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    Abusive User: Noclador, his impunity and the unacknowledgement of his actions

    I have waited this long to raise this here because I was allowing the due process of the wrongful sockpuppetry accusations and WQA concerning myself to transpire. I have been left disappointed at the end of it (conclusion here) .

    Noclador conducted a sockpuppetry investigation on behalf of Wikepidia and I was one of the accused. During the process I was subject to a myriad of personal attacks, flippant comments and manipulative character assassinations. This included the completely misrepresentative action of pulling together portions of statements from disparite locations to say something completely different to anything I was actually saying (or the context I was presenting). There selective use of “false/manipulated evidence” to incriminate me from a page that also had information that would contribute to prove my innocence. I have presened all the details at this link. This includes a summary of all the abuses and further links to all relevant pages.

    Moreover I was initially not directed to the correct evidence pages nor was I notified of a later, related, ANI compliant. It was categorically shown that I was not a sock (at link & link), yet there was no apology, nor any acknowledgment for the mistake.

    It now cannot be disputed that his evidence presented against me was poorly researched. It can also be speculated that there existed some kind of personal vendetta on the part of Noclador. At the evidence link I have detailed how several of my contributions were deleted by Noclador (some under the pretext of claimed vandalism), only to be undone by others. Even over the last few days he has deleted my cited contributions (from a couple of months ago) along with another editor’s recent addition (compare this and this [this; I have interjected with thisand this ) and claimed it to be non-consensus!! The aim appears to be to target the other editor’s content, but in light of Noclador’s behaviour towards me I see this as a convenient attempt to remove some of my citations. After all, he omits me (the main driver of the subsection, modified from an earlier attempt to include verifiable information) when he lists other editors as having made the consensus contributions.

    Furthermore, others involved in the investigation were prepared to overlook the abuses by Noclador and impinge me for making personal attacks (plural). This is a baseless claim because the only thing I said was that Noclador was lying and manipulative (which can be (and has been - at the evidence link) demonstrated to be an understatement). I certainly do not claim perfection on my part, however, this is, quite frankly, a glaring double standard.

    I asked for several things during the WQA discussion and as a sign of good faith modified the statement on my talk page to not include mention of the abuses that were carried out by my “accuser”. I received nothing. (See the two links, as mentioned above: here and here) So I see this as another one sided outcome. But I appreciate and respect the efforts of those who tried to mitigated the situation - they have been forthright.

    Given that Noclador has been able to flout Misplaced Pages rules and guidelines with respect to his conduct, and has received no warning or sanction, then there is no reason for anyone else not to be allowed to do the same. After all, why should some of us have to follow the rules and live up to the Misplaced Pages ethos when others do not?

    Romaioi (talk) 11:45, 6 August 2008 (UTC)

    Please summarize. Very few people are going to read walls of text like that. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 17:19, 6 August 2008 (UTC)
    Summary: User:Noclador accused user User:Romaioi of being a sock-puppet, in the course of which User:Noclador behaved uncivily towards User:Romaioi. When the sock-puppetry allegations turned out to be untrue, User:Romaioi asked for an apology and User:Noclador refused, when the whole thing could have been stopped in its tracks by a simple apology. The issue went to WP:WQA where it was not resolved. Ed Fitzgerald (unfutz) 17:54, 6 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Ed Fitzgerald comment is only a synopsis of Romaiois accusations and omits facts and lots of details. Fact is: During June a series of new users began to edit WWII topics with with a POV to proof that Italian forces were good fighters in WWII. As the editors in question were obviously part of a sock circus I started a report about them at Misplaced Pages:Suspected sock puppets/Giovanni Giove 2nd. I added Romaioi on June 25 at 2:22pm because "just 100 edits but these are only in Italian WWII military topics (and at that: the usual ones: Tobruk, El Alamein,...) also he copies text that Generalmesse wrote directly into other articles" and informed Romaioi 4 minutes later about it: "You have been accused of sockpuppetry. Please refer to Misplaced Pages:Suspected sock puppets/Giovanni Giove (2nd) for evidence. Please make sure you make yourself familiar with notes for the suspect before editing the evidence page." When he went online 4 days later he could not find the link to the socketpuppetry case as in the meantime the page name had been moved and a checkuser had been requested on the socks - as soon as he informed me about that I left him a note explaining were he can find the case thus defend himself and what the purpose of a checkuser is .
    • Romaioi began to defend himself ignoring all Wikiquette rules: "I will be expecting an unreserved apology from you." "Do your homework." "Use some of that good faith that you mentioned."; "Your moral and intuitive compass is upside down." ; "I will be contacting my Lawyer tomorrow concerning this matter. This is not a joke and its becoming very personal. Being that it should be a professional environment, there are liability issues involved." "So let me ask. Does noclador have some other agenda? I would like to know what it is."; "How is the witch hunt going?"; and that was just the first day! I therefore decided to not discuss with Romaioi, but to find more of the socks and more proof linking them together.
    • The next day Romaioi started were he had left off the night before: "noclador has lied in his very first accusation." "I only found the correct link: Misplaced Pages:Suspected sock puppets/Giovanni Giove 2nd by chance. Given the narrow and manipulative nature of by noclador’s evidence against me included on the latter page over the past day (discussed below), I would like to question if this was deliberate to mis-direct me to a page that I could not edit and not allow me to see (nor reply to) the case being presented against me." (by chance???) "noclador has persisted with his twisting arguments." (I did not respond to him to wait for the checkuser outcome... I did not persist, just did not answer) "noclador attempting to tar and feather me" "It all sounds frivilous to me." ""; at this point the checkuser results came back an showed that of 13 suspected socks 10 were confirmed socks, 2 users to old to check and Romaioi was proven to be unrelated.. A attempt by user:Justin A Kuntz to explain him the ceckuser process and had no effect.
    • Romaioi continued to insult: "that he was happy to lie just to see me implicated."; and even to come to my talkpage to insult me ""; as I had and have no interest to discuss with someone as him and I do not like to be bullied on my talkpage I removed his comment, which let him to reinsert it and hurl more insults at me: "stop being petty" "as you clearly have no idea" "as I do not think much of you in light of your inability to acknowledge your own mistake(s)" - at this point I had enough and filed a report about his myriads of insults at WP:AN/I but also decided to move on to more important work.
    • Today Ed Fitzgerald informed me that there is a WP:AN/I against me... Well, as it turns out Romaioi spent the last month continuing to smear me - and now he filed a complaint against me??? "Abusive User: Noclador, his impunity and the unacknowledgement of his actions" Abusive??? I went now to check his edits over the last month to get an idea, what he is talking about and found out, that he spent the last month dragging this story on and on: on User:EdJohnstons talkpage ; on his own talkpage with insults and presumptions: "evidence presented against User: Romaioi was manipulative and misrepresentative." "On 2 July 2008, it was categorically shown that User: Romaioi was not a sock puppet." (categorically was not even used once on the ceckuser page!) "anyone in future to be more thorough in their examination of the evidence before stepping over that line." "No acknowledgement of his error or apology (for either the mistakes or the personal attacks) has been made by User: noclador." "The extreme prejudice by User: noclador against User: Romaioi has continued after the sock puppetry case." "and typically making false accusations of Misplaced Pages:Vandalism as justification for removal." "Whilst the overall cause for which User: noclador was working for was good, his treatment of an innocent contributor has been reprehensible and devoid of good faith." "The message is to remain here as a permanent reminder of the and example of abuse of authority that remains largely unacknowledged.".
    • and that was just on July 4th and on July 11th he continued with a brazen lie: Answering Justin talk, who pointed out that I did inform Romaioi at the very start that a checkuser is noting personal Romaioi answers: "noclador indicated nothing of the sort to me."
    • On July 15th Jaysweet tried to explain Romaioi the checkuser process once more and suggested he move on, but on July 16th Romaioi goes on... "I can only speculate that he may have preconceived ideas concerning my character." "that there is a slight double standard in my being sanctioned when it seems plainly obvious that the injustice was done to me in several regards yet, the purveyor of it has received no sanction."
    • and on July 19th, same story continues "No one has ever been able to say that I did anything more that claim that Noclador was lying and did not have a clue (and then summarize events and point out that I receieved no apology)." He wants an apology for him insulting me or what??? and he insinuates that I would be ready to harm his family "Further, to give you some background, where I live there have been incidences of people/families being been tracked down to their homes from IP addresses and being physically attacked, all over online disagreements. I know of 2 such cases. So given the disingenuous nature of the evidence being accrued against me and the talk of IP’s etc I had genuine concern that an attack on my family was becoming a real possibility." WTF??? This is the worst insinuation he threw around! This is unacceptable!!! Is he thinking I will take a plane from Europe to Australia to go an club his child??? God, I haven't even thought about him for 3 weeks at this point!
    • and he goes on: claiming first "I am not trying to escalate the situation." and then smears me more "Removal of this would benefit noclador more than me because there would be no record of his behaviour." "I would like a statement inserted there by an administrator stating that Noclador’s statements are misleading and inappropriate. The statement should also declare that Nocaldor’s assertions should be ignored." and he "I would also like to see it stressed ( at link), that accusers are to be polite, courteous, respectful (whatever you want to call it), are prohibited from manipulating and misrepresenting evidence, and must not make personal attacks. There should be repercussions for uncivil behaviour." So, being polite and explaining to him everything was not good enough??? Has he looked at all his insults? "uncivil behaviour" does he have some diff-links to this behaviour he complains about???
    • But he is not yet finished! There is more "If he has behaved in this manner once, he can do it again. Noclador should be observed. Based on assessment of the circumstances, I do not believe this incident to be isolated. I may be the first person making the point as far as he is concerned." "Finally, I would like a statement inserted by someone with administrative authority here indicating that I am not guilty of incivility, but rather was more the victim of it." "And lets not forget how its started: from a wrongful accusation and bad manners directed at me." I am speechless at the level of insinuation, twisting of facts, lying and smearing Romaioi has had the impudence to do behind my back!
    • and on July 21st yet another lie: "The fact that I was being incorrectly associated with fascists by my accuser, both on the evidence page and on my talk page, compounded my concerns of the possibility of an attack." I did not link him to fascists - my statements read: "Your interest in topics regarding Italy and its military in WWII and Istrian exodus - both areas were User:Brunodam and the above socks have for a long time tried to manipulate the content (towards fascist glorification and revisionism)" and "It was written by the aforementioned socks with the stated intent to glorify the Italian Army in WWII. It's not neutral and it uses various fascist claims/statement as sources and that is unacceptable for an encyclopaedia." I spoke about the socks not him!!!
    • and on August 5th, he still doesn't want to move on and brings his continuing insulting behaviour to new lows: "Noclador has been able to move past it because no one has taken him to task on his abuses. He has been able to abuse his power and not be held accountable whatsoever. In fact, he was gven a pat on the back." (What pat on the back??) "Instead the victim of Noclador's abuses and insults has been taken to task for highlighting the abuse and was perversely accused of abuses he did not commit (the claim that I made personal abuses (plural) is rubbish)." (is the above all rubbish???) "You have an unethical abuser, in noclador, who now has carte blanche approval to do what he wants to whoever he wants." An "unethical abuser"??? Sorry, but once more: WTF!? This is the worst collection of insults I have seen on wikipedia in over 2 years and I had the "joy" of having to deal with über-vandals like Misplaced Pages:Long term abuse/Roitr more than once!
    • The recent events: On August 3rd User:ITALONY and on August 5th User:Bendiksen63 surfaced and it became quickly clear that both were new incarnations of the sock circus. After I talked with User:Kirrages and User:Narson we reached a consensus to mass revert/take the edits by socks down! (to which a IP immediately hurled a plethora of insults against me and Romaioi returned to continue his smear campaign with insults: "Your abusive friend Noclador tried his darndest to prove that I was one of GeneralMesse's sockpuppets and hurled a lot of insults my way. You must have sparked something in him.", lies: "In deleting your inclusions Noclador has vandalised some existing "concensus" information." (the consensus was to remove the addition by the socks!) insults: "Another example of him not doing his homework properly." & "I will undo Noclador's vandalism"... but he was not content with that and in a second instant went on to increase the level of his insults
    • and then he filed this WP:AN/I report - in his usual style: "During the process I was subject to a myriad of personal attacks, flippant comments and manipulative character assassinations." "It can also be speculated that there existed some kind of personal vendetta on the part of Noclador." "I have detailed how several of my contributions were deleted by Noclador (some under the pretext of claimed vandalism), only to be undone by others." (the insults on my talkpage I did revert! What else? Maybe he as a diff link to prove this???) "Even over the last few days he has deleted my cited contributions (from a couple of months ago) along with another editor’s recent addition", yet another lie: the revert of ITALONYs edits and not a single Romaioi edit in sight! and the revert of ITALONY & Bendiksen63s edits and in the last 500 edits there is not a single edit of Romaioi!!! So, which "cited contributions" of his did I delete??? I did revert the ITALONY & Bendiksen63 edits! none of Romaiois edits!
    • and then he increases the slander even more: "Given that Noclador has been able to flout Misplaced Pages rules and guidelines with respect to his conduct, and has received no warning or sanction, then there is no reason for anyone else not to be allowed to do the same. After all, why should some of us have to follow the rules and live up to the Misplaced Pages ethos when others do not?" Where have I flouted the rules???
    • Let me summarize: Romaioi doesn't do constructive work, only slander, malign and defame. He is lying, insulting and does show 0 good faith. While I have been doing 500 constructive edits in the last month alone, have contributed massively to wikipedia, have not insulted Romaioi, have not threatened him in any way and have moved on after he was proven to be not connected to the sock circus in question, he has continued for now 5 weeks a campaign to smear my spotless record on wikipeda (http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Special:Log&type=block&page=User:Noclador). I make it now clear that I will not discuss this matter further and expect this report to be closed at once and that it will be made clear to Romaioi that any further actions of his will result in a indef ban as an "no good faith" editor. --noclador (talk) 10:55, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    • User Noclador is undoubtedly fair and honest, his great contributions to Misplaced Pages surely speak for himself, and his behavior, as character of the Misplaced Pages community, has nothing common with these mendacious accusations against him. Flayer (talk) 12:20, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    Ed Fitzgerald's comments are particularly unhelpful and really do not help to resolve the situation, nor do they reflect what actually happened. The fact is that noclador was not the only editor involved in dealing with Generalmesse's sockpuppet circus, I helped out in a small way. To be brutally honest, as I have been with Romaioi, had I spotted his contribution I would have added him to the sock puppet report myself; his edits fitted the pattern of the sock puppet master and he actually restored one of his contributions. noclador withdrew from contact with Romaioi after he responded by calling him a liar and it got unpleasant; if you check Romaioi's talk page here, you can see the explanation and response. I have no doubt that noclador would have apologised for the accusation were it not for the personal attack and Romaioi's aggressive demand for an apology. I tried to smooth things over myself here. Now I have attempted to explain at length to Romaioi that noclador's actions were not aimed at him personally but he just doesn't seem to understand how this works. I issued a Wikiquette alert after Romaioi put up another summary attacking noclador in the hope that this could be defused.
    Essentially the accusations against noclador are entirely unfounded, Romaioi's responses usually fit into the TLDR category and to be honest I'm somewhat non-plussed by his inability to see that he was not targeted personally and his pursuit of noclador, with accusations of lying and abuse of power as well as unnecessary personal attacks do seem to indicate he has taken things incredibly personally. I can understand him being somewhat upset at being caught up in the sock puppet case but he has really gone the wrong way around airing a grievance to the point that his single-minded pursuit of noclador has the hallmark of stalking. Justin talk 13:01, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    Can somebody summarize the above material, i'm too busy eating lunch, tia, --70.109.223.188 (talk) 17:57, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    I've been asked to comment by Noclador. I've never found him abusive of power or lying at all; he's a good wikipedian, in my view, doing useful work on national armies, among other things. While I have not examined all the facts of the case, Noclador doing such things seems to me to be extremely unlikely. Regards Buckshot06(prof) 17:47, 7 August 2008 (UTC)

    (undent) User:Romaioi, do you wish to comment on User:Noclador's description of your conduct? If you ask for an apology but act that aggressively and belligerently, I wouldn't be surprised if someone doesn't want to bother with you again. Be civil. You asked him, he doesn't respond, don't bother him again. Assume good faith on his part for his conduct. Do not assume bad intentions from an error. What is the purpose of bringing it up again and again? -- Ricky81682 (talk) 18:06, 7 August 2008 (UTC)

    I've taken a bit of a hit for my comment earlier, perhaps justifiably, but I did think it was clear that I was responding to the request for a summary of Romaioi's claim, which I think is what I provided. I would also like to point out that it was I who notified Noclador of this thread (which I mistakenly marked as being on AN/I rather than AN). My apologies to Noclador, and I think I'll now bow out before I mess up again. Ed Fitzgerald (unfutz) 19:46, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    I was in a minor way involved in the SSP case that has caused this mutual rancour. While the checkuser results eventually exonerated Romaioi, his/her coincidental appearance at the same time as Generalmesse's massive sockfarm caused him/her to get accused of being one of the socks. Noclador was, as far as I am concerned, at all times acting absolutely in good faith, and did a sterling job in getting Generalmesse and all his puppets shut down. It was deeply unfortunate that Romaioi got caught up in it, but, frankly, at the time I (and, I believe, most other observers) believed him/her to be a sock. I have since apologised to Romaioi for this, and he has graciously accepted my apology. I think if he had received the same apology from Noclador then the issue would've gone away. However, for whatever reason, Noclador has decided not to apologise. Romaioi should accept that and move on. Now, Romaioi's lengthy post at the top of this thread smacks to me of a vendetta. I am sure that Romaioi as a good faith contributor will be happy at this point, having presented his/her grievances at length, to drop the issue and return to productive good faith editing, which appears to me to be Noclador's modus operandi at all times. AlasdairGreen27 (talk) 21:16, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    I can qualify Noclador as a person who is always ready to hear what others have to say (or read, anyway). He gladly takes information offered to him, as long as it comes from reliable sources. I remember how once I provided information from a reliable military review that proved to be partially incorrect. Another wikipedian corrected it. Did Noclador throw a fit and insult him? No. Noclador took the information and corrected the graphic. This concerned the Tsahal OrBat, for those who are curious.
    I also am the prime witness of his works being used without giving proper credit in a printed military review. It is always a harsh blow for somebody to see his work used not only without proper credit, but actually crediting a completely different person. I warned Noclador. He contacted them. I personally find the e-mail he sent to the review in question as polite and balanced. Those interested can check my talk page.
    It is 4am, I am tired, I cannot formulate long speeches in a cohesive manner. So I shall make it short: Noclador is amongst the best contributors to this whole project, a person that makes Misplaced Pages interesting, reliable and trustworthy and who is always ready to listen(read) what others have to say(type). Thank you for your attention Russoswiss (talk) 02:17, 8 August 2008 (UTC)

    User:Romaioi seems to be a sock of banned User:Brunodam. Brunodam had/has the habit to create socks wherever he goes, was massively pushing Italian nationalistic-revisionist POV in articles about the Balkans and the former Italian minorities there, liked to threat other users with lawyers, added fascist propaganda to various articles, insulted other editors and so on... Also he usually would leave very long comments and then revisit them often to change/add stuff (example: 1.2. edit). Romaioi fits nicely in this behavior - especially as Romaioi was the name to Roman people that lived in the Balkans after the partition of the Roman empire (with just 8,280 google results for Romaioi one must be quite an expert to a) know the name and b) know it is Greek). More damming proof that Romaioi and Brunodam are related: Until yesterday I never had anything to do with Brunodam, but suddenly he comes and lashes wildly and - let my say it clearly - insanely out at me. --noclador (talk) 08:54, 9 August 2008 (UTC)

    I said I would stay out of this, but I have a question that Noclador's supposition raises: wasn't checkuser run on Romaioi? And if he was a sock of Brunodam, wouldn't that have shown up? Or is a checkuser run more limited in scope? (I'm not being disingenuous here, I don't know the answer to these questions.) Ed Fitzgerald (unfutz) 20:26, 9 August 2008 (UTC)
    The SSP check was done against IP by Generalmesse, Brunodam is a different user. Brunodam appears to have returned but is attacking Noclador on those diffs. Now Noclador has never dealt with Brunodam, only Generalmesse. It could be that it is a deliberate attempt by a sock pupper master to create friction. Justin talk 22:15, 9 August 2008 (UTC)
    Surprise surpise, another sock puppetry accusation. This is surely getting beyond the joke. I have been tied up for weeks having to defend the previous sockpuppetry allegations and WQA/ANI. Yet again I have not been directed to an evidence page, and this time my user page has been vandalised. And there is wonderment as to why I have chosen to push the abuse case take this to the ANI level?
    I won't bother with a defence of this as I did last time (I do not want to be called a fanatic again!) - lets please take it straight to checkuser. It smacks of what I have been indicating in reference to deletion of contributions and abuse. Above, Noclador claims he did not imply me to be fascist, but in the same fashion as previously he has provided "DAMMING PROOF". Seeing that he is so adamant that I am all these socks, it is clear that he believes me to be fascist - who would not take such an allegation as a deliberate affront? I will only say this, ANYONE WHO INVERSTIGATES PROPERLY WILL SEE THAT THE PATTERNS (and tone) DO NOT MATCH. Whilst, several observers believed me to be giovannegiove and/or generalmesse from the face-value evidence based on one contribution, if any of them looked into my profile, examined my edits, my citations, the number of eidts on Italian military versus the variety of different topics I have contributed to in such a short period of time, and even the fact that I simply built a user page, would see that THE PATTERNS DO NOT MATCH! However, it was not their job to do so. They believed Noclador's assertions and selective evidence on good faith. It was Noclador who did not examine it properly (which is one of the issues I have been pressing). Here, we have just been privy to a repeat.
    Note that those involved in conversations at one of the diffs presented by Nocaldor in this round of concocted sockpuppetry "evidence", including AlasdairGreen27, believe that IP 72.157.177.44 (who is presumably 202.172.105.49?) is none other than GeneralMesse. This is there for Noclador to plainly observe, yet he has conveniently used it to claim that IP 72.157.177.44 = ME = User:Brunodam. In Noclador's words, WTF? Perhaps observers are now beginning to see the points I have been making concerning Noclador's manipulation and misrepresentation of evidence pertaining to me? Why would he do such a thing if he was acting in good faith? This is, as I have been stressing, how it was from the beginning - his first accusations on his GiovanneGiove sockpuppetry evidence page (where he then changed his mind and claimed that I was Generalmesse) were of this nature , as were his ANI claims .
    Can someone please direct me to the evidence page? Also has the checkuser process been initiated? If not can someone please offer me some guidance as to how I can do so? Better yet, can we please get a list of all the users that Noclador believes me to be and perform a checkuser on every single one of them? This way I can be vindicated yet again.
    Romaioi (talk) 12:03, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    In my elusive search to locate an evidence page with respect to this new sock puppetry accusation against me I have now found that we are back to square one. I have found no sockpuppetry case page. Only vandalism on my user page. Yet again I am being character assassinated as per when accusations where first raised against me. This is serving to divert attention from the case I have been trying to make in ralation to Noclador's abuse, character assassinations etc. However, it should serve as an example of the type of witch hunt that I have been subject to. The accusations are of the same manipulative and annecdotal nature as the initial accusations. Noclador is making assertions (reiterating, for example, that I am Generalmesse!!!!!) at two user talk pages, here and here, where hie is trying to convince Ed Fitzgerald of my guilt. It is startling that he is making, once again as per the previous sock accusations, baseless allegations that I have been travelling the world and having prior knowledge that I would be implicated so I moved across the country/world to subvert any possibility of being proven guilt. This has been presented as though factual and ignores that I was already proven not to be some of the implied socks. I am simply astounded that such a scenario could be conceived and a person to be automatically guilty of it. Oh yes, this is extremely fair and honest behaviour by Nuclador. I have made points concerning this at the bottom of this thread in reply to EdJohnson and Justin's posts. Forgive my apparent anger. This is more rehashing of old, dealt with topics. And quite frankly I am rather disturbed by the very low nature of it.
    The person that I am supposed to be a sock of seams to change by the paragraph. So I am getting rather confused exactly who I am supposed to be and how I managed to trail blaze the planet in some big sinister plot to disrupt wikipedia, whilst I otherwise could be attending to my day job and making a living.
    Can we proceed with checkuser? Or can someone guide me as to how I can instigate it?
    Romaioi (talk)

    I won’t read and comment the excessive accusation above; all I can say as a user and administrator of projects Noclador participates in (de.wikipedia.org, Commons) is that Noclador is a trustworthy user with valuable contributions. Please pay attention to his work and behavior, then judge. --Polarlys (talk) 21:51, 10 August 2008 (UTC)

    I'd like to make a few points clear before I present my view. Firstly, I am not a sysop nor checkuser. I have not been involved in this, or any related affair until this post. I have only recently become acquainted with noclador, having performed a mutual review of some of his order of battle diagrams, having never previously had contact with him nor knowledge of his edits. Similarly, I've never had contact with Romaioi, nor had knowledge of his edits. I would claim that noclador and I have just progressed from acquaintances into friendship from our recent collaboration, and he requested that I add my input to this discussion. In an attempt for impartiality, I have reviewed the pertinent pages regarding the conduct of the two users in question (not the results of the request for checkuser, because that issue is resolved), starting with the original request for checkuser on Giovanni Giove, and including the suspected sockpuppet discussion, two wikiquette alerts: 1st (archived) & 2nd (continuation of the 1st), a post to AN/I, Noclador's talk page, Romaioi's talk archive, and various bits of data scattered on several talk pages linked to above. I'd also like to note that viewing many, many diffs, I have noticed the text "(# intermediate revisions not shown.)" shown, and my assumption is that some of the data has been restricted by sysops or possibly higher.
    My take on this incident is as follows: noclador, in attempting to round up the sockpuppets of a prolific vandal, made a reasonable mistake in including an innocent user who, on the surface, followed some similar conventions as the vandal/puppetmaster. He also warned Romaioi, though made a mistake in linking to the discussion page. Now, as far as I understand, this is the purpose and procedure of a checkuser case: to present the accusation and supporting evidence, allow the accused to refute evidence, and then make a conclusion based upon the evidence and an analysis of IP addresses. It seems that this procedure was followed to the letter. While noclador could have avoided the accusation by digging deeper, I don't personally feel that constitutes any sort of violation or uncivil action; after all, he was researching many accounts at the time, and fully expected that more conclusive evidence would be found before any damaging/irreversable actions could be taken, as was the case. The process was allowed to work itself out: mitigating evidence was produced, and the Romaioi was cleared of the accusation.
    However, the conduct of the accused has been less than pristine. Naturally, being falsely accused would make anybody angry, adding confusion and disorientation due to his lack of understanding of the process at the time only makes the situation worse. This is not, however, justification for the persistence of this scandal, nor some of the very harsh remarks made on Romaioi's part. I can sympathize with the expectation for an apology, however, in light of the hostility the accused showed his accuser, I cannot fault nocaldor for refusing to make one. I myself would probably have done the same in his place, I'd view such an action as appeasement, which is not mandated by any policy I have ever read. Even if the accused remained civil and not taken the accusation personally, such an apology would not necessarily be mandated (though certainly appropriate) after the "innocent" verdict had been posted on the checkuser case; after all, that was vindication from all wrongdoing. I do not agree that noclador has performed any sort of slander or smearing of Romaioi's reputation, especially outside of the checkuser accusation.
    I also find no fault in noclador's decision to limit his involvement in the controversy once it was determined that the accusation may have been faulty. That sort of recusement should be expected whenever a possible conflict of interest could taint further proceedings. Removing yourself from action where your presence could worsen it is totally understandable. I also applaud noclador's attempts to move past this and get on with his life. It is in that spirit that I think this notice should be closed, and Romaioi be directed to review Misplaced Pages's policy on harassment and ignoring personal attacks so that he may finally let the issue rest, though it is entirely within his rights to seek a forum for his grievances, and ask for appeal to the decisions (there are several possible venues for further dispute resolution: Requests for mediation, informal mediation, formal mediation, request for comment, and even the "Supreme Court of Misplaced Pages", the request for arbitration). I am unclear as to what Romaioi desires or expects these proceedings to produce... Administrative actions against noclador? Jimbo Wales to beat him up and force him to apologize? Unlikely, but I would ask him to further clarify on exactly what he seeks. As far as I know, no double standard exists because both have been reprimanded for thier misdeeds in this whole process.
    I would also like to take this time to applaud Romaioi for being otherwise gracious and civil to other users. I would hope that you can drop this grudge and move on to more productive matters. Looking at you contributions, you've been wrapped up in this for far too long. My advice for you is to take a short wikibreak, spend some time with your family, then come back and focus on your passion for history.
    Thank you for reading this huge diatribe, it took forever to articulate and type up! bahamut0013 22:43, 10 August 2008 (UTC)

    Romaioi’s follow up comments

    I have just logged on for the first time since Wednesday to find more discussion (oh and another sock puppetry accusation) than I expected on this.

    However I would like to point out that User:Noclador has now accused me of being a sock of User:Brunodam (see above). He has provided more "invented proof" or should I use his words "damming proof". Dare I say the accusations concerning me are getting ridiculous. Yet again, I have not been directed to an evidence page. I was determined not to be a sock through checkuser. This is another personal attack and it is designed to distract from the evidence I have presented.

    Nocaldor has been clearly prejudiced against me from the very beginning (prejudice which has been proven by a further sockpuppetry accusation). The prejudice originates from my contribution to this subsection of an Italian Military history page. (I provided the basis for my contributions on the related discussion page, here). A review of my edits will show that most of my edits were supported by verifiable non-Italian, non-fascist citations, which I described in detail here, under comments and defense. A close investigation would have shown that the patterns of my contribution to this section did not match any of the accused socks. Here is a link to the summary of my contribution history.

    Even after I was PROVEN NOT TO BE A SOCK, he continued to delete my edits as though I were. While he may be gracious to most, he was clearly abusive towards me. His evidence against me above does not warrant a response. Now I have been accused of being another sock!!??!?! After I have been proven not to be a sock? And what of this vandalism of my user page with the obviously bogus accusation? I guess my totally unrelated contribution to topics on finance (see as per my contribution history summary) are damming proof of this too?

    Why are those who are providing supportive comments being attacked? Ed Fitzgerald's comments have not been unhelpful. In fact, I found his summary towards the beginning of the WQA to be very apt. And here he has questioned Noclador’s motives behind his second accusation of me being a Sockpuppet. Are only pro-noclador’s opinions allowed?

    Ricky81682, you wanted me to comment on Noclador’s accusations above. Well, they do not warrant a detailed rebuttal because they are nebulous and manipulative, as I have demonstrated repeatedly. I suggest that you read the source locations to see what was actually written and in which context rather than his edited version of events. You asked me for a summary. The most appropriate one (detailing how he has misrepresented information) is here. On this page I have listed Nocaldor’s abuses against me, such as referring to me as a fanatic, implying me to be fascist, snide comments, etc. To list them here would be repetitious. If you are going to do Noclador the favour of reading his assertions, then please take the time to review mine. Moreover, Noclador has repeatedly referred to me as a liar above (and has directed you somewhere unrelated to prove it on several occasions – as I said, it does not warrant a response). You can check all the links that actually do lead to my edits – I have not lied. Interestingly, I was hammered by Justin for claiming that Noclador was a lying concerning me (I actually demonstrated it) - though Justin has repeatedly overlooked Noclador's abuses. And the so-called “month of smearing him” comes from me being forced to defend WQA accusations and ANI actions. It was not smearing, there were no derogatory comments, it was highlighting his abusive pattern of behaviour towards me, the double standards associated with pulling me up for demonstrating him to be a liar, whist his more damning attacks and character assassination on me were overlooked. As you can gather, I have been a member since late May and have been harassed by all this (and now a new sock puppetry accusation) for almost the entire time. How is one supposed to be able to contibute when they attacked as such from the get go? And that is why I have instigated this ANI. Perhaps we should not lose sight of the fact that the sock puppetry accusations, the WQA and the previous ANI were directed at me. So who exactly is being smeared here?

    Furthermore, Ricky81682, does the fact that I have yet again been accused of being a sockpuppet, this time of User:Brunodam, and the bogus evidence presented there not highlight just how manipulative and prejudiced Noclador has been? It is written in the same ridiculously manipulative style of all his other accusations against me. I did not know that only a handful of contributions (actually one mainly) can so convincingly tie me to being the same as multiple users. What does the checkuser check-up say?

    Ricky81682, if you wish me to address each of Noclador’s points above, inform me of which are of concern and I will address each in detail. Noclador has not presented information chronologically and he has omitted relevant information.

    My assertions stand – I have presented evidence to back up every one . And as I have continually been treated with abuse and disrespect, I have no motivation to change my position.

    Whether or not Noclador has a history of being gracious to others (I wouldn’t know because I can only judge by my experience with him) does not mean that he is not capable of abusive behaviour. Nor does it mean he has not perpetrated abuses here.

    I have noticed a pattern with Noclador and his wholesale deletion of consensus information simply because he “BELIEVES” it to be contributed by a sock (but even if I made the contribution then its good enough for deletion). His deletions of my contributions, post-sock puppetry case, (and assertions that my contributions were vandalism) were undone by other editors (I explained this in the summary link above). See this dif as a separate example whereby Stephen Kirrages had to undo his deletion stipulated to Noclador that “you want to take out so-called "sock edits" you'll have to do it by hand rather than using this very blunt instrument”. Rather than wholesale deletion or material that may have merit, would it not be more constructive to modify it to conform with the Misplaced Pages ethos? Is this not how we develop knowledge of issues and subjects?

    This is among what concerns me about Noclador. He flies off the handle with accusations without the benefit of proper investigation. He makes edits of content (or deletes content) without sufficient research, often destroying verified content in the process.

    I will be deleting Noclador's blatant vandalism of my user page. See this dif for evidence. I have already been proven not to be a sock. Surely this reeks of Noclador’s motives!? - Spiteful perhaps? Noclador has clearly NOT demonstrated good faith towards me from the get go (because of a contribution I made regarding Italian Military history - apparently) – obviously no prejudice there. How stylish, to defend oneself with another false accusation and some vandalism.


    Romaioi (talk) 06:56, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    P.S. the summaries by others pertaining my motives for making my early Misplaced Pages member contributions pertaining to Italian involvement are off the mark. My motivation is purely historical accuracy, that’s it. Maybe I should have started with the Kokoda campaign.

    PP.S. bahamut0013 I appreciate your comments. Please note that I have only been involved in this too long due to the having to deal with the WQA and ANI (which I was not informed of) issues. If there was some acknowledgment of what has transpired, it would have been dropped. I was dragged further into this because I made a statement concerning the wrongful sockpuppetry accusation on my talk page. I have only continued to this point because I feel the double standard of abuse allowed by some and not others to be a serious issue. Further, whilst I have been willing to concede ground, the opposition has not. I would also like to point out that I have not been stalking or harrassing Noclador. I have limited my comments to the areas where this issue was being discussed (often without my notification - convenient). Over the past month that has been at the WQA. I asked people not to discuss it on my talk page. It should also be noted that I have been making, on average 1 post on this topic per week - always in response to comments of others. So it has hardly been prolific - it has only been that I have had many points to make in reply. What I want is a statement(s) that Noclador went to far, either from the user himself, or an adminstrator, and I want a statement that the WQA was unwarranted. I also want Noclador to be on notice to not commit acts of wholesale deletion, and he should not go anywhere near my contributions again, nor should he ever raise any further accusations against me. I won't go as far as he has, and demand for the others banning, I do not think that is necessary. He should be simply be instructed to toe the line, assume good faith, and ensure that he investigates properly (preferrably in consultation) before stepping over the line with wrongful accusations, character assassinations and abuse again. PPP.S. You are mistaken. Nocaldor has received no reprimand.


    A Final General Comment for Consideration
    There seams to be an inclination to take what Noclador has stated above as factual, with no consideration of any of the evidence that I have presented. Has anybody actually read the summary of events that I have included here? Has anyone actually read and followed the links to the demonstrated abuses? Is the fact that my contributions have been deleted since the sock-puppetry investigation not significant? Why else would I take these measures if such a thing was not occurring? And a further sockpuppetry accusation, what does that say? It is an example of the continuous character assassinations that I have been in receipt of from Nocaldor since I joined Misplaced Pages.
    Many of the comments presented against me above are rehashed. I have already addressed them elsewhere . I often had to do so repeatedly.
    As I said, I never claimed perfection. I admitted to emotive language at first. I also think it is rather understandable to be aggrieved when you are directed to an evidence page that has not reference to you, knowing full well that you are not as accused and have just commenced (as a new user, not yet familiar with the procedures) making contributions in good faith. I have been quite frank in admitting my faults in this matter from the beginning.
    I stated this elsewhere: Let me ask you all this. You are on the receiving end of an accusation such as sock puppetry (in this case). You were directed to an evidence page that made no reference to you. Then you found that the evidence being stacked up against you elsewhere was factually incorrect. On top of all that you then had to cop insults, personal attacks and snide comments along the way. What would you be thinking?
    Noclador may have made an innocent mistake to begin with, but it soon turned into something different. He tried his darndest to prove that I was this user or that user (3 different ones now). The fact that I was proven not to be, reflects poorly on his deliberate attempts to misrepresent the “evidence” against me.
    And to Justin, no I did not inform Noclador of this ANI. Reason: he was likely to delete it as vandalism. Yet as always, you have not considered that he did not inform me of his actions against me on two (three now) occasions. Sorry, but with respect, I believe you to be extremely biased on this issue and missing my point. It is inconceivable to me that you could believe that no personal attacks were made on me. You actually indicated that you may not have read my replies, based on your TLDR comment. If so, then how can you make a informed judgement when you have not considered all the information? However, I understand your intentions and regard them well. But I respectfully disagree. It is not a personal attack if you describe someone's behaviour/actions.
    The WQA was not resolved, so I brought it here. I have been following the due process respectfully. (Note that I have mentioned the further sockpuppetry accusation on my talk page.)
    As I said, I have detailed the abuses and chain of events here. His attitude towards me during and since was far from exhibitive of good faith. It has been abusive on several levels.
    Do I really need to list them again here to get it considered?
    Romaioi (talk) 08:35, 12 August 2008 (UTC)


    Evidence that Noclador's abuse against me is not an isolated case:

    From RUSSOSWISS' Talk Page (with diff so that it can't be conveniently deleted like elsewhere), clearly UPSET that someone did not respond to his calls for acknowledgement:

    .... Those fucking cunts!!! I wrote them and clearly explained that they can not do this! They didn't even answer me! I will write them once more and if they do not react, I will sue - this is shameless arrogant thievery! --noclador (talk) 23:14, 4 February 2008 (UTC)

    Romaioi (talk) 12:21, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    For context, this outburst from Noclador was due to the appropriation by a French magazine of several diagrams that he had created for Misplaced Pages, where the magazine gave credit to the wrong person and ignored his proposed corrections. You may want to consider if an impassioned comment by Noclador in February, 2008 on an unrelated matter has anything to do with Romaioi's complaint. I caution Romaioi that there is such a thing as disruptive editing. I urge Romaioi and Noclador to stay out of each other's way from now on and cease discussion of each other's sockpuppetry. EdJohnston (talk) 16:37, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Well I thought I would try Noclador's style for a change. He has done exactly this when trying to implicate me. I clearly demostarted that he was doing it but no one has pulled him up on it. He did just that on your own talk page, if you rememeber. The only difference is I have not edited the comments to say someting other than he said. And gee wizz, for all that has been thrown in my face regarding language that I used, all of what I have said pails into insignificance compared to this outburst, which, funnily enough was over an offence done to him. Kind of makes me feel glad that I was only called a fanatic, fascist, my contributions deleted and been having my character attacked since June 25th 2008.
    But I still haven't stooped as low as trying to convince other users individually of his assertions, as he has done on [this talk page. He has interestingly, claimed that others agree with him. But in following his posts on the matter, I have not come across a user that clearly agrees. This is why I claimed to be a victim of a witch hunt early in July.
    I have committed no sockpuppetry Ed. And the point of this ANI is Noclador's abuse and character assasinations towards me.
    Romaioi (talk) 22:32, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I originally took this to WP:WQA to try and head off exactly this sort of confrontation. I'm not sure whether its a bit of shit stirring on the part of the sock puppet master but at least some of the edits by the sock puppets of Brunodam named Noclador, whereas Noclador has never dealt with him only Generalmesse. Some of those edits have a link to Romaioi and I guess Noclador followed them up. Its unfortunate that Noclador did it himself, it probably would have been better if he'd recused himself and asked another editor to look at it.
    I can appreciate your suggestion Ed but Noclador edits on a lot of articles, where Romaioi has expressed an intention to also edit. Noclador did nothing wrong with the sock puppet report and yet, despite explaining the circumstances repeatedly to Romaioi he just doesn't seem to get it. In the main, Noclador has kept away from Romaioi, quite rightly so, but its likely they're going to butt heads soon. However, Romaioi has doggedly pursued a course of complaint against Noclador and on past performance he isn't going to let this thing drop. The way its going I can only see this ending up as a requests for arbitration. I note above that despite trying to smooth things over I'm now apparently "extremely biased on this issue" so I intend to recuse myself from further involvement. However, I have this nagging feeling it will all end in tears. Justin talk 16:58, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Ah, now I am begining to think that you are trying to stir the pot, even more so now that you have not read my TLDR rebuttals and have now stated what you have above. If you read my rebuttals you would find that my issue is with how I was treated, and still am treated. It was you guys who started the complaints against me (sock puppetry, then WQA, ANI) and I am now following up with due process to clear my name. I am criticized no matter what I do or say - yet your buddy has been allowed to say and do (delete) as he pleases. There is simply no middle gorund with you. Am I just supposed to lie down and allow these rediculous accusations and continual denigration of my character? Where exactly are the links between me and Brunodum? There are none - none of Nolcadors "EVIDENCE" above points to me at all. Only his say-so does. Can you clearly demonstrate where my (Romaioi's) cited contributions have been non-NPOV? Where is the evidence page? Where is the anvenue for conducting checkuser? In my elusive search for this evidence page etc, I have instead found this user talk page link Romaioi-Brunodam checkuser where Noclador is trying to convince User:Ed Fitzgerald(dif) that I travel around the world only to create socks for the expressed purpose of dusruption. HE seams to still be pressing the claim that I am Generalemesse. Who the hell has the time to do all these things that I am accussed of?
    Quote:

    ....As Romaioi stated in one of his rants that he was in Brisbane for work I and other editors believe that while on this trip he created the socks (as Brisbane is in New South Wales) - this foresight makes me believe that the user behind Romaioi was expecting to run into trouble on wikipedia and also that this was not his first sock creation (the knowledge about checkuser and his demand to make one, point also in the direction that he already knew how checkuser works and that he knew it would turn up negative.)

    CLEARLY HE MAINTAINS THAT I AM A SOCK! BRISBANE IS NOT IN NEW SOUTH WALES - CHECK A FRIGGIN MAP! Further, this is EXTREMELY presumptious and my defence in my previous sockpuppetry case has shown these sort of claims to be bogus. Yet he persists!
    Quote:

    ....As for Brunodam - the connection doesn't seem obvious as Brunodam usually edits from Broomfield Colorado, but Brunodam had/has a habit to create socks wherever he went - so new users popped up and would support him and edit exactly the same articles like he did with the same POV, but when a checkuser was run, if Brunodam was related to them the results were that he had registered in Colorado and the socks were registered in Italy or Florida or Georgia and so on.

    This guy is even trying to put forward on AlasdairGreen27's Talk page (diff) that " I am pretty sure it's him. As I understood from reading some Bruno discussions he had a habit of registering socks wherever he went... so I believe that he registered the various socks on a business trip to Australia (which would also explain, why Romaiois favourite time to edit is 4pm to 3am Perth time - or 7am to 6pm Broomfield time) " Just how many socks does he think I am? Oh and reagding my 4pm to 3qm posting times, thats a pretty big window. Heck, one of the persons making a character witness post on Noclador's behalf, above, made a post a 4am!!!! And has Noclador bothered to look at the days of the week that these posts typically occur?: Typically Friday's, Saturday and Sunday. Oh and as has been coveniently forgotten, I stated (on EdJohnson's talk page some time ago, wehere Noclador was canniving against me) that I had a newborn child. Well guess what - you tend to be up at all sorts of hours as a result. So you also tend to post sparodically over the course of a day, as a result. Like right now.
    That is a hell of a lot of ANECDOTAL nothings to base a tremendous number of conclusions on.
    And as to the belief that I am Brunodam based on the chronology of the posts by IP's 72.157.177.44 & 202.172.105.49. Would anyone be that silly to do such a thing, knowing a checkuser would show them up?
    Where is the official sockpuppetry case page for me being the guy from Colorado? Why was my user page vandalised with no such investigation initiated? Is this what is considered professional good faith coduct here? What kind of guilty before proven innocent lunacy is this? I was already proven innocent! Every single bit of information I have put forward with sincerity, in GOOD FAITH, has been twisted in this insiduously sick and twisted manner. Hence, why should I let repeated character assassinations, repeated deletion of my contributions, and now repeated sock puppetry accusations go? Why should I let someone with such a clearly prejudiced and antagonistic view towards me and my presence here (since May 27 2008) off for this degree of harassment that I have receieved? At least I am following due process rather than moving slyly in the background, trying to rally the troops.
    Given all of this and the kind of manipulation and foul language that Noclador has shown he is capable of, you expect me to remain respectful? Do as many checkuser's as is needed and leave me the alone in regards to the sock puppetry!
    Romaioi (talk) 22:32, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    Far too much blather, all in all. I have had no involvement with any of the issues discussed here, or with the parties in this controversy, but I hereby declare my distaste for this endless bickering and demand for apologies or for punishment of an admin who was doing much-needed work stopping sockpuppets from destroying Misplaced Pages. I am truly sorry that Romaioi was the subject of a checkuser request that was not substantiated. Now get on with life. Edison (talk) 06:17, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    With all due respect Edison, the title of this ANI alone implies that this is more than a gripe over a wrongful accusation. The initial sockpuppetry accusation itself is not a big deal (yet people keep saying it is solely about this), and my surprise and reaction to it was not great – I conceded this very early on with Justin – and yet it is this aspect that is continually held against me. Yet the real issues I am trying to stress are continually glossed over or ignored. Since the case Noclador has continued to delete my contributions as though I were a sock. Whilst I have not been perfect, I have been subjected to multiple personal attacks (e.g. fanaticism, fascist) and repeated character assassinations (even on this page) of greater magnitude than my calling my accuser a liar. In fact, I have discovered that he continues to maintain that I am the sock that I was categorically proven not to be, plus I have now been once again accused of being another sock – all this is stemming from my contribution to one subsection of an article. The entire time he has insisted that I be banned for one reason or another, both before and after I was exonerated, and now here, and he has continually misrepresented information to present as evidence against me from the outset. This includes inventing elaborate allegations such as claiming that I travel around the world (which I certainly cannot even afford to contemplate) for the expressed purpose of being a disruptive sock. So I find it most unhelpful, particularly as a new user, to be exposed to this treatement and find that my calls for assistance are being dismissed (and unread) without consideration - and to be told that I should just cop the abuse because he is a "favourite son". I find it to be an astounding double standard. (I tracked the locations of the IPs in question and intend to post them later; one is in the USA the other is east coast of Australia.) I have taken the trouble to respond as thoroughly as possible and in a short time frame and provide links to all the related evidence, and defend the further sockpuppetry accusation, plus I have tried to follow due process - how is that Blather? How can you truly judge if you have not considered the facts? I stated what I want out of this above in my PP.S. Romaioi (talk) 11:30, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I can say a couple of things with certainty, if I may. Romaioi is not Brunodam. Entirely different style in his use of English from my dear old friend Bruno. What has caused noclador to see an overlap is that these are definitely Bruno Special:Contributions/72.153.151.45, Special:Contributions/72.157.177.44, with the spectacular attacks on noclador by the second of them. But it is possible to be attacked by more than one person. Otherwise, I completely agree with Edison in all of his/her remarks. AlasdairGreen27 (talk) 06:57, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    A complaint becomes "blather" when it is presented verbosely and in florid language with much repetition. It is usually best to make your case succinctly, with diffs to document the problematic edits, then wait for response, rather than repeatedly making the same argument, filling this page with about a 5000 word essay on how you have been wronged. Edison (talk) 18:50, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Point taken on the repetition. It was sparked by the second sockpuppetry allegation and the revelation that the proof of my innocence the first time around was not good enough for some, according to Nocaldor (its in the dif). I discovered the new accusations towards end of writing my initial comments here. I could not afford the time for a complete re-write, so re-edited which added some convolution. However, because my points appear to be ignored and the same evidence against are rehashed, motivate me to reiterate. Irrespective, the appropriate links and diffs have been included throughout. And it does not mean that my statements are not valid. You don't go to this much trouble if you've been guilty (or have been lying) all along. Romaioi (talk) 15:10, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Sockpuppet-related IP checks

    Using http://www.ip2location.com/free.asp, it can be seen that IP 72.157.177.44 originates from New Orleans, Louisiana. IP 202.172.105.49 originates from Sydney, New South Wales and is a rural DragonNet ISP. IP 200.253.161.2 (also attributed to User:Brunodamdif) is in Brazil.

    The previous sock puppetry investigation showed I was on a different ISP 4000km away from the nearest sock (Perth, Western Australia, in fact) and this link indicates the REAL SOCKS were in the vicinity of Sydney, Australia.

    In this second sockpuppetry accusation I am supposedly User:Brunodam who is based in Colorado difs (or Brazil? (dif) – inconsistency has been a theme) and travels the world just to make disruptive posts on Italian military history. This is based on Noclador’s so-called “evidence” (here, here, here, & his say so, here, which the accuser claims is 'damming proof that Romaioi and Brunodam are related.

    Yet (in the risk of being repetitious) according to this diff Noclador asserts, still, that I am still Generalmesse, who I was cleared of being, and that Brisbane is in NSW. Brisbane is actually in QLD!!!!!!! Apparently, Noclador’s FORSIGHT makes him believe that the user behind Romaioi was expecting to run into trouble on wikipedia and also that this was not his first sock creation (the knowledge about checkuser and his demand to make one.... so I allegedly pre-emptively flew to Perth to create User:Romaioi a month earlier so that I could protest my innocence (its in the dif)????? Also, check my early defense – it is clear that I had no knowledge of checkuser nor the appropriate procedures I thought I had to disclose my identity (, .... & Noclador demonstated my lack of procedural knowledge above (dif). Even, User:Bahamut0013 saw that I did NOT know the procedures in his edit above .

    For the record, I was in Brisbane from the 23rd to the 27th of June. I cannot be bothered checking the chronology of who posted what back then but perhaps Noclador can use this to concoct his next round of damming evidence.

    It is amazing to me that these claims are not refuted by the accuser’s sound minded colleagues purely on the grounds of 1) highly non-probable, 2) highly unpractical & 3) unabashed character assassination.

    Examining the chronology of edits at Talk:Military history of Italy during World War II, it is alleged that I, User:Romaioi, made an edit as IP 202.172.105.49 in Sydney (or Rural NSW), then ~6.5 hours later made an edit as himself in Perth. This is a 5 hour flight away. If you include typical travel time of 50 minutes to Sydney Airport (it would be over 2 hours if your start was from Rural NSW) and 30 minutes travel from Perth Airport (typical). Then you have a 30 minute cut-off for checking in and 30 minutes for luggage collection. Add those times together and you have 7.3 hours – i.e. the fastest time possible to get from location to location and be able to think about turning on your computer. It is likely to be longer. Then I supposedly flew to New Orleans to make an edit as IP 72.157.177.44, a bit under 2 days later (where I apparently made several offending posts). The flight time alone is about 5 + 16 hours to LA + 4 = 24 hours. Then you have likely delays between flights, check-in, and travel to and from airports. It can add up to over 36 hours. Then, if we add IP 200.253.161.2 (dif) into the mix, I then allegedly took a flight to Brazil to post the very next day. Bare in mind that my base of operations is allegedly in Broomfield, Colorado diff, so I would have commenced my travels from there to make the very first edit in NSW (> 20 hours flying time). Am I the only one who sees the implausibility of this? Who would even have the energy?

    I guess my knowledge of approximate flight times will now be used as damming evidence against me.

    Who does not see this as character assassination? User:Bahamut0013 seams to think it does (dif). It has been a key, yet ignored, assertion of mine since the beginning. Who else see’s the so-called damming evidence as barely anecdotal? I do.

    AlasdairGreen27 has pointed out above that my writing style alone is completely different. Contrary, to Noclador’s assertion that “Romaioi fits nicely in this behaviour (here & here). He was very sure that I am Brunodam and everyone else (dif). So one contribution (THIS ONE) was enough for Noclador to tar me with the fascist label and of traveling the world creating socks?

    Note that in the edit summary of the edit that catalyzed the sock accusations, I stated what I was doing and where I otained the original passage. Yet this was blatantly ignored by my accuser .

    Thanks to the diffs that Noclador provided, I have read the comments by IP 72.157.177.44 at criticism of wikipedia. I do not know the extent of interaction between the two, but I find the comment interesting. Here, EdFitzpatrick questioned Noclador’s automatic deletion of what EdFitzpatrick sees as a genuine attempt to create balance. It remains unanswered as of this writing.

    I would suggest that the tasks that Noclador has been carried out be passed on to a constructive soul who demonstrates objectivity.

    I am personally astounded by the inability (or perhaps plain refusal) of Noclador to conduct an appropriately thorough investigation and his persistence in making wild claims based misrepresented/manipulative, poorly researched, anecdotal information. It reeks of extreme bias. If he did, we certainly would not be here.

    I am still yet to find the official sockpuppetry report that alleges Noclador’s second sockpuppetry accusations. As I stated on my talk page after the first basless sockpuppetry accusation: It is hoped that whoever wishes to raise such accusations against anyone in future will be more thorough in their examination of the evidence before stepping over that line. Is it too much to ask? Some consistency would also help – it would have aided me in shortening my defenses. Romaioi (talk) 15:05, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Whoah, don't take my words out of context. My remarks to noclador on his talk page were a warning against the appearance of ad hominem, I never said that I actually thought he was doing it. I simply didn't want his concerns to dismissed at face value due to this scandal without being considered on thier own merits. I'd like to point out that this "second accusation was nothing of the sort, nobody opened a suspected sockpuppetry or request for checkuser case because you (and others) came along and refuted his concerns before it got to that point. I think you can drop the rhetoric about that so-called "second accusation" based on that; it was obvious to me that he had a good reason to be suspicious.
    That's what this is all about, anyway. bahamut0013 16:22, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    For the sake of the record, when Romaioi refers to "Ed Fitzpatrick" above, he may be thinking of me, however his diff actually goes to a post by User:EdJohnston. As I said earlier, except for a technical question concerning checkuser, I've bowed out of this discussion. Ed Fitzgerald (unfutz) 03:05, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    For the sake of accuracy, with no comment intended as I too have bowed out of the discussion, an "Ed Fitzpatrick" commented on the WP:WQA. Justin talk 12:43, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    No, I believe that was me. I don't see any "Ed Fitzpatrick" in the WQA. Ed Fitzgerald (unfutz) 20:23, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    OK, this has gone on long enough. Romaioi, you have a clean block log. If you want to go edit and improve this encyclopedia, please do so. MastCell  16:56, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I have one more passage to add. Firstly, my apologies Ed Fitzgerald, yes it should say EdJohnson - I spelt your username wrong a couple of times. Sorry also to bahamut0013 for misunderstanding.
    bahamut0013, I do not agree that my “rhetoric” is inappropriate. The point is no matter what proof is presented, Noclador will continue to believe (and press when he can) that I am a sock. It does not matter what checkuser or an IP check says (he has come up with a ludicrous scenario to counter it). I have demonstrated the logistical impossibility of Noclador’s assertions twice now (hypersonic travel is not commercial just yet) – but I am sure it will have no effect. I would also really love to know how posting between 4pm and & 3am Perth time is proof that I am from Broomfield, Colorado. Its beyond me (they are > 12 hours apart). It is actually evidence to the contrary – considering typical daily human activity. Does he not appreciate that these two locations are literally at opposite ends of the planet? Or is he implying that I can post from Broomfield Coloarado, and mask/disguise it as being from Perth, Western Australia (and perhaps Perth is in NSW too)? The guy talks about the “worst kind of insinuation” in another out of context comment above, about him hopping on a plane…(I did not know where he lived at the time - I just know its happened). And yet here he is pushing the same kind of jetsetting insinuations (plural), as per the diffs I have highlighted in this section (and in the list abuses here).
    I also do not agree he had reason to be suspicious of me. Beyond the superficial coincidence of my having made a contribution to, what I was unaware was, a hot topic there were no grounds for believing me to be a sock. He blatantly lied about which pages/topics that I had contributed to , and presented it as evidence. (My contributions have always been on display for people to see – he lied about the number of contributions at the time too). And no-one thinks that one could be justifiably angry over this? This illustrates just how poorly Noclador investigated my (non)involvement. And others say he did nothing wrong?
    I will be expanding the summary on my talk page concerning the sock puppetry farce (no names will be included) and I will be watching for further wholesale deletions of my contributions. Noclador's behaviour towards some is abusive, he cannot get his facts straight, makes innapropriate accusations, carries out manipulative patchwork editing for proof, and commits unconstructive wholesale deletions of article content. It does not represent good faith. I make no apologies for asserting it!
    In contrast, I commend the excellent work of User:Kirrages in being constructive and contributing greatly to improving the quality of the subsection which motivated Nocaldor to label me a sock. The current format is to his credit. It has become what I had hoped.
    Romaioi (talk) 09:39, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Wilhelmina Will's DYK topic ban

    It seems only a short time ago that we were discussing it, but the issue of Wilhelmina Will (talk · contribs) has to be raised again. The background to this is that Blechnic (talk · contribs) called for this ban based on discovered copyright violations, the worsening of articles to make them meet the requirements of DYK, etc. Accordingly a discussion was held here.
    When Wilhelmina appeared to ignore the ban, it came up again , where I realised that, since WW refused to engage the community at the noticeboard, to assume good faith would be to assume that she hadn't noticed. I thus notified her, and closed the request, despite some protestations by Blechnic on my talk.
    This led Abd to regard me as the "responsible party" for the ban - I accepted that I had effectively closed the discussion, and thus could be regarded as "responsible", which I did principally to give Abd a point of contact since he seems to have styled himself as WW's advocate in these matters (see her talk page and archives, and here for examples). Subsequently, Abd has decided that the community consensus was illegitimate because the evidence the community used did not exist. He consequently believes that I should overturn the topic ban. Now despite my naturally high opinion of myself I felt that I can't undo what I believe was the will of the community. I therefore invite another admin to check whether my judgement of community consensus at the first discussion was correct, although some editors here seemed to agree.
    Furthermore, there is the question of when the topic ban may be overturned. I believe the consensus was along the lines of There exists a DYK ban for Wilhelmina at least until she tells us she understands and is willing to abide by copyvio rules and stop treating DYK medals as an end in themselves. I have invited, on her talkpage and through Abd for her to give me such an assurance that I could bring to the community and say "there it is", but no such assurance has yet to be received. I defer re-assessment of my closing arguments to other admins, and the latter question (once again) to the community at large, since my judgement has been repeatedly called into question on my talkpage, and for all I know, I may very well be wrong. Fritzpoll (talk) 08:46, 7 August 2008 (UTC)

