are removed, not whether you can wear down your opposition until they stop responding. This comes up all the time in articles, when determined editors will spend months pushing for non-consensus edits of certain articles. Leaving a comment and waiting for a while, depending on the severity of the changes you plan to implement, is a polite thing to do, but a lack of responses doesn't necessarily mean others agree with you. CMummert · talk 14:46, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- "Leave a comment first" is overused perhaps. If you do leave a comment, also edit. If you see an edit you disagree with, check back in 5-10 minutes to see if a comment shows up. --Kim Bruning 15:03, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
Thinking more about it, I am very uncomfortable with this concept. For one thing, the time you wait and the default action you can take can depend very much on the wording you use in your proposal. "I think X is a good idea and will implement unless someone objects" is very different from "I think Not X is a bad idea" or "I've ranted about X for the 10th time and people stopped bothering to respond to me". For another, the appropriate time has more to do with the nature and scope of the change than with whether or not the page is heavily edited. If the edit seems non-controversial, I'm going to be bold. If I expect it to be highly controversial, I will allow months for consensus to emerge. I don't think we can define even loose guidelines here. Sorry. Rossami (talk) 14:51, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- You should be bold in both cases. Worst case you will end up in a bold revert discuss cycle, otherwise you can just continue with normal consensus editing. --Kim Bruning 15:03, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Strict time limits would be pretty much instruction creep. Not such a good idea. >Radiant< 15:23, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
Making page strictly en.wikipedia
This recent edit by CentrX ties consensus specifically to the en.wikipedia definition . I wonder if we're actually creating these pages at the correct location? (Perhaps we should be working on meta?) --Kim Bruning 21:43, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
Dunbar's number, and predictions about RFA, AFD
When discussing RFA, AFD, etc...
" , therefore these processes may have been somewhat misdesigned. As a first heuristic in these decision-making processes, people might first see if the criterion of supermajority is achieved, and on that basis make a first order assumption on how close one is to rough consensus"
This is not correct?
--Kim Bruning 12:34, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
- No I do not think it is not correct because I think it is a minority point of view "that the processes may have been somewhat misdesigned." If it were not, then they would not be as they are. That they exist and are in very heavily used shows that there is a broad Misplaced Pages community consensus on the use of these processes. As for the second sentence please see the British Plain English Campaign. --Philip Baird Shearer 14:23, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
- See also Parliament Act which allows for a guillotine on fillibustering. I do not think that such an act means that Parliamentary democracy is somewhat misdesigned. --Philip Baird Shearer 14:29, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
- The first section is to do with the fact that they do not take Dunbar's number into account, and may therefore ultimately be self-defeating. Whether or not they have wide community consensus is irrelevant, as communities are quite capable of becoming pathological and self destructive if misdesigned.
- The wording here implies that literature suggests/predicts that these processes might be flawed, and therefore these processes should be closely watched. Seeing the discussions ongoing at for instance WP:RFA over the past months, people seem to state that there are known problems, so perhaps the literature-based prediction is turning out to be correct. AFD has long been known to be a problem area.
- As for the second sentence. Please {{sofixit}} rather than deleting. That's what wikis are for. :-) --Kim Bruning 15:05, 14 February 2007 (UTC) Perhaps the whole block needs to be rewritten in Plain English. I was initially merely concerned with expressing the situation in as exact terms as possible.
- As Kim has asked (on my talk page) for more. There is no point in the follow up sentence if the previous phrase is removed. I think I have said all that I want to say on this subject and others should contribute their POV as to whether the first phrase stays and if the sentence "As a first heuristic ..." is worth keeping. --Philip Baird Shearer 17:14, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
- No, you cannot enforce your own personal process over consensus. Please follow regular process. I am reverting you for that reason and that reason alone. There's no hard feelings, and I am assuming that you are acting in good faith. Feel free to come back and discuss at any time. If possible, please provide solid sources or reasoning for your position at that time as well. (see also: Bold revert discuss as a means to effectively implement your reasoning.) --Kim Bruning 18:04, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
Let me expand a bit on my reasoning for that last revert, just in case it isn't fully described elsewhere yet.
We shouldn't typically accept "It's community consensus" as an argument, since it is impossible for a single person to know the thoughts of the entire community. At best, a single person can only put forward their own thoughts and reasoning when challenged, even if those thoughts already constitute a sytnthesis of the concepts of the entire community. Consensus is mostly formed during wiki-editing of a page, so there is also no need for the "it's a consensus" argument.
Note that reverting good faith edits without providing reasoning on the talk page holds other people hostage to your whim, which is probably not what you intend. Let's agree on maintaining the process as described in the flowchart here. Discuss until we have some modicum of (temporary) agreement, and then and only then taking it back to the page itself. (though I have no trouble with "so how does this look! :-)" type edits to the page, even during discussion.)
Something like this has also been written at WP:BRD, but perhaps not to that length.
Philip: Could you put forward your personal argumentation please?
--Kim Bruning 18:13, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
- I do not agree with "therefore these processes may have been somewhat misdesigned." (which leads to deleting the second sentence as well), and nothing you have written here has convinced me othewise. As I have said there is a clear community consensus to use these processes and your presumption that "wide community consensus is irrelevant, as communities are quite capable of becoming pathological and self destructive if misdesigned" does not convince me that you are correct on this one. --Philip Baird Shearer 00:19, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
- I stated (for context): "...consensus-building can be unwieldy due to the sheer number of contributors/discussions involved, therefore..."
- Why do you accept the reference Dunbar's number, but then reject the conclusion? That does not compute... Wait... that wording wasn't really very clear on that either, now was it. How's this? --Kim Bruning 00:37, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
I still do not agree with your wording. The reason for this is that one can only reach a consensus when the group who hold differing points of view strive to reach a consensus and are willing to compromise. In the case of a Westminster cabinet there is a vested interest compromising for two reasons. One, there is a danger of collective loss of decision making (they loose the next election and the other lot get in), if they are not seen to agree, or secondly an individual who does not accept the decision of the others must resign from the cabinet and the loss of a government job is quite a large stick. But in a Misplaced Pages debate there are no carrots and sticks available to other members of a group to insist that their views prevail (and few to make a majority consider a compromise with a minority) ... But you know all this because it has already been discussed at great length in these talk pages. So to say that some processes are missaligned makes an assumption that there is an correct method within Misplaced Pages to reach a consensus which is not true. Now we could go off on a tangent and discuss gift cultures, the Cathedral and the Bazaar etc, but I do not think that is necessary nor do not think that the introduction of the article "Dunbar's number" at all helps in this context, because I do not think it is relevant as to why a guillotine on what amounts to filibustering is desirable on some wikipedia administrative processes. --Philip Baird Shearer 17:55, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
- Ok, Let's get back to Dunbar's number in a minute. But first, why do you bring up Filibustering? --Kim Bruning 18:30, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
Consensus of few overruling consensus of many
An issue I keep noticing with our guideline pages is the disparity between what the guideline says, and what editors actually do. A consensus of 10s of people can be enough to solidify a guideline, even when it is at odds with the editing habits of 1000s of people. Then, once the guideline is written, it only takes a few committed people to protect that guideline from change. Do we have any way of dealing with this proglem? - Peregrine Fisher 01:14, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
- The typical way is to simply define consensus as the 1000 people who are doing it their way, and/or ignoring whatever games this particular set of guideline writers are playing.
- Not exactly ideal, I know. I do keep pointing out that whatever is in the project namespace sometimes has little relationship to what people are actually doing, due to this tactic.
- A better way is to demand that people write descriptive (not prescriptive) guidelines. Maybe we should finally write that down in a policy. :-)
- Finally, the best way is to simply patrol guidelines, and make sure that isn't happening. It's a big world out there though. Could you tell me which guideline(s) you've encountered it on? --Kim Bruning 01:35, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
- We really ought to find a better word than "guidelines", because that isn't what they are. They are, at best, common practices, and in some cases they are merely what some people think should be common practices. Perhaps the most egregiously mis-categorized "guideline" that I am aware of is WP:PNSD which is really just an essay, and a "common opinion," since there is no "common practice" or anything really actionable involved. As the discussion on that page indicates, the reason that the main proponent wanted it to be a "guideline" was because people wouldn't listen if it was merely an essay. Someone else on that page (who favored it) said the purpose of making it a guideline was to be able to shut down polls. In other words, it was an opinion that was turned into a "guideline" for purposes of intimidating editors who dared to have a different opinion. Or, looked at another way, it was a supposedly "descriptive" statement that is called a "guideline" to discourage any change in what is being described -- and it thereby becomes prescriptive. 6SJ7 06:06, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
I would not call the "default" behavior of many Wikipedians to be a consensus. A consensus suggest that pros and cons were considered, that there was discussion, that people were aware there were even options. In many cases people just repeat what they saw from another place, and not for any major reason. Common practice can represent a consensus, but not always. -- Ned Scott 08:38, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
- There was a big discussion about this at a recent naming convention, where members of a wikiproject claimed that since the project had a consensus, the matter was decided even though people who were not members of that project disagreed with the outcome. It took several months of debate, but eventually the wikiwide consensus overrode the project-only consensus. >Radiant< 10:14, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
Asking the other parent
Hmmm, interesting addition. Could our friendly IP editor give some more background information or examples of situations where this applies? (though I might be able to think of one or two myself, perhaps :-) )
--Kim Bruning 01:57, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
A Miracle Happened Here
This article gives a flowchart. It says "Find a reasonable if temporary compromise" in one box. Good plan. But perhaps that should be labeled "A Miracle Happens Here".--Blue Tie 11:53, 30 March 2007 (UTC)
This page is nearly useless. --Blue Tie 14:56, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
- What do you think is missing? >Radiant< 15:39, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
- Clarity and reality. The problem starts with the heart of wikipedia. "The (internet) encyclopedia that ANYONE can edit". It then moves into the sense that wikipedia is NOT a democracy (but really it mostly is). The denial of the democracy here leads to a sense of "no voting". This is enhanced by a desire for "collegiality" on articles. When everyone is super pure and super good this will work. For normal people it will not.
