Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement/Archive175
MarkBernstein
[edit]Handpolk topic-banned, I will place the GG-related BLPs under Pending Changes as a normal admin action. Zad68 13:59, 22 June 2015 (UTC)
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below. Request concerning MarkBernstein[edit]
It's important to note that 'gamergate supporter' or anything similar is essentially a slur. It's a personal attack. And since I am not in any way a gamergate supporter, it really offends me to be described that way. It's also a violation of AGF to accuse somebody of editing the article in accordance with views you perceive them to have. And extremely disruptive to do so repeatedly whenever you disagree, in an attempt to win an argument. Along with demonstrating a battleground mentality. All of those are exactly what User:MarkBernstein has been doing to me, despite repeated warnings from me to stop. And they are against the sanctions that put a very short leash on all editors to not be disruptive. At the very least, I would ask him to be topic banned.
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:MarkBernstein&diff=prev&oldid=666700640
Discussion concerning MarkBernstein[edit]Statements must be made in separate sections. They may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs, except by permission of a reviewing administrator. Statement by MarkBernstein[edit]I am meeting with a distinguished colleague Saturday, and will have tasks and topics of greater interest and urgency before me. The complainant's behavior rather speaks for itself, as does the number of distinguished editors at AN/I who supported an indef even before this ill-advised return to AE. His subreddit, where notable Wikipedians have been ordered to "post tits", may also interest readers; it will not be difficult for you to find, I would call your attention to the amount of time and aggravation this editor has cost the project in the immediate wake of steps taken to stem the flood of "new" and zombie Gamergate editors. I said then that more would be needed; that appears to be the case. MarkBernstein (talk) 03:29, 13 June 2015 (UTC) It was perhaps very wicked of me, back in 2014, to allude to the influx of new, zombie, brigaded, and sockpuppet accounts that arrived at Gamergate, each so eager to be severely neutral. I trust we have moved beyond that, now, and that we can speak plainly about what we so clearly see. This complaint is one small move in Gamergate’s new playbook. Expendable accounts plan to file numerous grievances that will require lots of admin time. If they succeed in securing sanctions against their targets, or in embarrassing more victims, that’s icing on the cake: the immediate goal is to exhaust those few administrators willing to mop the space. First we had an ill-founded attack on TRPoD from an IP editor, resulting in the 30/500 rule. Here on its heels, we have an ill-founded attack on me, intended to gut that rule by showing it to be toothless. (Note, incidentally, that Handpolk’s late collaborator Dwarvenhobble has already been banned as an obvious -- and now confessed -- sock of a banned editor.) Is there any reason to believe this will end here? Of course not. Handpolk's work has been a great success; they set out to spend a lot your time, and -- voila! -- your time has been spent. They set out to poke holes in the 30/500 rule, and while you’ve held your ground, they are not worse off than when they began and they know where to poke next. (Meanwhile, it looks like they're hoping to use the distraction to put scare quotes around each characterization of Gamergate abuse.) It is gratifying to see so many respected administrators below taking an interest in the problem and demonstrating close familiarity with the area, its unprecedented problems, and its extensive archives. Sooner or later, though, you will have to grasp the nettle. You know why the talk page archives run to a million words, why no question is ever settled, why the answer to every point is always yet another dissertation on why the reliable sources cannot be relied upon, why every fresh zombie is greeted and cosseted and protected until, as here, they fall to pieces. You don’t want to take this on, you’ve been hoping it would go away, melt, thaw, or resolve itself into a dew. I understand. I sympathize. But it has cost the rest of us a lot of time, it's costing the project credibility, and editors, and admins -- none of which it can afford right now -- and it's not getting any better. MarkBernstein (talk) 16:30, 16 June 2015 (UTC)
Topic-banned editor @NorthBySouthBaranof:, participating in the Arbcom Lightbreather case, is being hounded along with former editor Ryulong by Gamergate IP editors trying to call attention to discussion of their supposed sex lives at an attack site we will not mention here. Paraphrasing his words, "I note that Gamergate-related disruption and personal attacks are continuing to spread across the encyclopedia, and entirely-unrelated arbitration cases are now being used as platforms to attack and harass Wikipedia users targeted by Gamergate. How long will it be before Wikipedia wakes up to the fact that this issue isn't a debating club with two sides, it's an organized campaign of harassment and abuse hell-bent on destroying the lives of its targets?” To further emphasize the point, the last few minutes a Gamergate supporter has written, falsely, that I wrote something untrue in The Guardian and then called Zoe Quinn a participant in the Gamergate controversy, suggesting that she had any choice after Gamergate used Wikipedia to announce her imminent murder. Enough already. MarkBernstein (talk) 20:01, 16 June 2015 (UTC) A reddit user named “ j0eg0d" has just opened a thread on one of the Gamergate forums to publicize this complaint. It disclaims any intention of encouraging Gamergaters to participate here, concluding "UPDATE: The Decision Against Bernstein Hasn't Been Made Yet, It's Ongoing, For Any Wikipedia Members That Haven't Made a Complaint ... I Mean ... Read The Article." A later addition, also signed "j0eg0d", explains that
Another editor named "ggtehxnor" opines:
At another Gamergate board, "WPBATTLEGROUND" starts a fresh thread titled "Let”s Talk About BarkMerstein.”
And as you know my talk page has been the home to lies and sneering insinuations, now kindly hatted by TRPoD. Thanks, guys! MarkBernstein (talk) 19:46, 18 June 2015 (UTC) @Bosstopher:’s historical survey is unsympathetic and in a few cases not quite accurate, but I thank him for taking the trouble. The original ban, in particular, arose as a boomerang when I (so young! so idealistic!) appealed here against what I believed to be a McCarthyist slander [1]. I believe I did not develop the terminology of Boss/Provocateur/Pal until Careless on January 22, substantially later. I am happy to discuss these former broils if you like, but don't wish to tire your patience. If any of you are of a historical bent, you also want to review Gamergate’s successful attack on Ryulong, from which this case (if case this be!) is taken. MarkBernstein (talk) 15:59, 21 June 2015 (UTC)
"An encyclopaedia is not amoral. It either supports evil through complacency or it embodies an overall force for good by refusing to flinch from the delineation of all, both evil and good. When we flinch and turn a blind eye to violent attempts to subvert our great work, then we face the true test.” -- Tony Sidaway MarkBernstein (talk) 03:03, 22 June 2015 (UTC) @J0eg0d: Re your comment about tag teams (forsooth!) with Strongjam and Bosstopher (!): I have no idea what you're saying, or asking me, or anyone, to do. MarkBernstein (talk) 02:50, 22 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by uninvolved IP[edit]Please note that there is currently a discussion at WP:ANI about whether User:Handpolk's latest complaint should earn him a boomerang. At the moment it has unanimous support.208.76.111.246 (talk) 01:31, 13 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by Beyond My Ken[edit]I do not want to replicate the AN/I report referred to by the IP, but it should be noted that Handpolk made 170 4-byte edits to List of Tamil films of 1973 within an hour, each one removing a single Wikilink, in order to pad his edit total and qualify for the 500/30 requirement. Such gaming of the system (which also included 20 closely-times edits to another article, as reported in the AN/I thread by Floquenbeam) should not be rewarded by allowing him to edit Gamergate articles, or by having this complaint heard here. BMK (talk) 02:14, 13 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by Masem[edit]While I do have a lot of doubts as to Handpolk's sincerity on their edits (the numerous tiny edits on one article as to get to 500+ edits), it should be noted that Mark has been warned and blocked twice before [2], [3] due to his commenting on contributors not content in article talk space. This diff [4] for example is specifically targeted at me due to a discussion I put into earlier regarding our WP:W2W policy. The comments toward Handpolk in article talk space are more of the same. --MASEM (t) 03:46, 13 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by Jorm[edit]User:Handpolk has pretty much followed the Gamergate Handbook On How To Be Difficult, only with a new twist (that of rapidly making hundreds of minor edits in order to game himself into the 30/500 set). Oh, he also started a subreddit where he exposes other Wikipedia editors to sexual harassment. He's absolutely not here to make an encyclopedia, and has just been indefinitely topic banned from the Gamergate/games/feminism area for his conduct. This should be closed as "no action."
