[WikiEN-l] Thoughts on admin-only IRC channels and RC patrol

Chris Jenkinson chris at starglade.org
Wed Jan 25 12:47:15 UTC 2006


Hi all,

My decision to found the admin IRC channel has meant that I've had to 
take a lot of flak from some of my friends which has been quite 
upsetting. I thought I would write this email to the list to explain 
what I see its purpose as. This also serves to highlight the importance 
of RC patrol.

I started the channel following Danny's suggestion that there should be 
a private place for discussion of confidential issues which we don't 
want the public (and by extension, the media) to know about. Such issues 
include complaints to the Foundation about libel in articles. Everyone 
should know this is one of Wikipedia's greatest problems, that anyone 
can say nasty things about someone else and quite often this isn't 
picked up on RC patrol.

Danny's suggestion for a private method of communication between 
"trusted users" given the issues we face was an excellent one in my 
opinion and I thought that an IRC channel is an ideal medium for this 
type of discussion to occur. Admins form a pretty diverse group of 
trustworthy users (all admins have the best interests of their project 
at heart) so for simplicity I created the channel for admins only.

The suggestion of a "trusted user" group is an interesting idea but 
unfortunately very selective. Who is responsible for choosing who is a 
trusted user? Whoever it was, there would be a large number of people 
who would be missed off even though they are perfectly trustworthy. 
Also, think of the consequences if someone found out if they weren't 
considered trustworthy as they weren't given channel access - it would 
be quite demoralising for one. Rationally, there may be perfectly solid 
reasons why they weren't given access but emotionally it is still 
demoralising. That's why I went by the simple, easily-defined standard 
of admins on the English-language Wikipedia.

Later Danny and I talked about the scope of the channel and raised the 
point that people who work the OTRS lists should be given access, since 
they get the bulk of the libel complaints and are best placed to notify 
people of potential issues. This is an entirely sensible argument.

Some people have raised concerns about backroom decisions, cliques and 
the lack of transparency this channel will create. These are fair 
comments to raise but I believe they are unfounded. Firstly, the 
channel's purpose is not a decision-making one. Unrelated chit-chatter 
and non-confidential discussions are pointed out as inappropriate for 
the channel and go on to take place in #wikipedia. Some admins have 
refused to join because they think the channel is closed and hidden. I 
think a better action for them to take would be to join, and 
self-regulate what the channel discusses. If it's not appropriate, ask 
the people discussing to talk in a different channel.

On a related note, the entire reason this channel exists is due to the 
problem we face from libel. This is why we must be grateful for the 
existing work people who work RC patrol do, and we should do everything 
we can to help them out. Problems which are ending up in OTRS and the 
admin channel are due to edits slipping through RC patrol. What we need 
to do is make their job easier. Admins who help out on RC patrol know 
the huge difference admin rollback makes, compared to having to do it 
manually. This is why we should either make the majority of RC 
patrollers admins, or give them access to rollback. Because of the 
rising standards for becoming an admin on the English language 
Wikipedia, the former is becoming more hard. Arguments of "adminship is 
no big deal" have now become "adminship should be no big deal". We have 
to recognise that this shift has taken place - and those who hold this 
principle should take part in RFA more, supporting more candidates.

Another - and better - solution, however, is to grant the rollback 
privilege to good contributors who are not admins. This would make the 
jobs of RC patrollers much easier - and will have the knock-on effect of 
lowering the amount of complaints the Foundation gets. The Foundation 
agrees that this is a great solution to the big problem we face. There 
is a poll to gauge community consensus on the issue:
  --> 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_rollback_privileges/Poll

Chris (Talrias)

-- 
Chris Jenkinson
chris at starglade.org

"Mistrust all in whom the impulse to punish is powerful."
  -- Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra



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