Revision as of 16:26, 8 June 2020 editRexxS (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers43,075 edits →June 2020: reply to Dennis← Previous edit | Revision as of 16:31, 8 June 2020 edit undoDennis Brown (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, IP block exemptions69,230 edits →June 2020: addNext edit → | ||
Line 239: | Line 239: | ||
*** You can stop threatening to block, for starters. Simply let the community handle it since the community has clearly indicated that your block was controversial at best. There comes a time you step back and let others handle it. This is one of those times. As a fellow editor (and I truly mean this in a friendly way), it is my opinion you are a little too close to the fire. AManWithNoPlan is accountable, and there is honest confusion on consensus, so lets slow down and let the COMMUNITY hash it out. ] - ] 16:18, 8 June 2020 (UTC) | *** You can stop threatening to block, for starters. Simply let the community handle it since the community has clearly indicated that your block was controversial at best. There comes a time you step back and let others handle it. This is one of those times. As a fellow editor (and I truly mean this in a friendly way), it is my opinion you are a little too close to the fire. AManWithNoPlan is accountable, and there is honest confusion on consensus, so lets slow down and let the COMMUNITY hash it out. ] - ] 16:18, 8 June 2020 (UTC) | ||
**** This is the second time in three months that we've had problems with AManWithNoPlan causing problems with his use of Citation bot and then denying responsibility for the edits. If you think that the next time he does exactly the same thing, I should just ignore it, then please tell me you'll be ready to step in because editors like {{u|SandyGeorgia}} need some admin wiling to make the hard calls. --] (]) 16:26, 8 June 2020 (UTC) | **** This is the second time in three months that we've had problems with AManWithNoPlan causing problems with his use of Citation bot and then denying responsibility for the edits. If you think that the next time he does exactly the same thing, I should just ignore it, then please tell me you'll be ready to step in because editors like {{u|SandyGeorgia}} need some admin wiling to make the hard calls. --] (]) 16:26, 8 June 2020 (UTC) | ||
*****I'm not taking his side, or any side for that matter. I am saying that so far at ANI, most everyone disagrees with how you are handling it. That is my point. Perhaps you shouldn't be making threats to someone when the community seems to be disagreeing with how you handled this case just one day ago. ] - ] 16:31, 8 June 2020 (UTC) | |||
:::::{{ec}} AManWithNoPlan, if you were responsible for creating this problem then you definitely need to take responsibility for sorting it out. {{u|RexxS}}, I have no knowledge of the specifics of this case, but in general if someone has made a mess and been blocked for it, then clearing up the mess should be a condition of any unblock, should it not? ] (]) 10:46, 8 June 2020 (UTC) | :::::{{ec}} AManWithNoPlan, if you were responsible for creating this problem then you definitely need to take responsibility for sorting it out. {{u|RexxS}}, I have no knowledge of the specifics of this case, but in general if someone has made a mess and been blocked for it, then clearing up the mess should be a condition of any unblock, should it not? ] (]) 10:46, 8 June 2020 (UTC) | ||
Revision as of 16:31, 8 June 2020
Do not discuss Citation bot issues here. Take them to the bot page instead. |
If you want to leave a message, please do it at the bottom, as a new section, for better formatting. You can do that by simply pressing the plus sign (+) or "new section" on the top of this page. And don't forget to sign your messages with four tildes, like this: ~~~~
Attention: I prefer to keep discussions unfragmented. If you leave a comment for me here, I will most likely respond to it on this same page—my talk page—as an effort to keep the entire conversation in one place. By the same token, if I leave a comment on your talk page, please respond to it there. Remember, we can use our watchlist and topic subscriptions to keep track of when responses are made. At the same time, feel free to send an alert to me on this page about a comment you have left elsewhere.
Thank you!
Thanks
... for fixing those DOIs. It's a vital maintenance task that is not normally listed or tracked, but makes a very important contribution to Misplaced Pages's linkage to other resources! JFW | T@lk 19:31, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
I have also been submitting hundreds of ones that should work to www.doi.org. Many of then are already fixed. Yippee. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 17:50, 29 July 2010 (UTC)
- My thanks also (noticed this fix). If you have experience in submitting DOIs to dx.doi.org does that mean it would be possible to get doi:10.1001/archinte.142.10.1816 to point here again by updating their record? Thanks Rjwilmsi 18:57, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
Thanks
Thanks for this. That had been confusing the hell out of me! How did you know they were there? SmartSE (talk) 16:32, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
I work hard to fix bad DOI's and Handles in General. So, I have just developed a sense of what can be wrong with a DOI. AManWithNoPlan (talk)
Thanks!
Hi AManWithNoPlan,
Just wanted to drop a quick note and say thanks for all the doi fixes you've been doing. I'm still working on the carbon cycle page plus the new pages I'm writing for the section and I sure appreciate any help I can get - especially on such things as citations, which I'm not the best at. Thanks again!
Daniel Lee (talk) 20:56, 11 June 2012 (UTC)
Thanks
Thank you for cleaning up my citation with the template at Negative temperature. RJFJR (talk) 14:35, 9 January 2013 (UTC)
Lightning Man
Thanks for your help with Khin Sok - that was super fast - too fast for me
All the bestWikirictor (talk) 16:31, 12 May 2015 (UTC)
PROXY
Extended content |
---|
What does 'proxy' mean?What does 'proxy' mean? BeenAroundAWhile (talk) 06:08, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
September 2016 - ProxyHello. This is a message to let you know that one or more of your recent contributions, such as the edit you made to Contemporary Christian music, did not appear constructive and have been undone. Please take some time to familiarise yourself with our policies and guidelines. You can find information about these at our welcome page which also provides further information about contributing constructively to this encyclopedia. If you only meant to make test edits, please use the sandbox for that. If you think I made a mistake, or if you have any questions, you may leave a message on my talk page. Bare URLs are not appropriate as they can cause ]. Please stop changing fully formatted references back to bare URLs. Walter Görlitz (talk) 06:23, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
Discussion of ProxiesThere is currently a discussion at Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents regarding an issue with which you may have been involved. Thank you. BeenAroundAWhile (talk) 05:05, 14 September 2016 (UTC)
ProxyURL, use AWBHey! I saw some of your work on the proxy urls: that seems like something that could move a lot quicker with a semi-automated tool, like WP:AWB or a WP:Bots. Have you thought about requesting access to one or both? Sadads (talk) 21:31, 16 September 2016 (UTC)
Proxy?Greetings! I noticed that you've been making some fixes to a series of articles about South Carolina Supreme Court justices that I set up a while back. That's great. I plowed through those people and created baseline entries for each of them, and I was hoping they might attract a little more attention than they have. It looks like a lot of the fixes involve "removing a proxy." I have to admit that I'm really most interested in the underlying content of articles and not all of the background machinery that goes into the coding. But, I'm open to learning. Can I ask for a super simple explanation of what exactly is being changed? If you can explain it to super low brow terms, I'd like to make sure that I am not making the same mistake elsewhere. Kevin ProfReader (talk) 02:21, 20 September 2016 (UTC)
Arizona proxies/ProquestHello. Thanks for your work on this. I noticed these too yesterday. I checked some of them but found that on occasion they used a citation that was unrelated to the content. I referred it to an administrator here. Karst (talk) 14:00, 30 September 2016 (UTC)
|
BeenAroundAWhile
I don't appreciate your removing the so-called "proxy" from the Bolton Hall (California) article, not from any of the others which you have "fixed," because now thousands of people with L.A. Public Library cards can't get in to follow the link. I'm sure you didn't think of this, but how are we now to see what the source said? BeenAroundAWhile (talk) 05:16, 18 November 2019 (UTC)
- I am very aware of this problem, but Misplaced Pages has actual policies against proxy urls. People just need to login with a library card. The links before are accessible by a few people who are physically at a library, while the fixed links are accessible to anyone in the world with a library card from most libraries. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 11:54, 18 November 2019 (UTC)
Citation bot
Hey, thanks for another suite of fixes to Citation bot; you'll be delighted to learn that after a very long-awaited free weekend I've finally beaten the issues that had held me back from rolling the bot out to production, so all your hard-written fixes are now live! Yay!
Now that we have a CI setup that I'm confident in (and I'm more confident in how it operates), I'm going to suggest a more positive approach to bug fixes. I don't think we need to make as extensive use of the development branch as we have been, so suggest now that we work directly on the master
branch, using a separate pull request for each bug. If each pull request includes a test case that addresses the bug (ideally by modifying an existing test case, to avoid test suite bloat), then when the PR goes green on Travis, I'll merge it directly into master
and pull it to the production site so that the fix is available immediately. We can use the development branch for more significant infrastructure-level changes as and when these are necessary (which is hopefully rarely).
Cheers, and thanks again for your help in maintaining the bot. Martin (Smith609 – Talk) 07:31, 23 July 2018 (UTC)
Thanks!
Hi, thanks for cleaning up the jstor cites on several pages. I apologize, those were generated automatically by visual editor. I'm curious if the right way to go is to use WP:UCB for all similar references moving forward as I've not been used to doing so on the source editor environment. Verbosmithie (talk) 02:47, 12 May 2019 (UTC)
In your editing preference you turn on "Citation expander: automatically expand and format citations using Citation bot" and then you can use it. As for the "easy" way to use it, I often just put urls or doi's into refercence like <ref>http://www.jstor.org/stable/dsafdfd</ref><ref>10.234132/3241234</ref> and then run the bot. I should note that some jstors do not get recognized, and might require you to explicitly <ref>{{cite journal|jstor=34231234faddfasdfdas}}</ref> AManWithNoPlan (talk) 03:06, 12 May 2019 (UTC)
- @AManWithNoPlan Thanks for the great tip.Verbosmithie (talk) 11:02, 13 May 2019 (UTC)
Your edits with the Citation bot removed the italics around the publisher name for newspapers, is this appropriate?
Hello! I generally put the names of newspapers in italics inside a citation for the publisher, (publisher=name here) similar to how they are displayed in Misplaced Pages article titles: The New York Times. Isn't italics for the name of a newspaper the norm/standard here? I haven't found any policy which states this explicitly, maybe can you point me to one for some clarity? Thanks! ---Avatar317 23:35, 27 May 2019 (UTC)
- Could you point me to a specific example? AManWithNoPlan (talk) 23:40, 27 May 2019 (UTC)
- Are you sure you don’t mean the
|work=
and its aliases such as|newspaper=
? Such as
- Are you sure you don’t mean the
"title". newspaper. publisher.
AManWithNoPlan (talk) 23:40, 27 May 2019 (UTC)
- the publisher is ‘The New York Times Company’, while the newspaper is ‘The New York Times’. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 23:49, 27 May 2019 (UTC)
- Sorry, I should have provided a diff for the edits, I had assumed it was happening on many articles. Here: publisher=The San Diego Union-Tribune publisher=Forbes publisher=Salon publisher=San Jose Mercury News ---Avatar317 00:23, 28 May 2019 (UTC)
The error is the use of the wrong template parameter. Publishers are not italics. Perhaps I should add a list of things put in publisher= that should be in work/journal/magazine/newspaper= (Which is automatically made italics) and fix them AManWithNoPlan (talk) 00:36, 28 May 2019 (UTC)
Once this is merged in, the bot will start fixing the citations and converting select publishers to the work parameter, which automatically does italics. https://github.com/ms609/citation-bot/pull/1679 AManWithNoPlan (talk) 04:06, 28 May 2019 (UTC)
- Ah, that is what I was doing wrong, thank you for explaining that; I'll use those fields properly from now on. It would be good to improve the bot's behavior like that, because I would guess I haven't been the only one who mis-understood how to use those parameters. --Thanks!! ---Avatar317 05:09, 28 May 2019 (UTC)
References
Why does Citation bot remove "publisher" and replace it with "work"?
Like with this edit on John Adams? That's about it. Thanks, Shearonink (talk) 12:10, 25 June 2019 (UTC)
- the magazine/newspaper/journal/work is the actual thing. The publisher is the corporation. So, for example a special commemorative child’s coloring book might have publisher=NYT, but it certainly does not have work=NYT. For example two, work=Life Magazine but publisher=Time/Life or something similar. Lastly when work=publisher, you don’t include publisher. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 12:38, 25 June 2019 (UTC)
Thanks
for your work on adding new IDs like SemScholar to citation bot. This will be most useful for the broader vision of the WikiCite project. – SJ + 15:26, 20 February 2020 (UTC)
March 2020
Extended content |
---|
You have been blocked from editing for a period of 24 hours for making personal attacks towards other editors. Once the block has expired, you are welcome to make useful contributions. If you think there are good reasons for being unblocked, please read the guide to appealing blocks, then add the following text below the block notice on your talk page: {{unblock|reason=Your reason here ~~~~}} . Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 12:28, 28 March 2020 (UTC)
This user's unblock request has been reviewed by an administrator, who declined the request. Other administrators may also review this block, but should not override the decision without good reason (see the blocking policy).
AManWithNoPlan (block log • active blocks • global blocks • contribs • deleted contribs • filter log • creation log • change block settings • unblock • checkuser (log)) Request reason: People lied about me and I pointed it out, so the liars got upset and me pointing it out Decline reason: WP:GAB will help you understand how to craft an acceptable unblock request. Yamla (talk) 13:22, 28 March 2020 (UTC) If you want to make any further unblock requests, please read the guide to appealing blocks first, then use the {{unblock}} template again. If you make too many unconvincing or disruptive unblock requests, you may be prevented from editing this page until your block has expired. Do not remove this unblock review while you are blocked.
IF the bot is working correctly, adding a comment to the URL should stop the bot from removing it. I have worked hard to make sure comment imply DON’T TOUCH THIS Mr Bot. There are a few exceptions, but they are far and few. I should note that access-dates are not when someone checked to see if the reference was saying what it claims to to say, but when the url was still alive. That’s why DOI, ProQuest and such don’t have access dates. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 15:12, 28 March 2020 (UTC)
AManWithNoPlan (block log • active blocks • global blocks • contribs • deleted contribs • filter log • creation log • change block settings • unblock • checkuser (log)) Request reason: resolved issues with word choices that implies bad faith in others that was not meant to be implied Accept reason: Welcome back. Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 15:52, 28 March 2020 (UTC) I'm also sorry to see you were blocked over this, and I feel a bit guilty as I was the one who started this particular rabbit running. On the upside, I'm really happy that you fixed the "minor edit" problem that concerned me, and I'll be delighted if Sandy and Andy's concerns are now settled as well. As I spend much of my time these days working on maintaining tools that bring Wikidata into infoboxes, I empathise with your desire to keep complaints and bug reports in a single place, but Misplaced Pages isn't neat and tidy like that. I'm even more glad that you've engaged in discourse with the editors who have had problems – it really does make a difference to the editor's experience when they raise an issue (even in the "Wrong Place™") if they get a response from a real person and they can see that they are taken seriously. One of the consequential issues is that I think we need to be clearer as a community about our expectations of responsibility. You'll find that most editors, if asked, will insist that there has to be person to "blame" for erroneous edits, whether they are made by an editor manually, or using a simple script or AWB, by a bot. I doubt that there would be many dissenting from the view that the editor who activates the bot should be the responsible person. The benefit of bots is that we get a lot of routine edits done rapidly and efficiently – we need to acknowledge that – but the disadvantage is that it is near impossible for whoever runs the bot to check all of the edits for errors – and we have to accept that as well. The flipside of that coin is that whoever triggers a bot has to pay extra attention to issues as they arise, mainly because it's the right thing to do, but also because you're likely to get it in the neck if you don't . I hope you've made some new wiki-friends (after all, we all want the same thing: to improve the encyclopedia), and I hope that Andy, Sandy, et al will feel that they can come to you if they run into Citation Bot issues in the future. Cheers --RexxS (talk) 23:01, 28 March 2020 (UTC) Cheers to you all too. It has been a hard road for all of us. But, thankfully no real trolls showed up. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 11:22, 31 March 2020 (UTC) |
Thank you for your bot work
Your hard work has not gone unnoticed. Thank you. Viriditas (talk) 07:31, 1 April 2020 (UTC)
Further mass cleanup
Hello, are you done with your large runs for now? (I ask because when you're done I want to refresh the OAbot queue.) From quarry:query/31224 I still see the usual ~44k articles: many are not fixable by citation bot (unstructured citations and such), but from a small sample I think the bot would make a successful edit on some 10-20 % of them. Nemo 13:18, 7 April 2020 (UTC)
- my runs are all done for now. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 13:42, 7 April 2020 (UTC)
- Alright, thanks. Nemo 13:54, 7 April 2020 (UTC)
Me again
AMWNP, there is a similar issue occurring to the last time we spoke, with free full text links being removed at coprolalia and dementia with Lewy bodies. Last time, I didn't fully understand where to raise the issue, or what was causing it, but I recall that you or someone told me to add a comment in the URL field so it would not continue to be removed. Will these fixes at DLB work to prevent those URLs from being removed again, or do I need to inquire somewhere else? Regards, SandyGeorgia (Talk) 13:36, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- Also at another featured article, dengue fever. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 13:50, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- S2 actually has asked for the parameter to be added and for the urls to be converted. The comments should block to url to ID conversion. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 13:54, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- Thanks for responding, AMWNP, but I don't understand any of your answer. Could you try rephrasing? For citation consistency, when free full text is available, it should blue link the title in the citation. Best, SandyGeorgia (Talk) 14:11, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- semanticscholar has explicitly asked that semanticscholar urls be converted to the s2cid parameter (in fact, they pushed to have the parameter added). If you do put the link back (post-conversion), I suggest you leave the s2cid parameter in place. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 14:28, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- there is strong talk of making doi-access=free and such automatically add the blue links you love. I hope that gets done. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 14:53, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- OK, I think I am following you to be saying:
- An independent organization has requested that we link directly to them. Why do we give them that authority? We will now have up to five links to the same information, which is clutter. Where should I ask this question, or do you happen to know the answer?
- I should review my edits to make sure I didn't remove any s2cids, depending on answer to 1.
- By adding a comment to the URL field, the URLs I add (which go directly to the PDF, which is not where the DOIs or S2cids always go) will not be removed by bot?
- SandyGeorgia (Talk) 16:39, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- OK, I think I am following you to be saying:
- there is strong talk of making doi-access=free and such automatically add the blue links you love. I hope that gets done. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 14:53, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- semanticscholar has explicitly asked that semanticscholar urls be converted to the s2cid parameter (in fact, they pushed to have the parameter added). If you do put the link back (post-conversion), I suggest you leave the s2cid parameter in place. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 14:28, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- Thanks for responding, AMWNP, but I don't understand any of your answer. Could you try rephrasing? For citation consistency, when free full text is available, it should blue link the title in the citation. Best, SandyGeorgia (Talk) 14:11, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
- S2 actually has asked for the parameter to be added and for the urls to be converted. The comments should block to url to ID conversion. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 13:54, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
the owner of the website linked to, requested that we link to the ID instead of URLs. As for PDF vs landing page, most editors prefer a landing page since they generally are much less likley to atop working: a lot of scemanticschlor pdf links that i found when testing the conversion code no longer worked and redirected to the landing page. The second reason is that landing pages are geneally much quicker to load and much more handicapped accesible. Many people find downloading ANY file to be evil and will not do it. I personaly, usually read just the abstract. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 16:57, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
June 2020
Your replies to my concerns about your disruptive editing in unlinking citation titles against common consensus lead me to believe that you intend to continue. I am therefore blocking you until you are prepared to give assurances that such disruption will not recur. --RexxS (talk) 22:00, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
You have been blocked indefinitely from editing for persistently making disruptive edits. If you think there are good reasons for being unblocked, please read the guide to appealing blocks, then add the following text below the block notice on your talk page:{{unblock|reason=Your reason here ~~~~}}
. RexxS (talk) 22:00, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
This user's unblock request has been reviewed by an administrator, who declined the request. Other administrators may also review this block, but should not override the decision without good reason (see the blocking policy).
AManWithNoPlan (block log • active blocks • global blocks • contribs • deleted contribs • filter log • creation log • change block settings • unblock • checkuser (log))
Request reason:
I am not editing anything. There is a bot that is editing pages. I am not an operator of the bot either. I cannot take part in discussions without being unblocked. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 22:07, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
Decline reason:
Procedural decline. No longer blocked, and the block is at ANI for community review anyway. It is clear that the state of a block will rest on the shoulders of ANI, not this unblock request. CaptainEek ⚓ 05:52, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
If you want to make any further unblock requests, please read the guide to appealing blocks first, then use the {{unblock}} template again. If you make too many unconvincing or disruptive unblock requests, you may be prevented from editing this page until your block has expired. Do not remove this unblock review while you are blocked.
- The block is being reviewed at ANI. I think we need to get just a little input on the admin action. Regardless, and without taking sides, I would support ublocking if you pledged to NOT use Citation bot until this is hashed out. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 23:19, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- There WAS a general agreement to do this, but times change so I promise not to fire up any more runs, but i should note that I am not the bot operator, I am just a dude who writes code for the bot who on rare occasions requests that it run. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 23:34, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- (edit conflict) In response to your claim: the edit summary for this edit clearly shows Activated by AManWithNoPlan. You cannot claim that the bot run was not initiated by you, nor that you have no responsibility for the edits made. Nevertheless, I'll happily unblock you myself if you gave the assurance that Dennis Brown suggests. --RexxS (talk) 23:39, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- I think that is fair. AMan* is a known quantity, and if he says he won't, I feel we can take him at his word. If not, blocks are cheap. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 23:43, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- I am trying to draw the distinction between me and the bot because if I do not do that, than anyone who requests the bot to run is prone to being blocked. It sets a terrible president. "here, use this tool...you used that tool, you are now blocked!" AManWithNoPlan (talk) 23:48, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- Any edits already requested, I cannot stop, since its a bot, not me. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 23:50, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- AMWNP, is the bot not operating on a list that you create in your user space? I know nothing of how this works, but what if you remove the list? SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:01, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- The bot loads a list and stores it. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 00:10, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- AMWNP, I am sorry to continue asking so many questions, but your answers are sometimes so cryptic I don't understand them. Do you mean that, even though the list was in your userspace, that the bot already has them in memory and there is nothing you can do to stop it? That seems like a really dumb way for a bot to operate, but I don't speak this language ... in other words, the bot literally can't be stopped unless it is blocked? SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:16, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- That's what it means, yes, and it's pretty much the only way the bot could operate without having to check if a page was updated prior to making edits every time which would slow things down quite a bit presumably. You send a list of things to the bot, the bot saves it internally, and off it goes. Headbomb {t · c · p · b} 00:23, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- So Headbomb, you are saying that even though AMWNP is blocked, we will continue to see article edits with edit summaries saying the bot was activated by AMWNP, and we will continue to need to repair them? It sounds like the bot needs to be blocked then. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:28, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Butting in here, but yes Sandy. Once you start the bot, the edits continue unless there is a mechanism to stop it (not likely) or you simply block it. This is why we block bots, to stop them from taking the already uploaded list and continuing to function on it. Typically, the real problem isn't the list, it is a bad line of code or instruction in the bot itself that might not have been previously known, causing it to do unwanted things. Blocking a bot obviously has less stigma than blocking a person, and is the only way to actually STOP the actions that are problematic. Blocking the person that uploaded the list to the bot does not change the behavior of the bot. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 10:33, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Thanks so much, Dennis Brown. A big part of this issue for me has been the difficulty in communication between those who speak bot, and those like me, who don't. Since I converted from manual citations (which I used to avoid these issues for more than a decade) to citation templates, I think this is my third go-round with these citation bot issues, and with your response, I now understand better what to do should it continue to happen. The community needs a centralized place to discuss bot issues like this, so that editors like AMWNP don't get hit with requests they can't do anything about. Sending us to a bot talk page doesn't make sense to me, when there are multiple issues. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 15:30, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Butting in here, but yes Sandy. Once you start the bot, the edits continue unless there is a mechanism to stop it (not likely) or you simply block it. This is why we block bots, to stop them from taking the already uploaded list and continuing to function on it. Typically, the real problem isn't the list, it is a bad line of code or instruction in the bot itself that might not have been previously known, causing it to do unwanted things. Blocking a bot obviously has less stigma than blocking a person, and is the only way to actually STOP the actions that are problematic. Blocking the person that uploaded the list to the bot does not change the behavior of the bot. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 10:33, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- So Headbomb, you are saying that even though AMWNP is blocked, we will continue to see article edits with edit summaries saying the bot was activated by AMWNP, and we will continue to need to repair them? It sounds like the bot needs to be blocked then. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:28, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- That's what it means, yes, and it's pretty much the only way the bot could operate without having to check if a page was updated prior to making edits every time which would slow things down quite a bit presumably. You send a list of things to the bot, the bot saves it internally, and off it goes. Headbomb {t · c · p · b} 00:23, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- AMWNP, I am sorry to continue asking so many questions, but your answers are sometimes so cryptic I don't understand them. Do you mean that, even though the list was in your userspace, that the bot already has them in memory and there is nothing you can do to stop it? That seems like a really dumb way for a bot to operate, but I don't speak this language ... in other words, the bot literally can't be stopped unless it is blocked? SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:16, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- The bot loads a list and stores it. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 00:10, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- AMWNP, is the bot not operating on a list that you create in your user space? I know nothing of how this works, but what if you remove the list? SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:01, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Any edits already requested, I cannot stop, since its a bot, not me. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 23:50, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- I am trying to draw the distinction between me and the bot because if I do not do that, than anyone who requests the bot to run is prone to being blocked. It sets a terrible president. "here, use this tool...you used that tool, you are now blocked!" AManWithNoPlan (talk) 23:48, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- I think that is fair. AMan* is a known quantity, and if he says he won't, I feel we can take him at his word. If not, blocks are cheap. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 23:43, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
if the bot is blocked then existing runs should die pretty fast. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 00:31, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Thank you for recognizing that a bot (and not I was making the edits). AManWithNoPlan (talk) 00:50, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- @SandyGeorgia: The bot is now blocked and AManWithNoPlan is now unblocked as I agree that his assurances should be taken in good faith.
- Looking at that reply, AManWithNoPlan, I believe I'll be reblocking you quite soon if you really don't think you have any responsibility for the edits made by the bot that you activated.
- I would like to ask AManWithNoPlan what steps he intends to take to restore the links removed by the bot in the run that he activated? --RexxS (talk) 00:54, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Honestly, I do not have time to look over all the links that were removed. The S2 links were mostly (but obvious not 100%) added by the bot actually. The bot stopped adding the links because people got very angry about that for copyright reasons - so, oddly enough the bot is banned from adding them back. I wish that the citation templates would automatically add a link for doi=free or something like that. I accept a pseudo-responsibility, but not a wikipedia "your account was used" responsibility. I try to keep that distinction, since I don't like people bothering users of the bot, since it historically has lead to bugs not being reported, people being harassed on wikipedia (people running to bot on one page getting hassled), and such. Also, if I am "fully responsible" then the bot would become a tool and not need a bot approval, which I think would be really bad. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 01:06, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- But what about the time of other editors who now either have to accept the loss of the links you caused to be removed en masse or have to manually go through every edit, find the links and restore them? Are you really saying that their time is less valuable than yours? Can't you understand the anger generated when your bot run makes far too many edits to be fixed and you now don't have an answer for sorting that out? --RexxS (talk) 02:18, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Honestly, I do not have time to look over all the links that were removed. The S2 links were mostly (but obvious not 100%) added by the bot actually. The bot stopped adding the links because people got very angry about that for copyright reasons - so, oddly enough the bot is banned from adding them back. I wish that the citation templates would automatically add a link for doi=free or something like that. I accept a pseudo-responsibility, but not a wikipedia "your account was used" responsibility. I try to keep that distinction, since I don't like people bothering users of the bot, since it historically has lead to bugs not being reported, people being harassed on wikipedia (people running to bot on one page getting hassled), and such. Also, if I am "fully responsible" then the bot would become a tool and not need a bot approval, which I think would be really bad. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 01:06, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- RexxS, you need to parse your words more carefully. "I believe I'll be reblocking you quite soon if you really don't think you have any responsibility for the edits made by the bot that you activated." was unnecessary on a number of levels. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 10:40, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- @Dennis Brown: please feel free to suggest another form of words that conveys my refusal to accept that AManWithNoPlan can start a bot running and then deny all responsibility for the edits then made. I'll happy change my wording if you'd be kind enough to do so. --RexxS (talk) 15:40, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- You can stop threatening to block, for starters. Simply let the community handle it since the community has clearly indicated that your block was controversial at best. There comes a time you step back and let others handle it. This is one of those times. As a fellow editor (and I truly mean this in a friendly way), it is my opinion you are a little too close to the fire. AManWithNoPlan is accountable, and there is honest confusion on consensus, so lets slow down and let the COMMUNITY hash it out. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 16:18, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- This is the second time in three months that we've had problems with AManWithNoPlan causing problems with his use of Citation bot and then denying responsibility for the edits. If you think that the next time he does exactly the same thing, I should just ignore it, then please tell me you'll be ready to step in because editors like SandyGeorgia need some admin wiling to make the hard calls. --RexxS (talk) 16:26, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- I'm not taking his side, or any side for that matter. I am saying that so far at ANI, most everyone disagrees with how you are handling it. That is my point. Perhaps you shouldn't be making threats to someone when the community seems to be disagreeing with how you handled this case just one day ago. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 16:31, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- This is the second time in three months that we've had problems with AManWithNoPlan causing problems with his use of Citation bot and then denying responsibility for the edits. If you think that the next time he does exactly the same thing, I should just ignore it, then please tell me you'll be ready to step in because editors like SandyGeorgia need some admin wiling to make the hard calls. --RexxS (talk) 16:26, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- You can stop threatening to block, for starters. Simply let the community handle it since the community has clearly indicated that your block was controversial at best. There comes a time you step back and let others handle it. This is one of those times. As a fellow editor (and I truly mean this in a friendly way), it is my opinion you are a little too close to the fire. AManWithNoPlan is accountable, and there is honest confusion on consensus, so lets slow down and let the COMMUNITY hash it out. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 16:18, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- @Dennis Brown: please feel free to suggest another form of words that conveys my refusal to accept that AManWithNoPlan can start a bot running and then deny all responsibility for the edits then made. I'll happy change my wording if you'd be kind enough to do so. --RexxS (talk) 15:40, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- (edit conflict) AManWithNoPlan, if you were responsible for creating this problem then you definitely need to take responsibility for sorting it out. RexxS, I have no knowledge of the specifics of this case, but in general if someone has made a mess and been blocked for it, then clearing up the mess should be a condition of any unblock, should it not? Justlettersandnumbers (talk) 10:46, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
I lack the skills to undo the actions of an approved bot doing an approved task. I find the request to "clean it up" while still blocked to be odd. A significant enough fraction of the links changes to ID links are copyright infringing copies that all the links would need to be checked by hand before adding, and in good faith I would have not only not add back the offending links but remove S2CID links for those. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 11:14, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Then the bot needs to stay blocked until this can all be sorted out. There are legitimate concerns on both sides but at the end of the day we need to find consensus and protect the encyclopedia. Dennis Brown - 2¢ 11:17, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- I see that opinion at ANI is that it would have been preferable to block the bot rather than the user operating it, so the second part of my comment is moot – sorry about that! Yes, I imagine the work would need to be done by hand, and presumably that is the way anyone working on it would have to do it; you have the advantage of a list of the pages you've made the change to. If you'd edited the pages yourself we could just have mass-reverted your edits, but the bot has been run by others too, so that doesn't seem to be an option – unless someone smarter than me can see a way to filter its contributions to show only those doing this task, so that those can be rolled back in bulk? Justlettersandnumbers (talk) 12:01, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Almost all these links were added by a bot in violation of the WP copyright policies. I wonder who would be willing to undertake adding them back and take ownership of having added them. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 12:59, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- AMWNP, could you please point us to where some discussion of this copyright issue was discussed, and what is involved. For example, I went through all the bot edits to all the articles I follow, and found that many of the URLs removed no longer contained the free full text content, which (???) seems to imply that if there was a copyright issue, that was resolved by removing the full text from the link. On those where there still existed a free full text link, I added it back ... sample. Now I do not know if I am adding a copyright violation, because I don't know what the issue is or where the discussion is. Separately, I don't believe anyone has answered yet why we are even providing these s2cid links, if that is an organization that violates copyright. Why are we now chunking up citation templates with five links to the same thing? Also, see this example of one of my corrections ... the semantic scholar links no longer contained free full text, but the lancet did, so I readded it. We need a central place to discuss these problem. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 15:38, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Please don't use semanticscholar pdf links! Read their licence and the "How do I cite?" Grimes2 (talk) 15:55, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Thanks for responding, Grimes2, but I have been to semanticscholar.org, and cannot find a "how do I cite" page or information. I still do not understand why we are even using s2cid links if this is a company that violates copyright. Why do they get a link at all? I am going to ping in Diannaa as she seems to speak my language and understand my limitations. Diannaa, the bot is removing free full text links to semanticscholar and replacing them with a parameter in the template. If they violate copyright, why do they get a right to their own parameter in our citation templates? In attempting repair, I found in many cases that the previous links no longer provided free full text, but in many cases that free full text was available other places. Here is all of my repair: In three instances, I restored free full text to semanticscholar links (that Grimes now says I should not have). Could you please decipher for me, with respect to these three papers?
- Sorry to trouble you here, but I am simply not get answers that I understand, and I think you can fill in the gaps. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 16:19, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Please don't use semanticscholar pdf links! Read their licence and the "How do I cite?" Grimes2 (talk) 15:55, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- AMWNP, could you please point us to where some discussion of this copyright issue was discussed, and what is involved. For example, I went through all the bot edits to all the articles I follow, and found that many of the URLs removed no longer contained the free full text content, which (???) seems to imply that if there was a copyright issue, that was resolved by removing the full text from the link. On those where there still existed a free full text link, I added it back ... sample. Now I do not know if I am adding a copyright violation, because I don't know what the issue is or where the discussion is. Separately, I don't believe anyone has answered yet why we are even providing these s2cid links, if that is an organization that violates copyright. Why are we now chunking up citation templates with five links to the same thing? Also, see this example of one of my corrections ... the semantic scholar links no longer contained free full text, but the lancet did, so I readded it. We need a central place to discuss these problem. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 15:38, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- Almost all these links were added by a bot in violation of the WP copyright policies. I wonder who would be willing to undertake adding them back and take ownership of having added them. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 12:59, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
- I see that opinion at ANI is that it would have been preferable to block the bot rather than the user operating it, so the second part of my comment is moot – sorry about that! Yes, I imagine the work would need to be done by hand, and presumably that is the way anyone working on it would have to do it; you have the advantage of a list of the pages you've made the change to. If you'd edited the pages yourself we could just have mass-reverted your edits, but the bot has been run by others too, so that doesn't seem to be an option – unless someone smarter than me can see a way to filter its contributions to show only those doing this task, so that those can be rolled back in bulk? Justlettersandnumbers (talk) 12:01, 8 June 2020 (UTC)