Wikipedia:Non-sysop closures
This is an non-admin closures. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been thoroughly vetted by the community . Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
On Wikipedia, editors who have the
sysop
user group into a social position, and editors will often ask sysops to perform actions which require their social capital rather than their technical tools. The conflation of the technical group sysop
and the social group "administrator" can be confusing since the social role of administrators can be performed by anyone the community trusts. One area where this difference has been contentious is non-sysop closures.
Discussions on Wikipedia are closed when an editor discourages further comments and summarizes the discussion, often using a template like {{
The weakness of closures is that they rely on the ability of the closing editor because the community is trusting that editor to write an adequate close. A problem arises when the community, or a subset, doesn't trust an editor who wrote an otherwise fine close. Because of the lack of trust, one side will likely challenge the close leading to extensive discussion and ultimately wasted time. Editors have tried a number of methods to resolve this problem, but a routine request is for closure by an administrator. While no tool bundled with sysop
helps with this task, the social role of administrator does help.
Requests for closure by a particular kind of editor ("admin", "experienced editor", etc) are made because social capital is needed to mobilize the editorial community, not because it requires special tools or tenure. Ideally, closures should be uncontentious because everyone already came to a consensus on what to do, but in cases where there is a rough consensus or the community does not agree, one side of the argument may not be willing to abide by the discussion outcome. While nothing stops a newly auto-confirmed account from closing a contentious discussion, editors are more likely to challenge the close regardless of the merits. Challenging closures by more experienced editors becomes more fraught because of how social capital is leveraged. Firstly, experienced editors have more community trust, and so their closures are often given the presumption of validity unlike closures by newbies. This makes it harder to overturn the close since a no-consensus outcome retains their close. Secondly, any discussion involving them is likely to attract editors who know them to the discussion leading to wider and often more sympathetic discussion than a closure by a newbie. Thirdly, experienced editors likely know the proper venues and individuals to contact to seek enforcement of the closure. These all apply to closures by sysops, but often sysops have more extensive community ties and the technical ability to enforce the decision themself. These social mechanisms result in a wikt:cline of stability where editors with more social capital produce more stable closures because others are more willing to trust their judgement.
The
sysop
---a technical permission---as a proxy for social cachet is convenient, it harms the community by reinforcing the idea that sysops, because of their account permissions, have greater social power than other editors.
Improving the system of closures and close challenges requires understanding why sysop closures became the gold standard for a process that doesn't require any of the tools bundled with +sysop
. How has the