Many have stated their concern about the inability of scanning the Recent Changes page for vandalism, and dealing with it. On the other hand, there was concern about cutting the freedom on wikipedia in the wake of terror^H^H^H^H^H^Hvandalism.
I believe that we can improve security without restricting users by focusing our attention through technical means, namely a "Recent Vandalisms" page. (We can argue about that title, though).
This page would list * edits from users that have been marked as "problematic" (was: vandals) * edits on problematic (was: "edit war") pages * edits that appear to be "suspect" utilizing some kind of filter (e.g., removal of larger text protions, certain keywords, etc.)
On Recent Changes, IPs and users can be marked as "problematic", but: * anons can't mark anyone * users can only mark IPs and user accounts that exist for less than a week / have less than 20 edits (a potential "sock puppet" filter) * sysops can mark anyone
A page can be marked as "problematic" by logged-in users.
This would help those who want to stop vandals to get a report on the latest "problematic" issues at a glance. The restrictions above are to prevent ill-minded users from flooding the page in order to render it useless.
Magnus
I like the idea, Magnus... though personally I suspect IPs by default, and found myself wishing for a way (other than convincing them to log in) to make the (seemingly about half) 'good' IPs not show up on 'hide logged-in users' RC.
So working off that, I'd say a three-state setup: default, suspect, trusted. Sysops start out trusted, everyone else at default. Recent Vandalisms (Recent Suspect Changes? We do need a better name...) would list all non-trusted IPs and all suspect logged-in users.
Just my thoughts.
-- Jake