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Guides: Less Sleep - Articles - Wikipedia talk:Quickpolls - Wikipedia

Wikipedia talk:Quickpolls

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

See also: Wikipedia_talk:Quickpolls/Archive1

Table of contents
1 Proposed "no retaliation" rule
2 How to deal with frivolous quickpolls?
3 Purpose of quickpolls
4 Notice location
5 Wik and Nico
6 Quickpolls evaluation
6.1 Quickpolls that helped wikipedia
6.2 Quickpolls that didn't help wikipedia
6.3 Other
7 Wik
8 St Mary's Church
8.1 Wik on Jor
8.2 Merovingian on neutrality
8.3 Adam Bishop on crap
8.4 MyRedDice on reverting
9 Some reform steps
10 Gdansk/Danzig
11 Impostor
12 Voting eligibility
13 How does the 3 revert rule apply to move wars?
14 meta issues
15 Retrospective votes
16 3-revert rule and anons
17 Removing quickpolls after 48 hours
18 I hate quickpolls
19 TDC and 172
20 no active quickpolls...

Proposed "no retaliation" rule

I agree that retaliation is a bad idea, but simply making that policy is an open invitation to the usual trolls to carry on with their favourite tactic of complaining about the victim before the victim finally feels obliged to complain about the troll. (We saw this exact sequence happen countless times on RFC and Complaints about Users. Habitual trolls are very good at this stuff.) Is there a way to avoid this problem that you can think of? Tannin

Uh, focus on accuracy of content rather than assigning euphemisms to donors?

How to deal with frivolous quickpolls?

We have a fairly blatant example of a frivolous quickpoll at the moment - 172 has started a quickpoll in apparent retaliation for VV's quickpoll started about an hour earlier. Frankly, I think this is an abuse of process. The question is, how do we deal with it? Should we have some sort of sanction for abusing the quickpolls process - say a temp ban of the user, or a more limited ban on the user starting new quickpolls (e.g. for one month or whatever)? -- ChrisO 10:27, 2 Apr 2004 (UTC)

We should require that any new Quickpoll be sponsored by an admin user, Chris. That would reduce the volume of silly and trivial stuff here enormously. Think about it:

You see what's happened here, Chris? All of a sudden, we are reintroducing the idea of personal responsibility. We are proposing that starting a Quickpoll actually require thought beforehand, not mere short-term anger.

You are an admin too, if I remember correctly. How many trivial and petty Quickpolls are you going to sponsor if the last one you signed your name to was roundly voted down? Or Martin? Or Hepastos? Or Angela? Or any of the other 200-odd admins? On the other hand, if the matter really is serious, then you (or me, or whichever one of us), if we take our responsibilities seriously, will stick our necks out and move the poll. Tannin 10:55, 2 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Perhaps we could have a Wikipedia:Requests for quickpolls page, along the lines of Wikipedia:Requests for page protection. The quickpolls page could be protected (so that only admins can add new ones) but the individual quickpolls could be includes, similar to those used on VfD, that all users could edit.

An alternative might be to restrict who can actually vote on quickpolls, perhaps just restricting the "franchise" to the 200-odd admins. That would eliminate at a stroke the sock puppets, ineligible voters etc. It could be accomplished simply by protecting the quickpolls page so that only admins can edit it. Again, there would need to be some kind of "requests for quickpolls" procedure where an admin can take a quickpoll request forward if it passes the "smell test".

Admittedly, these aren't particularly elegant solutions and I don't want to bog the whole process down in another layer of bureaucracy, but there does need to be some way of weeding out the hopeless and frivolous. The whole concept of quickpolling will be discredited very quickly otherwise. -- ChrisO 11:12, 2 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I agree, Chris, at least in the broad thrust of your remarks. I think that the notion of restricting quickpoll voting to admins only would produce rapid howls of outrage! For all that it would produce a technically neat and tidy, and very practical, way of proceeding, I think its chances of being implemented are close to zero.

