You are correct that in all but the most obvious cases, filing an SPI can be exceptionally time consuming. I'm afraid there is no obvious technical solution there that would not involve a complicated AI that is probably beyond the ability of the foundation to produce.
There is quite a bit of data available in the form of years of SPIs, but it seems like you're talking about Facebook or Google levels of machine learning, and even years of SPIs is tiny compared to the amount of data they work with.
On a separate note, frequently changing IP adresses is most often an indicator of nothing more than someone who is editing on a mobile connection. This can usually be easily verified with an online IP lookup.
V/r TJW/GMG
On Fri, Aug 23, 2019, 02:44 RhinosF1 rhinosf1@gmail.com wrote:
Just a note that you can still go through warnings for vandalism etc. and report to AIV.
Or at that edit speed, you may have a chance at AN at reporting for bot-like edits which will draw attention to the account.
If you ever need help, things like #wikipedia-en-help on Freenode IRC exist so you can ask other users.
RhinosF1 Miraheze Volunteer
On Fri, 23 Aug 2019 at 06:57, Kerry Raymond kerry.raymond@gmail.com wrote:
Currently, to open a sockpuppet investigation, you must name the two (or more) accounts that you believe to be sockpuppets with "clear,
behavioural
evidence of sock puppetry" which is typically in the form of pairs of
edits
that demonstrate similar edit behaviours that are unlikely to naturally occur. Now if you spend enough time on-wiki, you develop an intuition
about
behaviours you see on your watchlist and in article edit histories.
Often I
am highly suspicious that an account is a sockpuppet, but I cannot report them because I don't know which other account is involved.
As a example, I recently encounted User:Shelati an account about 1 day
old
at that time with nearly 100 edits in that day all about 1-2 minutes
apart,
mostly making a similar change to a large number of Australian place infoboxes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Contributions/Shelati <
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Contributions/Shelati&...
fset=20190728053057&limit=100&target=Shelati <
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Contributions/Shelati&...
&offset=20190728053057&limit=100&target=Shelati
Genuine new users do not edit that quickly, do not use templates and do
not
mess structurally with infoboxes (at most they try to change the values). It "smelled" like a sockpuppet. However, as I did not recognise that pattern of edit behaviour as being that of any other user I was familiar with, it wasn't something I could report for sockpuppet investigation. Anyhow
after
about 2 weeks, the user was blocked as a sockpuppet. Someone must have noticed and figured out the other account:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Sockpuppet_investigations/Meganesia/
Archive
Two weeks and 1,279 edits later . that's over 1000 possibly problematic edits after I first suspected them. But that's nothing compared with another ongoing situation in which a very large number of different IPs are
engaged
in a pattern of problem edits on mostly Australian articles (a few different types of edits but an obvious "quack like a duck" situation). The IP
number
changes frequently (and one assumes deliberately). The edits potentially
go
back to 2013 but appear to have intensified in 2018/2019. Here's one
user's
summary of all the IP addresses involved, and the extent to which they
have
been cleaned up, given many thousands of edits are involved, see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:IamNotU/History_cleanup
As well as the damage done to the content (which harms the readers),
these
IP sockpuppets are consuming enormous amounts of effort to track them
down
and revert them, which could be more productively used to improve the content. We need better tools to foil these pests. So I want to put that challenge out to this list.
Kerry
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