Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2024-12-24/Op-ed
Situations
- The Signpost is committed to publishing a diversity of perspectives, and this article reflects the opinions of its author, whom we invited to republish this 2021).
On-wiki-vs-off-wiki
Wikipedia has policies for a reason. We are trying to do something here, this is explicitly not just a place to hang out chatting and gossiping. A certain amount of decorum and respect is generally appropriate and this is a policy that has strong support from the community, even though enforcement is uneven at best. Policies like
Off-wiki criticism forums do not have these rules, that is their entire point. I'm mainly speaking of Wikipediocracy (WPO) here, as it is the only one of those forums I participate in. Some of the other forums truly are hate or attack sites, as opposed to being mostly focused on genuine criticism. So, a person might say something on WPO that they would never say here, because it would be outside policy to do so. This is not a crime, although in some extreme cases it could and should lead to on-wiki sanctions.
Insults and name-calling
Some folks on these external sites like to come up with nicknames based on a user's on-wiki name. Obviously, this is not allowed here. There is also arguably little to no value in it, especially if endlessly repeated every time the user in question comes up. Sometimes they say things like "<username> is a total idiot who should have their head examined" which, even if true, is unlikely to be seen by the user in question as useful feedback. Part of this trend may be due to the fact that, by and large, the person so targeted is not present in the discussion, but as has become very, very apparent; sometimes they might be
I would say that some of these folks need to grow up, but, in many cases, so do the targets of their comments. If you want to engage someone who is criticizing you, step up and do it in the place where they are doing so. If you don't want to do that, your remaining option is to let it go, not to start attacking them on-wiki.
Outing
Nobody can deny that there is material posted on WPO that, were it posted on Wikipedia, would violate the
WPO does not have any such rule. Most websites don't. It isn't generally considered a horribly invasive act to notice that
Note that this is not the same thing as doxing, which involves posting non-public personal information about someone without their permission.
What happened with me and the Arbitration Committee
The rest of this is about my specific situation; if you don't care about that, you can stop right here.
This is a bit more personal. In November 2023, the
Every arbitrator is granted these by default — along with
But it's the same thing, isn't it?
I don't think so.
Arbitrators are elected by the community to represent them at the highest level of dispute resolution. The community knew who I was, and what to expect, and I ran on a promise of trying to be more transparent when possible. I did what I did when I thought there was good reason to do it, even if it technically violated the level of privacy one normally expects from an email discussion. I wasn't there to toe the line and do what the other arbs wanted, I was there to do what I was elected to do — not once, but three times. There absolutely was not any personal information of any kind in any of the material I disclosed. It's an important distinction, and I would never release the kind of extremely sensitive material one routinely sees when using these tools.
What is important here is not that anyone agrees with my view — they only need to ask if they believe that I genuinely feel the way I say I feel about it.
I've apparently failed repeatedly at making that point to the Committee, possibly because I don't think I've ever put it quite like that. Maybe next year I'll try again. It is important work, and I did it for a very long time.
Discuss this story
strike it out, not to just erase it as if it was never said int he first place [10]. I'm glad you are able to see how overboard it is to paint everyone at WPO as akin to nazis, but this isn't how retracting over-the-top comments is usually done. Transparency is important. El Beeblerino if you're not into the whole brevity thing 02:41, 29 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]