Revision as of 14:29, 11 June 2010 editNarson (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers5,299 edits →Proposal to unblock Peter Damian← Previous edit | Revision as of 14:30, 11 June 2010 edit undoFT2 (talk | contribs)Edit filter managers, Administrators55,546 edits →Pending changes trial imminent!: new sectionNext edit → | ||
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*'''Strong Oppose''' He needs to go a year without sockpuppeting, then come back. We cannot go 'Oh he is avoiding the ban, so we should lift it', it would make more of a farce of our policies than already exists. Bringing up his quality contributions as a mitigating factor acctually convinces me more to oppose, we cannot be seen to give someone a 'pass' for civility/PA/sockpuppeting/whatever because they made some good edits. <span style="font-family: helvetica;"> --] ~ ] • </span> 14:29, 11 June 2010 (UTC) | *'''Strong Oppose''' He needs to go a year without sockpuppeting, then come back. We cannot go 'Oh he is avoiding the ban, so we should lift it', it would make more of a farce of our policies than already exists. Bringing up his quality contributions as a mitigating factor acctually convinces me more to oppose, we cannot be seen to give someone a 'pass' for civility/PA/sockpuppeting/whatever because they made some good edits. <span style="font-family: helvetica;"> --] ~ ] • </span> 14:29, 11 June 2010 (UTC) | ||
== ] trial imminent! == | |||
] ("]") is likely to go live in about 3 days, on 14 or 15 June. This is a quick summary of key information as it stands: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
;What is pending changes? What does it do? | |||
{{Collapse top}} | |||
"Pending changes protection" can ensure the most recent changes to a page are not displayed to the wider (non-editing) readership until checked by a more experienced user for obvious ] and similar clear issues (although they can see it if they choose). Reviewer rights are expected to be widely handed out and require roughly the same trust as ]. | |||
It is useful for persistent inappropriate edits that cannot easily be prevented using existing tools, and on high sensitivity articles and issues. It can be applied to prevent IP/non-autoconfirmed editing or editing by all users (except admins) the same as semi- and full- page protection. | |||
Its primary targets are pages with "hard to address" vandalism and inappropriate editing, such as very variable IP vandalism, breaking news with high visibility/high vandalism risk issues, BLPs with persistent rumors or internet gossip, or other activity that has usually needed permanent protection. | |||
{{Collapse bottom}} | |||
;How does the tool impact editors and readers? | |||
{{Collapse top}} | |||
]. '''Editors (logged in)''' are not affected at all. '''Non-editor readers''' are not affected except on "pending changes protected" pages, where they see the latest version that is marked as vandalism/abuse free. In effect "anyone can still edit", but "pending changes protected" pages have a delay before non-editors see the latest versions. | |||
No material is hidden and non-editors can still see the latest revisions (if any) at the click of a tab. The trial is starting slowly in order to test whether we can in fact do this without significant delay. | |||
{{Collapse bottom}} | |||
;How are reviewer rights obtained and removed? | |||
{{Collapse top}} | |||
]. Broadly administrators manage this, almost exactly the same as rollback (which has a very similar trust level). There's a page to apply for the right linked from there. | |||
{{Collapse bottom}} | |||
;What is the policy? | |||
{{Collapse top}} | |||
'''The policy on usage has been largely incorporated into page protection policy and processes'''. | |||
That's because of a pragmatic point about time (trial rolls out in a few days). More specifically, the reviewing aspect is different but the scope, usage and requests (ie WP:RFPP aspects) are likely to be nearly identical to semi-protection and can usefully go on the same page. It keeps it simple to have all forms of page protection and their requests in one place, and describe it as "pending changes protection" (which is intuitive and fits existing wordings), even if they are in fact 2 tools. Also treating it as "another form of protection" means we don't need to copypaste 2/3 of all PP and RFPP pages, guides and processes, we can just update those pages to include mention and coverage of this new method, and it's a lot less change and disruption, and much more likely to fit into "what people already know". | |||
Other aspects of the policy such as granting of rights etc and guidance are still at ] and ]. The main page ] ("]") is outdated and until rewritten, best ignored for a day or two. | |||
{{Collapse bottom}} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
More information: | |||
:* ''']''' (and related ''']''' {{dot}} ''']''') | |||
:* ''']''' has a section on "Pending changes protection" now (''']''') covering usage policy. | |||
:* ''']''' is being updated to reference requests for pending changes protection and its removal. | |||
To do: | |||
:* Mark pages referencing other proposals, possible implementations etc as "historical" | |||
:* Create necessary templates similar to semi-protection | |||
:* Check if "reviewer" and "autoreviewer" need distinguishing anywhere | |||
:* Inform users if needed (non-editor readers will probably rely on templates as for existing protection) | |||
(apologies for cruedeness of this post, I have to run and needed to post this up 1st! Will refine when free!) ] <sup><span style="font-style:italic">(] | ])</span></sup> 14:30, 11 June 2010 (UTC) |
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Harassment & outing by User:ScienceApologist
NOTE: ScienceApologist and I have reached an amicable resolution on this issue, and as the filing party, I do not believe it requires admin action. Thanks to those who commented; your insights and constructive criticism were helpful. --Middle 8 (talk) 20:43, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
Hi, apologies in advance if this is not the proper venue; and if it's not, I'd be grateful if someone could correct me. (Added Note: It might be better at AE?
I am filing a formal complaint about User:ScienceApologist. He was topic-banned sometime in 2009 for about six months. Sorry that I don't have the wikilink at hand, but the case is well-known, and User_talk:ScienceApologist/Approved_articles includes discussion of what he could and could not edit (typically, he pushed the boundaries as far as possible even when banned).
What he is doing now is harassing me by making completely baseless claims that I have a conflict of interest, and outing me for good measure. WP:COI clearly states: "Editing in an area in which you have professional or academic expertise is not, in itself, a conflict of interest." I have such expertise in acupuncture and Chinese medicine, and have contributed a lot (under retired usernames as well) to acupuncture. I understand the boundaries around here, and heed them, so I don't get banned or blocked. For example, I understand that WP:COI says that as long as I'm not pushing my own practice, writings, gizmos, etc., then it's fine for me to edit acupuncture. But not in ScienceApologist's world:
- he filed this patently absurd complaint about me: Misplaced Pages:Conflict_of_interest/Noticeboard#Middle_8,
- and in so doing attempted to out me by linking to what he believed was my professional webpage. (Note: diffs oversighted by User:Vsmith; here's a multiple diff with the information excised).
About a year ago I retired one account and started a new one precisely because I wanted to stop all use of my name on WP and be completely pseudonymous. I was quite clear about this. It even came up in the context of ScienceApologist's ArbCom case that led to his topic ban (and please note that I'd have to provide that diff offline for privacy reasons).
This is harassment, pure and simple, and if I recall correctly it was behavior like this that led, in part, to his topic ban. I generally just ignore him, but occasionally, Darwin forbid, someone gets in the way of his latest jihad and his full wrath rains down. Today I get to be that special someone. Tomorrow or next week, who knows? And how long does WP tolerate this?
I request and challenge the good people at WP:AE WP:AN to deal with this as harshly as possible, and then some. If I read WP:OUTING correctly, outing is a serious offense that usually results in an immediate block. But there are aggravating factors here. ScienceApologist is a recidivist, disruptive editor who drives away some editors and sets a bad example for others. I suggest a preventative siteban of significant duration. Thanks for considering this issue. Middle 8 (talk) 08:49, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Well, you claim professional expertise. Like Essjay did. /Pieter Kuiper (talk) 08:55, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, and other than the fact that he lied about it and I didn't, it's an awesome comparison! (Seriously, I've always said that any admin wanting to know my identity in good faith can email me.) --Middle 8 (talk) 10:58, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- This information is all linked from this editors various accounts, and was posted appropriately as part of a COI report. If the editor wants to start afresh, perhaps they should start a new account and avoid acupuncture articles. Verbal chat 09:52, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Verbal, I believe you are familiar with the history: I retired my old account (which was connected to my real name), and started this one stating that I desired pseudonymity. On-wiki, I never connected this with my old account. Off-wiki, I told a few editors, you among them, my identity, and was clear that on-wiki I wanted to retain pseudonymity. In fact, I'm pretty sure I remember warning SA about respecting my pseudonymity, though I'd have to dig up the diff (he was whining about the supposed COI thing). Read WP:PRIVACY; my requests for privacy are all well within accepted guidelines on WP. How could I have been clearer that I didn't want my personal information revealed? Put it in my fucking signature? --Middle 8 (talk) 10:58, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- It was and is clear that the two accounts are linked. You are free to start a new account that cannot be connected with the old. Verbal chat 11:24, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Sorry, Verbal, that's just not true -- and I wish you wouldn't play fast and loose with the facts. If what you say is true, please document the supposed link between the two accounts. Just for the record. Thanks. --Middle 8 (talk) 11:32, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- It was and is clear that the two accounts are linked. You are free to start a new account that cannot be connected with the old. Verbal chat 11:24, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Verbal, I believe you are familiar with the history: I retired my old account (which was connected to my real name), and started this one stating that I desired pseudonymity. On-wiki, I never connected this with my old account. Off-wiki, I told a few editors, you among them, my identity, and was clear that on-wiki I wanted to retain pseudonymity. In fact, I'm pretty sure I remember warning SA about respecting my pseudonymity, though I'd have to dig up the diff (he was whining about the supposed COI thing). Read WP:PRIVACY; my requests for privacy are all well within accepted guidelines on WP. How could I have been clearer that I didn't want my personal information revealed? Put it in my fucking signature? --Middle 8 (talk) 10:58, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
Middle 8, you should consider this discussion from the recent Russavia-Biophs ArbCom case. In it, Biophys (who had WP:OUTING issues and was sanctioned in the case) discusses establishing a new account for privacy reasons. Arbitrator Shell_Kinney makes some comments that are particularly relevant to your situation:
- "While editors are able to start new accounts for privacy or decide to vanish entirely, there are some limits to what you may do if you decide to start another account. See WP:CLEANSTART for details ... one of the things the community feels strongly about is that you do not enter the same discussions or disputes without disclosing that you are the same editor that was in these disputes before. This precludes the ability to start over for privacy and re-enter the disputed topic area."
- "... the community feels strongly that editors should not start new accounts, unlinked to the old, and start editing in the same areas/disputes. This has to do with transparency, accountability, not giving the appearance of additional support for a position and not being able to hide behind a new account and bother the same editors."
- "... unless you intend to never edit in the disputed area again, it's likely that creating a new account would do more harm than good. We've seen it happen time and time again - if you edit the same areas you were before, especially when those areas are heated, editors will go to extreme lengths to figure out what your old account was, possibly link them together and may handle things more poorly as a result of feeling that you are trying to hide something."
