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_ The ArbCom-L Leaks _ Climate Change Redux

Posted by: MaliceAforethought

You just wouldn't believe how much these idiots talk about nothing or their conversations look like this:

Subject: [arbcom-l] Climate change case
------------------------

From: Newyorkbrad <newyorkbrad@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 12:11
To: Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


I've been reviewing the PD talkpage, re-reviewing evidence as appropriate, commenting, voting. Others are more than welcome to be doing the same, to the extent they aren't already.

Thanks,
Newyorkbrad

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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 12:20
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Brad, there is an argument going on at the moment on the PD talk page.
I asked on the clerks mailing list if anyone could deal with it, but
no response. I can't deal with it myself. Are you able to take a look
and calm them down?

Carcharoth

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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Sat, Sep 4, 2010 at 13:22
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Picking this random thread to point out that Lar has namechecked
Kirill on the talk page:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Climate_change/Proposed_decision&diff=382897502&oldid=382897362

Wanted to point that out in case Kirill was still around. Oh, and in
an earlier edit, Lar has used the phrase "For shame" to try and, well,
shame arbitrators into agreeing with him. Brad, what do judges do when
plaintiffs act like that before them?

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From: Kirill Lokshin <kirill.lokshin@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, Sep 4, 2010 at 13:44
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Presumably Lar doesn't realize that, had I drafted the decision, most of the people involved would have been looking at year-long bans... ;-)

Kirill

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From: Roger Davies <roger.davies.wiki@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, Sep 4, 2010 at 13:45
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Ditto here.

Can I quote you on that by the way?

smile.gif

Roger

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From: Newyorkbrad <newyorkbrad@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, Sep 4, 2010 at 15:18
To: roger.davies.wiki@gmail.com, English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Please bear in mind that anyone can add any proposals as additions or alternatives to ours (although it probably would be better to do so sooner rather than later...).

Newyorkbrad

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From: Michelle Kinney <shell.kinney@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 09:17
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Is there any traction for findings on Minor4th?

Not only was their yet another edit war as marknutely tries to quickly
move his userspace into mainspace in the expectation of being banned
<https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/w/index.php?title=User:Marknutley/Climate_change_exaggeration&action=history>,
but then Minor4th started this gem on the Proposed decision talk page
<https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Climate_change/Proposed_decision#ScienceApologist_and_William_M._Connolley-Malicious_redirect_of_new_CC_article>.

This seems to be yet another editor who doesn't get it, but I don't
recall from the evidence if there was an actual history of these
issues or just insinuation not backed up by real evidence. (I'll try
to take a look again - this case has gone on a bit biggrin.gif )

Shell Kinney

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From: Risker <risker.wp@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 11:31
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Yes, actually, Minor4th has been raising alarm bells amongst the three drafters for a while, very much a [[WP:BATTLE]] style editor, and some indications of tag-teaming with GregJackP. That whole episode is fairly disturbing, and the overreaction on M4th's part shows evidence of bluster without sufficient familiarity of the background of the article involved. (Much of it is related to one of the links in the finding agaianst Marknutley.)



Risker/Anne


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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 09:42
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Pointing out here a talk page section that might be of interest:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Climate_change/Proposed_decision#The_author_of_a_scientific_paper_doesn.27t_know_what_his_paper_is_about_-_and_thus_we_must_go_by_what_editors_think_instead

I'm not entirely comfortable with WMC telling people what he meant in
the paper he wrote that is being published (he removed the reference
because he thinks others have misrepresented what he said. I would
have two questions here:

(1) How should WMC be handling this discussion, given that he is one
of the authors of the paper?

(2) Are people misrepresenting what is said in the paper?

This seems to strike to the heart of some of the issues here. Do we
want published authors to cite themselves and others, and argue on
Wikipedia for what they've published here and elsewhere, or do we want
Wikipedia articles to be handled by keeping published authors at a
distance (i.e. on the talk page) and have Wikipedia editors handle the
editing, remembering that because many Wikipedia editors are
pseudonymous, you may end up with those who are arguing and advocating
in other places outside of Wikipedia, coming here to continue
advocating and arguing, both with other editors and with published
authors.

Again, what is needed is people who are primarily here to write
encyclopedia articles, and happen to take an interest in climate
change, not people who are primarily here to agitate about climate
change (either way) and see writing encyclopedia articles as an outlet
for their feelings on climate change. Those who have useful and calm
contributions to make can be restricted to the talk pages. Those who
can't control themselves even on talk pages get topic banned. And the
field is left clear for those who want to focus on the articles,
rather than push an agenda here, there and elsewhere.

So that leads to a third question:

3) Is this desirable and/or possible to achieve?

Carcharoth

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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 09:45
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


That makes no sense. I meant:
the paper he wrote in 2008. (He removed the reference because he
thinks others have misrepresented what he said)."

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Climate_change_alarmism&action=historysubmit&diff=383705591&oldid=383700292

That should make more sense now.

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From: Marc A. Pelletier <marc@uberbox.org>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 09:56
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


OTOH, few people would be more qualified to make that assertion. I'm
not in the Sanger camp of expert worship, but I'm also not going to
dispute someone with expertise because he's making a pronouncement about
his own paper -- if we start trying to tell the author of a paper what
the paper means[1], we're taking the idea of content by consensus on the
la-la-land express to Batshit Crazytown.

-- Coren / Marc

[1] Deconstructivism as applied to scientific papers? Heh.