Statement by PeterTheFourth[edit]@Masem: Perhaps you should start a different enforcement request where the well is not quite so prodigiously poisoned by the filer? PeterTheFourth (talk) 04:14, 13 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Ryk72[edit]I do not believe that a reasonable person would find either the subject or the filer of this AE request to be entirely blameless. Given the issue raised here appears to be limited to comments about each other an interaction ban may be sufficient & appropriate. Support mutual (two-way) I-ban. - Ryk72 'c.s.n.s.' 04:53, 13 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by ForbiddenRocky[edit]I suspect the filer is WP:NOTHERE as evidenced by his reddit and other actions. ForbiddenRocky (talk) 05:02, 13 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by Tony Sidaway[edit]A topic ban of the filer is merited on the grounds of their blatant attempt to game the 500 edit qualification. This already seems to have been handled through a topic ban arrived at by community discussion at ANI, however. I suggest this current AE discussion may be safely closed with a note of that ban, unless there is merit in the original complaint. In the latter case, perhaps a new filer will come forward to advance any genuine issues. --TS 12:50, 13 June 2015 (UTC) The filer is advertising, on both user page and user talk page, a reddit community supposedly created by the filer that is described as uncensored and currently contains attacks on individual Wikipedia editors. An edit by me earlier today to remove the user page link citing WP:POLEMIC was reverted by the filer on the pretext of "vandalism". Obviously I'm walking away because I don't want to play to anybody's script. But maybe an indefinite block is merited here before things get out of control. --TS 01:15, 14 June 2015 (UTC) As a not at all disinterested observer I think it's fair to say that some otherwise edgy behaviour by some editors is being treated with a little indulgence (though very far from absolute liberty) precisely because they are clearly reacting to deliberate, targeted attacks that have been without cease for nine months. I don't know about other topics in Wikipedia that may be subject to similar attacks or worse, but I observe that over the past few months since the Gamergate arbitration this page has quite often been dominated by discussion of Gamergate. It may not be the worst topic for external pressure, but it's certainly not the least. There are honourable and fair editors who disagree with the mainstream on how we should report Gamergate; there are even some who clearly retain an honest belief that our NPOV policy requires that which I think it is impossible to square with the normal and routine interpretation we use everywhere else. They honestly and sincerely believe that Wikipedia should be truly amoral, knowing no difference between the most radiant love and the most heinous hatred, between a hand that caresses and a hand that mortally wounds. Those people, I can work with, though their very existence makes my hair stand up on end. We can discuss and wrangle and, grudgingly, reach a compromise that doesn't go off the deep end but does satisfactorily convey the fact that some objective harm must inevitably be conveyed in the course of reporting on malicious human behaviour. But we cannot work at all under the pressure of that same hatred, which I loathe with every fibre of my being, that seeks to harm those who find threats of rape to be a bad thing. And that's where we are. Ignore it, perhaps, for as Wikipedians we all have that option and that's always been the path condoned by Arbcom, sometimes expressly but usually only by omission. But an encyclopaedia is not amoral. It either supports evil through complacency or it embodies an overall force for good by refusing to flinch from the delineation of all, both evil and good. When we flinch and turn a blind eye to violent attempts to subvert our great work, then we face the true test. Righting great wrongs? No. Just making sure that we all understand that just getting the facts down, according to the NPOV, is a truly political statement and not one we should duck. --TS 00:19, 22 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Protonk[edit]I'd rather we not sanction editors for calling a duck a duck. The "I'm not a gater, I'm just a neutral editor who wanted to learn about GG and found the article be be biased" line is well-worn. We've heard it from literally every gater and almost never heard it from editors one might reasonably call neutral or disinterested. It is well worn precisely because serves a useful rhetorical purpose. The speaker can not only claim neutrality but they can erect that veneer over their position (which is almost inevitably pro gamergate in general and in this specific case stupefyingly obviously pro gamergate). Editors here trying to do their best to follow AGF are then obligated to treat this manifest ploy as the law of the land. If you accuse them what is plainly clear, you're impugning their neutrality or using a slur (gamergater) to describe them. If we keep reading from the same script it is no surprise the lines don't change. GG certainly won't change the tactic because it works like gangbusters and because it fits with their narrative of GG as objective/neutral and the rest of the world as biased. I find the hand-wringing above from editors who claim to be neutral offensive. This complaint is baseless and should be dismissed as such. Protonk (talk) 16:33, 13 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by EvergreenFir[edit]I've been quasi sorta watching Handpolk and frankly they've made the rope makers quite rich already. Nearly as rich as they've made the glue factories. It's honestly heartening that anyone would find a glimmer of potential here and if Zad68 thinks there's hope, don't see why not let them one more coil of rope? Though it's quite generous given the user's actions. EvergreenFir (talk) Please {{re}} 02:31, 14 June 2015 (UTC)
Gamaliel - Statement by IP user[edit]I find it strange that text which doesn't mention the banned topic would be sanctionable as a topic ban violation, or that it qualifies for removal under WP:POLEMIC. The user reported in this request in fact has the following text on their talk page which seems to advocate the destruction of wikipedia yet no mention has been made of WP:POLEMIC over several months:
I find it especially strange that here Gamaliel supports an indefinite ban when, while that same reported user was topic banned they maintained on their user pages links to their personal blog discussing the topic, criticizing our handling of it and even criticizing editors directly! In that case however, rather than recommend an indefinite ban he thought it more appropriate to lift the editor's topic ban. Is there some difference in these two situations not apparent to the rest of us? 173.192.176.158 (talk) 06:25, 14 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Cullen328[edit]The thing I like the least among the OP's behavior, among a range of bad behaviors that one might want to analyze, is that they stomped away while loudly accusing actually productive editors of being "trolls" and "vandals". Can you imagine? Folks like Liz, the kind, helpful opposite of a troll. I do not believe that the encyclopedia will suffer at the loss of this editor. Cullen328 Let's discuss it 06:40, 14 June 2015 (UTC) My statement isn't about Mark but about Handpolk. I would argue that we give the topic ban a chance have an impact. I already see Handpolk editing on non-Gamergate articles which was the main goal of the topic ban. I can see he has a bit of a persecution complex right now and doesn't fully undertand how, in good faith, editors on Wikipedia disagree all of the time but manage to, mostly, find a way to coexist without going to ANI or AE. But I hope maybe working with a different group of editors can turn him around. He's an intelligent editor and I see his main offense to be an unwillingness to drop the stick. If the topic ban can cause him to move on from Gamergate and work on other pages, then it will have served its purpose. Liz Read! Talk! 20:12, 14 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by 63.153.218.127[edit]I would just like to note that MarkBernstein accused an IP of creating the first arbitration request against TRPoD. 