Cannabis Ruderalis

A request for arbitration is the last step of dispute resolution for conduct disputes on Wikipedia. The Arbitration Committee considers requests to open new cases and review previous decisions. The entire process is governed by the arbitration policy. For information about requesting arbitration, and how cases are accepted and dealt with, please see guide to arbitration.

To request enforcement of previous Arbitration decisions or discretionary sanctions, please do not open a new Arbitration case. Instead, please submit your request to /Requests/Enforcement.

This page transcludes from /Case, /Clarification and Amendment, /Motions, and /Enforcement.

Please make your request in the appropriate section:

Current requests

Ulster Defence Regiment

Initiated by GDD1000 (talk) at 19:36, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request`
Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Statement by GDD1000

I have been trying to edit the article as I feel that it contained a bias towards collusion in the regiment without other information which reflected the true status of a British Army unit and its successes and honour. I feel that other editors who have a conflict of interest are attempting to prevent the inclusion of information which shows the regiment in a positive light. Over three weeks of negotiation have taken place with little progress and now the deletion of edits by the third party editor. In my opinion Wikipedia guidelines and policy are being given spuriously as reasons for the removal of information and that proper consideration is not being given with regards to good faith, particularly as I am a recent member with little experience. I am ceasing editing now until a decision can be made if you accept my request for arbitration.

Statement by {Party 2}

Statement by Angus McLellan

The locus of the dispute appears to fall within the scope of Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/The Troubles and can be addressed at Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Arbitration enforcement. I do not prejudge the matter, with which I am not yet familiar, but only wish to note that no further arbitration committee action is necessary. Angus McLellan (Talk) 21:30, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

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  • Request reformatted, notification confirmation diffs added. Anthøny 18:16, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (0/3/0/0)

  • Decline. As stated above, this article falls squarely within The Troubles, which allows administrators to use discretionary sanctions against disruption. Also, the dispute resolution at present appears to be confined to the article talk page; if this does not resolve disputes, then the opinions of more editors can be sought through a request for comments or on the reliable sources noticeboard etc. Sam Blacketer (talk) 08:35, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Decline. Sam's right. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 15:08, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Reject per Sam. FloNight♥♥♥ 17:21, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

User:SaltyBoatr

Initiated by Yaf (talk) at 20:21, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request
Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Two mediations, attempting to resolve this growing dispute, have ended unsuccessfully, with no resolution:

Statement by Yaf

This scope of the dispute involves a continuing and growing issue arising with editing all gun-related political articles on Wikipedia. The primary articles affected include:

The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution article has been locked indefinitely as of 18:35, 4 March 2008. Other articles (mentioned above) have likewise been repeatedly locked and re-locked, primarily though one editor's gaming of the system, typically instigating an edit war with the community, then requesting immediate protection of the article, all while not actually contributing much in the way of actual content, preferring instead to discuss minutiae on the talk page continuously or to mediate through asking continuous questions and continuously moving the goal posts regarding what the perceived issue is.

Examples of SaltyBoatr “gaming the system”:

Second Amendment to the United States Constititution:
Right to bear arms:
Gun politics in the United States:

What is interesting about this last series of edits is that SaltyBoatr requested page protection before even starting his edits! This definitely smacks of “gaming the system”, to get his edits in before the article is locked.

The end result of this editor's recurring practice, of either starting an edit war, and requesting page protection or requesting page protection and then editing fast and furious, is ultimately the cessation of the editing of articles to achieve balance, primarily through keeping affected articles perpetually locked from editing, or locked down in an unbalanced version per Wikipedia policy until disputes are resolved, which, with this editor, almost never occurs.

The core of the dispute revolves around how to edit articles on Wikipedia productively in the face of one editor who is gaming the system, while exhibiting WP:TEND, WP:OWN, WP:WIKILAWYERING, and similar issues. The dispute over content is less of an issue, especially when editors work productively as a community, to achieve balance. Yet, with this editor, mediations or discussions rarely reach resolution. The key issue revolves around SaltyBoatr's approach to editing all gun-related political articles on Wikipedia.

Yaf (talk) 20:21, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Anastrophe

Statement by scot

Statement by LWF

Statement by SaltyBoatr

Statement by SMP0328.

In regards to the Second Amendment article, SaltyBoatr has acted as if he owns the article. He continues to dictate how, and when, the article is to be edited. He is adversarial and does not appear to be seeking consensus. In order to prevent edits that he disapproves, SaltyBoatr initiates edit wars and then gets the article placed under full protection. This behavior should not be tolerated or permitted. In regards to the Second Amendment article, I concur with Yaf's comments; I have not edited, or discussed, any of the other articles mentioned by Yaf. SMP0328. (talk) 03:18, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

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Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (0/0/0/1)

  • Waiting for more comments, but at first look requesting arbitration now seems premature. Likely should try an user conduct RFC to see if that helps resolve the issue. FloNight♥♥♥ 17:27, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

List of projects supported by George Soros

Initiated by Kallahan (talk) at 02:17, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request

Notifying now. -- Kallahan (talk) 02:17, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Statement by Kallahan

User:FCYTravis has threatened to block me (User_talk:Kallahan#Discover_the_Networks) because I've reverted his wholesale and, now, indiscriminate deletions of information, in some cases verified independently from the source he/she objects to. User went after me personally without putting the page into any sort of temporary edit moratorium to mull the issue. This is unbecoming of an admin, if this is in fact what FCYTravis is, and I would appreciate it if he/she would 1.) return the page to what it was but, if he/she chooses, highlight the objectionable parts by signaling it with [citation needed] rather than deleting it because he/she feels like it, and 2.) treat future Wikipedians with whom he/she has a dispute with more respect than he's treated me. --Kallahan (talk) 02:17, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

With regard to FCYTravis's statement that he removed only single-sourced groups, I would only recommend admins compare what's been removed and whether properly cited sources were taken out in the user's haste, or even the citations themselves... cited to Soros's website. Moreover, the source, if not adequate, is disputable, and the entries cited to it would be better served with [citation needed], and if no other "better" cites found after a reasonable period, removed. That's not what happened here. --Kallahan (talk) 02:32, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Travis just reverted the page to one kinder to his current situation. Please refer to the edit history to see what was willfully done and then, to compel my compliance, followed up with a threat of a ban. --Kallahan (talk) 02:41, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:FCYTravis

This is massively premature, given that no other stages of dispute resolution have been attempted. I am engaged in removing references to a patently unreliable source - David Horowitz's polemic right-wing conspiracy Web site, "Discover the Networks." Material sourced solely to that Web site is prima facie suspect, and may be simply removed. We do not "[citation needed]" tag contentious material sourced only to radical right-wing (or radical left-wing) Web sites - we remove it. That the above user does not understand that is regrettable, and I have attempted to explain it. The "block" warning is simply that - a warning that reverting to unreliable sources can lead to a block. FCYTravis (talk) 02:25, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

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Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (0/6/0/0)


User:Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) and footnote quotes

Initiated by RedSpruce (talk) at 10:41, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request
Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Statement by Norton

The quote function is a part of the all the citation templates. Quoting the actual text in the article aids the researcher and the fact checker, thats why the snippet view of Google is so popular, you can see the text in situ. If they appear to clutter the article in larger articles, we can always write a few lines of code that can suppress them from displaying, but still allow them to be seen in editing, or have the reader choose in preferences if they want them displayed or not. It allows many useful things for both the casual reader and for the serious researcher:

  • 1) Allows for reconnection of broken links to a newspaper article. For example: if the title is: "Scientist killed", and the quote is "Today, John Bacon, a New Jersey scientist was killed when his car overturned". A Google search for the title may not find the article, its too general. Using the text string from the quote will find it. Broken links that can't be reconnected are usually deleted. Even if an external link for the citation is broken, and no other version of the newspaper article appears online, a fully-quoted reference can stand on its own.
  • 2) It provides the actual information for fact checking the citation. It makes it easy to double check references that are already in place. You no longer have to have the attitude "trust me" it is in the book, or it is in the article. The actual in situ quote supporting the citation is displayed with the actual wording by the original author. The trend should be to make it easy to fact check an article, not harder. You shouldn't have to get a book from the library or purchase an article to find out the exact wording used by an author to see if it actually supports the text in the Wikipedia article.
  • 3) It is not a copyright violation, the source is attributed, and the quote is usually a single sentence, well within the confines of "fair use". In the Tom Wolfe example the article is 4,254 words and my quote uses 43 of them, or 1%.
  • 4) Redspruce himself quotes text in some of his notes and references. See below where he writes "On the other hand, author Tom Wicker refers to Schine as 'Cohn's boyfriend'". It takes up a little less space, because he only encloses two words from the text in the quote, but the reader, including me, is still left to wonder what preceded 'Cohn's boyfriend'. "[He had wild animal sex all day and night as] Cohn's boyfriend" is very different than "[He was derided by his enemies as] Cohn's boyfriend". Which is it, if any? I looked up the ones I quoted because I wanted to see the exact wording. Others shouldn't have to repeat the effort to find out the exact, non-truncated, single-sentence quote.
  • 5) It doesn't add to clutter, any more than inline citations do already. No one forces a reader to scroll down ato the reference section in an article, any more than one is forced to read the endnotes in a book. In books they can be between 25-50% of a book's pages. Just a few years ago no citations were required in Wikipedia articles.
  • Here is a good example of using quotes in citations and how they clear up what is in the article, and how it aids the researcher:

Schine and Cohn were rumored to have a sexual relationship, although there has never been any proof of this. More recently, some historians have concluded it was a friendship and that Schine was heterosexual.[1] [2]

Well, what exactly do people have to say about whether Schine was gay or not, how strongly did they word it, and what words did they use. For instance the Tom Wolfe article up to a month ago required a paid subscription to the New York Times, but now is a free link, but you still can't just do a control-f and search for "gay" or "homosexual" because Wolfe doesn't use any of those words. You have to read the whole article to find the single sentence where Wolfe says: "But so far as Mr. Schine is concerned, there has never been the slightest evidence that he was anything but a good-looking kid who was having a helluva good time in a helluva good cause. In any event, the rumors were sizzling away ..." For a book you would have to get the book at a library, to look up the text. If the quote parameter is used and the exact wording for the sentence is known, it can be searched in Google Book.

Here are the references with the actual quotes
  1. ^ Miller, Neil (1995). "Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present". New York: Vintage Books. Ironically, it was the inordinate concern on the part of McCarthy and his chief counsel, Roy M. Cohn, regarding the military server of McCarthy committee aid G. David Schine — a concern that may or may not have had a homosexual element to it — that was to precipitate the Army-McCarthy hearings that finally brought down the Washington senator.
  2. ^ See for example:
    Wolfe, Tom (April 3, 1988). "Dangerous Obsessions". New York Times. But so far as Mr. Schine is concerned, there has never been the slightest evidence that he was anything but a good-looking kid who was having a helluva good time in a helluva good cause. In any event, the rumors were sizzling away ... {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help);
    Baxter, Randolph (November 13, 2006). "An Encyclopedia of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Culture". glbtq, Inc. Tall, rich, and suave, the Harvard-educated (and heterosexual) Schine contrasted starkly with the short, physically undistinguished, and caustic Cohn. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
    On the other hand, author Tom Wicker refers to Schine as "Cohn's boyfriend:" Wicker, Tom (1995). Shooting Star: The Brief Arc of Joe McCarthy. Harcourt. pp. pp. 127, 138 & 166. ISBN 015101082X. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)

Statement by RedSpruce

This Arb Request has to do with a seemingly minor issue of style, but one that is being repeated so often, on so many articles, that the cumulative effect is a notable detriment to Wikipedia.

User:Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) ('RAN') is an extremely prolific editor with over 47,000 contributiions.[15] A great many of his contributions are in the form of adding references to articles. When he adds reference footnotes, he usually makes use of the "quote =" parameter available in citation templates. Unfortunately, in most of these edits, the quote parameter is used for no good purpose; he simply takes a quotation from the source without considering whether that quotation adds information to the article or simply repeats information already in the article. At times his quoted text is completely irrelevant to the footnoted portion of the article.

This use of quotations--where the quotation adds no significant and relevant information to the article--is not in keeping with standard citation practice, and to my knowledge it has never been used in an article that has achieved Featured Article status. Since I consider these edits of RAN to be detrimental, and since I have had no success in reasoning with him about this issue (see Talk:Annie Lee Moss#Footnote quotes and User talk:Richard Arthur Norton (1958- )#Discussion for two of many examples). This has been the cause of endless edit wars between us. RAN's contributions are usually to obscure articles, and in my dealings with him it has often been impossible to get anything more than a fleeting and disinterested "drive by" comment from outside editors.

Here are some illustrative dif.s:

Quote is irrelevant to footnoted text:

Quote repeats information in the article:

Quote is irrelevant to footnoted text and repeats information elsewhere in the article:

Given the number of RAN's edits, it would be possible to list literally thousands of examples like this. Each one is only a minor dis-improvement to its article, but taken as a whole, they represent real damage to Wikipedia. Furthermore, this damage is happening because of a single, relatively isolated lack of understanding on RAN's part.

If the ArbCom could make a ruling that directs RAN to use quotations in footnotes correctly, then Wikipedia will greatly benefit. Alternatively, if the ArbCom can show me in what way my reasoning about this issue is incorrect, then I'll stop making this objection and a longstanding dispute will be settled.

I'm including User: Alansohn as an involved party because he has a pattern of supporting RAN in this and other edit conflicts. He generally does this with little or not participation on an article's Talk page.

Mea culpa

My first encounter with RAN was at Annie Lee Moss. In the discussion there, he persistently refused for long periods to respond to my comments, and when he did respond it was with a bizarre series of off-topic comments. See Talk:Annie Lee Moss#Pointless. This caused escalating frustration on my part, and I insulted him. [29] Since this time RAN has gradually improved his responsiveness to calls for discussion, and our interactions are at present tolerably civil. Nevertheless, I'm sure that RAN will use this ArbReq to complain about my "long term civility issues".

Statement by User:Alansohn

This is a very simple issue. User:RedSpruce has taken WP:OWNership of a series of articles related to Joseph McCarthy, the Army-McCarthy Hearings. Efforts to expand, improve and source these articles have been met by unexplained reverts and gross incivility. The quote feature is a widely used function within Wikipedia, and is intended to provide documentation of the specific material being cited within the reference. While there is ample room for quibbling about the specific text to be included, there is no argument as to its intended purpose. RedSpruce has turned his own personal battle on content and extended it to beselessly impose his personal preferenece that quotations should never be used under any circumstances.

RedSpruce is free to argue what should be included in reference quotations, yet his near exclusive respone has been to remove quotations or references in tehir entirety, regardless of their clear relevance to the points being supported. The only variations on User:RedSpruce's part have been whether abusive statements have been included.

The solution here is clear. A content ban should be placed on User:RedSpruce on articles related to the area of Joseph McCarthy and the Army-McCarthy Hearings. Warnings on further incivility on the part of User:RedSpruce should be included with any actions. It may be possible for RedSpruce to make productive edits where his strong personal biases do not manifest themselves as violating WP:OWN and WP:CIVIL when editors stray from his demands. Alansohn (talk) 15:58, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]


Comment by User:KrakatoaKatie

I have had the same problem with Alansohn and Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ). In October 2007, I was asked, on my talk page, by User:Wildhartlivie to give an opinion about the use of long quotes in the cited references of Dan Antonioli, a stub article created by Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ). This is the last version of the article prior to Wildhartlivie's addition of the copyvio template. I investigated, scoured the WP:RS and WP:CP talk archives for previous discussions, and spent an entire afternoon on it. In the end, I concluded that it is/was a copyright violation of four different websites, including one site with a strongly worded copyright statement. Since there were no clean revisions (and the paragraphs/quotes in the cited references were longer than the article itself), I made a case for deletion under WP:CSD#G12 as a blatant copyright violation. I had no objections to recreation of a new article in original prose, and I probably should have made that clear.

Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) and Alansohn disagreed, as did Woohookitty. I was not very experienced or assertive as an admin, and I was intimidated, quite frankly, by the in-your-face, long-winded approach I faced on that talk page. When Woohookitty voiced her opinion, I dropped the issue, and the article remained as it was. The quotes in the references have been shortened somewhat in the current version of the article.

I think Alansohn's allegations about RedSpruce are intended to draw attention away from the core of this request, which is the use of long quoted statements or even paragraphs in cited references and the actions of two editors who almost always act as one. They use a tag team approach to buttress each other's arguments, introduce irrelevant subjects or fallacies into discussions, and bully other editors. I feel there are user conduct and encyclopedia content issues here that ArbCom should investigate. Thanks. KrakatoaKatie 21:48, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by User:Wildhartlivie

I am commenting mostly to reinforce that in my view, this is not an issue of attempts at ownership of an article, or articles. The practice under discussion here is pervasive with User:Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ), and has been at issue in the past. The question of the appropriateness of use of the quote function and how this user has been utilizing it has been at issue well beyond the ones under discussion. As noted by KrakatoaKatie above regarding the Dan Antonioli article, large blocks of quotes were used in the absence of them being incorporated into articles. At no time during the Antonioli discussion was any attempt made by the author to incorporate and expand the article with the use of those sources. This particular article had been under question for deletion and my involvement came from supporting the retention of the article, with the caveat that it needed a LOT of work, and in trying to urge its expansion, was met with the lack of response and the uptake of the argument by Alansohn, the same circumstances indicated by RedSpruce above. One argument at the time from User:Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) was that it was preserving the quote in situ, to which I counter argued that inserting a block of text via copy and paste was not in situ preservation at all, and there were archive options available to be used when sources were in danger of being lost online. What I have seen is often copy and pasting of the opening paragraphs from, for example, New York Times archives. That particular method links us to a page at the Times website that purchase is required to access the rest of the article, which may or may not contain the material actually being cited. I took it to WP:Citing sources, the entire discussion of which can be seen here. The overall consensus at that time was that this practice violated the intent of the use of the quote function, as was summarized on that page by User:John Broughton. That discussion was obviously ignored and rejected, which brings it to issue yet again, with the same issues. I truly believe a ruling by ArbCom is necessary in this case since efforts at resolution over a variety of articles with a variety of editors has been the case. Wildhartlivie (talk) 23:22, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Note: Here is the article in question:

--Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) (talk) 19:39, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by User:John Broughton

As noted, this issue was discussed in October 2007 at Wikipedia talk:Citing sources/Archive 19#Quotes in references. My final comment in that section was: at this point Wildhartlivie, IvoShandor, Arnoutf, qp10qp, SallyScot, AndToToToo, CBM, Shirahadasha, and I have expressed opposition to the practice of putting chunks of text into footnotes, a practice that is not supported by any Wikipedia policy or guideline, and that is in no way the norm at Wikipedia. I think that's about as close to consensus as most discussions get, and I suggest that the practice stop. Wildhartlivie added one more comment to that section; then nothing happened until it was achived in January 2008. Given that the opposed practice has continued, this seems to me a clear case of defiance of consensus. -- John Broughton (♫♫) 13:22, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

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Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (1/0/0/2)

  • RedSpurce, I see that you both tried the AN/I multiple times but I see no diff related to the several Rfc's you are referring to in your statement. Have you tried to consult a third opinion beforehand? -- FayssalF - Wiki me up® 11:43, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I've added links to 2 of the RFCs. I think there was at least one other, but I couldn't find the dif. We haven't tried a third opinion. I'm reasonably sure that another 3rd opinion would make no impression on RAN; other editors have disagreed with him on this point before [30] with no effect. As for myself, it would take a well-reasoned argument to convince me that I'm wrong here. RedSpruce (talk) 13:44, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Before voting, I'd appreciate the parties' thoughts on whether a user-conduct RfC and/or mediation (formal or informal) might be helpful here. Newyorkbrad (talk) 20:55, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Although RAN has doled out a series of insults to me, I don't care about that, and since he is currently making an honest effort to engage in discussion I have no real complaint about his user conduct as such. Apparently quite a number of people have had complaints about Alansohn's conduct (see Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Alansohn), but that's not my issue here either. When RAN was refusing to discuss edit disputes I opened an ANI about this, but it came to nothing. At best, mediation would convince RAN to stop his dis-improving edits on a single article, and I doubt he would agree to participate in mediation.RedSpruce (talk) 00:24, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • I'm troubled by some of the allegations here. Alansohn, do you have diffs for the behaviour you mention? Sam Blacketer (talk) 21:25, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. I think we can help sort out this issue. FloNight♥♥♥ 00:17, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Request to lift article ban

Initiated by Guido den Broeder (talk) at 16:45, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request`
  • Informed Davidruben: [31]
Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried
  • Link 1
  • Link 2

Statement by Guido den Broeder

David Ruben has served me with an article ban on Vereniging Basisinkomen.

