GuildWiki:Admin noticeboard

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The Admin noticeboard is intended as a way to alert administrators of issues which need their attention.

This page is intended to assist in policy enforcement, and to provide a centralized location for protection, unprotection and undeletion requests.

To create a new request, add a new subheading and provide a neutral, concise, and signed summary of the issue. It is suggested that any other users involved in an issue should be informed of its discussion here. New sections go on the bottom.

Resolved issues are archived here: 1, 2, 3, 4.

Talk page administration
I have a problem with [ User talk:The Scythe Has Fallen], where my section header was drastically shortened: My personal opinion: We administrate users, not content, that means there shouldn't ever be administrative decisions on content; especially not on users' talkpages, because we've traditionally left them for the users to administrate themselves. Whether the point that the overlong header was making is important or not is for Scythe to decide; the admin action came 6 weeks after the fact; and the admin action completely removes the context for the discussion under that header, so a note would definitely have been in order, at the very least. I do not understand why the long header would disrupt anything, especially if Scythe himself doesn't think so; and why it would "accidentally the whole page", the content below the header is not affected, and the other sections are easily accessed via the TOC. PLease restore my header. --◄mendel► 02:03, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
 * 17:27, 5 December 2010 Randomtime (2,237 bytes) (Reverted User:The Scythe Has Fallen: The header is too long. This is an adminstrative decision)
 * 17:20, 5 December 2010 The Scythe Has Fallen m (10,412 bytes) (Reverted User:Shadowcrest: rv vandalism)
 * 17:09, 5 December 2010 Shadowcrest (2,235 bytes) (oops you accidentally the whole page, don't disrupt to make a point (that isn't even an important point))


 * We "administrate" anything that disrupts the display of a page - I use quotes because this can be done by any user, not just admins. In this case, I agree that your section header was being disruptive.  &mdash;Dr Ishmael Diablo_the_chicken.gif 02:14, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
 * What exactly did it disrupt? --◄mendel► 02:30, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
 * And it doesn't disrupt RC either because the edit summary cuts it off.--Łô√ë [[Image:Gigathrash_sig_G.jpg|Ho ho ho!]]îğá †ħŕášħ 02:36, 6 December 2010 (UTC)


 * I wouldn't've touched it in the first place. Although it is really large, Scythe doesn't seem to care, and he 'owns' the page somewhat. Second-best would be commenting it out for a large part (it only makes it longer code-wise, which was the point, but makes it shorter content-wise). Next comes trimming it to maybe 25% size (alters the comment, but retains content). Last would be destroying context altogether. --Vipermagi 12:01, 6 December 2010 (UTC)


 * I am of opinion that a section header that forces someone with 1920x1200 screen resolution to scroll in order to actually reach any discussion is in fact disruptive - or at the least, would be generally considered so anywhere outside of the userspace. That said, even in the userspace it's rather annoying, and looking at the past revisions with the full header hurts my eyes. Ultimately, the original purpose of a user's talk page is to provide a place to contact the user, discuss the user's contributions/projects, etc, though I realize guildwiki more often than not uses user talkpages more to hang out/chat/discuss random stuff. Personally, I would have shortened it, but not quite as drastically as Shadowcrest did. Wizardboy777 15:57, 6 December 2010 (UTC)


 * Under current policy, I am against people altering someone else's text on anyone's user page (except their own) unless there's a rendering problem, spam, or a personal attack so egregious that removal is the only sensible action. Too bad for me if the page looks odd or is hard to read; that is the owner's problem; we should feel free to drop a note (or 10) to mention the issue, but we should not unilaterally take action.


 * However, I would also support a change to existing guidelines that specifies excessive header length as an example of a type of disruptive text that can be altered by a maintenance edit. On user pages, maintenance edits should be limited to truncation, leaving any rephrasing to the original poster or page owner; that limit should not apply to communal talk pages.


 * Long section headers strike me as mildly funny, in a I remember my great grandpa used to tell that joke sort of way, but they are otherwise annoying to parse. They aren't disruptive in the way that an excessive signature is, but they sure don't do the section (or the users involved) any favors either. In other words, they are on the border between bad writing and disruptive text; under current policy, we need to treat it as the former and leave it alone. — Tennessee Ernie Ford ( TEF ) 17:10, 6 December 2010 (UTC)


 * When a section header crosses the line from "Long" to "Excessively Long", then it falls under disruptive text. 8k of text in the header is excessive. --JonTheMon 17:46, 6 December 2010 (UTC)


 * As a compromise, I have partially reverted the header to ~300 characters. This is enough to satisfy the original purpose of demonstrating how to "cheat" the 200-character limit in the standard new section title input box.  &mdash;Dr Ishmael Diablo_the_chicken.gif 17:59, 6 December 2010 (UTC)

Dr Ishmael's compromise doesn't solve the issue; it is not actually a compromise because it favors the side that argues that admins can edit talkpages if they personally don't like the content.

