more discussion July 2010 WP:BN

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See (archived at) Wikipedia:Bureaucrats'_noticeboard/Archive_20#Inactive_bureaucrats. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 12:20, 26 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Bureaucrat removal revival

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This request follows on from Wikipedia:Bureaucrats' noticeboard#Inactive bureaucrats, and is designed to gauge community support for the idea of removing highly inactive bureaucrats. A proper definition of "highly inactive" is yet to be determined; such a discussion should probably wait till the basic principle is adopted. The intention is rather that we discuss the merits and faults of the idea, as well as potential alternatives. Thanks in advance for your participation. —Anonymous DissidentTalk 09:58, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Addendum: Participants are asked to consider the notion of removing bureaucrats without a great deal of regard for the merits of the content on Wikipedia:Bureaucrat removal – in other words, with a fresh outlook. As a result of these discussions, much of the content on that page might be changed. —Anonymous DissidentTalk 10:01, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Martinp raises an important point here; "old hand" bureaucrats often supply useful institutional memory: even if semi-active/rarely active, they may be able to provide insight into aspects of a situation that newer bureaucrats have overlooked.
I'm of the mind that any proposal like this should come from without, not from within. Any removal of inactive bureaucrats will create a hegemony in the remainder. –xenotalk 13:42, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I find this point relatively unimportant. Wikipedia and its community change quickly, and old practice is old practice for a reason. I for one can't recall a recent situation in which an "old hand" has provided unique insight. —Anonymous DissidentTalk 14:07, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The "institutional memory" is nonsense really - there's nothing really an inactive bureaucrat would be able to do that an active one couldn't. This is why we appoint new ones, under ridiculous scrutiny. I think they are plenty capable, but the old ones, who for one reason or another never use their tools, or use them badly, I believe are not so much. Bureaucratship is completely overrated for what it is, so I don't see why it should be a big deal for inactives to have it taken from them. If they never use it, they won't miss it. Aiken 14:31, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Yes actually, they have. Can't recall details though, can anyone? I assure you, there very much is a problem, and not just the problem they continue to hold rights they never use. Aiken 15:51, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Don't need a catastrophe to implement a new idea. We also don't need a problem to introduce a new idea. There are what, 30-something bureaucrats? It'll take about a minute to remove inactive ones. That's it. Hardly bureaucracy. Just simplistic housekeeping. Aiken 16:05, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • It's creating bureaucracy to manage a 'problem' that doesn't exist. It isn't just the mere minute it takes. You have to come up with standards for removal. Then you have to come up with a process for removal, including notifications via talk pages, e-mails, etc. Senseless addition of bureaucracy. What problem does it solve? And why on God's green earth create more bureaucracy when there is no problem? Just for the hell of it? --Hammersoft (talk) 16:06, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The problem is the inactivity. You don't find it a problem, I do. I think it's disrespectful to the community to ask for such rights and never use them (or stop using them without good reason). RFB is probably the hardest thing to pass on Wikimedia projects, so it's inappropriate that someone who got the bit in 2004 with 8 votes (all from people who haven't edited in years) and never used it, still has the right to use them, but someone just as capable editing actively today will be turned down for "not been an admin a year, not enough featured articles"-type thing. Aiken 16:13, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Or stop using them without good reason? What? So, bureaucrats will have to come to a review board to determine if they have a good reason to stop using them, or else suffer...what? The rest of your arguments don't suggest bureaucrat removal, they suggest reconfirmation. That's a different beast entirely. For what its worth, I believe Jimbo himself has previously shot down both ideas. --Hammersoft (talk) 16:18, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I'd prefer reconfirmation actually, but seeing as it's unlikely any inactive bureaucrat would pass such a thing, that sounds like a bigger time-waster than simply removing them. Aiken 16:23, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps Aiken is referring to Cimon Avaro coming out of nowhere to close his first RFA in five years. During his closure, he moved a support to the oppose section, which resulted in an edit war and temporary page protection. 67.136.117.132 (talk) 17:06, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Hey, I only said perhaps. That was the first thing that came to mind. There may be more problems, or a bigger problem, that I'm not recalling at the moment but someone else might. 67.136.117.132 (talk) 17:54, 4 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I would point to our list of administrators as an example - We have admins with less then 1000 (Or even 200) edits, and who'se last edits have been years and years ago. Could such a person function as an admin when he or she returns after such a long break? I really doubt it. Besides, a general cleanup every now and then is never a bad idea. We currently list 1741 editors with administrative privileges, but this does in no way equal the amount of active users as only a fraction still edits. My condition is that this "De-rights" process only applies to extremely inactive users, for example, who have not made a single edit in 2-3 years. This can easily be run as a batch job with little user involvement, so bureaucracy would be little. I am aware that people will argue "Nothing bad happened so far, so why 'fix' it"? I would however argue that a security issue is an issue even if not exploited - especially if fixing it would generate negligible negative response. Excirial (Contact me,Contribs) 22:23, 6 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The current bureaucrats should be divided into active and inactive, recorded at Wikipedia:All bureaucrat accounts. This should be a simple page, not to be confused with Wikipedia:Bureaucrats#Current_bureaucrats, edited infrequently and easily watchlisted. The criteria for "active" should be loose and generous, along the lines of "keeps up to date with current practices".
Inactive bureaucrats should not exercise their bureaucrat functions without moving themselves from inactive to active.
After 1-2 years listing as inactive, the bureaucrat bit should probably be removed, if only as a security precaution.
There should be no pressure on bureaucrats discovering real life responsibilities to resign. The wisdom of old experience is only valued when it is needed. Angela's recent resignation is a loss for the project notwithstanding the statistics on her recent rate of exercise of bureaucrat function. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 23:35, 8 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Aw, I hadn't noticed that Angela resigned. I need to pay more attention. That's the trouble of being an IP, I can't have a watchlist. But that's two 'crats to have resigned this year (plus X! temporarily) after have no resignations in three years. 67.136.117.132 (talk) 15:19, 9 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I have compiled a sortable list of all current bureaucrats and their last crat actions performed (i.e. +-bot, +sysop, or user rename):

Name Last crat action Last +-bot Last +sysop Last rename
Andrevan (talk · contribs · rights · renames) March 14, 2010 February 3, 2010 February 17, 2009 March 14, 2010
Anonymous Dissident (talk · contribs · rights · renames) August 8, 2010 March 4, 2010 June 21, 2010 August 8, 2010
Avraham (talk · contribs · rights · renames) August 2, 2010 June 9, 2010 July 13, 2010 August 2, 2010
Bcorr (talk · contribs · rights · renames) March 15, 2009 -- August 18, 2006 March 15, 2009
Bibliomaniac15 (talk · contribs · rights · renames) August 2, 2010 March 3, 2010 July 10, 2010 August 2, 2010
Brion VIBBER (talk · contribs · rights · renames) -- -- -- --
Cecropia (talk · contribs · rights · renames) January 16, 2008 October 7, 2007 January 16, 2008 October 14, 2007
Cimon Avaro (talk · contribs · rights · renames) April 6, 2010 July 3, 2006 April 6, 2010 March 21, 2008
Cprompt (talk · contribs · rights · renames) -- -- -- --
Deskana (talk · contribs · rights · renames) July 9, 2010 April 25, 2010 July 9, 2010 June 26, 2010
Dweller (talk · contribs · rights · renames) July 29, 2010 June 16, 2009 July 29, 2010 July 28, 2010
EVula (talk · contribs · rights · renames) July 16, 2010 May 5, 2010 May 11, 2010 July 16, 2010
Ilyanep (talk · contribs · rights · renames) May 8, 2006 -- May 5, 2006 May 8, 2006
Infrogmation (talk · contribs · rights · renames) March 28, 2009 -- March 14, 2007 March 28, 2009
Jwrosenzweig (talk · contribs · rights · renames) April 16, 2006 -- April 16, 2006 --
Kingturtle (talk · contribs · rights · renames) November 30, 2009 July 9, 2008 June 28, 2009 November 30, 2009
Linuxbeak (talk · contribs · rights · renames) November 3, 2007 June 14, 2006 July 3, 2006 November 3, 2007
MBisanz (talk · contribs · rights · renames) August 9, 2010 June 12, 2010 July 29, 2010 August 9, 2010
Nihonjoe (talk · contribs · rights · renames) August 8, 2010 March 4, 2010 July 26, 2010 August 8, 2010
Pakaran (talk · contribs · rights · renames) February 21, 2010 February 3, 2010 February 12, 2010 February 21, 2010
Raul654 (talk · contribs · rights · renames) July 17, 2009 January 15, 2008 April 2, 2009 July 17, 2009
Rdsmith4 (talk · contribs · rights · renames) January 1, 2010 May 11, 2009 July 11, 2009 January 1, 2010
Redux (talk · contribs · rights · renames) January 9, 2009 July 9, 2007 November 26, 2007 January 9, 2009
Rlevse (talk · contribs · rights · renames) July 29, 2010 January 29, 2009 July 25, 2010 July 29, 2010
Secretlondon (talk · contribs · rights · renames) January 17, 2008 September 25, 2007 November 20, 2007 January 17, 2008
Stan Shebs (talk · contribs · rights · renames) February 20, 2007 -- -- February 20, 2007
TUF-KAT (talk · contribs · rights · renames) March 17, 2004 -- March 17, 2004 --
Taxman (talk · contribs · rights · renames) December 9, 2009 August 8, 2009 September 14, 2009 December 9, 2009
The Rambling Man (talk · contribs · rights · renames) July 16, 2010 May 16, 2008 April 24, 2010 July 16, 2010
Tim Starling (talk · contribs · rights · renames) July 19, 2006 -- -- July 19, 2006
UninvitedCompany (talk · contribs · rights · renames) May 25, 2010 April 30, 2010 May 11, 2010 May 25, 2010
Warofdreams (talk · contribs · rights · renames) June 19, 2010 June 19, 2010 November 1, 2009 December 12, 2007
WJBscribe (talk · contribs · rights · renames) August 9, 2010 August 8, 2010 July 28, 2010 August 9, 2010
X! (talk · contribs · rights · renames) June 21, 2010 June 21, 2010 April 24, 2010 April 7, 2010
Xeno (talk · contribs · rights · renames) August 9, 2010 August 9, 2010 August 9, 2010 August 9, 2010

According to the above table, of the 35 current bureaucrats:

MuZemike 00:46, 10 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Comment: There are Some cases where it may be appropriate. Most often if someone loses their bits, they can ask for them back, and get them back without a question asked (Unless arbcom/jimbo/community says otherwise). I would assume that they could say something like "I don't want my 'crat taken away". Pilif12p :  Yo  01:25, 11 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • The same argument can be used against 'active' bureaucrats. We know who they are, therefore they can be targeted. Whether a bureaucrat is active or not has no effect on whether they can or would be hacked. The more central issue is requiring more secure passwords. --Hammersoft (talk) 23:17, 1 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I would support asking both admins AND 'crats on their talk pages if they intend to become active again or if they would voluntarily give up their bits. I would support a non-response for a full year as meaning they are not interested. -- Cheers, your loving Cecropia (talk) 19:38, 6 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]