The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the miscellany page below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the page's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.

The result of the debate was reform. As with the Esperanza MFDs, the community has called for a "reconstruction", or "reformation", or whatever you want to call it. A discussion regarding the bot policy and BAG has already been initiated here, addressing the concerns raised in this MFD. Discussion there would help bring this matter to a close. If the Esperanza MFDs are any indication on what's to come, then reform must occur, lest another MFD spring up. Sean William 13:45, 1 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It has become clear that the closing statement did not say what I meant it to say, so I will rephrase it here as to more clearly put forth my interpretation. The result of the debate was keep, although some reform might be needed. If reform doesn't occur, I'm not going to hound anybody or promise the doom of the process via MFD. Que Será Será. If it works, who are we to complain? Sean William 17:39, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Wikipedia:Bots/Approvals group[edit]

The group this page describes operates without community consensus and without regard to community consensus, operates a "fiefdom" and defends it vigorously. The Bot Approval Group is basically a closed clique that exercises far more power than is reasonable in the Wikipedia environment and should be replaced by a far less formal, less bureaucratic group; as such I recommend deletion of this page, and by extension the group it defines. Kelly Martin (talk) 18:34, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Can I just request that if people think the group should cease operations, that the page be tagged as ((historical)) rather than deleted? It seems a tad ungrateful to the volunteers on BAG to erase them from Wikipedia history altogether. Thank you. --kingboyk 18:52, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  1. Prevents people from having a vote on bot approvals (they seem to disagree...saying anyone can comment and has a voice...but if that's the case why is there a group to vote if anyone can vote on approvals?)
  2. Indicate that approvals must have someone to close them, and the BAG members are authorized to do so. Why can't the community do so? We trust the community with forming consensus on our most precious resource, the mainspace, but not with bots? This is confusing.
  3. Indicate that technical knowledge is important for bot approval. I fail to understand this. A person with absolutely no background in bot writing or indeed even code writing can make a legitimate, well reasoned point that a given Xbot might be bad because of Y. It doesn't take technical knowledge to have a legitimate opinion.
  4. Have paradoxically indicated that membership is low, and creating this bureaucracy somehow solves this problem. I've asked about this a few times now, without answer. Looking at their talk page, there's 29 people contributing in the last three months. The group has 9 people. Why the extra bureaucracy to prevent 22 other people from having a say in bot approvals in the name of encouraging people to contribute and have a say? It's non-sensical.
  5. Barring further review, it seems that the only people that can get on the BAG are those that receive unanimous (or nearly so) of the current members of BAG. This creates a neat little exclusionary fiefdom. This is rather alarming to me.
Would you be willing to, or do you mind if I, number the sub points so they may be addressed individually? I believe you're right in some of the points you make but factually incorrect in others, you see :) --kingboyk 18:49, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Done :) --Durin 18:50, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks! With regards to point 1, anybody can take part in bot approvals, and folks other than BAG often do. Point 2, you are correct in how you describe the process; I can only presume that the bureacrats don't want to do the job themselves (they do the flagging after all). Why can't anybody close these discussions? I don't know! I've never examined any source code or had to make any technical decisions as a BAG member, and I'm not a Mediawiki dev anyway. Point 3, agree. Point 4, don't know. Point 5, it can look that way but it has nothing to do with hoarding power. Look at the people involved, these are all consensus-abiding, well-respected but low-key Wikipedians, doing a thankless task. Anybody is free to !vote on BAG membership but it seems most people don't care. Of course they do care when a bot goes apeshit though ;) :) --kingboyk 19:00, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Re 1) Then why is an exclusionary group needed if anyone can participate? Re 5) If anyone is free to vote on BAG membership, and anyone is free to vote on bots, the only remaining reason seems that you need someone to make a decision. Well, the community can make that decision. I just can't get my head around how this group is an asset to the process. It seems quite the opposite; a hindrance to it. --Durin 19:04, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • You seem to be the making the false assumption that I am defending the status quo :) I'm merely explaining to you how it works. I haven't decided yet if I support reform or of what sort. I don't think deletion is the way to go, though. --kingboyk 19:09, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • See my note above; technical qualifications should not be a requirement to having a say on bot approval. But, the exclusionary group has decreed that this must be so. Thus, the technical view is emphasized over all other views. This is not good. --Durin 18:50, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not disagreeing with you in your general point. You could be approving bots tommorow and I see no reason why you shouldn't. You've made a fair call there.
