Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2006-07-10/Arbitration report
Appearance
Arbitration report
The Report On Lengthy Litigation
The Arbitration Committee closed one case and opened four others this week.
Closed cases
- Highways: A case involving naming conventions on highway-related articles, closed on Wednesday. As a result of the case, User:SPUI, JohnnyBGood, Rschen7754, and PHenry were all placed on probation, allowing administrators to ban them from highway-related articles in case of disruption. Participants were also prohibited from moving pages between preferred names until a policy on the names is adopted, and SPUI and JohnnyBGood were warned to remain civil at all times.
New cases
Four cases were opened this week; all are in the evidence phase.
- Israeli apartheid: A case involving the actions of editors and administrators on Allegations of Israeli apartheid (formerly at Israeli apartheid). The article was the site of a move war during a poll to determine the article's naming.
- Sathya Sai Baba: A case involving Andries and SSS108's actions on the article Sathya Sai Baba. Both have accused each other of "POV pushing", and violating Wikipedia's policy on original research.
- Alienus: A case involving Alienus. Users Tony Sidaway, Nandesuka, and Jossi have presented evidence in the case, noting that Alienus has been blocked 15 times, has assumed bad faith, and has been warned many times about making personal attacks, edit warring, and incivility. Alienus had not presented any evidence as of press time.
- Trey Stone Appeal: No evidence has yet been presented in the case, which is an appeal of an August 2005 case which banned Trey Stone from articles relating to politics for one year (to end August 11, 2006).
Evidence phase
- Eternal Equinox: A case involving Eternal Equinox. Several users complained that Eternal Equinox has been trying to claim ownership of articles with edit wars and abuse directed at those who try to edit them. Eternal Equinox claims to have left Wikipedia, but the other parties argued that this was not credible because of a number of similar statements made previously.
- Hunger: A case involving a dispute about articles related to The Hunger Project. One of the parties, Jcoonrod, identifies himself as John Coonrod, an executive with that organization. The dispute has been in mediation about how and whether to include unflattering material about the organization in the article.
- Añoranza: A case involving Añoranza. Users asserted that Añoranza had been incivil, and had filed a retaliatory request for comment and request for checkuser. The dispute involves the usage of terms such as "Operation Iraqi Liberation" for the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Voting phase
- 8bitJake: A case involving 8bitJake. badlydrawnjeff, the initiator of the arbitration request, has asserted that 8bitJake's editing on political articles was biased, and that 8bitJake was incivil to other editors on the articles. Remedies brought by Fred Bauder, and not yet voted on by other members, would place 8bitJake and related editors on probation and ban them from articles relating to the politics of the State of Washington.
- Dionyseus: A case involving Dionyseus and Danny Pi, and their actions on Veselin Topalov, an article on a Bulgarian chess player accused of cheating. Remedies brought by Fred Bauder, and not yet voted on by other members, would ban Danielpi for a week for "discourtesy and personal attacks".
- Iloveminun: A case brought against Minun. Evidence presented asserted that Minun and various sockpuppets violated fair use and image deletion policies by uploading copyrighted images and removing tags. Remedies supported by Fred Bauder and James Forrester would limit Minun to one account, banning Minun for a year for various actions (with all bans running consecutively), and placed on probation, personal attack parole, and revert parole.
- Moby Dick: A case brought against Moby Dick. Administrators Tony Sidaway, Bishonen, and MONGO have alleged that Moby Dick is a sockpuppet of Davenbelle, violating previous arbitration rulings in his political edits and his relations with Cool Cat. Three arbitrators supported banning Moby Dick from Turkish and Kurdish-related articles.
- Pudgenet: A case brought against Pudgenet, involving a dispute between Pudgenet and -Barry-. The dispute involves pages relating to Perl, as well as Wikipedia:Wikipedians with articles. Three arbitrators support banning -Barry- from Perl, warning Pudgenet to avoid disruption, and placing Pudgenet on personal attack parole.
- Irishpunktom: A case involving Irishpunktom, Karl Meier, and Dbiv. Measures to ban Irishpunktom and Dbiv from editing Peter Tatchell for one year, place Irishpunktom and Karl Meier on probation for one year, and place Irishpunktom on one revert per article per week parole have the support of four arbitrators. Debate is still ongoing on an appropriate remedy for the actions of Dbiv.
- Saladin1970: A case involving an appeal of Saladin1970's indefinite block originally placed by Jayjg, and later by SlimVirgin. Saladin1970 would be banned for at least 2 years, perhaps indefinitely, and placed on probation, general probation, and personal attack parole.
- Raphael1: A case brought against Raphael1, involving the display of images on Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy. Measures to place Raphael1 on article probation for one year, as well as general probation, and to ban Raphael1 from Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy for one year, have the support of six arbitrators.
- Francis Schuckardt: A case involving editors on Francis Schuckardt. Remedies would place the article on a form of probation.
Motion to close
There are currently no motions to close on the table.
Discuss this story
This is a valuable set of information. However, I would like to suggest a change in its title. It is currently titled: "The Report On Lengthy Litigation." The word litigation seems wrong here. Litigation refers to "legal proceedings." Legal is usually taken to mean "pertaining to law."
The article refers primarily, as far as I can tell to Wikipedia arbitration cases. Arbitration and litigation are two different processes. While arbitration can be a step in legal proceedings, such is not the case here (I hope). In Wikipedia's case, the cases pertain to policies and guidelines and members' ability to adhere to them.
How about changing the title of this section of Signpost to "The Report on Arbitration Cases"? If the subject matter is broader than arbitration, the title could be: "The Report on Arbitration and other Disputes." or something similar. Sunray 01:54, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
this is messedrocker
(talk)
05:47, 13 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]