One thing to point out. Any Wikipedia user can become involved in any
arbitration case by trying to figure out which events and evidence
are significant and putting that information on the evidence page, or
commenting on talk pages about those issues. Often our litigants
throw a blizzard of stuff at us which is difficult to process.
If there is activity on the workshop page, where propositions are
sometimes initially advanced, comment on those propositions are also
helpful as an indication of community opinion.
Fred
On Sep 30, 2005, at 12:57 AM, Finne Boonen wrote:
On 9/30/05, Phroziac <phroziac(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Concur.
On 9/30/05, Kelly Martin <kelly.lynn.martin(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Arbitration assistants have been talked about several times before.
> Can't see how it would be a bad thing, although the Arbs would be
> obliged to at least spot-check the assistant's findings for accuracy
> before relying on them.
>
What is the reason for the community service assignment? A lot of
times you're supposed to do community service as a way to observe a
group working together, or practice in working together. In just
editing pages you don't see much of the inner workings of the group of
core wikipedians, so helping out with arbitration might give you more
of an insight.
Finne/henna
--
"Maybe you knew early on that your track went from point A to B, but
unlike you I wasn't given a map at birth!" Alyssa, "Chasing Amy"
http://hekla.rave.org/cookbook.html - my crossplatform dieet/recipe
app
_______________________________________________
Wikipedia-l mailing list
Wikipedia-l(a)Wikimedia.org
http://mail.wikipedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikipedia-l