Let's make one thing absolutely clear however. I, and members who came after me such as martinp23 or ST47, have decreed nothing. Wikipedia policy grows organically, and, as such, BAG and the approval process became policy long before we joined. All we have done is join this group to help out (I, in fact, was poacher turned gamekeeper, as I joined not long after getting my own bot approved, because they were real short members at the time). If the community decides change is needed that's wonderful, but let's not get too carried away with "power" and "decrees" because it's really not like that.--kingboyk 19:07, 26 April 2007 (UTC) (e/c)[reply]
  • With respect, please review the comments made by others on all the relevant pages since CydeBot was blocked (probably the trigger for this nom, which is rather making a mountain out of a molehill). In any case, I absolutely hate it when only BAG members comment on a nomination, and every time a see a non-BAG user commenting, I mentally praise them. It is iterated everywhere that BRFA needs community input, but there is insufficient interest. Even if, as you suggest, a "more inofmral process" were to be instituted, a group of users would end up frequenting the pages, and effectively become a de-facto approvals group. Not good. Martinp23 18:58, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Could you please explain to me how including the community is a "not good" thing? You've totally confused me. We trust our community with the encyclopedia itself. But, we can't trust them with bot approvals? Um,...uh...wow. --Durin 19:00, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • You seem to have misread my comment (it probably wasn't clear) - it is most certainly not good to delete the BAG pages, allow a new system to appear (as you suggest), and allow that to acquire a guerilla "de facto" approvals group. I hope I've clarified the comment. Further - I really can't see any other system being effective at all - people just aren't interested in bot approvals, as a quick look at the number of community comments at BRFA should tell you. Martinp23 19:04, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • My point is that creating an exclusionary group that you have to be voted into creates a mini-cabal that is self enforcing and anti-Wikipedia. We're a community based effort, not a set of hundreds of fiefdoms. I don't have any problem with a group that oversees bots. I do have a problem when that group thinks it a good and right thing to create barriers to admission to that group. We're all equals here. Yet, the BAG makes certain others more equal. It encourages badge wearing, which can be seen on the userpages three of the nine current members of the BAG (you, User:Ram-Man and User:Xaosflux, upper right in all three cases. --Durin 19:09, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Rather like ArbCom, adminship, and bureacratship then. At least all of these cliques are open and well advertised, and anybody can apply, unlike some others. --kingboyk 19:13, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • (ec)Badge wearing? Virtually every organisation on Wikipedia has some userbox or icon to indicate membership, so why don't we delete them? I'm sorry - I fail to see your reasoning on this point... Martinp23 19:14, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • This is rediculous. My "badge" means nothing to me, other than as an otherwise useful description. If it was that big of a deal I'd remove it. I assure you that it's hardly prestigous, afterall coming under fire often is so fun (right). I also have an "admin" badge too, but I'm a firm believer that adminship is not a big deal. You can't make the assumption of my purposes because I have an icon on my user page! Good grief... -- RM 19:42, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I agree with you. BAG membership is intended to be a technical safeguard and to have the authority to determine consensus. The actual approvals themselves are open to everyone. But instead of pointing fingers, do you have an suggestions how to improve the real problem, lack of participation? No amount of process reform is going to get more people to be involved in a process that they don't care about. -- RM 19:48, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Perhaps we ought to ask the crats what they think? I know it's their "job" and we can "mandate" them to do it, but otoh I don't ever recall seeing crats complaining about BAG lessening their work load nor indeed that they do a bad job at it. --kingboyk 20:05, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment: If it ain't broke, don't fix it. As i've argued elsewhere, BAG members do a fine job of determining community consensus on bot issues and defer to the rest of the community when it is appropriate. The real issues are community participation (which you can't force people to do) and speed of approvals. With regards to the latter, if you make the bureaucrats determine consensus, you're only going to slow down the process and make it even more painful than it is now. You'll also make the process more elitist, because a smaller, less open group determines the result. -- RM 20:15, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I agree. I think BAG does a great job (and I mean the members who are left). I think they do a necessary job; I believe Wikipedia is sufficiently large and bots easy enough to acquire (they don't have to be written any more) that regulation is needed (ArbCom seems to agrees with me). I further believe that if the community really don't want bots to be regulated they're entitled to choose that option. What I think would be foolish is to imagine that we can let this be self-regulating like AFD, because the community really aren't that interested in taking part. I'm also wary about the role of IRC in this. Decisions should take place on wiki wherever possible. Furthermore, I don't see any disatisfaction from the crats at being able to delegate these decisions to BAG. All that said, I didn't and don't want to be associated with anything which looks like a smash and grab or empire building, one reason why I'd support Kelly's proposal for a change to an "advisory" group. --kingboyk 20:24, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Would the bureaucrats be willing to look at source code? Do all of them have the technical expertise to do so? If they don't, then essentially the 'crats would go back and look at what the BAG said, to see whether it is ok to close or not. Or hey, even better... grant makebot rights to all BAG members, and the bureaucrats are out of the equation. Titoxd(?!? - cool stuff) 23:18, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This should be handled in 2 ways. First a noticeboard/consult where all the wikipedians can comment. Then Bureaucrats (who ARE the ones who can grant bot status) will close the discussions (after all past year it was requested by bureaucrats that they should handle bot status and it was granted, so now they should handle it). Bureaucrats are elected by community unlike BAG, which is self elected (and thus really cliqueish).
My point in short. Experienced wikipedians should have a say on what bots run and what bots not. Yes. But any experienced wikipedian, not a closed self perpetuating committee. (Think of what would be of RFA if only a dozen non-bureaucrats users hold the power to decide who will be sysop and who not, and moreover, only they decide who else can join in having that power). -- drini [meta:] [commons:] 13:36, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
You didn't read the debate did you? :) BAG members aren't "elected by BAG members", the process is open to the community. The bureacrats do the actual flagging too. --kingboyk 13:45, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
What power are you referring to? BAG does seek community consensus in all of its actions. Just a read above will assure you that in this sampling of the community, the majority want a specialized group performing the approvals. Aside from this sample, actual practice shows that most of the community does not desire additional input beyond BAG for bots. If BAG has no power to enforce its recommendations, what's the point? Reducing it to an advisory group would either destroy the process or be a name change with no actual change of process. I don't want to spend hours of volunteer effort if it's purely advisory and can be overriden on a whim. This whole idea behind an advisory group sounds interesting in theory, but it doesn't make sense between what the community wants and how the community acts towards bot approvals. I have to wonder how many people talking about the change of name have even bothered to see how BAG actually operates. Let me list the main BAG tasks:
  1. Community-based approvals open to everyone (~90% of the work)
  2. Determining consensus after discussions have closed (~5% of the work)
  3. Having the technical understanding or experience and policy understanding to override or temporarily block community approval in certain situations. (~5% of the work)
The community has spoken loudly in support of #3 and the only other proposed solutions to #2 are to either have a bureaucrat do it, which restricts community input even more and adds to the bureaucrats' work burden, or to eliminate it entirely (which is anarchy). If you believe that #1 is not open to the community, you have not done your research and are wildly misinformed. -- RM 13:07, 1 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the page's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.