But Erik, you are trying to have edit wars solution be based uniquely on 2 or 3 wik-like people, while there are many other very regular and sometimes very respected contributors, who actually sometimes get into edit war and reversion war themselves in the heat of the moment.
For Wik-like people, yes, a temporary ban may be a relief. Now, for regular editors, I think it is a bad solution.
Suggestion : What about a different policy depending on whether editors are listed as "frequently involved in wars" people ?
For those "problematic users", for example, though not mandatory, any 3 reverts session could grant either softban or page protection or slow-editing for 24 hours. Without the sysop doing the ban or the protection or the slow edit having to justify himself or to argue he did not commit sysop abuse.
However, none of these three actions would be mandatory. People could still consider applying one or another, depending on the person.
Now, for people not listed as "problematic", only page protection could be applied, eventually, after a certain number of reverts.
As for listing people problematic, I can just suggest a poll. If over 75% wikipedians agree a person is problematic, well, he may undergo harder punishement than others.
This will allow people like Wik to be blocked after 3 reverts. So, satisfy you and others. This will allow regular users only to see only article protection occuring for 3 reverts in most cases, so might satisfy all those against the ban for 3 revert rule. This should satisfy both those willing to stop editors like Wik, and those saying he is part of the project. This will sent him the signal "better behavior" -> "lighter punishment"
Erik Moeller a écrit:
So, are we going to do something about edit wars or not? What exactly is page protection going to accomplish if an individual like Wik will engage in an edit war on virtually every page they are involved in? Or per- article bans? Are we going to ban Wik from dozens of articles? Run after him wherever he goes?
I note on the arbitration for Wik that the consensus among the committee is leaning towards not handling the case of Wik directly because a 24 hour ban policy is *under discussion*. Well, that policy has been sabotaged for nonsensical reasons which could easily have been addressed by flexible language in the policy itself.
If people like Wik can engage in edit wars without serious consequences, and I on the other hand am attacked for doing what I can to intervene (as in the case of [[McFly]], where I protected the page which Wik had blanked repeatedly and - gasp - edited it afterwards), then it is clear that the Wikipedia community as a whole *wants* edit wars to happen.
Well, if you want edit wars to happen, you sure as hell are going to get edit wars. And don't expect me to hold back if someone like Wik gets into a conflict with me.
If I sound angry, that's because I am. The bullies are being protected with fallacious arguments of free speech and "WikiLove". We need enforcement here. And I'm very disappointed in Jimbo for not doing something about this issue and endlessly delaying any meaningful decision. The solution is trivial. Warn and then temporarily ban people who violate the *spirt and the letter* of the rule. There are *no* negative side- effects of such a policy.
Erik