#:::Immediately closing like that is not the way that RfA works. Only for SNOW and NOTNOW closures does it last less than a week. And what would community banning him do to help? You realize Giggly wasn't the source of more, if not all canvassing? [[User:X!|<span style="font-family:Verdana,Arial,Helvetica;color:steelblue;">'''X'''</span>]][[User talk:X!|<span style="color:steelblue;"><small>clamation point</small></span>]] 16:30, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#:::Immediately closing like that is not the way that RfA works. Only for SNOW and NOTNOW closures does it last less than a week. And what would community banning him do to help? You realize Giggly wasn't the source of more, if not all canvassing? [[User:X!|<span style="font-family:Verdana,Arial,Helvetica;color:steelblue;">'''X'''</span>]][[User talk:X!|<span style="color:steelblue;"><small>clamation point</small></span>]] 16:30, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#::::I saw enough to convince me that Giggy was not ignorant of it going on nor completely uninvolved. Canvassing in such a massive level during an RfA is a complete violation of RfA, Consensus, and the rest. It would have to be closed just like Aitias's attempt to desysop a user via RfA. It is a complete breach of protocol and many people should be blocked in response. It is a major disruption to not only the individual process but to the sanctity of the encyclopedia as a whole. [[User:Ottava Rima|Ottava Rima]] ([[User talk:Ottava Rima|talk]]) 16:40, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#::::I saw enough to convince me that Giggy was not ignorant of it going on nor completely uninvolved. Canvassing in such a massive level during an RfA is a complete violation of RfA, Consensus, and the rest. It would have to be closed just like Aitias's attempt to desysop a user via RfA. It is a complete breach of protocol and many people should be blocked in response. It is a major disruption to not only the individual process but to the sanctity of the encyclopedia as a whole. [[User:Ottava Rima|Ottava Rima]] ([[User talk:Ottava Rima|talk]]) 16:40, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#'''Oppose''' - I don't want to bring out the worst in me but anybody who gives a look at my talk page can see Avis constant harassment and intimidation: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_2#Canvassing_through_excessive_cross-posting] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_4#Removing_deletion_notice_from_prankster] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_4#Removal_of_some_template] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_4#Big_chunk_deletion_on_Baal_teshuva] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_3#Fascinating] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid#Once_again_Avi_threatens_of_using_tools_against_me] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_3#Oy_Vey] -[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_3#Motza_Sifasecha_Tishmor_V.27Asisa]- [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_2#Personal_attacks] [he has opened 3 separate ANI cases crying to his sysop friends to block me only once did he susceed[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_3#Blocked] for 24 hours and i came back committed to forgive but he never ever stopped trying to block me and others out of here,[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid#Courtesy_notice]. I cannot see how a free and open community should entrust him with any power.] He has even [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Yeshivish&action=edit&redlink=1 deleted] all history of a user who was ("his" - in alot of debates he and Avi were on the same page and that user also tried to block me) sock-puppet. I am confident he has hurt many more who left and r gone i speak for them: Please don't let this power hungry user get rid of users like me; I may be to most of u a problematic user, and thus a bad advocate for the silent victims, but silence isn't an option. Thanks--[[User:Yidisheryid|YY]] ([[User talk:Yidisheryid|talk]]) 21:28, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#'''Oppose''' - I don't want to bring out the worst in me but anybody who gives a look at my talk page can see Avis constant harassment and intimidation: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_2#Canvassing_through_excessive_cross-posting] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_4#Removing_deletion_notice_from_prankster] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_4#Removal_of_some_template] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_4#Big_chunk_deletion_on_Baal_teshuva] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_3#Fascinating] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid#Once_again_Avi_threatens_of_using_tools_against_me] - [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_3#Oy_Vey] -[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_3#Motza_Sifasecha_Tishmor_V.27Asisa]- [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_2#Personal_attacks] [he has opened 3 separate ANI cases crying to his sysop friends to block me only once did he susceed[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_3#Blocked] for 24 hours and i came back committed to forgive but he never ever stopped trying to block me and others out of