User:Matty.007/adoption/Behavioural policies
Wikipedia policies related to behavior
[edit]Sock puppetry
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Sock puppetry on Wikipedia[edit]Sock puppetry is whereby alternate accounts are created by an editor which do not follow the following requirements (listed here:
Most of the above will require a statement that it is an alternative account, and who of. The likelihood is that it is not for one of the above purposes, or fails, where necessary, to recognise whose account it is, it may be blocked. (If you want a list of what alternate accounts are not for, see here.) Bear in mind that there is currently nothing against editing whilst logged out, but it can be a bit of a grey area. Meatpuppetry is similar to sockpuppetry, it refers to when editors bring on new editors who have similar views. If you suspect someone of sockpuppetry or meatpuppetry, do not directly accuse them, these are serious allegations. Read this first, and think carefully before making any allegations. |
Harassment, threats, personal attacks
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Harassment, threats, and personal attacks[edit]This is pretty simple: don't commit any of the above. I will give a little detail about each heading though, so that you can be wary: Harassment[edit]Usually to make target feel threatened/intimidated; potentially to try and get your way. Described as repeated offensive beahviour. Can take various forms:
If you are being harassed, you need to not act rashly, do not retaliate in a tit for tat action, you could be blocked for it. If it is serious, contact The Arbitration Committee (ArbCom) or the Volunteer Response Team in an email, in strict confidence. Before taking any kind of action, read up on the harassment page; this is not an allegation to be taken lightly. If you make legal threats, or even legal action, you will be blocked until the matter is resolved. However, you may make reports of legal issues such as copyright violation, BLP issues, and so on. Before making legal threats, try and resolve it at the Dispute resolution noticeboard. If legal threats are made against you, tell an administrator or Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents. If you think legal threats are being made against you, read Wikipedia:No legal threats first, this is not an allegation to be taken lightly. No matter what the situation, do not make any kind of personal insult to another editor, make statements on content by all means, but do not degrade the editor. |
Edit warring and civility
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Edit warring and civility[edit]Do not merely revert other users contributions because you don't like them, discuss the issue with them on a talk page, the talk page of the disputed subject if you can. If you do repeatedly revert edits which are possibly beneficial (reverting vandalism and removal of sourced information is almost always OK), you can be blocked or banned (nice summary of difference between bans and blocks here). There is a set line, called a bright-line rule, which deals with this, called the Three Revert Rule (3RR). It states that:
This includes talk pages and project pages, but usually excludes your own userspace. If the 3RR is violated, revert your reverts which went over, and this may be taken into account. 3RR doesn't apply to reverting your own edits, your own userspace (within Wikipedia:User pages), banned users' edits, obvious vandalism, content that obviously violates Wikipedia:Non-free content criteria, illegal content under US law, and sometimes Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons violations, this is controversial so you are best asking someone before passing 3RR fixing a BLP. Civility is a major part of Wikipedia, as a collaborative project having good relations between participants is vital. Civility is basically being polite, with concise and clear arguments, not ignoring where others stand, don't be rude, assume good faith... This can be summed up as 'don't be rude, be polite and welcoming to all'. (This includes edit summaries.) Remember: apologising is not a sign of weakness, it is merely regretting an action. |
You do not own articles
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This is quite an easy concept: once you have made an edit, created a page, done something on Wikipedia, you are releasing that content, it can be used by anyone and everyone. Do not act as if you own any article, or use the reasoning of "I have spent hours on this article, you can't change it!". I repeat, this is relatively simple, but do not fall into the trap, it is easy to start calling articles "my article". |
End of topic test
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Test[edit]This is the end of the behavioural policies section, so here is the test:
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