On 6/17/06, Dabljuh <samw(a)student.ethz.ch> wrote:
If blocked, in error or abuse, or even legitimately,
an editor has basically no chance to >revoke the block. He can no longer edit the
relevant pages such as the Administrator's >Noticeboard for Intervention. Thus,
even though the policy explicitely and >uncompromisingly forbids abusing blocked or
disruptive users, regardless of their past, an >user, once blocked, is realistically
considered free game for all sorts of false accusations, >abuses, personal attacks and
libel.
That simply isn't the case
Because of the factionalizing mechanics of the administrative system, a blocked user
>has basically no chance to get an abusive ban lifted. The policy quite clearly states
that >the originally blocked user is meant to lift blocks he invoked himself. An
abusive sysop >will simply not do so. And nobody else will. WikiEN-l is a mailing list
mostly read by the >administrative system itself, who again, naturally, almost always
will side with the >administrator they know rather than a random editor.
In most cases the block will simply expire.
If the wrongly blocked user then decides to ignore the
block, and proceeds with the trivial >technical task of evading the block, in order to
protect himself from false accusations, >personal attacks, or - dear lord - continuing
to edit mainspace articles or talk pages, this >is actually seen as an invitation to
administrators to resort to personal attacks, vandalize >the user at will - more even
than before he becomes "free game", easily resulting in >blocks lasting to
the end of time, literally forcing an user that wants to contribute to >Wikipedia to
evade or leave the project.
Whixh is why the sane option is the wait out the block
Ignorance and indifference to policy are normal in today's administrative system of
>Wikipedia.
Not true.
Completely unfair and unwarranted blocks occur on a
daily basis,
personal attacks, >vandalizations of the userpages of unpopular
editors - a strong pecking order.
Not true
The policies are ignorable, the only thing that counts
is "Don't piss
off the sysops that >have real power".
If you manage to piss off sysops (multiple) it suggests you are doing
something wrong
> All of this also undermines the basic content policies of Wikipedia. Adherents of a
>different POV can be removed easily (although no administrator would ever be caught
>dead with banning an user on the basis of POV). Not to mention it removes strong
editors, >and replaces them with weak ones compliant to the POV of increasingly
sociopathic >administrators having an interest in the article.
There is a faint posibilty that argument might hold up if all admins
had the same POV. They do not.
Currently Wikipedia is too much of an MMORPG: If one
editor has 500 edits, and another >has 20'000, and they have a dispute, the editor
with 20'000 edits always wins - especially >so when he is a sysop himself, the
chances for which increase almost exponentially with >the number of posts.
That would be because they are generaly right.
This is not a way to find consensus: Consensus must be
found in
debate. And debate is >the hardest of all ways to fight an opposite
POV - It is almost always the more successful >strategy to get the
opposite side blocked than to actually get down and find this sacred
consensus (or compromise).
There is no compromise on NPOV.
> Why are administrators needed in the first
place? "To combat vandalism" would most >answer.
Dealing with copyvios, stuff in the mediawiki namespace, dealing with
the results of XFDs and various other ods and ends.
But interestingly, popups, applications, bots, etc are
all much more
effective than the >administrative power to block and to protect
an
article
False. If I block you you have to mess around chnageing IP. If I use a
range block you have to get a new ISP.
If I hard protect there is nothing a vandle can do.
These are either trivially easy circumvented by a
determined vandal,
So are bots. In fact it would be generaly posible to know out even
determided vandels but it is rarely worth the extra effort to do more
than repeatedly spaping them down.
or undermine the most basic idea of Wikipedia: That
everyone can edit
it - the very idea >that made Wikipedia so popular, and what it
is
today.
Take away blocks and you very soon find that no one can edit. Ever
hear of spambots?
Regular editors can patrol RecentChanges just as much
as administrators can.
They can only revet. They can't stop vandles.
The only real necessity for privileged users is the
management of the
front page - And it >doesn't take thousands of
administrators to do
that.
So you support the protection of the front page. So much for your
anyone can edit stance.
The solution to the system is to simply remove all
administrative privileges, short of >maybe a dozen "hard core" people needed
to manage the front page, and instructed not >to use their powers for anything in the
mainspace.
The main page is in the main namespace.
Would the removal of all administrators result in more
edit warring? Yes of course. >Because no longer would one party simply get the opposite
party blocked. But edit >warring is not effective, it is indeed mutually assured
destruction:
I'm failing to see any destruction
If two parties simply revert each other all the time,
they would
never get anywhere - >Ultimately even the most stubborn POV warrior
realizes he will have to arrange with the >other side.
Why? If the other side is older than him he just has to wait.
Personal attacks? Don't listen to it and grow a
skin. Copyvios? Give regular users the >ability to remove pictures.
Um no. how do we prevent them from removeing pictures we don't want
them to remove?
Delete and undelete? Merely a technical problem.
huh?
--
geni