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:Wikilawyering - Misplaced Pages

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This page in a nutshell: Utilising the rules in a manner contrary to their spirit in order to "win" editing disputes is highly frowned upon by the Misplaced Pages community.
"WP:WL" redirects here. You may also be looking for WikiProject Lacrosse (WP:WLAX), the whitelist (WP:WHITELIST), or WikiLove (WP:LOVE).

Wikilawyering (and the related legal term pettifogging) is a pejorative term that refers to certain quasi-legal practices, including:

  1. Using formal legal terms in an inappropriate way when discussing Misplaced Pages policy;
  2. Abiding by the letter of a policy or guideline while violating its spirit;
  3. Asserting that the technical interpretation of Misplaced Pages:Policies and guidelines should override the principles they express;
  4. Misinterpreting policy or relying on technicalities to justify inappropriate actions.

Misplaced Pages policies and procedures should be interpreted in a commonsensical way to achieve the purpose of the policy, or help dispute resolution. Typically, wikilawyering raises procedural or evidentiary points in a manner analogous to that used in formal legal proceedings, often using ill-founded legal reasoning. Occasionally wikilawyering may raise legitimate questions, including fairness, but often it serves to evade an issue or obstruct the crafting of a workable solution.

For example, while it is often impossible to definitely establish the actual user behind a set of sockpuppets, it is not a defense that all the sockpuppets which emerge were not named in the request for arbitration.

As another example, the Three-Revert Rule is a measure of protection against edit warring. An editor who intentionally reverts the same article three times every day is not breaching the letter of this rule, but violates the spirit of the rule - and can thus be sanctioned for revert warring.

See for an actual example of conflation of judicial proceedings and Misplaced Pages arbitration procedures (It is possible the poster intended this to be satire in an attempt to make a point about a particular editing dispute).

Appropriate use of advocacy

Use of authentic legal skills by legal professionals or other persons trained and skilled in the arts of negotiation and advocacy is welcome in proceedings of the Arbitration Committee and on Misplaced Pages in a variety of contexts. Please see Misplaced Pages:Requests for arbitration/How to present a case for some suggestions regarding effective advocacy. Precis: common sense trumps process.

Negative connotations

Some Wikipedians allege that the charge of wikilawyering is used, particularly by Wikipedians more influential than them, to avoid giving careful attention to their claims. It is also said that newer users tend to believe nuanced complex policy (particularly WP:NPOV) conforms to their point of view, and will repeatedly refer to policy rather than providing rationale for their edits.

The word "Wikilawyering" typically has negative connotations, much like the term "meatpuppet"; those utilizing the term should take care that it can be backed up and isn't frivolous (see WP:NPA and WP:CIVIL).

In cases where it is possible a user is simply mistaken or naive and not deliberately deceiving others, efforts should be made to educate them rather than labeling their actions as "wikilawyering".

Misuse of the term

Occasionally, editors who engage in semantic discussions about the language of a policy or guideline, or propose minor changes in the wording of a policy or guideline, will be accused of wikilawyering. In such cases, it may make sense instead to assume good faith and engage in the discussion productively rather than tar those editors with the wikilawyering brush. And simply being a stickler about Misplaced Pages policies/guidelines and process does not make an editor a wikilawyer; remember that Misplaced Pages has an Arbitration Committee closely modelled on a court of law, a system of elections of administrators and bureaucrats, Featured Article & Good Article review procedures, and various other formal processes.

See also

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