1st, I'm very sorry to say that I think a policy prohibiting selling the use of community granted tools (and similar) is needed. The main example given there involves OTRS. I think we already really have such a policy - it's just that we never thought we'd need to say it - "no selling the use of your tools"
But this is not to say that anybody here has been abusing their position or tools, its just that we need to say the obvious now.
Each policy that outlines special positions and tools can have a different variation on this proposed policy reflecting how the tools are used.
My proposal here follows. Please suggest alternative wording if you'd like. Note that WMF employees and employees of affiliates are exempt when fulfilling their duties for these employers. Wikipedians-in-Residence only need to declare what they are doing.
To be placed as a subsection immediately under "Use of rights"
No editor may use their global rights on Wikipedia or their status as a global rights holder to:
solicit payment for services to be rendered on Wikipedia, or
accept payment for the use of such rights or status
for the benefit a client
for advocating for a client, or
to evade our normal scrutiny system for new content and COI content.
Salaries, payments and grants made by the Wikimedia Foundation or its affiliates (e.g. chapters) are excepted.
Wikipedians-in-Residence should declare their paid status and their paid use of global rights, but are otherwise exempt.
Oppose - the one instance given as an example was a volunteer whose access was removed when it was discovered they were using the service to solicit money. Clearly the current system is working, and we don't need to explicitly say this. It also seems very odd to restrict paid editors from using global rights on enwiki, when global rights are mainly used from Meta, and OTRS access is only indirectly used on enwiki. -- Ajraddatz (talk) 07:04, 9 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Ajraddatz: Thanks for mentioning that most of the global rights users are operating off-enWiki. This proposal doesn't directly affect what they do off-enWiki.
Without this proposal, this policy simply says that there are global rights holders and that they are allowed to operate on enWiki within the bounds laid out in this policy. It then defines the groups and says what they do, and a very little about what they can't do here. If they abuse their rights then they are to be reported to the appropriate group (e.g. OTRS) with temporary measures that can be taken here, This proposal only changes the enWiki policy by adding paid-editing as an abuse of these rights here. As you said this mostly works ok already, but that doesn't mean that selling the use of global rights should not be explicitly prohibited. For example at WP:VPP there is one person who just says "I think Wikipedians should always be able to solicit 'payment for services to be rendered on Wikipedia'." We should just let it be known clearly that use of global rights for pay is not allowed, now that paid editing by global rights holders has shown up.
I don't think that the OTRS folks should disagree, since they are defined as an organization of *volunteers*. Just to be sure, I'll ping all the OTRS admins to see if this interferes in any way with OTRS activity @Daniel, Emufarmers, Keegan, Mailer Diablo, Rjd0060, and Sphilbrick:.
Other global rights holders migh also be pinged to see if there is anything here that interferes, but I really don't know who they are. Maybe people interested in global use of bots? Smallbones(smalltalk)19:04, 10 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I have held global rights of some kind since early 2011, and I have never heard of paid use of global rights ever being allowed or accepted by the community. As such, while the proposed addition would not interfere with the legitimate use of global rights, adding more text to the policy is not necessary. There is no demonstrable need for this addition, since the one case referenced was dealt with appropriately without the proposed wording. To me, this proposal just looks like an extension of the moral panic surrounding paid editing here. To be clear, I don't support paid editing myself, but I also don't support the disproportionate addition of bureaucratic rules to address a problem that doesn't exist. -- Ajraddatz (talk) 19:59, 10 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Global interface administrators can technically protect any page[edit]
Global interface administrators can technically protect any page with any protection. This also applies to users who are not administrators on the English Wikipedia. Because protection of articles is not really "their job", neither globally nor locally, I guess they should not do so? ~ ToBeFree (talk) 23:22, 20 November 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@ToBeFree: GEI's have the (protect) right primarily as it is required to edit a protected page they may have a special reason to edit. There could be some odd use cases where they may apply or modify a protection level, but it would be very very rare. There is an extremely small number of GEI's and they are carefully vetted (outside WMF employees there are only 10). They are still expected to follow all local policies and if they were to edit through protection or set/change/remove a protection level outside our policy we could block them (which would also likely lead to their GEI access being pulled). — xaosfluxTalk00:44, 21 November 2018 (UTC)[reply]
And also that all GEIs (excluding WMF employee) are required to renew their membership every year, so any misconduct on a big wikis like enwiki will prevent their renewals. — regards, Revi04:59, 6 June 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I'll also add that GEIs are technically competent users who are usually making changes that are global in nature, or which are otherwise needed across multiple projects. These people are an asset to our sites. This sort of benefit should outweigh the ridiculous jurisdictional boundaries that we seem to spend so much time setting up and fighting over. -- Ajraddatz (talk) 05:13, 6 June 2019 (UTC)[reply]