    From a review of the above, I would suggest that a topic ban consensus was very apparent and that the subsequent discussion was properly closed once Wilhelmina Will had been advised of the ban and invited to participate in the discussion of its implementation. I feel the argument that the ban is invalid because there is no determined time period is hollow; the editor is topic banned until such time the editor engages with the community with regard to the concerns raised - at that point the appropriate period (if any) before the editor can be allowed to contribute to DYK nominations can be determined. It appears that Abd's conclusions and requests are driven by considerations other than policy interpretation and application of the communities consensus, and are not shared by the majority. I see no reason to vary the sanctions on Wilhelmina Will's account until such time as Wilhemina Will starts a dialogue with those who have expressed concerns regarding her editing. LessHeard vanU (talk) 09:41, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    Agree with LHvU - until and unless Wilhelmina Will makes an assurance the poor behaviour will cease (even accepting the behaviour WAS poor would be a start), the topic ban must remain. Neıl 10:03, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    In fairness to Abd, he appears to now be contending that the consensus was flawed, and thus my close showed a "lack of wisdom" (or words to that effect) because there was no problem to begin with. He says that there is no evidence of copyvios and so the topic ban is an error that I should not have made. I'd paste the discussion over here, but it's pretty lengthy - it's at the bottom of my talk page. Fritzpoll (talk) 10:17, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    His is, and was then, a singular viewpoint. A lot of people apparently reviewed the evidence and concluded there was a problem. You did not make a decision, you enacted one made by the community. Perhaps Abd might consider that when they are the singular voice against the majority, then it may be them who is wrong. LessHeard vanU (talk) 10:33, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    That would be true if I were a singular voice. I'm not. I've written an extensive response, but it is sitting on another computer. This topic ban would not be sustained through an RfC or ArbComm review, I'm certain of that. What has happened is that a lot of editors did not review the evidence and came to a conclusion based on an assumption that the charges were true, and they !voted in that line, some actually stated, "if the charges are true, then a topic ban is appropriate," and I will, in a full comment, provide diffs. Fritzpoll, however, has not fairly presented my argument, though I believe it was his intention to do so. To date, no significant evidence, enough to justify a ban, has been presented for a topic ban. Therefore Fritzpoll has made a closure decision without reviewing the evidence, but, apparently, based on his own opinion outside of what was presented in the discussion, but not only without expressing that evidence, but also not expressing it later, when questioned about it (specifically, about the copyvio charges which he stated were central). He was therefore not a neutral administrator, one more flaw in this affair. At this point there is enough evidence -- but not presented here yet -- for a neutral administrator to reverse the decision, perhaps also sending it back to that community (AN/I) for review; though I would contend that this was the wrong forum in the first place for dispute resolution. AN and AN/I are not part of W:DR, which corresponds to a legal system, whereas AN/I is like calling 911. 911 makes immediate decisions for the protection of the project, but not binding or lasting ones, in the presence of significant disagreement. --Abd (talk) 17:56, 10 August 2008 (UTC)
    As I indicated on my talkpage to you, I based the closing decision both on the consensus of the community and the AN/I discussion (that I have not linked here) which dealt with her copyvios and introduction of inaccurate material. You are being disingenuous in saying that I acted in a non-neutral fashion when I have already described to you how my decision was reached, and in saying that I have not responded to your request for information, which I did on my talkpage. I also invited you to ask another administrator to "close" the discussion, on the presumption that, if they disagreed, the topic ban could be overturned. I asked you to supply the proof to back up your statement that she had clearly learned her lesson, so that I could propose overturning the topic ban. I asked you to get WW to talk to me so that I could propose overturning the topic ban. Instead you decide to attack my position by disputing my neutrality or helpfulness in this matter - I have not vested interest in WW being banned from DYK (hardly an overbearing restriction in itself), and certainly not indefinitely. Perhaps you need to choose your words with greater care? Fritzpoll (talk) 10:48, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Once again, Fritzpoll has failed, apparently, to understand the basis of the problem. Yes, Fritzpoll has "described" the basis of his ban. He based in on two charges. I have a detailed response at . What you call, below, "the facts of his argument," have not been presented by you, or anyone at AN or AN/I, ever. My argument is that there was no evidence presented showing that the charges were anything more than Blechnic's warped and exaggerated allegations. (Which opinion, by the way, has been expressed by multiple editors at various times, before I was ever involved.) In short, there were two "facts" underlying your ban: (1) copyvio, and (2) padding an article to meet DYK 1500 words. The latter is so trivial that it's hardly worth mentioning, but you did mention it. Unless it were shown that this editor continued to do this, and more than rarely, it's not worthy of a topic ban, and the padding would disappear if it actually damaged the article, rather quickly. As it did. The first charge, though, copyvio, would be serious. How do we deal with editors who plagiarize text? Do we topic ban them? No! I don't know of any other example, though possibly there might be an odd one. We warn them, and we block them if the action is repeated after warning. Often we will warn them more than once. However, no evidence showing any pattern of copyvio, nor even a single example, as I recall, was asserted in either AN/I report filed by Blechnic -- and this is what you referred me to when claiming that you had acted based on evidence. No evidence was asserted here, either, nor did you, in bringing this here, note the very clear basis for my effort to persuade you to lift the ban, which I am required to do before proceeding with further process. The basis wasn't what you claimed. There was a consensus at AN/I. It was, however, a consensus of editors who aren't responsible for confirming the evidence, and a number, indeed, noted that they had simply assumed the charges to be true, and therefore their approval of a topic ban was conditional, and you failed to confirm the condition. And many others, I'm sure, did not look for the evidence, or were confused by the red herrings presented, the few allegedly outrageous mistakes of WW, which, however, were really only outrageous if they were repeated, particularly if repeated after warning, plus some sort of dark assumptions based on WW's "failure to respond." Which should have been irrelevant. (A positive response would be a basis for not topic banning, based on AGF, but a lack of response is never an offense, only the repetition of problem behavior after warning.)
    I did not bring this report to AN, nor would I have done so, until I'd exhausted WP:DR, though there is a basis for an attempt at AN/I (I consider that the ban has seriously damaged the project and should be lifted promptly). But it's here, so I've responded. And I will go to the next step in DR, unless some admin takes a look at this and lifts the ban, which, having been discussed, could now be done without wheel-warring. Had anyone confirmed the evidence, sufficient evidence to block, it would be another matter. --Abd (talk) 15:33, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    I will note, now, that I'm accused, via a warning on my Talk page, by User:Jehochman, of failing to AGF for Fritzpoll. I might have made a mistake somewhere, but I am not aware of ever questioning Fritzpoll's good faith, and I have assumed it all along. I have concluded that he erred, and I requested that he review his decision, and then questioned its correctness, but I do not believe and have never believed that he intended anything other than the welfare of the project, and I assume this, as well, of the editors who have been, the last few minutes, piling onto my Talk page to "second" the warning. It's not over, folks, until the diva sings. There is a reason why we don't make decisions based on the first few !votes that come in, they are often biased. We'll see. I'd say, given that I haven't filed any AN or ANI reports, started any RfCs, or even edit warred or maintained tendentious debate against an informed consensus, that blocking me based on my history would probably be disruptive, I'd not advise it. But, then again, maybe some good would come out of such, you never know. It was just suggested, yesterday, to me, that I go again for RfA. Last time the !vote was about 50-50, after the canvassed votes due to an SPA -- blocked for it -- were disregarded. And the reason given by most voters was that I only had something like 1400 edits at the time. Might be disruptive for me to self-nom, though. I won't do that. --Abd (talk) 15:33, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Thanks for that - I didn't want to be accused of forcing bias in a response by not presenting the facts of his argument. Fritzpoll (talk) 10:37, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    I have now commented on your talkpage that Abd should bring his concerns regarding the basis on which consensus for a topic ban was created back to the community which expressed it, and not on the page of the admin that enacted it. LessHeard vanU (talk) 10:52, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    Thanks very much for that, LHvU Fritzpoll (talk) 10:57, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
    It may be a bit late to say it, I've been indisposed, but this is the issue of general value here. There is a view of administrative responsibility here that conflicts, certainly with my understanding of it and with that of some admins whom I respect greatly. Generally, short of ArbComm, we don't make decisions by vote. Rather, a rough consensus may -- or may not -- be expressed in some discussion. And then an administrator reviews it, reviews the arguments and evidence, and makes a decision. The administrator makes the decision. This is very clear at AfD. It's also clear when a block decision is made after a discussion. The blocking admin becomes the go-to person for unblock or unblock permission. I have never seen it be considered necessary to go back to AN/I to get an unblock if the actual blocking admin consents to it. So I assumed that a topic ban would be the same. The closing admin is the actual judge, and would never make a decision contrary to their own opinion after review of the evidence, on the idea that "the community decided, not me." I have seen quite a solid supermajority be reversed by a closing admin because he didn't accept the basis they were asserting. And because this "judge" can decide any way, the exact way that the admin decides at close is not binding on that judge, the admin can reverse it later upon consideration of new evidence or argument. Further, all that I've seen about dispute resolution guidelines indicates that, when we disagree with an admin close, the admin is where we go, first. It's disruptive to go beyond that when it might not be necessary. The closing admin can say "bug off!" That is totally within his or her discretion. And then there would be further process, each step involving slightly more fuss. --Abd (talk) 22:30, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Fritz, I also agree your reading of the consensus was entirely correct. I was considering closing that topic ban discussion myself and I would have closed it exactly the same way. As others have said, if Wilhelmina Will wants the ban overturned, she needs to engage with the community. Sarah 02:29, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
    Thanks, Sarah. I figured my first AN/I close was probably worth checking Fritzpoll (talk) 08:34, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
    This was an obvious one. Fritzpoll divined consensus (and an overwhelming one) rightly, and until and unless WW engages with either Fritz personally, or the wider community with regards to the topic ban, it should stay. D.Jameson 14:35, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
    Yes although some of the way the conclusion was arrived at might be arguable, this was definitely the consensus. What I will say though is that WW herself hasn't edited in five days, and she hasn't done anything to violate or even question that ban herself in the meantime, so the 'blame' for this being made an issue again shouldn't fall on her and I hope this won't effect the outcome. I wish she would talk to the community though to discuss mentoring etc or ask for help, and hope she isn't gone for good. :( Sticky Parkin 13:32, 10 August 2008 (UTC)
    It is correct, there was a "rough consensus," but this affair shows why AN/I is the wrong venue for complex user conduct investigations and response, it is only good for ad-hoc, easily reversible decisions, made necessary by some immediate hazard. Had there been no rough consensus (and from vote count alone, it was a strong one), I'd have been advising WW to ignore it, and Fritzpoll's later comment to her I would characterize as a warning from an involved administrator. But that's not the case. Hence I've advised WW to respect the topic ban, even though I believe it to be seriously defective. It's also true that WW has not challenged the ban, not once, nor did she repeat, after warning, any of the allegedly improper behavior, not before the ban, nor after it. Mentoring would be a good idea, if it were not an utter waste of time. We propose mentoring for good editors who don't learn from their mistakes without it. Quite simply, that isn't Wilhelmina Will. She is far above average for editors. --Abd (talk) 18:35, 10 August 2008 (UTC)
    When he took responsibility for the ban, Fritzpoll gave this reason for the it: The general argument was that WW was introducing copyright-violating material (despite repeated requests not to do so), and reducing the quality of articles in order to achieve a DYK nomination. As such, I interpreted the situation as a threat to the quality and integrity of the encyclopedia. In this context the community consensus for a DYK topic ban was justified.
    Now, the "reduction of quality" argument was based on a single incident, and, as was noted by an editor at one point, her problem was that "she didn't know how to bloviate well enough." Clearly, she made a mistake, but it was not even close to being a reason for a topic ban. Copyvio, though, would be much more serious. Indeed, it would be a shortcut to her goal, DYK nominations, to simply copy existing articles that she finds somewhere. Was she doing this?
    Repeatedly, in the AN/I reports in question, requests were made for evidence, and I continued this with Fritzpoll, and evidence wasn't provided. The copyvio charges were trumped-up, I must conclude. I suspect that there was some incident, somewhere, but, since there was active request for the evidence at AN/I, and a participating editor -- tendentiously participating -- who would presumably have had access to the evidence, and who did not provide it, there must not have been much! Definitely not enough to justify a topic ban. And there was, in addition, no evidence that she had been warned and persisted beyond the warning. Topic ban, quite simply, was not justified by the evidence presented in the AN/I report, and Fritzpoll has not responded to this particular issue. Instead, he brought this matter here as if the question were the consensus at AN/I, which then produced the simple answer: there was a consensus at AN/I, something we already knew. And, since, Fritzpoll is unwilling, as closing admin, to reverse the ban without going back to AN/I, the simplest recourse is to go back to AN/I with a request to unban, which I intend to do. He shouldn't have brought this here, nor should he bring it there. Going to AN/I simply because someone criticizes something you've done is not appropriate. The reason I would go to AN/I: the project has been damaged, damage continues, and thus the matter justifies an AN/I report requesting immediate action. An unjust topic ban can be expected to drive away some productive editors, and it seems it is doing just that.--Abd (talk) 04:45, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    No, AN/I is probably not the venue for that discussion - I would suggest proposing the unban elsewhere, since AN/I is for incidents requiring immediate administrative assistance. The reason I brought it here, Abd, is that you questioned the validity of what I had done - not being so arrogant as to believe that all my words and deeds are without fault, I brought my actions here for scrutiny. Wilhelmina was on a Wikibreak, so it is hardly surprising that she hasn't been editing (look at her edit summaries for today) and she is creating new pages again. I have consistently responded to your request for information, including the original AN/I report where the copyvios were discussed. I have offered opportunities to resolve this repeatedly - that you refuse to counsel WW to engage with the community, refuse to accept my offers of compromise in the form of discussion (where I even offered, under certain conditions, to request the unban myself) and instead embark on this crusade on her behalf is bewildering to me.
    You also persist in this idea that I can overturn a topic ban on my own. This is not true - administrators in these instances, as I understand it, enact the will of the community. They do not decide that will - admins are no more special in that regard than any other editor. Fritzpoll (talk) 09:09, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Just to recap this thread into a clear discussion, there are three elements together which brought about the DYK topic ban against Wilhelmina Will. These are discussed in detail in the threads linked to in Fritzpoll's opening paragraph, and can be summarised as follows:
    • Wilhelmina Will was found to be introducing copyrighted material into DYK candidates that were being prepared.
    • Wilhelmina Will has been found to edit war with others working on DYK candidates in the interest of meeting DYK minimum requirements.
    • Wilhelmina Will has been found to be uncivil to others when the subject is discussed, working against the collaborative ethos.
    While one of these issues on it's own would cause concern, it is the three together that have generated this situation and all three that need to be improved upon before the ban is likely to be rescinded. It is also worth bearing in mind that blocks and bans are preventative, not punitive. In this case, they are designed to prevent DYK submissions from being created that are potentially damaging, either by worsening the experience of other editors wishing to collaborate on the article or through potentially copyright infringing material being introduced. It is also why, in this instance, Wilhelmina Will has been encouraged to demonstrate an admission that these problems exist and a resolve to avoid repeating them in the future so that the topic ban can be lifted.
    In addition, consensus does not equate approval without dissent. Although there are some editors who disagreed with the topic ban and felt that other measures were appropriate, the broad consensus was for a topic ban to be applied. Such a measure does not require the approval of ArbCom or an RfC to be implemented, and is a common remedy introduced by the community in response to editor concerns in a particular area while allowing them the freedom to contribute to other unrelated areas.
    To conclude, I would encourage Abd and Wilhelmina Will to work constructively through this topic ban, demonstrate a willingness to contribute to lifting this through positive means and in the fullness of time rejoin the DYK contribution process with the consent of the community at large. I am concerned that any protracted argument or dispute will only cause further contributors to leave the project, which is somehting I think we can all agree is an undesirable outcome. Consensus has shown a clear way to resolve this issue, and I would humbly request in the interests of all concerned that it is followed. Many thanks, Gazimoff 14:38, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    That's unfortunate. All that happened was that I questioned his close decision (made something like a week after the apparent AN/I consensus which had, however, never been closed, with no administrator taking responsibilty for a topic ban allegedly decided there). I did not call into question his editing, ever. I claimed no administrative misconduct rising to a level of bad faith, for I believed, and continue to believe, that he simply erred by not confirming the crucial copyvio claim, not that he intended to harm anyone. He was the one who brought this report here, when a simpler and more direct response, following WP:DR would have been more appropriate. He did not need to insert himself into this, he could have simply done nothing when I pointed out to him that he had warned Wilhelmina Will of a topic ban that was never properly decided. And then he could have made his decision, and continued to do nothing more. I didn't make this into a drama, he did. But, still, he had options, and continues to have options. He has taken one of them, which is, essentially, to do nothing, unless he changes his mind. It's a legitimate option: let the community sort it out. It's the option that Wilhelmina Will took; however, the paradox here is that he held it against her. I won't. No process was begun that he had any obligation to respond to, at all, with no immediate risk from silence, so I find his withdrawal puzzling. --Abd (talk) 15:44, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Part of the reason for people's reactions and the withdrawal, I think, is that it is difficult sometimes to understand exactly what it is you are saying, Abd. I say this as someone who thinks you often say some very perceptive things, and as someone who disagrees with the views that others are developing about your contributions (see your talk page section and warning). I think the problem is that to engage in a full and frank discussion with you on a topic can be rather difficult due to the length and abstractness of your responses, and the end result can be uncertain. I don't think what you do is harassment, but I can understand some people getting frustrated with the approach you take. I did ask before whether you had considered putting some of your views into an essay? Sometimes the points you are trying to make are best made in the abstract, before alighting on people as examples, if you get what I mean? For the record, I have supported Blechnic (someone you are criticising at the moment) over their flagging of copyvios in the past, so I think you both make good points, while I'm not 100% sure exactly what started this latest incident (I've been away for a few weeks). Carcharoth (talk) 16:40, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Thanks, Carcharoth. It should be noted that when I have an agenda, a decision I've made and I'm trying to persuade the community to act, eventually will I take the time to boil it down to brief, effective speech. It takes a lot of time, so when I write at greater length, it is in discussion mode, it is not intended as persuasion, but rather exploration. It should also be recognized that this rewriting takes a lot of time, discussion is far easier, and that this problem is typical for writers like me. I did not file this AN/I report and am simply responding here, with information and analysis. While it could save a lot of fuss if someone looked at what I've written in the past about Blechnic, I'm not expecting that, though I've been succinct, actually, in some comments on AN/I that were simply ignored. But I've seen long-term, highly experienced administrators filing cogent reports ignored on AN/I. That's part of the problem that I really want to address. I do intend to write about "what started this incident," unless it becomes moot, in which case I may get distracted from that. Yes, I understand why some people "get frustrated." I've been seeing this for better than twenty years of on-line conferencing and communication experience. I don't hold it against them. However, that doesn't necessarily mean that I shut up when I have something I think important to say.
    I develop the ideas that I might put into an essay by communicating with that part of the community that cares to read what I write, not for the tl;dr crowd. Some people read what I write, some don't. Unless I'm in action mode, which will be obvious, nobody has any obligation to read what I write, and there is no serious hazard from skipping it. Again, thanks. --Abd (talk) 17:43, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    goes beyond that doesn't it? more firmly implied by your dire threat on your talkpage that my "administrative future" might depend on reading your 11KB post. --87.114.149.224 (talk) 17:14, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Holy Shit! 87.114 is a User:Fredrick day IP. Two possibilities: Fritzpoll is Fredrick day, a banned editor, which I absolutely did not suspect, though it now does make some kind of sense, or this is Fredrick day is trying to stir up shit by pretending to be User:Fritzpoll. It's checkuser time, to clear Fritzpoll, if nothing else. (I would not argue that Fritzpoll should automatically be blocked if checkuser confirms that he is Fredrick day, but I think it is essential that we know, given what has come down here. (FYI, folks, Fredrick day was himself exposed most clearly because he apparently forgot he was logged in and edited signing his post with the sig of an identified vandal; if Fp is Fd, this, then, could be him forgetting that he was not logged in, thus revealing his IP. But it would take checkuser of Fp to verify this.--Abd (talk) 17:51, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Em.. I'm quoting the guy - doesn't the link to his statement give that away? I know you like to go on fishing trips and accusing people of being me - but your harrassement of fitzpoll should stop at this stage, you drove him away, what more do you want?--87.114.149.224 (talk) 17:56, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    In the same edit, though, we have: "...until I'm sure that I can edit without feeling the dread, without waiting for you to tell me..." - I read that as Fritzpoll saying 'it's you or me and I'm not coming back until you avoid me or are gone'. I can understand that is being written under stress, but it is equally unhelpful. I have very little sympathy with people who say things are too stressful due to someone's edits, and then argue against that someone from halfway through the door while saying they are leaving. Misplaced Pages is a stressful place, and the balance has to be struck between reducing that stress and not skewing discussions. Take a break or reassess how you do things here (one of the lessons to learn is how to handle people like Abd, as well as how to handle departures, and, to be fair, for Abd to reassess how he does things as well), but don't use leaving as a parting shot at someone. Carcharoth (talk) 17:44, 11 August 2008 (UTC) For example, if Fritzpoll now says he is leaving again because of what I said, the cycle starts again. See User:NoSeptember/Leaving for more on this.
    I find your characterization of Fritz's message incredibly unfair. I didn't see it as a "parting shot" at Abd, I saw it as a final response to an editor who had hounded him over the course of several days over a properly made administrative call, threatening all sorts of process-related recourses, until finally Fritz just had enough of it, and decided to take a long break (at least). If you look at Fritz's initial responses to Abd, he was accomodating in the extreme, unfailingly polite, and in no way contributed to the mess that this has currently become. Fritz is not the problem here in any way, Carch. To suggest otherwise does him and the work he's done here a great disservice. D.Jameson 17:51, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    FWIW, Fritzpoll withdrew that comment. I was trying to make clear that I didn't think Fritzpoll intended it as a parting shot, but was trying to make the point that it could still have that effect. Until you've had it happen to you, it is difficult to communicate how powerless an editor can be when trying to refute an argument made by someone the other side of a still-swinging exit door. I will just repeat again that I appreciate the work done by Fritzpoll. The problem seems to be more social here - many editors getting heavily sidetracked and losing sight of the initial dispute and examining the evidence for that, rather than whether Abd or Fritzpoll dor other editors did the right thing along the way. See my comments below where I say that the best thing would have been to re-examine the whole thing afresh. Carcharoth (talk) 22:41, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    But it's a pattern of behaviour - if you look at Abd's user page - he's been warned off before of making those "you need to listen to me or it's trouble for you" warnings to administrators. Everyone has a right to speak but you don't get to try and force people to listen with vague threats of trouble. --87.114.149.224 (talk) 17:50, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    This changes the complexion of this entirely. I had no general complaint about Fritzpoll, which is why the departure made no sense to me. However Fredrick day has bailed from attempts to persuade him to negotiate a return because he knows that I'd maintain some kind of notice of his activities, which he seems to be totally allergic to. Given what he's done in the past, some level of awareness is necessary. He has stated, elsewhere, that he had other accounts, so it would not be surprising if he is Fritzpoll, but quite surprising that he'd make the mistake of editing as him without logging in, he's usually much more careful. There remains the possibility that he is merely pretending to be Fritzpoll, but there is now strong reason to suspect Fritzpoll is a sleeper account for Fredrick day. There was very, very little hazard to Fritzpoll here, unless he persisted through much more process, starting with RfC (which would, of course, require another editor's certification, I could not do that on my own), so the strong reaction does make sense. That's how Fredrick day would react if he imagined I was harassing him. We'll see. --Abd (talk) 17:58, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    That's a pretty low trick - you are now trying to knobble the guy by saying out of the side of your mouth "psst.. he might be one of THEM.. he cannot be trusted" - have you no shame? --87.114.149.224 (talk) 18:10, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    No such charges were made, Fredrick. I couldn't continue this not only because of the block, but because before the block I had promised to stay under voluntary house arrest, so to speak, to confine myself to my Talk on all these issues until the smoke cleared. In other words, the block actually did nothing except make it impossible for me to edit stuff irrelevant to this. And to handle archiving my own Talk page, among other nuisances. On th eother hand, I got to find out who my friends are, and who is helpful weven then they aren't my friends, so to speak. You didn't have to face this inconvenience, when your IP, the vandal "Section 31" was discovered to be Fredrick day, you just packed it in, immediately. (You'd slipped up, in a manner somewhat similar to how you made the edit that triggered this whole sock mess (but reversed: that was conclusive, this merely created a weird suspicion). When I filed a checkuser for Allemandtando, you, again, bailed immediately, before the checkuser result came in. Now, here, Fritzpoll had already -- it appeared -- bailed. I think you saw that, and saw an opportunity to stir up trouble by planting that edit. While it's possible that it was inadvertent, that you didn't intend the post to create the appearance that you obviously recognized it did, it was awfully fortuitous for your goals. I think you crafted it, practically a stroke of genius, I'd say, so that I'd see it and comment on it, and then someone else would look deeper at it and notice the exact quote and then have a reason to dispel it -- and make me look foolish. However, I never had any intention of pursuing anything against Fritzpoll. I doubt I would have filed an SSP report, or requested checkuser, because, while the suspicion was strong, I had previously had stronger suspicion about Allemandtando, said so at AN/I, and didn't file. I'd have supported checkuser but not to "get" Fritzpoll or "knobble" him, but to clear him of the suspicion you created. In the very first edit, the Holy Shit edit, I noted that this could easily be, not Fritzpoll, so to speak, thinking he was logged in and signing, thus revealing his IP, but you creating this false impression to cause disruption. That part worked. It did cause disruption. The coincidence of your edit, plus his mysterious departure with cries that he'd been harassed -- something you were known to do -- certainly raised suspicion, but it was far short of proof, which I said again and again. And Fritzpoll wasn't a disruptive editor, and I had only one reason to suspect the quality of his adminship, a single decision. Far, far from any kind of actual opinion that something should be done about him. No, I was focused on the case which he had closed. I approached him for clarity on it, asked him questions about it, and none of that could have been considered harassment. Or any editor seeking clarity on a decision would be considered to be harassing. At any time, he could have said to me, as to his Talk page discussions, stop, and I would have come to a dead stop, full brakes. Had I filed an AN report on him, likewise, before exhausting reasonable simpler remedies, it could have been considered harassment, but that wouldn't have been my next step and, in fact, as the smoke cleared, we discovered that we agreed on the next step. Big surprise: it's dispute resolution policy, involve a neutral editor to mediate or make an independent decision. But it was he who filed the AN report, and it's still beyond me why he did it. It wasn't necessary. I had acknowledged that there had been a consensus, my question was about the close and who the closing admin was, and therefore who could make decisions regarding the ban. When I discovered, after my return from a trip, that he had filed the AN report, and commented there. he resigned, and people were blaming me for it -- which remains quite mysterious to me, since I'd done nothing drastic (this was before the sock puppet flap, which was itself a mountain made from a molehill). So then you showed up with your little poison dart. Anyway, I'm back, Fredrick day. I'm pretty sure you've never been gone, and I might just get motivated enough to finish that sock discovery research. Active socks can be identified (i.e., simultaneous accounts), it should be pretty difficult to conceal them once one knows where and how to look. But, I do, in fact, have other stuff to do. Such as, even, occasionally, working on articles, but more often, children (7 ranging in ages from 5 to 40), grandchildren (5), business, and, of course, trying to change the world. Of which Misplaced Pages is only a small slice. --Abd (talk) 22:11, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    I'm pretty sure you've never been gone, and I might just get motivated enough to finish that sock discovery research. Active socks can be identified (i.e., simultaneous accounts), it should be pretty difficult to conceal them once one knows where and how to look. - please do, your sockfinder general stuff is always hilarious and it's great fun to watch you accuse various people of being me (did Seddon69 ever get an proper apology off you? I don't think he did). --87.114.131.159 (talk) 22:19, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Back on topic

    Just a couple of quick words on this topic if I may. Firstly, like Abd and a number of other users, I feel the initial ban was hasty, ill-considered, and made on some pretty flimsy evidence. I also found it pretty distasteful, quite frankly, to see a 16-year-old girl pilloried the way she was at AN/I, and it therefore doesn't in the least suprise me that she might be reluctant to participate there. It also bothered me that no-one thought to notify any of the DYK regulars to see if they might have want to express an opinion, and I didn't even know about the ban until the topic had been closed.

    Subsequently a second thread was started by Blechnic, in which I tried to clarify just what the nature of the ban was. It transpired that most people merely felt that she needed to acknowledge some mistakes and accept a mentor, but since no-one put up their hand to act as mentor and the discussion petered out without much response, I decided it would have to be handled ad hoc. Since then two articles by WW have been nominated on behalf of her by other users, one has been promoted and one IIRC was not.