I make no comment on ScienceApologist's actions - I haven't looked at them - but if you previously edited in alternate medicine areas, which can be controversial, and have returned to them, and in addition have a potential WP:COI, I'd say the chances were high that your old and new accounts would be connected by someone... no matter what your wishes might be. I'm not arguing that this is the way it should be, more that it is the way things are. EdChem (talk) 11:26, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Thanks, EdChem -- I took all of these issues into account, and contacted editors off-wiki to let them know who I was and that I just wanted to be pseudonymous with my new username. I was careful not to give the impression of additional support for a position. I was all about full-disclosure, just some of it off-wiki. All I want(ed) is for my requests at pseudonymity to be honored: an analogous case is User:Shoemaker's Holiday, whose name-change and privacy-boundaries seem to have been well-accepted. Thanks again for that background. --Middle 8 (talk) 11:41, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Middle 8 - happy to provide the links. The problem with full-disclosure, just some of it off-wiki is that it only takes one editor to whom no disclosure has been made to get suspicious (say because of something you said reminding them of something you said with your previous account) and to start digging. The only real way to ensure pseudonymity is to stay away from your previous areas. Without knowing your history I have no idea how closely it is analogous to Shoemaker's Holiday's case, but I would say that his experiences were pretty nasty over an extended period. His privacy may be relatively well accepted now, but that took a long time and his former editing identity is known to a considerable number of users. If you have been through anything like the amount of shit that SH was forced through then you have my sincere sympathies. EdChem (talk) 12:06, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Thanks. I don't know exactly how much crap Shoemaker's went through. I gather I went through less, but still more than enough. I understand what you say about someone inevitably starting to dig around, but since I notified the rest of the world with a great big "Please let me be pseudonymous on-wiki" on my user page, I don't think I could have made my preferences clearer. On my user page, I also state my profession and explain why I don't violate COI, and ScienceApologist cites this in his complaint at Misplaced Pages:Conflict_of_interest/Noticeboard#Middle_8 (multiple diff excluding oversighted material). His whole point is that as an acupuncturist I inherently have a COI because of some magic double standard that doesn't apply to other professions. He's not basing his complaint on anything specific to me other than my profession. Since I made that known on-wiki, there was no need to link to my (putative) web page -- other than harassment. --Middle 8 (talk) 16:02, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Middle 8 - happy to provide the links. The problem with full-disclosure, just some of it off-wiki is that it only takes one editor to whom no disclosure has been made to get suspicious (say because of something you said reminding them of something you said with your previous account) and to start digging. The only real way to ensure pseudonymity is to stay away from your previous areas. Without knowing your history I have no idea how closely it is analogous to Shoemaker's Holiday's case, but I would say that his experiences were pretty nasty over an extended period. His privacy may be relatively well accepted now, but that took a long time and his former editing identity is known to a considerable number of users. If you have been through anything like the amount of shit that SH was forced through then you have my sincere sympathies. EdChem (talk) 12:06, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
Part of the issue here is that Middle 8 isn't just an acupuncturist, he is a rank pseudoscientist whose website proves he promotes acupuncture far beyond the evidence-basis for it. The issue is that this user is heavy-handedly removing material that contradicts the documented POV on his webpage. I'm all for privacy, but there's this thing called WP:SCRUTINY that can be argued this user is engaging in. If this user wasn't active at acupuncture at all, there would be no problem. That he is and that his account can easily and verifiably be linked to three other accounts who have, in the past, been used to advocate the same POV-pushing tactics is extremely relevant to the WP:COI case. I do not take this charge lightly, but when people use Misplaced Pages rules to flout our WP:NPOV, WP:FRINGE, and WP:MEDRS policies, I think it stinks of gaming the system to cry wolf about privacy concerns. There is a right to vanish, but one must actually exercise the right in order for it to apply. This particular user did not exercise that right by entering into the same venue and acting the same way and, by the way, linking to his previous accounts (note that WP:OUTING explicitly states that if the user links to the information, which this user did, then this is an obvious exception to the rule against posting personal information — and I only posted a website he had linked to from one of the previous accounts that he is verifiably connected to, and I manifestly did not post "legal name, date of birth, identification numbers, home or workplace address, job title and work organisation, telephone number, email address, or other contact information"). If an investigation is supposed to happen, we need to be able to present evidence. There is nothing in WP:OUTING which states how this is supposed to be done. People refer obliquely to my identity all the time and I actually had the police called on me once due to Misplaced Pages. This doesn't bother me because the areas in which I work are high-profile and likely to attract attention. If a clarification could be given of how one is supposed to go about taking another editor's problematic behavior to task in such a situation, I'd greatly appreciate it. I definitely promise never to do such a thing again, as I was not really aware that posting a website as evidence was such an issue (and perhaps would suggest adding it to WP:OUTING if it is an issue). If we can explain how such a situation should be handled, I'd greatly appreciate it, and it might help future incidents such as this which are bound to arise. ScienceApologist (talk) 21:42, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
- Where did he link to his personal page himself? Email me if it will reconstitute outing. — Rlevse • Talk • 00:44, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- @Rlevse: I never linked to my website with my current account; that's the whole point. Please email me if you wish. I specifically said "let me be pseudonymous" with this account. Consider User:Shoemaker's Holiday as an example of another user who exercised something on the order of WP:VANISH and returned pseudonymously: the key thing being, like me, they didn't want their name or personal info on WP. I stated this preference at every turn. SA was at best negligent and at worst malicious (he's WP:GAME'd enough that I don't readily assume AGF, and he could easily be just making up an excuse when the intention all along was to humiliate and harass). As for SA's ad hominem argumentation ("rank pseudoscientist"), that speaks for itself. --Middle 8 (talk) 04:32, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- The edits have been deleted or oversighted (not sure which). I don't have them saved and have no idea when they went down. ScienceApologist (talk) 01:22, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Middle 8, if you want to maintain, or restore, your privacy why don't you do as suggested here: get a new username and stop editing topics related to alternative medicine? Will Beback talk 04:49, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Will, I don't think it's quite fair to suggest that he stop editing topics that he prefers to edit, short of any evidence of malfeasance. That almost sounds like a threat (stop editing these topics otherwise you will get outed). I would like to think that ScienceApologist (or any editor on wikipedia) would have the courtesy not to out someone when they prefer not to be outed, even if it's possible to do it without too much trouble. Lord knows SA has filed his own (very angry) ANI thread when other people have outed him in the past. Can we all recognize that Middle 8 doesn't want to be outed, and agree not to do it? If SA had COI concerns, he can ask an administrator to discuss it with M8 off-wiki. --Ludwigs2 05:10, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- The user here is accused of having more than just an interest in the topic, but an actual conflict of interest. Further, there's an assertion that this potential COI has been a disputed topic in the past. If that's true, then we have a situation of someone who may have a COI trying to avoid the accusations by changing his identity, but still editing in the topic. That's the wrong approach. If there's a COI, and it causes this kind of tension, then he should stop editing the topic directly rather than hiding his COI. As a hypothetical example, imagine I was the president and owner of Beback Enterprises. If I was editing the article on our latest product other editors might raise the issue of my COI. Would it be legitimate for me to change my username, go back to editing that article on my new product, and complain about anyone who connects me to my previous account? No. COIs belong to users, not to usernames. Will Beback talk 08:13, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Very well put. No, creating a new username doesn't solve the problem. On the contrary. The solution is to admit upfront that one has a COI and will attempt to edit carefully. Doing otherwise would be an attempt to evade the scrutiny of other editors, a practice that is forbidden here. Middle8, just write it on your userpage. Admit it and then just edit responsibly. We need experts here. -- Brangifer (talk) 14:33, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Brangifer - Thanks, yes, it's been on my userpage forever. Will, just because there's an assertion of COI doesn't mean there is COI, especially when the assertion originates from an extremely disruptive, angry mastodon type editor. ScienceApologist uses these things to attack, not to resolve. Which reminds me -- the whole reason I went pseudonymous wasn't to avoid COI at all -- no one except Science Apologist took the issue seriously, and his one complaint was dismissed out of hand -- but rather to avoid my real name being used in forums like this where editors like ScienceApologist go into battleground, say-anything, end-justifies the means mode (the end being: drive away editors with whom he's tired of discussing content). Gosh, what a bad editor I am for acting in this manner. Definitely let's blame me, rather than hold to account the handful of intensely disruptive, recidivist editors who think WP is a battleground. Let's blame editors like me, rather than call out the admins who enable toxic, battleground editors by failing to impose escalating blocks. --Middle 8 (talk) 05:02, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- Very well put. No, creating a new username doesn't solve the problem. On the contrary. The solution is to admit upfront that one has a COI and will attempt to edit carefully. Doing otherwise would be an attempt to evade the scrutiny of other editors, a practice that is forbidden here. Middle8, just write it on your userpage. Admit it and then just edit responsibly. We need experts here. -- Brangifer (talk) 14:33, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- The user here is accused of having more than just an interest in the topic, but an actual conflict of interest. Further, there's an assertion that this potential COI has been a disputed topic in the past. If that's true, then we have a situation of someone who may have a COI trying to avoid the accusations by changing his identity, but still editing in the topic. That's the wrong approach. If there's a COI, and it causes this kind of tension, then he should stop editing the topic directly rather than hiding his COI. As a hypothetical example, imagine I was the president and owner of Beback Enterprises. If I was editing the article on our latest product other editors might raise the issue of my COI. Would it be legitimate for me to change my username, go back to editing that article on my new product, and complain about anyone who connects me to my previous account? No. COIs belong to users, not to usernames. Will Beback talk 08:13, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Will, I don't think it's quite fair to suggest that he stop editing topics that he prefers to edit, short of any evidence of malfeasance. That almost sounds like a threat (stop editing these topics otherwise you will get outed). I would like to think that ScienceApologist (or any editor on wikipedia) would have the courtesy not to out someone when they prefer not to be outed, even if it's possible to do it without too much trouble. Lord knows SA has filed his own (very angry) ANI thread when other people have outed him in the past. Can we all recognize that Middle 8 doesn't want to be outed, and agree not to do it? If SA had COI concerns, he can ask an administrator to discuss it with M8 off-wiki. --Ludwigs2 05:10, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Middle 8, if you want to maintain, or restore, your privacy why don't you do as suggested here: get a new username and stop editing topics related to alternative medicine? Will Beback talk 04:49, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Where did he link to his personal page himself? Email me if it will reconstitute outing. — Rlevse • Talk • 00:44, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
Yeah, I'd agree, Ludwigs2, but the WP:COIN is supposed to be transparent to the wiki and there is no course of action outlined on that page which would apply for (what I did not fully realize) was "sensitive" information. How does one do a private or off-wiki COI notice that can abide by consensus rules? I have concerns about a COI and I want people to know what the concerns are. The issue was that Middle 8 was essentially refusing to admit that there could possibly be any concerns at all. A single administrator that I ask to act on my behalf isn't going to loosen this kind of intractable situation.
The other problem is that "outing" is not a well-defined idealization. Linking to a personal webpage that a person had previously linked to on Misplaced Pages and wasn't on the blacklist seemed to me to be no real thing. "Let me be pseudonymous" can obviously be used to game the system so as to avoid scrutiny. If Middle 8 doesn't want this page linked, why doesn't he ask for it to be blacklisted on WP:BLACKLIST? That would solve a lot of issues and unintentional outings that may occur in the future. I'd also love to see that ANI thread and compare to this incident. I'm pretty sure it didn't have to do with a personal webpage that I maintained, but maybe my memory is faulty. Let me know.
ScienceApologist (talk) 05:18, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- You knew he wanted anonymity. You outed him anyway. Is there anything else to say about this? Anthony (talk) 12:53, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Plenty, Anthony... if there was a previously discussed COI issue, CLEANSTART may not be used to hide it. See the comments I quoted above from Arbitrator Shell_Kinney. EdChem (talk) 13:03, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Hi Ed -- ScienceApologist filed one, and it was quickly dismissed by an admin who cited Misplaced Pages:Coi#Citing_oneself. SA is trying to invent a new kind of COI, and has provided virtually no diffs showing my alleged extreme bias (because it doesn't exist). --Middle 8 (talk) 17:34, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Plenty, Anthony... if there was a previously discussed COI issue, CLEANSTART may not be used to hide it. See the comments I quoted above from Arbitrator Shell_Kinney. EdChem (talk) 13:03, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
EdChem mentioned he'd quoted me here, and it looks like he's got it about right. Middle8, you simply can't do what you did. Yes, we want to be sensitive to editors who didn't realize how revealing personal information might affect them, however the editor trying to regain privacy has some responsibilities of their own which obviously weren't followed.
