Revision as of 19:06, 5 August 2009 editSpartaz (talk | contribs)Administrators52,776 edits →The community found no problem with WMC's blocks when they were brought up for review: cmt to objectivist← Previous edit | Revision as of 21:42, 5 August 2009 edit undoAbd (talk | contribs)14,259 edits →Administrators blocks can be brought up for review by any editor: extended response examines this issue in detail. Conflicts with WP:DR.Next edit → | ||
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::::ANI or AN are where bans are usually reviewed. I don't see what this has to do with dispute resolution. ] (]) 23:59, 4 August 2009 (UTC) | ::::ANI or AN are where bans are usually reviewed. I don't see what this has to do with dispute resolution. ] (]) 23:59, 4 August 2009 (UTC) | ||
:: '''Endorse''' Blocks and bans are not dispute resolution but enforcement of policy and community norms. I find it incredible that people are arguing that blocks and bans can't be raised at AN or ANI. That's undermining the whole basis on whichwe hold admionistrator's accoundable for their actions. ] <sup>'']''</sup> 06:57, 5 August 2009 (UTC) | :: '''Endorse''' Blocks and bans are not dispute resolution but enforcement of policy and community norms. I find it incredible that people are arguing that blocks and bans can't be raised at AN or ANI. That's undermining the whole basis on whichwe hold admionistrator's accoundable for their actions. ] <sup>'']''</sup> 06:57, 5 August 2009 (UTC) | ||
:::I have certainly not claimed that "blocks and bans can't be raised at AN or ANI." However, consider what Spartaz has said, he seems to think that our process for holding administrators accountable is at risk. That wasn't the issue here, nobody went to ANI to attempt to "hold an administrator accountable." Rather, someone aligned with the admin, part of a cabal of editors supporting a particular approach to articles and that admin, went to ANI to "avoid disruption" by causing it, by obtaining a "community consensus" for a ban. If an editor is threatened with a block by an admin, which is what this amounted to, the editor may appeal that immediately to ANI, yes, and I could have chosen that. However, I knew the cabal was involved; previously, at RfC/JzG 3, ''25 editors'' called for me to be banned. --] (]) 21:42, 5 August 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{collapse top|extended argument by Abd, reviewing this issue with respect to this case}} | |||
:::RfC/JzG 3 was a process open for weeks, as I recall, so it had the opportunity to attract a lot of participation, and it was two:one for those calling for me to be banned for having the temerity to "beat a dead horse, vs those who supported my position, matching what I'd seen about a year before with RfC/GoRight. Very clear polarization, with editors taking positions predictable from prior involvements. Positions quite different from neutral editors -- in RfC/GoRight, I was naive, entirely neutral, when it began, and my findings were supported by many neutral editors, as can be seen by a careful review of that RfC. | |||
:::But when we went to ArbComm (Jehochman filed the case), ArbComm sustained my claim about JzG's action while involved, and ignored the calls for me to be banned. I expected quite the same with any process before a place where the cabal might mass, especially ANI. I did not contest the ban there, to avoid further disruption, but it must be noted that the editors piling in were not "uninvolved," as required by ], though ordinary definitions of involvement may fail to be adequate when a cabal is involved; this is part of what is raised by this case. This proposed principle, if passed, will encourage more disputes to be taken to AN or ANI, which conflicts with ], which encourages other, less disruptive steps. Those noticeboards are properly used for emergencies, situations calling for uninvolved administrator action. | |||
:::The other problem with this principle is that it encourages editors who are not involved to take a block or ban to a noticeboard ''without the consent of a party involved.'' Because independent dispute resolution may be under way, AN or ANI can bypass this low-level process, which might even be taking place off-wiki. Disputes which might never become a problem, but which might be resolved as contemplated in WP:DR, by small-scale discussions seeking consensus, become, instead, mass decisions made by often poor-informed editors, voting based on prejudgment, distorted evidence, or shallow interpretations and biased arguments, in an environment where there is no careful process, such as there is in RfC or RfAr. Bad Idea. It's not that editors ''can't'' do this, but that it can be more disruptive than the situation being taken to the noticeboard, and, I submit, that was true in this case. | |||
:::If I had defied the ban unilaterally issued by WMC, by editing the article, what would have happened? | |||
:::*He blocks me. I put up an unblock template. A neutral administrator makes a decision, presumably on review of evidence provided by WMC and myself. | |||
::::*I'm unblocked. Done. No disruption. Very few editors involved (though there might still have been a pile-on on my Talk page, it was less likely). | |||
::::*I'm still blocked. I can appeal to ArbComm. Same result as we got as a result of the whole mess at ANI, etc. Just done faster, which ArbComm encourages. | |||
:::*He doesn't block me. Done. No disruption. If my edits themselves are disruptive, someone else can block, but that's speculative and unlikely. Until this ban, I hadn't been blocked since the old Iridescent block last year, and that was for something completely different, a dispute that was resolved, very effectively. | |||
:::Alternatively, WMC could have gone to AN complaining about my "disruptive edit." This is, in fact, what policy would require if he were involved, as he was. And the likelihood of AN supporting that would have been low, ''unless the edit were disruptive.'' Hipocrite took ban-violating edits by ScienceApologist to AE, as part of what appears to have been a plan to disrupt arbitration enforcement, since those edits were being ignored. Even with an ArbComm ban, very clear, taking non-disruptive edits to a noticeboard was considered, itself, disruption, and if Hipocrite had continued, he'd have been blocked. WMC actually suggested this! A claim by WMC that I should be blocked, essentially because I disagreed with WMC on whether or not I should be allowed to edit the article? The cabal has some power, but not that much power, there are limits. | |||
:::Now, suppose an editor like Enric Naval thought that I should be banned. We already know that many editors thought this, they'd called for it before. So what could they do? Should they go to AN/I to suggest a ban? This is exactly what I consider a very bad idea, and I've seen it too many times. ] would suggest an RfC before a measure is taken like that; once there is a collection of evidence that has at least been reviewed and documented, with prior efforts required to resolve the matter without an RfC, there is then a basis in evidence for a community ban, as a possibility, as well as an appeal to ArbComm if necessary. Alternatively, it can be taken directly to RfAr, but ArbComm prefers to see RfC first. | |||
:::Should I have filed an RfC for WMC? No, because it was already clear that there was a cabal involved, or at least many editors. RfC would have been disruptive, with, then, a requirement to go to ArbComm anyway, RfC/JzG 3 would simply have repeated. As an editor under a declared ban, even if illegitimate, I had the right to direct appeal to ArbComm, which I took. This was the path of minimum disruption, and if the cabal had not piled in here with massive and tendentious evidence and argument, the same names as I'd seen so many times, I would not have been forced to identify the cabal, an arguably disruptive action, I would not have done it if it were not necessary, even though I'd known about the cabal for more than a year. When a cabal is not involved, ] works, but a cabal will avoid it, because dispute resolution process leads to different outcomes than the cabal wants; instead, they want decisions to be made at articles, where they can tag-team revert or dominate discussion -- that's real domination, not a few long posts by a single editor -- or a noticeboard, where the crowd-management skills of the cabal and especially its instinctive ability to quickly assemble many editors supporting its position, creating an initial snow, can often function in full flower. | |||
:::If these RfAr pages were AN/I, I'd have been history already, banned "by the community," being forced to claim that these were involved editors, under very difficult conditions, needing to make a claim of "cabal" without the careful conditions obtaining here that allow it to be done on the basis of evidence, and it takes a ''lot'' of evidence. | |||
:::] requires a ban consensus to be of "uninvolved editors," but the recent ban of ] showed that closing admins -- or at least one of them! -- pay attention, in fact, to the number of votes (he cited percentages to four figure accuracy), and no attention at all to involvement, and even though this was raised extensively at ], there never was such an analysis except for the tentative one I did and reported, showing that after editors involved in content disputes with NYScholar were set aside, there was a tiny majority against the ban, or it was even, no consensus. If we look at the later votes vs. the earlier, we see an even greater majority opposed to the ban (later votes tend to be from less involved editors, early votes represent those whose minds are already made up, preferentially). The admin never responded to the problem, but cited cogency of the arguments, which is fine for an administrative ban, not a community ban. (I made no claim that the closing admin shouldn't have banned, only that this was not a "community ban," it was a decision by an administrator on what was best for the community, ''and I was not disputing that, but, rather, tried, for a time, to negotiate a settlement that would protect the community as well as providing an opportunity for NYScholar to become a more cooperative editor, which certainly won't happen while completely banned, it takes practice and experience.'' The difference is largely moot, except that an administrative ban is more flexible; what the admin decides the admin can undecide, and ''if the administrator is uninvolved,'' this has good prospects. As well, in theory, another admin could unblock NYScholar, without going back to a noticeboard, there having been no "consensus of uninvolved editors" there, whereas with a true community ban, appeal would be only to ArbComm.) | |||
:::Remember, when this case was filed, Enric Naval wrote that he'd take this to a noticeboard if ArbComm refused to take the case. Enric Naval has never pursued dispute resolution with me (except for what's happening with the mediation, which is specifically not about behavior, but about content). He's warned me, sure, but the discussions have all been on the level of "stop your disruption," and if I disagreed that what I'd done was disruption, it was then "See, you don't listen to what other editors are telling you." The next stage of WP:DR would be the involvement of a neutral mediator. Never attempted, and, since I wasn't trying to ban Enric, while I suggested that he, indeed, follow DR if he had a problem with my behavior, I didn't solicit a meditator myself. Maybe I should have. In any case, he'd rather go to a noticeboard, and that, precisely, is what ArbComm should discourage. --] (]) 21:42, 5 August 2009 (UTC) | |||
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=== Proposed findings of fact === | === Proposed findings of fact === |
Revision as of 21:42, 5 August 2009
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This is a page for working on Arbitration decisions. The Arbitrators, parties to the case, and other editors may draft proposals and post them to this page for review and comments. Proposals may include proposed general principles, findings of fact, remedies, and enforcement provisions—the same format as is used in Arbitration Committee decisions. The bottom of the page may be used for overall analysis of the /Evidence and for general discussion of the case.
Any user may edit this workshop page. Please sign all suggestions and comments. Arbitrators will place proposed items they believe should be part of the final decision on the /Proposed decision page, which only Arbitrators and clerks may edit, for voting, clarification as well as implementation purposes.
Motions and requests by the parties
Hipocrite and Mathsci are added as parties
1) Please add the following parties:
- Hipocrite (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
*Mathsci (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- This addition is solely with respect to actions related to the ban of Abd from Cold fusion, the underlying causes or conditions, or the use of administrative tools by William M. Connolley, while involved or showing favoritism, in this or other incidents.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- I haven't reviewed the case in enough detail yet to know whether any additional parties should be added. However, at this point, I believe that all the editors who have been listed are on notice that the case exists and that their names have been mentioned, so that they can provide evidence if they wish. If any formal additions or changes to the list of parties are warranted, the arbitrators working on the draft decision will presumably follow up; the key point being that no party be mentioned in a decision or subject to criticism or sanction without fair notice and an opportunity to be heard. Please note that any editor with useful input is invited to make a statement at the accept-or-decline stage, so the suggestion that an editor's having urged us to decline the case warrants his addition as a party is unwarranted. I would also note that while the convention has developed of leaving parties' statements on the case page and moving non-parties' statements to the talkpage, this does not have substantive significance, and where the clerks wind up leaving someone's statement does not govern who the parties are. Newyorkbrad (talk) 15:15, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Note also that Hipocrite retired from editing, for unrelated reasons, three weeks ago now. Newyorkbrad (talk) 15:15, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by parties:
- Proposed. A number of involved editors commented extensively on the Request page, showing strong support for banning they had previously advocated, and for the rejection of this case as frivolous. I have not presented evidence of this beyond their own display on the Request page, however, that should be sufficient to establish a risk to them of admonishment or sanction, and therefore of their right to notice and special participation as parties. The above editors were added to the list of parties by me,
before the acceptance of the Request,and were notified, but Mathsci edit warred to remove his name, and William M. Connolley reverted Hipocrite's insertion, then edit warred at User talk:Hipocrite over the notice, which seems to have been a last-straw incident leading to the retirement of Rootology.These partiesHipocrite should be addedand their comments restored to the Request page,and notice to Hipocrite should be restored as well. - Hipocrite did not comment on the Request page, having "retired," but previously retired under a cloud, returned, was extraordinarily disruptive while active, and was the primary cause of the two recent protections of Cold fusion and thus of the actions of WMC leading to this case, aside from whatever prior agenda WMC may have had. --Abd (talk) 13:20, 15 July 2009 (UTC)
- Having now realized that it's reasonable to consider the case accepted when there were four net votes, instead of when acceptance was declared and the case pages set up, and for simplicity, I have withdrawn the proposed motion to add Mathsci, and I ask that Verbal and Stephan Schulz's comments be removed from the Request page, unless they desire to be parties, and I apologize to the committee and the community for disruption that resulted. (It would have been quite enough if someone had suggested to me: once there were four net votes, the case was to be considered accepted and no changes made -- and this should be made clear in general.
- To Bilby. Hipocrite was centrally involved in the events leading up to the ban, as evidence will show, and I do not believe that a voluntary, reversible, very recent retirement should be suffice to exclude oneself from consideration. It was an error for me not to include Hipocrite from the start. --Abd (talk) 19:16, 15 July 2009 (UTC)
- To Mathsci. The other names were removed by Ryan yesterday, but the clerk overlooked the moving of non-party arguments to Talk. Evidence will show that Hipocrite created the disruption allowing WMC's intervention at Cold fusion, pursuing an agenda that WMC favors. Hipocrite accepted the ban because banning me was his goal, and the dual bans gave WMC cover. --Abd (talk) 13:24, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- To Newyorkbrad. I agree that the list of named parties may be moot, because of notice provided already. No claim was made that, simply by urging denial of the case, editors should be added to it; the additional editors named by me were, in fact, involved in the underlying events; other editors urged denial and were not added. Two issues remain that are not moot.
- Hipocrite's notice was removed by a party to this case, so if Hipocrite reviews his Talk page, he may not see the notice. The notice should be replaced pending resolution of this case.
- As to the comments left in place, leaving non-party comments prejudices the record; there are good reasons for the practice of removal, and it was only an accident that they were not. All other statements were removed, and the two in question only remain because, at that point, they were listed as named parties. --Abd (talk) 15:36, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Proposed. A number of involved editors commented extensively on the Request page, showing strong support for banning they had previously advocated, and for the rejection of this case as frivolous. I have not presented evidence of this beyond their own display on the Request page, however, that should be sufficient to establish a risk to them of admonishment or sanction, and therefore of their right to notice and special participation as parties. The above editors were added to the list of parties by me,
- Comment by others:
- I'm quite opposed to expanding the list of involved parties at this point. Hipocrite, being retired, is unable to be involved in proceedings, and therefore cannot present his case. I agree that he was involved in the events, but I'd be very uncomfortable with including someone in his situation, and in my view that involvement was not central to what is being discussed here. In regard to MathSci, he has strong opinions about Abd, as expressed, but the case is in regard to Abd and WMC's actions. It's likely to be messy enough as it is - it would be far better to keep to focus as narrow as possible. - Bilby (talk) 15:27, 15 July 2009 (UTC)
- I suggest that Abd email ArbCom directly requesting the removal by the clerks of the other names which he added to the list. If Hipocrite has retired and nobody has so far mentioned problems with his behaviour that need to be examined, why add his name? Please drop the motion entirely to keep things simple. Mathsci (talk) 02:59, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'm opposed to the adding of MathSci as unnecessary expanding the scope, and the focus should remain on WMC admin actions and Abd's general behaviour - the central concerns. Hipocrite I'm less concerned about, he was heavily involved, but as he's disabled email and retired after an argument with Jimbo it would seem a bit pointless now - and since Abd didn't include him originally, error or not the case wasn't taken with H as a party. Also, he accepted WMCs actions and wasn't then involved with Abd's behaviour. Like Bilby, I think these two editors are not central to the issues presented by Abd or raised in the comments. I'd also ask Abd to tone down his rhetoric a bit (eg "Evidence will show that..."), thanks. I also don't see why my comment, or any others, should be removed - leaving a comment doesn't mean you become a party to the case. Verbal chat 14:25, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- I would support the addition of User:Hipocrite as he was a central player in all of these events. His behavior at Cold Fusion was disruptive and provocative. His actions directly led to the issue at hand, regardless of whether those actions were premeditated with a specific agenda or simply the result of poor judgment. The treatment of User:Hipocrite in comparison to the treatment of User:Abd by User:William M. Connolley should be examined to shed light on User:William M. Connolley's state of mind regarding User:Abd and his level of objectivity in this case. An examination of whether or not User:William M. Connolley acted in support of User:Hipocrite in some way, whether wittingly or unwittingly, also seems relevant to this case. --GoRight (talk) 23:28, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- RE: "I don't think this should distract everyone from the issues of behaviors of these two editors interactions with each other." - The scope of the case is, as I understand it, whether WMC's use of his administrative privileges was appropriate, or not, as well as Abd's editing that led up to the ban in question. Since the ban WMC issued covered BOTH Abd and Hipocrite it seems appropriate to examine his application of the ban on all parties involved, not just one, as this may reveal an underlying bias.
- I really don't think others should be added to this case. The scope of this case from what I'm being told is Abd's editing behavior and whether WMC was involved or not. As for the comment "The treatment of User:Hipocrite in comparison to the treatment of User:Abd by User:William M. Connolley should be examined to shed light on User:William M. Connolley's state of mind regarding User:Abd and his level of objectivity in this case. An examination of whether or not User:William M. Connolley acted in support of User:Hipocrite in some way, whether wittingly or unwittingly, also seems relevant to this case." I don't think this should distract everyone from the issues of behaviors of these two editors interactions with each other. --CrohnieGal 15:12, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
Expand the scope of the case to cover Abd's behaviour over the last two years
2) Apart from the ban itself and the issues surrounding it, this case should also cover Abd's overall approach to dispute resolution, including how Abd's conduct has evolved in the last two years, to understand why he is returning to Arbcom as a party in another dispute with another admin in the same article, just three months after the Abd and JzG case, and why one month ago WMC's page ban was so resoundingly endorsed by the community, to the point of WP:SNOW. The last case already advised and urged Abd to take heed to good-faith advice, but Abd has decided that Arbcom had backed all of his views and that it only decided to give him "some good advice", see here.
The evidence here shows a pattern of repeated complaints about meatpuppeting, too long comments, bad faith assumptions, confrontational editing, etc, issued by many unrelated editors from many different POVs over many months about many topics, ranging from harsh criticism to terse expositions of problems, and it's worrying that, when faced with very recent examples of the criticized behaviour, Abd saw no problem in his editing here. I also stated here that I have only scratched the surface of all the complaints and advice given to him over years.
This case should decide if Abd has been taking heed of all that advice, if he is willing to start doing so now, if Abd even acknowledges that he has a problem with his editing (as in "the first step is admitting that you have a problem"), if Abd is going to keep thinking that there is really a cabal, if Abd will keep thinking that anyone opposing him is either part of the cabal or misguided or wrong, and if a full ban or an extremely strict edit restriction is going to be the only way to stop him to stop that part of his behaviour which is highly disruptive.
If the case closes without addressing this, then I predict that Abd will be swiftly community banned in ANI in a short time, in a drama-filled thread which will leave a bad impression in many editors who have been helped by Abd and who won't understand all the complicated issues surrounding the situation. I also predict that Abd will claim that him not being banned means that Arbcom thinks that he is right, which will only confuse more those editors that trust Abd.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- Proposed. Past tomorrow I will start expanding the warnings list with more diffs so arbs can weigh just how many editors have given Abd advice on what to change and why, and to show that the advice given to him by the end of 2007 is the same that has been given to him very recently, and the same that has been given to him regularly over almost two years. --Enric Naval (talk) 23:04, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Notice that I don't want to cover the events that caused the warnings, I want to cover how not taking heed to all those warnings has brought Abd to the current situation of being banned from an article that he wants to edit, and brought him twice in front of Arbcom in three months. I note that Abd is now directly stating that the advice given to him by me is incorrect, I think that it's up for the arbs to look at the warnings by other editors I collected and decide if they fit my own advice and if they address correctly Abd's conduct in the cold fusion article.
- Proposed. Past tomorrow I will start expanding the warnings list with more diffs so arbs can weigh just how many editors have given Abd advice on what to change and why, and to show that the advice given to him by the end of 2007 is the same that has been given to him very recently, and the same that has been given to him regularly over almost two years. --Enric Naval (talk) 23:04, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- About being unfair to Abd, notice that WMC's administrative actions have been already brought to the community and been widely endorsed by it, while Abd's conduct has been widely criticized by the community over a long time and not just in the cold fusion article, so it's perfectly appropiate to ask that we examine Abd's behaviour in more depth, even if causes complaints of unfairness. Also, Arbcom is supposed to solve the problems that the community can't solve, the community has not found a problem with WMC's administrative conduct, but it has found a problem with Abd's editing. (Arbcom is supposed to have teeth, you see, it's the last recourse on WP:DR, and it shouldn't have to avoid addressing clear problems for fear of looking unfair, arbs should have clear by now that any outcome negative towards Abd is going to be claimed to be unfair anyways, regardless of what they actually do)
- Tomorrow I was going to start gathering more evidence, so, I'll be in a better position to show if this motion is warranted or not. If arbs raise issues about the motion, I'll see if I can address them with a better-worded motion, with better evidence, or if I should abandon this motion. --Enric Naval (talk) 07:45, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose Enric is seeking to drastically expand this case to cover every possible error -- or courageous action -- I might have taken over the last two years. Remember, the "advice" offered me, so many times, has been quite incorrect. Subsequently, my positions have often been confirmed, either by ArbComm or by editorial consensus. JzG did act while involved. His blacklistings were improper. The blacklist was being used to control content. The link to lenr-canr.org at Martin Fleischmann was accepted. Except for one withdrawn page (which may be resubmitted, I have new evidence on it), and in spite of strong efforts from a number of editors whose comments appear in this case, every page from lenr-canr.org that I submitted for whitelisting was accepted. Newenergytimes.com was delisted. The "proposed explanations" for cold fusion -- there are many, and a few of the theories are covered in multiple reliable secondary sources, some of them peer-reviewed, such as Naturwissenschaften -- were being accepted into the article. That's what Hipocrite edit warred against and that's what WMC removed with his revert to the May 14 version. From our present article, you would not know that these theories exist. That's the "quiet" that is so pleasing to some. Enric has raised many old issues, such as statements by a few editors at RFA/Abd 2, solicited by Yellowbeard, blocked for canvassing and now indef blocked, who sought out prior disputants and invited them to comment. Enric previously promised, if the case was rejected, to immediately take the matter to AN to push for a continued ban, even without any edits justifying that. For him, this dispute has become highly personal. Without his prior move to AN/I over the ban, it's entirely possible that this entire flap would have been quieted. If we assume that I'd edited the Talk page -- I had no intention at all of editing the article -- WMC would have blocked me, I'd have submitted an unblock template, and we'd have had a decision by an uninvolved admin, and that might have been that. Instead, we have this mess. It's not only WMC's stubbornness (and/or mine), it's Enric's passion for banning me, yet he never followed dispute resolution for any of it, beyond warning me, his version of DR; likewise he does not understand that the noticeboards are not part of DR, either. He should be reminded. --Abd (talk) 04:46, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- I think this would be a little impracticable. However, while Abd continues in his evidence to assert there are those out to get him or that there is a cabal, his longer term interactions with the users that he claims are in dispute with him should be taken into account. As Brecht wrote: Denn wie man sich bettet, so liegt man. Mathsci (talk) 05:09, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'm inclined to oppose this: if the scope is widened in regard to all of Abd's actions, then I'm concerned that it is also reasonable to ask that the scope should be widened to cover all of WMC's actions. And even if it was not expanded to include WMC, I'm in agreement with Mathsci that increasing the scope would make the discussion impractical. That said, I would assume that Abd's editing practices in regard to Cold fusion are within scope (in so far as they show cause for an article ban), as are those interactions mentioned by Mathsci, and that any findings in regard to these topics could serve in a potential future RFC/U or community ban discussion. - Bilby (talk) 05:24, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose - Expanding the scope to cover the editing and behavior of just one of the named parties would be grossly unfair. If the scope is to be expanded to cover a multi-year span of behavior let it be for all the named parties, including Enric. Enric has been on a crusade against Abd and trying to get him banned for quite some time (diffs to be provided upon request) and this motion is simply one more example of that behavior.
- Enric fails to WP:AGF on a regular basis, and not simply against Abd. Recently Enric also tried to make a case for having me banned by falsely accusing me of being a sock puppet. Enric has also
rabidlyvehemently pursued a ban on Jed Rothwell despite that fact that he is currently indefinitely blocked and unable to (legitimately) edit anywhere on the project. His constant droning on about these bannings is disruptive here, on the administrative notice boards, and basically anywhere he edits. I believe that the extent of this WP:HARASSment and the WP:ABF evidence behind it would be an appropriate topic for ArbCom to review. I would issue a motion to this effect, but unlike Enric I am not looking to have those with whom I disagree banned or barred from participating on the project.
- Enric fails to WP:AGF on a regular basis, and not simply against Abd. Recently Enric also tried to make a case for having me banned by falsely accusing me of being a sock puppet. Enric has also
- Another prime example is the ANI thread that is being discussed here as part of WMC's ban where it purportedly WP:SNOWed against Abd. The only trouble was that the snow was yellow and it was coming from editors like Enric who initiated that discussion despite the fact that at the time Abd had not violated the ban WMC imposed. There was, in essence, nothing to actually talk about in terms of substance or policy violations, it was all drama and it was all started by Enric. And it was all bolstered by involved editors. Such activities are clearly disruptive and waste valuable editor time.
- Abd had asked that the ANI thread in question be closed to AVOID disruption. Enric created it. I also suspect that the WP:SNOW seen there was more a function of the ban in question being a strictly limited one of one month and on a specific page. A full community ban would be quite different, I suspect, despite Enric's fantasies to the contrary. --GoRight (talk) 06:42, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Please refactor the word "rabidly": remember WP:NPA. Enric Naval has patiently engaged in discussion with Abd longer than most users. He does not show signs of "acute pain, violent movements, uncontrolled excitement, depression and inability to swallow water". Nor does he appear to be experiencing "periods of mania and lethargy, followed by coma". Please try to avoid using this kind of inflammatory rhetoric. Mathsci (talk) 07:08, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Abd had asked that the ANI thread in question be closed to AVOID disruption. Enric created it. I also suspect that the WP:SNOW seen there was more a function of the ban in question being a strictly limited one of one month and on a specific page. A full community ban would be quite different, I suspect, despite Enric's fantasies to the contrary. --GoRight (talk) 06:42, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- I chose my words carefully. See rabidly, specifically definition 1b which was the meaning I had intended. That definition is not inflammatory, it is an accurate description of his behavior. One need look no further than this RFAR to see that. Never the less, per your request I have refactored the word accordingly.
- "... rather than contribute to the mediation process ..." - You appear to be, let's say, factually challenged. Abd has embraced the Cold Fusion mediation since it first began. Just go look at the discussion there. --GoRight (talk) 08:01, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Mediation cases are privileged as much as anything is on wikipedia and are not supposed to be used in Arbitration. can I suggest you both redact any reference to mediation from your comments? Cheers Spartaz 08:55, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Done. Mathsci (talk) 09:03, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Not sure this kind of motion is needed or necessary. Past actions can be used to illustrate/clarify current ongoing problems. Previous postings can also be used to indicate current patterns of behavior (e.g. offers of meatpuppetry -deleted by Black Kite in '08) which are undesirable and against policies. R. Baley (talk) 16:10, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- R. Baley, if that link refers to something I wrote, which it appears to, I'd appreciate a copy, if the file wasn't offensive or a policy violation, or how about undeleting it so that anyone can read it? I have nothing to hide. (And if I do, I'd want to know!) --Abd (talk) 01:06, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I decline. Request forwarded (diff) to the deleting administrator, Black Kite (section link). R. Baley (talk) 02:26, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I also decline to undelete it, but if I quote the opening section of it - "This is a page for users to leave articles, essay suggestions, or comments for my review. This may be used, as an example, by users on article or civility parole ... Leaving material here gives me permission to use the material elsewhere on Misplaced Pages, with me taking responsibility for it as my own edit..." the reason for it being deleted is probably fairly clear. Black Kite 08:28, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Mmmm.... as far as I can see, that is not a violation of any kind, and that Black Kite thinks it is may suggest that ArbComm address this issue of "proxying." It was just a more specified location for that kind of suggestion, and more public than email or my page User talk:Abd/IP, which is important when my Talk page is semiprotected. It's my view that we should always keep lines of communication open with banned users; when we don't, we get Scibaby et al. That communication should only be with consenting editors, so the "exhausted patience of the community" does not apply. We recently had many editors cooperating with ScienceApologist in working on an article, while not only banned but blocked, and I supported that. Why not extend that possibility of cooperation to all banned editors? I request, then, undeletion of that page to my user space, so that I may review the history as well. In order to avoid unnecessary disruption, I will CSD tag it for deletion after I review it, unless others request it remain. --Abd (talk) 15:31, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- No, the whole "taking responsibility for it as my own edit" thing seems to directly contradict the GFDL, which requires that all edits be attributed to their creator. Copying content from one page to another requires that you provide a list of contributors or otherwise provide a reference to the text's history. As such, that page is improperly licensed and should not be restored. I note that I'm now the third admin to decline this. Hersfold non-admin 16:17, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- FWIW, the new CC-BY-SA license requires this too, not that it was applied to text contributions at that time. Hersfold non-admin 16:19, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Mmmm.... as far as I can see, that is not a violation of any kind, and that Black Kite thinks it is may suggest that ArbComm address this issue of "proxying." It was just a more specified location for that kind of suggestion, and more public than email or my page User talk:Abd/IP, which is important when my Talk page is semiprotected. It's my view that we should always keep lines of communication open with banned users; when we don't, we get Scibaby et al. That communication should only be with consenting editors, so the "exhausted patience of the community" does not apply. We recently had many editors cooperating with ScienceApologist in working on an article, while not only banned but blocked, and I supported that. Why not extend that possibility of cooperation to all banned editors? I request, then, undeletion of that page to my user space, so that I may review the history as well. In order to avoid unnecessary disruption, I will CSD tag it for deletion after I review it, unless others request it remain. --Abd (talk) 15:31, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- I also decline to undelete it, but if I quote the opening section of it - "This is a page for users to leave articles, essay suggestions, or comments for my review. This may be used, as an example, by users on article or civility parole ... Leaving material here gives me permission to use the material elsewhere on Misplaced Pages, with me taking responsibility for it as my own edit..." the reason for it being deleted is probably fairly clear. Black Kite 08:28, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I decline. Request forwarded (diff) to the deleting administrator, Black Kite (section link). R. Baley (talk) 02:26, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- R. Baley, if that link refers to something I wrote, which it appears to, I'd appreciate a copy, if the file wasn't offensive or a policy violation, or how about undeleting it so that anyone can read it? I have nothing to hide. (And if I do, I'd want to know!) --Abd (talk) 01:06, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
Two more weeks to gather evidence
3) I ask arbs to give me and Abd two more weeks to gather evidence before they start making proposals in the workshop (until Monday 3rd August). There are megabytes of conversation related to this case, just reading it takes me a lot of time, and I have only gone throught a fraction of it. I have problems backing up my statements in the workshop because there are so many problems that I haven't sorted through yet. Also, I want to address in my evidence whether WMC's prior blocks have been found problematic by the community, and I want to make clearer wich evidence covers the time frame of the ban, and which evidence is about the current problems with the current ban being just a continuation and/or a logical consequence of long-term problems that remained unacknowledged by Abd over a long time. Arbs will also be able to see better if the evidence supports or not a expansion of the scope.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Diminishing returns for these sorts of cases. — Rlevse • Talk • 23:10, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Not seeing value in this; the scope is well circumscribed, and it should not take more than the standard one week to present evidence here. In fact, if it is taking more than a week, that begs the question of whether (a) the evidence is relevant to the scope or (b) there was a reason to take the case in the first place. Risker (talk) 16:56, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- I want everyone to have a full and fair opportunity to locate evidence and present it cogently to us ... but I would prefer to move to a proposed decision in much less than two more weeks. Ultimately, though, it's really up to the drafting arbitrator, who to an extent dictates the pace of the case from the committee's point of view. Newyorkbrad (talk) 00:08, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by parties:
- Proposed. Notice that, for example, today I'll be busy so I won't be able to gather evidence (and, indeed, I shouldn't be editing wikipedia right now!). --Enric Naval (talk) 08:35, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. I could use the time as well, in fact, I'm a bit worried about even a week more, it might not be enough. I do have kids, a business to run, and a Meetup in New York this weekend that I've promised to join. Note that this support is not support of expansion of the scope of the case. I'm aware, at the present, that my evidence may look like I'm expanding the scope, but I'm not. The situations mentioned there will be placed in context and the many editors mentioned are not targets, specific wrong-doing is not being alleged. (If it were, I would have notified them, and some of those names were only mentioned at this point so that I could make blanket statements of completeness, i.e., this list of editors was all editors who qualified as stated.) If there are behavior problems with the "cabal," they would be raised as enforcement requests for Misplaced Pages:Requests for arbitration/Fringe science, not here. The most that is being shown is a kind of broad involvement that should be a matter of concern, but not necessarily of sanction, except where that prior involvement led these editors to become specifically involved in this much narrower case, as can be seen in those showing behavioral problems in this very request, with warning after warning being issued by clerks. --Abd (talk) 15:54, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- I changed it to two weeks, since I was also wary that one week would not be enough and I would have to ask for another adjourning. I also changed "me" to "me and Abd". --Enric Naval (talk) 16:37, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Two weeks okay by me. There are some wedge issues here, and taking the time to do it right could be quite useful. Besides, I've got some actual article work to do that I should get done before I'm site-banned, as some have been predicting. I suppose I could email some
of my meat puppetscooperating editors should I not get it done in time. It's just finishing stuff that I began, stuff that was controversial for a short time, but then consensus was found. Some here -- except for Enric once in a while -- aren't likely to mention that. Maybe I'll ask Enric to "proxy" for me. Hey, Enric, if I email you some good edits that you could easily verify, not controversial, would you make them for me? Or would you think that a violation of WP:MEAT? --Abd (talk) 01:32, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Two weeks okay by me. There are some wedge issues here, and taking the time to do it right could be quite useful. Besides, I've got some actual article work to do that I should get done before I'm site-banned, as some have been predicting. I suppose I could email some
- I changed it to two weeks, since I was also wary that one week would not be enough and I would have to ask for another adjourning. I also changed "me" to "me and Abd". --Enric Naval (talk) 16:37, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
Don't much care. I've said everything I need to for the moment. The train-wreck remains entertaining; but drawn out for another two weeks it will probably become dull. Abd is busy shooting himself in the foot; given more time he may manage to do so slightly less messily, which would be good. The downside is that I'll probably be tempted into more self-defeating sarcasm, but its a fine balance William M. Connolley (talk) 21:38, 20 July 2009 (UTC)- Oppose. Enough junk; Stephan is correct William M. Connolley (talk) 22:33, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'm finished now. I don't have time to gather the rest of the evidence. --Enric Naval (talk) 17:34, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Support. I could use the time as well, in fact, I'm a bit worried about even a week more, it might not be enough. I do have kids, a business to run, and a Meetup in New York this weekend that I've promised to join. Note that this support is not support of expansion of the scope of the case. I'm aware, at the present, that my evidence may look like I'm expanding the scope, but I'm not. The situations mentioned there will be placed in context and the many editors mentioned are not targets, specific wrong-doing is not being alleged. (If it were, I would have notified them, and some of those names were only mentioned at this point so that I could make blanket statements of completeness, i.e., this list of editors was all editors who qualified as stated.) If there are behavior problems with the "cabal," they would be raised as enforcement requests for Misplaced Pages:Requests for arbitration/Fringe science, not here. The most that is being shown is a kind of broad involvement that should be a matter of concern, but not necessarily of sanction, except where that prior involvement led these editors to become specifically involved in this much narrower case, as can be seen in those showing behavioral problems in this very request, with warning after warning being issued by clerks. --Abd (talk) 15:54, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- I personally would like to see what Enric gathers to get a feel of it all. So far I have found the evidence and the difs very enlightening and would find that the more difs should be an advantage to everyone prior to deciding anything here. The idea of this case is to stop the disruptions so lets give anyone a chance to show what they feel a need to show. If it goes off target it can always be reverted and the situation can be stopped by an arbitrator. Thoughts of others? --CrohnieGal 11:50, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- A period of five days might be reasonable, but really this is up to ArbCom and the clerks, not us. Mathsci (talk) 17:16, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. Let Enric have all the time he needs. I admit that I would likely make use of it myself. Scope to remain unchanged by my !vote. --GoRight (talk) 21:53, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose. Taiwan cannot make enough hard drives to store the amount of low-content text this case will produce in two weeks. The Great Misplaced Pages Dramaout goes to July 23rd. It makes sense to give participating editors a chance to chime in on the evidence page. But 24 hours are as likely to produce useful results as 24 weeks, in my opinion. --Stephan Schulz (talk) 07:12, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Let me get this straight. A party proposes this. An adverse party supports it. And the third party accepts it. Consensus of the parties! And Stephan is opposed? May I suggest that he do something useful with the time? Evidence and proposals can be refactored, so, in fact, 24 weeks would be better than 24 hours, this is, after all, a wiki. There are issues, even issues raised here, where a 24 week page, continually refined until settled, would be quite appropriate. What if, for example, the factions involved got together and persuaded "members" to withdraw distracting and redundant comments, leaving only the best and most cogent, or combined and signed proposals? However, there is a point of maximum return for effort, and it's probably quite a bit short of 24 weeks! It's longer than 24 hours, editors have outside responsibilities, etc. --Abd (talk) 14:29, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Abd, please move this remark to the section "comment by parties". Mathsci (talk) 15:37, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Tradition seems to be that parties may respond in the "others" section. Parties get privileged position, that's all. Mathsci, you could have had this privilege too, you could still have it. I'm sure that if you requested to be added as a party, it would be done. A clerk may move the comment if the clerk decides it's better that way. --Abd (talk) 17:02, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Abd, please move this remark to the section "comment by parties". Mathsci (talk) 15:37, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I stand by my comment. --Stephan Schulz (talk) 14:53, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I personally would like to see what Enric gathers to get a feel of it all. So far I have found the evidence and the difs very enlightening and would find that the more difs should be an advantage to everyone prior to deciding anything here. The idea of this case is to stop the disruptions so lets give anyone a chance to show what they feel a need to show. If it goes off target it can always be reverted and the situation can be stopped by an arbitrator. Thoughts of others? --CrohnieGal 11:50, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Concur 100% with Stephan. Raul654 (talk) 15:40, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- But of course as a member in good standing of the "Raul/WMC/SS/KDP/... Majority POV Pushing Society" this would have been understood by all coming in. Your comment here is actually a tad redundant in that respect. (Comment made for illustration purposes only.) --GoRight (talk) 16:03, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- The difference here is that, unlike you, I'm not making transparently false claims. Stephan's point -- that giving Abd an extra two weeks would only result in an extraordinarily low signal-to-noise ratio on all pages he touches -- is well taken. Raul654 (talk) 16:14, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- But of course as a member in good standing of the "Raul/WMC/SS/KDP/... Majority POV Pushing Society" this would have been understood by all coming in. Your comment here is actually a tad redundant in that respect. (Comment made for illustration purposes only.) --GoRight (talk) 16:03, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Concur 100% with Stephan. Raul654 (talk) 15:40, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Surely if I add piles of irrelevant and "false claims," this will simplify ArbComm's job; no arbitrator is actually obligated to read all the "twaddle." If I cover up the "signal" with dreck, effectively mooning the jury, surely that would be a great reason to site-ban me or perhaps demand that I find a mentor or some other remedy. What I see on the evidence page, though, is a bit of the reverse. Again, anyone gets to make false claims here, but making false claims can be grounds for being sanctioned, for they are disruptive. --Abd (talk) 17:08, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- @Raul - Am I mistaken here? I thought that this was actually Enric's motion? --GoRight (talk) 17:58, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- It is Enric's motion. What is your point? I oppose it all the same. I don't want Abd filling up these pages with his content-void walls of text, and Enric's motion is bound to encourage exactly that. Raul654 (talk) 18:07, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- @Raul - Am I mistaken here? I thought that this was actually Enric's motion? --GoRight (talk) 17:58, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- As I've mentioned privately to the arbitrators via clerks-l, I feel that extending this case opens up severe risk of further disruption, and I believe the attacks and name-calling in this very section are evidence of that. In any event, there are already several statements that are close to or over the defined evidence limit, Enric's included (although I will grant it has been shortened). Hersfold 02:33, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
