On Tue, Aug 12, 2014 at 3:49 AM, Brad Jorsch (Anomie) bjorsch@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Mon, Aug 11, 2014 at 2:01 PM, John Mark Vandenberg jayvdb@gmail.com wrote:
Before this, there was no expectation that a page could be protected such that sysops could not alter the content of the superprotected page.
This is false.
Care to explain?
Was this functionality was ever supported by MediaWiki core? Could you point me towards some documentation?
Now, the devs/ops have attempted to introduce that capability, and the new functionality is very likely riddled with holes, some of which MZMcBride has suggested in the thread 'Options for the German Wikipedia'.
Most of what MZMcBride posted there has nothing to do with actually breaking superprotection. Editing a page that isn't superprotected isn't a break in the protection feature itself, for example.
Of course it is. It isnt a 'feature' until it actually works at the released product level. Rushing component level hardening changes into production, when everyone knows how to work around the new 'hardened' code, it very bad change management. It likely introduces unforeseen bugs, for no actual gain.
-- John Vandenberg