But something has to be done, and done fairly promptly, as - just as you say - the whole concept of quickpolling will be discredited very quickly otherwise. Tannin 11:28, 2 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Bear in mind that it was a non-admin who made the valid quickpoll, and an admin who made the frivolous, childish retaliatory one. (Ditto for RfC.) 172's violation of guidelines and abuse of the system seem to be of precious little concern, however, if the 1-10 vote on his censure is any indication. -- VV 01:47, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Neither poll was supported by the jury, VV. Neither one wound up being "valid" in any significant way. Notice also that there was a similarly clear vote against the suggestion of banning you. In other words, the community clearly felt that you had both violated the spirit of the guideline, and also that the violation was better dealt with via reprimand rather than an actual ban. Tannin

My issues with this so-called "jury" have been noted, but that is beside the point. I reported a violation of the guideline; he did not. That is the difference. In fact, the frivolous nature of his poll was so obvious I don't know how you can twist it around to make them equal. And if the "community" felt I had violated the "spirit", I was not made aware of this. -- VV 06:12, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Maybe we should require that quickpolls, in general, need to be started by someone who is not a party to the conflict. It doesn't need to be a sysop, just a regular, known member of the community.—Eloquence 02:30, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

Just remember to check to see whether the listing party has also failed to follow the policy and ensure that you list them if they have. Jamesday 07:02, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Purpose of quickpolls

I apparently did not understand what the point of having quickpolls is. 172 clearly violated the guideline in question in addition to his generally belligerent behavior on that page, but votes (though few in number) were overwhelmingly opposed. So, what is the criterion? I understand of course that 172's ideology fits with the community (at least most of the voters), but is it really going to be the policy that a user's actions are tolerable as long as they have the "right" opinions? Or, should I assume that there is no three-revert rule at all? I held back on undoing 172's grossly inappropriate reverts because I believed that there was a rule and system for this. Apparently there is not. -- VV 01:47, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

In most cases the purpose of a quickpoll is to cause the subject to shape up, knowing that any further misbehavior will almost certainly result in a ban. Clearly, an improvement in a user's behavior is a better outcome than a ban. Mkweise 02:16, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

You're welcome to try talking to 172. Perhaps you will wind up being relentlessly personally attacked and campaigned against as well. -- VV 06:27, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

For what it's worth, I would have supported a temp-ban if you had given 172 a warning and a fair chance to improve his behavior, as required by quickpoll policy. Otherwise you open yourself up to charges of a "setup".—Eloquence 02:22, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

I have been dealing with 172 for months on this issue. See my comments on the RfC pages, for instance, or Talk:State terrorism, or Talk:History of the United States (1980-1988). He has never improved his behavior. In this case, I explained in the summary box my objection to him reverting days worth of edits because of some objection left over from last week; what more needs to be said? And, how could it be a "setup"? By undoing his wrong revert, I'm "causing" him to re-revert? Isn't the whole point of this guideline to address this very situation, known as an edit war? -- VV 06:27, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Quickpolls can result in temporary bans from editing any page on Wikipedia. This is a rather drastic measure that can drive a user away permanently. That's why, when developing the quickpoll proposal, I took great care to explain that quickpolls should only be used when the user has been given a fair chance to improve their behavior, and when they have been made aware of the guideline which they appear to have violated, or are about to violate. Otherwise it would be very easy to trick a user into reverting more than three times and then start a quickpoll on them.

Note that if 172 breaks the three-revert-guideline again, that will certainly be grounds for a 24 hour ban. But it's his first violation under this new system.--Eloquence* 06:31, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

172 cannot seriously claim ignorance. And I really doubt two or even a hundred violations would change anything. 172's appalling behavior is irrelevant to most; this is ideological, and nothing else. Look at most of the users who opposed 172's censure. Secretlondon all but declared in my poll she was itching for a reason to ban me (apparently because I'm part of the "Fox News crowd" - hah!), but was unwilling to go as far as 172's outright fabrication of an excuse (unlike Wik). I'm sure if I ever fought back against someone like 172 with four reverts, I'd be banned at the drop of a hat. We may find out soon enough, because my inference as of now is that this supposed "rule" is simply empty rhetoric, or, at best, a way to hold a popularity contest. If I sound rather annoyed right now, it's because I am. -- VV 08:13, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I understand. Whether 172 can claim ignorance or not, warnings are a precondition for quickpolls. Regardless, I do agree that some users vote simply with their bias, and that is a trend that concerns me. Do you have any suggestions to remedy that?--Eloquence*

I don't have a specific policy recommendation, but perhaps we should not have this rule if it's not going to be enforced, or will only be used to force a majority POV. A project like this requires participants to put ideology aside and make honest judgements on the facts of the cases. Since it is clear that is not the case, I don't know what can be done; Wikipedia may become naught but a battleground. (Certainly some leftist users are willing to remove crudities such as "BUSH SUCKS!!!" from pages, but beyond that I see little evidence of sincerity from those I have crossed with.) 172's behavior is beyond the pale; he reverts at will, provokes edit wars, abuses every system of conflict resolution (RfC, quickpolls), misstates facts and deceives incessantly, and refuses mediation when people ask. Why is this tolerated? The answer is sad indeed. -- VV 21:27, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Well, I doubt that the answer is that a majority of Wikipedians secretly worship Mao and Lenin ;-). I think the poll would have had a better chance of succeeding if it had as its goal an official warning, rather than a 24 hour ban. Like it or not, people are afraid of losing valued contributors, and 172, in spite of his undeniable flaws, is widely considered one. He has contributed huge amounts of generally qualified historical information to Wikipedia. Rest assured, however, that at least I take the revert policy seriously, and will not make exceptions for anyone. I hope that the reforms below will contribute to more consistent enforcement.

Next time you have a problem with 172, feel free to leave me a message, and I'll see what I can do.--Eloquence* 21:37, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

Thanks for the offer. No, I do not think most are as far out as Mao/Lenin. Anyway, I just want to point out that I did only ask for a warning (a "censure", actually), not a ban. -- VV 21:43, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Notice location

Can some kind soul remind me where else I am supposed to post notice that I have blocked a signed-in user? I seem to remember that I am supposed to place a notice somewhere. (No, not the mailing list - I stopped reading & posting to that unreadable madhouse long ago.) But I think there is a page here somewhere I'm supposed to put a note on. Thanks -- Tannin 01:57, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Nowhere that I can think of. Do you want me to tell the mailing list for you? moink 01:59, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Thankyou. I'd appreciate it. I find the mailing list overly difficult to post to. (For complex reasons to do with using multiple ISPs.) Tannin

Done. moink 02:11, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Wik and Nico

I strongly oppose the idea of using this page to attack opponents in edits wars and pushing own POVs, like Wik is allowed to. Also, a strong Polish lobby, which also has an army of known and unknown sock puppets, may certainly be able to abuse this page in order to reach such a goal. There is clearly a need of more discussion of how this is supposed to work. Nico 02:26, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I resent your generalization. With the exception of Wik and a couple of anons, they are all reasonable people unless provoked. Mkweise 03:37, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

User:Gdansk is worse than anyone else involved in these disputes. As far as the other Polish contributors, most of them are fairly polite, if often unwilling to listen to (or unable to understand?) what those who disagree with them have to say. To some extent, this might have to do with a language gap, I'm not sure. As to Wik, he's perfectly reasonable assuming one makes the effort to actually discuss things with him. As far as I can tell, on the Polich city name issue, his only concern is that the older German names be listed as "former" names, rather than as present-day alternatives. Wik's unwillingness to actually discuss his concerns can be irritating, but usually the actual issue is fairly valid (if sometimes rather nit-picky). john 06:29, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Yes, I counted User:Gdansk as an anon since that username is now blocked. As for Wik—his POV is generally very reasonable, but the way he conducts himself in disputes goes against the spirit of Wikipedia and creates a hostile climate. Mkweise 13:48, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Quickpolls evaluation

Well, while I don't personally agree with quickpolls at all (see archive), at least we can work on them and make them Suck Less (less perjorative than it sounds: see: mutt (software) ).

(A quickpoll can be listed under more than one catagory at once, if you think someone else listed it under the wrong one, list your example under the other. This division allows for easier tallying. )

I'm pulling 4 that I saw *didn't* work out too well from the previous archive page, since that's what I've concentrated on so far. This doesn't mean I'm trying to push my bias, just that my particular POV was biased up till now. Please do add quickpolls that *were* useful to balance my POV. Thank you!

If you participated in a quickpoll that reached its goals successfully please do add it to the "quickpolls that were successful" list.

Quickpolls that helped wikipedia

  1. User:Dogmaster3000 , was a test poll.
    It was a test poll, and it worked out fine. Kim Bruning 22:04, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)
  2. User:Anthony DiPierro was banned after consensus was reached
  3. User:GrazingshipIV was not banned after gaining much support

Quickpolls that didn't help wikipedia

  1. user:reddi Revenge poll by user:Lord Kenneth
  2. user:172 was in an edit war with VerilyVerily
  3. user:VerilyVerily was in an edit war with 172
  4. user:Lord Kenneth (first poll, second or both?), user left went on vandalism rampage after quickpoll, resulting in his blocking and a 2nd poll.
  5. user:Lord Kenneth (second poll) the user was banned prior to the poll, so the concept of using a quickpoll to judge agreement prior to acting failed. Jamesday 07:55, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)
  6. User:wik, User:Jor (2nd incarnation now ongoing)
  7. User:Anthony DiPierro was banned after consensus was reached

