On 5/5/07, Tim Starling tstarling@wikimedia.org wrote:
The Cunctator wrote:
On 5/2/07, Anthony wikilegal@inbox.org wrote:
On 5/2/07, Angela beesley@gmail.com wrote:
This is a different type of blacklist. The spam blacklist which can be edited by any meta admin only applies to URLs. The regex blacklist applies to any text, whether in URL format or not. On Wikimedia, I believe only people with server access could edit that, but that doesn't mean it was an official Wikimedia decision. The majority of people with server access are not Wikimedia employees.
So who are they accountable to, no one? Isn't obviously problematic that people can unilaterally make such major decisions with neither the request of the foundation nor the community?
Yes.
We're accountable to both. This action was taken at the request of the community, and is subject to review by both the community and the Board. We unilaterally edit the spam blacklist in the same way that you unilaterally edit an article. It can be reversed at any time. I have heard arguments in either direction on this mailing list, many seem to be agreeing with this action. I have seen no vote, there has been no demonstration of a majority in favour of removing it, and I've had no request from the Board.
-- Tim Starling
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Shouldn't it kind of work the other way, that a blacklist entry goes unless there's unambiguous consensus that it stays? I can understand saying "Okay, in an emergency, we act first and discuss later", but it hardly seems right that if there's then no consensus to keep it that way it stays anyway.