- Example: Two people disagree on a paragraph. Where is the consensus? None? Does the paragraph get struck? No consensus for that. So we ask for a third opinion. The third opinion gives a real third opinion not a "tie breaking vote". What is the consensus now?
- Example: One lone expert holds out against and then gets overridden by 10 other ignorant editors. What is the consensus?
- Example: Five editors guard an article and revert changes instantly. Between them they have at least 12 reverts a day and maybe 15. They chase off other 20 or 30 other editors, one at a time. What is the consensus?
- A more realistic guideline would say "Consensus is what someone can get a majority of people who are editing this week or this day to agree to include or exclude in the article. The majority will decide issues through the use of discussions as possible or as they desire and decide the issue through reverts and volume at other times." This may sound like the words of a bitter person. I am not bitter. I feel fine. I am trying to honestly say what I think is wrong with the consensus article. It does not define consensus very clearly. Without a clear definition, it is useless. As evidence, just look at how frequently it gets cited in debates and the nature of those cites. It is almost never cited until someone announces the achievement of consensus. Upon which point someone else is likely to disagree and then the article gets cited as a touchstone for both sides of the issue. On the other hand, if a cite for Attribution is brought up, it typically results in a recognition by all of the issue. That is because WP:V or WP:ATT are clear. WP:CON is not. --Blue Tie 16:01, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
- I think you are overlooking the important point that, barring a small but vocal minority, Misplaced Pages editors tend to be reasonable, well-meaning folks who can compromise on issues and can change their mind over discussion. If you make that assumption, consensus is not problematic; if you deny that assumption, Misplaced Pages is doomed. Forming consensus only becomes problematic when sufficient unreasonable people become involved to drown out the reasonable debate. This does happen on articles on controversial issues, but there is no real way to avoid that in a wiki. >Radiant< 16:05, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
- Well, it only comes to play on controversial articles. And as you say, there is nothing that can be done about that.
- I have seen consensus work on a controversial topic only once. It was beautiful. It was rare. I know it happens. It requires a very strong assumption of good faith as a minimum and often it requires a level above good faith -- active goodness of heart. I believe I have personally witnessed at least one case where the "sufficient reasonable people" have both: 1) come to their own consensus and value it now above new contributions -- and thus become unreasonable, and 2) they have been attacked for their perspective until they no longer believe that anyone but them has good faith. But let's suppose that this policy is not for those contentious times but rather it is for collaborative times. In collaborative times, a fuzzy guide will work fine, but this guideline also tries to cover consensus when people are disputing and fighting. That also muddies the water. Perhaps the WP:CON page should say: Consensus rarely emerges from a fight and the presence of strong and on-going disputes is an indication that there is no consensus. No one can claim consensus under those conditions -- they can only claim majority opinion. Saying that would be anathema though. --Blue Tie 16:20, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
- Current best estimate is ~3K controversial articles where consensus is unlikely to work, and ~3M articles where consensus is very likely to work.
- Slogging through working on guidelines for "just" the 3M articles is already way too much work for me, especially since the system is not really designed to help people describe process. (actually make that: it was never designed, full stop. Perhaps sharpening the axe we work with would be a good idea, hmm... )
- Sometime in my copious free time, I'll try to figure out what works on the remaining 3K. AFAIK, nothing has been written on the latter topic, yet. --Kim Bruning 17:31, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
- Kim, that is an interesting response. On one hand, the guidelines that reflect the majority of the instances (I am accepting your numbers as correct) is clearly descriptive. But in those cases, it is not needed. When it is needed is when there is a problem. The 3k need the guidelines more than the 3m do.
- Incidentally, I do not know if it comes thru but I respect almost every word you type. Even though I am sure we do not generally agree, I think you are really fantastic. I am a fan. --Blue Tie 17:51, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
- It is true enough that consensus rarely emerges from a fight. However, the presence of a dispute does not necessarily mean there's no consensus. In particular, a few controversial articles have a reasonably stable state but get "attacked" by outsiders every week. This is rather unfortunate, and one of the things Stable Versions (WP:STABLE?) was supposed to remedy. The problem with "disputing and fighting" cases is that there really isn't much we can state in policy that would actually work against that, because of the wiki model. >Radiant< 08:47, 6 April 2007 (UTC)
Flowchart: Wait .... how long?
Very nice flowchart, but unless it states for how long the wait is, then it makes the whole thing rather un-followable! --Rebroad 11:01, 10 April 2007 (UTC)
- It depends on the number of people participating on the talk page, the size of the article, etc. We need to seriously cut back on detailed rules like "wait 2 days" and emphasize more common sense rules like "wait and see what other people say". — Omegatron 13:25, 10 April 2007 (UTC)
The wait can be for three reasons
- First, your edit is too new. No one has seen it yet.
- People have seen it, but the person who will object hasn't seen it yet.
- Your change has been consensus for years, but consensus can change, and now someone disagrees.
For sanities sake, in all three situations, we just say that your edit "has consensus" until someone finally changes it. (though arguably, in the first case, you don't know for sure). --Kim Bruning 02:52, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
Not policy? Overridden by other guidelines?
Errr, that's not right afaict. CentrX, care to explain?
(And if you reply with something like "there's no consensus for this to be policy" ... well... that would be funny ;-) )
--Kim Bruning 02:48, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- I would go farther than policy, even. The "wiki process", which I take to be essentially the same as consensus decision making, is a foundation principle, along with NPOV. Of course everyone knows this, I just want to point out the irony of a foundation principle that is not a "policy". CMummert · talk 02:57, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- The "wiki process" is not consensus as defined here, and consensus does not not over-ride those other policies. —Centrx→talk • 03:11, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- We should have a foundation-issue tag, perhaps? --Kim Bruning 03:05, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- Consensus is always in reference to the encyclopedia. There cannot be a consensus to over-ride neutrality, or freedom, or even simple reasonable deductions about what is an encyclopedia. Consensus as the basis of everything is meaningless, because consensus requires absolutely a goal. There is no consensus without a goal. In any case, a notion of "consensus" being policy is wholly separate from whether this page itself is policy on the order of any policy. This page precisely fits into what a guideline is, and is nothing like neutrality or verifiability in its firmness of what is acceptable on Misplaced Pages. —Centrx→talk • 03:11, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- Also, see above, at section #Policy which is the entire extent of the discussion preceding the tag change. —Centrx→talk • 03:14, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- If the content of this page doesn't reflect the accepted policy on consensus, I think the appropriate thing to do is to change the content to reflect the policy, rather than leave the content alone and remove the policy tag. I think that there should be some page, somewhere, that explains the policy on consensus decision making, and this is the natural location for it. CMummert · talk 03:18, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- The problem is there has never been any firm or good definition of consensus. It is appropriate to say that "Decisions on Misplaced Pages are made by consensus" and tag that statement alone as a policy (i.e. on some "Misplaced Pages:Decisions" page), but there are problems with making an entire page about "consensus" be a "policy" because any definition always runs into infirmities and holes of the kind that belong with a guideline. We can say "Be bold" is policy too (and that is part of the "wiki process" cited above), but there are specifics and exceptions that make any page about it a guideline. We can say the same for Misplaced Pages:Etiquette; being polite is a good policy, but that's just an extrapolation of Misplaced Pages:Civility, with advice and exceptions. The idea of Misplaced Pages:Do not disrupt Misplaced Pages to illustrate a point can be said to be "policy" (could it ever be policy that it is okay to disrupt Misplaced Pages?) but the specifics of it fall under guideline. —Centrx→talk • 03:27, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- So basically, what you are saying is that a lot of pages describing fundamental aspects of wikipedia are/should be marked "guideline", while less important pages are "policy". Back to square one. *sigh* . Well, maybe not quite. You're not going to revert WP:5P back to essay status as well, are you? --Kim Bruning 03:32, 12 April 2007 (UTC) perhaps we should abandon the policy/guideline/essay system, since it doesn't prioritize very well.
- Not so much importance, the pages are categorized by primacy and firmness. While ethereal "consensus" has higher primacy, this page itself is simply filled with some good suggestions and is somewhat essay-like; it is no where near canonical or comprehensive or firm. WP:5P, on the other hand, is the most prime of all and because of its simplicity also has the luxury of being firm (just as the sentence "Decisions are made by consensus", formulated in the pillars in "find consensus", has the luxury of being relatively firmer policy). —Centrx→talk • 03:51, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- By that criterion, if a particular principle is divided among multiple pages, would the "tag level" of all the pages drop? --Kim Bruning 04:09, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- It depends on what you mean. An important principle still warrants a super-page that generally encompasses the others. —Centrx→talk • 00:21, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
- By that criterion, if a particular principle is divided among multiple pages, would the "tag level" of all the pages drop? --Kim Bruning 04:09, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- Not so much importance, the pages are categorized by primacy and firmness. While ethereal "consensus" has higher primacy, this page itself is simply filled with some good suggestions and is somewhat essay-like; it is no where near canonical or comprehensive or firm. WP:5P, on the other hand, is the most prime of all and because of its simplicity also has the luxury of being firm (just as the sentence "Decisions are made by consensus", formulated in the pillars in "find consensus", has the luxury of being relatively firmer policy). —Centrx→talk • 03:51, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- So basically, what you are saying is that a lot of pages describing fundamental aspects of wikipedia are/should be marked "guideline", while less important pages are "policy". Back to square one. *sigh* . Well, maybe not quite. You're not going to revert WP:5P back to essay status as well, are you? --Kim Bruning 03:32, 12 April 2007 (UTC) perhaps we should abandon the policy/guideline/essay system, since it doesn't prioritize very well.
