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This page is for reporting and discussing incidents that require the intervention of administrators, such as blocked users evading blocks. Any user of Misplaced Pages may post here. Please feel free to leave a message.
Note: Reporting violations of the three revert rule should be done at Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/3RR.
If you do post, please sign and date all contributions, using the Misplaced Pages special form "~~~~", which translates into a signature and a time stamp automagically. (The page archivers really need the time information.)
If you want to make an open informal complaint over the behaviour of an admin, you can do so here, but please only do either that, or file a RFC or RFAr, but not both.
Please be aware that this page isn't the place to bring disputes over content, or reports of abusive behaviour — we aren't referees, and have limited authority to deal with abusive editors. We have a dispute resolution procedure which we recommend you follow. If you bring such disputes here, we will usually advise you to take them elsewhere, such as mediation, requests for comment, or requests for arbitration.
See also:
- Arbitrators' requests for admin enforcement
- Blocking policy
- Controversial blocks
- Block user
- List of blocked IP addresses and usernames
- Block log
User:Larsie, User:Chrispy
These users appear to have engaged in some kind of stealth hoax vandalism (see Misplaced Pages:Votes for deletion/Lars Olsen):
- Larsie (talk · contribs)
- Chrispy (talk · contribs)
- 135.214.66.241 (talk · contribs), possibly the same user as 135.214.66.240 (talk · contribs)
In cryptic messages on User talk:Chrispy, Larsie talks about some kind of game (possibly related to Nomic) that involves making edits to Misplaced Pages, that shouldn't be made public, or something that could result in getting kicked off Misplaced Pages. The time frame of these edits (late October 2004) is the same as the Lars Olsen edits:
It seems that User:Larsie and User:Chrispy share some interest in unusual articles, like Infinite monkey theorem and Extreme ironing (the latter, believe it or not, isn't a hoax). Only a few days after the Lars Olsen edits and the cryptic messages above, User:Larsie started making major and apparently legitimate contributions to Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, which became a featured article. The thought of a featured article possibly containing sneaky hoax vandalism made me react a bit strongly.
Anyway, I left messages on their talk pages and it would be nice if they owned up to what they were up to with Lars Olsen, and were upfront about any other possible hoaxes, so I won't need to trawl through the entire contribution history. -- Curps 08:35, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- User:Larsie has stated that one of his colleagues at work must have made some edits on his PC as an immature prank, and when I requested that he check the integrity of the other contributions made under his username he has stated that they are all fine. He has also stated that the seemingly cryptic messages were related to the idea of starting a nomic game on Misplaced Pages. It seems this incident wasn't as serious as I once feared, so I consider it closed. -- Curps 20:23, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
User:The Recycling Troll
See also: Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/Snowspinner
This troll is at it again, stalking me and voting the opposite from my votes on VfD. Has been blocked once before for the same behavior. RickK 00:49, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- If I go around and vote opposite you, will you block me too? -- Netoholic @ 00:52, 2005 Mar 9 (UTC)
- Dunno. Will you be a new user who follows his every edit and makes it clear from his username that he's a troll? (Snowspinner) 01:11, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- One's username doesn't automatically mean that they are, in fact, a troll. May I point out that my original name, before adminship, was User:ClockworkTroll. It's one's behavior that makes one a troll, not one's name. – ClockworkSoul 14:21, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- At any given time there are hundreds of open votes on VfD, any one person can only pick a handful of them to vote on. The odds that two people would randomly pick the same handful and consistently vote in the opposite way each time are nearly impossible. If you did this, you would effectively disenfranchise RickK and deny him any right to vote. Yes, I think that would be grounds for blocking someone. If you think it's OK to take away someone's right to vote, you could hardly turn around and complain about someone else taking away your right to edit. -- Curps 08:10, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Curps, this is so wrong! There are many ways to navigate Misplaced Pages and using another user's contributions is as valid a way as any other particularly if you share interests. Refdoc 21:07, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Dunno. Will you be a new user who follows his every edit and makes it clear from his username that he's a troll? (Snowspinner) 01:11, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- Honestly, Rick, that's no good if that's what he's doing, but how in the world could we verify his motives? And even if we could, is a blockable offense? I would say just rely on the judgment of those who determine the outcome of the votes to give proper weight to his vote and to yours. Everyking 01:02, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Let's go ahead and call a spade a spade. Snowspinner 01:11, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- Blocked for a week. Snowspinner 01:11, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- 01:13, 2005 Mar 9 Snowspinner blocked "User:The Recycling Troll" with an expiry time of 7 days (Repeating behavior that got him blocked last time.)
- Snowspinner, the one-man ArbCom. This "Troll" makes some very helpful edits, and just happens to vote opposite of RickK. You have no grounds, and I hope some more even-tempered admins will take care to unblock him ASAP. Geez man, you didn't even contact him on his talk page to explain things. -- Netoholic @ 01:39, 2005 Mar 9 (UTC)
- Having discussed this with him previously, I didn't see much need. And let's be clear - this is not an issue of him voting opposite RickK. It is an issue of him systematically editing every article RickK does, down the line. That is stalking and harassment. Snowspinner 02:05, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- Only if RickK let's himself feel harassed. RickK tends to handle a lot of Recentchanges. He marks them for deletion, pov, cleanup, etc. It seems reasonable that following RickK's edits in order to find work that needs to be done is a good technique. The only harrassment I see is on your part, and would happily co-sign an RfC to that effect, if anyone else is inclined. -- Netoholic @ 02:15, 2005 Mar 9 (UTC)
- Well, you have a valid point, but I hesitate to go to bat for someone called "The Recycling Troll." Why not file an RfC on behalf of someone who wasn't trying to provoke a block? Rad Racer 02:34, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Only if RickK let's himself feel harassed. RickK tends to handle a lot of Recentchanges. He marks them for deletion, pov, cleanup, etc. It seems reasonable that following RickK's edits in order to find work that needs to be done is a good technique. The only harrassment I see is on your part, and would happily co-sign an RfC to that effect, if anyone else is inclined. -- Netoholic @ 02:15, 2005 Mar 9 (UTC)
- Having discussed this with him previously, I didn't see much need. And let's be clear - this is not an issue of him voting opposite RickK. It is an issue of him systematically editing every article RickK does, down the line. That is stalking and harassment. Snowspinner 02:05, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- Snowspinner, when dealing with what you consider troll behaviour, it is important to maintain your equanimity and the moral high ground; otherwise your actions as an administrator are apt to become the issue, and distract attention from the behaviour that you were attempting to deal with. As a result of your action, other administrators now have a more complex situation to deal with. For one thing, there is nothing in Blocking policy, so far as I can see, that sanctions a block in this case, and if there is, there is nothing that sanctions a 7 day block. The nearest section that could apply is "Disruptive behaviour", and the policy calls for a 24 Hour block in that case. It is somewhat a matter of interpretation whether following RickK around even qualifies as disruptive behaviour. I sypathize with your motivation, but it would have been much better to go through the RfC/RFAr process. You might wish for a less tedious process, but that is the process we have. If you consider Mr Recycling to be a troll, the prime advice is "Do not feed the trolls", and I'm afraid you have rather transgressed against that advice. --BM 02:55, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- The previous 24 hour block clearly did not penetrate through The Recycling Troll's skull and into his consciousness in any form that affects his behavior. It seems that more force is necessary. If this is against the letter of the blocking policy, I can only say that common sense suggests that when a user shows up, has "troll" in their name (Which, while not in and of itself a reason to block, is still not insignificant), goes straight to the mailing list with his complaint, and follows RickK around, we are not dealing with a good editor. The question is whether to dither around debating the obvious, or to just shoot.
- Bang. Snowspinner 03:46, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- I think a week is too long. His behaviour is disruptive and he knows it, (there has been discussion on the mailing list, so snowspinner's block hasn't come out of the blue) Also he is not new. So let's not start escalating blocks beyond what policy allows. If one 24 hour block doesn't get the message through, then we try anonther (and another, and another). Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 06:38, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
How about waiting till s/he does something that is against current policy? Blocking is not supposed to be something that is used against users who simply annoy us, it is supposed to be used to prevent damage to the wiki in cases where mediation or arbitration is not an option. This isn't a new user, and they're not damaging the wiki, in fact, they seem to be making positive edits. Let's let this one go and get on with real issues. Mark Richards 11:24, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- This seems to be most of the problem with Snowspinner. He's using up his energy in "fighting trolls" when he could just be building an encyclopaedia. Surely, we're more in need of positive editors than vigilantes? Dr Zen 01:39, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- A look at Snowspinner's most recent article-space edits suggests that he finds time to fight trolls and produce good article edits. --Tony Sidaway|Talk 14:46, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- When I look at that record, that is not what I see. Sure, he did some work on the steak articles, but before that we have long strings of rollbacking of User:John Gohde, removing stub tags and deleted templates, and some RC patrol. In fact, if you look at his 500 articles, you have to go all the way back to Sep 14th (at present). This "500 article point" is quite far out there compared to most. Tony's goes back just two months to Jan 6 and even Dr Zen beats him out at Oct 21. Granted, it's probably unfair to judge value to the project using raw comparisons like this, but I find that he generates more heat than light, and doesn't have call to judge the merits of other ed-i-tors. -- Netoholic @ 15:57, 2005 Mar 11 (UTC)
- What you're seeing is a very different kind of editor than you and me. He does far more basic janitorial work than I do. It's clear from looking at his history that he is not the Don Quixote that Dr Zen wishes to paint him as, but a working editor performing under-appreciated but nevertheless very useful tasks. He has also in this time done a lot of useful work in the Misplaced Pages namespace, not the least of which is his VfD participation. --Tony Sidaway|Talk 16:31, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Policy question
I'm very confused by all of this. I know that an admin can, on his or her own, block an obvious vandal, permanently block an account with an inappropriate name, etc. However, I thought that pretty much anything else was supposed to go through the process of RfC, mediation, and arbitration, and that admins were simply supposed to enforce decisions once they have been reached. In practice, it seems to me that a lot of admins are behaving as judge and jury, and—what really worries me—doing so in cases in which they are personally involved. I don't know if we have a specific rule about that, but I would expect the same principle to apply to blocks over behevior as the one that says you don't protect an article on which you are an active editor. -- Jmabel | Talk 07:45, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- I very strongly agree with Jmabel that you should not block users in cases where you are personally involved. Rick did the right thing, he could have blocked the RT himself, but that would have been wrong. Instead he brought up the issue here, so it is in the open, and we can form a consensus on the case as a group. We do have the authority to block disruptive users for up to a
weekmonth. Let us use this power, where it seems to improve the operation of WP. I do believe that admins dealing out this maximum "court martial" penalty should have some experience of precedent cases, so they can make an estimation whether their block is in line with the practice approved of by other admins. I propose that it should be made binding policy that admins should not use their power in disputes to which they are a party. But as long as the matter is brought up here, in the open, and people decide to act, I see nothing wrong in that. Of course, if there is disagreement and unblocking, the blocking admin should stand down and wait for other opinions. In the present case, I have no problem with the block. If the RT is a bona-fide user, he can discuss and try to explain how his behaviour is motivated. As long as he just stubbornly annoys Rick without arguing that he just happens to have opposite views, and that it's not really to do with Rick at all (go figure), I think we are justified in dealing with him as a troll. dab (ᛏ) 07:55, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC) - ah, blocking policy on disruption has, "such blocks should initially last 24 hours, but repeat violators may be blocked for a maximum of one month.", so one week is not even the maximum. Arguably, Snowspinner could have gone from one to two days first, but a week does not seem excessive after the user had been blocked for a day already, and did not seem to have reconsidered his behaviour. dab (ᛏ) 08:04, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- If it were a new user, which it's not. Mark Richards 11:21, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
This guy is obviously getting on Rick's nerves, which is bad, but he's also going around making (what I understand to be) valid edits after Rick, so I guess he is improving the encyclopedia in his own way. I'm reluctant to condemn that. I don't want Rick to be deliberately irritated by anybody, but this guy's behavior seems so utterly harmless and maybe even beneficial that I really don't see how it warrants a week's block. Surely the two can work out whatever differences they might have. There is no need for punitive measures when honest discussion could produce a better result. Everyking 08:29, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