Other

  1. user:Lord Kenneth, user left went on rampage after quickpoll

Wik

Is Wik allowed to delete content from the page by blatantly reverting? — Jor (Talk) 18:19, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Please see talk pages. — Jor (Talk) 16:57, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Is Jor allowed to vote in his own polls by calling them "non quickpoll polls"? --Wik 18:24, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

There is no such thing as a "non quickpoll vote" on the Quickpolls page, which is obviously designed for Quickpolls, but Jor keeps adding this nonsense, so that he can thwart the rules and vote in his own poll. Any comments relevant to the polls below should be made in the polls below. --Wik 18:47, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

See also his comments above. Any one with eyes can see he is incorrect. — Jor (Talk) 17:02, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Wik is currently attempting to remove info by reverting this page. — Jor (Talk) 18:14, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Above (User:Jor) is not taking into account that a) page location was decided by talk page, b) anon being reverted was doing highly questionable edits, and c) discussion of page title is ongoing on talk page. — Jor (Talk) 19:00, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

St Mary's Church

Round two of Wik vs Jor, place your bets now! — Jor (Talk) 17:30, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Since this is a political dispute about a controversial page title which is being actively discussed, I feel it does not belong here. — Jor (Talk) 17:07, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

This is not a political dispute, but simply a (blatant) violation of the 3-revert rule by Jor. --Wik 17:09, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

Number of reverts is explained by this diff, and the reason a revert was done is that the copies are not identical: the Danzig (Gdansk) copy is a later edit. Quickpolls are not to drag someone through the mud because you refuse to use talk pages to discuss controversial naming issues. — Jor (Talk) 17:12, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

This was by no means vandalism, it was you doing your usual POV pushing. --Wik 17:15, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

Yes Wik, I think everyone knows by now everyone you disagree with is a vandal, moron, idiot, revisionist, POV pusher, or combination of the above. — Jor (Talk) 17:17, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Support both:

Oppose both:

NON Quickpoll vote:
Support removing these polls so the issue can be discussed on talk, where it should:

  1. — Jor (Talk) 17:36, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Clarify need for non-quickpoll vote: This began because of a political dispute, and is just distorting this page. — Jor (Talk) 18:24, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Comment: Wik has multiple times reverted this page, deleting a vote from the non-quickpoll vote above and comments. — Jor (Talk) 18:12, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Wik on Jor

Additionally, Jor violated Quickpolls rules by reverting this very page several times to reinstate his own vote on a poll he brought himself as well as an invalid vote by an anon. --Wik 18:11, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)
I'd rather not use a Wik-defiled term, but that is a blatant lie as edit history proves. — Jor (Talk) 18:24, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Oh come on Wik. As you could see from the article's talk page, and the anon's talk page, this anon was doing similar reverts on many pages. I simply put it back where it belonged, according to community consensus as seen on talk. — Jor (Talk) 16:51, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

There is not even remotely such a consensus. Stop lying. --Wik 16:54, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)
Please see talk page, Wik, and refrain from your insulting and accusing. — Jor (Talk) 16:57, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)
You just continue lying. The talk page clearly shows that you have no one but Nico on your side. --Wik 17:00, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)
Sigh. Whatever Wik. — Jor (Talk) 17:02, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Is User:Mkweise Nico or me according to you? — Jor (Talk) 17:19, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Neither, but he proposed "Gdansk (Danzig)". But if you want to count him, it's still anything but a consensus since Halibutt, Kpalion, the anon, and me oppose it. --Wik 17:23, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

Merovingian on neutrality

  1. The first title is more neutral. --Merovingian ↕ Talk 17:06, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

  1. Don't you people have anything constructive to do?? --Merovingian ↕ Talk 17:06, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)
    Exactly! Discussion is ongoing on talk, and this REALLY does not belong here. — Jor (Talk) 17:07, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I quit this discussion. You two can battle it out. I find it to be absolutely ridiculous and childish to continue to dispute German/Polish names in such a small-minded and pugnacious manner. --Merovingian ↕ Talk 17:35, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

Adam Bishop on crap

  1. I support blocking Wik just so I don't have to see this crap over and over again. Adam Bishop 18:14, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Which crap? Bringing a perfectly legitimate case here, which this page is explicitly designed for (violations of 3-revert rules)? --Wik 18:16, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)
Having an edit war over the Quickpolls page? This is bullshit. Do you even do anything but go around reverting things? We would be better off here without you, I think. Adam Bishop 18:19, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Am I having an edit war on my own? I wonder how that's possible. Yet you say no word about Jor, who started it by reverting a page 20 times. I'd say we would be better off without people whose judgement is that much off balance. --Wik 18:22, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)
You're right about that, get rid of him too :) Adam Bishop 18:24, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

MyRedDice on reverting

19 reverts in under an hour is a clear and serious violation of the guideline to revert no more than three time in any given day. Martin 18:43, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Does that include vandalism? — Jor (Talk) 18:45, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

It includes everything. Whether you consider some edit vandalism or not is irrelevant. If it really is vandalism, someone else will revert it. Martin 18:51, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Some reform steps

I have changed the Wikipedia:Quickpolls policy in two ways:

  1. Users must not be a party to a dispute to start a quickpoll, they must convince someone else to do it for them.
  2. There needs to be a minimum number of 20 votes in order for the quickpoll to be implemented (note that 16 votes, i.e. 80% of 20, are not sufficient, we do want a reasonably large sample).

This is a response to two observed problems:

  1. Users start quickpolls in the heat of the moment. By requiring them to convince someone else to do it, quickpolls become a community instrument rather than an instrument of individual revenge.
  2. The first wave of votes tends to fall into one side or another. Furthermore, important comments may appear that would have altered the QP had it run for a little while longer. Hopefully we can make better decisions by getting more people involved.

If we still get pointless polls, we may want to allow uninvolved admins to remove a poll. However, I believe that the two above measures should already make a substantial difference.--Eloquence* 19:57, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

So can involved parties vote on a quickpoll, then? There's been some uncertainty about that, but it's established that the proponent cannot vote. That rule seems tied to an assumption that the proponent is the opposing party to the quickpoll subject, who cannot vote either. --Michael Snow 20:05, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

No, involved parties cannot vote.--Eloquence* 20:08, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

If somebody goes on a rampage, then, and a number of people are involved in fighting it, it seems to me like this disqualifies quite a few people who in my mind should be allowed to vote. And incidentally makes it a lot harder to come up with 20 votes.

What does "involved" mean, anyway? Do we start excluding people, including negative votes, who have been working on the article where a revert war is taking place? I know Wikipedia operates by consensus, not democracy, but when we do use voting procedures I have serious concerns about disenfranchising lots of people with subjective criteria. --Michael Snow 20:25, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Indeed, involved is too ambiguous. I like a clearcut definition whenever possible. Dori | Talk 20:27, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

I object. These are supposed to be quick polls you can hold BEFORE acting. It takes too long to gather 20 people before acting in an emergency. Jamesday 07:52, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

on Jor

I am adopting this quickpoll in order to comply with the policy that the proponent of a QP may not be a party to the dispute. As Jor himself as previously started a quickpoll on Wik with the comment "Wik is currently on a revert rampage again, accusing me of 'vandalism'", and shown the exact same behavior here, we can assume that he is well aware of the guidelines. I therefore propose a 24 hour ban.--Eloquence* 20:13, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

As Jor has now recognized his error, I withdraw my support for this quickpoll. Hence, if nobody else adopts it, it can be removed from this page within 6 hours. However, it is to be archived, so that if Jor engages in similar behavior in the future, we can refer to this case.Eloquence*

On Wik

Unless someone else adopts this poll within 6 hours, I will remove it from this page as per the policy that participants to a dispute may not propose a quickpoll.--Eloquence* 20:19, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

Please delete. I retract it as it was made in the heat of the moment. — Jor (Talk) 20:47, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

You added that policy after the poll was started. No ex-post facto rules, please. anthony (this comment is a work in progress and may change without prior notice) 20:24, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I have adopted these polls for procedural reasons - I do not believe changes to policy should be retroactively applied. Martin 22:16, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)


Gdansk/Danzig

Why couldn't the Gdansk/Danzig issue be resolved through a Wikipedia-wide poll? It seems to me that this would go a long way toward resolving quite a few issues. One party may not like the result, but at least there will be some stability. Dori | Talk 20:11, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

I agree. However, someone would have to refactor all the arguments, so it is an informed vote.--Eloquence* 20:20, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

Each side could give their arguments in round one, give replies in round two, questions by other people in round three, and round four is a vote. After the vote, whichever name is picked as the more dominating one, will go into titles, be used throughout the articles (the other name(s) will of course have to be explained), etc. I am tired of seeing this issue come up time and time again. Dori | Talk 20:23, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

It's not about that. Noone are trying to move the main article from Gdansk to Danzig, or use Danzig in references to the present-day city. We are mainly discussing which name(s) should be used in historical references to Danzig before 1945 (Free City of Danzig, Danzig Research Society, Günter Grass was born in Danzig etc.). John Kenney has proved numerous times that the city in English is overwhelmingly referred to as Danzig as such. Nico 23:09, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

The issue here seems to be native German speakers and native Polish speakers arguing over what native English speakers should write. We've occasionally seen such things in other areas as well, where the local partisans bring their naming fights to en. Perhaps we should bar non-native English speakers from such things, so they don't bring their fights here? Jamesday 08:08, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

My assessment would rather be that some Poles (they don't need to have Polish mother tongue, but they most certainly are Polish nationalists) put a pride in eradicating traces of German presense east of the Oder-Neisse line whenever, and wherever, they can. German spekers are not concerned to any particular degree.
— A quickpoll doesn't help if the conflict continues after it. What's needed is discussions on Wikipedia's policy in this regard.
--Ruhrjung 08:19, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I expect that there are also cases of some German nationalists doing things related to Germany. Never all of any nationality, of course - most people of all nationalities are good people and a pleasure to deal with -it's just the exceptions which cause problems. Jamesday 22:12, 10 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Impostor

Is a quickpoll needed to ban (not 24 hr block) User:Jo%E2%84%9D and any new incarnations? It seems to be a clear-cut case of vandalism to me. Dori | Talk 20:40, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC)

I believe there are policies on inappropriate usernames that can be leveraged in these cases. wikipedia:username. Martin 22:22, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Voting eligibility

I see on the article page that Martin has moved some votes based on what he said were eligibility issues. Where are the voting elibigility rules located? RickK | Talk 23:26, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Wikipedia:Quickpolls_policy#Rules. Martin 23:29, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)

How does the 3 revert rule apply to move wars?

Nico and Wik have been at it again. This time they stopped at 3 reverts each, then switched to a move competition. I can't count exactly how many times the article was moved back and forth—I think only developers can look into that—but they did move it several times each. Mkweise 22:59, 4 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I moved two times, I think. Nico 23:21, 4 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Did any part of the article, including its title, change to effectively what it was before? If it did, it was a reversion. Jamesday 05:53, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

meta issues

A growing number of contributors seems to be concerned that Wikipedia:Quickpolls tends to place the rules of a game before the quality of encyclopedic entries. Perhaps this page ought to be ditched, and replaced with an entirely new stage in the WP conflict resolution process. What do people think about naming specialized, subject-area arbitrators? 172 08:16, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)
In sum, I'm just wondering if there's a way to bring in an element of specialized expertise in the conflict resolution processes pertaining to content (rather than "behavioral") disputes. 172 08:44, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

A great idea, so long as they can be over-ruled, and so long as you arn't one of them ;). It strikes me as a fascinating way to combine the best of nupedia and the wikipedia. m:Wikipedia needs editors has some thoughts/ideas on the subject. Sam Spade 08:22, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)
If I were nominated and/or elected to any post, I'd accept/not accept, notwithstanding your stance. 172 08:44, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Clearly you are not interested in the thoughts or feelings of others, that is why you'd make a poor arbitrator. Sam Spade 18:30, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Huh? What does this have to do with anything? I'm not being nominated for any post right now. 172 20:11, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Retrospective votes

Jamesday raised a matter of some import above, but as it is tangential to the issue discussed up there, I'll put it here, in a seperate section. James wrote that: "user:Lord Kenneth (second poll) the user was banned prior to the poll, so the concept of using a quickpoll to judge agreement prior to acting failed."

In this case, I think it would be fairer to say that the concept was not applicable: it didn't "fail", it just wasn't one of the options available at the time.

But that said, I don't think that this matter was really one that Quickpolls were designed for. I made the judgement that there was an urgent need to intervene in an ongoing vandalism spree, and blocked the user. This is something that admins have both the right and the duty to do on their own initiative, provided that the situation does indeed warrant such action. It's not something that any admin should do lightly, of course, and the admin in question is obliged to post an immediate explanation of his action so that the community as a whole (a) knows about it, and (b) has the opportunity to comment on it and if necessary reverse it.

Prior to the advent of Quickpolls, this community judgement was done on an ad-hoc basic, with the ultimate authority resting with Jimbo or the arbitration committee. Now that the Quickpoll mechanism exists, is it an appropriate one to use in cases like this, where the action has already taken place? Or is this type of circumstance one that should still be dealt with by Jimbo or the arbitration committee? Or is there a third possibility.

Tannin 08:55, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

One of the matters which prompted quickpolls was the actions of individuals banning, unbanning and desysopping prior to seeking the views of the community, at times contrary to those views. The purpose was in part to provide a fast way to confirm that the views of the individual contemplating the action accurately reflect the view of the community, thereby providing some protection from inappropriate action even in rapidly changing situations. I agree with the decision you took, but not with the way you took it prior to a quickpoll. Jamesday 05:49, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

But James, that is what admins are for - to protect the 'pedia against vandalism. There is no requirement to seek a vote on outright vandalism, and never has beem. Nor could there be, for two very practical reasons: (a) it takes several hours for a Quickpoll to achieve a consensus (hours during which the vandal is running rampant), and (b) if the vandal decides to target the quickpoll voting page itself, it becomes near-impossible to use it to determine a consensus. The role of admins in preventing vandalism is not in question here. What is in question is the role of Quickpolls (if any) in this process. There is no policy on this at present, which is why I brought it up. I am quite surprised that no-one has expressed an opinion on this matter yet. (Including your good self: your reply above addresses a different matter.) Tannin 07:25, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

The history of this is in part Tim Starling insisting on a straw poll before desysopping someone, then proceeding while there was agreement and reversing once that agreement had ended. Then Erik desysopped someone without a straw poll first and there was discussion with Erik in IRC about the need to have at least a straw poll prior to unilateral action. After that the following was proposed on the mailing list and here by Erik:

"Please look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Quickpolls .It is a proposed polling system for backing up sysop and developer decisions in cases like 24 hour bans or emergency desysoppings. Not a voting system per se but more a way to confirm that the community is behind a certain action before it is taken. 80% approval is needed or any quickpoll."

So, proposing here prior to acting was the original intent. If it turns out not to be fast enough (and it's extremely unlikely that anything requiring 20 votes will be fast enough) then we can adjust it as necessary. It has to be fast at first, requiring enough people to ensure it's not unilateral, and easy to undo if necessary as more people vote and possibly disagree, if it was a clique who made the initial votes. Jamesday 10:30, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

3-revert rule and anons

Since registered users are constrained by the 3-revert rule and can be brought to Quickpolls to be held accountable... is there any reason that an anon that violates the rule cannot be blocked for 24 hours without a quickpoll? I am watching a revert war at Cosmotheism where registered users are trying to adhere to the rule while an anon is flagrantly disregarding it. All registered users and another anon are reverting three times and the anon believes himself above the rule.

Either this anon needs to be brought to a Quickpoll again or blocked immediately - Tεxτurε 17:18, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Anons can be brought to quickpolls to be held accountable - if they are aware of the rule in question.
I think there's definately an argument for violations of the 3-revert rule by anons being a blockable offense (see wikipedia:blocking policy), but I'm personally unconvinced. It might create more problems than it solves, to be honest. Martin 22:59, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Have there been cases where users log out in order to be able to squeeze in an extra few reverts as an anon? I could well imagine this strategem being employed, if it has not already. -- VV 23:05, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Yes, but so far they've been pretty obvious (and it only gives you three more reverts - the sort of scum who pull this trick are normally outnumbered 10-1). Martin 00:38, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

It's worth remembering that developers can link logged in and not logged in edits. If you suspect that a logged in user was trying to conceal their identity so that their breaking of the policy would not be noticed, please ask a developer to check, so that the appropriate action can be taken. This applies to sock puppets as well as edits while not logged in - the policy is addresing people, not accounts or IP addresses. Jamesday 05:56, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I asked a developer to check this one. Nothing was reported except what is clear from the visible edit history. Jamesday 06:27, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

The case in question is Paul Vogel, who has never bothered getting a login (but signs his talk page comments). All attempts to introduce clues to him have so far been futile. Where would one report gross violations of the three-revert policy? - David Gerard 07:32, Apr 6, 2004 (UTC)

Report gross violations to any administrator for appropriate action. Note that by "gross violaton" I don't mean 4 reverts rather than 3! If it's marginal, take it to a Quickpoll, or just ignore it. What I'm talking about is the sort of case where you have a user doing a whole great stack of reverts against a clear consensus - 10, 20, 30 of them - or (as our friemd 24.45.99.191 was doing about 10 hours ago) getting abusive and calling people lying hippocritical Jews. Tannin 07:57, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

To follow the process to the letter, please warn all of the IPs involved and Paul, then if it continues and you're not involved, start a quickpoll yourself if you meet the qualifications. If you don't, a request here should be sufficient, just paste a template with the edits giving the warnings, the dates and times of the reverts and any information you may have about the individual acting. Once we can tie in an account and a series of IP ranges we can act against all aliases which are in use by the person and make it harder for them to dodge. Note that if it is an IP editing, the sysops have an easier threshold for acting than if it is a named user, so it may be viable and appropriate for a sysop to block the IPs while still proceeding against the named user and all of their aliases via a quickpoll. Jamesday 10:23, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Removing quickpolls after 48 hours

Wikipedia:Quickpolls policy says that A quickpoll can be removed from this page [...] 48 hours after listing if no ban is implemented. However, Wik's quickpoll (regarding St. Mary's church) is still here after almost 72 hours. Did I misunderstand the policy, or it this simply an oversight? -- uriber 15:31, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

There doesn't seem to be any policy placing a 48 hour limit on voting. It's all permissive can rather than setting a voting time limit. However, IMO a 20 vote ceiling and a 48 hour time limit makes it almost impossible to use quickpolls to impose a penalty. It effectively converts them to the polls we had before but with a short time limit which almost guarantees nothing happening. Jamesday 21:33, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I put the ceiling back to 8 votes. 48 hours is enough time to take emergency action. Martin 23:51, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Thanks. Jamesday 22:15, 10 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I hate quickpolls

At first I thought quickpolls were a good idea. I envisioned them as a good way for the community to quickly come to consensus in cases of egregiously unacceptable behaviour. It now seems like they're just one more way for people to get angry with each other and people are using quickpolls to push their POV or to punish users they disagree with. I don't think they're contributing to a peaceful community. moink 20:29, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

(William M. Connolley 20:47, 2004 Apr 6 (UTC)) On the plus side, if all there is trivial disputes, then that must imply that there is very little "egregiously unacceptable behaviour". Which must be a good thing.

I think quickpolls for solving excessive reverts have failed. I still think they're useful in cases of emergency de-sysoping and vandalism rampages. Martin 21:11, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Sheesh, give it some time. We just changed the policy to disallow involved parties from starting quickpolls (and thanks to Martin, the current polls don't even fall under that policy).--Eloquence* 21:18, Apr 6, 2004 (UTC)

Fair point Erik. Longer term, we might want to think about replacing "violating the 3RR" with "violating the 3RR on several pages" - IE, a reversion rampage to mirror vandalism rampages. Martin 22:19, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

It has its uses. Before the quickpoll page, the battles ranged over Wikipedia:Requests for review of admin actions, Wikipedia:Problem users, Wikipedia:Vandalism in progress, Wikipedia:Requests for adminship, and Wikipedia:Possible misuses of sysop rights. So a large number of otherwise useful pages were rendered periodically useless due to some discussion that was never going to be conclusory anyway. Now all of those pages (or their descendants) are markedly quieter, and so work gets done. So frankly if all this page does is to condense all the hate into one nasty little bolus that most wikipedians strike from their watchlist and get on with something constructive, then it's succeeded. This, or any other device, isn't going to fix the entrenched problems or cure the deranged, but it serves one function more: there is that class of troubled user who genuinely thinks they're doing the right thing and that most folks would agree with them (which was usually the plaintif cry on ViP, for example). A quick vote here settles that speedily and conclusively. This, or something much like it, is as good as it's going to get. -- Finlay McWalter | Talk 00:12, 7 Apr 2004 (UTC)

You may be right. I didn't really mind most of those other pages, though I thought ViP was (and still is) abused for disputes rather than the pure simple vandalism it was designed for. Maybe I'm too much of an idealist, to think that people should just be able to talk out their problems. moink 01:20, 7 Apr 2004 (UTC)

TDC and 172

I would suggest that User:TDC and User:172 be held to this policy, since it appears that there is an issue. Giving two people a time out is also good, because it equally eliminates partisan hostiles. In this case TDC should probably get a 48 hour ban, since he seems to be starting an ill tradition of insults. -SV(talk) 02:16, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Honestly, I admit my guilt. I prioritize stopping the vandalism of an encyclopedic entry over the daily gamesmanship on the Wikipedia:Quickpolls page. Perhaps the fetish of the "three-revert rule" has caused people to forget this, but the reason we're on this site is to work supposedly on an encyclopedia. Things would go a lot more smoothly if another admin backed me up next time, instead of dragging me on this page to play count the reverts games with the trolls attempting to mutilate articles. 172 05:28, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)

removed from main - not a quickpoll, just a suggestion. Martin 21:16, 6 Apr 2004 (UTC)

no active quickpolls...

... that feels kinda nice. :) Martin 01:27, 10 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Spoke too soon! ;-) Martin 12:08, 10 Apr 2004 (UTC)

... that feels kinda nice. :) Martin 21:29, 11 Apr 2004 (UTC)

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