here,[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid#Courtesy_notice]. I cannot see how a free and open community should entrust him with any power.] He has even [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Yeshivish&action=edit&redlink=1 deleted] all history of a user who was ("his" - in alot of debates he and Avi were on the same page and that user also tried to block me[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Yidisheryid/Archive_2#your_behavior].) sock-puppet. I am confident he has hurt many more who left and r gone i speak for them: Please don't let this power hungry user get rid of users like me; I may be to most of u a problematic user, and thus a bad advocate for the silent victims, but silence isn't an option. Thanks--[[User:Yidisheryid|YY]] ([[User talk:Yidisheryid|talk]]) 21:28, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#:"Constant harassment" is a rather strong claim; could you please provide some evidence? Thanks, –<strong>[[User:Juliancolton|<span style="font-family:Script MT;color:#36648B">Juliancolton</span>]]</strong> | [[User_talk:Juliancolton|<sup><span style="font-family:Verdana;color:gray">''Talk''</span></sup>]] 21:46, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#:"Constant harassment" is a rather strong claim; could you please provide some evidence? Thanks, –<strong>[[User:Juliancolton|<span style="font-family:Script MT;color:#36648B">Juliancolton</span>]]</strong> | [[User_talk:Juliancolton|<sup><span style="font-family:Verdana;color:gray">''Talk''</span></sup>]] 21:46, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#::The editor has cited their talk page as evidence. --[[User:RegentsPark|RegentsPark]] <small>([[User talk:RegentsPark|My narrowboat]])</small> 21:48, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
#::The editor has cited their talk page as evidence. --[[User:RegentsPark|RegentsPark]] <small>([[User talk:RegentsPark|My narrowboat]])</small> 21:48, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
Approximately one year ago, I presented myself to the greater wikipedia community as a candidate for bureaucratship. I found the feedback I received those previous times to be both valuable and educational. Since that point we have had five excellent candidates successfully become bureaucrats. However, we have also lost the services of some of our more prolific bureaucrats. As such, I am still willing to volunteer my services to the project as a bureaucrat.
I had been approached by a number of people over the past six months about resubmitting my candidacy, and my original plan was to wait until a year had passed. My impetus for submitting my candidacy a month early is based on a specific need. Unfortunately, as the project has grown, the level of vandalism has increased dramatically, including vandalism that relates to the creation of inappropriate usernames—ones that defame and ones that violate privacy concerns. While there are mediawiki extensions that can hide usernames from logs, sometimes a full-out rename is called for. We have a few checkuser or oversight enabled bureaucrats, but there have been times when having more would have been helpful to protect the privacy of wikipedia editors or wikipedia biography subjects. As this need has been raised a few times recently on the functionaries mailing list, I have decided to post my candidacy earlier.
About me: I have been a member of this project since July 2005, and active since January 2006. I have over 29,000 edits, and near 31,000 if you count deleted edits. I was granted the community's trust as an administrator in July 2006. Most recently, I was appointed as a checkuser in October 2008. I am a sysop on the Commons and volunteer for the OTRS system. While the bots make clerking less of a need at the various name-change pages, I have taken the community's advice to heart and became more active at those pages. While I lack the technical ability to run a bot, I believe that I have the necessary understanding of the appropriate bot policies.
I hope that I my actions on this project and interactions with fellow contributors to this project have demonstrated the qualities and skills that the community requires of and desires in its bureaucrats and that you will allow me the privilege of contributing to the project in this fashion. Thank you. -- Avi (talk) 23:45, 1 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Candidate, please indicate acceptance of the nomination here:
Dear candidate, thank you for offering to serve Wikipedia as a Bureaucrat. You may wish to answer the following optional questions to provide guidance for participants:
1. Have you read the discussions on when to promote and not promote? What do you understand the criteria for promotion to be?
A. Yes, the criteria for promotion is community consensus. As stated on Wikipedia:Bureaucrats: “They are bound by policy and consensus to grant administrator or bureaucrat access only when doing so reflects the wishes of the community, usually after a successful request at Wikipedia:Requests for adminship.” This is what requires us to have a human bureaucrat; it is not for the times when the consensus is obvious one way or the other, it is for the gray zone. Common practice is that over around 80% is clear, and under around 70% is clear, but that zone in-between is where the community relies on the judgment of its bureaucrats to best determine what its consensus is.