The problem here is that "disruption" is arbitrary and not clear-cut; there is no consensus what it is, and there never can be; if you want to base admin actions on disruption, become an admin at gww: or gw2w: or sign up with Wikia staff. In fact, I argue that my 8000 character header disrupted nothing for 6 weeks; then Shadowcrest made a point via an edit and that edit caused disruption. If the header disrupts, so did the user who posted it; I did not receive a warning, I did not get a chance to correct it myself, I did not get a satisfactory explanation. ("I have to scroll to get to the current discussion" has applied to every admin's talkpage at one time or another, and it'd be silly to demand that this not be so.) So instead we have an admin declaring something unilaterally as "disruption" without explaining why this should be so to any of the parties involved; we get a "disruption" of the limited "sovereignty" over their talkpages that our users have historically enjoyed here. Then the page owner affirms his position, and another admin overrules it, not minding GW:1RV, and nobody is opening discussion. Frankly, that is disappointing, and I expected better of you. Dr Ishmael defended the right to keep a comment of someone off the wiki for 3 years to keep a comment about an issue long since resolved, but now he supports modifying the recent comment of an active user on the talkpage of another active user for no other reason that people have to scroll some.

The concept of "maintenance edits" has so far encompassed rewriting links where pages that were linked to were moved or deleted, i.e. generally fix things that got broken in the course of events to ensure the original writing escapes as intact as possible. There was nothing broken about that edit! There was nothing to maintain! To call this edit a maintenance edit calls into question what maintenance should be, and whether it stands for "arbitrary use of admin position". Please stop calling adjusting content to personal preferences "maintenance".

This is not about my header. Had Scythe shortened it himself, I wouldn't have minded much (though I'd have probably complained a bit, just for show). I don't care how long it is. I care deeply that a sysop who is on bad terms with a wiki editor modifies their talkpage for no reason that past practice on this wiki supports in any way, and does not think to adress this openly before somebody else does. I do not want this to continue. Make me understand why this is necessary, or stop. A compromise won't do, there needs to be understanding. --◄mendel► 22:06, 6 December 2010 (UTC)

The tl;dr version of the above WoT is: Who decides what gets written in headers, editors or admins? --◄mendel► 22:34, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
 * Brb posting spam pyramids on every talk page I can see. I did what has always been done for ridiculous shit-- removed it. There's a difference between an 8000 character unnecessary section header and any reasonable conversation that extends that long (normal conversations also don't give the page a ridiculous horizontal scrollbar). Nobody was oppressed here. Move along. Shadowcrest 23:00, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
 * what has always been done -- well, only if "always" doesn't include 3 days prior, when you edited the very same page. Also, I've seen "ridiculous" scrollbars, and this isn't one - I doubt you'd see one if your screen was 1400 pixels wide, and of course there wasn't one on Oasis, for which this post was originally made; if you'd politely pointed this out to me, I'd probably have changed the line breaks that I did add in this edit. Also, educate yourself on the violence inherent in the system. --◄mendel► 07:58, 7 December 2010 (UTC)
 * (edit conflict) A 8000 character header does not disrupt if it's the last thing on a page. When it's in the middle of a page it would. And what if the first removal was not as an admin, but as a user who found the header overly disruptive? What do you do then? And yes, the second removal had less merit (1RV) and I definitely wouldn't say it falls under maintenance edit (more like discretionary edit). However, your WoT loses a little bit of merit from your "just for show", arguing a point just for the sake of it (which in certain cases is disruptive). In the general case of other users editing another's comment, it's frowned upon, but there's a certain level of usability vs expression that this situation crossed (especially as talk pages are for the community). --JonTheMon 23:03, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
 * I submit that when I posted it, my post was the last thing on the page (and also the first). I also still don't understand what distinguishes the header from other content you have to scroll past to get to the bottom of a talk page (except maybe that people don't understand the point it was making; but it was quite clear from context when it was made 6 weeks ago, and apparently Scythe, to whom it was adressed, got it - and that's the point of talkpages, they're not always meant to be understood by the general public, which is why we usually leave their "owner" some freedom to decide what happens on them.)
 * Admins act on content when it's vandalism, spam, or libel (or something broke, i.e. "maintenance"); if we see "disruption", I'd prefer for us to act on the user instead as this is the more long-term strategy.
 * You misunderstood my "just for show" point: I meant that if Scythe had changed the header, I would have respected that - I did not want him to, I did not expect him to, he in fact didn't, if he had done so I would have expressed my displeasure and disagreement, but I would have respected his decision and seen nothing wrong with him making it, hence my protest would have been, in a sense, "for show". This protest here isn't, because it wasn't Scythe who changed it, and I don't believe the people doing it should have been.
 * If the edit had been done as an editor and not as an admin, I'd have reverted the editor and explained to them that we respect the integrity of other people's comments, especially on other people's talkpages; that if you must, delete a comment outright; if you choose to change it, leave a note that you did so and why; but that it is vastly preferable to take your issue to the author if they are available, and let them make the change. I recall an instance where I managed to get an editor to remove their potentially inflammatory comment, thus averting drama, without actually editing it myself. To not give someone that chance, especially not wiki contributors in good standing, is quite disrespectful, and not the way I want this wiki community to work. (If you now think, "meh, it wasn't serious enough to be brought up on a talkpage", then why didn't you stay away from it in the first place?) --◄mendel► 07:58, 7 December 2010 (UTC)


