Anthony wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007 8:59 AM, Florence Devouard
<Anthere9(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
Anthony wrote:
Do you want to force contributors to Wikipedia to
use their real
names? If not, then I really don't think you want this.
I would not support
that.
However, I can not help thinking that the rather ugly atmosphere that
developped on enwiki is largely due to the very large and uncontrolled
use of the checkuser tool by a minority.
When one gives specific tools to a person, that's creates a power lever
which may be used to grab bits of power. Which is more or less what is
happening, much to the dismay of those who do not have that power.
I very much agree with this. Though maybe we're talking about it on
the wrong list.
I am tired of long trolls on other lists :-)
There are
several possibilities to fix that.
Either the use of the tool is much more widely made possible, increasing
the check and balances (and thus reducing risks of abuse). Eg, giving
the tool to all admins.
Or on the contrary, limiting the use of the tool by reducing number of
people with access, strengthening the rules, and applying the rules
strictly (in short, in case of abuse, removing access rather than simply
whining).
In the limit of this idea, only giving access to WMF employees, and
only then giving them access from within the office.
yes, but very unpractical due to language limitations
Or dividing
strategy (which seems a good idea anyway), to flatten the
roles and responsabilities (eg, a checkuser can not be oversight; an
arbcom member can not be steward; or even a checkuser can not be arbcom)
I doubt that would help, as you can't stop people in the different
roles from talking to each other.
true... but look, in real life, the law is decided by some, the
judgement using legal information and past history is done by others,
and last the application of the judgement is applied by a third group.
For example, parliament, judges and cops.
Right now, it seems the community left in part the parliament in the
hands of the arbcom. The investigators are the checkusers. Judges are
arbcom. Arbcom are also checkusers, so investigation and judgement are
done by the same. Cops are the admins (for ban) or oversight (for clean
up). Arbcom is frequently playing the admin and oversight role.
In short, the principles of separation are very weakly implemented.
There ought to be a reason why most democracies decided to separate
those, don't you think ?
Removing the
tool entirely and making ip of registered users, public info
Making it mandatory to publicly log checkusers actions
Not sure how that would work, as the actions of checkusers often
reveals the results.
True. German wikipedia does that. Not sure what the impacts are with
regards to privacy policy.
Other options ?
Unblocking Tor and anonymizing proxies, thereby making checkuser
relatively useless.
ant