[WikiEN-l] Repeated blocks -- collateral damage
Koltwills at aol.com
Koltwills at aol.com
Wed Oct 26 10:18:58 UTC 2005
In a message dated 10/26/2005 6:11:55 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,
dgerard at gmail.com writes:
Koltwills wrote:
>You have attempted to edit a page, either by clicking the "edit this page"
>tab or by following a red link.
>Your user name or IP address has been _blocked_
>(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Blocking_policy) by _David
Gerard_
>(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:David_Gerard) .
>The reason given is:
>Autoblocked because your IP address has been recently used by
>"_Ugabogaimasuuuukpoopit@!_
>(http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Ugabogaimasuuuukpoopit@!&acti
on=edit)
". >The reason given for Ugabogaimasuuuukpoopit@!'s
>block is: "massive sockpuppetry (A1sdf sockpuppet)".
Yeah. I blocked a sokpuppeteering vandal. Unfortunately, they were
using a pile of AOL IPs, so I spent yesterday answering email (and
trying to get some people to just cut'n'paste the error message so I
know which username to look for!) and undoing blocks on the IPs.
>This hasn't happened for a couple of weeks, but it happens frequently
enough
>-- often three and four times a week: I get blocked as the result of
>someone else's conduct. When I try to edit, I get the "User is
blocked" message --
>but the I.P. address is never my own.
>How does this happen?
AOL runs what is effectively a massive internal anonymising proxy. Any
individual *page view* might come from a different IP.
A page explaining it technically is:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Dealing_with_AOL_vandals
Someone's called it "super-dynamic proxying", which is a pretty good
way to put it.
>How does this happen? Is there something I or someone else can do to
>prevent it from occurring again?
Excluding AOL ranges from the autoblocker might be an idea, or setting
the duration to be very short for those IPs.
In the meantime, I apologise profusely for the trouble, even though it
will probably happen again and again and again and ...
- d.
Hi, David. *waving*
Thanks.
I've asked the question of "how" repeatedly in the past, but this is the
first time I've gotten a real explanation.
Now, what about the selective blocking. How does THAT happen -- being able
to edit one page and not another, when the article I can't edit is open for
editing?
I've been told that such a thing is "impossible," but it's happened to me
many times.
Does anyone have an explanation?
dcv
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