The ban was given because I removed the COI template, which I did because the user who completely rewrote the article does not have a COI (but could not untag himself). I.e., I acted in good faith, but the ruling admin apparently believes otherwise.

No dispute resolution has taken place on this matter. I found that a mention was added to an older dispute resolution that I was no longer following, without informing me.

I kindly ask the ban to be lifted, since there was no malintent on my part. What we have here is merely a different interpretation of the text of the template, where my arguments remain unaddressed. I suggest that the text of the template is to be reconsidered, as it should not be open to multiple interpretations. In my opinion, this template serves no purpose once the article has had a major overhaul by another editor, and is misleading the reader.

Please note that the content of Vereniging Basisinkomen is discussed in a normal fashion.

Regards, Guido den Broeder (talk) 16:45, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Davidruben

Issue is over WP:COI which advises that "COI edits are strongly discouraged. When they cause disruption to the encyclopaedia in the opinion of an uninvolved administrator, they may lead to accounts being blocked". Following discussion on Vereniging Basisinkomen article's talk page and WP:COI/N#Guido den Broeder vs. others, I informed Guido den Broeder (talk · contribs) that he should consider himself banned[32] (seems no ideal WP:UWT for partial bans, unlike a variety of block templates), when WP:COI indicates that he could have been blocked entirely from WP - a single article ban seemed more proportionate.

This article was created by Guido den Broeder, who is apparently the organisation's treasurer, and he repeatedly removed a COI tag despite consensus of opinion at Talk:Vereniging Basisinkomen and at WP:COI/N#Guido den Broeder vs. others. He sought to excuse himself from needing to adhere to community consensus by not listening to it (removing COI/N from his watch list)[33], but that cannot be an excuse for then acting against consensus. Of course fair notice of a discussion about a user must be given to the user in question, but failure to at least then read a discussion does not separate one one from still being in the community.

The suggestion of fellow admin User:EdJohnston at the COI/N [34], was to consider blocking Guido den Broeder but to warn him first. To me this seemed therefore to serve notice of a ban before imposing a block. In hindsight I suppose this could also have been issuing a final user warning template (? {{Uw-tdel4}}), although I chose instead {{uw-own3}} and added additional comments to it.

As I understand bans, this is a consensus view of the Wikipedia community that an editor should withdraw from some (or all) of article space. WP:Banned suggests discussion at WP:Community sanction noticeboard, but that is now closed down. The question then is what constitutes a "community ban" decision. I accept this might have been an issue to bring up at WP:AN/I, but I took the decision (rightly or wrongly) that the article's talk page and COI/N were sufficient community input in deciding that Guido den Broeder, notwithstanding his own repeated denials, has a COI in the Vereniging Basisinkomen article, and that COI tagging therefore should remain. Furthermore, as I understand things, a user may be banned from an article without enacting the enforcement of blocking (which may be done if the user ignores the ban). Hence WP:Banned states in its lead-in "A ban is a social construct and does not, in itself, disable a user's ability to edit any page." yet in the Wikipedia:Banned#Decision to ban section, first and least "bureaucratic" option, notes "If no uninvolved administrator proposes unblocking a user" - but surely that implies a ban exists if the user has already first been blocked - surely this is the situation not of "Decision to ban", but the later policy section of Wikipedia:Banned#Evasion and enforcement ? The more I re-read WP:Banned, the more this seems poorly worded. Nevertheless, clearly if I have over interpreted WP:Banned then my apologies are due to the community and of course Guido den Broeder.

This RFAR thought does not seem warranted, as no dialogue has occurred since I suggested to Guido den Broeder that he should consider himself banned from the article. Options might have included:

  1. Discussion at the Talk:Vereniging Basisinkomen, which I had specifically mention was not off limits to him
  2. Discussion on either his or my own user talk pages
  3. Seeking opinion of other editors and admins at WP:AN/I - on both the issue of whether Guido den Broeder has a COI issue and my own actions/handling of situation.

I think given Guido den Broeder's previous rejection of the views of others at Talk:Vereniging Basisinkomen and COI/N, that resolution is unlikely with the first two of above options, and that AN/I would have been the more appropriate next step. I'm unclear whether, given this RFAR has been initiated, I can now seek independent views at AN/I, or if this needs to await ArbCom instruction on this. David Ruben Talk 00:27, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Response to Davidruben

I see a lot of statements without any attempt to provide proof. I can therefore only conclude that Davidruben has not actually done any form of investigation. He may further be confusing this article with another article, the one that led to the old dispute resolution that I mentioned. Let me state clearly that:

  • I have not denied COI with the topic, in fact I have openly declared it on my user page.
  • I have not edited the article against oonsensus.
  • No disruption whatsoever has taken place with regard to this article.

I am furthermore entitled to have my own opinion just like everyone else, and find it appalling that an admin speculates that I will behave badly just because my opinions are different. Meanwhile I should remind admin that my opinions found enough support to prevent deletion of the article.

It is amazing that admin admits that no dialogue has occurred yet sees not that he should be the one to initiate a dialogue, before making a decision or drawing conclusions.

Finally, I am now confused with regard to the nature of Davidruben's intervention. Did he impose a ban or did he only make a suggestion? I'd like to see that made clear. If it is only a suggestion, than this procedure can be closed, blocking me for editing the article is out of the question, and I can work together normally with second editor to improve it. Guido den Broeder (talk) 07:41, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

As stated above
  • I felt suitable dialogue had already been had at article talk and COI/N to take the action that I did.
  • The options I list above were those you could have sought as alternatives to immediately stepping up to this the highest rung of the dispute ladder (or that I could have initiated on your behalf if you challanged my action).
  • That a topic is agreed as being notable, does not in itself allow continued consensus-objected-to COI editing (to reiterate, this is then disruptive/ownership etc and as per COI/N finally risks being blocked).
  • I stated "you should consider yourself community WP:Banned", trying to both word this as pleasantly as possible and trying to imply that I thought you should accept & agree to abide by this (given how you had rejected consensus views at Talk & COI/N).
  • Finally "blocking me for editing the article is out of the question" is not the case. Where others feel you have a COI that interfers (or appears to) with impartial editing of articles, then you should not work on the artice itself (except obvious vandalism reverting or copyediting) but instead propose changes on the talk page and let other editors decide whether to edit the article or not; i.e. what the COI tagging and WP:COI/N, that you ignored, were trying to advise you... and led to COI/N opinion to just outright block you (which I held back from). David Ruben Talk 12:36, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Either a dialogue took place, and it is a case for arbitration, or it didn't, and you bypassed due process.
  • WP:Banned clearly directs here, and only here, for appeal. Note further that so far you are unresponsive on both user talk pages. A ban should not be discussed on an article talk page.
  • You seem unwilling to clarify the nature of your intervention.
  • You are still not providing any evidence whatsoever. Let me stress again: I have not acted against consensus. Your insistent failure to address the actual facts is quite disheartening.
  • Nobody has claimed that my edits to the article are partial. Guido den Broeder (talk) 12:55, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Dialogue was Wikipedia:COI/N#Guido_den_Broeder_vs._others (which you chose to walk away from) and Talk:Vereniging_Basisinkomen#COI and your acting against consensus was removal of COI tag as per #1-13:12, 23 April 2008 (reverted) and #2-16:58, 23 April 2008 (reverted).
Your editing needs to be impartial to follow NPOV, editing partially with a POV is not acceptable.
Anyway ArbCom have declined this RFAR and suggested taking to WP:AN/I, which I shall now do. Thank you ArbCom. David Ruben Talk 22:48, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Please take note of the chronological order of events. There was no consensus on the template at the time of my edit.
Nobody has claimed POV on my part. Guido den Broeder (talk) 22:56, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
@FayssalF: thanks. I'm getting quite a runaround for my money: helpdesk sent me here (I asked twice to make sure!). Guido den Broeder (talk) 23:01, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Clerk notes

This area is used for notes by non-recused Clerks.

Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (0/4/0/0)



User:William M. Connolley

Initiated by User:HooperBandP (talk) at 09:15, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request`
See clerk notes below John Vandenberg (chat) 00:33, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Statement by User:HooperBandP

The user in question, User:William M. Connolley, is an administrator on Wikipedia. The conduct in question is possible improper protecting of articles, followed by edits that may not be NPOV. ([43]) ([44]) ([45]). Additionaly, it may be possible that he has blocked or threatens to block any objective editors ([46]) ([47]). He has been asked about his faith and intentions when doing this ([48]), even by other administrators([49]). Three administrators have even found him in violation of blocking policy ([50]). History has shown on wikipedia that administers found to have violated the blocking policy less than William was found have lost their Admin privelages ([51]). Even on occasions where the article in question is not protected, he has possibly used excessive force in editing without consulting the talk page discussion which is usually debating edits at the same time ([52]). He has been warned on this issues many times ([53]) but appears to continue to work in the same manner. As an editor, I feel as though William is very knowledgeable in the areas of Wikipedia he spends most his time in, and has the best at heart for articles, but his admin powers have allowed him to improperly circumvent the proper channels in article content disputes. I feel as though if he did not have these powers, and continued to be an editor, he would have to follow procedure and his input in content discussions could lead to much better articles overall.

Comment by User:HooperBandP
This is not about the state terrorism article. That article may have issues, but leave them where they are. This is about WMC. We need to make that perfectly clear. Hooper (talk) 17:19, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:William M. Connolley

I encourage the arbcomm to take this case. Its up to the arbcomm what to make of it. If its me, then fine. I suggest it should be Allegations of state terrorism by the United States and perhaps broadened to User:Raul654/Civil POV pushing (even if civility has been lacking at times).

I stand by my actions at Allegations of state terrorism by the United States. They were firm but necessary. Indeed, more is needed. That article desperately needs someone to help sort it out, and ignore the whining. There is too much wikilawyering going on here and there, both by people using it to push their POV and by people with nothing better to do with their time.

User:I Write Stuff seems to come into this category (over at Theodor Landscheidt, he is busy demonstrating a lack of understanding of WP:RS [54] [55] [update: and at Fred Singer too! [56]). IWS is *still* complaining about me blocking User:Supergreenred and appears to be unable to understand that the user was being disruptive and needed a block. Happily (so to speak) SGR turns out to be a sock, making the block obviously sensible in retrospect. User:Giovanni33 was also suspected of being a sock [57], though was later unblocked. I think G33 is a waste of space (or, more politely, a net detriment to the project) and we should stop giving him 2nd chances and indef block him (prev arbcomm refers [58]). There are various other sock/meatpuppet problems that may be worth looking at (DrGabriella springs to mind).

HooperBandP's only real contribution seems to have been to blunder in, break 3RR [59], and get the article protected (again); although he seems sufficiently naive not to know he broke 3RR [60]. IMHO he should be advised to get back to useful editing and stop wasting time on process.

William M. Connolley (talk) 23:42, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:I Write Stuff

You can see the current RFC on William Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/William_M._Connolley_2 this information is a step by step guide through it:

  1. Violation of Protection Policy
  2. Violation of Blocking Policy
    • William later removes over 30% of the article [64]
    • The information was readded since William never attempted to seek consensus, the revert was by Supergreenred: [65]
    • William then blocks Supergreenred: [66]
    • To be fair, I will note later Supergreenred was found to be a sockpuppet, however William was not aware of this at the time, making it a blocking violation. The exact reason given is "tendentious editing" and the post on Supergreenred's talk page never mentioned him being a sockpuppet: [67]
  3. Violation of Blocking Policy #2
    • Following Williams removal of over 60K worth of additional text, other editors began reverting in protest
      • RedPenOfDoom: [68] with the edit summary: 1 protest reversion -William Connely's edits were not concensus (and were not for POV)
      • BernardL: [69] with the edit summary: reverting once, in protest (as per talk)
      • Travb\Inclusionist then commited 3 reverts: [70] [71][72] in his third revert he is stating he will seek page protection.
      • William then blocks Travb\Inclusionist: [73] which is clearly against the blocking policy. [74]
        • Another issue comes up related that may be a violation, or is obviously not a fair method. The page is protected by a 3rd party admin [75] due to Travb\Inclusionists request, however William then removes the protection: [76]

Just to add a brief point. In the RfC I was seeking some kind on injunction against William from editing this particular article as his abuses, as far as I knew, were just in relation to this article. Williams reply to the RfC was actually gross misstatements. For instance:

  • "Blocking supergreenred, an abusive sockpuppet, was obviously sensible."
    • However he did not block Supergreenred for being an abusive sock, nor know Supergreenred was one at the time.
  • "And - gasp - I unprotected the page when it was on my "favoured" version. Obviously grossly promoting my own POV by, err, allowing other people to change it."
    • However the issue was never protection, it was editing the article while it was protected, and not within the permitted confines, to remove a BLP violation or a copyright violation. He also blocked 2 of the 4 people who later reverted him, apparently not allowing other people to change it.

Final point, there are over 14 instances posted by another user of William blocking people he was in disputes with, I am still sifting through this to present a cohesive list showing Williams edits to the articles in question, the blocks, and other relevant information such as warnings from other admins, blocks being overturned etc. They are noted in the RfC. So far I started to go through the blocks Travb listed in the Arbcom dispute to see if William was in fact editing the articles at the time actively. I discounted anything simple such as if he only protected the page and did not edit again, or anything that did not seem like a continued participation. The list as I will be updating is: User:I Write Stuff/For Arbcom

Response to Bozmo by IWS

It is correct that some admins have agreed with the blocks, however they have not agreed with William abusing his admin rights:

  • Coren: Wrong person, good block. I've reblocked for 23h (the original 24 minus the one hour already blocked).[77]
  • Viridae: ON the basis of that evidence I have unblocked Trab. WMC was in now way in hell an unimvolved admin. [78]
  • BlackKite: I would still be interested in an explanation by User:William M. Connolley as to why he made POV major edits to an article after he protected it. This is certainly not advisable, if not unacceptable. [79]
  • JTrainor: The block was clearly legit-- Travb was edit warring and reverting to the preferred versions of sockpuppets. Perhaps this specific admin shouldn't have done it, but the block certainly was well-deserved. [80]

Those are all from the Travb incident. For more:

I do not see anyone making claims of cabal, simply claims that William has violated his admin privileges repeatedly.

Response to JohnSmith by IWS

John Smith claims the Arbcom is because the RfC did not "gain some sort of consensus" however the breakdown is as follows:

  • Supporting William: Ultramarine, Vsmith, Jtrainor, JzG, John Smith's, Merzbow, Bozmo, DHeyward
  • Supporting complaint: Giovanni33, Travb/Inclusionist, UBeR, TheRenPenOfDoom
  • Neutral but concerned about contents: Silly Rabbitt, RegentsPark, Biophys

Of people not involved with the state terrorism page, which everyone wants to make this about, one, Vsmith supported William, and the other 3 were all concerned with what was noted in the RfC. However as pointed out above, the issue stretches multiple months, multiple blocks, and multiple articles. Further RfC is not a venue for removal of admin tools, which after Travb's presented information, and it happening multiple times, seemed to be the required venue. Also, according to Arbcom, a dispute resolution is not required for: Reviews of emergency actions to remove administrator privileges

Response to CWC

The list may incorrectly label edit disputes as edit wars, however it still does not excuse what are violations of blocking policy as you yourself stated they were: However, I continue to request an unblock, so that my block log will have at least some indication that WMC's blocks are contrary to multiple Wikipedia rules ... CWC 23:20, 20 June 2007 (UTC)[83][reply]

Response to William

It seems even on an Arbcom page William can not stick to the issue. How is anyone to believe Williams edits to the article after his protection were not PoV, he exudes it here with his personal opinions of all who told him he was wrong. As for my lack of understanding, you can review the 20 articles I have written and the sources used in them. Perhaps you should familiarize yourself with COI, putting an article up for AfD because you had a previous personal issue on an online forum some time ago is clearly not appropriate. Its amazing that William can claim all of his blocks were necessary. What is stopping him from going to AN/I and making a post, like every other admin on Wikipedia is asked to do. WP:IAR is an essay, and after reviewing Williams blocks, he would be citing IAR over 10 times this year alone, as almost all of his blocks take place on articles he edits. There is one set of rules and William is required to follow them.

  • Comments regarding Hooper: Seems William ignores of course his own 3 reverts on the article, [84] [85] [86] I believe its frowned upon to engage in a revert war then report the one you are warring against. And why does William believe Hooper doesn't have many edits other then those 3 reverts? Because Hooper actually uses the talk page to find consensus: [87] [88] [89] [90] [91] [92] [93] instead of just doing as he pleases and blocking those who oppose. --I Write Stuff (talk) 00:08, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comments regarding Giovanni33: More mudslinging and falsehoods. Seems the blocking admin had doubts in the block and so he unblocked Giovanni. [94] but why mention that when you are attempting to muddy the waters?
  • Comments directed at me: Apparently William can only engage in ad hominem attacks, apparently me debating a WP:RS source means William can violate blocking policy, or its just more attempts to muddy the waters and attack those who disagree with his violations.

Apparently pointing out a violation of admin tools is "wiki-lawyering." Telling William his edits were against consensus and the rules is "whining" that needs to be ignored. And the final attempt to muddy the waters is that participants on the page who do not agree with William are there to "push their POV" or have "nothing better to do with their time" Further "waste of space" is not appropriate language but is a clear indication of the type of attitude and behavior this supposed "uninterested admin" has been showing while editing that particular article.

Statement by User:Supergreenred

First of all, I am no sock. As I disclosed previously I have been a long time user but always preferred to edit anonymously (I'm sure we can look at my IP edits to verify). But this is besides the point becuase that is not why William M. Connolley (talk · contribs) blocked me anyway. But the false sock block was reversed by the blocking admin. So much for Mr. Connolley's claim that I turned out to be a sock. That is wishful thinking after the fact of abusing the tools for other reasons.

Now as to just the facts: 1. He puts a full protection on page. See:[95][96]

Then, after he protects the page, he starts making his changes to it, by deleting many sections. There is no chance given for participation on talk page about what he wanted to do before he did it. No discussion. It's just his unilateral use of admin powers. See:[97]

He continues to make massive changes he wants, after he protected the page. See:[98] And, again, he continues, making his mass deletions after he protected the page:[99]

This is clearly using his admin powers to gain a big advantage in a content dispute. He then unprotects the page and editors restore most of what he has removed without consensus. Then, another admin Rlevse (talk · contribs), comes in and protects the page again for a short period:[100] I think this is correct as its unstable at this point.

But as soon as it gets unprotected,William M. Connolley (talk · contribs) comes in again and does a super mass deletion of this article, ignoring discussion. See this:[101]

I then complain about this on the talk page, and explain my reason for reverting him. See:[102]

The result is William M. Connolley (talk · contribs) uses his admin powers to block me. Right after blocking me, he then reverts back to his version, having rendered his content opponent silent. See:[103] This has a chlling effect on editors opposed to his POV. Still many go and make a 1 revert protest revert in disgust about his abusive bullying and blanking of sourced material.

It's not proper for admins to use their powers to protect the article and then edit it: it gives them a content change advantage. That is not allowed. Since he became involved in content dispute, he should have abstained from using administrator powers that gives him an advantage in the content dispute. Blocking the editors with whom he is in a content dispute with so he can continue to edit war to force his changes to stick is a clear cut case of abuse, just like when he protected the article and then started editing through protection.

Also, despite other editor edit warring, reverting 3 times, he ignored them and singled me out for a block, right after I challenged his abuse of admin powers, and when I was the one calling for discussion to occur on the talk page. I had only asked that we discuss before making major changes. Apparently Mr. Connolley felt this was not needed. It was his way or else! He then blocked the other editor who opposed his POV. I felt it was a kind of totalitarianism. I think Arbcom should make it clear that this kind of use of the tools is an abuse of the trust. The article has problems but can be solved the way every other article has been solved. Abusing the tools made things worse, not better.Supergreenred (talk) 07:30, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by User:Coppertwig

New user Lawrence Solomon, who was writing a series of columns in the Financial Post about Wikipedia and Global Warming (Wikipedia's Zealots:Solomon and Hide your name on Wiked-pedia), asked me a series of questions on my talk page about how Wikipedia works, as I had invited the user to do. Two of those questions [104] [105] concerned an edit during page protection by William M. Connolley to the Naomi Oreskes page, the page about which Lawrence Solomon was writing the newspaper columns. Without judging whether the edit conformed to policy or not, I will state that I felt I was in an awkward position having to explain it. Coppertwig (talk) 17:28, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Ultramarine

Just pointing out that the issue has been discussed on WP:ANI here. An independent administrator reviewed and reblocked Travb/Inclusionist.Ultramarine (talk) 16:23, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

In regards to the comment by User:Ultramarine, this user sees the linked item as just one issue, not as the entire problem. Hooper (talk) 16:30, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Why a In regards to the comment by User:Ultramarine? That is obviously the case. Several of the alleged issues were discussed. There is also an ANI discussion regarding canvassing for this RfA here.Ultramarine (talk) 16:36, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comments by JzG

The assertion that a demand for desysopping does not require prior dispute resolution, appears to be founded primarily on the complainants' consistent failure to recruit meaningful numbers of people who think William is doing anything wrong here.

Take this supposedly abusive edit, for example: [106] includes seven intermediate diffs, where William takes an article subject to endless edit warring and POV-pushing, protects it to halt the edit war, removes some redundant and contentious material for which consensus clearly to include clearly does not exist (see WP:ONUS for my views on that), fixes some refs, and then reduces to semi-protection.

In contrast to William, the other parties show strong evidence of commitment to a POV on that article, and have edit-warred prolifically there. Examples include the blatantly revisionist inclusion of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which were self-evidently an act of war, conducted by the US but with British and Canadian involvement before, during and after the fact - an Allied operation against an enemy combatant, in other words; a small number of sources use the term war terrorism to describe acts against civilian populations in time of war with the aim of destroying morale, but this is also essentially revisionist, in that it did not exist as a term at the time and has grown up largely as a result of the previously unimaginable levels of destruction that were inflicted by all sides in World War II, including the bombings of Dresden and Coventry to name but two. Consensus to include this section is manifestly absent, but people keep putting it back in.

I'd look at the other examples, but frankly I can't be bothered, because the whole thing has the look of a laundry-list of past grudges dragged up to try to gain some kind of advantage in a long-running content dispute in which William is only peripherally involved, and then in the role of janitor. The article in question has for a very long time been one of the worst on Wikipedia, and the people who WP:OWN it are incredible resistant to allowing it to be anything else.

For the avoidance of doubt, I would be more than happy to see this case taken as Wikipedia/Requests for arbitration/Allegations of state terrorism by the United States, with a very rapid outcome of rigorously enforced article probation and topic bans for the worst offenders, but as it's a content dispute that may be considered out of remit, and in any case I suspect the admin community could simply agree to to that anyway, as it seems to be the current standard for handling long-running content disputes. Guy (Help!) 20:19, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]


In response to comments by User:JzG, as Arb policy asks for responses when warranted, the User admitted to not looking into it enough to understand that consensus was being worked on with multiple users at the time of this particular incident. This one article though is not the extent of our problem with the abuse of admin powers. In continued response, this is about possible admin abuse, not one particular article. If the user has an issue he may follow the proper procedures to deal with stated article soley. Hooper (talk) 20:08, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Your comments go in your section, not mine. This is not yet another venue to spin out the POV-pushing in respect of that most atrocious of all articles. Guy (Help!) 20:15, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comments by BozMo

I find it difficult to make any comments here whilst avoiding breaking WP:NPA because the conduct of some of those involved has been so poor. A series of complaints against WMC have been repeated by a small group of editors (mainly ones with a short time history on WP and a narrow spread of article involvement) all over the place on user talk pages, AN/I etc including all sorts of claims of CABAL etc. I have been slightly involved because I blocked one user for NPA violation against WMC (that block was appealed and was upheld) and this seems to have been pulled into the "whole issue" here but I think the only whole issue is "whole concerted campaign against WMC". Several times these complaints have been looked at and other independent admins have agreed with the actions taken by WMC but however patient we have been in trying to explain this the complaints go on and on. The main root seems to be over misunderstanding (wilful or otherwise) over what an "uninvolved admin" is and whether WMC was uninvolved when he got stuck into disputes. Also whether other admins pulled in were uninvolved. Perhaps the only positive thing which could come out of this is to get this explained more clearly (your first action when you arrive to help with an edit war doesn't instantly make you a party to the dispute. It would also be positive if some people learnt to complain or appeal once and accept the decision given without spending forever discussing history. --BozMo talk 21:33, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comments by UBeR

I've never been involved in an ArbCom before, so I'll be brief.

To be blunt, during my tenure as an editor at Wikipedia, my involvement with William M. Connolley has been less than exceptional. I find him to be very rude and uncivil. I've witnessed him make many, many personal attacks (all of which have gone unpunished), several of them directed at me. This is, by far, his biggest issue. He has a hard time acting collegially.

To be sure, his actions as an administrator have been suspect and contrary to Wikipedia's policies regarding administration. He has a history of blocking users with whom he has a dispute rather than allowing an uninvolved administrator to take a look and edits protected articles inappropriately (or protects/unprotects them inappropriately).

As Kendrick7 states below, "[I]t would be nice if Mr. Connolley apologized and promised not to do it again." ~ UBeR (talk) 22:09, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Just a note, though Kendrick7 struck the line above, I still believe it applies. His response to William M. Connolley's ignoring of and bash on procedure (see above), I still believe it would "commendable" if said user "apologized and promised not to do it again." To wit, while many here are focused on this one particular case and a particularly degraded article, the issue extends far beyond it. This case should not be about his actions on any one article. ~ UBeR (talk) 19:13, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Kendrick7

It seems there has been rather obvious abuse of the mop here; however, it would be nice if Mr. Connolley apologized and promised not to do it again and saved the committee the trouble of opening a case. I'm sure Guy is correct that there a great deal of disorder in the article, but that doesn't excuse tool misuse. I'm reminded of the words of Mayor Daley in responding to criticism of his handling of the 1968 DNC riots: The policeman isn't there to create disorder; the policeman is there to preserve disorder. -- Kendrick7talk 21:40, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

reply to Jtrainor: Perhaps this does happen all the time, Jtrainor, that doesn't make it right. It's not the job of the administration to use their tools to circumvent the WP:CONSENSUS process. Clearly at the point when multiple editors reverted William -- adding back in such controversial sources as the Britannica, for example -- it should have dawned on him that the consensus he thought he was enforcing did not in fact exist. But then he instead brazenly blocked one of those editors, to make an example out of him I suppose, and that's just really bad. -- Kendrick7talk 18:59, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In light of User:R. Baley's updated comments, I'm striking the above. Nothing personal, William, but the idea R. Bailey presents that using bullying tactics and blocks in order to short circuit the consensus process and silence dissent is something that should be commended is an idea I find simply abhorrent. Such a sentiment represents a fundamental disconnect between the role of WP:Administrators, how our guidelines say the tools should be used, and how certain admins seem to think they should be used in practice. I thus must request the ArbCom take this case to remind administrators in general of the fundamental principles which should underly their behavior. It's one thing to wink at such tactics, or merely rap the knuckles of admins who just barely cross the line, but suggesting it's time to start handing out medals is taking it a bridge too far. -- Kendrick7talk 16:55, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by John Smith's

This is a completely inappropriate arbitration request. As far as I can see the complaining users are bringing this because their RfC did not gain some sort of consensus to censure William for his actions. They should have known it would be highly unlikely any real sanctions would be implimented against him as the result of a RfC, so why did they bring it - as a means of "justifying" an arbitration report? I don't know, but it is a suspicion of mine. At the least they could have waited a month or so to see what happened. But bringing an arb-comm report just because they didn't get their way would seem to be an abuse of process.

However, there is certainly a long history of edit-warring at the Allegations of state terrorism by the United States that needs attention. I believe that it would be more appropriate to open a new arbitration report on the editors who have fought over the page, not just one admin who in my view tried to interject some proactive change into the page without everyone involved being article banned/blocked. And on the matter of protection, William did remove the protection not long after he made his edits. So he couldn't have been abusing his admin tools - the advice for admins not to edit through protection is to ensure they don't keep a page locked for a real period of time and turn it into what they want. John Smith's (talk) 22:44, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

IWS, I did not use the word "traction" once - please do not put words in my mouth. I said "consensus to censure William". That is quite different. John Smith's (talk) 23:12, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
IWS, please restore your comments and strikethrough so that people can see what I was replying to. John Smith's (talk) 23:30, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Now that the scope of the arbitration request has opened up, I would say that this case should be heard. I had hoped mediation could have resolved many of the issues but this was not attempted before matters came to a head here. John Smith's (talk) 21:05, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Lawrence

Please pick this one up. It should be a case about this entire shithole of an article that is making otherwise rational admins and editors do stupid things for apparently years (move wars, multiple admins editing through protection, incivility being the norm, etc.). Lawrence Cohen § t/e 23:18, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Black Kite

I don't agree with Lawrence here. If you're going to have a case about William Connolley, then fine. If you're going to have a case about the article, then also fine. But don't conflate the two, or you're going to have a confusing mess, and the completely predictable result will be, well, nothing much. Black Kite 23:40, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Merzbow

It took years of trench warfare surrounding this article for an admin to volunteer to come in and help clean it up, and I thank WMC for it. Although I do not deny I've had editing differences with him in the past on other articles, I've never seen him abuse the tools. What we have here is an extremely narrow definition of "uninvolved admin" being put forth; please see User:Raul654/Civil_POV_pushing for a discussion of how the misuse of the concept can be wielded as a weapon to calcify problem articles. And boy did AOSTBTUS have problems; I encouraged people to peruse (not read through, heck no) the 163k version of the now circa-60k article for an example of perhaps the worst POV-pushing mess this project has ever seen. Luckily now some of the page's editors seem to be reaching agreement on the scope of the newly-shrunken article (unfortunately with problem editing having moved in some cases to lesser-policed subarticles), but it took WMC's decisive action to reach that point.

Comment by User:Bigtimepeace

There are two separate issues here as others have mentioned: 1) William M. Connolley's possible misuse of administrative tools in a content dispute (and, arguably, the behavior of those who have complained about what WMC did) 2) The general problems on Allegations of state terrorism by the United States. If the committee is going to deal with one or the other or both they should keep some sense of separation between the two issues.

Is WMC's conduct problematic enough for an ArbCom case? I'm really not sure, but I find it hard to believe that anyone can honestly say it was not problematic at all. An admin who edit protects a page and then deletes massive content without discussion (incredibly questionable in and of itself given the overall lack of BLP concerns) cannot then turn around and claim non-involvement to the point where they block two editors who revert their changes. I was recently up for RfA, and had I endorsed that kind of behavior in an admin there is no way my RfA would have passed. Again, I don't really have an opinion about whether it's worthy of a case or not, but it's hardly something we should be endorsing as several editors above seem to be doing.

I've been as involved as anyone with the "US State Terrorism" article (though not so much right now thank god) and damned if I know what to do about it. I think it's still basically a content dispute, and I'm not sure it's worth it for the ArbCom to wade into it at this point. A number of folks had expressed interest in mediation, so if editing is really at an impasse right now that might be a better first step. The problem is that this article has always had one side of promoters and one side of detractors (with changing casts, like a Broadway show!) who are utterly convinced that they are right and most everyone on the other side is a POV-pushing (insertyournegativelabelhere). If I had a good answer I'd suggest it, but as of right now I'm not sure that ArbCom is the right place to be discussing the problem.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 05:00, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Sceptre

A few things are absolute and non-negotiable, though. NPOV for example.

Accepting this case to sanction WMC would be undermining the entire encyclopedia. Sceptre (talk) 13:35, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]


Comment by Restepc

It seems to me that there are two entirely separate issues, WMCs behaviour, and the state of the state terrorism article. I feel very strongly that these should be kept separate, the fact that the article was in a state shouldn't excuse any theoretical misuse of admin tools, likewise the behaviour of some of the other editors involved shouldn't.

In my dealings with WMC, and much moreso my viewing of WMCs past and current behaviour, two issues come up. One, regular incivility/rudeness...but I don't think it's anything to get too worried about.

Secondly and importantly, it's my view that he enforces his own view of how each article should be, which is not necessarily always the consensus view, and that he regularly ignores wikipedia policy and sometimes uses his admin powers to do this. It is obvious that WMC has good intentions, and feels that his actions are for the best. In my view, his actions definitely break the rules, but there is a rule on wikipedia somewhere that says something like 'ignore all rules if following them wouldn't be best for the article'.

I think the issue here is whether his actions broke the rules and he should have his powers revoked or at least told to stop, or whether he justifiably ignored the rules as per the 'ignore all rules' rule. It seems extremely likely that many of the instances of this behaviour fit in with the ignore all rules rule, but I'm not convinced they all do, and I don't know wiki policy well enough to know if 'ignore all rules' applies to using admin powers in this way at all. Restepc (talk) 19:30, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Jtrainor

This is, essentially, a classic case of gaming the system-- WMC came to help clean the article up (and has made good inroads in that direction), while the people causing problems have done everything they can to obstruct and nullify his efforts. This whole fracas over the block is a classic case of the following method of gaming the system:

  1. Uninvolved admin shows up at problematic article and attempts to start fixing it up.
  2. People causing problems attempt to stop him.
  3. Admin thwacks them.
  4. People causing problems run to WP:ANI and other places and claim that said admin is misusing his tools in an article he's involved in.

This happens routinely on controversial articles and needs to stop. Jtrainor (talk) 15:00, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:R. Baley

Just dropped by to endorse the above statement by Jtrainor. A classic case indeed. R. Baley (talk) 15:05, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • Additional: I ask the ArbCom to look at this link of contributers to that page (Well?), and then per WP:IAR, simply issue a joint statement thanking WMC for his efforts to bring some sanity to the article in question. This doesn't have the makings of an ArbCom case, it is instead, an *opportunity* for the Arbitration Committee to take the lead and support an admin (previously uninvolved) who stepped outside their normal area of expertise and actually tried to help resolve a situation which has dragged on, for how long now? (Years in my estimation). How many of those accounts have already been at ArbCom? How many have been banned? Do the right thing here. Thanks, R. Baley (talk) 15:28, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by User:Biophys

I too agree that many problems are bogus or content disputes. The most important claim is the alleged violations of blocking policies by William, supposedly supported by evidence. I can not judge this issue. But this is a serious accusation. I suggest ArbCom to take this case and clarify the matter, as has been suggested by William himself. If he is a defender of wiki, he must be encouraged to continue everything exactly as he does. If something should be corrected, let's identify and state a problem. No doubts, there are also WP:DE problems with editing of terrorism and climate changes articles. And I strongly agree with statements by Chris and Raymond below. Biophys (talk) 16:16, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by User:Chris Chittleborough AKA "CWC"

We have far too many ugly, dispute-laden articles in our encyclopedia. Often the best way to fix them is for someone to take charge, forcefully excise the cruft, explain how Wikipedia works to those who haven't Got It, and let those who cannot—or will not—work within the rules get a clue or get blocked. The "Allegations of state terrorism by the United States" article is a classic example, especially since we've lost MONGO, and it seems to me that WMC is doing exactly the right thing. I strongly believe that Wikipedia needs to give some extra latitude to experienced editors cleaning up nasty messes, even if it's hard to codify rules for such situations.

(BTW, on checking the list Biophys links to, I was surprised to see my name in the first item, and disappointed by the way it overstates WMC's [mis]behaviour. For one thing, there was no edit war. This does not inspire confidence in the rest of the list.) CWC 15:51, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by User:Raymond arritt

Allegations of state terrorism by the United States is one of the very worst articles in all of Wikipedia, a festering boil of POV-pushing, lousy partisan sources, and everything else that makes for a wretched article. The atmosphere scares away most editors. Admins willing to fix such embarrassments to the encyclopedia deserve support and reasonable latitude to get the job done. User:Jtrainor's summary above is spot on. Raymond Arritt (talk) 18:53, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by User:Jtrainor

I would like to suggest that users Ultramarine, John Smith's, and Giovanni33 all be added to the case as parties. All of them have been involved with the current mess in one way or another. Jtrainor (talk) 20:07, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Note by Jehochman

I've looked at a few sock puppet cases stemming from this dispute. Per Jtrainor's request, I have added the names he mentioned to the parties and notified them. Wikipedia is not a bureaucracy. It seems there will be a case, so we may as well convene those who have knowledge of the situation and ask for their comments. Jehochman Talk 20:22, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Note by User:Giovanni33

Thanks. I was planning on commenting. I'm surprised that Guy is not formally listed, yet. He is definitely involved and abused the tools, similarly to the WMC.Giovanni33 (talk) 00:29, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Ice Cold Beer

This article is terrible and has been for a long time. Looking at some of the top contributors to the article, it is easy to see why; many of these editors have lengthy block logs for using sockpuppets and revert warring to keep their POV-pushing in the article. I would like to see the arbitration committee enact the same or similar discretionary sanctions that have been used, effectively, to clean up POV-pusing on the 9/11 articles.

Clerk notes

This area is used for notes by non-recused Clerks.
  • This cases started as a sandbox, and the named parties were all notified of it. The named parties, except for FellGleaming (talk · contribs) and William M. Connolley (talk · contribs) had already commented at the sandbox, and William M. Connolley has added a statement now that this rfar has "gone live".
    I have just now notified FellGleaming that this request is now underway. John Vandenberg (chat) 00:30, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    Jtrainor added themself as a party at 15:00, 27 April 2008 after the request went live.[107] John Vandenberg (chat) 00:35, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (4/1/0/1)

  • Accept. -- FayssalF - Wiki me up® 04:07, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Given the somewhat confusing RfC pointed to (deleted but still running in userfied form), wouldn't it be better to allow that some time? I can tell you that the low level of support there for the more serious allegations of abuse weighs with me. Charles Matthews (talk) 14:31, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept, to consider the use of the tools, but, since it is patently obvious that the tools were being employed against real and significant problems, to consider the history of editing at Allegations of state terrorism by the United States too (and any other related articles or editors that bear considering). --bainer (talk) 02:06, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept to look at all involved parties. FloNight♥♥♥ 11:07, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. Kirill 13:39, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Reject. The Uninvited Co., Inc. 17:11, 29 April 2008 (UTC) I am unconvinced that there is any problem with Connolley's activities. The remainder of this matter is a content dispute.[reply]

Clarifications and other requests

Place requests related to amendments of prior cases, appeals, and clarifications on this page. If the case is ongoing, please use the relevant talk page. Requests for enforcement of past cases should be made at Arbitration enforcement. Requests to clarify general Arbitration matters should be made on the Talk page. To create a new request for arbitration, please so to Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration. Place new requests at the top. Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/How-to other requests


Request for clarification–Episodes and characters 2

List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:

Statement by User:Kww

The decision text is : TTN is prohibited for six months from making any edit to an article or project page related to a television episode or character that substantially amounts to a merge, redirect, deletion, or request for any of the preceding, to be interpreted broadly. He is free to contribute on the talk pages or to comment on any AfD, RfD, DRV, or similar discussion initiated by another editor, as appropriate.

TTN was blocked for one week today, for edits that did not violate a single term of the restrictions from his arbcom enforcement. "Broadly interpreting" [108] and [109] as substantially amounting to a merge or deletion is a broad interpretation beyond all reason.

Can TTN still edit character articles to bring them in compliance with Wikipedia's policies and guidelines? Or is any edit that removes material from a character article capable of being broadly interpreted as a deletion?Kww (talk) 21:30, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Just to make sure I'm understood ... I'm not concerned about applying the decision to video-game characters. I'm objecting to the idea that taking an article that was in truly miserable shape and fixing it substantially amounts to a merge or deletion.Kww (talk) 23:03, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Rlevse

Over the last week TTN has removed over 80% of the "Final Fight: Streetwise" article 3 times, which TTN claims are trimming and cleaning up, yet in fact whole paragraphs were removed, such as here. In the Mario characters, which have also been on TV as best I recall, he removed entire paragraphs, as here. Similar issues were brought here at AN. As video games are very similar to TV, they often appear on TV in some form, and the fact that this problem was evident during the arbitration hearings, and the ruling says "broadly interpreted", and TTN seems to be pushing the envelope, the need for a block was apparent to me.

An unblock was declined and supported by others.

Response to Kww's clarification...I'd have to say that removing whole sections, paragraphs, and 80% of an article amounts to deletion. This is not "trimming and cleaning up". Further consider that the remedy also said "The parties are instructed to cease engaging in editorial conflict and to work collaboratively to develop a generally accepted and applicable approach to the articles in question." This seems to have been clearly violated by TTN too. There has been no chat at Talk:Final Fight: Streetwise for a year. RlevseTalk 23:11, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by GRBerry

I will be pleasantly surprised if the editors in this area manage to avoid another full ArbComm in the near future. The issues are not specific to TTN; one example is shown by this archived WP:AE report. In my view, problems exist in the behavior of both factions. It seems ridiculous to consider discretionary sanctions for this topic area; these editors should be able to work together to find consensus if they choose to. But if they don't choose to, we may have to end up with discretionary sanctions. GRBerry 13:03, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by other user

Clerk notes

  • This request has been retitled to "Request for clarification–Episodes and characters 2" (note the "–" after clarification, as oppose to the customary ":"). This is to differentiate it from the similar "Request for clarification: Episodes and characters 2". Please note the difference between the two, and be careful in linking to either thread. Anthøny 18:42, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitrator views and discussion


Request for clarifications: Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/September 11 conspiracy theories

List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:

Statement by User:Pokipsy76

I would ask the Arbcom to clarify this points:

  1. Area of conflict: According to the arbcom remedies the "discretionary sanctions" can be delivered to any editor "working in the area of conflict (defined as articles which relate to the events of September 11, broadly interpreted)". I think that the expression "which relates" leave the door open to some interpretations, so I will make two questions to have a clearer understanding:
    1. What if an editor is not working in any article but makes a comment about other admins/users actions (made within the the area of conflict) on a user talk page or on the AN pages? Do "discretionary sanctions" can still be made if an admin (on his or her own discretion) decide for example that the criticism is "disruptive"?
    2. Suppose that someone is editing possibly related articles like George W Bush or Conspiracy theory but is adding or discussing informations about events unrelated to 9/11. Can he/her be "discretionarily sanctioned" or just standard wikipedia rules hold?
  2. Topic bans: What if a person who is "topic banned" make the second kind of edit described above? Would it be a violation of the "topic ban"?
  3. Retroactivity?: Can the discretionary sanctions be "retroactive" and be delivered if an admin think that a user has been "disruptive" in any time prior to the arbcom decision? If it is so how can this be reconciled with the statement "Prior to any sanctions being imposed, the editor in question shall be given a warning with a link to this decision"?
  4. Terror: Considering:
    • the fact that the motivations given to justify the "discretionary" bans include
      • edits reflecting a consensus on the talk pages but nevertheless alleged to be "tendentious" by admins: [110] [111]
      • possibly good faith arguments on the talk pages alleged to be "tendentious stonewalling" by admins [112]
    • the lack of any prior warning before heavy sanctions like topic bans [113] [114] [115]
    • threats to people accused of being "tendentious" or "wikilawyering" because they are questioning the decision of the admins [116][117] [118]
These elements all together contribute to create an atmosphere when apparently anyone can legitimately be afraid of being suddenly punished for whatever he does and whatever he says: it seems indeed that almost any action or statement could be in principle be viewed as "tendentious" according to the opinion of this or that admin (even when supported by the consensus). Personally I don't even feel free to express my opinion in talk pages devoted to discussing these sanctions. Given this situation I ask the arbcom if they consider this atmosphere to be the desired result of their remedy. If it is not the case I ask the arbcom which kind of solution can be found.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 08:56, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Notes regarding the response by Sam Blacketer:
Probably I need to be more clear about point 4: I am not actually disputing any procedure or any decision. I am asking a completely different kind of question: assuming that everything I listed above is formally correct (and therefore this atmosphere of constant danger for whatever one does/says is formally legitimated) do the arbitrators consider this atmosphere to be the desired result of the proposed remedy?
Thank you for your reply.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 14:35, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:Xiutwel

  • I would like to know if quoting the 9/11 Commission is to be seen as tenditious editing.

(I believe it is important to include some quotes of that Commission's work into the article. I feel that omitting these quotations is biasing the article to a pro-government viewpoint. I had thought the WP:NPOV policy was very clear on representing viewpoints, and actually, I can hardly believe we are still having these discussions. An uninvolved admin never saw why the A-gang admins were blocking such edits, but ofcourse he did not want to upset his peers.)

Yours faithfully,

 — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 17:39, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Jehochman

Must every remedy imposed over 9/11 Truth Movement lobbying be appealed to this board? Jehochman Talk 11:13, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Others

Clerk notes

Arbitrator views and discussion

  • My individual views rather than a response on behalf of the committee:
1.1: If comments on admin actions extend to discussions of whether individual admins or groups of them are trying to affect article content rather than acting neutrally, then those editors who make them are included within the definition of 'working in the area of conflict'. Admins should not however judge whether criticisms of their own actions are disruptive.
1.2: If the edits do not relate to 11 September 2001 then they are not covered by discretionary sanctions. Advice can be sought on the talk page, or on the arbitration enforcement noticeboard, to get a consensus about whether this is the case.
2: As above, the topic bans are limited to edits relating to 11 September 2001, but advice should be sought if there is a possible dispute about it.
3: Editing behaviour prior to the final decision in the case is relevant in determining whether an editor has been disruptive, but the warning admin should allow the user a chance to demonstrate that their behaviour has changed.
4: The key phrase in the decision is that it applies to those who fail "to adhere to the purpose of Wikipedia", which is to provide a high-quality encyclopaedia which is neutral point of view and based on reliable sources. Consensus on talk pages cannot overrule the purpose of Wikipedia. The notification requirements were complied with in all three cases you link to. Instead of trying to dispute the procedure lying behind decisions, or attacking the admins who have imposed them, editors unhappy with restrictions should look at the aspects of their own behaviour which have provoked them, and see if they can change it. Sam Blacketer (talk) 13:12, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Request to amend prior case: Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/IRC#Civility: Giano

List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:

Statement by LessHeard vanU

I propose that the the wording of the incivility parole be amended to include the word "unduly" (or similar) prior to the word "uncivil", to permit the community (and especially the admins) sufficient leeway in attempting to deal with instances of vigorous debate with sometimes colourful language by Giano II. In this instance a heated discussion involving several parties resulted in an enquiry whether Giano II should be sanctioned for their style or tone of comments. I do not believe that the parole was intended to disallow Giano from strongly expressing their views, or to allow opposing parties to use the threat of sanction to discourage Giano from arguing their case (a very foolish premise, it might be concluded), and the wording as is allows for instances of "block shopping". Giano II would still be under sanction for instances of incivility that may be determined as being disruptive.

I shall inform Giano II of this request, but do not anticipate a response (here). I urge the Committee to proceed (or not) independent of a statement by Giano II. LessHeard vanU (talk) 13:23, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by ddstretch

As the person who initiated the enquiry referred to, I would support such an amendment myself.  DDStretch  (talk) 13:33, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Until(1 == 2)

The civility policy in no way prevents people from expressing strong views. It just needs to be done in a way that is not nasty. Giano is not being prevented from expressing strong views, but is instead prevented from being uncivil while doing so. You do not need incivility to debate, even when you have strong views. All Giano needs to do in order to avoid sanctions is to treat other editors with more respect. For example he could have explained his objection without saying that his opponent had "the attention span of a gnat", which would have prevented people being concerned about his actions. (1 == 2)Until 13:37, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Ddstretch

In addition to Until(1 ==2)'s point, if Giano took more care to avoid characterising other users (editors and readers) in the way he did, it would help maintain the collaborative nature of wikipedia. It would reduce to a minimum the chance that discussions would get unnecessarily heated or dramatic. The underlying point he was endeavouring to make was made quite reasonably, using rational and calm language (excepting the use of "cognitive deficit"), by another here, for instance.  DDStretch  (talk) 13:56, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by JzG

There seems to be a confusion between incivility and kid gloves. In the same way that Wikipedia is not censored, it should not be necessary to treat every editor as if they are a grade-schooler from a strict Mormon home who will be offended by the word "bother". A workable definition of civility has to be one which will improve our community and be embraced by it, rather than one which allows polite but vexatious people to drive off those with greater knowledge and understanding than they themselves have, by pretending mortal insults in cases of forceful assertion.

If a civility guideline cannot include, influence and inspire people like Giano, I'd argue that it is a bad guideline. And there is also a huge difference in character between what is said close to the encyclopaedia, and what is acceptable in userspace. We've recently had the utterly absurd case of an admin blocking a long-standing contributor for telling him to "get lost" on his own user page. Some part of the community seems incapable of applying Clue in this matter. Guy (Help!) 20:43, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by other user

Clerk notes

Arbitrator views and discussion

  • Civility is always due. The incivility of one editor does not give others with whom they are in discussion an exemption from themselves being civil. Admins do, though, have discretion about whether to enforce sanctions. We are discussing, below, proposals to make special provision for enforcement of Giano's civility sanction. Sam Blacketer (talk) 14:45, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • The promise and actuality of a mutually civil and friendly working environment were things that drew me, as a new editor, to become more active within Wikipedia. I think this is true of many of us, and it is a reason that most of the arbitration decisions I draft begin with the premise that our purpose is to develop a high-quality free-content encyclopedia "in an atmosphere of cameraderie and mutual respect among contributors." As a general and aspirational matter, I would like to see substantially heightened levels of civility in various places all over the site. However, I think that before we consider blocking an editor for uncivil comments or personal attacks, the history would have to reflect chronic or severe instances of incivility, rather than fleeting and mild ones. This should be understood in connection with all enforcement of the civility and NPA policies, as well as all arbitration decisions imposing civility restrictions or paroles. Newyorkbrad (talk) 16:48, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Request for clarification: Episodes and characters 2

List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:

Statement by Kyaa the Catlord

The decision text is : TTN is prohibited for six months from making any edit to an article or project page related to a television episode or character that substantially amounts to a merge, redirect, deletion, or request for any of the preceding, to be interpreted broadly. He is free to contribute on the talk pages or to comment on any AfD, RfD, DRV, or similar discussion initiated by another editor, as appropriate.

My question is the following:

Can TTN request others to redirect articles as a proxy or is he under the same sort of restrictions as a banned user would be in cases where others would work as his proxy and redirect articles on his behalf? He has recently asked another user to make some redirects on articles where the other user had not acted in the previous month and three weeks (roughly) until encouraged to redirect by TTN. Thank you for the clarification in advance. (for further information and discussion please see Adminstrator's Noticeboard thread on TTN

Response to sg (who's name is really hard for me to spell, forgive me): I believe that's the crux of the problem TTN seems to not be able to initiate discussion per the ruling and bringing them to your attention is similar, in my view, to asking you to act as a proxy to work around the sanction which would be, in my view, terribly ungood behavior. Kyaa the Catlord (talk) 11:32, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Response to sg2: I agree that doing so in the light is better than sneaking around and coordinating it off-wiki, but... the key question remains, is he allowed to initiate such conversation. From my reading of the ruling, it would be no. Its the "initiated by another user" bit that has caused me to ask for clarification. Kyaa the Catlord (talk) 12:20, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you to Neil for providing diffs. (I'm new to this sort of thing.) Kyaa the Catlord (talk) 13:24, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by sgeureka

Speaking metaphorically, arbcom prohibited TTN from bullying the other kids at school, but at the same time took away his right to self-defend when he is the target of bullying (or at least of gross unfairness). This risk was pointed out in the arbcom case, but no solution was offered. TTN asking a teacher for help (who may grant it or not based on their own good judgement) neither automatically makes the teacher TTN's proxy nor does it make TTN the bad guy. So I would like some clarification if (a) TTN is allowed to point out problematic articles/edits without editing or tagging the articles himself, (b) if I am allowed to agree with TTN's reasoning and (c) if I am allowed to edit problematic articles/edits. If the answer is yes to all three questions, there shouldn't be a problem. – sgeureka t•c 11:12, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Response to Kyaa: sg stands for Stargate, Eureka is the famous exclamation, long story. ;-) And just like bringing up an issue at a noticeboard or pointing out a recurring typo that needs fixing, I see nothing wrong in pointing out articles that fail a policy when you're prohibited doing so via the usual channels (tagging and discussing). I guess you'd agree that this transparent action is better than TTN contacting me via email about his "troubles" (which he never did, but I wouldn't hold it against him - if he can't even do the most trivial things without risking a witch hunt against him). – sgeureka t•c 12:12, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Addendum I think I've got a better illustration of the situation, at least as far as I am involved: If someone disallows the boy who cried wolf to ever (publicly) cry wolf again, may the boy (privately) whipser in my ear that he sees a wolf, and am I allowed to chase the wolf off when I see fit? Note that most people never had an issue with how I dealt with wolves before. – sgeureka t•c 17:14, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Neil

  • Relevant diffs:
    • [119] - asking another user to redirect a number of character articles (expressly forbidden in the Arbcom ruling)
    • [120] - suggesting a merge of character articles to another user (expressly forbidden in the Arbcom ruling)
    • [121] - expressed intent to keep such suggestions off-Wiki in future
  • Suggest either an extention to the probation, a month's block, or a final warning prior to a year's block. Neıl 13:22, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Le Grand Roi des Citrouilles

Relevant recent discussions in chronological order:

Sincerely, --Le Grand Roi des CitrouillesTally-ho! 16:23, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Kww

Really, what part of He is free to contribute on the talk pages is so difficult to understand? I don't see that any diff provided is on anything other than a talk page.Kww (talk) 16:45, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I read that ruling as referring to article-space talk pages, not as an invitation to post on user-space talk pages requesting proxy edits. Catchpole (talk) 16:53, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"TTN is prohibited for six months from making any edit to an article or project page related to a television episode or character that substantially amounts to a merge, redirect, deletion, or request for any of the preceding, to be interpreted broadly." Neıl 16:56, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Neil's quote still only restricts edits on article and project pages. He is free to lobby on talk pages for others to make edits on article and project pages.Kww (talk) 17:13, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed. Moreover, it would be very helpful if Arbcom could remind those who are disruptively undoing TTN's earlier efforts that this violates the spirit of the ruling. Asking for assistance in restoring good faith redirects firmly grounded in policy because of a disruptive editing pattern is certainly reasonable. Also, arbcom needs to make it clear that the ruling was not a victory for one side nor the other in the ongoing debate about notability for topics of fiction. (sorry to butt in your statement page Kww; I just agree with everything you said here.) Eusebeus (talk) 17:23, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Petitioning for an article to be merged without discussion and pointing out specifically that he himself cannot do it so he needs someone else to is not promoting good faith, it's bypassing the restriction placed on him by simply adding a middle man to do it instead. In effect this negates the whole purpose of limiting him.
Additionally his comments that he should probably resort to such communication in secret does not help good faith either, but instead paints that he's well aware that his actions are in violation: if they weren't, he wouldn't have anything to even worry about to consider such an alternative, no?--Kung Fu Man (talk) 22:42, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know about that ... I might take steps to avoid getting hauled in front of Arbcom every two days, even if Arbcom cleared me of wrongdoing every time.Kww (talk) 13:21, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well, you know taking steps to avoid Arbcom appearances could end badly, as the "Wikilobby" drama reminds us. Kyaa the Catlord (talk) 13:35, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, it can, which is why I hope Arbcom puts a stop to these efforts to drive TTN underground. Kww (talk) 13:43, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Or maybe it can make TTN realize that he has to work under the restrictions it placed on him, not attempt to find loopholes and proxies to do the sort of things that got him under editting restrictions in the first place. Kyaa the Catlord (talk) 13:57, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
This neglects to recognize that TTN's problem was style, not content. His identification of bad articles that needed to be redirected was somewhere around 99% accurate. His effort to bulldoze his way through was what caused the trouble.Kww (talk) 14:47, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by other user

Clerk notes

Arbitrator views and discussion


User:Benjiboi: appeal of topic ban on Matt Sanchez

See AE noticeboard thread and topic-ban appeal

List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:

Statement by Benjiboi

I request a complete lift and reversal of the indefinite topic ban against me on Matt Sanchez. I'm quite disappointed at having to take this step to clear my name and worked to avoid having to take this step and indicated so during the AE discussion.[122] I'm surprised that my contributions to Wikipedia was treated in this manner and the same assuming of good faith we extend to all others seemed to evaporate towards me despite my obvious attempts to communicate civilly and directly.[123] I feel the blocking admin may have been personally invested in driving me away from the article by their involvement in numerous OTRS tickets from banned user Bluemarine (who is one of Matt Sanchez's accounts) and making edits on Sanchez's behalf. I appreciate the work that OTRS volunteers do and that they are trying to work with someone who earned a community RfC and Arbcom ban for voluminous and personal attacks amongst other issues. However, despite Sanchez's assertions that I, and others, are a part of a "radical left-leaning fringe that is the LGBT is hell bent on venting frustrations through the article", many editors, including admins and LGBT editors, worked to follow policy and work with Sanchez and tried to look past his personal attacks and unique style of writing accusatory statements. When information and verifiable statements at odds with Sanchez's views were presented he routinely would fill up the talk page sometimes contradicting himself. It's understandable for someone to want their biography to only show them in the best possible light but topic-banning editors because the subject of the article doesn't like their tone[124] doesn't seem like a inspiring direction for the project and in Sanchez's case the list of user's he's found problematic would quickly add up.

In short, the article exists because his notability is as a former gay porn star who became a marine and then the poster-child for US social conservatives thus placing Sanchez in the center of several current American culture wars including issues of gays in the military. (As referenced by the Military Times as a "don't ask, don't tell" issue) I personally don't care about his sexuality or expression thereof, I do care about presenting sexuality issues correctly and as factually as possible. In addition, I felt I was helping Sanchez avoid abusing Wikipedia for self-promotion and personal gain by insisting that claims be reliably sourced.

The other reason his case received national attention was that it was revealed he also was a "gay" escort (an escort for men who have sex with men) who mostly advertised in gay male magazines with Sanchez stating he was an escort (prostitute) on the internationally broadcast Fox News Channel Hannity & Colmes show. Sanchez stated (in the Arbcom case and elsewhere on wiki) that he later retracted his statements but no proof of that retraction seems to have ever been presented to balance out his earlier statements. I have regularly and consistently stressed than anything about his escort work has to be well sourced and neutral. I believe he is now being coached how to self-publish retractions on his blog. I can certainly see why Sanchez wouldn't want anyone around who was basically saying we print what's verifiable not just what you'd like. It wasn't until Sanchez's Arbcom ban and the related AfD during his Arbcom case that the circular talk page dynamic seemed to disappear. In fairness, he may have also been targeted by SPAs but that's not a license to abuse those you disagree with. Once Sanchez was banned I worked to clean up the talk page, archives and keep the discussion constructive and as focussed as possible in a collaborative fashion. (See January's archive for instance.) Even when folks disagreed we mostly stayed constructive and tried to find workable solutions. My contributions were mostly constructive and it would we a stretch to paint me as simply trying to disrupt or otherwise compromise Wikipedia's policies.

JzG (Guy), in what I feel was a somewhat condescending, impatient, confrontational and personal manner, bordering on uncivil, IMHO, rather than simply warning me in any manner suggested instead I be topic-banned without giving me any notice I had breached policy or was heading in a bad direction. When I responded to all the stated concerns he repeated that this ban was really no big deal.[125] When I sought guidance I was told I should take my case to JzG (Guy) directly to see what it would take to have the ban lifted.[126] He deleted the request only stating " Discussion at AE board" in the edit summary.[127] Later JzG (Guy) admitted he was unwilling to budge on the issue. I sent two email to the Arbcom elist per Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee stating

I got no response.

Finally, I believe it states, "[E]ditors are expected to make mistakes, suffer occasional lapses of judgement...in well-meaning furtherance of the project's goals." If I've overstepped a line or indeed violated some policy then please point it out, perhaps a warning would have served the purpose of ensuring the "tone" of edits remained civil and constructive. I wish it had been considered and attempted, instead I have been shown what I consider to be disrespect and a leap of bad faith. Banjeboi 13:01, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Timeline prior to topic-ban

4 March
Amongst other {{editprotected}} requests, a request was made by Durova to remove wording that could have been reworded instead; within that request was that the reference was to content hosted at YouTube. There didn't seem to be an emphasis or effort to improve the wording to clarify that the gay escort didn't refer to Sanchez, just to remove it altogether. This request was later struck by the same editor who later filed the AE request that started all this. Durova struck the request as it was pointed out they were mistaken and that it wasn't YouTube after all.

21 March
(19:56, 21 March 2008)
JzG (Guy) edits Sanchez article removing (rather than rewording) problem phrase (it has since been re-added and reworded). And removing a source rather than correctly attributing to the original source.

(22:50, 21 March 2008)
JzG (Guy) opens ArbCom case amendment to allow Bluemarine (Matt Sanchez) to comment on the Matt Sanchez talk page as "over a dozen" OTRS tickets (averaging two per week) since Sanchez's 7 Feb Arbcom ban. He also alleges that the protected article has been edited with an a agenda and other editors should be monitored. The request is withdrawn as Sanchez again evades his ban. Although arguably incomplete some of his socks have been tagged and others have been logged into the Arbcom case.

22 March
(09:10, 22 March 2008)
Durova first posts to the talk page regarding YouTube as source concern; they state they are making "one last effort" but no previous efforts to bring up sourcing in the article seem to be evident. They also don't suggest, even as an option, to source to the original publisher. Nothing seems to suggest that anyone would have opposed fixing the sourcing and, in fact, it has since been done.

(23:03, 22 March 2008)
Durova files noticeboard AE request to remove Youtube links and "potentially defamatory claims that reference them be removed from the article". When asked why posting to the AE board they respond, "Two editors consistently oppose, and are filling up the talk page AE thread with irrelevant comments that give passersby the mistaken impression that this is a content dispute. But this isn't a content issue; copyright is bright line policy. I am on the verge of filing a separate AE thread against one of those editors for tendentiousness, incivility, and disruption." I feel however that this was presented as we need to remove all YouTube citations and this, IMHO, was the first that this was brought up. Also they painted me as "filling up the talk page AE thread with irrelevant comments that give passersby the mistaken impression that this is a content dispute". Instead of approaching the issue as we need to fix this sourcing it was, IMHO, presented as this needs to also be removed. After months of Sanchez's thwarting progress it was quite frustrating to be accused of the very same thing. Subsequently the refs have been amended to the original publishers as I would have readily agreed had it been presented as such. I was also not given any indication that I was in any way violating BLP (or any policy), nor was I notified in any way that I was being discussed on an Admin board. Note: the links have been updated to the original source and no "potentially defamatory claims" from those sources seem to have been found although many other items that show the subject in a less than flattering light have been removed or reworked.

23 March
'(11:19, 23 March 2008)
Admin JzG (Guy) proposes myself and another editor be topic-banned "for consistent failure to follow WP:BLP". No notice was given to me or any indication that I was being considered for a ban or that I had violated any policy.

Statement by JzG

The Arbitration Committee is well aware, I think, of the long-term issues of accuracy and neutrality in Matt Sanchez (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views). Sanchez, aka Bluemarine (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · page moves · block user · block log), is banned and therefore restricted to using OTRS to request changes to the article. This has resulted in an absolute barrage of email, much of it related to edits made by Benjiboi and Eleemosynary (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · page moves · block user · block log) (now indefinitely blocked for other reasons).

The reason I advocated a topic ban was that Sanchez complained specifically about Benjiboi's edits and their neutrality, and because Sanchez vehemently denies the "escort" characterisation which Benjiboi is so determined to include. A situation with a banned article subject, WP:BLP concerns, what appears to be selective reporting in the outside world, and obsession with including problematic content, is pretty close to impossible to manage.

I said right up front that I don't consider this a black mark against Benjiboi, we just don't need the hassle of tens of emails a day from an extremely agitated subject. We've had well over a hundred emails in total.

Some OTRS tickets related to this:

I know this is going to sound like Morton's Fork, but the main reason I am so strongly opposed to Benjiboi editing that article, is that he is so very determined to do so. We do not need obsessive editors on WP:BLP articles. This was not my call alone, but it's true that not many were involved. Durova was one, and she also has long experience of the Sanchez article.

If article probation is to mean anything at all, then it must surely mean that people dealing with a sensitive article (and an angry subject) can request others to leave it alone, and expect to have that request stick. In this case, requesting did not work, so we had a topic ban, and now this. What is so very very important about the Sanchez article that Benjiboi must be allowed to contribute despite the subject's clear preference otherwise?

Comment: The subject has been banned from Wikipedia for his homophobic attacks on gay editors, including Benjiboi. Via the subject's year long ban from Wikipedia, the subject has no rights to an article about him, just as Ann Coulter has no rights to the article about her. Benji is one of the best editors I've seen on Wikipedia. Characterizing him as obsessed with the Sanchez article is absurd. His contibs history proves that. If he's obsessed with anything, it would be Wikipedia in general and not poor little ole Matt Sanchez. Benji works on many articles at once. Just a look at his talk page right now shows "notes to self" all over it referencing the many articles he's working on. - ALLSTAR echo 15:16, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sanchez's ludicrous and defamatory attacks on gays has no bearing on who gets to edit the Matt Sanchez article. Mr. Sanchez, to be indelicate, can shove his bigoted views up his own ass. There is obsessive behavior (the history is demonstrated and incontrovertible) coming from multiple sides here. To be as un-PC as possible: It's odd that most of the "pushing" to include negative material comes from self-admitted homosexual editors. The whole thing has a tit-for-tat retaliatory feel, and we don't need that shit. Before anyone screams "Oh my God, Lawrence hates the LGBTers," my best friend went from Mr. to Ms., and I love her still, one of my best friends in the world is as gay as people can possibly be, and I was the one that assembled the bulk of the evidence displaying the absurd homophobic attacks here by Sanchez. However, "Wikipedia" doesn't need an evangelical war of The Gays Vs. Sanchez and Sanchez Vs. The Gays. His article is so heavily watched now that any attempts to whitewash or scrub the article of his sourced and factual history of performing in gay pornography, and doing some gay escort work (both points which seem to be points of contention) won't happen. Lawrence Cohen § t/e 15:28, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Reply to JzG's statement. While I appreciate the position OTRS volunteers are put in I seem to be getting punished for Sanchez (yet again) gaming the system. I'm not an OTRS volunteer and have no access to the emails linked above so have no clue what Sanchez wrote but all my contributions are quite evident in the article and talk page history. I may be wrong here but I don't recall anyone, ever, asking me not to edit there prior to this surprise ban. No one politely asided me to indicate that sadly Wikipedia does topic-ban editors primarily because the subject prefers them not to. I'm also not "determined" or "obsessed" to include anything that isn't true and reliably sourced. As I've stated a few times in the AE threads I have no problem following policies and if I made an error simply (civilly) point it out.
Over a hundred emails in two months? Doesn't that seem to indicate that just maybe, yet again, Sanchez is the primary source of this drama and, yet again, instead of dealing with him firmly to set boundaries the frustration is applied elsewhere. A variance was being created for Sanchez so he could edit on the talk page but was dropped because he wasn't willing or able to refrain from again evading his ban. If this situation is "close to impossible to manage" it's not by my doing and I'm more than willing to abide by policies and, in fact, have frequently taken bios to the BLP board as well as assisted other bios listed there. The same courtesy shown to obvious vandals didn't seem to be extended to myself. This ban was stated as dealing with reliable sourcing on the AE board and had it been presented as such in the first place on the talk page as "we need to correct these sources to the original sources" I don't think anyone would have disagreed. Banjeboi 17:06, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Punished? I don't think so. There are over two million articles you can edit without causing problems of apparent militant advocacy and upsetting the subject. You're not banned from Wikipedia, you are free to edit on any subject you like except Matt Sanchez, who is, it must be said, an incredibly minor figure. Guy (Help!) 18:52, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Of course, the key part is that this is the encyclopedia "anyone can edit".. including any article so that argument is moot. - ALLSTAR echo 18:57, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You think? Even banned and blocked and topic banned and WP:COI editors? Guy (Help!) 12:04, 23 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The point is that I think it's punishment and a black mark against myself even if you do not, and I have not been blocked or otherwise banned. You seem to put a lot of weight on what Sanchez, a community banned and blocked (and COI) editor who continues to evade bans even this week, while dismissing my concerns as really not a big deal. Banjeboi 23:11, 23 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Note to Jpgordon

Matt Sanchez has made many requests, and a decent proportion of them have been rejected as mere interpretations of weight. The "escort" business is only one of a number of contentious issues, most of which have now been settled. Sanchez has never had a right of veto over the content and I've several times told him "no" in no uncertain terms. This is not about Benjiboi's advocacy of one particular edit, either, it's about a long-standing pattern of advocacy on that article, and yes, any editor who showed such a pattern of edits would cause the same problem, because the pattern of edits and talk page comments reveals an agenda, and Wikipedia (especially Wikipedia biographies) is not the place to pursue an agenda. Guy (Help!) 18:59, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by GRBerry

The original WP:AE report that triggered the topic ban by JzG is archived here. (I closed this report.) The follow-up discussion of Benjiboi's protest is archived here. 14:06, 21 April 2008 (UTC)

Comment by Lawrence

Having been involved with this for a long time myself I have to agree with Guy's assessment, unfortunately. All the regulars on Matt Sanchez should find some other pages to work on. Lawrence Cohen § t/e 15:22, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Durova

It is disappointing to see gaps in Benjiboi's presentation. Actually we had substantial discussion about YouTube hostings prior to 22 March. The problems there were contributory copyright infringement, as laid forth in Wikipedia:COPYRIGHT#Linking_to_copyrighted_works. WP:V, WP:RS, and WP:BLP were also relevant. The article was sourcing negative information about a living subject to copyvio hostings at YouTube. I would have had no problem with citing such material to a legitimate hosting or a transcript, but linking to copyright infringements places WMF at risk of a lawsuit. Per BLP, negative text in the article that had no legitimate citation needed to be removed, at least temporarily, until a legitimate hosting or a show transcript could be found.

I first raised these issues on 29 February:

Durova: Videos can be edited and digitally altered in misleading ways, so a video hosted on a blog isn't reliable either. That goes for YouTube too, which is a point I hadn't raised yet. I'm not taking any partisan position here. Count the number of Blogspot and YouTube links I've removed in my last thousand edits. Or double check with the noticeboard.[128]

Benjiboi is aware of that statement; he replied an hour later.[129] I responded again.[130]

The next day he continued the thread as follows:

Benjiboi: Disagree completely. The world was agreed to be flat at one point as well, now we have better information that just maybe that isn't accurate. New media sources continue to evolve and wikipedia continues to keep up with those changes, sometimes successfully. I again assert that both the video of Sanchez doing what he says he does and the content which no one seems to dispute can be used and if semantics is an issue address those concerns. Dismissing something out of hand doesn't make for better articles.[131]

With that statement, Benjiboi was dismissing the Intellectual Reserve v. Utah Lighthouse Ministry precedent on contributory copyright infringement as semantics, which is a hypothesis that would really be better to test on his own website where he bears the consequences, than on WMF's website where the Foundation bears the consequences. He is also attempting to lecture me about new media. Although I was tempted to reply with a link to my dozens of featured picture credits, instead I just referred him to a noticeboard for third party feedback:

Durova: You are welcome to take advantage of this full protection to see whether the volunteers at WP:BLPN confirm your proposal regarding sources.[132]

His reply was sarcastic:

Benjiboi: Lovely. How special of you to make suggestions for my volunteering.[133]

Again on March 4 I mentioned the YouTube problem at another thread. Here is a link to that thread, which gives a good picture of how difficult even the simplest changes had become: Talk:Matt_Sanchez/Archive_18#Wall_of_Shame_photo_edit_request. Another relevant thread, immediately before the WP:AE request: Talk:Matt_Sanchez/Archive_18#Ahem. It was partly due to the difficulty of getting even bright line policy edits implemented that, after waiting nearly a full month to settle obvious BLP and copyright issues that ought to have been handled immediately, I resorted to AE for an edit request.

Also, contrary to Benjiboi's assertions, I did offer alternative citation options. It wasn't my responsibility to spell out these things and I was somewhat concerned that this would appear patronizing, but I wanted to be perfectly fair:

Durova: Now to state this for clarity: there are other ways besides YouTube to cite a major news broadcast. It's been nearly a full month since I first raised this point about YouTube in late February so I hope the editors who wish to retain the underlying information have been at work obtaining official transcripts of the relevant broadcasts.[134]

Overall, Benjiboi's participation has had several tendentious traits. I'll supply examples of the others if requested, but this presentation is already long:

  • Emphasizing the article subject's career in pornography.
  • Asserting that the article subject is or was a male escort; in other words, a prostitute.
  • Downplaying the subject's military career.
  • Downplaying the subject's journalism career.

I wish to draw the Committee's attention to Benjiboi's insistence, even here on this page, upon claiming that Matt Sanchez was an escort. Per David Shankbone's actions at Michael Lucas (director), that highly damaging assertion is to be made with particular caution even when the sources are impeccable. At Matt Sanchez it was being sourced in article text to non-notable blogs. Benjiboi fiercely defended that practice. We had several exchanges about it. Here's one example:

Durova: (I had already given examples of what sorts of blog citations would be acceptable, and why the particular one under discussion was not). Benjiboi, blogs as sources are a settled matter; I remove inappropriate blog citations all the time. That's unacceptable per both WP:RS and WP:BLP. If you have any doubts about my good faith and fairness, please take your doubts to Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard.[135]
Benjiboi:"blogs as sources are a settled matter" umm hardly. Just because many blogs are less than reliable certainly some are fine. Just wondering are you disputing any of the information as true? If so perhaps you could simply remove the ref that so distresses this strict interpretation as all blogs are bad thinking. Did you notice that the post in question is a video of - Sanchez conducting an interview? Please. The reality police are calling.[136]

At WP:AE I was on the fence about Benjiboi's topic ban and afterward I even offered to open a thread myself to lift his ban after one month if no further problems arose. Here is the latest repetition of that offer, where on April 20 I offered to open the request three days early.[137] Instead of replying he opened this request, where ne makes no mention of these overtures, misrepresents my involvement, and either does not recognize or does not understand the underlying policy and copyright issues at stake. That looks, unfortunately, like a preview of what to expect if his topic ban is lifted. Although I would like to support his return, his presentation renews my concerns.


One further statement for the record. I absolutely do not endorse Matt Sanchez's statements about gay people or the particular insults he has directed at some of the people who edited this article. That was one of the reasons I supported Mr. Sanchez's siteban. Privately, I strongly endorse LGBT rights (straight but not narrow). When I put on my Wikipedian hat I set personal politics on a shelf and apply dry policy analysis. I have answered content RFCs for Michael Moore, Matt Sanchez and Michael Lucas (director) on exactly the same neutral basis. DurovaCharge! 18:13, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Response to Durova's comments. I'm sorry if you felt I was purposely misleading in any way. Firstly, I included you as your actions started the whole AE thread thus my ban. I didn't mean to imply that was your intent. To answer your assertion that there are "gaps", the querty content issue was focussed on blogs as reliable sources not on YouTube as a reliable source. The answer in both cases should be to source to the original broadcaster rather than the site simply hosting the content. In the discussion, in fairness, YouTube was mentioned so could be seen as where the issue arose. To my point the content didn't seem to be presented as "this sourcing needs to be corrected" as much as "this content has to be deleted". I wouldn't have added the querty blog except that it seemed terribly non-controversial to state that the Sanchez had conducted a video interview as a vlogger and here is that vlog. I still disagree that all blogs and vlogs are considered unreliable and will decline to entangle myself in copyright discussions. I also felt the suggestion that I should shop the idea of was this a reliable source around as faulty as the concensus was that the content wasn't needed and if it wasn't considered a reliable source then forum-shopping seemed innappropriate to me. I felt your statement at that time was being sarcastic towards me and I responded in kind, that was a mistake. Also, just to clarify I have no website(s) where I engage in any wikipedia activity nor do I have any interest in Sanchez past the content of the article on this site.
I do want to point out that your "offer alternative citation options" came twenty minutes after you started the AE thread. This might be simple misunderstandings on a heated talk page but if your attempt was to correct the sourcing it wasn't clear to me so I apologize.
As for your highlights of my "tendentious traits" in regards to that article his notability, as far as reliable sourcing is concerned, is tied to his past porn career, this isn't a porn bio so shouldn't look like one but for those looking for that information we should cover it appropriately and with balance. This is tied directly to his military and journalism careers. We have plenty of sources for the adult entertainment career but talk page concensus is that he is likely no longer in the military with the only reason we don't state so is we have no reliable source stating that he no longer is. As for his journalism, I don't believe I've ever downplayed his journalism career and as is evident from the querty blog and other content (including Sanchez's vlog channel on YouTube) I was trying to add more information. I don't recall doing anything but trying to stick with wikipedia standards on whether he should be called a war-blogger or whatever was most appropriate and similar discussions continued after I was banned. I even listed the blog posts added to the article as examples of his work so that interested editors could try to find some representative quotes to use.
As for his escorting I really don't care that much if he did or didn't. He said he did, the incident that made him nationally known certainly said he did and there were lengthy discussions on primary vs secondary sources. The issue seemed far from settled but you've "boldly" archived all of it so until the next person brings it up or a new source covers it it can be anywhere else but on his article. Your links about "Benjiboi's insistence, even here on this page, upon claiming that Matt Sanchez was an escort. ... At Matt Sanchez it was being sourced in article text to non-notable blogs. Benjiboi fiercely defended that practice. We had several exchanges about it. Here's one example:" is completely off-base. First that is the qwerty blog thread about Sanchez being a vlogger interviewing someone else who was an escort not anything having to do with Sanchez himself escorting; also the thrust of adding that content was to help anchor him as covering the CPAC convention as a vlogger as well as that he had been corresponding with the interviewee while Sanchez was in the war zones, none of it seemed controversial to me. Secondly, when the escorting topics were brought up, I worked toward talkpage consensus on what information to add about the escorting as well as what wording. We never had consensus and I opposed adding anything to the article until there was some agreement.
Finally, as to your offers to help lift my ban I thanked you for your support, period. I have been working on my above statement ever since the second AE thread closed and this route was presented as the only way for me to overturn an admin topic ban. This has caused me more stress than any of the on-wiki homophobia I've dealt with and I only was able to finish it today, apologies if my timing isn't to your liking but I decided months ago to take a break from my volunteering here whenever I was feeling stressed and getting banned from any article without any heads up that I was on thin ice has made me reconsider if my time has been worth it. Banjeboi 20:18, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Lots of ground is covered there, so with space in mind I'll target this reply to just a few points. There was a concern among some editors that tangential mentions of other people's escort work were being abused per Wikipedia:Coatrack with ambiguous syntax to suggest that Mr. Sanchez was also an escort. At BLP articles, citation of blogs other than the subject's own is a delicate matter under the best of circumstances, and this was being handled very indelicately under adverse circumstances. If you thought my tone was sarcastic I wish you had brought the concern to my attention rather than engage in tit-for-tat. It has never been my intention to give offense, and those replies left me at a loss for what else to do. I hoped that had just been a bad day for you so I waited several weeks to pursue the matter seriously again, but obviously this kind of issue can't wait forever. If you can't trust me and won't seek third opinions, where else can I go? Most straight men wouldn't touch this topic with a ten inch pole.
Part of the problem when editorial discussion becomes too contentious is that outside opinions are harder to obtain. Here's one candid statement from earlier this month:
Cleo123: As an outsider, here in response to the notice at WP:BLPN - I, too, support the phrasing created by Durova and Abecedare. Insistence on the bizarre and inadequately sourced phraseology "embedded blogger" strikes me as an attempt to diminish sourced professional accomplishments, which is POV. Wow! I can't believe something so obvious and clear cut as the man's profession is the subject of such heated debate. Quick! Get me off of this page! LOL! Never! Never to return! LOL! You all have my sympathies!May the Wiki force be with you![138]
Lastly, I do not endorse JzG's assertion that Mr. Sanchez's personal opinions about who should or shouldn't edit the article ought to have any bearing. It doesn't matter to me (or, I hope, to the Committee) what any individual editor's sexual orientation is. What does matter is whether someone's contributions are productive and consistent with policy. DurovaCharge! 22:36, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Coatrack concerns are certainly valid, I wish it had been brought up in advance on the talk page as other had been simply as "the article states _____" but per coatrack we should reword to _____ so to remain more NPOV. That's how we've been able to clean up a lot of other problems there. Frankly, I thought Sanchez's interviewing another blogger, on the anniversary and at the same event of Sanchez's national fame (the CPAC convention/awards), who had gone through nearly identical experience as Sanchez (conservative voice being outed as a gay adult entertainer) could have made for a good compare/contrast launching point. As for editor's being straight or any gender or sexuality it really didn't cross my mind and rarely does. I realize most people have more traditional heterosexist and gender binary ideas (people are "either strait or gay" and either "male or female") so I rarely get into those areas unless the discussion seems to be of value.
I think I covered that I had no issues with his writing/blogging/journalism career being covered, whatever career title policies stated it be termed. Pretty consistently I've advocated letting reliable sources speak for themselves as a way to stop the SPA abuse and other nonsense. I also felt we were knee deep in experienced editors lately so someone would come up with a way to deem what was most appropriate, I was certainly in no rush. As was evident from discussions like Sanchez is not a writer, I wasn't terribly bothered one way or another but moved to simply keep it accurate, organized and move on. He's a writer, yes, move on. Right below that section is Work as an escort, where my take on the whole escorting/prostitution issue is pretty evident to lean on what reliable sources state and presenting the information neutrally. Also it's fairly evident that this was an issue that many editors besides myself also felt wasn't resolved but others can judge for themselves. Banjeboi 05:43, 22 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for those replies. I agree that Matt Sanchez is no saint and negative information has a place in the article. My concern is that it be properly sourced and overall balanced. This page has been a battleground far too long; I'd like to see it on the same footing as any other BLP. DurovaCharge! 10:05, 22 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
No prob. I agree that it needs a lot of work still, I waited a while before I did much until I could suss out what we actually had to work with (trying to see the content through all the drama). When I started I did more simple things like adding sections and infobox. I've also learned to look for the overall arch on bios as well and Sanchez seems to be media person of sorts, an actor, editorializer and now doing reporting/commentaries on blogs, vlogs and apparently overseas TV. I liken him to other political commentators and think his views should be expressed with some quotes so he "speaks" for himself. To me the answer was almost never to delete content to achieve balance but add content like expanding the military and Columbia sections so the stuff Sanchez deems negative (adult entertainer) isn't lost but minimized as a part of a past career. I've said before that if he just let others build the article it would be so much better. Banjeboi 18:46, 22 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment. Cleo123's comment above used to illustrate how difficult it was to solicit outside opinions when "editorial discussion becomes too contentious" should be seen in context. All talkpage contributions from myself had been archived away prior to that comment. This perhaps would support that the topic itself is controversial with or without my involvement. Banjeboi 18:54, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Rushdittobot

Benjiboi wrote:

Although I can see how you might piece together the above timeline it's not one I've ever seen. Instead most of the accounts I've read have been more along the lines that his former clients or at least those who claimed to be his former clients blew the whistle to the bloggers.

Former Matt Sanchez clients have made statements? Where?

Benjiboi is the only person to describe Sanchez as a vlogger. What does that mean? And does he have a source? I haven't found one anywhere. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Rushdittobot (talk • contribs) 03:50, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Response to Rushdittobot. It doesn't matter where those former clients, or more precisely those who claimed to be former clients made any statements unless it's in a reliable source that we can use. I've yet to see any usable content of that nature but if it interests you take it to the article's talk page, I imagine you'll get the same answer. On YouTube Matt has his own vlogging channel. A vlogger is a blogger who also does video blogs, hardly a controversial term but if it just seems off-base then, again, take it to that talk page, this forum is not to make cases for or against article content. I will assume good faith that you just happenned along that talkpage thread on Thatcher's talkpage and naturally decided that you should comment here. Sadly, the experience with that article has been socks both for and against Sanchez and this seems to be along those lines. Banjeboi 11:10, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Neil

Re jpgordon's statement below: ..with Benji crossed off and the new editor's name written in crayon... That's a rather incivil, unfair and inappropriate comment from a sitting Arbitrator. Would appreciate that being excised. Neıl 12:16, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Clerk notes

This area is used for notes by non-recused Clerks.

Arbitrator views and discussion

  • The whole point of an article probation is to reduce the thrashing and tsuris associated with heated topics. It's not the faithless editors who have to worry about article probation; they get taken care of in other fashions. Good editors, however, can also cause problems, sometimes by their very presence. That their intentions are good, and that their history is sterling, does not alter the fact that their work on specific articles can be disruptive (or can be part of a cycle that leads to disruption.) My initial inclination is to let the ban stand; it's not a "black mark" against Benji, but rather a recognition that his presence on that article is causing more problems than it is worth. On the other hand, if another editor were to come to the article, and do the same sort of work Benji's been doing, Mr Sanchez' stream of OTRS requests would resume, with Benji crossed off and the new editor's name written in crayon. So this isn't about Benji, but about the material itself, which either belongs or does not belong in the article, regardless of Mr Sanchez' feelings. This means the only question for Benji is, "can you continue the edit the article while respecting our BLP, NPOV, V, etc requirements?" As far as OTRS is concerned, if Mr Sanchez' requests are valid, they should be respected; if not, they should be politely declined the first time, and ignored after that; he certainly doesn't get to dictate who edits the article about him. I can't imagine this is the first time someone has been persistent trying to get their way via OTRS; what's the usual way of dealing with repeat complainants? --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 16:27, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Proposed motions and voting


Request for appeal: Topic ban of Thomas Basboll

List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:

Statement by Thomas Basboll

Raul654 has imposed a topic ban as sanctioned by ArbCom's recent ruling in the case on 9/11 conspiracy theories (see discussion at at AE). I do not consider myself a POV pusher (nor, it should go without saying, a conspiracy theorist or "truther"). I have devoted my time here (increasingly narrowly) as a good-faith single-purpose editor to articles related the collapse of the WTC, which interests me both from a technical, engineering point of view and as an episode in the philosophy, history and sociology of knowledge. I consider the WTC collapse article to be mainly an article on an engineering topic, and the controlled demolition hypothesis article to be mainly an article about a fringe hypothesis (comparable to, say, memory of water and, until recently, ball lightning, a phenomenon whose status is changing). I have edited them as such, in accordance with what I know, and based on (to my mind) reasonable interpretations of reliable sources.

I have behaved civily in all discussions, and was in this case implementing what I saw as an emerging consensus (from a week-long poll) in good faith, and explicitly noted that anyone could revert it if they thought I was jumping the gun [139]. Taking a longer view, my editing on these articles has been overwhelmingly accepted by consensus. The difference between the two versions being discussed in this particular case is very small. (This, for example, gives an indication of the difference between my proposal and Jehochman's; note that the bulk of my allegedly POV-pushing edit, namely, the merger of the overview section with the lead, has been preserved.) It is certainly a far cry from the sorts of claims that are normally associated with 9/11 CT POV-pushers. Moreover, I am willing to accept either of the two possible solutions. The purpose of the poll was to clearly identify the consensus in order to make it easier to maintain the page in the face of predictable edits.

Somewhat ironically, I had already explained this to Jehochman [140] before he lodged his complaint against my "horrendous POV pushing". I now, of course, understand why he didn't contribute to the poll. He seems to believe none of this, i.e., patient, civil ongoing discussion about the scientific status of the hypothesis, should be necessary. I look forward to hearing ArbCom's view on this matter.--Thomas Basboll (talk) 07:40, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Addendum

Mongo has added a number of charges to the Tango Arbitration that are probably better dealt with here. It includes a characteristically false allegation: "Interestingly, during Basboll's hiatus from editing, User:Aude was able to get the disruption free period she needed to get 7 World Trade Center to featured level. I was able to help her with some copywriting issues. It remains the only 9/11 related article to achieve FA status. Basboll made numerous comments regarding the article upon his return to editing. Aude was also able to get Construction of the World Trade Center (a peripheral article) to FA status as well during Basboll's hiatus." Clearly this statement can only begin to make sense if I had actually worked on the articles that he rightly praises Aude's work on. Well, until my departure in May 2007, I had not edited them. I've actually checked back through my contributions. As far as I can tell I had not made a single edit to those articles before my break. It can hardly be in my absence that Aude was able to bring the 7 WTC article up to FA; there is simply no basis for identifying my hiatus with a "disruption free period" in this case. MONGO next suggests that, upon my return, I began to disrupt her work. He cites discussion threads that begin here. Notice that these threads conclude with agreement reached between Aude and I. The article was simply improved. By contrast, during my most recent absence, MONGO had four months to deal with a POV tag issue he insisted on leaving in, thereby ensuring that the article would fail a GA review after I had fixed a series shortcomings not related to CTs that had been identified by the sweeps reviewer. Nothing was done until, upon my return, I raised that as obviously the most pressing issue to deal with. I was immediately called a POV pusher and troll (the cause of what is now the Tango arbitration) and it was suggested that the section, after sitting quietly in the article for four months with a "neutrality disputed" tag, should just be deleted. Here, too, the situation has been resolved after lengthy discussions ... this time in MONGO's absence (block and retirement).--Thomas Basboll (talk) 22:28, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Request for clarification of the difference that made the difference

Regardless of how AC judges my appeal, it will be useful to clarify the extent to which it is against policy to edit on the wrong side of this difference.--Thomas Basboll (talk) 11:35, 28 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by JzG

I didn't see the debate, but there is no doubt that Thomas Basboll's presence in those articles, while generally not egregiously uncivil, has had the effect of inflaming disputes and extending debate on matters where there is clearly a strong agreement with a few prominent holdouts, Basboll being one of same. His opinions on 9/11 are definitely not mainstream, and tireless advocacy of non-mainstream positions is one of the things I consider to be a serious problem in Wikipedia right now, so I would be inclined to support Raul's call here. Guy (Help!) 08:23, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  1. Are you suggesting that he is "incivil" in a non-egregious way? On what grounds?
  2. If there is "no doubt" that he inflames disputes please provide proofs about this.
  3. Provide proofs also of "clearly strong agreement" where debates have been extended.
  4. Personal opinions are completely irrelevant (and you would have to prove them too).
  5. If "advocacy" is so big a problem why don't you provide proofs of advocacy in this case?
  6. According to which policy your (unproved) description of the user would be enough for a ban?
Unless you will provide any supporting material yours is just a groundless personal attack.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 18:06, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
See WP:SOUP. Guy (Help!) 19:00, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
How is someone challenging your view of something you "consider to be a serious problem" and asking for concrete examples to support some fairly broad statements in any way comparable to a distraction tactic? I really don't see a problem with "extending debate" - no article is ever finished and available information always changes. Debate is necessary, and from what I've seen of this user (admittedly not a huge amount), he appears to debate in a relatively constructive manner. I know a lot of people don't agree with this, but I feel firmly that is important in any kind of collaborative project for exclusion to be the resort only when there is absolutely no other option. I have seen no evidence to suggest that this is the case. 78.86.18.55 (talk) 00:41, 22 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thomas is a supporter of certain fringe theories. His continued advocacy of those fringe theories in the face of multiple rejections, constitutes disruptive behaviour. Thomas is a perfectly nice fellow, he simply has this fringe view which he cannot bring himself to drop voluntarily. That does not make him evil, but it does make for a problem. Guy (Help!) 20:46, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
at the risk of being presumptuous, I'll reword this. I don't think Thomas holds the fringe view, or rather I presume he doesn't. However, he advocates its inclusion to the articles as if it were not a fringe view. This is very difficult to deal with. He is perfectly civil. There are others that advocate the fringe view that support him and make him feel as if inclusion is consensus. This is the problem in that continuous battles to include this material is not conducive to building the encyclopedia with high quality content. --DHeyward (talk) 01:37, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Whether Thomas rather than you is right about the correct application of WP:UNDUE in the specific cases is a matter to be discussed in the talk page of the articles as required by the Wikipedia editorial process. You can't say that people are "a problem" just because you disagree with their opinions about content issues unless they don't follow the Wikipedia editorial process, which is not the case.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 10:24, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
What you DHeyward and others are overlooking is that the edit that led to this ban was not a fringe view. What you are in effect saying here is that because he supports a fringe view then any edit he makes regardless of legitimacy is automatically rejected. This goes to the unanswered question I posed earlier. Was it the intention of Arbcom to stabilise the article by restricting editing to the “official” mainstream viewpoint to the exclusion of other minor but significant viewpoints as well as fringe viewpoints?. Wayne (talk) 13:26, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You are incorrect on all accounts. Firstly, I don't view the topic ban as the result of one edit, rather a collection of a body of work that culminated in a final edit, i.e. the "last straw". This was after the arbcom ruling. Secondly, the whole article "Controlled Demilition Hypothesis..." is an article on a notable fringe theory. NPOV does not require that Wikipedia write the article as if this theory were accepted or that it must be written as if it were possible. Rather, the overwhelming scientific consensus view is taht this is a fringe conspriacy theory that has no merit in science or engineering and that it should be treated as such. The NPOV challenge is to present these facts about the hypothesis and not get confused with neutrally advocating the position. The facts are that it's 1) fringe 2) conspiracy theory and 3) overwhelmingly refuted. That's a neutral assessment of the hypothesis. The challenge for editors is to present those facts without advocating the theory and also to present it without disparaging the holders of this view. It is not NPOV to treat it as a legitmate theory. --DHeyward (talk) 16:47, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Lets clarify a few points. It was not a "final edit, i.e. the "last straw" but the first edit he made after the Arbcom. The edit did not support any fringe theory but in fact added a sentence which reduced the weight of fringe theories. This sentence was later replaced in the article the day after Thomas' edit was reverted and is still there. This means that the only part of his edit disputed was removing the words "911 conspiracy" from the first sentence and moving it to the second sentence where he expanded it by explaining it is fringe and not accepted. In his edit summary he even said that if you didn't agree with the edit, revert it. Basically a single minor edit of no real importance that had general support got an editor banned. Wayne (talk) 04:46, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Jehochman

I filed the arbitration enforcement request. Truthers have been trying to whitewash Controlled demolition hypothesis for the collapse of the World Trade Center for quite some time, and a variety of editors have been attempting to restore neutral point of view. Id est: [141] [142] [143] [144] [145] [146] At some point people need to understand that Wikipedia is not a soapbox for advancing fringe theories. The community has been put on notice. Enough is enough. Let the administrators do their work. User:Thomas Basboll's long contribution history shows three main types of contributions to Wikipedia: 1/ pushing a Truther POV, 2/ attacking MONGO, and 3/ engaging in various processes to support those agendas. We simply do not need single purpose policy violation accounts, no matter how polite they may be. Jehochman Talk 08:29, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comments by Pokipsy76

We don't determine whether Bigfoot exists by polling Bigfoot believers. We follow what the preponderance of reliable sources say. Jehochman Talk 08:34, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  1. Why do you speak abouth "truthers": can you prove anyone here is a truther?
  2. Your opinion about what is the due weight to give to allegedly "fringe" theories is not relevant here, it must be decided by means of consensus.
  3. Administrators have not the right to unilaterally decide what is the due weight and who did violate it. It's up to the wikipedia community by means of consensus. --Pokipsy76 (talk) 18:20, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Uninvolved Ncmvocalist

It appears that the editor who has been sanctioned has made good-faith attempts to try to find common ground among two sides - one side who feels that a certain hypothesis is labelled as a conspiracy theory, and another who doesn't. It is irrespective that I am of the opinion that it should be labelled as a conspiracy theory, because this editor in conducting a straw poll, has identified it as a conspiracy theory - whether it is in the first sentence, or the second of the article - although, the second sentence did not give enough emphasis on this I feel.

Although straw polls do not determine consensus, there was some discussion. The editor who filed the Arb-enforcement request made no attempts to participate in the discussion until earlier today, despite being invited to by the editor over 5 days ago, and editing on the article during those 5 days. In his editing, he has in fact on several occasions quoted 'consensus', but because the very policy clearly outlines that consensus can change, he should have engaged in the current discussion.

I find that there is insufficient evidence (of the sanctioned user failing to adhere to the Wikipedia principles outlined) for a sanction to be imposed in this case. However, the editor should've "been counselled on specific steps that he or she can take to improve his or her editing in accordance with relevant policies and guidelines" as per the the remedy imposed by the ArbCom - I see none being given by the admin who imposed this sanction.

I am therefore of the opinion that there appear to be grounds for an appeal here. Ncmvocalist (talk) 09:31, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Xiutwel

It seems to me an emotional decision, blocking an editor, citing one edit.

Raul654 first neglected to give any specific reasons, and later added one edit as "the reason". onetwothree

I think Raul misunderstands the ArbCom decision, and also misunderstands NPOV policy.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 19:36, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • at User:Raul654/Civil POV pushing he explaines why involved editors should engage in POV disputes to make sure that the commendable POV (the government does not lie) triumphs over the evil POV's. It is clear that Raul fails to understand how policy, by following its process, leads to good articles. In stead, he starts with "the truth" and sees editors who disagree with him as "the Problem".  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 19:54, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by semi-involved Wayne

I do not edit the article and do not personally believe the CD theory. I do however participate in talk occasionally as I believe the CD theory should be treated fairly. Comparing the current version with Thomas' version shows a difference of less than half a sentence which is not particularly controversial and was made in good faith after discussion. If we compare Thomas' edit with the original version we see that the current version is now closer to his edit than was the original and in fact his is more critical of the theory than the original was.
There was no warning before banning and no reason given for the ban. The reasons eventually given were confusing and lacked substance. Jehochman says "We don't determine whether Bigfoot exists by polling Bigfoot believers." but this is a gross misrepresentation. The poll was of both supporters and opposition and was primarily a grammatical edit that implied no preference for any conclusion. If Jehochman equates his refusal to take part in the discussion as bias to Thomas' viewpoint then he has no one to blame but himself and Thomas should not be punished for his failure.
Given what I see I have to ask, why is Arbcom enforcement so strictly enforced that it equates to either a.) almost total control of the article by supporters of the official theory or b.) discourages neutral editors from participating? Was it the intention of Arbcom to stabilise the article by restricting editing to the “official” mainstream viewpoint to the exclusion of other minor but significant viewpoints as well as fringe viewpoints? Wayne (talk) 05:43, 22 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:Inclusionist

Raul654 is NOT an "uninvolved" administrator

The arbitration remedy states:

"Any uninvolved administrator may, on his or her own discretion, impose sanctions on any editor working in the area of conflict (defined as articles which relate to the events of September 11, broadly interpreted)"

Raul654 is NOT an "uninvolved" administrator.

"The original 7 World Trade Center collapsed at 5:20 p.m. on September 11 due to the combined effect of structural and fire damage." stating "rv - well known fact" [163]
Raul654 blocks editors he edit wars with
Raul654's did not follow the arbcom guidelines

Raul654's did not follow the arbcom guidelines, the arbitration remedy states:

"...if, despite being warned, that editor repeatedly or seriously fails to adhere to the purpose of Wikipedia, any expected standards of behavior, or any normal editorial process...Prior to any sanctions being imposed, the editor in question shall be given a warning with a link to this decision; and, where appropriate, should be counseled on specific steps that he or she can take to improve his or her editing in accordance with relevant policies and guidelines. Editors wishing to edit in these areas are advised to...amend behaviors that are deemed to be of concern by administrators"

Raul654 did not warn Thomas before the block: "Prior to any sanctions being imposed, the editor in question shall be given a warning with a link to this decision".

The arbitration remedy states also:

"Editors wishing to edit in these areas are advised to edit carefully, to adopt Wikipedia's communal approaches (including appropriate conduct, dispute resolution, neutral point of view, no original research and verifiability) in their editing, and to amend behaviors that are deemed to be of concern by administrators"

Thomas Basboll used a "communal approach" in a straw poll. Jehochman lost the straw poll, which meant a majority of editors agreed with Thomas's POV. Instead of attempting to build consensus, Jehochman filed this Arbitration enforcement.

Jehochman's evidence

The seven edits which Jehochman uses as evidence to topic ban Thomas are as follows:

  • Thomas "boldly" implementing the results of the straw poll. [173]
  • Jehochman reverting Thomas, in an argument over one sentence. In both Jehochman and Thomas's revisions 9/11 conspiracy theories remains in the sentence. Jehochman is reverted by Pokipsy76. [174]
  • Jehochman reverts anon 67.164.76.73, which has nothing to do with Thomas. [175]
  • Jehochman reverts WillOakland, and then is reverted by 67.168.160.59. [176]
  • MONGO reverts Apostle12. [177]
  • Jehochman reverts Wowest who is reverted by Dscotese [178]
  • Jehochman reverts Dscotese [179]

Only the first involves Thomas.

Raul based his ban on one Thomas edit which Jehochman complained about [180]

Jehochman's language shows that he is just as much a POV warrior as Thomas is:

  • "Truthers"
  • "tendentious group of editors"
  • "horrendous POV pushing"
  • "Truthers have been trying to whitewash the article for quite some time"
  • "The community has been put on notice. Enough is enough."

POV warriors often:

  1. label their opponents ("Truthers"),
  2. use vivid adjectives ("horrendous") to describe their opponents,
  3. make absolute statements ("Enough is enough").

Inclusionist (talk) 23:32, 22 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by DHeyward

I can only say that the Collapse of the World Trade Center article is vastly superior since the edits of April 22. Because of the vast amount of progress in the short amount of time, I have to support the article ban. This is now a proper article without huge WP:UNDUE, WP:FRINGE and other problems. I have tried to edit this article prior to the enforcement action and endless discussion about non-reliable, fringe theories was counterproductive. --DHeyward (talk) 07:23, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

After comparing the differences you claim make the article "vastly superior" I notice that apart from cosmetic edits the only real changes are the deletion of a NIST reference and a reference to the engineer Cherepanov that I am disputing. This dispute is exactly what I just said in my reply to you above....Because Cherepanov supports a fringe theory you deleted a claim he made that is not fringe and tacitly supported by other reliable sources. I also notice that the current version still contains almost all of the edits Thomas Basboll made before April 22. The more I see the more I feel Thomas is being penalised for his views rather than his editing. Wayne (talk) 14:10, 27 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Amen to that. Probably it's worth being underlined that Thomas' views, expressed here on Wikipedia, are strictly on wiki-editing matters, like the one that editors should look carefully into what scientific and reliable sources say and report it accordingly, without WP:OR, or locking our heads onto mainstream media ("so that Internet not suck").
Why is this case so mostly ignored by admins? Please voice your opinions. salVNaut (talk) 02:08, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by other user

Clerk notes

Arbitrator views and discussion


Request to amend prior case: Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Privatemusings

List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:


Statement by Avruch

I would like the Committee to please reconsider the indefinite restriction placed upon Privatemusings that prevents editing to any article that is "substantially a biography of a living person." I request that this restriction be commuted to an indefinite or time-limited parole, including: allowing blocks in line with the remedy based on edits reasonably construed as a violation of the BLP policy and restriction to 1RR for all non-vandalism edits on BLP articles.

Privatemusings, returned from his 90 day ban, has edited reasonably and participated as a member of the community in a number of policy related areas. His contributions have shown a fully improved understanding of and adherence to Wikipedia policies and norms, and Wikipedia has benefited from his presence. He has not incurred any additional blocks or other restrictions since returning from his ban, and many editors expressed during his ban and upon its expiration that his insight and participation was valuable both on-wiki and on the Wikback forum. I've even seen grudging praise about his presence on Wikipedia Review.

The link to evidence presented against Privatemusings that is related to the BLP policy is here. While the links to the di Stefano article edits are admin-only, the description does not lead me to believe that they are egregious violations of BLP policy. It is clear to me and many others that the atmosphere of the di Stefano article is particularly strained and contentious, but PM and others should not be penalized permanently for inartful attempts to edit an article whose history is unclear to newcomers. Edits to the King article are admittedly more serious, and display a regrettable lapse in judgment. However, it seems unlikely to me that such behavior will be repeated and I believe the Committee should give Privatemusings the opportunity to reform and eventually transition to an unrestricted status should his conduct remain exemplary. Avruch T 18:18, 16 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Privatemusings

Yes please! I'd love an unencumbered account! I'll happily engage with any process any of you recommend; anyone have any questions, for example? I could answer some on a subpage? or expand answers to points you feel it would be good to address? - would anyone like to chat on IRC or somewhere? - let me know. I should also note that ides like a '1RR' on biographies of living people are fine with me, and in many ways are good practice, as well as reassuring anyone worried that I might leap into disruptive editing. How's about a six month '1RR'? I'm also open to any other ideas which may be floating around.

I think my case was a little unusual, and I also wonder if there's any appetite to look at the decision overall, and specifically some of the principles involved (well actually, mainly this one) - which I feel may not have been applied equitably across the board. I'll explain further if any find it relevant.

Regardless of the outcome of this request, I've got a couple of quick questions that are hopefully easy to resolve as well;

  • A link was provided at the end of my biography editing restriction and I wanted to clarify the intention of that. I'm not sure which aspects of my editing the arb.s which to define as inappropriate (one article, two, or just a general sort of thing). In particular it would be very helpful to me to have a concrete response to my posts like this one and this one.
  • If this is too soon, how long d'ya think represents good timing? I'm happy to wait as long as you like, but I'm not completely sure what will change in the interim, so would hope you might consider this now.

thanks, Privatemusings (talk) 01:37, 17 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by other user

Clerk notes

Arbitrator views and discussion

  • Too soon for a change. Give it some more time, please. FloNight♥♥♥ 19:03, 16 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Privatemusings has improved his behaviour considerably since his return and if he maintains this attitude then I will definitely be prepared to remove the remaining restrictions - but we need slightly longer to show it. Sam Blacketer (talk) 19:47, 16 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Too soon. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 03:40, 17 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Give it another couple months and if behavior is still good I will give my unqualified support. Matthew Brown (Morven) (T:C) 07:56, 20 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • I would support modification of the remedy, but defer to my colleagues who believe that the passage of some additional time would be helpful. Newyorkbrad (talk) 14:32, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Request for clarification : Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/IRC

List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:

  • Carcharoth (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA) (initiator)
  • Giano II (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) [181]
  • Bishonen (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) (self-added)
  • All of the current arbitration committee that were active and recused on this case (will notify separately) [182]

Statement by Carcharoth

Could the arbitration committee please clarify what has or has not resulted from the final principle and the associated remedy in the IRC case, namely: Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/IRC#Policy issues surrounding IRC and Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/IRC#IRC, and what is planned for the future, if anything. The principle in full is:

"The Arbitration Committee has recently been asked by Jimbo Wales to take an expanded role in the governance of IRC. The Committee is formulating policy and procedure changes based on this new role independently from this case. passed 7-1 at 03:48, 9 February 2008 (UTC)"

The remedy in full is:

"Policy and procedure changes regarding Wikipedia IRC channels will be addressed separately by this committee. passed 9-0 with 1 abstention at 03:56, 9 February 2008 (UTC)"

Thank-you. Carcharoth (talk) 16:40, 26 March 2008 (UTC) Updated 17:16, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Update - About a week ago, when filing this request, I contacted 13 arbitrators on their talk pages regarding this request for clarification (see here). These were the current arbitrators who were listed as active on the case, or who recused themselves. So far, four have responded: FT2, Newyorkbrad, Paul August and Jdforrester (James F). Of the other nine, eight have edited Wikipedia since I contacted them (the other one has not edited in some time and has a break notice on their talk page), but have not responded here, or on their talk page. I note that FT2 has left a note here saying that he is dealing with other issues at the moment which take priority, which is fair enough. Should we take the silence of most of the other arbitrators to mean that the committee have left FT2 to deal with this? And if the arbitration committee have done this delegation (which I would in some ways prefer to long-winded committee decisions), why can't they just say so? Carcharoth (talk) 15:09, 2 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
No such formal delegation has been made. Paul August 05:02, 5 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. I see Flonight has since posted a response. I will wait another week before posting here again, or longer if the arbitration committee can: (a) come up with a schedule for this request; (b) clarify what is needed here and whether any all or only some arbitrators need to respond here; and (c) agree to eventually move/restart the discussion somewhere else. What I hope will come of this is that progress and consensus will be made and documented on Wikipedia (rather than in the channel and by other off-wiki means) - I presume all those participating in the #en-admins IRC channel are happy to participate in on-wiki discussion about the channel? Some moderation of the discussion might be needed, but I think such a discussion might alleviate some of the concerns. For example, one thing that could be suggested is that anyone obtaining a cloak to the channel could be required to sign (on-wiki) the channel code of conduct as part of the sign up process. Carcharoth (talk) 19:12, 5 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Ryan Postlethwaite

I can state that several other channel ops and I have been working hard to take the communities views in hand when we have been discussing how to handle future behavioural issues in the channel. The first thing we've done is created guidlines for the channel which all users of the channel are aware of. These can be found here. The problems highlighted in the IRC case are mainly because members of the channel didn't understand what was expected of them and the channel operators didn't really know their role in stopping behavioural problems. The operators have now decided to take a more proactive role in the enforcement of channel standards, and all users are aware that if they start discussing people behind their backs, start being offensive or anything else which could be seen from the outside as unacceptable, they'll have their access removed. Obviously sometimes a warning may suffice, but in serious incidents, we'll remove on sight.

What we've also done is made the access list public, so any IRC user can see exactly who has access to the channel. On wiki, we've created User:Cbrown1023/Guidelines (user info) so that everyone is aware exactly who has access to the channel, and who the channel operators are. If there's a concern with someones conduct, then anyone is welcome to contact one of the ops and it will be taken extremely seriously and we'll of course keep you informed of what is happening. At present, we're currently debating the role of non administrators in the channel and whether or not they should keep their access. We've had no consensus either way up to this point, but we'll keep on going highlighting both the benefits and disadvantages.

The channel has moved on a lot since the case and although there hasn't been any direction from ArbCom, the internal running and operation has taken a lot from the case and everything is now much clearer regarding expected standards and routes for ops to take if there are problems. If people have concerns, just contact one of us. I'm sure the arbitration committee would also be willing to hear of problems if the ops haven't dealt with it. Ryan Postlethwaite 17:16, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Related suggestion from Wetman
If the access list has been made public, can Ryan Postlethwaite ensure that it is entered in some acceptable fashion at Wikipedia:IRC channels, so that more ordinary Wikipedians like myself could actually access it?--Wetman (talk) 22:35, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I've gone ahead and created a new proposed page. Please see User:Ryan Postlethwaite/IRC. This would replace the old admins channel wikipedia space page so it has to go through DRV which can be found at Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2008 March 26#Wikipedia:IRC channels/wikipedia-en-admins. Ryan Postlethwaite 23:13, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Note: I linked the list at WP:IRC in the header of the WEA section, some weeks ago. FT2 (Talk | email) 11:13, 27 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Related suggestion from Lawrence Cohen
Can we get this list of users updated to seperate out admins from non-admins, with a direct 1:1 relationship shown what IRC handle connects with what English Wikipedia username? Lawrence § t/e 15:13, 27 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I've done this at User:Cbrown1023/Guidelines (user info). I linked the ones I knew of the top of my head and non-admins are in bold. John Reaves 07:13, 28 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Related query by Bishonen

"Just contact one of us"..? Er, how? Why are people expected to know the way to CBrowns userspace if they have been treated badly on the channel? Why isn't there a public board in Wikipedia space (linked to from WP:AN and similar) where complaints can be dealt with by senior ops? Bishonen | talk 17:40, 26 March 2008 (UTC).[reply]

It should be noted that the anchored redirect WP:WEA broke when the header it redirected to was changed with this edit on 6 March. I've just fixed it, so now people can go straight to the big red box with the link to the guidelines when they click on WP:WEA. From there, they should be able to find someone to complain to. This is a work in progress, and I'm sure suggestions you make will be discussed. Any ideas for a suitable on-wiki talk page to discuss things? Carcharoth (talk) 17:56, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I hope you don't mind me commenting here Bish, please feel fee to move it if you want. I agree that CBrowns userspace isn't ideal, but people didn't like the fact that we had a whole wiki-space page dedicated to #wikipedia-en-admins. I personally wouldn't mind it being in a more accessible location and it would be a good idea to link it more widely so that people are clear where and who to go to and the expected conduct of the users in the channel. I'm not sure a public board is a great idea for this, if there are problems, it would most likely involve passing logs to channel operators, or the channel operators getting evidence from logs which shouldn't be posted on-wiki. I personally don't have a problem with people coming to my talk page with their concerns and I'll communicate with them on wiki regarding the steps that I'm taking to resolve them - I just don't think a dedicated noticeboard is such a good idea. Ryan Postlethwaite 17:59, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Quick comment on that - that was taken care of at the same time, earlier this month. I linked the entire channel guidelines (including where to seek help and who are the channel operators) from WP:IRC#wikipedia-en-admins specifically to ensure that question had an answer, and those needing to know how to find the guidelines and help, could know.
I also added as a second measure, also earlier this month, a section to WP:IRC covering #Problems and help, and to be sure that was visible relinked it as well from near the top of the page too. It gives full details on how to seek help if there is a problem on an IRC channel. The pages they link to contain full details of every person in any kind of channel op role, on en-admins and more generally, for much of English Wikipedia IRC. FT2 (Talk | email) 18:39, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"people didn't like the fact that we had a whole wiki-space page dedicated to #wikipedia-en-admins" - that wasn't my perception at all. People didn't seem to have a problem with it - they seemed to have a problem with the proclamation that there were "special rules" for that page, that only certain editors were allowed to touch it, it wasn't subject to consensus, and that presence there was a privilege above and beyond anything else. Achromatic (talk) 20:50, 30 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by GRBerry

Given that the remedy the committee passed was that the committee would address this issue, the activity Ryan discusses, while likely meritorious, does not actually fulfill the remedy. Is there a status update as to the committee's activity? GRBerry 17:43, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Thatcher

First, I think this space should probably be reserved to ask the committee for an update on their views of IRC governance etc., and discussion of Bishonen's excellent question should be moved elsewhere (including my comments below, should someone be so bold as to start such a discussion).

I think a noticeboard for IRC chanops would be an excellent idea. Now, this gets a bit esoteric and lawyerish, but it seems to be the current situation that IRC is recognized as an independent creature, with different rules of conduct and methods of dispute resolution, and that Wikipedia has no authority to mandate any particular channel behavior or dispute resolution process. However, that does not mean that the chanops could not choose for their own convenience to host a noticeboard on Wikipedia. I think a noticeboard is an excellent idea because it will allow issues to be discussed by more than just the ops who happen to be online at a given moment, and it will have archives, including a record of when and why a user was added or removed from the channel that IRC itself does not provide. There already seems to be a sort of noticeboard at User talk:Cbrown1023/Guidelines.

However, hosting the noticeboard and associated policies/contact lists/dispute resolution processes in Wikipedia space presents the same problem it did before; it suggests that anyone can edit it, when in fact only the participants in IRC have a say and only the chanops (appear to) have the final say. So it may be necessary either to host the pages in project space but grant them an exemption from "everyone can edit" or to keep them in user space but raise their profile through linkage or even transclusion. Thatcher 18:10, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Thatcher, IRC is not reccognised as an independent creature with separate and different rules. Jimbo, himslf, made this very clear here [183]. Giano (talk) 08:23, 28 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Further plea and misplaced clarification by Bishonen (but if not here, then where?)

I'm replying here to FT2's response to Carcharoth's basic question why the final principle "The Arbitration Committee has recently been asked by Jimbo Wales to take an expanded role in the governance of IRC. The Committee is formulating policy and procedure changes based on this new role independently from this case" (passed 7-1) and its associated remedy "Policy and procedure changes regarding Wikipedia IRC channels will be addressed separately by this committee" (passed 9-0), have both come to naught. My post goes to clarifying the committee's final principles and remedies as they relate to en-admins IRC case—it's not about FT2's block of Giano—therefore I post it here, in preference to drowning it at the now extremely copious discussion of that block on WP:AE (most of it posted by FT2). Yes, I know I'm not supposed to post in this section, which is for arbs, but it seems my only chance of being heard. (I won't post again, whether or not you remove me from this spot, Thatcher. This has taken me much too much time as it is.)

Like probably most people, I feel at an awful disadvantage when attempting to discuss or debate with FT2, since he seems impressively able to write about 100 lines in the space of time that it takes your average wikipedian to write 20, and me to write 5. (And NYBrad to write 70 or so.) My efforts in the direction of debate with FT2 have always literally drowned. But I will try just once to do my own clarification. I made an effort to come to grips with the background to FT2's new guidelines for IRC (at this moment not available in CBrown's space, but mirrored at [184])—these guidelines being the only mouse that has so far been born from the laboring mountains of the IRC case, and it's final principles and remedies. The background to the guidelines, as offered by FT2 in channel to anybody interested, turned out to be an edited log of a discussion between FT2 and some 6 or 10 channel users (by FT2's own estimate) from February 25-26. I have it here. It's been edited by FT2 to remove irrelevancies, and consists–well, I don't have any counting tool that will work for this— but at my rough estimate, the discussion consists to at least 80% of FT2 himself talking, mainly describing how well the channel works now:

(Exact quote of log)
  • <FT2> irc runs well now (here)
  • <FT2> but the outside world doesnt know it
  • <FT2> we're like in wikipedia in the old days, "dont be a dick" and "no real rules otherwise"
  • <FT2> we have our sort of "unspoken code"
  • <FT2> a user who harasses here will (or probably should be) talked to or sorted out/calmed down...
  • <FT2> a user who canvasses persistently likewise
  • <FT2> these things dont much happen, we have a sort of unspoken code here
  • <FT2> its nice
  • <FT2> but the outside world doesnt know it
  • <FT2> also channel ops dont know what's okay to do, so if a dispute breaks out, like the bishonen/tony one a while back... should they act? or not.


I discussed these matters with FT2 in PM on IRC several times, before he actually sent me the above log to look at, and I was rather shocked by his descriptions of that log. Here's a snippet of our discussion from March 5, posted with permission.

(Exact quote except that an e-mail address and a couple of typos have been removed.)
  • <bishonen> may I have a copy of the full discussion of the channel? there was something about that in the header before.
  • <FT2-away> sure :)
  • its enacted now but there wasnt any controversy on it -- most folks reaction was "yeah, commonsense"
  • <bishonen> thanks
  • <FT2-away> I was just very careful to consult hugely to be sure that nobody could accidentally feel unasked or whatever. You know how it can go.
  • <bishonen> i thought there was going to be a workgroup, or the arbcom would be involved.
  • <FT2-away> I was thinking of the dispute over roillback.
  • nah
  • <bishonen> hugely?....
  • <FT2-away> the channel basically sorted it out, about 6 or 10 people, everyone was pretty much "yeah, commonsense" by the time it was done
  • <bishonen> so more people than the users of this channel were invoived?
  • <FT2-away> no...
  • <bishonen> i see
  • <FT2-away> but there are a lot of users here... and of course those include a load of people who arent often here
  • <bishonen> that's not hugely in my book, i'm afraid. but whatever.
  • <FT2-away> the concern was to clean up and ensure that issues of the past were not going to be perrennial
  • <bishonen> let me get this straight. only admins have been consulted? and only the minority of admins that use the admin channel?
  • <FT2-away> and that's much more about people here accepting norms and considering what norms they feel apply, than about asking others... most people here or elsewhere who care about irc stuff, know what the issues are or were anyway
  • <bishonen> do they?


To recapitulate: What has happened with the policy and procedures of the IRC en-admins channel since the IRC case was closed, then, is that there are now new guidelines for it in CBrown's userspace (update: no, actually at this moment in Martinp23's userspace), authored (largely) by FT2, and emphasizing how well the channel currently works.[185] The origin of the new guidelines was an IRC discussion, massively dominated by FT2 himself, on February 25-26 between FT2 and a few admins. So much for the expanded role in the governance of IRC that the ArbCom undertook in its final principle. So much for its new oversight as foreseen in the remedy it voted for. May we please have some commentary from some of the arbs besides FT2—from those that put hand to keyboard and voted for a new role of arbcom with respect to IRC—voted for changes in policy and procedure, changes to be addressed by the committee—voted 9-0 and 7-1? FloNight? Newyorkbrad? Paul August? Clarification please? Especially, clarification of that which is never clarified by anybody, but always sidestepped — the role of James Forrester as envisaged by arbcom — would be appreciated to the point of jubilation. Bishonen | talk 16:14, 27 March 2008 (UTC).[reply]

What on earth does one say, reading the above - just sums up the truth of what I have been saying for weeks. Have our Arbcom anything to say to justify themselves? Or are we all to be banned for wondering, and demanding that they answer and explain themselves. Giano (talk) 17:36, 27 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
For the record, I voted oppossed to the related "principle" and abstained with regard to the related "remedy". As far as I know ArbCom has yet to take any official action with regard to either. Paul August 18:40, 27 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by White Cat

Not that I want to stir trouble but I would like to remind people the above rule. Be careful what you post here as this is a public place to publish things. I just don't want to see anyone get banned.

-- Cat chi? 21:46, 27 March 2008 (UTC)

It should be pointed out that these excerpts were posted by one of the participants with the explicit permission of the other; there is no issue on that front. — Coren (talk) 22:58, 27 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I was not accusing anyone of wrong doing. In the heat of the dispute people sometimes forget such things. This was intended as a good faith reminder. Nothing more or less. -- Cat chi? 00:25, 28 March 2008 (UTC)

Comment by Orderinchaos

I'd make the point, speaking to the notes and log above, that the current en-admins channel does have a wide membership in terms of its views, and I think despite the thinking of some that the diversity of the community's views are actually well represented there. A recent incident (well documented elsewhere so no need to do so here) resulted in strident criticism of the channel's operations, and as a critic myself of the initial handling of the matter, I was happy with how it was ultimately resolved. Orderinchaos 11:08, 29 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Reply to Newyorkbrad by Bishonen

in reply to NYB's opinion (moved from below)

"Succinctly"? LOL, come on, don't be so quick to dudgeon just because it's me. You're Patient Guy with everybody else, remember? Thank you for your answer. Will you clarify it a little bit more? I guess there may not indeed be community consensus that the ArbCom should exercise control over the channel, but it's my impression that there is/was ArbCom consensus for it[186] (with the single exception of Paul August). Your own support for the principle "Policy and procedure changes regarding Wikipedia IRC channels will be addressed separately by this committee" is admittedly very hedged, being predicated on it being "unfair to the parties" to keep the IRC case open any longer (not that I quite see what one thing has to do with the other — did Paul's abstention keep the case open any extra time?) As a short version, would you agree with this description of the current state of affairs: the ArbCom is, with the exception of FT2, individually and collectively in flight from taking responsibilty for the principle+remedy in question? Are you all waiting for somebody else to fulfill the passive "input should be sought"? Bishonen | talk 01:29, 29 March 2008 (UTC).[reply]

"Succinctly" was a bit of self-criticism; I'm trying to cut back on the excessive length of some of my project-space posts (although I will note with a smile that I share your assessment that I will never be the longest-winded arbitrator so long as FT2 is serving on the committee alongside me).
The relationship between my vote and closing the case is that traditionally a case is not closed until all the pending substantive proposals have been voted on. The alternative to "issues relating to the channel will be addressed later" would have been keeping the case open to address them now, and that would have prolonged the case, including the pendency of remedy proposals against several editors (including yourself) that you and I were both strongly opposed to.
I fear that "in flight" could be considered an NPOV term. I have acknowledged that we have not, or have not yet, collectively followed up on the agenda item of exerting control over the #admins channel. But I am not sure that we should be criticized for not implementing ArbCom governance of the channel without some evidence that either the denizens of the channel or the community at large (the views of both are entitled to strong consideration) wants us to do such a thing. In fact, putting aside the solicitation of the views of the whole community, I am not sure what you personally believe the committee should do at this time to implement the remedy cited and exercise responsibility over the channel, if we were to approach the matter collectively rather than individually. Newyorkbrad (talk) 01:50, 29 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
(Diverging from the committee as collective for a moment, I certainly honor you individually for supporting Paul August's motion to dismiss the case.[187]) I'm aware of that tradition, but I thought voting against, or explicitly abstaining on, a substantive proposal counted as "voting on" it, too. No? Keeping the case open can't very well have been the only alternative to voting support to "issues relating to the channel will be addressed later". There was always the possibility of an (at the time) obviously impopular but franker and less foot-shuffling counterproposal that "issues relating to the channel will not be addressed by this committee, and as for James Forrester, forgeddabaddit. " Kicking the ball discreetly into my court ("what you personally believe the committee should do at this time") won't help either, I'm afraid. I have no straw for your collective bricks. If I had, I'd gladly offer it. But, to reverse a classic wiki-saying, [188] I'm not ArbCom's mother. Bishonen | talk 09:49, 29 March 2008 (UTC).[reply]
The arbcom voted to address the issues, Jimbo told you that you have the "Jimbo given" authority, now cut the crap all of you get in there and do as you told us you were going to do. 9 Arbs voted to address the issues. So far we have seen FT2 and someone called Ryan Postlethwaite talk about how there is no problem. We all know too many bad blocks have been orchestrated there, and too much discussed with non-admins and toadies, so time to clean it up. If you are too frightened to solve the problems, then dissolve the channel. Incidentally where are these 9 brave Arbs who voted to address the problem in return for placing me on civility patrol? Has there been some form of unreported massacre? I don't believe I have read any reports of it? Now come on, cut the crap and address the problem. You Arbs enjoy banning me, now you keep to your side of the bargain - or does James Forrester rule you? Giano (talk) 00:26, 30 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by Irpen

The saga over IRC is not new and the abuse grew since its inception. It first came to public light in the Fall 2006. The IRC got so frightened by the public reaction and by the evidence seeing the light that it called it a "coup d'etat attempt" (this post made my day). Shortly the mess called Giano-I ArbCom was dubbed (aptly but imprecisely) an uprising of writing admins while in fact it was an uprising of Wikipedia writing community against the Wikipedia being "run" by its self-appointed ever-chatting in secret "elite" that dubbed that very community as "fickle and ill-informed populace".

Once some facts came out in the open, the 2007 passed with IRC resisting to give ground and claiming that everything is good to much of the community disgust. However, what was originally seen as "IRC" got developed into a new mentality. This culminated in Durova case and another messy discovery of the existence of the secret "lists" run on Wikia servers where good editors were investigated the Wikipedia Review style by a newly arrived layer of self-appointed "leaders and protectors of Wikipedia". Each of these messes brought some good revelations (and good desysoppings) but their usefulness by far exceeded that.

They where eye openers. Giano-I case revealed the phenomenon, the Durova case showed the extent to which the malfeasance penetrated. It was in this context that a mysterious and never heard of user (just like the author of Giano-I case) submitted a new case (originally also dubbed Giano) which was renamed "IRC" and portrayed as the case about "warring over WP:WEA" when editors of the "fickle and ill-informed" side tried to make the page reflecting the reality while David Gerard and his friends insisted on explicit rights over the Wikipedia page and on the the hypocritically convenient and deliberate lack of clarity over the connection between #admins and the Wikipedia

The ArbCom for whatever reason accepted a case over David Gerard's WP:WEA page just as quickly as it accepted the original (Giano-I) case. ArbCom then produced a decision with a bunch of findings and remedies totally disconnected from each other. Nevertheless, the committee took it upon itself to address the IRC problems at a later time leaving the community under an impression that " Policy and procedure changes regarding Wikipedia IRC channels will be addressed separately by this committee". Community hoped to see something meaningful, like a workgroup proposed by Flo. Later, "no consensus from ArbCom was found for this proposal" (note passive voice).

Soon the community "was told" that the adequate measures "were taken" through the channel's "self-policing" decided through "discussion" that occurred... nowhere else but at #admins itself. A paradox? I happened to have seen this "discussion". It was basically one arb/chanellop saying things and others nodding. This is a strange kind of "discussion" where an input from those "allegedly" abused by #admins is glaringly lacking. But let's see whether the channel improved and the problems are now "addressed" like we've heard time and again. Here is a random (not exclusive by any means) list of events (note recent dates) that took place at #admins and how they were "addressed".

  1. Feb. 7, 2008: Admin Moreschi roamed into a channel out of the blue exclusively to whine about Irpen. I think it is worse that he spoke about me behind my back having no courage to say things in my face than the particular word "a bastard" he chose, but that aside, he was met at the channel by a level-30 chanellop. That chanellop told Moreschi that he "probably shouldn't do it somewhere so leaky" and tried to alleviate Moreschi's worries by reminding Moreschi "Well, you've still got a block button" "*chanellop hints". This pleasant conversation had several consequences:
    1. When I confronted Moreschi about his conduct this person had no courage to respond at all
    2. However, my request for explanation did prompt a discussion at... (sigh) #admins. The discussion was not about the Moreschi's conduct though. Instead it was about "leaks" and it was initiated by another channelop
    3. Yet another level-30 channelop was present at the channel, took part in discussion and did nothing of consequence
    4. The case was finally analyzed by yet another level-30 channelop and a sitting arbitrator, (see here). The analysis called this blockshopping and a request to take it somewhere "less leaky" as an attempt to restrain Moreschi. Case thus considered "handled".
  2. March 13, 2008 an admin blocked for a clear case of 3RR came to the channel to shop for an unblock. He called his content opponents, long time contributors with a long history of content writing, "two POV-trolls". Again, the user, a long time champion of citing WP:CIV, had no courage to say things of that sort to their face, but at #admins it was considered "OK": not only wasn't he called to order, but he talked himself out of the block. Details available here and here
  3. March 14, 2008, an admin who is widely active in wikipolitics (an arbcom clerk, no less, among other things) called a female user "a bitch" (in her absense) over her attempt to draw attention to her pet project through posting a call for participation at another user's talk (she later reverted that). At this time, the admin was politely asked to cut it by an arbitrator who was at the channel. The admin's response to the call to order was defiant, he claimed that he would have said the same in her face. There is no evidence that the said admin went ahead and said this to her face, which I think, although revolting, would be less objectionable than doing so behind the woman's back, but that maybe just me. The admin was not sanctioned in any way although it would have likely prevented an incident below that took place just hours later.
  4. On the same date, an IRC admin who happens to be a [former?] "volunteer Communications Coordinator at the WMF" called an absent non-admin user "an idiot and a moron" over this, perhaps a gullible but honest mistake without a doubt. There was no action at the channel
  5. Mar 25, 2008: A different but a very IRC active admin who tried to bait Giano with "civility policing" warnings and questions had his comments removed. He ran to the channel asking "someone else" to help "to stop fucking with my questions to Giano so I dfon't have to edit war?" [sic] Is it just me or others see a double paradox in this all being over the civility policing itself (1) and the help being asked so that "[he does]n't have to edit war" (2) ?

(To avoid more red faces, I did not name some of the users and only provided the names in the cases that have been already discussed onwiki).

Now, we clearly see that the channel remains abusive. We also see that the despite some claims to the contrary, the current system of "good ombudsmanship" does not work. One does not need to be exceptionally smart to explain why:

  1. This whole idea of ombundsmanship by "good" ops of such closed media as checkuser log and #admins can only work with proactive ombudsmans since affected users usually don't know about being abused. So, channelops have to act vigilantly upon each case of abuse even if they found out purely by accident. Otherwise, it is all meaningless.
  2. The corrupted medium cannot be fixed from within by definition. Attempts of outside reform are vigorously thwarted but not by the "community", as some suggest, but by no one other than the channel's regulars
  3. This all continues for so long due to a deliberately maintained ambiguity of the channel's status that allows those who shared David Gerard's views and preferences to both claim the cake and eat it too. Not only attempts to improve the channel meaningfully are thwarted, the attempts to disconnect the channel from the Wikipedia are thwarted too. In a bizarre twist, the attempts to subject the channel to a meaningful WP oversight are also thwarted (and again only by the channel enthusiasts.)

I am sure that immediately upon my posting this will be discussed at the channel whose name you guessed right or even at one of the other "less leaky" channels. Surprisingly, I predict that the discussion will be again not on the substance but on the leaks themselves, just like in the Moreschi's incident.

We walked a long way since the Fall of 2006. On one hand we are by far better aware that backroom activity is thriving. OTOH, more people are now involved. A whole bunch now are on some channel: the #admins, "that other less leaky one" or one of its twins. Among those who are not (as well as who are) a whole bunch are on some "lists", yet unpurged Arbcom-L, a second (or third or more) Arbcom-L, the WR-style "investigations" list, etc (note: I do not have anything against the anti-harassment list particularly if it is held on topic). This list/channel tradition in addition to a direct devastating effect on the project, created a secondary effect. There are now POV-pushing and nationalist e-lists and IM networks. Instead of wikiprojects (many of which are dying), we have IRC-projects that are not transparent (e.g., the USRoads IRC related to another recent Arbcom case.) This atmosphere procreated by #admins is now corroding the good of Wikipedia.

Yes, people can (and will) talk privately. But we should not encourage it directly and, most importantly, should not sanction abuse at the officially affiliated IRC channels (by refusing to act or pretend that all is well), or disclaim the affiliation but refuse to dissociate either (cake have/eat) procreating this deliberate, hypocritical and morally indefensible limbo.

Clean up the #admins in a meaningful way or remove all links to it and let the folks have their chat, just like the team tags do! This all are not new ideas and have been stated in some form multiple times. However, please don't talk the "channel is now good and reformed". It just does not cut it and the editors would not believe such claims anymore anyway.

Volunteering by Stifle

I rarely use IRC (I've been on four times this year) but spend quite an amount of time on wiki, and am somewhat removed from the issues complained of. I'd like to volunteer to be one of the five named admins if the proposal below is passed. Of course I will not take offense if not chosen. Stifle (talk) 11:32, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Clerk notes

Arbitrator views and discussion

  • Good questions by all, and I'll have a go at an answer, but it probably won't be brief. Others will obviously have their view too. Firstly, some background reading for anyone unfamiliar with matters - and that includes a number of people who might feel they are familiar. I tried to describe the main points of the background on IRC as I see it (both sides) at: WP:RFC/IRC channels#Comment by FT2. It's "essential background" on the issue and dynamics, and forms the context of the decisions and any reply.
In the meantime I'm fitting drafting a fuller reply in between working stuff in my wiki-in-tray, as well as ever-present real world matters. I'll try to get it posted later today but it could be tomorrow or even a day beyond. That's unavoidable in a way -- the question actually asks for a short report in a way, rather than the usual simple opinion, since "measures taken" are meaningless without an understanding of the context, the disputes, and the various perspectives involved. And of course, a few have very strong views which in fact don't competely match reality, and that will be tricky to explain to them (as can happen in any dispute). So given the subject, it needs to be a bit more thorough. FT2 (Talk | email) 19:22, 26 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Update - events were rather busy here last week, as noted (and here too). This last few days I've been more involved in pushing to 'go live' on BLP-related matters that will help BLP subjects (members of the public). Prioritization. Hence a delay. FT2 (Talk | email) 21:13, 1 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comments from Newyorkbrad:
I will respond as Bishonen requests, while trying my best to heed her implied request that I do so succinctly.
Personally, I have not played a role in the governance of #admins or any other IRC channel, although I log into the channel from time to time (less often now than I did a few months ago, as it happens). Frankly, I think I am not alone among the arbitrators in not yet figured out quite how best to implement Jimbo Wales' request that the Arbitration Committee play a new role in overseeing channel governance. Nor is it clear to me that there is community consensus that the ArbCom, as such, should exercise control over the channel. Not only does there remain a lack of clarity as to the relationship, if any, between Wikipedia and the "Wikipedia" named IRC channels, but there remain very mixed views as to whether that lack of clarity is unacceptable, tolerable, or affirmatively desirable. Nor has there been further discussion so far as I am aware concerning the role of Jdforrester in this regard. As reflected in his contribution history, James has had to take some extended wikibreaks this year for real-world reasons and to the best of my knowledge has not been a participant in any matters related to the channel(s) for at least several weeks.
In the absence of a committee decision or consensus on how to proceed, individual arbitrators have tried to take the lead: first FloNight, by proposing the creation of a work group (a proposal that did not attain critical mass to go forward), and then FT2 with his proposal and adopting of channel guidelines. Other proposed initiatives to address concerns about the #admins channel, such as the suggestion that the access of everyone who is not an English Wikipedia admininstrator be revoked, have not attained consensus among users of the channel, and the new chan-ops have apparently decided not to implement them over widespread objections. The Arbitration Committee as a whole was not the decision-maker on this or any related issues. It bears note, however, that at least one controversial former participant in #admins, Tony Sidaway, has permanently relinquished his access to the channel and my sense is that there is no prospect of such access being restored save in the unlikely event he were to have a new and successful RfA.
If there is a perception that the committee needs to act on its adopted remedy to address issues relating to the administrators' IRC channel, then community input should be sought regarding what changes, if any, should be made. On whether this should be done now, or whether some time should be allowed to pass so we can judge whether the new guidelines have a salutary effect as sought by FT2 and others, I have no strong view. Newyorkbrad (talk) 00:09, 29 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • I recused from the Arbitration case for obvious reasons; since the case closed, I have been asked by a group of people who I judged (in my rôle as IRC Group Contact) to be representatives of the #wikipedia-en-admins community to carry out a few actions. However, I am (as intended) hands-off and, as Brad mentions, I have not particularly participated in any discussions regarding the channel's organisational aspects. James F. (talk) 13:29, 30 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment by FloNight.
By custom, and widely supported by the Community and the Arbitration Committee, the Arbitration Committee is not a legislative body. We do not write policy for the Community except as it directly relates to the Committee's procedures and practices. The Arbitration Committee's role is to assist the Community in settling disputes where user conduct issues are stopping the Community from making thoughtful consensus decisions about content or policy, or when user conduct issues are seriously disrupting the Community in other ways. Traditionally, the Arbitration Committee is the source all involuntary removal of administrative tools for misuse of the tools.
My interpretation of Jimbo's comment is that he is stating his view that the Arbitration Committee has the authority to settle user conduct problems that occur in #wikipedi-en-admins, if the the usual dispute resolution processes in this channel does not work. I do not think that he is suggesting that the Arbitration Committee is charged with writing the policy for the channel or to be involved in the daily administration of the channel. His request that arbitrators have an influence over the daily administration of the channel is also noted. (This is my interpretations of Jimbo's comments, I realize that other interpretations are possible.)
Since misconduct in the #admins channel might be related to the use of administrative tools or possibly involve a lack of decorum that is expected of Wikipedia administrators, it is reasonable to think that an arbitration case might be warranted if a serious type of administrative misconduct occurs.
At a minimum, in order for the Arbitration Committee actions related to the channel to be reliable and effective, the Committee needs an accurate record of the alleged dispute to compare with established channel guidelines. Prior to the start of the IRC case neither accurate logs or channel guidelines were available for our review. Establishing these were a priority and the first action taken.
I would like to note that other methods for establishing Community consensus regarding #admins have been suggested but none have received the level of support for Community to take action on them at this time. Other suggestions related to other issues related to Wikipedia IRC are also noted. I want to make special note that the Committee received comments on site and by email from editors who primarily edit other Foundation projects that expressed opinions about the Committee's relationship to all Wikimedia Freenode IRC channels. (My comment follows.)
  1. A Working group focused on establishing policies that adhere to joint Wikipedia English and IRC standards of conduct. (Not enough support for a separate body to write new policies. I'm uncertain that this is needed.)
  2. Establish/review user conduct guideline for all Wikipedia English related IRC channels. (Not enough support at this time. I support a discussion about the merits of this type of a review.)
  3. Chan op elections on Wikipedia English for #admin channel. (Not enough support and uncertain that this is needed.)
  4. Requiring that the current chan ops read and agree to enforce #admin channel guidelines. (Suggestion has not been widely discussed as far as I know so I'm unclear it has been rejected. I support this idea.)
  5. Monitor all Wikipedia English related IRC channels for user conduct issues with logs and other means of observation of conduct. (Not received adequate discussion since Jimbo's comments regarding ArbCom's relationship to IRC.)
  6. A notice board for concerns about IRC channels to be discussed. (Not enough support at this time for consensus to establish it and have chan ops available on the notice board.)
  7. Monthly meeting on site to address IRC related concerns. Possible in connection with a noticeboard. (Not consensus for the need.)
  8. Close #admin. (No consensus.)
Future Committee action for consideration:
  1. Update Arbitration Committee policy to reflect a consensus agreement of Jimbo's statements about IRC.
  2. Continue to in listen to the Community for suggestions about the best ways that the Arbitration Committee assist with IRC related issues. FloNight♥♥♥ 17:38, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Proposed motions and voting

Special enforcement

The editing restriction imposed on Giano II (talk · contribs) in this case shall be subject to special enforcement. The Committee shall name up to five administrators who, together with the sitting members of the Committee, shall act as special enforcers for this restriction. Only these special enforcers shall be authorized to determine whether a violation of the restriction has occurred, and to issue blocks if one has.

Any administrator that reverses, modifies, or otherwise interferes with a block imposed by one of the special enforcers under this provision shall be summarily desysopped.

This provision shall supersede the existing enforcement provisions in the case.

Support:
  1. Some moderation would be good here. Kirill 02:49, 17 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  2. I think this would be fairer all round in the exceptional circumstances. Sam Blacketer (talk) 16:06, 19 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  3. Might work; certainly nothing else has. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 16:29, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
it makes no difference I will not be acknowldging this illicit sanction. Giano (talk) 17:05, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose:
Comment:
Kirill, thank you for listening to my concerns about the Committee's existing editing restrictions on Giano, the way that his editing is being evaluated, and the manner that the Committee's sanctions are being enforced. We need to make it clear that administrators that block Giano would be subject to summarily desysopping, as well as those that unblock him. (More later). FloNight♥♥♥ 11:22, 17 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In terms of desysopping blocking admins, do you mean those who block specifically under the civility parole, or in general? I have no problems with the former; and my only concern with the latter would be the question of how to effectively inform the admin community of the matter. Kirill 00:32, 18 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Both. I want to make it clear that a limited sanction by the Committee should not interpreted in a manner that lowers the threshold for blocking an user with many good contributions EXPECT for the specific problem that the Committee is addressing with our remedy. I do not think that a single administrator should take it upon themselves to block an user for conduct that the Committee can not agree to address through ArbCom sanctions. In the case of a high profile user, I think that this is an important issue because many administrators are marginally familiar with the user and the situation around them. As a general rule, I think that administrators should be extremely slow to block any user with many, many good contributions because it has an adverse effect well beyond the length of the block. FloNight♥♥♥ 17:11, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Although my sole involvement has been in an administrative manner, I feel in view of the intense nature of the last week's discussion, and that it's not needed for me to express a view here (enough others can or will), and prefer to abstain this time around, without prejudice to future case decisions. FT2 (Talk | email) 16:03, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

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