Motion to freeze the Workshop page pending completion of evidence
4) For two weeks, while the parties and others prepare and condense evidence for completeness and clarity, the Workshop page should be protected and work on findings and proposals suspended.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Well, since I don't think that anyone needs two weeks to present evidence here (remember, we want evidence specific to this issue, not philosophical treatises), then there is no particular reason to extend the evidence phase. Risker (talk) 17:06, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- See my comment above. Beyond that, I don't see the desirability of "freezing" the workshop, though I do think that everyone should present only proposals that they believe should be seriously considered for adoption as part of the decision, and not mere debating points. Newyorkbrad (talk) 00:09, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by parties:
- Proposals are being made based on charges that have not been supported with evidence. There is reasonable fear that if more time elapses, the comments will multiply. It would seem to make sense that the community have before it clear and complete evidence before making proposals. Without the evidence being complete, I see a clerk having difficulty identifying what is relevant and what is not, and some editors are supporting or opposing proposed findings based on prior opinions and impressions, and quite possibly factional affiliation, rather than specific evidence. We have the advisory jury of the community debating the verdict before the trial. --Abd (talk) 04:51, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Risker: Evidence text is relatively brief, once evidence has been compiled. Compiling relevant evidence and sorting through it for what is relevant, and presenting it cogently could be impossible for some, difficult for others, and time-consuming for anyone. Having precompiled much of the evidence, it still took me a full day, maybe 12 hours, to write the RfAr, and that was very narrowly focused. From what other editors have brought up, it became necessary to expand what's covered, though I'm still keeping it focused on the needs of the Abd-WMC dispute (though it might look otherwise at the moment, because the existing evidence hasn't been boiled down yet, I've laid part of the foundation, but have built none of the house.) --Abd (talk) 18:16, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- Newyorkbrad: I would propose *in general* not opening workshops until the evidence phase has been completed to the satisfaction of the editors presenting evidence (within reason). Debate on the Evidence page should be highly discouraged. Alternatively, the workshop could be open for proposals, but without any debate other than preliminary endorsements, with no opposing comments, as in an RfC. (That way, parties would know better what evidence might need to be presented.) I have made only one proposal on this page, other than motions. It didn't require evidence, because it's general. However a series of proposed findings and remedies have been created here, without supporting evidence on the evidence page, as far as I've seen. That's a waste of time and dangerous, and has encouraged much premature debate. I don't need this page frozen, but the complaint about allowing additional time for evidence -- you won't know if it was necessary until you've seen it! -- was that it would encourage more waste of time here. The claim that these motions are dilatory should be considered in the light of who is harmed by delay. As far as I can see, only me. Is there some ongoing disruption that would make a fast decision necessary? If so, the behavior should be enjoined, quickly and without prejudice. --Abd (talk) 18:16, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose William M. Connolley (talk) 07:56, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment: I asked the arbs not to make proposals while evidence was still being compiled, but the editors that have been directly involved in the matter are already familiar with the events. They have already finished their evidence, and myself I made a couple of proposals below when I finished that part of my evidence. --Enric Naval (talk) 23:54, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- Oppose, Abd started with proposals before adding any evidence whatsoever so its hipocritical of them to now demand the workshop be frozen because others are making proposals. There is so such data now that its unfair on others to make them stop for Abd's benefit. Spartaz 05:44, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Not a demand, Spartaz. It's a proposed motion. If ArbComm wants this page to continue to grow ad interim, I have no personal problem with it, though it wastes time for me and others to create proposals and respond to comments that would not necessarily be made if the evidence were all in. I trust that ArbComm will decide based on what it considers best. --Abd (talk) 15:18, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'd suggest you just concentrated on completing your evidence if this is such an important point for you rather then wasting your time on frivolous motions like this. Spartaz 15:28, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Not a demand, Spartaz. It's a proposed motion. If ArbComm wants this page to continue to grow ad interim, I have no personal problem with it, though it wastes time for me and others to create proposals and respond to comments that would not necessarily be made if the evidence were all in. I trust that ArbComm will decide based on what it considers best. --Abd (talk) 15:18, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose Per comments to proposal of prolongation of period of preparation of evidence, per clerk's comments and per projected date of completion in mid-August. As the initiator of the case, Abd should have prepared the bulk of his evidence before it started. Mathsci (talk) 05:54, 22 July 2009 (UTC) It's 1000 words, not War and Peace — Abd's writing skills are needed on the evidence page not on Misplaced Pages Review. Chop-Chop.
- I had evidence prepared, and it was filed with the case. However, attempts have been made to expand the scope, and, when this case was open and evidence and proposals started coming in, I realized that the issue of the cabal, which I'd hoped to avoid, was becoming highly relevant. The level of disruption in these pages has diverted me from that task, plus I have RL responsibilities that I cannot continue to neglect. --Abd (talk) 15:18, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- You've spent more time arguing this case off-site than you have presenting evidence over the past few days, so the limited-time argument seems somewhat unconvincing. If you want to refocus on developing evidence, you don't need an ArbCom motion. Just lead the way. MastCell 16:05, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- A number of editors have commented on this, assuming that the length of a post correlates well with how much time it took. Actually, posts on WR are fast and easy to write, because, there, I truly DGAF. Further, what many editors have missed is that raw discussion like what happens there can help me to develop a sense of what may resonate and what may not. I use Talk discussion the same way here, to test the water, but I'm much more cautious. I can tell what's likely to find consensus by the response (or non-response) on a Talk page. WR is like an eXtreme Talk page. It's an efficient use of my time, in fact, it takes little time and I gain relatively much information. An ordinary Talk post, standard Wall-o-Text (TM) takes me easily twice as long, sometimes ten or twenty times as long, as a post of equivalent length on WR. Putting together RfAr evidence text? Triple that or more. I'd much prefer having been able to put this time to work converting reliable sources to article text. During the month before I was banned, that's what I'd started to do. --Abd (talk) 21:31, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- You've spent more time arguing this case off-site than you have presenting evidence over the past few days, so the limited-time argument seems somewhat unconvincing. If you want to refocus on developing evidence, you don't need an ArbCom motion. Just lead the way. MastCell 16:05, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- I had evidence prepared, and it was filed with the case. However, attempts have been made to expand the scope, and, when this case was open and evidence and proposals started coming in, I realized that the issue of the cabal, which I'd hoped to avoid, was becoming highly relevant. The level of disruption in these pages has diverted me from that task, plus I have RL responsibilities that I cannot continue to neglect. --Abd (talk) 15:18, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose. Actually I think I might have been accused in around and about way of coming to decisions prior to this case without doing my homework here. I have to admit some of the accusations and comments made to me have colored my opinions, a lot, sorry. This seems like a way to slow things down when maybe they aren't going as planned, just a thought. --CrohnieGal 14:18, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose, Abd started with proposals before adding any evidence whatsoever so its hipocritical of them to now demand the workshop be frozen because others are making proposals. There is so such data now that its unfair on others to make them stop for Abd's benefit. Spartaz 05:44, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose - dilatory. Raul654 (talk) 05:48, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reply to Abd's reply to NYB: Need I remind you that we've had two instances of edit warring in this case, once before and once after it was accepted? While it has been made clear further disruption won't be tolerated, and things have been moderately quiet for the last 36 hours, I would be a fool to think we've seen the end of it in this case. Hersfold non-admin 18:20, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
Proposed temporary injunctions
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- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- Comment by others:
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Questions to the parties
Proposed final decision
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Proposed principles
Consensus is fundamental to NPOV
1) The surest sign that neutral text has been found is that all reasonable editors, understanding guidelines and policy, will agree or accept it, regardless of personal POV. Where necessary, and without compromising our fundamental principles, we need take extraordinary care that this consensus is discovered, documented, and maintained, which includes supporting process for consensus to shift and grow non-disruptively.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- The first sentence is basically right, although it is overly optimistic to anticipate that unanimous agreement among even "reasonable editors" can be reached in every case. It also is true that consensus can change over time, but beyond that, I don't understand the second sentence. Newyorkbrad (talk) 15:17, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- I am not persuaded that this is a useful principle, particularly the second part, which seems overly focused on the process of "discovering" consensus than it is in writing NPOV content. Risker (talk) 02:11, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by parties:
- Support. This cannot be overemphasized, it was part of the founding vision of Misplaced Pages. Where we actively pursue true consensus, not merely a rough consensus that excludes minority views, we settle disputes and broaden the community which has an interest in stability, instead of motivating and maintaining disruption. --Abd (talk) 14:50, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Response to Newyorkbrad. Thanks. Unanimous agreement isn't necessary, but is desirable. In fact, consensus organizations which establish good process find that complete agreement is more attainable than expected, but my own conclusion from many years of experience is that majority rule is an important operating principle, necessary for efficiency, that becomes damaging when the strong desirability of full consensus is overlooked. When there is maximized consensus, long-term efficiency is maximized. It's established that consensus can change, but how is not well established. While we may assert some kind of abstract NPOV principle, we have no way of objectively measuring it except through the measure of consensus. If a consensus exists at one time, but is not documented, if the evidence and arguments for the consensus haven't been made explicit and accessible, there is no guidance for the future except an assumption that existing text is "consensus," and the boulder must roll inevitably down the hill, and we will have to push it up again, which is so much work that we often prefer to revert and block a dissident, instead of engaging and recruiting the new editor to help extend consensus by reviewing the basis for it and pointing out, if possible, any defects. --Abd (talk) 16:11, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
@Newyorkbrad, IMO, Abd means in his second sentence that we should held terribly long discussions with dozens of editors involved, so we can then measure consensus using some unnecessarily complicated rule that Abd wants to try out in wikipedia. All of this, of course, with Abd being the one in charge of the whole process. This is what he tried to do with his last poll right before he was banned from CF.(see below) --Enric Naval (talk) 16:36, 16 July 2009 (UTC)- This preposterous assumption is an example of what I've faced for five months at Cold fusion, raw ABF. --Abd (talk) 17:43, 16 July 2009 (UTC) I couldn't control it if I wanted to, and I don't, not even if the community demanded it, and inefficient discussion would entirely defeat the purpose and would simply fail.
- Enric Naval: That was hardly a productive comment. Please limit discussion on arbitration pages to constructive additions only. AGK 03:13, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'm sorry, but that is what Abd means with that sentence, altough he would have chosen a very different wording. --Enric Naval (talk) 05:41, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
- AGK, you are right, my uncivil wording was really inadequate,and it wasn't productive. NewYorkBrad deserves a better explanation (and he doesn't know the context, so he probably doesn't even know what I am talking about). I striked it out and I will make a proper explanation in a couple of hours. --Enric Naval (talk) 12:58, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
- Rewording: Shortly before being banned, Abd was Hipocrite were making competing polls. Abd tried to make a poll based in Range voting, and tried to merge two polls in one. He was heavily criticized for moving votes around, modifying the poll at mid-polling, using too complicated rules, WP:OWNership issues, etc, and was told to stop touching the poll and even to drop it completely. His behaviour at the poll was part of what triggered his ban. Despite all this, he thinks that the poll was a success, and now he is here making proposals of measuring consensus without giving any acknowledgement or indication that he was ever heavily criticized for his methods. Editors who saw their suggestions and criticims ignored during and after that poll are now understandibly wary of him ever handling any measurement of consensus, since they assume that Abd will not listen to them. (Whether that assumption is warranted is something that deserves a separate discussion, the point here is that Abd has lost the trust of many editors in measurement of consensus) His second sentence looks a lot like what he did in that poll.
- Enric Naval: That was hardly a productive comment. Please limit discussion on arbitration pages to constructive additions only. AGK 03:13, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
- This preposterous assumption is an example of what I've faced for five months at Cold fusion, raw ABF. --Abd (talk) 17:43, 16 July 2009 (UTC) I couldn't control it if I wanted to, and I don't, not even if the community demanded it, and inefficient discussion would entirely defeat the purpose and would simply fail.
- Also, Risker points out the sentence is more focused in the process than in the final result. Abd has a long history of supporting new processes of discovering consensus, as he has always been interested in voting systems (yeah, I know, I have to prove this in the evidence section, I will link here when it's done) with his support of Misplaced Pages:Delegable proxy and his editing in relatively obscure voting systems like Instant-runoff voting or Approval voting, which he edited heavily before getting interested in cold fusion (Abd's edit count) (Abd used Range voting in the poll, and Approval voting is a type of range voting). This makes me fear that Abd is more interested in experimenting with measurement of democratic votes than in measuring WP:CONSENSUS consensus by wikipedia standards. There are more indications that make me think this, but it will be better if I put them into the Evidence page and link them here later. Also, part of a trend where process is put over results, so not an isolated incident that is being blown out of proportion. Posting in talk page. --Enric Naval (talk) 14:52, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
- Response to Mathsci. This proposal is an expansion on and explanation of the five, not a substitute for them. I thank Mathsci for pointing to the essay and the MfD, which was, when MfD'd, indeed a rant, though in the process of conversion to one more neutral and less topical, with participation and comment from others invited. The MfD, Mathsci nominating, snowed Keep; some of the criticism at the time was justified and may have been addressed, but I'm not claiming it's ready for WP space. A move is not a decision I will make. --Abd (talk) 17:53, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Response to MastCell. Yes, that's a problem, but it doesn't relate to the desirability of consensus. If we exclude editors without adequate opportunity for them to participate, if they are met with hostility and threats and blocks, most will become, if they were not before, "unreasonable." They may create, as Scibaby did, as many as 300 sock puppets. We don't know if he would have been reasonable if welcomed and channeled toward constructive work on what I call the "backstory," with an opportunity to participate in expansion of consensus, and where intrinsic unreasonableness, if present, would have become obvious, and he'd then have been rejected, not only by those opposed to him in POV, but by the whole community, including supporters of his POV and those neutral. Once we understand that consensus only begins with "rough consensus," and that when we stop there, we may be institutionalizing disruption, we will confine stern response to necessity. It only takes two to discuss, not dozens, and discussion of changes can expand from there as needed. --Abd (talk) 18:14, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
my response to WMC |
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- I'm returning this comment, but collapsed, because obviously it was too long for WMC's tastes, and collapse is one standard response to claims that comments are too long, rambling, or off-topic. In time, I will bring out of collapse a summary of what's most important about this comment. Meanwhile, it is, in fact, on-topic, in my opinion, and it should be readily accessible to the arbitrators who eventually must go over this mess, hence it should remain here. Arbitrators will decide whether to read it or not.
- --Abd (talk) 14:12, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Ah, that explains at least part of the edit warring (): WMC believes that this is his section. Take a look at where this is: Proposals by Abd. And this does make clear what the case is about: WMC develops some opinion, and then ignores all rules to implement it. Sometimes it's brilliant, that's why we have IAR. But sometimes it is ... not. And he hasn't learned how to back down quickly. --Abd (talk) 15:03, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject In case it wasn't clear. Second sentence is plain not good. Also, assuming that "all reasonable editors" will agree to a text is unrealistic. Some editors disagree deeply with what the sources say about the topic they like/hate, so it's imposible that they are happy about any text that actually reflects the sources. --Enric Naval (talk) 23:40, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
- Redacted proposal to strike second sentence. That will be made as a separate proposal. The important part was the first sentence! --Abd (talk) 02:44, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Note There is a straw man argument here, from Enric, above. No assumption that "all reasonable editors will agree" is necessary or proposed. All that is stated is that this, if it happens, is the surest sign of NPOV; the surest sign may not be attainable within practical limits. If we posit two alternative texts, one which is considered neutral by 99% of editors, and one which is considered neutral by 100% of editors, the latter is more neutral. How we would move from 99% NPOV to 100% is a structural and process problem, and the ease or difficulty of this has no effect on its desirability. In arguing against this, usually critics suggest that the 99% of editors have to give up something to please the remaining 1%. That's a false assumption that contradicts the conditions of the claim. If 100% of editors agree that a text is neutral, we are constrained to consider that text unquestionably neutral, since we all agree on it (until someone objects!). If it's only 99%, the 99% are satisfied, sure, and we cannot expect them to be exercised to search for better text; but, in reality, it only takes one editor from the 99% and one from the 1% to work on a compromise. One editor working with one other editor. Both self-selected or otherwise volunteering. Thus the claims about "wearing out editors" are spurious. If an editor with a minority idea can't find anyone willing to discuss it, that's the end of it until the situation changes. This is connected with the proposal for not debating unsupported proposals. If you feel you must "correct" everything that is "wrong," then you will be irritated by proposals that are clearly "against consensus" and you will ultimately be motivated to stop such "disruption," especially if it is repeated, which tends to happen when nobody listens. Rather, shunting minority proposals that are not close to adoption to subpages or otherwise confining them, but encouraging and allowing them, keeps the door open to possible improvements in consensus and thus in certainty of neutrality, without irritating the majority. If I have some wild-hair idea, and someone moves it to a Wild Hair Idea subpage, all it would take is another involved editor moving it back to prove that it's not isolated, at least, or we could have a page for Emerging Ideas. As our scale increases, there can be increasing refinements to this. I'd be silly, however, to personally edit war to move that proposal back to the top level talk page. Basically, if I can't find any support, it is a Wild Hair Idea, and I'm quite prepared to accept that some of my ideas, no matter how Excellent (or otherwise!) are not going to be accepted, and they might as well be on the Wild Hair Idea subpage until they find some sympathy. In general, minorities understand that they are minorities until it gets close.
