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WP:Ombudsmen Committee |
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| Proabivouac |
Fri 4th July 2008, 1:53am
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Bane of all wikiland
      
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QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Fri 4th July 2008, 1:48am)  QUOTE(Giggy @ Fri 4th July 2008, 1:43am)  That's not what's happening, though. People are doing stuff; criticising the ArbCom, taking it to RfC, etc. No need for another committee to do that for them.
It creates more badges for people to collect. That's about it. What is needed is a separation of powers, along the following lines: 1) content editors (in the real world sense of the term) 2) mediators/arbitrators 3) administrators (citzendium's "constables")/checkusers, with relative power in that order. Nobody can be a member of more than one.
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| Proabivouac |
Fri 4th July 2008, 2:27am
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QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Fri 4th July 2008, 2:00am)  As a rule in the real world, a publication will not have a Chief Justice or a Commander in Chief. What it will have is an Editor.
Bingo. Ultimately, the way to check the administrators class is to marginalize them through the creation of overt content management, with officers selected for real-world expertise more than wiki-experience, to which administrators cannot belong. It's probably no coincidence that overt content management is needed for a whole host of other reasons, including to make edit-wars, flame wars, ritualized character assassination, sockpuppetry etc. - things of the past. Removing that crucial piece from the design has proven disasterous.
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| GlassBeadGame |
Fri 4th July 2008, 2:30am
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Dharma Bum
        
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QUOTE(Proabivouac @ Thu 3rd July 2008, 8:27pm)  QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Fri 4th July 2008, 2:00am)  As a rule in the real world, a publication will not have a Chief Justice or a Commander in Chief. What it will have is an Editor.
Bingo. Ultimately, the way to check the administrators class is to marginalize them through the creation of overt content management, with officers selected for real-world expertise more than wiki-experience, to which administrators cannot belong. It's probably no coincidence that overt content management is needed for a whole host of other reasons, including to make edit-wars, flame wars, ritualized character assassination, sockpuppetry etc. - things of the past. Removing that crucial piece from the design has proven disasterous. This would be a reform that might actually help.
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| Rootology |
Fri 4th July 2008, 2:46am
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Fat Cat
     
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The one thing this can work on is if the Arbcom has zero power over the Ombudsmen people. If the Arbcom also has zero power in any way, shape, or form to hinder the Ombudsmen from publishing any unfavorable findings (that happen to come up) or in any way to limit what the Ombudsmen can look at or review, it could work.
If the Arbcom are unwilling to give up or share authority, and a vocal minority are unwilling to limit the Arbcom, then a group with the sanctioned unstoppable mandate and authority to review "classified" information (which the Ombudsmen would) and to publish unpleasant findings without the Arbcom being able to stop them, it could work.
No one wants to shamed in public for doing stupid things. Thats how this could work, potentially.
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