- The problem is there has never been any firm or good definition of consensus. It is appropriate to say that "Decisions on Misplaced Pages are made by consensus" and tag that statement alone as a policy (i.e. on some "Misplaced Pages:Decisions" page), but there are problems with making an entire page about "consensus" be a "policy" because any definition always runs into infirmities and holes of the kind that belong with a guideline. We can say "Be bold" is policy too (and that is part of the "wiki process" cited above), but there are specifics and exceptions that make any page about it a guideline. We can say the same for Misplaced Pages:Etiquette; being polite is a good policy, but that's just an extrapolation of Misplaced Pages:Civility, with advice and exceptions. The idea of Misplaced Pages:Do not disrupt Misplaced Pages to illustrate a point can be said to be "policy" (could it ever be policy that it is okay to disrupt Misplaced Pages?) but the specifics of it fall under guideline. —Centrx→talk • 03:27, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- If the content of this page doesn't reflect the accepted policy on consensus, I think the appropriate thing to do is to change the content to reflect the policy, rather than leave the content alone and remove the policy tag. I think that there should be some page, somewhere, that explains the policy on consensus decision making, and this is the natural location for it. CMummert · talk 03:18, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- As far as I'm aware, this is just about the only page that actually takes the time to explain any part of the wiki-process at all. Consensus is a key component of that process, of course.
- I agree that consensus by itself doesn't do much, but in many ways it is inherent to the fact that wikipedia is a wiki. A wiki by itself also doesn't do much of course, hence the decision to use this particular wiki to write an encyclopedia. With those basics down, we have the concept of "wikipedia" mostly covered. Throw in a GFDL, and off we go. :-)
- Note that verifiability is currently under contention, and people are using the consensus decision making process to decide its ultimate fate.
- NPOV is not so much under contention, but that's because it's a foundation issue. Even so, note that even the foundation issues are subject to debate and gradually changing views. (And, in fact, an update to them is required right now)
- Misplaced Pages:Be bold in updating pages, Misplaced Pages:Ignore all rules, and (much of) Misplaced Pages:Resolving disputes are all about the wiki process. The concept of verifiability is under no contention whatsoever; the only contention is about replacing or merging the page. Again, the issue here and for Verifiability is the page and where it belongs; there isn't a guideline on Misplaced Pages whose principle is not sound policy. Neither verifiability and neutrality are under contention because they are fundamental to a wiki encyclopedia, sine qua non to Misplaced Pages. Consensus cannot over-ride these things; consensus cannot annihilate Misplaced Pages, it can only fork it. —Centrx→talk • 03:44, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- On wikipedia, policy is just a word that means that something has general consensus (see the policy tag "a wide acceptance among editors"). This doesn't mean that something with a strong general consensus isn't very important. Basically the strong general consensus is what makes them important, and that's why we respect those concepts.
- Incidentally, did you notice the discussion about "verifiability, not truth?"
- Guidelines also have general consensus and wide acceptance, but they are nevertheless different sorts of pages. There is no guideline on Misplaced Pages that we should not follow in principle, but all of them, such as this one, are not so strong or even good in their particulars. —Centrx→talk • 00:24, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
how can this page be improved
How can this page be improved to better reflect the true policy? I read through it again, and some parts seem very appropriate. For example, the lede section is very good. It looks to me that sections 1 and 5 are the most problematic. CMummert · talk 11:21, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- That's odd. 1 is supposed to summarize Consensus decision making, although the current version might be rewritten more constructively. 5 is supposed to summarize WP:BOLD (though may need to be better integrated into the text). (The concept there is simply that wikipedia is a wiki, not a discussion site. Use the fine wiki! )
- I would think 3 and 4 would cause the most issues.
- But that's all just me :-)
- Could you explain issues you see with the sections you indicate?
- --Kim Bruning 11:46, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- For section 1 (Reasonable consensus-building), it's mostly the tone that I dislike. The second para is not so great.
- For section 5 (Note on use of discussion page), there are several issues. The title needs to change (is it a footnote, or a section?) and it shouldn't start with a bullet point. Those are very minor. The prose is choppy, which is less minor. The one para mixes two issues: being bold, and using the talk page instead of just edit summaries. This could be split into two pieces.
- I agree that the other sections could also use some work. CMummert · talk 11:58, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- That's probably fair criticism. Have at it! :-) --Kim Bruning 12:20, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
How much makes a consenus?
Hi all. I have a question on the application of consensus. In a feud by a user I'm curious at knowing how many contributors are needed to make a consensus. I understand that most times arguments engage several contributors, however, in some cases, arguments include small numbers of contributors. In these cases, should the argumentors ask help from others or discuss it amongst themselves and have the minor party conceed? Cheers. Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons 12:25, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
- Everyone needs to agree (or at least needs to agree to disagree). Else try asking for help at Misplaced Pages:Editor assistance, they can help you sort out consensus issues. --Kim Bruning 15:15, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
- See Misplaced Pages:Resolving disputes. Also, consensus is about creating an encyclopedia, not about the numbers on opposing sides. —Centrx→talk • 17:05, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
Removing concept that Consensus subject to other guidelines
I think that that is a "suicide clause". Consensus is very fragile, more fragile than even democracy. If anything else stomps on it, it ceases to function. --Kim Bruning 23:28, 16 April 2007 (UTC)
The not formally "verifiable" link
The not formally "verifiable" link to the mailing list for a "definition" is problematic, as is the tone that seems to imply that on Misplaced Pages, Consensus == Majority/Supermajority
First, we should use a "verifiable" definition of consensus, not one from a mailing list, especially as a primary definition. If we need the link to the posting from the mailing list, it should be posed as a contrasting opinion. The formal definition of consensus includes not only absolutely no voting (the Society of Friends - i.e. the non-religious arm of the Quakers - have been doing consensus-based decision-making for hundreds of years without ever once voting) of any kind, ever, under any circumstances, as well as making sure that every opinion, no matter how contrasting, is heard. When an organization shifts to or uses majority/supermajority voting mechanics in place of consensus, an organization has then stopped using consensus.
I strongly feel that the implication of this policy that consensus and majority/supermajority are equivalent is dishonest and disingenuous. It potentially leads to Deletion Review closers and other admins thinking that nose-counting is consensus-making when it's clearly not, and it leads to us drifting away from the stated point of consensus.
I don't really mind whether policy is changed to reflect the reality of procedure (i.e. some processes use voting instead of consensus) or whether we start using actual consensus again, but the situation as it stands where we at Misplaced Pages say that we do one thing (consensus) but in fact do another entirely different thing (voting, in some cases), is definitely not okay.
I'll try to furnish some actual edits soon, boldly, and then we can revert and discuss them as needed. --MalcolmGin Talk / Conts 21:46, 17 April 2007 (UTC)
- There's already been some attempts to clarify the difference. Tread lightly :-) --Kim Bruning 22:01, 17 April 2007 (UTC)
If no one cares enough to comment, is there consensus?
See Misplaced Pages talk:Requested moves#How much discussion is needed?; a move request was closed as no consensus when I was the only one commenting, and I supported the move. --NE2 10:07, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
- In some cases, like requested moves and {{editprotected}} requests, the admins are looking for evidence of consensus, and may refuse to take action if there isn't any. This is an acceptable, conservative approach to administrative actions. In this case, I think the admin's remark on the article talk page means that he or she is looking to see more comments at the wikiproject talk page. Try restarting the conversation there. CMummert · talk 12:56, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
- If no one commented when I posted a link there, why would anyone comment this time? Note how many threads without response are on Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject New York City Public Transportation, and the lack of comments at Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject New York City Public Transportation/station names. What you're suggesting is compulsory voting, an impossibility on a volunteer project. --NE2 13:02, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
- If you feel the request by the admin in question was unreasonable, why not raise the issue on his talk page to see if he will reconsider or at least explain his thinking? If that doesn't lead to a good resolution, you are always free to request the move again with an explanation. CMummert · talk 13:40, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
- I already discussed that. I think my move request was pretty clear in showing what the common name is; why would requesting the move again lead to a different result? --NE2 14:01, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
- I wish you had indicated from the start that the closing admin in question has already explained their reasoning . The advice given in that comment seems sound. CMummert · talk 14:12, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
- I don't understand what I am to do. I've already tried to get others to comment, to no avail. Any more would probably be canvassing. --NE2 14:28, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
- Specifically, someone has said that he supports using the common name, but is not sure exactly how one would find that. Would I be allowed to specifically ask him to comment? --NE2 14:53, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
- It is all right to do so, particularly if you won't do it too often. Just do it once, and hopefully he will go and support your idea. No mass mailing to everyone, though.--Kylohk 15:30, 2 May 2007 (UTC)
Local or global consensus
I am trying to understand how consensus interacts with guidelines, and in particular whether there is such a concept as "local consensus". Can the editors of an article agree that the article ignore particular guidelines? Or can other editors, citing the guidline, breeze through and enforce it anyway? (Note: I am talking about "guidelines" rather than "policies"). I am as guilty as anyone of editing articles I've never seen before to enforce guidlines to meet WP:EL, Manual of Style, etc. But what if the other editors of the page disagree in consensus? Is there some "Misplaced Pages wide consensus" that applies over and above any particular article's dedicated editors? Notinasnaid 07:12, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
- There is absolutely at least for WP:NPOV, WP:V and WP:NOR, but for guidelines and less frequented pages like the Manual of Style subpages, it is not necessarily so clear. Ultimately, though, if someone really wants to remove an external link from an article or conform to the manual of style, you are going to need to convince them of why that should not be done, in the interests of having a good encyclopedia article, and if there is a good reason in the particular case it might be good to make a small change to the guideline page about it. Guidelines are best practice written down. —Centrx→talk • 15:27, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
I do mean written down, well defined, guidelines. (But not policy). For example WP:EL is a guideline. What if a consensus of editors on a page agree they will ignore the guideline (not policy). Do visiting editors have any right to ignore their consensus and do what the guideline says? Notinasnaid 15:31, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
- What is the particular issue? If the consensus of the article editors is to add some advertisement, that is absolutely not appropriate for the encyclopedia. If, on the other hand, WP:EL has some obscure provision about Usenet links not being appropriate on Sundays--which few people have probably read anyway--despite the eminent relevance of the link to the article, then the link should be included and the guideline should be softened. —Centrx→talk • 15:36, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
There isn't a specific issue. My question is an overspill from another discussion. I don't want to complicate this with a specific issue, because I'm trying to understand how Misplaced Pages processes work, to solve future issues. Do guidelines (such as WP:EL or the manual of style) trump consensus, which is a policy? If guidelines do trump consensus, then how do I deal with this consensus of editors who have made up their mind? Can I warn each of them who reverts me, immune from 3RR warnings myself? If not, how does this work? Notinasnaid 16:18, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
- No, guidelines don't trump consensus, but I think you're asking the wrong question here. Guidelines should have rough global consensus to begin with, or they shouldn't be guidelines. They should also not conflict with policy, which should absolutely have consensus (or be mandated from on high, in the case of a few key provisions). But locally, there is wiggle room if there's a significant reason to deviate from the written guideline. If this happens often enough, then the guideline should be modified to describe the exception (they should be descriptive, not proscriptive). But I can't think of any guideline that allows you to violate the 3 revert "rule", no, as long as the edits you are disagreeing with are not vandalism or violating core policies. -- nae'blis 17:25, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
- What he said. The general answer is that guidelines can and do have exceptions. >Radiant< 09:42, 4 May 2007 (UTC)
- What if there's a proposal based on a guideline, and the only comments saying why the guideline based proposal shouldn't go through are the gist of "I don't the agree with the guideline" and not anything about why it doesn't fit in a particular scenario. Then does the guideline beat local consensus (or lack thereof)? Miss Mondegreen talk 07:10, May 8 2007
- Quite possibly. Could you please be more specific? >Radiant< 08:16, 8 May 2007 (UTC)
- Here's the case that got me interested in consensus. Miss Mondegreen talk 09:06, May 9 2007
- *pulling out a 10-foot bargepole* Eeeuw! That's a requested moves spam :-/ . Nothing to do with consensus at all! The amazing thing is that it actually almost worked here, and people point out that the page shouldn't be moved, and provide solid reasoning. Of course, requested moves only entrenches people in one option or another, so you've basically just sunk any chance of moving it. That's the risk you take and the price you pay for using RM. :-/ --Kim Bruning 14:10, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
- Please AGF---once a RM failed, there's no way I'd try to move over that, and that's not what I was trying to do. In hindsight, I should have just been bold and moved it and sighted the relevent guideline, but that's not what I'm asking about.
