[Foundation-l] new checkuser policy
Robert Scott Horning
robert_horning at netzero.net
Thu Apr 20 16:43:13 UTC 2006
Anthere wrote:
>You may find a new version of the checkuser access policy here
>
>http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:CheckUser_Policy#Access_.28new_version.29
>
>the main differences are
>* it takes into account the fact some local communities with arbcom do
>not necessarily want to delegate appointement of checkusers to their arbcom
>* any local project may choose at least 2 people amongst the already
>approved checkusers, with localized requirement (the local community
>choose itself percentage of support, minimum number of votes etc...)
>
>Which would allow to make Essjay and Karynn checkuser on en.wikibooks if
>the en.wikibooks is happy with this.
>
>Warning : the idea is not that all checkusers be selected by wikipedias
>and later imposed on other projects. The idea is rather that generally,
>a person widely supported in one project to do a job... is some one we
>generally trust to do the job properly anywhere.
>
>So, if wikicommons wants to appoints 5 checkusers from 5 different
>languages, all those 5 may serve on various other projects. The one
>requirement to keep though : always at least 2 checkusers per project.
>
>Opinion ? Please comment on the meta page. Trolls not welcome. I do not
>have the time this week :-)
>
>
>ant
>
>
>
I am not all that pleased with having to deal with "outsiders" in order
to obtain this critical information, although having it is better than
not having it. I am really curious as to the reasons why Essjay and
Karynn are any better candidates for checkuser status on en.wikibooks
than the current two candidates on the request for checkuser status, and
all I can say is that they enjoy somewhat better relationships with the
Foundation board. That seems hardly a reasonable policy.
It does indeed seem as though Wikibooks is being requested to get
permission from Wikipedia, and all of the checkusers are selected by
Wikipedias because they happen to, at the moment, be the big boys on the
block, and that Wikipedia wants to have editorial control over all other
Wikimedia projects of similar languages. Or this is a crack in the door
for this to happen.
Perhaps because this was buried under all of the previous comments, but
it really hasn't been answered at least to my satisfaction. Under what
reasonable criteria is being applied that would allow somebody to become
a bureaucrat on a project that would not also mean they are trusted
enough to have checkuser status as well? This is a critical question in
the sense that the current approach isn't really scalable if you assume
that the board have personal knowledge of each person with checkuser
privileges. It also strongly favors very large projects, and sets up a
preceedence that all new administrator-like functions will only be
allowed for very large projects, because of the sensitive nature of some
of the information they are dealing with.
I don't mind this approach if you are trying to suggest that people with
checkuser privileges is more of a social experiment by the Wikimedia
Foundation and that the whole issue of even allowing checkuser scans is
still something that is being Beta tested to see if it is effective and
worth the effort. The official policy should state it in that manner,
and suggest that it is only going to be tested on Wikipedias first.
That removes the ambiguity of the issue and makes it clear what is
happening. By only giving this to very trusted users known personally
to the Foundation, the Foundation can then gague its effectiveness and
keep watch on a much smaller group of users. But a beta test also
implies that it will only be available for a limited time before it is
expanded to other areas or simply removed altogether.
And getting back to the original point of this thread, the Stewards who
supposedly have at least the option of having checkuser status, and are
allowed to act in the capacity of performing administrative actions
where existing policies on individual projects are lacking these
policies due to their size, are ignoring checkuser requests. If Essjay
and Karynn have the trust and support for this widespread and cross
project assistance, perhaps they should simply be made stewards as well.
And to the point at hand, en.wikibooks is in English, which from what
I've seen of the list of stewards is one of the languages of every
current steward. That these checkuser scans aren't being performed is
more of a condemnation of all of the stewards, or a very serious
misunderstanding of what their role is as backup administrators to
smaller projects.
--
Robert Scott Horning
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