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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 10:39
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


My objection is more that he edited the article to remove a reference
to a work he co-authored. He should, in my view, have raised the
matter on the talk page. Imagine if every living author of every
reference used on Wikipedia started edit warring over how their works
were cited. That (more than the point Brad made in one of the climate
change case principles) would *really* be a test of whether the
wiki-editing model is viable. The whole point about authoring a work
is that the work is what *you* say and not what others say. Extending
from that to allowing authors to have control over how others cite
what they have said is putting things on another type of express
altogether. Having said that, editorialising is a problem here as
well. If people want to comment on and criticise sources, they should
publish outside of Wikipedia, or raise the point politely on the
relevant talk page, or use a blog. Wikipedia shouldn't be used as a
vehicle to soapbox about how bad (or good) a source is, and those
taking part in sourcing discussions need to show restraint.

Carcharoth

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From: Marc A. Pelletier <marc@uberbox.org>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 12:27
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


I'm not sure I get your point.

Citations that do not, in fact, support the statement to which they are
attached are a Bad Thing™. We've banned people for this.

*Removing* those bad citations seems perfectly okay to me; and I would
argue that the cited document's author is arguably the single most
qualified person to make that determination. IMO, doing so isn't a
conflict of interest unless the *article* is about the author (or at
least the statement holding the citation).

I mean, I could understand that /adding/ citations to your own work is
iffy from a COI point of view because it's potentially self promotional,
or could be a sneaky way of slipping POV in; but removing them with the
stated rationale of "this citation does not support the assertion"? I
really don't see anything wrong with it.

-- Coren / Marc

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From: Michelle Kinney <shell.kinney@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 15:18
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


GregJackP read some quotations in a source, decided that these quotes
amounted to alarmism over global cooling and proceeded to insert his
interpretation into the article. The article does not back up his
interpretation nor do any secondary sources. This is textbook
original research.

Not that edit warring is ever an appropriate way to handle things but
frankly, the furor over the reverts is more because of who it is than
the actual substance. GregJackP and Cla68 were clearly in the wrong
here and yet this subject area is so out of control that people are
actually defending them with the claim that WMC didn't really know
what the paper was about or that he's trying to rewrite history.

I think we should strongly consider a topic ban for anyone involved in
edit wars during the case for extreme disruption and topic bans for
anyone who supported GregJackP for lacking enough clue to edit in the
topic area.

Shell

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From: Roger Davies <roger.davies.wiki@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 15:35
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>



I have been talking to Anne about putting up a series of "battleground editiing" findings with a view to removing a dozen or so editors from the topic area, any associated BLPs, all associated talk pages, and any related process discussions. The list could include:

ATren
ChrisO
Cla68
GregJackP
Jehochman
JohnWBarber
Lar
Marknutley
Minor4th
Polargeo
Scjessey
Stephan Schulz
Thegoodlocust
William M. Connolley
Thoughts?
Roger

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From: Michelle Kinney <shell.kinney@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 16:20
To: roger.davies.wiki@gmail.com, English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Ooops. I was already working on findings toward the idea of a topic
ban for Minor4th, GregJackP and Cla68 - just put up the finding for
Minor4th...

I'll keep working on diffs for GregJackP and Cla68 but hold off
posting anything else for the time being.

There are a couple of names on that list that I don't recall offhand
as being disruptive, but frankly it's all starting to blur a bit
because of the sheer number of people and articles involved. I think
a bit of a cleaner sleep is a great idea, especially given the
continued disruption during the case.

Shell

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From: Roger Davies <roger.davies.wiki@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 16:32
To: Michelle Kinney <shell.kinney@gmail.com>
Cc: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>



Don't let me stop you smile.gif Just keep disruptive or battleground in the headings (for the benefit of hard of thinking onlookers).

I'll recuse on Cla68 anyway (including FoF drafting) as he and I go back a long way on Milhist.

Roger

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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 19:27
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


My point is that blurring the lines between writing something that
gets cited on Wikipedia, and then participating as a Wikipedian to
determine how that same source gets used, is also a Bad Thing™.
It's just less intuitively obvious. It degrades the whole question of
independence of sources (kind of like one person being judge, jury and
executioner). Or to put it another way, when someone reads a Wikipedia
article, they expect the editor(s) to have read different sources and
have written the article based on those sources, rather than expecting
the editor to have been the author of one of those sources. Also, if
you've written something that gets published, it is very difficult to
be objective about how other people use that source, hence why the
talk page should be used.
Agreed.
It would be better to *correct* the citation (using the talk page)
rather than remove it. Or at least to recognise the COI involved and
to place the citation and the relevant text on the talk page for
review.

More generally, we don't expect people to object from beyond the grave
to the use of the sources they wrote. So why do we act differently
when it is living authors involved? This was an issue in the race and
intelligence case, IIRC (the alleged misrepresentation of Jensen's
work).
Because it allows the author of the said source too much direct
control over how their work is cited. Suppose someone subtly mis-cited
or misrepresented Connolley's work in a paper they wrote that was
accepted by a journal. Would Connolley be able to edit war it out of
that journal? No, he would have to go through the proper channels to
deal with the situation. I understand that Wikipedia is not paper, but
misrepresentation of a source is serious enough that it should be
dealt with properly, and by edit warring over it himself, rather than
explaining the problem and letting others deal with it, Connolley
makes the matter harder to deal with, not easier.

Carcharoth

----------
From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 19:51
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


<snip>

From what I've read of the description of the paper (the link I
clicked on looked like it was behind a paywall), GregJackP is saying
that WMC was wrong to say what he said in the paper, and GregJackP is
using the same quotes WMC used in the paper, but using them to try and
demonstrate what WMC should have said. So, yeah, that *is* textbook
original research, and an example of using Wikipedia to argue about
the conclusions drawn in a published source. i.e. Rather then
discussing how or whether to use the source, he is arguing about
whether the source is correct or not and what the source should (in
his opinion) have said.

But I still think WMC should have raised it on the talk page (there
was discussion there and he did take part, IIRC), rather than take
action himself by editing the article.