The reason the policy states that you may not reenter the same disputes is demonstrated here. If you, as a new account, enter into a dispute you participated in as your old account, you will be recognized almost immediately by editors who had discussed the issue with you before. This is obviously bad for your privacy; an editor who wishes to regain a measure of anonymity needs to be very careful to avoid any behavior that would connect them to their original account.
Reentering an old dispute without making it clear that you are the same person appears deceptive for a variety of reasons. It gives the appearance that a particular viewpoint in the dispute has more support rather than just the continued support of the same person. If the old account had been warned or sanctioned for behavior, or there were concerns of a conflict of interest, creating a new account unlinked to the old avoids scrutiny.
Basically, if there were concerns over your conflict of interest before and they're obvious enough that someone was able to figure out that you were a returning user then what needed to happen was for you to be considerably more circumspect in your editing, not try to hide behind a new account. While experts are in fact appreciated, if your feelings about a topic are so strong that other editors have concerns, you need to consider that editing that topic may not be the best thing for you or Misplaced Pages. Shell 15:51, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Hi, Shell, thanks for commenting. To clarify several things: I changed usernames for the simple reason that I was tired of seeing statements like "John Q. Doe is a pseudoscientist" all over WP and then popping up in search engines. (These kinds of statements were being made by ScienceApologist and by User:Mccready who has left the project after being indef-topic-banned.) Talk to User:Shoemaker's Holiday; they went through the same thing, and seem to have been granted the courtesy of pseudonymity that I seek. No editor should have to put up with flagrant disparagement on WP under their real name, and there should be an expectation of pseudonymity for editors who are targeted in this way and want to change handles.
- I've been upfront about being the same person as my old account, but off-wiki. On-wiki I wanted pseudonymity, so I adressed the COI issue and handled my real-life identity on a need-to-know-basis. I emailed everyone with whom I'd routinely collaborated: Verbal, Brangifer, 2/0 and numerous others.... I don't remember whether I emailed ScienceApologist or not, but he figured out my identity anyway, so as I recall I reminded him about pseudonymyity as well (and had a big notice on my talk page; see link just below), and moved on. And I did address COI on-wiki (cf. old user page, and more explicitly here). What seems to get lost in the mix is that WP:COI explicitly allows editing in one's professional area. Just because ScienceApologist and his "posse" say I'm biased doesn't make it so; I demonstrably "write for the enemy" and so on. To tie up one more loose end, there was no appearance of my new handle giving added support for a topic because it appeared was after I closed the old one, and again, I notified my editing collaborators off-wiki.
- Maybe I could have handled this better, somehow, but I acted in good faith, and was diligent in notifying colleagues. I was never warned or sanctioned with this or any previous account. Indeed, I'm surprised that uninvolved parties here have taken ScienceApologist's spurious allegations at face value, since he's provided precious few diffs (just a few, showing me disagreeing with him on content! horrors!) and is mostly just hand-waving. He's simply trying to give me a hard time, and it's classic false equivalence to assume our misbehavior was remotely comparable; compare our block logs. Everyone was cool with my pseudonymous-partial-reboot for 18 months, with the exception of two angry, mastodon-type editors who would rather discredit those with whom they have content disagreements then pursue normal WP:DR. By contrast, I'm collegial, consider issues on the merits, and know my subject areas; do you want good editors or do you want to enable like ScienceApologist whose M.O. is to push good editors away with bogus accusations and wikilawyering? As always, any admin can email me if I've missed anything. I'm busy IRL and can't rebut every allegation. --Middle 8 (talk) 17:24, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- I guess I'm a little confused then - if you told everyone you interacted with what your old account was, how was this outing? I will have to say I'm terribly unimpressed by your comments on ScienceApologist's talk page as well. If you do not have a problem writing for the enemy and your conflict doesn't show up in your editing, surely the COI noticeboard thread will bear that out? All in all, I'm failing to see what here merited urgent admin attention. Shell 17:32, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- @Shell: when I retired my old account I explicitly asked for pseudonymity with my new one. I clearly requested that my real name and other identifying info never be used on-wiki. There is precedent for that, as I mentioned. Why would I want pseudonymity on WP when many editors know my identity? Because I don't want silly wikidrama and attacks on my name to end up in Google. Now do you see why I didn't want my (alleged) page posted? It's a matter of reputation: ask Shoemaker's Holiday about that. If you don't believe that such courtesies are worth extending on WP, then sure, I understand that you'd be unlikely to see a problem with SA's actions. I disagree; I think WP should be a respectful community where things like requests for pseudonymity are honored, rather than a "Wild West" kind of place.
- As for the COI case SA brought against me, yes, believe it's meritless and that it will be dismissed. The reason I filed a complaint, besides the privacy issue, is that SA files these cases just to harass editors with whom he has content disagreements (and as an extra bonus, he tried to post my webpage against my explicit wishes). That sort of vengeful abuse of process is part of what got him topic-banned last time, and why I brought it up again: I believe that it's a corrosive, disruptive behavior pattern that is the opposite of WP:DR, and apparently he hasn't yet learned much, in that respect, from his last Arbitration action. (BTW, I did intend to post this at WP:AE; Vsmith had suggested I post at either AE or AN and I mistakenly put it here. Sorry for any confusion caused by the venue). regards, Middle 8 (talk) 00:23, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- SA-how is the different for the similar instance with you and Martinphi? — Rlevse • Talk • 23:58, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- I'm not sure I remember all the details between myself and Martinphi, and if I remember correctly Martinphi got banned for outing someone other than myself not in the context of a WP:COIN. Do I remember correctly? ScienceApologist (talk) 01:09, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
I am not at all clear what the conflict of interest here might be. The topic is acupuncture: even if Middle 8 is a practicing acupuncturist, or an individual who has published material about acupuncture, COI seems like a bit of a stretch (unless M8 is involved in blatant self-promotion of his business or his writing). and even that (if true) seems more like market-spam than COI. COI really only applies when some editor begins working on articles that are directly about him - e.g. an employee of a business writing on an article about that particular business; a scientist editing an article about his own published theories, or published theories that oppose his. The COI rule is there to prevent real-world disputes from entering into[REDACTED] editing (because[REDACTED] should not be a venue for arguing real-world disputes). without any more outing, is that what is happening here? --Ludwigs2 01:01, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- The problem is that acupuncture can be portrayed as being like standard health procedures, as if it were based on evidence. If a person is known to advocate that position in order to bolster their profession, that person definitely has a COI if they edit acupuncture articles by removing suggestions of pseudoscience, or by adding dubious references to support unwarranted efficacy claims. A neurosurgeon will not have those kinds of problems when editing an article in their area of expertise because there will not be any suggestions of pseudoscience, and there will be plenty of good sources available to back up any material the neurosurgeon wants to add. Johnuniq (talk) 07:23, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, and I don't do that. I understand your point; what you describe is not really part of WP:COI as written, but it is a self-interested kind of POV-pushing. The thing is, (a) there is some evidence for acupuncture according to a lot of good sources, and (b) I don't overstate (a) here on WP; the position that I take is within the spectra of scientifically mainstream views on acupuncture, and I respect WP's policies and guidelines. Science Apologist just doesn't like debating the issue, so he substitutes these complaints for regular talk page discussion in hopes that he can get his way. It's part of his M.O. --Middle 8 (talk) 09:01, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- Isn't the question whether Middle 8 has a COI best left to COIN? ScienceApologist (talk) 01:09, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- well, SA, no: The question of whether you have done something wrong by outing Middle 8 (which it's pretty clear you did) depends on whether there's a conflict of interest that justified the outing.
- Isn't the question whether Middle 8 has a COI best left to COIN? ScienceApologist (talk) 01:09, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, and I don't do that. I understand your point; what you describe is not really part of WP:COI as written, but it is a self-interested kind of POV-pushing. The thing is, (a) there is some evidence for acupuncture according to a lot of good sources, and (b) I don't overstate (a) here on WP; the position that I take is within the spectra of scientifically mainstream views on acupuncture, and I respect WP's policies and guidelines. Science Apologist just doesn't like debating the issue, so he substitutes these complaints for regular talk page discussion in hopes that he can get his way. It's part of his M.O. --Middle 8 (talk) 09:01, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
I'm not sure I see the logic behind that. Outing is never okay. The question is if someone is avoiding scrutiny, whether mentioning actions of their previous account in evidence is appropriate. WP:OUTING is somewhat vague and at least partially open to interpretation in such cases, obviously. But are we really equipped to parse the entire thing? There's a lot of commentary here about how WP:CLEANSTART works and whether that was properly engaged. That could be another tack. ScienceApologist (talk) 17:58, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Point taken. from my perspective, I guess, it looks like this. Middle 8 clearly did not want to have his personal information exposed (even though that information was nominally available to you and others). You chose to expose it because - as you say - you thought he was trying to avoid scrutiny for some bad behavior (in this case something akin to COI). However, the assertion of bad behavior is highly questionable (you seem to be implying that any professional acupuncturist would automatically have a conflict of interest - i.e., none of the people who know about the topic are allowed to write about it on wikipedia), and even if true it's doubtful that the severity of the problem would call for an extreme action like exposing someone's personal information to the entire internet. Any way you cut it, what you did was highly rude (which is not something I'm in a position to criticize people on, so no problem). the question, though, is whether it was a justifiable rudeness or a petty rudeness; petty rudeness is bad. --Ludwigs2 18:10, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Thanks for responding. I'd like to clarify one thing here: I absolutely do not think that "any professional acupuncturist" automatically has a conflict of interest. Rather I think that professional acupuncturists who adhere to a certain perspective (arguing in favor of certain theorizing and proposing that the acupuncture they practice can alleiviate diseases and conditions for which there is poor or scant evidence) and who also act to mitigate or eliminate critiques of their perspective are demonstrating a conflict-of-interest vis-a-vis the subject. Below, Middle 8 accuses me of "slander" (he likely means libel, but you get the picture). He wants to eliminate references to him on Misplaced Pages probably to protect his good name. Fair enough. Except this seems to me to be a tacit admission of a conflict-of-interest with regards to the subject itself and, specifically, the characterizations of the aspects of the subject that are criticized by sources he continually impugns, excises, or ignores. This looks to me like a combination of the Simon Singh chiropractic controversy and the issues we had with Dana Ullman. It is by no means meant to be a universalist prohibition. It's a matter of MMO. All three should be presented for a potential COI to become a concern. ScienceApologist (talk) 18:30, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- conflict-of-interest vis-a-vis the subject? You seem to be saying that anyone who makes a claim that is not supported by scientific evidence in the real world is automatically guilty of a conflict of interest on wikipedia, and that doesn't make any sense. It would tend to imply, for instance, that every physicist who has ever advocated for string theory in the Academy has a conflict of interest and should be prohibited from editing physics-related articles. If M8 has made claims unsupported by scientific evidence (or worse, claims refuted by scientific evidence) in the real world, then that may be a reason not go to him for therapeutic services. If he is trying to edit such claims into[REDACTED] articles, then he may run afoul of FRINGE. but neither of those is a conflict of interest on[REDACTED] itself. You actually seem to be trying to assert that there is a conflict of interest between acupuncture and medicine, but that's not a conflict of interest, that's a matter of NPOV. --Ludwigs2 20:13, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Thanks for responding. I'd like to clarify one thing here: I absolutely do not think that "any professional acupuncturist" automatically has a conflict of interest. Rather I think that professional acupuncturists who adhere to a certain perspective (arguing in favor of certain theorizing and proposing that the acupuncture they practice can alleiviate diseases and conditions for which there is poor or scant evidence) and who also act to mitigate or eliminate critiques of their perspective are demonstrating a conflict-of-interest vis-a-vis the subject. Below, Middle 8 accuses me of "slander" (he likely means libel, but you get the picture). He wants to eliminate references to him on Misplaced Pages probably to protect his good name. Fair enough. Except this seems to me to be a tacit admission of a conflict-of-interest with regards to the subject itself and, specifically, the characterizations of the aspects of the subject that are criticized by sources he continually impugns, excises, or ignores. This looks to me like a combination of the Simon Singh chiropractic controversy and the issues we had with Dana Ullman. It is by no means meant to be a universalist prohibition. It's a matter of MMO. All three should be presented for a potential COI to become a concern. ScienceApologist (talk) 18:30, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- @ Johnuniq: I have to disagree with the reasoning you've used here. Clearly a neurosurgeon who edited an article in order to (say) promote neurosurgery as a superior alternative to pharmacology for treatment of some disorder would be engaged in a conflict of interest; a neurosurgeon writing more generally about neurosurgery would not have a COI. likewise, a practitioner of acupuncture writing generally about acupuncture has no conflict of interest unless he is specifically promoting acupuncture as a superior alternative to other forms of medicine (which would also, in this case, run him afoul of NPOV and FRINGE). Misplaced Pages is not here to determine or assert that acupuncture is 'wrong' or 'bad', and you can not begin from the perspective that it is 'wrong' or 'bad' in order to claim that it conflicts with 'good'/'right' medicine. "Can be portrayed as..." is irrelevant. what matters is whether whether this is what's actually being done. --Ludwigs2 17:52, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Let's say neurosurgery was a discipline that wasn't as tied to evidence-based medicine as it was. If a neurosurgeon maintained a webpage advertising his services as a neurosurgeon that trumped up the dubious benefits of neurosurgery beyond that which was supported by evidence basis (for example, as a cure for lung cancer) and kept a wider range of text that was sourced to criticism of this fringe position off the page because there were conflicting anecdotal and less-than-rigorous sources which supported his position, then that would absolutely represent a conflict-of-interest. ScienceApologist (talk) 18:02, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- No need to say anything about evidence-based here. let's say a neurosurgeon (one with a degree from Harvard, say) was using his webpage to promote the idea that neurosurgery could treat lung cancer - based on, say, removing brain material to change the body-brain mapping, or some other rubbish. Clearly fringe, and this theory is not something that should appear on Misplaced Pages unless it (somehow) gains scholarly consensus (or at least some measure of notoriety). but there would be no COI with having this neurosurgeon edit any article, so long as he is not trying to push his lung cancer cure into[REDACTED] or disparage other types of lung cancer cures. The fact that he has an unproven theory on his business webpage does not make him an unfit editor for wikipedia; it just means that he has to be careful not to advance his theory in[REDACTED] space. --Ludwigs2 18:23, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- My wording above was concerned with a medical specialist writing in their area of expertise without any suggestion of pseudoscience (for example, a neurosurgeon writing only about evidence-based and reliably-sourced information strictly within the field of neurosurgery). Obviously that kind of non-promotional editing is good. By contrast, an alternate health practioner may have a COI if they promote acupuncture to suggest it is based on the same kind of medical evidence as applies to neurosurgery. Johnuniq (talk) 04:45, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- I understand what you were saying; I disagree with the reasoning. Conflict of Interest implies that someone has a personal stake in some matter that conflicts with his professional obligations. Even an expert, non-pseudoscientific doctor can be subject to a conflict of interest if he is promoting his services in a way that may not be in the best interests of his patients. This is actually a fairly common situation: doctors are frequently asked to decide between treatment recommendations where the differential benefits to patients may be marginal or ambiguous and the differential costs (which increases the doctor's bottom-line) may be large. Consider the difference between recommending short term therapy with a psychologist for the treatment of depression (at a cost of a couple of thousand dollars over a few months, all of which goes to the psychologist) to recommending chemical antidepressants, which are much more expensive, which are not clearly more effective, and where the doctor himself retains income from the patient).
- No need to say anything about evidence-based here. let's say a neurosurgeon (one with a degree from Harvard, say) was using his webpage to promote the idea that neurosurgery could treat lung cancer - based on, say, removing brain material to change the body-brain mapping, or some other rubbish. Clearly fringe, and this theory is not something that should appear on Misplaced Pages unless it (somehow) gains scholarly consensus (or at least some measure of notoriety). but there would be no COI with having this neurosurgeon edit any article, so long as he is not trying to push his lung cancer cure into[REDACTED] or disparage other types of lung cancer cures. The fact that he has an unproven theory on his business webpage does not make him an unfit editor for wikipedia; it just means that he has to be careful not to advance his theory in[REDACTED] space. --Ludwigs2 18:23, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Let's say neurosurgery was a discipline that wasn't as tied to evidence-based medicine as it was. If a neurosurgeon maintained a webpage advertising his services as a neurosurgeon that trumped up the dubious benefits of neurosurgery beyond that which was supported by evidence basis (for example, as a cure for lung cancer) and kept a wider range of text that was sourced to criticism of this fringe position off the page because there were conflicting anecdotal and less-than-rigorous sources which supported his position, then that would absolutely represent a conflict-of-interest. ScienceApologist (talk) 18:02, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- @ Johnuniq: I have to disagree with the reasoning you've used here. Clearly a neurosurgeon who edited an article in order to (say) promote neurosurgery as a superior alternative to pharmacology for treatment of some disorder would be engaged in a conflict of interest; a neurosurgeon writing more generally about neurosurgery would not have a COI. likewise, a practitioner of acupuncture writing generally about acupuncture has no conflict of interest unless he is specifically promoting acupuncture as a superior alternative to other forms of medicine (which would also, in this case, run him afoul of NPOV and FRINGE). Misplaced Pages is not here to determine or assert that acupuncture is 'wrong' or 'bad', and you can not begin from the perspective that it is 'wrong' or 'bad' in order to claim that it conflicts with 'good'/'right' medicine. "Can be portrayed as..." is irrelevant. what matters is whether whether this is what's actually being done. --Ludwigs2 17:52, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- On Misplaced Pages, more to the point, conflict of interest can only mean that someone is editing the encyclopedia in such a way that it will (ultimately) improve his personal or professional standing in the real-world community. Misplaced Pages is not really a good place to advertise specific professional services, even if one somehow manages to slip by the anti-spam rules, and so the only way to establish a conflict of interest on project is to begin promoting one's own professional theories or insights in the hopes that it will translate to some sort of personal recognition or advantage in the greater world.
- The professional obligation of an acupuncturist (like that of a doctor) is to the health of his patients. An acupuncturist may have a real-world conflict of interest if he is promoting some practice that has dubious health benefits, but it would be just as unusual for an acupuncturist to have a COI on the project as it would be for a neurosurgeon. I see no indication that M8 is doing anything that will increase his real-world standing (personal or professional). There may be other issues involving NPOV or FRINGE that need to be considered, but there is no implicit COI just because he is an acupuncturist (with some questionable real-world ideas) editing acupuncture-related articles. --Ludwigs2 15:18, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
convenience break (1)
I haven't been very active over the last few days and just saw this thread by accident on my watchlist. Here are some comments based on what I know about the past:
- I can confirm that Middle 8's previous user name (and hence real name) is well known among editors for whom it is relevant. He sent me an email in March 2009 warning me about possible backlash from SA and his enablers after I filed an ANI section ScienceApologist asking for a block for an incident that resulted in a 48-hour block by Ryan Postlethwaite. In that email he confidentially mentioned his previous identity, but even though I don't edit in the acupuncture area I was well aware of it at that point.
- We are very fortunate to have an expert on acupuncture who has the intelligence and integrity to edit the area neutrally as well as competently. This is something which the extreme science-as-a-creed "skeptic" faction can't deal with, because it prevents them from skewing articles in such a way that instead of providing reliable information they focus exclusively on debunking and read like a piece from the Skeptical Inquirer. (It's much easier for them at the homeopathy article, for example, which has a steady supply of unreasonable homeopaths that makes it easy to scare away the more reasonable ones.)
- I was under the impression that SA was much more moderate recently than he used to be. I am not sure whether this has changed or whether personal animosities with Middle 8 were simply not covered by this change.
- When SA claimed a COI against Middle 8 under his previous name, the discussion ended with the following comment by Jehochman, which was the only third-party comment in the thread: "An editor's vocation does not create a COI. COI is when an editor writes about themselves or their own organization, not their own field of work. Whether this matter may involve Misplaced Pages:Advocacy, a violation of WP:NPOV, is another matter." (There is nothing surprising about this comment. It has always been like that and it cannot be different; remember that we want to write an encyclopedia as well as play this huge game.) If that is the kind of scrutiny that one may not hide from by changing one's user name, then it would be impossible for me to change my user name to an anonymous one and continue editing mathematics topics, and practically all experts who start editing under their real names and at some point become subject to a vicious character assassination attack would be in the same situation. In other words: Any determined editor of the ScienceApologist type would have a legal method for forcing our most valuable editors to choose between being libelled and ending their expert contributions to Misplaced Pages. This is simply not reasonable. It would be reasonable if accusations of the type "John Doe is a pseudoscientist" were generally regarded as insta-blockable oversightable stuff. But they aren't. Incorrect accusations of this type happen all the time and don't even raise an eyebrow. (I am not worried about the correct ones, which incidentally don't happen much because our methods for treating actual fringers are efficient enough.)
- ScienceApologist knows that his COI claim against Middle 8 is baseless. He has repeated a COI filing from 1½ years earlier when the only thing that has changed is that Middle 8 is now more vulnerable because he is trying to keep his name out. (Quotation from Middle 8's email to me in March 2008: "SA's nonsense was a major reason for my deciding to be pseudonymous".) Unless there is something surprising in the current situation at the acupuncture article, this seems to be a clear case of gaming and harassment by SA.
- Some time ago there was a lot of drama when SA tried to get an association between his account and his real name removed. At the time it looked very hypocritical given his disregard for the justified privacy interests of his opponents. It's interesting to see that nothing has changed. I would like to know whether (a) it is now allowed to link to the WP page where SA has outed himself, (b) SA is simply totally wrong in this case, or (c) there is an official policy to the effect that self-styled "skeptics" have a substantially stronger claim to privacy than their targets.
It seems to me that WP:COI/N#Middle 8 is the kind of thing for which SA was banned. Is there some kind of probation? Surely he is on a shorter lash than he was before his ban. Hans Adler 11:11, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- Aside from the continuing character assassinations perpetuated by this one-time homeopathy sympathist, the bizarre praise for Middle 8 (this user has provided no evidence for Middle 8's neutrality or lack of COI, I'll point out), and his straw-man false trilemma, I would like to thank this user for his contribution. In particular, this user has now revealed a smoking gun personal communication with Middle 8 which sheds light on exactly why Middle 8 is using the "pseudonym" excuse. Although I'm amazed that I'm the reason that Middle 8 wants to go "pseudonymous", the only thing I can understand is that Middle 8 is concerned that by pointing out his conflict-of-interest, he will eventually lose free-range edit privileges that he now exercises to censor critiques from the acupuncture page. What it looks like from my end is the following happened: Middle 8 saw a possible means to exploit the Misplaced Pages rules which came out of the IRL harassment issues associated with a third-party account referenced in this thread. Middle 8 saw people banned and blocked for referring to a particular accounts former user name, and decided that if he did a shoddy attempt at scrubbing his identity from Misplaced Pages and set-up a parallel set of accounts so as to avoid scrutiny, he would have the perfect boobytrap for someone who would complain about his COI. He could claim coverage by a narrow understanding of WP:OUTING in order to change the discussion from one of WP:COI to one of harassment. Far from the above user's claim that I know that the COI claim is baseless, I am more convinced now than ever that Middle 8 is viewing Misplaced Pages as a battleground in an attempt to keep his proprietary understanding of acupuncture protected at Misplaced Pages. This kind of advocacy is despicable and exactly mirrors the behavior of Dana Ullman. The only difference is that Middle 8 has been around Misplaced Pages long enough to figure out clever ways to exploit the system. ScienceApologist (talk) 20:52, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- "one-time homeopathy sympathist, Hans Adler" – Thanks for demonstrating that Middle 8 was justified because apparently you have the freedom to engage in such character assassination unpunished and don't even refrain from it while you are under attack for it. Hans Adler 12:49, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Aside from the continuing character assassinations perpetuated by this one-time homeopathy sympathist, the bizarre praise for Middle 8 (this user has provided no evidence for Middle 8's neutrality or lack of COI, I'll point out), and his straw-man false trilemma, I would like to thank this user for his contribution. In particular, this user has now revealed a smoking gun personal communication with Middle 8 which sheds light on exactly why Middle 8 is using the "pseudonym" excuse. Although I'm amazed that I'm the reason that Middle 8 wants to go "pseudonymous", the only thing I can understand is that Middle 8 is concerned that by pointing out his conflict-of-interest, he will eventually lose free-range edit privileges that he now exercises to censor critiques from the acupuncture page. What it looks like from my end is the following happened: Middle 8 saw a possible means to exploit the Misplaced Pages rules which came out of the IRL harassment issues associated with a third-party account referenced in this thread. Middle 8 saw people banned and blocked for referring to a particular accounts former user name, and decided that if he did a shoddy attempt at scrubbing his identity from Misplaced Pages and set-up a parallel set of accounts so as to avoid scrutiny, he would have the perfect boobytrap for someone who would complain about his COI. He could claim coverage by a narrow understanding of WP:OUTING in order to change the discussion from one of WP:COI to one of harassment. Far from the above user's claim that I know that the COI claim is baseless, I am more convinced now than ever that Middle 8 is viewing Misplaced Pages as a battleground in an attempt to keep his proprietary understanding of acupuncture protected at Misplaced Pages. This kind of advocacy is despicable and exactly mirrors the behavior of Dana Ullman. The only difference is that Middle 8 has been around Misplaced Pages long enough to figure out clever ways to exploit the system. ScienceApologist (talk) 20:52, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
Would you like me to dig up diffs that show your sympathetic approach to homeopathy? ScienceApologist (talk) 17:52, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Do you think that's an acceptable response? How about you stop bringing science into disrepute with your totally over-the-top pseudo-skeptic approach? I happen to have relatively high tolerance for bullshit in general but a very low tolerance for missionaries of bullshit who falsely pretend to speak with the authority of science. As a result I have to continually restrain myself not to tell you and some of your friends of the irrational pseudo-rational persuasion what I think of you. If you don't bother to show the same kind of restraint and keep your absurd fantasies about my opinions to yourself I really don't see why I need to remain quiet about your character. Hans Adler 22:48, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- @ScienceApologist: um, no, the "smoking gun" is that I didn't want you or another chronically disruptive editor slandering my real name on WP. That's what it's about, not my running from COI, as Han explained. Your comments are about as good an example of bad faith as any I've ever seen. --Middle 8 (talk) 03:42, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Hmm, slander, really? I remind you of WP:NLT. ScienceApologist (talk) 17:52, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- @ScienceApologist: um, no, the "smoking gun" is that I didn't want you or another chronically disruptive editor slandering my real name on WP. That's what it's about, not my running from COI, as Han explained. Your comments are about as good an example of bad faith as any I've ever seen. --Middle 8 (talk) 03:42, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- I'd agree with that and I think that there is no compelling reason to return to the regularly scheduled threads about him. Perhaps the ban should be reinstated and for a longer time since the message was not received.--Crossmr (talk) 12:32, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- WP:PUNITIVE much? ScienceApologist (talk) 21:04, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- No, it's to prevent further disruption.--Crossmr (talk) 23:37, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- Where's your evidence that I'm causing "further disruption"? There are disagreements as to whether my actions were disruptive or not, weren't there? ScienceApologist (talk) 01:09, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- "Who? Me? Disruptive?" Your block log is a pretty good starting point, and your most recent topic ban was in part because of disruptive complaints in venues like this one. All of that is a matter of record. --Middle 8 (talk) 03:45, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Where's your evidence that I'm causing "further disruption"? There are disagreements as to whether my actions were disruptive or not, weren't there? ScienceApologist (talk) 01:09, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- No, it's to prevent further disruption.--Crossmr (talk) 23:37, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- WP:PUNITIVE much? ScienceApologist (talk) 21:04, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
Be careful, that kettle is hot! Of course, scrutinizing your record across multiple accounts isn't all that easy to do. The last time I was blocked was more than a year ago. WP:REHAB has done me good. Care to come to group? ScienceApologist (talk) 03:55, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- This all seems pretty basic to me: Middle 8 didn't do a proper clean start. He returned to the areas that he edited before. If he really wants a clean start, he is free to start up a third account, abandon Middle 8, and not edit acupuncture-related articles again. Any editor is free to connect two accounts if he thinks the connection is relevant. Those of us that have usernames connected to our real-life identities bear the risk if connecting the two accounts also reveals our real-life identity.—Kww(talk) 23:56, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
- Or, alternatively, Middle 8 can keep his account, ask for the website in question to be blacklisted, and continue discussing how to edit acupuncture while acknowledging his potential conflict-of-interest. ScienceApologist (talk) 01:11, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- In actuality, Middle 8 is this editor's fourth account used to edit altmed articles and engage in identical disputes. There was a flurry of renaming and reneged right to vanish requests in between the "account-that-must-not-be-named" and Middle 8. Interested admins can email me. Skinwalker (talk) 02:01, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, this is my fourth account, although it's wrong to imply that I kept having COI complaints: as Hans Adler correctly noted above, there was only one complaint from ScienceApologist, and that was quickly dismissed by Jehochman, who was the only third party commenting. Any editor implying that I've been skittering around running from COI issues, repeatedly raised, is either misinformed or untruthful.
- As to my accounts, I'm happy to explain them (again) here, and invite admins to email me for the account names or anything else that's not clear. My first account was my real name. Because of the "John Doe is a pseudoscientist" concerns I mentioned above, I changed account names while keeping that account; however, it became clear that I wouldn't be able to be pseudonymous. So I did a modified sort of vanishing (having seen another user, Shoemaker's, do the same thing and noting that the community accepted it), and came back with two separate accounts -- not socks -- which I intended to use on separate accounts in order to avoid bad-faith wikistalking of my edits. One account is the present one, and the other was User:Bodhi Agonist. The latter account I retired after using it briefly and accidentally self-outing as being the same as this one. I wasn't aware of WP:CLEANSTART at that time, and was not trying to avoid any sort of WP:COI because, as Hans Adler indicated above, I had no reason to believe I had one: there was only one complaint by one editor that was quickly dismissed.
- So there you have it. Getting to the main reason behind my username changes, I think Hans Adler's points above about pseudonymity say it well, and I endorse his account of our email exchange as being correct. --Middle 8 (talk) 03:42, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
Assuming good faith, I think that this discussion has made clear that Middle 8 has had some difficulty finding a clean start and seems to want to remain anonymous so that people such as myself don't use his words and identity against him in discussions. There is a fundamental tug-of-war between conflict-of-interest matters and Misplaced Pages. User:Jehochman, far from being a "third party" was acting as a police officer in this case hot off WP:RfArb#Cold fusion, where a similar situation (though not involving any "outing" claims) played out. Jehochman thinks, idiosyncratically, that COI only applies to companies and personal information, not to topics. This is not accepted by the consensus of the community, and while topic-based COIs are harder to parse, they have been the basis of at least three different COIs that I've successfully prosecuted.
For any part I had to play in unduly harassing Middle 8, I apologize and I offer my help to aid him in his endeavor to keep personal information off the wiki including his website. I will not link to his personal website on-wiki again, and I think that Middle 8 should ask for his personal site to be blacklisted so that future incidents such as these don't happen again. As it is, there are literally dozens of users who know Middle 8's personal website is connected to him, most through no actions of my own, and not all of them would have had the privilege of seeing this extensive discussion and know not to link the two. If Middle 8 prefers, I'll even do the dirty work of asking that his website be added so that additional connections to his current account are not made by casual history diggers.
I'm also going to make it clear at WP:OUTING that personal websites can be considered "outing" and attempt to outline in the COI and COI/N rules how one should go about presenting potentially sensitive evidence. My current feeling is that one should present their case as follows:
There is potentially personal information that can serve as evidence related to this case. If you would like to review this evidence, please e-mail the filing user and request it.
I intend to add this quote to the top of my COI.
ScienceApologist (talk) 04:13, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Thanks, SA. I too apologize for any undue escalation, and would be very happy to go the good-faith route you describe. Also, I won't be on wiki for a few days but can be reached via email if anyone needs to ask me a question. --Middle 8 (talk) 21:18, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- I'm reluctant to comment because I don't want to stir a pot which has already settled, but I do agree with Hans Adler completely, and I just wanted to say that particularly because several people expressed the opinion that Middle 8 is the problem. Middle 8 is polite, reasonable, well-educated, and was originally forthright enough to edit under his name. His greatest fault is that his posts are not as concise as they could be. Is there any evidence of him adding unreliable sources to promote acupuncture? The current content dispute is over whether acupuncture can be added to the pseudoscience category, despite current reviews which find it to be efficacious for certain conditions. As far as WP:COI and outing, the guideline says:
Clearly, the guideline says the right thing. I think the best practice is to pretend there's no conflict of interest. So rather than jumping to the personal attack of WP:COI/N, try WP:NPOV/N or WP:RS/N. Conflict of interests and ad hominen attacks are a dirty way to engage in a content dispute. It's also helpful that Middle 8's COI is relatively narrow; we have an editor who suspiciously deletes scholarly material from Western academics if it is critical to China (Misplaced Pages:Requests_for_comment/PCPP), which spans hundreds or even thousands of articles, yet he got a pass on the RfC/U. II | (t - c) 06:42, 10 June 2010 (UTC)Dealing with suspected conflicted editors: The first approach should be direct discussion of the issue with the editor, referring to this guideline. If persuasion fails, consider whether you are involved in a content dispute. If so, an early recourse to dispute resolution may help. Another option is to initiate discussion at WP:COIN, where experienced editors may be able to help you resolve the matter without recourse to publishing assertions and accusations on Misplaced Pages. Using COI allegations to harass an editor or to gain the upper hand in a content dispute is prohibited, and can result in a block or ban. Misplaced Pages places importance on both the neutrality of articles and the ability of editors to edit pseudonymously. Do not out an editor's real life identity in order to prove a conflict of interest. Misplaced Pages's policy against harassment prohibits this...
- Again, II, WP:COI must exist for a reason. Taking your rationalizations to their logical conclusions would have us mark COI and COI/N as "historical". ScienceApologist (talk) 16:36, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- @SA: To clarify, it's merely about one policy taking priority over another. The lead section of WP:COI says:
- "When investigating possible cases of COI editing, Wikipedians must be careful not to reveal the identity of other editors. Misplaced Pages's policy against harassment takes precedence over this guideline on conflict of interest."
- So what II is pointing out is a simple matter of priority, as with WP:BLP's taking precedence over certain other policies. That said, I now doubt that SA meant to harass or "out" me by posting the aforesaid personal information, and indeed he has made a good-faith offer which I've accepted to help keep the material off WP. Bottom line, as far as I am concerned, this case needs no admin action and I look forward to SA and I "turning a new page" in our editing. --Middle 8 (talk) 20:35, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- @SA: To clarify, it's merely about one policy taking priority over another. The lead section of WP:COI says:
- On the question of whether COI is historical, I don't think so. COI is a legitimate thing to keep in mind, but I would parallel it to an aggravating circumstance. You can't build a case around it but its existence in a case could be relevant. SA can perhaps understand - if SA was a tendentious, uncivil pseudoscience promoter rather than a pseudoscience critic, he would likely have been treated more harshly. Since he's critical of pseudoscience, he is probably treated more gently - it's an mitigating circumstance. Basically, if you want to pursue something against Middle 8, build the case around something substantive and then cite the conflict of interest as evidence that there's no hope for the future. Incidentally, I tend to hold rational people to a higher standard of understanding policy, using high-quality sources, and writing neutrally since I expect more of smart people. Meaning that I have a habit of treating intelligence as an aggravating circumstance. II | (t - c) 03:00, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
Speedy category renaming violating the CC-BY-SA-3.0 license
When checking my deleted contributions to self-review some recent speedy deletions, I noticed that the change I left at Category:Football (soccer) hooligan firms classifying association football hooligan firms as criminal organizations were among the deleted contributions. I then checked Category:Association football hooligan firms and saw my contributions there without any credit after checking the history, making me upset about this clear violation of the CC-BY-SA-3.0 license. I then undeleted the former category and then left a soft redirect there, and left a link to its history page in the talk page of the newer category to try to remedy the situation.
We need to stop speedy category renames until we figure out a way to credit the people who contributed to the old category. Maybe we need to file a Mediawiki Bugzilla enhancement request ticket allowing category pages to be moved to allow their histories to be preserved as part of a speedy category renaming. Jesse Viviano (talk) 06:50, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- In the interim, how about a null edit with contributor's names as the edit summary? Most categories aren't going to have very many edits. --B (talk) 06:51, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- I don't think that merely adding an existing category to a page is a copyrightable action. That's the only change you made to the text of the category [here (or is there some other edit that I'm missing?)
- When creating the new category, Cydebot used the following edit summary: "Robot: Moved from Category:Football (soccer) hooligan firms. Authors: PeeJay2K3, Kbdank71, Black Falcon, Qwghlm, Cydebot, Nicknackrussian, Jesse Viviano" - so you are being given credit as one of the authors.
- That having been said, I've seen situations where real contributions to categories, which were subsequently renamed more than once, have lost their attribution. I think that the following would help:
- When Cydebot renames a category, it should leave a (red) link to the old category, making it easier for admins to recreate the detailed history of the category.
- If Cydebot runs into a category, where some edit summary links to some user's user name, it should request that a human editor deal with attributing the edit. This may be a case where the real author of the edit isn't the contributor who did it, but rather the linked-to user.
- When Cydebot renames categories, it should subsequently list those contributors, in stead of itself, the next time the category is renamed.
- I'm leaving a note at the bot's operator to participate in the discussion.
- עוד מישהו Od Mishehu 08:49, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Unfortunately, the move log is not visible from the history page. That is why I did not think to look for it. Second, one other example is when I added the template to notify users of the now empty category Category:Suspected hoax articles of the shortcut I created, CAT:HOAX. (It now points to the renamed category Category:Misplaced Pages suspected hoax articles, for your information.) This is why I advocate filing a Bugzilla ticket to allow page moves within the Category namespace, and to and from other namespaces, in order to preserve edit histories and to allow speedy moves of certain problematic list articles to the Category namespace. Also, in the off-chance that many people have made contributions to a category like Category:Candidates for speedy deletion which has received plenty of edits, the edit summary for the move log will certainly run out of room and cut many contributors' usernames off. Jesse Viviano (talk) 09:09, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- I believe that merely adding the name of an existing page (category, template, interwiki, shortcut), or even a template with the name of an existing page as a parameter, isn't copyrightable. So, in my opinion, neither of your edits requires attribution. That having been said, there clearly is a problem, as I pointed out in my previous post. עוד מישהו Od Mishehu 09:15, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Unfortunately, the move log is not visible from the history page. That is why I did not think to look for it. Second, one other example is when I added the template to notify users of the now empty category Category:Suspected hoax articles of the shortcut I created, CAT:HOAX. (It now points to the renamed category Category:Misplaced Pages suspected hoax articles, for your information.) This is why I advocate filing a Bugzilla ticket to allow page moves within the Category namespace, and to and from other namespaces, in order to preserve edit histories and to allow speedy moves of certain problematic list articles to the Category namespace. Also, in the off-chance that many people have made contributions to a category like Category:Candidates for speedy deletion which has received plenty of edits, the edit summary for the move log will certainly run out of room and cut many contributors' usernames off. Jesse Viviano (talk) 09:09, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
The problem here is a limitation in the MediaWiki software, in that we cannot move the text of a category page in the same way that we do an article. Until that is allowed, all we have are hacks and work-arounds that, as you point out, have various problems associated with them. But it's not that big a deal because people tend not to add copyrightable content to a category page anyway. And if someone were to, that detail would really belong on a relevant article, not the category page itself (this is just how things are done on Misplaced Pages). --Cyde Weys 12:35, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Is there any way that CydeBot could have a threshold set for notifying a human that manual copying of the history is needed, eg, if there is more than one sentence of prose (ignoring categories and templates)? --B (talk) 14:00, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Quite simply have it add a {{db-histmerge}} to the new cat. And to answer one question a bit earlier, nothing in Jesse's edit is actually copyrightable. MLauba 15:16, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- If history merges were possible, I would have done them and have just blocked Cydebot and left a note on Cyde's talk page until the code is fixed to perform them. Unfortunately, moving anything in the Category namespace is impossible, so history merges are therefore impossible. That is why I have suggested opening up a Mediawiki Bugzilla ticket to fix this issue. Jesse Viviano (talk) 17:42, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- I think that only a small percentage of edits in the category namespace are copyrightable (most merely involve addition/removal of links or category tags), so history merges generally would be unnecessary. In general, attribution by means of listing the original contributors should suffice, no? That's not to say, of course, that it wouldn't be better if we could move category pages so as to preserve the history. -- Black Falcon 18:02, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- A listing of the contributors is fine for license compliance—not the preferred method, but it does avoid copyvio/licensing violations. VernoWhitney (talk)
- Category talk: pages, such as Category talk:Association football hooligan firms, can be moved. I propose that CydeBot copy the Category: history to the corresponding talk page and move it to the new location. Multiple renames would be appended to the history. Flatscan (talk) 04:29, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- A listing of the contributors is fine for license compliance—not the preferred method, but it does avoid copyvio/licensing violations. VernoWhitney (talk)
- I'm not sure a block of CydeBot is necessary, but in any case, feel free to file a bug in BugZilla. Titoxd 01:47, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- I think that only a small percentage of edits in the category namespace are copyrightable (most merely involve addition/removal of links or category tags), so history merges generally would be unnecessary. In general, attribution by means of listing the original contributors should suffice, no? That's not to say, of course, that it wouldn't be better if we could move category pages so as to preserve the history. -- Black Falcon 18:02, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- If history merges were possible, I would have done them and have just blocked Cydebot and left a note on Cyde's talk page until the code is fixed to perform them. Unfortunately, moving anything in the Category namespace is impossible, so history merges are therefore impossible. That is why I have suggested opening up a Mediawiki Bugzilla ticket to fix this issue. Jesse Viviano (talk) 17:42, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
- Quite simply have it add a {{db-histmerge}} to the new cat. And to answer one question a bit earlier, nothing in Jesse's edit is actually copyrightable. MLauba 15:16, 7 June 2010 (UTC)
Uninvolved admin required to close RfC
Resolved – Closed. ···日本穣 · 投稿 · Talk to Nihonjoe · Join WikiProject Japan! 20:03, 9 June 2010 (UTC)The RfC at WT:TFA#RfC: Time to dispense with WP:NOPRO? is long overdue for a close, so it would be greatly appreciated if an uninvolved admin could take a look with a view to closing it (as the initiator, I am way too involved!). Thanks, HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 02:27, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Anybody? Please? HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 19:25, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- I'll take a look. If I think I can't close it, I'll note here again so someone else can have a go. Peter 19:42, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
I need an admin
Telus has just changed their internet service and TV name to Optik. Telus TV already has an article and I want to move it to Optik (which is a redirect page) and ad info about Telus Internet there.--Everyone Dies In the End (talk) 09:12, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Er, but Telus TV appears to still be the general product, with Telus Satellite TV and Optik TV as sub-products ... if anything, perhaps create the article Optik TV and redirect it to the Telus TV article? (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 11:33, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Optik ia now officially trademarked under Telus. It's their name. Optik is also the name for their internet now too.--Everyone Dies In the End (talk) 21:31, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Looks like you need WP:RM. Stifle (talk) 12:39, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- Yea, I put it there. Thk --Everyone Dies In the End (talk) 04:04, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Looks like you need WP:RM. Stifle (talk) 12:39, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- Optik ia now officially trademarked under Telus. It's their name. Optik is also the name for their internet now too.--Everyone Dies In the End (talk) 21:31, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
North Korea caused the spill and other assorted nonsense
Resolved – semi-protection applied. Horologium (talk) 12:07, 9 June 2010 (UTC)There is a group of IP's from Spain that keeps modifying Deepwater Horizon drilling rig explosion with the allegation that the Gulf of Mexico spill was caused by a North Korean torpedo attack. While this has been thoroughly debunked (and as noted in talk page and elsewhere, the allegation is sourced to a far-right extremist website), more eyes in keeping the article clear from that nonsense would appreciated. Titoxd 11:18, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Is it bad enough for WP:RFPP ?? (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 11:36, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Just a quick note, Truthout (the source for the crazy allegations) is leftist, not far-right. In any case, I semi-protected it for a week to stop the edit-warring. Horologium (talk) 12:07, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- The link given was from EUTimes, which is considered far right... I guess that once you're that far into the fringe, you can't really tell what is left and what is right. Titoxd 18:49, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Oh, so you have seen me play golf then ;-) (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 20:28, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- The link given was from EUTimes, which is considered far right... I guess that once you're that far into the fringe, you can't really tell what is left and what is right. Titoxd 18:49, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Just a quick note, Truthout (the source for the crazy allegations) is leftist, not far-right. In any case, I semi-protected it for a week to stop the edit-warring. Horologium (talk) 12:07, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
Vandalism by Theirrulez
Theirrulez has delted twice the comment on talk page indicating his inappropriate behaviour:1st time without any explanation and 2nd time under some excuse of "disorder". Please resolve this! 13:12, 9 June 2010 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.3.78.105 (talk)
- I'm not sure that meets the definition of "vandalism" yet (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 13:37, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Hi mr. unsigned IP, hi Bwilkins, thanks for kindly letting me now on my talk page about this attempt against me. My revert is widely explained in the talk page, I also asked a counseil to the admin, GTBacchus, who put down the rules for that subpages, and after he answered me I'd never more edited there. Regards, - Theirrulez (talk) 14:05, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- I would note the IP is still misunderstanding that subpage use and rules, reverting my old edits and another IP. Maybe this is "vandalism" too in his opinion? Cheers. - Theirrulez (talk) 14:11, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
Yes, your vandalism is deleteing comment that indicate your forgery here which you try to erase!--78.3.5.234 (talk) 11:10, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
A redirect I created has been nominated for speedy deletion - eh?!?!
When the candidates of the TV programme Junior Apprentice were announced a few weeks ago, I redirected all of their names to the parent article as they would be plausible search terms (such as Hannah Cherry, Rhys Rosser, Emma Walker...). Bizzarely, the page Arjun Rajyagor (one of the redirects) was nominated for speedy deletion today without any clear reasoning - . Note that the user (User:Arjun024) appears to be called Arjun himself. Surely this does not qualify for speedy deletion and these kind of simple redirects are allowed? KingOfTheMedia (talk) 13:20, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- This really does not need any admin intervention at this time. An editor CSD'd the redirect, it was declined - happens hundreds of times daily. Yeah, I expect the editor in question monitors that page closely. If you felt it was more problematic, then you should have discussed it directly with the editor. There's no behaviour here that needs investigation yet. (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 13:36, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- its a simple thing buddy; i nominated it for CSD because "i thought" it deserved to be. You could have talked up with me before you took up things at the admin notice-board. And i am amused that you guessed malice from my username. Arjun 14:47, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
My watchlist has been hacked and vandalized!
Greetings. I've just discovered that my watchlist has been hacked and vandalized, by adding red links that contain some hate speech about some articles I've been watching. I kept all the vandal's watched red links for your reference. I can't help but wonder if this is a security whole in Misplaced Pages, in my browser, or it's just some skillful coding from the hacker. And if so is my whole account compromised? Do I have to change my password? Or just delete the links and ignore it ever happened? I hope you have a solution for this problem, and thanks in advance. Regards. -- Orionist ★ talk 19:13, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Relax, your account is secure. When someone moves an article to a different name, and someone else moves it back, your watchlist watches both article names from then on. It was just an annoying page-move vandal. i obviously can't see your watchlist, but I'm fairly sure some pages on your list were moved to the offensive names, someone else moved them back, and now both names appear in your watchlist. Just delete the names you don't want. --Floquenbeam (talk) 19:22, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- (edit conflict) If a page is moved that you are watching, the new title will be watched automatically. Even when the page is moved back to the correct location, and the page deleted, the logs will still show up (as red links) unless they're revdeleted. I suggest that you probably got caught by the spate of move-vandalism that has been happening. You can safely ignore and unwatch them probably - there are no current significant security issues with MediaWiki. ;) Ale_Jrb 19:25, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Thank you guys! I feel much better now! I appreciate your quick response, and the time and effort you put into maintaining our beloved Misplaced Pages. Best regards. -- Orionist ★ talk 19:47, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
List of Duplicate Files
I just did a query and found that there are quite a few duplicate files which may qualify for F1 Speedy Deletion (~600). That query is ~12 hours old. After tagging about 30 of them I thought it would be a good idea to ask for help. I've noticed that many of them are bot created and some of them are similar but not identical (such as File:127 northbound.jpg and File:127northbound2.jpg). Thanks, --nn123645 (talk) 21:08, 9 June 2010 (UTC)
- Thanks for the notice. I've converted the format from simple text into links, so that we can more easily select the images for deletion. Nyttend (talk) 14:36, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
Cleaning up & revamping WP:LTA
Hello all, I've previously posted a comment on the LTA talk page seeking comment from the community on cleaning up and reorganizing the Long term abuse project. If you're not already familiar with the project, it basically provides a central place for recording information regarding long term vandals. I don't exactly agree with the existence of the project, since it is somewhat a violation of WP:DENY and doesn't help recent changes patrollers identify long term vandalism immediately, but since it exists, we might as well make it useful by reorganizing it. Currently it is extremely difficult to find the relevant entry fast, and this wastes valuable time when responding to abuse. Greater efficiency could be attained by reorganizing it using a chart in alphabetical order, with a subpage for each long term vandal. This would make it much easier to navigate and find relevant entries. As part of this proposed cleanup, I'd also like to integrate LTA with WP:ABUSE for contacting. These 2 would stay independent, but WP:ABUSE would contact the ISPs of long term vandals that already have IP information associated. Netalarm 07:13, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- Any comments on this revamp, or should I just continue? Netalarm 09:50, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- Link to discussion. Two hours is not a long time, especially at this hour, to get comments on a proposal. If you're waiting for feedback you should probably give it a day or two. -- zzuuzz 10:04, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- Hehe, I added that second line because I was concerned that other people might think it was just a "notice", since this is a "noticeboard." Just a note, the discussion on the revamping would be more beneficial if held at the link above (LTA talk). Netalarm 12:25, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
AWB requests
Resolved – Backlog cleared Camw (talk) 11:43, 10 June 2010 (UTC)Hi, I was wondering if someone could check AWB check page. There is a couple over 48hrs old and a few others awaiting approval (me included). Thanks --NavyBlue84 11:19, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- I'll take a look. Camw (talk) 11:23, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- Don't know what happened there, I normally deal with these on a daily basis, but the page seems to have somehow dropped off my watchlist. Normal service has been resumed. Rodhullandemu 20:53, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
Transcendental Meditation - request for uninvolved admins
Misplaced Pages:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Transcendental Meditation movement closed a few days ago. The main remedy was to allow the use of discretionary sanctions by uninvolved admins. The ArbCom specifically requested uninvolved admins to keep an eye on the topic:
- Uninvolved administrators are invited to monitor the articles in the area of conflict to enforce compliance by editors with, in particular, the principles outlined in this case.
At least a couple of ArbCom members have expressed concerns that the disputes will continue and that the matter will return to the ArbCom. SirFozzie wrote, in voting to close the case: "With the Cassandra-ish prediction we'll be doing this again soon. Let's not folks." Though there are 72 articles more or less connected to the topic, the ones that have been the venues for disputes the most are:
- Transcendental Meditation (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
- Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
- TM-Sidhi program (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
- Maharishi Vedic Approach to Health (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
- Maharishi University of Management (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
Please consider adding these articles to your watchlists, and helping to prevent another ArbCom case. Will Beback talk 23:08, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
- 72 Articles? To be realistic, that's asking an awful lot from volunteer editors, Admin or not. Realistically, most of us have better things to do than monitor such a huge tranche of articles. And the dichotomy is that we wouldn't watch those articles unless we had an interest in doing so, and if we did have such an interest, we would probably have been already involved in the ArbCom case. Expecting uninvolved, and disinterested, editors to step into the lion's den is a triumph of hope over experience, as far as I can see, since I've seen many well-intentioned editors destroyed by their efforts in similar situations. This should go back to ArbCom with a recommendation to get some balls. Rodhullandemu 03:37, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
RomanRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston
Resolved – Admin MBK004 took care of this already — Gavia immer (talk) 04:10, 11 June 2010 (UTC)While reverting an undiscussed page move, somehow the title got messed up.. ie: "RomanRoman" instead of "Roman Catholic". I tried to move it to the correct name, but it says its not possible. I left a message on the Admin's page, who was previously involved in an attempt to move without discussion. Could someone help straighten out the naming error. I have also opened a name disucssion on the talk page. --nsaum75 03:28, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
Proposal to unblock Peter Damian
I'd like to ask whether we can agree to lift the community ban of the philosopher Peter Damian (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log).
Without going into the whole background, Peter got into a dispute regarding FT2 during the December 2007 ArbCom election, in which FT2 was standing. There was some back-and-forth about whether Peter's objections to FT2 were fair, and Peter responded too aggressively in the view of many, which led to an indefblock. So far as I know, he had been a peaceful editor since 2003, with the bulk of his editing starting in 2005. Since the 2007 block, he has engaged in a fair bit of sockpuppetry—see Category:Misplaced Pages sockpuppets of Peter Damian—and there have been blocks and unblocks, and various discussions about how to proceed. The latest discussion was in March here.
I'd like to see Peter return because he's a good writer and researcher, and there's a shortage of philosophers on WP. He continues to edit, but with difficulty; for example, his History of logic was nominated in March for featured-article status, but I believe he was blocked in the middle of the process.
I've asked him by e-mail whether he's willing to make concessions in exchange for an unblock. He agrees to the following: (1) no more sockpuppetry or alternate accounts; he says he was socking to show that admins were willing to revert good edits rather than see a blocked editor make them; (2) no more breaching experiments; (3) any complaints he might have in future about editors will go through the proper channels; and (4) he'll avoid interacting with FT2.
For my own part I undertake not to support Peter further if he reneges on the above. With that said, can we try to put this behind us? SlimVirgin 09:10, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Support as proposer. SlimVirgin 09:10, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Strong support. Before I registered an account here, I often read the talk pages of some of the philosophy articles, and his participation always struck me as constructive, educated, and full of good sense. As the proposer said, there is a shortage of expertise in philosophy on Misplaced Pages and I would very much welcome his return in that corner of content. The conditions sound reasonable. ---Sluzzelin talk 09:20, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Support. The guy can make a great contribution to Misplaced Pages (can Non-Admin vote). Sir Floyd (talk) 09:40, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Support. Those are appropriate concessions, comparable with the Arbcom restrictions which were in place. John Vandenberg 09:43, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Oppose I acknowledge his editing abilities. However, it is how he goes against the community that is my reason for opposing this unban. Even when we extend WP:OFFER to others, the editor has to keep their nose clean for usually 6 months or more. Peter has been socking as recently as
Marchyesterday - at least to our knowledge. He has strong support on Misplaced Pages, and I'm sorry to suggest that even if he made a minor violation in the near future, he would somehow escape correction by the community. The fact that he was so willing to violate so many restrictions, his concessions mean nothing. (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 09:49, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
Comment by FT2: - I have committed to not discuss Peter Damian, however this may be a case for a brief IAR. There are a couple of other conditions that might be needed, both reasonable: - Past conduct included personal attacks, on and off-wiki harassment, and (when those became too difficult to get away with), the attacks switched to snarky or offensive comments, targeting articles he believed (incorrectly) to be important to me and were selected mainly for that reason , indirect attacks, and other attempts to get in "under the radar". Due to past wikilawyering, I would like to know if Peter will agree to avoid the following behaviors, which cover the past attempts:
- Not engage in indirect interaction either, such as by reference or implication;
- Not target (including AFD-nomming) articles and pages;
- Avoid negative canvassing of other editors (on wiki or email);
- Act in a civil collegial manner;
- Not engage in actions and comments that appear to relate to myself or be provocative, even if not an "interaction".
- Because this was a campaign of years' duration, not weeks or months, I would like to ask that if Peter Damian does resume clear attacks, snarkiness, or targetted activity to myself (direct or implied), his unblock is conditional on not doing so and will resume if he does.
Given the safeguards in these conditions, it might work, though only time can tell. Anyone can change and some do. FT2 10:02, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Past conduct included personal attacks, on and off-wiki harassment, and (when those became too difficult to get away with), the attacks switched to snarky or offensive comments, targeting articles he believed (incorrectly) to be important to me and were selected mainly for that reason , indirect attacks, and other attempts to get in "under the radar". Due to past wikilawyering, I would like to know if Peter will agree to avoid the following behaviors, which cover the past attempts:
- Strong support Peter has the capability and willingness to do outstanding work on Philosophy articles and we have few people able to do that. Several of us are prepared to work on the other interactions --Snowded 10:21, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Support. Peter Damian turns out high-quality articles in a field where we urgently need expertise. More than that—he is a keen WPian. I can vouch for the user's expertise and enthusiasm on the basis of my role as a reviewer at WP:FAC. I believe the agreement he has given to the community via SlimVirgin is measured and reasonable, and I'll put my head on the chopping block to vouch for his bona fides, and to express my belief that he has learned from this unfortunate saga. FT2's points above seem reasonable too, if mostly either expected of all of us or covered in the agreement PD has already endorsed. I do hope to see an end to this matter. The project will benefit significantly by his return. Tony (talk) 10:25, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Oppose I have to agree with Bwilkins on this one. I do not oppose an unblock of this editor per se but I believe that everyone should be treated equally and if he violated his restrictions this often and this recently, he should demonstrate that he can follow restrictions placed on him before we can move to remove them. Otherwise we would effectively reward him for violating these sanctions since we usually expect people to go at least 6 months without socking. Regards SoWhy 10:33, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Support. Competent editors of this calibre are now becoming increasingly rare on Misplaced Pages as the atmosphere certain administrators generate towards such editors becomes increasingly dysfunctional. We need more administrators who nurture and champion able content editors. The current ill-considered and heartbreaking administrator wars against able content editors needs to stop. If Misplaced Pages is to have some trajectory moving into the future, we need to find a way of encouraging real content editors to contribute again to Misplaced Pages. --Epipelagic (talk) 10:50, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Comment I was leaning towards coming here to !vote, in a non-adminy way, for letting Peter Damien return. But then I noticed a bit of an issue over at History of Logic, and that Fram had just (yesterday) blocked Here for a bit as a new sock of Peter Damien's. Which makes for a quandary - on the one hand, clearly he wants to edit, and clearly he is more than capable of doing so and of producing high quality content, all of which are good things. On the other hand, this request today comes just after what looks like another sockpuppet. While I don't want to oppose outright, as I honestly believe that Peter operating openly within Misplaced Pages could be a net benefit, I remain concerned that he seems to be unwilling to abide by his ban, which doesn't invite confidence that he will abide by conditions for his return. Perhaps it is worth the risk, but disappointingly there's no evidence that it isn't a risk. - Bilby (talk) 13:30, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Note Fram new that sock was PD because the sock said it was PD. It was sockpuppetry, and it was a mistake and wrong to do, but the sock was not used to mislead. Just an ameliorating factor. Hipocrite (talk) 13:36, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- So he did. With so few edits I should have followed them up to see that. It makes me feel better, but still generally concerned. - Bilby (talk) 13:42, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Doesn't that just reset the stopwatch for another 6 months? How bloody frustrating. It's like he's saying to himself "eventually they'll see that my ban is useless, and they'll just unban me" ... and yes, that's what this proposal is. (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 13:48, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Could we be careful in using the word "sock". It appears to me that this was an "alternate account", since its owner was announced. A sock is an alternate account that is used for deceptive purposes. Please see WP:SOCK. Tony (talk) 14:23, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Doesn't that just reset the stopwatch for another 6 months? How bloody frustrating. It's like he's saying to himself "eventually they'll see that my ban is useless, and they'll just unban me" ... and yes, that's what this proposal is. (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 13:48, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- So he did. With so few edits I should have followed them up to see that. It makes me feel better, but still generally concerned. - Bilby (talk) 13:42, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Note Fram new that sock was PD because the sock said it was PD. It was sockpuppetry, and it was a mistake and wrong to do, but the sock was not used to mislead. Just an ameliorating factor. Hipocrite (talk) 13:36, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Compromise proposal Would he also accept being limited to only articles and talk pages approved by either SlimVirgin, myself or (insert anyone else willing to be on PD patrol here)? Hipocrite (talk) 13:33, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Strong Oppose per Bwilkins and SoWhy. He may be a good contributor, and may really want to edit, but that he is still apparently actively flaunting his ability to sock and continues doing so knowing he is banned does not speak towards his actually wanting to be a good member of the Misplaced Pages community. As SoWhy notes, if he is unbanned at this point, he basically is reworded for his inappropriate actions and given the green light to continue ignoring those policies and guidelines he dislikes. As for his claim that he socks to "show that admins were willing to revert good edits rather than see a blocked editor make them", it seems dubious at best as the community generally agrees that banned means banned and that a banned editors edits WILL be reverted and/or deleted regardless of value because otherwise the ban is completely meaningless. If PD actually wants to return and be a productive editors, then follow the rules: no socking or editing for six months period to show that he actually will "play nice" with the community. -- AnmaFinotera (talk · contribs) 13:45, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Where are you getting "a banned editors edits WILL be reverted and/or deleted regardless of value" from? That is not, and has never been, any Misplaced Pages policy or practice. May be reverted is not the same as will be reverted. – iridescent 14:01, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Misplaced Pages:Banning policy: "A ban is not merely a request to avoid editing "unless they behave". The measure of a site ban is that even if the user were to make good edits, permitting them to re-join the community poses enough risk of disruption, issues, or harm, that they may not edit at all, even if the edits seem good." "Anyone is free to revert any edits made in defiance of a ban. By banning a user, the community has decided that the broader problems due to their participation outweigh the benefits of their editing, and their edits may be reverted without any further reason.", further {{db-g5}} exists for a reason. In practice, as with almost anything else, it is not applied equally of course. Those violating bans who have friends and fans are often allowed, as this editor has been, to just continue editing in blatant violation of the ban because its "good", while those with few fans are properly reverted wholescale.-- AnmaFinotera (talk · contribs) 14:10, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Where are you getting "a banned editors edits WILL be reverted and/or deleted regardless of value" from? That is not, and has never been, any Misplaced Pages policy or practice. May be reverted is not the same as will be reverted. – iridescent 14:01, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Oppose I see no evidence that this editor is willing to follow any rules. The quality of his contributions should not come into play if he purposely disrupts the encyclopedia and skirts its policies. J04n(talk page) 13:55, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Oppose. The amount of socking and the reason for socking is worrisome to say the least. Par our policy a banned user may not edit, and any of their edits may (but are not required to) be reverted without a reason. This policy is in place to discourage banned users from creating sock puppets to evade their ban, as their edits may end up being completely futile. Creating sockpuppets just to demonstrate this rule in action is, in my eyes, disruption to prove a point.
- Even so the oldest sockpuppet in hus category is three months old, which may have convinced me to allow for another chance as long as some safety valves would be applied. However, User:Here for a bit rings a sockpuppet alarm for me. The user name is similar to the other sock puppets username's, the user is involved in a discussion a new account wouldn't know of, and the edits strongly suggest that it is the same user as we are discussing here. Promising "no more socks" a day after one is caught does not convince me in the least. In this case i would say WP:OFFER - No more sockpuppets or edits for the next 6 months. If Damian manages this i would support unblocking. But as of current i will oppose. Excirial 14:10, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Oppose Quality contributions do not make up for disrupting the site and ignoring it's policies. The Thing // Talk // Contribs 14:20, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
- Strong Oppose He needs to go a year without sockpuppeting, then come back. We cannot go 'Oh he is avoiding the ban, so we should lift it', it would make more of a farce of our policies than already exists. Bringing up his quality contributions as a mitigating factor acctually convinces me more to oppose, we cannot be seen to give someone a 'pass' for civility/PA/sockpuppeting/whatever because they made some good edits. --Narson ~ Talk • 14:29, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
Pending changes trial imminent!
Pending changes ("WP:PEND") is likely to go live in about 3 days, on 14 or 15 June. This is a quick summary of key information as it stands:
- What is pending changes? What does it do?
Extended content "Pending changes protection" can ensure the most recent changes to a page are not displayed to the wider (non-editing) readership until checked by a more experienced user for obvious vandalism and similar clear issues (although they can see it if they choose). Reviewer rights are expected to be widely handed out and require roughly the same trust as rollback.
It is useful for persistent inappropriate edits that cannot easily be prevented using existing tools, and on high sensitivity articles and issues. It can be applied to prevent IP/non-autoconfirmed editing or editing by all users (except admins) the same as semi- and full- page protection.
Its primary targets are pages with "hard to address" vandalism and inappropriate editing, such as very variable IP vandalism, breaking news with high visibility/high vandalism risk issues, BLPs with persistent rumors or internet gossip, or other activity that has usually needed permanent protection.
- How does the tool impact editors and readers?
Extended content See the help page. Editors (logged in) are not affected at all. Non-editor readers are not affected except on "pending changes protected" pages, where they see the latest version that is marked as vandalism/abuse free. In effect "anyone can still edit", but "pending changes protected" pages have a delay before non-editors see the latest versions.
No material is hidden and non-editors can still see the latest revisions (if any) at the click of a tab. The trial is starting slowly in order to test whether we can in fact do this without significant delay.
- How are reviewer rights obtained and removed?
Extended content See the help page. Broadly administrators manage this, almost exactly the same as rollback (which has a very similar trust level). There's a page to apply for the right linked from there.
- What is the policy?
Extended content The policy on usage has been largely incorporated into page protection policy and processes.
That's because of a pragmatic point about time (trial rolls out in a few days). More specifically, the reviewing aspect is different but the scope, usage and requests (ie WP:RFPP aspects) are likely to be nearly identical to semi-protection and can usefully go on the same page. It keeps it simple to have all forms of page protection and their requests in one place, and describe it as "pending changes protection" (which is intuitive and fits existing wordings), even if they are in fact 2 tools. Also treating it as "another form of protection" means we don't need to copypaste 2/3 of all PP and RFPP pages, guides and processes, we can just update those pages to include mention and coverage of this new method, and it's a lot less change and disruption, and much more likely to fit into "what people already know".
Other aspects of the policy such as granting of rights etc and guidance are still at Help:Pending changes and Help:Pending changes review process. The main page Misplaced Pages:Pending changes ("WP:PEND") is outdated and until rewritten, best ignored for a day or two.
More information:
- Help:Pending changes (and related Help:Pending changes review process · Request rights)
- Misplaced Pages:Protection policy has a section on "Pending changes protection" now (link) covering usage policy.
- Misplaced Pages:Requests for page protection is being updated to reference requests for pending changes protection and its removal.
To do:
- Mark pages referencing other proposals, possible implementations etc as "historical"
- Create necessary templates similar to semi-protection
- Check if "reviewer" and "autoreviewer" need distinguishing anywhere
- Inform users if needed (non-editor readers will probably rely on templates as for existing protection)
(apologies for cruedeness of this post, I have to run and needed to post this up 1st! Will refine when free!) FT2 14:30, 11 June 2010 (UTC)
Category: