GuildWiki talk:Requests for arbitration/Stabber and esan vs F G

Let me be the first to say, that as an avid contributor, I have been watching(reading) this little dispute play out. Since I have been here, I have seen some minor quarrels, but nothing of this magnitude. Although a complete stranger to those involved, I would have to say that anyone that read any of this dispute is dissappointed in those individuals. GuildWiki should be a place of accurate information, mature discussions, and making sure others do not tarnish what we are working hard to do here. This should not be a place of quarreling between contributors, name calling, ban threats, and the like. I agree with Tanaric as he stated, "If you can't handle reasonable discussion on the Internet, we don't need you."

With that said, I know I have placed Bans on some anon users and reverted their vandalism. While I, and most others, do it the way it was intended and try to help the admins, the Ban template can also be used to threaten someone. That never crossed my mind until this debate. I am 100% in agreement with Tanaric in not allowing non-admins to use the Ban template. Having been apart of many forums and admin some, I expect to see this type of behavior again, although I always hope I never do. --Gares Redstorm 22:22, 9 May 2006 (CDT)
 * There's no point in not letting regular users using the ban template. We admins simply ban, we never use the template. -PanSola 03:24, 10 May 2006 (CDT)

Ban template issue
My personal thoughts on the ban template. First let's look at what this template actually says, the text of it: This user is a candidate for (temporary) blocking, because: 

See the history of article "" for evidence.

If you disagree with this user's privileges being (temporarily) removed, please explain why on their talk page.

Administrators, remember to check the user's contributions :: Check | Ban * Fields inside <>'s show user entered fields.

Essentially what this is is a request for admins to look at this user's contributions (the word links to the user's contributions whose page the template is posted on), especially the article mentioned. And then, if the admin feels that it is warrented, to ban them. If the admin does not feel a ban is warrented, then the admin should remove the template. No where does the notice state that, "You will be banned," and it gives a place where other users, including the user who is the subject of the notice to post their opinions.

Now IMO this is an asset for the admins. There are, what, four of us who are on here with any regularity? 84-175, Karlos, PanSola and myself. I don't know about the other three, but I personally don't have time to go through all the entries in Special:recentchanges, especially now, when in the time between when I go to bed and when I get up, we have more than 500 entries (altho, to be fair roughly 100 of these entries last night were about this Stabber/F G thing). Personally when I go through Category:Candidates for banning, I check the article linked to the notice and look to see what that user did in said article, usually I will check to see what, if any other contributions the user has made, and to see if they have been banned before or not (all these options are available as links in the template). If I think it is warrented, I will ban them for an amount of time I feel is appropriate, if I don't think it is, I'll remove the template.

As for Tanaric's comment about "I'd rather instruct than ban any day, regardless of how much more difficult instructing often is.", please don't take offense at this, but WTF? Please instruct me what sort of instruction is necessary for a user who wipes out an article and replaces it with, "I hate niggaz!"? Add to that the fact that we only see you on here once in a blue moon, usually when someone has had a run in with someone else, and that comment really comes off as holier than thou (note, I'm not saying that you aren't here often, but you don't make your presense known).

On Administrators Tanaric stated:
 * 84.175, Karlos, Rainith and PanSola are on the wiki daily to fight vandalism, block users, delete pages, and respond to general user requests. (This comment has been edited since it was originally written it to reflect the current admins, but not the "responsiblilites" that they have)
 * Tanaric is on slightly less often, and does the above jobs when there's anything left for him to do. Additionally, if you have non-technical issues which you wish an admin to intervene in, such as interuser disputes or policy/tradition questions, he's usually willing to help.

The Ban template is one tool that we (the afforementioned administrators) use to help us with with the fighting of vandalism, blocking of users, deleting of pages, and the responding to general user requests. If people feel that a change in name to the ban template is needed, fine, although I think   is much easier to type than   .

Any users who feel that they could be "targeted" by another user that they are having a dispute with and that they will be blocked for not doing anything shouldn't worry. I very much doubt that any of the 4 above mentioned admins (myself included) is going to block someone because of a request like this without doing due dilligance. In fact, I don't think I've ever had a complaint from anyone who I blocked because of a request. But I can think of at least 2 people that I blocked (that was not requested by another user, just an edit that I saw that looked like vandalism to me) that it turns out were unjust.

Blah, like most of my posts that go on for more than a paragraph, this has wandered further than I had intended. Short and sweet, keep the ban template, rename it if you must, reword what shows when it is applied to a page if you feel that is necessary, but keep the functionality there. --Rainith 23:04, 9 May 2006 (CDT)


 * I actually agree with you; I didn't mean to be unclear in the arbitration request. I had actually typed a few more paragraphs about the ban template, but deleted them, figuring they were redundant and that nobody but you four would care. Lesson learned. :)  The only remaining line from that paragraph is this:


 * I would not be against a very specific "anonymous vandal" template, as that is theoretically a help to the admins that keep tabs on that sort of thing.


 * ...which both deprecates myself for rarely doing anything involving wiki maintenance and acknowledges that the ban template's original goal was to help us categorize vandals when nobody was monitoring Recentchanges.


 * That said, I think that, while the template is 99% of the time used in that context, it has the potential to be abused. Logging in to see that message on your talk page isn't pleasant, regardless of how unjustified it is. It has the potential to scare away new users. It has the power to cause users that regularly patrol Recentchanges, and whom regularly place the ban template on anon vandal pages, to think of themselves as mightier than the average GuildWikian. Most deviously, it has the power to make other users think of said vandalwatchers as "more than users."


 * There is definitely a need for a template to mark vandals.  would be sufficient. But a template that, even in name, purports to cause the banning of users isn't appropriate, and the "you messed up so you get a tempban" mentality that has evolved alongside it (NOT among us admins, but among some users) needs to be squelched. A user that sees another user messing up (ESPECIALLY non anons, but even anon users that aren't obvious vandals) should post a message with some advice; they shouldn't be posting a  notice.


 * I didn't mean to imply that any admin bans based on the template without checking the important info first. I know that none of you would; I recommended all of you as admins because I trust you'll do the job right! :)


 * &mdash;Tanaric 23:31, 9 May 2006 (CDT)


 * In this particular case, the anon that Stabber nominated for banning did not even want to discuss thing on the talk page. That anon user fundamentally disagree with the Revert Once Policy, as illustrated in him accusing me of barging into his and Stabber's little revert war.  The anon user (and Stabber) would not have stopped the revert war had Rainith not protected the article.  I don't believe bans are being used as threats at all on GuildWiki, nor do I feel there is a "oh no if I mess up I might get banned" mantality spreading or being encouraged by the current use of ban templates.  The only improper thing regarding usage of ban templates was F G's presumption that, after he nominated someone for banning, and if no one come to the nominated user's defense, then he can proclaim that user to be banned.  That was a singular incident. -PanSola 03:22, 10 May 2006 (CDT)


 * I 'll abstain from any comments in the Stabber-vs-FG debate. Anybody who knows my history on this wiki will understand that I made a resolution to stay out of any fights. :)
 * As for the ban request template, I think it should not be deleted, however, the use of the template should strictly be limited to cases of vandalism, and the template should be changed accordingly. --Tetris L [[Image:TurningL sml.gif]]  04:15, 10 May 2006 (CDT)

PanSola's response - Agree, but some things are overlooked.
1. "About the comments in question" include in Tanaric's arbitration does not seem to cover F G's reply to esan. At least, "Stabber asked him for his opinion on this matter" definitely does not cover that latter reply. Additionally, I in principle disagree with "F G can say whatever he wants on his own talk page." We acknowledge free speech, but that does not mean literally ANYTHING is allowed. Specifically, I strongly believe that if a GuildWiki user should type something that constitute personal attacks on another individual, even if it's on the user's own user page, that there be nothing for the administrators to do. A direct implication of "User can say whatever s/he wants on her/his own talk page" means uncontrolled flame war is allowed.

In this particular incident, I do not consider F G to have crossed over the line. I just disagree on the general principle Tanric stated.

2. A point of irony I have noticed. F G claimed Stabber threatened to ban the anon user. As far as my observasion goes, Stabber simply flagged the anon user as a candidate for banning. There were no threats involved, and there where no assumption of administrator rights/authorities/status implied by Stabber. It was a pretty routine "I saw a violation of policy, I'll flag that user" on Stabber's part, without realizing that she herself also took part in violiating the policy. Later F G flagged Stabber as a candidate for banning.

The irony was that, a short period of time after F G flagged Stabber, he proclaimed that, because nobody has came to Stabber's defense, Stabber should be banned. The "short period of time", as far as I can tell comparing insert of ban template and "no one has come to her defense", was 4 MINUTES.

In this entire drama I see one single individual who have overstepped the lines of regular user vs admin, and that wasn't Stabber.

The above are topics I felt Tanric did not touch upon in the arbitration. In the end however, I don't see anything that needs to be done, as the conflict has been resolved by the involved parties no longer engaging in communication. -PanSola 03:17, 10 May 2006 (CDT)