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Wikipedia:Three-revert rule

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Eric B. and Rakim (talk | contribs) at 06:25, 2 September 2004. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Another one of Wikipedia's policies and guidelines:

Don't revert any page more than three times within a period of 24 hours.

This guideline applies to each person, and use of multiple accounts is not a legitimate way to avoid this limit. If the edit really needs reverting that much, somebody else will probably do it – and that will serve the vital purpose of showing that the community at large is in agreement over which of two competing versions is correct. If you like, chat with other Wikipedians whom you respect, and ask them if they could take a look. If you and the person you've asked to help have both needed to revert three times, then it is probably time to ask for the page to be protected.

If you find yourself reverting a considerable quantity of edits by the same user, due to vandalism or edits by a banned user, it may be appropriate to block the user or IP address. See Wikipedia:Bans and blocks for policy and procedure. Only administrators may place and remove blocks.

"Reversion wars" between two competing individuals are against Wikipedia's spirit, and reflect badly on both participants. Instead of performing a straight revert, look for ways to compromise, or alternate ways of saying the same thing - while such edits take more time and thought than another unthinking revert, they are far more likely to result in a mutually satisfactory article. In the case of newcomers who are genuinely making poor edits, being reverted by two or more people demonstrates that the reversions are not a one man crusade, but something closer to a consensus.

High-frequency reversion wars make the version history less useful, make it hard for other people to contribute, and flood recent changes and watchlists. Low-frequency reversion wars do not cause the community as many problems, though they still cause some. Experience has shown that waiting an hour or more between reverts to vandalism makes continued vandalism less likely. In most cases the troublemaker will lose interest and leave.

This principle could be compared to the Ko rule in Go (one cannot repeat positions), or chess's rule that if a position is repeated three times then the game can end in a draw.

Many users recommend spacing out your reverts to one per day. Benefits are:

  • The other person might see the light of reason.
  • You might realize that the other person was right!
  • Others can easily step in and try to help. See, for example, MeatBall:DefendEachOther

Enforcement

Currently this rule is enforced by:

  • Educating users who may not be aware of good Wikipedia practice in the matter.
  • Peer pressure and leadership by example.
  • Where pages are protected due to revert wars, sysops may protect pages on the version disliked by those who have engaged in excessive reverts. This is believed by some to be a recent change to the protection policy. The sysop also has the option to protect the current version, thereby maintaining a sense of neutrality.
  • In extreme cases, investigation by the arbitration committee, which may lead to any number of responses.