    So just for the record, I would like to say, firstly, that I personally have no problem dealing with submissions to DYK from WW provided they are on general rather than technical subjects. Secondly, I think I should add that I frequently see much worse copyvio offenders on DYK than WW (in fact I haven't actually seen a copyvio from her in spite of all the accusations), but my response has just been to disqualify the article and warn the user. So why WW has been singled out for a DYK ban I can only suppose has been due to Blechnic's persistence in frequently bringing her case before AN/I. At this point then, I think we need to make our minds up whether WW's trangressions were really so exceptional as to deserve a ban in the first place, and if so, what exactly needs to be done in order for her to have the ban overturned. Some clarification at this point would be very useful. Thanks, Gatoclass (talk) 17:59, 11 August 2008 (UTC)

    I agree with you entirely, and I say that as someone who initially supported the ban. While User:Gazimoff is correct below when he states that copyvios were not the only or even the primary reason for the ban, the copyvio issue was by far the most serious issue. The rest of the issues were one inappropriate revert, one uncivil remark in an edit summary, and some statements indicating a lack of comprehension on certain topics she has been editing on, leading to some inaccurate statements in articles she creates. None of those would - or even all together - would seem to warrant any sort of ban, maybe a short term block at most, if it wasn't for the copyvio issues. And so far the only copyvio that has been uncovered is an item that is 7 months old, and apparently was a result of some misunderstanding with another user (possibly an admin). And by the way, BOTH of the articles that WW created and were nominated for DYK by other users were ultimately accepted. Rlendog (talk) 23:44, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    I think that some important clarifications are required, in a restatement of my original response to Abd:
    • As part of this thread, a temporary ban was put in place. Copvio concerns were not the only (or even the primary) reason, but civility and edit warring were heavily discussed. It was the combination of these three areas that brought about the topic ban. Stating that it is purely regarding copyvio is, regrettably, only part of the problem.
    • Copyvio evidence, as has been repeatedly requested, is documented in this thread under the section 'Her existing copy vios and vandalisms that need edited'. Please note that this is not the only concern, as stated in my previous point.
    • Fritzpoll intervened in this matter due to the convoluted nature of mutiple AN and ANI threads on the topic, in order to act as a single point of contact and simplify matters. Since taking up this role, the majority of discussion has been around the legitemacy or otherwise of a topic ban, and not (as was intended) progressing onwards from this point.
    • User:87.114.149.224 has no contributions to wikipedia outside of this topic. The IP is used by PlusNet, an ADSL broadband provider in the United Kingdom. As such, it is exceedingly difficult to level accusations of sockpuppetry without strong, (usually checkuser based) evidence. If you have such material available I would strongly urge you to come forward with it or drop what ammounts to a fundamental accusation of bad faith.
    It wouyld seem that WW is prepared to work within the guidelines set to improve the quality of DYK submissions and regain the trust of the community. I reiterate my request to Abd and WW to progress in this avenue. Constant resortion to debate and argument tends to stall progression on the isse and only perpetuates a needlessly tense situation. Many thanks, Gazimoff 18:31, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    I thank Gazimoff for taking the time to investigate to the degree to which he has. However, it's not adequate, there are aspects to this situation which can rather easily be overlooked until one researches it depth -- or reads an RfC or other discussion that thoroughly explores it, and such doesn't exist yet, and I've been hoping the whole thing could be resolved more simply. So some corrections and points in response:
    1. Yes, other matters were discussed, but Fritzpoll based his eventual closure on only two points and the rest not only wasn't considered important enough to mention, in our discussions, but I'd agree they were moot, minor faults; however, minor faults pointed out in the context of other allegations that are much more serious can add to an impression of wrongdoing, which clearly happened.
    2. Fritzpoll intervened, first, without realizing what he was doing, if I AGF, which I do. There was an AN/I discussion where a clear majority supported a topic ban, but no administrator investigated it and drew a conclusion for closure. As a result, WW was not informed of the ban and made another DYK nomination. Blechnic complained, and Fritzpoll then took it upon himself to warn WW that she had (allegedly) been topic-banned. It took me a day or so to sort this out and realize the implications, so I can easily understand that others might still not get it.
    3. We don't make decisions by vote. Ever. Votes represent a rough consensus, we make decisions through servants, closing administrators, trusted by the community to review not only some apparent consensus, but also the evidence and the analysis, and a closing administrator is obligated, in fact, to make his or her own decision, being informed by the community as to evidence and opinion. Part of this is a responsibility to investigate the evidence, to understand the basis for the decision. However, when Fritzpoll went to the WW Talk page to warn her, he denied that it was his decision, he essentially said, "Don't shoot the messenger," I'm just reporting the community's decision. He most explicitly did not take responsibility for the decision.
    4. I raised at one point the possibility that Fritzpoll was not neutral in this affair, but that's not a point that I pursued. Rather, I acted as if he were, in fact, neutral, and thus able to properly close if he agreed with the evidence and conclusion.
    5. When the community makes a decision through a polling process, there is always a close by an administrator, or sometimes another editor; when a topic ban is involved, custom is that this is an administrator, because the administrator then becomes responsible for enforcing the ban with blocks if necessary. Since there had been no close, the ban was not in effect, it was not merely that it hadn't been communicated to WW. However, when I discovered this and wrote about it (on my Talk page?) I cautioned WW to continue to assume that there was a ban, until it could be sorted out. But I also wanted to give her some hope, so that we might avoid losing her entirely. As well as, possibly, to assuage her probable hurt feelings. At least she could know that somebody was trying to sort it out!
    6. So I went to Fritzpoll and pointed out that there was no close, and invited him to review the situation. I mentioned several options: He could simply not act, in which case there would be no ban, and I'd return to AN/I with that, probably, or at least to DYK (which is where most of this should have happened in the first place.) He could close the discussion, either with a ban or not. He elected to close it, to take responsibility. I considered this as progress, even though I considered the decision incorrect. Now there was a responsible administrator, and I could attempt to negotiate with him, or could ask others to do so. It never came to that, because Fritzpoll continued to insist that the decision had been the community's, not his. I asked him for the evidence of copyvio, and he provided only a diff to a former AN/I report by Blechnic, which didn't show copy vio. I'll note that copyvio evidence recently posted here, taken from Blechnic's Talk page, posted after the ban, was a single example, from many months ago, with extenuating circumstances. I understand there is another example, it's been mentioned, but I haven't seen it myself, though I've looked. It's not important. If there were a pattern of violation, worthy of a topic ban or even a warning of a topic ban, we'd have seen it by now. This has been a very productive editor, with many, many articles, and it's quite possible that going over it all with a fine-tooth comb would turn up something else. But we don't ban for this level of problem. 'Wilhelmina Will was a productive editor, with 29 DYKs to her credit and many short articles created and standing. I look now, and I see, to my relief, that she has resumed editing. She was gone for a week.
    7. While I was negotiating with Fritzpoll, and then while I was traveling for three days, he took the matter to AN for review -- without necessity, it was his choice --, but he didn't present the crucial argument: the lack of copyvio evidence. Instead, he was looking for what he thought important: confirmation of the consensus at AN/I on the ban. He thought that if there was an apparent consensus, that meant that he was justified in his close. It's an error, but it is an error which, I assume, could be corrected; the appearance of a consensus was never challenged. What was challenged was the underlying arguments and evidence, or lack of same. Some !voters at the AN/I report specifically prefaced their comment with a disclaimer: "If the charges by Blechnic are true, and I see no reason why they would not be, ...."
    8. Yet Blechnic was an editor, fairly new, previously blocked for harassment, who, I'd already concluded, was, indeed, harassing WW, beyond all reason, tendentiously arguing against every positive thing said about her or questioning his report. While it is proper for editors to AGF and make a prefatory remark like that, it was not proper for an administrator to consider those !votes as being effective unless the administrator personally verified the evidence. And, absent evidence to the contrary, we can assume that most !votes are, in fact, dependent upon the evidence visible when they !voted, so such verification is crucial, or, at least, when a close without personal examination of evidence is made, and challenged, it should be immediately investigated and fixed. Which Fritzpoll apparently never did. (I don't think he needed to consider the !votes at all, the matter is simpler. He should have looked at the charges de novo, and verified the evidence. If the evidence was verified, then he'd have presumably made his own decision based on it, which might or might not match the community's apparent consensus.
    9. It seems that Fritzpoll had some impression in his mind that there had been copyvio problems, I've mentioned this "other" incident. But one incident can create such an impression, yet a ban should be based on a pattern of incidents, likely to be repeated. Now, lots of admins make close decisions, and then change them when aspects of the decision are questioned. There is no difference, in principle, between an AfD or an AN/I poll decision, and it is fairly common to reverse an AfD and, in fact, the standard first action, before challenging an AfD at WP:DRV is to discuss it with the administrator, who can change the result, and going back to the community (i.e., re-opening the AfD), isn't necessary, because there is simple recourse available for any member of the community who disagrees with the new admin decision.
    10. Eventually, I came to question Fritzpoll's competence as an administrator, based on a series of factors that I won't review here, since it is moot now, but never his good faith, and there was no risk to Fritzpoll's admin bit unless he tendentiously opposed the community in possible ensuing process. My reference to hazard had to do with the possibility that he would do this, and I made that clear in my full comment (on my Talk page, by the way, not pushed in his face). I did not threaten that further process, I move very slowly, normally, unless pushed by circumstances. He didn't need to do anything. The fuss that ensued was caused by his report here, and then my answers to it. Further process only becomes burdensome at the RfC level, which would require quite a bit of preparation, including independent efforts to resolve the dispute. And I continued to make it clear that Fritzpoll wasn't the problem. The problem was unclear process and practice at AN/I, for which the community is responsible.
    11. Yes, this is long. But quite a bit shorter than a full RfC would be. Nobody's obligated to read this. I'm not pushing for anyone to be blocked, and this is not where I'd ask for a reversal of the WW ban -- though it's once again questionable due to the departure of the closing admin, for whatever reason.
    12. And I haven't provided diffs. Don't trust me? Don't worry! You won't personally be held responsible. I've been threatened with being blocked, twice today, most seriously for the sock puppet issue, so I should address that.
    13. 87.114 is Fredrick day IP, the possibility that this was other than Fd would be minute, and I've read that 87.114 has acknowledged being Fd, not that this was ever in doubt. See Misplaced Pages talk:Suspected sock puppets/Fredrick day for a list of IPs, known or reasonably suspected to have been used by Fd, together with some other sock puppets. I do know what I'm talking about. As to Fritzpoll being Fd, I do not consider it proven yet, there is merely reason for suspicion, most notably since Fd did use the first person singular possessive pronoun, referring to Fritzpolls' administrative status. I'll decide later if there is reason to file checkuser, which would simply be routine at this point, it's possible that a checkuser coming across this would do it on their own. Or not. Fritzpoll was not a disruptive editor, as far as anything I've seen. It would be the community's decision as to what to do if it turns out that Fritzpoll is Fredrick day. Continuing the sysop status would be out of the question, I'd say. (If you know what Fredrick day has done, I think you would agree.) But blocking would be another matter. Misplaced Pages does not punish, we protect, and that is exactly what I'm doing all this work for, to ensure that the policy and guidelines are a reality. --Abd (talk) 21:21, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    The only thing I'll respond to here, Abd is your last point (#13). You are not getting it and need to read your user talk, which I presume you're doing. You have completely misunderstood the "possessive pronoun" bit, and I can't find another way of explaining it to you. The IP (who admitted to being F-day), copy/pasted from Fritzpoll's talkpage, not from your talkpage. The "MY" in the post is a direct copy paste from the person who said MY, Fritzpoll. Your "suspicions" are laughably unfounded and are serving you no purpose other than to deflect from the core issues. Type less, think more. Keeper ǀ 76 21:37, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Two more points of note that I see in this latest missive:
    • Carcharoth has just made the point (elsewhere) that it's unfair to see Fritzpoll leaving (hopefully not for long) as an exacerbating factor in re Abd, yet Abd in #6 above is directly using the tactic for their own benefit "I see, to my relief, that she has resumed editing. She was gone for a week."
    • And in point #8, "Blechnic...previously blocked for harassment" which seems to elide the discussion where Blechnic's block log was subsequently modified to indicate that the blocks were unjustified.
    And of course, to continue with a sockpuppet discussion of any kind, especially based on the premise of the leading two octets of an IP address (that leaves 65,000 possibilities doncha-know) somewhat strains credulity. Franamax (talk) 22:01, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
    Good Lord. What a mess. I'm going to ignore the sockpuppet accusations, while noting that Abd has been blocked indefintely for the accusations (see his talk page). Somewhere in those points 1-12, though, there is an important point, which is 'individual admin responsibility for their actions', versus 'actions that "enact community consensus"'. It is incredibly easy to hide behind consensus and the conclusions of previous discussions, instead of standing up for your own admin actions and examining the evidence de novo. In that sense, Abd is right: when asked to look into something, admins should examine the evidence afresh (no matter how tedious it might seem), and not just rubber-stamp previous decisions. This is similar to the way "unblock" requests are supposed to work. An admin answering an unblock request might end up agreeing with the previous decision, but they need to make clear that they have done an independent examination of the situation, and not just briefly read the previous discussion and nodded a few times. It is difficult, but that is the only way to avoid confirmation bias. Carcharoth (talk) 22:34, 11 August 2008 (UTC)

    My what a wikidrama this whole thing has turned into. I have not read every single word in this tomb but I have read enough to get a sense of what has happened and who has done what. As a totally uninvolved editor here, I would say that people just need to chill out for a bit and stop being so sensitive to perceive slights and defending entrenched positions. While there are many bit payers in all of this, here are the most significant points as I see them:

    1. WW appears to be a 16 year old who is enthusiastic and motivated to help create content for the project. This should be viewed as a good thing and she should be encouraged not tarred and feathered.
    2. As such expecting a professional level of maturity from her is unrealistic and totally unnecessary. So being motivated to win some DYK award may seem trivial to some here, it is quite conceivably important to a 16 year old. If she has made mistakes, the can be corrected. Finding a support structure to help her improve should be the goal here, not deriding her because she is intimidated to come here to the "Hall of Authority" to defend herself and her actions before a group of much older and oft times much more uncivil authority figures.
    3. As far as I am concerned Abd has done a good thing by taking up an advocate position for this user who may simply lack the assertiveness to deal with the BS that goes on here that only comes with experience and maturity beyond her years. While he may be verbose, and while some of his ways of putting things may appear as threats, his underlying premise in this case appears to be sound: an early consensus was formed simply by uninformed editors piling on (with all good intent) because they were hearing accusations of copyvio violations which is the only substantive charge I see in this whole mess, but for which I have seen essentially zero evidence given the amount of discussion space already dedicated to discussing things ... well there was that single 6 or 7 month old one liner ... which has apparently already been dealt with. This warrants a more thorough investigation whose goal should be simply to find and repair and past damage and to compile a list of example to present to WW so that she might learn to avoid similar mistakes in the future.
    4. I will agree that it is important for WW to engage the community but there is no need for this to be a threatening experience for her as I am sure it must be. Simply allow Abd to continue as her advocate and adviser so that she has the structure to help her to properly engage in the experience. This would be a valuable life experience for her in the long run and as long as she embraces the changes that need to be made she promises to be a prolific contributor to the project. This is, after all, what the goal should be here, right?
    5. As for Abd leveling accusations of sock puppetry, I think that things are being over blown here. His statements were hardly clear cut accusations. They were mere stream of consciousness suspicions as is Abd's way. In the end after Thatcher's post and some reflection Abd clearly acknowledged that Fritzpoll is NOT Fredrick Day and apologized for any distress that his suspicions may have caused. This is, I believe, the trigger that people were expecting to lift his ban? If so the threshold would appear to have been reached.
    6. For what it's worth, I find Carcharoth and Gatoclass to be the most level headed voices of reason in all this. i found their positions and assessments to be the most compelling. Most of the pointy sticks in this discussion were based on entrenched positions and a lack of willingness to admit a rush to judgment.
    7. I clearly believe that Fritzpoll was acting in good faith when he closed the original ANI imposing the DYK ban. There was a clearly stated consensus there so his actions were justified but it is also important to note that many of those voting had admitted that they had not actually looked into the matter personally and were taking the word of other editors on the charges. I have no reason to doubt the good faith intentions of those whose findings these others listened to, but I also note a distinct lack of verifiable diffs to back up all the bluster. As such, I think Abd was correct in his assertion that this ban was premature and potentially a rush to judgment that should be corrected.
    8. I also believe the Blechnic was acting in good faith in his actions here and his desire to protect the project from what he saw as harm. While this is admirable I think that he is being overzealous in his pursuit of WW, especially in consideration of her age. To the extent that his actions have prevented further damage he has been vindicated, but now that the threat has been halted I would hope that he would switch his focus towards finding a positive solution to this situation which allows WW to continue to be an enthusiastic contributor to the project regardless of what motivates her to do so. There is no reason that the desire to achieve a DYK award should be considered a negative as long as his primary concerns regarding copyvios, the padding of articles just for padding's sake, and a couple of thinly veiled insults are addressed. With the exception of the copyvios, neither of these issues is worthy of a ban, IMHO. On the issue of extensive copyvio allegations I am seeing very little here in terms of actual diffs. That does not mean that they don't exist, but without them a ban is clearly premature given the number of conditional votes in the existing consensus which is all Abd is claiming, also IMHO. Even if they do exist a ban should not be the goal. Correcting them should be and WW will probably be more than willing to help in that effort as long as the process is not pursued in such an intimidating manner.

    --GoRight (talk) 07:49, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    The main problem here is that Abd, whilst claiming to have tried to follow WP:DR, seemed to lose that in a quest to be "right". As I felt was appropriate, I offered, as one means of resolving the dispute, having another administrator review the close (since I can't unilaterally overturn what I perceived as a community ban). Following Abd's block last night, I asked Carcharoth to perform this task, which will hopefully be to the satisfaction of all concerned. Fritzpoll (talk) 08:52, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I think an independent review is a fine step, but I don't see that as a resolution moving forward. As I said above I believe that you were acting in good faith and given what you had before you that you were justified in your actions at the time. The question now becomes what is the best positive outcome that can be achieved here and what is the best means of effecting that? What the community has done only the community can undo, which is the core of your point, correct? So let us formulate as best we can the conditions which have to be met so that the ban can be lifted by community action. Whether the ban was right or whether it was a rush to judgment is rather moot a this point, IMHO. It is done so let's focus on moving forward and let the independent review serve as a retrospective to help everyone avoid similar problems in the future (if it is deemed a problem at all). If the independent review reveals an injustice was done in the form of a good faith rush to judgment then it should be easy enough to garner community support for the lifting of the ban. If the judgment was justified, well, then the issues identified need to be addressed by WW in a construction way for the obvious reasons.
    Clearly actual participation by WW here would facilitate this process. While WP:AGF coupled with her age can explain (but not excuse) her alleged actions she will eventually have to step up and become accountable if she is to be taken seriously. More than anything I think the main complaint or uncomfort I am hearing in this whole discussion is a lack of active participation in this process by WW, which I think is fair, and this then becomes her first challenge in getting this matter resolved. I simply think that this will be most effective if Abd continues to be an advocate and an adviser but ultimately with her direct participation here. In that context I would urge Abd to encourage WW to take some responsibility and engage the process. 16 years old or not if she refuses to address the community it should be no surprise that the community will view her with suspicion and in a negative light (regardless of whether that is justified or not). It is simply the reality of the situation.
    Personally I prefer to wait for the results of the independent review before formulating any next steps. This will not prevent WW from working on additional contributions as part of her DYK goal, as far as I can tell, as long as the ban on her self-nominating is respected until this is resolved. Personally I have no particular problem if others within the DYK community want to nominate her work within that process so long as the nominator takes responsibility for insuring quality concerns are properly covered before making such a nomination. Do others have any serious objections with such an arrangement? It seems she has some support from within that community so perhaps that could be a workable arrangement? --GoRight (talk) 16:43, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I agree with all of the sentiments above, and, to be explicit, I don't think it should be considered "ban evasion" (as it was once termed by an editor) if another editor nominates on her behalf, provided that editor takes the same responsibility for the nomination as if it were their own Fritzpoll (talk) 16:51, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    There is a secondary problem here, which is that WW has apparently not been communicative with anyone in recent days and has successfully avoided addressing any concerns. It's nice to see people standing up to protect this poor frightened sixteen-year-old - except that she professes leadership such that she's unable to join in a project, she doesn't have time to read about what's happened, she's still creating technical articles and she's guessing at them. I suppose these issues are subsidiary to the big show and I won't pursue them. I'll just make my prediction that this topic will recur here, some new players, some the same old same old. I'll try to watch more quietly next time. Franamax (talk) 10:28, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I think that you raise valid points, some of which I have addressed above. On the issue of leadership and not having time to read what's happened I think the WP:AGF view of that is simply her rationalizing things so she can avoid the trip to the principal's office, as it were. This seems to make perfect sense in a 16 year old frame of mind, IMHO.
    On the issue of her creating technical articles on material which she does not understand, I would suggest that Abd convey to her that this is no longer an advisable set of material for her to work on unless and until a suitable reviewer or reviewers can be identified to volunteer to vet her work. Still, if the material is sufficiently above her level of comprehension that she is writing incomprehensible gibberish then obviously this would be of no value to anyone, including herself in her quest for the DYK award. Clearly it would be best for her to confine her activities to topics that she can reasonably understand, but even on technical articles IF she is able to get things into even a 90% usable state this can be a way to make those interested in such topics much more efficient at creating new content since they would only need to help her get the last 10% completed. This is obviously only a viable option so long as suitable arrangements are made with other appropriate contributors who are capable of and willing to invest that extra 10%. Thoughts? Concerns?
    I would also suggest to Abd that he convey to her that quality is just as important a goal here as quantity. In other words, 5,000 really well written articles is probably a more laudable achievement than would be 10,000 sloppy and inaccurate ones. Agreed? --GoRight (talk) 16:43, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    Abd blocked

    Just a quick note as the blocker; Abd was blocked solely for the de facto campaign of harassment against Fritzpoll (even after the blocking, the closest he can come to an apology is that Fritzpoll "could" be innocent. This has nothing to do with the wider issue re WW (FWIW, somewhere in the thread you'll see me actually arguing in support of WW; I'm not trying to "suppress the opposition" here). As I've said, I specifically mean "indefinite" as "undefined", not "forever". If someone genuinely thinks this was an abusive block (but note the seven warnings after the final warning), or Abd comes up with a legitimate reason to unblock, I won't oppose anyone unblocking – although having done some research through his contribs, he seems to have some very serious COI issues; as the self-declared inventor of a voting system, more than 50% of his mainspace edits are to related articles; there also seem to be some off-wiki issues, for what they're worth. – iridescent 22:48, 11 August 2008 (UTC)

    I think you've made the right call here. Much as I often agree with Abd on more general topics, his behaviour here was beyond the pale regarding Fritzpoll, who is an excellent contributor to mainspace. Orderinchaos 00:26, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    For the benefit of anyone trying to resolve this mess, and to save reposting a huge chunk of diffs, the "personal attacks following final warning" on which the block was based (incidentally, despite what Abd is saying, the warning was not given by me), are listed here. Even after all that, the closest he's coming to a retraction is that "the whole thing could be a trick", a claim that I somehow cooked this up because I wanted to block him but couldn't find a reason, and a threat to take me to Arbcom for "putting him in talk page prison". – iridescent 00:35, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    For what its worth, there is no technical evidence of a connection between Fredrick day and Fritzpoll, and substantial circumstantial evidence to actively refute a connection. Thatcher 00:43, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I don't think the reference to a "trick" was that Iridescent was tricking Abd. The reference seems to be that F.D. was trying to trick Abd into thinking Fritzpoll was a sock of F.D. Which apparently succeeded, although rather than being an attempted trick it was apparently a case of missing quotation marks. Rlendog (talk) 12:59, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    No – read it in context. "I've seen these kind of arguments before. They come up when admins want to block someone, but need to figure out a reason. This affair has, so far, to me, all the signs of that. It's fine with me. I don't need to be able to edit Misplaced Pages to prepare an ArbComm case" is explicitly referring to this block being an admin conspiracy and/or a deliberate abuse by myself, and an implicit (albeit laughable) threat of an RFAR. – iridescent 13:05, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    I made one of the last warnings, asking for input from others at the same time. I thoroughly support this block, more so now that Abd is claiming in the aftermath he was "tricked." His hints about Fritzpoll were utter smears and whether in good or bad faith, were disruption. He is clearly here to drum for his own interests, in his own meta-talk ways, far above and beyond anything else. Gwen Gale (talk) 00:49, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    I see on his talk page just now what i take as a rather full apology, so the block has served its purpose. I support an unblock. DGG (talk) 04:19, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I also support an unblock as Abd has thrice made my list of wise wikipedians. --Happy editing! Sincerely, Le Grand Roi des Citrouilles 04:44, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    What? How silly. Iridescent, the blocking admin, also appears on your "list of wise wikipedians". So I guess really you should be neutral? Keeper ǀ 76 14:38, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I do not think either Abd or Iridescent should be blocked indefinitely. --Happy editing! Sincerely, Le Grand Roi des Citrouilles 00:04, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    On his talk page Abd has clearly acknowledged that Fritzpoll is not Fredrick Day and has apologized directly to Fritzpoll for any distress this misunderstanding may have caused and they seem to have parted on friendly terms. This seems to be a significant constraint that those who supported the ban wanted from Abd. He has now provided it. I support unblocking him. --GoRight (talk) 07:58, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    This is Abd's "apology" to Fritzpoll : "I can also, now, apologize for my thoughts, expressed above, calling into question Fritzpolls' competence as an administrator. I still think he made some mistakes, but.... what matters is what happens next, and it looks like he's properly handling it now." Although Abd uses the term "apologize", he still claims that the mistakes were on Fritzpoll's side. Abd apologizes only because Fritzpoll "is properly handling it now". Yellowbeard 11:06, 12 August 2008 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Yellowbeard (talkcontribs)

    Abd has clearly apologized for the sock puppetry related suspicions and any distress those may have caused. Unless I am reading things incorrectly this was the primary motivation for his block. That now seems to be settled. That he still believes there was a rush to judgment in this case and therefore an injustice had been done is a separate matter. Both Fritzpoll and Abd seem to be in agreement that an independent review is appropriate and I suspect most people would accept that this is a good course of action at this point. The outcome of that review will set the tone for any next steps in resolving this matter. If an injustice was done then it can be easily undone. If the judgment was proper then corrective action can be put in place. The bottom line is that simple, IMHO. Either way I agree, even if Abd does not, that Fritzpoll was justified in his actions based on the consensus expressed there and the information Fritzpoll had available to him at the time.
    I also believe that people may be misinterpreting Abd's position and intent. When he says that Fritzpoll made mistakes, knowing what I do about Abd, I don't believe that this is intended as an attack on Fritzpoll, per se. It is merely an observation (without prejudice or judgment) about the process that was followed, where it might have gone wrong, and therefore what should be done to fix it. I interpret Abd's comment as being a statement about the process as opposed to about Fritzpoll personally, but I can certainly see how others might interpret it differently. Abd is focused on improving the process to avoid similar issues arising in the future as far as I can tell. So in that light I think that YB's issue above takes on a whole different tone. Perhaps this is just my interpretation, though, and your mileage may vary. --GoRight (talk) 17:07, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    As far as I can tell (I find it hard to follow 15,000 byte polemics) he hasn't provided a retraction and unconditional apology for his baseless sockpuppetry accusation. –xeno (talk) 17:12, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I think it's as close as I'm going to get, and I have accordingly assumed good faith and accepted it on his talkpage. The block, from my vantage point was triggered by the accusation, but not the sole issue for iridescent, which is something you should probably check with him. Fritzpoll (talk) 17:17, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    As I say on his talkpage, I'm neither going to endorse a block or an unblock here. I am getting very irritated at being the butt of a sub-WR level conspiracy theory that (despite never having interacted with this user or Fritzpoll in any way prior to this incident, AFAIK) I somehow engineered this situation to give myself a pretext to block him. Since, given what appears to be a totally warped view of what Misplaced Pages is for (this is not another Giano or Vintagekits who has had disputes with some editors but has a basically sound pattern of editing; this is a user with less than 20% of their contributions being to mainspace, more than 50% of which are on the voting system he claims on his userpage to have invented) I believe that any endorsement I make of either blocking or unblocking, he'll either see as "proof of the vendetta against him", or as a "defeat for the cabal", as appropriate. That is not to argue against an unblock – he'd hardly be the first disruptive editor given another chance – but it's a decision I want no part in taking. – iridescent 17:28, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    That's fair enough, but I think you should go further and say that you won't stand in the way of an unblock. Simply blocking and then sitting on the fence doesn't really help. Fritzpoll has taken an admirable and pragmatic stance and has decided to accept the apology, as far as it goes, and move on. I can understand your frustration, but really, the sockpuppet accusations and the block of Abd, and even his comments about you, are a sideshow. If we could get that cleared up and move on to how to handle (and not handle) editors producing (sometimes) problematic content with DYK as a motivation, then that would be good. We could even try and persuade Abd to take a different approach (I haven't read all he has written recently), but that is a separate issue to what you blocked him for. Carcharoth (talk) 17:49, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    "If someone genuinely thinks this was an abusive block (but note the seven warnings after the final warning), or Abd comes up with a legitimate reason to unblock, I won't oppose anyone unblocking" (...) iridescent 22:48, 11 August 2008 (UTC). I suppose we are just waiting for Abd to throw up an unblock template. –xeno (talk) 17:54, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Sorry, I thought I was clear but these threads are starting to get rather tangled; for the record, I will explicitly not stand in the way of, or argue against, anyone unblocking. As Xeno quotes above, if you genuinely think this was abusive – or if you think he's "served his time" – feel free to unblock. I specifically said both on the block log and the block notice that this was not "indefinite" in the sense of "forever". The point I was trying to make above is that I don't think I should be the one to make the decision on this one since after the string of attacks on me I'm not going to be unbiased. – iridescent 18:03, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    I must protest the continuation of Abd's block at this point.

    While I accept Iridescent's good faith in her making of the block, the use of an indefinite block was perhaps not the best choice. When she made the block she stated "If someone genuinely thinks this was an abusive block (but note the seven warnings after the final warning), or Abd comes up with a legitimate reason to unblock, I won't oppose anyone unblocking ..." While I agree that it was not Iridescent's original intent, I am here to claim that this block has become abusive and punitive, and as such I would ask that someone please unblock him at this point.

    In looking over WP:BLOCK can someone please justify the continued blocking of User:Abd under any of the sections listed in WP:BLOCK#When_blocking_may_be_used because I am having a hard time understanding how the continuation of this block serves any of the purposes listed therein. Can someone offer a rationale here, please?

    I will also note that this particular block, IMHO, has now reached a point where the first two sections of WP:BLOCK#When_blocking_may_not_be_used seem quite applicable. It is being used, for all practical purposes, to settle a dispute , , and the edit summary of , and for others here with the power to unblock I suspect that they see this more as WP:CDB. If this is not the case please state your rationale for allowing this to continue.

    --GoRight (talk) 15:46, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Abd has not asked to be unblocked yet. I'm sure if they were to request to be unblocked and retract their comments regarding iridescent, someone would unblock them. I think even Keeper76 has offered to under these circumstances. –xeno (talk) 15:50, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Has yet to* and he's a she. Synergy 15:55, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    User page says his name is "Dennis". Tan ǀ 39 16:14, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Tan {{trout}}. I meant iridescent. Synergy 16:21, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
     Fixed --GoRight (talk) 16:37, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
     Fixedxeno (talk) 15:57, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    But I never referenced irid with a gender-specific pronoun. –xeno (talk) 16:40, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    My fault. GoRight started off by saying him, and its now corrected. /end confusions. Synergy 16:47, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I don't think there is a requirement for Abd to make such a request before an unblock can be performed. I am arguing that, as Iridescent said at the beginning of this, enough is enough. If the block is no longer justified under WP:BLOCK it should be lifted. --GoRight (talk) 16:16, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Well, to try and answer some of your questions: If he has not requested an unblock, there is no reason to unblock, since it was done in good faith and appropriate. Its indef only because there is currently no fixed duration (this is of course up to how Abd proceeds from here on out). When and if he chooses to request it, conversation can flow in that specific direction on his talk page (so long as its not misused and subsequently protected). I hope this helps you understand this situation a little better. Synergy 16:40, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    He was blocked for making baseless accusations towards Fritzpoll (which have since been resolved) but exacerbated the situation by making baseless accusations towards Iridescent. I see no reason for him to be unblocked without a retraction of the latter. –xeno (talk) 16:42, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Seems the cabal is out to get him and prevent him from saving wikipedia - "So, there's a task for me, write about it on the policy pages. Which is, of course, exactly what some admins, explicitly, are trying to prevent. --87.115.24.199 (talk) 09:55, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Well, there is a kind of cabal, the real kind, which is mostly virtual and informal, which is clearly out to get me, but, apparently, they aren't in firm control. Yup. I find out about cracks in policy and try to patch them, usually after someone tripped over them. There are some doozies. Anyway, folks, that's a Fredrick day IP, in case you haven't noticed. Up to his usual. You might notice I'm unblocked, now, courtesy of Xenocidic. Thanks to all who supported me through this block. It took longer than it might otherwise, I didn't put up an unblock template till today. When I put it up, unblock was denied, no big surprise, but the alleged consensus that I should continued to be blocked unravelled quickly with no further action by me. --Abd (talk) 03:55, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Welcome back. Looking at the length of my last two posts I think you may be starting to rub off on me. :) Rlendog (talk) 04:15, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    One of the big problems is that we have a process whereby editors are encouraged to make comments that become decisions based on knee-jerk responses to incomplete analysis of situations, and often highly biased presentations of arguments that exaggerate what evidence does exist. Garbage in, garbage out. We can see, now, that the charges against WW were not based on evidence of copyvio, that evidence still hasn't shown up, so whatever exists must be minor. The other charges looked bad, except that her lack of repetition of each offense (and she had made mistakes, no doubt about it) wasn't brought out, because nobody went over the charges in a systematic way: had she done the thing (often yes but sometimes no), was she warned, did she continue after warning? If not, there was no need for any sanction, the basis warning/behavioral change process worked. I've claimed that AN/I is a terrible place to decide long-term remedies, it's great for deciding on escalating blocks, which are harmless if there is review process that will exonerate an editor who is wrongly blocked. But we actually don't have a good process on that. We have a process that usually works, but which can seriously break down, it's far too unreliable. In any case, we aren't going to fix these problems through shallow, knee-jerk responses, which can easily be very brief. If someone works a half-day to develop an opinion, sure, they can summarize the opinion, sometimes, in a few words. And then people who haven't done that research simply dismiss it as without evidence. If they put in the evidence needed, it is quite likely to be a long post. There are solutions to the problem, but Misplaced Pages doesn't even agree that there is a problem yet, so implementing a solution is way premature. I'm attempting to experiment with solutions in narrow environments, and even that is quite difficult. But I think we will get there. If I didn't think that, I'd abandon the project. It's far too abusive as it is. --Abd (talk) 14:29, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I came across your account as the result of a comment I made on someone else's userpage that was copied to yours. I saw you were blocked and had a look at your history. When you get past the massive massive comments that you make everywhere, you seem to be a SPA - you have some sort of voting system that you want to push and everything you do seems to be geared to getting us to adopt it and nobody is interested. Part of the reason that nobody seems to be interested is that you seem to have no interest in getting engaged in the core function of this project - to produce a quality encyclopedia. Your mainspace edits account are @ 18% but once you remove the edits to the article on your pet voting structure (which I think you claim to invented), it's actually near 9%. Would you consider becoming involved in our core function? writing and producing quality articles? --Hank Pym (talk) 14:45, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Comment: Please note that User:Hank Pym has been confirmed as a ban evading sock per checkuser. --Happy editing! Sincerely, Le Grand Roi des Citrouilles 20:09, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Pym (Fredrick day) knows that if you throw enough mud, some of it sticks. But he's quite confused about this "voting structure" thing. Sure, I'm one of six independent inventors that I know of -- there are probably more -- of what I call Delegable proxy, but the article on that, which I created as Liquid democracy in 2005, I think, for that was the name from another inventor, that was, at the time, better known than my own term, I only edited at the very beginning. Later, I didn't touch it because of COI, so that isn't what Fred is talking about. Must be Instant runoff voting, which isn't exactly my "pet voting structure." For sure. But I happen to be a bit of an expert on it and on the politics of it. Delegable proxy is not a "voting structure," it's a communications structure that can be used to form and estimate consensus on a large scale, efficiently, see WP:Delegable proxy a proposal that was, of course, rejected, because, in spite of all that the creator of that page and I explained, editors considered it a voting method. And, of course, "we don't vote." Of course, when the attempt was made to actually delete the project page, and the majority of editors !voted Delete, and the closer closed with Keep as Rejected, they screamed. How dare the closer disregard the "consensus"! Such is this place. Little by little, we are either waking up or going totally mad. --Abd (talk) 03:54, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    In my opinion, Abd's unblock came too early. Abd succeeded in getting unblocked without having to show any insight. It is clear that Abd will interpret his unblock as a community approval of his behaviour. And it is clear that he won't change his behaviour after these events. Yellowbeard 11:32, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Yellowbeard is an SPA that became entirely devoted to me and my associates or work, since December, 2007. He's correct. Hopefully, this discussion here will cease. Pending resolution satisfactory to me, I have taken voluntary action which largely restricts me to my own user space:

    So the state of play is?

