The NoSeptember Admin Project


Intermediate admin punishment proposals

Ideas for intermediate punishments for admins who come before Arbcom. Related ArbCom policy (see Footnote #1)


Deficiency of the current punishments applicable to admins:


A sanction that is not intermediate:

  1. Desysopping with permission to reapply via the RfA process
    • a desysopping with the requirement to reapply for adminship is in practical effect a permanent punishment (since most admins involved in any significant dispute could not succeed in a new RfA, given the enemies they pick up just doing their job as admin and the low percentage level of opposition required to block adminship) (see Resysop applications)
    • An example: The difference in the future of adminship for Ashibaka, BorgHunter, Carnildo and Karmafist were clearly determined by ArbCom in its decision. The wheel war had supporters on both sides, neither side could have overcome the 20-25% opposition level that it takes to deny adminship in an RfA, so the decision to desysop was for all intents and purposes the final say on the matter, and it was ArbCom not the community that made that decision.
    • A major impact of a sanction widely perceived as too harsh by many is the departure from the project of many editors, not just those involved in the case, but also those who are watching the controversy. We have seen several major contributors depart in the recent case where this sanction was applied.

An aspect of admin accounts that can be exploited by ArbCom in their sanctions:


Intermediate sanctions proposed:
Given the lack of sanctions between the minor and the major, and the inability of admins to create alternate admin accounts, the following intermediate sanctions could be effective (options 2 - 5 are the new proposals being made here).

  1. Probation (this has used by ArbCom)
    Can be applied to the specific circumstances of the case. (Example: In a case where moves and/or deletions are the issue, the sanction could be to prohibit the move or deletion of any article beyond a certain size.)
    1. Timed probation against blocking
    2. Timed probation against deletion
    3. Timed probation against protection
    4. Timed probation against actions that can be performed by non-admins (moves, involvement in specific articles, etc.)
    Enforcement can involve an extention of the probation period or a reopening of the case in case of violations.
  2. Temporary timed desysopping
    (example: X is desysopped for 3 months, adminship to be restored automatically)
    • In a community where participants may only stay for a few years, a 2, 3 or 4 months desysopping penalty is a significant yet non-permanent punishment.
    • Probation in areas not requiring admin buttons can run concurrently.
    • If the sanctioned admin has a meltdown during this temporary desysopping, the ruling can be reconsidered by ArbCom before adminship is restored.
  3. A negotiated penalty between Arbcom and the admin with enforcement action available if violated. See Carnildo's negotiation proposal (comment below his acceptance), which if it were an ArbCom case, could be a first step to negotiate a sanction. ArbCom will of course only accept a sanction that they feel is adequate, and an impasse may occur, leaving the decision to ArbCom to make in the end. A negotiation can show the good faith of the involved admin, and past successful negotiations could generate precedents for other effective intermediate sanctions in the future.
  4. Presenting a choice of penalties to the admin (example: X has the option of accepting a timed desysopping of 4 months or reapplying earlier via RfA).
  5. An alternative to RfA for resysoppings. In most cases in Wikipedia a consensus is required to change the status quo (i.e. a lack of AfD consensus means the article is kept). The opposite is the case with desysopping. In a desysopping case, the status quo going into the controversy is that the user is an admin, yet we require a consensus to maintain the status quo and a lack of consensus changes the status quo. Perhaps, instead of requiring an RfA, an RfD (request for desysop) could be ordered, requiring a consensus to desysop (with perhaps a 60% level considered a consensus).

The Bottom Line:
The current policy stated in Footnote #1 below is inadequate in the range of sanctions to be applied against admins who abuse their powers. ArbCom should try various intermediate penalties, encourage community feedback, and develop more options for handling admin abuse cases. Continuing to limit its sanctions to either reprimand on the one hand or permanent desysopping (where reapplication is required) on the other makes for a very clumsy enforcement policy.

Without intermediate sanctions, desysopping as a punishment is used much less frequently than it could be (with temporary desysoppings). This results in the RfA community appying very high standards to admin candidates, and makes adminship a "big deal", since once someone passes RfA only very rarely will they be desysopped, even if they become a "problem admin".


Footnote #1: The current ArbCom policy, Wikipedia:Arbitration policy/Past decisions#Administrators:

Statement(s) of principle
Previous penalties relating to principle

Administrators who abuse their powers may be subjected to a reapplication for adminship via RFA procedure.