 * Okay, I will say one thing here: I resent you nitpicking my actions when I wasn't the one to perform the "administrative action" in the first place. I at least attempted a compromise to resolve this silly situation, but you rejected it.  &mdash;Dr Ishmael Diablo_the_chicken.gif 14:17, 7 December 2010 (UTC)
 * A compromise is an agreement between the concerned parties. If one suggests a compromise, it is customary to get the parties to agree before deploying it.
 * Your compromise was a compromise only as far as the header length was concerned; the real issue was unannounced admin edits to personal talkpage comment headers, and with your edit you came down fairly square on the support side on that one (i.e. you did announce it here, but you didn't wait for a reaction). To point this out is not an attempt to pick nits, but to correct a major misperception on your part of what I am on about; sorry if I didn't make myself clear enough.
 * I did not nitpick "your" actions, I addressed all three admins who did that sort of action, though you were the one who did it with the discussion already ongoing; I'll refrain from crying "disruption" since clearly that wasn't your intent. --◄mendel► 04:01, 8 December 2010 (UTC)

Shut up
And write up a policy to avoid this kind of shit in the future. You'll have been working as a team to get us off wikia (and I can't thank you enough for that), but now you are squabbling among each other like little children. That hurts me. I love this wiki, and I love the people here. Can't you see it? You are running around in the same old circles again. Don't go there; it's not nice (for anyone). On a petite side note, I favour "owners" of pages making this kind of decision. Ask them to remove the invading or in any other way not nice parts. Also, leave teh making of long and funny headers to me. Arnout aka The Emperors Angel 09:56, 7 December 2010 (UTC)


 * Thank you. I've been trying to come up with a reply to mendel, but you're right - this is unnecessary nitpicking that isn't going to improve the community in any way.  I'm going to ignore this issue now and focus on actually improving the wiki.  &mdash;Dr Ishmael Diablo_the_chicken.gif 13:58, 7 December 2010 (UTC)


 * What Arnout said. We have bigger fish fries. [ sic ] — Tennessee Ernie Ford ( TEF ) 21:47, 7 December 2010 (UTC)


 * Unfortunately, this is pretty big fish as well. Proof: if you stifle it here, the discussion just moves elsewhere (see below). It'd be good if could get off the personal and focus on the big issues at stake, though: I saw an attempt to extend admin roles here from what I perceived them to be, and I'm hoping we can affirm the old roles, but I don't see a consenus for that yet. --◄mendel► 04:10, 8 December 2010 (UTC)

User talk:Shadowcrest
'' The content between the lines was copied from User talk:Shadowcrest ([..] elisions mine). --◄mendel► 03:32, 8 December 2010 (UTC)''


 * [..] And finally, yes, we have historically removed stuff exactly like your header-- see (spam pyramid template, which was removed from multiple talk pages and then deleted),  (same deal), ... etc etc.   Shadowcrest 00:14, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
 * [..]
 * 2.1) As it is not spam (read: excessively long single-edit post is not spam) it is not "exactly the same. It is also not "exactly like..." because it could be categorized as a mathematical equation, which (unless you were generating a spam pyramid because you wanted to count to lines or do trig on them or something) is not the same deal.
 * 3) It spanned one page, therefore the last three links are redundant.
 * Don't throw out random links that don't matter into a discussion, please. &mdash;  Scythe   1:26, 8 Dec 2010 (UTC)


 * Quick refutation of 2.1: yes, an excessively long single edit can be considered spam when it has no meaningful content. Mendel's header held no content that was meaningful to the point he was making - it was the length of the content, not the content itself, that was meaningful.  That is why I felt that editing it down from 8000 to 300 characters was an acceptable compromise - it was still long enough to suit mendel's point without being disruptive/spammy.  Yes, it was disruptive - what do you call all this drama if not a disruption?  &mdash;Dr Ishmael Diablo_the_chicken.gif 01:50, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
 * I find this E-peen contest that is really getting nowhere several times more disruptive than the initial edit. a ToC would easily make it navigable and end any possible disruption (to an extent, I use ToCs though some people may scroll).  This would (will?) go away once enough crap lands on my talk to force me to archive + stylize it so I don't have an ugly archive box, tbh imho. &mdash;  Scythe   2:06, 8 Dec 2010 (UTC)

Adressing the precedent that Shadowcrest cites, from the deletion logs: An additional point is that these are outright deletions, not unmarked modifications of user talkpage comments.
 * User:Gimmethegepgun/Spamlicious was delete tagged by Gimme
 * User:Warwick/Spam Pyramid Template was 500 kB of Warwick's sig repeated
 * User:Warwick/Spam Crew! was not delete tagged, but Warwick consented to the deletion

In my opinion, none of these precedents apply to the matter at hand. --◄mendel► 03:32, 8 December 2010 (UTC)

Moratorium
If I were to rule this place by fiat, I would force a moratorium on this conversation for 24 hours and block anyone who didn't comply. As I do not (drat!) I would suggest that we walk away from this for a little bit. Pissing at each other isn't going to do much good. There are some points on both sides, but there's also a lot of derision and slight mis-perceptions of comments. --JonTheMon 03:58, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
 * Drat. I was only away for 19 hours. ;) --◄mendel► 04:12, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
 * Thanks Jon. Help me in stopping this shit. Arnout aka The Emperors Angel 08:18, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
 * Telling people to stop arguing about the problem does not solve the problem.--Łô√ë [[Image:Gigathrash_sig_G.jpg|Ho ho ho!]]îğá †ħŕášħ 09:00, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
 * I posted a sollution: write up a policy, or establish a code of behaviour. Its contents should be simple; if something is disturbing you, cindly ask if the owner of the page could remove the disturbance. Simple. Arnout aka The Emperors Angel 09:38, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
 * Existing policy: "Assuming every edit is a well-intended edit, any reverts or removals should be explained thoroughly, unless the edit in question is obvious vandalism." (GW:AGF) Not enough? --◄mendel► 15:06, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
 * Giga, he didn't ask people to stop completely, he merely asked for a pause. Bloody hell, now we're arguing about a request to calm down the arguing! XO  &mdash;Dr Ishmael Diablo_the_chicken.gif 14:02, 8 December 2010 (UTC)

FAQ
Q: Isn't it a bit silly to discuss the length of your talkpage section headers here?
 * Yes, it is. Discussion of my talkpage section header style should be directed to my talkpage.

Q: Why didn't you shorten your header?
 * Nobody asked me to. I didn't realize it would annoy people; it apparently didn't annoy Scythe (it was posted on his talkpage), nor did any of the people patrolling RecentChanges at the time complain.

Q: If you didn't mind shortening your header, why did you make such a fuzz?
 * I minded Shadowcrest and Randomtime (and later Dr ishmael) changing it without asking me.

Q: Couldn't you just have brought it up with them personally?
 * As it turns out, it doesn't affect only them; it is a problem of community standards potentially changing, and I believe any conflict arising from this change should be out in the open. It would probably have been better to first ask them privately whether they intended to change community standards.

Q: What is this standard you speak of?
 * "We do not censor talk pages" (Rose of Kali, [ here])
 * "GuildWiki talk pages are not censored, unless they are blatantly vandalised." (Randomtime, on User talk:Nikaido25)
 * "On other rare occasions, people introduce a topic with a misleading or gratuitous header. In which case, I will change the header, (a) noting so on the relevant talk page and (b) offering an explanation on the original contributors page. That extra work makes me hesitate before taking the drastic step, but shouldn't stop me if there's a true problem with the original. The other option I've used (for veterans) is to post a note on their talk asking them to change the header themselves." (Tennessee Ernie Ford, on User_talk:Dr ishmael/Archive 8)

Q: Reading that, didn't the standard already change back in August?
 * Yes, it did; now it is changing a step further, with the standard for the change lowered:
 * back then, the header was gratuitious, now it's just long;
 * back then, the comment was in Talk: space, which is administered by all, now it is in User talk: space, which is traditionally administered by the Users themselves, except (up to now) in exceptional cases.
 * back then, the comment was two years old, and the user not active on the wiki

Q: Are there other standards that apply?
 * Assume Good Faith promotes assuming all edits in question were intended as positive edits and that removal of any legitimate contribution should be well justified. I think it would also be common courtesy to contact an active editor before making a change to their comment that you have reason to assume they would not consent to.

Q: Don't we routinely make maintenance edits to comments without contacting people?
 * Yes, of course. These edits never change the meaning of an edit. They typically involve removing or adjusting links to pages or images that have been moved or deleted, or fixing wikicode errors that break the formatting of the page they're on. Shortening the text of a message is not maintenance.

Q: But wasn't your long header disruptive?
 * I am not convinced that the length of a text determines how disruptive it is; we deal with long text on talkpages all the time. My post didn't disrupt anything for 6 weeks, so first evidence seems to support me. I believe that rudely changing my header caused the disruption. But then this is one of the issues under discussion.

Q: What are the issues under discussion?
 * One opinion is that my header was disruptive, and that this justified the edit to it. Currently, Shadowcrest, Randomtime, Dr ishmael, Wizardboy, Jon the Mon and Auron seem to be in favor of this interpretation; Auron even sees it as grounds for a block.
 * Scythe, Gigathrash and Tennessee Ernie Ford have denied that the header crossed the line into disruption; Vipermagi, Tennessee Ernie Ford and Arnout have affirmed the right of the User talkpage owners to decide for themselves what they think "disruptive".

Q: What is your own opinion?
 * I do not believe that "disruption" is a good standard for policing wikis; on the wikis I know that use it, it has been watered down from its common language origin to apply to arbitrary annoyances. I do not wish for this term to become part of GuildWiki's administrative standards. We can do well enough with terms like "spam", "vandalism" and "personal attacks", which are less arbitrary (and still pose problems at times).
 * I believe that there would have been no drama if Shadowcrest had expressed his annoyance to me politely instead of editing my comment. I want to encourage all wiki users to exchange their views on controversial subjects instead of limiting themselves to controversial actions. All our policies ancourage this behaviour; the reason for this is that it makes the wiki run much more smoothly. I expect wiki administrators to not set a bad example in this respect.

Q: When will you let this matter rest?
 * I want to find out whether "disruption" is going to be considered a standard on this wiki from now on or not. I want to find out whether users retain the right to decide what to allow on their talkpages (obscenity and libel excluded). I want to find out what style of interaction is considered acceptable here. I believe these are important issues.

Q: So it's not really about your header at all?
 * It never was.

Q: Thank you.
 * You're welcome.

--◄mendel► 11:54, 9 December 2010 (UTC)


 * No thank you. --JonTheMon 13:50, 9 December 2010 (UTC)
 * Ok, to be more constructive and focus the conversation, do you want to discuss what counts as disruption, or what should the response to disruption be? --JonTheMon 14:30, 9 December 2010 (UTC)


 * "it is a problem of community standards potentially changing" It wasn't until you turned it into one.  It was an isolated incident that two editors participated in.  I would hardly call that a potential change to community standards.
 * However, you chose to involve the entire community in it. Obviously, you were looking for people to back you up and say, "Comments on user talk pages (including their section headers) are sacrosanct, we shall never ever edit them for any reason whatsoever, upon pain of death!"  Instead, you got a lot of people who thought your header was patently ridiculous, and you don't seem to be able to accept this.
 * No, this is not a change in community standards. Your header was making the page unusable for some people (no matter that it was never technically broken), so they fixed it.  We've always done this.
 * No, community standards are not going to change, either. We're not going to suddenly start editing other users' posts willy-nilly just because of this one incident.  This was a very unique situation - I'm pretty certain we've never had a section header of even 500 characters before, much less 8000 - and it is very unlikely that a circumstance like this will happen again.
 * Honestly, mendel, you're worrying too much about nothing. You're crying wolf.  Hell, even [ Auron] thinks you're acting childish about this.  IF a situation like this ever happens again, then you would have a case for a "change in community standards."  Until then, please give it a rest.  &mdash;Dr Ishmael Diablo_the_chicken.gif 15:37, 9 December 2010 (UTC)