Wikipedia:Gravedancing

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Respect the dead.

Some editors are blocked or banned,

retired
, or implicitly by simply discontinuing their editing. These editors may have edited Wikipedia only for a short time and simply engaged in vandalism, or they may have made a significant, valuable contribution to the project.

In certain circumstances there may be bad feeling amongst other editors against the blocked, banned or retired editor, possibly caused by perceived disruptive editing behaviour on their part. At its most extreme, this antipathy manifests itself as

disruptive editing
.

In other circumstances, the perceived disruptive and untrustworthy behaviour of the blocked/banned/retired editor may bring suspicion on their previous contributions to the project. This suspicion may be justifiable, particularly where the editor in question has been involved in

copyright violations
or other undesirable editing behaviour related to content. However, particularly where the editor may have been blocked or banned following disruptive behaviour unrelated to article-space content (e.g., sock-puppeting on RFCs), suspicion about the quality of their work may be no more justified than towards that of any other editor.

The basis of this is the idea that the blocked/banned/retired editor

owns
the content they created, and that this content was invalidated at the same time they were blocked, banned or decided to retire. This is incorrect, since the editor may originally have meant very well, and done good work, before they eventually flamed out.

Examples of gravedancing

Please, don't dance on people's graves.

Examples of gravedancing may include:

  • Insults/accusations/other behavior directed at editors who are now blocked or banned. This is motivated by the idea that the editor in question won't be able to respond to the comment. This is wrong even if the editor in question never sees it because it contributes to a negative environment that is less likely to encourage editors to work together.
  • Behaving as though a consensus is no longer valid simply because a blocked or banned editor contributed to it. Whilst consensus can change, the simple act of blocking does not change it - if you wish to overturn the previous consensus then further input should be sought.
  • Nominating articles for
    deletion
    based solely on a blocked/banned/retired editor being the one who started them or contributed to them.
  • Going through the editor's edits and undoing them without justification in Wikipedia's policies.
  • Adding templates or categories to user pages of editors temporarily blocked (Special:BlockList already provides a way to list all blocked users).

What isn't gravedancing

The following are examples of what may not be gravedancing:

  • Removing policy-violating content from a blocked or banned editor's userpage.
  • Checking the edits of a user who was blocked or banned for, or who was later discovered to have been engaged in, disruptive editing related to content in article space, and undoing/deleting those that fail to meet
    Wikipedia policy
    .
  • Going through the pages created by an editor who was blocked or banned for, or who was later discovered to have been engaged in, disruptive editing related to content in article space and improving their articles to meet Wikipedia standards and policies. Where this is not possible they may still of course be nominated for deletion.
  • Going through and undoing the edits of a user who was determined to have been a ban-evading sockpuppet at the time when the edits were made, per
    WP:BLOCKEVADE
    .
  • Describing factually, solely for the information of other editors, disruptive activities that resulted in a ban/block or preceded retirement under a cloud.

See also