    I note that no-one has yet replied to my question, which was, what exactly is the state of play regarding WW and the supposed DYK ban? Hopefully I can get an answer this time. If I don't, I think I am just going to have to assume that there is no consensus and that it will be up to the DYK regulars to formulate a response for themselves. Gatoclass (talk) 07:37, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    That a topic ban is currently in place, but that I have asked for it to be reviewed by a neutral administrator, who will get around to it this evening. Hope that helps Fritzpoll (talk) 11:21, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Ho hum, the drama goes on. Thanks for letting me know. Gatoclass (talk) 11:23, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    One minor correction to your summary above, Gatoclass. You stated "It transpired that most people merely felt that she needed to acknowledge some mistakes and accept a mentor, but since no-one put up their hand to act as mentor..." however at least two people offered to mentor her. WW simply "archived" those offers along with anything else put on her talk page with in minutes of seeing it and did not respond to them. I, myself, am one of the ones who agreed with the bans because her reactions to them showed she didn't care at all about the guidelines and made it clear that she was her because she felt she "had" to make 10,000 articles and get a lot of DYK's to make a name for herself. I am mildly concerned that she has such an obsession at a young age, one that would daunt many older, more experienced editors.
    I felt a topic ban was necessary to stop her from violating WP:COPYRIGHT (which I know she has done frequently in other topic areas, such as films and television because I was the one who went behind and corrected her and thought, mistakenly, that she had learned rather than just moved to a new area) and from violating WP:V with her inaccurate additions where she admits to not knowing what she's reading or writing about, her actually sourcing herself in some articles, etc. These are two very core policies that editors can not just be allowed to ignore because they are "young" or "inexperienced." I know another editor who is about 10 who has learned about those and come to understand both reasonably well enough that he even checks to make sure a source is WP:RS if he isn't sure himself. If a 10 year old can learn that without having to come to this extremely, sure WW should have gotten it by now? Her talk page history shows that rather than learn, she is ignoring, and that is not good. I would like to see her get turned around, as I think she does have the potential to be a good editor if she'd stop ignoring the community, policies, and guidelines, to do so. I worked with her on a few articles and it took some time but I thought she'd learned something, but it seems she hasn't learned to apply those teachings across the board, and has allowed herself to become obsessed with amassing DYKs. -- ] (] · ]) 14:30, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    When did the copyvios that you refer to occur? The most recent copyvio that I have seen evidence of to date occurred more than 6 months ago. If you know of recent copyvios I would like to see evidence of that, because that would likely impact my current position that the ban (that I originally supported) was probably inappropriate. But if the copyvios are from a few months ago or more I do not think we should be sanctioning her for that now, as that issue would have already been addressed. The quality issue is still outstanding, but I have looked at some of her creations, and while there have been errors it has hardly been the situation that was represented at the original AN/I - that she either just copies straight from her sources (no evidence in the past 6 months that I've seen) or changes some words to avoid copyvio but doesn't care about whether the result is correct or not. Sometimes the result has been incorrect (which is a legitimate issue, but not the overwhelming one presented at AN/I), but more often than not she gets things right, and the inaccuracies are typically minor. For example, I nominated her Jillian Clare article for DYK. I had to expand the article and add references to get it to be eligible for DYK. But the only error I found in the original article as WW created it was that she referred to Star Trek IV as an "episode", rather than as a "movie". And given that it is one of now 10 movies, describing it as an episode is arguably accurate. Rlendog (talk) 16:38, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Having reviewed the various threads myself for the first time I can now comment. There was a clear community consensus to topic ban her from DYK. The most important underlying problems were concern about plagiarism and writing articles that just weren't right. The intent of topic banning her from DYK was to get her to slow down and do a better job herself, instead of depending on the rest of the community to repair her articles to an acceptable standard after the page has already been on the main page. Thus someone who quickly forwards her suggestions for DYK noms is undercutting the intent of the ban, and in the long run is likely to lead to further restrictions being placed. The community was open to mentoring - which would require the mentor to actually review her work closely - but WW did not indicate any such openness (and some evidence from her talk archives seems to indicate that she is not willing to work with or learn from anybody).

    It might be possible for another editor to review her new page creations, take responsibility themselves to make sure it is a decent article, explain to her the changes that were made and why they had to be made, and then nominate the resulting article for DYK under their own name. When they stop having to make changes to her articles to get them into decent shape, then it would be time to nominate on behalf of WW. It would be most effective if each type of change was made in a single edit with appropriate edit summaries - say one edit to clean up any copyvio/plagiarism, one edit to correct the article's wording and facts, one edit to bring the referencing up to snuff, and (it appears likely to be needed) one edit to use multiple sources. This would have the effect of mentoring her, though it would work better if she were actively participating in two way communication. Given the pace at which she has been operating, this may be more than any one editor can do on their own - and given her prior attitude we may have trouble finding volunteers. It takes me a couple hours to produce a decent non-stub article - and it will probably take about as long for any reviewer to make sure that a new article from this editor is in fact not just a stub (regardless of the presence of absence of a stub template). GRBerry 14:32, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    I think you're right. I also think we should not be spending lots of editor time, just to facilitate some editor who seems more interested in racking up a new high score than in collaborating usefully with others. Anyone who actively subverts the topic ban probably needs to also be topic banned. Friday (talk) 14:53, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Excuse me? What in the original topic ban or consensus thereof indicated that the ban applied to other editors nominating articles created by WW? Some supporters of the ban explicitly stated that their conditions for lifting the ban were that other editors succesfully nominate at least 5 (or maybe it was some other number) of her articles to DYK. Surely they weren't supporting a ban on other editors nominating her articles. And while that wasn't my position, the ban as I supported it was applicable only to her self-nominations.Rlendog (talk) 16:41, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    GRBerry, I was going to ask/echo "is it worth it?" when I saw Friday had said rather much the same thing. As you hint, if there are volunteers willing to help out with this, wonderful but otherwise it seems to me she isn't ready to do this on her own yet. Gwen Gale (talk) 15:05, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    One of the problems is that, if you look closely at new articles (not just the ones being looked at here), lots of them have problems. That is part of the point of a wiki, after all, that people come along and improve what you have written. Where to draw the line with problems with articles and explaining this to those who start articles in a stubby state (we've all done that, I would venture to say), is tricky. I've spent time trying to find out more about Paul E. Pieris Deraniyagala, to see if WW's choice of one source over another for one date (1967, instead of 1937) was correct, but it is difficult. I agree with those that have said that an obsession with DYK is not good. The aim should be to improve as an editor overall, not rack up DYKs. Oh, and in case anyone thinks I write good stubs, List of Arctic expeditions needs attention... Carcharoth (talk) 15:58, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    So you have a verdict yet? Because I'm still not clear on what's happening. Is she barred from participating in DYK unless she accepts a mentor, and if so, who is putting their hand up for the job? Gatoclass (talk) 11:57, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    She is barred from DYK. Mentoring is a possible path to removing the bar. There are others, but they all require WW to do things she hasn't yet done - or even shown any understanding of. To put it bluntly, she is going to have to change her ways significantly for the DYK bar to be lifted, and thus far the only acknowledgment of problems I've seen is that she has admitted the need to check WP:AFC submissions for copyright issues. DGG, Tim Vickers, Fritzpoll, and S. Dean Jameson had previously offered to mentor and work with her to various degrees at various times. In late July, she did work a little with DGG. . For Tim and S. Dean Jameson, she thought it was "wierd" that people were trying to help her, said that she didn't want anybody talking to her, basically said that she won't listen to anyone who thinks there is a problem with her work, and said that she'll only work with others if she is in charge. GRBerry 14:46, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Regarding her "wierd" comment, I am certainly not alleging ANYTHING here on the part of those who approached her and who I recognize as being sincere in their efforts, but if you had a 16 year old daughter working on the internet today would you want her to be befriending everyone who approaches her out of the blue? From her perspective people she knows nothing about are approaching her, uninvited, and offering to be her friend. If I were her parent I would encourage her to be suspicious of such people, wouldn't you? --GoRight (talk) 16:53, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    One thing I have discovered is that this "topic ban" for WW didn't get added to Misplaced Pages:Editing restrictions. So Abd's point that the paperwork wasn't filled out is valid, let alone the points that people are making that the original case may have been overstated. My verdict, if it helps at all, is that everyone should try and move on from the mess that resulted, and try and start again with assessing what needs to be done. ie. Restart disussion from the point of the topic ban proposal. Sorry if that isn't very helpful, but that's about as much as I can make out at the moment. Carcharoth (talk) 16:06, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Since the most significant factor in the original discussion which made a ban even a consideration was the accusation of wide spread copyvio on her part, and since is it impossible for us to prove that these haven't occurred, perhaps those making the charge should now be required to provide diff's in sufficient quantity and recency to justify the continuation of the ban? --GoRight (talk) 16:27, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    The discussion seems to have become focused on copyvio. I think many people joined this case during or after the argument at AN/I here, that started on 28 July, where the DYK topic ban was proposed. In deciding the way forward it would be helpful to forget the mess of accusation and counter-accusation that followed and re-read the discussion of Blechnic's original expression of concern about WW's activities on 21 July here which was not limited to copyvios, but included poor sourcing, taking articles from AfC without adequate checking, and inaccuracies caused by haste and by writing on subjects she did not understand. Mentors/nominators need to be alert to all these. JohnCD (talk) 21:08, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Even the July 21 thread is heavily focused on copyvios and plagarism. Although even there User:Blechnic concedes that she copies "cleverly" - as far as I can tell he is saying that she copies but changes the wording from her sources. Which she does. But that is no longer a copyvio. Admittedly, that could lead to different problems - i.e., her inaccuracies when revising the wording - but I'll come back to that. Another problem discussed in the July 21 thread is poor sourcing. But that is not a problem unique to WW or to DYK. That is the case with many newly created Start class articles. That is the nature of most newly created start class articles - they have a limited amount of information and are often poorly sourced. At least with a DYK we know that one item from the article was traced back to at least a plausibly reliable source. And then there are the issues from the July 28 thread - the reverting an edit to keep an article over 1500 characters, using uncivil language in the edit summary while doing so, and trying to lie about the latter. But all that at worst was worth a short block, and most likely at most a warning. Which gets us back to the inaccuracies that sometimes emerge when she tries to reword articles or journals she doesn't fully understand. That is the one issue she has that is serious and recent (unless someone can show evidence of a recent copyvio; so far no one has come up with anything more recent than 7 months ago). But even that seems to be overblown. The only topics where any evidence of significant inaccuracies have been shown are in paleontology articles, which do seem to be a particular interest of WW's. Although as User:GoRight has indicated, there don't seem to be any such issues with her paleontology articles (alneit stubs) created since this whole drama erupted. But if the genuine issue is inaccuracies in paleontology articles (far less than the accusations in the July 21 or July 28 threads that led to the topic ban) then a DYK ban is hardly an appropriate remedy. At worst that ban should be limited to paleontology articles, or better yet, allow her to nominate paleontology articles to DYK but require a 2nd opinion from another knowledgeable editor before they can be used. Rlendog (talk) 04:00, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    One last point. Much was made in the July 28 thread (and to a lesser extent the July 21 thread) of her just creating articles to hunt for DYK "medals" and reach a goal she set for herself of 5000 DYKs. People felt that was inapprorpriate (I too at first). But even here there is more than initially meets the eye. First of all, a desire for DYK trophies is in itself hadly a bad thing. The purpose of the awards must be to encourage creation of DYK articles or else they wouldn't be there. Of course, if editors get sloppy just for the purpose of collecting DYK awards then it becomes counterproductive. But what was not mentioned in those threads was that WW's other goal is 10,000 newly created articles. That means 5000 non-DYK articles. That is hardly the goal of a mere trophy collector. It means her goal is to put in the effort to create 5000 articles that she would not expect to get DYK credit for. Also, having 30 DYK articles to her credit, she is entitled to the award for 25 DYKs. As far as I can tell from her user page or from the list of DYK contributors, it does not appear that she ever collected or tried to collect this award. Strange conduct if her sole goal was (as stated in the AN/I threads) just to collect DYK medals. And even after her ban (which apparently upset her very much) she went back to creating new articles with no expectation whatsoever of them achieving DYK status -and she seems genuinely surprised on her user page that 2 of her articles were successfully nominated during her Wikibreak. I think her ambitions are a lot more complex than was represented in the AN/I threads. She seems to genuinely want to improve the encycolpedia by creating new articles, and DYKs are just one element of that goal. And she seems to respond to criticism, even if she doesn't necessarily acknowledge it immediately, as she apparently stopped generating copyvios months ago when the issue was brought to her attention. Rlendog (talk) 04:11, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Having others nominate WW's pages for DYK

    Since Abd's block has removed the voice of WW's advocate from this forum, I shall attempt to fill that role during his absence. I have argued above, and Fritzpoll has concurred, that it will be acceptable for others to nominate WW's material so long as the nominator accepts responsibility for any quality concerns therein, and any such nominations shall not be considered an evasion of WW's ban. Is there any serious objection to this approach? --GoRight (talk) 15:54, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    In fact, in the interests of time and effort, let us begin with a straw poll to gauge the level of consensus on this point.

    Those in favor of allowing others to nominate WW's material for DYK per the conditions stated above:

    1. --GoRight (talk) 16:01, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    2. --Rlendog This is what the original topic ban was, at least as I supported it. Some other people supporting the ban explicitly stated that their conditions for lifting the ban would be that other editors successfully nominate at least 5 (or some other number) of her new articles to DYK. So I don't see how anyone can conclude that there was a consensus for the topic ban to be any more restrictive than this. And I will say that in the time since the ban I have become concerned that my support of even this version of the ban was probably hasty. I have yet to see ANY eveidence of a copyvio (the most serious infraction) from the past 6 months, so I am concerned that the discussion of copyvios in the original discussuion was a red herring. Maybe a serious issue in the past, but apparently long since addressed. The issue of accuracy remains, but even there, having looked at some of her other creations, the issue seems less prevalent than it was presented at the original AN/I. Rlendog (talk) 16:05, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    3. --Agree. Sticky Parkin 22:50, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    4. ---Agree. This is really standard. Nominating an article is often by other than the creator. She's not banned from creating articles. Misplaced Pages articles aren't expected to be perfect; DYK nomination actually results in rapid cleanup, much more often than not. If you look at what's being nominated, you'll see that a lot of pretty bad stuff is nominated. Her articles are way above the norm, so I wouldn't even think that an editor should be obsessive about checking the articles. I did one nomination for her, and I checked all the references and fixed some missing citations. I probably did a worse job of it than she would have, but others then helped some more. I don't see the reasoning behind the ban. It protects nothing. But it exists, so, in the meantime, we can avert part of the damage by simply recognizing what shouldn't have been controversial in the first place: anyone can nominate any article, and the community hasn't been banned from nominating WW's articles. --Abd (talk) 04:01, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    5. --Agree. This is similar to something I suggested on WT:DYK to remedy the situation, so of course I endorese this.--King Bedford I 04:41, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Those with different conditions:

    1. Nominators need to actually review the article themselves for accuracy, copyright/plagiarism, and reliable sourcing. They should make any necessary changes before nominating the article, not merely "accept responsibility for any quality concerns". GRBerry 16:03, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      FWIW, I had expected as much but thanks for the clarification. --GoRight (talk) 16:20, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      Having just noticed it myself for the first time in a long time, I'd also be happier if they were processing User:AlexNewArtBot/GoodSearchResult or Special:Newpages rather than specifically looking to get WW's contribs nominated. Not that this must be a necessary condition, but given the proxying policy, it would be a good idea. GRBerry 16:31, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      Agree with GoRight. I would assume that anyone nominating an article (by WW or anyone else) would check the article for quality before nominating as a matter of course. Rlendog (talk) 16:28, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    2. Agree (including GRBerry's condition). I agree with some reluctance, because I think the focus on DYK numbers is harmful, to her and to WP, and I am concerned about her continued refusal to engage in dialogue or accept a mentor or admit that there might (have been) a problem. But perhaps article discussions with other nominators will improve things. JohnCD (talk) 21:21, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Those opposed:

    Review of the Specific Allegations of copyvio

    I wish to review in detail any examples of copyvio alleged against WW. Thus far I am only aware of one specific example and here is what I turned up. Are there other examples which have already been identified?

    Item 1
    Original report:
    From User:Blechnic, and
    Chronology:
    WW identifies a page that was started in the sandbox by another user but was never created, , she then asks a more experienced user if she should create it, Antandrus Archive No. 26., who then indicates that it is an "unusually good for first by newbies". She then creates the stub from the sandbox version, , and begins to wikify the stub (see her edits in the history ). As part of the improvement process User:Jllm06 adds references back to the original source, , approximately 11 days later.
    User:Blechnic creates a user page section to record notes, , and WW replies there with an explanation, some hours later.
    Conclusions:
    1. The actual copying of copyrighted material was done by someone other than WW. While she should have been more careful about using such a stub, this is something that could have slipped by anyone, especially a newbie. In fact, it even slipped by a more experienced editor who subsequently added the references back to the original source.
    2. Given the amount of text involved here it is not clear that this is even a copyright violation under fair use standards once it was subsequently referenced back to the original source.
    Comments on this review:

    Review of User:Wilhelmina Will's articles

    WW maintains a list of the articles she has created here, Articles I have mothered (created).

    Review results:

    • Today I reviewed numbers 357-374 (her latest submissions) with the following observations:
      • She has a number of scientific stubs created for various extinct animals. There is very little information on these pages but they are valuable as stubs, IMHO, as a couple of them have attracted additional user inputs. I reviewed the content and compared it to the sources she had used. I observed no copyvios and the information that is there is accurate per the sources. I can't speak to the WP:RS nature of these sources, however, but they don't appear to be alarming in any way. The images she used are from the wikimedia commons. My conclusion: no problems.
      • She has a couple of pages on wrestlers. These pages have a lot of content which are mostly referenced to a wide range of fan sites. I expect that this is the norm for this type of article, but I could be wrong. They seem well written and provide a nice overview of the subjects, IMHO. I followed a number of the references provided on each page, but not every reference, and her use of the content from these sources seems appropriate. I did not observe any direct copyvio problems in my random checks. Other users have already begun to enhance these articles. My conclusion: good articles, no problems.
      • She has a couple of BLPs on people from the entertainment industry. The content appears reasonable to me and the text is well written. I checked a reasonable subset of the information against the sources she had used and I observed no copyvios and an accurate use of the information from those sources. My conclusion: good articles, no problems.
      • On all of the pages with significant content I would randomly select significant phrases and googled for an exact match. I found no hits based on these random checks.
      • I won't claim to have vetted every word of every article but I believe I gave them a reasonably thorough look in each case, but your mileage may vary.
    Extended content
    --GoRight (talk) 03:19, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I asked again and again for copyvio evidence, and nothing was provided, except the single old example. That doesn't mean there is none, this editor has written a lot of articles, and people can make mistakes. But I'd think that with Blechnic hot on her trail, he'd have come up with more if it was as common as would justify some kind of reprimand. What I saw was a quite respectable editor, with 30 DYKs. That is not a small accomplishment in itself. She made a few mistakes, but there is no sign that she repeated them after warning. And if there was a problem, it would be in article space. The alleged problem of her DYK nomination "greed" was a total red herring. If she's creating bad articles, the quickest way for them to be exposed and corrected is to DYK nominate them. As has been pointed out, if there is a problem, it would be with DYK policy. If we don't want to motivate people to create and nominate articles, why do we give awards? So she's motivated, and then we blame her for being motivated? There was one instance where she was a few characters short of 1500, the supposed requirement. And so she reverted an otherwise-proper edit on that basis, and very naively said that was her reason. Now, if she'd been faced with a sympathetic editor -- and we really should be sympathetic with each other, the other editor might have helped find some factoid to insert. Instead, he went ballistic. --Abd (talk) 04:48, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I invite you, and others who care to, to go through her articles in a manner similar to what I have done (I plan to continue going through them a little each day) and do a reasonable level of checking and report what you find here as I have done above. Interested parties can select a small range of articles and reserve them here with a first level bulleted one liner saying which ones you plan to go through. That way we won't duplicate efforts. And then when you are done replace the one liner with the summary of the results as I have done above. Soon we will have a good record to judge whether there is actually a problem here, or not. --GoRight (talk) 07:35, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Extended content
    Well, I'm not planning to do it. I don't think it is necessary. A number of editors have looked for copyvio in her edits, and little has been found. Whatever has been asserted was old, and, as you pointed out, not necessarily even copyvio when sourced. In the absence of evidence, we can assume that there is insufficient copyvio to be a basis for any remedy. If there is to be a ban of some kind, it would require other evidence. Further, the ban against DYK self-nomination, in place, is not preventative, it's apparently punitive. She can still create bad articles if she wants to or is unable to do otherwise. But that's self-punishing, she won't reach her DYK goals, which are indeed ambitious, if she creates bad articles, and if she's creating bad articles, that's a separate issue; should the net value of her contributions be less than the effort needed to fix whatever errors she makes, a remedy would be warning and block for ignoring or being unable to respond to the warnings, to protect the article space, which is, after all, what all this is about. If someone thinks her articles to be a problem, the answer is simple: watch her DYK nominations if you think DYK is the problem -- it isn't, it's actually part of the solution -- and check the articles. Might be one article per day. And fix the problems. In every case I've seen, that has involved a few edits, resulting in better articles that wouldn't have existed otherwise. Work with her, not against her. Help her, don't attempt to drag her to AN/I. Is this a difficult concept? I wouldn't think so, but apparently .... --Abd (talk) 14:40, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Both User:GoRight and User:Abd are not helpful in this thread. I recommend that they both back off and let other editors handle this matter. Jehochman 14:43, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Please explain how reviewing her articles for the alleged violations is not helpful. Do you suggest that we instead let the unsubstantiated accusations stand, and thereby allow her DYK ban to stand based on no evidence? --GoRight (talk) 20:21, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    The length of this thread shows signs of argumentum ad nauseum. Rather than continuing here, perhaps you could request a review by the body appointed to handle such matters. It does not seem you have had much luck convincing the community to overturn the ban. I take no position on the underlying dispute as I have not reviewed it yet. The length of this conversation indicates a problem, for sure. Jehochman 22:17, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    "I take no position on the underlying dispute as I have not reviewed it yet." - Perhaps you should before commenting further. --GoRight (talk) 22:31, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Is Jehochman actually suggesting that we go to ArbComm when there is a neutral administrator, designated by the closing admin, reviewing the case, and that this may resolve it without further ado? Has he noticed that I suggested, many times, this wasn't the place to try to resolve this, but so many editors seem to have insisted on going right ahead? That I suggested we didn't need to compile evidence on WW's edits here, that's not what AN is for? I did not come here, in fact, to overturn the ban. At all. I came to respond to the issues raised by Fritzpoll. The ban stood, even though I considered it defective in certain ways, I advised WW to respect it, then developed a way to minimize the damage pending further resolution. This was a minimally disruptive plan. And, in fact, it is still going on. I'd suggest to GoRight that if he wants to continue to search for copyvios in WW's work, something I consider unnecessary at this point -- we don't have to prove that she never made any, and, in fact, she could have created *many* articles with copyvio as long as it wasn't recent -- he should do it on a user page. It could then be used in ensuing process if it is necessary, which it may not be. We already know that, in spite of multiple requests, the copyvio charge was essentially false. I.e., there may have been an isolated incident, perhaps, but there was no ongoing pattern, hence copy vio as a basis for the ban -- and this is the main reason the closing admin gave -- was defective. What happens here is that no clear decision is made, arguments go back and forth about this or that. There is no open case for AN to decide, this whole discussion was a mistake, that's what I've been saying from the beginning. It's like someone taking an AfD decision they don't like to AN. Or, more accurately, a closing admin who is asked about his decision and who comes here to find out if he "judged the consensus right," when that wasn't the issue at all. If he wasn't clear about his decision and willing to take personal responsbility for it, he should not have closed, period. He didn't close at the time, nobody closed, so I wonder at the comment of an admin above that she was about to close "with the same decision." The discussion simply petered out and went into archive, with nobody taking responsibility for a decision. I really wish people would take the time to either (1) investigate this or (2) assume a little good faith on my part when I present the results of my investigations. In an environment like this, too many seem to want a brief conclusion, not a detailed examination, and then they will agree with it or not, not based on reviewing the evidence, but on ... what? The name of the editor? The phase of the moon? The faction they perceive the editors as belonging to? But, really, my opinion is that nobody should vote in any of our processes without investigating the evidence, which would, yes, reduce greatly the number of people voting. But we'd get better decisions. --Abd (talk) 22:45, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    User:Kanabekobaton

    It's beyond time for a Japanese-speaking editor or admin to step in here. This editor has been making dozens upon dozens of edits a day for the last couple of years, and maybe has been bothered to use the edit summary twice. The edit history on the user's talk page shows that the typical response to warnings is to delete the message without comment and continue on just as before. Kanabekobaton has been asked on countless occasions to stop this behavior or at least give account for the actions. No change or explanation has been forthcoming. The userbox on the userpage suggests that English is not this user's first language. That's not important. What is important is that the total lack of response to the inquires of other users is not acceptable. DarkAudit (talk) 17:07, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    User has been banned on ja Misplaced Pages since 18 April and has had similar bad faith edits on other wikis, endorse indef ban here and community block. treelo radda 18:08, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Editor has now switched to television-related articles after being run out of beauty pageant articles. Over 150 edits today alone. Every one tagged "minor", even the moves and redirects. And not a single explanation for why the edit was made. Something smells here. DarkAudit (talk) 23:38, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Has he been banned? His talk page at ja.wikipedia suggests that he got a UsernameBlock. —C.Fred (talk) 00:50, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    From the talk on the Korean Wiki comes implications of misconduct. he's been warned on the Simple English wiki, and it looks like there are a fair number of other warnings where he has edited. DarkAudit (talk) 03:06, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Support a block if he doesn't engage with something other than a template. He's using Huggle to template anyone, experienced or not, who reverts him. Then, after editors remove the warnings from their own user talk pages, he adds them back. He's definitely disruptive and my good faith is seriously stretched for this user. KrakatoaKatie 23:53, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I informed user of this discussion within minutes of posting here, urging a response. None was forthcoming, yet hundreds of similar edits poured forth afterwards. I have subsequently informed them that with the evidence of a preexisting ban on another Misplaced Pages, continued silence could only result in further sanctions if the behavior persisted. DarkAudit (talk) 00:01, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I've warned him too, when I reverted a page move he made. He's been editing since 2045 UTC without a break, with only two or three minutes between edits, and this is his typical pattern. He does this three or four times a day, like this is all he's doing with his life. If he doesn't respond or stop these edits in a few moments, I'll block him myself for disruption until he explains himself. Review of my actions is welcome. KrakatoaKatie 00:17, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    So he's not actually doing anything wrong? I've spot checked at least 20 different contribs at this point, and haven't seen any actual disruption. -- Ned Scott 00:21, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    He's been doing moves and reverts without bothering to give any reason why, and refusing to respond when challenged on the action on talk pages, even when others have had to go back and revert. He has been given final warnings on his talk page, but merely undid the edit and continued right along. Each individual edit or block of edits may not be disruptive, but the sheer quantity of them combined with the utter refusal to engage in any sort of communication with fellow editors, is disruptive. It asks the rest of us to be mindreaders, Misplaced Pages is not a collection of mindreaders. DarkAudit (talk) 00:33, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Exactly. I've had to fix two or three things he's done in just the last few hours. He's moving pages and creating new pages and fixing dabs but he's not always doing it correctly, and nobody seems to be able to engage him in a dialogue to ask him what's going on. Some of these moves and new pages are because of punctuation, like tildes and accent marks. He's going so fast that he must be working off some type of list, first beauty pageants, then television, then athletics, then geography, and so forth. I'm bothered both by speed and variety of subjects. I won't block for now, but somebody has to watch him and I can't stay up 24/7. KrakatoaKatie 00:44, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    (ec) It depends. Right now his edits are all compliant. At times they won't be. I've pointed the issue out before, when he was on a streak where 3 out of 4 edits did require reversion. He may be well-intentioned, but his reluctance to use edit summaries creates problems—almost to the point of it being disruptive in and of itself. Certainly, any evidence of a change-revert-revert again without discussion would warrant a block, IMO. —C.Fred (talk) 00:38, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Like Stifle I've looked through a quite a few edits here ( and some on other Wikis). The only significant issues I see are the marking of edits as minor, the lack of edit summaries and possibly the lack of community involvement. I am yet to see a pattern of poor editing and cannot see a reason for a block. I've dropped a note on his talk page about this. He seems to make lots of good edits and in this case steering the user to better community engagement and better editing practice will achieve good ends, I can't see that blocking him will - Peripitus (Talk) 00:50, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    looking over his contribs, I get a strong sense of, um, mechanicalness. Looie496 (talk) 00:48, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Except it looks to be manual, based on this edit. —C.Fred (talk) 01:05, 13 August 2008 (UTC)


