The following discussion is an archived debate. Please do not modify it. To request review of this BRFA, please start a new section at WT:BRFA. The result of the discussion was Revoked. In June 2009, ArbCom restricted Lightmouse from performing any automated tasks. They are now considering lifting this restriction, subject to (re)approval of any tasks by BAG. To avoid any confusion, I am marking Lightbot's old approvals as "Revoked". Anomie 17:38, 13 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]



Reconsider[edit]

I move the approval of this bot be revoked until

  1. A test suite is developed which will be run after every single change to Lightbot, no matter how minor
  2. A plan is presented to roll back all edits performed while the bot was malfunctioning.— Preceding unsigned comment added by Gerry Ashton (talkcontribs)

I second this; it was never clear that the intent here was to unlink all year dates whatsoever. There is an ongoing discussion as to what year links are valuable; there is no consensus that none are. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 23:16, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I third this. I have read the above request trying to work out what was approved or not, and gave up after the third or fourth set of strike through bits. If people can't work out what was approved, a request can't be considered valid. Carcharoth (talk) 23:44, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Fourth. The approval did not give the bot the right to remove all linked years. Corvus cornixtalk 23:45, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

"Years" discussion started at Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style (dates and numbers)#Year articles and wikilinks to year articles. Carcharoth (talk) 00:22, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Kotinski's post assumes that every article is on someone's watchlist, and that those watchers will notice and fix any errors that Lightbot makes. I have roughly 150 articles on my watchlist, and I'd say Lightbot has made errors on around 5 of them. Articles about topics that happened before the year 1000 seem to be more prone to trouble. So I think the error rate is too high. Also, there is no procedure to avoid making the same mistake even after it has been reported. There is no procedure to undo edits that were made during a period when the bot is known to have been broken. I don't think Lightmouse has the correct attitude towards quality control to be running a bot. --Gerry Ashton (talk) 17:31, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The scope of this approval seems insanely broad. I see that this very issue was raised by several of the commenters in the original discussion, but never addressed. There are many MOS related edits that require human judgment and should not be made by bots. -Chunky Rice (talk) 23:33, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I think bot has done 340,000 edits over a period of 5 months. It is inevitable that many people have seen its edits. This debate looks to me like a debate about the Manual of Style. I am not sure if this is the place where the MoS can be redebated but this is what it says:

Discussion of the meaning of those words is best undertaken at wt:mosnum. Lightbot (talk) 11:00, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. To request review of this BRFA, please start a new section at WT:BRFA.