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:Courtesy vanishing - Misplaced Pages

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Nagle (talk | contribs) at 18:12, 9 November 2008 (Added section on how to leave "normally", without vanishing, per talk.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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Blue tickThis page documents an English Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline.
Editors should generally follow it, though exceptions may apply. Substantive edits to this page should reflect consensus. When in doubt, discuss first on this guideline's talk page.
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How to leave Misplaced Pages

All Misplaced Pages editors have the right to leave. The usual way to leave the Misplaced Pages project is simply to stop editing. Your contributions remain in Misplaced Pages. It is suggested that you place a {{retired}} template at the top of your user and talk pages to indicate that you are no longer involved with Misplaced Pages. This tells other editors that you are no longer active and that messages should not be left for you. If you ever want to return to editing, simply remove the {{retired}} template. Retiring will not prevent you from logging in at a future date.

If you no longer wish to be associated with your past edits, you can exercise your Right to vanish. This is not usually necessary. The Misplaced Pages community will typically accord the right to vanish to users in good standing who exercise their right to leave and ask to "vanish" permanently.

Vanishing from Misplaced Pages

Vanishing is the act of disassociating the identity of a user account from the identity of its owner, and typically involves:

Vanishing is not a right in the strict sense of the word; rather, it is a courtesy extended by the Misplaced Pages community to make it easy for users to exercise their right to leave. Sometimes the community will not extend the courtesy: for example, if the user is not actually leaving, or if the user is not in good standing. Note also that the Wikimedia Foundation does not guarantee that an account's username will be changed on request.

What vanishing is not

The right to vanish is only available to users who are also exercising their right to leave. The "right to vanish" is not a "right to a fresh start" under a new identity. Vanishing means that the individual is vanishing, not just the account. Vanished users have no right to silently return under a new identity.

Users in good standing are free to request a change of username at any time. All contributions made under the old username will be reattributed to the new username, including deleted contributions, preserving the edit history.

The deletion of personally identifiable information about users (such as a phone number or a street address) is not "vanishing", and users do not need to leave in order for this information to be deleted. Such information can be deleted on request, provided it is not needed for administrative purposes, which are generally limited to dealing with site misuse issues.

Effectiveness

Allowing your editing to trail off or simply stopping editing is likely to be about as effective since for the most part if a user in good standing disappears people tend to accept they are gone and leave it at that. This has the advantage that you can change your mind with no penalty.

The template {{Retired}}, placed on your user page and talk page, indicates that you are no longer active on Misplaced Pages. This is a simple and polite way to leave Misplaced Pages.

To vanish more completely, you may wish to blank your userpage, talkpage, and any subpages in your userspace, and/or tag them with {{db-user}}, which will notify administrators that you wish them to be speedily deleted.

Notes

  1. The account must have made fewer than 200,000 edits. This is a technical limitation in the rename tool, not a policy limitation.

See also

Category: