Feel free to ask me any questions you may have about my experience, my philosophy, or my outlook as it pertains to conflict resolution. I hope that I can give you a full answer. If it is not a pleasing answer, I can at least assure you that it will be an honest one. Geogre 01:26, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Warning: this candidate believes in full answers. I really do. One reason I'm running is that I believe that people haven't been explaining themselves fully, so, below, my answers are all sort of long. If you take the time and put in the effort to ask the question, I will try to put in the time and thought to answer it. Geogre 20:21, 12 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question(s) from xaosflux[edit]

  1. As functions assigned by ArbCom, describe your view on the assignments of Oversight and Checkuser permissions, including thresholds for (or even the possibility of) new applicants. (Question from — xaosflux Talk 02:06, 7 November 2006 (UTC) [reply]
That's difficult to answer fully, but I'll try. First, let me answer the negative of your question: check user, in particular, is massively sensitive. Wikipedia is built on anonymous contributions. Despite our account names, we are still anonymous, and even the people who "edit under their real name" may not be doing so. Therefore, access to the data that checkuser yields is, by its nature, super-procedural. I.e. it is something that is beyond the walls of Wikipedia, because it brings in the flesh and blood (or modem, anyway) person. Therefore, to answer your actual question, I feel that access to Checkuser must be given very carefully to those whose ethical standards are far beyond question. Even a credible allegation of misuse should result in the loss of such priviledges. The reasons are regrettably obvious: we have had stalkers, people trying to get other editors fired, people who have actually shown up in editor's rooms. Anonymity is a founding principle, so I would be terribly reluctant to extend Checkuser access and quicker than most to revoke it. At present, the tasks people perform can entail access to Checkuser data, and this makes us, in essence, approve programmers on a basis of their skills rather than their calm. I would love to be able to rationalize the selection criteria for Checkuser and offer up at least nominal guidelines for those who have access as something coincident to their jobs.
Oversight is new, and with new things the practice fills a need and the best practice guidelines follow after. To me, need should always be a second place argument, because it is need that justifies any abuse as well as any cure of problems. I'm not as familiar with oversight as I need to be to offer any good answer to how it could or could not change, but I think there is no crime in responding to emergencies with emergency actions, so long as we very quickly thereafter accept the fact that we have to guard our users and our readers alike, that our silly words on these silly screens can have dire consequencies in the worlds of politics, economics, and personal misery. We cannot prevent all harm and remain Wikipedia, but we must do what we can within our mission. Geogre 02:37, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from jd2718[edit]

Geogre, as a longtime user you may have been party to the occasional dispute. Have you ever benefited from arbitration or mediation? Could you say something about the experience? What would the ArbCom lose if you were not elected? Jd2718 03:32, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well, I've never been the subject of arbitration, although I have been involved in a few cases as a witness, so to speak. I'm not saying that I'm more sinned against than sinning, but I do my best to avoid conflicts. I cannot say that any person benefits from arbitration. Honestly, it isn't designed to help a person, but rather to help the atmosphere for the people in general. It is my own view that arbitration is about behaviors rather than persons, and we do best when we abstract the behaviors from the people. When a user is working on a history of bad action, a present of bad action, and promises a future of bad action, then arbitration has to rule that the actions aren't permissible.
Mediation has worked very well in some cases, and it's preferrable whenever the bad actions are coming from jarring personalities rather than a person's whole character. Mediation has also failed spectacularly and acted as a waiver for further action. It takes skilled and patient (and active) mediators and willing and patient participants for mediation to work. I do not see a lesson to draw, except that when mediation is failing, we need to be able to call upon an outside assessment and determine whether it's time to arbitrate instead, and do so quickly.
Arbitration can create as many hard feelings as anything else, but that's one reason why it should never be expected to fix people. It can only rule that a set of actions is such that it threatens the peace and operation of Wikipedia or that they are significant but need only clarification. Anyone who believes that any editor will go into arbitration unhappy and come out happy is somewhat missing the point of the process and certainly misunderstanding how corrosive and wounding it can be.
One of the reasons that I'm running this time is that I have seen the decisions of ArbCom inflame passions or appear mysterious. I hope that I am articulate enough to be able to explain to people objectively (or at least disinterestedly) what is going on and to be polite enough to ameliorate the pain. There are some excellent candidates running this time, and I do not put myself in contrast to them. Instead, ArbCom would lose, I believe, another person of integrity, consistency, intelligence, and, I would like to think, wisdom. My particular strength in contrast may only be my experience as a writer and "content" provider to Wikipedia. It's a little unusual that I should need to point this out or say it, but I do think that the backgrounds of ArbCom members should represent all of our community and, through an accident of timing, current members represent the writers less than the make up of the community. Geogre 11:55, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from Mailer Diablo[edit]

1. Express in a short paragraph, using any particular issue/incident that you feel strongly about (or lack thereof) in the past, on why editors must understand the importance of the ArbCom elections and making wise, informed decisions when they vote.

  • This is a dangerous question, as the best way to answer it is to point to previous bad choices, and that brings acrimony or questioning the voters. We should all believe in the voters or quit Wikipedia, because the project is based on the idea that the commoner is king. Where voters have been mistaken, it has been because of election-year conversions and the weight of "awe" around certain names. If voters don't know the candidates, they have to very seriously investigate or abstain, because the consequences of a bad choice can be very grave. There have been people who have worked consistently to create echelons of rulership, people who have themselves superior, and people who have "experience with ArbCom" by being in the dock frequently, and they can craft a sugary candidate's statement. (I am not referring to any current or past members of ArbCom.) Some now-banned editors ran for ArbCom and received many votes. Because we have real trouble educating new and casual users about the characters and histories of the candidates, it gets to be extremely important for the voters themselves to pick up the burden. If they do not, if destructive users garner big vote stacks, then it justifies those people who advocate a purely selected and non-elected ArbCom. However, the vote leaders, the vote winners, do not tend to be people with whom I would have any quarrel. Geogre 12:37, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    YAA (Yet Another Addendum): I have thought about this question some more, and I remember pretty well the last elections and the rationales voters stated, and I do have one thing to say. People should remember, in these elections and candidate statements, that you are voted not on, "Is this how I want ArbCom to be," but, "Do I want this voice to join ArbCom." The current ArbCom, like the one before it, is not homogenous. Each person is just one vote, one voice. Geogre 12:07, 9 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

2. Imagine. Say Jimbo grants you the authority to make, or abolish one policy with immediate and permanent effect, assuming no other limitations, no questions asked. What would that be?

  • Oh, now that's a set up. :-) Ok, because I really believe it: WP:IAR. IAR is written clearly enough. It says that there are novel circumstances with abuse and issues that have never been anticipated coming up and causing a crisis (the BLP cases, for example). When these new and dangerous things happen, we cannot sit on our hands and let the project get destroyed because there is no rule. That is all something I wholeheartedly agree with. However, people have a tendency to read the names of policies and to throw policies like missiles, whereas IAR gets used like a truncheon. I have seen so many, many people justifying unilateral actions with "IAR" that I think we are better off without it. The basic argument of the policy is something that we will obey without a policy in place telling us to. I do not think we are in any danger whatever of sitting in legal paralysis, so IAR is not necessary and, as a policy statement, it is used destructively. Geogre 12:37, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

3. It is expected that some successful candidates will receive checkuser and oversight privileges. Have you read and understood foundation policies regulating these privileges, and able to help out fellow Wikipedians on avenues (e.g. WP:RFCU) in a timely manner should you be granted either or both of them?

  • Checkuser is amazingly sensitive. My own advantage here is that I have absolutely no interest in people.  :-) I am neither curious nor interested in the people beyond the pixels, as they all tend to be, like me, much shabbier than the exalted presences on the screen. I would be willing to perform Checkuser when an arbitration case required it, but not for general noticeboard or preventative issues. That, I think, is the difference between checkuser access and someone who does Checkuser. I have read the policies on Checkuser, and I am very, very sensitive to the potential for abuse. If RFCU is lacking personnel, I will volunteer as I have time. As for Oversight, I have not gone over that issue very thoroughly, and I am ambivalent about the practice. It can be a life and death action, but I do not feel strongly enough to volunteer to be part of that. If we are in a crisis, of course, I will step up, if I can. If I cannot, I will nag someone else with integrity who has access. Geogre 12:37, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

4. What is integrity, accountability and transparency to you on the ArbCom?

  • Integrity means consistency. It means being true to the issues you believe in over the people you like. I have been somewhat consistent over the years about accountability and transparency, and I will leave friends in the lurch (as they're friends because they know that I will act on my principles first) and supporting people I dislike if the issues are at play. Currently (at the time of writing) there is a controversy about user Homey on AN/I. I do believe that the current sockpuppet should be banned, but I am also interested in our getting a solid ruling. The expedient answer is to block. The long term answer is to resume prior ArbCom actions. Accountability is possible only with some level of transparency. I don't like secrecy, and Wikipedia is built on each edit being visible and rewritable in our articles. It has bothered me that we then have segments where we insist that the man behind the curtain is the Great Oz. It isn't that we don't need an Oz, but we don't need the curtain. We should be able to respect the fact that the guys back there are just like the guys in front, only performing a different job.
  • I know that you are asking about specifics, so I will offer some. I believe that the ArbCom mailing list should be private and that its privacy is inviolate. However, I do not think it would be amiss to offer a summary once a month with names suppressed: "Two members sought further information on [case]. One member worried that [case] was growing stale" if needed. I also think that the names of those with access should be open. If there are allegations that untoward influence has been exerted, we should be able to assert a negative. Additionally, I think that there needs to be an appeal to recusal (not an appeal process above what we have in general). If I were weighing in on a Giano case and didn't recuse myself, I think there should be some mechanism short of appealing the whole decision. I also think that there should be some internal procedural guides that we should develop so that we can be regular in our actions.
  • Most particularly, I think we should communicate in the broadest cases. If a case starts gathering huge participation, it's fair enough that we be expected to be frank with the people who have power: the editors. Essentially, I believe that no one on Wikipedia has "power." We all have volunteer jobs, and no good comes from treating anyone as beneath or above. Geogre 12:37, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

@ Thank you for your answers! :) - Cheers, Mailer Diablo 11:49, 9 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from NatusRoma[edit]

Why should the Wikipedia community give you responsibilities that will take away from writing articles? NatusRoma | Talk 05:31, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm sorry, but I reject the premise. I write very quickly, and I enjoy it. When I became an administrator, my article writing actually increased considerably. I do not believe that I will slacken in article writing at all, as, and this is hard to explain, I do "policy stuff" and "article stuff" at different parts of my day. I will go over to the library, gather up notes, shape a narrative in my head, organize, and then blurt it out generally in the afternoon or just in the early evening, and I go to AN/I now or other controversy-oriented matters in the morning and at night (see this time stamp, for example). If it really came down to a choice, I would have to assess where I felt that I was doing the most good and act accordingly. I do not think that it would be a choice. Geogre 12:08, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from User:Ideogram[edit]

During the Giano case I tried to ask you questions and you became offended and decided not to answer them. Can you explain why this happened, and will you be more responsive to me here and in the future? --Ideogram 06:53, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It was my feeling, rightly or wrongly, that you were asking motivated questions designed to get to a particular conclusion and that you had answered the questions to your own satisfaction ahead of time. Given that that case was enormous in philosophy, in action, and in participation, more words were going to do little but give all sides a chance to offend or say something they did not believe. As Samuel Butler said, "Who complies against his will/ Is of his own opinion still," and I felt that you were not going to change your mind. Additionally, I thought we were covering the same questions over and over. Rather than saying something rude to you or joining the others who wanted to characterize your edits harshly, I simply ducked out.
If you have questions about my philosophies toward ArbCom, I certainly welcome them, but I hope that you understand that a failure to answer might be an attempt to avoid conflict rather than a statement that there is a conflict. I've often thought that some of the fights people have on Wikipedia could be avoided if one side said, "Go about your business and prosper" and just left it. Geogre 12:01, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I am sorry you felt that way, although I can see how I might have given that impression. My intention was never to pretend to be neutral, but on the other hand I was (and still am) prepared to be proven wrong in my interpretation of your position.
Certainly it was an unpleasant first impression and I currently view your ArbCom candidacy with some skepticism. However, my purpose always has been and still is to understand your opinions better and I welcome the opportunity to continue pursuing that goal. Of course if you feel the conversation is not productive no one can force you to answer my questions, but I think your response to me, as someone critical of your views, will reveal much about how you might deal with controversy as an ArbCom member. I was not planning to pursue the issues further but your ArbCom candidacy inevitably puts you in the spotlight.
To start, let me ask you to describe, concretely, what is right about the current ArbCom, what is wrong, and how you propose to fix it. Again, I beg you to be clear and concise. My previous attempts to push you in this direction with some humor proved to be disastrous failures, but they were born of a very real frustration with your communication style.
If at any time you feel my questions are phrased poorly or the conversation is going in the wrong direction by all means make your concerns known to me and I will try to address them. I feel that it is possible for people to have a productive conversation and come to a mutual understanding even if they never agree. I hope you feel the same. --Ideogram 14:54, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, first, there is nothing institutionally wrong with ArbCom. I had reason to doubt the objectivity and dispassion of some members of ArbCom (and always phrased it that way and always turned away people wanting to complain about ArbCom as ArbCom), but that's not the same thing. It is not up to me, or any candidate, to fix the problems, as those "problems" are people, and one can fix a dog, not a person. If I had felt strongly about the individual or individuals who I thought went awry in that case, I would have pursued it. I didn't. The case is closed now, and we really shouldn't be discussing it. If you lose confidence in my ability to be objective and considerate because of it, then that's regrettable but not remediable here. The only actual inherent problem at present is that the work is dull and overwhelming (and I'm both dull and overwhelming, myself, so it ought to fit), and so the first one to rush through the door with a proposed solution shapes the debate. Again, though, that's human psychology and not policy or process. Geogre 15:45, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I am deliberately trying to focus on issues relevant to your ArbCom candidacy and not ask questions about the wider issues raised in the Giano case. However, it was clear from that discussion that you feel there are some things wrong with Wikipedia today and if you are elected to ArbCom your opinions on those issues may affect your decisions even if unconsciously.
Also, your behavior in the Giano case is my only experience with you and I cannot avoid using it to form my opinion about you. For example, do you feel you demonstrated patience there or that you have a bit of a temper? Do you think how you behaved there is indicative of how you might behave on the ArbCom or that it is irrelevant?
What I am really trying to get at here is, why should I not be skeptical of your candidacy? Will you try to address my concerns or remain doubtful about my motives? I believe that I am capable of changing my mind, but it will take some hard work. How do you want this conversation to proceed? --Ideogram 16:09, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The questions you ask appear more personal than general, and so I would encourage you to pursue them on a talk page rather than here. If you have a specific question here, I will try to answer it. Geogre 16:22, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I feel the question of your character is highly relevant to your suitability for the ArbCom, but if you do not wish to discuss it there is nothing I can do. --Ideogram 16:30, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

What is your interpretation of WP:NOT#DEMOCRACY? Do you agree with this policy? --Ideogram 10:25, 17 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from AnonEMouse[edit]

Warning: Most of these are intended to be tough. Answering them properly will be hard. I don't expect anyone to actually withdraw themselves from nomination rather than answer these, but I do expect at least some to seriously think about it!

The one consolation is that your competitors for the positions will be asked them too. Notice that there are about one thousand admins, and about a dozen arbcom members, so the process to become an arbcom member may be expected to be one hundred times harder. (Bonus question - do you think I hit that difficulty standard?) :-)

  1. A current Arbcom case, Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Protecting children's privacy is concerned with the decision of whether or not a proposed policy has consensus or not, and therefore whether or not it should be a policy/guideline. Whether or not the Arbcom has or should have the power of making this decision is hotly disputed. Does Arbcom have this power? Should it have this power? Why or why not?
    No, I do not believe it should. This is not because arbitrators are not wise with experience and insightful about policy, but because policy was formerly developed by plebiscite and has not yet changed. I absolutely share the frustration anyone may feel or voice about the difficulty of adapting or adopting policies. We are now so large that it is virtually impossible to get true consensus on any policy. Between those who misread the arguments, those infringed by the new policies, and those who grow frustrated during the debates, there is going to be significant dissent from practically anything. That means that we need to reform our policy process, but it doesn't mean that we accomplish this by falling upon ArbCom. ArbCom is a dispute resolution body. The paralysis of policy does argue for the establishment of an echelon of decision makers, perhaps, but it can argue other ways, too. For example, should we rethink the meaning of consensus in policy debates? Should we rethink our allowance of alternate accounts to better preserve voting tallies? Should we rethink franchise in policy debate? Should we consider (my favorite) establishing quorum for policy motions? Should we have upper end cut-offs for either time or voting? Should we limit debate formats? There are many potential solutions, but they are generally going to have to come from a place beyond mere ArbCom, if they are to be top-down, or from a wider venue than ArbCom, if they are to be consensual. I will avoid, however, commenting on the specific case. First, I have not watched it from the beginning, and, second, I am not on ArbCom. Geogre 16:39, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  2. Similarly, a recently closed Arbcom case Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Giano barely dodged the possibly similar issue of whether the Arbcom can, or should, determine whether Bureaucrats properly made someone an administrator. (Discussed, for example, here). The current arbcom dodged the question (didn't reach agreement one way or the other, and ended up leaving it alone by omission), but you don't get to. :-) Does the arbcom have this power? Should it?
    Indeed, I was a participant in that one. I was very clear in my view there: the bureaucrats cannot ignore or overturn consensus in such cases. I have said this a number of ways in a number of places, but the simplest way may be this: the position of administrator is by definition a "trusted member of the community." No one can tell the community who it trusts, because trust is given, not taken. There is no possible room for "discretion" after legitimate accounts are tallied in such instances. I have believed and campaigned for more instances of temporary demotion of administrators than blocks and bans, as I think a demotion merely prevents future instances of bad behavior while a block means disgrace and robbing the project of a person's good offices, so the ultimate conclusion of the case was satisfactory, if by no means pleasing. The argument for discretion has been based on analogy, I believe, with AfD, where administrators determine consensus within their discretion. Since an incorrectly deleted or undeleted article can be remedied, there is always the possibility for review by others and reversal. Such is not the case with promotion and demotion of administrators. Finally, I also thought that the matter of "discretion" had been conducted by a small group lobbied by a small group, away from any input by the wider community. That sanitary cordon was truly objectionable to me. My first and last impulse on serious actions is confer. If the group comes up with the wrong conclusion, abide by it. There is no way that any of us is above another, no way that a bureaucrat is above an administrator: it is a job, not a laurel. Geogre 16:39, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  3. [Apologies: I accidentally cut this question. It was on how ArbCom has ruled that people who have made strong contributions can be more leniently treated than those whose sole contributions have been bad and whether or not I agreed.]
    Prior actions are always a consideration, as they establish likely future actions, testify to character, and argue intent. Even if I were to disagree with the practice, I would be a hypocrite, because it is a basic part of functioning in the world to see actions in context. So, if a person's general contributions show good character and a commitment to the project, then a mistake is a mistake. If a person's whole career is destructive, that argues that the person's desires are destructive. Geogre 19:26, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  4. If you agree with the above point, which service to the encyclopedia is more valuable - administration, or writing very good articles? For example, what happens when two editors, an administrator and a good article writer, come into conflict and/or commit a similar infraction - how should they be treated? Note that there are relatively the same number of current administrators and featured articles on the Wikipedia - about 1000 - however, while relatively few administrators have been de-adminned, many former featured articles have been de-featured, so there have been noticeably more featured articles written than administrators made. This is a really tough one to answer without offending at least one important group of people, and I will understand if you weasel your way out of answering it, but it was one of the issues brought up in the recent Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Giano, so you can imagine it may come up again.
    I reject the premise that there are better and worse contributions, even if I think that there are more and less necessary contributions. The Giano case had a much more serious issue in it than merely that. Neither Giano nor I, nor any of the other "article people," would denigrate the contributions of programmers: each contributes according to his or her skill and interest. However, each contribution type has with it an attendant area of expertise. Who is better at determining whether cross namespace redirects are appropriate: me or someone who works with servers? Who is better at determining whether a person's constant habit of "alphabetizing" serial items in an article is designed to provoke or a legitimate edit: me or someone who works with servers? In fact, I think that Wikipedia's size is such that we are developing "republics" within the democracy. We have WikiProject X, and we get the SpecialUser noticeboards, and we get various portals and the like. In other words, we are developing our own peer-determined sets of experts and peer-determined rule sets. Where the real violence comes is when someone is operating out of his or her expertise and when someone denigrates another person's area of expertise.
    On the other hand, there are "inside the covers" and "outside the covers" contributions. Article authors are working inside the covers of the book, and developers and template/box people are working outside the covers. They are looking out for the way the book functions, the way the book looks, but not what's in the book. Who is more important, the author or the publisher? It depends on what you want, but they are mutually dependent. There are tens of thousands of skilled programmers with time to spare and thousands of skilled authors with time to spare. The two camps are equally replaceable and irreplaceable. I personally feel that template and box work is the least important because least necessary to either content or function of the Wikipedia, but that doesn't mean that it's unimportant or ignorable.
    My personal view is that we should value our leaders in their various skill sets. One reason I think I might work out well for ArbCom is that it is an empire of words and reading, and I think I have those skills. I have been frustrated, and was frustrated in the Giano case, by the implication that authors are a dime a dozen that came from some current members of ArbCom, but what really struck me is that the same personality traits and skills that make a person excellent at a certain task might make him or her weak at another, and the skill of categorizing and vandal fighting, for example, might translate as a weakness at conflict resolution or living with the ambiguities of people of good will in powerful disagreements. Geogre 19:26, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  5. While some Arbcom decisions pass unanimously, many pass with some disagreement. I don't know of any Arbcom member who hasn't been in the minority on some decisions. Find an Arbcom decision that passed, was actually made that you disagree with. Link to it, then explain why you disagree. (If you don't have time or inclination to do the research to find one - are you sure you will have time or inclination to do the research when elected? If you can't find any passed decisions you disagree with, realize you are leaving yourself open to accusations of running as a rubber stamp candidate, one who doesn't have any opinions that might disagree with anyone.)
    I again disagree with the question and its implicit conclusions. I have disagreed with the outcomes of several ArbCom decisions, but quiescence about it is not the same thing as a rubber stamp. I disagreed with the Giano decision because several key points of logic were left uncovered. If people are going to look at past ArbCom decisions to make proscriptive or preventative actions, then the principles have to be very, very clear. (BTW, you have linked to the Giano case yourself, so I hope I'm forgiven for not digging that one up.) I hope folks have time, because my "why" is lengthy:
    1. The central issue of re-RFA could be dealt with by acceding to bureaucrat "discretion," by demoting Carnildo pending a successful RFA, or by modifying the prior demotion to have it time out (thereby mooting it). Although the last was proposed, it did not pass. The end result was almost "let's not talk about it." That was, I felt, insufficient.
    2. The other issues involved were acute: can persons associated with ArbCom badger the rest of users and imply threats? Kelly Martin gave up her rights, and the decision carried with it a conclusion that she had done so under a cloud, but it never ruled on the issue of whether any member of ArbCom (or ex-member, in her case) could feign disclosure of the mailing list's contents to try to silence controversy over another associated user's (Tony Sidaway's) actions.
    3. Another critical issue was whether there is any such thing as a "cooling off" block and whether or not blocking someone "to cool off" was a violation of the blocking policy. This was simply not addressed, even though it is part of what got Tony Sidaway blocked in the first place.
    4. Yet another issue was the blocking Tony Sidaway had done for "civility" and "NPA": this was an opportunity to clarify the blocking policy and to iron out the plausibility or impossibility of blocking someone for a dirty word.
    5. Most of all, I was disturbed that Fred Bauder wrote the decision proposal and introduced elements that had nowhere been argued in Evidence or the Workshop to the decision. A judge does not produce evidence and cannot conclude on a case not made, in my opinion, as that makes him an advocate rather than arbiter.
    I was also displeased with the final version of the user:Eternal Equinox decision (Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Eternal Equinox. Evidence had been presented of a very long and persistent habit of that user demanding attention by picking at other users. Like a low-grade fever, he continued to want to belabor editors he disagreed with. In the process of the arguments, Giano made colorful insults. The proposed decision wanted to sanction Giano for those and offered no injunction on Eternal Equinox. The final verdict gave parole to a user who had already had a full year of consistently problematic behavior.
    In several cases, users in the docket at ArbCom have said that they were quitting. They would blank their pages and cease editing for a while. That has convinced the arbitrators to stop the proceedings. Their reasoning is sound, and the demands of the job are taxing enough without arbitrating ghosts, but some of these cases have involved issues that should be interpreted. If nothing else, some of these "departed" users have lingered under new names, some have come back as soon as the heat was off, and some have only been gone for a week or so. As onerous as it is, and as seemingly cruel, we have to consider the issues that need interpretation and not the personalities or persons. Geogre 19:26, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  6. It has been noted that the diligent User:Fred Bauder writes most of the initial Arbcom decisions -- especially principles, and findings of fact, but even a fair number of the remedies. (Then a fair number get opposed, and refined or don't pass, but he does do most of the initial work.) Do you believe this is: right; neither right nor wrong but acceptable; or wrong? When you get elected, what do you plan to do about it?
    It is the primary reason I am running. It is not that I plan to get there first or anything of the sort. Fred does very valuable work, but I have seen too many cases where arbitrators are not adding remedies or findings that they believe in because the debate has been shaped by Fred's proposal. No one person should be shaping the debates in such a manner. There is no Chief Justice of ArbCom. This is not a knock on Fred, even if I have profound disagreements with some of the things he has done, but simply a matter of how entirely dependent the arguments can be on that first formulation of principles. Geogre 19:26, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  7. For those who are administrators only - how do you feel about non-administrators on the arbcom? Note that while "sure, let them on if they get elected" is an easy answer, there are issues with not having the ability to view deleted articles, and either not earning the community trust enough to become an admin, or not wanting the commensurate duties. Or do you believe that non-administrators are a group that need representation on the arbcom? AnonEMouse (squeak) 16:23, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    I do not have a particular problem with it, although I cannot imagine that it is likely soon. The most important factor for my consideration of an arbitrator is familiarity with Wikipedia and its policies, and that takes time, time, time. It is more than possible for some of our 12,000 edit editors out there to make great arbitrators, but the other part of the equation is interest in helping out on the dispute resolution front. Most people who have that desire will have had an interest in RFA. So, if someone has a great deal of time on the project and a strong interest in dispute resolution, it is almost a sure bet that he or she will have become an administrator before an arbitrator. It's always possible for there to be exceptions, but it would be a really exceptional exception, in my view. Now I hope I can pass the Bridge of Death. Geogre 19:26, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  8. Yes. No, wait, no! Aaaargh....! Unlike the above, which I ask of everyone, these next are more specific to your case. I see in your statement, you refer us to User:Geogre/AfD. While that article says it is old, it does not explicitly say that it is no longer applicable - is it? In other words, do you still believe, just for one example, "AfD is for votes, not proof"?
    I do, in spirit, although, to be fair, you should read all of it rather than just the intentionally provocative headline. N.b. I am not saying "not for discussion," and it is old. I should change it with a headnote so people know that it was VfD, not AfD, and it reflected the years when we voted. The general argument is that people should not use AfD to try to fight, to interline claim and counter claim, that a person should read, consider, express, not fight. If I were writing it now, I'd get rid of "vote" language and point out that the main idea there is not to get into tit-for-tat-for-tit-for-tatty horror movies. People should consider with reference to the deletion guideline, not other people. Geogre 21:14, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    I will strive to clarify by a headnote rather than a change of body text how this bit of my philosophy is or is not still applicable. Geogre 21:17, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  9. In the RFAR/Giano, Fred Bauder proposed a rather ... notable ... sanction of you, personally. When elected, how will that affect your relations with him on the Arbcom? AnonEMouse (squeak) 20:05, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    It shouldn't have any real effect. Fred and I had disagreed before that, and I do have a different set of views from him. However, I really don't believe in personalities. You'll have to believe me or not, but I genuinely don't care much about the "people" here (quotes because "we" are not people, but personae, because "we" are constructs of our words). However Fred may feel about me, and I honestly don't know, I don't have any hard feelings toward him. I obviously thought he was in error, and I probably didn't keep the sneer entirely away from my lips when I typed some of the time, but I fully expect to be disagreed with, to be corrected, to be taught, to teach, and to convince. My exasperation was that Fred's proposed decision wasn't connected in any way that he explained with the evidence and workshop pages, and my most vigorous disagreement was his interpretation of a segment of a policy. I make a big distinction between feeling that a person's actions or behavior in a case were wrong and thinking that a person was wrong. It's like the AfD stuff: the presence or absence of an article has nothing to do with the value of the subject of the article, and Fred's feelings about me have nothing to do with me as a person, and therefore, as a corrollary, my view of his words or deeds have nothing to do with my view of him as a person. I wasn't personally offended. Geogre 21:14, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    Oh, heck, as long as I'm here on stage, I might as well share something I've been thinking about lately, as it might explain my ability to work with Fred or not. It seems to me that, along with the general Big Endians and Little Endians, we have a kind of division between the Thick Skinners and Thin Skinners: the people who believe that folks should not be blocked for NPA and people who think they should. I'm a Thick Skinner (and thick sinner): I don't think that a mean word here or there is going to be better or worse if it has five letters instead of four, and I don't think that anyone should be explaining bad behavior with the excuse of "He was mean to me." Fred was mean to me, I guess. <shrug> I was pretty ticked off by his reasoning, but that's about it. It doesn't apply now. ArbCom currently has people who disagree with each other at least as much as Fred and I do. Geogre 21:33, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    YAA (yet another addendum): My disagreement and frustration with Fred was that the proposed decision would seem to be unconnected, and then, when asked to explain where it came from, he would say, "the evidence." That was inflammatory, when there were three /Workshop pages, each over 100Kb, an /Evidence page that was about that large, a talk page to the /Proposed decision that should have been split into three, and yet the proposed decision didn't seem connected and no one could get the sole author to explain, at least in public. That leads to either thinking that there was an explanation that the parties didn't get to see or that there wasn't an explanation, so it's natural that people got put out. That's also what I mean about "why I'm running": I felt that the parties really needed calm explanation, esp. if the proposed decision was under significant clouds of confusion. I may write too long, but there are times when that's better than not communicating. Geogre 11:23, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from Newyorkbrad[edit]

These are the standard questions I've been posing to all the candidates, so I will add them here as well, but if the answers would duplicate responses already given above feel free just to cross-reference. Thanks. Newyorkbrad 23:06, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  1. What can be done to reduce the delays in the arbitration process?
    1) Add staffing. 2) Reject cases that do not have focus. 3) Keep to the focus as much as possible. 4) Draft findings as quickly as possible after evidence is in, preferrably with plenty of warning. Geogre 01:47, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  2. Do you anticipate participating in actually writing the ArbCom decision? If so, do you have any writing experience germane to this particular type of drafting?
    I do intend to, yes. I'm not sure how anyone can have experience, quite, as the closest analogy is experience with the legal profession. I have no experience there except as a witness. (I seem to see a lot of things.) I have as much other experience as one might have, having been involved in multiple policy drafts, policy debates, and various deliberative venues within Wikipedia. Outside of Wikipedia, I have experience of the usual sort -- drawing up charters of organizations, professional editing, that kind of thing. We are the amateur experts, so I have as much expertise as a professional amateur could have here. Geogre 01:47, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from Robth[edit]

  1. I've gotten the impression, and I believe you have stated, that you are more of a "big narrative" person than a grind-through-the-diffs-to-get-the-picky-details-exactly-right person. Given that getting the picky details just right is an important part of examining a case, are you confident that you have a skillset well suited for arbcom (or would you disagree that the previous statement is a given)? To put it another way: your candidacy is clearly based in large part on your philosophical views regarding how arbcom should act and what it should be; can you explain why you would be a good person to have doing the day-to-day work? --RobthTalk 06:25, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    1. I have been a big narrative person because I have had that luxury. It is absolutely not the right way for a member of ArbCom to be, and therefore I have passed up several elections. I would not stand now if I were not prepared to be as much of a diff-digger as possible and as much of a particular narrative as possible.
    2. I think the impression that I am here for philosophical reasons is derived from these questions, which can only be answered in sweeping panoramas. If I were to answer too specifically, I would risk either drumming up dissent with an ongoing or past decision, and if I were to speak of persons here or there who have been too well or poorly treated, I would be introducing personalities. However, arbitration isn't for correcting people, and blaming isn't a part of its function, either: it is about resolving (not punishing) disputes.
    3. The arbitrators themselves are not diff-diggers. Diffs come from the /Evidence and /Workshop pages, and arbitrators do not need to, and I think should not, be advocates or prosecutors. I hope no one has ever gotten the impression that I don't read diffs offered in evidence! If an emergency behavior is present where the presented case is such a shambles that the real issue isn't presented, then the answer is simple: recuse and become a party and present information.
    4. In my own mind, standing means committing to becoming much more of an investigator and particularist than I have been in the past, and I would not stand if I were not prepared to do so. Geogre 10:22, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from Samir[edit]

  1. Why should administrators take an active role in editing articles? -- Samir धर्म 06:30, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    1. Everyone should take an active role in editing articles, as we are here because this is the encyclopedia that "anyone can edit," so "edit" should be part of what draws us.
    2. I assume you're posing a form of the editor/manager debate? If one's skills and interests are in editing, then one should edit, and if one's skills and interests are in hackers and protection, then one should vandal hunt. However, I do believe that anyone who does only one thing is in no position to exert influence over the others. If I were only writing and editing, then I would have little stature at AN/I. Each of us should do as much as we can, and none of us should approach Wikipedia as a series of chutes into which we go to show our powers if we are administrators. To be in a position of trust by the community, we should be in the community, and not merely police or architects.
    3. The ultimate encyclopedia is inside the covers. Writing and adding drew most of us, and abandoning that because of a perception that there is such a need to stop the ceiling cat vandal or to make a -bot to stop the ceiling cat vandal is to voluntarily withdraw from the largest part of the project. Needs must be met, but need cannot be the whole of an argument.
    4. Every bit of the project you have nothing to do with is a bit of the project you lose expertise on, and therefore you lose effectiveness as an arbiter or advocate. Geogre 10:31, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question(s) from maclean[edit]

Do you have dispute resolution experience in any of the following areas: Wikipedia:Mediation Committee, Wikipedia:Mediation Cabal, Wikipedia:Third opinion, Wikipedia:Requests for comment, or Wikipedia:Association of Members' Advocates? If not successful with the Arbitration Committee, will you seek a position with the Mediation Committee? ·maclean 00:50, 10 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No. I have worked with people to try to defuse situations, of course, but I have been very active throughout Wikipedia without being active there. My interest is in the interpretation of policy violations, and I'm not sure that I would be the best person to work in detail with upset editors. The tasks of ArbCom are different from those of mediation. I applaud and stand in awe of all who have the patience and skills necessary to mediate, and I could wish that all of those who volunteer possessed them in equal measure, but I would not be performing to my strengths there. Geogre 02:06, 10 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from John Reid[edit]

Q: 1. Who are you?

A: *In Tristram Shandy, Tristram, asked that, answers, "Pray, Sir, don't confuse me." Each person is a construct of hope, expectation, desire, and mainly memories. I'm Geogre. Geogre 10:07, 10 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Q: 2. Are you 13? Are you 18?

A: *No and no. I'm 44, and now qualifying as "magnum" sized, and Dirty Harry says that the 44 magnum is the most powerful handgun in the world. Geogre 10:07, 10 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Q: 3. Should ArbCom arbitrate policy disputes or any other matter outside user conduct issues? Why or why not?

A: *In my opinion, ArbCom, whether it was intentionally set up this way or not, has become the judicial branch of Wikipedia. At least in my mind, we do well to think that it is limited the way that the courts are limited in the UK, US, Canada, and France: it cannot make law, cannot enforce law, but does interpret existing laws. ArbCom cannot act unless a case is brought, but it has to be acting on the basis of an action. If we are looking at "blocking for cooling off," that's ok. If we are talking about "can the bureauocrats determine administrators against or without consensus," I think so, if there has been an action. As long as ArbCom doesn't get into the business of creating policy, as long as it is confined to user actions, it's ok. However, it is not a council of sages, not a ruling council of any form. Furthermore, unless they are actually sitting at the time, members of ArbCom have to be as free to be wrong and goofy as anyone else, and all need to realize that they are regular users who are arbiters only in the confines of a case. Geogre 10:07, 10 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Hypothetical from John Reid[edit]

Admin D sees the reblock and reads the comment that reveals C's ignorance, reunblocks B, and leaves message on AN, explaining the sneaky revert. C reblocks again, leaves message on User talk:D complaining of 0WW violation. D replies on User talk:C, explains the sneaky revert, and unblocks both parties. Admin E (up to now uninvolved, stay with me here) comes to User talk:B to follow up on unrelated Article Y discussion; sees B complaining mightily but incoherently about being blocked. E reads through talk on X, A, and B and sees a lot of rudeness, blocks both editors for a day.
Editors M, N, P, and Q, friends or partisans of A and B, object loudly on talk to every turn of events; C blocks some of them, D blocks others. Meanwhile, C and D are trading insults on talk and Admin F finally steps in and blocks them for a week. Admin G unblocks everybody. Admin H discusses the situation offwiki with Admins J and K; H posts to AN with the stated intent to block all involved parties for 24 hours for violations of CIVIL and NPA. J and K endorse; H implements the blocks, which expire a day later. The case winds up at ArbCom.
I've already written my answer in detail, encrypted it, and uploaded it to a userpage. I'll give you a week to think about this case before revealing my solutions. 08:44, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
  • That's a hypothetical? Sounds like what goes on here every week!
  • The sad thing is that I think it shows a few things. First, it shows this new mental disability that Wikipedia and the Internet in general has created, and that's the ability to write without the ability to read. If any of those people (past B) had read and understood or been slow about it, the escalation would have stopped.
  • Of course, what's happening on a more practical level is that WP:NPA is being used as a weapon again. B and A were counting on NPA, and all the admins involved were reflexively acting on NPA, and because of that no one is giving anyone a breath of air, no one is shrugging anything off. It's only because of the misconception that "rude speech = block" that anyone can act so much like tattling kindergarteners and only because of that that "he did it first" comes into play at all.
  • Additionally, though, people are acting as if the default status is "blocked." The default status for all of us is unblocked. If there is doubt, go back to the default. If time has passed, go back to the default. Blocks are for repeated actions and not for landmines. If these people are really unfit for a cooperative editing environment, then they're going to do it again, and they're going to create a trail of frustrated people, and that's when we have to act. If there is a single bad exchange, then people need to go on or step away for a couple of days. Insults can turn funny, if you give them time.
  • The other thing is that mediation was the answer from the start. The first administrator to get involved should have warned and invited the parties to work out their differences. This is about a cooperative editing environment, and cooperation is multivocal. If the admin who did the block couldn't stand to listen to the complaints and find a middle ground, then he or she needed to refer them to the projects that volunteer to do that.
  • As for whose fault all of it is, it is irrelevant. We are not interested in punishing the guilty. We are interested in maintaining a working environment. Geogre 12:53, 19 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from Ragesoss[edit]

In the Wikipedia context, what is the difference (if any) between NPOV and SPOV (scientific point of view)?