- Please see the 2003 mailing list post by Jimbo at . While that's old, Jimbo's claims there that those holding fringe science views will agree that the view is considered fringe by a majority of scientists, assuming there is source for that (and maybe even if there is not), and I can confirm that from many years of experience with consensus process. See also the MeatBall wiki pages that are external links from WP:NPOV. Finding neutral text is often just a matter of finding accurate and neutral framing. I am convinced that the 2004 DoE report on Low Energy Nuclear Reactions (Cold fusion) came to radically different conclusions, in the body of the report, than did the 1989 panel, but I'd be stupid to argue against text stating that the report claims to have come to the same conclusion as 1989. And the apparent contradiction is resolved if we understand that the bureaucrat making that comment was concerned about funding decisions, the purpose for both panels, and, for that, the conclusion was practically identical. (Modest funding under existing programs.) The position on the science, though, was radically different, and all this could be described in NPOV text, reliably sourced and verifiable, in an article on the history of Cold fusion. Conflicts arise particularly when minority views are entirely excluded, even though reliable source exists for them, and this is often done by the cabal, on the argument of undue weight. Jimbo, in the cited mail, addresses this, suggesting subarticles, an approach that the cabal generally opposes, because it would allow full expression of fringe theories, to the extent that they are covered by reliable source, and the cabal generally seeks to repress fringe content, not to present and balance it. --Abd (talk) 14:32, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- Not the way most WP articles are written and not helpful as a substitute for WP:Five pillars. No need to transfer extracts of the userspace essay User:Abd/Majority POV-pushing onto this page: it was already severely criticized in the MfD by multiple users. Mathsci (talk) 15:23, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Although their purpose is unclear, Abd's second sentence in the proposal and his userspace essay might be an attempt to justify the pushing of a fringe viewpoint by slowly tiring out mainstream (= majority point of view) editors. Mathsci (talk) 18:29, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Not to put too fine a point on it, but I believe that the problem here has been in parsing the definition of "reasonable editors". MastCell 17:54, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject. This kind of wooly principle has become a staple of arbcom announcements, and this one, to quote from Macbeth, is "... full of sound and fury, signifying nothing". WP:NPOV and WP:CONSENSUS are already policies, and MathSci has already mentioned the WP:FIVEPILLARS. The community has already established policy, and that is not a job for anyone else. Unless there happens to be a philosopher king lying around. Verbal chat 18:11, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Curious that Abd chooses to use the workshop for more grandstanding rather then supplying evidence for arbcom to look at.
If I were cynical I'd suggest that this case has been cooked up to give them an opportunity to promote their own agenda rather then a genuine disagreement where dispute resolution is required.Spartaz 18:06, 17 July 2009 (UTC) - struck per instructions. Spartaz 21:45, 17 July 2009 (UTC)- Spartaz, this page (and this section in particular) is for the discussion of the proposed principle, not for making unfounded speculation as to the motives of those involved. Please strike your comment and refrain from making further statements of this nature. Thank you. Hersfold 21:31, 17 July 2009 (UTC) (later edit: Thank you for your understanding.)
- Not the way most WP articles are written and not helpful as a substitute for WP:Five pillars. No need to transfer extracts of the userspace essay User:Abd/Majority POV-pushing onto this page: it was already severely criticized in the MfD by multiple users. Mathsci (talk) 15:23, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject. Poorly written and to me, over analyzed. Let's stick with the way we already do consensus, not this new way that has been refused. --CrohnieGal 11:23, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject. For one, useful consensus is not typically "discovered", it is constructed. You can only discover the lowest common denominator. NPOV is not achieved by accommodating each and every opinion, but by weighting arguments and sources. --Stephan Schulz (talk) 15:55, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject per Stephan. Raul654 (talk) 15:57, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support per NPOV. The second sentence seems to me to mean that we should make an intense effort to find NPOV wording (as opposed to giving up and accepting wording that is acceptable from many, but not all, significant POVs). Risker, this principle is about writing NPOV content. It's about finding NPOV content via a process of discussion and consensus among editors. As I quote Abd on my userpage, "Individual opinion about NPOV is unreliable, ultimately." ☺Coppertwig (talk) 00:13, 25 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reply to Enric Naval who said "Some editors disagree deeply with what the sources say about the topic they like/hate, so it's imposible that they are happy about any text that actually reflects the sources". You seem to ignore the possibility that there are editors who are willing to write NPOV text based on the sources rather than on their own personal beliefs. Proponents of a fringe theory may be happy when they see the theory described accurately (without presenting it as true) in proportion to its degree of prominence in the sources. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 22:16, 29 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject WP:NPOV explicitly rejects this line of argument; viz. "The principles upon which these policies are based cannot be superseded by other policies or guidelines, or by editors' consensus." (emphasis added) Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 23:45, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
- WP:IAR explicitly rejects the idea that we are bound by any policy. May I assume that the text of WP:NPOV is consensus? If consensus changed, could it say something different? And if the Foundation froze that page and that text and insisted on it, what could a consensus of editors -- i.e. all or most of them -- do? I'd suggest it would be singularly foolish for the Foundation to do that, they wouldn't, that simple. Boris's opinion, in religion, would be called "fundamentalist." It's the idea that policies exist in the abstract and we are all bound to follow them, no interpretation is necessary. In fact, there is always interpretation, decisions about where to draw the line, how to satisfy competing "principles," and the only way to make these boundary decisions is through a decision-making process, and the best and least disruptive guide for that process is editorial consensus. We have no other guide except that used by Boris and the rest of the cabal: their own factional position, considered by them fundamental and not a matter of interpretation. Editorial consensus will never reverse "the principles on which these policies are founded," because those principles are fundamentally sound, consensus is always wiser than any individual (it must be, if it's a deliberated consensus!), and the cabal, in fact, disagrees with and frustrates those fundamental principles. If it followed them, we'd have no problem, though we'd certainly still have plenty of debate. Constructive debate, productive debate, and, indeed, efficient debate. Not this crap over a proposed principle that ought to be noncontroversial! (But it's only proposed because there is, indeed, disagreement with it, which is why it's important it be stated by ArbComm.) --Abd (talk) 14:47, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- BTW, that was a nice example of wikilawyering, Boris, thanks. "Editors' consensus" means, in that context, a local consensus, not a broad one. Jimbo and the WMF would not resist a coherent, broad consensus, they'd be stupid not to respect it, or, to be more accurate, there would have to be a damn good reason. Because they could, if they did resist it, see an immediate loss of most of the editorial labor, and most of the small donations, and if we were capable of forming a coherent consensus (we aren't yet, except by osmosis, which takes too long), we could start our own damn wiki, practically overnight, beginning with all the content of this one, practically nothing lost, and no liabilities, and with the funding and labor immediately available. Ain't gonna happen, even if we develop the structures that could do it, because consensus is wiser than that, and so are Jimbo and the board. Jimbo, I'm sure, understands exactly what I'm saying, whether you do or not.--Abd (talk) 15:00, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose strongly, this just calls for calling everybody who will not follow a certain side of the outcome an 'unreasonable editor', and voilá, you have the consensus that you want (and guess what, the other half of the editors do the same and have their version of consensus). --Dirk Beetstra 08:27, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
Broadening of consensus is always desirable
2) While full unanimity on text may be unattainable, maximization beyond rough consensus is always desirable, provided that it can be done efficiently. Tendentious debate involving unwilling editors is to be avoided.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- Proposed. I'll get to how to do this below. Organizations that depend on unity for maximum function have learned to take extraordinary measures to satisfy the last hold-out, but, of course, there are practical limits. The key is to leave process open so that isolated disagreement can be channeled into small-scale, non-disruptive discussions between willing editors, where a new idea can be considered without requiring a larger community to immediately take it on. --Abd (talk) 03:01, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- Oppose Extremely poorly drafted proposal which has little or nothing to do with wikipedia policies. Mathsci (talk) 08:30, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose Misplaced Pages is not an exercise in experimental democracy and consensus does not mean that generally supported positions can be filibustered out by stubborn editors holding out on a fringe view. Spartaz 10:34, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose, you want to exclude again people from debate, because they do not support a certain view: a) full unanimity would be possible if the above passes, you just call the 'others' unreasonable; b) remove unwilling editors does the same. --Dirk Beetstra 08:31, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support This seems obvious and clearly a core part of achieivng WP:NPOV. --GoRight (talk) 14:12, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment. This seems to be information-free. Logically, the header says something different from the body, and the body is so circumspect that its essentially empty. Was is "efficiently"? What is "tendentious debate"? And is it OK if "unwilling editors" are excluded? --Stephan Schulz (talk) 14:26, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose as written Not understandable as presently written. Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 14:31, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. One of Abd's other proposals below, "Don't debate proposals with no support", demonstrates one way of implementing this. This seems an obvious principle, essentially consensus and NPOV; balance is provided; the last sentence addresses a concern raised by Abd's detractors; and I don't understand the oppose rationales given, except Beetstra's (per which I decided to put "support" rather than "strong support"). It seems contradictory to me that Mathsci and Spartaz oppose this principle, which contains "Tendentious debate involving unwilling editors is to be avoided", yet at the same time suppport the proposed remedy "Abd banned". (Note to avoid misinterpretation: I don't consider Abd's editing to be "tendentious".) Do these editors believe that full unanimity is always attainable? Or that achieving more than mere rough consensus is not desirable? ☺Coppertwig (talk) 14:30, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose per Spartaz. Raul654 (talk) 17:08, 3 August 2009 (UTC)
Don't debate proposals with no support
3) When a proposal or article talk page comment is made, editors should need not argue against it or reject it until it has received support from at least one other editor, beyond noting objection if needed. That objection need not be explained, and often should not it's a good idea not to, because that may encourage useless debate. "I'd object to that, but if anyone else supports it, we can discuss it," is civil and sufficient.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- Proposed, revised argument. This is proposed as advice; one of the situations where following this advice would be beneficial is with "wall-of-text" proposals on article Talk pages. By not debating or objecting to such a proposal, if, indeed, it is useless, the proposal is not thereby accepted, and if the editor edits the article according to it, while the editor may claim "discussion," if there was no response that is only a low-level defense, especially if the proposal was not clear and sufficiently succinct. Arguing with a proposal encourages counter-argument, and this can go on endlessly. The proof is in article edits; Talk page discussion is a device to improve consensus but does not control. If an edit is reverted, there is some obligation to explain why in Talk, and that a refutation of this "why" may be buried somewhere in prior discussion is moot. We are ordinarily not obligated to read prior discussion, especially if it is long and confusing. I edited the original proposal to change "should not" to "need not" which closer reflects the advisory intention. --Abd (talk) 04:07, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
original argument by Abd, a somewhat different approach |
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- reply to Short Brigade Harvester Boris: Sigh. This is not proposed as a rule to be enforced, not a "requirement," but a suggestion, advice if you will, that could avoid a lot of the crap we've seen. There is no "bureaucracy" involved, none. It's relevant to this case because much of the objection to "walls of text" comes from a belief that it's necessary to respond to anything one disagrees with. If we knew that ArbComm would not consider a proposal here that wasn't seconded, however, we could save a whole lotta disruption, reducing the work load on arbitrators. (An arbitrator could second, and if no arbitrator is willing to do that, well, how much chance is that proposal going to have to pass? "Second," by the way, doesn't mean, necessarily, "support," it means, "worth considering.")
- Comment by others:
- Oppose Enforcing Robert's Rules of Order ("the requirement that a motion be seconded before being debated") certainly violates the spirit of Misplaced Pages is not a bureaucracy, if not the letter. Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 03:39, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'm experiencing a bout of cognitive dissonance in reconciling your initial reference to "the requirement that a motion be seconded" and your followup statement "This is not proposed as a rule to be enforced, not a 'requirement'". Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 14:37, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- I mentioned formal deliberative process where that is, indeed, a requirement. We don't do requirements here, usually. But that doesn't mean that waiting for a second becomes stupid. It's still efficient, and editors who complain about wall-of-text really should consider this one. If nobody reads it, why bother complaining? Think it's too much? Collapse it, letting anyone who wants to read it, read it, but keeping the page clean. The section header should be kept out of collapse so that it remains in the table of contents, generally. --Abd (talk) 04:07, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- I'm experiencing a bout of cognitive dissonance in reconciling your initial reference to "the requirement that a motion be seconded" and your followup statement "This is not proposed as a rule to be enforced, not a 'requirement'". Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 14:37, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose. Incompatible with Misplaced Pages culture and practice (which even now often sees "nobody objected when I proposed it on talk" style arguments).
It might be a good idea for Misplaced Pages 2.0, thoughAfter minimal thought, not even that. Such a rule would really encourage traveling cabals. --Stephan Schulz (talk) 07:27, 30 July 2009 (UTC) - Oppose Not how wikipedia works. Mathsci (talk) 08:31, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose We don't do this and I can't see why we should either. Spartaz 10:34, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose. This seems to be a reflection of my comments "dear wise one" that you commented on paragraph starting with "Crohnie, please read what I write carefully." I will let you all read Abd's comments. --CrohnieGal 12:25, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
OpposeComment (after change), if someone suggests an improvement on a talkpage, that improvement can immediately be implemented, as no-one is allowed to oppose to it, and no-one is allowed to discuss it as long as there is no second support for it? Or do you want to say now, that no-one is allowed to be bold in improving an article, because it first has to be discussed on the talkpage, and such a discussion may never take place if that one person will never get a support? Dangerous draft, this. --Dirk Beetstra 08:37, 31 July 2009 (UTC)- Beetstra, that's a preposterous interpretation of the proposal. There is nothing to prevent an editor from, elsewhere, discussing the proposal to find a second, either before or after making it. It already happens frequently that editors make a proposal and nobody replies. So? "no one is allowed" isn't what's proposed. You want to discuss it, fine. But don't then blame the proposer for back and forth debate that then ensues, and that, if there was no support even to discuss it, wasn't needed. This proposal doesn't change our process, if passed, it might nudge our process toward efficience, or it might simply allow some editors to more efficiently use their own time. The big point is that if you are inclined to disagree with a proposal and not inclined to think it needs discussion, jumping in to disagree with it will be likely to encourage counter-argument, but you remain free to do so if you think it will help something. If you have concluded that an editor is tendentious, though, it's just tossing fuel on the fire if you are right.
- I wrote above that, if it was important to express objection, simply stating "I object to this," without argument, was enough. That's not an argument, it's a position. Discussion on a talk page is not required before making a bold edit. If one is reverted, properly the reverting editor will explain the reversion, but it might be very simple, such as "we don't have consensus for that." If we consider the first edit a "motion," then the reversion is an "objection." What's clear is that if an editor never gets any support, there is an impasse. If the proposer cannot find any support, and opposition exists, the presumption is usually status quo. If there has been no response, the proposer might consider refactoring the proposal, making it more succinct or approachable, you can do that with comments with no response. Or the proposer might look at article history and find possibly interested editors and approach them individually. Or might go to the Talk for the one objecting and ask why, and it then can become a two-person negotiation (or the editor can be asked to stop). Nothing is gained by arguing against an unseconded proposal, except in the situation where one actually educates the proposer to drop it because it's truly a bad idea. That can be done, sometimes, but if the proponent thinks of the opposition as biased or ignorant, it almost never works.
- It's also apparently easy to misunderstand this proposal as discouraging discussion. Discussion is the equivalent in deliberative process of meeting in committee or as the "committee of the whole," where brainstorming is normal. However, what I have in mind with this proposal is situations where the rapport for that doesn't exist. If you imagine that you must argue against every proposal from the minority, you will then come to resent those proposals, because they will waste your time, over and over. What this suggests is that you might be partly responsible for that waste through a belief that you must answer. Answering dumb proposals in Talk is not required, and might even be better not done, especially if you can't do it nicely. --Abd (talk) 04:07, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Abd, you rewrote the proposal, and now it reads much better. I don't oppose anymore (strikethrough applied), but I don't see too much utility.
- As an explanation: The 'should' in the first sentence in the original could give the following situation: a) I propose something really silly ("grass is orange!"), b) you read it, and think, "this is really silly", and give ":I'd object to that, but if anyone else supports it, we can discuss it. ~~~~". Indeed, friendly and sufficient .. but .. ":I'd object to that, because when I walk outside, I see the cows and they all eat green grass. And ... Green is generally the colour of grass, because of the compounds in it that convert carbon dioxide and water to sugar are green (they absorb at ..). blah blah blah. But if anyone else supports it, we can discuss it. ~~~~" would initiate discussion, even if there is no support, and you give an explanation etc. etc. Maybe I am a 2nd year primary school kid, and I would be very gratefull for the full explanation (though mine here might be a bit too far ..). The former action would not get that response, I might even react "What are you opposing against, ****, when I walk here through my garden, all my grass is orange-like. I don't understand why my goat was dying. You unhelpful ***!". Hope this explains. --Dirk Beetstra 09:27, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Weak support. I'm starting to warm to this idea. I'm biassed against it because I felt very frustrated when I ran up against something similar in the WP:ATT dispute here (two consecutive threads). Essentially, this idea gives a bit more weight to keeping an older version. I can see it being useful in situations (as sometimes occur) where an enthusiastic, creative and hardworking editor generates large amounts of new article text which is opposed by others who don't really have time to look at it in detail or provide complete rationales for rejecting it. It would require expansionists to keep an eye on the talk page (or search back through the talk page archives) for proposals they might support, but it would free up status-quo-ists to keep their thumbs on good articles without too much effort, which could be useful in situations such as with this frustrated expert. At the Circumcision article, for example, I feel that I put a lot of effort into it in the past and now just want to keep an eye on it without spending a lot of time, so requiring a seconder before I have to explain (again?) why I oppose some extensive change can be a plus. Of course, it doesn't prevent all change, nor would I want it to; need to avoid WP:OWN.
As I understand it, this would allow a bold edit and if nothing further happens, it stays. If the edit is reverted without a real rationale, just "please get consensus before making this change", and the first editor explains why they want the change but nobody answers, this would mean they can't put the edit in. That's where I'm not sure I support it: perhaps they deserve an explanation of why their edit is opposed (per "help the clueless" below). But maybe that's OK, provided it's documented as a standard guideline or essay so people know it isn't being applied only to them. Perhaps it could be a modification of the WP:BRD essay. If a second person supports the edit then usual processes for discussion and consensus apply.