- I see this issue of local v. global consensus everywhere, and this was one of the first cases that I was involved in that brought it to my attention, and it's a great one to link to, because it was made clear that the opponents of the move didn't agree with the guideline--one flat out said that my case would work except that he didn't agree with the guideline.
- So I'm asking what I or someone else can do if a move or Afd or something splits like this in the future, and it's clear, as clear as a user saying that they disagree with the guideline or policy... Then what happens? Does local consensus overrule global consensus? Can someone close in favor of global consensus if no one raises a legitimate issue with the guideline or policy and how it applies in the case in question? The theory of global consensus is all well and good, but I keep seeing again and again 3 or 5 people showing up and saying "I don't like ____" and overruling Misplaced Pages's guidelines and policies, and asking what can actually be done about this. Pretend you're closing the RM and those are the only editors who have commented and those are the comments you have to go by. What happens? Miss Mondegreen talk 06:34, May 11 2007
- The guidelines form the starting point for a discussion. If people then point out that the guideline is silly "in this particular case", then perhaps it may just be so. At that point, take a look at the guideline, and perhaps modify that instead. :-) . In the example case you point out, it seems like both titles have only ever been released in japan. Insisting on using an English translation does seem just a little odd then, and one person points out that the translation does not appear to come from a reliable source , and that's a guideline too... Hmmm... --Kim Bruning 11:26, 11 May 2007 (UTC) In general this class of problem is mostly "political" in nature, since we do have redirects. If we could have pages under two or more titles with equal priority, this kind of discussion would be entirely unnecessary :-P
- Unreliable? The translation came from a Nintendo press release years ago when they were planning to release the game in English. The translated name is copyrighted and trademarked by them. And I wouldn't have put it up for a RM, because the page has a ton of redirects, except that there's a nav box. When the page is in the nav box (which is on and off and that is for political reasons), the page was in their by the Japanese name, which didn't help people in terms of navigation, especially since it was the only page to go by the name. I was just confused by the whole thing. Everyone insisted on it being an official name, even though the guideline says that it only had to be a common name, and it wasn't just a common name, we had a Nintendo press release as a source, and given that that's a Nintendo game, that seems reliable to me--and none of the other articles had issue with it. I just guess I have an issue with two or three people being able to say "eating ice cream is against policy" or "I don't like policy" and if not enough people are there to stop them, policy or guideline is thrown by the wayside. And since wikipedia moves so quickly, I do see this happening and if it's subtle enough, or not too bad, it's often just left to set. Miss Mondegreen talk 04:58, May 12 2007
- The guidelines form the starting point for a discussion. If people then point out that the guideline is silly "in this particular case", then perhaps it may just be so. At that point, take a look at the guideline, and perhaps modify that instead. :-) . In the example case you point out, it seems like both titles have only ever been released in japan. Insisting on using an English translation does seem just a little odd then, and one person points out that the translation does not appear to come from a reliable source , and that's a guideline too... Hmmm... --Kim Bruning 11:26, 11 May 2007 (UTC) In general this class of problem is mostly "political" in nature, since we do have redirects. If we could have pages under two or more titles with equal priority, this kind of discussion would be entirely unnecessary :-P
- *pulling out a 10-foot bargepole* Eeeuw! That's a requested moves spam :-/ . Nothing to do with consensus at all! The amazing thing is that it actually almost worked here, and people point out that the page shouldn't be moved, and provide solid reasoning. Of course, requested moves only entrenches people in one option or another, so you've basically just sunk any chance of moving it. That's the risk you take and the price you pay for using RM. :-/ --Kim Bruning 14:10, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
- What if there's a proposal based on a guideline, and the only comments saying why the guideline based proposal shouldn't go through are the gist of "I don't the agree with the guideline" and not anything about why it doesn't fit in a particular scenario. Then does the guideline beat local consensus (or lack thereof)? Miss Mondegreen talk 07:10, May 8 2007
- What he said. The general answer is that guidelines can and do have exceptions. >Radiant< 09:42, 4 May 2007 (UTC)
Continued appeals to "Consensus has been reached"
I'm not quite sure where to ask this, but on a talk page I've been involved in, there are a group of editors who consistently argue against any change based almost exclusively on the claim that "consensus has been reached", despite the fact that there are currently several editors who are trying to discuss changes to this, and despite the fact that for several months, there have been continued debate over the issue.
How do you deal with this? Cogswobbletalk 16:30, 5 May 2007 (UTC)
- Generally by pointing out that consensus can change, and by getting outside people to comment via WP:RFC. >Radiant< 09:58, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- You can also try moving to a more inclusive stance. Instead of trying to decide whether A or B is the correct position, try to come up with a proposal that includes both A and B. For instance by saying "X says A, but this is refuted by Y who says B." or something similar. If you can come up with a wording that both groups agree is accurate, you have created something that can be truly enlightening. Often arguments get bogged down because both sides believe they are protecting the truth. In cases like that, both sides need to move to a broader understanding, which is recognizing that people can have different interpretations of the same facts and events. The issue, instead of determining the truth, is determining how much weight to give each perspective. This can be settled by looking at the citations presented by each side. This moves the discussion from "truth" to "scholarship". When the discussion moves from truth to scholarship it separates the zealot from the scholar. Zealots don't seem to last long here. They end up blocked, or leave on their own accord. -- Samuel Wantman 07:36, 8 May 2007 (UTC)
You disagree with the situation, so possibly there might not be consensus, and those people may just be confused. --Kim Bruning 11:33, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
- Hard to know. After all, "What is consensus?" Never defined, it is not even necessary, but it is constantly referred to. Probably the least useful policy on wikipedia because of the vague nature of its definitions and content. Second is WP:MEAT. If we have a bunch of people who agree with one another, editing the same articles... are they meat puppets or not? I saw two guys who are friends and who edit in agreement, get blocked for a week for WP:MEAT violations, even though each was acting to his own personal direction. So... What makes some meat puppets and others not meat puppets? And, in particularly, when we are looking at "Consensus", are all the people who agree with each other Meat puppets? Again, this is another large area of vague interpretations. --Blue Tie 14:06, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
- Hm, that's interesting. The meatpuppetry policy is intended to prevent a deletion debate on e.g. a website being flooded by users of that website, registering Misplaced Pages accounts solely to prevent that article from being deleted. Such accounts should generally be ignored rather than blocked. I would like to know which meat case you're referring to, because it appears to have been an improper block. >Radiant< 14:13, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, it is interesting. Here is the block notice. Here is the blocking admin's explanation -- which seemed pretty thin to me. Here and here I requested further information because it appeared to me that the standards enacted are regularly violated by other people who "guard" a particular article. It looked like a double standard. In reply, I was essentially told to go away. So I did.
- Interestingly enough, the article under discussion there was up for a review for featured article. There was a poll taken. I think that 50% said it should not be featured article and 50% said that it should. (In fact, it might have been 17 for and 18 against -- I would have to go back). Many of the problems of the article that would have technically denied it featured status were not actually addressed. Despite the vote, and despite the pesky technical issues there was apparently a consensus for the article to be featured because that is how it was closed -- although just a couple of weeks earlier, Kim, who contributes here, had closed it as not featured (and then re-opened it when someone complained that the close was improper). Isn't consensus weird? But at least its not a democracy... you would have been so proud about how the poll was ignored!
