It seems to me that if you run into a nasty situation while
intervening, we (the arbitrators and the rest of the community)
should cut you some slack if a skunk gets some stink on you.
Fred
On Feb 22, 2006, at 5:04 AM, Guy Chapman aka JzG wrote:
As a party to the arbitration on WebEx and Min Zhu
(
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/
WebEx_and_Min_Zhu)
I note that FeloniousMonk is criticised for using admin powers in a
dispute in which he is involved. It seems to me that Felonious was
not involved in an editorial capacity, only in the prevention of
reversion of certain content - which he saw (in good faith) as
whitewashing, which is vandalism. I happen to disagree - I would
always err on the side of removal where living people are concerned -
but I have come to trust Felonious' good faith even while disagreeing
with him.
Be that as it may, at what point does an admin become "involved" in a
dispute to which (s)he has been called to stop an edit war? I'm a bit
concerned that use of admin powers in a dispute where one takes a
watching brief without actively editing content might still be
interpreted as abuse, by extension of this precedent.
Or is it that Felonious' reviewing of the evidence and taking a stand
was, in effect, placing himself in the editorial dispute?
My problem here is that once an admin has been called into a
firefight, one side or the other will invariably see them as partisan
almost immediately, and I am not at all certain that I know when to
stop providing administrative support against vandals by request of
trusted editors in contentious articles: at what point am I "involved"
and needing to step back?
Guy (JzG)
--
http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:JzG
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