    Never an edit summary, almost all edits marked as minor, clearly doesn't understand swaths of English idiom hence makes mistakes now and then, which means lots of mistakes since he makes lots of edits and unwilling to discuss. I think it's disruptive. Some editors may believe the helpful edits outweigh the worries and it's worthwhile to quietly clean up after this editor but I don't. Gwen Gale (talk) 00:55, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Here he did delete content without explanation. I was generous and gave uw-delete3 (if only because I don't want to say "will" be blocked with this discussion ongoing), but a repeat would be enough for me to block him. —C.Fred (talk) 01:14, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    It may take someone posting a message to his talk page in Japanese to get his attention. DarkAudit (talk) 01:30, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    And when I tried with 妨げることができる。 答えなければならない。 (You may be blocked. You must respond. Reverse translated to It is possible to obstruct. You must answer.), he merely undid my edit. I reverted his undo. DarkAudit (talk) 01:37, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    And once again with a heading of "You must answer" and a link here. Undid the post. It's clear that this user refuses to discuss this or any other matter he finds himself involved in. That is *highly* disruptive to the process. DarkAudit (talk) 01:47, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Just to note, it is not vandalism for him to remove a message from his talk page, nor is it appropriate to keep putting it back per WP:TALK. His removal is considered a sign he has read it. -- ] (] · ]) 01:46, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    A reply of some sort would be a sign that he read it. Deleting the message is not a reply. This user has been asked on numerous occasions to account for his actions. He has not bothered to say a word in *any* language. DarkAudit (talk) 01:51, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    True, the user is not vandalizing anything. However, his unwillingness to talk about his many edits has become disruptive and I have blocked him pending discussion. Gwen Gale (talk) 01:50, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Just a note, I did notice him using a summary once, , where he incorrectly identified an edit as vandalism, not to mention called it minor. He edits, imo, the most random selection of pages and at a pretty quick rate. It seems like there is always something for him to change. I know that I couldn't just open up a page and be able to edit it. I'm not even sure if he is Japanese like we suspected. This is the most bizarre user I have ever seen, and in addition, he has definitely made some disruptive edits on Eurovision articles. (does he have auto minor edits checked in preferences?) Grk1011 (talk) 03:19, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Grk1011: Exactly. When I read that he marks almost all his edits as minor I too thought that he must have "Mark all edits minor by default" turned on in his preferences. I have now left a message on his talk page asking him to turn that setting off.
    Why do we even have that setting? I can't imagine a case when we would need that setting.
    --David Göthberg (talk) 04:04, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    We have it because it is very helpful for editors who contribute minor edits mainly (there are too many). -- fayssal / Wiki me up® 09:07, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Gwen, please unblock now. You've blocked him for not discussing his non-controversial edits? What the hell? Like David mentions above, the minor thing is probably just a setting that needs to be changed. See also User talk:Kanabekobaton/Archive 1#April 2008. Leave the poor guy alone. -- Ned Scott 04:17, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    He was not blocked for not discussing his non-controversial edits. Have you read this thread? Gwen Gale (talk) 04:19, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    "True, the user is not vandalizing anything. However, his unwillingness to talk about his many edits has become disruptive and I have blocked him pending discussion." I guess you don't remember saying that.
    The user has made a handful of mistakes, but nothing that would ever warrant a blocking like this. There is no urgency here, and your actions will only inflame the situation. -- Ned Scott 04:30, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    He wasn't blocked for vandalism either. He was blocked for disruption, as I said. Meanwhile, you seem to be the one who's inflaming things. Gwen Gale (talk) 04:34, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    (Outdent)What disruption? You have blatantly blocked him for not discussing his edits, which he is not required to do. -- Ned Scott 04:39, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    You're mistaken about why I blocked this editor. Altogether, this mix of refusing to talk at all about marking hundreds of edits a day as minor when many are not minor, making mistaken edits and page moves which other editors must clean up (and sometimes templating these editors for vandalism when they do), along with an utter lack of edit summaries has stirred up so much worry that many editors have posted in this thread, wondering what to do about it. That is an urgent disruption of the project. Let's wait and see what he has to say. Gwen Gale (talk) 04:48, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    You're already backtracking on why you've blocked him . You can't weasel your way out of a bad block. I'm not going to allow you to sweep this under the rug and hope everyone just forgets about him. We've got three diffs cited in this entire discussion, none of which call for this kind of action. I'm tired of checking his contribs and not finding anything, so unless anyone has some actual diffs of disruption, this guy needs to be unblocked. -- Ned Scott 04:52, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    You had misread my blocking statement so I made the syntax more clear. See the block log. He was blocked for disruption. Gwen Gale (talk) 05:10, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    There is no disruption. You've failed to show evidence of disruption. Where's the diffs? Where's the fire? KrakatoaKatie gave him a vandalism warning today for a good pave move that another editor (C.Fred) agreed with. You're all going around in circles, no one being able to actually show this user doing anything wrong except a hand full of minor mistakes. I'd rather not do something as drastic as an arbcom request, but if you're going to blatantly bullshit me like this, then I'll do just that. -- Ned Scott 05:18, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Look at his talk page and the archive. He has been asked over and over again to explain why he edited the way he did, to the point that he was blocked for 3RR in June, and warned to keep out of other articles. And those are just since April. Before that he just deleted all talk page messages. He edits without regard for his fellow editors, at the rate of hundreds an hour, leaving the rest of us to somehow decipher his reasoning and motives, and to clean up any damage he leaves behind. That is as disruptive as it gets. DarkAudit (talk) 05:37, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    How am I meant to respond to talk like that? Gwen Gale (talk) 05:29, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Are you forgetting the arena dispute from April? Where he insisted that arenas were actually stadia? Look at the logs of his talk page at all the different users asking him to say something, anything about why he was editing the way he was. There are probably three times as many requests that he summarily deleted. It doesn't take vandalism to be disruptive. Charging through Misplaced Pages at a hundred edits an hour, other users be damned, who cares if mistakes are made, is just as disruptive, if not worse. DarkAudit (talk) 05:04, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      • Considering I stepped though those edits one by one, I don't think I'm forgetting them. I was the only one to point out that more than one admin was ignorantly reverting him and then breaking an infobox. Everyone else just assumed he was being disruptive. -- Ned Scott 05:14, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
        • But how the hell were we supposed to know? I kept trying to ask him about his Stansbury Hall edit, but got no reply. I see that building every single day. I should know what an old basketball *arena* looks like. The infobox was fine when I created the page. It wasn't broken when I reverted him. Continuing to revert when an unexplained edit is challenged *is* disruptive, it *is* rude, and it *is* unacceptable. Take a look at this block of edits from just yesterday regarding the Miss World pages. Warring templates without any further discussion. Communication should be at the heart of the project. This user flatly refuses to communicate with his fellow editors. If he doesn't want to give account for his actions when needed, then the block should stay. DarkAudit (talk) 05:25, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Three comments. We read above:

    when I tried with 妨げることができる。 答えなければならない。 (You may be blocked. You must respond. Reverse translated to It is possible to obstruct. You must answer.), he merely undid my edit. I reverted his undo.

    First, and as somebody else has pointed out, that reversion wasn't called for.

    Secondly, the Japanese-language message strikes me as a curious mixture of ambiguous (the first half) and brusque (particularly the second). I don't recommend that you repost it anywhere. There could be a place for a Japanese-language message, but not this particular Japanese-language message.

    And the block: The user is experienced, and can read English. If they can't fully understand the message in English, they'll be able to ask about it in English. An indefinite block is not an eternal block, and this user is free to challenge it at any time. -- Hoary (talk) 05:00, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    I had to try something to get a reply. He wasn't responding to anything in English, so what else could I do short of going to his home and giving him a good shake? Yeah it was brusque. It had to be. We were talking about blocking the guy and he wasn't bothering to do anything to defend his position. He had to respond if he didn't want to be sanctioned. He ignored it and continued to plow ahead like nothing could touch him. That is not acceptable. DarkAudit (talk) 05:10, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    There is no reason either to be ambiguous or to be brusque. If you want him to respond, you might take your cue from the ja:WP template designed for just this purpose. It's right here. Note its content: 対話拒否はやめてください。これ以上続ければ、ウィキペディアの編集ができなくなる投稿ブロックの対象となります。ご注意ください。An entirely different register from your prose, and complete with formulaic honorifics. (I shan't bother to make a literal translation, which would sound stilted and laughable.) -- Hoary (talk) 05:39, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    It's better than what I used... babelfish. DarkAudit (talk) 05:42, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Sorry I stepped away for a few hours. Ned, don't pick on Gwen for a revert I made. In the article you mention, Sardis Road ground, I interpreted from the context of the article that the word 'ground' meant an athletic ground or field. So, when I saw Sardis Road ground being moved to Sardis Road, it looked to me like a poor move, especially given the lack of communication from this editor. I reverted and left a short note. B to the R to the... nothing. That's the whole point - he won't communicate about his intent or his reaction or the price of milk in Sardinia. Not "hello", not "go to hell", nothing.
    I don't see us as 'going in circles' or trying to punish him, either. I looked at every one of his last 500 edits (roughly the last 48 hours) before I made my second post here. Further, I looked at every edit he's made to both the talk space (no dialogue, just moves of talk pages with article pages that create an edit on the talk page) and user talk space (100% templates, plus reverting other users removal of his templates and other material on their own talk pages), regardless of the date. Most of his changes and moves look okay, but the ones that are not need explanation and/or discussion, especially the moves. He was making 25 to 40 edits an hour for literally hours and days on end, and the mistakes and bad decisions should have had some discussion. He was warned in April, by C.Fred, to improve his communication, so this isn't a sudden, spur-of-the-moment, 'gotcha' block.
    We can't do WP:BRD, as I tried to do with Sardis Road, if someone insists on the bold without the discuss. He has not responded at all, even to this block. His talk page and archive are full of pleas, begging, even, to communicate with other editors, going back several months. He may have the potential to be a good editor/WikiGnome if he would just engage with other humans. Since he has been making hundreds of edits very quickly, I do not think it is unreasonable to block pending a short explanation from him. KrakatoaKatie 06:49, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Ned Scott: That I have left a message on Kanabekobaton's talk page asking him to turn of the "Mark all edits minor by default" setting in his Misplaced Pages preferences only potentially solves one of the problems. I just wanted to report here that I thought that was the case and that I had asked him to fix it. It doesn't solve all the other problems.
    I haven't personally checked up on Kanabekobaton so I should probably not say anything, but if what I read here is true then I think he should remain blocked. It is very frustrating when a user refuses to answer any messages. It makes it more or less impossible to work with that user. I think he should remain blocked until he agrees to communicate properly.
    By the way, can a blocked user still edit his talk page and thus answer? Or does he have to edit as an anon user to respond?
    --David Göthberg (talk) 07:25, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    He's able to edit his talk page while blocked and logged in. MBisanz 13:45, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • By this time of the day, he's usually already made several hundred edits. He did not see a need to respond at all to this discussion. He has not seen fit to respond to the block, as one of his edit cycles has come and gone with nothing. Assume good faith can only go so far. To continue to assume good faith in this case, if no change in behavior is forthcoming, is to ask other Misplaced Pages editors to develop mental skills and abilities that only exist in comic books. Mindreader is not part of the average Misplaced Pages editor's skill set. It may not be a requirement to use edit summaries, but when you combine a refusal to do so on such a scale (18K edits, *maybe* two summaries) with unwillingness to discuss anything with other editors, even when told that continued failure to do so jeopardizes their place in the project, you reach the state we find ourselves in now. Even after the block was in place, there was no response. No positive or negative. A big patch of nothing. That shows that this user just doesn't give a damn either way. Even after my apparently misguided attempts to engage him in Japanese (I was bold. No one else bothered.), there was no response beyond deletion of the comments. Without communication amongst editors, the whole project falls down. We cannot have editors like this who so blatantly refuse to engage his fellow editors. DarkAudit (talk) 15:15, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    I wouldn't try to understand what's going on in his mind, other than to say that for him, it may all be in what he sees as good faith. I don't know and I don't need to know. The outcome of his behaviour is enough to go by. Meanwhile, the only talk page posts I've been able to find from this editor are vandalism templates like this, where there was no vandalism, after someone mistakenly warned Kanabekobaton to stop vandalizing. That Kanabekobaton has disrupted the project can be clearly seen through all the posts in this thread from worried editors. If Kanabekobaton doesn't respond (which he may not) is that the end of it? How do we handle this? Should we welcome an editor who misleadingly marks all of his hundreds of edits a day as minor, with no edit summaries, who won't talk about anything at all but to throw off a mistaken vandalism template on a talk page now and then? If there is a community consensus that we should indeed welcome Kanabekobaton as he is, disruption and all, given his many helpful edits, maybe he should be unblocked straight off. Or, if the consensus is that the disruption and worry he causes makes it all not worth it, then perhaps he should stay blocked until he speaks up. I can only say that making a few (mostly) harmless edits a day, marking them all as minor with no edit summary and zero talk page participation would not be taken as disruptive by most editors. If that's what was happening, this thread never would have come up. Rather, it's the hundreds of daily edits with towering stacks of bolded ms, blank edit summaries and utter silence in response to many pleas for discussion, other than a few templated and mistaken vandalism warnings from Kanabekobaton, which have all come together to make this a tale of disruption. What shall we do? Gwen Gale (talk) 16:13, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Were this to go to RFC, I doubt that anything would change. Unless he could respond to RFC while still blocked, all I see would be a resumption of previous behavior and continued silence. He had edited via IP a few times during the arena dispute in April, so it may be safe to assume that rather than bother to reply, he's either doing it via IP or has a new name. Given that he registered the current name across all Wikis, the latter seems unlikely. DarkAudit (talk) 16:48, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    This is beginning to be an epidemic: it seems that in the last 12-18 months there has been a growing volume of reports about editors who decline to discuss their edits. While there is nothing wrong with an editor deleting messages on her/his Talk page, or declining to respond to some (or even most) of the messages left with her/him, the whole Wiki process will cease to work. Is it time to formulate a new policy, explaining that Wikipedians need to be willing to explain their edits -- & may be blocked if they fail to do so? -- llywrch (talk) 20:42, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Most folks are talkative, it's how we are so I have no fear Misplaced Pages will ever break down owing to lack of discussion. Meanwhile, there will always be a few editors who don't want to talk, no need to ask why. In itself, this is ok, so I do think one should go lightly on any editor who doesn't want to talk about their edits, so long as the edits are helpful (which is to say, not stirring up much fuss), all the more so if they're not quick to revert back when they've been reverted. With this user, it was a mix of many behaviours: No discussion, no edit summaries at all on hundreds of daily edits, reverting back when reverted (then sometimes replying with unfit vandalism templates), tipped by marking all the many edits as minor, making for a misleading and very long contrib log, with worried editors posting about it here. Gwen Gale (talk) 14:39, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Any movement starts with a few isolated individuals & grows from them, although I doubt that one day all or most Wikipedians will make their edits without ever exchanging a word with each other. But to my point, from personal experience with one of these individuals I can attest that it is very frustrating to deal with another editor -- even if it is clear she/he is acting in good faith -- who will not respond to messages. But what I find strange is that, although I read WP:AN & AN/I regularly, I don't remember ever seeing this problem before I encountered it -- yet since then these autistic editors (to give them a name) have been reported once or twice every month or two. I don't know if this is simply because I started looking for this problem -- or that new editors have decided that the best way to deal with other Wikipedians (who have a reputation for bizarre behavior) is to simply ignore us. If the latter is the reason for this development, it is not a good development. -- llywrch (talk) 05:23, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Since the block, there's been absolutely nothing. No activity at all. After two days one would expect a request for an unblock, but no. Did I stumble upon a Misplaced Pages otaku? DarkAudit (talk) 15:44, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Peter Damian block review

    Resolved – Mistake made and rectified.

    I have indefinitely blocked Peter Damian (talk · contribs) for continuing the same harassment that resulted in his prior block. Specifically, was strongly cautioned from becoming involved in topics on "you , FT2, pedophilia and NLP". He has continued to go after FT2 and twice created deletion debates on NLP. Additionally, he has edited and involved himself in pedophilia-related topics. Given this user's past history of being banned, socking, being unbanned, reblocked for harassment, and finally unblocked as a last chance, I believe this is appropriate. MBisanz 14:31, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Sorry, what has the pedophilia bit got to do with this? I objected to Jules Verne being labelled a pedophile, and to several of the strange claims being made in the 'historical couples' article - remember my initial involvement in the pedophile stuff was at the explicit request of user Thatcher. So are you are barking mad? Peter Damian (talk) 21:18, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Are you are sure it is a good idea to re-ignite this matter? LessHeard vanU (talk) 21:52, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Turn this around: why would it not be a good idea? Peter Damian (talk) 05:47, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    You first... LessHeard vanU (talk) 12:34, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    This gives the appearance of thought crime punishment; claiming that a difference of opinion constitutes harassment. WAS 4.250 (talk) 15:29, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    He was warned to not ABF and not to jump to conclusions, and then this. MBisanz 15:31, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I see no assumtion of bad faith in your link. But I do see an assumption of bad faith against Peter Damian. Please see http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia_talk:Requests_for_arbitration/Mantanmoreland#Statement_by_User:WAS_4.250 and http://en.wikiversity.org/Ethical_Management_of_the_English_Language_Wikipedia/Case_Studies#The_players_and_the_game] for where this can lead. WAS 4.250 (talk) 15:38, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Disagree with block. Respectfully, I think this is a massive overreaction. Specifically, I think it's odd to cite his creation of an AfD when, if you look at the AfD, there seems to be massive consensus that the article should be deleted. We want editors to create AfDs like that. Likewise, I'm not sure how the talk page comment you cited demonstrates bad faith: to my eyes, it looks like he's asking a question about a potential conflict of interest, but he seems to be doing so respectfully and in a way that doesn't look particularly badgery or harassing to me. If there's more context here (for example, if he's asking about a conflict of interest after every one of FT2's edits, or something) I think you should share it. I'm inclined to unblock because, looking at the specific material cited here, there's simply no "there", there. Nandesuka (talk) 15:52, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      From Peter's earlier comment at FT2's talk page I am notifying you, as the original creator and good-faith guardian and defender of the NLP pages. I'm really not seeing the good faith going into this whole event from Peter's side. MBisanz 16:04, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    OK, I read that link, but I just don't see that as particularly unreasonable. Maybe I'm thick? If anything, it reads to me as being particularly respectful and polite. Nandesuka (talk) 16:07, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Furthermore, upon reviewing the talk page discussion regarding the previous blocks, it is quite unclear to me as a third-party observer that this editor was subject to a topic-area ban at all. If we want to enforce that sort of thing, it needs to be made crystal clear to the editor. This block simply doesn't meet our standards, especially for an indefinite block. Nandesuka (talk) 16:07, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Was it a topic-area ban? I don't think it was a formal one, at least if it was, it wasn't noted at Misplaced Pages:Editing restrictions. I think it was more an admin-to-editor "final warning" and topic ban restriction. Whether admins have the authority to impose topic bans has never been clear. I don't think they do, but I can see how it could help (outside of "general sanctions" of course). Carcharoth (talk) 16:35, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Unblock: One can't be blocked for launching an AFD and questioning an Arb - or this now just more of the heavy handed wiki secret police? It;s fascinating isn't it, always the same names cropping up to defend bad blocks made to save and protect Arbs. Giano (talk) 16:01, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    • Disagree Let's assume for a moment that Damian's goal is indeed to get revenge on FT2. He has constructed an argument about article content and defended it, and he seems to have a fair amount of support; both AfDs express considerable skepticism about the constellation of NLP articles. Damian has not tried to personalize the matter (certainly not to the extent that resulted in the original block) which was the main issue at the unblock. Clear bad faith nominations are quickly recognized, this seems not to be one, at least in the judgement of the commentors. The NLP articles will rise and fall on their merits, hopefully like all articles at AfD. Thatcher 16:05, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      • I agree, Thatcher. And yet the first thing FT2 said on the AfD was to accuse PD of a bad-faith nomination. (Now moved to the AfD talkpage, in case you want to look, dear reader. Funny how nobody thought to criticise him for that rude and un-wiki allegation. I mean, people have been blocked for such smears. Not that I recommend any silly block like that... but they have. Bishonen | talk 16:26, 13 August 2008 (UTC).
    Actually, Bish, I recommended to FT2 that he remove the personal items from the evidence page and stick to the content issue and he did so (see the latter edits to /Evidence). Thatcher 16:44, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    That's nice, but I was talking about the AfD talkpage, not about FT2's personal "evidence page." On Misplaced Pages talk:Articles for deletion/NLP Modeling, FT2's first words are still This seems to me to be a bad faith nomination. Just the same as when I posted before. That's not proper and not worthy of the project, let alone worthy of an arbitrator. Bishonen | talk 19:15, 13 August 2008 (UTC).
    Well, my advice to not take it personal still stands, I'm not inclined to force him to be polite. The dispute between FT2 and Damian is long and complex and I understand why FT2 still takes it personally, even though I think it is a bad idea and I would hope to take a higher road myself if I were ever in a similar circumstance. I'm not a fan of reflexive civility blocks as you know, if I didn't support the block of Damian, why would I support a block of FT2? But perhaps, as Damian is now unblocked, we should continue this elsewhere if you are so inclined. Thatcher 19:28, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I'm not for blocking anyone. Why can't we just discuss the facts and get the truth out into the open. I haven't even mentioned the dreaded oversighed edits issue even once. OK I have now. Peter Damian (talk) 21:16, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    This page Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/NLP Modeling/Evidence also starts out by calling it a bad faith nomination, and attacking the nominator. Still, I guess arbs aren't bound by any policies so FT2 can do whatever he wants. DuncanHill (talk) 19:22, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • This is just the usual sort of bad block, made by one of the Arb's toadies that we have come to expect as the norm. It occurs whenever an Arb is treated in a manner that he feels is disrespectful or likely to embarrass him. If this were not the case another Arb would have unblocked by now to show this is not the case. Giano (talk) 16:11, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Thatcher has hit the nail on the head, all Peter appears to have done is nominated an article for deletion and defended said nomination on the discussion page. In return he has been accused by FT2 of making a 'bad faith' nomination and was the subject of an 'evidence' page that was completely irrelevant to the AFD. The AFD itself has a lot of support for deletion so I find it hard to believe that Peter is behaving out of line in nominating it. This is a very poor block. naerii 16:57, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I also note that MBisanz did not actually bother to tell Peter Damian that he had unblocked him, or to tell him of the unilateral imposition of conditions associated with the unblock. Nor yet did he bother to come here to let participants in this thread know. Not the actions of an admin acting in good faith. DuncanHill (talk) 17:55, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    That's because our illustrious Arbs see him as a threat. So he has to be curtailed. Does one little admin even have the power to say "Last chance at WP, no more harassment or disruption will be tolerated" without knowing the Arbs are right behind him? Giano (talk) 17:50, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    No, people do not get things wrong from time to time, this is typical of the stupid actions which surround this present Arbcom. This has to be the most ridiculous block yet - and where were our wondrous Arbcom? Please do not tel me "none were online" yet again! If they are that disinterested in the project they may as well go. Giano (talk) 17:41, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Apparently there is some confusion, in any event, I follow a personal rule that once I block someone, I'm too involved to block them a second time. If you check my block log, you may find one or two extensions of a block, but I don't think you'll find any second times through on an individual who was unblocked. MBisanz 17:55, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Probably an autoblock. It'll be taken care of ASAP. lifebaka++ 18:33, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Comment This block was perfectly outrageous. Words fail. Also, what is my supposed history of FT2 harassment? My previous block (in June) was for complaining about FT2's block of an anti-NLP editor. You can't suppress an important issue like the proliferation of cruft and fringe and other dubious material in Misplaced Pages just by blocking people. I have been passionately committed to this project since 2003, and have contributed huge amounts of material, nearly all of which still there. See Medieval philosophy, all mine. Why this persecution? Peter Damian (talk) 19:00, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I would suggest you address your questions to the Arbcom - like the Lord, they move in very mysterious ways. Giano (talk) 20:19, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Yes well perhaps they might consider answering my emails for once. Thanks Giano, by the way, and thanks Bish and the others. Peter Damian (talk) 21:12, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • I may not be the best one to judge here, and that looked to me like a spectacularly ill-judged block, but ArbCom? I think MBisanz was wrong, but I'd certainly not consider at this point that bad faith was involved. I really don't see why battle lines are being drawn. Perhaps I'm just out of the loop these days. Guy (Help!) 20:36, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      Perhaps you are Guy, lets just say this has been a very interesting and testing day. Giano (talk) 21:15, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      You are quite right that the idea that this was a block made out of anything other than the best of intentions is ridiculous. Even if you think that it is a patently obviously incorrect block (and I find that argument hard to maintain), it is equally obviously MBisanz's intent to do the best for the project. That anyone should call that into question is frankly absurd. Sam Korn 21:36, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
      It is apparently S.O.P. these days to assume bad faith of any admin who tries to make Misplaced Pages work properly. Corvus cornixtalk 01:16, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    I agree with Sam Korn and Thatcher, and PD's been unblocked, so let's move along. — RlevseTalk21:50, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Valentino movie spammer - heads up

    Heads up! Please keep an eye on User talk:206.252.134.18. Pushing their company's product, as they say they have a movie coming out this year. I deleted their article Valentino Movie - "Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008) as G12-Copyright infringement, and then found this request on my page wich reads: "I am writing directly from the production company so that we may be able to establish this page on wikipedia". I also reverted their many very spammy edits to Valentino Garavani (an article about somebody I have never heard of before). I warned them accordingly and put them in my watchlist, but another set of eyes would be good since I don't think they are done yet. -- Alexf 23:16, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Note that this is probably the same person as Valentinomovie (talk · contribs), which was blocked as a promotional username. - Icewedge (talk) 06:31, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Likely. WP:RFCU will be helpful. Otolemur crassicaudatus (talk) 06:42, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Am I going insane?

    I was poking around the 2008 South Ossetia war article when I thought I'd look to see when it was semi-protected. But when I went to the logs, there was nothing there. Trying to edit reveals that it is at least semi-protected, but there's no record of who did it--even more surprising, going to the protection dialogue shows that not only is it semi-protected against editing, it's actually fully-protected against moves. But of course, there's no entry in the log to show who protected it when, and I couldn't find anything while browsing through the history.

    I recently had a similar case like this on my talk page (a user tried to move an article but was told that the target was protected against creation even though there was nothing in the log; when I tried to do it with my non-sysop sock, it worked just fine). So in the interest of a sanity check/identifying any potential bugs, I thought I'd ask here in the hopes that someone knows something I don't. --jonny-mt 08:28, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Protection logs stay with the title that was protected so you need to look for a record of page moves in the page history. The second situation was probably due to a temporary error in the title blacklist. -- zzuuzz 08:36, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    (ec) The article was moved a couple of times, and the protection log doesn't move with it. See . That's probably a bug. If I knew how bugzilla worked I'd report it. Neıl 08:38, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Ah, that make a good deal of sense. I was doubly confused because I didn't see anything in the move log for the page, either. I also came to the conclusion that the MediaWiki blacklist was to blame for the second case, but I was wondering about two such cases happening in close proximity. I'll take a closer look later on and submit a bug report. Thanks! --jonny-mt 08:54, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Updating the protection/deletion logs with every page-move would cause more confusion than it would prevent. If this happened it would appear that (or at least be indistinguishable from a situation where) the title was protected from creation before anything was moved to it, and for deletion logs changing this behavior would make it harder to find any still-deleted edits. On the other hand a new type of "movedto" log entry would be much more helpful. Currently if A is moved to B, there is a move log entry associated with A saying "so-and-so moved A to B" but nothing in the log for B, so fixing this is probably the best approach. — CharlotteWebb 16:10, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Wikisports

    Resolved – Usual Gawp crap. Links removed CambridgeBayWeather Have a gorilla 01:18, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    I have come across a new wiki project wikisports, which currently has four pages, the main page, the community portal, my user page and a page I will nominate for deletion entitled "Dolphins". I did some work on Wikiversity but I am excited by the prospect of a new project. I am bringing this to the attention of the admins on wikipedia because I would like some help from people with experience to help me promote this project so more people will join and discuss a plan of action for getting it off the ground. I would appreciate any advice and assistance that people may offer. Signing off, Donek —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.184.10.72 (talk) 18:44, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    That's not a Wikimedia wiki. John Reaves 20:09, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Who owns it? Can we get a wikimedia one? 79.184.31.4 (talk) 21:01, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    This is the administrator's noticeboard for the English Misplaced Pages. It's here to provide a place for discussions which may be of interest to the administrators of this project.
    For Misplaced Pages's general sports project, see Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Sports.
    For general information about what you can do to promote a website, you might try the reference desk. --OnoremDil 20:36, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Huge lag?

    Resolved – Shoulda' check around first, :P . lifebaka++ 19:29, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Anyone else having problems with some huge lag? Like, on the order of 6374 seconds? Is someone deleting the main page or something like that? Cheers, everyone. lifebaka++ 19:22, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Please see . Cheers, Tiptoety 19:25, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Heh... I'd just gone over there and found it too. Silly me for not checking both boards before posting. At least I can see stuff from after 14:30 UTC now. It's headed down, so it'll be gone eventually. Cheers. lifebaka++ 19:29, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Can I get a second opinion?

