GuildWiki talk:Penalties for abuse

If this does become policy then it needs to be moved to Policy as this is the page that is linked to from the "Ban User" page. --Rainith 07:26, 17 March 2006 (CST)


 * I don't think it should become policy without a lot more review and possibly a vote. The current draft is too preliminary to think of it as anything more than a guideline. 07:33, 17 March 2006 (CST)

Not first time - how to ID?
My only question is on the "not first time" list. Does this then require the admin to go to the banning log, then scroll through trying to spot if the particular user ID or IP has ever been banned in the past? A user could easilly edit out any reference to a prior ban from their user or talk pages, so to me it would be extremely difficult to identify "not first time" offenders unless it's all repeated offenses prior to the first ban. --161.88.255.140 07:14, 17 March 2006 (CST)
 * I too am confused by that as I am not going to go back through the block log looking to see if 123.456.789.10 has been blocked before, it is enough of a hassle to see if someone already blocked the IP and didn't delete the ban request. --Rainith 07:26, 17 March 2006 (CST)
 * Luckily for you that is an invalid IP so you don't even have to look! :) But seriously, feel free to edit the page if there is something there that doesn't make sense or is far too cumbersome to implement. 07:33, 17 March 2006 (CST)
 * I think just removing the "First" and "Not First Time" while leaving the "Single Page" and "Multiple Pages" would suffice. What about penalties for a *new* page that the person created?  That hits home for me, as that's why I got blocked for a month - Greven 07:42, 17 March 2006 (CST)
 * I made a first stab at adjusting some points. --161.88.255.140 07:54, 17 March 2006 (CST)

Standard Ban times
Just so the non-admin user know here is a list of the standard ban times we have in the drop down menu on the "Block user" page:
 * 2 hours
 * 1 day
 * 3 days
 * 1 week
 * 2 weeks
 * 1 month
 * 3 months
 * 6 months
 * 1 year
 * infinite

--Rainith 08:12, 17 March 2006 (CST)
 * I modified the durations to fit into the above values. I also extended some durations (I honestly don't think 1-day is effective for anything, so moved most minimums up to 3 days). --161.88.255.140 08:21, 17 March 2006 (CST)
 * The tradition, based on the "recent changes" pages over the last few months, seems to be a week. I think "a week, or maybe three days if you feel kind" is more in tune with what the admins have already been doing, and probably a bit more effective. Thoughts? --130.58 12:13, 17 March 2006 (CST)


 * Well, ultimately, I think the final decision should be up to the admin enacting the ban. I mean sometimes things just don't fit cleanly into a category like that.  I think a little note to the effect of saying that the time listed is the minimum ban time.  Or.... something.
 * Also, what's with the multiple pages, accidental editing == two weeks? That's the same as some of the more malicious vandalizing... perhaps 3 days <-> 1 week?  It just seems kind of harsh to go from zero to two weeks if you happen to have the same mistake on two pages.  Evan The Cursed (Talk) 12:50, 17 March 2006 (CST)


 * I think the penalty should be increased for racist/homophobic abuse. 3 months for a single incident, 6 months or even a year for repeated. Other than that the numbers look okay to me. -- 13:46, 17 March 2006 (CST)


 * The one thing I would be careful about is infinite bans. IPs can switch owners and infinite bans remove a part of the web forever, even if the owner switches. 1 year is a very long time, it should be enough even for bots.


 * My internet connection is provided by a proxy that serves all higher and lower education institutes in the state I am living in. The problem being, some children obviously repeatedly vandalised the german part of wikipedia from school, so a good part of that proxys IP range is now banned, meaning several 1000s to 10000s users from schools and universities now cant edit there infinitly. And while I understand the wikipedia guys (the vandalism was of the hard form and repeaded quite often before the ban went permanent), this is something I'd rather avoid here, especially after the first edit. --Xeeron 21:10, 17 March 2006 (CST)


 * I made a post on this subject on the blog awhile back; basically, I don't think the bans -really- do anything useful at all. I think current top-level feeling about ban is something like: "If I notice it, I will do an infinite ban, because we can, and I am in Wrath of God mode. If I don't notice it, someone else will, and will probably revert it, and life goes on." So.. as far as concrete policy? I don't really think it's needed, but you're welcome to draw up a "these are the current habits" article. --Nunix 16:22, 23 March 2006 (CST)


 * I think the day- or week- long ban is useful as a kind of "cool-off" thing. I've noticed a lot of people tend to get high on the power of being able to slap their worthless graffiti on one page and having five minutes tick by before someone else changes it, causing them to go on happy little sprees. So I would say that short-term bans work, as long as you think of them as a deterent, not a punishment: a short ban is enough to bore almost anyone other than a bot into stopping, and the best way to deal with bots is to protect pages with words like "fur" and "domination" in the titles. Given how IPs work, I'm opposed to infinite bans, even for bots. --130.58 16:31, 23 March 2006 (CST)

I'm also opposed to infinite bans. I think we should just never use them at all. I think "disrespectful" bans should be very short (people who are clearly not following the rules, but aren't advertising, hate-spamming, etc.) One day is probably enough for most people. Lastly, I strongly feel this should just be a "Guidelines" page, never a hard policy. Admins can still agree to do whatever (and should have freedom to judge), and it would actually be most useful for people who actually get banned for short periods of time (to see what is in place and that they aren't being treated particularly unfairly). As a final aside, being able to protect some pages by requiring login would be really good; I know it's not possible currently, but some pages just get spammed more than others. --JoDiamonds 02:31, 28 March 2006 (CST)