2. How would you deal with contentious nominations where a decision to promote or not promote might be criticized?
A. My first move would be to to discuss it with fellow bureaucrats, on an open page, where the bureaucratic consensus as to the community consensus can be followed and understood by all, as was done for my own unsuccessful second attempt. As there is bound to be those that will argue with whatever decision is reached in this kind of situation, having an open process and discussion makes the final decision more understandable which leads to much more acceptance. In the event I would be the only bureaucrat available to make this decision, I would do so with a detailed explanation of my thought process and which policies and guidelines were used to best capture the community's consensus, for the same reasons.
3. Wikipedians expect bureaucrats to adhere to high standards of fairness, knowledge of policy and the ability to engage others in the community. Why do you feel you meet those standards?
A. I have been an administrator on the English wikipedia for here for over 34 months. I have been considered worthy of that trust on the Commons as well. I have been trusted enough to be approached to mentor cases of editors as their last resort before community sanctions, and have been considered fair enough to be approached as such about editors whose issues deal with among our most difficult ones, such as the Palestinan-Israeli issues. I have been considered trustworthy, fair, and discrete enough to be allowed to volunteer on the m:OTRS list, where the most difficult and contentious issues that affect all Wikimedia projects, and are bound by the policies and guidelines of all of our projects, not just Wikipedia, are dealt with. Also, I have been considered honest, fair, and knowledgeable to be allowed to fight recidivist vandalism and sockpuppetry using the checkuser tool. I have done my best to both follow, as well as uphold, wikipedia policies and guidelines—both those that deal with article content as well as those that deal with inter-editor communications.
4. How would you close these RfA/Bs? If you opine for a crat chat, please express what you would have said there as the final determination of the outcome.
I would have brought this one to chat. There are mitigating circumstances as demon was an admin prior, but in lieu of anything else, this one would likely remain as no consensus/unsuccessful.
As I opined (Support #127) I could not actually have closed that one. Had I not supported, I would have brought this one to chat. There are mitigating circumstances in this one due to Danny's previous position as an employee of the foundation that would have likely made him have more people who would be happy to see him fail than the standard editor (OFFICE blocks, etc.) and these need to be factored in.
As I opined (Oppose #25) I could not actually have closed that one. Had I not opposed, this would be another example of where the bureaucratic chat is key, as this turned more into a referendum on attack sites than a discussion about the candidate.
As I opined (Support #280) I could not actually have closed that one. Had I not supported, I would likely have closed as pass at that time. Although, I should add that a chat would be helpful here too due to the number of opposes.
Are you asking me as an editor or as a bureaucrat? Asking me as an editor, which includes asking for opinions about the trustworthiness or non-trustworthiness of the people involved is irrelevant. What should have occurred, in my opinion, was for the accusatory information to be relayed to ArbCom who could follow up on it and either corroborate or refute it. Which may even have been done for all we know. -- Avi (talk) 06:32, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
If a release of private information occurred, the proper sanctions need to be levied. However, as a bureaucrat, one needs to take into account the hundreds of people who knew of the allegation and supported anyway. The bureaucrat's role is not to input his or her own opinions into the discussion but judge what the community feels. -- Avi (talk) 06:40, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Hundreds of people who knew of the allegation and supported anyway is more than a mite inaccurate. In the ten hours between when the oppose was made and the RfA was withdrawn, four people supported andatleastsevenopposedcitingeast's oppose. Your response seems to indicate that you believe ten hours is enough time for most who commented to be apprised of the developments and re-assess their votes, and that in this case you have chosen to believe that they all supported despite east's oppose. Is this correct? seresin ( ¡? ) 07:19, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
The question as asked was specific to that particular diff of the discussion "(at this point in time)". If you would like to ask another question, by all means, go ahead. As an aside, please note my answer to question 6 below. -- Avi (talk) 07:22, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Here, Seresin, I'll make it easier for you to decide:
At that point in time, a chat is the best option, in which the points you raise could be discussed by the bureaucrats. As I have said many times in my years here, I am always open to being swayed by suitably convincing logical arguments.
Were I the only bureaucrat available at the time of that diff, I would lean to close as pass (and I agree it is close).
In the time AFTER the diff brought above, if the candidacy was discussion have not been removed, and remained open longer, and the proportion of opposes have risen, then that would have likely indicated a lack of consensus.
As mentioned below, should the natural time of expiry have been accompanied by a distinct shift, the idea of extending the time should be raised in the chat.
Note, that your question is not a logical extension of the original question, although it is related. -- Avi (talk) 07:35, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I made no reference to time after the diff provided above; all the opposes I cited were present at the time you were asked to hypothetically close it. And of course it's a logical extension: I asked what bearing a specific oppose had on your closure, you said that it had little, because hundreds of people supported in spite of it, I asked if you thought supports remaining in the support column after ten hours indicates they have all read the allegation and decided it was not enough to oppose over (which I note you still have not answered). If you would like, I can re-ask this question as a totally separate one, so that you will have no confusion as to its logical source. seresin ( ¡? ) 08:26, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
My apologies for not being clear. The original question by Jake Wartenberg made that reference to time, which is how I answered. You asked a question about my response to Jake, wich still had the time element. The numbered list above takes that into account specifically. May I suggest you ask a new question, hypothetical or otherwise, and specifically spell out what you are trying to uncover, so that there will be no confusion? Thanks. -- Avi (talk) 12:24, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
As I opined (Support #91) I could not actually have closed that one. Had I not supported, I would likely have closed as pass. Although, I should add that a chat would be helpful here too due to the number of opposes.
5. One of of the bureaucrats elected in 2004 has yet to use any of the crat tools and others have used them very rarely. Do you think the bureaucrat position should have a minimum level of activity?
A. I think that bureaucrats should use the tools that they are given. I understand peoples lives change at times, and even in shorter time frames, peoples work and family lives may place greater and lesser demands on them. If the bureaucrat makes a good faith effort to use the trust the community has given him, fine. Someone who has not used the tools in 4 years should be approached as to why. A set minimum, however, can be counter-productive. I'd rather see gentle pressure placed on those not using the tools to start helping out. The community's view of bureaucrats has changed a lot since some of the earliest ones were appointed. -- Avi (talk) 02:53, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
6. Of the 3,500+ prior RFAs, only eight have ever had a bureaucrat extend the endtime; of over 100 prior RFBs, only two have ever had a bureaucrat extend the endtime. Under what circumstances and by what process would you extend an RFA in general?
A. I have no set process or algorithm; each editor and discussion is unique. In general, I believe that discussions should not be extended; a week is usually sufficient time. The only situation I can think of as of now that would lend itself to having a discussion extended is if there a noticeable influx of comments near the end of the discussion. As the purpose of these discussions are to help the community reach a consensus, if a major shift is seen near the end time of a discussion, I would consult with the other bureaucrats as to whether or not some extra time would help the community reach a clear(er) consensus. -- Avi (talk) 02:26, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
7.Francs2000, Optim, Eloquence, Danny, Ugen64, and WJBscribe were decratted at their own requests between 2004 and 2008. Of them all, the only controversial decrattings could be considered Ugen64 who resigned after a dispute over the promotion % for RFBs and Francs2000 who resigned after a dispute over tallying RFA results. Danny's remains the unusual case of him resigning both crat and sysop rights and later being re-RFA'd, all in connection with his ceasing employment at the Wikimedia Foundation. Which of these users would you re-crat if they asked at WP:BN and which would you require to re-run RfB?
A: I believe that the bureaucrats involved handled it very sensibly. This was right after, almost during, the discussions about lowering the RfB bar and Riana's RfB as well, and my case was not a compelling one for the bar to be dropped all the way to 82/83. While understandably personally disappointed at the time, I think they made the best decision under the circumstances, taking the time to discuss it. -- Avi (talk) 03:19, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
10. For each username listed below, please indicate whether it is acceptable or not acceptable on Wikipedia, with an explanation if you wish.
A: Answers below names.
Dumb Democrat
I would clarify if the user meant it disparagingly, or if they meant it as a humorous representation of themselves ("This user is a Dumb Democrat"). As can be seen from Wikipedia:Requests for comment/User names#FeygeleGoy, self-descriptive names like User:FeygeleGoy and User:Queer Scout have been judged acceptable. The user's editing pattern would shed light on this as well.
I would approach this first by asking for a voluntary rename, and if that doesn't work, taking it to WP:RFCN. I do not think it is blatantly disruptive/offensive, but it is getting close.
End Racism!
While I agree wholeheartedly with the principle, this one already indicates a propensity to engage in WP:SOAPboxing, and can be considered disruptive.
