Jredmond

AUSC candidate pages: DominicFrankJredmondKillerChihuahuaMBisanzTznkai

To vote, click here • Poll open 00:01 (UTC) 30 October to 23:59 8 November (UTC)


Jredmond (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA)

Nomination statement (250 words max.)
  • Hello, everyone.

    For those of you who don't know me, my name is Jim Redmond, and my username is Jredmond. I've been an admin on the English Wikipedia since July 2005, a member of the volunteer response team since February 2006, an administrator on the OTRS interface since February 2007, and an admin and bureaucrat on the private OTRS wiki since it was created in November 2007. My identity has already been confirmed with the WMF office.

    During the day, I work as a system and network administrator in an academic research environment. Previously, I did the same sort of work for a large local non-profit organization.

    As a member of the Audit Subcommittee, I hope to help resolve complaints quickly, effectively, discreetly, and with an appropriate level of decorum. Our primary goal here on Wikipedia is to create a good, neutral, and well-sourced encyclopedia. I'd like to help good editors get back to that work as soon as possible.

    I look forward to any questions, comments, or concerns you may have for me. Thank you for your time.

Standard questions for all candidates

Please describe any relevant on-Wiki experience you have for this role.

  • I have been an administrator here for over four years. In that time, I've done everything from RC patrol to BLP cleanup, and while I can't go into great detail I have been involved in a number of oversight-related cases through my work on the volunteer response team.

Please outline, without breaching your personal privacy, what off-Wiki experience or technical expertise you have for this role.

  • For the past ten years, I have worked in system and network administration. A signifiant portion of my current job deals with management of my department's public and private address spaces and with investigation of suspicious accesses.

Do you hold advanced permissions (checkuser, oversight, bureaucrat, steward) on this or other WMF projects? If so, please list them. Also, do you have OTRS permissions? If so, to which queues?

  • I am an administrator on the OTRS system, and consequently hold administrtor and bureaucrat rights on the private OTRS wiki. I have run (unsuccessfully) for steward, but have not pursued advanced rights on any other WMF wikis.

Questions for this candidate

Please put any questions you might have in this section.

Questions from Xeno
Question from Mailer Diablo
Question from SilkTork
  1. An appropriate use of CheckUser: Confirming that two or more vandals or spammers share the same IP address space.
  2. An inappropriate use of CheckUser: Using CheckUser information to harass a user who has been involved in an edit war.
  3. A borderline use of CheckUser: Releasing CheckUser information to someone claiming to be a law-enforcement official without first trying to verify that claim. Remember, on the Internet nobody knows you're a dog, so it's important for users with the CU bit to confirm credentials before handing out private details. The exact details of my response would rely on the exact context of the case, of course, but in general I'd be inclined to remove the bit for a period of time.
  4. An appropriate use of Oversight: Removing unsourced allegations of a heinous crime, like rape or murder, from a biography.
  5. An inappropriate use of Oversight: Removing well-sourced material that does not violate copyright or disclose private personal information.
  6. A borderline use of Oversight: Removing heinous-crime allegations from a BLP when those allegations are only tangentially mentioned in a reliable source or only mentioned in an unreliable source. In potential-libel cases, I'd rather the oversighter err on the side of caution until a better source can be found.
Does this list answer your question? - Jredmond (talk) 18:40, 2 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Yes. Your borderline responses are very good - you give examples, and give your view on how you would respond. That is exactly what I wanted. SilkTork *YES! 11:53, 4 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Question from Emufarmers
Questions from Cenarium
  1. oversee the use of the oversight and checkuser tools by monitoring the checkuser and oversight logs
  2. advise (through email) checkusers and oversighters on best practices, point out possible improvements in their use of the tools
  3. verify that CU, OS and privacy related matters are properly handled in the functionaries-en mailing list
  1. Oversee tool use by monitoring logs? It never hurts to browse logs (says the sysadmin), and intense log-monitoring should be the first step in any investigation, but routine deep scouring is overkill.
  2. Advise on best practices? I would upon request, and when the improvements would help that person avoid any potential misuse. Since the AUSC would be policing use of the tools, though, friendly-but-unsolicited advice could easy be misinterpreted as dogma even when not meant that way.
  3. Verify that matters are handled properly on functionaries-en? Yes, this is well within the scope of the AUSC.
  • Ultimately, this will depend on intent (which, I know, is extremely difficult to divine). An investigation and a temporary suspension of bits would be appropriate in every case, but the permanent removal of bits should only be necessary in the event of malicious or spiteful disclosure. In your particular example, I would tend towards removal of bits, though I'd also need to know more details about the case.
  • If the alternative account is clearly maintaining or improving the wiki, encyclopedia, or editing community - the legitimate uses listed on WP:SOCK qualify here - then there is no need (IMHO) for an investigation or formal sanction. Beyond that, it would be appropriate to suspend bits pending investigation, and to remove them permanently if the alt-account had been used to damage the wiki, encyclopedia, or community.

Comments