This would be one way to solve the problem Crohnie and Enric Naval have raised about feeling obligated to read long posts.☺Coppertwig (talk) 15:16, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose Enforcing Robert's Rules of Order ("the requirement that a motion be seconded before being debated") certainly violates the spirit of Misplaced Pages is not a bureaucracy, if not the letter. Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 03:39, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
Help the clueless
4) If an editor makes a clueless proposal, or attempts to contradict an established consensus, suggest that the editor try to identify an involved editor willing to discuss it and, on the one hand, help the editor to understand the consensus, and, on the other, to be an ear to consider possible changes to consensus. If possible, refer the editor to an involved editor with a similar POV, one who has been part of forming the existing consensus.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- Proposed We might avoid half the current blocked editor rate if we did this. For full value for this, it's assumed that we actually do have broad consensus on articles, so that responsible and reasonable editors with various POVs are available. But all it takes to work is editors willing to listen and sympathetically explain. If there is one with the new editor's POV, we might see this: "Yes, I know that what you are saying is True (TM), but this is an encyclopedia, and facts reported here must be verifiable and well-established. We will just have to be patient, because, you know, Truth(TM) will out, and if it doesn't, well, Misplaced Pages isn't going to fix it. If you try to put that text in the article, and insist, it will destabilize the consensus, which we carefully and with much work negotiated to make sure that it was fair to our FringeTruth(TM), and, since there are more of them than us, we will Lose(TM) and we may end up with less not more. Hence if you try to do that, I'd have to report you to a noticeboard. However, here is what we can do ... there is room for a subarticle on RecentDiscoveryFavoringTheTruth(TM), there has been reliable source on it, and I don't have time to research and write it. How about you do that and bring the material to me for review? It's usually a lot easier to clean something up and try to make it compatible with consensus than to do the original work. Besides, look around, try doing some Recent Changes patrolling, get some experience helping with Other Stuff than Our Important Topic, become familiar with how this place works. If you respect it, it's a very tolerant community, there is a lot of room here." --Abd (talk) 03:45, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- Oppose. A completely batty suggestion and not at all how wikipedia functions. Editors rarely self-identify as clueless. Abd is wasting time with suggestions like this. Mathsci (talk) 08:38, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Then don't waste your time responding to it! No self-identification is involved in what is proposed, so the response is ... batty. --Abd (talk) 04:14, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose What exactly has this to do with this case? Spartaz 10:36, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- It's an extension of the prior proposal, how to deal with editors who post rambling comments.--Abd (talk) 04:14, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Comment, I can't be for or against, what on earth does all of the above mean please? Maybe I am dense, I don't get it. --CrohnieGal 12:30, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Totally in line with the disregard of unreasonable editors (vide supra), unwilling editors (vide supra) and the view that someone first has to find support before discussing a change. In violation of WP:BOLD, I would say. Oppose. --Dirk Beetstra 08:40, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- I do find it offensive that what is proposed is misstated to oppose it. But this whole discussion is an example of what's being suggested above about "seconding." What is being discussed is article Talk, and a very common claim that there is a problem with "POV-pushing" in Talk. In fact, we restrict COI editors to Talk precisely because we expect them to push a POV, but we dislike banning them because they are often experts on some aspect of the field of the article. What I'm trying to describe are methods of addressing the problems without banning the editor; most of those commenting here very readily fall back on the ban as a way to deal with what this is suggesting be handled differently.— Preceding unsigned comment added by Abd (talk • contribs) (I think).
- Well, Abd, if the opposition comes from 'misstating', then maybe it is just not clear? Are you arguing here that 'all this opposition is crap, because they do not understand me, so actually, this proposal should pass'?? --Dirk Beetstra 09:12, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Support. Excellent advice. Essentially, this encourages involved editors to act in a mediator-like role, and the more of that the better. This fits in with the proposal above about requiring seconders, and frees up Majority POV-supporters not to have to respond to endless messages, while avoiding having to ban anyone. Mathsci, it's not about self-identifying as clueless; the advice is to those who see others as clueless. Abd, in case the editors in question might see links to this idea as part of the discussion of their situation, consider using a more charitable word than "clueless". Beetstra, does this proposal look any better to you if you consider it as an alternative to banning rather than as an alternative to extensive discussion with the editor? I see this, along with the proposal above, as a way to allow editors representing minority POVs to continue to have some influence on an article without exhausting the other editors. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 15:32, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- I do find it offensive that what is proposed is misstated to oppose it. But this whole discussion is an example of what's being suggested above about "seconding." What is being discussed is article Talk, and a very common claim that there is a problem with "POV-pushing" in Talk. In fact, we restrict COI editors to Talk precisely because we expect them to push a POV, but we dislike banning them because they are often experts on some aspect of the field of the article. What I'm trying to describe are methods of addressing the problems without banning the editor; most of those commenting here very readily fall back on the ban as a way to deal with what this is suggesting be handled differently.— Preceding unsigned comment added by Abd (talk • contribs) (I think).
- Oppose. A completely batty suggestion and not at all how wikipedia functions. Editors rarely self-identify as clueless. Abd is wasting time with suggestions like this. Mathsci (talk) 08:38, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
Administrative recusal upon claim
5) Absent emergency or specific duty, an administrator should not insist upon the right to use tools when involvement has been claimed, but should recuse. Recusal does not mean "unblock" or "unprotect" or "revert that edit under protection." It means abstinence from future action. An administrator seeing new disruption caused by an editor who has claimed involvement should take this to a noticeboard, disclosing the reason for recusal. Ignore all rules continues to apply, if serious harm will be caused to the project by failing to immediately respond, for example, involvement should not prevent an admin from use of tools, but the admin should promptly disclose the action on a noticeboard.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- Proposed This one has been the subject of much comment in previous ArbComm cases over recusal failure. The argument has been that, then, anyone who is blocked will try to wikilawyer out of it by claiming involvement. However, this principle is useless for getting unblocked, for the admin can just say, "Because you have objected, I recuse. Here is how you can request unblock. Good luck." Recusal is an abstinence from action, not an undoing of action. And if an editor claims bias on the part of a series of admins, goodbye editor, the last block will be indef and there will be nobody willing to unblock. There is a boundary situation: an admin warns an editor, saying, if you repeat that, I'll block you. The editor says "You're biased, you *****." Can the admin block the editor. Yes. But not for saying *****, and only for repeating the prohibited action, and nothing beyond that. Basically, the admin could have simply blocked instead of warning, and should not lose the ability to protect the project by warning instead of blocking. Because bias has been alleged, the admin should probably report the block to AN/I, stating recusal from further action. While a closing admin for a discussion should be uninvolved, involvement is not created simply by an accusation, and I suggest that admins specifically accused of involvement routinely recuse because that is the least disruptive and simplest procedure, and because it preserves not only neutrality of administrative action, but appearance of it as well. Appearances count.
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- General response to comments. It is completely predictable that factional editors accustomed to administrative support from allied administrators, or those administrators themselves, would oppose this. The claim that this comes out of my personal desire for protection is pure ABF, and silly. I could be the worst possible editor and the most skilled wikilawyer, yet this principle would stand, and would be useless to me for preventing sanctions. Spartaz expresses a position that has been rejected by ArbComm many times, but never explicitly enough. It's time. Nobody is "forced" to recuse, and there is no way to prevent even a clearly biased admin from pushing a block button. WP:IAR continues to apply, even if this were taken as a fixed rule. Recusal means that a decision is made, efficiently, by an uninvolved administrator: recusal does not mean "unblock," and screaming "bias" is singularly ineffective as an unblock argument. An editor who demands recusal frequently, without good cause, is disruptive, and will be effectively banned even without a discussion.
- Spartaz's argument is based on the idea that some administrators understand a situation better than others, because of experience with it. That's certainly true, but if that understanding can't be communicated when necessary, sufficient to convince an uninvolved admin, who will listen to both sides, it's highly likely to be biased. Involved editors always understand situations better than uninvolved ones, each in their own way, but we need to deal with conflict among them, and we do that by encouraging neutral decision. What recusal does is to avoid debates over bias; instead, the issue becomes the editor's behavior. As I describe in my collapsed discussion above, it works. In a recent discussion on her Talk, Iridescent wrote she considered her block of me the most controversial thing she had ever done. My view of it was quite different. Given her understanding of the situation, it was perfect, because she immediately recused, and, more than that, she fully recused, she didn't try to prove she was right. I was left, not with a dispute with her, but facing the community. If I had whined tendentiously about her being biased -- she wasn't -- I might still be blocked! That history also shows that recusal doesn't mean "unblock." It simply means that an admin, faced with involvement or a claim of such, sidesteps the issue easily and entirely by turning it over. The admin still does his or her duty under IAR. I'm not claiming that an admin should be desysopped for failing to recuse, faced with some vandal's claim of involvement! However, it's still a good idea! The admin should make sure that the block is long enough to be reviewed, that's all. Most vandals don't make such claims, actually.
- We are seeing, here, the cabal fighting to retain its privilege and power. With one possible exception, these are not neutral opinions, they are biased, factional opinions. Raul654 claims that "Abd does this frequently." He hasn't, here, or in his evidence, cited one example, and there are none. I've been blocked three times. The first, as a police "Everybody stop!" action, immediately rescinded. The second, by Iridescent. No claim of involvement. The third, by WMC, and in this case the claims of admin action while involved were long-standing, yet I did not even put up an unblock template. I claimed that JzG was involved when he made certain decisions. Not with me -- he had actually supported me with his tools, with Yellowbeard. ArbComm confirmed I was correct about JzG, while the cabal claimed that I should be banned for "pushing" the issue, as it continues to claim. I now assert that Raul654 was and is involved in his use of tools, I will present evidence to support this, but he hasn't used them against me, he's merely threatened to. I can think of one other claim of admin involvement, starting long ago when I wasn't personally involved: WMC, as documented in my evidence. It was the same with JzG; I encountered and warned the admin about action while involved when I was completely neutral, there was no personal dispute, and the Cold fusion POV aspect only came up later. This is the first case where I'm claiming involvement where I was the target. And, I submit, the ultimate cause for this was that I confronted three cabal administrators, Raul654 and WMC (in RfC/GoRight) and then JzG.
- The cabal is not organized. It does not ultimately protect its own, except temporarily; in fact, it leads them off the cliff by supporting them when their positions are blatantly insupportable. An organized cabal would be far more clever, and, on the one hand, possibly more dangerous, but, on the other, tractable, because it would be possible to negotiate with it. There is no negotiation with the cabal confronted here, precisely because it isn't organized. There is a legitimate aspect to its activities, and the only issue is that it becomes unrestrained, and damages the balance of the project, through collective action. This proposal isn't about the cabal, though it shows how to defuse claims of factional bias without debate, rather this proposal is about the principle of recusal, to protect the project against damage to its reputation and against unnecessary disruption over claims of administrative bias.
- response to Crohie. Thanks. Our system need not answer the question, "how many," but I'm going to say "Three," as a guess. This proposal does not require or even suggest that an editor be unblocked upon a claim of bias. It merely suggests that the admin who faces such a claim should step back and let someone else make the next decision, and specious claims of bias are relevant as disruptive, so I always advise blocked editors to avoid this unless they are prepared to prove it, and, as well, to wait longer for unblock. It should not necessary to prove bias to request recusal. An editor who repeated this a few times, however, with a few different admins, would almost certainly be indef blocked, and admins would become increasingly reluctant to unblock.
- Suppose that there is a cabal involved. Perhaps cabal admins watched for the unblock template and rushed in. Okay, at this point we have a possible cabal, not merely a small-scale dispute, and it will probably be necessary for ArbComm to address it, lower-level dispute resolution process is likely inadequate to resolve it without disruption. Any editor believing denial of unblock is unfair, and who continues to believe this after a series of unblock denials, may appeal to ArbComm, and in a case like this, ArbComm would consider if the claims of involvement were reasonable. If they were, then it would address that, and, where this has happened once, it has likely happened other times as well, because the great bulk of admin actions are never reviewed. Most blocked editors just disappear (or come back quietly as new accounts). Few editors have what it takes to bring a matter before ArbComm, unless somehow they attract an advocate, and it's often complicated by some level of actual misbehavior. (GoRight had certainly violated policies, but what I did then was to look at the context. The cabal focused on him and completely avoided looking at its own involvement.) A cabal trait would be that offenses normally dealt with by warning or dispute resolution process are, instead, promptly and severely addressed with incivility, tag-team reversion, and blocks, which then encourages the blocked editor to violate as well, thus justifying further blocks or bans, sometimes even by uninvolved admins who look at behavior in isolation. Incivility or other policy violations by cabal members is unaddressed until it becomes so widespread and disruptive that it is impossible to ignore it, as happened with JzG and ScienceApologist. In both cases, had friends of the editor acted effectively to restrain their friend, we might have avoided much disruption.
- Many seem to assume I'm complaining about the existence of the cabal. I'm not. I'm suggesting that there are factions involved here, and we may all benefit if they are acknowledged and identified, and if they are better organized within themselves, as they see fit -- and we cannot prevent this in any case -- not if they are "crushed." Crushing opposition is a cabal effect, and very harmful to the project. The problem with the cabal is that it may present the appearance of many independent judgments, a false consensus, when it is really representing an established factional position only, with the individual judgments being predictable and thus almost certainly not neutral. And it's very visible here, as it was in RfC/GoRight. There may be many cabals, but, here we are looking at what might be named the Global Warming Cabal, after the first incident that made it plain to me that it existed. RfC/GoRight and the evidence and comments is well worth reviewing carefully in order to understand cabal behavior.
- Clerk recusal. Crohnie raised this. Yes, I asked for recusal, because the clerk made certain comments showing a judgment about case issues, it's basic for a clerk not to do that while a case is active, or to recuse, if the clerk believes that commenting is more important. However, it's minor, and probably harmless. I don't see it being continued, so water under the bridge. Had I thought it of continued importance, I'd have made sure it was considered by ArbComm. Nothing about this proposal involves "threats of desysop." Acting while involved is not automatic desysop, at all. However, insisting on the continued right to do so probably is. Hence WMC's bit is seriously at risk, because that's his position and the oft-expressed position of the cabal. I'm glad to see you moving away from that. Notice how strongly the cabal admins have expressed the contrary.
- Beetstra's comment. Beetstra is not a cabal admin, though he has called for me to be banned before, in the JzG case; he has consistently argued against restrictions on administrative discretion, which he imagines this proposal is. (Spartaz isn't currently listed with the cabal, but will be, I expect, for reasons that will be given in the Evidence.) Requiring that there be a discussion of involvement for routine recusal guarantees unnecessary disruption, because a definitive determination can be very complex. Recusal is simple. If we want to make it more complicated -- I do not see it needed at this point -- we might require a "second" from a responsible editor. And "responsible" means that this editor could be held accountable for repeated "seconds" without reasonable basis. The point of good process is to avoid unnecessary dispute; if we have to discuss involvement, we've lost sight of the purpose of it all: efficiently facilitating the project while maintaining, not only neutrality, but the appearance of neutrality as well. If we are going to require a second, we would then make recusal truly mandatory upon a seconded request. It would still be advisable upon a solitary request. Note, as well, that an admin may, under IAR, disregard -- temporarily -- recusal requirements, as with any rule, and, if the admin provides notice and the action isn't later considered "bad faith" or incompetent, there is no risk to the bit. I've defended an admin who so acted (and his "deletionist" factional affiliation was different from mine, he'd blocked my "inclusionist" wikifriend). I'll note, though, that this case was one of the few that I've "lost," perhaps because it was decided the admin clearly should have recused and it was decided there was no emergency requiring he block, and he's been desysopped. Making recusal rules plain and simple will protect administrators, not make their tasks more difficult. The belief of an administrator that their personal knowledge is crucial, and therefore they must personally maintain control, is probably a strong sign of real involvement, even if difficult to prove. --Abd (talk) 18:07, 1 August 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- Oppose Obviously a tailor-made "get-me-of-the hook" proposal by Abd. It is completely unworkable and favours disruptive wikilawyering editors. Mathsci (talk) 08:48, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose Its a long standing trick of tendentious editors to try and argue that an admin is involved and thereby force them to recuse to avoid scrutiny by admins who actually understand the issues. Undertaking admin actions on editors or articles when not acting as an editor does not make you involved. Spartaz 10:38, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Partially Agree with some, not other parts. I think the recusal policy is important. But the problem I am having is what administrator is not involved with Abd? He has even stated he wants Hersfold to recuse from this case (dif provided if you need it.). When is claiming an administrator is involved being seen as 'crying wolf' too many times? I have a problems with this and threats of dysop. --CrohnieGal 12:41, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose Involved admins must recuse, but the hazards of requiring recusal "when involvement has been claimed" are self apparent. Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 13:35, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose - Spartaz described perfectly what Abd does frequently. Raul654 (talk) 14:23, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose, I could live with such a statement when there is some significant support for calling an admin involved (that needs independent editors saying that, or editors who, by themselves, decide that they are involved), but the claim alone is by far not enough. 'Will the last remaining uninvolved admin please involve himself by taking action?' --Dirk Beetstra 08:47, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reply to Abd. Again a wall of text, unreadable, so I only bothered to reply for the part to me. Abd, this is about recusal, I do not see, like in the other part where you mention this, what my previous (ancient?) call for your ban is doing here, that would be more appropriate as a response somewhere else on this page (there where I did not remark, heh, maybe that is why you need to do it here, maybe you wonder if and what I will respond there?), it is totally out of line to mention that here, does not make any sense. My response, short and clear, is against your "..an administrator should not insist upon the right to use tools when involvement has been claimed, but should recuse..". I Oppose to this one, in this form, as you fail to say, who has to claim this. If the subject of the 'conflict' is the claimant, then no (and you are often that claimaint that claims that someone is involved, but maybe if you would rephrase it, I could agree. "... we might require a "second" from a responsible editor. And "responsible" means that this editor could be held accountable for repeated "seconds" without reasonable basis. The point of good process is to avoid unnecessary dispute ..." .. hmm .. and who is going to decide who is the second 'responsible' editor? Do we also need a third for that, to decide if the second is actually responsible and not actually involved himself so also he should recuse (even if that is not an admin!), &c. &c. Like in an American lawcourt, where, I believe, first a process is necessery to collect an 'independent' jury of 12 (?). A whole process to define everything. Wikilawyering, Abd, that is what it is. We are all volunteers here, and everybody makes mistakes, what you define here is process to make sure that if admins make mistakes or step over the edge, that they can be punished for it. I do believe you mean it in good faith, and with the best meaning of it all, but that is exactly how it is going to be used. Hence, oppose, per WP:NOTLAW. --Dirk Beetstra 22:44, 1 August 2009 (UTC)
- "We are all volunteers here, and everybody makes mistakes, what you define here is process to make sure that if admins make mistakes or step over the edge, that they can be punished for it." - Could you please clarify why you think punishment is involved here? In what way is mere recusal for the good of the project by upholding the highest standards of neutrality a punishment? --GoRight (talk) 02:50, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- No, GoRight, what I mean is that I anticipate what will happen if an admin does not recuse, while involvement has been claimed .. and what will happen if an admin is opposing to an edit or performs an action (as I expect that many will cry wolf and claim involvement): we will get lengthy processes for almost every action that an admin takes. Recusal can very easy come after that action (not before), we now already get many lengthy ArbComs (and if principles like these pass, there are MANY to come) because Abd (and you apparently), think that the admin has to recuse before taking action. If an admin takes an action, while one thinks he is involved, then a) review if the action is OK (we have {{unblock}}, blacklist de-listing requests page, talkpages for protected pages, &c. &c.), b) see if the admin really is involved, and from then on the admin can/should recuse (if he really is involved), but don't start discussions, 'oh, but the previous action should not have been taken in the first place' (and failure to acknowledge that .. well see this attempt (I know, one can also read that remedy as 'preventing further damage')).