- And speaking of weird, the individuals who were blocked for one week, had brought a complaint against an Admin who was the chief editor and contributor on that article. This same admin had been reported for 3rr violations in the past a few times and always got off by the narrowest of constructions of the policy, while to my eye, these two non-admin editors who were questioning some of his actions got hit with a week for rather flimsy reasons. Interestingly, not long after that incident, Raul, who is a strong supporter of that Admin -- to the point of egregiously insulting other editors, was himself blocked for actively and unapologetically edit warring on the article. 6rr and personal insults to other editors in less than 24 hours so he got a 12 hour block overnight while he slept. Pretty rough, I know, but fair is fair. I am sure that had he been a regular editor instead of a member of arbcom, he would have just been told to be careful, but I know they had to set an example, so they were fearless and stern. Later, when a question about the process and the decision to close that article as featured was brought up on the FARC talk page, the Closing Admin closed off all discussion and told everyone to appeal the decision to the boss of "featured article status". Who is ... Raul! Of course, there is clearly no evidence here of a cabal, but you know how kooks get... they might think all of this looks a bit suspicious. Thankfully though we all know that all of this was an unbiased process of consensus, just like the policy says. --Blue Tie 18:22, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
- Insofar as I was involved, I discovered that particular actions I took did not have consensus. Therefore I undid those actions, as is correct on wikipedia. After that I stayed away from the Global Warming article, and from the discussions, simply because I lack the time to deal with it (argh!) ^^;; --Kim Bruning 18:12, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
- (In case of misunderstanding -- I think you are blameless. That is your habit -- you are always doing things well.)--Blue Tie 18:44, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
- This seems to be a rather complicated issue. On the one hand making sockpuppets is not usually a problem, on the other hand using them to astroturf an issue is. It's a bit late to do anything about it; in the future I would strongly recommend (if you cannot reach an agreement with the admin in question) to bring up the matter on the admin noticeboard. I would also recommend being less verbose in doing so, brevity is wit and all that. Durova's reaction is rather curt but this may be caused by the verbosity. >Radiant< 15:02, 14 May 2007 (UTC)
- (In case of misunderstanding -- I think you are blameless. That is your habit -- you are always doing things well.)--Blue Tie 18:44, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
- Insofar as I was involved, I discovered that particular actions I took did not have consensus. Therefore I undid those actions, as is correct on wikipedia. After that I stayed away from the Global Warming article, and from the discussions, simply because I lack the time to deal with it (argh!) ^^;; --Kim Bruning 18:12, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
- Hard to know. After all, "What is consensus?" Never defined, it is not even necessary, but it is constantly referred to. Probably the least useful policy on wikipedia because of the vague nature of its definitions and content. Second is WP:MEAT. If we have a bunch of people who agree with one another, editing the same articles... are they meat puppets or not? I saw two guys who are friends and who edit in agreement, get blocked for a week for WP:MEAT violations, even though each was acting to his own personal direction. So... What makes some meat puppets and others not meat puppets? And, in particularly, when we are looking at "Consensus", are all the people who agree with each other Meat puppets? Again, this is another large area of vague interpretations. --Blue Tie 14:06, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
- All excellent recommendations. I was not upset so I did not pursue it. But it seemed a bit wrong. Thanks for the notice on my talk page. Also... question: What is meant by "astroturf"? In this case it is not sockpuppets, it is two guys who work together editing. I think one is a radio talk show guy and the other is his producer or something like that. I am not sure of the details. They agree with each other though. --Blue Tie 01:00, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
And yet existence of (temporary) consensus can be detected unambiguously. --Kim Bruning 15:17, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
- Astroturfing. Basically using sock- and/or meatpuppets to make an issue seem more supported than it actually is. >Radiant< 08:23, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
- Kind of like this. Not Radiant, honestly 08:23, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
To the original question, WP:CCC addresses this quite directly, "A small group of editors can reach a consensual decision about an article, but when the article gains wider attention, members of the larger community of interest may then disagree, thus changing the consensus. The original group should not block further change on grounds that they already have made a decision." Why not just go there? Dhaluza 10:39, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
- Well the original question is misleading at best, an outright lie at worst. What the editor (because there was only one editor who used the phrase "Consensus has been reached") at the page was telling Cogswobble, was that one of his points was addressed previously and that he should read the archives, because no one wanted to keep repeating themself. Cogswobble made a few suggestions, some of which were incorporated into the article. At no point in time, was discussion ever cut off. "Consensus can change" does not require editors to constantly repeat all arguments once every "Johnnie-come-lately" comes to an article. Or does it? Ramsquire 17:02, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- If people don't want to repeat arguments, they can give links or precise directions to exactly where the arguments are. I don't think it's fair to just say that the arguments are in the archives "somewhere". The other person might read the entire archives and not find them because they don't see them as convincing arguments. If people get tired of pointing to the same arguments over and over again, they can make some sort of FAQ or pointer to them. "Convincing arguments are in the archives somewhere" is not a valid argument because it is not refutable. --Coppertwig 17:26, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- Your FAQ suggestion is very interesting because one was created for the page, and Cogswobble deleted it. He felt that it was being used to suppress discussion. In addition, said links were given over and over, and over again. This just seems to be a sour grapes discussion thread. Also of note is that all of these so called editors who felt that consensus had changed have now moved on to other aspects of the article, and the original text reads exactly the same as it did before they got there. A success for consensus actually being reached I would say. Ramsquire 17:45, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- Undelete the FAQ... And /FAQ pages seem like a good idea in general to me. :-) --Kim Bruning 18:01, 3 June 2007 (UTC) Sounds like a good "alternate rule for heavily edited pages"
- The problem with the FAQ is that there were a group of editors who were pretty much using the FAQ, and appeals to consensus, as the primary argument against any change or even discussion about an issue. Their arguments typically went like this "There's already consensus, and I'm sick of repeating this over and over to different editors for the past eight months". Note the hostile attitude of this editor in his response above - "Well the original question is misleading at best, an outright lie at worst". The FAQ was and is being used to discourage discussion. Cogswobbletalk 18:03, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
- Well, if you take issue with certain entreis in the FAQ, you can edit them (and go bold revert discuss worst case), or you could challenge the assertions in the FAQ. Would either of those be a good start here, or is there more to this? --Kim Bruning 18:57, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
- To Kim Bruning...Yeah, there is a lot more to this, like 4 archives (including 2 RfC's, an ArbCom request, and confirmed and suspected sockpuppetry) of discussion on the Fox News Channel talk page (which would seem to contradict this assertion that discussion was discouraged). Again, discussion wasn't discouraged when we adopted some of Cogswobble ideas, but when we disagreed with his ONE point, because it was addressed previously in detail (and in two RfC's), then we are discouraging discussion. To Cogsobble-- You can't have it both ways. I'm sorry you came in at the end of the discussion, but you have been provided links to the archives, and the FAQ. And I will give you credit you have been one of the more reasonable Johnie-come-lately's (not intended to offend, it's just that its kind of innaccurate to call you a latecomer). Whenever you raise a new point I have and will continue to address your concerns but there is no burden on me or other editors to constantly repeat the same points over and over. Finally, your post here is misleading because we've been through this before and you've admitted that I did not discourage discussion. The problem you have is with one editor in particular. But up there you make it seem as though there was some sort of cabal at that page of which I would be a member. And if you are saying that I have discouraged discussion using the argument that "consensus has been reached" that would be lie, wouldn't it!? There is nothing hostile about my attitude (trying to discern an attitude from a post is an often useless endeavor since in effect, you are simply reading text on a computer screen. It's better to just simply ask the editor instead of assuming hostility--outside a blatant PA of course). I just figured that both sides should be presented. Ramsquire 19:59, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
Talk pages
I am now in a controversy, with an editor who insists that article talk pages do not operate by consensus. (The point at issue is a project tag he insists on adding to a talk page which only he thinks in relevant to the project.)
Has anyone met this aberration before? If so, should we clarify the page to say explicitly that consensus governs all pages at Misplaced Pages? If not, will someone click on the link above and tell him so? Septentrionalis PMAnderson 16:29, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
- I guess a talk page is somewhat of a different animal. Individual comments are not governed by consensus. They are a means to reach consensus. But what about the common items such as the tags at the top of the talk page? It seems that those should be consensus driven, though most of them are far from controversial. What project tag and page are of concern? maybe the specifics make a difference here. --Blue Tie 19:56, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
- I think the account at User:TonyTheTiger/DR bot is intelligible. It links, eventually, to two other discussions and the talk page concerned (Talk:Jon Corzine. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 22:05, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
Ode to Consensus
- A yakkity-yak,
- A hackity-hack,
- A talk page archive or two.
- Put 'em together and what have you got?
- Something that's scary and blue.
Splash - tk 22:21, 18 May 2007 (UTC)
- In serenity
- Everyone stops arguing
- That is consensus.
- Courtesy of WP:HAIKU. >Radiant< 12:13, 21 May 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, some see through smudgy lenses,
- And some with extra senses
- And many don't even know their proboscis from their tail.
- But I’ll go by consensus
- For that is what defends us
- From the trolling and the polling that otherwise would prevail.
- ...with apologies to Silly Wizard. -- Visviva 12:53, 21 May 2007 (UTC)
"Clear consensus"
At Misplaced Pages:Deletion review/Log/2007 May 23, you can read:
- List of people by name – Overturned and deleted. AFD showed a clear consensus to delete which is apparent here too. – Srikeit 03:57, 28 May 2007 (UTC)
Following Srikeit's suggestion, I have posted the issue at Misplaced Pages:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents#List_of_people_by_name, so a discussion may develop there, but my basic question, after carefully rereading Misplaced Pages:Consensus, is how anyone, even an admin, can boldly claim that there is "clear concensus" in the face of dozens of objections by various users. In the case cited above, this has been going on for months, if not years (Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/List of people by name, Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/List of people by name (2nd nomination), Misplaced Pages:Miscellany for deletion/List of people by name (May 2007), Misplaced Pages:Deletion review/Log/2007 May 23, etc.).
