The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the miscellany page below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the page's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.

The result of the debate was , in brief, to close the noticeboard.

The ensuing discussion is strongly leaning against the status quo, and most of the differences between the keep and delete voters have to do with what to do with the page itself after other changes have been made. From the binary keep/delete perspective, this debate is a "keep," as Sjakkalle's point for not deleting the page is the most convincing, and was not successfully contested by anyone. In other words, the page itself and its archives cannot be deleted per se because that would cause problems when referencing existing discussions.

On the other hand, the debate was not purely a keep/delete discussion, but it also had a dimension about what other changes must be done to the page and its concept. The strongest consensus in this portion of the discussion (albeit not unanimous), and the one I'm closing with, is merge role back into Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents. That also means, as a result, that I'll tag CSN as ((historical)), which was implicitly expressed in many "merge" opinions. However, I strongly recommend finding a technical way to maintain CSN's original purpose of documenting bans created by the community in a place separate from AN/I's overwhelming archives. MessedRocker's idea has merit, as well as Jpgordon's, so they should remain under discussion, albeit in a different place. Any implementation of those ideas would not be covered under CSD G4, under my interpretation of the debate, and would actually be very encouraged. (By the way, someone asked what would happen with WP:CEM if the noticeboard is removed; the answer to that is not a thing. CSN's role in that proposed process can be replaced by another page's without incident.)

So, for those who don't want to read the essay I wrote above, here's the CliffsNotes version of my closure: keep, but merge role and functionality back into AN/I, at least temporarily, tag as historical, and maintain the current archives. Titoxd(?!? - cool stuff) 03:04, 11 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

NB. WP:BAN now reads: "If a user has proven to be repeatedly disruptive in a certain area of Wikipedia, the community may engage in a discussion at a relevant noticeboard such as the administrators' noticeboard" Thus WP:AN should be the venue for discussions, not WP:ANI. Carcharoth (talk) 11:05, 21 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Wikipedia:Community sanction noticeboard[edit]

Nomination[edit]

Wikipedia:Community sanction noticeboard (edit | talk | history | links | watch | logs)

The community sanction noticeboard (CSN) was split off from Wikipedia:administrators' noticeboard/Incidents (ANI) in February of this year in response to the imaginary problem of lack of a centralized discussion page for community-related issues. It seemed like a good idea at the time, though, and I was one of the initial supporters of the page. As the page focused in on behavioral sanctions, it was moved to the current name.

Since that point it has, well, deteriorated: some CSN bans are discussed for less than a day; many are assented to with simple "support" votes (no wonder "votes for banning" is a common nickname); discussions have less than a half dozen participants (how this could possibly be construed as consensus for something as major as revoking a user's editing privileges, indefinitely, escapes me); discussions to ban are started by people who are in editwarring with the person they propose the banning of, and this isn't even noted (ANI reports get a lot more research going into them, especially regarding the involvement of the user making the complaint).

This page was first nominated for deletion for much the same reasons in May, and we ended up with a no-consensus close. The closer, Phaedriel, recognized that the page had issues (as did all those in favor of deletion and many of those in favor of keeping), and suggested reform to address these. It was a completely reasonable suggestion, and some reform was attempted, as can be seen in the archives; similar to the Esperanza issue, however, reform-minded discussion largely tapered off, and I don't think there have been any changes. The following issues are present, and are my basis for nominating this for deletion again:

I foresee the following arguments in favor of keep:

I do not propose reform; reform was tried and failed. I propose deletion, as the failings of this board are incapable of being rectified. CSN's positive functions can be easily reabsorbed by AN/I, where productive, extended discussion happens frequently, while the voting mentality and speedbanning can be dropped. Resuming these discussions at AN/I will also provide much wider oversight, to ensure discussions remain discussions and to ensure a small group of users do not disproportionately influence the outcome. Thank you for reading through all of that. Picaroon (t) 03:28, 6 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

As a matter of clarification, I do not think the people who regularly partake in ban discussions are at fault any more than any other subsection of Wikipedia would be, and I attribute no ill intentions whatsoever to them. I have a tremendous amount of respect for the work Durova and others put into our dispute resolution system, but simply do not think this is a successful part of the system. Picaroon (t) 04:22, 6 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Discussion[edit]

Section break 1[edit]

Even though this may be done in good faith, and may work well usually, I distrust the risk of creating a clique. I think a guarantee of wider viewing and less self-selection in the discussions individuals will be presented with on visiting the page, is probably a Good Thing. This way every discussion -- ban, block, sanction, dispute -- that ends up for admin/experienced editor discussion, is at least presented for viewing by a broad representation of the community rather than some minor subgroup. For some issues thats not important. For potential bans, I think it may be. FT2 (Talk | email) 21:04, 6 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Arbcom isn't "nothing but voting". There is discussion between arbcom members which you don't see, before anything is publicly written, and routinely, a number of proposals are written (and often new ones added) until a proposal that eventually meets as wide a consensus as can be obtained is met. The difference between consensus and voting is, a proposal will be discarded if unpopular amongst arb' members, and also the minority on a proposal (if any) are willing as a rule to concur with a good decision, rather than stand as "winners" and "losers" in some "vote". All views are heard and a decision reached that usually, all can live with. As a result of these plus collaborative approaches, an unusually large proportion of arb' proposed statements are in fact unanimous. FT2 (Talk | email) 21:46, 6 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Okay, you have a point. But that process clearly won't work for the community as a whole. So do we have a better idea, or are we just going to remove voting and hope it doesn't become WP:Decisions to ban because the only admin who sees it doesn't like you? -Amarkov moo! 22:11, 6 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Section break 2[edit]

What part was too long, and did you not read? Mercury 18:44, 7 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I very much support the idea of having a discussion about where to go in the future with the community ban process. It's pretty obvious from both MfD discussions that the current WP:CSN system needs an overhaul. That said, I think the WP:ANI based proposals advanced here are not really workable. Having MessedRocker's/Alkivar's proposal page will allow some discussion of what should be done in the future, which is really outside of the scope of an MfD. I've added "tag historical" to my original !vote as in my mind, tagging WP:CSN historical would be workable too while the proposal is discussed.--Isotope23 talk 17:28, 8 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  1. Rename it to Wikipedia:Community issues noticeboard - not the same thing as Wikipedia:Village pump - with the emphasis on community issues, not sanctions.
  2. If banning is to be discussed, people should not use votes, but rather rational discussion.
  3. WP:ANI is doing a good job so far, no complaints there.

These are just my ideas, you may not agree with them all but they could be implemented if there is consensus. --Solumeiras talk 21:50, 8 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

(ec) *Keep and/or jpgordon's idea - or maybe both. I do think B has a point though. CSN became a ban endorsing board because the rules governing it (ie WP:BAN) and (WP:DE) are not 'tight' enough. I think we should keep the CSN history but transform it into a transcluded noticebaord like jpgordan suggests - however I think we should have a serious look at restructing the way cases are brought and how the board is used - somthing along the RFC/U format for discussion would be a help, but for me the biggest issue (visibility) could be easily resolved by making it mandatory that an admin support a case's referal to CSN - when/if that happens then the admin should make a short post to WP:ANI. There is a precident for this where Arbcom makes a short post indicating the closure of cases to CSN--Cailil talk 15:27, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Section break 3[edit]

I disagree that the culture of AN/I isn't geared towards banning people. That is where people go to request banning/blocking of thier enemies, and there are ordinarily a number of sections that are "I've indef blocked this awful user, please tell me I was right." If the problems of CSN cannot be fixed ever (according to the Nom), then we need to get over this idea that the community runs the show, and get back to the "truth" that the admin "cabal" does. --Rocksanddirt 18:33, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The culture of AN/I is geared towards many things, but if I had to pick one word it wouldn't be "banning" (it'd probably be "drama"). AN/I is where people go to get action to occur, and for the most part I think it's for the betterment of keeping the project running. What concerns me more are places like Requests for Adminship or Articles for Deletion. Places like that develop very insular cultures, and there are many folks in both spots who focus on very little else in the encyclopedia. The utility of this has been hotly debated even in those areas, I shudder to think of such a culture forming around CSN (and I fear it's every so slowly beginning). You throw around words like "truth" and "cabal" in quotes like they're some dark secret...but the word you're mistaken on is "admin". It's not admins who run the show, or any technical classification like admin, bureaucrat, or steward. It's the people that know, know how "these things work" that run things. RFA is full of them, AFD, is too...let's not let CSN do the same. --InkSplotch 21:45, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the page's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.