I like the idea of more liberally (and perhaps automatically) giving out the right. As it stands, I'm not even sure who can give out editbugs other than Andre. In any case I understand it to be a very small number who can. For a start it would be nice if pretty much any active developer could. Perhaps even anyone with the editbugs right.
Automated solution would be even better. I suppose one could implement Dan's suggestion by having a script that sends part A of a token to your bugzilla email, part b to a your mediawiki email, and asks the user to produce both.
-bawolff On 2013-11-06 11:46 AM, "Dan Garry" dgarry@wikimedia.org wrote:
I don't want anything to stand in the way of good users
Perhaps something similar to autoconfirmed as Thehelpfulone suggested,
i.e.
X total edits across all Wikimedia projects (or on a single Wikimedia project), and account was created Y days ago. There are details to work through with that (e.g. how do we verify bugzilla user a@b.com owns the global account they say they do?), but I think it's a good approach.
Dan
On 6 November 2013 15:38, Rob Lanphier robla@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Wed, Nov 6, 2013 at 5:24 AM, MZMcBride z@mzmcbride.com wrote:
Our Bugzilla installation at https://bugs.wikimedia.org/ currently restricts the capabilities of new users as a knee-jerk response to
prior
Bugzilla-related vandalism. There are further details at https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/40497.
As I recall, Mark Hershberger and Ariel Glenn were the ones that dealt
with
most of the aftermath of the attacks that we received that ultimately
led
to it being turned off. It was not a knee jerk response. We
temporarily
turned it off and turned it back on a few days later, only to have
dozens
(hundreds?) of bugs altered in a way that was not easily reversed.
In consulting with the Bugzilla developers (I believe I may have sent a public mail about this to their list), their answer was essentially that Bugzilla was never designed for giving editbugs to untrusted users, and that by doing so, we had what was coming to us.
We tried reversing it several times, and each time were rewarded with an arduous cleanup task. We gave up trying after months. So, calling it "kneejerk" is simply wrong. We had a determined vandal who may still be among us, and will likely exploit whatever loophole we open up.
Increasingly new users are making manual requests to be assigned to
bugs,
as they cannot edit others' bugs by default. This is problematic and disruptive to development efforts.
My suggestion is to re-add the "editbugs" user right to new users by default (revert the old settings adjustment). Otherwise, an acceptable workaround needs to be found.
I don't think we can pretend that the vandalism issue is solved,
because it
isn't. Bugzilla doesn't have the vandalism fighting tools that
MediaWiki
does.
We can certainly do something different than what we're doing, though.
It
should be easy to get editbugs; just not so easy that a vandal can get
it.
Anyone have any ideas how to mitigate the vandalism problem?
Rob _______________________________________________ Wikitech-l mailing list Wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l
-- Dan Garry Associate Product Manager for Platform Wikimedia Foundation _______________________________________________ Wikitech-l mailing list Wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l