User:Ceyockey has commented that "this page set is going the way of other perennially nominated pages and it will, eventually, be deleted simply as a matter of time. Radiant's bringing it here is pretty much a death knell for the page set as this is a highly respected contributor and admin. Therefore there is simply no way it can be kept for the long term owing to continued attempts to delete by persons who vigorously oppose its existence. It is not original research, it is not useless, and it is not unmaintainable but it is unpopular - and that is the reason why it is ultimately doomed to deletion".
I'm willing to learn, so who can explain to me what is "clear" about the consensus above? <KF> 12:55, 28 May 2007 (UTC)
- No one, it seems. <KF> 21:35, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
NPOV
I think this policy should state that it doesn't override WP:NPOV. What is the use of having a WP:NPOV if majority rules overrides it? There may be an instance where someone does not want to follow NPOV at all. Ideally, we should reach consensus with the goal of NPOV, but where in this policy does it state that requirement? Some editors could say they have arrived at a consensus in which they desire to only show one POV where other notable POVs exist, overriding the NPOV policy. This policy should state that it doesn't override the WP:NPOV.--09:27, 30 May 2007 (UTC)
- While it's not made explicit, both the "consensus can not quickly override existing policies" and "consensus does not trump Foundation Issues" include NPOV, with the latter link mentioning it specifically. It would be foolhardy in my view to try to enumerate all the things that consensus can and cannot override on this page. -- nae'blis 15:33, 30 May 2007 (UTC)
- Local consensus on one wikiproject cannot override Foundation issues by themselves. However, Consensus Can Change, and even the Foundation issues evolve ever so slowly over time, as conditions and our understanding change. --Kim Bruning 18:06, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
How to Avoid Consensus
It seems to me that the idea of consensus has one huge loophole. If an editor is involved in a content dispute or just simply wants to be a pest, all he has to do is be a persistent three revert violator. Once reported to WP:3RR an admin may simply lock the page and request further discussion, instead of blocking the disruptive editor. This encourages holdout editors to avoid ever reaching consensus, in the hopes that they could frustate other editors off of the disputed article. Perhaps, we can ask admins to dig a little deeper, before locking an article brought to their attention from WP:3RR. Ramsquire 17:12, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- Admins should block the 3RR perpetrator, not punish other editors by protecting the page. --Kim Bruning 18:07, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- Unfortunately though, I've seen more than one admin do precisely that. Of course, you don't want 3RR to become a race where the first one there becomes the content dispute winner by getting the competition blocked, but you don't want the situation I described above either. Ramsquire 18:22, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- Hmm, typically I refer people to User:Dmcdevit/Thoughts. Is that useful? --Kim Bruning 19:04, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- Unfortunately though, I've seen more than one admin do precisely that. Of course, you don't want 3RR to become a race where the first one there becomes the content dispute winner by getting the competition blocked, but you don't want the situation I described above either. Ramsquire 18:22, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- Well, there are a number of people that argue that if they never agree to any compromise or suggestion, then the "present version" must stay since there is obviously no consensus for moving away from that version. Since this attitude can be disruptive, such people have a tendency of ending up blocked. In general this approach by definition causes a fuss which attracts attention, and attention tends to show that the approach is invalid. >Radiant< 15:51, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
Moved from Misplaced Pages talk:Consensus can change
this needs a tag - is it a policy, guideline, edict or something else? Thryduulf 20:39, 31 August 2005 (UTC)
- I think a great many of the old grandees of Misplaced Pages (and no, I'm not including myself in that category - I'm far too new around here - though I would, also) would say that it has, indeed, been policy right from the start. "Edict" sounds like it comes from on-high, which is the wrong idea; it's more of a backbone of the social contract of Misplaced Pages, I would say.
- James F. (talk) 22:04, 31 August 2005 (UTC)
- Disagreed. The picture I'm getting is that Misplaced Pages is evolving into an environment where the community votes on everything procedural. Denelson83 23:19, 31 August 2005 (UTC)
- I would use the term "mutating" rather than "evolving". It is not a welcome change, and it is not a change for the better, and it is a change.
- James F. (talk) 00:22, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
This can't be a policy since it's simply not accurate. If binding polls were not permitted, neither RFA nor any of the deletion pages would exist. If a complete absence of voting is desirable (on which the community is far from unanimous), we've got a lot of reform to do. — Dan | Talk 23:26, 31 August 2005 (UTC)
- They're not binding polls. The closing admin (or bureaucrat) evaluates using their intelligence to gauge consensus. The distinction may appear slight, but it's important.
- James F. (talk) 00:22, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- Fair enough; however, this distinction should be made very clear, and I've attempted to make it so. — Dan | Talk 01:02, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- Just wanted to say thanks for putting the clarification in, even though I've already thanked you in IRC. :-)
- James F. (talk) 01:17, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
Voting is not banned
Voting is not banned. What do you think happened during the Elections? How do you think arbitration cases are determined? The policy has always been Don't vote on everything, not don't vote at all. Angela. 03:06, September 1, 2005 (UTC)
- I've moved the page from Misplaced Pages:Voting is banned to Misplaced Pages:Don't vote on everything to reflect this. Angela.
- Elections are not part of the Misplaced Pages process. Neither are Arbitration cases. Feel free to bring up an actual example of something to do with Wikipedia, as opposed to Wikimedia in general. Otherwise, this should be moved back.
- James F. (talk) 09:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- How Arbitration cases are handled internally is irrelevent to the community's use of our decisions, however. The Committee's internal workings are not a community process, and we're talking about that here.
- James F. (talk) 14:36, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
Consensus on voting :-)
It appears to me that some of those who are so heavily advocating consensus are at the same time trying to steamroll over those who feel that voting is legitimate under certain circumstances. I hope that I'm mistaken. Titles such as "Voting is banned" are certainly not likely to engender productive discourse, so I'd like to thank Angela for moving the page to a more appropriate title. I have attempted to rewrite the page to reflect the actual policies and practices on the English Misplaced Pages and the beliefs of its inhabitants.
Before you bring up a vote/poll distinction: Please look at the dictionary definitions for both words. Neither word automatically implies that the result is "binding", or that a particular process is to be used.--Eloquence* 04:10, September 1, 2005 (UTC)
- Before you quote a dictionary at us, remember that we have dozens of terms of art and distinctions of this kind on Misplaced Pages. "Poll" and "vote" do not mean the same thing on Misplaced Pages (much as "ban" and "block" have very different meaning).
- James F. (talk) 12:15, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- Community knowledge is very rarely laid out; that's why we're only creating this page now, 4 years after it has been use. But you want definitions; very well, here you go:
- Poll
- n., system whereby people simplistically but clearly list opinions on each of the sides of a debate in a helpful manner to ease understanding of community consensus.
- Vote
- n., aka "binding poll", poll (q.v.) system wherein instead of community consensus being allowed to be evaluated, a rigid system which violates the Misplaced Pages principles of flexibility and open-ness is used where the community is forced to be bound.
- James F. (talk) 14:23, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
Voting is not banned, but binding voting might be
Following discussion with James F. about this, it seems the main issue is the binding aspect of a poll or vote rather than the occurrence of such a method itself. Therefore, I've moved the page to Misplaced Pages:No binding decisions since it isn't only polls/votes that shouldn't be binding, but the result of any decision making process. I feel polls can be a valid decision making process if used correctly, and if they are not binding, they can not be accused of undermining consensus. Angela. 13:17, September 1, 2005 (UTC)
- I agree that straw polling can indeed be helpful. I'm happy with the current title, and the current wording too.
- Others?
- James F. (talk) 14:28, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- Sure; looks OK from here. Mindspillage (spill yours?) 15:36, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- As the one who was initially responsible for the original title (I suggested Kim write it on IRC), I am perfectly happy with this. May I suggest that meta is a better place for this? ] 17:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- The problem with putting things on meta is that people immediately say that they don't apply to the English Misplaced Pages.
- *sighs*
- James F. (talk) 10:17, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
- Which proves our main problem: people are stupid. ] 16:07, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
No binding decisions eh? Does that include the decision for the policy "No binding decisions"? :) --WikiSlasher 09:06, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Precedent should matter
While I understand what this is trying to say, I think it almost comes across as an endorsement of arbitrary decision-making. I think it's especially important in AfD debates to look at the outcome of recent debates and the presence of similar, long-established articles. Consensus may change, but change will probably take some time, and when it happens, it should be reflected consistently in the treatment of different articles. I've seen the NBD policy used to justify multiple AfD nominations in a short period of time, which I think reflects a misunderstanding of what it's trying to say. --Cheapestcostavoider 20:03, 18 May 2006 (UTC)
- If there's no consensus to delete, how do you think re-polling will change that consensus?
- Right! It won't.
- A poll measures current consensus, it doesn't nescesarily change it. No matter how often you measure, the outcome will always be similar! :-)
- (it won't be exactly the same, because consensus is constantly slowly shifting, and a poll only samples that consensus at at a single point in time)
- Kim Bruning 11:45, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
Contradiction
Isn't this kind of a contradiction? Misplaced Pages has no binding decisions. Except the decision that we have no binding decisions. That's binding. :-) --W.marsh 00:40, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
- It's a fundamental property of the wiki concept. Any software that implements a wiki will tend to enforce it by default. There is no contradiction with policy and guidelines, as those are made up by users of the sofware, and looked after by hand.
- This page happens to also be an example of the kind of knowledge was taken for granted in the first few years of wikipedia. I've been pushing old users to actually write down that knowledge; before they leave, and their knowlege and skills are lost to the communuity.
Verification Needed for Assertion of Policy Status
JA: I have requested verification of the claim asserted by the 02 Sept 2005 insertion of the {policy} template that "This page is an official policy on the English Misplaced Pages. It has wide acceptance among editors". Until somebody provides adequate evidence to support this claim, the template is invalid and unverified and can be removed with impunity at any time by any user. Jon Awbrey 12:12, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
- That's not how things work. I've removed the tag, please don't put it back. (note however, that it might be interesting to find verifiability rules for guidelines... that might be a great way to cut down on the mess). Note that this particular rule is a logical consequence of how a wiki works, so there's not much we can do about it. That and it's the only way to ensure that wikipedia will be around for ~100 years. You need to be able to get out if you accidentally paint yourself into a corner. Kim Bruning 15:37, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
- Hoping that Misplaced Pages will be around for an entire century is a bit ambitious. Copies of it will probably still exist, but let's hope that by 2106 there'll be something even better than this. And then I mean, something better than the world wide web. --Thunderhead 16:01, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
- You can hope, but in the mean time, this is what we have. It's doable and definately worth going for, even though I know it runs a bit counter to the current-day western psyche. It's still much less ambitious than long now ;-P Kim Bruning 16:57, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
- Hoping that Misplaced Pages will be around for an entire century is a bit ambitious. Copies of it will probably still exist, but let's hope that by 2106 there'll be something even better than this. And then I mean, something better than the world wide web. --Thunderhead 16:01, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: IC, so U do recognize the distinction between a policy and a principle after all. Thanks, I needed that. Jon Awbrey 20:14, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
BRD shortcut
Jon Awbrey, it's great that you're re-inventing bold revert discuss, but I've already done the reverting. Could we get to the next step? Kim Bruning 17:09, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
Binding decisions
We already have a method of making binding decisions, in one small case: the deletion of redirects. WP:CSD G4 permits speedy deletion of recreated pages which are substantially identical to the deleted page; and in general that's a good thing. If someone wants to reopen the discussion on whether to have an article, he need merely write a new article on the topic, and it will be taken to AfD.
But if a redirect is ever deleted, that's permanent. There's only one way to make a redirect from A to B, so anybody, any time, who makes the same redirect will find it speedied. (This is already happening with cross-namespace redirects.) Septentrionalis 18:19, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
History and status of this project
This project page was declared to be a "WikiPedia Policy" by User:Jdforrester on 02 Sept 2005, when that user posted the {{policy|]}} template on the project page, as evidenced by the following history link:
The claims asserted by means of this device, specifically:
- "This page is an official policy on the English Misplaced Pages", and
- "It has wide acceptance among editors and is considered a standard that all users should follow",
are in dispute and should be regarded as the personal opinions of the small number of Misplaced Pages users who actually support them.
JA: Under Extreme Protest, moving the above from main to talk.
JA: Misplaced Pages broke down for a couple of hours when I tried to post the above. I hope it wasn't something I said. Jon Awbrey 20:04, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: 21 Aug 2006. I tagged this project page as Proposed, and Kim Bruning reverted it:
JA: I do understand the English sentence that asserts of this project page that "It has wide acceptance among editors and is considered a standard that all users should follow". There are three problems with this statement:
- There is no evidence given to support it.
- There is no reason given to believe that it's true.
- There is no source given to say by whom it "is considered a standard that all users should follow".
JA: That sort of claim is inveighed against in WP articles — I cannot imagine why it should be permitted in WP policies. Jon Awbrey 17:24, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- Misplaced Pages guidelines are odd, relative to the rest of the encyclopedia, since we need to do our own research for them. There's no choice in this. There is no scientific document or engineering procedure that can explain how this particular system can be run at this scale, so we need to design our own, and that's what we've been doing in the past 5 years.
- This particular guideline is somewhat stranger, since it's basically a primary source even! A group of old experienced wikipedians was asked to write down one of the design principles of the wiki.
- It actually states one of the design principles behind the wiki-engine, especially the way it allows editing (and reverting). So you can say that the actual php code has been written based on this rule, and it sets the framework within which we work.
- No matter how you mark this page, or how you edit it, the php code will still enforce the framework. (A rose by any other name ... ) .
- Now if you change the php code, then things would change. However, the end result would no longer be called a wiki.
JA: 21 Aug 2006. According to my scan of the edit history, subject to correction, there have been a total of 15 editors on the main page, a total of 14 editors on the talk page, and a total of 21 editors all together on this project since its inception, namely:
Main Page Participants
|
Talk Page Participants
|
Combined List
|
JA: That does not warrant claims of "wide acceptance among editors", even if all 21 editors agreed about every issue among themselves, which I know for a fact that they do not. Jon Awbrey 18:12, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- With that, you are (partially) answering a point I made a couple of days ago, not the point I made today. Kim Bruning 18:22, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- Right. Would you care to answer the point I'm making now? In a sense you're forgetting to mention Ward Cunningham, I think ;-) Any idea why I think you're forgetting him? Kim Bruning 20:20, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: I just munged the edit histories into a table and sorted — if I missed an edit line please supply. Thanks, Jon Awbrey 20:26, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- It's nice that you're doing this work, but you're not addressing my current point yet. If you'd like to continue on the previous point though, perhaps you'd like to talk with each of these people? Especially James Forrester might be handy. Kim Bruning 20:31, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: As to the point that you are trying to make, I quite frankly hesitate to articulate it, and apparently so do you. So I can but wonder why is that? Jon Awbrey 20:36, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- JA: what you may be missing is that Misplaced Pages, and wiki communities in general, are not empirical. Wide acceptance may be asserted of anything which is widely practiced, without need to justify this with a poll of the community. It's rather like saying lawns of grass are widely accepted; it's not universal, it may be virulently opposed by a segment of the population, yet any reasonable survey of lawns will find the vast majority have grass as a consituent element. - Amgine 20:32, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
My point was . Kim Bruning 21:07, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Point, Counterpoint — and Fugue
JA: I was afraid of that. And my point is that no amount of techno-mumbo-jumbo is an excuse for making false or misleading statements on a content, policy, guideline, or project page. Software is made to serve society. Society is not made to serve software. Let's call it "Simple Rule Number 1". Jon Awbrey 21:24, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- Darn, we can't work with those definitions. Please see Social software as a start. But ...there's more to it than that. Kim Bruning 22:16, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: Please try to understand, I did not come here to join some kind of Borg Religious Order (BRO), or fade and dissolve my storm-tossed exhile of selfhood in a mystical etherium of wiki-karmic-goo. I came here to write high quality encyclopedia articles on subjects that I have invested a lifetime getting more or less adequate in. There are all sorts of wikis in space(.com) that have no other purpose but to preserve the cultivation of their lotuses (loti?) by providing their "users" with a Feel God experience, but that's not what WikiPedia claims to be. If the software does not serve the espoused objective well enough, then those of us who really share that objective will find some other tool to that purpose. The software is not a replacement for society. The software is a tool of human purposes that antedate it by many, many evolutionary cycles. Jon Awbrey 02:16, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
- Good. That means we're both pragmatic. Now let's discuss how an amalgamation of software and social systems can allow you to write your high quality encyclopedia articles, and also how -without adequate constraint- they can conspire to prevent you from doing so. (see also: Cybernetics, Systems theory, Game theory, Nomic) Kim Bruning 09:09, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: Our Pragma are as Manifold as our Sinns. There are many forms of pragmatism, pragmaticism, mea maxima pragmata. The most pressing problem at the moment is that there is a false or misleading statement at the top of the project page that you have resisted correcting or removing for reasons that you have yet to articulate fully, much less render in the least bit convincing with regard to ordinary standards of acceptability. And that is normally considered a bad thing. When we have dealt with that tiny dust bunny, then we can can think about the next task on the list. Jon Awbrey 13:06, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
- I will not be drawn into a philosophical discussion. I have neither the time nor the inclination at the moment, sorry.
- This page is policy. I have stated why, you reject my premise. Fine. But since the wiki design leans on that same premise (among several others), you automatically reject the existence of wikis. Oops.
But that's your problem. Resolve it for yourself. Come back when your philosophy and reality are back in the same ballpark.I'm always willing to talk, as you know :-)
- Perhaps the problem is that we're not quite speaking the same language, even though we both *appear* to be using english. Consider yourself a stranger in a strange land. It would be polite and handy to learn (parts of) our language, especially if your own language lacks words for snow. ;-) At the same time, I might take some trouble to learn yours? In the mean time, we'll get into big conflicts if we keep up like this. Could we call an editing truce? :-) Kim Bruning 15:19, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
Hello Jon. If I am reading you right, you have three issues:
- The coherence of the rule itself: objection based on self-reference
- The status of the rule: doubt that this is actually "policy"
- The meta-text of the rule: the specific claims of the box with the green ticky mark in it, even if it is "policy".
I hope I have not omitted anything, or mischaracterized you on anything I have included. My responses are:
- No comment at this time. Let us get the meta-argument resolved first, and see if there is still an argument left over.
- The policy tag adds it to a particular category. I infer either support, or at least lack of objection, from everyone who would have noticed such a thing over the past 11 and a half months. This should not be underestimated.
- I think it is a bit misleading to suggest "wide support" among editors, when the overwhelming majority probably rarely visit meta-space at all. But it occurs on many policy pages, and has its roots in the need for people to put ticky boxes on things, which is an issue much broader than this particular page. It may be best discussed for the template in general.
