On Jan 16, 2006, at 12:02 AM, MacGyverMagic/Mgm wrote:
No it doesn't. 3RR can be about any edit unless
there's a
concensus. One
should always discuss a change and try to come to an agreement
rather than
revert more than 3 times. If it's clearly vandalism and everyone
but the
vandal agrees to that, 3RR is in fact not a problem at all.
Vandalism can
always be reverted (though usually it's best to still not violate
3RR). In
content disputes you always need to take care not to break the 3
revert
rule.
Mgm
I don't understand what you said that is contrary to what I said. I
quote from the 3RR policy:
The policy states that an editor must not perform more than three
reversions, in whole or in part, on a single Wikipedia article within
24 hours of their first reversion. (This does not apply to self-
reverts or correction of simple vandalism)
I said that exemption from the 3RR rule only applies to reverting
vandalism, which is word-for-word from the policy. The policy is
clear that content disputes do not count as "simple vandalism".
[[en:User:Bbatsell]]