For this week's Arbitration Report: another long-running case has been closed, while the voting process for this year's Arbitration Committee Elections has begun.
On 22 November, a little under three months since it opened in late August, the Palestine–Israel articles 3 case has been closed. The case stemmed from a dispute in the topic-area of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict; allegations of copyright violation were the proximate cause, along with sockpuppetry investigations, various ethnicity-related personal attacks, and the resultant noticeboard threads. Peace in the Middle East has been a long-standing problem in the real world, where tensions run especially high, even in comparison to the normally higher tensions that accompany discussion of political and religious views. Wikipedia is not immune to outside tensions being imported into on-wiki disputes, unfortunately. The strength of the Five Pillars is often tested in this particular topic-area, especially neutrality and civility, as the prior two ArbCom cases indicate.
The specifics of the initiation of this ArbCom case, ARBPIA3, were related to the use of administrative tools while blocked. There was a Level 1 emergency desysop, which one sitting arbitrator noted was an "extremely rare" procedure, on that specific basis. Although administrators are held to a higher standard with regard to civility and other behavioral criteria, the stated cause of the emergency desysop on 18 August was the tool use. The full ArbCom case, which was accepted, was explicitly of a scope not specific to the particulars of the events involving the small number of named parties, but rather "with the aim of reviewing... existing sanction provisions in the prior Palestine–Israel articles case" of 2009; later amended in 2011 (as well as here), and related motions were also passed in 2012.
...the "area of conflict" shall be defined as it was defined in the (2008) Palestine–Israel articles case, encompassing the entire set of Arab-Israeli conflict-related articles, broadly interpreted... throughout the project. —WP:ARBPIA2, in 2009
The following remedies were the result of the ARBPIA3 case:
All anonymous IP editors and accounts with less than 500 edits and 30 days tenure are prohibited from editing any page that could be reasonably construed as being related to the Arab-Israeli conflict. This prohibition may be enforced by reverts, page protections, blocks, the use of Pending Changes, and appropriate edit filters.
Uninvolved administrators are encouraged to monitor the articles covered by discretionary sanctions in the original Palestine–Israel case to ensure compliance. To assist in this, administrators are reminded that:
- Accounts with a clear shared agenda may be blocked if they violate the sockpuppetry policy or other applicable policy;
- Accounts whose primary purpose is disruption, violating the policy on biographies of living persons, or making personal attacks may be blocked indefinitely;
- There are special provisions in place to deal with editors who violate the BLP policy;
- Administrators may act on clear BLP violations with page protections, blocks, or warnings even if they have edited the article themselves or are otherwise involved;
- Discretionary sanctions permit full and semi-page protections, including use of pending changes where warranted, and – once an editor has become aware of sanctions for the topic – any other appropriate remedy may be issued without further warning.
—WP:ARBPIA3, in 2015
The specific portion of the remedy which permits discretionary-sanctions reverts of new editors and new usernames (those who have been editing for less than one month and/or have fewer than 500 edits) was first utilized in summer 2015 during the GamerGate case, another topic-area which also involves high tensions and sockpuppetry. The handling of both these cases have been mentioned during the ongoing ArbCom election process.
Table of the unofficial advertised voter-guides[a] by individual wikipedians.
guide | Cal. | Cas. | Drm. | Gam. | Gor. | Haw. | Hul. | Kei. | Kel. | Kev. | Kir. | Kud. | Lfa. | Mah. | Mar. | NEE. | Opa. | Ric. | Thr. | Tim. | Wil. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tot.[b] | 70% 5th |
+ 91% 2nd |
+ 84% 4th |
27% 14th |
Low 46% 9th[c] |
-- 10% 18th |
33% 10th |
~ 57% 7th |
+ 88% 3rd |
-- 13% 17th |
30% 11th |
~ 54% 8th |
28% 13th |
-- 4% 20th |
-- 9% 19th |
~ 61% 6th |
+ 95% 1st |
27% 15th |
26% 16th |
Out |
30% 12th |
AGK | ?? | mu[d] | ?? | ?? | mu | ||||||||||||||||
Beg. | mu | mu | |||||||||||||||||||
Bis. | ?? | ?? | mu | ||||||||||||||||||
Boi. | -- | mu | |||||||||||||||||||
Carc. | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ||||||||||||||||
Carr. | + | + | -- | -- | -- | -- | + | ||||||||||||||
Col.[e] | 'C' | + | 'C' | + | + | n | 'C' | + | 'C' | ||||||||||||
Eal. | mu | + | + | ~ | mu | mu | ~ | mu | |||||||||||||
Elo. | ?? | ~ | ~ | ||||||||||||||||||
Fuz. | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ||||||||
HJM. | mu | mu | mu | ||||||||||||||||||
Cat. [f] | ?? | mu | ?? | ?? | |||||||||||||||||
MON. | mu | mu | mu | ||||||||||||||||||
MZM. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Pet. | -- | -- | |||||||||||||||||||
Pld. | mu | + | + | -- | + | + | |||||||||||||||
Rea. | ~ | + | + | + | -- | -- | + | -- | mu | + | |||||||||||
Reg. | mu | mu | mu | mu | mu | mu | |||||||||||||||
SBJ. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Sil.[g] | + | + | mu | ~ | -- | mu | ~ | ~ | ~ | mu | -- | -- | mu | + | mu | -- | |||||
Sja. | mu | mu | mu | mu | mu | ||||||||||||||||
Sma. | mu | mu | mu | ||||||||||||||||||
Own. | ~ | ~ | ~ | ||||||||||||||||||
Try. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Wor. | -- | mu | mu | mu | |||||||||||||||||
Yng. | + | + | mu | + | + | mu |
As we reported last week, there are 20 candidates in 2015, seeking to fill up to nine open seats on the Committee. The number of candidates is now at 20 after one editor announced their withdrawal from the election on 25 November. As the election must go on, on 23 November at 00:00 UTC, voting for the 2015 election began via Special:SecurePoll. Polls will remain open to eligible voters (currently unblocked usernames registered before 28 October with 150+ edits to mainspace before 1 November) through 6 December at 23:59 UTC.
More than 500 Wikipedians cast votes during the first 24 hours of polling, a figure which was markedly higher than in the previous year, and by 28 November over 2000 votes had been cast. Voter-participation in the 2014 ArbCom election was 593 legitimate non-duplicate ballots, lower than in previous years. After a series of discussions at WP:AN and User talk:Jimbo Wales, among other places, consensus developed that during 2015 elections a WP:MassMessage would be sent out to the roughly one hundred thousand eligible ArbCom voters, via their user talk pages. Election commissioner Mdann52 helped implement the actual message.
To learn more about the candidates, review their campaign-statements, which link to their contributions and other information about them. Questions for candidates are ongoing, and will continue throughout the voting-period. In addition, there are now more voter-guides than there are candidates; written by individual wikipedians, these guides provide arb-candidate criteria, and often specific support/oppose advice (see table at right), for editors unfamiliar with ArbCom, or unfamiliar with specific candidates. At least a dozen other candidate-analysis pieces have been published on-wiki, plus a special report last week in the Signpost.
As there has been one withdrawal since the voting began, and since candidates will continue to answer questions throughout the 6 December close of the SecurePoll, please note that voters "may revisit and change their decisions" by returning to the voting booth and re-entering their revised preferences. Finally, for technical reasons, voters should cast their vote by "an hour before the close of voting" or so, to ensure their vote will be counted.
Discuss this story
Side remark: I have the impression that at least one opinion about one candidate was not correctly transcribed. Main remark: concerning the predictive value of the voter guides, I have the impression that quite all voter guide writers would have voted even without the mass message reminder. Are they predictive about the whole set of voters, or only about a smaller subset? The final result will give some clues about the likeliness of such hypotheses. Pldx1 (talk) 10:11, 30 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]