Cheers. -anon 16:04, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
Hypocrisy & Misrepresentation Breed Cynicism & Mistrust
JA: 'Nuff said. Jon Awbrey 16:52, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
- Yes they do. :-) Kim Bruning 21:40, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: I'm beginning to see the sand this castle is made on — and I see that you people need some serious help rationalizing your policies. I'm not even sure you want them to be rational. Doesn't matter, the rest of the world — and Oh Yes, Virgilia, the Sandy Claws of Reality will Catch your Act in the Vth — will demand rational justification for what you say and do. I will think on it a while, but right now I desperately need to go work on some genuine articles before I go bats. In the meantime, I would like KB to quit confusing my WikiPedia birthdate with my RealWorld birthdate — I wasn't born yesterday, or late last December. At any rate, back to the grinstone for a now. Jon Awbrey 12:38, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
- The empirical justification is that it has worked, and outperformed all other known rulesets for the past 5 years, including at least one ruleset used by the same project under a different name, and one ruleset used by a different project with the same objectives. Kim Bruning 13:41, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: Not Entirely Non Sequitur. I used to think I was the Artful Dodger, but I see now that I've got a lot to learn about the Art of the Non-Sequitur. The best I can do for now is to share the following story, based on true life events, if not exactly ripped from today's headlines.
JA: Every Spring we hang a clear red plastic globe — shaped and colored vaguely reminiscent of a large translucent strawberry, with yellow plastic flower-portals on a subtended green plastic calyx — on a cast-iron scrollwork post in our rose garden, and we fill it full of sugar water on a biweekly basis. Now, the instincts of hummingbirds are clearly plastic enough that they go right to it and sup the refined sugar nectar from where it wells up in the faux-flower ports. But the funniest thing, and it cracks us up all Summer long into Fall as we peek through the bay window that peeps out over the roses, is this — there's more sugar water in a single filling of that globe than the whole gang of hummers in the 'hood could possibly consume in a month, and yet their instincts are not so plastic that they'll ever leave off blustering and dogfighting and just plain enjoy the mix. Moral of the Story? Ay, there's the rub.
JA: Still, I wonder, what your plans are for refactoring that ruleset, or have you even noticed it yet, with all your idees fixed on that rube mechanical bit? Jon Awbrey 05:20, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
- It's a continuum. In my career I've found that some some things that looked like social problems could more easily be fixed by software engineering, and some things that looked like software problems could more easily be fixed by "social engineering". I could tell you lots of fun stories about this :-)
- Once I was working in a team with one programmer and one social engineer. One day I was sitting next to the programmer, and we'd determined that our problem would take 3 days to solve, if we didn't want to get in everyone elses way. The social engineer went around and talked with several people and asked them if it was ok if we stomped on their areas for a bit. The problem was solved in 3 hours. :-)
- On the other side of the coin, there exists a famous program called bittorrent, which uses clever codified social rules to prevent defection (called leeching). By clever enforcement of these social rules on its users, bittorrent allows unprecedented data traffic between machines, and in fact the bittorrent protocol is currently a very significant percentage of all internet traffic. (Use of) Bittorrent has also had several social consequences, most famously leading to the creation and increased popularity of a political party in sweden (!)
- So the first thing to understand is not to make arbitrary distinctions between social and software, since they are very much a continuum; in fact I'd consider software to be a subset of social behaviour. If you don't take the entire continuum into account, you will be blindsided. Badly. Mediawiki people have been accused of (deliberately) blindsiding people in the past, for precisely this reason Kim Bruning 13:05, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: Thank you. This has been very liberating. Naturally, I don't believe you folks for a second. But still, even a bit of foma can be freeing. Jon Awbrey 21:34, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
- This reminds me of a discussion at the start of a book ... (I think it was Thomas More's Utopia, but don't pin me on that). In one scene, a monk sets out to philosophically prove that the Americas couldn't possibly exist... to a member of Amerigo Vespuccis expedition, who had just returned from there ;-) Kim Bruning 01:04, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: Dear B, I hope you don't think I was being sarcastic. I genuinely experienced a moment of satori and immediately went off and spent a blissflow day in several creative endeavors here and there about WikiParadiso. My sideswipe of suspended belief is merely the escape pause that reflects long experience, and warns against the perils of Icharus. Jon Awbrey 20:00, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
Aware, Bware, Cware
JA: Making this new section to continue a previous discussion in a slightly different light. Jon Awbrey 21:14, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
This needs a rename
...because the title is misleading, and this has been confusing new users. An important purpose of policy/guideline pages is to instruct new users, and because of cognitive laziness they don't always read past the first few lines. The point of this page is not that we make no binding decisions (indeed, that would imply a loner can ignore a consensual discussion entirely). The point of this page, rather, is that consensus can change, and that any consensual decision can later be overturned by consensus (but not by a lone editor who didn't like it). >Radiant< 16:58, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
- Got a suggestion? Maybe Misplaced Pages:Consensus can change, which differentiates top-down decisions and the five pillars? Misplaced Pages:No stone tablets has appeal too... -- nae'blis 15:45, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
- Good idea, and done. >Radiant< 20:29, 14 September 2006 (UTC)
Query
"Why on earth would you ask about a specific article content issue on Village Pump before on the talk page? that's what talk pages are for, to discuss articles" -- Derex (talk · contribs)
- Because this page is about how "Consensus can change". If consensus has been demonstrated a few months ago on an article talk page, asking "is this consensus still valid" on that talk page is very unlikely to get you a meaningful response. Hence, if you wish to demonstrate that consensus has changed, you need to get feedback in a more public spot. >Radiant< 14:58, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
Precedent - in or out
I think it would be nice if this page mentioned how precedent should be used on wikipedia. I, for one, think that precedent can be involved in discussing changes - but changes should not simply be made based solely on precedent. Consensus from discussion is key, and precedent (like statistics) can be made to prove anything has support. Therefore, I think this page should mention something about precedent - whether or not there is consensus for using precedent or not. Did that make sense..? Fresheneesz 09:49, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
- That didn't really make sense, and the assumption that precedent can be made to prove anything is an obvious fallacy. >Radiant< 10:17, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Sticky consensus
A popular idea around here is that once a consensus is formed, it becomes "sticky", and you need another opposing consensus to undo it. Like you get a consensus of five like-minded people on a talk page, slap a policy tag on a page and force people to do stupid shit, and you then need to get a lot more than five people to overrule the original five who won't give up their position in order to remove the tag. I think this is quite silly, and not the way things are done. If there's no agreement, there's no agreement.
However, User:Sarenne made a good point about the fact that the people who like the status quo aren't going to be participating vocally on talk pages... What do you think? — Omegatron 00:34, 19 May 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, that behavior is more common than I'd like, but that doesn't make it right. The sections on "consensus can change" and "local consensus vs. wikiwide consensus" should make that clear. >Radiant< 08:26, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
Precedent for retention after an AfD Keep
What is the status of an article that has had an AfD end as a Keep? Is there any limitation on additional attempts to delete the article and does there have to be any material change in fact to justify initiating a second AfD after a previous AfD established a precedent to Keep the article? The way I read WP:Consensus -- "This does not mean that Misplaced Pages ignores precedent; for example, editors should not continuously nominate an article to WP:AFD until it reaches their preferred outcome." -- there is an implied "protection" for an article that has a demonstrated consensus for retention. The way I interpret this statement, if AfD1 ends in a Keep, then a strong burden is placed on the prospective nominator of AfD2 (on the same article) to demonstrate that "... there is new information to discuss.", as the policy continues, before starting a new AfD. If a Keep precedent on an initial AfD provides no measure of protection to an article, there is nothing to prevent any other editor from taking a second (or third, fourth or fifth...) stab at deleting the article. And if AfD #37 finally achieves the desired result, there would seem to be nothing in WP:Consensus forbidding the article from being recreated as is, and the AfD cycle starting all over again. Does AfD precedent have any meaning in terms of the future of an article? Alansohn 16:12, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, it does. If you repeatedly recreate a deleted article, it gets locked out. If you nominate an article for deletion for the, say, 37th time, it gets speedily closed. Both cases can get you blocked for edit warring against consensus, and/or WP:POINT. >Radiant< 16:15, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
- Let's ignore the extreme case. Does the precedent of a Keep in an AfD offer any "protection" from AfD II happening or does it place any burden on the prospective nominator of AfD II to show why the AfD I consensus should be overturned? Alansohn 16:20, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
- The protection it offers is that the same good reasoning in AfD I applies to AfD II. The people who comment in AfD II and the closing admin in AfD II will look at the discussion in AfD I and the prevailing reasons there, if they were indeed prevailing reasons and if they are still relevant to the article, apply just as much to AfD II. It is not, though, binding precedent in the same sense as precedent is binding in the legal system. —Centrx→talk • 16:27, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
- Let's ignore the extreme case. Does the precedent of a Keep in an AfD offer any "protection" from AfD II happening or does it place any burden on the prospective nominator of AfD II to show why the AfD I consensus should be overturned? Alansohn 16:20, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
- Posting AfD#2 immediately after a Keep-close AFD#1 usually results in a quick build up of speedy Keeps before a speedily closed. Since consensus changes, the passage of time is enough to offer up the same article for AfD. Sometimes you'll see an AfD#2 for an article that has not change much in the year since AfD#1 and the article winds up being delete. The prospective nominator of AfD II need only show why the article should be deleted, not why the AfD I consensus should be overturned. If the reason for the AfD I consensus remains valid, most people just repeat the valid Keep reason in AfD#2 rather than use AfD#1 as some sort of precedent. I've seen AfD arguments that articles listed on the main page under DYK have DYK precedent approval to remain on Misplaced Pages. That precedent argument usually received little to no weight by others. -- Jreferee 17:05, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
Policy in a nutshell, potential wording
This may have already come up, but I think this policy should have a nutshell, such as:
This page in a nutshell: All Misplaced Pages articles and other encyclopedic content must be built through consensus, representing a most agreeable decision reached through discussion. |
Please comment on the proposed wording. -- Jreferee 16:47, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
- That disregards the fact that most content is written by people who feel like writing something, not people who first ask for consensus to support their wording. In other words it contradicts WP:BOLD. >Radiant< 15:46, 4 July 2007 (UTC)
I added the following back in February. It only lasted a few hours and I didn't pursue it further:
This page in a nutshell:
|
- --☑ SamuelWantman 07:07, 5 July 2007 (UTC)