63.153.218.127 (talk) 20:25, 15 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by NorthBySouthBaranof[edit]I note that Gamergate-related disruption and personal attacks are continuing to spread across the encyclopedia, and entirely-unrelated arbitration cases are now being used as platforms to attack and harass Wikipedia users targeted by Gamergate. How long will it be before ArbCom wakes up to the fact that this issue isn't a debating club with two sides, it's an organized campaign of harassment and abuse hell-bent on destroying the lives of its targets for nothing more than "lulz"? NorthBySouthBaranof (talk) 19:40, 16 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by j0eg0d[edit]@Zad68: Apologies Zad68, I'm unfamiliar with the Admins handling this request ... In regards to User:MarkBernstein; I will talk from my own experiences: Mark has engaged in WP:OUTING me and brigading members Liz & Cullen328 into investigation of (what Mark believed to be) my IP address. MARK WAS WARNED Yet he continued researching for personal information about me through the Hugo Awards website, and demanding I provide personal information myself. I have been a member of Wikipedia since 2005, Mark's persistence that I am a SOCK account appears to be a false-excuse to harass others & openly DOX people. He reacts this way to anyone looking to discuss the role of Gamergate. Mark and acquaintances PeterTheFourth, TheRedPenOfDoom, Jorm blatantly Wikihounded me and others in discussions about Gamergate. It's all archived. They would Wikihound me personally when I created a dialog in a forum, edited other pages, or simply uploaded an image for a WIKI page. Their sole purpose regarding GamerGate_Controversy (IMHO) is to divert intelligent dialog by twisting words, going off-topic, deleting and hatting anything providing a balanced narrative about the #gamergate hashtag. Read from Mark's own words above; "zombie Gamergate editors, brigaded and sockpuppet accounts". These are the same biased, angry (dare I claim paranoid) attacks used against someone who has been with Wikipedia for 10 years. I stepped away from Wikipedia just to get a break, and here I return to still see Mark's activities being allowed. This man and his alliances (Please note who is defending Mark and who is requesting Handpolk be topic banned) are disruptive to every GamerGate topic and aggressively harass newer users that want to add to the same GamerGate discussion - I point to Handpolk whose USER page was altered because of a link he provided to Reddit. He was accused of advertising in this case. I can see the frustration in this, because Mark Bernstein's USER page is advertising his own website. Mark advertises again below in A Modest Informal Proposal where I admittedly removed the link to his website only to have to undone by [User:PeterTheFourth|PeterTheFourth]]. Is this because of favoritism, because no one has ever pointed it out, or maybe Mark has enough friends to create the consensus that his website is not advertising? My appeal on Mark Bernstein, in light of the documented history of his past bannings & current behavior; is to permanently restrict him from every topic regarding GamerGate. I find this to be an absolutely reasonable action considering his current request to "check"(2) every Wikipedia newcomer. Mark is not learning from his past bans. --j0eg0d (talk) 07:22, 17 June 2015 (UTC)
I believe any accusations by MarkBernstein should be sourced. I'm very aware of MarkBernstein;s excessive suspicions as it have been focused on myself in Mark's attempts to OUT me. His immoderate requests made to "harass" newcomers should be taken as an admission in treating Wikipedia as if it were a battleground. I'm also concerned by the accounts of TRPOD, PeterTheFourth, Jorm, Strongjam and NorthBySouthBaranof in what is clearly a shared agenda. I find it difficult to believe their claims of "organized attacks" against themselves or Wikipedia when each of these editors have cried wolf continuously on IP addresses, contributing editors such as Masem, myself and every NEWCOMER that seeks to correct errors in a WIKI article. Even within this very page it is Mark's unusual behavior that needs to be addressed as it is personable to me ... To Quote
I have one account and only one account with Wikipedia since 2005. I have not been blocked or restricted in all my 10 years. MarkBernstein continues to make these accusations without fact, evidence or sourcing. MarkBernstein pursuant zealotry in researching & following me inside & outside of Wikipedia is the exact method in which Mark approaches every person bringing question to the very articles MarkBernstein himself guards. ADMINS, I must ask: After so many temporary blocks/restrictions specific Long Term Abuse, if MarkBernstein has not learned how to behave by now; Why is he and his Wikihounds being allowed to continue this WP:BATTLEFIELD conduct? --j0eg0d (talk) 04:36, 20 June 2015 (UTC)
@Strongjam and Strongjam: If you and your WP:Tag Team with Bosstopher & Mark Bernstein have an ARBCOM request towards me or other Editors making statements; You may want to create a separate request (with sources) as you're pursuing off-topic conversations to distract from the current issue. --j0eg0d (talk) 01:54, 22 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Strongjam[edit]This bullshit is the type of thing MarkBernstein and NorthBySouthBaranof are talking about, and it needs to stop. — Strongjam (talk) 15:55, 18 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by Johnuniq[edit]J0eg0d's above statement mentions their long history at Wikipedia—that's a good achievement but it would be fairer to note the context:
That gives a total of 304 edits, the vast majority of which have been in 2015 and concerned with gamergate. Most editors would not have sufficient experience to comment at WP:AE after 304 edits, nor would they know that "WP:BATTLEFIELD" is a useful term of art. Rather than worrying about whether MarkBernstein has examined off-wiki forums, it would make more sense to worry about the off-wiki forums where tactics to push the gamergate line are discussed. Johnuniq (talk) 10:48, 20 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Bosstopher[edit]@Zad68: It's only just hit me that you don't know the background of Mark's topic bans and his IBANs with DHeyward so here I go. Mark was originally Tbanned for making some very extreme claims. He accused Thargor Orlando of being part of a coordinated 8chan threat against which endangered his life, without providing any evidence,[12][13] made some incredibly dodgy and insulting comments to starship.paint[14] and accused Masem of being the BOSS of a Gamergate faction that was organising offsite.[15] As a result he ended up topic banned. Then he wrote a blogpost that got covered in the Guardian, got blocked for posting about it on Jimbotalk, got his topic ban removed because it had supposedly become punitive by this point. He then returned to editing the article and behaved a lot more calmer than last time, but people he crossed swords with before his topic ban found it hard to bury the hatchet. So they tried to get him tbanned over minor issues. This led to all those IBANS that popped up, as well as another temporary topic ban/block. As for the present day I'm not really sure what's going on, because it's been 2 weeks since I've had a good nights sleep, but j0eg0d is acting like an ass ([16] +Mark's statement)) and really has no room to talk about AGF and civility. Also people in general are being a bit too mean to Masem on the talk page and really ought to dial it down. Bosstopher (talk) 12:09, 21 June 2015 (UTC) @Protonk: That comment is no more absurd than claiming Masem is coordinating a Gator army, which is something multiple editors of the article actually believe. On a related note you'd think if an experienced administrator was coordinating offsite disruption he'd come up with a better strategy than the current one: "And then after 4 days and 10 posts, you go to talk page and write "This isn't neutral at all, you're all SJWs! Then they'll be bound to fix the article!"Bosstopher (talk) 12:09, 21 June 2015 (UTC) @Zad68:@MarkBernstein: Per your suggestion, (and per the worrying path j0eg0d is taking), here is a brief summary of what happned to Ryulong for Zad to get some context. Once upon a time an advocate of Gamergate started editing Wikipedia. He didn't like what was going on so he complained about it on reddit (a lot). He eventually made so many reddit posts about wikipedia that they made him a moderator of /r/KotakuInAction. Most of his reddit posts were extremely focused on Ryulong, some were highly insulting and tried to dig up dirt on him from a webpage that was created to harass him. He used exactly the same name on reddit and Wikipedia and admitted the reddit account was his multiple times.