A random check of article edits shows that almost all of his "valid edits" are adding a few wiki links -- most of which, admittedly, lead to actual articles. The only actual editing I came across in my (admittedly incomplete) survey was changing Rickk's "...which had a claimed membership of 15,000" to "...which claimed a membership of 15,000 people". I'm not seeing any real editing here. --Calton | Talk 08:45, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Well, Calton, I think that's a bit of a harsh claim - there are many users whose primary contribution is to fix links and grammar. They do seem like good changes, and I don't think we can block people for the types of edits they make. Looking at it, I really think that we should probably be able to put up with someone systematically going through our edits and 'checking' them. If the edits s/hes making are constructive, then I really don't think theres any reason to block a user for doing that. Yes, it's annoying, but really, if it were Rick 'checking' this users edits, I don't think there'd be this outcry. As for voting on vfd, I don't think there can be any rule about how people do this. If some wierdo wants to go through my votes and vote against them, they pretty much can (many do in fact!). Let's try to separate being annoyed by it, and what will actually improve the encyclopedia. As far as I can see this user has done nothing but improve it. Mark Richards 11:21, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I think the vfd issue should be delt with by admins simply ignoring his votes. Bad faith voting does not improve wikipedia. Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 11:33, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Let's get this one straight. He can be banned because RickK doesn't like him and his votes should be ignored because he doesn't agree with RickK? I nearly always vote opposite to RickK, because he is a deletionist and I want the encyclopaedia to be inclusive. I don't resent him for it; I just think he's misguided. I know he doesn't like me too. Should I be banned for that? There's definitely something in the air here -- I note you have expressed it on your talk page although you withdrew it -- that admins are something other than just editors with mops, but have become an ungovernable moral force, untouchable and inviolable. RickK is very popular with a certain sort of user here and very unpopular with others. He reacts to the latter with anger and disdain. I don't think you should be encouraging that. Perhaps his votes should be disregarded for opposing them. Dr Zen 01:39, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Hi Theresa - how do you know they are bad faith? I really am not sure I see the issue here. Many people frequently vote against me on vfd, and, to be honest, I wouldn't have a particular problem if an editor appeared to vote against me on principle. That's why it is 'votes' for deletion. If someone wants to use their vote to express an opinion that others find strange, then that's how it is. The user seems to be making good edits, and I don't think there is any good reason to discount their votes. Mark Richards 12:30, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Erm? That's a novel idea - I don't think any of the people blocking has asked him. I have to tell you, a lot of my irritation around this issue relates to admins simply not following the policies we have in place on blocking. To be honest I think that (this case aside) we create a lot of disgruntled and angry new users through that. Mark Richards 12:24, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- um, look, I'm not an expert on this case, but it looks like there was some exchange. RickK asked RT on his talk page and apparently got some reply along the lines of "I have to check your edits". There is the disruption policy. Yes, blocks based on that will be controversial, but we need it. We need to be able to use common sense as to who is just trying to take the piss out of people (a.k.a. trolling). Policy allows block ranging up to one month. At the moment we are looking at a week's block. I do not think any admin has violated policy here. It is very important that new users are approached assuming good faith. But it usually becomes clear very soon whether this assumption was justified. New users whose first edits consists of blanking articles or inserting BUSH IS A PRICK should maybe (no, probably!) not even initially be approached with this assumption. dab (ᛏ) 12:31, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I agree with Mark Richards that this sends a very bad message, undermining most of what people keep saying about the status and role of administrators. On Misplaced Pages there are people being "annoyed" by, and annoying each others, left and right. Misplaced Pages is not a venue where people are especially civil to each other (does this news come as a surprise to anyone?), and there are disputes all over the place, including a lot of troll, and troll-like behaviour. It is an annoying place, and you better have a high threshold for being annoyed. Almost nothing is done about it. If one wants to try to do something about it, the process is long and torturous, and many of the people who use the process are the guilty parties gaming the system or semi-trolls (sometimes not so semi-) who like conflict and who are using the dispute resolution process to be even more annoying. Most people don't bother, and just develop a thick skin. Now we have a case where someone is doing something which is tame in comparison to a lot of what goes on, and because the "target" is an administrator and has friends who are administrators, the guilty party is blocked for a week, the week being justified apparently because the person in question is a "serial annoyer". There is no clear rule which even defines what is illegitimate about this behaviour. Is it policy that you cannot edit the same articles as another member in case you annoy him? We have many administrators and other volunteers monitoring the edits of newbies, and other suspect individuals, etc, and if the they find this annoying, it is too bad. Are administrators immune to being monitored? Can any Misplaced Pages member who finds another member "annoying" have that person banned for being disruptive? If you are a regular member, here is the message: develop a thick skin because not much will be done to keep people from annoying you. But make sure you don't do anything to annoy any administrators who don't have thick skins, because if you do you will be whacked. How does that square with: administrators are just servants of the community; they are janitors, the mop and bucket brigade? Etc. Etc. --BM 12:42, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I think a more productive forum for this discussion would be RfC. That way, we can crystallize the policy issues that are being disputed, and set some type of precedent so admins know how to respond in the future. Rad Racer 14:11, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Look. He's been on the mailing list, howling at the abusive admins, claiming that they think checking other users' edits is harassment, and generally making straw men out of anything that moves. He's adopted an editing style designed to piss people off. And you want to wait for a policy violation? This is clearly not a stupid troll. If we tell him he's allowed to stalk and harass RickK but nothing else, he will be perfectly content to stalk and harass RickK. This is not a reasonable outcome. And just because the arbcom is now capable of closing cases does not mean every piece of disruption and idiocy that we are able to find something to debate about needs to go to them. They are a way of dealing with problem users. They are not the way, and this problem absolutely does not need to escelate to them when we have perfectly reasionable tools like big sticks that we can whack the problem with until it fixes itself.
I mean, really. How much clearer do you really want this user to be about his bad faith? Did you want to wait until the harassment and stalking actually drives RickK off Misplaced Pages? Snowspinner 13:09, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- But you could in many ways just have described RickK. He's allowed to annoy other users. He's permitted to be aggressive. He is a problem for some here. And so are you, Snowspinner. The rules just don't apply to you. Dr Zen 01:39, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I am currently undecided as to which of you is the bigger drama queen, but making positive edits cannot be seen as harassing. All of the edits he has made, I would too, and so would many people. The only harassment is the constant blocking by you. If RickK marks tags articles for cleanup, VfD, whatever without even trying to improve them himself (and I know he does), then he should expect that someone will come along and fix them sooner or later. In this case, sooner seems to be the only reason RickK is whining. -- Netoholic @ 14:20, 2005 Mar 9 (UTC)
- I have no problem with somebody cleaning up things I put the cleanup headers on. That's what they're for, ffs. But TRT followed along behind me and made an edit to EVERY SINGLE PAGE I TOUCHED, even so much as a little linking here or there, and if there was nothing for him to link, he would make tiny little wording changes, just so that he could let me know that he was there. I have no problem with people cleaning up after me, I expect it, and I do it as well. But every single thing I've edited goes beyond good faith editing and, as I have siad, is stalking. RickK 00:33, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- RickK, for anyone that has ever really been stalked, or even cyberstalked, your accusation is probably seen as insulting. I'd like to illustrate the double-standard being put forth here. If you take a look at what Snowspinner has been doing regarding User:John Gohde, you may get a hint of what true Wiki-stalking is. That poor guy, who may be misguided, is trying to edit in his area of speciality. Snowspinner is systematically using reversion, deletion, and good old fashion editing to remove tones of that guys work. The only way Snowspinner is doing that is by pulling that user's contribs and going over every single one, reverting most of them and removing anything that guy does. I would suspect if you count up, Snowspinner is a much bigger stalker than TRT, and more blatant. So please stop using the term "stalked", since it is nothing of the sort. -- Netoholic @ 00:53, 2005 Mar 10 (UTC)
- Yeah! Except for, you know, the part where I haven't reverted him in two days, haven't listed anything for deletion, and in fact haven't really crossed paths with him since making the suggestion that he split Health and Wellness (alternative medicine) into two distinct articles... and where even before that I didn't revert all of his contributions, so much as fix problems he left... oh, and the part where he's not so much a "poor guy" as "someone who's been banned twice and who prudence suggests glancing at the contributions of every once in a while might not be a bad idea." But other than those bits where you're totally wrong, yes, you've described the situation perfectly. Snowspinner 00:56, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
unlike the typical cases you mention, BM, the point is that (a) this isn't part of a content dispute, and (b) the provocation doesn't go both ways. Show me another case where a user's single purpose seems to be to annoy another user, without a background of disputed content, and I'll also support a day's block as a warning, or, show me how RickK has seriously provoked or abused this user, and I'll change my opinion. dab (ᛏ) 14:04, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Dab, my point is that even if RT is a troll, which seems very likely to me, the way to deal with trolls is not to let them provoke you into violating your own procedures and policies. In this case Snowspinner has taken a step which makes his own behaviour an issue. His response to provocation is more questionable than the provocation. No matter how sensible a policy is, trolls will find a boundary along which they can tread to be provocative without violating rules or policies. In this case, members monitoring others they find questionable is standard operating procedure on the Misplaced Pages. RT is doing nothing different from what administrators and others routinely do. The only difference is that he has picked on RickK, who is an administrator and a tad excitable, hoping to provoke an overreaction. In this case, RickK actually has kept his temper pretty well, to his credit. But Snowspinner has stepped in and blown it, giving RT what he wants (presuming that he is a troll). Trolls always go after the administrators, the moderators, etc, and the hot-heads. If they can find a moderator who is a hothead, all the better. The key with trolls, the advice in Misplaced Pages's article on the subject Misplaced Pages:Trolls is: do not feed the trolls. That is, do not let them provoke you into a reaction that gives them attention and by making you look bad, sets them up for getting more attention. Certainly don't let them provoke you into an action that widens cracks in the community: such as suspicions that the administrators of the site are a "cabal", etc. --BM 14:26, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Exactly. The biggest disruption here is the continual over-reaction from some quarters to something that is annoying, but not damaging or against policy. Please stop feeding the trolls and let's get over it! Mark Richards 15:31, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- how is blocking a troll feeding him? Given that we agree that RT is a troll, why not slap a laconic block on him and forget the matter? That would hardly be 'giving him what he wanted'. Making the admin who happened to issue the block the subject of a drawn-out inquiry, otoh, may be nearer to that. dab (ᛏ) 15:43, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- It's feeding them as it's giving them attention and taking up your time, which is what trolls thrive on. Dan100 15:56, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- If you look at this diff, it seems questionable whether this user is really a troll, especially considering the length of time they have been around. 7 days is a wikieternity. It should have been 24 hours. Rad Racer 16:16, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- There is no question in my mind. Compare his behaviour to that of User:clockwork troll (now User: clockwork soul) harrassing rickK is no way to redeem the word "troll". Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 16:25, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- If you look at this diff, it seems questionable whether this user is really a troll, especially considering the length of time they have been around. 7 days is a wikieternity. It should have been 24 hours. Rad Racer 16:16, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Also, it is only a 7 day block. He'll be back in 7 days, unless someone unblocks him sooner. He has already been protesting his blocking on the mailing list, and David Gerard has been provoked into blocking from the list. When he comes back, he will no doubt continue to protest his blocking and find other ways to be provocative. Since there is no policy against doing anything that he is doing, it basically looks like administrators are picking on someone who (1) has the audacity to have "troll" in his username; (2) is "annoying" to some administrators; and (3) protests when administrators single him out for discipline without good justification. This makes administrators look heavy-handed and more concerned about people who annoy administrators than about other behaviour problems. Other people who feel victimized have to go through a tedious process to have misbehaviour sanctioned, a process that also exposes their own behaviour to scrutiny. But administrators don't have to bother with that -- they can just impose a sanction directly, and apparently unilaterally. It looks like administrators are first-class citizens, and that everybody else is a second-class citizen. At this point, it would be better to just ban the RT account entirely because administrator mistakes have set this person up to be a real troublemaker when he comes back. I would suggest that this be done by the Arbitration Committee, however. It would have been much better to have ignored him and to have maintained the moral high ground until he did something truly objectionable. --BM 16:11, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- It's feeding them as it's giving them attention and taking up your time, which is what trolls thrive on. Dan100 15:56, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
- I would hardly say Snowspinner's behaviour is not subjected to scrutiny here. Nobody "set up" RT to be a troublemaker. You are responsible for your actions, and if you were treated unfairly, there are decent ways to address the issue. Anyway, I suppose this should either go to an RfC now, or to VP for policy building. dab (ᛏ) 16:30, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- See Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/Snowspinner. Rad Racer 16:59, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- how is blocking a troll feeding him? Given that we agree that RT is a troll, why not slap a laconic block on him and forget the matter? That would hardly be 'giving him what he wanted'. Making the admin who happened to issue the block the subject of a drawn-out inquiry, otoh, may be nearer to that. dab (ᛏ) 15:43, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
BM is completely right. This user has not actually done anything wrong, and the responses to his (albiet annoying) behavior has ranged from blocks that breach policy through abuse and attacks. No one has given a coherent reason for why s/he should be blocked. This is making a mockery of the admins involved since they do look like they are more interested in protecting a cabal from being annoyed than anything else. Had people simply had the common sense to leave well enough alone untill / unless s/he did something actually disruptive, s/he would have got quickly bored with this and moved on. As it is, it has socked up a lot of time and energy, and resulted in the administration looking heavy handed and stupid. Mark Richards 17:08, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- My interest is straightforward. RickK was bothered. RickK was, quite frankly, reasonably bothered. I say this as someone who has been cyberstalked - it is scary, it is unpleasant, and it is upsetting. A reasonable person would be bothered by being stalked. That he was actively disturbing and upsetting another user is sufficient to conclude disruption has taken place. Snowspinner 17:20, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
Most of which is well and good, but what about this was so urgent as to circumvent the RfC/mediation/arbitration process? Nothing above explains why RT harrassing Rick was in a different class than the many issues that routinely go through the RfC process. -- Jmabel | Talk 00:54, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
Something needs to be done about Snowspinner. It won't be while he has the support of his fellows, but surely vigilanteism isn't actually encouraged? Dr Zen 01:25, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
As far as I can tell, no one has answered my question. Maybe I'm missing it in the broad discussion above, but what about this was so urgent as to circumvent the RfC/mediation/arbitration process? And if that is not the appropriate question, could someone please explain to me what I'm missing? (Dr Zen, with all due respect, using this as an opportunity to attack some individual is not going to shed any light on the policy question I am asking.) -- Jmabel | Talk 06:29, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- I'd say it was the appropriate question originally, and I suggested to Snowspinner before this started that the normal dispute resolution process would be a better approach. Unfortunately, I think it's a little late to get that genie back into the normal bottle, so I'm not sure what the question is we should be asking now. But I agree that some people here are definitely generating a lot of heat and very little light. --Michael Snow 06:56, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Michael, thanks for agreeing with me, but what I'm asking for is an explanation (from someone who disagrees) as to either where I misunderstand policy, or why this required exceptional handling. It's not a rhetorical question. There seems to be a genuine disagreement here, and I still don't grasp the argument from the other side. -- Jmabel | Talk 07:05, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
I have to laugh. Netoholic is all upset that I'm disrupting Misplaced Pages because I'm making minor changes to the articles he's editing. But, isn't he saying in this very page that such actions are not only not disruptive, but are to be encouraged? I would have done the same thing with Dr. Zen's pages, except he never edits any articles. RickK 07:16, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- Rick, if that's a response to my question, I don't see the relevance. And given that you are a key player on this, and I believe you've seen enough of my work to know that I am in no way trolling, I believe I deserve a response. I am still truly at a loss here as to what about this case makes it an exception to normal process. Or, if I have misunderstood normal process, then I believe I deserve an explanation about that, too. -- Jmabel | Talk 19:28, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- You win RickK. You play the part of the Troll very well. I won't say your silly revert war generates any sympathy from me. By your own assertion, TRT was editing poorly. By emulating him, then picking my recent edits to try and prove your point, you've only shown that you're more willing to ascribe to the notion that two wrongs make a right. I would expect that a block at least for a short time might be in order for something so deliberately disrupting (again, that is using your own definition). -- Netoholic @ 07:48, 2005 Mar 10 (UTC)
Hey, that's really cruel, man. Our talk inspired me to write wolfbag.Dr Zen 07:21, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Reincarnation?
User:The Recycling Troll is either a reincarnation of User:142, who was hard-banned by Jimbo, or is doing his best to imitate 142. As such, I've blocked him indefinitely as a clear reincarnation of a hard-banned user who should not be unblocked at all. The block includes a reference to the relevant part of the blocking policy. I blocked him from wikien-l as well as a querulous waste of electrons.
Let me add: "Assume good faith" doesn't mean "pretend we're bloody stupid." What conceivable part of anything The Recycling Troll has done has been in good faith, or helped build an encyclopedia? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? - David Gerard 18:24, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- All right, can we see some diffs that suggest they are the same user? Rad Racer 18:27, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Agree. We need to see a connection more than just "I think it's him". You have only the most tenious guilt by association to go off of. This person has made good edits, added wikilinks and other cleanup. What -MORE- does he need to do to show he has "helped build an encyclopedia"? -- Netoholic @ 18:38, 2005 Mar 9 (UTC)
- I reviewed this user's contributions, and I'm not that impressed with the several dozen I looked at. Other than votes on VfD, their contribution of actual content appeared to be limited to adding links, and minor punctuation changes. Not exactly what I'd call a solid contribution. I take no position on anything else, just this specific point. Noel (talk) 18:50, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I have not seen any disruptive edits. The claim being made is not that his edits are of exceptional quality, simply that they are nearly all solid, productive and positive. Which of his edits link him to a previously banned user? Mark Richards 18:52, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- It was his posts on wikien-l using almost trademark 142 phrases that nailed it for me. The stalking editing style. The "good" edits being wikilinking words in articles is a 142 favourite. THE USERNAME WITH "TROLL" IN IT.
- Stalking someone - following up most of their edits with adding a space or whatever to say "I'm watching you" - is none of solid, productive or positive. (It was noted as stalking behaviour, by the way, when Irismeister was doing it to Theresa Knott last year.) What on EARTH do you find solid, productive or positive about such behaviour? - David Gerard 18:59, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- What evidence is there that RT is 142? What so-called "trademark" phrases? It's annoying to ask for evidence, I know, but no original research and all that. --Mrfixter 20:03, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Go read up, some of us have experience of this fuckhead and why he was hard-banned - David Gerard 20:41, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Again, I don't wish to gain a reputation for being obstreperous, but this "hard ban" concerns me greatly. My questions are:
- Can any administrator simply draw the conclusion without consultation or review by anyone that a particular account is a banned user?
- Yes. The very reason that they are admins is becasue they are trustred to make judgement calls.
- Why is David Gerard dodging the legitimate request for the evidence supporting his conclusion? --BM 20:48, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- He's not dodging it. The evidence is in the edit history of 142.
- In what capacity is David Gerard operating here? Presumably, he is operating as a regular administrator, since Arbitrators have no special powers except en banc. If so, by what authority can a regular administrator permanently hard ban an established member of Misplaced Pages? Can any of the 400+ administrators do this, or does David Gerard have some special status?
- A regular administrator. No only jimbo can hard ban people. He has hard banned 142. Administrators are expected to enforce this ban though. They are expected to block any account who in thier judgement is 142.
- If any regular administrator can do this, then why do we have an Arbitration Committee?
- To sort out difficut cases (this being an easy case) Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 21:09, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I must say, if RT is a troll, he has succeeded in provoking a lot of people to act in a very high-handed that suggests that Misplaced Pages might have more God-Kings than I thought. --BM 20:48, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- In this case the userid was an obvious (in fact admitted) troll, set up for the purpose of harassing one user. The edits it made were of minor value, the annoyance it brought was far more significant. I think an "indefinite" ban was not long enough; do we have something that lasts longer, say until the end of the Universe? Jayjg 20:51, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Go read the blocking policy. I cited it in the block itself - David Gerard 20:54, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- The blocking policy says that "when it becomes clear" that an account is a reincarnation of a blocked user, that reincarnating account can likewise be blocked. Are you asserting that this sentence licenses any administrator to permanently ban any account merely by asserting that the account is a reincarnation without being under any obligation to present the evidence and subject it to any kind of review? If I were an administrator and did that, would you accept it? You are being outrageous. --BM 21:06, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I am not questioning the decision (although I think it is questionable). What I am questioning is the process. I know Jimbo can ban anybody or do anything else he wants. But David Gerard is not Jimbo, is he? Why do we have an Arbitration Committee, if David Gerard can permanently ban people? Can any administrator do that, or does it just come down to raw power and who can get away with what? Are there any other God-Kings besides Jimbo and Mr Gerard that I should know about? Does Misplaced Pages have no process at all, or should proceed on the assumption that it is all based on power? --BM 20:57, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- You can assume it is based on a consensus of administrators. And rest assured, there are plenty of other administrators willing to ban that Troll as well. Jayjg 21:03, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- That is nonsense. There are over 400 administrators. Where was this consensus formed? Do administrators now have a private forum where they form consensus amongst themselves, excluding non-administrators? How come some of the other people asking questions about this are administrators. What happened to the transparent Arbitration Committee process? Is that out the window? --BM 21:11, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I can assure you that there is no consensus of administrators, nor is the issue whether or not there are other administrators willing to ban that Troll. Administrators carry out community made policy. Whether an administrator, or all the administrators, want to ban that troll is not the point, the point is, has the community given them the authority to do that. They have clearly not in this case. Please, follow policy. Mark Richards 21:14, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
There is nothing wrong with following another person's lead. The edits I found by teh "Troll" were basically fine and consisted out of cleaning up behind RickK's "clean-up" tags. I do think this ban is grossly wrong. Refdoc 21:01, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- This is the problem with vigilante blocking that puts an admin way outside of the blocking policy (David did not follow the policy in this case). It opens the whole project administration to accusations of gross unfairness, favouritism and cabalism. Let's get back to the land of the sane, and ignore this annoying user who has not breached any policies or made any disruptive edits. The cure is infinately worse than the disease, and yes, I am perfectly happy for anyone who wants to follow me around making small edits to articles I edit. Mark Richards 21:08, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- David identified a banned user and blocked him because of it. Jimbo relies on admins to enforce his banning of people. I$" was permanently banned from editing this site. Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 21:13, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Yes, but there is a procedure for this, and David did not follow it. If I think you are a reincarnated banned user, and I block you, is that ok? If not, why not? David has not produced any meaningful evidence. Mark Richards 21:19, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I repeat my questions, can any administrator ban any account on the basis that it is a reincarnation of a banned user? Or is this a privilege reserved only to David Gerard? Is not an administrator who does that responsible at least to produce, when asked for it, the evidence he relied on to conclude that an account was an reincarnation? Or is the decision not subject to review by anyone else? Could Gerard declare my account to be a banned user and "disappear" me anytime he thought I was asking too many questions? What stops him? --BM 21:21, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Quoting from Misplaced Pages:Blocking policy: "Sockpuppets that were created to violate Misplaced Pages policy should be blocked permanently." Jayjg 21:48, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- That doesn't answer a single one of my questions. My questions are answered partly by Misplaced Pages:Controversial blocks, one of the provisions of which is that Mr Gerard should be "willing to discuss the block with other Wikipedians". All he will say is that on the mailing list RT used the same "trademark phrases" that 142 used. He has been asked what trademark phrases, the obvious question. No answer, although if he had one, I am sure he would be eager to put his brilliant deductive reasoning on display. Mr Gerard is acting like he has some kind of special status on Misplaced Pages. I just want to know: does he or does he not? --BM 22:06, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- One needn't be a reincarnation of a blocked user to be a policy violating sockpuppet; David doesn't have to prove the former to block for the latter. Jayjg 22:17, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I'm sorry, I'm not finding David's info about the "trademark phrases" he saw. He just said that it is "in the edit history" somewhere, unless I'm just missing it. That isn't very helpful. --BM 22:43, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
There have been several blocks and unblocks of RT recently, to wit:
- 01:13, 9 Mar 2005 Snowspinner blocked "User:The Recycling Troll" with an expiry time of 7 days (Repeating behavior that got him blocked last time.)
- 03:02, 9 Mar 2005 Mark Richards unblocked User:The Recycling Troll (No valid reason for block given)
- 12:58, 9 Mar 2005 Snowspinner blocked "User:The Recycling Troll" with an expiry time of 24 hours (Harrassment)
- 18:09, 9 Mar 2005 David Gerard blocked "User:The Recycling Troll" with an expiry time of infinite (Reincarnation of hard-banned user 142. This user is hard-banned by Jimbo and should not be unblocked. See Misplaced Pages:Blocking_policy#Bans)
- 21:01, 9 Mar 2005 Mark Richards unblocked User:The Recycling Troll (No evidence provided and procedure not followed)
- 21:07, 9 Mar 2005 Neutrality blocked "User:The Recycling Troll" with an expiry time of infinite (Sockpuppet/banned user.)
Per Misplaced Pages:Controversial blocks: If no consensus has emerged after several respected Wikipedians have reviewed the matter, the user should be left unblocked. Since no consensus has been reached, RT must remain unblocked. Rad Racer 22:19, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Or not, since it appears that only one person is unblocking, and several people are blocking. Jayjg 23:06, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I respectfully disagree with anyone contending that The Recycling Troll is a reincarnation of the user who edited as 24/142.177.xxx.xxx/EntmootsOfTrolls. I think I can fairly claim to be quite familiar with much of this banned user's history and unique style of interaction, and I have blocked a number of his accounts in the past.
It seems that The Recycling Troll's posts to the mailing list are cited as being similar in style to 24/142/EoT. I have reviewed every one of those posts, and find very little to suggest that they are the same. Moreover, the mere fact of posting to the mailing list is strong evidence in my mind that they are not the same, because to my knowledge 24/142/EoT strictly avoided the mailing lists apparently as a matter of principle. What similarity exists is simply a generic similarity found in the postings of many users who have been blocked for disruptive behavior (i.e., professing complete ignorance of how anyone could possibly be disturbed by their actions, immediate escalation of rhetoric about abuse, etc.). The additional similarity of choosing a user name containing the word "troll" has also been tried by others besides 24/142/EoT, so it is hardly definitive.
If The Recycling Troll is attempting to imitate 24/142/EoT beyond the homage involved in the choice of name, and I doubt this, then he is a pathetically poor imitation. I do not think he should be blocked on the grounds of being a reincarnation. I decline to comment any further on whether blocks on the general grounds of disruption are justified at this point, and will defer to whatever outcome is decided on that question. I have reviewed his edits only enough to satisfy myself that this is not 24/142/EoT, but not enough to judge the extent of disruptiveness. --Michael Snow 23:17, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- As I've pointed out, he can (and should) be blocked indefinitely for being a sockpuppet created for the purpose of violating Misplaced Pages policies; no reincarnation proof required. Jayjg 23:21, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Fine, as I mentioned I'm not debating that point, I just thought it necessary to refute the reincarnation argument. Our previously banned user has some very distinctive habits and interests, which I won't enumerate here so as not to give imitators any ideas. But if anyone's ever wondering if they've got the real thing on their hands, drop me a note and I'll take a look. --Michael Snow 23:30, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I'm not following you. What is the "sockpuppet" charge separate from the "reincarnation" charge? --BM 00:21, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- A sockpuppet is a new userid created by any experienced Misplaced Pages user; it doesn't have to be the reincarnation of a banned user. Jayjg 00:11, 4 Jan 2003 (UTC)
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks like a duck and is found in a pond then it might be a platypus but I wouldn't wuckin' bet on it. If it turns out to be someone with a duck decoy and a duck call, the blocking policy points out they have fully earnt being shot at. I will, however, fully accept Michael Snow's expert opinion that I am wrong on that one - David Gerard 00:24, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I'm not saying it's not a duck, I'm just saying it's not a duck named Donald. It might very well be Huey, Dewey, or Louie. --Michael Snow 00:40, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Of course, I'm speaking in general - David Gerard 20:44, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
It is clear that there is no consensus on this, and every block has been for different reasons. The complete lack of willingness to have any kind of accountability here is very disturbing. Snowspinner blocked him, people protested that the block was in breach of policy and unfair, so a friend of snow blocked him again, listing a different reason, etc. Please follow the procedures, and unblock this user. You are making a mockery of the policy we have, and making admins look like a bunch of cabalistic buddies covering for each other. Mark Richards 00:56, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
The reason of the moment seems now to be that the user is a sockpuppet, and thus can be blocked on sight. Above, User:Jayjg quoted Misplaced Pages:Blocking policy, where it indicates that sockpuppets that are created to violate policy can be blocked on sight. Unfortunately, Jayjg did not include the rest of the paragraph. I quote the entire section, since I believe it is relevant and I don't want anyone to take things out of context:
- Sysops may, at their judgement, block IP addresses that disrupt the normal functioning of Misplaced Pages. Such disruption is to be objectively defined by specific policies, and may include changing other users' signed comments or making deliberately misleading edits. Users should be warned that they are violating policy before they are blocked. For dynamic IPs, such blocks should last 24 hours. For static IPs and user names, such blocks should initially last 24 hours, but repeat violators may be blocked for a maximum of one month.
- Sysops may also block new user accounts that make lots of disruptive edits, for any length of time or permanently, at their discretion. Sockpuppets that were created to violate Misplaced Pages policy should be blocked permanently. However, blocks should not be used against isolated incidents of disruption from IP addresses nor against user accounts that make a mixture of disruptive and useful edits.
- Reincarnations of blocked disruptive users will be reblocked if they continue being disruptive, or if they edit in a way which suggests they are likely to continue being disruptive—such as "YOU CANT BLOCK ME!!11!!" or "JOIN ME IN MY FIGHT TO DESTRY WIKIPEDIA!1!!1!!"
- Blocks under this provision are almost always controversial.
If one considers that the user was disrupting the normal functioning of wikipedia, then according to policy, a maximum block (for repeat violators) is one month.
It is clear that this user made at least some useful edits. Therefore, according to policy, he should not have been blocked as a new disruptive user or as a sockpuppet.
The policy already warns us that this king of block will almost always be controversial -- and the blocking of this user has certainly proved to be that.
I have once again removed the block on this user, since there is at least lack of consensus on this controversial block. This user should not be blocked until a consensus is reached on that block. -Rholton 01:57, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- It could be argued that the userid made no useful edits, in that any potential useful edits were mitigated by the fact that they were of minor utility, and thus outweighed by the fact that they were specifically intended to harass user RickK. Jayjg 15:14, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Thank you. Some sense at last. I am pretty disgusted with how this has been dealt with - the admin circus around this has been far more disruptive than simply letting this user check whatever edits s/he wants and make small changes was. I cannot concieve of a policy that forbids this without becoming 'any admin can ban anyone they like, and noone can do anything about it'. Mark Richards 02:15, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I am disappointed by your lack of imagination. I think "Don't harass other users" covers it very well. Snowspinner 02:19, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- I would be in favor of a policy that could be summarized by "don't harass other users". The hard part is to give a useful definition of "harass" -- one that would not be a magnet for abuse, and would not encourage troublemakers to walk up to the line and stick out their tongues. It seems to me that such a policy would have to require some sort of consensus building before action could be taken against the harasser. -Rholton 02:38, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- If you're looking for policies that can be interpreted and executed without ambiguity, I'm afraid you're due for a fruitless search. The trolls, idiots, and fuckheads in all their various flavors will always come up with new things to do that require new interpretations of policy. Ultimately, the best we can do is whack people when they're obviously editing in bad faith.
- I have trouble thinking of a case more obvious than this one, though. Snowspinner 02:43, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- Such a system might work. Many internet sites have a small number of moderators who can delete posts or, if necessary, ban people for misbehaviour, and most of them do not require that the moderators explain or justify themselves to non-moderators. Such a system has advantages and disadvantages. Actually, Misplaced Pages used to have this system: Jimbo was the God-King, and nobody could ban established members except for him; and while people could complain about his decisions, nobody could compel him to justify himself if he didn't wish to do so. If Misplaced Pages wants to return to that system, it can, of course. However, you shouldn't suppose that there would be 400 people roving around as cops/judges, and that every current administrator would have those kind of powers. There would be a few. Consensus that someone could be trusted with janitor/custodian powers would not necessary translate to consensus that someone could be trusted as an enforcer. Most of the current administrators would find themselves demoted back to regular user, or some intermediate janitor-level. --BM 03:06, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Yes, other sites have those guys. But we don't. Or do we? Can Snowspinner or Dave Gerard just hard-ban anyone they think is a "fuckhead"? Is that the policy? Why don't Snowspinner and Dave Gerard just not involve themselves with "fuckheads"? We are, after all, asked to walk away from conflict, not arm ourselves and get into it. Dr Zen 03:14, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Just for the record: I am totally opposed to this block, think it is wrong +++. I have not unblocked, simply to not inflame this all more, since we had already a "revert-war" going. But it is disingenious to say it there is consensus between the admins, but for one who keeps unblocking. Refdoc 08:22, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I suppose I should also add my voice to those opposed to the block, to further demonstrate that there is no "admin consensus". I also will not unblock the user (I don't know if he or she is presently blocked, anyway), but I don't believe anybody should be blocked unless they have violated policy. Making good edits that happen to make Rick uncomfortable is not a reason to block. Rick himself makes me uncomfortable with the general harshness of his demeanor. But making other people uncomfortable is not in itself cause for a block, whoever it is. Everyking 08:55, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- There's a world of difference between someone's edits making you uncomfortable because of their demeanor, and someone who is intenionally making you uncomfortable with their edits. Jayjg 15:17, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Let's try to keep "he's disruptive" separate from "he's 142". I admit that I would like to see some IP-related plausibility that he is indeed 142. Snowspinner didn't "hard ban" RT, he blocked him for 7 days. David hardbanned him, for different reasons. I defended the week's block as business as usual (unrelated to 142), I take no stance on the indefinite block, pending further evidence. dab (ᛏ) 10:00, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- IP-related plausibility that he is 142 was not found. Indeed, the IP evidence leans towards the assertion that he is not 142. See . No, this is not conclusive evidence, but it certainly does not support the assertion that the user is 142. -Rholton 15:12, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC)
- This is why I did not include Snowspinner in the Arbitration request. One can argue about what "stalking" is, whether it is "disrupting Misplaced Pages" as defined in Misplaced Pages:Blocking policy, whether Snowspinner should have imposed a 7-day ban for it, and whether he followed the process called for by the policies. But, unlike the "142 reincarnation" allegation by David Gerard, we all at least know why Snowspinner did what he did. With David's permanent block for "142 reincarnation", we do not know the facts that support it. We are called upon simply to trust his comparison of the 142 edit history with the TRT mails to the mailing list. He won't give details about how he arrived at his conclusion. Neutrality and Cyrius in some ways are even more outrageous: they blocked a user permanently without even having evidence, simply because they trusted the say-so of another user. I don't think administrators should be blocking people unless they have seen the evidence themselves and have formed their own opinions. Groups of administrators acting in concert in a blocking war because they "trust" each other is cabalism. Administrators should be trying to serve the consensus not trying to force through the decisions of other administrators that they "trust". That two of these three were Arbitrators just adds to this concern. At this point, my suspicion is that the evidence was so weak that David is embarassed to produce it. He has already conceded earlier on this page that Michael Snow is correct in denying any connection between 142 and TRT, meaning that whatever the evidence was, David now concedes that he drew the wrong conclusion from it. This must be embarassing for Neutrality and Cyrius. It looks like they shouldn't be so quick to block people based on "trusting" David in the future. But I doubt that will occur to them. I note also that TRT is still blocked. At least, the expiry date should be changed to 7 days, on the basis of the "stalking" charge, which is the only one still standing. --BM 14:23, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Jimbo's decision
Jimbo investigated the arbitration case against me, posted his decision and has blocked User:The Recycling Troll indefinitely - David Gerard 20:44, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Let me be the first to congratulate you on your promotion to God-Prince, David. --BM 21:00, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Taking this to email might be a thought. I'm dgerard at gmail dot com - David Gerard 21:40, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- May I prostrate myself before Your Supreme Highness, GodPrince of Wikimedia, Duke of WikiEN-l, Lord of the Outer Projects Rim, Earl Protector.
- Some might think your words had a sarcastic overtone. But I shall assume good faith and say: Thank you! - David Gerard 21:40, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- One might say "this is not a democracy ... its feudalism" Or one might say "this is not a project to make wiki software; its a project to make a 💕". Of course, a 💕 project can have a variety of forms of governance, and there is no obvious contradiction involved in being *both* a 💕 project and a democracy. So "this is not a democracy .. its a free encylopedia" is a non-sequitur. Interesting that a non-sequitur is one of Jimbo's favorite expressions: one that rather begs the question as to what the governance system of Misplaced Pages actually is. After his pronouncement on the Arbitration case, I am not sure I could say what is the governance system of Misplaced Pages, except it obviously isn't democracy. Not that I was very clear on it before. The cabalism theory is looking more likely right at present, if you want to know. --BM 22:55, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Well, the governance is pretty clear. There's Misplaced Pages the content, which is psuedo-PD - if anyone wants to leave, and take a fork of the database with them, they can. Then there is Misplaced Pages the physical plant, name, etc which all belong to the Wikimedia Trust, and that is run by the Board of Trustees. And my sense is that they probably generally agree with Jimbo - priority number one is creation of content, and fairness/democracy is not our principal goal. Noel (talk) 01:08, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Ignoring the particulars of this case (which I admit are a bit troubling, though I'm not yet convinced this is the crisis some are suggesting it is), I think, BM, you're too hasty in calling Jimmy's comments a non sequitur. I think it's relatively clear from the general tone of his overall remarks that he's not implying there is a logical inconsistency in being a democracy and a 💕 (how could such a remark be confidently made?). Rather, I take from his remarks that he is saying that our desire to be democratic and even-handed should not interfere with this project's true goals, and that, where there is a real conflict between democratic principle and protecting this site's goal to be an accurate and reliable source of encyclopedic information, democracy loses. I'm fine with that. I'm just not convinced that this is one of the occasions where there is, in fact, a real conflict -- I believe there was likely a more patient and democratic solution to the problem that did not significantly impact the ability of Misplaced Pages to continue its progress towards being the encyclopedia I (and most if not all of us) want it to be. If people here really are convinced that Misplaced Pages cannot be a truly 💕 unless it is also perfectly democratic in nature....I'd say the line in the sand has been drawn, and like it or not, I doubt Jimmy will budge on that general principle. But if you simply feel that it is arguable whether or not this was a time to abandon democratic policy in order to preserve the project's aims, then I feel confident Jimmy will be open to dialogue on the topic. Jwrosenzweig 23:33, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
What... horrible... precedent... - Would it make it easier if all of us who have been accused of trolling line up for banning? What ratio of good edits to trolling is below the threshold? -- Netoholic @ 23:12, 2005 Mar 10 (UTC)
- There are many occasions on which I'd disagree with Jimbo, but in this csae IMO, he is spot on. Commonsense should prevail, jguk 23:30, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- It is not about common sense, it is about speed. Why couldn't a simple RfC been filed before this person was blocked? It may be common sense, but going by one pseron's interpretation of common sense? Summary judgement is the bad precedent, not the banning of a troll. -- Netoholic @ 23:39, 2005 Mar 10 (UTC)
- It's not an unheralded precedent at all, in any way. Jimbo may already take any ArbCom decision he feels he should. Furthermore, this one was a case against an arbitrator - and both the original complainant (BM) and several others agreed it would be difficult for this case to be heard by the ArbCom and that escalating it may be appropriate. So no miraculous manifestation that defies science has occurred; Jimbo sorting problems out and determining who's being a dick is entirely according to existing policy and guidelines. Remember that Jimbo used to have to do this every time before the ArbCom was instituted - things are more democratic now, not less. - David Gerard 01:07, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I disagree with this. Rules and process need to be respected. Let's concern ourselves with content first and foremost, and not take these petty user issues too seriously. Everyking 23:41, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- As per above, Jimbo can take any dispute reaching the ArbCom he feels he needs to - David Gerard 01:07, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Uh. I pretty clearly was talking about what he should do, not what he can do. Everyking 07:44, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I am very relieved that Jimbo decided to take this upon himself. It probably was the only way to achieve a satisfactory conclusion. I am also satisfied that TRT was banned by Jimbo. I am convinced that, if there had been some mechanism employed to gain consensus on the block on the user, TRT would have been banned with little controversy.
There are some questions that came up during or as a result of the conversation that remain unanswered. Now that the urgency of the situation is diminished, let's take the time to discuss some of these questions:
- If a request for arbitration is brought against a member of the arbitration committee, should there be special handling?
- Is there some way we can avoid a recurrence of this rather ugly dispute? Obviously, we cannot universally ignore any action by an admin that appears to be contrary to policy. At the same time, admins need to be able to use common sense in some circumstances. We don't want a repeat of this controversy every time that happens.
- Do we need to consider some policy that directly addresses wiki-stalking?
Others? -Rholton 01:21, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
- Arbitrators have been parties to cases several times before (I know I have been, at least twice if I recall correctly). It's never been that controversial -- Arbitrators aren't a close-knit community. Or at least, I think if you posed any Misplaced Pages policy question to mav, Fred Bauder, sannse, and Raul 654, you'd get 4 very different answers. So I don't see that the AC is particularly biased towards its own. I agree that your 2nd and 3rd questions are important to address, though. Jwrosenzweig 01:47, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
It seems that there are a few senior admins who think that dealing with probable trolls like TRT is so time-critical that the policies that have been established by consensus must be swept aside in the interests of time. I think they are quite reasonable policies, and that if they impose any inconvenience on an administrator intent on disciplining another member, it is only a slight one, of no long-run consequence, and that there are more situations where that inconvenience is desirable than otherwise. In the case of TRT, whose trolling was relatively tame, there was no need for a big rush to banish him. It was just impatience and hot tempers. The policies could have been easily followed and consensus developed to block him in the usual way; the administrators in question simply thought the policies too much bother. If he had been a more dangerous troll, and it had been time-critical to eject him, and our policies interfered with dealing with him expeditiously, then Jimbo could have been called in to deal with him. (In the actual event, he was called in anyway.) People will accept that there is one God-King who can circumvent policies at need; 400+ administrators with their fingers on the blocking trigger thinking that they can circumvent policies is chaos. Misbehaving users, including trolls, need to be handled in a way that preserves the structures and norms that we all work under. If those are weakened, content-creation will slow to a crawl as unresolvable disputes proliferate and people leave in frustration. There will always be trolls, and we can't let trolls provoke us into weakening the social system that holds the project together and allows it to progress. If policies can be swept aside to deal with a troll, they can be swept aside in any dispute between an administrator and a good-faith editor. I hoped the Arbitration Committee would at least rebuke the administrators who were holding themselves above the community's policies (although I must admit I had my doubts whether they would.) What happened is that the Arbitrators could not bring themselves to reproach their co-Arbitrators, or apply the policies to them, and found one lame excuse after another to reject the case. These are people who must now sit in judgement of other users' behaviour under the policies that they proved incapable of applying to themselves. Still, the situation obviously was embarassing for them. Jimbo stepped in to end their embarassment. In my opinion, he did it in a way that needlessly weakened the consensus and social sinews of the project, and in the end hurt the project. A slightly annoying troll ended up doing a lot of damage. --BM 01:50, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- BM, I appreciate your concerns are genuine, but I do think you are mistaken. We do not have "400+ admins on the blocking trigger". We have 400+ admins most of which do not even know each other, and who are likely to disagree on many issues. If an admin acts in bad faith, it is very likely that many other admins will yell at him immediately (or that Ed Poor will decapitate them with the zweihänder (sorry :p). Your concerns actually show how far we have advanced on the way of building an "ad-hocracy" (great word!) -- it seems normal now that every case, no matter how obvious or trollish, is dragged through rfc-arbcom, wasting everybody's time. Yes, RT has also managed to waste everybody's time, but that's mainly because you, and others, insisted that it should, thereby proving that if good-faith editors object to something an admin did, it will be an issue. The "slippery slope" argument is just as fallacious here than anywhere else. If we're curt with trolls, this does not in the least imply we'll be curt with anybody of good faith. If you can find us a case where a hot-headed, incivil, but sincere editor has been treated "outside policy", I will pay close attention and take the case seriously. But the fact is that we all have common sense to distinguish between users. I am sorry if you feel that good editors risk being bullied by admins, and I was going to suggest I nominate you for admin yourself, to add a less heavy-handed specimen to the crew, but you seem not to appear in the top 1000 editors-by-number-of-edits yet, so I suggest I'll nominate you as soon as you have >1500 edits to article-namespace. dab (ᛏ) 07:41, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I'm somewhat surprised that, after reading WP:AN and its subpages, you can think any two admins would agree on the colour of the sky, let alone 400+ - David Gerard 09:02, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Dave Gerard points the finger, Jimbo pulls the trigger. No more illusions about consensus. The RT may have been a dick but he wasn't harming the encyclopaedia, just pricking a couple of balloons. Could we at least be told which admins are appointed to the role of Trollfinder General alongside Mr Gerard? Dr Zen 02:46, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I think you should read up on Misplaced Pages:What_Wikipedia_is_not#What_the_community_is_not. We're supposed to operate on good faith and on common sense (admittedly, that occasionally fails to prevail due to group inertia, Autofellatio is a good example). If you feel that WP has no basis in common sense left, up to and especially in, the arbcom and Jimbo Wales, it may be time for you to create a fork. dab (ᛏ) 11:36, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
User:Martin2000
Blocked the user for 24 hours for a personal attack against violet/riga. -- Chris 73 Talk 00:10, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
- we are not authoriesd to block for personal attacksGeni 08:43, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- some stern words to the effect that he can shove off to usenet may be in order, though. dab (ᛏ) 09:13, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- re Lack of Authority: I think this applies to the ordinary "stupid" etc. What Martin did here is way beyond this and strays into the dangerous. He was essentially making threats of real life sexual harrassment. The fun stops here really. I might be biased and I acknowledge this hence i have not at any stage used admin powers, but I would have blocked him too. Refdoc 11:21, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- teh cabal! I admit that the block is "outside policy". And you know what? I'll do nothing about it. if one of the 400+ admins feels that this edit was unfairly slapped with a 24h block, let them unblock this user, I'll not complain. But, as Refdoc said, Martin2000 was so far out of line that I hope nobody will think it necessary to file an RfC against Chris 73 or ask for Jimbo's intervention... dab (ᛏ) 11:31, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I think we are authorized to block for personal attacks: According to Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks, Users have been blocked or banned for , and If you are personally attacked, you can request the attacker be blocked. While the block did not fall 100% under this rule, I think common sense and standard practice allowed the block. This edit is also questionable. While he did not attack me personally, violet/riga seemed to be happy to have him blocked. Anyway, glad the majority here seems to agree with the block. -- Chris 73 Talk 11:53, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
- The vote to give admins the power to block in case of personal attacks did not gain comunity consensus.Geni 12:24, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Gnnn... another vote which I missed and really would have liked to vote on. I did not/do not know about the vote. The only oneI know is at Misplaced Pages talk:No personal attacks, which accepted the guidelines on Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks. If it's not too much trouble, could you give me the link to the failed vote? Thanks -- Chris 73 Talk 12:31, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
- Should we have a Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Links to votes sub-page here? Filiocht 12:42, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
- See Misplaced Pages:Blocking policy/Personal attacks (old), it got a majority (36(including JW):26), but no consensus. Obvious objections were/are objectivity/defineability/vagueness (everybody would suddenly become very touchy in an effort to have people blocked...). I do believe that the case of Martin2000 is so unambiguous that this very vote may be cited to support Chris' block. dab (ᛏ) 12:53, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Gnnn... another vote which I missed and really would have liked to vote on. I did not/do not know about the vote. The only oneI know is at Misplaced Pages talk:No personal attacks, which accepted the guidelines on Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks. If it's not too much trouble, could you give me the link to the failed vote? Thanks -- Chris 73 Talk 12:31, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
- The vote to give admins the power to block in case of personal attacks did not gain comunity consensus.Geni 12:24, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I think we are authorized to block for personal attacks: According to Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks, Users have been blocked or banned for , and If you are personally attacked, you can request the attacker be blocked. While the block did not fall 100% under this rule, I think common sense and standard practice allowed the block. This edit is also questionable. While he did not attack me personally, violet/riga seemed to be happy to have him blocked. Anyway, glad the majority here seems to agree with the block. -- Chris 73 Talk 11:53, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
- teh cabal! I admit that the block is "outside policy". And you know what? I'll do nothing about it. if one of the 400+ admins feels that this edit was unfairly slapped with a 24h block, let them unblock this user, I'll not complain. But, as Refdoc said, Martin2000 was so far out of line that I hope nobody will think it necessary to file an RfC against Chris 73 or ask for Jimbo's intervention... dab (ᛏ) 11:31, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Extreme cases make bad law. People can be blocked for personal attacks. The ArbComm can do it; Jimbo can do it. It cannot be done by a regular administrator. This is another example where it is a problem that the ArbComm acts only through a slow-moving, super-cumbersome judicial process. I can't really fault the admin for wanting to get rid of this guy, but it chips away again at the policies and consensus we have set up. There should be a relatively fast way to establish community consensus that someone is a troll or a serious behaviour problem and have him removed from the community quickly. At least temporarily while the more slow moving processes confirm the decision. Otherwise, admins will take it onto themselves to make up policy as they go along; so that they can get rid of people they think are "obviously" objectionable. Sometimes, as in this case, it will be obvious, and there will be no disagreement in the end, and in other cases it will only be obvious to the admin concerned. Sometimes it will just be impatience and hot temper, and sometimes the admin will be correctly predicting the consensus (or at least Jimbo's eventual opinion). But that isn't how it should be. --BM 12:57, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- re Lack of Authority: I think this applies to the ordinary "stupid" etc. What Martin did here is way beyond this and strays into the dangerous. He was essentially making threats of real life sexual harrassment. The fun stops here really. I might be biased and I acknowledge this hence i have not at any stage used admin powers, but I would have blocked him too. Refdoc 11:21, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I disagree that this block was contrary to policy: it was a personal threat to Violetriga, for which the user can be blocked indefinitely under the blocking policy, since we have no way of knowing whether the threat was a joke or not. User:Rdsmith4/Sig 13:04, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- you have a point. It had not occured to me to eamine the issue from the angle. I agree with your analysisGeni 13:27, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- the comment was obnoxious, no doubt. It would get anybody in an American workplace instantly fired for sexual harassment. Or if it didn't, some company would be getting sued. On my web site, where I am the God-King, I would just ban this person for this since it would be an obvious violation of the Terms of Use of my site. But it is really stretching the point to see this comment as physically "threatening". For one thing it is an exchange between two anonymous handles on an Internet site. Misplaced Pages's current structure is that this kind of case has to be dealt with by Jimbo or the ArbComm. If that is a problem, and I agree it is, we should fix that problem. Meanwhile, lets not just make shit up so that admins can whack people that they want to whack, popular as that might be in some cases. --BM 14:29, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Why don't we just rollback their changes or delete their personal attacks? But I don't disagree with blocking this idiot. Sheesh. What is it with these nasty people? - Ta bu shi da yu 13:48, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- agree with BM, not a threat, that's really stretching it. rather an illustration of why we do need a policy to block such jerks, along the lines "admins may issue short blocks for repeated, extremely unambiguous attacks or insults". Hey, there is no community consensus for not blocking these idiots, look at it this way. There is, rather, a decided majority in favour of it. In general, "no consensus" should default to "don't block", but I argue that there are cases where "no consensus" definitely defaults to "block"!. dab (ᛏ) 14:36, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- hey, and BM, we (WPians, including you) make up policy as we go along, that's the idea! And sometimes we do trade some justice for manageability. We're not here to assure that every troll gets treated with the exact same amount of patience. You will agree that your voice is heard, even though you're not an admin. Stick around and write a few articles, and you'll be admin before you know it, TINC. dab (ᛏ) 14:41, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- well, this is only because I'm just so overwhelmingly persuasive and reasonable at all times, that people have to listen to me, or else they'd feel rotten about themselves. Right? Cheers. --BM 16:41, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- While rules and policies are important to any community, especially one with as many disputes as Misplaced Pages. I don't think we should be hamstrung by them. If we know someone is a troll and is making extreme personal attacks, why should we not block the person for a short time? Because of some policy? I think Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks is deliberately ambiguous (may be blocked) to allow admins the descretion of blocking someone for personal attacks. Quoting rules and regulations as
an excusea reason not to block someone that we (from common sense) know should be blocked is one of the reasons why instruction creep is a bane. As long as the ban isn't long term (ie, greater than 24 hours), and is performed by a third party, I think it should be fine. --Deathphoenix 15:38, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- While rules and policies are important to any community, especially one with as many disputes as Misplaced Pages. I don't think we should be hamstrung by them. If we know someone is a troll and is making extreme personal attacks, why should we not block the person for a short time? Because of some policy? I think Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks is deliberately ambiguous (may be blocked) to allow admins the descretion of blocking someone for personal attacks. Quoting rules and regulations as
- If we do not follow policy then why should we expect others to?Geni 18:04, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- No, I'm saying (and when I read my comments above, I can see how things aren't clear at all) that there are some things that don't need policy. I agree that once a policy is set, we should follow it. But there are some things where following common sense or discretion is better than turning to a policy and following chapter 2.4, section 3a, paragraph 5. That a clever and smart troll can turn up and possibly inflict a lot of damage while we argue over which policy applies to the individual's actions is, quite frankly, a little frightening. I have pretty thick skin, but there are some good editors who may leave over the actions of such trolls. That's why I'm glad that Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks is deliberately vague to show that in some cases, users engaging in such activities may be banned. --Deathphoenix 18:32, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- A skilled troll can do a lot more damage when a system is based on subjective judgement and "common sense". Yes there are times to turn vigilantly but it is important to know when these times are. I my opinion this was not such a case since the problem was limited to a small area. Such cases can and should be dealt with through normal means (RFC mediation arbcom).Geni 20:06, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Which is why, IMO, some things are policy, and some things are not. Speaking hypothetically, if I were subject to a personal attack, and there were more to come, I'd prefer that the attacking user be blocked for 24 hours until the problem has been addressed. 24 hours seems to be a "tempban" anyway. I don't see how a skilled troll can do more damage in my example than if several admins had to go look up a policy and debate its merits and applicability while the user continutes to make personal attacks against me. --Deathphoenix 20:11, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- The troll flits around the edge of the subjective rules resulting in them being extend for "clear cases" or them being removed altogher. In the first case a respected member finds themselves falling into a danger zone in the second the troll keeps pushing. Neither of these are goodGeni 21:24, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- So what's wrong with an admin using discretion to temp-block the personal attacker for 24 hours, especially because doing so doesn't violate any policies? Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks allows for admin's discretion in such cases, and if other admins disagree, they can unblock the user anyway (although there is a danger of getting into block-wars in this case). Most admin blocks for personal attacks that I've seen have been responsibly done because if the target is an admin, they'll post a request for some other admin to do the block. --Deathphoenix 21:31, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Block wars are not a risk since if a block is disputed then the person remains unblocked. Whats wrong is how do you define a personal attack? the comunity is not sure about what to do over this area as such we should use extream caution this area.Geni 22:02, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I think good examples of personal attacks are provided in Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks, and asking another admin to look into the personal attacker is a good way to have a third party determine whether something is a personal attack. --Deathphoenix 22:20, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I give lots of my time to Misplaced Pages already and am not about to spend an extraordinary amount of time on "(RFC mediation arbcom)" against this person. You seem to be forgetting two very important aspects of this: 1) the user has made no significant edits and 2) there was no call for any dispute resolutions between him and myself because there is no dispute - I merely applied correct policy and he attacked me for it. violet/riga (t) 20:32, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- so then perhaps rather then telling those who break the 3RR trying to stop POV pushers and those getting into edits wars that they should try the disspute resolution process I should say; you can do this but unless you want to spend extraordinary amounts of time on it I would suggest learning to edit war better. If we don't repect policy and the wikipedia process why should we expect anyone else to? I know about this conflict I have been watching it and have been slightly involved for some time. It is an interesting case it constaly seems to be on the edge of a catastophy but never quite gets thereGeni 21:24, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- You seem to have skipped over everything I said. Martin2000 has been blocked from editting for 24 hours (hardly a nasty punishment against someone with edits only really related to one article) and I can promise that if I see a similar case anywhere else I will block the user involved. I respect the policies but they can't cover everything. violet/riga (t) 22:41, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- that is not an answer to my pointsGeni 09:10, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I wasn't aware that you made any points that required a response. violet/riga (t) 17:41, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
It saddens me greatly that some people believe that any user should be able to get away with making such strong personal attacks. We are a group of people trying to add content to an encyclopedia, not looking to have to defend ourselves against little kids with no sense of how to communicate with people. He should be banned, and even if it's not along with current policy then I think most people would agree that this troll isn't worthy of being let off. Virtually all the edits have been part of a revert war, and I think there can be little doubt that he also abused users and broke the 3RR under IP 64.6.186.242. Thanks to Chris 73 for blocking him, and I think that some people need to stop thinking that policy is a hard and fast set of rules that must be followed 100%. violet/riga (t) 18:26, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Perfectly good editors can argue back and forth about which policy applies to what situation. Meanwhile, the potentially abusive user (or smart troll) is free to carry out personal attacks which, while harmful, may not be against any written policies. --Deathphoenix 18:40, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I wouldn't be too sure about the IP there is anouther user in this conflict who I consider a posible candidate for those actionsGeni 21:24, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I also would like to thank violet/riga to get involved in the first place. Refdoc 18:54, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
rec.sport.pro-wrestling
We seem to have imported a serious case of usenet drama at rec.sport.pro-wrestling. Impersonation, vandalism, and trolling ahoy! All within one day. silsor 13:38, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
- I think you should look whether there's a case to ban either one (or both of them) to stop this. If that's not possible, I'm afraid the only thing that will cool it down is a block on a version that precedes both their edits. Mgm| 14:00, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
They could probably just be ignored. Any action against them will likely be more harmful to Misplaced Pages than just not being too bothered, coming back in a couple of weeks and fixing the article then. Dr Zen 03:01, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- You ought to know better than to speak against punitive logic, Zen! They'll get you for that! Everyking 06:35, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
New vandal MO
Probable sockpuppets of Willy on Wheels have been trying a new method of vandalism, since we've made it harder to perform page-move vandalism without using up old accounts. The MO is to create redirects to (for example) ]. Using the multiple language prefixes causes redirection to occur in a way that makes using the normal user interface to undo the damage impossible. The changes can be backed off using URL-mangling to create appropriate editing commands, but this assumes a high level of admin skill, and is slower than just using the normal Web user interface -- which is surely WoW's intent. This probably requires developer involvement to make this kind of to-and-fro redirection impossible. -- The Anome 14:19, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC)
- Interwiki redirection is used on the images on the main page, for example. This kind of vandalism can be dealt with by clicking the history links in the user contributions, not the article links. From there you can perform page operations as usual. silsor 14:21, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC)
Open proxys
I am an open proxy, found care of an open proxy search engine -
This proxy search engine lists new IPs every time it is refreshed, so its list will never be able to be blocked. Choosedreams 14:46, 12 Mar 2005
- I suggest we keep an eye on articles that CheeseDreams frequents. - Ta bu shi da yu 02:22, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Impersonation and other harassment directed at User:Tabib and others
As a result of the ongoing arbitration case brought by User:Tabib, there are likely to be impersonations and other disruptive edits on his pages and those of anyone associated with the case or fighting the vandalism involved.
A recent case was User:-Tabib which made some reasonably plausible impersonations of Tabib today. I have blocked the user indefinitely. --Tony Sidaway|Talk 21:07, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
This link may be of some use in spotting such cases. It's a related-changes for the evidence page in that case. --Tony Sidaway|Talk 21:12, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Autofellatio
User:198 is deleting the LINE DRAWING as "offensive", and indicates that he/she will continue to do so indefinitely to "protect the children". The page has been protected twice now in the last three days because of his edit warring and indications that he will not give up, including violating the 3RR. RickK 10:36, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
I think this is marginal. It's a bit like a copycat of DrZen's behavior. He is being annoying and pointless and insisting that only his version (without the picture) is right. Let him knock his head against group consensus for a bit. --Tony Sidaway|Talk 11:11, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Why do people keep protecting this page? 198 is obviously aware of the three revert rule. To my knowledge he's the only one who wants the drawing gone, and he has demonstrated that he is not willing to discuss the matter. Let him get blocked. Rhobite 21:28, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
I agree that no purpose is served by protection. The community is perfectly capable of asserting its wishes over this whenever the single user goes against its wishes. I'll unprotect. Anyone who disagrees, feel free to reprotect and I won't argue with it. --Tony Sidaway|Talk 21:50, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
From 198's user page:
- Autofellatio--I will revert on sight if I see that porn picture, I don't care about the 3-revert rule in this case--198 03:17, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Seems like the outcome is inevitable, to me. --Calton | Talk 23:57, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
User:Neutrality/workshop III
Netoholic is editing and reverting me at User:Neutrality/workshop III, a personal subpage in my userspace where I and others am collecting evidence against him to use in an Arbitration case. This is my userspace, and he has no right to edit it for any reason (especially because it deals with evidence against him). As such, I've blocked him for 24 hours ours. Comments? --Neutrality 21:41, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
(cross-posted to WP:RFAr)
Granted, User:Neutrality/workshop III is his subpage, and he is using it to gather a quite one-sided view of my actions. Certainly, making the other guy look as bad as possible is probably how most Arbitrations get started. I made two fairly innocent updates - one to correct a gross exaggeration and another to provide context for a comment I made. Neutrality then used my edits against me by claiming this was evidence tampering. I clarified that comment saying "it's misleading to present multiple edits in one link". This was rollback reverted by Neutrality. I tried adding it as a signed comment. This was rollback reverted. In total, Neutrality has rollback reverted four times today, violating the . I bring this up here, not to report that violation, but to show the misdirected animosity from this person. Sure, it is his subpage, but it is not official evidence in any open case. -- Netoholic @ 21:50, 2005 Mar 13 (UTC)
- Why don't you just let it be, since, as you said, it isn't official evidence? You can make a note of things that you think should be corrected and provide a list of corrections if it does become official evidence. Use the fact that he is doing this in a public space to your own advantage by preparing your defense as the evidence is collected. ;) -Aranel ("Sarah") 22:02, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I completely agree with Aranel here. What exactly is wrong with waiting until he's got his evidence collected and filed the RFAr? You'll have an entire section in which you can respond to this thing without getting reverted once the evidence does become official. Mgm| 22:07, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
- To be honest, I wouldn't have expected this kind of response from him. It's quite venomous. If this was my own page, and the "opposition" made these corrections, then I would have thought it was fair and balanced. There are certainly other responses I would make if this goes anywhere, but I don't see the point of leaving in such a gross (and maybe unintentional) mistake. As it is, I myself don't want to violate 3RR, so I'll not edit anymore. My reply above makes the case just the same. -- Netoholic @ 22:09, 2005 Mar 13 (UTC)
I have a comment: you should not be blocking a person with whom you are in dispute. You should be asking a different admin to block. -- Jmabel | Talk 00:35, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC)
3RR violations by User:Neutrality
Three revert rule violation by Neutrality (talk · contribs) on User:Neutrality/workshop III (edit | ] | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) and User talk:Neutrality/workshop III (edit | ] | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views).
User:Neutrality/workshop III (edit | ] | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views):
- 1st revert: 21:25, 2005 Mar 13 (rollback)
- 2nd revert: 21:29, 2005 Mar 13 (rollback)
- 3rd revert: 21:32, 2005 Mar 13 (rollback)
- 4th revert: 21:35, 2005 Mar 13 (rollback)
User talk:Neutrality/workshop III (edit | ] | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views):
- 1st revert: 21:28, 2005 Mar 13
- 2nd revert: 22:38, 2005 Mar 13 (rollback)
- 3rd revert: 23:11, 2005 Mar 13 (rollback)
- 4th revert: 00:16, 2005 Mar 13 (rollback)
Reported by: Netoholic
Comments:
- Of course I doubt whether this report will result in anything (I have reported 3RR violations by him before), but these are clear reverts/removals of signed comments and good faith edits. Worse yet, it was done using the rollback anti-vandalism tool. This may be his subpage, but he doesn't "own" it enough to warrant this. -- Netoholic @ 00:56, 2005 Mar 14 (UTC)
- This is in his User space. He has the perfect right to do whatever he wants to do in his own space. 3RR rules do not apply to your own User space. Leave it alone, editing other people's User space is in and of itself a blockable offense. RickK 01:00, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC)
- Since when? Vandalising another users user space is blockable, but editing isn't. Having said that, I'd advise Netaholic to leave Neutrality's evidence alone and instead counter that evidence on the RFAr page or by creating an evidence page yourself in your own space. Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 06:20, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- User:Neutrality/workshop III is part of my userspace and I can revert whoever the hell I want in it, unless my page violates the userpage policy (which it obviously doesn't). Go peddle your nonsense somewhere else, Netoholic. Neutrality 07:51, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC)
- Funny you should bring up Misplaced Pages:User page. When I read it, I saw "Community policies, including Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks, apply to your user space just as they do elsewhere." I am sure that if ever the situation was reversed, I'd be sitting out a block right now. 3RR violations are bad, but removing comments from a talk page makes this so much worse. -- Netoholic @ 08:59, 2005 Mar 14 (UTC)
- Adding evidence to a page isn't a personal attack. People remove comments from their own talkpages all the time. Like I said before, there is nothing to stop you from creating your own subpage defending yourself against Neutrality's accusations and linking to it on the RFAr page. Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 15:39, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Funny you should bring up Misplaced Pages:User page. When I read it, I saw "Community policies, including Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks, apply to your user space just as they do elsewhere." I am sure that if ever the situation was reversed, I'd be sitting out a block right now. 3RR violations are bad, but removing comments from a talk page makes this so much worse. -- Netoholic @ 08:59, 2005 Mar 14 (UTC)
Informal complaints over the behaviour of admins
User:Snowspinner
Snowspinner has committed stalking and harassment against me and thereby actively disturbed and made me upset by repeatedly reversing the following edits of mine: Natural health, Osteopathy, Metamorphic Technique, Orthomolecular medicine, Body work (alternative medicine), Rolfing and Magnet therapy. This is not a dispute over the content of an article but is about Snowspinner knowlingly engaging in stalking and harassing behavior by Snowspinner's abuse of administrative reversals. The only thing that I am trying to do is to update the old objectionable pre-existing project infoboxes with a new version of a single purpose infobox design. According to Snowspinner
Natural Health Medicine:CAM NCCAM:BiologicallyBased Therapy Modality:Self-care Culture:Western
- "I object because it is not an infobox, but rather an attempt to make your categories shinier and more special than everybody else's." Snowspinner 13:21, Feb 28, 2005 (UTC)
I am not banned and I am currently an editor in good standing.
- "John Gohde has made no secret of the fact that he is MNH. He had a ban from the arbcom. The ban ended, and he came back. So he is now a user in good standing." Snowspinner 14:45, Mar 1, 2005 (UTC)
In addition, Snowspinner has been stalking my edits since 16:14, 12 Feb 2005, See additional evidence at .
Furthermore, I brought the subject up on Misplaced Pages talk:Requests for comment/Snowspinner and on Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/Snowspinner. Snowspinner's reply in Talk indicates that Snowspinner thinks that the whole thing is very funny. It is about time that you Admins did something about your problem areas.
Therefore, Snowspinner 's repeated admin reversals are totally inappropriate. -- John Gohde 15:58, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Prior to today, I had not reverted any edits of the sort for several days, possibly upward of a week. Indeed, I didn't revert (Or even look at your contributions) over the weekend. Today, I did, removed the infoboxes once again, and then noticed that, after repeated accusations of stalking, you've mysteriously wandered off of your usual focus on alternative medicine and expressed an interest in beef and Internet pornography. I never knew such matters interested you. Perhaps you should bring up your objections to my edits on the talk page, and we can discuss them. I'm particularly surprised to find that you don't think a top 4000 website is notable - it's one of the most successful and important erotic websites on the Internet. But I look forward to seeing your responses on the talk page! In good faith,
Snowspinner 15:41, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
- Sorry, but I am NOT a sex pervert. That article is NOT suitable for Misplaced Pages, period. -- John Gohde 16:33, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Do you similarly want Playboy, Oral sex, and BDSM removed? Snowspinner 17:12, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
Comments from above
- When I look at that record, that is not what I see. Sure, he did some work on the steak articles, but before that we have long strings of rollbacking of User:John Gohde, removing stub tags and deleted templates, and some RC patrol. In fact, if you look at his 500 articles, you have to go all the way back to Sep 14th (at present). ... -- Netoholic @ 15:57, 2005 Mar 11 (UTC)
- RickK, for anyone that has ever really been stalked, or even cyberstalked, your accusation is probably seen as insulting. I'd like to illustrate the double-standard being put forth here. If you take a look at what Snowspinner has been doing regarding User:John Gohde, you may get a hint of what true Wiki-stalking is. That poor guy, who may be misguided, is trying to edit in his area of speciality. Snowspinner is systematically using reversion, deletion, and good old fashion editing to remove tones of that guys work. The only way Snowspinner is doing that is by pulling that user's contribs and going over every single one, reverting most of them and removing anything that guy does. I would suspect if you count up, Snowspinner is a much bigger stalker than TRT, and more blatant. So please stop using the term "stalked", since it is nothing of the sort. -- Netoholic @ 00:53, 2005 Mar 10 (UTC)
- Why was this moved here? What does this have to do with anything above it? RickK 21:07, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
- It was copied here, rather than moved. The reason is obviously self-explainatory. -- John Gohde 04:05, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- What does this have to do with any activities I have or will perform as an admin, and what does it have to do with any comments above it? RickK 06:34, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC)
- Why was this moved here? What does this have to do with anything above it? RickK 21:07, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
User:David Gerard
David has committed stalking and harassment against me and thereby actively disturbed and made me upset by repeatedly reversing the following edits of mine:Natural health, Osteopathy, Metamorphic Technique, Orthomolecular medicine, Body work (alternative medicine), Rolfing and Magnet therapy. This is not a dispute over the content of an article but for knowlingly engaging in stalking and harassing behavior by abusing his use of admin of reversals. I am not banned and I am currently an editor in good standing.
- "Compared to the behaviour of such recent arbitration subjects as Herschelkrustofsky or Robert the Bruce, John Gohde is just fine. He works very hard indeed at writing material he's a subject matter expert on to fill in Misplaced Pages's coverage nicely. ... In my non-arbitrating and strictly as any old Wikipedian opinion" - David Gerard 23:54, 28 Feb 2005 (UTC).
Therefore, David's repeated admin reversals are totally inappropriate. -- John Gohde 15:19, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Because David doesn't think you're as bad as some people, he shouldn't revert your edits when he thinks they're bad? I don't get this. Snowspinner 15:28, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
- Stalking, harassment, actively disturbing and making me upset knowlingly by an Admin, with his repeated inappropriate use of admin reversals. -- John Gohde 15:48, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- nothing to see here... I can only see commented, straightforward edits by Snowspinner. , would have been more informative diffs. If you are so upset simply by people disagreeing with you, maybe it's your turn for a wikibreak? Also, rollbacks are hardly an abuse of admin power. It's not like you have been inappropriately blocked or something. Any editor may revert you, if they don't like your edits. dab (ᛏ) 15:56, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- The fact they are roll back reversals doesn't change a thing. A revert is a revert no matter who makes it. You make it sound like making a rollback on non-vandalism is a bad thing. Mgm| 16:29, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
- It is when used to facilitate an edit conflict. Roll-backing a non-vandalous edit expressly fails the "Always explain your reverts" policy. -- Netoholic @ 17:19, 2005 Mar 13 (UTC)
- Rollbacks are a way of dealing with vandalism.They really shouldn't be used for non vandal reverts. I've done it myself from time to time, but I regret doing it as a non explained revert rarely helps the situation. Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 17:27, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- The reason for objection was made pretty clear by me on several occasions - it's an inappropriate use of series boxes. It seems assumable that David's reversions amounted to "Agree with Snowspinner." He may even have indicated that once in an edit summary - I don't recall, quite honestly. Snowspinner 17:32, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
- You have to ask yourself, "why doesn't every editor have access to rollback?" I think we all know it is because it would be abused to facilitate unproductive edit wars. Admins are supposed to be able to handle themselves better, and so are given this tool for vandal-fighting. It is not a "voting tool" in an edit conflict, so the "Agree with Snowspinner" assumption, though probably correct in David's mind, doesn't make it a proper action. -- Netoholic @ 17:46, 2005 Mar 13 (UTC)
- The reason for objection was made pretty clear by me on several occasions - it's an inappropriate use of series boxes. It seems assumable that David's reversions amounted to "Agree with Snowspinner." He may even have indicated that once in an edit summary - I don't recall, quite honestly. Snowspinner 17:32, Mar 13, 2005 (UTC)
Well then how about telling me the reason for David repeatedly reversing my edits. Are the project's infoboxes too shiny for David's taste? How about a reason that belongs on planet Earth? Inboboxes are a totally accepted part of Misplaced Pages by policy, guidelines, and style guides. Show me one thing wrong with replacing the old infobox design with a new single purpose design. These boxes were already there. They are not going through a list. They are intentionally harassing me for no good rational reason. And, I am talking about Admins, NOT an editor. Admins must be held to a higher standard of conduct. -- John Gohde 16:47, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I've looked at the "infoboxes" and they aren't actually infoboxes they are navigation boxes. As such they are a duplication of the category links and are therefore redundant. Please stop adding them. Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 17:34, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- So, have I. They are positively NOT navigation boxes. The new design is positively a pure infobox. And, the blocking is actually keeping all the old navigation boxes from being updated to a pure infobox design. -- John Gohde 04:10, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
this is bogus. On the risk of sounding "territorial" again, there is no need to come here just to ask David what he thought was wrong with the boxes, and could he please comment on his reverts. He has a Talk Page for that. After he refuses to give his reasons, the option to complain, formally or informally, will still be open. As it is, this is just abusing this board to get a wider audience for your whining, or for exposing the buddying-up of admins. Let me tell you, if any sizeable subset of this motley crew of admins buddies-up against you, you must have a really weak case. dab (ᛏ) 20:12, 13 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Actually, I have already discussed same in the respective talk pages of both users under the topic of WP:POINT. And, these dudes made some of their dumbest comments ever, IMHO. -- John Gohde 05:07, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- The only thing bogus here, is your comments. Time has past for being polite. I want David punished for stalking, harassment, actively disturbing and making me upset knowlingly by an Admin, with his repeated inappropriate use of admin reversals. Nothing than less than punishment for David will be accepted by me. -- John Gohde 04:15, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- that's great, but you're equally mistaken to bring it up here, then. ta-ta, happy arbcomming. dab (ᛏ) 09:27, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
User:RickK
- Deliberately deleting what my complaints against admins on this page, twice. Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents: "If you want to make an open informal complaint over the behaviour of an admin, you can do so here."
- For a recent bogus enforcement of a 3RR violation after Snowspinner made the offer on his talk page.
- Violating WP:POINT because I made a big stink about his abuse of sysop privileges last year. Time to get over it, Rick!
- Rick is obviously a cronie of the above two other admins. Probably the worst offense of the lot. -- John Gohde 06:14, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
What a load of crap. I won't respond to this garbage. Get this guy banned permanently. He is a cancer on the project. RickK 06:36, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC)
Everyking again
Everyking has reverted Autobiography (Ashlee Simpson album) again, in violation of the arbitration ruling against him. As is typical, this is not a simple revert that can be shown using a single diff:
- On Feb 27, Snowspinner converted four paragraphs of reviews into a single paragraph, and I reduced the number of reviews quoted from six to three. Alkivar made some unrelated changes (I shrank the # of reviews in the table to make it fit on 1 page Alkivar).
- On March 4, Everyking made some unrelated edits to the article
- On March 13, Everyking reverted the "reviews" part of the article back to the pre-Feb 27 version, with the removal of a single sentence and movement of a second sentence.
The overall changes can be seen in this diff: the parts labeled "line 86" and "line 92" in the first column cover the net changes in the "reviews" column: one sentence removed, one moved. --Carnildo 02:20, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Apparently any edit I make is a revert now. Give me a break. Everyking 02:59, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Did you look at the diffs? That was a revert. --Carnildo 03:09, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I know what the edits were; there was no revert. Everyking 03:12, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Hilariously, Carnildo has now gone and reverted back. What were you arguing, exactly? Everyking 04:15, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- That you, according to the arbcom case, are not permitted to make this edit, and thus should be blocked for 24 hours. I, on the other hand, have no such limit, and am perfectly free to revert said edit. --Carnildo 04:41, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- You reverted (twice now), while I haven't reverted at all. Doesn't that make your argument a bit silly? Everyking 04:48, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- That you, according to the arbcom case, are not permitted to make this edit, and thus should be blocked for 24 hours. I, on the other hand, have no such limit, and am perfectly free to revert said edit. --Carnildo 04:41, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Did you look at the diffs? That was a revert. --Carnildo 03:09, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- And he's done it again, this time one of his special "partial restore" reverts: . Note that he left out the fourth paragraph this time. --Carnildo 04:45, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- And another "partial restore": one paragraph: --Carnildo 04:53, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- As Everyking declared that he had made 100 reverts by the definition at Misplaced Pages:Revert and told me to block him for 100 days on IRC, I have done so. Snowspinner 05:14, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC)
Transcript for the interested (trimmed):
00:10 <everyking> if that's the case, i've reverted about a hundred times in the last few hours 00:10 <Snowspinner> EK: On Ashlee articles? 00:10 <Snowspinner> Because I can ban for 100 days if you want. 00:10 <everyking> go ahead 00:10 <Snowspinner> Well, I mean, if they were all on Ashlee articles. 00:11 <everyking> sure they were, add on those 99 days already 00:11 <Snowspinner> OK. If you say so. 00:12 <Snowspinner> Done.
Times are EST. -Fennec (はさばくのきつね) 05:16, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- One more case of Snowspinner's abuse of admin powers. Blocking another user, a fellow admin, for 100 days for not responding to his IRC threats with meek submission. Everyking 05:54, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- There is an open Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/Snowspinner, which is focused on his use of the blocking function. -- Netoholic @ 06:32, 2005 Mar 14 (UTC)
- Note that Everyking still hasn't been blocked for this violation. --Carnildo 07:01, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- And another one of his special "partial restores": --Carnildo 08:44, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- This is ridiculous. You have reverted twice. I have not even reverted once; instead I've been trying to find acceptable compromises. Would you stop the complaining? Everyking 08:48, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- You have not been trying to find acceptable compromises; if you had, you would have noticed the discussion on the Talk page about this part of the article. --Carnildo 09:43, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I'm sure we could work out something mutually agreeable. There's no need for the reverting. I created the scratchpad version of the article so we wouldn't need to go through all this stuff again. Everyking 10:21, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- You have not been trying to find acceptable compromises; if you had, you would have noticed the discussion on the Talk page about this part of the article. --Carnildo 09:43, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- This is ridiculous. You have reverted twice. I have not even reverted once; instead I've been trying to find acceptable compromises. Would you stop the complaining? Everyking 08:48, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- If James wishes to add useful info to Ashlee articles let him - he has a revert ban, not a ban on them. Please don't goad him either - if they are good edits, let them stay. However, James knows (although does not accept) what fellow Wikipedians think about his Ashlee obsession - he should not allow himself to be wound up by those who seek to do so, jguk 12:52, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I think referring to me as having an "obsession" is rather uncivil. The only think I'm obsessed about is improving Misplaced Pages. Everyking 12:54, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- If James wishes to add useful info to Ashlee articles let him - he has a revert ban, not a ban on them. Please don't goad him either - if they are good edits, let them stay. However, James knows (although does not accept) what fellow Wikipedians think about his Ashlee obsession - he should not allow himself to be wound up by those who seek to do so, jguk 12:52, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- Comment: Could you provide an additional diff to show exactly what content that Everyking is alleged to have reverted? ie, "This is what John Doe added (diff)" and "This is what I think Everyking reverted (diff)". Maybe this is laziness on my part, although I prefer to think of it as benefiting anyone else who will read this. :-)
John Gohde
I have blocked John Gohde for 24 hours for a 3RR violation on this page. RickK 06:23, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC)
- Inappropriate. You were involved in this lame "edit war". Please provide diffs to substantiate this. I have in teh meantime readded his section, which is appropriate per the page introduction. -- Netoholic @ 06:28, 2005 Mar 14 (UTC)
Rick I've counted the reverts today. John reverted 3 times not 4. So he hasn't actually broken the 3RR. Please provide the diffs if you think I'm wrong, but in the meantime i have to unblock him. Theresa Knott (ask the rotten) 15:46, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I only count 2 reverts rather than your 3, and certainly NOT 4! NickK deleted my valid complaint twice. Therefore, I re-added it only 2 times. The 3rd re-added was done by somebody else since I was blocked. -- John Gohde 16:04, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC)