=== PART ONE ===
==== Definitions ====
Rookie : A logged in user who has fewer than 10 editing days. An "editing day" is a calendar day when the user makes one or more edits.
Frequently Edited Article : An article in the main encyclopedia namespace that has been edited more than 5 times in the last 48 hours.
==== Policy ====
On the English Wikipedia, neither Rookies nor IP users are permitted to edit Frequently Edited Articles.
=== PART TWO ===
To aid in enforcement of hard bans, Wikipedians may list any user on [[Wikipedia:Petitions for users of concern]], thus starting a petition. Criteria for listing a user are: controversial edits and a belief that the user may have been banned previously. These are subjective criteria and Wikipedians are to use their best judgment. When there are eight or more Wikipedians in support of the petition (regardless of how many may be opposed), the user must demonstrate their real-world identity to the Wikipedia Bureaucracy within 10 days; if they do not do so, their editing privileges are suspended until they do.
The Wikipedia Bureaucracy will validate identities using sensible but effective methods, such as requiring a $1 donation via paypal or personal check, or returning a form sent to the user's postal address. The identity check will be used to determine whether the user is previously banned, and will be used to enforce a future ban if one should become necessary. Otherwise, it will remain confidential.
To discourage misuse, we may want to exempt Wikipedians who have been editing for, say, more than six months from the process.
--- UninvitedCompany
uninvited@nerstrand.net wrote:
The Wikipedia Bureaucracy will validate identities using sensible but effective methods, such as requiring a $1 donation via paypal or personal check, or returning a form sent to the user's postal address. The identity check will be used to determine whether the user is previously banned, and will be used to enforce a future ban if one should become necessary. Otherwise, it will remain confidential.
This proposal should wait until there is a broad consensus in favour of having a large paid bureaucracy?
Ec
On Friday 27 February 2004 16:23, uninvited@nerstrand.net wrote:
Rookie : A logged in user who has fewer than 10 editing days. An "editing day" is a calendar day when the user makes one or more edits.
Frequently Edited Article : An article in the main encyclopedia namespace that has been edited more than 5 times in the last 48 hours.
==== Policy ====
On the English Wikipedia, neither Rookies nor IP users are permitted to edit Frequently Edited Articles.
===== Solution =====
**Create user 1 **Make an edit as user 1 *Tomorrow: **Create user 2 **Make an edit as user 2 **Make an edit as user 1 *Day after tomorrow: **Create user 3 ... *After 10 days: **Fresh flow of non-rookie usernames
On Fri, 2004-02-27 at 10:23, uninvited@nerstrand.net wrote:
On the English Wikipedia, neither Rookies nor IP users are permitted to edit Frequently Edited Articles.
Well, catch me if I'm wrong, but I thought that editing frequently edited articles weren't the problem. People keep their eye on them, and find it easy to revert. It's when "rookies" make new articles or edit the "Least Frequently Edited" articles that they slip under the radar.
=== PART TWO ===
To aid in enforcement of hard bans, Wikipedians may list any user on [[Wikipedia:Petitions for users of concern]], thus starting a petition. Criteria for listing a user are: controversial edits and a belief that the user may have been banned previously. These are subjective criteria and Wikipedians are to use their best judgment. When there are eight or more Wikipedians in support of the petition (regardless of how many may be opposed), the user must demonstrate their real-world identity to the Wikipedia Bureaucracy within 10 days; if they do not do so, their editing privileges are suspended until they do.
I'll share my real identity with Wikipedia as soon as I'm on the payroll.