[17][18] But whenever the account was brought up and Ryulong tried to correct his errors or get him to stop, he denied the account was his and accused everyone of WP:OUTING him.[19][20] He then deleted the vast majority of his insulting reddit posts about Ryulong before the Arbcom case ended (does this remind you anyone @J0eg0d:?). The wikipedia administration in their infinite wisdom responded by banning Ryulong from mentioning offsite behaviour, and Arbcom claimed it was impossible to deduce that the reddit account and wikipedia account belonged to the same person (the extreme stupidity of such a conclusion still blows my mind to this day). In the end the editor in question got so ballsy that he started wikistalking Ryulong in the last days before his ArbCom ban, and it was this outrageous display which finally got him blocked (for 24 hour).[21] Zad, I hope you keep the lessons of such a story in mind when dealing with complaints about insults on reddit. Also please note the recent RfC we had that concluded linking usages of the same username on multiple websites is not necessarily outing.Bosstopher (talk) 16:31, 21 June 2015 (UTC) @J0eg0d: Firstly I'd like to say how flattered I am that you think I have the necessary social skills to make friends. Secondly Mark's exclamation mark in brackets, pretty much sums up my views on your theory that Mark, Strongjam and me are some kind of evil Gamergate triumvirate. The reason I explained both Mark's story and that of Ryulong vs Loganmac to Zad, was because both were barely touched on in the Arbcom case, which is where he was looking for information. Also I never called you an ass, I merely said you were acting like an ass. I gave evidence that supported this, in the form of your taunting Mark through putting hidden Reichstag links in his username and referring to Gamaliel as his "butt buddy" on reddit. Now I am no expert on assholish behaviour, but surely you must agree that what you did here falls very well into that category? If my name calling is part of the problem, what does that make your name calling?Bosstopher (talk) 13:49, 22 June 2015 (UTC) Result concerning MarkBernstein[edit]
A Modest, Informal Proposal[edit]We've had a rough day. An IP tried to use an Arbcom page to publicize material of a sexual nature about two Gamergate enemies -- one current and one former Wikipedian. The current Wikipedian complained there, and here; an IP deleted their complaint because they're topic banned for Gamergate. I repeated it, as it's Kafkaesque to prevent someone from protesting Gamergate's use of Wikipedia to defame them because they're not supposed to mention Gamergate. Then I was redacted. Finally, this page was semi-protected. Elsewhere, Zoe Quinn is being called a "participant" in the Gamergate Controversy, as if she chose to participate. I'm accused falsely of publishing a falsehood in The Guardian, and also of looking at Gamergaters funny, or something. A new Gamergater arrived at the talk page, full of severe neutrality (but not full of 500 edits) to argue that we must immediately link to the latest Gamergate attack site, the promotion of which is 8chan's talking point of the day. Other editors are again unhatting their pet dead horses and throwing up great walls of text in support of phantasmic and whimsical propositions that have no chance of gaining consensus. You're the experts: you know what to do! But, as you appear stuck, some things you might try include: 1) The IP loophole is clearly being used to allow socks or puppets to edit Arbcom and AE pages and Gamergate biographies. Stop this: semi-protect everything in sight for the next six months. At least that will deter the IP socks. 2) Consider checking all newcomers to Gamergate topics against the whole list of banned Gamergate editors. No doubt that's onerous, but what else can you do? (This still doesn't help with meat puppets, zombies, and brigades, but it's a start.) 3) Extend 30/500 to other problematic pages -- especially but not limited to the prominent Gamergate targets. 4) Either enforce the 30/500 restriction automatically, like blocks, or do this proactively, or let oversight do it proactively. It shouldn't be the responsibility of the defenders of the wiki to enforce rules against Gamergate transgression, and it reinforces their sense that the rules are simply meant to oppress them. 5) Limit or supervise Gamergate talk page editing. Endlessly repetitive rehashing of the same failed arguments, to which editors must respond time and time again, is painful and unproductive. At present, it requires endless wrangling simply to hat a dead horse -- and the horse always rises again in a couple of weeks. 6) Freeze the Gamergate page and the talk page. No dithering, no shadow drafts, nothing. Send everyone away until 2016. If anything needs to be changed, petition for the change at AE, with the understanding that few or no changes are likely to be accepted. These are drastic, but the pain this continued nonsense inflicts is very real. I’m not wedded at all to any of these suggestions, but it's time to try something. We have no business broadcasting murder threats against Gamergate's victims or broadcasting sexual gossip about Gamergate’s perceived enemies, and we're spending vast amounts of time (and incurring significant pain) simply to provide some amusing lulz for Gamergate’s fans.. MarkBernstein (talk) 22:27, 16 June 2015 (UTC)
@Gamaliel: I also see a number of comments here that indicate that some editors are here to [[WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS]. If you visit the usual Gamergate haunts, you may find a fairly fresh thread in which this is proposed as the talking point to use against that me and in defense of some of the more vocal participants here.At another, there's a nice thread about how "Masem’s had Enough" with that nasty Jew "Bernstein...stein..stein". MarkBernstein (talk) 21:32, 17 June 2015 (UTC) I understand that the clerks and admins need to allow a lot of latitude here, Still, I do think calling me "dishonest or paranoid" might be just a little hard to square with policy. MarkBernstein (talk) 22:17, 17 June 2015 (UTC) And since Dr. Hathaway raises the subject, I continue to stand behind Infamous and its sequels, in which, to the best of my knowledge, I took no liberties of any sort with any person’s words. Having previously diagnosed my mental illness, he now accuses me of unspecified professional misconduct. The mental illness is one thing, this is really another. Guys -- I tried to keep this section light in tone, general in its recommendations, and useful to administrators who I acknowledged have a tough job. You see below some of of the personal vituperation I'm receiving in consequence; there's plenty more beneath the waterline. I'm writing about the project; Gamergate responds by writing about (er) me. I'm really trying to help you here, but... MarkBernstein (talk) 23:28, 17 June 2015 (UTC) Dr. Hathaway now says my professional misconduct is not, as he wrote, "taking liberties with the words of others" but rather taking liberties with facts. He is mistaken on this count as well; that article correctly summarized the proposal that was its topic. If Dr. Hathaway wishes to take issue with something that The Guardian published, their editor Katherine Viner may be reached at Kings Place, 90 York Way, London N1 9GU; I cannot help him, nor can Wikipedia administrators. Again, repeated and unfair attacks on my professional reputation are hard to square with policy, especially as the topic of this section is not my conduct at Arbcom or elsewhere: Handpolk's complaint against my conduct is thataway ⇧ ⇧ ⇧ , In the mean time, perhaps someone might mop up the mess? MarkBernstein (talk) 23:59, 17 June 2015 (UTC) To repeat myself at dr hathaway's demand, neither Infamous nor its sequels took any liberties with any facts. Though my professional reputation is not even slightly pertinent to this topic, I value it highly. Will an appropriate authority kindly delete this gratuitous personal attack or indicate that personal attacks, even if false and irrelevant , are sanctioned by custom or policy here? MarkBernstein (talk) 01:13, 18 June 2015 (UTC)
The attention of administrators is called to this outrageous eve of wiki hounding [30]. I presume even wiki editors who cross Gamergate are permitted to volunteer for their local candidates! Even if they support Democrats? MarkBernstein (talk) 01:24, 18 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by Starke Hathaway[edit]Any proposed solution to what is wrong with the Gamergate article will be incomplete if it does not address the problem of a number of established editors with powerful personal feelings on the topic asserting ownership over the article, strangling any attempt to even discuss changes that do not fully agree with their preferred POV on the topic, and creating a palpably hostile, demeaning, and uncollaborative environment for anyone who dissents from their preferred POV (i.e., everyone but themselves). You don't need to look any farther than the abuse they heap on Masem, a long-established editor and administrator, to see that this is a problem. And that is entirely beside the fact that they assume, without evidence and in total contravention of AGF, that any young editor or newcomer to the topic area is a sock, or a troll, or a trolling sock. Just today, MarkBernstein alone has referred to Masem as a "Gamergate fan" (Masem has strenuously objected to this characterization), to Rhoark (and me) as simply "Gamergate" (neither of us so identify as far as I know), and reposted a topic-banned editor's comments about Gamergate to AE. In short, the article has exactly the same problem it had before the ArbCom case, which is that a confederacy of frankly paranoid editors is hell-bent on creating an article that reads in the most condemnatory way possible without regard to other editors' views, AGF and civility, and the sources as demonstrated by the discussion here. That's not to say it doesn't have other problems as well, but I think everyone might find that the flames will die down if certain individuals around here stop throwing gasoline on them. -Starke Hathaway (talk) 23:32, 16 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by ForbiddenRocky[edit]Dear Admins, please save GGC from all the dead horses. Today included a suggestion to change the lede that has been shot down every time. And a repeat of the attempt to make GG ethics the keystone of the description of GG. And a rehash of the anti-feminism issue. ForbiddenRocky (talk) 23:21, 16 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Ryk72[edit]Respected Administrators, Having reviewed the considerable archives of the Talk pages, one feels inclined to believe that there would be less re-discussion if discussions were allowed to reach their normal conclusion; rather than being endlessly filibustered, derailed with WP:FORUM violating comment on the Article subject, personal attacks, constant requests to close discussion, and aggressive "hatting". If editors were compelled to focus on the discussion of article improvements, you might see both a better editing environment and a better article. NB: Diffs to follow. - Ryk72 'c.s.n.s.' 23:44, 16 June 2015 (UTC) Statement By Masem[edit]First and foremost, it is very very frustrating that there is continued attempts to meat/sockpuppet Wikipedia due to GG-related issues, and I share Mark's and likely countless other admins in having to stem that tide. I certain agree in condemning any editor (new/IP or otherwise) that attempts to shame other editors in the matter Mark's addressed. This unfortunately is a reality that WP, being an open wiki in a age where the 4chan/Anon mentality exists, has to struggle with. This is still a learning experience for WP for everyone to figure out how to deal with these topics that involve the technology-saavy. That said, Mark has demonstrated in his analysis above the continued battlefield mentality that he and others on that page have continued to engage in since the formal closure of the GG arbcom case, in line with Starke Hathaway's comments above. In his plea, he points out how to limit IP and new editors (a reasonable step, particular in light of Handpolk's approach), but then says that we must block all further discussion on the talk page, which is basically allowing his version of the article, which several established editors including myself, have pointed out still has problems in tone and neutrality, and while summarizing the sources, is being used as a soapbox to attack the Gamergate supporters/movement in a manner that no other WP on a disliked group is treated as. Myself and other editors cannot get any word in edgewise because Mark and others on that page try to shut down any discussion before it can start. Add in the personal attacks or comments directed at other editors and not content (which I again point out, Mark has been warned and blocked twice within the duration of Gamergate), and this is the same OWNership and battleground mentality that Ryulong, NBSB, etc. showed from the original ArbCom. I've personally been very patient, trying to avoid opening any new ArbCom case against them and trying to work with them, but any suggestions that simply don't fit their vision are stonewalled. --MASEM (t) 00:52, 17 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement By Rhoark[edit]Much has been made about calling people Gamergaters. Mark Bernstein has made it abundantly clear that he defines a Gamergater as a violent misogynist. This makes it problematic when he casually labels someone as such. I on the other hand consider a Gamergater to be someone with a deep concern for verifiability in all media and solidarity with anyone who's been persecuted for expressing their views. As such, it's high praise that I consider Mr. Bernstein a standout Gamergater. I expect that displeases him, but I hope we can eventually see eye-to-eye. What this all goes to show is simply that we should not worry about what a Gamergater "really" is, foruming, and righting great wrongs. Rather we should focus on the sources. There is a problem, as others have noted, that certain editors are unwilling to engage with the sources. They will quote the name of a policy, but are unwilling to explain how it is pertinent. They will call for a discussion to be hatted without bothering to understand what has been said. This stems from the unfortunate situation of the number of trolls they have had to endure. They deserve sympathy on this count, but it has trained them to take a very particular mental shortcut of regarding anyone they see as opposition as being interchangeable. Thus you see Mr. Bernstein casually describing events on and off wiki as simply a continuum of "what Gamergate did today". They see conspiracies and campaigns whenever anyone on the Internet takes note of how bad the article is. It's true, whenever it happens there's an influx of people who are not familiar with policy or the history of the talk page. This is why we already have the exceptional 30/500 requirement. So far as I can tell, it hasn't helped. Experienced editors, who understand policy, are still subject to aspersions as if they were part of the mob. Will any of the proposed measures help? I can't say. Any of them but a total freeze would be mostly harmless. However, for these editors, change will ultimately have to come from within. Rhoark (talk) 01:36, 17 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by ColorOfSuffering[edit]7) Topic-ban every user who has ever contributed to the Gamergate controversy talk page or article. This can be extended to other articles within the scope of Gamergate, but I'd focus on the controversy page first. We can maintain the 300/50 silliness to keep the trolls at bay, but we need to start from scratch with all new faces. The article does not need to be frozen; the editors do. There are too many battleground SPAs monitoring the most trivial edit, exhibiting extreme battleground behavior that would be excoriated in any other article space. Everyone with skin in the game has had their say, I believe it's now time for the true uninvolved editors to clean up the mess. ColorOfSuffering (talk) 05:33, 17 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by an uninvolved editor FDJK001[edit]Some nice ideas up there. Seeing how an editor threatened to block me after seeing my pattern of editing (actually my intentions were unrelated to gaining access to 500/30, the reason is hilarious), I realized things based off of what I read from all of you, how if unregulated Wikipedia could become the broadcast channel for Gamergate (quoting MarkBernstein and how the 500/30 rule could work only for so long. First of all, I am uninvolved, having placed only one edit on the talk page for Gamergate but only to have it closed in minutes for my quota on edits being too low. So my one edit on there doesn't count and so this categorizes me as uninvolved. We obviously need to restrict editors who have had some involvement with the talk page and those who have battleground behaviour, like ColorOfSuffering said. So here could be the optimal compilation of the solutions:
I might come back and redefine my solutions if more loopholes spring up. I wish you all luck in finding the true optimal solution. Good night. FDJK001 (talk) 06:25, 17 June 2015 (UTC). Statement by j0eg0d[edit]1) I suggest this for Gamergate related discussion only; The excessive suspicion Ad Nauseam of the IP "loopholes", "socks" & "puppets" could also be handled by taking away the swords & shields off the editors battle-fielding the WIKI. OR - We could experiment with a trial-solution that all gamergate_controversy edits refrain from USER names and only allow IP signed content.
2) Checking all newcomers interested in Gamergate topics disregards Assume Good Faith. We are very aware of the interest in the WIKI Gamergate_controversy, because the current page is completely one-sided. It's one reason we get so many newcomers - because people want a balanced narrative. Editors certainly can not perform reasonably with the logic that every single newcomer is (sic) "meat puppets" or "zombies" Incivility. It would be autocratic in entertaining the idea and it's just further harassment. 3) "Extend 30/500 to other problematic pages" Again, we have a demand for restrictions and again Mark specifically points to "the prominent Gamergate targets". I suggest Mark Berstein be removed from every gamergate topic, because (IMHO) Mark Bernstein incites the disruptions Don't Be A Fanatic. I'm speaking from personal experience noted in this statement above. 4) "enforce the 30/500 restriction automatically" Again ... more restrictions ... A suggestion to dominate #gamergate discussions by some inherent right. It IS part of our responsibility to maintain the WIKI, and by locking in automated functions that BLOCK even the questioning of content is subjugation. 5) "Limit or supervise Gamergate talk page editing" We should never need to restrict a TALK page. It's the manner in reviewing content, identifying bias and (for some) pointing out the unreasonable hostility towards #gamergate supporters. This excuse of "endlessly repetitive rehashing of the same failed arguments" is the fault of those editors insulting, attacking, Tag Teaming newcomers - as I and several other have noted and genuinely experienced. 6) "Freeze the Gamergate page and the talk page" ... more of the same deadhorse calls for restriction. Maybe it's time the Admins knew the opposition's story? We've heard plenty of Mark's one-sided prejudices & intolerant name-calling here. With all humility, I request our Admins to watch this interview with actor Adam Baldwin - Adam Baldwin created the #gamergate hashtag and he explains exactly why he started Gamergate. I understand YouTube is not a reliable source, I am not suggesting it be allowed in the WIKI, that isn't my intention. My intention is to allow you (our Administrators) to understand what makes the WIKI Gamergate_controversy so BIASED, and why people are so adamant about a Neutral Point Of View. It may also help you come to a final decision. @Zad68: Final Thought: I wouldn't mind if we deleted the gamergate WIKI and let User:Ryulong's old friends go back to protecting his Kamen_Rider creations. They've made a mockery of the entire structure and I for one am tired of seeing new editors scrutinized & discouraged. I would also like some attention noted on the persons that have diverted this case off-topic over the past 8 days, as I believe the intentions are to close any resolution against Mark Bernstein by rehashing the Gamergate controversy and misdirecting attention to other Editors: [[38]], [[39]], [[40]], [[41]], [[42]], [[43]], [[44]]. --j0eg0d (talk) 08:38, 17 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Aquillion[edit]Most of these seem a bit too heavy-handed; the page itself is fairly stable, say, and while the circular talk-page discussions might be frustrating, my reading of the way they're going is that they're unlikely to lead to any dramatic changes. More aggressively doing checkusers on new users who immediately start arguing the position of recently-banned or topic-banned users could be reasonable, but the 30/500 restriction is hopefully minimizing that problem anyway. Regarding people going around the 30/500 restriction, though, I would suggest extending it to the entire topic regardless of where it appears, since it does seem like some users are just posting elsewhere in order to avoid that restriction and since it's generally bad for one content dispute to spill out all over the wiki. Being more proactive about topic-banning editors who seem like they're here to WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS or whose discussion indicates that they're WP:NOTHERE to build an encyclopedia could help with a bit of the rancor, though (and discourage users from getting rancorous about their views in the first place). Anyone who edits a controversial article extensively is going to have some kind of opinion on its topic, on the sources and how to weight them and so on; but that opinion has to be expressed in a way consistent with our policies or it's not really going to be helpful. Wikipedia is not really the place to try and eg. press a disagreement with the mainstream coverage, and people who repeatedly seem to be pushing that without any apparent regard for the problems it causes are probably here to get the word out on a viewpoint they feel is being suppressed by the mainstream media -- which isn't an unreasonable thing to want, but which means they're WP:NOTHERE to write an encyclopedia. As an aside, I notice that a lot of users above are referring to WP:OWN a lot in an accusatory manner; it might be worth reminding people of WP:STEWARDSHIP. If people are editing an article due to sincere interest in its subject matter, and if they're taking the time to explain why they object to a change (as opposed to just tirelessly reverting back to one version with little or no explanation), it isn't usually WP:OWN. As that article says, it's important to be careful about throwing accusations about it around, since it can be taken as a personal attack (it implies that their edits are coming from a sense of ownership rather than a desire to improve the article.) --Aquillion (talk) 22:25, 18 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by TheRedPenOfDoom[edit]I am not sure how it would be possible to contain the disruption of the gamergate trolls. If you have the stomach to go to their boards, you find that they are COMPLETELY OUTRAGED!!! by something new and not related to games every day - and they still seem to feel that Wikipedia is the place where they should play the white knight and try to right these terrible wrongs if only the SJW would just go away and let them write the TRUTHTM. But the longer they are allowed to maintain that delusion, the more of Wikipedia gets sucked into that pit. -- TRPoD aka The Red Pen of Doom 20:02, 21 June 2015 (UTC)
This request has been open now for 8 days and has gone in a dozen different directions and we are now rehashing the Gamergate controversy as it was lived out on Wikipedia. It seems likely that no action will be taken against any editor so could Gamaliel, Zad68 or another admin close this case? Gamergate discussion have the potential to continue indefinitely so editors will keep posting as long as this complaint is open. Liz Read! Talk! 20:21, 21 June 2015 (UTC) Result concerning A Modest, Informal Proposal[edit]I see a lot of comments here that indicate that some editors are here to WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS and not to edit the encyclopedia in a neutral manner regarding a variety of topics. Gamaliel (talk) 20:32, 17 June 2015 (UTC)
I agree with Liz, this should be closed for that very reason. I'm not going to close it myself, because every time I say or do anything here, I get a bunch of messages and emails saying how I'm preventing righteous justice or some shit. Gamaliel (talk) 20:24, 21 June 2015 (UTC) I will place the GG-related BLPs under Pending Changes per Newyorkbrad's suggestion. No further action, if you want BIG CHANGES start another ArbCom. |
Unblock request from 82.11.33.86
[edit]IP unblocked. The user has agreed to stop warring at Gulf War and will create an account that they will use for any edits to ARBPIA articles. EdJohnston (talk) 16:56, 22 June 2015 (UTC) | ||
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An IP user who was recently blocked for 1RR violation at Gulf War just requested an unblock on their talk page. Here is the unblock request:
--TL22 (talk) 18:39, 21 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Uninvolved non admin Bosstopher[edit]Illegitimate block. The IP editor was never properly alerted of DS guidelines per policy and therefore can't recieve a DS block, even if the edit page itself has the relevant information. Also it seems a bit overzealous, somebody could have just gone to the IP's talk page an informed them of 1RR without need for a block, which in my (albeit limited to one topic area) experience is what usually happens when someone violates 1RR. Judging by the IPs current comments they would have stopped if informed. Bosstopher (talk) 18:54, 21 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Mar4d[edit]I don't want to debate the merits of the block, but a cursory look at WP:AN3 shows that this highly problematic user is involved in 4 different edit wars. If not this, the IPs actions elsewhere are significant to contend disruption. That of course is another topic, but relevant as far as the IP's recent conduct is concerned. Mar4d (talk) 19:23, 21 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Involved non admin TripWire[edit]I'll leave the validity of the block to the admins, but I, having been dealt with this IP over the past week or so, would like to say:
Statement by blocking administrator[edit]I don't think this has been copied over properly, but no matter. First, a DS alert is not necessary for a violation of 1RR. Second, the IP was at least put on notice at AN3 when the filer stated that it was a violation of WP:ARBPIA, although I don't believe he used the magical term 1RR. The IP could then have self-reverted or at least said he didn't know. Putting all that aside, and assuming that the IP's claim of ignorance is perceived as credible, I have no problem unblocking him if even one administrator thinks that's the right course of action.--Bbb23 (talk) 19:42, 21 June 2015 (UTC) Result of the appeal by 82.11.33.86[edit]
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TheRedPenOfDoom
[edit]TRPoD indefinitely topic-banned from Gamergate per the standard GG discretionary sanction; they may appeal after six months. Zad68 19:00, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below. Request concerning TheRedPenOfDoom[edit]
None.
Yesterday, Anarchyte (talk · contribs) posted a question of in light of the website Kotaku's involvement with the Gamergate topic whether to continue to use them as a primary source or not [45]. (Note that Anarchyte is >500 edits/30 day but I don't see any gaming like Handpolk). Additionally, they refers to the person on Kotaku as "one of their chief editors", which was probably an unintentional mistake, as the Kotaku person is a writer.) TheRedPenofDoom (TRPOD) reverted this (Diff #1 above), with the change "one sealion out, the next appears to make the same unfounded accusations" which is failing to assume good faith from the start. I subsequently reverted this [46] and replied to the editor of how Kotaku is being used in relation to their question [47]. TRPoD hatted this discussion (Diff #2 above) with again language that was inappropriate "WP:DEADHORSE / WP:BLP / WP:39PAGESOFTHISSHIT", as well as a question of violating 1RR. TRPoD, properly, did let Anarchyte (talk · contribs) aware of sanctions of the GG on their talk page [48] but not after claiming they were "peddle in allegations" on the GG talk page (Diff #3 above). I pointed out TRPOD on that user's talk page that there was no BLP violations in the user's questions, and certainly nothing to question the disproven claim that is central to GG [49]. TRPOD replies again that the disproven allegation was being dragged through the mud again [50]; I agree 100% in TRPOD if Anarchyte was redragging the disproven allegation but that was not the question asked. Subsequently TRPOD redacted out the claim on the GG talk page (Diff #4 above). He then begs a question of why Anarchyte linked to an archive version of the article then link directly [51]. To some defense of TRPOD, using archive sites is a tactic of GGers but they use "archive dot is", a blacklisted site on en.wiki rather than the Wayback version. On TRPOD's redaction, and not wanting to hit 1RR myself, I opened a new section on the Meta page to ask about reverting the redaction as it was not a BLP issue [52]. TRPOD again instisted there was a inference of the disproven accusation [53], and continued to assert that the goal of this whole discussion was to "muddy her name" [54]. He subsequently hatted that discussion (Diff #5) with the change "[C]ontinued attempts to slur reputation by association in events that 1) never occurred and 2) would not have been on the part of the only person named." which again is not what the original question was nor were any non-established claims made in this discussion to date. I reopened it [55] since I felt the close was completely out of line and the discussion far from over. He rehatted that again (Diff #6) simply saying "WP:BLP". This is an isolated case that would likely merit a WP:TROUT from any other editor if it was done for the first time. But this is the continuation of behavior of TRPOD (who others have brought here before) of completely failing to assume good faith, issuing personal attacks and assuming editors are acting for Gamergate without cause, very little civility, trying to shut down discussions that they asserted have no need for further discussion, violating the 1RR behavior demanded by ArbCom, and overall a battleground mentality that shows no willingness to work with editors to discuss improvements to the article in a consensus-based manner (that is, WP:NOTHERE at least in the area of Gamergate). I have tried to give TRPOD benefit of the doubt in case of a mistaken read of Anarchyte's question. @Strongjam: Assuming good faith and in context of Anarchyte's question, I do not see the attempt to make a false statement - just misidentifying the person's role at Kotaku, but as their question was asked, it was the fact Kotaku's activities relative to the accusation being central to GG making the question of their usability of a source, and that's nowhere close to a BLP issue, that's a standard good question to ask about independence of sources. --MASEM (t) 18:34, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
@PeterTheFourth: That wasn't the question asked of whether the relationship's existence should involve WP's consideration of the source, but whether because Kotaku was criticized and was forced to respond to the situation around the disproven accusation of COI that gained further criticism from GG of them, how WP should treat that source. --MASEM (t) 18:45, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
Discussion concerning TheRedPenOfDoom[edit]Statements must be made in separate sections. They may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs, except by permission of a reviewing administrator. Statement by TheRedPenOfDoom[edit]The insistence by Masem on trotting out and retrotting out and retrotting out the name of a living person in relation to an "ethical scandal" that 1) reliable sources from the beginning of the coverage have verified was never inappropriate action/scandal and 2) where even if there had been a scandal of inappropriate unethical the only person being named is the one who would have had zero agency in the commission of the ethical breach. It is unacceptable. That he is attempting to justify his actions by "But they were in a relationship!!!" as justification for repeatedly dragging someone's name as near as the mud as he can get it is disgusting. -- TRPoD aka The Red Pen of Doom 18:37, 25 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Strongjam[edit]That's a pretty cut and dry BLP violation. It's not just unsourced, as you noted it's a false statement about an editor at Kotaku. Why would you restore it without correcting that first? — Strongjam (talk) 18:25, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by PeterTheFourth[edit]You've provided a number of diffs you believe to contain 1RR violations- I may be wrong, but I don't believe the talk page for Gamergate controversy has a 1RR restriction, just the article itself (besides, removals due to BLP violations are exempt from revert restrictions.) PeterTheFourth (talk) 18:29, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by (username)[edit]Result concerning TheRedPenOfDoom[edit]
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J0eg0d
[edit]Wrong venue for the context of the behavior under review; closing with no action here, discussion is at ANI. Zad68 19:20, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below. Request concerning J0eg0d[edit]
Currently topic-banned (indef Gamaliel) and blocked (DESiegel); I'm not sure how to provide the diffs.
In diff #1, J0eg0d lashes out against Gamaliel and calls him a kapo, a Jewish concentration-camp guard, providing a helpful WikiLink for those unfamiliar with the term. In diff #2, J0eg0d defends his use of the term "kapo" and says Gamaliel and I "are lying about it." I replied:
J0eG0d removed this from his user page, which he is entitled to do, but the attitude displayed here might merit scrutiny. The repeated injection of religion into Gamergate is strange and unsavory, its defense here is not well calculated to excuse or explain the editor's conduct, and of course we have real questions of competence here as well. Someone using the same name on a gamergate forum at Reddit writes:
I mention this only because (a) you might want to know what’s coming down the track, and (b) if I had more confidence in this editor’s competence, I might take the four-letter-word as an allusion or dog-whistle to the Gender Gap Task Force ArbCom case, and that, too, might be worth knowing about. Admins being busy, I thought it might be easier to see it laid out plainly that to await your digging through the history for deleted passages.
Discussion concerning J0eg0d[edit]Statements must be made in separate sections. They may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs, except by permission of a reviewing administrator. Statement by J0eg0d[edit]Statement by Starke Hathaway[edit]He's already indefinitely topic-banned from Gamergate and currently blocked for the behavior MarkBernstein cites here. Leaving aside the question of what exactly MarkBernstein hopes to gain from bringing this request beyond the indefinite topic ban and block already in place, this request should be closed without action or at least deferred until j0eg0d is unblocked and can respond here. -Starke Hathaway (talk) 15:43, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by 174.30.95.89[edit]I don't think pursuing this is gonna help. j0eg0d already has an indef topic ban and is blocked for 3 weeks, more than enough to get the message across. This seems like kicking him while he is down. 174.30.95.89 (talk) 15:52, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by Bosstopher[edit]J0eg0d's behaviour has gone far beyond the pale, and a strong statement should be made that throwing anti-semitic insults at other editors is not acceptable. Even though he's currently topic banned and temporarily blocked, I don't think that's enough given the circumstance. His block should be extended to indefinite with room for a standard offer should he wish to return. Bosstopher (talk) 15:58, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
@Kyohyi:@Starke Hathaway:I think the armies of Mordor thing is not the nicest way to refer to a group of people. The term sealion has also been used insultingly from time to time on Wikipedia, such as this comment from tRPOD.[57] This is obviously not the best way to go about civil editing. BUT (and this is one huge but, think Sarah Massey only bigger) this is not on the same level as calling someone a Kapo. I would much rather people associate me with the fictional character Sauron than Hitler. Also the Kapo insult was racially and ethnically charged. It's one thing to insult a group based on ideology (for instance saying Liberal Democrats are dumb), and another to insult a group based on ethnicity (for instance saying French people are dumb). While insults against people because of their ideology may not always be appropriate, it's just incomparable to racially charged epithets and insults.Bosstopher (talk) 17:06, 25 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Strongjam[edit]While I agree with Bosstopher. This seems like the wrong place for it. There is still an open topic on ANI regarding this. — Strongjam (talk) 16:00, 25 June 2015 (UTC) False equivalence springs to mind. — Strongjam (talk) 16:54, 25 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by uninvolved IP[edit]Question for the filer: beyond minor copyedits what substantive contributions have you made to the encyclopedia in the last week? Last month? I think it's time you demonstrate an intent to contribute positively beyond the scope of a minor video game controversy. Enough community time and effort has been wasted on this pettiness. 166.177.187.197 (talk) 16:02, 25 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by TheRedPenOfDoom[edit]Question for 166.177.187.197: what contribution of any kind have you made to the project, in any space EVER? -- TRPoD aka The Red Pen of Doom 16:55, 25 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by RolandR[edit]j0eg0d denies that the term "kapo" is antisemitic, arguing that it is instead "a term we call privileged Jews abasing other Jews". Putting aside, for a moment, the fact that he only uses this term to describe editors he perceives to be Jewish, we should note that in Jewish discourse the term kapo is used to mean a traitor. This was the term used by the Israeli right wing to delegitimise Yitzhak Rabin in the period of incitement leading up to his murder in 1995. So it would appear to me that its use in this context is far worse than a simple antisemitic smear; it is an implicit call for physical violence against the editors so defamed. Use of this term should be banned in Wikipedia, and those who so describe other editors should be severely sanctioned. RolandR (talk) 16:04, 25 June 2015 (UTC) Statement by Kyohyi[edit]Dehumanization has been going on in the Gamergate topic area. If we are going to sanction this editor for this behavior we should be sanctioning all editors that participate in such behavior. --Kyohyi (talk) 16:10, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
Statement by ColorOfSuffering[edit]My name was invoked and so I felt I should respond. First, I would like to say that calling someone a kapo is a bad thing, and I'd consider it a personal attack specifically on point #4: Statement by (username)[edit]Result concerning J0eg0d[edit]
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