Questions from Badbilltucker[edit]

Thank you for volunteering to take on this task, and for putting yourself through having to answer these questions. For what it's worth, these particular questions are going to all the candidates.

1. I've noticed that a total of thriteen people have resigned from the committee, and that there is currently one vacancy open in one of the tranches. Having members of the committee resign sometime during their term could create problems somewhere down the road. What do you think are the odds that you yourself might consider resigning during the course of your term, and what if any circumstances can you envision that might cause you to resign? Also, do you think that possibly negative feelings from others arising as a result of a decision you made could ever be likely to be cause for your own resignation?

  1. It's not the easiest general question to answer, because the previous resignations have little in common. It may appear that hard feelings were the cause, but that, I know, is not the case. If I felt that I would resign, I would not run. As I've said, this is at least the third election that has come and gone since I have been an administrator, and I have remained all of this time doing pretty much as I have been doing. Some of the people who have resigned have felt implicated in the cases they view, and some have been so passionate about their views that they have done things against policy, while most have just gotten burned out. I have had my own cases of being rude with people and having people be rude to me, but I would like to say that I have never made a campaign nor been campaigned against. So far, at least, I have also never misused the buttons to express myself on an issue. I feel very strongly, for example, that simple predicate nominatives are not articles, and therefore any article that says, "South Beaverton School is a school in South Beaverton" is not an article. When something like that goes through AfD and wins, despite being, in my view, a clear policy violation, I abide by the community. Therefore, I don't expect that I'll fall to one of the first two reasons. The most common reason, though, burnout, is also something I've considered. I've gotten burned out by various things, but what I've realized is that there is a period of romance with a task, a period of frustration, and then burnout, but that's not the end of things. After burnout comes reapproachment, reappraisal, and recommitment, so I think I would not resign over fatigue. I would, instead, take some time, take a few breaths, go inactive for a time, and then come back. Geogre 19:10, 11 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

2. There may well arise cases where a dispute based on the inclusion of information whose accuracy is currently a point of seemingly reasonable controversy, possibly even bitter controversy, in that field of study. Should you encounter a case dealing with such information, and few if any of your colleagues on the committee were knowledgeable enough in the field for them to be people whose judgement in this matter could be completely relied upon, how do you think you would handle it?

  1. That's one of the most critical issues we face, and we face it many times and places. ArbCom is not a content board, and so it does not answer questions about whether X is correct. Instead, we have to look at the methods of discussion and decision at an article. We cannot say, "Bob is correct and wins the prize, but Jane is wrong and must let Bob have his way." Instead, we say, "Bob may be right or wrong, but he was trying to monopolize the article and calling names and preventing all attempts at negotiation and mollification." However, in general, we have to remain amateur and risk being non-definitive. Again, in general, experts demonstrate expertise rather than assert it. Also, we have to realize that there is no right version. If Bob silences Jane, then that's only temporary, because some day Jimmy will show up and mess everything up again. We all write upon water, and we can attempt to make things accurate and verifiable. However, I have recently watched my pretty boring work at Eliza Haywood get a feminist overlay. I have all sorts of arguments against that stuff. I have so many smirks and sneers to throw at that approach that you wouldn't believe it. It is, however, valid, even if I think it is wrong, and it is cited, even if I think the citations are to some very weak critics, so I say not a word. It is not my article, and the changes do not make it incorrect. Of all the people using Wikipedia, perhaps no more than four or five could have the interest and background to weigh the various arguments, so I see no reason to try to play battling experts. Geogre 19:10, 11 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Question from Giano[edit]

What is your view on the IRC Admin Channel. What subjects do you, and would you if elected, see fit to discuss on the IRC Admin channel? Why would you not discuss the same subjects On-Wiki. Giano 18:47, 12 November 2006 (UTC

Question from Certified.Gangsta[edit]

A current arbitrator, recently wanted you to be desysop in the Giano arbCom case, is there going to be any problem working with this user if you're elected?--Certified.Gangsta 05:26, 14 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I answered that above, so I'll spare too much detail here, but no. ArbCom members currently debate, propose, and write, but they don't have to be chatting each other up. I purposely did not join proceedings against that person for other things, and, while I was not pleasant in talking to him, it is simply not something that really can be a problem. As an arbitrator, one doesn't have a way to "get" another arbcom member, unless you yourself violate WP:POINT, and that's something I have not done in the past and won't do in the future. Geogre 11:29, 14 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question(s) from Dakota[edit]

If elected to the Arbitration Committee will you continue active editing? Will you not lose interest in contributing to articles. Will you be available to any users who seek your help or advice.

--Dakota 05:54, 14 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from JzG[edit]

Open-mindedness and the ability to revise one's own position in response to new evidence seems to me to be an important factor in considering ArbCom cases. Can you please provide an example of a situation where your initial judgement of a situation turned out to be wrong, and show how you dealt with it? Guy (Help!) 14:03, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from Sjakkalle[edit]

Glad to see you running, and I am looking forward to placing myself in your "support" column.

  1. I have often seen you argue against blocks made where the sole reason was "personal attacks". Why do you think such blocks are a bad idea, and are there cases where you think a block for such cause is appropriate?
    Ok, I'll try to answer all this stuff, one piece at a time, but I want to apologize to everyone in advance that I may go long. My biggest problem with NPA that we are creatures of words, here, and when we target the words instead of the intention or consequences, we are really attacking each other in the most whole-bodied approach we can.
    We never should block for NPA because we never mean "personal attacks" as the reasons. Instead, we mean "disrupting the editing atmosphere of Wikipedia." We should block for disruption but not for "personal attacks." If a person is calling names and being nasty, then it's nothing to anyone, unless that prevents people from making progress on the articles. If that happens, then the infraction is disruption, not "personal attacks."
    The reason this is a distinction with difference is that the moment we say that "personal attacks" are blocking offenses, we beg the question of who decides when it is an attack as well as who decides that it's personal and when is it bad enough for a block? This is the very same question brought up with "politically correct" speech. We have to ask whether the listener determines offense, the speaker's intent determines offense, or the audience in general (the community) does. If I say, "You are a loathesome coprophage," is that better or worse than saying, "Oh, fuck off?" The first might be a really personal judgment designed to really harm, and the second may even be a joke. The words themselves cannot carry bans, as the intent and the effect are important. When some user or other called me all sorts of names on an AfD debate, I just shrugged. The words were a personal attack, but I was not endangered or concerned. On the other hand, when user:Ideogram said that I suggested that Kelly Martin be banned, I was extremely angry and offended. I had spent hours, cumulatively, trying to make a reasoned and calm case. So I can be offended, irritated, and enraged, just like everyone not trying to pass a Turing Test, but how could I have presented my unconcern with one and concern with the other? It seems to me that we can never let the recipient determine when something is a personal attack (as we've seen dozens of people call being proven incorrect "personal attacks"). We similarly cannot leave it to the speaker, as no one will admit to intending to hurt someone else's feelings. We could rely on the community, I suppose, if we had confidence that the community would act according to concrete criteria, but that would be a tremendous bother and a way to multiply dissent rather than decrease it.
    It's much simpler if we concentrate on whether a person's comments were intended to disrupt the project rather than whether they made Miss Manners cry. Geogre 20:18, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  2. Same question as above, but this time for blocks where the cause is "egregious incivility" or simply "incivility".
    I have almost the same answer: It is not ever for incivility that one can be blocked, but for stopping progress on articles and poisoning the atmosphere. I.e. we block for disruption, which is much more concrete and much less dependent upon the emotions of one user vs. another. Geogre 20:18, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  3. Arbcom often levies sanctions due to personal attacks, incivility or failure to assume good faith. Do you think the ArbCom's present course here is appropriate, and if not, what direction do you think it ought to take?
    I can't imagine authoring any such thing. At the same time, telling someone to cool it with the rhetoric is absolutely fine. I think something like a "two month personal attack probation" is both unworkable and wrongheaded, as it implies that, after those two months, the person can go back to calling other people Zionist pigs or Fascist butchers. In other words, I agree with establishing that a user has a history of such ill temper as to be unfit for a collaborative writing project, but not for blocking someone for this or that insult. The issue, seen clearly in the case of user:Prof02 recently, is that some people just aren't right for a cooperative editing environment. They may write well, might have good things to say, but they just can't work with others. We need to assess that, and it's entirely fair game to be giving injunctions on that basis. Geogre 20:18, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  4. The term "wheel-warring" is a bit contentious, with some viewing a single reversal of an admin action as starting a wheel war, while some others argue that repetition is the key. See for instance Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Tony Sidaway/Proposed decision. Under what circumstances, if any, do you think an administrator is justified in reversing another admin's action without discussion? (Excepting some policy sanctioned reversals such as undeleting a WP:PRODded article.)
    Your critical phrase is "without discussion." If there is already a consensus from a community that a particular person is too close to a subject or is going against policy, then reversing (pending resolution by another means only) makes sense, but I don't agree with anyone reversing another without discussion. The discussion should always, always take place, and reversing someone is only a stop-gap until a resolution is obtained by RfC or RFAR or mediation. This can get complicated when we're dealing with "wrong version" reverts and the like, but we should be striving to leave things with a status quo that conforms to policy.
    I have a confession here, as I did get into a wheel war once. Tony Sidaway and I went round and round with Warren Benbow. It had been deleted by AfD, and Tony said that it never should have been deleted and so undeleted it. I told him that he had to use what was WP:DRV, and he said that administrators don't need things like that. Administrators, he maintained, could undelete anything that "shouldn't" have been deleted. He rewrote the article, and the finished version was very nice, but he had been warring with me, essentially, over preserving the single edit by an IP editor that had been empty. I couldn't understand why it was worth going to war to honor an IP editor who couldn't manage an entire sentence, when what Tony was going to do was, effectively, write an article from scratch. That kind of thing was worth pursuing for me solely because I did not feel that administrators have the right in any way to ignore the processes that everyone else has to use. Geogre 20:18, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  5. You said higher up that you have issues with WP:IAR. Is your issue with the policy itself, or simply with how it is being interpreted by some people? Would a clarification of what IAR does not mean make the policy more tolerable?
    The real problem is with Wikipedia users who use the names of articles rather than the words of them. I don't know how we're going to correct that. We'd need to rename the policy, and it would be fine. Call it Wikipedia:Respond appropriately, and it'll be fine. This is also something (maybe I'm the only one who gets this) bugging me about Discuss, don't vote. What it says is what I've said, and I agree with it, but what's going to happen (what is already happening) is that people are going to shout "don't vote! don't vote! it's up to the administrator's judgment alone!" That's not what it says, and it's not what it means, but the title will be shot like an elephant gun. Names are important as long as Wikipedians are partly lazy about reading policy. Geogre 20:18, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  6. It is often said that "Wikipedia is not a democracy", yet Wikipedia has a number of quasi-democratic processes such as RFA, AFD and DRV, where people highlight what they think should be done ("keep", "support", "oppose") Do you believe the "vote count" in such processes ought to have a big, if not absolute, say in determining the outcome of such processes?
    You know, it used to be that we did vote. We used to actually have straw polls, and we did used to count majorities. The simplest version of my feeling is that any government without the consent of the governed is the shadow of tyranny. How do we know consent? Well, we either go with preponderance or super majority or majority, but we should never be telling the people of Wikipedia that they are servants or lessers. At the same time, as in constitutional democracies, we have core principles and policies that cannot be easily changed. Any time there is no harm in majority, it ought to be majority, as long as it is within the confines of our policy. Geogre 20:18, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  7. Related to the above, do you think the entire concept of "ArbCom election" runs counter to "Wikipedia is not a democracy"?

Sjakkalle (Check!) 15:34, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  1. Indeed, I think that the ArbCom elections are vital, and I would rather they be pure elections with no selection. Why? Well, arbitrators, like administrators, are trusted by the community as persons who know the policies and how to apply them. You can never tell people who they trust. Only the community can tell the community who it trusts, and you can never tell them that a personal friend is their favorite. I think Wikipedia is a democracy, partly, just as all constitutional democracies are. Geogre 20:18, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from Torinir[edit]

I'm asking these questions all applicants:

1) How would you handle a situation where an error of judgment has occured, especially if evidence is provided to confirm that the position is incorrect?

2) If a decision of yours, while technically a correct one, would knowingly be unpopular en masse, how would you present your decision?

3) Place each of these policies/guidelines listed in order of precedence (to you) starting with highest priority. There is really no right or wrong answer. I'm interested in seeing what you would normally look at first when assessing an article.

WP:V WP:BLP WP:NOT WP:NPOV WP:NOR WP:C WP:RS WP:N

Hmmm, I may have to reject some of the premises, but here goes.

  1. I'm not sure whether you mean that the disputants have simply misjudged a situation or where I had or where ArbCom had in its agreed upon solution. I fully expect mistakes: we are not Adamic man and are all heir to mistakes. The question is less whether a mistake has been made than how people react to their mistakes. If they take it in stride or try to clarify what had prompted the mistake and concentrate upon what can be fixed, then that's great behavior. If they feel cornered and begin lashing out, that's not appropriate for Wikipedia. I make mistakes quite often. I spend time at the Humanities reference desk from time to time, and I make all sorts of small mistakes. Above, I had "malleus malefactorum." When someone corrected me, I joked and said men are a lot more wicked than women (i.e. I had gone with a butchered Latin masculine noun instead of the proper feminine of "malifacarum"). If it's ArbCom, that's slightly different. If a decision is made, agreed upon by several of the arbitrators, and that is mistake, then the fault, such as one may exist, lies with the parties who didn't explain themselves or present apt information in their evidence. If several vote to accept a solution, then it's not just one person's mistake. (If a single student writes a paper on the wrong topic, it's her fault. If half the class does, it's the teacher's fault.)
  2. Discuss, discuss, discuss. It's true that correct decisions can be unpopular, but that's why we need articulate folks on ArbCom who will communicate clearly with the community. It's possible to make it quite clear that the decision isn't going to be reversed, to explain why it must take place, and yet explain how it is better for all (which it would have to be to be correct). At the same time, if it is very unpopular, that means that there is a large group that would be desirous of changing the policies or guidelines, and I would encourage folks to go through the steps necessary for doing so. Sometimes we just have to lump it, like I have to do with high school articles, but it's never a win for one side or another.
  3. I'm afraid that I can't answer your third question, because I don't really look with a checklist filter. I'm not trying to evade, but I really don't think in those terms. If I'm looking to keep/delete, then the first thing I want is for the article to provide significance to its subject. Next, I want the article to provide a context for the subject (as encyclopedias add contexts for terms, while dictionaries limit contexts). These two things are primary jobs of the author. If there are irrelevant biographical details in a generally ok structure, we can edit them. If there are scandalous, salacious, and libellous statements, then those negate the entire article because of the legal exposure of Wikipedia and the unnecessary harm. The sourcing of the article can always be improved, if the article can be verified, but it has to be verifiable so that we can help, so that we can improve the article. As I said above, we are a never-ending quest to improve, and any article on something that cannot be verified cannot be improved and therefore should not be on Wikipedia. All of the "NOT" things should be obvious and logical derivatives from "encyclopedia," but those come into play on AfD rather than on a first read of an article. Most of the NOT parts have to be defined because they represent the seven deadly sins of cooperative editing: the temptations that all public websites suffer -- to get too granular, to get too fannish, to get too nationalistic/chauvanistic, and to be taken over by commerce and/or narrow interest groups. Geogre 10:32, 17 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from Sugaar[edit]

How would you deal with abuse of authority by administrators, meaning by this application of blocks as punitive measures and use of blocks in unclear PA cases, as per WP:BLOCK. Would you protect the sysop no matter what or would you defend policy above all? In other words, what do you consider more important: strict discipline or strict application of policy? Thanks.

Well they do happen - that's why I asked. My case is currently in ANI (section "Unjust block") but, despite the obviousness of it no admin is intervening, just saying: "drop it". I just had one warn, had ammended my behaviour, the article dispute was extremely hot and the alleged PAs are more than dubious (mere irony). Besides, I have a very clean historial of 2 years. Thanks for your reply anyhow. --Sugaar 20:12, 21 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, if the block can be appealed, at least the log of the block could be deleted and maybe the sysop scolded (personally I requested her recusal in future cases regarding my person or the disputed article, to which her intervention has done much damage). A block is a very negative mark in one's reputation, according to the policy it can only be used in extreme cases. If I get in another trouble in the future, for whatever reason, admins will know I have been already "convicted", no matter that "conviction" was done without any guarantees, and they will act in consequence. I want to clean my historial and someone must be able to do it.
I am not worried about the block itself but about the negative impact in my reputation (plus side effects in displacing editors out of a disputed article). If a single previous warning was enough to justify this block, a single previous block may be sufficient to justify a ban, who knows? (Maybe you prefer to reply in my talk page, as this is not directly related to elections. Tahnks for your comments anyhow. --Sugaar 22:11, 21 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from User:Balla Laika[edit]

Wikipedia Board members as well as stewards are now required to make their real names known. Additionally, almost all current ArbComm members either use their real name as their userid or have allowed their real names to become known which adds to the transparency and accountability of the ArbComm. Are you willing to reveal your real name? Balla Laika 23:26, 22 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from Anomo[edit]

1. Do you think there should be an age requirement for ArbCom? Anomo 12:01, 27 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

2. I have read on several websites (they even gave links to block logs) of Wikipedia admins who do things like indefinitely blocking accounts who have not edited for months, there was no CheckUser anything, no reports, and the admin didn't give any reason, just put personal attacks as the block reason (e.g. saying "troll"). Basically such cases seem done beyond punative, but just out of bullying. I saw at least ten of these, but so far I can only find one here [1]. I don't feel like digging for hours, as I just want to ask your opinion of whether you support or oppose such admin activity because it's clear most support it. Anomo 12:01, 27 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

3. What is your view on the current policy often called "kicking them while they're down" of deleting the user and talk pages of people who are blocked? Anomo 12:01, 27 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

4. What is your view on the practice on Wikipedia where a person blanks out text on talk pages because the text mentioned something wrong the person did or defeated them in an argument? The text blanked usually has no reason given. When there is a reason given, it's only a fake reason. In rare cases, the text is not blanked, but the entire talk page is archived including discussions hours old, blanking it out. Anomo 12:01, 27 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

5. What is your view on the frequent practice of locking the talk page of someone who is banned to avoid communication with them? Anomo 12:01, 27 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

6. Why do you feel in the past when in a conflict between ArbCom and administrators that ArbCom has always sided with the admins? Anomo 12:01, 27 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Yeah it was a typo. It should have been "Why do you feel in the past when in a conflict in ArbCom between non-admins and administrators that ArbCom has always sided with the admins?". Anomo 12:58, 27 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from Dfrg.msc[edit]

In one sentence, what will you bring to the Arbitration Committee? Dfrg.msc 1 . 2 . Editor Review 23:20, 1 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Voting in the elections[edit]

Hello, the ArbCom elections are coming up very soon and I was wondering if you would give your public assurance not to vote or comment on other candidates. I think this will help keep friction to a minimum. Imagine how ugly it would be if two people who vehemently publicly attacked and opposed each other both ended up sitting on the ArbCom together. I think, in the best interests of decorum, these kind of conflict of interest issues should be avoided. Do you agree? --Cyde Weys 20:21, 2 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You answered my question. Thanks. --Cyde Weys 22:50, 2 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

(Removed a fallacy of many questions that was about my feelings toward a single user instead of my interpretation of policy or temperament as an arbitrator. Geogre 12:13, 7 December 2006 (UTC) )[reply]

Question from TheronJ[edit]

1. You mention recusal a few times above. Based on your background, any prior conflicts, etc., are there any areas or topics where you anticipate receiving requests for recusal or would consider self-recusal? If so, what are those areas and how would you resolve the issue of recusal in those areas? Thanks, TheronJ 19:41, 3 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions from NinaEliza 18:26, 6 December 2006 (UTC)[edit]

ArbCom Candidate Questions[edit]

1. As concisely as possible, please explain how you would continue with your stated commitment to the ArbCom process as an ordinary editor, should you NOT be "elected". Please be as concise as possible, preferably in 100 words or less.

My reasons for this question are three-fold.
First, Wikipedia is the encyclopedia that anyone can edit. It's a powerful statement that has many meanings. It means that, among other things, any user has the power to do pretty much anything, should they wish it. I submit my own user contributions as evidence.
Second, one thing that's a constant is Wikipedia's GNU License. As an online-encyclopedia, the history of everything, every edit, every comment, every misdeed, every injury, and every achievement are readily available to anyone who wish to look at it. All they need is a computer, frankly, and they can dig away.
The third is merely a perception. Power is great, but when the entire history of your actions are utterly transparent, and anyone can do virtually anything on their first day here, it's really just a big illusion. I further submit that the more "power" you think you have, the more you have to "lose". You also have to more "work" and have less "fun".

2. What do you think about this "election"? What do you think about your fellow "candidates"? What do you think about "campaign banners" on an online, open-source encyclopedia? What do you think about your own "campaign"? Please answer as concisely as possible, preferably in 100 words or less. For reference, please see this: [WP:Wikipedia is not a Democracy]]?

3. What, specifically have you done wrong in the past as an editor, community member, administrator, and human being trying to create a world-wide online open source encyclopedia on Wikipedia? For reference, see my own user contributions. Please be as concise as possible, preferably in 100 words or less.

4. Do you apologize for your actions, and who are you apologising to, specifically? Please be as concise as possible, preferably in 100 words or less.

5. Hypothetically, how would you deal with an explosion of editors and users behaving very badly because Wikipedia has just aquired a bigger "stick". For reference please see Soft Power.

6. What, exactly do you want do on Wikipedia? Why did you come here, and why did you stay for more than a minute? What's fun for you here? What makes you happy here? Please be as concise as possible, preferably in 100 words or less.

Questions from LoveLight[edit]

Would you kindly evaluate and/or comment article 911. As a reader do you find that piece factual and accurate? As an editor do you find it satisfying (with regards to our fundamental Wiki policies and guidelines)? As future arbitrator how do you feel about status quo imposed on that and similar "ever burning" editorials? Lovelight 10:40, 7 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Question from Zoe[edit]

What is your feeling concerning the potential vote to desysop User:MONGO? User:Zoe|(talk) 21:17, 12 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

(rudely butting into Zoe's question, and wrapping mind around the brilliantly taken opportunity to plug Brecht): What's your reading of this finding of fact: Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Seabhcan/Proposed decision#MONGO misuses his admin tools. Do you think that it's enough that there's appropriate evidence on the /Evidence page, or should findings of fact include explicit evidence of what is being found? Zocky | picture popups 17:48, 13 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]