I totally disagree. Arbco. Decisions have a huge impact on the community even if the
majority of the community doesnt see it. Since you mention discretionary sanctions, that
is an area where i have seen abused many times. Some admins who like power frequently hide
behind ds's and use them as a means to get rid of editor they dont like. They are too
broad, too discretionary and too "broadlt construed". It makes them open to
abuse in a project where its nearly impossible to remove the tools from even the most
abusive admin.
Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE device
------ Original message------
From: Risker
Date: Wed, Dec 10, 2014 9:43 AM
To: Addressing gender equity and exploring ways to increase the participation of women
within Wikimedia projects.;
Subject:Re: [Gendergap] Arbcom election
On 9 December 2014 at 09:37, Jim Hayes <slowking4(a)gmail.com> wrote:
one take away is how few voters there are.
we have a lot of feminist editathons coming up
should we consider recruiting at events to get new editors over 150 edits,
with a view of block voting in next year's election?
if we organize now, we could run a civility slate of candidates.
Slates are specifically banned from arbcom elections. The majority of candidates who are
running this year (and the past several years, for that matter) have stated they were very
pro-civility. However, I'm not sure that it makes a difference, since Arbcom decisions
and actions have so little impact on the project as a whole. Aside from actions against
individual editors (i.e., banning or otherwise sanctioning individuals), pretty much
everything else they "decide" has to be implemented by the broader community,
and the committee has no way to leverage these things. Better than half the time when
Arbcom asks the community to review certain things, it's ignored; discretionary
sanctions are entirely based on who is willing to risk the boomerang effect of reporting
someone at the DS noticeboard; and there is no apparent willingness of the community to
proactively address these issues.
Again, I think you're caught in the trap of believing Arbcom has more power and
authority than it really has.
Risker/Anne
Show replies by date