This is an attempt to separate and clarify the subject of Stalking as applied to Wikipedia.
1) The term "Wikistalking", which has generally referred to following someone's contributions on wikipedia and then making petty edits or reverts. This is, I think, a poor choice of word, it's not 'Stalking' in the threatening sense, and really just an additional avenue of common place harassment. Rolling so called 'wikistalking' up as a 'subset of stalking' is not useful, and may in-fact be damaging towards attempts to confront threatening stalking. Perhaps it should be renamed "Contribution harassment", as it's a pattern of harassment following someone's contributions. There have been recent issues of accusations of "Stalking" being misused as an attack in it's self, by labelling honest attempts to improve articles or review a user's behaviour as attempts to 'stalk'.
2) It should be important to note, that under US law, notable editors of Wikipedia may become "limited purpose public figures". This does mean that, for example, "outing" a notable editor's identity, is not something they can take action against. The outside world would not, therefore, consider it 'stalking' behaviour. The existence of 'Harassment Sites' is not something that Wikimedia can realistically do anything about. Attempts to enforce restrictions on linking to, and restrictions on editors found to be involved with such sites was discussed in depth on en.wikipedia, and proposals to enforce these failed. There is likely still a large issue in the need to offer anonymity, the need to provide accountability, and the need to prevent conflicts of interest. However, these issues should not be combined with 'Stalking'.
3) Threats of harm, ranging from threats of 'beating you up' to 'rape you and kill you' should and must be handled by the police. It's beyond the scope of Wikimedia's abilities to do anything about these threats beyond blocking editors. Problems with getting your local police force to do something, is also sadly beyond Wikimedia's abilities. If your local police office refuses to take action on threats of assault, make a complaint and write to your government authority.
Generally, the best and most Wikimedia can do are... * Limit "contribution harassment" on it's projects. * Enforce policies on civility and threats. * Refer threats of violence to the authorities. * Co-operate with the authorities in investigations into harassment and stalking. * Provide professional advice and guidance to victims of stalking.
I think that some of the actions that have been taken in the name of 'combating stalking' so far have proved counter productive. The setting up of a private invitation only "Wikistalking Mailing List" especially. While well intentioned, has lead to a large amount of mistrust in that it is seen as a secret administrator cabal. It does seem to have become an unfortunate knee jerk reaction that the solution to problems on wikipedia can only be solved by a secret Jimbo approved cabal.
- John
Hoi, Thank you for your attempt to clarify things. The problem is that you bring not much clarification for me. The problem is that you assume things to be true while it is not clear to me at all why you make your assumptions and also I fail to understand the reasoning behind them.
There are in my opinion several issues at play. The most important one is that actual stalking, behaviour with real life threads is an observable phenomena and there are ample indications that the authorities fail to take these things seriously. When people are REALLY insistent they get the attention that is required. The notion to leave it all to the authorities leaves our fellow wikimedians that are threatened in this way isolated and threatened.
From this thread level down there is behaviour that can be euphemistically
called as problematic. They are the kind of behaviour where people actively are involved in endangering the reputation of our fellow contributors. Some indicators are people who have a conflict where one does have any or hardly any content contributions and another with a rich history of positive content contributions.
The issue is that there is a continuum from normal behaviour to stalking. We do not have the experience to deal with this. We need a better understanding in what triggers someone to move on this scale. With this better understanding we should be able to more effectively deal with this type of behaviour.
The notion that the English Wikipedia cannot make up its mind is not surprising. The question is very much to what extend it matters. It does not make the problems of the people that are stalked any less. It does not make the responsibility that we have by ignoring this issue any less real. Denial and procrastination add to the responsibility that we collectively face.
I would seriously doubt your assumption that under American law Wikipedians can be assigned a label as "limited purpose public figures". What do you base this on? Is this the fact that they have had controversies ? Would that mean that it is exactly the people that have such a sad effect that make people "limited purpose public figures" ???
Your suggestion though well intended, do not make any difference. It seems to me to be a regurgitations of what has been sad before. In my opinion calling the mailing list that deals with "wiki stalking" a cabal is a knee jerk reaction. Why do people not understand that there is a need for mutual advice and solace? I am not part of this "cabal" and there is no need for me to be on this list to have an opinion, to inform me and to tell about what I have learned even to express the opinion that this is more serious then how it is generally appreciated.
I seriously think that we need help in dealing with this in a way that does justice to the suffering that is caused and the effect it has on us all. Not only victims need help, we all have to deal with the people that suffer from stalking and the people that stalk or may stalk in the future. Learning to recognise the signals of this type of unhealthy behaviour is what we need.
Thanks, GerardM
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 3:44 PM, John Barberio barberio@lineone.net wrote:
This is an attempt to separate and clarify the subject of Stalking as applied to Wikipedia.
- The term "Wikistalking", which has generally referred to following
someone's contributions on wikipedia and then making petty edits or reverts. This is, I think, a poor choice of word, it's not 'Stalking' in the threatening sense, and really just an additional avenue of common place harassment. Rolling so called 'wikistalking' up as a 'subset of stalking' is not useful, and may in-fact be damaging towards attempts to confront threatening stalking. Perhaps it should be renamed "Contribution harassment", as it's a pattern of harassment following someone's contributions. There have been recent issues of accusations of "Stalking" being misused as an attack in it's self, by labelling honest attempts to improve articles or review a user's behaviour as attempts to 'stalk'.
- It should be important to note, that under US law, notable editors
of Wikipedia may become "limited purpose public figures". This does mean that, for example, "outing" a notable editor's identity, is not something they can take action against. The outside world would not, therefore, consider it 'stalking' behaviour. The existence of 'Harassment Sites' is not something that Wikimedia can realistically do anything about. Attempts to enforce restrictions on linking to, and restrictions on editors found to be involved with such sites was discussed in depth on en.wikipedia, and proposals to enforce these failed. There is likely still a large issue in the need to offer anonymity, the need to provide accountability, and the need to prevent conflicts of interest. However, these issues should not be combined with 'Stalking'.
- Threats of harm, ranging from threats of 'beating you up' to 'rape
you and kill you' should and must be handled by the police. It's beyond the scope of Wikimedia's abilities to do anything about these threats beyond blocking editors. Problems with getting your local police force to do something, is also sadly beyond Wikimedia's abilities. If your local police office refuses to take action on threats of assault, make a complaint and write to your government authority.
Generally, the best and most Wikimedia can do are... * Limit "contribution harassment" on it's projects. * Enforce policies on civility and threats. * Refer threats of violence to the authorities. * Co-operate with the authorities in investigations into harassment and stalking. * Provide professional advice and guidance to victims of stalking.
I think that some of the actions that have been taken in the name of 'combating stalking' so far have proved counter productive. The setting up of a private invitation only "Wikistalking Mailing List" especially. While well intentioned, has lead to a large amount of mistrust in that it is seen as a secret administrator cabal. It does seem to have become an unfortunate knee jerk reaction that the solution to problems on wikipedia can only be solved by a secret Jimbo approved cabal.
- John
foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
Okay, I'll illustrate this with an example
Say... For the sake of annoying you for his own pleasure someone decides to wikistalk you. He can do this by..
... Voting oppose whenever you vote support and vote support when you vote oppose (very infrequently votes inline with your votes to throw the system off course) ... Taking a stance against articles you work on. This may include seeking to delete them, redirectifying them or other methods of effectively removing your work. ... Interfering with your other contribution such as attempts to dictate your talk page or user page ... Pursing you to other wikis such as commons, meta, en.wikinews, or some other wiki that you and your stalker can mutually understand.
Overall the intention of a wikistalker is to harass and annoy.
People are sometimes given medals for such conduct for the basic rationale of "my enemies enemy is my friend" principle.
- White Cat
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 6:13 PM, Gerard Meijssen gerard.meijssen@gmail.com wrote:
Hoi, Thank you for your attempt to clarify things. The problem is that you bring not much clarification for me. The problem is that you assume things to be true while it is not clear to me at all why you make your assumptions and also I fail to understand the reasoning behind them.
There are in my opinion several issues at play. The most important one is that actual stalking, behaviour with real life threads is an observable phenomena and there are ample indications that the authorities fail to take these things seriously. When people are REALLY insistent they get the attention that is required. The notion to leave it all to the authorities leaves our fellow wikimedians that are threatened in this way isolated and threatened.
From this thread level down there is behaviour that can be euphemistically called as problematic. They are the kind of behaviour where people actively are involved in endangering the reputation of our fellow contributors. Some indicators are people who have a conflict where one does have any or hardly any content contributions and another with a rich history of positive content contributions.
The issue is that there is a continuum from normal behaviour to stalking. We do not have the experience to deal with this. We need a better understanding in what triggers someone to move on this scale. With this better understanding we should be able to more effectively deal with this type of behaviour.
The notion that the English Wikipedia cannot make up its mind is not surprising. The question is very much to what extend it matters. It does not make the problems of the people that are stalked any less. It does not make the responsibility that we have by ignoring this issue any less real. Denial and procrastination add to the responsibility that we collectively face.
I would seriously doubt your assumption that under American law Wikipedians can be assigned a label as "limited purpose public figures". What do you base this on? Is this the fact that they have had controversies ? Would that mean that it is exactly the people that have such a sad effect that make people "limited purpose public figures" ???
Your suggestion though well intended, do not make any difference. It seems to me to be a regurgitations of what has been sad before. In my opinion calling the mailing list that deals with "wiki stalking" a cabal is a knee jerk reaction. Why do people not understand that there is a need for mutual advice and solace? I am not part of this "cabal" and there is no need for me to be on this list to have an opinion, to inform me and to tell about what I have learned even to express the opinion that this is more serious then how it is generally appreciated.
I seriously think that we need help in dealing with this in a way that does justice to the suffering that is caused and the effect it has on us all. Not only victims need help, we all have to deal with the people that suffer from stalking and the people that stalk or may stalk in the future. Learning to recognise the signals of this type of unhealthy behaviour is what we need.
Thanks, GerardM
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 3:44 PM, John Barberio barberio@lineone.net wrote:
This is an attempt to separate and clarify the subject of Stalking as applied to Wikipedia.
- The term "Wikistalking", which has generally referred to following
someone's contributions on wikipedia and then making petty edits or reverts. This is, I think, a poor choice of word, it's not 'Stalking' in the threatening sense, and really just an additional avenue of common place harassment. Rolling so called 'wikistalking' up as a 'subset of stalking' is not useful, and may in-fact be damaging towards attempts to confront threatening stalking. Perhaps it should be renamed "Contribution harassment", as it's a pattern of harassment following someone's contributions. There have been recent issues of accusations of "Stalking" being misused as an attack in it's self, by labelling honest attempts to improve articles or review a user's behaviour as attempts to 'stalk'.
- It should be important to note, that under US law, notable editors
of Wikipedia may become "limited purpose public figures". This does mean that, for example, "outing" a notable editor's identity, is not something they can take action against. The outside world would not, therefore, consider it 'stalking' behaviour. The existence of 'Harassment Sites' is not something that Wikimedia can realistically do anything about. Attempts to enforce restrictions on linking to, and restrictions on editors found to be involved with such sites was discussed in depth on en.wikipedia, and proposals to enforce these failed. There is likely still a large issue in the need to offer anonymity, the need to provide accountability, and the need to prevent conflicts of interest. However, these issues should not be combined with 'Stalking'.
- Threats of harm, ranging from threats of 'beating you up' to 'rape
you and kill you' should and must be handled by the police. It's beyond the scope of Wikimedia's abilities to do anything about these threats beyond blocking editors. Problems with getting your local police force to do something, is also sadly beyond Wikimedia's abilities. If your local police office refuses to take action on threats of assault, make a complaint and write to your government authority.
Generally, the best and most Wikimedia can do are... * Limit "contribution harassment" on it's projects. * Enforce policies on civility and threats. * Refer threats of violence to the authorities. * Co-operate with the authorities in investigations into
harassment
and stalking. * Provide professional advice and guidance to victims of stalking.
I think that some of the actions that have been taken in the name of 'combating stalking' so far have proved counter productive. The setting up of a private invitation only "Wikistalking Mailing List" especially. While well intentioned, has lead to a large amount of mistrust in that it is seen as a secret administrator cabal. It does seem to have become an unfortunate knee jerk reaction that the solution to problems on wikipedia can only be solved by a secret Jimbo approved cabal.
- John
foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
Hoi, What is "this" ?? Thanks, GerardM
PS I should write threat with a t and not a d..
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 11:54 PM, White Cat wikipedia.kawaii.neko@gmail.com wrote:
Okay, I'll illustrate this with an example
Say... For the sake of annoying you for his own pleasure someone decides to wikistalk you. He can do this by..
... Voting oppose whenever you vote support and vote support when you vote oppose (very infrequently votes inline with your votes to throw the system off course) ... Taking a stance against articles you work on. This may include seeking to delete them, redirectifying them or other methods of effectively removing your work. ... Interfering with your other contribution such as attempts to dictate your talk page or user page ... Pursing you to other wikis such as commons, meta, en.wikinews, or some other wiki that you and your stalker can mutually understand.
Overall the intention of a wikistalker is to harass and annoy.
People are sometimes given medals for such conduct for the basic rationale of "my enemies enemy is my friend" principle.
- White Cat
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 6:13 PM, Gerard Meijssen < gerard.meijssen@gmail.com> wrote:
Hoi, Thank you for your attempt to clarify things. The problem is that you
bring
not much clarification for me. The problem is that you assume things to
be
true while it is not clear to me at all why you make your assumptions and also I fail to understand the reasoning behind them.
There are in my opinion several issues at play. The most important one is that actual stalking, behaviour with real life threads is an observable phenomena and there are ample indications that the authorities fail to
take
these things seriously. When people are REALLY insistent they get the attention that is required. The notion to leave it all to the authorities leaves our fellow wikimedians that are threatened in this way isolated
and
threatened.
From this thread level down there is behaviour that can be
euphemistically
called as problematic. They are the kind of behaviour where people
actively
are involved in endangering the reputation of our fellow contributors.
Some
indicators are people who have a conflict where one does have any or
hardly
any content contributions and another with a rich history of positive content contributions.
The issue is that there is a continuum from normal behaviour to stalking. We do not have the experience to deal with this. We need a better understanding in what triggers someone to move on this scale. With this better understanding we should be able to more effectively deal with this type
of
behaviour.
The notion that the English Wikipedia cannot make up its mind is not surprising. The question is very much to what extend it matters. It does not make the problems of the people that are stalked any less. It does not
make
the responsibility that we have by ignoring this issue any less real. Denial and procrastination add to the responsibility that we collectively face.
I would seriously doubt your assumption that under American law
Wikipedians
can be assigned a label as "limited purpose public figures". What do you base this on? Is this the fact that they have had controversies ? Would that mean that it is exactly the people that have such a sad effect that make people "limited purpose public figures" ???
Your suggestion though well intended, do not make any difference. It
seems
to me to be a regurgitations of what has been sad before. In my opinion calling the mailing list that deals with "wiki stalking" a cabal is a
knee
jerk reaction. Why do people not understand that there is a need for
mutual
advice and solace? I am not part of this "cabal" and there is no need for me to be on this list to have an opinion, to inform me and to tell about
what
I have learned even to express the opinion that this is more serious then
how
it is generally appreciated.
I seriously think that we need help in dealing with this in a way that
does
justice to the suffering that is caused and the effect it has on us all. Not only victims need help, we all have to deal with the people that suffer from stalking and the people that stalk or may stalk in the future. Learning
to
recognise the signals of this type of unhealthy behaviour is what we
need.
Thanks, GerardM
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 3:44 PM, John Barberio barberio@lineone.net wrote:
This is an attempt to separate and clarify the subject of Stalking as applied to Wikipedia.
- The term "Wikistalking", which has generally referred to following
someone's contributions on wikipedia and then making petty edits or reverts. This is, I think, a poor choice of word, it's not 'Stalking' in the threatening sense, and really just an additional avenue of common place harassment. Rolling so called 'wikistalking' up as a 'subset of stalking' is not useful, and may in-fact be damaging towards attempts to confront threatening stalking. Perhaps it should be renamed "Contribution harassment", as it's a pattern of harassment following someone's contributions. There have been recent issues of accusations of "Stalking" being misused as an attack in it's self, by labelling honest attempts to improve articles or review a user's behaviour as attempts to 'stalk'.
- It should be important to note, that under US law, notable editors
of Wikipedia may become "limited purpose public figures". This does mean that, for example, "outing" a notable editor's identity, is not something they can take action against. The outside world would not, therefore, consider it 'stalking' behaviour. The existence of 'Harassment Sites' is not something that Wikimedia can realistically do anything about. Attempts to enforce restrictions on linking to, and restrictions on editors found to be involved with such sites was discussed in depth on en.wikipedia, and proposals to enforce these failed. There is likely still a large issue in the need to offer anonymity, the need to provide accountability, and the need to prevent conflicts of interest. However, these issues should not be combined with 'Stalking'.
- Threats of harm, ranging from threats of 'beating you up' to 'rape
you and kill you' should and must be handled by the police. It's beyond the scope of Wikimedia's abilities to do anything about these threats beyond blocking editors. Problems with getting your local police force to do something, is also sadly beyond Wikimedia's abilities. If your local police office refuses to take action on threats of assault, make a complaint and write to your government authority.
Generally, the best and most Wikimedia can do are... * Limit "contribution harassment" on it's projects. * Enforce policies on civility and threats. * Refer threats of violence to the authorities. * Co-operate with the authorities in investigations into
harassment
and stalking. * Provide professional advice and guidance to victims of
stalking.
I think that some of the actions that have been taken in the name of 'combating stalking' so far have proved counter productive. The setting up of a private invitation only "Wikistalking Mailing List" especially. While well intentioned, has lead to a large amount of mistrust in that it is seen as a secret administrator cabal. It does seem to have become an unfortunate knee jerk reaction that the solution to problems on wikipedia can only be solved by a secret Jimbo approved cabal.
- John
foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
White Cat wrote:
Okay, I'll illustrate this with an example
Say... For the sake of annoying you for his own pleasure someone decides to wikistalk you. He can do this by..
... Voting oppose whenever you vote support and vote support when you vote oppose (very infrequently votes inline with your votes to throw the system off course) ... Taking a stance against articles you work on. This may include seeking to delete them, redirectifying them or other methods of effectively removing your work. ... Interfering with your other contribution such as attempts to dictate your talk page or user page ... Pursing you to other wikis such as commons, meta, en.wikinews, or some other wiki that you and your stalker can mutually understand.
Overall the intention of a wikistalker is to harass and annoy.
People are sometimes given medals for such conduct for the basic rationale of "my enemies enemy is my friend" principle.
Thank you very much for that contribution.
It precisely makes my point about the need for clear definitions!
Ec
wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org