Carcharoth

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From: Michelle Kinney <shell.kinney@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 01:36
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


No argument there or at the *very* least not edit warred over it. I
think this is another good indication that a break from the topic area
will do WMC some good.

Shell

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From: Risker <risker.wp@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 01:54
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Yes, please continue on your work there, focusing on [[WP:BATTLE]] diffs (though today's misuse of sources incident might also be useful). Because of something that was at least initially unrelated to this case and started long before either Minor4th or GregJackP started editing in this topic area, I do not think that I am the right person to be writing on either of them.

Risker/Anne

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From: Michelle Kinney <shell.kinney@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 02:20
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


I can't do Jehochman, but I will happily go contrib surfing for the
rest. If anyone is working on findings for anyone on that list,
please let me know so I don't duplicate your effort smile.gif

Shell

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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 05:02
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Yes. And I found a link to the article in question:

http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/2008BAMS2370.1

And the summaries by MastCell and Guettarda seem to hit the nail on the head:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Climate_change/Proposed_decision&diff=383961813&oldid=383957002

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Climate_change/Proposed_decision&diff=383964070&oldid=383961813

This is not surprising, as they are two of the most competent editors
in the topic area. If we are going for a much wider set of findings,
please leave some competent editors in the area that will be able to
keep an eye on things.

----------
From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 05:09
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 10:02 AM, Carcharoth
<carcharothwp@googlemail.com> wrote:

[Guettarda and MastCell]
Also, Sphilbrick impressed me early on in the case with his approach.
And some others as well (I've worked with Awickert on geology articles
and watched his work on other articles as well). What I'm saying here
is that there are *plenty* of other editors waiting in the wings, so I
wouldn't be too worried about wide-ranging findings, but I would
modify the length of any topic bans according to how much competence
an editor demonstrates.

----------
From: Michelle Kinney <shell.kinney@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 05:10
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Were there any concerns about the list Roger came up with? I'm also
seriously considering including Hipocrite. I don't see any reason to
have a finding about MastCell and Guettarda is always prickly but
doesn't seem to have been over the top.

I'm also floating the idea of a more specific finding about harassment
of WMC; there have been intentional taunts (very clear), threats to
harm his biography because someone didn't like his editing elsewhere,
a large number of frivolous requests for sanctions. I don't want to
use this as a basis to excuse his behavior (which I think has gone too
far) but I think it needs to be said - some of the diffs are rather
outrageous.

Shell

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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 05:14
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


No objections to such findings being posted (though I may end up
opposing the findings depending on whether I think they are supported
by evidence or not). I think WMC should be pinned down to answering
some specific questions about his conduct, as any finding of
harassment will encourage him to think he has done nothing wrong here.

Carcharoth

On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 10:10 AM, Michelle Kinney

----------
From: Roger Davies <roger.davies.wiki@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 05:47
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>



Slightly revised list of FoF candidates:

{{userlinks|ATren}}
{{userlinks|ChrisO}}
{{userlinks|Cla68}}
{{userlinks|GoRight}}
{{userlinks|GregJackP}}
{{userlinks|Hipocrite}}
{{userlinks|Jehochman}}
{{userlinks|JohnWBarber}}
{{userlinks|Lar}}
{{userlinks|Marknutley}}
{{userlinks|Minor4th}}
{{userlinks|Polargeo}}
{{userlinks|Scjessey}}
{{userlinks|Stephan Schulz}}
{{userlinks|Thegoodlocust}}
{{userlinks|William M. Connolley}}

As mentioned previously, it'd be good if Shell could do the Minor4th and Cla68 FoFs, and perhaps Lars too.

It'll probably need a couple of more specific principles.

If there are no objections, I'll start putting this together this afternoon (UTC).

Roger

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From: Michelle Kinney <shell.kinney@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 06:47
To: roger.davies.wiki@gmail.com, English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Roger, I've posted Minor4th and ATren (but of course feel free to add
additional diffs, or fix the ones I have) and I'm working on most of
the others at:
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/arbcom-en/wiki/User:Shell_Kinney/Climate_Change_new_stuff

It's a wiki - anyone is welcome to join in smile.gif I'm also going to set
up IRC, so I'll be on there (and a bunch of IMs) if anyone wants to
chat directly about stuff or collaborate to help get this stuff
finished.

Shell

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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 09:48
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Don't forget to notify (or ask the clerks to notify) people about
these new findings. Hipocrite is one that springs to mind,
particularly as he went off over a month ago (not edited since 3
August) in not the best of moods:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Climate_change/Evidence&diff=prev&oldid=377003901

Carcharoth

On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 11:47 AM, Michelle Kinney

----------
From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 09:50
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


FWIW, I had no idea Hipocrite was dyslexic (he stated in that diff
that it was "widely known").

"Addendum - Kicking Cripples

It is widely known that I am dyslexic. GregJackP "kicked the cripple"
in this piece of tripe. WMC redacted part of that (not nearly enough,
and Lar, who is well aware I am dyslexic, took a shot at WMC here. I
took hours away from the keyboard to try to get over this, but failed
miserably - I'm still outrageously offended that Wikipedia, and it's
senior administrators support people antagonizing people who have
actual diagnosed disabilities over some stupid rules. I'm going to
take a month or so off, but I leave with these parting words - fix
this."

Not quite sure what to make of all that, or how it affects things (if at all).

Carcharoth

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From: Fayssal F. <szvest@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 18:46
To: arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org


That makes it a very interesting ArbCom case principle. It is a behavioral issue after all.

Fayssal F.

Date: Fri, 10 Sep 2010 00:27:05 +0100
From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Subject: Re: [arbcom-l] Climate change case
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list Message-ID:
<AANLkTimch56j_vRTd6xiv=iZ1aosdfgFBm8sLCquQvsJ@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1


(snip)


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From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 13:41
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


I noticed this recently:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Watts_Up_With_That%3F&action=historysubmit&diff=384539610&oldid=384323635

It led to this ANI thread:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:ANI#Disruptive_editing_by_User:ScienceApologist

I tend to agree with what Crossmr said:

"A GA nominated article, currently under peer review isn't the place
to run around being bold with a redirect. that's pure disruption and
nothing else.--Crossmr (talk) 15:03, 13 September 2010 (UTC)"

----------
From: dyellope.wiki@GMAIL.COM <dyellope.wiki@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 15:27
To: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>, English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Honestly... is there anyone in this topic area that DOESN'T deserve a topic ban?

Sent from my HTC on the Now Network from Sprint!

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From: Randy Everette <rlevse@cox.net>
Date: Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 16:11
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>, Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>


Pretty much all of them.

R

From: arbcom-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org [mailto:arbcom-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of dyellope.wiki@GMAIL.COM
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2010 3:28 PM
To: Carcharoth; English Arbitration Committee mailing list
Subject: Re: [arbcom-l] Climate change case

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From: Kirill Lokshin <kirill.lokshin@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 16:28
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


I assume you mean that they all do, not that they all don't? ;-)

Kirill

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Posted by: Anna

That has almost nothing to do with Climate Change.

I suppose that is the point: that decisions about how to represent important topics like climate change are made based on wholly unrelated social squabbling.

The future of the species is at stake, dammit, and they're complaining about people "being disruptive"???

Certainly much more productive than complaining about people "being disruptive". What does that have to do with writing an article on a website that purports to be an "encyclopedia" anyway?

[Modnote: off-topic items redacted. -- gomi]

Posted by: gomi

QUOTE(Anna @ Fri 24th June 2011, 1:48pm) *
That has almost nothing to do with Climate Change. ... Here's a good petition to sign:

While I agree that the discussion is almost entirely opaque to those not thoroughly steeped in wiki-politics, it is at least nominally about Wikipedia's reaction to Climate Change editing, which is what we're commenting on here. If you would like to post petitions and whatnot, we have the "Lounge" and the "Politics, Religion, and such" forums to which you should go.

Posted by: Anna

QUOTE(gomi @ Fri 24th June 2011, 8:56pm) *

QUOTE(Anna @ Fri 24th June 2011, 1:48pm) *
That has almost nothing to do with Climate Change. ... Here's a good petition to sign:

While I agree that the discussion is almost entirely opaque to those not thoroughly steeped in wiki-politics, it is at least nominally about Wikipedia's reaction to Climate Change editing, which is what we're commenting on here. If you would like to post petitions and whatnot, we have the "Lounge" and the "Politics, Religion, and such" forums to which you should go.


As far as I can tell, Wikipedia's reaction to climate change has nothing at all to do with climate change. They are complaining about people "being disruptive"? What the hell does that mean? Isn't "being disruptive" what activists are supposed to do when lives are at stake?

At least other websites can be expected to take the activist, pro-humanity stance, or to take the corporate, pro-profit humanity-be-damned stance, or to stand nervously at the sidelines and confess they have no idea what's going on. At least then we know where they stand. But "being disruptive"? What the hell does that have to do with anything, other than the mark of a good activist?

Posted by: MaliceAforethought

QUOTE

As far as I can tell, Wikipedia's reaction to climate change has nothing at all to do with climate change. They are complaining about people "being disruptive"? What the hell does that mean? Isn't "being disruptive" what activists are supposed to do when lives are at stake?

At least other websites can be expected to take the activist, pro-humanity stance, or to take the corporate, pro-profit humanity-be-damned stance, or to stand nervously at the sidelines and confess they have no idea what's going on. At least then we know where they stand. But "being disruptive"? What the hell does that have to do with anything, other than the mark of a good activist?



You don't actually have a clue about Wikipedia, do you?

This isn't about Wikipedia's reaction to "Climate Change" its about an arbitration because editors on the site were fighting over the article on the topic.

Try educating yourself a bit about the topic you're posting on. If you're confused about the topic, try reading the name of the site.

Posted by: Anna

QUOTE(MaliceAforethought @ Fri 24th June 2011, 9:22pm) *

QUOTE

As far as I can tell, Wikipedia's reaction to climate change has nothing at all to do with climate change. They are complaining about people "being disruptive"? What the hell does that mean? Isn't "being disruptive" what activists are supposed to do when lives are at stake?

At least other websites can be expected to take the activist, pro-humanity stance, or to take the corporate, pro-profit humanity-be-damned stance, or to stand nervously at the sidelines and confess they have no idea what's going on. At least then we know where they stand. But "being disruptive"? What the hell does that have to do with anything, other than the mark of a good activist?



You don't actually have a clue about Wikipedia, do you?

This isn't about Wikipedia's reaction to "Climate Change" its about an arbitration because editors on the site were fighting over the article on the topic.

Try educating yourself a bit about the topic you're posting on. If you're confused about the topic, try reading the name of the site.


Well, as someone who has no clue how Wikipedia arrives at some of the ridiculous things I read on there, I would expect anything called an Arbitration Committee to have some sort of argument about who's right and who's wrong, and decide what sort of editors they want to have based on that. Or, if there are indecisive or just want to be let everyone have their say, split the article up into a liberal version and a conservative version, and perhaps a few third party versions, and let the reader decide which one he or she wants to read.

Instead, they seems to be deciding what sort of editors they want to have based on petty, meaningless concerns. No wonder Wikipedia is such a mess.

Posted by: Peter Damian

QUOTE(Anna @ Fri 24th June 2011, 11:12pm) *

Instead, they seems to be deciding what sort of editors they want to have based on petty, meaningless concerns.


In my experience, that seems about right.

Posted by: EricBarbour

QUOTE(Anna @ Fri 24th June 2011, 3:12pm) *
Well, as someone who has no clue how Wikipedia arrives at some of the ridiculous things I read on there, I would expect anything called an Arbitration Committee to have some sort of argument about who's right and who's wrong, and decide what sort of editors they want to have based on that. Or, if there are indecisive or just want to be let everyone have their say, split the article up into a liberal version and a conservative version, and perhaps a few third party versions, and let the reader decide which one he or she wants to read.

Instead, they seems to be deciding what sort of editors they want to have based on petty, meaningless concerns. No wonder Wikipedia is such a mess.

Ah, at last you're getting the general picture!

I've thought seriously about getting "ARBCOM IS A JOKE" T-shirts made, but nobody at Wikipedia
meetings would have the guts to wear them--and the rest of the world doesn't care.

Posted by: RMHED

QUOTE(Anna @ Fri 24th June 2011, 11:12pm) *


Instead, they seems to be deciding what sort of editors they want to have based on petty, meaningless concerns. No wonder Wikipedia is such a mess.

Yeah, it's all so wonderfully human. Kinda reassuring that humanity doesn't really change, only the technology does.

Posted by: MaliceAforethought

QUOTE

I've thought seriously about getting "ARBCOM IS A JOKE" T-shirts made, but nobody at Wikipedia
meetings would have the guts to wear them--and the rest of the world doesn't care.


Ah now, I'd certainly wear one...so long as it doesn't look like shite that is.

Posted by: Peter Damian

You seem to have a good supply of material, dating back to before this year (and hence before the election of Iridescent). I'm particularly interested in the contents of the email that is referred to below. It would have to have been sent about 4 December to the committee. A lot hangs upon that. It would probably have been sent from the wjbscribe gmail address, thought not necessarily. I have asked many people about that email, and have received many many denials of its existence.

QUOTE
----- Original Message -----
From: "Will" <wjbscribe AT gmail.com>
To: "Family" <peter.damian AT btinternet.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2011 8:08 PM
Subject: Re: Could you clarify one point?

I am sorry but I'm not prepared to send you a copy of the email(s) I
sent to FT2 in December. I had my reasons for deciding to approach
him privately. I still think that was the right course of action and
achieved the most satisfactory outcome. The Arbitration Committee
have a copy of the correspondence between FT2 and myself in December
in any event.


Will

Posted by: Anna

QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Fri 24th June 2011, 10:17pm) *

QUOTE(Anna @ Fri 24th June 2011, 3:12pm) *
Well, as someone who has no clue how Wikipedia arrives at some of the ridiculous things I read on there, I would expect anything called an Arbitration Committee to have some sort of argument about who's right and who's wrong, and decide what sort of editors they want to have based on that. Or, if there are indecisive or just want to be let everyone have their say, split the article up into a liberal version and a conservative version, and perhaps a few third party versions, and let the reader decide which one he or she wants to read.

Instead, they seems to be deciding what sort of editors they want to have based on petty, meaningless concerns. No wonder Wikipedia is such a mess.

Ah, at last you're getting the general picture!

I've thought seriously about getting "ARBCOM IS A JOKE" T-shirts made, but nobody at Wikipedia
meetings would have the guts to wear them--and the rest of the world doesn't care.


Truly, if they're always like that, "the Arbitrary Committee" would be a better name for them.

Posted by: Peter Damian

QUOTE(MaliceAforethought @ Fri 24th June 2011, 9:21pm) *


----------
From: Carcharoth <carcharothwp@googlemail.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 09:42
To: English Arbitration Committee mailing list <arbcom-l@lists.wikimedia.org>


Again, what is needed is people who are primarily here to write
encyclopedia articles, and happen to take an interest in climate
change, not people who are primarily here to agitate about climate
change (either way) and see writing encyclopedia articles as an outlet
for their feelings on climate change.


That is a particularly stupid remark.

Posted by: MaliceAforethought

QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Fri 24th June 2011, 10:24pm) *

You seem to have a good supply of material, dating back to before this year (and hence before the election of Iridescent). I'm particularly interested in the contents of the email that is referred to below. It would have to have been sent about 4 December to the committee. A lot hangs upon that. It would probably have been sent from the wjbscribe gmail address, thought not necessarily. I have asked many people about that email, and have received many many denials of its existence.


I'll look, but ya know, it would be hella easier to find in all this if you hadn't emailed the idiots 100 or so times about the issue.

Posted by: Peter Damian

QUOTE(MaliceAforethought @ Fri 24th June 2011, 11:31pm) *

QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Fri 24th June 2011, 10:24pm) *

You seem to have a good supply of material, dating back to before this year (and hence before the election of Iridescent). I'm particularly interested in the contents of the email that is referred to below. It would have to have been sent about 4 December to the committee. A lot hangs upon that. It would probably have been sent from the wjbscribe gmail address, thought not necessarily. I have asked many people about that email, and have received many many denials of its existence.


I'll look, but ya know, it would be hella easier to find in all this if you hadn't emailed the idiots 100 or so times about the issue.


Well that proves you have the whole supply, at least for this year. But this email would have been from WJBscribe, not from me. Look for anything from wjbscribe AT gmail.com before 5 December 2010, and probably on the 4th.

Just to spell it out, Boddy (aka scribe) refers to a nice big block of correspondence between himself in FT2 in December. This was really private so he couldn't send it to me, but not so private he couldn't send it to all of the Committee, or so he claims. Did he? I would love to find out.

QUOTE
----- Original Message -----
From: "Will" <wjbscribe AT gmail.com>
To: "Family" <peter.damian AT btinternet.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2011 8:08 PM
Subject: Re: Could you clarify one point?

I am sorry but I'm not prepared to send you a copy of the email(s) I
sent to FT2 in December. I had my reasons for deciding to approach
him privately. I still think that was the right course of action and
achieved the most satisfactory outcome. The Arbitration Committee
have a copy of the correspondence between FT2 and myself in December
in any event.


Will

Posted by: Milton Roe

QUOTE(gomi @ Fri 24th June 2011, 1:56pm) *

QUOTE(Anna @ Fri 24th June 2011, 1:48pm) *
That has almost nothing to do with Climate Change. ... Here's a good petition to sign:

While I agree that the discussion is almost entirely opaque to those not thoroughly steeped in wiki-politics, it is at least nominally about Wikipedia's reaction to Climate Change editing, which is what we're commenting on here. If you would like to post petitions and whatnot, we have the "Lounge" and the "Politics, Religion, and such" forums to which you should go.

I thought we already sent Anna to the BBS full of experts that analyzes the scientific accuracy of WP articles. Didn't we? huh.gif

If not, please do so. hrmph.gif

Posted by: Herschelkrustofsky

QUOTE(Anna @ Fri 24th June 2011, 1:48pm) *

That has almost nothing to do with Climate Change.

I suppose that is the point: that decisions about how to represent important topics like climate change are made based on wholly unrelated social squabbling.
It's like a much nerdier Facebook.

Posted by: Herschelkrustofsky

QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Fri 24th June 2011, 3:49pm) *

I thought we already sent Anna to the BBS full of experts that analyzes the scientific accuracy of WP articles. Didn't we? huh.gif

If not, please do so. hrmph.gif


Hang in there, Anna. This place must seem like the Scottish Rite or some equally insular grouping, but if you survive the initial hazing, I'm sure you'll get along fine.

Posted by: Zoloft

Anna, be a dear and fetch me a left-handed snipe spanner, won't you?

Posted by: Cla68

These emails appear to show about what I expected was going one behind the scenes with the arbitrators during the case. Some observations:

- Most of the arbitrators appear to be trying to apply the rules equally among all the editors involved on "both sides"
- Shell Kinney, on the other hand, is fairly obviously trying to promote sanctions for one side and not the other.
- If Roger Davies was going to recuse from voting on sanctions for me, then why does he ask another arbitrator to post a finding on me? Shouldn't he refrain completely from any discussion of me with the other arbs, either by email or on-wiki?
- Why isn't there any discussion by the arbitrators about the long-running BLP violations by WMC and his gang? That was the main reason why many of the "sceptic" editors got involved in the first place, to try to stop those abuses. Guettarda, who Carcharoth compliments as being a valuable contributor to the climate change articles, was one of the editors who violated BLP, in once case linking a pejorative statement on a hockey stick graph critic to a blog.
- If Kirill is going to discuss the case on the ArbCom mailing list, then he should have voted in the proposed decision.

Posted by: Anna

Hello, Herschelrustofsky!

Cla68, what language are you speaking? Because it's not normal English.

Whatever "the rules" of which you speak are, the survival of the species is more important. It's disrespectful to the Earth for the Arbitrary Committee to go on and on about trivial social concerns when such serious matters are at stake.

Posted by: NuclearWarfare

QUOTE(Cla68 @ Mon 27th June 2011, 12:36am) *
- If Kirill is going to discuss the case on the ArbCom mailing list, then he should have voted in the proposed decision.


Err...he did?

Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Climate change/Proposed decision (T-H-L-K-D)

Posted by: gomi

QUOTE(Anna @ Sun 26th June 2011, 5:57pm) *
Whatever "the rules" of which you speak are, the survival of the species is more important. It's disrespectful to the Earth for the Arbitrary Committee to go on and on about trivial social concerns when such serious matters are at stake.

Indeed. If the survival of human society on Earth (as we know it) is your utmost concern, neither Wikipedia nor Wikipedia Review are likely to be the best venue for your evangelism. Many of us here believe these matters to be serious, but discuss them elsewhere.

Posted by: Anna

Gomi --

Well, yes, Change.org is the best venue for my evangelism. Already have an account there, and use it frequently. But lately, I've been getting annoyed at people who start spouting these ridiculous ideas and then tell me they got them from Wikipedia, and thus I wanted to say something about it.

What exactly is your evangelism here are the Wikipedia Review? Are you trying to review Wikipedia is such a way that readers of Wikipedia can understand why they shouldn't really take it seriously, as it's more of an encyclopedia-ISH than an encyclopedia? Doubtful, given how little of the conversation here on the Wikipedia Review is actually comprehensible to a person who has not joined Wikipedia and been indoctrinated with their secret language. Are you perhaps trying to review Wikipedia in such a way that the people over there might actually improve their website? I doubt you will get very far. Or are you cheering them on? Because, you know, it's sort of hard to tell sometimes. In fact, it doesn't look like you're doing any of those things in this thread. You haven't commented on the discussion Malice forwarded to us; you seem intent instead on telling me... what exactly? That this *isn't* the forum to warn readers not to take Wikipedia seriously, despite the name? So, what the hell *is* this the forum for?

Posted by: Minor4th

Did Kirill not vote on the PD?

Pretty much as I imagined discussions regarding the case. They figured out who they wanted gone and who they wanted to stay according to how knowledgeable or "valuable" they judged an editor, and then went looking for diffs to justify their gut feelings, which in many cases appear to be based on personality issues unrelated to Wiki policy and/or arbs' personal biases about climate change.

I thought the ChrisO discussion was interesting too.

Posted by: Cla68

QUOTE(Minor4th @ Thu 30th June 2011, 7:12pm) *

Did Kirill not vote on the PD?

Pretty much as I imagined discussions regarding the case. They figured out who they wanted gone and who they wanted to stay according to how knowledgeable or "valuable" they judged an editor, and then went looking for diffs to justify their gut feelings, which in many cases appear to be based on personality issues unrelated to Wiki policy and/or arbs' personal biases about climate change.

I thought the ChrisO discussion was interesting too.


I think the discussion shows that most of the arbitrators were trying to be fair, but your comments made me realize something that was nagging at me. That email exchange seems to show the arbitrators trying to come to a conclusion using deductive, rather than inductive reasoning.

As you say, they appear to be first identifying editors who they think are wrong, then finding evidence to support that. Instead, they should be asking each other what the evidence says, then forming conclusions, such as, "Cla68 says in his evidence section that Stephan Schulz and WMC have been bullying editors on the Global Warming talk page for years, could someone check to see if this is true?", or conversely, "Dave Souza says that Cla68 is, in fact, a POV-pushing, partisan editor. Could someone check to see if the evidence supports this assertion?" I know this would have been a more time-consuming way of coming to a decision, but I think the ultimate decision would have been more comprehensive and fair.

Posted by: Abd

QUOTE(Cla68 @ Fri 1st July 2011, 8:03am) *
I think the discussion shows that most of the arbitrators were trying to be fair, but your comments made me realize something that was nagging at me. That email exchange seems to show the arbitrators trying to come to a conclusion using deductive, rather than inductive reasoning.
That's correct. They start with a story, formed very quickly from immediate impressions, then they look for evidence to confirm the story. They most certainly do not start with neutral investigation, way too often. Occasionally some do, and they get good decisions when they do it.

If evidence presented by others is not heavily edited to become pure and effective polemic, they don't read it with any care, I'd bet. They simply assume that whatever the editor presents is like what they'd present, evidence dug up to prove what the editor already believes. An editor who actually investigates neutrally will come up with evidence for more than one position, which, to them, is confusing, they dislike it. tl;dr.
QUOTE
As you say, they appear to be first identifying editors who they think are wrong, then finding evidence to support that. Instead, they should be asking each other what the evidence says, then forming conclusions, such as, "Cla68 says in his evidence section that Stephan Schulz and WMC have been bullying editors on the Global Warming talk page for years, could someone check to see if this is true?", or conversely, "Dave Souza says that Cla68 is, in fact, a POV-pushing, partisan editor. Could someone check to see if the evidence supports this assertion?" I know this would have been a more time-consuming way of coming to a decision, but I think the ultimate decision would have been more comprehensive and fair.
It seems more time-consuming, but it would, in fact, save a great deal of time in the long run. To be practical, ArbComm -- or individual arbitrators! -- would need to name trusted investigators, who would do two things:

1. Prepare complete reports on situations or issues, based on careful investigation that aims to develop accurate and balanced reports, not to create some desired conclusion.
2. Prepare analyses of these with regard to implications.

(These are really two separate functions, and the second can contaminate the first, so, ideally, the functions should be separated, so, to make a legal parallel, the first function would be that of a court-appointed investigator, and the second function would be that of judges in an administrative hearing.)

An arb could submit such a report for review to an entire committee of trusted users, if the arb has any doubt about it. Otherwise the arb presents the report, to ArbComm, on his or her own authority, being adequately convinced to stand for it. If this is an individual process, the arbitrator would have complete authority over these tasks.

Structure. But not exactly bureaucracy. This could be done by any individual arbitrator without the consent of the committee or any other body. But would an arb have the cojones, would arbs even realize the possibility?

I tried to explain this, in part, to arbs in 2009. They reacted by banning me for the temerity of advising them. The bans were not based on any cogent evidence, they even cited, in my cold fusion ban, "evidence" provided by a highly adverse editor, who later revealed his firm and staunch POV, wherein he cited his own opinion in RfAr/Fringe science, an opinion directly contradicting ArbComm's own decision, an opinion delivered at a point before I had ever edited cold fusion and it had nothing to do with me. I think they looked at the diff and the title of the edit and simply assumed what was in it, they thought, my guess, that I had said what this editor had actually said.

That particular "allegation" was not even about me, but about the editor's view of the general, long-term situation. There is no way that it was evidence of my "tendentious editing," as claimed.

In later bans, "tendentious editing" alleged was simply discussion considered to be too long, without any regard for necessity or cogency or collaborative character. I was, later, acting under COI rules, so there was *no* contentious article editing.

Now, I did point out this problem with Enric Naval's evidence on the Talk page when the finding was made as a proposal. There was no answer. I think they were not reading the case. Why bother? Too much work!

And I agree. Too much work. It's a set-up, a structural problem. But ... they don't want to fix the structure, since this is a structure that empowered them, and independent investigators? Who knows what they might find?

Posted by: Minor4th

I really don't think they read the evidence.

And Cla -- the amount of time it took them to conclude the case, there was certainly enoygh time for them to go through the more time consuming analysis you described. Fact is, it's too tedious, ans there's no oversight of yhe process, so why bother being thorough, comprehensive or even-handed?

I havent been to Wiki more than a handful of times in the last 9 months and havent looked at climate change at all. Has it changed? Is there a noticeable absence of edit wars, tag teaming, socking and activism?

Posted by: Abd

QUOTE(Minor4th @ Fri 1st July 2011, 7:39pm) *
I really don't think they read the evidence.
My conclusion as well.
QUOTE
And Cla -- the amount of time it took them to conclude the case, there was certainly enoygh time for them to go through the more time consuming analysis you described. Fact is, it's too tedious, ans there's no oversight of yhe process, so why bother being thorough, comprehensive or even-handed?
It's definitely tedious, but if the goal of the project is neutrality, it's necessary. That's why tasks must be delegated. It's completely untenable without that, arbs are *forced* to rely on knee-jerk impressions. They are volunteers. If we wanted better performance, we would either pay them or set them up to supervise their own volunteer staff.

Instead we sit back and take potshots at them. Me too, by the way. By accepting the job and playing it the way it is set up, they do become responsible.
QUOTE
I havent been to Wiki more than a handful of times in the last 9 months and havent looked at climate change at all. Has it changed? Is there a noticeable absence of edit wars, tag teaming, socking and activism?
I haven't looked either. Like I should care?

From what I could tell, ArbComm's response to the Climate Change arbitration was weak and inadequate, but definitely the cabal was dinged. (Users editing contrary to the cabal position were banned, but some cabal editors did get some sanctions applied.) But I don't know where it went then.

I barely watch Cold fusion, and that's connected now with one of my businesses. Mostly, even thinking about editing Wikipedia makes me feel ill.

Posted by: Cla68

QUOTE(Minor4th @ Fri 1st July 2011, 11:39pm) *


I havent been to Wiki more than a handful of times in the last 9 months and havent looked at climate change at all. Has it changed? Is there a noticeable absence of edit wars, tag teaming, socking and activism?


http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Climatic_Research_Unit_email_controversy&curid=25160837&diff=438187656&oldid=438184919

Posted by: Abd

QUOTE(Cla68 @ Thu 7th July 2011, 3:37am) *
QUOTE(Minor4th @ Fri 1st July 2011, 11:39pm) *
I havent been to Wiki more than a handful of times in the last 9 months and havent looked at climate change at all. Has it changed? Is there a noticeable absence of edit wars, tag teaming, socking and activism?

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Climatic_Research_Unit_email_controversy&curid=25160837&diff=438187656&oldid=438184919
KimDabelsteinPetersen (T-C-L-K-R-D)

Cabal editor, reliably editing in support of cabal positions.

This is the lead of article with typical claim, weight on "sceptics," i.e., anyone concerned about a conspiracy to manipulate data, is a "climate change skeptic." The other side is "scientists and policy makers." You know. Reputable people.

KDP does not discuss the change on the Talk page. Of course, neither did Hobby Lobby (T-C-L-K-R-D) . The latter doesn't want to waste visibility. Any bets on how long before HL is blocked? (Yes, the HL edit was also POV.) However, HL has a point, and is simply imbalancing in the opposite direction. KDP is restoring the status quo, which is the same old, same old.

Posted by: Cla68

QUOTE(Abd @ Thu 7th July 2011, 11:34am) *

QUOTE(Cla68 @ Thu 7th July 2011, 3:37am) *
QUOTE(Minor4th @ Fri 1st July 2011, 11:39pm) *
I havent been to Wiki more than a handful of times in the last 9 months and havent looked at climate change at all. Has it changed? Is there a noticeable absence of edit wars, tag teaming, socking and activism?

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Climatic_Research_Unit_email_controversy&curid=25160837&diff=438187656&oldid=438184919
KimDabelsteinPetersen (T-C-L-K-R-D)

Cabal editor, reliably editing in support of cabal positions.

This is the lead of article with typical claim, weight on "sceptics," i.e., anyone concerned about a conspiracy to manipulate data, is a "climate change skeptic." The other side is "scientists and policy makers." You know. Reputable people.

KDP does not discuss the change on the Talk page. Of course, neither did Hobby Lobby (T-C-L-K-R-D) . The latter doesn't want to waste visibility. Any bets on how long before HL is blocked? (Yes, the HL edit was also POV.) However, HL has a point, and is simply imbalancing in the opposite direction. KDP is restoring the status quo, which is the same old, same old.


There were a few scientists who were fairly critical of the East Anglia team, including Judith Curry, who isn't a global warming skeptic. A few journalists were also critical. Of course, a more neutral thing to say in the lede would be something like "observers said...", but, of course, something that neutral isn't acceptable to activists trying to put their side in Wikipedia's voice.

Posted by: Abd

QUOTE(Cla68 @ Thu 7th July 2011, 8:51am) *
There were a few scientists who were fairly critical of the East Anglia team, including Judith Curry, who isn't a global warming skeptic. A few journalists were also critical. Of course, a more neutral thing to say in the lede would be something like "observers said...", but, of course, something that neutral isn't acceptable to activists trying to put their side in Wikipedia's voice.
Yes. And, with the cooperation of ArbComm, editors who actually stood for neutrality (despite their own POV), were banned.

Standing for neutrality and consensus requires discussion. The cabal detests discussion. After all, they are right, what is there to discuss? Go away, fringe nutcase POV-pusher!

Oh! ArbComm? You don't want us to say "nutcase"? Okay, okay.

"Go way, stop pushing your fringe POV, or we will ban your ass."

Posted by: Kelly Martin

I'm utterly amazed that the username patrols even allowed someone to register as Hobby Lobby. Surely they're heard of them, they're probably the largest retailer of hobby supplies in the US. Isn't there a policy against using a business name for your username on Wikipedia?

Posted by: Somey

QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Thu 7th July 2011, 1:10pm) *
I'm utterly amazed that the username patrols even allowed someone to register as Hobby Lobby. Surely they're heard of them, they're probably the largest retailer of hobby supplies in the US. Isn't there a policy against using a business name for your username on Wikipedia?

I would assume so, but I'd also assume they don't have an automated way of comparing new registrant names against a list of prominent businesses... And since the two edits were at 5:39 AM UTC, the patrollers would have been mostly in the UK (or possibly India/Australia, etc.), where presumably they would call it "Hobby Foyer" or perhaps "Hobby Vestibule."

Posted by: Abd

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Hobby_Lobby How you can identify Scibaby from that editing is obvious: you look for signs of Scibaby POV.

That this means, in effect, that the POV is banned, well, too bad! That's why they get for being fringe nutcase POV-pushers. Honestly, don't they have any sense?

(http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Sockpuppet_investigations/Scibaby&oldid=438257997 That was pretty fast. Multiply this by the better part of a thousand socks, and you can get an idea of what refusal to negotiate consensus does to the project.)

Hmmm... A Modest Proposal.