I agree that China is responsible for the problem in general (Internet censorship being something individual websites have trouble doing) but I suspect our influence over Chinese policy is limited. There are technical workarounds for Chinese editors, however - blocking all Tor exit nodes categorically shuts off a main workaround.
Re the blocking policy, if you read the page linked to by Mercury it seems that it isn't at all clear what the consensus is there. Mercury made mention of modifying the policy based on the discussion on that page, which contained a number of objections to the indef hardblock of all open proxies. The most convincing to my mind was the apparent fact that Tor exit nodes are frequently active only for a very short period of time - afterwards the IP is recycled, so it serves no purpose to indefinitely block an IP that was used as an exit node for 2 days.
Lastly, anonymizer IP ranges are under consideration for blocking as well using RonaldB's tools.
In a technical sense, I would be fine with using Ronald's tool to block all current open proxy exit IPs. Politically, I think it is something the Foundation should weigh in on so that issues associated with blocking this category of IPs permanently can be addressed/anticipated.
Nathan
On Jan 14, 2008 11:28 PM, Matthew Britton matthew.britton@btinternet.com wrote:
--- Nathan nawrich@gmail.com wrote:
(Was Ipblock exempt proposal for en wiki)
This seems like something that, while it affects primarily en.wiki, should be run by the Foundation because of the potentially serious PR consequences (Wikipedia makes it impossible to edit from China etc.).
Hi, forgive me, but I don't quite see how you got there from here.
First, problems with editing Wikipedia from China are primarily the fault of China itself, which blocks access to Wikipedia.
Second, anonymizing proxies are not the only way in which these blocks may be bypassed.
Third, and most importantly, open proxies are *already* indefinitely hard-blocked, abuse or otherwise. It would be nice to think that they are only blocked in case of abuse, but this is not the case. All this proposal would do would allow exemptions from such hard-blocks for individual users. If this sounds controversial, bear in mind that all administrators are alrady exempt from hard-blocks. Any administrator on any project could already be editing through any hard-block blocked proxy and (short of a checkuser) nobody would be any the wiser.
In short, this proposal makes it no more "impossible to edit from China" than it is already.
-Gurch
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