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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

< Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost | 2013-07-17

The Signpost


Arbitration report

Kiefer.Wolfowitz and Ironholds case opens; July 22 deadline for checkuser and oversight applications

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  • ByNeotarf

    The case Kiefer.Wolfowitz and Ironholds was opened. Voting on the Tea Party movement case continued, after a failed attempt at moderated discussion. A group tasked with deciding the content of the lead section of the Jerusalem article has reported back to the committee. Applications for checkuser and oversight permissions close on 22 July.

    Open cases

    Kiefer.Wolfowitz and Ironholds

    This case, brought by Mark Arsten, involves a dispute between Kiefer Wolfowitz and Ironholds, the original account of Wikimedia Foundation employee Oliver Keyes, that began on-wiki and escalated in off-wiki forums, ending with statements that could be interpreted as threats of violence. The evidence phase of the case closes 26 July, the workshop closes 2 August, and a proposed decision is scheduled to be posted 9 August 2013.

    Tea Party movement

    This case involving an American political group, brought by KillerChihuahua, is now unsuspended, after a moderated discussion failed to agree on the ground rules for such a discussion.

    Two additional findings of fact currently have enough votes to pass: that there was no misconduct on the part of KillerChihuahua, and that the current sanctions, which prohibit “more than one (1) revert on the same content per twenty-four (24) hour period" are inadequate.

    Other requests and committee action

    Inactive

    Race and politics

    The Race and politics case, brought by UseTheCommandLine and dealing with sourcing methods in articles pertaining to race politics, has been suspended for a two-month period beginning 26 May 2013, to see if an editor central to the case will return to editing.

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    These comments are automatically transcluded from this article's talk page. To follow comments, add the page to your watchlist. If your comment has not appeared here, you can try purging the cache.

    Kiefer.Wolfowitz (talk · contribs) and Ironholds (talk · contribs) have made several comments about each other on off-wiki forums, and this dispute has spilled over onto Wikipedia, although some of it has been revision deleted. Some of these comments could be seen as personal attacks make reference to violence.

    • What shocks me is that users will take every opportunity to stir up drama and lob accusations without first substantiating their claims. Pot calling the kettle black. James (TC) • 12:15pm 01:15, 19 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
    When editors accuse each other of violating BLP, the bar of evidence usually is not very high. Mark Arsten's statement is unquestionably a single primary source, and that it does not present the allegations as true. Either is usually enough for editors to exclude content from BLPs, though in my opinion they are generally overzealous about it. I might not be as concerned about parroting primary sources regarding anonymous pseudonyms, but this article tars someone under their real name, so standards equal to those for an actual biography article should apply. I wasn't criticizing Neotarf specifically, because the whole team working on the Signpost is responsible for upholding standards - I suggest they do that. Wnt (talk) 15:36, 19 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
    It's a very hard task to write this report while retaining what every reader will regard as a strict sense of balance. In my view, Neotarf is highly skilled at the forensic analysis of text and as a writer (not to be at all negative about James's contributions, which have had to be put on hold because of his high RL workload). Personally, I'd probably have used a title without the names in it, since it does broadcast the matter around the WM movement. I may be so bold as to say that Oliver—whom I like and who does excellent work for the WMF—might adjust his style of interaction as a result of this incident. His style sometimes blurs humour, genuine insight, smut, and frivolity in ways that other people can take the wrong way. He doesn't seem to be sending the right signals to Arbcom to maximise the likelihood that the case will be rejected. It would be sensible for him to walk the pragmatic line: arbcom is not about truth or justice; it's about keeping the game afloat. Tony (talk) 15:59, 19 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]

    I would invite Wnt to read the arbitration report again, more carefully. The report has accused no one of anything by name, it merely says statements were made that could be (and in fact have been) interpreted in a certain way. If you look at the case, you will see there are in fact two editors that statement could apply to.

    I see no point in quoting any of the original statements directly, especially since one of the comments was made on-wiki and has now been scrubbed. There is much nuance in this case, and it needs to be read in its entirety to be fully appreciated. It would not be fair to either editor to quote anything here out of context. My goal here is not to represent every ping-pong of every argument, but to indicate in broad terms what a dispute is about, and provide a link for those who want to read further.

    Likewise I see no point in redacting the name of the case just because one of the named parties is a WMF employee. The Signpost has long used case names in its headings, see for example this report from April of 2012. The original nameofKiefer.Wolfowitz and Ironholds was "Offsite comments and personal attacks". It was the arbitration committee, not the Signpost, that changed the name of the title to reflect the parties named in the dispute.

    That said, I would have to say that I feel very strongly about the way accusations about individual editors are represented in the Arbitration Report, whether they are WMF employees or ordinary garden-variety users. This is something I have made clear in private communications with other Signpost volunteers. My write-ups usually name only the party bringing the request, not any named parties, and I have taken care not to repeat unproven, and possibly untrue accusations. I do however report findings that have been voted on by the committee, but even then it is impossible to say whether something is empirically true or not, only that the committee has reached a conclusion.

    What is notable about the Kiefer.Wolfowitz and Ironholds case is first, the interplay between on-wiki and off-wiki interactions, second, the fact that some comments were interpreted as being threatening, and third, the relationship between one of the named parties and the WMF. These are not just peripheral issues, they have been identified by the participants as being central to the case. For the Arbitration Report to not to report on this would indeed be a dereliction of duty.

    Neotarf (talk) 04:34, 20 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]


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    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2013-07-17/Arbitration_report&oldid=1193871481"

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