This page documents a feature the Wikimedia Foundation's Anti-Harassment Tools team may build. Development of this feature is complete.

🗣   We invite you to join the discussion!

The Interaction Timeline shows a chronologic history for two users on pages where they have both made edits.

The goal of the feature is to help administrators understand the sequence of events between two users so they can confidently make a decision about how to best resolve a user conduct dispute. Non-administrators may also use the tool to determine whether to file a complaint about another user, and to compile evidence for that complaint.

Use the Interaction Timeline[edit]

The Interaction Timeline can be found at https://tools.wmflabs.org/interaction-timeline/

How it works[edit]

Screenshot of the Interaction Timeline

If you provide two usernames and a wiki, the Interaction Timeline will display a chronologic list of edits made by the two specified users on pages where both users have edited. For example:


The start and end date options allow you to narrow what information is displayed on the Timeline and calculates pages where both users have edited. For example:


The edits are displayed on a vertical timeline, with the edits made by one user on the left and the edits made by the other on the right. Clicking on the edit card opens a diff in the Timeline for quick review. The diff can be opened in a new tab by middle click. All dates and times on the Timeline are displayed in UTC.

When activity shifts from one user to the other, the Timeline calculates and displays the amount of time between interactions in small red text. We believe this is helpful in understanding if two users are rapidly editing over each other, potentially stalking each other or edit warring.

Known limitations

In the future we would like to add new functionality to alleviate these problems. This may be a way to hide all edits from a certain page, all edits in a certain namespace, or a tool that helps you locate the closely-discussing interactions in a wide date range. Your feedback on this talk page or via email will help us build the best possible version of this tool!

Examples to test

  1. User:Test-apples and User:Test-bananas on test.wikipedia.org
  2. User:Test-carrots and User:Test-durian on test.wikipedia.org
  3. User:Derby pie and User:Sweets lover
  4. Tinker toys and Baby rattle

Leave us feedback[edit]

We'd love to hear if this tool is adequately meeting your expectations and needs! We encourage and welcome feedback and ideas of how we can make the Timeline even better at our talk page.

Project information[edit]

Updates

December 20

User interviews (mentioned in the November 8 update, below) are underway for the Interaction Timeline. We hope to complete the interviews in January and will work with our designer to see if there any changes we can make so the Timeline is more useful. We won't start development until April 2019 at the earliest.

If you have thoughts about the Timeline, please let us know on the talk page! We still believe the tool has potential for locating and identifying evidence for user disputes.

November 8

After several months of existence, the Interaction Timeline is not seeing the adoption we were hopeful for. This may be due to a handful of reasons so we will be performing some interviews with Wikipedia administrators and other users who investigate user disputes. We have some theories on what would make the tool more useful and look forward to seeing what we learn over the coming weeks.

After our interviews we will either conduct more interviews, leave the Timeline as-is, or work with our designer to address the opportunities raised in the interviews.

Problems we believe the Timeline can solve

As we've observed how user disputes are reported, we've identified some common problems:

Project goals

In the end, we want users to be able to make decisions about conduct disputes:

Use Cases

Wikihounding

"He said, she said" harassment

Conduct vs. content dispute

Preliminary sockpuppet investigation

Existing features

Log formats

Many MediaWiki tools use a log format which could be used in this feature:

These all include:

Wireframes

First draft

For our first iteration of wireframes, we've anonymized a real example of two users who accused each other of harassment on English Wikipedia's ANI. We identified all the pages where they had both edited and plotted them in a vertical timeline. We extrapolated the section they edited from the edit summary.

Each edit block would have a link or option to view the link, either in-line on the tool itself or in a new tab.

These are wireframes — the exact dimensions, colors, and text will be finalized later. The feedback we need at this stage is on the general layout, arrangement, and organization.

Second draft

Third draft (current draft)

Next steps[edit]

Communication and training plans

See Planning for communication and training

Metrics

See Metrics