Misplaced Pages

:Third opinion - Misplaced Pages

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Adrian M. H. (talk | contribs) at 18:28, 6 August 2007 (Active disagreements: Rm Talk:John_Howard - went to respond but more than two parties involved - will suggest RFC or similar). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 18:28, 6 August 2007 by Adrian M. H. (talk | contribs) (Active disagreements: Rm Talk:John_Howard - went to respond but more than two parties involved - will suggest RFC or similar)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
This page is not an official policy or a guideline. It is a non-binding informal process by which editors interested in lending a hand on content disputes can meet those that need such help, and those that seek that help can advertise their need for assistance. Shortcuts
Dispute resolution
(Requests)
Tips
Content disputes
Conduct disputes


Misplaced Pages:Third opinion is a suggestion for the use of third-party mediators in a dispute. When editors cannot reach a compromise and need a third opinion, they may list a dispute here. The third-opinion process requires good faith on both sides of the dispute.

This page is primarily for informally resolving disputes involving only two editors. More complex disputes should be worked out on article talk pages or by following the dispute resolution process.

Listing a dispute

Please discuss the dispute on the talk page before coming here.

  1. If, after discussion, only two editors are involved, you may list the dispute here. Otherwise, follow other parts of the dispute resolution process.
  2. Provide a short, neutral description of the disagreement, with links to the specific section of the talk page where it is discussed.
  3. Sign with five tildes ("~~~~~") to add the date without your name.
  • Do not discuss on this page. Leave the discussion to the linked talk page.
  • Listings that do not follow the above instructions may be removed.
Example

"Talk:Style guide#"Descriptive" style guides: Disagreement about existence of nonprescriptive style guides. 12:34, 5 June 2006 (UTC)"

Providing third opinions

  • Provide third opinions on the disputed article talk pages, not on this page. Sign your comments on the associated talk page as normal, with four tildes, like so: ~~~~.
  • Read the arguments of the disputants.
  • Do not provide third opinions recklessly. In some cases your opinion is a tie-breaker, while in others both sides may have presented valid arguments, or you may disagree with both.
  • Third opinions must be neutral. If you have previously had dealings with the article or with the editors involved in the dispute which would bias your response, do not offer a third opinion on that dispute.
  • Consider keeping pages on which you have given a third opinion on your watchlist for a few days. Often, articles listed here are watched by very few people.
  • When providing a third opinion, remove the listing from this page and mention in the summary which dispute you have removed and how many remain.

Third opinion project

  • The informal nature of the third opinion process is its chief advantage over more formal methods of resolving disputes. If you are a third opinion provider, you are part of the project and are encouraged to add the Category:Third opinion Wikipedians (with or without the {{User Third opinion}} userbox, as you prefer) to your userpage.

Active disagreements

Reminders:
  • Your description must be neutral — see Example above.
  • Link to the correct talk page discussion section. (You may wish to pipe the link to keep it short).
  • Do not enter into discussion here.
  • Sign with five tildes ~~~~~ for timestamp only.
  • Use an accurate edit summary.
Categories: