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 sheer number of participants in this debate, as well as the many opposite arguments that have been articulated in either sense (some of which are mutually exclusive), makes it very difficult to weigh the balance towards a single, unequivocal result. Furthermore, opinions are virtually split evenly between both positions, reinforcing the division that this discussion creates in the opinions of editors. Therefore, it is impossible to reach a result other than no consensus achieved. However, this instance has also revealed itself fruitful, as several comments have raised important points that should not be overlooked, and which have been acknowledged even by many of those who support keeping this Noticeboard.

It is clear that the intentions of those who have invested great effort in creating and maintaining this Noticeboard are good, and they should be praised for this. However, in the opinion of big part of the community, it is slowly but steadily losing its focus and turning itself more into (to put it bluntly) some sort of execution platoon rather than a centralized forum for discussion of possible actions by the community. Revealing testimonies of this tendency are:

It has been suggested, and I agree, that this Noticeboard should and needs to be closely monitored to correct these flaws and remove its newborn subtype of bureaucracy before it becomes too established. In its present form, the theory intended by those who created it and by others who've worked hard to make it a viable venue for discussion is getting remarkably different from its every day practice. A couple of things to keep in mind when observing its future development could be summed up as:

As conclusion to this rationale, I also consider relevant the possible advantages that this Noticeboard potentially possesses, and which have been aptly put by several users below; namely, being a separate forum to discuss a very delicate matter that normally takes a longer time frame than the Administrators' Noticeboards permit. Whether said benefits are augmented with a corrected functionality remains to be seen and observed, and will ultimately decide its fate in the future. - Phaedriel - 12:47, 9 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Wikipedia:Community sanction noticeboard[edit]

Wikipedia:Community sanction noticeboard (edit | talk | history | links | watch | logs)

This page was created with the intent that it was to become a place for the community to come together and discuss matters similar to those that are normally discussed on the administrative and incident noticeboards. It was felt that because "administrators'" was used in the title of the other two pages, it excluded the rest of the community, which they truly did not.

This board was originally known as the "Community noticeboard". It has however become a board to get a vote on officially banning users. I had originally planned to send this board up for the miscellany for deletion when the board decided to discuss the merits of the original community ban on Daniel Brandt including some users who wished to lift the ban on the user (irrelevant of later actions by Jimbo concerning Brandt). This board is no longer used to discuss pressing issues for the community but rather a brand new version of Wikipedia:Quickpolls.

Such examples of abuse of the board include the discussion of Eagle 101's unblocking of Gen. von Klinkerhoffen and the extreme misunderstanding of what a community ban is, a request for more people to comment on a ban (not unlike an AfD discussion), as well as the previously stated Daniel Brandt discussion and discussing whether or not the original community bans are still in effect.

The decisions made on the community sanction noticeboard have also spread to other pages concerning the community ban, but those pages will have to come up at a later date. Deletion is my first choice here. Sending it the way of Esperanza is my second choice. We just need some sort of decision to eliminate this mess of bureaucracy before it becomes like WP:AfD or what has become WP:RFCN.—Ryūlóng (竜龍) 08:28, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

A community ban is one that "not one out of 1,200+ admins are willing to undo", not something that was "ratified" on a noticeboard. Check out this current request. Community bans are simple, something that nobody is willing to undo, not something that is ratified by a board. Also please note the board's original purpose was to be a place to post things visable to everyone, not a place to discuss users. I'm seeing cases where the board is being used for nothing but to attack other editors, without going through the dispute resolution process, or even attempting to open an request for comment on a user. See WP:CN#Request_for_blocking_of_user:Pdelongchamp_on_vlogging_article, that user has never had a Request for comment, or gone through the dispute resolution process, but rather just ran to get a ban. Misuse of this board (whose intent was never to be for bans to start with) are rampent, just check the archives here which shows 38 sections with a bolded endorse, support, or oppose. —— Eagle101 Need help? 08:35, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
If you don't support quickpolls at all, then how do you suggest we interpret non-poll discussions. Polls are only used to make concensus measurable. - Mgm|(talk) 09:13, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Reasons? Dmcdevit·t 09:33, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Consensus between reasonable people is typically pretty obvious without polls. In addition, no matter how many bogus polls you make, the user can still be unbanned by any administrator if the ban is unreasonable, which is the exact same situation as without polls. —Centrxtalk • 14:33, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"Consensus between reasonable people is typically pretty obvious without polls." But generally it does take discussion, unless Wikipedia features Internet-compatible telepathic scanners. WP:CSN is for such discussions, not voting, as it says in its very first sentence. -- BenTALK/HIST 10:46, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No, most things on Wikipedia are done without discussion. Discussion is done if someone is unsure about an action, or if a legitimate person does dispute or is going to dispute it. —Centrxtalk • 16:24, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
D'ye mean "beerocratic"? *hic* -- BenTALK/HIST 12:51, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Arbitrary section break[edit]

I still don't see any counter to Dmcdevit's arguments. I'd also like to note that there is now an easy way to search AN and ANI archives. Kindly click over to this script written by GM, here. All archives of AN and ANI are searchable, and are thus very easy to find past banning discussions. —— Eagle101 Need help? 18:14, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

For one thing, that tool wouldn't have helped me last week when I needed to perform a search and couldn't recall a sockmaster's username. That tool also does nothing to address the other uses of that noticeboard, or to address the fact that non-sysops have little reason to slog through these lengthy and primarily administrative boards in search of occasional ban discussions. Also that tool is of little value for survey purposes: it provides information to people who already know exactly what they're seeking, which is only one of many uses for an archive. DurovaCharge! 21:25, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Durova well Keep in mind that this board's "small" number of arhives is only temporary, provided that this passes MFD, (not that I think it should) the archives will only grow in number, so that argument on how the archives are simpler to search does not make much sense to me. Having the tool at least allows you to search for part of say... one of the socks, or someone else that you saw edit that discussion. Heck if you edited the discussion then you can do <yournamehere> AND <something that you recall in the discussion>. In any case I feel the arguments to delete are far stronger then those to keep, sorry. —— Eagle101 Need help? 21:53, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I find it very odd that you imagine I have yet to consider such a thing. Naturally enough, a supportive referencing system will probably emerge after the raw archives grow to a certain size. My particular vision for that is a table formatted index that would correlate date, specific sanction, and outcome along with a section for relevant notes and a link to the archive thread. A similar compilation would be several orders of magnitude more difficult to assemble from the cluttered AN and ANI archives. For example, very few Wikipedians would recall the genesis of the JB196 community ban. It was originally an indefinite block that had been instituted shortly before the banning policy language changed last fall. The basis for that indef was somewhat open to challenge, so after his long term sockpuppet BooyakaDell was conclusively identified as the same person (technical limitations prevented a direct checkuser) the community ban discussion referenced the sockpuppet rather than the sockmaster. Why did that happen? Well, people do odd things sometimes on the spur of the moment and precedents hadn't been organized for ready reference. So recently when some people wanted to look up the case they had a hard time of it. I cannot emphasize this enough: this drive to eliminate a functional noticeboard originates from and is driven by people who have had minimal involvement in the process and who fail to appreciate why things have developed in the present direction. DurovaCharge! 01:06, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Dmcdevit's arguments were the board isn't perfect. Several editors have already commented the board should be kept and improved. What's with not reading the discussion? Addhoc 18:26, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Wow.. I have :) Don't worry. But I don't think you can fix something like this, especially when the previous method was working just fine. I found it rather scary that somebody did not like my unblock of an editor, (mind you thats per policy) and after I reported to ANI, they took it to the community sanction noticeboard. Something with that is just wrong, I'm sorry. ANI is just fine. For ban discusssions use WP:AN, which does not get all that much traffic for its visablitity. Also I'd suggest that you re-read the arguments, they are that the philosophy behind the board is flawed. —— Eagle101 Need help? 18:29, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
But it wasn't working just fine. And the people who were actively working at it identified and solved the problems. AFD developed over time in response to growing pains. So did the FA concept. This developed also and it took its present form for good reasons that are being overlooked and jettisoned by many participants at this discussion. DurovaCharge! 00:50, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
ArbCom approved of such partial-sanctions when they endorsed a topic ban that the community placed, and somebody took to ArbCom. SirFozzie 18:53, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Eh really? did they specifically endorse the community noticeboard handing them out? (note the noticeboard is by all means not the full community) I find that rather bizarre. —— Eagle101 Need help? 19:04, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yes they did. If my memory serves me right, the person who was bringing it even said that it was an invalid topic ban because the CSN board did it, and that the CSN did not have the mandate to do so. The ARbCom folks said "Decline, and endorse/ratify community sanctions"). I'll try to find it, but since the ArbCom folks don't archive declined ArbCom cases, it may take some time. SirFozzie 19:54, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Found it, it involved User: Gordon Watts, who was given a topic ban on articles relating to Terry Schiavo [1] SirFozzie 20:00, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • The bureaucracy is expanding to meet the needs of the expanding bureaucracy. --Durin 18:49, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Now granted, there are exceptional situations where a ban shouldn't be discussed, but to my mind, you'd better have a pretty damned compelling reason not to do so (example, the Nathanrdotcom affair).Blueboy96 18:51, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

And that could not have been raised on WP:AN why? —— Eagle101 Need help? 18:54, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
For the sake of Wikipedia's image--I would think we would want to avoid the perception that Wikipedia is run by a "cabal." The Nathanrdotcom affair, from what I've read of it, was an emergency example where he should have been nuked, the blocking admin disclosing that this was an emergency example not to be discussed on-wiki, and that should have been that (without going into the gory details of it).Blueboy96 19:02, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Err what? so posting on AN is cabalish? How is posting on CN not cabalish then? I'm not sure your example applies here. (please note I'm ttalking about all cases, not just nathen.) —— Eagle101 Need help? 19:06, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Comment Easy like creating a thread on AN saying "Anyone know a reason why I shouldn't block User X?", AN is JUST as hidden as CSN.. considering they're in the same top bar at the whole family of AN/ANI/CSN etcetera pages. And as for "Attracting its own culture" (which is scary to you), Please don't tell me that AN/ANI doesn't have its own culture. In fact considering that one of the reasons CSN was created in the first part was to get away from the AN/ANI subculture and get you know, non-administrators input (funny thing, non-admins feeling like they don't belong to an ADMINISTRATOR'S noticceboard?) to decisions.. I'm sorry, none of your arguments pass the smell test. SirFozzie 23:36, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
AN has many times more people watching it, and if it has any culture it is not a homogeneous subculture, because of its vastness and popularity. The CSN proposal does not talk about culture, it talks about some people being afeared of posting there, which can be corrected by a simple name change. It is called the "Administrators' noticeboard" (not "Administrator's noticeboard") because it is for notices for administrators, i.e. things that require administrator action, which a ban does. —Centrxtalk • 16:54, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Please read the apologies of the creator of Wikipedia:community noticeboard, the board that somehow morphed into this, in otherwords the original intent was not this. —— Eagle101 Need help? 01:05, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I doubt anyone who participated in the original proposal supported the renaming to CSN. That shift was proposed by the same editor who had already tried to kill it in two different ways: by a completely out of process unilateral attempt to mark it historical and by putting it up for MFD shortly after its creation. At the time when the renaming was proposed I had reservations that the proposal amounted to a political move to marginalize the board and slate it for destruction. Although I don't like to think such a thing of any Wikipedian, today's developments go a long way toward validating that suspicion. DurovaCharge! 01:35, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree that AN is "just as hidden" as CSN, I feel it gets much more traffic. Nor will I tell you AN/ANI doesn't have it's own subculture, but I will tell you it's a plus in this situation because I feel the AN/ANI subculture is of much wider focus than just "let's ban person x". Finally, I just don't buy the non-admins concern...seems like most of the voices at AN/ANI aren't admins. Funny thing. I think my arguments smell just fine.--InkSplotch 03:16, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Break 2[edit]
Section break 3[edit]

For my part, I think that this is probably the wrong venue to discuss what would amount to a policy change. Community input is a good thing in most cases, and confirmation of a community ban that doesn't have to involve the arbitration committee is probably a good thing. The "if no admin restores them, the ban stands" position counts on all administrators being aware of the situation, and in agreement. Rogue admins (and rouge ones!) do exist, they're thankfully rare, and I can say that 99.x% of wikipedia admins are good ones, but counting on not one person being willing to reverse a ban is a little too biased towards never community-banning anyone. Wintermut3 05:26, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Concurrent with this discussion is one at WT:BAN; please note that the policy provision in WP:BAN#Community ban that mentioned WP:CSN, which had been stable for five months, has now been repeatedly deleted without consensus (there or here) despite objections, restorations, and ongoing discussion. For a while the policy was protected to prevent edit-warring, but upon unprotection the deletions resumed. The same topsy-turvy argument has been made there as here, that the status quo is a "change" which needs consensus to be retained, while these deletions should stand even though there is no consensus for them. -- BenTALK/HIST 05:46, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Actucally I think the names "Administrator Noticeboard" and "Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents" do more to reinforce that notion than anything else... this perception existed long before there was a Community Noticeboard.--Isotope23 12:36, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
    • Hence my use of "reinforce" rather than "create". If the names need to be changed as well to get rid of the impression, fine, but that's not the issue being discussed here. JPD (talk) 13:32, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment. I'm involved in discussions on the board so I'm not going to vote here. I just thought I'd add this. When I first used the page I used it as a noticeboard - I didn't request a ban for the user I was reporting. Many of the responses to that post asked "what sanction is being requested here" - since that I've made 2 reports and I followed the "request a sanction" logic. Having read through this and considering my own first use of the page the "request a sanction" side of the page is a problem and I sincerely hope I, as a user of the page, haven't added to that. Having said that, the page is important we need a space to discuss serious disruption as per WP:DE: "In order to protect against frivolous accusations and other potential exploitation, no editor shall be eligible for a disruptive editor block until after a consensus of neutral parties has agreed that an editor has behaved in a disruptive manner." The options of RfC, WP:WQA and 3rd opinion are good but I've never seen a block or warning issued because of RfC or 3rd opinion and WP:WQA is really for incivility and personal attack issues. I would like to see this board kept but I think the sanction part of it should be seriously reconsidered--Cailil talk 14:10, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Exactly: With this page dedicated to this topic, in a stable public location with accessible archives, everyone concerned about banning discussions can watch it like a hawk. But how could you watchlist and monitor such discussions if they were scattered all over (and off) Wikipedia? One minor proviso: discussions gone wrong should be closed and archived, not deleted, so the reason it got closed can always be reviewed. What we do right, and what we do wrong, should all have an audit trail. -- BenTALK/HIST 04:20, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Well stated! This seems to be the crux of the objections, and you've provided a good solution. Jehochman (talk/contrib) 16:19, 4 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • "things were working fine before" -- How do you know? If all the worst accusations about what did or might happen on CSN (which you can watchlist and monitor because you know where it is) also happened in other banning discussions on other pages you never saw, or on off-wiki chatboards, mailing lists, and IRC channels you might never get to see, how would you ever know they happened? What if "things were working fine before" only means the things that went wrong simply never came to light? -- BenTALK/HIST 04:49, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • "this board only reinforces the erroneous belief that discussion amongst a handful of like-minded editors is sufficient to ban another editor." -- The same version of WP:BAN#Community ban that points to this board also says "Community bans must be supported by a strong consensus and should never be enacted based on agreement between a handful of admins or users." So that policy refutes the erroneous belief. Unfortunately, the same people who keep deleting the mention of this board from that section also keep deleting "and should never be enacted based on agreement between a handful of admins or users." [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] Apparently a "handful" is an acceptable quorum as long as it's composed solely of admins. -- BenTALK/HIST 05:06, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
AFD is not a vote. Please state your reason. WooyiTalk, Editor review 01:28, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
OK. It isn't needed. If I ever impose a community ban I'll simply make a note at wp:ani that concludes; "request any admin to review and modify as they see fit". Creating a sanction noticeboard takes a simple and functional concept and makes it more complicated, gives it a life of its own and creates a new group of people who hang out there. It's bureaucracy and admin page creep. Since when is it a good idea to take something simple that works fine and make it more complicated? I encourage all admins to KISS this one and don't use the sanction noticeboard. --Duk 02:51, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
And to reply to Durova about the "experimental" Wikipedia:Community enforceable mediation, that's even more bureaucracy creep! Keep it on its own page and don't use it as an excuse to redefine community bans. --Duk 03:48, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Break 4[edit]
The AN's audience is mostly admins. You can hardly find any non-admin users commenting there. WooyiTalk, Editor review 23:42, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
AN gets a whole lot more traffic then this page. We shouldn't splinter the community into multiple fora. Being an admin is not supposed to be a big deal, and everyone should give their input at AN. The energy spent on maintaing this page should be devoted instead to reforming AN to have broader appeal. nadav 00:00, 7 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
We should splinter the conversations so people can track the conversations that interest them, without having to filter through large volumes of correspondence. If you want to watch everything, just add all the pages to your watch list. Jehochman (talk/contrib) 13:15, 7 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
That's not a very good reason to keep a redundant alternative board that is checked less often. A better solution is merely to organize ANI better. nadav 21:05, 7 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
ANI is geared to quick, in-the-moment reaction to events as they are happening. A community ban needs a calmer, more deliberative process that's better able to check for the possibility that some wrong assumptions might have been made. Best, --Shirahadasha 04:43, 9 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Response Take a look at this section of policy. It should be of some clarification to you. 76.7.198.131 16:53, 8 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you, and I think it supports what I said above. It reads in part The processes surrounding community bans are presently highly controversial. Although it's part of an official policy page, this indicates to me that there's no consensus as to what the policy is or should be. There have been a dozen or so edits to this section in the last few days alone, and most of Wikipedia talk:Banning policy is dedicated to this issue. Andrewa 01:06, 9 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.