    Can I get a second opinion on this? (BHG is away at the moment so won't be in a position to comment). Legitimate request or start-of-a-spammer? – iridescent 20:30, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    If it was completely unsolicited, as it appears at first glance, I would say this is most definitely spam. Tan ǀ 39 20:32, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    N.B. I've deliberately not notified Aignacio09 of this thread; if it's considered a legitimate request, there doesn't seem a need to WP:BITE a new account by the first thread on their talkpage being an {{ANI-notice}}; they can always be advised later if The Consensus thinks there's a concern. – iridescent 20:34, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Without any evidence of prior communication, this feels and reads like spam. No need to make a big deal about it if Aignacio09 doesn't edit again, though. Sam Korn 20:35, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    It's spam. Likely a test. Gwen Gale (talk) 12:31, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Misplaced Pages talk:AutoWikiBrowser/CheckPage

    Resolved

    Could someone take care of this Thanks! — Navy  Blue  21:56, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Hardly a huge backlog. If it gets over 24 hours, bring it here, but I will look at it now. --Rodhullandemu 22:07, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    They are all  Done Tiptoety 22:14, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Sanjao sam san...

    Resolved

    I noticed that this article title was blacklisted. This is the title of Montenegrin singer Sako Polumenta newest album. AFAIK, the article for the album never existed. I request that this article be removed from the blacklist as I plan to add much about this album. Thank you. --Prevalis (talk) 21:59, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Any reason why this got blacklisted in the first place? If nothing controversial, I see no problem with removing. --Tone 22:14, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Sanjao sam san... is not salted. Go ahead and create the article, there is nothing to unprotect. EdJohnston (talk) 22:26, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
    Actually, if you try to create it you get a Titleblacklist warning. I would guess it's the line ".*{3}.* # Disallows three consecutive characters that are not letters (in any script), numbers, or (normal) spaces" catching the ... at the end of the title. Confusing Manifestation(Say hi!) 22:44, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    (ec)Likely the elipses was causing the problem. I've created a stub for you. ~ BigrTex 22:46, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

    Should it ("...") be changed to the Unicode character "…"? — Arthur Rubin (talk) 16:16, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Gene Poole is adding "sock warnings" to my user page

    Resolved – If you feel this strongly about the roses, create a report at SSP. Otherwise, quit accusing other editors of sockpuppetry.

    Three times, Gene Poole added {{sockpuppeteer}} to my user page , although he didn't give any explanation why he believes that I might be a sockpuppet. I asked Gene Poole to stop adding that template to my user page , but he continues to do so . Adam233 (talk) 01:32, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Here Gene Poole asks other users to vandalize my user page. Could an administrator please remove the "sock warning" and protect my user page? Adam233 (talk) 01:46, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Queried the accuser here. I suppose I should also notify him of this thread ;-) Tan ǀ 39 01:36, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    See Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Crown Dependency of Forvik for the reasoning of Adam233 being a sockpuppet. You might also want to check that account's edit history, too. Adam233 has created an account strictly for the prosecution of the Crown Dependency of Forvik article. --coldacid (talk|contrib) 01:41, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    So what? IP's can't create AfD's; it's not unreasonable that an IP editor saw an article he wanted to nominate for deletion, and created an account so he could do it. In any case, an SPA isn't the same as a sock puppet. If you can prove sockpuppetry, do it, but right now you're edit warring to keep the tag on his page, and in my opinion, you and Gene are flirting with 3RR. --barneca (talk) 01:45, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Gene has already breached 3RR and is assuming bad faith without proving that Adam233 is an sockpuppet. IMO if Gene thought that Adam233 is a sockpuppet then he should have taken it to WP:SSP then to tag. Bidgee (talk) 01:51, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    And this looks like gaming the system to me. --barneca (talk) 01:47, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Yep. We should probably wait until the accuser can speak his piece before we get the blowtorches out, tho... Tan ǀ 39 01:48, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Adam233 is an obvious single-purpose sock account, deliberately created to subvert the consensus process concerning Crown Dependency of Forvik. He has made no edits whatsoever beyond nominating this article for deletion. Multiple editors support the contention that the account is disruptive sock, and have asked for a permanent block to be applied. I suggest you do so as a matter of urgency, as the account's continued disruption of WP is both inappropriate and abusive. --Gene_poole (talk) 01:50, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    In what way has Adam233 been disruptive? Bidgee (talk) 01:53, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    You need evidence, diffs, some sort of cohesive report, Gene, if you are going to try to get this user blocked. Right now, this just looks bad on your part. Tan ǀ 39 01:55, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    More than sufficient evidence is in plain sight. I suggest you review it, rather than attacking those responsible for bringing the matter to notice. --Gene_poole (talk) 01:58, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    You're just making yourself bad ATM WP:BITE "# Do not call newcomers disparaging names such as "sockpuppet" or "meatpuppet". If a lot of newcomers show up on one side of a vote, you should make them feel welcome while explaining that their votes may be disregarded. No name-calling is necessary. # Think hard before calling newcomers Single-purpose account" Bidgee (talk) 02:04, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    By multiple people, I assume you mean you and the other two people you canvassed? I've never understood the theory that a new account, created with the obvious purpose of nominating an article for AfD, is wrong; how else is an IP supposed to nominate an article for deletion? Or is it your position that an IP editor isn't supposed to be able to nominate an article for deletion? And an AfD, by definition, is not an attempt to circumvent consensus. I have absolutely no opinion on that article, and for all I know you have secret evidence that actually proves it is a sockpuppet of someone. But if all you've got is three fans of that article labelling opponents SPA's and socks because, well, the three of you all agree, then I don't buy it. --barneca (talk) 02:01, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    You may consider it gaming, but I would have acted the same even if Onecanadasquarebishopsgate and Gene Poole hadn't written any of that. They both knew that I was following the article and AfD and it's been blatantly obvious from the beginning where my support was. I originally thought that the guy who started the merge proposal was puppetmaster, but I'm thinking now that it may be someone else inspired by that failed proposal. --coldacid (talk|contrib) 02:05, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I'm willing to concede that it might not be a sock puppet account (although I do still feel it is). However it's quite obvious to be a single-purpose account with a disruptive agenda. (And I hope this doesn't take five or six attempts to post again, edit conflicts are lame.) --coldacid (talk|contrib) 02:10, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    See WP:BITE "Think hard before calling newcomers Single-purpose account" and assume good faith. Bidgee (talk) 02:14, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I did think hard. The facts line up, S.P.A. Had Adam233 also contributed in any meaningful way outside the AfD, I could assume good faith, even despite him not doing so with the AfD. I normally assume good faith, but watching the behaviour of others turns assumptions in different ways. --coldacid (talk|contrib) 02:25, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    For all we know is that Adam233 may have edited with an IP in the past and thought to get an account who may or may not make vauled contributions in the future. Bidgee (talk) 02:34, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    That's true, but without being an admin I'll never know because I don't get to see what IPs Adam233 is editing from. Which likewise makes it hard to gather evidence supporting or dismissing the sockpuppet theory, without reverting to nothing but circumstantial evidence. If Adam233 turns out to be contributing in a helpful way in the future, then my SPA opinion would hold no merit; but until that happens, I'm sticking to my opinion as so far all I've seen is the AfD, the accusations, and the arguments.
    TBH, this whole thing is just disgusting me. But being tangled up in it now (and having a couple accusations fired my way for my troubles!) it's not like I can just pull out until the whole issue is resolved. And I just wanted to work on my own articles! --coldacid (talk|contrib) 03:02, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Adam is innocent until proven guilty. Bidgee (talk) 06:48, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    The lesson here is that if you have evidence of sock puppetry, real evidence, file a suspected sock puppet report. If it's an obvious sock, somebody will come along and tag the account, and maybe block it too. There is no rush. Jehochman 02:06, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    The only "gaming" being perpetrated here is that of the sock account. And if by "canvassed" you mean "other editors - including several editors who have actually taken the oppposing view in the AfD discussion" - who all just happen to share the opinion that an account with the following characterustics is not editing in good faith: (a) appears at the conclusion of a spirited merge discussion, the consensus of which was not to merge, and immediately nominates the article in question for deletion. (b) makes no other edits to WP unrelated to that AfD, before or since. Then I'm afraid you need to wake up and smell the roses. --Gene_poole (talk) 02:13, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Sorry, that's not how it works. Here is how it will go down: You will either file a suspected sock report and let the administrators do the work, or this will be closed down and you'll just have to live with it. Your poor attitude here at ANI and your relentless application of a disputed and non-discussed tag to a userpage is not a desirable trait.
    The ball is in your court, but if you refuse to point out specific infractions, or refuse to file an SSP report, then there is not much that we can (or will) do. A single purpose account is not always necessarily bad, although I personally frown upon it; the user may have been editing from an IP address prior, but there is no way for us to determine it unless you do some of the legwork for us. seicer | talk | contribs 02:20, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Caitlin202

    A new user, Caitlin202 (talk · contribs), is making some seemingly uninformed moves and edits. None of it appears to be intentional vandalism, but the fact that she created an article with the {{advert}} template included in the initial revision is a bit weird. So far, the majority of her edits had to be cleaned up by others, and she doesn't appear very responsive. Not sure what should be done here, but I'd appreciate an admin taking a quick look over her contribs. user:Everyme 05:15, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    I think a block is a little excessive here, as she hasn't been approached all that many times previously, and has changed her behaviour in response to most requests. I've just her a second time about the edit summaries. If someone can replace my suggestion with a better worded one, feel free - mine might be a little more caustic than what we're after. -- Mark Chovain 06:53, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    I agree we shouldn't block just yet, as she seems to be a younger user who possibly hasn't had time yet to digest the messages on her talk page. Let's give her a few days to see what happens. This is nowhere near Kanabekobaton's refusal to communicate. KrakatoaKatie 07:24, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    I thought at first there was a possibility that this was an experienced user putting up a front of cluelessness as a mask, but after looking into her edits more thoroughly, I doubt that now. I concur that this is most probably a inexperienced young editor needing some guidance. Ed Fitzgerald (unfutz) 07:46, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Echo that. I believe she is genuinely inexperienced and probably of relatively young age, but she's well-intentioned throughout, and not uncivil or anything. But she clearly needs some guideance and we should keep an eye on her contribs and offer her feedback, at least for a little while. (I believe admins are generally more suited to the task of mentoring, maybe one of you guys could offer her mentorship, or rather: adoption?) user:Everyme 14:07, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I think you are familiar enough with RFA to know that admins aren't as a rule "better suited" for anything. — CharlotteWebb 16:00, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    True, but I personally hold them to higher standards nevertheless. user:Everyme 17:23, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Misplaced Pages:Conflict_of_interest/Noticeboard#Funchords_and_NebuAd

    Does this violate WP:OUTING? Corvus cornixtalk 06:55, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Nope, Funchords provides his full name on his userpage. This link comes up on the first page of search results when you search for his name. -- Ned Scott 07:04, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Thanks. Corvus cornixtalk 07:16, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Totally lost, need help

    I know I may come off annoying, constantly asking for help, because it is not a pressing matter, it's just that I am new. Yes, I have read the basics of Misplaced Pages, I just need guidance. This is a big encyclopedia, much bigger than a paper-based one, since this is the internet and there are no bounds, so it will take quite a while to adjust to the vastness of it. Again, please forgive my pestering. --Crackthewhip775 (talk) 09:17, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    I suggest the adopt a user scheme. You'll be 'adopted' by an experienced user where they'll teach you the ropes. Or you can insert the {{helpme}} tag followed by a question and someone will be along to respond :) ——RyanLupin(talk) 09:51, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    When you use {{helpme}}, make sure you place it on your talk page, otherwise you may not get a response. Cheers, caknuck ° is not used to being the voice of reason 16:21, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Transwiki to Wiktionary still broken ?

    Hi. I raised an issue Misplaced Pages:Administrators'_noticeboard/Archive158#Transwiki_to_Wiktionary_broken_.3F a couple of weeks ago about the automatic Misplaced Pages -> Wiktionary transwiki process being possibly broken - I can't see any change in the situation - is there anything that can be done, or is it all dependent on the bot's owner fixing it ? CultureDrone (talk) 12:22, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Since the talk message didn't work, I sent him an email. I'm sorry this is taking so long, but without the bot operator's help we can't get anywhere on this. Cheers. lifebaka++ 12:53, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    This one has been going nowhere for a long time. :) I've posted about it here and at village pump. I wrote Connel about it in May. On May 24th, he told me that CopyToWiktionaryBot had been disabled until a false positives situation with Special:Import could be fixed. He noted that Wiktionary sysops can manually import a couple of articles, if they seem important. At the time I noticed it, there were about 30 days worth of backlog. I rather imagine that's compounded dramatically by now, though I haven't looked. --Moonriddengirl 13:00, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Actually, there's nothing wrong with the bot - the problem seems to be with Special:Import - which fails in at least 2 out of 5 attempts..(see bug #9911 ) I ran the import process manually a few times to check if the problem still exists, and it does.. The bot can't run as long as Special:Import is flaky. I'll work on doing the imports manually (this requires +sysop on Wiktionary, which I have). --Versageek 13:03, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Proposed topic-ban

    ResearchEditor (talk · contribs) aka Abuse truth (talk · contribs) aka Abuse t (talk · contribs) is a single-purpose account focussing on child abuse in general and Satanic ritual abuse in particular. On the SRA article he has persistently pushed the point of view that SRA was/is "real" and continues to this day, when scholarly consensus is that SRA was nothing more than a whopping great moral panic back in the 80s. Despite blocks and multiple previous threads at FTN and ANI he has continued to cause problems for the productive editors on this page, whose mammoth patience is gradually being eroded.

    I suggest that we, the community, ban ResearchEditor/Abuse truth from the SRA article, its talk page, and all closely related articles and talk pages. Moreschi (talk) (debate) 16:23, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Wrong venue. A user RfC is probably more appropriate. Furthermore, the "admin community" cannot create a topic ban absent a "special enforcement zone"; it would have to be the community at large. I agree with the preferred outcome, but I just don't think this is the correct venue. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 16:41, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Actually, no, AN is the right venue to suggest topic bans. RFCs aren't supposed to have any real teeth to them. I've cut the "admin" from the the proposal if that's objectionable. Moreschi (talk) (debate) 16:50, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Wherever it ends up, here'll be my comments.
    There are several books from university press that explicitly state that SRA has no credibility - here and here are verbatim quotes that conclude SRA has no mainstream support, in addition to whole books by academic publishers that focus on this idea. This has been settled by sources, and a reasonable editor not pushing a grossly overwhelming POV would have let it die. ResearchEditor's response has been to post a list of low-quality references, most of which are from before 2000, which are portrayed as supporting the idea that the scholarly majority still sees SRA as a current problem (here is one example, here is another, here is a third). I've typed my response to this list out before to no avail, so here is where my response to this list can be read in detail. Despite these sources and points existing for weeks now, ResearchEditor makes edits like this one that pushes the idea that the skeptical view is undue weight.
    The other claim brought up repeatedly is that there is too much weight given to three skeptical authors, despite skepticism being the mainstream position (see here, the hidden text here, here, and here and more if I really wanted to dig). I've repeatedly said that if RE thinks the sourcing is excessive, s/he can add appropriate balancing non-skeptical sources if s/he can find them, or discuss specific citations within the page that should be removed rather than presumably randomly removing statements and citations to the books. To date, I've never seen a single suggestion or discussion, just repetition of "it's too much".
    All the RFC's I've seen ended up with no real response, I'd rather it were here. WLU (talk) 17:09, 15 August 2008 (UTC)(copy and paste if the venue changes)
    Hmmm. It appears that ResearchEditor was unblocked based on a promise to behave as well as a nebulous 1-revert-per-week restriction (see discussion here). My sense from a brief skim is that ResearchEditor has resumed the behavior for which the initial block was placed - that is, single-purpose advocacy of an agenda combined with slow edit-warring. Unless I'm mistaken in this overview, I think at the very least the 1RR/week limitation proposed as a condition of his unblock should be enforced; I'd probably go a bit further and suggest that a few months away from this topic might be good for everyone, including ResearchEditor. MastCell  17:11, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Ok. Say a time limit for the topic ban of six months? Moreschi (talk) (debate) 17:13, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    ← Reinstatement of the indefinite block is entirely warranted for this tendentious editor, so if people are agreeing on a topic ban then that seems to me to be more lenience than he is entitled to expect and he should count himself lucky. Guy (Help!) 18:58, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    I have the topic ban in mind as his last chance. Moreschi (talk) (debate) 19:07, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Because MangoJuice was involved in RE's previous ban, I've left him a note here; his contribs are low lately, so I don't know if he'll respond but I figured he might be interested. WLU (talk) 20:15, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    The following pages are connected to the satanic ritual abuse article and abuse allegations in general - Michelle Remembers, recovered memory therapy, McMartin preschool trial, false memory syndrome, dissociative identity disorder, multiple personality controversy. Though I'm not calling for a topic ban on them as well, they are other areas where RE's strong POV push has been present. User:DreamGuy, who has his own strong POV, has worked with RE on some of these pages recently. User:Jack-A-Roe would be a good example of someone with a somewhat similar POV (more so than the editors of SRA anyway; I don't know if he'd agree that he and RE have the same POV) who manages his contributions much more successfully and understands wikipedia much better. I don't know if JAR would be willing to mentor or edit by proxy, but I would definitely trust him to mediate contributions from RE in a much more reasonable way. WLU (talk) 22:54, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    ResearchEditor's reply

    Below please find my reply. Note this will be long, since I believe that this is a very serious matter and should be thought out very carefully and slowly before a full decision is made.
    I have tried very hard to edit from the position of following the five pillars of Misplaced Pages. I have edited from both sides of the debate when needed to ensure that the concepts of WP:UNDUE and WP:NPOV needed to be followed. As an example of this, I have deleted unsourced arguments from either side of the debate when added to pages. I have also posted both sides of an argument when needed to fairly present a reference's opinion.
    In regard to my position of the page representing the possible reality of SRA, I posted these references:
    here
    Some of these are post 2000, which shows there is some recent support in the literature for the pro-SRA position, though these are also critiqued by another editor in this section.
    I have tried using a variety of noticeboards, including WP:30, WP:RFC and WP:NPOVN as well as asking on the SRA discussion page for ideas for different ways to discuss edits before their being added to the page, but this suggestion was ignored or denied. I have tried as much as possible to discuss my edits on the talk page while making them and justified my reasoning for each edit I have made.


    Below were my reasons for believing the page violates WP:UNDUE


    1)Number of references given to three extremely skeptical researchers (as of last week)
    Frankfurter 11
    Victor 24
    LaFontaine 13
    48 out of 127 citations (almost 38%) have been given to three authors, all extremely skeptical about the existence of SRA. This violates WP:UNDUE. If this extremely skeptical point of view is so popular in the field, then why does the article need to cite only three authors so many times. The answer could be that "panic theory" is being given undue weight in the article.
    2)Though those editing from a skeptical position state they want post year 2000 edits as evidence of pro SRA theories, they cite pre-2000 extreme skeptical researchers 92 times, probably more now - in the SRA article.
    My question, unanswered on the talk page, was in essence, if extreme skepticism is the majority position on the topic of SRA, then why is there such a large reliance on a couple of researchers and pre-2000 references promoting extreme skepticism?


    Though I do not necessarily agree with the tone in the SRA talk page reply below, I do agree with the ideas presented.


    In reply to one of the editors promoting and editing from a skeptical position on the SRA page, it was written on the SRA talk page
    "You demand that RE supply "unequivocal proof" of SRA, and yet two of your favorite sources (Victor and Frankfurter) are purely theoretical works. Why do you require such a low burden of proof from yourself, and such a high one from RE?
    You call clinical accounts of treating RA patients "wishy-washy BS",and yet clinical accounts are a crucial part of psychological and psychiatric literature, and they always have been. Are you simply cleaving off a significant body of scientific literature because it contradicts your POV?
    I would be crucified if I went through a select group of credible, peer-reviewed sources that took SRA seriously, and amended this article accordingly, entrenching that POV in sentence by sentence. I would be flayed alive. And yet you've done exactly this for the sceptical team, and when RE raised his concerns quite validly, and politely, you flamed him....Biaothanatoi (talk) 03:22, 11 August 2008 (UTC)


    The only reason that RE is the only representative of the "other side" of this debate is because editors have shit on any non-sceptic on this page since it was first written. That's why, as... notes, "one side" is dominating this page. You've cleared out everyone else . This page does not reflect the variety of opinions on the subject of SRA. Far from being "outside the mainstream", SRA has been mainstreamed to the point where it is integrated into existing literature on sexual assault, domestic violence and child protection....--Biaothanatoi (talk) 02:57, 11 August 2008 (UTC)


    And a comment from a neutral voice on the SRA talk page, unfortunately the only one
    I must repeat, I am not a "believer"; more accurately, I'm a "skeptic"(though some editors here might think it's funny I describe myself that way); the way I see skepticism is that I'm as skeptical of disbelieving as I am of believing. When hard science can't answer a question, it's OK for it to remain a question. That said, there certainly was a moral panic about SRA that went beyond its actual prevalence (that could have ranged from none, to some few cases, or maybe a few more than a few -but not to "many"); so the emphasis on the moral panic is appropriate in the article, though that does not mean that the still-open question of what really happened need be relegated to fringe status. --Jack-A-Roe (talk) 04:56, 14 August 2008 (UTC)


    You can see a revert of my most recent edits here
    here
    If you check this edit that all I was trying to do was add two lines from a NYT article about the McMartin trial, add two lines about a recent research study about SRA with several thousand people, add one line about an opinion from an APA published book about SRA from a notable psychiatrist, restore two lines to the article about day care studies from reliable sources that was delete without reason and correct an interpretation of a Van Benschoten source that was changed it is now inaccurate. This was reverted totally, though this was also replied to by another editor on the talk page.


    Unfortunately it is very difficult to find editors totally neutral on the SRA topic. Most of the editors above that have commented on this proposed ban I believe have skeptical or extremely skeptical views on the topic of the existence of SRA. Some of this is obvious from the SRA talk page itself. This means that their opinions on this proposed ban could possibly be colored by their views on the topic itself, providing an unfair decision in this matter.


    In essence, when one chooses a jury, one does not choose people that may have a bias. What is needed is for several truly neutral editors on this topic, like Mangojuice and others to discuss this and really look over the talk page edits at SRA, as well as the actual edits made for at least the last month or so before a decision should be made. There have been several problems on the SRA talk page, including violations of WP:NPA and WP:CIVIL that may need to be addressed or at least discussed. Also, editors' edits from the skeptical or extreme skeptical should also be looked at, as several editors working on the SRA page edit only from an extremely skeptical position.


    Honestly, my opinion is that the above discussion of a topic ban is being used to limit debate on the topic of SRA as well as control the content on the SRA page itself. This only hurts wikipedia and its status as an Internet encyclopedia, for those reading the page familiar with the SRA topic will realize that the page itself now only represents one side of the field.
    But, among editors at wikipedia, it appears that my view is in the minority. So though I believe that I honestly tried as hard as I could to follow all wikipedia policies and guidelines, I will agree not to edit the SRA page itself for one week, starting from now.
    Hopefully more neutral editors will begin to work on the SRA page in the future, so that a truly balanced and accurate view of this field can be presented to the public. ResearchEditor (talk) 23:12, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    I very much doubt that mentorship will work. For example, ResearchEditor's post above is analogous to his February post in this very board, as you can see here. Just search for the sentence "I would strongly disagree that the SRA page is currently making progress. Certain recent edits have been made without consensus...", followed by Guy's definite reply. —Cesar Tort 23:36, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Cesar Tort is one of the editors whose edits regularly represent an extremely skeptical position on the SRA page and other pages. At times, his edits on the SRA talk page may violate WP:NPA and WP:CIVIL. I also believe that at times his edits edit warred at the SRA page, simply reverting my edits in groups without explanation. I do not believe that he can be an unbiased observer in this procedure and am still hoping for a more neutral voice in this matter.ResearchEditor (talk) 23:47, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    RE, the neutral voices have spoken above and they are suggesting that a half year topic ban would be doing you a favor. In fact these non-involved voices started this very thread. Regards.PelleSmith (talk) 01:26, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    By "extremely skeptical" RE means that I don't swallow claims of an intergenerational conspiracy (theory) of Satanic ritual abuse, bizarre child molestation acts such as necrophilia, cannibalism, infanticide, human sacrifice and even officers who covered up the evidence. All of this happening by the thousands in English-speaking countries in front of our noses... —Cesar Tort 23:59, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    {undent}Comments:

    1. I believe every single one of the NPOV, 3O and RFC's have come down against ResearchEditor's position. The results have not been ignored, they've been followed, because they have supported the skeptical position. See Talk:Satanic_ritual_abuse#Third_opinion, Talk:Satanic_ritual_abuse#Straw_poll, Talk:Multiple_personality_controversy#Third_Opinion_2, Talk:Multiple_personality_controversy#Third_opinion
    2. I can't recall a time when s/he has presented the skeptical side bar the occasional token effort that's at best a reprint of another editor's comment
    3. The position that the list of sources supports anything except a fringe position is in my opinion blatantly wrong; I have never seen any evidence of any reliable source that contradicted the multiple explicit statements by university press sources that SRA is over.
    4. Victor is the first, longest, and most extensive source regarding SRA as a moral panic; Frankfurter is the most recent source, and La Fontaine is a book-length discussion of actual criminal investigations of SRA in England. All are excellent sources, represent the mainstream skeptical position and are published by university and scholarly press. I believe this represents DUE weight, and to diminish their weight would be undue weight. This is also not a new argument, that has been unconvincing for months and received support only from one other editor who also believes SRA is an ongoing reality rather than historical moral panic.
    5. In response to "if extreme skepticism is the majority position on the topic of SRA, then why is there such a large reliance on a couple of researchers and pre-2000 references promoting extreme skepticism?" - it's because most researchers have moved on; further, RE just complained about placing too much emphasis on Frankfurter, which was published in 2006. Because it's a historical phenomenon, it's also quite natural to rely on historical sources.
    6. Biaothanatoi is the only other editor who agrees with RE, and despite apparently doing a thesis on the subject of SRA from a credulous position, has not added any sources that credibly argue SRA is an ongoing phenomenon.
    7. Jack-A-Roe admits in his post that he thinks it was a moral panic, which is how Frankfurter, Victor and La Fontaine approach the subject. Jack-A-Roe has also never commented on the quotes by five sources that the phenomenon is over, or the point that if the mainstream considers SRA a moral panic that has passed, then the idea of SRA is not a fringe subject, but the idea that it has any credibility as a real phenomenon is a fringe theory.
    8. The line about the McMartin trial is undue weight. I address this idea here; the Los Angeles Times coverage was criticized by its own writers as being biased, and only 2 of 11 jurors in that decision felt that Buckey was guilty. That's undue weight if you ask me.
    9. The SRA page does not require an even balance of skeptical and non-sketpical. Five sources explicitly say SRA is over and no longer of mainstream concern. This should be the tone of the page, and to do otherwise is undue weight on a tiny, fringe minority.
    10. The topic to ban RE from the SRA page isn't to control content. SRA does not need it's content 'controlled' as a fair representation of the sources is to say that SRA is no longer considered credible. The page does need to be protected from RE's wholly POV position. Check out this edit; one source, which is itself heartily skeptical of the idea that there is any truth to Michelle Remembers, may mention that a minority of scholars believe it may be true; this represents one sentence in the body text, and the google books preview does not contain this assertion. Why should this end up in the lead when there are at least three sources that have discredited the book's contents? It should not, and this is classic undue weight and POV-pushing.
    11. I don't think that one week off will be any help. I doubt that RE will come back after a week with any appreciation of what the policies of undue weight, neutral point of view or fringe topics actually mean and may give the other editors a week break but won't address RE's problematic approach to editing.
    12. Yeah, we're less civil on the talk pages, but that's because we've been dealing with the exact same arguments and POV-pushing for months now, despite the addition of many reliable sources which all converge on the same skeptical interpretation.
    13. The debate seems to be over the truth of SRA. Misplaced Pages is about verifiability, not truth. It's verifiable, and has been verified in many reliable sources. SRA is done. How many sources does it take before we can conclude on this? Is one more enough? Should I stop at 7? How about 10? At what point can I stop adding random books that turn up on google book search that verify this point?

    A topic ban is warranted, and I fully support it, because ResearchEditor has demonstrated an inability to interpret wikipedia's policies and guidelines in a way that gives appropriate weight to the appropriate sources, and has demonstrated gaming the system with slow revert wars, illegitimate interpretations and promotion of WP:CONSENSUS and WP:NPOV in an effort to give equal weight to a fringe point of view, an inability to admit their position has no merit, and overall an unwillingness or inability to stray from the path of WP:TRUTH, which was the original reason RE was blocked. There have been many offers to change, and all have ended in the same POV-pushing location. RE is an example of civil POV-pushing and I would really, really like it to stop. WLU (talk) 00:32, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Speaking as an uninvolved party, looking over the last few day's of edits to this page & reading the latest part of the Talk page, I feel it is clear that this matter has been gone over so many times now that the field is not only trodden to death but has been turned to dust: a consensus has emerged, right or wrong, that SRA was some form of a social fad or hysteria; a few individuals still disagree with this consensus, but instead of proving new information, they apparently continue to push the same material back into the article, although with slight variations. If the dissenters still feel a mistake has been made, they should find new sources that defend their opinion then explain on the Talk page why these sources should be included; to do anything else would be disruptive. (And if there are no other sources, well the matter has been decided, & it is time to move on to another article; with 2.5 million articles, there must be at least one other article that interests you.) -- llywrch (talk) 02:28, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Adding Jeffpw to Misplaced Pages:Deceased Wikipedians?

    Resolved – Boldness is required here: declaring a two week break on this discussion. With respect for the late editor's friends and family, the best thing we can do is maintain a respectful decorum. Nothing in this matter demands our immediate attention. What the situation does demand is taste and sensitivity. Durova 04:19, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.
    This thread can still be viewed via the article history.

    Let's try this again

    My initial question (before everyone started to think I was running for AntiChrist by having the temerity to remove a banned user's comments from a memorial) was whether we can add Jeffpw to Misplaced Pages:Deceased Wikipedians, as he mets the criteria for inclusion. However, SandyGeorgia raised the concern about how the article lists the RW name of the contributor with their username in parentheses. I have watched the noticeboard drama about this, and wanted to get some feedback. Clearly, this wasn't really addressed before PeterSymonds and MzMcBride closed down the entire topic (the latter being the perennial conflict between SandyGeorgia and DavidShankbone).
    So clearly, I have learned my lesson about mixing topics. How about we deal with this one (polite-like would be greatly appreciated). - Arcayne () 20:13, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Perhaps this might be best discussed at Misplaced Pages talk:Deceased Wikipedians. –xeno (talk) 20:19, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Oh, of that, I am sure. What I was seeking clarification on, however, was the point of using Jeff's real name (as are used in the articles). Someone who was following all the drama about that might be able to sum up policy on how it applies to my question here: when adding Jeff, do we add his real name, seeing as its commonly available? - Arcayne () 20:31, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I think part of the debate really (more heat than light, for sure) is just how "commonly available" his real name really is. I see no problem with adding him to WP:DIED, and without his real name, regardless of precedence. Keeper ǀ 76 20:34, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    There are three separate and general issues here, and some of them verge into text at the WP:HARASSMENT page and under- or undeveloped Wiki policy in this area; it's not something we encounter every day.