GodSucks
This username also is unacceptable as it is offensive to a large group of people and will make harmonious editing difficult to impossible.
Depends. Is this a sock of a known vandal, or is this someone else? The former is blocked on site. A real, contributing editor who wants that name should have no problem using it.
11.
Apologies for the upcoming Kobayashi Maru multipart question, but I feel it is relevant, timely and important.
No problems. May I reprogram the computer to attack itself? Answers are interspersed with the questions in italics. -- Avi (talk) 06:11, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
You are a checkuser. Will you checkuser all candidates before promoting them? No Why or why not? No need.
If not, if a candidate for adminship somehow reminded you of a previous, unrelated checkuser result, would it be appropriate to checkuser the candidate? Perhaps Why or why not? It depends on whom the person reminded me of. If it is one of our recidivist sockpuppeteers (some of whom are outright dangerous) I would first check the log and see IF the candidate OR the target was checked and by whom, and inform THAT checkuser of my concerns. If there is none, I may ask another uninvolved checkuser for their opinion. If not, if a candidate was directly impeached by a previous checkuser result, but this was not disclosed to the public, how would you deal with this? Inform ArbCom.
1. If you were to run a checkuser, and the results of your checkuser were suspicious in some way, how would you address this? Depends on the some way. If slightly suspicious, I may ask another experienced checkuser to confirm/refute the conclusions. If very suspicious, I would inform ArbCom. If the results of your checkuser indicated that a user well beyond the threshold of "pass" was fundamentally unsuitable as an administrator, in your judgement, what would you do? I would inform ArbCom.
2. If you were not to run a checkuser on any given user, how do you justify promoting administrators who may very well significantly damage the encyclopedia? (Malicious and clueful administrators can cause substantial non-obvious damage if they chose to.) How does any non-CU bureaucrat close an RfA as pass according to that statement? We rely on good faith and the collective wisdom and perception of the community, who, as a whole, have been pretty d@rn good about picking their admins. Yes, an Archtransit can slip through, but in the main the admin corps have not been the issue. Wikipedia as it is currently formulated has a very strong culture of protecting privacy; only those people privy to privileged information have to identify to the foundation. Calling for a CU for every RfA/B/X runs very much counter to the current culture. The combined efforts of all editors, admins, CUs, and ArbCom have, so far, worked well together protecting the project from those who try to harm it. -- Avi (talk) 06:11, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
12.You are a bureaucrat. There is an RfA ready to be closed at this point in time. You look it over and make a decision as to how to address it (you stated above that you "likely would have closed as pass"). You stated above that oppose #74 has no special relevance to your decision, since the supporters all knew of the allegation and supported despite it. Do you think it is appropriate to close an RfA as successful with such an allegation (which was true, mind) sitting unresolved on the table? Do you, also, believe that in those ten hours, all the supports learned of the allegation and decided to support anyway?
Just to clarify, and without prejudice to your suitability as bureaucrat (an area of the project I do not get involved in), Avi, bureaucrats should not be renaming sensitive accounts. It compounds the problem, since you'll still need an oversighter to clean the rename logs, and probably the move, protection, or deletion logs for the userspace, whereas an oversighter can do all of this with a single click from the block interface. Dominic·t02:34, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, but there have been specific instances where post-revision hiding the usernames needed changing as well. You have access to the mailing list, you know which case(s) came up very recently 8-). There are only a handful of bureaucrats who also have access to the general functionaries mailing list (former/current arbs, OS, and CU) and there is a need for more. There also is a need for more bureaucrats in general, and Kingturtle mentioned on WT:RFA. Thank you. -- Avi (talk) 03:03, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
From my reading of the mailing list, all of the calls for bureaucrats seem to be based on mixing up the ability to hide revisions individually with the ability to suppress an account entirely. What exactly is it that you think a bureaucrat can accomplish that isn't done better by actually using hideuser? I don't understand why a bureaucrat would ever need to be part of the process at all now, since RevisionDelete. Dominic·t03:22, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support Has been around since July 2005 and after reviewing contributions,Protects and Blocks clearly find a outstanding user and feel the project will only gain with the user becoming a crat.Pharaoh of the Wizards (talk) 02:06, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Strongly support — Avraham arguably should have been a 'crat long ago; he is sane, sensible, and highly competent, as evidenced by his outstanding administrator and checkuser work. I'm glad to give my strongest endorsement to Avi for bureaucratship. Master&Expert (Talk) 03:13, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support I thought you were a 'crat, already. Well, anyway, he does great things on here, and if things go as they are now, it looks like the evening of April 8th you will have something extra to celebrate besides freedom from slavery. Valley2city‽05:41, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Without question. Despite my previous opposition, my interactions with Avi over the last few months leave me without reservation when I support this candidacy. Has the experience and the aptitude – and the judgement. Will make a fantastic addition to the team. Best of luck! —Anonymous DissidentTalk05:50, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support. I trust Avraham's judgment and he has shown himself to be a constructive and helpful communicator and contributor over the last few years. I feel he would make an excellent bureaucrat. Rje (talk) 07:29, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support. I continue my support. :) I believe Avi is diligent, intelligent and motivated and will use any tools he is granted wisely and where they are needed. --Moonriddengirl(talk)13:28, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support - Screw my neutral, there's no need to abstain over something like that. The real question here is whether Avi would make a good 'crat, and I see nothing to indicate not. — neuro(talk)(review)14:33, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Anonymous Dissident says it best. This candidate (while still overusing smileys :) ) has become one of the people I most trust to do the right thing here... my previous opposition has become a strong support. Avi's many helpful and sage comments on the functionaries mailing list show that he is definitely ready for this role and then some, and his hard work shows he has the time to devote to do a great job. Also, we need crats with checkuser. Absolutely yes. ++Lar: t/c15:24, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support. The candidate is fully qualified for bureaucrat status under the traditional criteria, and his answers to the questions are satisfactory. In addition, I can attest that the rationale for selecting one or more checkuser- or oversight-enabled bureaucrats to deal with certain types of vandalism-related emergencies, as set forth in the self-nomination statement, is compelling. I have reviewed the opposer's rationale and find it wholly unpersuasive. Newyorkbrad (talk) 21:25, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support - No concerns with his record, we need more bureaucrats, the bureaucrat tools are not very dangerous, and having a checkuser-enabled bureaucrat would be helpful. EdJohnston (talk) 21:44, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support. Avi is a well-respected, sensible and competent administrator and checkuser. He is clearly trustworthy and is fully aware of the responsibilities and functions that go along with becoming a bureaucrat - I have no concerns about his suitability at all. ~ mazcat|c22:11, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support and I am baffled how anyone could oppose based on a proposed closure of the DHMO RfA, which had strong arguments on both sides for how it should be closed. I personally would have asked for an extension rather than close it at that point in time, but I would not argue with anyone who would choose to promote. Avraham's other qualifications are good enough for me. He's jumped through enough hoops for this and I am anxious to see how he would perform as a bureaucrat. Sincerely, Enigmamsg05:09, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Support Looks fine, and answered the questions well, showing the considerations necessary, even if the outcomes may have been different to mine. --GedUK10:43, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, but yeah The DHMO should not be passed in any regards and the lack of a strong enough rational in both your original vote and here is enough for me not to trust your closing judgment. Sorry. Letting one really bad pass to go through is too risky. Ottava Rima (talk) 02:56, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Just want to make sure we're clear; the question was whether to pass DMHO/Giggy when he was at 79%, when there were a few concerns about article reviewing and drama. I'm not challenging your oppose, of course, and even if it's a protest vote, it's legitimate, but I want to make sure we're all talking about the same thing, not about what happened later in that RFA. - Dan Dank55 (push to talk) 15:59, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
79% is an imaginary number. There was major off site canvassing. At least 100 of the supports were uncredible. The Crats at the time knew it. It states as much at the top of the RfA. It should have been immediately closed as not passed and restarted later. If it happened again, he should have been community banned from RfA in general. There were many message board forums that were calling random people out of the woodwork to vote in support of him. That goes against most of our core beliefs here. To support that RfA as passing is to attack what keeps Wikipedia strong. Ottava Rima (talk) 16:02, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Immediately closing like that is not the way that RfA works. Only for SNOW and NOTNOW closures does it last less than a week. And what would community banning him do to help? You realize Giggly wasn't the source of more, if not all canvassing? Xclamation point16:30, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I saw enough to convince me that Giggy was not ignorant of it going on nor completely uninvolved. Canvassing in such a massive level during an RfA is a complete violation of RfA, Consensus, and the rest. It would have to be closed just like Aitias's attempt to desysop a user via RfA. It is a complete breach of protocol and many people should be blocked in response. It is a major disruption to not only the individual process but to the sanctity of the encyclopedia as a whole. Ottava Rima (talk) 16:40, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose - I don't want to bring out the worst in me but anybody who gives a look at my talk page can see Avis constant harassment and intimidation: [3] - [4] - [5] - [6] - [7] - [8] - [9] -[10]- [11] [he has opened 3 separate ANI cases crying to his sysop friends to block me only once did he susceed[12] for 24 hours and i came back committed to forgive but he never ever stopped trying to block me and others out of here,[13]. I cannot see how a free and open community should entrust him with any power.] He has even deleted all history of a user who was ("his" - in alot of debates he and Avi were on the same page and that user also tried to block me[14].) sock-puppet. I am confident he has hurt many more who left and r gone i speak for them: Please don't let this power hungry user get rid of users like me; I may be to most of u a problematic user, and thus a bad advocate for the silent victims, but silence isn't an option. Thanks--YY (talk) 21:28, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I could be wrong, but I think he (or she) is referring to the comments by Avi on the talk page. Whether they constitute harassment is, of course, open to interpretation. --RegentsPark (My narrowboat) 21:52, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Your comments on that talk page are utterly baffling. Nowhere in the section did he attack you, and as for the blocks, I highly doubt that they were unjustified. Opposing over a personal vendetta you have against him is inappropriate. —Darktalk06:48, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Answer to Dark: I dont know this Avi persanal and i do not beleave his itimidation and haresments should be called "atacks" - all i say this user isnt at all the man i would like to see with any higer power then others. Please do not make it into a persnal vandate. Thanks--YY (talk) 13:24, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Oppose: Riana's RFB would be successful while Krimpet's RFA would not be? There's a direct contradiction there that makes me incredibly uncomfortable. --MZMcBride (talk) 03:43, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Can you please explain a bit further why you believe there is a contradiction between the RfA and the RfB? It seems fairly reasonable to me, though I might be missing something. NuclearWarfare(Talk)03:46, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not seeing the issue here either. More generally, truly borderline RfA's or RfB's come along about four or five times a year; I'm not sure that an isolated disagreement about how one might have closed one or another of them is the best means of evaluating a candidate for 'cratship, particularly one who has explained that much of his focus as a bureaucrat may lie elsewhere. Newyorkbrad (talk) 03:50, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Apologies, I thought that this vote was obvious, but clearly I was mistaken.
There are some bureaucrats who base promotions purely on numbers; that is, if it falls between X and Y, the candidate is promoted, if not, the candidate is not promoted. There are others who are willing to weigh each request and will occasionally bend the guidelines a bit in order for a candidate to pass who would otherwise normally fail. In this case, Avi indicates that he's trying to a member of both groups, something that doesn't sit well with me because it's unfair to the candidates. If you want to be a bureaucrat who uses strict percentages, that's an acceptable position to take. If you want a bureaucrat who doesn't, there are equally-valid arguments for doing so. But what we have here is a person who's trying to take a middle ground that I don't believe exists.
While it's very true that requests like these are the exception and not the rule, how a bureaucrat would have closed them does give quite a bit of insight into their views more generally.
As for the points brought up above regarding renaming and user names, I find all of that discussion to be entirely silly. There's simply no reason admins do not have the renameuser right (other than tradition). That's something that should certainly be addressed, but it is not a reason to make more bureaucrats.
(This can be moved to the talkpage if it is considered digressive.)
I don't think you have nearly enough information to conclude that the contradiction you are positing exists. Avraham has said that he would likely have closed an RfA at 67% as unsuccessful, but an RfB at 86% as successful. You infer that he is trying to have it both ways in the perennial debate about whether RfX closes should be purely numerical, or discretionary. But there are several alternative explanations that are equally likely (and therefore to be preferred in the first instance, per WP:AGF), and in fact in my mind are substantially more likely. (I emphasize that these are hypothetical possibilities; I've not discussed them with the candidate, and no one has asked him.) One of several possibilities that Avraham may have had in mind is that a 'crat might consider that for RfA, 75%+ is pretty much a guaranteed pass and 70%-75% is the discretionary range; and that for RfB, 90%+ is the guaranteed pass and 85%-90% is the discretionary range. Those figures are not universally agreed upon, by any means, but they are certainly reasonable, and they yield the conclusion that the Krimpet RfA did not attain consensus but that the Riana RfB might have.
With regard to distribution of the renaming function, I too have previously suggested that the rename right need not be limited to a small subset of administrators. The conventional response is that renames place a high load on the servers, sometimes slowing the interface for all users for a period of minutes, and therefore only a relative small handful of folks should have this capability. You (MZMcBride) are more qualified than I to comment on this rationale, but the fact is that the limitation of renames to 'crats is the current situation, and that for the reasons I discussed in my response to Tiptoety's neutral, there is a present issue in this regard requiring attention. Newyorkbrad (talk) 04:44, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Neutral
Slightly shaken that he would have passed Giggy. I have no problem with people who take a different stance than my own, but that RfA certainly should not have passed under any way shape or form. Neutralling due to positives. — neuro(talk)(review)13:17, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Neutral Avi seems like a fine candidate and a fine administrator and checkuser. However, I disliked his answer to DHMO 3 quite a lot. Even if he pretended he was closing it at the 7-day mark, East's oppose was far too recent to ignore. That evidence is quite stunning, and I believe enough for an RfA extension at the minimum. Closing as a "pass" at 299/85/17, which had quickly been trending downwards merits at the minimum an extension; a no consensus close would not have been bad either. The answer to question five I also disliked, but I will not oppose over it. NuclearWarfare : Chat 19:17, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Neutral - I just don't know yet. I'm still in the process of looking over multiple things about the candidate. Also, the DMHO problem isn't large, but it's something. iMatthew : Chat 19:21, 2 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Neutral - I have thought about this for a little bit now, and have come to the conclusion that I just can't make up my mind. Avraham is a very trustworthy editor whom has served the community in a variety of different ways, and I do not feel he would misuse the 'crat tools in anyway. That said, the main reason for this RfB is to assist with renaming bad usernames. While that is all fine and dandy, RevisionDelete has recently been implemented allowing for oversighter's to simply hide accounts making renaming of abusive names almost obsolete. On top of that, I feel that giving one user too many hats only adds to backlogs. In addition, I personally feel that we do not have a need for 'crats, and really the only area that could use a few more is around bots which is something that Avi does not have a lot of experience in. Tiptoetytalk01:34, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
There are specific reasons that a rename in addition to or instead of revision-deletion may be needed to deal with specific types of hurtful vandalism and attacks (e.g., if the improperly named user has been able to make a substantial number of edits before being detected and blocked). Many of these situations are exceptionally serious; if we do not have bureaucrats who can deal with them, I will have to consider proposing that we confer the renaming function directly upon checkusers or oversighters, in addition to bureaucrats. Electing one or more bureaucrats who are committed to addressing this problem directly, and have other tools that will assist in doing so, would help ameliorate this issue. I do agree that it would also be worthwhile to elect a bureaucrat or two with experience and expertise in bot-related matters. Newyorkbrad (talk) 03:41, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Hm, interesting. I was unaware of these circumstances and as such I will be reconsidering my !vote. Thanks for the information Brad. Tiptoetytalk03:44, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
As a steward, I vouch for the circumstances NYB outlines not being solvable with revision deletion in all cases, and also for how serious of a problem it can become in some circumstances. If the community does not grant 'cratship to several hardworking and trustworthy CU/OVs I would strongly support granting the rename right to all CU/OVs on en:wp as an alternative approach to solving the problem. ++Lar: t/c05:49, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Lar, and Newyorkbrad, this is simply not correct. If a user has made edits then hiding the account just as effective as always, which is to say, more effective than renaming the account. This is what happens: [15]; the name is simply removed. It is renaming that is the poorer choice in all cases; it actually creates bad log entries that someone with oversight is going to have to clean up, as well as not affecting things like deletion and protection logs of the user pages. There is no circumstance in which renaming is a better option. I feel like I am repeating myself, both here and on the mailing list. Perhaps you two should try the tool out? Dominic·t08:55, 3 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]