- This proposal shifts the time of action to a time in discussion which is very dangerous, and many admins already bring up their actions themselves already, some recuse from action in the future, but do not moan about the actions already taken. Abd clearly says here 'I do not acknowledge the ban applied by William M. Connolley, as he is involved' (and that is very similar to the Abd and JzG case). No, follow the ban, don't wikilawyer, discuss it somewhere else, and if a) the community thinks that the ban should not apply, then lift the ban, and b) if William M. Connolley is really involved, he should recuse from then on. And if the admin already does that by himself before taking action, well that is already very clearly described in WP:UNINVOLVED. --Dirk Beetstra 09:09, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- "We are all volunteers here, and everybody makes mistakes, what you define here is process to make sure that if admins make mistakes or step over the edge, that they can be punished for it." - Could you please clarify why you think punishment is involved here? In what way is mere recusal for the good of the project by upholding the highest standards of neutrality a punishment? --GoRight (talk) 02:50, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- Unsure. I think I'm starting to "get" it. In a case of a new and disruptive editor, it would mean that more than one admin handles the situation. There would tend to be rapid escalation of block length, and only a few admins would be needed. Abd, what about a situation where an established editor argues (with some justification) that each of almost every admin is "involved" with them? May I suggest rewording this one to be advice rather than a requirement? (e.g. "would be well-advised to" or something rather than "should"). The way I would put it is: actually acting while involved (as determined by community consensus later, if necessary) is the offense. Acting while not (considered by broad consensus to be) involved but while claimed to be involved is not an offense. However, it's nevertheless advisable to recuse, for two reasons: first, in case there's a chance that community consensus will later determine that you were indeed involved; thus this advice removes excuses for acting while involved, ("but I didn't realize I would be considered involved!") since recusal was an available and recommended option. Secondly, because recusal in the face of a claim of involvement helps give those affected by the admin action the impression that they were treated fairly, even if nobody but them can see any reasonable argument for involvement. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 15:54, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
Proposed findings of fact
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Proposed remedies
Note: All remedies that refer to a period of time, for example to a ban of X months or a revert parole of Y months, are to run concurrently unless otherwise stated.
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Proposed enforcement
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Proposals by User:Raul654
Proposed principles
Meatpuppetry
1) Restoring edits from banned users is meatpuppetry. Meatpuppetry is prohibited. Users who act as meatpuppets for banned users may be blocked.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Two comments. First, the term "meatpuppetry" has a variety of meanings to different people, and using it can divert attention from the substance of the discussion to quarrels over definitions. It would be better if this were expressed directly in terms of the underlying conduct (e.g., "Restoring edits from banned users is prohibited"). If the conduct is prohibited, it is prohibited regardless of what label is put on it. Second, as reflected in the discussion below, we might be best served with a somewhat refined or more nuanced version of the proposal. Newyorkbrad (talk) 19:22, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by parties:
- Oppose. Restoring edits from banned users is not meat puppetry, per se. The use of the term "banned" here is also not necessary. Blocked users are in the same position. Edits from blocked or banned users may be reverted on sight. Raul has, below, quoted me accurately. There is no policy as claimed. It is acknowledged that acting as a meatpuppet for a blocked or banned user -- or any user, for that matter -- can result in a block. However, once an edit has been made, the edit is in the database and can be read by anyone unless oversighted. Whether or not to restore an edit should depend, not on the ban or block status of the original editor, but on its usefulness to the project. I'm insufficiently familiar with the Scibaby case to say much about it; I reverted a Scibaby edit back in without any reasonable notice that it was, in fact, Scibaby; however, the edit itself was to User talk:GoRight and my judgment was that he'd rather see the edit directly; the whole thing was rather silly, since GoRight can read it anyway; GoRight later decided to restore it to respond to it. The other alleged "meat puppetry" would be with User:JedRothwell, who is not banned, there has never been the required community ban discussion; if he's banned, it's an administrative ban, originally issued by JzG, in the presence of his involvement in long-term conflict with the editor; that account is blocked, but it was an inactive account, not used since 2006, blocked during a recent RfAr/Clarification for unclear reasons. JedRothwell, however, is a well-known expert in the field of Cold fusion, he knows the literature extremely well, having edited much of it. When he pops in as IP, he often has much to say of relevance to the article or what's going on. He's also blunt and caustic, but no more so than another COI editor we tolerate at the article: Kirk shanahan. With one restored edit from Rothwell, I recall removing the arguably uncivil part (usually it is on the level of a general claim of Misplaced Pages bias or general uselessness). It has never been found that a specific reversion to restore an edit by Rothwell was, itself, disruptive or improper; what's been claimed over and over is that such reversion is prohibited, but IAR recognizes no absolute prohibitions, and, as noted, there is no policy prohibiting such, unless ArbComm decides to establish one. The existing policy allows restoration of content if the editor restoring is willing to take responsibility for it, and "content" is a general term that does not solely refer to articles.
- Those who claim that I inappropriately restored edits, please provide specific examples where the content violated policy. --Abd (talk) 06:39, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Jed was banned exclusively for his comments in Talk:Cold fusion (since it was the only page he posted to) and you restored his comments, taking full responsability for them. In other works, per our banning policy, we should have had to ban you too if you hadn't stopped. --Enric Naval (talk) 08:43, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Well, banning from a small number of incidents, and with no showing that the specific restorations were disruptive, would be a tad overreactive, I'd think. Enric's interpretation would be correct under the proposed principle, however, which is why it's so offensive. Restoring edits from blocked or banned editors, which takes place quite in the open and with obvious personal responsibility, is not "meat puppetry," per se, nor is it "proxying"; to establish these would require verification of improper intent. It is an editor making a decision that content (for articles or for discussion) is useful, and that's why I requested -- so far no satisfaction of this request -- that specific examples be provided. Enric has always argued, since the beginning of this dispute, that restoration was per se contrary to policy, and that's a serious misunderstanding, and an obvious one. I restored a spelling correction to Cold fusion made by ScienceApologist, that had been reverted because of his topic ban, and under the proposed principle, that would be "meat puppetry." This was, in fact, taken to AE, where the complainant, Hipocrite!, was pretty roundly criticized for disruption. I'm amazed that Enric or others would edit war with me over some harmless content on a Talk page, but I did not revert war back, nor did I pursue DR; quite simply, it wasn't important enough. Nor did any editor pursue DR with me. Now that there is a nice coat-rack erected, all this is being brought up, even though it was totally irrelevant to the page bans issued by WMC, as far as I've seen. What does Raul's proposal have to do with this case? --Abd (talk) 17:12, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support but make the changes proposed by NYB. I hae seen in other discussions that "meatpuppeting" is taken as inaccurate by the community and that there are problems when using that label. --Enric Naval (talk) 23:36, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- Given Abd's behavior with respect to Jed Rothwell and Scibaby, and his own misconceptions about what our policies are (To wit: There is no policy against restoring reverted edits of banned or blocked users if the edits themselves are not disruptive or policy violations - Abd, July 14, 2009), a clear principle to this effect is needed. Raul654 (talk) 23:44, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
- I would agree that that particular statement is misinformed; edits by banned users are to be reverted on sight, regardless of merit. There's a (rarely used) CSD criterion for specifically this purpose, WP:G5. However, once reverted, if the edit does have merit and an editor can independently verify its worth and has independent reasons for making it themselves, they can do so to put it in under their own name. Granted, though, that's a little complicated and can elicit suspicion itself. Hersfold 01:53, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with Hersfold here. I think Raul's interpretation is not at all what the policy states, per WP:BAN: "Wikipedians are not permitted to post or edit material at the direction of a banned user, an activity sometimes called 'proxying,' unless they are able to confirm that the changes are verifiable and have independent reasons for making them." (emphasis mine). There is no rule prohibiting Abd or anyone else from restoring a Scibaby edit provided they have verified the legitimacy of it, and realizing that by doing so they take full responsibility for the edit. Oren0 (talk) 05:57, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- "Verifiable" means restoring edits to articles which improve the article, and can be verified against reliable sources. Given that Abd was restoring, among other things, talk page edits by banned users, he fails that exception on both counts -- his edits were neither verifiable nor did he think of them independently. Raul654 (talk) 06:03, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Ok, yeah. I can't think of any reason you'd need to restore a talk page edit; that is proxying. Hersfold 06:05, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Perhaps then "Unless they can be independently verified and there is a good, editorial-based reason for doing so, restoring edits..." ? Hersfold 06:06, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Question, what is the definition of "restore" being applied here? A simple revert? Adding a comment that contains the same or similar content? What is the time duration required to have elapsed before the topic mentioned by a banned user is once again safe to discuss? These are all applicable questions given the manner in which this principle is likely to be applied. --GoRight (talk) 07:07, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- "Verifiable" means restoring edits to articles which improve the article, and can be verified against reliable sources. Given that Abd was restoring, among other things, talk page edits by banned users, he fails that exception on both counts -- his edits were neither verifiable nor did he think of them independently. Raul654 (talk) 06:03, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with Hersfold here. I think Raul's interpretation is not at all what the policy states, per WP:BAN: "Wikipedians are not permitted to post or edit material at the direction of a banned user, an activity sometimes called 'proxying,' unless they are able to confirm that the changes are verifiable and have independent reasons for making them." (emphasis mine). There is no rule prohibiting Abd or anyone else from restoring a Scibaby edit provided they have verified the legitimacy of it, and realizing that by doing so they take full responsibility for the edit. Oren0 (talk) 05:57, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject: "Restoring edits from banned users is meatpuppetry." - This is a ridiculous statement. This would allow Raul to block anyone expressing even a vaguely skeptical statement related to AGW. Once they had done so he could easily twist it into resembling something Scibaby said some place. While policy allows the edits of banned users to be reverted on sight, and for good reason, it does not forever ban any mention of a topic of the same or a similar nature. This proposal is merely a transparent attempt to ban minority points of view. Meat puppetry is inherently acting at the direction of another user, not simply the act of restoring material that may have value to the project. Current policy clearly states that users are permitted to restore edits of banned users so long as they are willing to take full responsibility for the content. --GoRight (talk) 07:17, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- If a banned user makes a spelling correction and their edit is reverted, must we now leave the word misspelled lest we be blocked for meat puppetry? This could easily happen with a RollBack could it not? --GoRight (talk) 07:17, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. proxying for banned users is simply unacceptable. Spartaz 07:02, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- I have no problem with this statement depending on the definition of "proxying." Does proxying require that the user be acting at the direction of the banned user, or not? How do we distinguish between "proxying" and WP:AGF adoption of a valid point that happens to have started with a banned user? --GoRight (talk) 07:11, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- It depends how consistently the user is doing it. Reverting and restoring a minor edit is within policy. Advocating on talk pages on behalf of fringe views put forward by banned users is clearly not acceptable. Starting a crusade to advance the agenda of the banned user is even worse. Where you fall on that continuum is why we expect admins to exercise discretion and common sense Spartaz 16:45, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- You did not address the fundamental point of my question. To be a meat puppet do you need to be acting at the direction of the banned user, or not? Is merely expressing a similar POV sufficient to label someone a meat puppet? --GoRight (talk) 17:11, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- I suspect the correct answer is somewhere in the middle between the two poles you cite but that is undoubtedly something the arbcom will look at. I know where I stand and I can guess where you stand but I can't see the point arguing the point because ultimately it doesnt matter two hoots what we think as were aren't arbiters. Spartaz 17:42, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- You did not address the fundamental point of my question. To be a meat puppet do you need to be acting at the direction of the banned user, or not? Is merely expressing a similar POV sufficient to label someone a meat puppet? --GoRight (talk) 17:11, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- It depends how consistently the user is doing it. Reverting and restoring a minor edit is within policy. Advocating on talk pages on behalf of fringe views put forward by banned users is clearly not acceptable. Starting a crusade to advance the agenda of the banned user is even worse. Where you fall on that continuum is why we expect admins to exercise discretion and common sense Spartaz 16:45, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- I have no problem with this statement depending on the definition of "proxying." Does proxying require that the user be acting at the direction of the banned user, or not? How do we distinguish between "proxying" and WP:AGF adoption of a valid point that happens to have started with a banned user? --GoRight (talk) 07:11, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. Banned/blocked means you don't edit, period. The spelling errors and other minor things will be noticed by someone editing the article. --CrohnieGal 19:33, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- I would agree that that particular statement is misinformed; edits by banned users are to be reverted on sight, regardless of merit. There's a (rarely used) CSD criterion for specifically this purpose, WP:G5. However, once reverted, if the edit does have merit and an editor can independently verify its worth and has independent reasons for making it themselves, they can do so to put it in under their own name. Granted, though, that's a little complicated and can elicit suspicion itself. Hersfold 01:53, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Given Abd's behavior with respect to Jed Rothwell and Scibaby, and his own misconceptions about what our policies are (To wit: There is no policy against restoring reverted edits of banned or blocked users if the edits themselves are not disruptive or policy violations - Abd, July 14, 2009), a clear principle to this effect is needed. Raul654 (talk) 23:44, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
- Question for Raul: I thought that the scope of this proceeding was limited to a review of the actions of the involved parties as they relate specifically to User:William M. Connolley's page ban of User:Abd. Am I wrong on this point? Has the scope been increased?
- Assuming I am correct for the moment, what is the relevance of your proposed principle to the case being discussed? Did User:William M. Connolley allege meat puppetry as part of his reason for issuing the ban in question? I don't recall seeing any such allegation but I could have missed it. If so, please point it out. On the other hand, has User:Abd accused User:William M. Connolley of being a meat puppet of someone else in this matter? I don't recall seeing such an allegation on his part either. --GoRight (talk) 21:15, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- See Carcharoth's comment in accepting the case. I'd say it's safe to say that the arbs may look at things a bit more broadly. Guettarda (talk) 05:41, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. Rather obvious, perhaps in a slightly rewritten form. Neither Abd nor GoRight seem to understand wikipedia policy. Mathsci (talk) 22:08, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. This is not controversial -it's basic. Though occasionally one may take responsibility for the rare and helpful mainspace edit, it should never appear as if you are seeking out a banned editor's edits to restore (could be construed as disruptive). "Comments" by banned users (almost any non-mainspace edit) should never be made at their direction or restored. R. Baley (talk) 14:34, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- What degree of similarity in comments would you require to label someone as a meat puppet? How would you prevent this from being used to extend the bans of some individuals to others who are not otherwise banned but hold similar points of view? --GoRight (talk) 20:36, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- The business of reverting edits by banned users has always been fairly controversial, for instance in the sense that despite hardliners on the issue, the language of the relevant policy has been deliberately kept soft: edits "may be reverted" but efforts to harden into "are reverted" and "will be reverted" have always been rejected. Editors are "are generally expected to refrain" from reinstating such edits. Reinstatements "may be viewed" as meatpuppetry. Of course reinstatement does not in itself make it so, that would be "will be viewed", a wording no one has ever suggested. User talk and talk pages have historically been places where the policy was weaker again. The idea has been of course to leave room for common sense to win the day. Whether instances of reinstatement by Abd were common sense or not could be a matter for discussion (with diffs), but is it a matter that rises to the level of a finding? Doubtful. Was it meatpuppetry? Seems rather a stretch and proved here merely by assertion. 86.44.42.17 (talk) 03:38, 24 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support - although I also don't like the use of "meatpuppet", and I think it can be more neutrally worded. - Bilby (talk) 00:46, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- The Banning policy says this: "Users are generally expected to refrain from reinstating edits made by banned users in violation of the ban, and such edits may be viewed as meatpuppetry. Users who reinstate such edits take complete responsibility for the content by so doing." My interpretation of it is that reinstating such edits is not absolutely prohibited (the policy uses the words "generally" and "may be viewed", and for reinstaters the policy says "full responsibility for the content", not "automatically regarded as a lackey to the banned user"), but that a great deal of caution should be exercised when doing so, because the reinstater needs to make sure the edit is indeed a good one. This kind of quality control is something most editors do for their own edits, but it needs to be taken special care of when reinstating an edit that you yourself didn't write. I think the blanket term "is meatpuppetry" goes a little bit too far, because it implies that any reinstatement of an edit from a banned user must be a bad edit. A reinstated edit from a banned user should be assessed on its objective merit and value to the article, and if the edit is good, the reinstater should not be sanctioned for it. Sjakkalle (Check!) 14:06, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- I would agree with this interpretation Sjakkalle if we were only discussing edits on article pages, but my understanding is that the main objection came when Abd starting restoring talk page comments from banned users. Fixing occasional spelling and grammatical errors in actual articles is one thing but inserting a banned user back into a discussion of content that they have specifically been told they can't contribute to - by virtue of being banned from the project - is clearly not something covered by this interpretation. Spartaz 14:26, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Spartaz, rarely, (once or twice?) I restored Talk page comments from IP edits signed as "Jed Rothwell." All of the comments I restored were helpful to the project, in my opinion, that's why I restored them. I was reverted and didn't insist, even though the reversion of me was actually improper. Then, very recently, I saw an edit by an unknown user to User talk:GoRight that was reverted by Raul654 with no explanation. I knew that GoRight would want to see it, probably want to reply, no matter who it was from. So I restored it, and Raul654 started screaming "meat puppetry" and threatening to block me. Huge disruption over an edit that wasn't disruptive in itself. I was, of course, reverted by a familiar name. (These are never truly ininvolved administrators, watching Talk:GoRight!) It was GoRight's Talk page, Spartaz. On Cold fusion, and Jed Rothwell, he wasn't banned, he's been blocked, in a rather irregular way. He has no right to edit, theoretically, because he hasn't appealed the block (it's not clear he even knows that it exists), but that doesn't and shouldn't deprive me of the right to consider something from him useful. There has been no community ban. If I could quote something from his web site on the Talk page -- and I can -- why can't I quote a post that he dropped here as IP?
- I think that's fair enough. I too have a hard time imagining a situation where a talk page edit from a banned user would be something which should restoration. If someone wants to make the discuss something on the talkpage, and just happen to have a legitimate viewpoint similar to that of a banned user, they should be able to write it in their own words. Sjakkalle (Check!) 14:59, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- It's not fair if credit is deprived from a banned editor for a helpful suggestion! What is banned is disruption, not helpful suggestions, which is what the edit from Jed Rothwell was as I recall. In neither relevant case, by the way, was the user actually banned by ArbComm or a consensus of uninvolved editors, these were what I call "administrative bans." The Scibaby ban has been by default, accepted, though not logged, but I can verify that there is a lot of grumbling over it, and it may be time to actually examine the circumstances, the necessary range blocks are highly disruptive. I did look, a little, and from what I found, it stinks. Police riot. Involved administrators, protecting the article they own, Global warming. Familiar names. Look at the block log for User:Scibaby. Look at the block log for sock number 1, User:Obedium. (if that was a sock, that couldn't have been proven by checkuser, I'm pretty sure, because of the timing.) When they aren't necessary, bans and blocks can cause more disruption than they prevent, much more. I'm not going to name names, but a "highly placed Wikipedian" commented about Scibaby at WikiConference New York, "Aren't most of his edits harmless anyway?" What's really involved here is Raul654's ego. He's not about to let Scibaby "win." Myself, I don't care about Scibaby, I care about the project. As long as the project doesn't lose, he can win. How about we make him a checkuser and put his expertise at evading blocks to use? --Abd (talk) 05:21, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- "How about we make him a checkuser and put his expertise at evading blocks to use?" - Heh, an interesting point. It made me think of another. If someone (not Scibaby) reverts one of Raul's edits and Scibaby subsequently restores it, are we now allowed to remove the edit that Scibaby restored on sight? And if Raul (or anyone else for that matter) then restores his original edit can he (or that other someone) be blocked for acting as a meat puppet of Scibaby? Hmmm. Maybe I should reconsider my position on this point ... nah. --GoRight (talk) 03:08, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- It's not fair if credit is deprived from a banned editor for a helpful suggestion! What is banned is disruption, not helpful suggestions, which is what the edit from Jed Rothwell was as I recall. In neither relevant case, by the way, was the user actually banned by ArbComm or a consensus of uninvolved editors, these were what I call "administrative bans." The Scibaby ban has been by default, accepted, though not logged, but I can verify that there is a lot of grumbling over it, and it may be time to actually examine the circumstances, the necessary range blocks are highly disruptive. I did look, a little, and from what I found, it stinks. Police riot. Involved administrators, protecting the article they own, Global warming. Familiar names. Look at the block log for User:Scibaby. Look at the block log for sock number 1, User:Obedium. (if that was a sock, that couldn't have been proven by checkuser, I'm pretty sure, because of the timing.) When they aren't necessary, bans and blocks can cause more disruption than they prevent, much more. I'm not going to name names, but a "highly placed Wikipedian" commented about Scibaby at WikiConference New York, "Aren't most of his edits harmless anyway?" What's really involved here is Raul654's ego. He's not about to let Scibaby "win." Myself, I don't care about Scibaby, I care about the project. As long as the project doesn't lose, he can win. How about we make him a checkuser and put his expertise at evading blocks to use? --Abd (talk) 05:21, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. This is not controversial -it's basic. Though occasionally one may take responsibility for the rare and helpful mainspace edit, it should never appear as if you are seeking out a banned editor's edits to restore (could be construed as disruptive). "Comments" by banned users (almost any non-mainspace edit) should never be made at their direction or restored. R. Baley (talk) 14:34, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- I believe you may have a misinformed impression of the level of reverting actually taking place in some cases. We are not simply talking about bald reverts of banned user comments. They are also complaining about even taking some nugget of the comment from a banned user which is pertinent to a discussion of improving an article, and pulling that into the talk page under your own signature. would have you banned for such practices.
- To give a hypothetical example, Scibaby is known to want to introduce material into the global warming articles related to methane and cow flatulence. Now, if some editor sees a comment from Scibaby on one of the talk pages that mentions this topic and it even provides a reference to a peer-reviewed paper in a scientific journal discussing such effects, and then that editor thinks hey, maybe this SHOULD be mentioned in the article and they pluck the same reference out of Scibaby's post perhaps including a bit of explanatory text and repost it Raul (mentioned here because he is the main Administrator chasing after Scibaby) is highly likely to call that reverting the comments of Scibaby. I disagree. Scibaby is banned, but discussions of cow flatulence and the effects of methane on climate change are not. --GoRight (talk) 15:23, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support If you're banned, you're banned. If you want to comment, appeal your ban. Nothing controversial here. Verbal chat 15:33, 24 July 2009 (UTC)
- Somewhat support Sjakkale makes some good points - for one thing, even some of our worst editors who get banninated to the seventh hell may actually have made edits which were completely correct, necessary, uncontroversial etc other than the ones that gotthem there. However the problem here is possible proxying for banned editors, a far more deliberate act which should not be condoned at all. Orderinchaos 16:12, 25 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject per Sjakkalle. Reverting or quoting is not in itself meatpuppetry; else two editors reverting to the same version in an ordinary editwar (or even reversion of vandalism) would be committing meatpuppetry. It's a question of intent. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 21:31, 25 July 2009 (UTC)
- So are you OK weith Abd restoring talk page comments from banned users? Spartaz 15:37, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
- It depends. Although restoring such a comment might in itself be no more meatpuppetry than jumping in and reverting during an ordinary editwar, it could violate the banning policy, (or not, depending on the situation). Personally it doesn't bother me if any editor in good standing chooses to restore a talk page comment from a banned user, provided the comment itself is not intrinsically objectionable. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 16:42, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
Wikilawyering
2) Wikilawyering to certain quasi-legal practices, including... Misinterpreting policy or relying on technicalities to justify inappropriate actions. - Misplaced Pages:Wikilawyering
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Just as with "Meatpuppetry" above, "Wikilawyering" means many things to many people. It might again be best to avoid the use of this type of term and just focus on the specific types of conduct that are being prohibited or discouraged. Newyorkbrad (talk) 19:24, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by parties:
- Agree. @NewYorkBrad, while you are right in that we should focus in specific conducts, "wikilawyering" is an accurate term and it is accepted by the community, similar to how "trolling" is also accepted by the community as an acceptable accurate block summary. If the wikilawyers are offended by the term then they should stop engaging into it. --Enric Naval (talk) 23:33, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose. That is one lousy definition of wikilawyering, which refers to insisting upon the letter of the guidelines and policies, or interpretations of same, neglecting the purpose of those guidelines or policies. Wikilawyering isn't illegal or legal, or quasi-legal. It's not a "legal" thing at all, it's polemic, and "misinterpreting policy" is not wikilawyering, it's simply a mistake (unless it is deliberate, and founded on the letter of the policy instead of the intention). Wikilawyering abounds here on this page, with the spirit and purpose of policies being neglected in favor of insistence on following the letter of a policy, as interpreted by an editor and being used to condemn another, without regard for the purpose, which, in the end, is always the welfare of the project. --Abd (talk) 05:29, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- Not hard to see why this is needed here. Raul654 (talk) 16:48, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Agree, this practice needs to be stopped as it always causes disruptions. --CrohnieGal 11:27, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support, see Abd's response in the meatpuppetry section above -to my recollection, this is pervasive throughout his editing history. R. Baley (talk) 14:40, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support; although one person's appropriate is another's inappropriate, and one person's misinterpretation is another's interpretation. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 00:20, 28 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support, needs to be said. --Dirk Beetstra 08:49, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
Proposed findings of fact
Abd has engaged in meatpuppetry
1) Abd has engaged in meatpuppetry on behalf of banned users Jed Rothwell and Scibaby .
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- Preposterous. It's not even on the map with Scibaby, but Raul hasn't presented actual evidence with any clarity. That's typical for Raul. He's a checkuser and oversighter, after all, why would he need to bother with real evidence? He's too busy whacking the moles in the game he helped to create. As to JedRothwell, again, where is the evidence? JedRothwell has expertise in the field of Cold fusion and makes occasional comments that are worth considering. (He's not banned, but so what? There is a block against an old account of his, issued three years after he last used it, based on ... what? He may be considered a blocked editor, but it's all quite shaky. I've never argued that editors could not revert his edits on sight, I've only claimed that restoring them may sometimes be appropriate.) I will, in my evidence, I expect, cover the edits involved, but allegations of meat puppetry were not part of any discussion connected with WMC's ban, as far as I'm aware. (Enric Naval has long made this charge, over and over, and he might have mentioned it before AN/I where it would have, again, been quite peripheral. However, it has never been shown or decided by consensus that my rare restorations of content from blocked or banned editors was improper. I've never been warned over it, as far as I recall, by any neutral editor, nor have I been blocked for it, and, from Raul's history with other editors, it's quite clear that if he believed he could make the Scibaby charge stick, he'd have blocked me.) --Abd (talk) 17:26, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- "I've never been warned over it, as far as I recall, by any neutral editor" <-------------- but you have been warned multiple times by editors that you don't consider neutral, right? And what did you do about their warnings, may I ask? --Enric Naval (talk) 17:52, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Preposterous. It's not even on the map with Scibaby, but Raul hasn't presented actual evidence with any clarity. That's typical for Raul. He's a checkuser and oversighter, after all, why would he need to bother with real evidence? He's too busy whacking the moles in the game he helped to create. As to JedRothwell, again, where is the evidence? JedRothwell has expertise in the field of Cold fusion and makes occasional comments that are worth considering. (He's not banned, but so what? There is a block against an old account of his, issued three years after he last used it, based on ... what? He may be considered a blocked editor, but it's all quite shaky. I've never argued that editors could not revert his edits on sight, I've only claimed that restoring them may sometimes be appropriate.) I will, in my evidence, I expect, cover the edits involved, but allegations of meat puppetry were not part of any discussion connected with WMC's ban, as far as I'm aware. (Enric Naval has long made this charge, over and over, and he might have mentioned it before AN/I where it would have, again, been quite peripheral. However, it has never been shown or decided by consensus that my rare restorations of content from blocked or banned editors was improper. I've never been warned over it, as far as I recall, by any neutral editor, nor have I been blocked for it, and, from Raul's history with other editors, it's quite clear that if he believed he could make the Scibaby charge stick, he'd have blocked me.) --Abd (talk) 17:26, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- I considered them and either accepted them or rejected them or compromised. I usually explain my position quite thoroughly, that's one of the complaints against me, actually. Only when an editor repeats the same spurious charges, over and over, do I start deleting them without comment or asking the editor to refrain from posting to my Talk. What, pray tell, am I supposed to do? I consider the positions on meat puppetry expressed here to be preposterous, and, while it's certainly not a common action for me, I've reverted in enough edits from blocked or banned editors without consequence, most frequently with no comment at all, and if the reality were as is being claimed (it is wikilawyering to claim that reverting a banned editor's content back in is a violation of policy based on a literalist interpretation of "ban," and a misinterpretation of "may be reverted" to morph it into "must be excluded"), and given that I've been closely tracked since WP:PRX days, I'd have been blocked. Instead, there never has been a community discussion that involved me and confirmed this position. I claim that if the project is improved, any editorial action like that is allowed, and unless an action is clearly against policy, AGF and IAR establish a presumption that what is not prohibited is allowed, and an editor may follow their own lights on this, until consensus against it becomes clear or there is collision with the rights of other editors. With policies, that means broad consensus, not just a local handful of editors screaming for blood because they are attached to a particular outcome. Or it means an ArbComm decision. Can anyone point to a relevant discussion or decision, if the policy is as alleged?
- Once again, this proposed finding is not based on specific evidence provided, as far as I've seen, just general claims and charges. Verdict first, trial later. The alleged Scibaby meat puppetry only happened once, period, so I can assume the incident! It's this sequence: Original edit by alleged Scibaby sock], revert without comment by Raul654, my restoration with explanation, an explanation I've seen many times when I was so bold as to remove vandalism from an editor's talk page, and this wasn't vandalism. By the way, I've claimed in some places that I wasn't aware that this was a Scibaby sock. From my edit, I now see, this was obviously not true. Now that I see the discrepancy, I think I know what may have happened. My original simple revert was lost in a profusion of windows, and there may have been an access problem, Misplaced Pages was giving me error messages frequently, or I just closed the edit window accidentally. Later, when I realized that the edit hadn't been saved, I'd already looked around more, I knew more, and I redid the edit, and added the note about Scibaby. But I'm not sure. R.Baley -- recognize the name? -- reverted me. And I then commented, and more discussion ensued. GoRight eventually arrived and confirmed my impression that he'd want to respond to the edit. Now, tell me, was GoRight "meat puppeting" for Scibaby by restoring that edit? If so, and if this was done in the full view of a series of administrators who watch that page, and who had been claiming he'd be blocked for "proxying" for Scibaby, why wasn't he blocked or even warned? Discussion continued and Raul eventually made this enlightening comment. Raul watches GoRight talk and looks for edits that he suspects might be Scibaby, then checkusers the editor. Cool, eh? Wouldn't you like a tool like that? To use whenever you like? To check IP for a user who has a POV that is banned? Oops! We don't ban POVs, do we? I mean a user who has a POV like that of a banned user. If someone has been banned for what Raul thinks is your POV, checkuser restrictions, where disruptive editing is required before checkuser may be performed, apparently mean nothing. --Abd (talk) 02:22, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- @both Abd and GoRight. I expected Abd to stop and think "Hey, if so many editors are warning me about doing a certain thing, then maybe I am wrong about that thing?", and then stop doing that thing. IMHO, this is the root problem here. --Enric Naval (talk) 16:21, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support in case it wasn't clear. Abd directly stated that he thought that Jed was an expert and that we should have Jed's opinions in the talk page. And that we were missing important opinions and information due to Jed not being present in the talk page. I'm not going to search diffs because they are buried in the middle of seas of verbiage, but his comments in the case here should be enough. --Enric Naval (talk) 23:30, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment I have not argued as Enric Naval claims. That's his impression. I do believe what he says, we have lost something important because of the block of Rothwell, though really the problem was long-term incivility and abuse from JzG, going way back, that's why Rothwell became uncivil (though he's normally quite gruff and blunt), but this has nothing to do with the very few (one or two?) restored edits, which were about those edits only. --Abd (talk) 05:49, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment re Crohnie. This is a great example of how the cabal works. There is no evidence presented on the Evidence page showing any pattern of restoring edits of a banned user, much less "meat puppetry." None. Raul's evidence essentially shows that I disagreed with him, not that I did anything reprehensible. For Raul, that's enough! Disagreement with Raul is Not Allowed. In the Scibaby sock revert Raul654 says it's a sock, do we believe him? I don't know, in fact. I do know that there is a whiff of disregard of checkuser policy in this case, Raul has acknowledged watching GoRight's talk page for posts that might be Scibaby, so he can checkuser and block, that's a matter of concern. I should diff this , there was one edit restored to a user talk page. The user subsequently restored that edit himself so that he could respond, and nobody has claimed that he didn't have the right to do that. I was merely anticipating it, and correctly. Crohnie acknowledges no familiarity with Rothwell, and doesn't know the history, and hasn't seen evidence, but merely unsubstantiated claims by cabal members, and so she supports this finding? That's reprehensible, in fact. We should base findings of fact on evidence, not on mere claims, and support of a finding should be testimony that the editor has seen evidence personally. Otherwise it's all just a popularity contest. Diffs showing a pattern? Showing that the restorations were contrary to policy? The cabal doesn't need that, because it believes that it is the community, its opinion is consensus. Crohnie has fallen in with the wrong crowd, unfortunately. It's time that ArbComm notice the problem, as a minimum.--Abd (talk) 05:49, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- Follows from above. Raul654 (talk) 16:38, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. Spartaz 16:46, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- He is proud of it. Mathsci (talk) 22:13, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject.
Abd cannot be a meat puppet of Jed Rothwell because Jed Rothwell is not banned.Abd cannot be a meat puppet of "banned user" Jed Rothwell because Jed Rothwell is not banned. No direct community discussion of banning of Rothwell has ever been held, nor has a clear community consensus in support of a ban ever been demonstrated. Reverting the comment on my talk page was a courtesy to me, not a demonstration of support for Scibaby. --GoRight (talk) 23:01, 18 July 2009 (UTC)- It's possible to be a meat puppet for anyone; if you edit on their behalf, it qualifies. If person X asked me to !vote on an AfD a certain way, and did so without question or independent review, I'd be their meatpuppet. I'm not saying this has been done, necessarily, just that your statement above is inaccurate. Hersfold 23:35, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- In general you are correct. I have clarified my meaning above. You do point to a key point, that such editing had to be at the direction of ther other user (i.e. "If person X asked me to ...") in order to be a meat puppet of that user, correct? Where is the evidence that Abd acted at the direction of either Jed Rothwell or Scibaby?
- It's possible to be a meat puppet for anyone; if you edit on their behalf, it qualifies. If person X asked me to !vote on an AfD a certain way, and did so without question or independent review, I'd be their meatpuppet. I'm not saying this has been done, necessarily, just that your statement above is inaccurate. Hersfold 23:35, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. I think a couple of editors should read WP:MEAT again if they haven't already the User:Hersfold explains the problem pretty well. Also, an editor can be banned by an administrator and continue to be banned as long as there is no one available to unban. Please stop saying the editor isn't banned when he obviously is. For disclosure, I do not know the editor Jed Rothwell.--CrohnieGal 11:33, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Response to Abd. You have no idea what I have looked into since this case has started. What difs I have looked at or how I came to my conclusions. With what you have been pounding me with, your goal is to try to get my perfect record here at this project, dirty! On my talk page you warned me that I had nothing to worry about as long as I didn't become uncivil here at arbcom. Are you looking for those buttons to push? You almost had me but instead I am asking for someone to make Abd assume good faith and follow no personal attacks which is what the comments addressed to me are, assumptions of bad faith, that I just follow the crowd. He can't know what I've read or what I haven't, please refactored or remove. I say that this cabal stuff has gone far enough, it is a personal attack above. If you don't want editors to make comments about you and Rothwell then I suggest you stop posting that you are restoring his posts and talking to him via email. You have said it many times, even in this arbcom case, and you've said you'ld do it again. This is a violations of WP:MEAT with a banned user. You said it, so don't blame me for agreeing that you have done it and would continue to with others. You set up a whole page for banned editors to share with you that got deleted because of policies, let's be real. --CrohnieGal 14:04, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
- "Also, an editor can be
bannedindefinitely blocked by an administrator andcontinue to be bannedas long as there is no one available tounbanunblock, that block may be considered to be a ban." - That is a more accurate description of what WP:Banning policy actually states. So the question becomes, how do you know that there is no administrator available to unblock Jed Rothwell? Without such a determination Rothwell is more accurately described as indefinitely blocked than banned. --GoRight (talk) 21:05, 19 July 2009 (UTC)- Well until an adminstrator comes along and unblocks them they are banned, we don't need to poll all 1800 or however many there are these days. And to answer your earlier is obvious Abd was meatpuppeting because they knowingly restored the edits of a banned user. Spartaz 06:22, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- "Well until an administrator comes along and unblocks them they are
bannedindefinitely blocked." - Sorry but this statement disagrees with WP:Banning policy as it is currently written. The indefinite block only becomes a ban after we know, for a fact, that there IS no administrator willing to unblock. The policy is currently mute on what process is to be used to actually determine that no administrator is willing to unblock. If you find that situation unacceptable, well help find a consensus on how to address it in the policy. --GoRight (talk) 06:55, 20 July 2009 (UTC)- Sorry but this statement disagrees with WP:Banning policy as it is currently written - Gee, I wonder why that is? Raul654 (talk) 05:28, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I can only assume that you somehow missed this, which restored the text of the policy to its state at the time of the events being discussed here and was performed well in advance of my comment here. You wouldn't be trying to give people any false impressions, would you? Regardless, I stand by my comment under either wording. --GoRight (talk) 17:50, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I have to indicate that Sarah had also changed the text to that state. However she reverted herself because she couldn't deal with the current page (which was filled with lenghty rantings and it was ridiculous for anoyone from outside to come in and the discussion and that others thought like her), and that she had to go to bed and she hadn't time to start a new section to discuss it. So WMC wasn't alone in his opposition to that change. Also notice how experienced admins have later explained why the change is not good. --Enric Naval (talk) 18:12, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- I can only assume that you somehow missed this, which restored the text of the policy to its state at the time of the events being discussed here and was performed well in advance of my comment here. You wouldn't be trying to give people any false impressions, would you? Regardless, I stand by my comment under either wording. --GoRight (talk) 17:50, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Sorry but this statement disagrees with WP:Banning policy as it is currently written - Gee, I wonder why that is? Raul654 (talk) 05:28, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- "Well until an administrator comes along and unblocks them they are
- Well until an adminstrator comes along and unblocks them they are banned, we don't need to poll all 1800 or however many there are these days. And to answer your earlier is obvious Abd was meatpuppeting because they knowingly restored the edits of a banned user. Spartaz 06:22, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- "Also, an editor can be
- Response to Enric Above "And what did you do about their warnings, may I ask?" - What would you have him do, Enric, simply give up and let the majority POV pushers have their way even though his actions do not violate any policy? Do you not think that there is any benefit from requiring such warnings to come for neutral parties? Given your apparent alignment with the individuals in question I guess I can understand why you might take this position. --GoRight (talk) 00:50, 21 July 2009 (UTC)
- Response to Enric Above "I expected Abd to stop and think "Hey, if so many editors are warning me about doing a certain thing, then maybe I am wrong about that thing?", and then stop doing that thing." - And why, exactly, should he do that if he believes that he is right? Must everyone bow before the opinion of Enric and his friends lest Enric decide that they should be summarily banned and
rabidlyvehemently pursued for the egregious offense of having a differing opinion along with being willing to express it? It is no secret that you have becomeobsessed withhighly focused on having first Rothwell, then Abd, and recently myself all banned and have used every method you could devise to effect that purpose. Note that none of your targets has called for your banning. Hmmm, says I, perhaps you should take your own advice to stop and think about that and why it might be. --GoRight (talk) 22:52, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- Agree I think my first interactions with Abd, before I knew anything else about him, was warning him about this and removing Jed's comments and Abd's restorations from the Cold fusion talk page. Clear proxy editing and meatpuppetry and an ongoing problem, even during this case. Verbal chat 15:25, 24 July 2009 (UTC)
- Oppose: I find it difficult to imagine Abd editing at the direction of anyone. He places community consensus and concern for the project first, and always seems to have an explanation of the reasons for his actions. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 13:59, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject My rationale is explained farther down, in the second of two paragraphs (different locations) that start with "Question:" V (talk) 13:14, 29 July 2009 (UTC)
Abd's wikilawyering
2) Abd frequently proffers his own interpretations of policy which are at odds with what policy actually says. He uses these false claims about policy to justify his own inappropriate behavior. This is wikilawyering.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- Very accurate. In my evidence you can find the comments of many editors telling him over many months that he doesn't understand or misunderstands policy, but at this point in time he still thinks that he has the correct interpretation. --Enric Naval (talk) 08:47, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Opposed. Let me translate Raul's proposal. "what policy actually says" is not what policy actually says, it's what Raul believes it means. This proposal is internally contradictory, not uncommon with Raul's bullying bulls or fatwas. "Wikilawyering" doesn't refer to attempts to state the substance or meaning of policy, but to relying upon the actual wording of the policy in contrast to the substance. Thus, if I were "wikilawyering," I would not be stating what is at odds with what the policy "actually says," I would be doing the opposite: I'd be doing what he asserts in the second part: making a false claim about the real policy, i.e., the "intent of the law," based on accidental meanings of the text, in order to justify my own behavior (or that of others.) Occasionally, I consider that the wording of a policy does not reflect the intention. Further, I may sometimes err in my understanding of actual practice; after all, I've only been seriously editing this project for less than two effing years. I'm quick, but not that quick. But I do understand the basic principles on which this project was founded, why it worked to the extent it has, and why it has fallen short of the original ideals, in some respects, and I do express this native and instinctive understanding, which, to those who are rule-bound, can be puzzling. And to those who want everyone else to follow rules, with IAR applying only to them, infuriating. Underneath this case is a phenomenon I will need to address, as will ArbComm. My very presence can sometimes be disruptive, this did not begin here. However, I will say this: I've been ejected before for "disruption," where those with the power made that decision, and the results have not been good for the organizations, not necessarily because I was crucial, though sometimes I was, but because a society which rejects "gadflies," or those who mention the nudity of the emperor, has become rigid and unable to adapt to changing circumstances. For good social reasons, though, mentioning the nudity of the emperor needs to be properly confined and contained. It is not a simple problem.
- I will note one fact: it seems that whenever Jimbo makes a bold decision, the community descends into an uproar. His activity is disruptive. For better or for worse? My position is that we need this kind of disruption, but we should take measures to contain it, and what it will require is nondisruptive means of rapid and efficient development of deep consensus, and this is something that is vigorously opposed by those who might lose some power were it to happen, or, at least, that is what they fear. --Abd (talk) 17:56, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Comment by others:
- An extremely common Abd behavior. Raul654 (talk) 16:57, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Seems accurate. Mathsci (talk) 22:13, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject. Abd's statements regarding policy are always backed by the clear text and spirit of the policy in question. --GoRight (talk) 23:02, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
- Absolutely, almost a textbook case. Spartaz 08:48, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
- Agree Sadly I have to agree to this. I have been talking a lot to editors about this case, including Abd, and I find a lot of wikilawyering going on to justify things. --CrohnieGal 12:02, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Endorse. Also note the salient point from Abd's long response above, "I've been ejected before for 'disruption,' . . ." -apparently from multiple "organizations". Food for thought, R. Baley (talk) 22:42, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
- Support. No way around it. --Stephan Schulz (talk) 15:59, 22 July 2009 (UTC)
- Agree All too obvious. Common behaviour from Abd, and a huge problem for those attempting to work on the same articles. Verbal chat 15:22, 24 July 2009 (UTC)
- Endorse Orderinchaos 16:15, 25 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject. I don't remember seeing any examples of such. We all find ourselves having to interpret and apply policy at times; if there is disagreement about how to apply it in particular situations, try WP:DR. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 00:20, 28 July 2009 (UTC)
- I don't remember seeing any examples of such. - You must not be looking very hard. if there is disagreement about how to apply it in particular situations, try WP:DR - you do realize that arbitration workshops -- including this page -- are part of the dispute resolution process, right? Raul654 (talk) 16:29, 29 July 2009 (UTC)
- We've discussed this here. ☺Coppertwig (talk) 21:16, 1 August 2009 (UTC)
- Support Abd has done this on many occasions, and I did remark about this to Abd when Abd disagreed with a certain action, where the action may have been harsh, but well within policy/guideline (outside of the Cold Fusion case). --Dirk Beetstra 08:53, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
- Reject - Per Coppertwig. --GoRight (talk) 03:26, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
Abd/GoRight disruption of dispute resolution proceedings
GoRight and Abd have on multiple occasions attempted to derail dispute resolution proceedings against the other.
- Comment by Arbitrators:
- Comment by parties:
- This isn't quite the phrasing I'd choose, but it comes close to expressing the basic problem. For whatever reason, GR has chosen to pile in on Abd's side, and is completely ignoring Abd's many flaws. So, support William M. Connolley (talk) 22:55, 23 July 2009 (UTC)
- Yeah. GoRight has made every effort to disturb attempts to get Abd banned. I am still unclear on why. --Enric Naval (talk) 23:27, 26 July 2009 (UTC)
- Raul cites his own evidence, which is better than some others have done. Except that this compilation of evidence, like that when I first came across Raul654, completely impeaches him, he's unreliable, he makes statements, central to his argument, that are just plain false, and he should know better, he's either seriously reckless or worse. See my response at User:Abd/Response to Raul654, which quotes his full evidence section. In short, his evidence sucks. Read it and weep, for Raul654 is about as highly privileged an editor as exists, and that he's been allowed to get away with this for so long is a tragedy. "Attempted to derail dispute resolution proceedings?" I attracted negative cabal attention when I was completely uninvolved, and I read RfC/GoRight and was completely horrified at what was being done, so I compiled evidence, neutral evidence, evidence that was never impeached, and that was, on the contrary, commended by the uninvolved editors, including two who are now sitting arbitrators, and entirely opposed by cabal editors. This polarization is typical of the cabal, and you can see it here in this RfAr. --Abd (talk)
extended comment by Abd | |||||||||||||
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At that point, I was looking at those who had edit warred with GoRight and when they supported the RfC written, like the bad evidence section cited, by Raul654, and certified, as the above is supported, by WMC. WMC doesn't compile evidence, he's too much of a block 'em, I don't need no stinkin' evidence or reason, kind of administrator. Sure, GoRight was grateful. Sure, he's going to speak up when he sees me being deceptively attacked. But it's not, unlike the cabal, because of shared POV, I think our POV on his major interest, Global warming, is opposing. He has no POV, as far as I'm aware, about Cold fusion. No, it's because I'm standing up for basic wiki principles and policies, as enunciated by ArbComm and as defied by the cabal, openly in many cases. These are people who supported ScienceApologist, not only in his good work, and there was much of that, but in his defiance of policies, and they complained about sanctions against him and considered it a shame, that ArbComm had gone down the tubes. I trust ArbComm, and they don't. If ArbComm decides that I'm disruptive, I'm out of here, because, like Socrates, I believe in consensus, and ArbComm is the closest device we have for estimating large-scale consensus. My work is to improve that, that's why I proposed delegable proxy, it's a possible way to deal with the participation bias problems that make the cabal as disruptive as it is, and the same structures used as the related Asset voting could be used to create a content review body that would represent true, broad, editorial consensus. Without contested elections. No losers. (No, delegable proxy isn't vulnerable to manipulation by sock puppets, the opposite, but that will take some explaining, and it won't be here). And all this is highly threatening to the cabal, because they can maintain their agenda by preventing such large-scale consensus from forming. Fortunately, they are not seriously organized, or it might be hopeless. --Abd (talk) 06:33, 30 July 2009 (UTC) |}
Abd has driven away subject matter expertsAbd has actively driven away subject matter experts from cold fusion articles, at least one of whom has cited Abd by name as the reason he quit.
Abd's personal attacksAbd has made numerous personal attacks against other editors, both on-wiki and off-wiki
Abd ignores warningsAbd has received a huge number of warnings from a multitude of other users about his conduct, but has persisted in his disruptive behavior.
Proposed remediesNote: All remedies that refer to a period of time, for example to a ban of X months or a revert parole of Y months, are to run concurrently unless otherwise stated. Abd banned1) Abd is banned from Misplaced Pages.
GoRight prohibited from intervening in dispute resolution proceedings to which he is not a party2) GoRight is prohibited from intervening in any dispute resolution proceeding (including but not limited to noticeboard threads, RFCs, or arbcom proceedings) in which he is not named as an involved party. GoRight is prohibited from requesting to be added as a party to such proceedings.
Proposed enforcementEnforcement of GoRight prohibition on participation in dispute resolution processes other than his own1) If GoRight participates in a dispute resolution proceeding to which he is not a party (to be interpreted broadly), or if he should request to be added as a party to one, any uninvolved administrator may summarily remove his comments and block him for any period of time.
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Proposals by User:William M. ConnolleyProposed principlesWP:BURO1) WP:BURO is reaffirmed: Misplaced Pages is not governed by statute: it is not a moot court, and rules are not the purpose of the community. Instruction creep should be avoided. Misplaced Pages's policies and guidelines are descriptive, not prescriptive. Do not follow an overly strict interpretation of the letter of policy to violate the principles of the policy. If the rules prevent you from improving the encyclopedia, ignore them.
Misplaced Pages is an encyclopaedia not a discussion forum2) The purpose of wikipedia is to build an encyclopaedia. It is not a discussion forum. Editors are expected to edit wiki with the primary intention of improving the encyclopaedia
WP:TINC3) There really is no cabal. If a large group of well-respected editors all disagree with you, then this is generally because you are wrong.
Proposed findings of factAbd in violation of previous arbcomm remedies1) In Misplaced Pages:Requests for arbitration/Abd and JzG, Abd was advised to heed good-faith feedback when handling disputes, to incorporate that feedback, and to clearly and succinctly document previous and current attempts at resolution of the dispute before escalating to the next stage of dispute resolution. He has failed to follow that advice.
State of the Cold Fusion article2) Before WMC stepped in to page-ban A and H, the Cold Fusion page had degenerated to a state of semi-permanent protection and the talk page had become an unintelligible morass of competing polls and walls of text. Afterwards, protection was removed and normal editing resumed; the talk page became a peaceful venue for useful discussion.
Proposals by User:Stephan SchulzProposed principlesExpert opinion is essential1) Many topics covered on Misplaced Pages are so complex that expert knowledge is necessary to properly understand and contextualize them.
Consensus is not achieved by default(ing)2) Meaningful consensus is only achieved by informed editors agreeing on a question, or at least agreeing to disagree. It is not achieved by wearing people out with sheer mass of text, wikilawyering, and nagging. So-called "consensus" that is only achieved by driving off or wearing out all opposing editors has no value. Discussion styles that have this effect are disruptive and wasteful.
No personal attacks3) Comparing other editors with Stalin violates WP:NPA and is unacceptable.
Proposed findings of factNot enough experts1) Misplaced Pages has difficulties in attracting and retaining experts. Especially for topics that are also subject to "balanced" coverage in the popular press, experts have a hard time defending real NPOV (reflecting the considered opinions of experts on a topic) against popular misconceptions. Randy in Boise seems to be able to tie up valuable contributor time forever.
Proposals by User:GoRightProposed principles
Pursuant to this comment I have considered each of my proposals below. To the limited extent that the partial reversion of a few of Jed Rothwell's comments is pertinent to this case, I believe that all of these proposals are applicable, in scope, and I would ask that they be given serious consideration. I believe that adopting them would have benefits which reach far beyond this one case given the stated intentions of certain administrators which are likely to cause additional disruption across the project unless these points are made clear. The policy was written so as to specifically recognize that in cases were there is benefit to the project for doing so, the content of even banned users may be reverted so long as the editor performing the revert has verified its content, has their own reasons for considering it beneficial to the project, and is willing to accept responsibility for the content under their own name. Restoration of Constructive Content1) The simple act of restoring content, either by revert or refactoring, which is pertinent to the advancement of the project and otherwise within policy shall NOT be construed as proxying or meat puppetry regardless of the origins of that content or the namespace in which the restoration occurred. Any user who performs such a restoration takes full personal responsibility for the content actually restored.
Meat Puppetry Inherently Requires the Direction of a Puppet Master2) Meat puppetry inherently involves having the puppet act at the direction of a puppet master. To successfully demonstrate that an editor is acting as a meat puppet requires that reasonable evidence be presented to demonstrate that the accused is explicitly acting at the direction of another editor.
Portions of the existing WP:BAN policy are acknowledged and reaffirmed.3) The following portions of the now existing WP:BAN policy are hereby
NOTE: The highlighting above only illustrates the points which are being
Expert opinion from all viewpoints of a topic is essential4) Many topics covered on Misplaced Pages are so complex that expert knowledge is necessary to properly understand and contextualize them. This concept extends to all of the various significant published viewpoints within a topic, and articles should provide background on who believes what, and why, and on which points of view are more popular.
Template5) {text of Proposed principle}
Proposed findings of factTemplate1) {text of proposed finding of fact}
Template2) {text of proposed finding of fact}
Proposed remediesNote: All remedies that refer to a period of time, for example to a ban of X months or a revert parole of Y months, are to run concurrently unless otherwise stated. Proposal by User:Objectivist1) Sources for the Cold Fusion article should explicitly follow the WP:Verify guidelines and not be required to follow the WP:RS guidelines, until such time (if ever) that the subject matter becomes "mainstream science".
Template2) {text of proposed remedy}
Proposed enforcementTemplate1) {text of proposed enforcement}
Template2) {text of proposed enforcement}
Proposals by User:BilbyProposed principlesPage protection
1) Because Misplaced Pages is "the encyclopedia that everyone can edit," the vast majority of articles and other pages can be freely edited by anyone (except for blocked or banned users). While it may be necessary for an administrator to protect a page,
Reverting during protection2) Uninvolved administrators may choose to revert a page that has been protected due to an edit war back to a stable version that predates the dispute. Doing so should not be seen as indicating the administrator's approval of that version.
Proposals by User:Enric NavalProposed principlesAdministrators blocks can be brought up for review by any editor1) Any editor can bring an administrator block up for review in the relevant noticeboard if he sees a problem with it. Idem for bans from pages. The community can, among other things, lift the block/ban, endorse it or extend it in time and/or scope.
Proposed findings of factThe community found no problem with WMC's blocks when they were brought up for review1) Some blocks made by WMC were found worrysome by some editors, and those editors brought the blocks to the community for review. The community found no problem with them.
Proposals by User:CoppertwigProposed principlesBans should be clear1) In order to avoid contributing to long-term disruption, administrators should strive to avoid creating situations where it's unclear whether an editor is banned or not, and bans should be carried out with a reasonable effort to give the banned editor the impression that they have been treated fairly, properly, civilly and respectfully. This applies to all types of bans: page-bans, topic-bans, project-bans etc.
Respected editors need to behave accordingly2) Administrators, long-time editors and editors who have gained the respect of others need to avoid behaving in ways that set a bad example or bring the project into disrepute. One reason is that when a respected editor does something it tends to give others the impression that it's OK. Also, establshed editors tend to be seen as representing the project and might damage its reputation, particularly in the eyes of victims of such behaviour, who might tell their friends etc.
Edit summaries when editing protected pages3) Providing an informative edit summary with a rationale is particularly important when editing protected pages and can help reduce ensuing confusion and disruption.
Proposed findings of factTemplate1) {text of proposed finding of fact}
Proposed remediesNote: All remedies that refer to a period of time, for example to a ban of X months or a revert parole of Y months, are to run concurrently unless otherwise stated. A proxy for Abd1) An individual will be found to interpret community consensus about Abd's behaviour. Whenever anyone gives Abd a warning or a request, the interpreter's responsibility will be to inform Abd whether complying with it is expected.
Proposals by User:ZProposed principlesTemplate1) {text of Proposed principle}
Template2) {text of Proposed principle}
Proposed findings of factTemplate1) {text of proposed finding of fact}
Template2) {text of proposed finding of fact}
Proposed remediesNote: All remedies that refer to a period of time, for example to a ban of X months or a revert parole of Y months, are to run concurrently unless otherwise stated. Template1) {text of proposed remedy}
Template2) {text of proposed remedy}
Proposed enforcementTemplate1) {text of proposed enforcement}
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Analysis of evidencePlace here items of evidence (with diffs) and detailed analysis Abd's Evidence for consensusIn his present surface-level evidence section Abd states that WMC edited a protected page, "ignoring an expressed consensus." The link to diffs yields a similar claim, "WMC edited Cold fusion while under protection, contrary to full consensus, as shown in and , for the version of May 31." The diffs given to support this "full consensus" link to two different polls, each offering two different versions of the page for editors to vote on. The first link (as you can check if you follow the diffs above) takes you to this poll which gives voters a choice between two versions, the version of 2:54 June 1, 2009, which has two supporters, Abd (10 points) and Krelikraver (10 points), and the version of 3:51 June 1 which was given 0 points by the same two editors, Abd and Krelikraver. There are no other votes for or against either of these two versions. Below this poll is a section labeled "Deprecated proposals, withdrawn by Abd" which lists two versions, the version of 19:01 May 21 which Abd has given 6 points, and the version of 16:51 May 31 which Abd has given 8 points. There are no other votes for or against either of these deprecated and withdrawn versions in this section. The second link leads to this poll which gives voters a choice between two different versions, which you'll notice are the same two listed under "Deprecated proposals, withdrawn by Abd" in the poll above, the version of 19:01 May 21 which was rated "Acceptable" by Hippocrite and Verbal, and the version of 16:51 May 31 also rated "Acceptable" by Hippocrite and Verbal. There are no other votes for or against either of these two versions, or any other versions, in this poll. Summarizing the data from these two polls, cited in the diffs given by Abd to show that there was a "full consensus" for the May 31 version: two versions, May 21 and May 31, were each supported by three people (the same three people): Verbal, Hippocrite and Abd, V & H in one poll and Abd in the other, although both of these "consensus" versions were marked "deprecated" and "withdrawn" by Abd in his poll. Sixteen people edited the talk page during the two days of the poll wars; 3/4 of them did not vote in either poll. To assert that these three people represent a "full consensus" that WMC should have honored when reverting the page is not reasonable, even if we ignore the fact that the three people supported two different versions. True, Abd gave the May 31 version two more points than the May 21 version, but we can't count the points because we don't know how many points Hippocrite and Verbal might have assigned the two versions, had Hippocrite chosen to ask people to vote on a point system rather than to designate whether the version was "Acceptable" or "Not Acceptable." If anyone cares, the version that I voted for and the version that Abd moved my vote to are not listed in either of these diffs. At any rate, the many objections to the way the polling was conducted and the furor that surrounded the polling (illustrated with a few examples in my evidence section)) belie the claim that consensus existed on the page at the time of WMC's edit, which is being portrayed as an edit in defiance of consensus. There was no consensus. Woonpton (talk) 08:38, 28 July 2009 (UTC)
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General discussion
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