    1. Do we only add a name to that page when we have verifiable, referenced information about the editor's death? For example, what would we do in a future similar case if we didn't have credible checkuser evidence on Jeff's sister and if we didn't have any reliable proof?

    2. In a borderline case like this, where Jeff did use his real name on Wiki less-than-a-handful of times in the past, but made it clear more recently that he didn't use his real name on Wiki, how do we decide whether to use a real name? In this case, we have every indication that Jeff's sister is Jeff's sister, so we could defer to her if/when we hear from her, and if she wants his name revealed we should do that IMO, but what would we do in another case, under different circumstances?

    3. The separate matter that needs to be dealt with via our policy at WP:HARASSMENT is where we stand on private correspondence and information being revealed, on and off-Wiki, after a person is deceased. Since we haven't even fully developed that policy for living editors, it's hard to see how we can sort it for deceased editors. But at least living editors can speak for themselves, so perhaps we have more of an obligation to protect deceased editors.

    In this case, I'm comfortable adding his full name to the page if his sister wants that and as long as there is no reference to the site that released Jeff's private correspondence; otherwise, we have too many other indications that it's not a cut-and-dried case. Jeff's name is "out there" widely now simply because Wikipedians released it, unfortunately. It is what it is; it should be up to his sister, in this case, but we should set a policy that covers all cases.

    SandyGeorgia (Talk) 20:45, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    • "Jeff's name is "out there" widely now simply because Wikipedians released it, unfortunately." Sandy, that's not true. I don't know why Jeff would strike up a conversation about not using his name with you, but then use that of his deceased husband in a memorial page, but you certainly haven't provided any evidence of that. If you had, I don't think all the people on the LGBT project, where he was most active and well-known, would have used his real name. --David Shankbone 20:53, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Okay, let's ask her if it's okay, presuming she is the next of kin. On a side note, BLP wouldn't matter here, right? The subject of the entry is dead. - Arcayne () 21:00, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I don't know if his sister or his mother is next of kin. And we don't seem to have our BLP policy that well fleshed out either, in terms of when BLP kicks off. In other words, I don't know. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 21:02, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    The opinions of Jeff's sister don't have anything to do with what Jeff would have wanted. Jeff used his real name as his email address to me, and far as I know, that was the email he used for everyone. He dropped all kinds of personal information into ordinary conversation, and the only reason he held anything back was so he couldn't be stalked again - now both he and Isaac are dead, it doesn't matter.
    Please stop the fighting with each other and over IAR. It was that that kept driving Jeff away from Misplaced Pages. For one thing several of the people who think they know what Jeff thought of them are wrong, and I would rather they stop abusing an imagined relationship with him to push their point. Please don't duke it out over his grave - here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VST5W_PqXXM . Dev920, who misses Jeffpw. 22:41, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Respectfully, Dev920, we aren't talking about that right now. That conversation was archived after a fiery onslaught of bitter recrimination erupted like an bloated, angry zit, and over very little, to boot.
    This conversation is about how to post an entry in Deceased Wikipedians (ie, whether to use his name and, in parentheses, username). No one wants to take the wrong step, as some concern has been voiced that doing so would possibly out his identity. Your contributions would be helpful here, as many folk are saying that his identity was secret, while others are voicing with conviction that Jeff was courageous (and ballsy) enough that he didn't care who knew who he was. It has been posted here so as to determine whether his identity was public enough to warrant inclusion of his real name. I tend to think it was. - Arcayne () 23:05, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I know that this is not the specific place to ask people to stop fighting, but I don't want to go wandering all over the wiki wherever this issue crops up. The firey onslaught, as you put it, hasn't stopped, it has simply moved elsewhere and I very much wish it would stop. Checking one's watchlist in the middle of grieving and discovering that your friend's death has become just another pawn in the wikigame is very hard to bear. Dev920, who misses Jeffpw. 00:22, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Arcayne, I suggest that someone neutral should approach his sister after a suitable amount of time has passed. Right now, the rush to add his name to a page is somewhat distasteful. Pedro seems to have established a good rapport with his sister and might be the right person to raise the subject. (Shankbone made some mistaken representations below about previous posts of mine and just to reassure: I never said nor do I have any intention of taking this to private e-mail with Jeff's sister, as 1) I believe in transparency and can say that all of my posts to Debbie are in the public eye, and 2) I think it would be distasteful to approach her about this so soon. Pedro would be a good candidate, based on what I've seen of his posts so far, or Alison.) SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:05, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    • Loss of a sibling is incredibly traumatic (I speak from personal experience here). Let them make the running. Misplaced Pages's just a website, in the end, and the real world doesn't actually give a toss what we as individuals think, so I jon here with the chorus of people urging that everybody just drop it. Guy (Help!) 00:20, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

    LessHeard Van U

    Resolved – I don't see how this will generate any positive outcome. To Sandy and David: diverge on opposite paths and leave the matter of Jeff to others. This isn't helping anybody, and the resulting bickering is only causing bad ill on all sides here. seicer | talk | contribs 21:31, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.
    A catfight, for illustration

    Why is it that I always end up with a Misplaced Pages Reviewer on my page? LessHeard is restoring a comment that was made post-archive after I removed it. The comment adds nothing to the discussion. When I removed the post-archived comment again, I end up with LessHeard on my Talk page threatening to block, so that he can restore the post-archive, non-substantive comment. --David Shankbone 19:47, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Just drop it. Others added to the thread after it was archived. No-one is helped by this bickering. DuncanHill (talk) 19:49, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Nobody added after User:MZMcBride archived, and if anybody is keeping this alive at this point, it is LessHeard, who is warning to block me and encouraging the User to rejigger his post. That's not dropping it, which I had done. And I agree - nobody is enjoying this, and that includes me. --David Shankbone 19:52, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I fail to see how my participating on Misplaced Pages Review has anything to do with the matter, unless it is a pre-emptive attempt to make my actions appear in a unfavourable light - or is simply a personal attack based on your own bias'. You do seem incapable of conducting yourself with any discernable degree of civility.
    However, back to the matter regarding my warning; you removed a good faith edit (expressing some distaste toward your conduct) that was made a minute after MZMcBride archived the discussion - which the editor may not have been aware of. Moreover, you removed the edit with a tool (which one uses "popups"?) which is supposed to be only for vandalism. This is bad faith taken to extreme, so I reverted the inappropriate edit, warned you for the bad faith, and invited the other editor to remove or amend their edit. I notice that you have not had the manners to comment to the other editor regarding the matter, but then this seems to be habit with you since I have not yet received notice from you regarding this thread either.
    Now, other than the fact I post on a board that has been frequented by you in the recent past, please advise me where I acted against policy or guidelines? Don't let your unfamiliarity with the detail hold you back. LessHeard vanU (talk) 20:16, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Actually, I have been having a discussion with the other editor on his talk page. Regarding the Misplaced Pages Review reference, it is simply curious that every time there is an issue, one of you guys end up on my talk page. I mean, there's what, 1500 admins and how millions of Users, the vast majority of whom don't frequent that site? Never mind. As I told Tom, Sandy said some pretty horrible things about what was a heartfelt memorial of someone who had been a good friend, but with whom I had a falling out but expected to be friends with again. My ire with Sandy is more than justified, and yes, almost any interaction the two of us have will more than devolve. I have existed, and made friends, on this project for years, so regarding your personal attack that "You do seem incapable of conducting yourself with any discernable degree of civility", it's a bit difficult when the Misplaced Pages Review crowd is always on my talk page, nit-picking, most recently in defense of Gretab, the same user who spread pedophilia rumors on the Misplaced Pages Review about a Wikimedian, amongst other atrocities. Yes, it's difficult to be civil when we have admins defending people like that on my Talk page and on ANI, over nit-picky issues. --David Shankbone 20:26, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Your discussion with the other editor is after I initially contacted them about their edit - a little late in the day, and no comment about using an anti-vandalism tool to revert them. As regards civility, it seems that I have previously taken exception to your manner of interacting with editors; I once blocked you for a week (quickly enough lifted by a third party) for referring to an editor as a cunt. I really don't care for the way you decide when and if you are going to abide by the same rules as everyone else on the basis of with which you are friends. As for your continuing harping on about my presence on Misplaced Pages Review, if how you conduct yourself with some people is the basis on how you judge the suitability of other websites then WR is manifestly a better place to gain your approbation.
    Again, as against your conduct today and (as exampled above) in the past, please can you show where I have abused my position as an admin as regards the rules, policies and guidelines. LessHeard vanU (talk) 20:47, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Frankly, LessHeard, I think the animosity and group pile-on of the Misplaced Pages Review folks have been more than demonstrated in the past (Uh, SlimVirgin, JzG, Durova, JoshuaZ, etc. etc. etc.), and I take your words in that light, and I imagine most other people in the know do as well. Calling someone with Merkin in their user name a cunt hardly seems beyond the bounds of reason, but whatever. --David Shankbone 20:58, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I see Shankbone managed to work in again, on yet another thread, 1) my name, and 2) a link to his blog that reveals private correspondence. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 20:55, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    You're so fascinated by yourself, it's the easiest way to get you to take notice. You're like Bloody Mary that way, except nobody has to turn off the lights, and they simply have to casually reference you. I'll be posting a link to my memorial on my Talk page, as well. --David Shankbone 20:58, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Is Shankbone exempt from WP:NPA? He's got quite a few on me alone in just a couple of days. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 20:59, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Is Sandy exempt from personal attacks? She's made some pretty horrible ones in the past few days. --David Shankbone 21:02, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Can Sandy and David both stop please? You are both making yourselves look bad, and I am sure that you are upsetting and hurting a lot of other editors by your current choice of argument. DuncanHill (talk) 21:05, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
      • AGree with DH (shit, that's like twice today!). Get a room, you two. AN is not the venue for either of you. Tell each other to fuck off via email, eh? Maybe make a subpage that no one else knows about? You're both better than this. Keeper ǀ 76 21:09, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    • It seems clear to me that both Sandy and David need to move away from the issue of jeffpw, and move away from each other, or be forcibly pulled apart. WilyD 21:08, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    • In a situation where Sandy has said she plans to contact a deceased person's sister to trash me, I don't know what anyone else expect. I loved Jeffpw, and we were very good friends for a long time, and had a ridiculously stupid falling out over something dumb like Santa Claus (I realize that never happens to anyone else on Misplaced Pages). But, if anyone really thinks that I'm not going to vehemently defend myself in reference to someone I admired and respected, who passed away, when I have someone who has only popped into my wiki life to talk about my "unnecessary photos", and that person is now going to write that deceased person's sister?! Sandy has offended me beyond belief, and I have Debbie's e-mail as well. It is Sandy who sparked this. --David Shankbone 21:18, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    • To be perfectly frank, starting is not what is interesting. You're both escalating this conflict, and I would be loath to see either (or both) of you try to drag his sister into it.
    • Look, Sandy disagreed with your action, strongly, but it wasn't a Personal Attack by the standards we usually use - she did comment on the action, not the actor. I don't see why she was offended, but that's neither here nor there. And the two of you barking at each other won't do anything but hurt more feelings and escalate things more. Go do something that doesn't involve Sandy or Jeff. Sandy needs to do the same. You have offended Sandy. She has offended you. Nobody wants to sort the two of you out because neither of you it at your best.
    • No punishments is a principle we've all agreed to stick to. So guilt isn't the issue. Current behaviour is. If you drop this and Sandy doesn't, then something can be done. But now, there's nothing. WilyD 21:37, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Oh, I'm closing my participation in this matter down - David Shankbone is as incapable of giving example of how I might have misinterpreted policy as he is admitting that he is wrong in any matter in which he has ignored or violated WP rules and guidelines. I feel that it paints a fairly wretched picture of a fairly wretched individual. LessHeard vanU (talk) 21:16, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Right back at you, Misplaced Pages Review guy. --David Shankbone 21:18, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Everyone involved: Stop it. Can't be any more blunt. Honestly, the way this has degraded into mudslinging is rather silly. Wizardman 21:24, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

    AN page proposal

    (Well we've been here before with nothing beyond discussion, but let's try again : )

    What would you (plural) think about us turning WP:AN (the main page) into a (protected?) nav page, which would list all the subpages (as sort of a directory, or index, or table of contents)? It would make things easier for everyone, and I think that we'd be more likely to see the subpages more correctly ustilised.

    I think that this would help with every page/subpage of AN. Better to have the main page as a directory to point everyone in the right direction, than for this page to be (as it often is) the one-stop shop.

    To clarify: This page (and its history) would be moved to a sub-page. (Consensual discussion can come up with a name.) And then this page would become the navpage/directory for all the subpages.

    Thoughts/concerns welcome. - jc37 23:36, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    I am no admin, but it sounds like a long-overdue move to me. Brilliantine (talk) 23:38, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    I actually have another similar proposal for how we could work things better. We could have a number of different AN subpages, each dealing with different editorial problems. We could have Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Editors, Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Content, Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Admin problems (to be used when people have concerns about admin behaviour), Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Meta requests and Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Miscellaneous requests. This would have a few advantages, with admins able to concentrate on the areas that they have expertise in. It would also significantly reduce the size that each pages gets to. WP:AN could be an index of each of these subpages, and AN/I would no longer need to be used, or replaced with Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Urgent admin intervention. Ryan Postlethwaite 23:46, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Sounds like an excellent idea. Cirt (talk) 23:53, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    (I also have a proposal for AN/I on the talk page.)
    But regardless of how we (re-)purpose the subpages, I still think we need a directory as the most likely "first stop" (here). (As you seem to agree: "WP:AN could be an index of each of these subpages...") So, at least for now, to keep this discussion sane, let's just focus on discussing this page being repuposed as a directory. A ReOrg to the subpages is a different discussion altogether. - jc37 23:54, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    Well, we couldn't do away with AN altogether without additional boards - there would be too much pressure on the current boards if we did that, so I think it would be good to discuss options for complete reform. Ryan Postlethwaite 00:04, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I've always thought ANI should be known as 'User Conduct' and this one, as a subpage, could be simply 'General'. I would strenuously oppose there being an AN/Content board - for me, that would be an example of exactly what wikipedia shouldn't be about. Brilliantine (talk) 00:08, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    Well, we get content issues brought up here all the time such as BLP concerns, off wiki legal concerns, image copyright concerns - a central place to discuss these would be good. Ryan Postlethwaite 00:10, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    There is already a BLP board. The thought of yet another place begging for content disputes to be inappropriately shopped around to gives me the heebie-jeebies: keep them in talk space or as an RFC if they cover a wide range of topics, says I. Copyright etc fair enough... Brilliantine (talk) 00:33, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    I thought we had a masterlist of noticeboards somewhere (not just admin ones), but I see that Misplaced Pages:Noticeboard is a redirect to something I've never heard of. I suppose Category:Misplaced Pages noticeboards is the closest we have. Carcharoth (talk) 00:03, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    (outdent) I think it's a great concept! This board is difficult to navigate at times due to long issues. Warning, though, that if we make a Misplaced Pages:Administrators' Noticeboard/Misc, that's the board that will get all the traffic. Nobody wants to read instructions, it seems, and if they're angry, they're even less likely to bother. KrakatoaKatie 00:26, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    I say this every time someone suggests drastically changing how AN works - Why does it need changing? Is it broken at the moment? Not convinced ... I think the current set up works fine, particularly as it's less busy now then it was a year ago (as with Misplaced Pages in general). Neıl 09:10, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Well, size was one of the issues we were discussing some months ago, but there are plenty of other issues for change. I'd support almost any proposal, so long as it cleans all of the noticeboards up (and there is reason to do so). Would anyone like to provide a comprehensive list of discrepancies that might be fixed with x amount of change? Synergy 11:48, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    I support turning AN into a navboard, but I think there would need to be somewhere to post the kind of miscellaneous notices that AN is needed for. J Milburn (talk) 12:11, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • I'd find it much more useful to extract all threads into subpages, one per topic, similar to the AfD logs.
      I have only been active here a couple of times, but found it very hard to follow my topic due to the noise, i.e. high number of other edits to this page. If every topic is in its own subpage I can watchlist it, and look at every diff if the discussion gets too confusing to just see at a glance which comments are new.
      There's a possibility of name clashes when creating a new topic page, but if they are prefixed with the date (e.g. WP:AN/2008 August 13/AN page proposal) that should be acceptable.
      The sub topics could then be classified however one likes, by having one or more AN pages that list or transclude all open issues.
      --Amalthea 16:32, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
    • God, yes. AN and ANI need to be reorganized like AfD or DRV's main list pages are. It would not only make it easier to track individual topics, but people could be referred directly to the old discussion when it drops off the main page, instead of having to sort through a bunch of archived pages full of stuff. — The Hand That Feeds You: 17:42, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Looking at the above, this would seem to have consensus. But I'd like to give it at least another day before making the move, just to give everyone who would like to comment (for or against) that opportunity. - jc37 20:24, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    This is no where near enough support to make such a major change. Ryan Postlethwaite 20:26, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Why don't you start by creating pages for some of the suggested redlinks above, and see what people think at that point? Cirt (talk) 20:31, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    (To Ryan) - actually the only naysayers at that point were Neil, and you had a conditional support/oppose. Everyone else appeared to support. But even so, I still would like more comment (as I noted). - jc37 07:25, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    first things first

    Not at all to interrupt what is above, but I'd think it would be good, before we dive into solutions, that we explicitly find consensus on what the problems are, if any. How about a project page? We could examine on that page what the strengths and weaknesses of the noticeboards are. We could easily make drastic changes, without understanding this clearly, first, and simply make things worse, if we don't stop and first agree on what the problems are. I can think of numerous solutions to problems that I perceive, and I perceive plenty, but ... it's like trying to decide what medicine to take when you haven't figured out what disease you've got. Sure, in desperation, we might do that. But I don't think it's a great idea. If there is a solution to some of the problems that is described above that is easy to implement, that is reversible, that does no damage, sure, we can do this simultaneously. But some of the truly major problems, I suspect, won't be solved merely by splitting up the noticeboards into subpages, unless other aspects of the process are also examined and reformed. The very purpose and function of the noticeboards should be examined. And I don't even want to go into that here, I think we should do what we should be good at: describing consensus, neutrally, on a page, that would have its own Talk page where open discussion takes place and the project page where consensus is summarized, revised, etc. Not signed, the project page is a report of the community participating on the topic. --Abd (talk) 23:13, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    • I very much oppose doing away with this noticeboard and splintering discussion onto a half dozen other boards; the last thing we need is yet another noticeboard (I don't have time as it is to read the 38 pages linked on {{Editabuselinks}}). I must a agree with Neil's comment above, in that this seems to be a solution in search of a problem. The Editabuselinks templates already serves as a list of noticeboards. Doing away with WP:AN will only increase the traffic on AN/I and reduce the number of eyes on topics sent to other, less trafficked noticeboards. I also don't see any benefit to an AfD style noticeboard, with each issue created as a subpage that is then transcluded here. That's overly complicated compared the current system and creates more problems than it solves. - auburnpilot talk 23:02, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    I'm also concerned that the vandals which plague this page will find it easier to vandalize several individual pages, requiring protection across a wide range of pages. Corvus cornixtalk 01:07, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    • This thread is exactly why my initial proposal was and is merely for moving this page to a sub-page and using this location as a navpage. Nothing lost, and everything gained. Instead we have people hung up on ReOrg plans for sub-pages and the like. - jc37 07:25, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    User:SusanPolgar and WP:NLT violation

    User:SusanPolgar Special:Contributions/SusanPolgar has sued User:Sam_Sloan and others, for defamation. User:Sam_Sloan himself was blocked on 10 November 2007 by User:Viridae for a similar lawsuit: . It would only be fair that User:SusanPolgar be blocked for filing suit as well. Here is proof of the lawsuit: Polgar targets national chess group, associates in lawsuit. Here is proof that User:Sam_Sloan (the same user as Sam Sloan) is a defendent in User:SusanPolgar's lawsuit: Crime and Courts, Official Records. And here is a self-attestation that User:SusanPolgar is Susan Polgar: . And here is the evidence that User:Sam_Sloan is the Sam Sloan which user:SusanPolgar just sued: More information on this new suit by may be found at Susan Polgar#Executive board member. Although User:SusanPolgar has not been recently active, she should nonetheless be blocked per WP:NLT due to her ongoing lawsuit involving another wikipedia editor. 98.204.199.179 (talk) 22:28, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    Why would we bother blocking someone who has not edited in over a year? The rationale over WP:NLT is that blocking is a means of stopping anyone from making WP a party to an action by their editing. If they are not editing then there is no reason for WP to act. LessHeard vanU (talk) 22:56, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
        • Sorry, I didn't mean to snap back at you like that Guy. First, this crackpot claims I am a guy named "Greg Strong" and now you're claiming I am Sam Sloan. It's enough to make a person Schizophrenic. 01:43, 16 August 2008 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.204.199.179 (talk)

    Self-hating Jew - cited history is being deleted

    please help!

    After decistion to merege, I've merged my self, and added the cited historical citation. Citation is by Nativ, and a supporter of the merge - has asked to so, only if content is added.

    having Shabazz refusing to accpet the historical facts, he keeps deleting a RS by Nativ.

    please Help!

    --Shevashalosh (talk) 22:57, 15 August 2008 (UTC)

    In order for an admin to look into the matter, we really need more information such as the article in question and some diffs of the edits. Thanks —Travis 23:02, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    The article is Self-hating Jew and the material being added is WP:OR cited to a POV source. The phrase in question (Auto-Anti-Semitism) is a neologism with 21 Google hits (including 1 from Misplaced Pages and 2 from Wikirage). — ] (] · ]) 23:10, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Correction. Today it's up to 26 Google hits, with 2 from Misplaced Pages. — ] (] · ]) 23:12, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Pretty simple. I wrote an article of "Auto Anti Semitism". It was decided on talk page to merege it into "Self hating Jew". A supporter of this merege has asked to merge, only if the contant of "Auto Anti Semitism" is included, I've done the merging myself.
    Shabaz disagrees to this decision, and he want's to eliminate what existed in "Auto Anti Semitism" for some reason, and he keeps deleting the merge i've done, as to keeping it "clean" from merge, only the way it was before "Auto Anti semitism" existed.
    In addition - "Auto-Anti-Semitism" term, is cited with RS of Nativ - and he keeps deleting the citation of it as well, so you can't see that it is a relible source.
    Someone responsible needs to get involved --Shevashalosh (talk) 23:17, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    This is a misrepresentation of the merge discussion. One editor wrote "Merge by making the new article a redirect. No other changes necessary." Another wrote "S-h J is surely the better known term." A third wrote that "'Auto-Anti-Semitism' is hardly ever used in English", while stating that its contents should be retained. Nobody agreed with Shevashalosh's OR that Auto-Anti-Semitism is "the academic term" for the phenomenon of Jewish self-hatred, or her OR regarding its causes or history. — ] (] · ]) 23:35, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    Someone take responsibilty on this guy's behavior and his deletion of the merge, history and RS by Nativ. Please. --Shevashalosh (talk) 23:47, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    It looks to me like Shabazz is in the correct; I don't see anything in that article to support that "'Auto-Anti-Semitism'" is even a commonly used academic term, let alone the predominant one. Celarnor 00:34, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Well the term known to jews is "Auto-Anti-Semitism", the term "Self hating Jew" does not existt in in use. In addtion, to support the obvious, I have added an RS by nativ.

    A merge was decided upon, despite this fact. But you can not igonre the realty, as a supporter of this merge expressed on talk page, this is how it is being refered, not as "Self hating Jew". to say other wise is wikipedia basiclly lying. thank you, take responsibilty on Shabazz--Shevashalosh (talk) 00:43, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    I protected the page for 24 hours because there was so much reverting in the last two days. Please try to come to an agreement on the talkpage. Regards, dvdrw 00:52, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    "Auto-Anti-Semitism" seems like a neologism, when one considers the current sources. It is only mentioned in a handful of Scholar-indexed journal articles, all of which seem to treat it as a hypothetical linguistic term rather than one that is actually in regular usage; by comparison, "self-hating jew" has astronomically more uses in academic literature; there really isn't anything to support your assertion that "Auto-Anti-Semitism" is the term used internally to the Jewish community. If you could uncover something, obviously it could be included. In any case, you're grossly in violation of 3RR, and its been protected anyway; this is an issue for consensus and the talk page. Celarnor 00:57, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    Also, Shevashalosh has un-redirected Auto-Anti-Semitism and started their own article there based off the single source they had been using on the other article. Celarnor 01:12, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    Hi,
    There is a consensus to merge Auto-Anti-Semitism into Self-hating Jews.
    Shevashalosh doesn't agree. Right, but he doens't give the reasons on the talk page but come here to complain when this is applied.
    He has been here for 4 months, is considered highly disruptive by many editors and has already not respected 3RR rules 2 times.
    It is up to you guys, but the "sysop community attitude" with Shevashalosh could be considered completely in disagreement with WP:CIVIL for other contributors who take care of content issues.
    The more you wait, the stronger he feels, and the less he listens.
    Personnaly, I have just received personnal attacks when I tried to discuss with him.
    Ceedjee (talk) 11:46, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Problem with someone who just won't stop.

    The content issue : There are two college societies with the same name, "Mystical Seven". They both have articles, that's not a problem. One society uses Mystical 7 as its name, and that is actually the proper form of the name for that society. Not so for the other. There is a disambiguation page for both Mystical Seven articles, and the redirect page for "Mystical 7" should go to the society that uses that as it's name, not to both societies. As one poster said, "a redirect from 'Coke' as a name should go to 'Coca-cola', not a cola disambiguation page for Coca-Cola and Pepsi."

    The editor issue : There is a user who can't apparently understand this. He wants to have the redirect for Mystical 7 go to the disambiguation page for both societies. (He's given no reason why.) It went back and forth a bit. HE then asked for comment. The comments he got supported the 'it should go to the one society that uses the name, not the other' side of the argument. He still reverted to his view. I changed it back and he STILL reverts it back to his view. I have a hard time accepting that this is good faith anymore, since it has all the appearance of a profound and sullen stolidity.

    So the question is this : what do you do with an editor who can't accept his own request for comment?Thaïs Alexandrina (talk) 00:29, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Where is this RFC? If you mean the question he asked on the secret societies talk page, that's not exactly something official and binding that can be enforced. Not only that, but there was no consensus either way in it, in the four comments I saw. (Personally, I agree with him) --Golbez (talk) 00:35, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    Hang on. Ok, these are secret societies? I've never understood how we can have Misplaced Pages pages on secret societies. If they're secret, then we don't know about them. If they're not secret, then they're something like "private membership" or "confidential membership." However, that violation of fundamental logic aside, we do redirects for misspellings. It's routine. Therefore, it's safe to assume that a person who has only heard the name (after all, it's secret) will type "7" sometimes and "seven" sometimes, so it would be logical to have the redirect serve as the landing point for any query. The "7" people lose nothing. After all, they're secret, so presumably they don't want people to find them quickly. Geogre (talk) 14:29, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    I agree as well. This is hardly a Coke and Pepsi issue, and it's extremely misleading for you to use that analogy, Thaïs. These societies have the exact same name, and people who are unfamiliar with the particular form of the word seven should not be penalized by having to dig around, looking for whichever of the two they're trying to find. Mystical Seven and Mystical 7 should both stay as they are currently. GlassCobra 14:37, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    Exactly. These so-called secret societies can't have articles without reliable sources, so it hardly makes them secret, does it? Corvus cornixtalk 18:09, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Newcomer

    I was looking at some articles until I stumbled upon this one. Since I'm here and you folks are Misplaced Pages administrators, how come I have not been given the "welcome to Misplaced Pages" greeting? Don't newcomers get those greetings? Auto Racing Fan (talk) 01:21, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Not automatically, no. Only when someone notices new accounts editing. Have placed one there. Congratulations, I think you win the award for the least annoying post on AN all week! Georgewilliamherbert (talk) 01:27, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Misplaced Pages landing page

    The wikipedia landing page still reflects 2.49 M articles although we hit 2.5 a couple days ago. Someone might want to take a look at the counter.--Kumioko (talk) 01:40, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Please disambig Nightline at Iran Air Flight 655

     Done

    I just finished disambiguating 300+ links to Nightline, and this page has the last one that could be fixed. Would someone mind disambiguating it to Nightline (US news program)? Thanks! Auntof6 (talk) 03:10, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    In the future, you can use Template:Editprotected on the article's talk page.-Andrew c  05:28, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Portal:Indianapolis/On this day...

    I am unable to create a new Portal:Indianapolis/On this day... such as Portal:Indianapolis/On this day.../August 14 or Portal:Indianapolis/On this day.../June 9. I'm sure the rest are the same but these two are the only ones I've tried to edit. Thanks for any help! HoosierState 03:31, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    It's because of the '...' in the article name. I will create blank pages for you so that you can edit them. J Milburn (talk) 11:45, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Admin Bot

    I'm currently requesting approval for an admin bot. I have transcluded the brfa below --Chris 04:40, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Maybe just link this, to avoid breaking the section apart? Hersfold 04:42, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Ok - Misplaced Pages:Bots/Requests for approval/FA Template Protection Bot --Chris 04:49, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Shouldn't this be at the crat noticeboard? bibliomaniac15 04:52, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    It is sort of, but since this has to do with admins as well I thought i'd place a notice here --Chris 04:57, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    This seems to me like an appropriate place to notify as well. SQL 06:10, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    Using admin powers to prevent vandalism on a page admin is involved in heavily?

    As an admin, it is appropriate to add protection to an article that you are involved actively with in terms of normal editing as a measure to cut down on perceived vandalism within the article, or is it better to go through the proper process to achieve this? --MASEM 13:04, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

    If its obvious vandalism, rather than possible content dispute or good faith poor editing, then protecting the encyclopedia from disruption is paramount. If blocking the vandal is inappropriate, if the account is ip hopping or there are too many of them then protecting the article should be considered. After taking the action it should then be brought to an admin board for a sanity check. If it is a grey area regarding vandalism, just a third opinion might suffice. LessHeard vanU (talk) 13:19, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    If you're asking yourself seriously, then use the requests for page protection and hand off. This will do two important things aside from cleanse your conscience. 1. It will diffuse the "enemy" of the vandal. It won't be You vs. Him (or her) in a death roll. This is very good, because it prevents any rumor of being a fighter. 2. If the vandals are into user page defacement and such, they don't have such a clear target for their adolescent rage, if they don't have an enemy, but, instead, have the project to look to. ¶The down side is that it can be slow. However, I believe that more admins should be using it. It could certainly forestall some heated and inappropriate acts. ¶Finally, remember that protection should be used sparingly. Geogre (talk) 14:24, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
    Category: