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New template for changing blocked users' usernames

When I stumbled upon Template:UsernameBlocked, I found it quite silly to put up a request when you are blocked ([1]), so I have created a new template, Template:Username change request (along with Category:Requests for username changes when blocked), for the use of people who are blocked for username but still have enough contributions to matter. (Otherwise, they could simply create the new account.) I will update the Wikipedia:Changing username page as well. -- King of 05:47, 2 July 2006 (UTC)

The wordings of the two templates are akward. The If you are not blocked... clause could be very confusing for a new user. And the page history link points to the template history. Is this correct? =Nichalp «Talk»= 14:26, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
If you subst'ed it, it wouldn't obviously. Highway Batman! 11:21, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

Hey

Sorry I've been kind of slacking on everything recently. Hopefully I can get back into promoting and renaming soon. — Ilyanep (Talk) 14:55, 5 July 2006 (UTC)

Hey -- Again, I guess

I'm back after a little bit of cool-down from all the stuff I had to do. Have there been any major changes in RfA since I stopped doing this? — Ilyanep (Talk) 17:02, 12 July 2006 (UTC)

Not really. It's still "not a vote," it still takes 75% (minimum) to pass, etc.; I can't think of any changes at all. :) Essjay (Talk) 17:10, 12 July 2006 (UTC)

A note to our bureaucrats there. This is now due. Thanks, Blnguyen | rant-line 07:12, 17 July 2006 (UTC)

Are drive-by votes OK?

A discussion about this is going on at WT:RFA.

I'm only posting this notice here because any change in this policy would affect the way crats consider promotions, and it seems that no crat has taken part in the discussion about the validity (or lack thereof) about one-word votes.--The ikiroid (talk·desk·Advise me) 03:27, 19 July 2006 (UTC)

How it's done on OrthodoxWiki

Check here and here and you will find that this wiki has an interesting way of dealing with vandal accounts. Myrtone 11:30, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

Indeed. There are, however, two problems with doing so here:
  • Renaming an account removes it from the system, allowing it to be recreated. Thus, every renamed vandal username is a username they can recreate and use to vandalize again.
  • The rename policy on en.wiki does not allow forced renames; no consent, no rename. A dramatic change in policy, and consultation with counsel over the GFDL effects of forced renames of accounts with contributions, regardless of the contributions' merit, would be required.
Of the two, the second is a much bigger legal issue, but the first is a far worse technical issue. Essjay (Talk) 00:29, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
In terms of the first problem, I think that doing this to imposters would be a good way to make way for Doppelgänger accounts. I think the rename policy is the same on OrthodoxWiki but with just that one exception. I'm not sure what you mean by the GFDL effects, however, that wiki does operate under a dual GFDL and Creative Commons Attribution--ShareAlike 2.5 licensing. Myrtone 08:48, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
The rename policy here is this, exactly: An account can be renamed when the user makes a request to do so while logged in to that account. Period.
As for the GFDL effects, the GFDL requires that users be credited for their work; that's why we keep edit histories, and why we make such a fuss about anyone messing with them. If you rename a user without their consent, you move thier contributions to a username other than the one they specifically released those contributions under. I'm not an attorney, and I don't represent the Wikimedia Foundation, but it has been said previously that doing such changes could be seen as violation of the terms of the GFDL, and could expose the Foundation to legal liablity. Any such policy change would have to be cleared by the legal department first. Essjay (Talk) 20:16, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Then the policy in Wikipedia:Username#Changing_inappropriate_usernames should be changed. I've not really been involved with that one, but it clearly says that innapropriate usernames can be changes without consent. I think in practice they are just blocked and allowed to make a new username or change as they wish. - Taxman Talk 16:18, 20 July 2006 (UTC)

"The rename policy here is this, exactly: An account can be renamed when the user makes a request to do so while logged in to that account. Period." And I don't undestand what that word is doing after the full-stop, and anyway, the policy is probably exaclty the same but with that one exception I mentioned earlier, who needs to repeat to make a point? "...but it has been said previously that doing such changes could be seen as violation of the terms of the GFDL, and could expose the Foundation to legal liablity." Well, considering the points mentioned above, how exactly does OrthodoxWiki get away with it? That still hasn't been explained. Myrtone ()

A period is a full-stop. It's there to emphasize that there are no exceptions to the rule Essjay stated, although Taxman seems to indicate otherwise based on the username policy (and he's absolutely right). I'm not sure what forced renames have to do with the GDFL licensing, but I'm not a lawyer, so I won't question that. -- joturner 16:25, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
What the OrthodoxWiki does is thier business: This is not OrthodoxWiki, this is the English Wikipedia, and it operates under it's own set of policies. We have a full time attorney on staff, and a legal department full of experts; it's really not that difficult to get an opinion on whether we're likely to get sued for attributing contributions to the wrong name. That is exactly what a forced rename does: It is no different than a publisher deciding to change the name of an author without the author's consent. Forcing renames is the online equivalent of changing "Written by Salmon Rushdie" to "Written by John Smith" and then putting "We decided to change "Salmon Rushdie" to John Smith without his permission" in 0.5px font, upside down, in Greek, on the back side of the page glued to the front cover. Essjay (Talk) 20:19, 20 July 2006 (UTC)

"...in 0.5px font, upside down, in Greek, on the back side of the page glued to the front cover." I don't know what that has got to do with it, if forced renames are a problem in our society, how does OrthodoxWiki get to do it online, maybe their Bureaucrats consider it "the will of God." Myrtone ()

The central point you seem to be missing is that different websites have different policies. OrthodoxWiki is not en.wikipedia.org. It's not the same community, it's not the same policies. What they do over there is completely unrelated to what we do here.' They can do whatever they like on thier wiki, hosted on thier servers, edited by thier community; it does not impact what we do here in the least. We have our own policies, and it simply does not matter in the least what they do: WE FOLLOW OUR POLICIES, NOT THIERS. Essjay (Talk) 02:39, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
No I have not missed the point, it is just seeming irrational, I don't see any reason why we couldn't get ideas off them, yes they are diffrent but I don't see that as any rationality for not allowing, for example, progress. And I still don't understand what font, upsidedown and Greek, and the back cover glued to the front have to do with it. Myrtone ():-(
I think the glued page comment referes to the fact that although we do LOG EVERY USERNAME CHANGE, where to go to look for that log is not simple to get to. We seem to have 2 issues up in the air here: 1)Does legal have any reasons why this shouldn't be done? 1a)If the users have no edits (e.g. all deleted), where does GFDL come in to play? 2)If there's no reason why we must not do this, then we need to form a heavy consensus for why we should do it. — xaosflux Talk 02:58, 21 July 2006 (UTC)

And what about the font, the upsidedown, and the Greek? These are yet to be explained. Myrtone ():-|

For the love of Jimbo: It was hyperbole, pointing out how difficult it is for the average user to find any record of a username change. You have to be pretty savvy with Wikipedia to know that usernames can be changed at all, and more so to know where to look. It is, for all intents and purposes, hidden to the vast majority of readers, just like tiny print, upside down, in a foreign language, on the back of a page glued to another page, would be in a print book. Essjay (Talk) 04:31, 21 July 2006 (UTC)

I'm one of the handful of admins on OrthodoxWiki. The reason why some usernames are changed is because they belong only to vandals (so none of their contributions are kept) and because, as an Orthodox Christian site, we don't want what we define as obscenity hosted on our site, not even in the list of users. We only change usernames we find offensive, and we block all vandals indefinitely.

We're small and nowhere near as active as Wikipedia, and we also have a different focus, so our policies are designed to work for us in that context. I would not recommend that our policies be used to influence or determine Wikipedia policies. We use the same software, but that's really where the similarity effectively ends. We have our own legal counsel, and those issues are handled by the site owner. —A.S. Damick talk contribs 01:36, 29 July 2006 (UTC)

Misza's RfA

He should have been promoted 5 hours ago, and he has only one oppose, yet the bot lists six. Just an FYI ;).--The ikiroid (talk·desk·Advise me) 23:28, 21 July 2006 (UTC)

Gender-Based Oppose Votes in WP:RfA/Catamorphism

A closing bureaucrat will most likely close Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Catamorphism shortly. I am posting here due to great concern about the preponderance of "votes" (I know they're not really votes, but have we thought up a better replacement word yet? ;-)) within the RfA that seem to oppose the admin nominee simply on the basis of their stated preferred gender identity, a semi-rare choice of being gender-neutral. First, it strikes me as something fundamentally wrong: would we ask a gay Wikipedia editor to not make a big deal out of it if someone labeled them as straight, and continued to label them as straight despite their continued indication they were gay? Would we ask an African-American Wikipedia editor to not make a big deal out of it if someone labeled them as white, and continued to label them as white despite their continued indication they were African-American? I think it's out of line to be asking a nominee to suggest that they would be a better admin if they alter the gender identity they present to Wikipedia, as a voter suggested to the nominee.

Of course, all that is moot, since my second point is that the nominee has already indicated that they will not make a big deal out of small mistakes obviously not made in bad faith, and will be quite reasonable in other cases ... yet the oppose votes still remain unwithdrawn. I am posting here simply to ask the closing bureaucrat, whomever that individual might be, to consider this factor when examing oppose votes and coming to a judgment regarding consensus upon closing the request. From my brief research, I know the concept of RfA consensus is different than, say, AfD consensus (such as, for example, the 75% figure coming into play), but I would hope that the determination of RfA consensus still allows an examination by the closing bureaucrat of the validity of the various editors' reasoning.

If the closing bureaucrat doesn't believe my concern is valid, then such is life, but given the circumstances, I did feel that it very much needed to be brought to your attention. I am not certain if alerting you to this compromises the process or not; I assume not (since others appear to come here to advise you of certain elements of RfAs they are concerned about), but I assure you in any case that I am making this post well-intentioned and in good faith, despite my recent advocacy in Catamorphism's RfA (whom I had never interacted with prior to the RfA).

In any case, my apologies for the melodrama. Thanks. — Mike 01:40, 25 July 2006 (UTC)

It seems that the consensus is above 75%, though, so the outcome is in Cat's favor with numbers. The ikiroid (talk·desk·Advise me) 01:50, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
It still has a good 14-15 hours to go 'til closing, at least, it appears — were we right at closing time, I'd be less concerned. I'm just saying if it's close enough, the closing bureaucrat may want to take the above into account when making the call one way or the other. (Also, note that of the oppose votes, one vote is from someone angry about getting banned for WP:3RR after being reported by Catamorphism, and another oppose vote is from someone angry that Catamorphism nommed his creation for AfD. That's well-documented in the RfA, but isn't clear in the sheer statistics.) — Mike 01:56, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
OK. I see your point of its importance. The ikiroid (talk·desk·Advise me) 02:06, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
I think this has come up before but I don't remember exactly where and I think it's pretty much as mentioned above where it may be taken into account if it's close but otherwise it should probably just be ignored. Pegasus1138Talk | Contribs | Email ---- 07:28, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
Addendum I don't see a problem with many of the votes since although they have to do with gender much of it is how the candidate's view on the use of gender pronouns would effect his/her actions on Wikipedia which is definitely a legitimate concern. Pegasus1138Talk | Contribs | Email ---- 07:33, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
If that's how the closing bureaucrat feels, Pegasus1138, then so be it — I disagree. I see it not as the candidate's "view on the use of gender pronouns" but as part of their identity they're being asked to alter, an entirely inappropriate affair. Also, if I'm wrong, please excuse me, but I don't believe you're a bureaucrat, correct? If so, my comment here is more directed to them than to you; although you are of course entitled to your opinion on the matter, this is really not the place to debate it out. — Mike 12:33, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
You are correct; Pegasus is not a bureaucrat. But I don't see how that's relevant (you're not one either). But in all honestly, as Pegasus hinted, if you take a look at the oppose votes, you'll see that they are not based entirely on gender pronouns. Some comment on civility or Catamorphism's controversial views and how they affect his/her editing. I understand that opposing based on the fact that he/she is a stickler with gender pronouns would be absurd, but that's not what's going on here. -- tariqabjotu (joturner) 13:31, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
My last comment in this thread: Just like ANI isn't the place to work out a difference of opinion, this noticeboard isn't, either. Just like ANI, this is a place to advise bureaucrats of concerns. I've done so. The debate itself's already being well-fought out in the threads on Catamorphism's RfA. If in the closing bureaucrat's judgment I'm wrong, so be it. But I'm not going to refight the concern here and clutter up their noticeboard as a result. And, for the record, I certainly don't have any problem with oppose votes based on the polemical political material on Catamorphism's page, although I myself wouldn't vote 'oppose' simply because of it. — Mike 14:19, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
This is not the place to lobby bureaucrats in either direction. Trust them to know what they are doing. We can discuss these issues ad nauseum on WT:RFA when there is not a specific RfA at issue. NoSeptember 14:29, 25 July 2006 (UTC)

EssjayBot II

Just as a heads up, I've been archiving this page by hand for a while; EssjayBot II has been approved to do archiving, and so I've set it up to archive this page as well as WP:CHU, and the talk pages of each. Here and both talk pages will have any section where the last timestamp is 7 days or older archived; WP:CHU will have any section 2 days or older archived. Just a heads up in case anyone wonders who EssjayBot II is and what it's doing. Essjay (Talk) 03:44, 27 July 2006 (UTC)

Whatever happened to EssjayBot I? ;) NoSeptember 11:02, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
Maybe there's been a coup d'État. EssjayBot I has been dethroned. All hail EssjayBot II! :) Redux 12:27, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
I'm glad EssjayBot II is around. I really hate the original EssjayBot and its owner, but I love the new EssjayBot II and its owner! --Deathphoenix ʕ 18:50, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
Just, you know, in case anyone wanders by who doesn't know, EssjayBot I (which is actually just EssjayBot) is a sandbot; I wanted to make sure I separated the sandbox functions from the archive functions for clarity. Essjay (Talk) 00:38, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/HighwayCello 2

Can someone please close my RfA, I would like to withdraw. Thank you, Highway Return to Oz... 10:55, 29 July 2006 (UTC)

I have closed this RfA. Cheers TigerShark 11:19, 29 July 2006 (UTC)

Without some sort of time machine, my RfA will not obtain a concencus. I therefore wish to withdraw it. ViridaeTalk 13:03, 2 August 2006 (UTC)

You should perhaps put a strikeout through your acceptance on your RfA page. DarthVader 13:10, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
Done. ViridaeTalk 13:28, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
What pessimism! They might invent one by the end of your 7 days. Stranger things may have happened...-Splash - tk 13:14, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
To be honest, if they did that I think my RfA would be the least of my worries! :) ViridaeTalk 13:28, 2 August 2006 (UTC)

Bureaucrats, please notice that I've extended Ambuj.Saxena's RfA until tomorrow. Thank you. Redux 16:54, 3 August 2006 (UTC)

Would anyone care to close this early. Not just WP:SNOWBALL. For the good/dignity of the community, I'm not sure this needs to continue to unfold any further. :) Dlohcierekim 15:50, 11 August 2006 (UTC)

I'd second this. There is (in my opinion) little to no chance of this reaching consensus and I see nothing but harm coming from it continuing. All that needs to be said has probably been said. Thanks, Gwernol 15:57, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
Third this, although I'm not sure why this is on the talk page. -- tariqabjotu (joturner) 16:14, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
(moved thread to project page) The RfA was closed by Taxman. ~ PseudoSudo 01:06, 12 August 2006 (UTC)

This RfA was accepted, not listed by the candidate because he wasn't ready to answer the questions, then the first oppose voter listed it at WP:RFA where it was then de-listed by someone else, after 7 people had voted... then more people voted after it wasn't listed. Ugh! I suggest a b'crat restart the RfA... it's hopelessly muddled now. See also my proposal on WT:RFA for avoiding this kind of stuff in the future. Thanks. --W.marsh 02:26, 12 August 2006 (UTC)

RFA voting clarification request

Pardon me, is my vote counted regardless of the reason I place beside it? What do you think of it? As I seem to be having a problem with the admin as the definition of disruption. --Masssiveego 04:55, 15 August 2006 (UTC)

This was already discussed on WT:RFA and directly answered for you. Why not keep the conversation in the same place? You seem to want to be able to not have to explain yourself at all. Sorry, but RfA is a consensus gathering exercise so that doesn't help. - Taxman Talk 12:44, 15 August 2006 (UTC)

Malformed RfA

Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Lindsay1980 is a single unsigned line. User has also canvased votes on at least one occasion: [2]. I am about to notify the user that the RfA has not used the correct template, but it may as well be closed. Judging by what I have seen just now and past experiences, it will be a snowball oppose. ViridaeTalk 23:34, 18 August 2006 (UTC)

J Di beat me to the notification. ViridaeTalk 23:35, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
Oops, didn't realise somebody else was gonna do that. Sorry. talk to JD wants e-mail 23:48, 18 August 2006 (UTC)

User wants their name changed

User:Gzuz pc wants their username changed, but they don't speak a lot of English, so they may need some help. Can a crat help them out? The ikiroid (talk·desk·Advise me) 02:38, 9 August 2006 (UTC)

That shouldn't be a problem. Just have him post a thread at WP:CHU. Since he doesn't speak English, and being that I'm aware of the situation, all he needs to write there is the username he wants and sign the post -- basically, I require the verification that the account owner wants the change (which a post at CHU will provide) and the specification of which name he wants. Naturally, once the account verifies that a namechange is disired, I will proceed to the usual verification of the user's history, in order to determine if the namechange can be performed (the request is not granted in advance), but that's nothing out of the ordinary. Redux 02:41, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
User:Titoxd is taking care of it (in spanish!) apparently. The ikiroid (talk·desk·Advise me) 03:22, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
Ok, he made the request on WP:CHU now. Titoxd(?!?) 23:44, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
I've carried out his request. Redux 00:11, 21 August 2006 (UTC)

Straw Poll

Due to the recent turmoil on community pages, a large community straw poll is being conducted. Wikipedia:Communities strawpoll is now open for voting. Despite resolutions made on this page, many others are facing turmoil similar to what this page is, or once did face. In an effor to solve the issue, I invite all Wikipedians to vote there by September 18th on this page following the procedures and ballot instuctions explained there. Thank You. Ericsaindon2 06:06, 21 August 2006 (UTC)

Zsinj's RFA discussion closing.

Someone was complaining on an IRC channel that Zsinj's RFA was taking forever to close. Only a half truth really, as Raul promoted Zsijn a few hours before this edit, but didn't literally close up Wikipedia:Requests_for_adminship/Zsinj_2 (though it appears to have disappeared from the base page). It was still appearing on the RFA summaries including the one here. So I "closed" it , modelling after Taxman's closure of Larry V's RFA page. Please look over that page's formatting that I did it right and fix whatever. (aside from mispelling Zsinj's name in the edit summary). --Kevin_b_er 06:01, 23 August 2006 (UTC)

There are two bots in need of flagging at Wikipedia:Bots/Requests_for_approvals#Approved.2C_needs_to_be_flagged. Thank you, — xaosflux Talk 20:46, 26 August 2006 (UTC)

I've set the bot flag for both. The respective users have been informed in their talk pages. Cheers, Redux 03:46, 27 August 2006 (UTC)

Copying from Village Pump (Miscellaneous)

The bureaucrat who usually does the username changes (Nichalp will be inactive on Wikipedia until the end of October (as per his user page), and there is a long list of Wikipedians awaiting name changes who seem to be getting increasingly rowdier. Is there possibly another free bureaucrat who can take over his duties until he gets back? Ellie041505 13:29, 30 August 2006 (UTC) (or, hopefully, Eilicea) copied by -- Lost(talk)

Copied from WP:VP/A - username change queue

The bureaucrat who usually does the username changes (Nichalp will be inactive on Wikipedia until the end of October (as per his user page), and there is a long list of Wikipedians awaiting name changes who seem to be getting increasingly rowdier. Is there possibly another free bureaucrat who can take over his duties until he gets back? Ellie041505 13:29, 30 August 2006 (UTC) (or, hopefully, Eilicea)

The backlog is only two days, but still looks a bit long, so I decided to post this here. Kusma (討論) 13:35, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
We don't have any one Bureaucrat who is reponsible alone for any particular duty, Nichalp just prefers to focus on username change. This [small] waiting period in answering the requests is happening because we only have 4 Bureaucrats who are active on a regular basis, and two of them are temporarily inactive. Don't worry, Taxman and I will get around to answering all of the requests. We always try to answer requests as soon as possible, but a waiting period of 48 to 72 hours is not uncommon in those cases. Regards, Redux 13:52, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
Actually Essjay did the lion's share by far, and he's not as active now. I started a thread on Wikipedia talk:Changing username relating to reducing the number of allowed reasons to change a username to reduce administrative and server overhead. Please comment there. - Taxman Talk 18:22, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
I'm back from a lengthy holiday, and will be available to help with bureaucrat duties for the foreseeable future. — Dan | talk 04:27, 4 September 2006 (UTC)

Close withdrawn RfA

It appears that User:Nimur has commented (just below his answers to questions, just above the !votes) that he's ready to withdraw his RfA and try again later. Close? Newyorkbrad 23:08, 5 September 2006 (UTC)

For future reference, yes, you can close out any RfA in which the candidate indicates their withdrawal, and add to WP:RFAF. NoSeptember 04:16, 6 September 2006 (UTC)

Bot flags needed

2 Bot request have been approved for bot flags, please see:

Thank you, — xaosflux Talk 03:03, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
I've taken care of the two. Cheers, Redux 08:02, 7 September 2006 (UTC)

Closing RfAs via WP:SNOW

I've got just a brief question - can a non-bureaucrat editor (in good standing, invoking WP:SNOW or WP:IAR) close and delist normal RfAs as failed if they accumulated far more opposing votes/comments than supporting ones in a short period of time? --Charon 00:19, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

Surely yes. If a mistake is made this can always be reversed. If he's merely being disingenuous or shows poor judgement then his snows and iars will not prevail. --Tony Sidaway 00:26, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
This appears to be common practice, though I would advise it only in cases where the outcome is very obvious. Anything approaching a close call should be left to run its course (unless it's particularly acrimonious, in which case it might be best to ask a bureaucrat to consider closing it early). — Dan | talk 00:46, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
There are only a few editors whose RFAs I would close myself. If an editor is under several existing arbitration remedies, which he habitually breaks, has recently been blocked, is associated with an anti-Wikipedia website, was desysopped a few days ago, and his RFA has turned into a rout, well I think it's a bit obvious. --Tony Sidaway 01:19, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for clearing this up Dan and Tony. I just was a bit confused since reminder of on the RfA page exlicitely says otherwise, but if its alright with you I can't have any qualms either. CharonX/talk 12:23, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

Bot approval

While we work out how to improve this process, in the meantime, please grant the bot flag to Ligulembot (BRFA · contribs · actions log · block log · flag log · user rights). When this is completed, please make a note here -- RM 15:59, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

All done. Redux 16:54, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

The next bot on the list: BOTepho (BRFA · contribs · actions log · block log · flag log · user rights). Same procedure. -- RM 18:59, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

Done as well. Redux 20:02, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

Bot Needs a flag

Gnome (Bot) (BRFA · contribs · actions log · block log · flag log · user rights) Betacommand (talkcontribsBot) 05:25, 12 September 2006 (UTC)

And, YES, we are working on a better way to list these other than this noticeboard ;) Just trying to get rid of the backlog thanks to the new approvers! — xaosflux Talk 05:33, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Done. We need a separate page like the WP:CHU to add to our watchlists. Regards, =Nichalp «Talk»= 08:39, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
I suggested this the other day in the discussion above. I've gone ahead and been BOLD and created Wikipedia:Approved Bots Awaiting Flags if the bot-folks and bureaucrats want to use it. Just create a shortcut, tailor the instructions at the top to what you want, insert the right links, and you're in business. Newyorkbrad 14:09, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
This has already been discussed. We have a page at Wikipedia:Requested bot flags and the recently inactive Wikipedia:Bots/Approval log. To date we've just been posting here because it was easier, but we fully intend to use a better system when we have time to work out the details. -- RM 17:01, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
If you don't need my page, please go ahead and delete it before it causes any confusion. 90 seconds' work shot to heck. :) Newyorkbrad 17:04, 12 September 2006 (UTC)

Making it up as you go along

I don't recall approving bureaucrats to hand out arbitrary lengths of adminship service because they don't really know how to make the decision. Adminship has never, ever been handed out for 8 weeks at a time as a result of an RfA. Did you actually tell anyone anywhere taht you planned to do this if they supported Carnildo? Or are you just making it up as you go along? You don't own RfA, you merely implement its decisions, and no part of its decision referred to two months. -Splash - tk 13:30, 5 September 2006 (UTC)

I also object. I did not comment on RfA/Carnildo3; I can't recall having anything to do with this editor; so perhaps I'm neutral on him. I have been occasionally active on RfAs. This editor may be rehabilitated, a fine admin -- or not; I have no idea. I do see that the RfA was contentious and the tally borderline. My instinct in such matters is to err on the side of caution; I would invite the candidate to reapply in a few months and see if community sentiment changes. Guesstimating from the change since RfA/Carnildo2, clear consensus may well form in favor -- then.
I definitely don't like the precedent set by "temporary" adminship. Has this ever been done before? Has the community expressed any desire for this measure in general? Where does this door lead? B'crats are expected to make tough judgement decisions; it's routine. Is this a creative solution or a failure to make the call? Also, exactly under what circumstances and by what method will Carnildo's sysop privs "expire"? Who will make the decision to revoke or extend them? Sorry, but evaluating admin performance is not a b'crat function; it is ArbCom's or a steward's, if not the community's. John Reid 15:14, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
I was not involved in the decision that led to Carnildo's resysopping, but to clarify: his adminship is not temporary exactly. It is under probation. This means that, after a given period of time (two months), the ArbCom, not the Bureaucrats, will review his record as an admin for this period of time and decide on whether or not to remove his admin bit again or let it stay. If the decision is made to remove his adminship again, a member of the ArbCom will post on Meta, at a forum called Request for Permissions, where a Steward will take care of the request and remove the flag. Redux 16:02, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
It's worth noting that RfA doesn't own bureaucrats either. Presumably they are empowered to take actions that in their best judgment are for the good of the project. Christopher Parham (talk) 04:27, 6 September 2006 (UTC)
There is no precedent for probationary adminship and I dislike to see it set by fiat. I object to the term "own"; it is an inappropriate straw man. RfA determines who will and who will not become an admin; b'crats are empowered only to implement community will -- not to paternalistically watch over the community and do what's best for us. If we want a probationary admin, we'll ask for one.
This is a very old, well-established principle: Power is divided between the rank-and-file on one hand and Jimbo and the Board on the other. ArbCom is a comparative novelty; power is expressly delegated to this body. Power is not delegated to admins or b'crats -- not in any way. These classes of users exist solely to implement community will.
If there are any b'crats who don't agree with that last statement, please speak out clearly right now. John Reid 11:32, 7 September 2006 (UTC)

I too am concerned about the Carnildo decision, and am reposting my comments here from Wikipedia talk:Requests for adminship/Carnildo_3. Discussion has also reached User_talk:Carnildo and WT:RfA.

The role of bureaucrats is to gauge community consensus. WP:CRAT says that bureaucrats may grant administrator access "only when doing so reflects the wishes of the community", WP:RfA says that bureaucrats "review the discussion to see whether there is a general consensus for promotion", and Taxman, one of the three bureaucrats behind the decision to promote Carnildo, acknowledges that "As a bureaucrat it is my job to determine consensus in RfAs." Yet the decision makes no mention of consensus, and only references community opinion to say that while many users oppose Carnildo's adminship, he is being promoted anyway.

The threshold for consensus was not met here. Although RfA is not a rigid vote, consensus tends to be gauged by percentage, with bureaucrats "generally held to a 75-80% discretionary zone", in Taxman's words. Carnildo's RfA closed with 112 supports and 71 opposes, a 61% ratio. The true ratio may be even lower due to users (like [3] and [4]) not bothering to oppose when they saw that the RfA was already well below the threshold for promotion.

There has arisen a dangerous misconception that when deciding whether to promote, bureaucrats are permitted to "weigh the arguments" or make arguments of their own at the expense of community consensus. Neither WP:CRAT nor WP:RfA gives them such authority. Rather, it is the job of the community to make arguments and weigh each other's arguments during the discussion. The job of bureaucrats is strictly to gauge consensus. Of course, they cannot do so by mechanically counting supports and opposes, but must watch carefully for sockpuppets and other consensus-obscuring factors. And of course, bureaucrats are part of the community too, and in their role as community members, may participate in the discussion themselves. But in their role as bureaucrats, when deciding whether to promote, they are bound by the community's will.

In addition to lacking consensus, this decision had other problems. First, although bureaucrats may participate in RfA discussions, it is best for impartiality that they not close discussions in which they have participated, unless the outcome is uncontroversial due to an obvious consensus or non-consensus. Danny, who supported the RfA, nonetheless holds "primary writing credit" for this very controversial decision. Second, transparency requires that bureaucrats discuss issues of promotion or non-promotion openly. Taxman pledged to do so when he became a bureaucrat, but now admits that with respect to the current decision, of which, as far as I know, not a peep was made prior to its surprise announcement, he "did different from what [he] said [he] would", a "mistake", in his words.

In short, the decision to promote Carnildo was made without transparency and without consensus. If the bureaucrats believed that "special consideration should be given to the extenuating circumstances of this case", they could have presented that view to the community and sought consensus in the ensuing discussion. Instead, they issued a highly irregular decision without public consultation. It is disappointing and worrying to see trusted users exhibit such disrespect for the community which granted them their positions, and I urge them to recant. Tim Smith 14:37, 8 September 2006 (UTC)

  • I think what transpired is that Carnildo was put up for RfA by User:UninvitedCompany. Word rapidly reached the members of ArbCom, sparking a discussion on what to do. Three members of ArbCom that voted to have Carnildo's sysop powers removed subsequent to the pedophilia userbox war came out in support of the RfA in the first day. As the RfA's time period waned, it became obvious that the RfA would not pass. Discussion ensued between some bureaucrats and some members of ArbCom on what to do. A decision was made to promote Carnildo, and use the closing RfA as the vehicle for doing so. I could be wrong in some of the above; it's speculation.
  • In my opinion, what should have happened is the RfA should have been allowed to fail. Subsequent to that, a case should have been submitted to ArbCom re-opening Carnildo's role in the pedophilia userbox war, to re-evaluate whether the desysopping should have been permanent, or temporarily suspended.
  • What should happen now, and so far (to my knowledge) has not happened is a full accounting of exactly what transpired. This is a highly controversial case, and transparency is being demanded by a number of users. If the case can not be presented in a convincing way that the community can support, then it would seem there would be basis for overturning the decision. Mistakes can and do happen. In the least, some statement by the bureaucrats as to why this case should or should not be a precedent for future considerations and what impact this decision has on future (and some would ask for) past RfAs should be made.
  • The bureaucrats didn't just make a controversial decision. They shattered the mold that RfA has held to for years. To date, this has been without satisfactory transparency or explanation. I am not going to say the bureaucrats made a mistake. I've been witholding personal judgement on that pending explanation by the bureaucrats. However, such explanation has not been forthcoming. This is...disappointing. --Durin 15:50, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
Durin's speculation as to the chain of events is interesting but not wholly accurate. Please note that Carnildo's nomination was offered by UninvitedCompany, a former Arbitrator and a member of and regular participant in the Arbitration Committee's private discussion list, the same as I. UC specifically raised the issue in our discussion list, and the matter was discussed at some length. UC's nomination was after this discussion and the Arbitration Committee was appraised of, and generally not opposed to the nomination, in advance of it being made. The nomination was not a surprise to the Committee, as Durin suggests. Several of us (acting as individuals, but with the gravity that a members or former member of the Committee has) deliberately supported the nomination early on.
The decision to promote him was made by the three bureaucrats who claimed to make it. The Committee was not (as a whole) consulted on the question as to whether he should be promoted. One member of the Committee objected after the fact to the promotion, although that member's opinion appears (from the discussion that followed) to be a minority of one within the Committee. I was present for the tail end of the discussion to promote Carnildo, but by the time I joined the discussion the decision had been made; I played no role in that decision. I did not represent the ArbCom in that discussion. I am not, at this time, at liberty to name who else was present, although I will state that at least one member of the current ArbCom was present at the time I joined the discussion.
It is my belief that if the ArbCom were asked to consider whether Carnildo should be returned to sysop status, prior to the RfA, the Committee would likely have agreed to do so. Even after the RfA was completed, I believe the Committee would have done so. I believe that I am not alone in this evaluation of the Committee's likely action, and that any member of the Committee would likely come to the same conclusion after reasonable consideration. I believe the three bureaucrats who decided to promote Carnildo, were advised of this state of affairs by representative(s) of the Committee, and concluded that promoting Carnildo on their authority, rather that on the Arbitration Committee's, was in the best interests of the project at that time.
I see that someone above has made some starkly legalistic argument about bureaucrats and sysops not being delegated their authority from the Board and therefore restrained to act only as agents of consensus or some such folderol. That is, frankly, nonsense. Sysops and bureaucrats, as with all editors on the English Wikipedia, are charged to act in the best interests of the encyclopedia. Consensus is a tool we use to gauge the best interests of the project, but it is not an end in and of itself. I applaud these three bureaucrats for having the moxie to break from the stifling expectations of the pseudoconsensus that typically erupts from any given Request for Adminship and instead evaluate the broader picture and make a decision that reflects more than merely the shifting moods of a fickle and ill-informed populace. Kelly Martin (talk) 04:09, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps I'm that someone. There is nothing "legalistic" (i.e, BS) about my position; community control of admins and b'crats is a core principle. B'crats do not have the power to decide who will be promoted to adminship or b'cratship; neither does ArbCom. Only the community has that power. ArbCom does have the power -- granted by an unsteady meld of community consensus and Board fiat -- to deadmin; they exercised that power in this case. Other admins involved in this case were temporarily deadminned; Carnildo was simply deadminned and invited to reapply in due time. That's all. ArbCom is out of this.
There is a growing trend among admins to assert authority within this community. Yet it is a core principle of our community -- our social model -- that admins have no authority, only the responsibility to carry out community will. Their authority, such as it is, is strictly limited to understanding and interpreting general expressions of community will and applying them to specific cases. When the community speaks directly to a specific case, admins have no latitude to ignore us. I object in the strongest possible terms to the creeping arrogance infecting the admin group. This threatens to destroy the community and convert it into a hive of worker bees controlled by straw bosses.
What goes for admins goes double for b'crats. The least sign of autocracy among the b'crat group must be stamped out, lest admins be promoted against community consensus who themselves lean toward autocracy. Consensus does not come before the encyclopedia; it is not a mere tool but a core principle of our little society.
In my last comment I called upon dissenting b'crats to come forth and so state. Kelly Martin is not a b'crat so I will not hold her to this higher standard of accountability. Now I call on all b'crats to formally state that they continue to serve community needs by acting in accordance with expressed community consensus. John Reid 09:35, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
Admins serve the encyclopaedia, not the community. They are charged with acting in the best interests of the encyclopaedia, not the community. The fact that they are selected by the community does not mean they have a community-given mandate which may be withdrawn as the community chooses. The community is merely expressing its view that the candidate concerned will be able to act in the best interests of the encyclopaedia; community consensus is meant to be a practical and pragmatic solution to the problem of selecting the best-qualified admins. Recall that prior to RfA, we selected admins only based on the views of a few people equivalent to 'crats. Today, for reasons of scalability, we have RfA.
If we must compare WP to a democracy, as some people seem to enjoy doing, let us recall that representatives in Congress/Parliament and the President/Prime Minister are not charged with enacting the will of the people, but doing what will best serve the people. Congressmen do not vote on motions as they think their constituents would, but vote as they think would best serve their constituents. The analogy breaks down, of course, when one considers that in a democracy, the government is subordinate to the will of the people. Wikipedia is not a democracy. It is closer to an encyclopaedia publishing company, and there is a clear hierarchy which must be followed. The fact that the shareholders elect the board of directors doesn't imply that the board of directors must hew to every whim and fancy of a majority of the shareholders. Johnleemk | Talk 12:16, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
  • I think we need to pull this back and constrain the discussion to bureaucrats and RfA. We've extended the discussion to be a debate about the entire project. This is really not the place for such a discussion.
  • There seems to be two sides to this; bureaucrats are charged with either (a) implementing the will of the community as expressed by the consensus garnering mechanism known as RfA or (b) acting in the best interests of the encyclopedia, even if that act is contrary to community will. At a guess, I would venture to say that the majority view is the former, and not the latter. There's the divide. The divide is further exacerbated in that the people who advocate (b) are generally regarding the opinions of the people who advocate (a) as worthless. Further, the people who advocate (a) regard the people who advocate (b) as power mongering and cabal creating people. Both sides are right, and both sides are wrong. At this juncture, neither side seems interested in the possibility of compromise. --Durin 13:09, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
Indeed, this is the usual division within Wikipedia: the division between the people who view Wikipedia as an encyclopedia being written by a community and the people who view Wikipedia as a community that happens to be at the moment writing an encyclopedia. The problem with the people in the second group is that the Wikimedia Foundation has a charter that really rather prohibits Wikipedia from turning into (for example) a K/S novel, no matter how much the community may wish for such a thing to happen. The encyclopedia is and will always be paramount, and any wishes the community should have, no matter how strongly held, that are inconsistent with that are simply wrong and must be ignored. The community is not empowered to decide to stop writing an encyclopedia; or, rather, if it should do so, it will no longer be welcome to participate in the project. We are all servants of the project, not of the community.
Every debate about the proper role of editors, including that administrators and bureaucrats, ends up being a reflection of this fundamental division. You can't get away from it by wishing it away. Kelly Martin (talk) 13:31, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
  • Nobody is wishing it away. To conclude the people who advocate (a) as being in opposition to the goals of the project is improper. Both groups are interested in the success of the project. People who advocate (a) do not necessarily view Wikipedia as a community that happens to be writing an encyclopedia. --Durin 13:42, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
No, you're wrong about that. People who advocate (a) are not committed to the project. They are committed to the community. The fact that the community at this time happens to be writing an encyclopedia is merely a coincidence, and if they are truly advocating (a), then they will happily go along when the community decides, by consensus, to instead change goals and start writing K/S fanfic. Now, you can, of course, argue that "well, of course the community will not do that", but that's not the point. The point is whether your committment is to the encyclopedia, or to the community. And I argue that the people advocating (a) are committed to the community and to whatever the community, in its ever-shifting moods, decides it feels like doing, rather than inerrantly committed to writing an encyclopedia no matter what butterfly the community decides to chase this week. And to that extent I am convinced that the people advocating (a) are not merely simply wrong but actually harmful; not only do they dilute our focus and encourage us to waste time on irrelevancies, but generate friction when they refuse to allow the car to be steered back on the road simply because the community has decided to go drive off after pretty flowers. Simply put, the people advocating (a) are only committed to writing an encyclopedia because currently the community still has something of a consensus for doing so. However, that consensus is fading fast and will continue to fade as the community grows.
We have large segments of our community who don't do anything to write an encyclopedia. There are segments that are writing advertising copy. There's a segment that is writing a sports gazetter (masquerading as encyclopedic coverage). There are segments that are writing a social networking site. I shouldn't be surprised to find out that there's a segment somewhere that is writing interactive fiction somewhere in some corner of Wikipedia. Our community is absolutely not unified in its desire to write an encyclopedia. Anyone who thinks it is simply is not paying attention, or is stuck in 2003 (when there really was such a consensus).
We have not a small number of people whose participation in Wikipedia is solely so they can become admins (because being an admin is cool, ya know). We have people who are here only to pimp their wares. We have people who are here only to primp their egos. And the people advocating (a) would give all of these people just as much license to decide how this encyclopedia project should be run as they would the people who are actually writing an encyclopedia. Kelly Martin (talk) 15:15, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
  • Thanks for your input Kelly. Per earlier disagreements and their outcome, I am exiting this conversation with you. For the record; I strongly disagree with you, but will not debate you on these points as you and I working together is like oil and water. --Durin 15:28, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
From where I'm standing it looks like >95% of the people who participate in RFA are committed to help build an encyclopedia. People who have goals not in alignment with that tend not to last long around here and tend not to participate in processes like RFA. Haukur 15:26, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
Kelly you are putting up a straw man. People, like myself, who believe that RFA should be about implementing the will of the community don't automatically believe that the total direction of the project as a whole is a matter of consensus. Though thank you for making clear the root of your objection, which appears to be that you don't like or trust Wikipedia's current community. Dragons flight 15:38, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

It is helpful that a knowledgeable participant has shed some light on the murky internal machinations behind the recent debacle, rather that us being left to speculate for ourselves. From Kelly Martin's first reply above, it looks like she is saying that the ArbCom had decided that Carnildo should be re-admined, and thought the RFA process was the least painful way to achieve it (the alternative being to recind part of an earlier ArbCom decision). Certain former and current members of ArbCom piled on the support votes "in a personal capacity", but with their customary "gravity", to achieve that result. When the RFA went pear-shaped, there was a discussion between certain bureaucrats and certain members of the ArbCom, informing the bureaucrats that the ArbCom would be minded to re-admin Carnildo anyway, at which point the bureaucrats decided bite the bullet to re-admin him, notwithstanding that the balance of opinions expressed in the RFA fell outside the usual range within which they would, based on past practice, have decided that there was consensus for the RFA to pass.

Perhaps this is an application of WP:IAR, with the ArbCom and bureaucrats know the "right thing" when they see it; perhaps the views of current and former members of the ArbCom have a heavier weight (or "gravity", should I say) that us common-or-garden peons; perhaps this is just an exceptional case and no conclusions should be drawn from it.

Now, where did I leave that FAC I am writing... -- ALoan (Talk) 15:30, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

I've been active here for a shorter time than most who will be reading here, but I have to comment on what's been written above, although I'm not sure whether this essay belongs here or not, but it was spurred by Kelly's comments so I'll go ahead here.
From what I have seen since I've been here and what I've read of past disputes and decisions, on balance "the community" has gotten a lot more right than it's gotten wrong. I define "the community" here as the group of people who participate in both the article-writing and the decision-making functions -- the people who are writing the encyclopedia while also participating in some of the meta-decisions about how it should be written. There are times when leadership is needed, and there have been times on AN/I when I (a non-admin but an interested bystander) have commented that a given sensitive situation is something that should be resolved off-wiki. Those situations exist, and mechanisms are needed for dealing with them, but they are rare.
On balance, community decision-making means decision-making by those users who care to participate in a given process. Those who choose not to participate are putting their trust, generally safely, in those who do. I don't participate, for example, in choosing featured pictures. That doesn't mean that I am indifferent to whether the picture on tomorrow's main page will be attractive and informative or ugly and useless; it means that I think there are other users more qualified than I to make, and more interested than I in making, that particular decision. I don't seek to participate in bot approvals, because I know nothing about the technical aspects of bots. On the other hand, I do participate in RfA, because I believe that my individual abilities lead me to be able to provide useful comments in that particular arena. People say that there isn't enough participation in RfA, but I don't think we want one million casual users weighing in on admin candidates -- nor do we want them chosen by a small committee. Editors who are choosing featured articles, or commenting on AfD's, or just to do their editing, have made their own choice about where their talents and interests lie.
I will also mention in passing that I've seen no evidence that we have a problem with people becoming administrators "because it's cool." To be sure, users may spend their time in areas such as XfD and RC patrol because participation there is significant to many RfA voters; I've debated whether I wish to be an admin at some point (I'm not sure), and I know that if I do, I will have to get involved in those areas even though they are far from the major contributions I can make to this encyclopedia with my own interests and abilities. But the net result, if my efforts were to be redirected in those directions, would be that I would be attending to responsibilities where the encyclopedia needs more resources. Who's to say that pushing the type of intensive user who is considering adminship in those directions is a bad thing. Similarly, I disagree with 1FA voters but if the net result of their position is more FA's, I don't see that as a threat to the project.
The distinction between "the community" and "the encyclopedia" may have a kernel of truth to it, but as it's been presented, it is an entirely false dichotomy, and needlessly divisive. I think of Wikipedia as an encyclopedia that is written by a community -- a community that I am proud to be a part of, that is working together in a grand experiment of volunteer effort to do something that has never been done before. Building such an effort requires teamwork, comeraderie, and a sense that the participants are valued and, collectively, have significant input into the future of the enterprise. It also requires, as Jimbo recently noted, that the contributors be having fun.
One individual decision, on a promotion or anything else, is insignificant in the bigger picture, and I have not joined with anyone who's claimed that if the bureaucrats are allowed to do X or the community doesn't overrule decision Y, the project is worthless and we must all down tools. I'm willing to accept that once in awhile, there may be something that the rank-and-file users don't know. But if highly experienced members of the project, who esteem themselves and present themselves as leaders, proclaim that support for the general principle of community decision-making is a rejection of the project of writing an encyclopedia, I suggest that they could not be more wrong. Newyorkbrad 16:03, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
That sums up my feelings perfectly. the wub "?!" 22:07, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
Well, maybe. You are right in what you say, that in the end we can't have a cabal running things, but actually I think most people may have forgotten that adminship "should be no bog deal". If Carnildo abuses the tools - and he will be watched like a hawk - then the tools will surely be withdrawn again, just as we allow tendentious editors to be unblocked and have a second chance, but we block them if they abuse the privilege. I see plenty of possible benefit to the project from Carnildo being able to delete images. Carnildo is one of the best-informed in regard to copyright issues, and most copyight violators have no intention of paying our nlegal bills if their invalid fair-use claim gets us sued. I don't see much disbenefit of Carnildo having the sysop bit. Not now the userbox wars are over. So: give Carnildo a second chance. Assume good faith. Guy 23:24, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
Speaking only for myself, and not on behalf of any of the others who've posted above, I was commenting on general principles, and not on any one specific decision. Just in case it wasn't clear. Newyorkbrad 23:36, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
We should probably trust the bureaucrats to determine community consensus. Obviously if they only ever added up votes they would be failing the community and failing the encyclopedia. --Tony Sidaway 23:30, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

To Protect and Serve

I agree with Tony Sidaway and indeed I'll strengthen it: We do and even must trust b'crats to implement community consensus. Perhaps Tony and I part ways over his essay; I read it as a call to give b'crats greater latitude, which I do not endorse. But I do agree that RfA is not a vote and b'crats need to use wise discretion in sorting the puppets from the people. That said, there is a certain standard set for promotion. With obvious puppets discounted and reasonable participation, RfA outcomes above a certain percentage pretty much demand promotion; RfAs below a lower threshold forbid it. It is only within the gray area between thresholds that we ask b'crats to go beyond combating "election fraud" and make a close call.

The particular RfA that sparked this thread fell well under acceptable limits for promotion. The fact that ArbCom members lobbied in favor contaminates the discussion, rather than enhances it. That is to say, the suspicion of undue influence requires the closing b'crat to cast a particularly critical eye on an outcome so weighted.

Pompeia Sulla. Precisely because b'crats are entrusted with such an important privilege and with the community mandate to exercise it with discretion, no b'crat can afford to appear biased or subject to pressure from any direction. Admin promotions come at the behest of our community only.

No personal offense intended, but remarks such as We are all servants of the project, not of the community make me shudder.

Each one of us in his role as editor is a servant of the encyclopedia project and I hope that no experienced editor will disagree. We have many different viewpoints on just what an encyclopedia may be; personally, I say that the word itself is becoming self-referential, since for most purposes, Wikipedia is the only general-reference encyclopedia most human beings will ever use. But that's another topic. Those of us fortunate enough to have spent considerable time with printed, bound, multi-volume encyclopedias have a very clear idea what is meant by the word and we hope to pass this value along to the next generation of editors. It is a core value, a foundation issue, and absolutely non-negotiable -- although very difficult to define.

The Board serves our project directly and is empowered to ignore our community, for good or ill. Jimbo is above any law, at present. Those of us who have been promoted to positions of trust -- admins and b'crats -- do not serve our project in these capacities. They serve our community; our community serves our project. There is no value conflict whatever.

The danger is that our trusted servants may decide to serve our project directly, bypassing our community. This is in direct conflict with Sidaway's law of Wikipedia: Wikipedia is cleverer than you are. We do our best to elevate our wisest members but b'crats are still flawed humans. We trust them to interpret and implement community consensus. We do not trust them to be smarter than our community as a whole.

I renew my call for each individual b'crat to declare his or her position on this topic. I want to hear it. John Reid 01:54, 12 September 2006 (UTC)

Seconded. It is notable that the discussion on one side seems to be led by Tony (and, to a lesser extent, Kelly), neither of whom is a bureaucrat, whereas the bureaucrats have remained almost silent. It would be very nice to see what they think of this decision, whether they think it implements policy as it was understood before it or is merely an exercise of discretion, and whether it has any influence on how RFAs will be handled in future. -- ALoan (Talk) 12:48, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
  • Frankly I'm rather disturbed that the bureaucrats have gone silent. When I had a moment, I was going to do a thorough check, but it appears that not a single bureaucrat has contributed to the discussion here or at WT:RFA for the last two days and maybe longer. --Durin 13:36, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
I've added a section heading here, to improve continued editing. I disagree with your assertions that the Admins and Bureaucrats serve the community and not the project directly, nor do I feel it conflicts with Wikipeida is cleverer than you are. In fact, it's precisely that reason I trust them in the positions they're in to act for the project first and community second. I don't believe their actions, even the Bureacrats, are completly irreversible - which is the underlying flexability of Wikipedia which allows it to survive. Whilst flawed humans they may be, they're not without oversight, so I don't expect them to outthink the community as a whole - I don't expect anyone to, even Jimbo.
I don't expect my comments to change your mind on this, but I just wanted to offer a similar yet opposing viewpoint. I'd be happy to discuss my thoughts on it further but I have no idea where Tony or Kelly would fall on this. --InkSplotch 23:33, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
The historical role of bureaucrats is to promote candidates for adminship when authorized to do so by the community. Speaking from a standpoint of roles, User:Ed Poor was the first to do this, and carried out his responsibilities for a considerable span of time using SQL queries before a user interface was constructed and the term "bureaucrat" applied. As such, the role predates RFA, it predates voting and percentage thresholds, and predates consensus (the original standard being no significant objections). I don't think the role has changed significantly, though it has been formalized, and the community has made the means by which it authorizes promotion clearer and more objective. The role has expanded somewhat with time, in that bureaucrats now are the sole closers of RFAs, and the matter of bots and name changes has been added. The Uninvited Co., Inc. 04:10, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for this historical context. Perhaps we should return to the "no significant objections" standard, with bureaucrats deciding whether objections are "significant" or not. -- ALoan (Talk) 09:39, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

Please see new thread (WPOA/BN) before adding to this thread. Thank you. John Reid 09:22, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

Renewing my call to suspend RfA

A couple of months ago I called for the bureaucrats to suspend RfA. I'm renewing that call. I am asking all bureaucrats to refrain from promoting new admins until such time as the community develops a process for promoting admins that isn't broken. The current process is too capable of promoting unqualified candidates, excludes qualified candidates for thoroughly irrelevant reasons, and often generates hostility and bad blood. But as long as it functions at all, there's no incentive to change it. An agreement by the bureaucrats to suspend promotions would force the community to actually deal with the issue, instead of blithely ignoring it. The Sean Black and Carnildo RfAs are great examples.

At least give it some thought. Don't dismiss it out of hand, the way you did last time. Kelly Martin (talk) 08:15, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

I strongly agree that RfA is broken and that it needs replacement. I strongly disagree that this is the place to propose turning it "off". B'crats are not given that latitude, sorry. I will surely entertain a proposal to overhaul RfA and I pledge to work with any serious proposal. I oppose any b'crat sit-down strike.
I'll repeat: In regard to promotion, the sole job of b'crats is to implement community will -- not to determine, control, or correct it. John Reid 13:33, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
And I disagree. Bureaucrats are given that latitude. They are expected to act in the best interest of the project; they are not mere automatons who exist only to promote people who meet certain numerical standards. Kelly Martin (talk) 14:47, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
The role of bureaucrats is to gauge and implement community consensus. WP:CRAT says that bureaucrats may grant administrator access "only when doing so reflects the wishes of the community" and WP:RfA says that bureaucrats "review the discussion to see whether there is a general community consensus for promotion". It is the job of the community to determine the best interest of the project by making arguments and weighing each other's arguments during the discussion. The job of bureaucrats is strictly to follow community consensus. Of course, they cannot do so by mechanically counting supports and opposes, but must watch carefully for sockpuppets and other consensus-obscuring factors. And of course, bureaucrats are part of the community too, and in their role as community members, may participate in the discussion themselves. But in their role as bureaucrats, when deciding whether to promote, they are bound by the community's will. Tim Smith 16:23, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Not quite. Whatever our written policy may say, Bureaucrats may not, for instance, promote a clearly unsuitable administrator even if it's the community's will. Ignore all rules applies to bureaucrats, too. --Tony Sidaway 16:41, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Let's also keep in mind that the sampling on RfA is not very reliably a "consensus" of the community. The largest RfA I've seen had some 175 votes. There are over 10,000 active editors on the English Wikipedia. Frankly, I think a sampling of less than 2% of the community can't really be characterized as a "consensus". I know that I don't participate in RfA not because I think it's unimportant or that I don't care, but because I find the toxicity of RfA sufficiently unpleasant that I don't want anything to do with it. My opinion is not counted because I find the process unpleasantly repulsive, not because I don't care. I wonder how many other editors are avoiding RfA because they find the process distasteful; I doubt I'm the only one. Kelly Martin (talk) 17:28, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Kelly actually participated in five RfAs during the past month ([5] [6] [7] [8] [9]), the last just hours before the above post. Consensus on Wikipedia—about an article, an adminship, or anything else—rarely involves a sizeable percentage of active editors. In practice, because RfA is open to the community, the consensus of editors in a discussion is taken as a proxy for the consensus of the community. It's true that sampling irregularities can skew the result, and bureaucrats must watch carefully for such consensus-obscuring factors. But their job remains to gauge and implement community consensus.
To address Tony's example, different people have different standards of suitability for adminship. If community consensus is to promote, then the candidate is suitable in the eyes of a large majority, and unsuitable only in the view of a small minority. In that case the closing bureaucrat may indeed promote. In fact, that commonly happens. If the bureaucrat decides instead to ignore all rules and not promote, then they must answer to the community for doing so. Tim Smith 21:04, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
I join Kelly in urging the bureaucrats to seriously consider suspending the process of making new administrators. An alternative to this would be for bureaucrats to routinely close out RFAs in a more conscientious manner, instead of just counting up sacks of me-toos from the RFA groupies. But I think that might require an expanded corps of bureaucrats to cope with the workload. --Tony Sidaway 14:56, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
What makes you think bureaucrats are not already closing RfAs in a "conscientious manner"? Angela. 15:02, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
I'm sorry if I didn't make myself understood. My point is not that they're not conscientious (they are), but that perhaps routinely increasing the amount of work being put into closes, distinguishing good reasons for oppose or support from poor ones, listing editors who contributions are against the spirit of RfA (such as those who always vote support), might be an alternative to Kelly's proposal. I also recognise, you will see, that this would entail substantially more work and might require more bureaucrats. --Tony Sidaway 15:11, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Angela, I certainly do not believe that the bureaucrats are acting unconscientiously. Rather, I think the current structure of RfA itself engenders harm to Wikipedia, and that bureaucrats should refuse to participate in it in order to put an end to that harm. Kelly Martin (talk) 15:34, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

I think there's consensus (that word again!) that there are times RfA isn't working smoothly, though no consensus at all about how to improve it. But this suggestion is not a solution to anything. We have a pending RfA in which the votes expressions of opinion are running something like 90 to 0. Are you suggesting that the closing 'crat should refuse to promote, in a clear case where RfA worked fine, to draw attention to the fact that in other cases it doesn't? Sounds highly counter-productive, and a bit like a WP:POINT situation to me. Newyorkbrad 15:04, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

I think the suggestion is that all promotions should be suspended. --Tony Sidaway 15:13, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Kelly's suggestion was that the bureaucrats "refrain from promoting new administrators" and "suspend promotions" until the RfA process is revised, to "force the community" to come up with a new process. If that is done, then even the uncontroversial promotions in cases where there's no dispute about application of the RfA process at all will be held up. I still don't see the value to that. Newyorkbrad 15:20, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Many of the "uncontroversial" candidates are uncontroversial because nobody asks the right questions. We've had uncontroversial candidates who turned out to be bad admins, after all, and a lot of people who make admin these days do so because they've deliberately gamed the system in order to become admins. Kelly Martin (talk) 15:34, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
If the right questions aren't being asked, you are as free to ask a question or present a comment as anyone else. Newyorkbrad 17:12, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
The value is obvious. Produce a non-broken process. --Tony Sidaway 15:33, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

I think the 'crats are doing the best that they can and are attempted to act in a manner that is both professional and effective. If a process is screwed up, it doesn't mean the 'crats are. They are human beings capable of seeing beyond simple numbers or a list of names. They may mess up, but everyone does. I think the 'crats should be and can be trusted in the vast majority of circumstances. Yanksox 15:15, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

Kelly, closing the RFA is not the best solution. I agree with you that the RFA has become a mess, and the quality of admins in the past are much better than some of the present day ones. So why is this happening? I have a few thoughts: Well, power corrupts and as the size of admins increases it's becoming more of a cabal and we find many users shooting down valid candidates on really flimsy reasons. I've noticed that the RFAs that have the highest chances of passing are the ones which have been nominated by well known wikipedians. Calling and end to the process without proposed solutions is certainly not the best way to move ahead. Why don't you give 'crats the mandate some more elbow room in subjectivity? Either way if we go ahead (as Splash has put it above), we're accused of being partial or not considering 'legitimate' concerns. My concerns are mainly the fact that if just *one* well known user objects, you're going to get a whole army of mechanical "nodders" agreeing with the editor, without going in the reasons why the candidate may have acted in that fashion and the opposer could be wrong. What do we do then? I know that the candidate may have just got a little hot one incident, so can it be integrated for all instances in the future? I certainly don't feel so, but if we do promote, there are accusations of us having ulterior motives and what not. Please do suggest some alternatives before calling for a suspended session. =Nichalp «Talk»= 18:08, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

Here’s an alternative that makes sense to me. Most of the comments/concerns are centered around voting and unreasonable oppose rational, and many are suggesting giving Bureaucrats more discretionary power. Instead of turning RFA off, why don’t we try something like this for the next 5 nominations? See what happens. Rx StrangeLove 18:27, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
By sheer coincidence, as it were, recently I started a new guideline called Requests for adminship is not a vote. It has effectively been incorporated in Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Front matter. It clarifies that bureaucrats have wide discretion in determining community consensus. --Tony Sidaway 18:35, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Having contributed to the current language, I'd like to say that I consider it a reflection of the existing system and not a license to expand bureaucrat discretion. In my opinion bureaucrat discretion is and should be narrowly construed except when exceptional circumstances exist. It is important to the sense of community involvement and fairness that the closing of average/normal RFAs be handled in a way that is transparent and predictable. Also, I would be very dissappointed in any Bureaucrat who felt that RFA should be suspended in the absence of a community mandate to do so. Bureaucrats are trusted to implement community standards and expectations; they are not empowered to force their own views upon the community. Dragons flight 19:44, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

I am unconvinced that suspending RFA will solve anything. However, I do once again urge everyone who is interested, and most particularly Tony Sidaway and Kelly Martin, to participate in earnest in the Wikipedia:WikiProject on Adminship or otherwise start a discussion independent of RFA itself. I believe that a major barrier to any sort of change at RFA is that no demonstrably better alternative has been presented in sufficient detail to withstand scrutiny. The Uninvited Co., Inc. 20:21, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

  • This is in part because no concerted effort has been made to determine just what is wrong with it and what the goals of such an effort would be. Lots of people say its broken (of course, lots say it isn't). Fine. You can say its broken. But, without any idea of what is wrong with it and what the goals are, you're just taking shots in the dark and are likely to make it worse, not better. --Durin 01:21, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
It's obviously broken because it's changing rapidly in unexpected directions. Hopefully it will become unbroken pretty soon. Perhaps those who are changing it know what they're doing, perhaps not. --Tony Sidaway 01:27, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

The brokenness of RfA is directly connected to our failure to communicate our core values to new editors. This is such a massive failure that most of us are unwilling to address it in the whole. Indeed, this may be impossible; perhaps all we can do is chip away on the edges. The explosion of policy proposals is another effect of an influx of editors who are poorly informed or unwilling to uphold core principles and foundation issues. This failure threatens to overshadow every other issue.

The UBX war is a case in point. Some anti-boxers feel that pro-boxers are only amusing themselves or that they come here in order to shove their biases in total disregard of neutrality. Unfortunately, far too many kiddie editors are here for just such purposes and they do create and use kiddie boxes to serve these ends. My personal belief is that sometimes UBX serve important social roles; they act as a social binder, an occasional lubricant, and are a practical tool for reputation management -- they are small change in our reputation economy. However, this viewpoint of mine is overshadowed by the hordes of kiddie editors slapping kiddie boxes everywhere because we can and it's free speech, man. The discussion of whether UBX serve community needs, thus indirectly but importantly serving the project, has tended to degenerate into the question of how to deal with kiddie boxes. Those of us trying to promote a moderate policy are caught in the crossfire between flesh-eating zombies and exhausted, embattled shooters.

Thus, our community has been infected with two opposing camps of internal enemies. The first are those who join up and start editing without any grasp of core values -- and who are taught all the wrong lessons and none of the right ones. The second are editors who understand these core values all too well but who, in reaction to the first, determine to abandon some values in order to protect others. When one group or the other have killed out all the moderates (if you're not with us, you're against us), there will be nothing left except total war and destruction of the project. Choose your nightmare: MyWiki, NuNupedia, BoardWar, Invasion of the Lawyers, WP Brand Inc., or Jimbo Goes Postal.

I do not have a solution to this most pressing of all issues. Sorry. Heck, I'll admit it: I do consider myself smarter than the average monkey. But this has me stumped. I tend to think that our foundation principles are internally inconsistent, that at least one must be abandoned to accommodate inevitables. But I also suspect that to remove even one such brick will be to bring the whole house down. I just don't know.

So long as editors in general either do not embrace core values or willfully abandon them, naturally admins will do no better -- and a lifetime of experience tells me that bad apples tend to float up in hierarchies. No method of promoting admins can draw gold from straw.

I do not think RfA can be fixed. I think it works now as well as it can now. If this failure to communicate our core values to new editors -- to attract and retain editors who share core values -- is reversed into success, then existing process will start working again. If this failure persists and worsens, then it really doesn't matter what else we do. John Reid 02:43, 12 September 2006 (UTC)

Well put. Clearly there needs to be a better process for RfA than the one that is in place now (there seems to be community consensous for a change), however, how to go about re-factoring RfA is probably not going to be an easy nor agreeable task. // Pilotguy (Have your say) 20:27, 12 September 2006 (UTC)

Ha ha, Pilotguy. You say my comment is "well put" but then you go on to disagree and say RfA can and should be fixed. No offense taken or, I hope, given; I can see the other side, too. But I'm afraid that any fix will, by the law of unintended consequences, do more harm than good.

I'm wary even of floating ideas (WP:BEANS) but I can think of a few band-aid fixes that might allow the current situation to stagger along for a bit:

  • Make RfA a straight vote with explicit suffrage requirements. I like 1 month. Forbid discussion.
  • Make it a secret ballot, so nobody can earn brown-nose points for supporting candidates.
  • Deadmin (and de-b'crat) everyone. Let Jimbo and the Board choose 3 b'crats to their own taste. For a limited period of time -- say, 1 month -- allow these new b'crats to elevate anybody to adminship they personally feel worthy. This new class of admins is limited to, say, 100 members. When this class fills or the free time frame elapses, we simply return to the old system.
  • Establish the rule that new admins are always temporary; at the end of the (3 month?) term they are automatically deadminned...
    • ... and cannot reapply for adminship for another year. OR
    • ... unless they pass a second confirmation evaluation.
  • Abolish elevation-by-merit or by discussion. Admin all editors who maintain some minimum level of contribs for 1 year without getting blocked for more than a day or two or being banned by ArbCom.
  • Dissolve RfA as a page and as a process. Create a subpage for every user, e.g, User:John Reid/Review. Encourage all editors to comment on this editor's performance there. When an editor feels this page looks favorable "enough", let him apply directly to any b'crat for elevation. Same general guidelines for elevation but there is no open or close time. Editors who whine and repeatedly reapply pointlessly are hung by their thumbs from Main Gate.
  • Create a secret guideline that prevents anyone from becoming an admin who has never been blocked.
  • Create a new class of admin-candidates. These do not get any special new powers but are required to serve under the mentorship of an existing admin for 3 months, during which they do dog work. The mentor gets a veto at RfA.
  • Require admins to prove legal majority. Seriously.

If I get any more wacky ideas, I'll add them later. But I really don't think any of these will bring lasting improvement. John Reid 01:03, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

Whoops, heh, my comment was for the topic in general, not in response to you John. Sorry about that :) // Pilotguy (Have your say) 21:24, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

If RfA is suspended, it will be viewed by some elements in the community as the existing corps of Admins trying to close ranks and prevent anyone new from joining them. I'm not saying that I believe that this is the intention of the suggestion to suspend RfA - just that it will be perceived this way in some quarters. That will lead to immense pressure for a new system to be devised and implemented extremely quickly - and thus may well lead to a poorly thought-out new system which may well have more problems than the exitising one. If someone has a clear proposal on how to replace the existing RfA system, they should put it up for discussion like any new process proposal. And the existing system should stay in place until a clear decision on how to replace it is reached. In the meantime, discussing the vague idea of replacing the system without a proper proposed alternative is getting us nowhere. Utimately any new system is probably only going to draw the active involevment of a small percentage of users. If those are the only users who take an active interest in the role of adminship and evaluating the people who wish to hold that position, I don't see that as a problem. At least the people who are involved take it seriously. Zaxem 00:22, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

Please see new thread (WPOA/BN) before adding to this thread. Thank you. John Reid 08:55, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

RfA proposal

I have written a new proposal for RfA. I'd appretiate any comments on the talk page, as I'd like to review and revise it.Voice-of-All 05:11, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

RFA on Wikipedia in other languages

I don't think the occasional bad admin has really much to do with problems at the RFA stage. There are people who have turned out to be (in my opinion) unsuitable admins who got a unanimous pass at RFA. Furthermore RFA was right in giving them a unanimous pass because up to then they hadn't shown any indication that they would be problematic. No process on earth can detect problems before they actually occur.

I do think we could do with some RFA simplification. For example I like the way we do things over at no: There are certain minimum requirements before someone can be nominated and there are certain (very generous) suffrage requirements. After that it's a simple straightforward up-or-down vote on the candidate - if she gets >75% of valid votes (and no-one is shy in calling them votes) a bureaucrat gives her the bit. It's simple, fair and cordial. Haukur 12:36, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

But does this idea scale up to a larger community such as en:? — Werdna talk criticism 12:48, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
A good question - I think the answer is 'yes'. Straightforward voting scales much better than attempts at attaining consensus by discussion. You'll note that we're currently voting on board members, not trying to attain a consensus on which one is best. Haukur 12:58, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
I think the issue with the board election is that a discussion can't go on in a multilingual setting. Every single comment would need to be translated into dozens of languages. — Werdna talk criticism 12:55, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
A good point, regarding the Board, but ArbCom? -- ALoan (Talk) 13:12, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps something we need to reconsider. — Werdna talk criticism 13:23, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
RFArbCom? Boggle. -- ALoan (Talk) 13:59, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
(edit conflict)I think a straight voting model scales better to large communities than a "discuss to determine consensus" model. I am not convinced either way whether pure voting would produce better or worse results than our current RfA system. Kusma (討論) 13:01, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

A refreshingly interesting idea. Adminship is, after all, meant to be "not a big deal" (I think the "big deal" in the recent cases arise mostly from people's surprise that their clear understanding of a mature process was apparently quite mistaken).

How does no: deal with de-adminning? A straight up-or-down 75% to de-admin? Is there an ArbCom?

I wonder if there are lessons to learn from other Wikipedias. What do, for example, fr, de:, it:, nl: and ja: do? -- ALoan (Talk) 13:36, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

There was a "vote for deadmin" structure on :no: which was used a couple of times but it has fallen into disuse and was removed from the process pages on the understanding that rogue admins were so rare that they were better handled on a case-by-case basis than through a standardized process. On the other hand inactive admins are deadminned after a while (something I personally don't see much point in).
I'd love to see an overview of how the different languages have tackled the problem of handing out and retracting the admin buttons. Maybe we should create a little page to document this? Haukur 13:43, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
As a sidenote, compare the number of admins in :no: and :en: I don't think that deadminship is really an important issue when you have a handful of admins. When you have 1000 admins, the issue is pressing. --Ghirla -трёп- 13:47, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
Yes, that sounds about right. Nevertheless several of the smaller Wikipedias seem to have experimented with a deadminship procedure. I notice the Swedish one has had several votes on removing buttons from admins, including a rather amusing proposal to deadmin every last one of them. [10] Haukur 14:07, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
I too would like to see a page describing the adminship processes of other Wikipedias, and perhaps of sister projects too. Good idea! Tim Smith 21:41, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
  • Certainly... on the Dutch wiki, it works like this: Suffrage for candidate = 3 months, 300 edits. Suffrage for voters = 1 month, 100 edits. Strict vote, 75% support required to pass. Adminship is subject to yearly reconfirmation via the same procedure but only if there are significant objections to the admin.
  • German wiki: suffrage for nominator = 2 months, 200 edits; it is implied that suffrage for voting is likewise, whereas suffrage for candidate is "significantly more than that". Strict vote, 67% suport required to pass. Lengthy comments and rebuttals are strictly discouraged. Wheel warring or breach of protection policy is grounds for immediate deopping, which is temporary while the community decides how to deal with the person. Aside from that, in case of substantial complaints against an admin (for abuse or incivility), a motion can be made to deop the admin for up to three months. In a strict vote, the admin needs 67% support to not lose his privileges.
  • >Radiant< 17:34, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
Thanks. So, how did we end up here, when they are all over there? -- ALoan (Talk) 17:52, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
  • A bit late to the discussion, but the Spanish Wikipedia has something similar: suffrage requirements make 100 edits AND 30 days since account creation; 75% approval on a straight support/oppose/neutral vote; limited discussion on the RfA itself, but a prominent link to the talk page, where issues are discussed; plus, any RfA needs to be advertised on the Village Pump and in the WikiES-l list. However, adminship is more permanent, as no desysopping method was agreed on in a recent poll. Titoxd(?!?) 05:38, 14 September 2006 (UTC)

Username of the famous

Wikipedia:Username says that "Names of well-known living or recently deceased people, such as Chuck Norris or Ken Lay" are inappropriate, "unless you are that living person. If you are, say so on your user page". Is such an assertion enough? (And, if it is, I'm George Bush!).

I was all but ready to block Harry Kewell 14 (talk · contribs) who claims to be a current Premiership footballer, claims I find very dubious, and ask him to contact the Foundation to prove his identity. However, according to the policy he asserts that he is him and I can't do anything more. Thoughts? --kingboyk 11:56, 10 October 2006 (UTC)

There have been a few methods that can be used to validate people discussed (none consitant), but a off-wiki verification from the orginization the person supposedly belongs to may be helpful. — xaosflux Talk 12:19, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
Quote from user's page, "Hello I'm Harold Kewell. I was born on the 22 of September 1987. I play for Liverpool F.C. and the Australian National Team. My nicname's are The Wizard Of Oz and Hazza." Emphasis is mine. I'd think Harry'd know his own birthdate. He most certainly isn't 19. I'd also think he'd know how to spell. – Chacor 05:34, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
I'd say block per username.... anyone can claim to be anyone... in those cases real world confirmation is a good thing (tm) -- Tawker 05:36, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
I'd agree and I've blocked with instructions to email me. We've blocked for notable physicists before (at least I have). Coincidentally, he got his birthday wrong on his userpage, Kewell appears to be born in 1978. Alphachimp 05:48, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Thanks guys. Can we toughen up the wording of that policy a little bit? --kingboyk 09:33, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Spacing between headings and line beneath them

Has anyone else noticed the increase in the gap between headings and the (<hr>-style) line beneath them...?  Is this an alteration with consensus somewhere...?  Apologies in advance if this not a bureaucrat (or higher) level issue. Regards, David Kernow (talk) 03:10, 14 October 2006 (UTC)

This is to do with MediaWiki:monobook.css, which is full-protected, so it's an admin issue. (Wikipedia is a wiki; even much of the interface is controlled wiki-style by admins.) The best place to discuss it is probably WP:VPT. --ais523 13:16, 16 October 2006 (UTC)

Sock-puppeteer attempting to disrupt Wikipedia:Changing username

A whole swathe of requests at Wikipedia:Changing username have found that the name they have requested has been created, shortly after they made the request. Those requestees who have responded have not created these accounts. I suspect that someone keen to disrupt Wikipedia - and with quite a bit of knowledge of its processes - has created these names, possibly to use for vandalism at a future date. As it seems clear that they have not been created for constructive purposes, I'd like to propose that the junk "user"s are moved and their accounts blocked, allowing the genuine requestees to be renamed (should their requests be approved). I have also requested a checkuser on these newly created accounts. Warofdreams talk 14:59, 14 October 2006 (UTC)

What you've proposed is pretty much what I did for one when that happened. Once there's an open request for username change, that name is taken as of then in my mind. Anyone grabbing it then, especially several is just being disruptive. Just move it to a number or whatever and block it. - Taxman Talk 17:04, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
Thank you for the note. I'm adding another step in assessing a request: if the name is taken, and if the circumstances justify it, I will check the new account log, and if it turns out that the account was created shortly after the request was made, I will consider it to be an attempt to disrupt Wikipedia (and probably to pester the users requesting renames) and deal with it accordingly. Redux 23:18, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
Seems like a good idea, I'd be willing to help with making RFCU requests, as I already do a lot down there.Voice-of-All 02:32, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
Great. I've renamed the spurious "users" from User:Junk01 to User:Junk10 and have blocked them all. This has now allowed the requests to be completed. Warofdreams talk 11:02, 15 October 2006 (UTC)

Potential campaigning problem at the Hex RfA

First off an upfront disclaimer: I strongly opposed the RfA for Hex, so please take this into account while reading my comment.

There appears to be a procedural issue at Hex's RfA. One of the editors who has supported the candidate has been campaigning for the candidate. In particular he is attempting to rally white supremacists in favor of the candidate; see particularly this edit. I have no reason to believe the candidate anything to do with this, but several of the editors that have been contacted by User:Subversive_element have shown up at the RfA to voice their support. While it seems unlikely that the RfA will reach consensus to promote, should it get closer, I believe the circumstances of several of the supports should be taken into consideration. Thanks, Gwernol 18:19, 16 October 2006 (UTC)

Do we really have a list floating around of users who advocate for white supremacy? Hrm. --Interiot 19:13, 16 October 2006 (UTC)

WP:CHU possibility?

It looks we have a personal information disclosure via new username vandal. This account has NO edits, and is indef blocked. Would a CHU request by admins be rejected? — xaosflux Talk 02:36, 20 October 2006 (UTC)

It wouldn't be rejected - on the contrary, any usernames containing such personal information need to be changed whatever their status. For instance, we will change any usernames which are e-mail addresses, whether the users have any contributions or not. But bear in mind that the vandal username will still show up in the username change log - we don't have the capability to completely erase a username. Warofdreams talk 02:47, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
Posted request at Wikipedia:Changing_username#New_Username_Vandalism_.E2.86.92_Cxxx_Fxxx_Bxxxxx_at_xxx_xxx_xxxx. — xaosflux Talk 03:13, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
Thanks, all done. — xaosflux Talk 04:03, 20 October 2006 (UTC)

'@' usernames now disallowed

I was going to post this at Wikipedia talk:Changing username, but this page has more visibility. Per Bug 6849, usernames containing @ will not be allowed. Also, Brion said that existing usernames with that character "ought to be renamed"... just a heads-up. Titoxd(?!?) 05:33, 23 October 2006 (UTC)

I suspect that with the sheer number of usernames containing "@", any mass-renaming should be an issue for the developers. Meanwhile, we could continue with the current approach, renaming any user with an "@" in their username on request, regardless of number of edits. Warofdreams talk 20:54, 23 October 2006 (UTC)

I was desysopped at my request in May, without controversy, out of general burn-out and tiredness. Never been blocked, never been before arbcom. I had a nice, long wikibreak, and am now back. I'm interested in having the tools again. What do you folks think? Chick Bowen 04:00, 26 October 2006 (UTC)

Maybe do another rfa. I see no reason why it would fail. ViridaeTalk 04:49, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
I would be more than happy to do another RFA if the Bureaucrats request it, but my impression is that the consensus has been that re-sysopping can be done without one if no controversy exists. This was recently confirmed by Arbcom here. Chick Bowen 05:06, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
Fair enough. Take it easy, dont burn otu again. :) ViridaeTalk 11:07, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
Since I haven't had much chance to know you, I'm relying on your statement that there was no controversy, and of course I don't see anything obvious on a review. So have fun with your adminliness again, and have a re-read through the policies to catch back up on them please. Also, would you consider restoring your talk archives? I reallize they are in the history, but for ease, etc. - Taxman Talk 12:45, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
Thanks very much. I will make sure I'm caught up on everything, and I've already seen that a few things have changed (all for the better, from what I've seen). The talk page archives are restored, and of course I took off the bit about not being an admin. Thanks again. Chick Bowen 15:18, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
You're most welcome. - Taxman Talk 16:58, 26 October 2006 (UTC)

Please consider a speedy close per WP:SNOW for Wp:rfa#Bobabobabo, posted just a few hours ago and already running at 1/11/2. Newyorkbrad 03:22, 29 October 2006 (UTC)

Update - candidate withdrew a few minutes ago, closed. Newyorkbrad 03:57, 29 October 2006 (UTC)

Bot flag requested

A bot flag has been requested in this thread: Wikipedia talk:Bots/Requests for approval#User:PlangeBot. The bot is already approved to have the flag. Tizio, Caio, Sempronio 13:42, 30 October 2006 (UTC)

I've taken care of it. Thanks for the note. Redux 17:44, 30 October 2006 (UTC)

Adam Gawronski (talk · contribs) misrepresentation of real life Adam Gawronski

I was directed to here from the Admin Incidents Noticeboard.

It has come to my attention that someone has created an account using my real life name (Adam Gawronski) and proceeded to vandilise the St Pius X College article with offensive edits. Although these have since been reverted, the username (and hence my real name) still exists in the history. As you can imagine, I do not wish to have these comments under my name as they can be used against me even though I am not at fault. It appears that the same has happened under the username Leonie Miller - St Pius X Administrator Extraordinaire (talk · contribs), which is in fact the real name of a staff member at the school. As these users are both 'joke' users, obviously created exclusively with the intention of vandalising the St Pius X College article I do not believe that prior warning is required / would have any effect.

I would request that:

Thankyou for your consideration. Gawronski 02:53, 31 October 2006 (UTC)

Both accounts reverted and blocked, they just need a bureaucrat to perform the rename. Titoxd(?!?) 02:58, 31 October 2006 (UTC)
Thankyou very much for your quick reply. If you require specific names to rename to, you can use SPX Contributor1 and SPX Contributor2. Gawronski 03:07, 31 October 2006 (UTC)

If the "Adam G." account has been blocked, it can't edit again, so there's no need to change your username to protect it, though you certainly still can if you want to. The bad edits can be deleted from history by any administrator (meaning that thereafter only administrators could see them), or even oversighted by a bureaucrat with Oversight access (meaning not even admins could see them). Newyorkbrad 03:23, 31 October 2006 (UTC)

I've selectively deleted those edits from the article, so those names are no longer in the contribution history, but are still in the deleted edits area Special:Undelete/St_Pius_X_College (admins only). — xaosflux Talk 03:30, 31 October 2006 (UTC)

Bizarre username

I believe this username violates WP:UN: ° (talk ·  contribs). S/He's had it since around May 2005. What do we need to do to get it changed? ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 01:23, 1 November 2006 (UTC)

As they appear to be a constuctive editor, the simplest way would be to have them request a change themselves. — xaosflux Talk 01:50, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
Done. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 02:28, 1 November 2006 (UTC)

There's a note that apparently some bureaucrats have volunteered to be involved in enforcing this mechanism.

"Administrator recall" and related proposals have all been overwhelmingly rejected by the community whenever they are voted upon. The present list is tolerated only because it is voluntary, both from the standpoint of one's inclusion in it and from the standpoint that currently, any actual desysopping must be requested of the stewards by the admin being desysopped.

I see the present direction as being an end-run around community consensus on both fronts. Admins are being pressured to agree to be "open to recall" in the course of the RFA process, and there is this effort to make the "recall" process itself enforced by us. This is policymaking by fiat and should be considered unacceptable.

One thing we all should have learned from the Kelly Martin fiasco is that there are a number of very active editors, who meet any reasonable numeric threshold for sufferage in such votes, who dislike substantially all admins as a group, and who will support any recall-related petition even when its merits are weak.

The Uninvited Co., Inc. 17:36, 1 November 2006 (UTC)

I think that last paragraph is completely unsupported by the facts. Haukur 18:02, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
If you look at the statement in general, it is fairly clear it is correct. There are users that have stated they feel that way. Whether that applied in the specific situation mentioned, I don't know, I didn't follow it. - Taxman Talk 18:05, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
No it's not fairly clear that it's correct. What people are you talking about? I can't think of any. Ghirla is a little grumpy, for example, but he supports as many RFAs as he opposes. Haukur 18:09, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
I clarified there what I had said. His version was a little different, and above yours seems a little more so. But thats fine. I don't see where admins are being pressured to join the category, and if they are, it should be noted it has not gained consensus. Agree with your last point in general. - Taxman Talk 18:05, 1 November 2006 (UTC)