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''Place appeals and requests for clarification on matters related to past Arbitration cases in this section. If the case is ongoing, please use the relevant talk page. Requests for enforcement of past cases should be made at [[WP:AE|Arbitration enforcement]]. Requests to clarify general Arbitration matters should be made on the [[WT:RFAR|Talk page]]. '''Place new requests at the top'''.''
''Place appeals and requests for clarification on matters related to past Arbitration cases in this section. If the case is ongoing, please use the relevant talk page. Requests for enforcement of past cases should be made at [[WP:AE|Arbitration enforcement]]. Requests to clarify general Arbitration matters should be made on the [[WT:RFAR|Talk page]]. '''Place new requests at the top'''.''


=== Is homeopathy pseudoscience? ===

{{resolved|discussion moved to [[Wikipedia:Fringe theories/Noticeboard#Is homeopathy pseudoscience?]]}}

{{hidden begin|title=moved discussion|ta1=center|bg1=beige}}

Per [[Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Pseudoscience#Generally considered pseudoscience]] ''et seq.'', is [[homeopathy]] generally considered pseudoscience, or just questionable science? [[User:MilesAgain|MilesAgain]] ([[User talk:MilesAgain|talk]]) 12:54, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

:[[Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Pseudoscience#Generally considered pseudoscience]] makes a reference to scientific versus nonscientific evaluations and treatments of the human mind where there is a great deal of uncertainty and where the term pseudoscience should not be used lightly. [[Homeopathy]] by contrast makes claims about chemistry that are illogical and have been dis-proven by science and that no scientist takes seriously. [[Homeopathy]] is clearly pseudoscience. Does ink get more ink-like if you dilute it? Does sugar-water gain calories if you add water? Is blood serum better to give as a transfusion if you add more water? When you take Vitamin C, is it more potent to dissolve in water and take less? Does gasoline for your car give more energy if you dilute it in water? Diluting a substance decreases the qualities of that substance. [[User:WAS 4.250|WAS 4.250]] ([[User talk:WAS 4.250|talk]]) 13:42, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

:Even the article itself states (with good references) that <small>"Claims for the efficacy of homeopathy are unsupported by the collective weight of scientific and clinical studies. Ethical concerns regarding homeopathic treatment, a lack of convincing scientific evidence supporting its efficacy, and its contradiction of basic scientific principles have caused homeopathy to be regarded as "placebo therapy at best and quackery at worst".</small>[[User:Nergaal|Nergaal]] ([[User talk:Nergaal|talk]]) 14:11, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

:: You using a wiki article to prove a point? The article is a point of contention and a work in progress. Homeopathy is currently the subject of much research by reputable scientist. The research methodology is evolving (improving) as is common with topics worth scientific review. [[User:Anthon01|Anthon01]] ([[User talk:Anthon01|talk]]) 14:15, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Your claim of "reputable scientist <nowiki>[sic]</nowiki>" conduducting research is somewhat false. What reputable studies have been done show no basis other than the placebo effect, and those that show some other benefit have major flaws (lack of control and small sample sizes to name but two) [[User:LinaMishima|LinaMishima]] ([[User talk:LinaMishima|talk]]) 14:31, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
:: (ec) The present article is not NPOV in the opinion of a number of editors. Homeopathy does not make claims about chemistry, contrary to WAS statement above. It is not obvious pseudoscience, it may be an alternative theoretical formulation. &mdash;[[User:Whig|Whig]] ('''[[User talk:Whig|talk]]''') 14:17, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Actually, they often do make such claims. There are entire (unreliable) journals devoted to "water memory" and "quantum" effects. If one uses the terminology of science, one must be prepared to defend oneself against it. [[User:LinaMishima|LinaMishima]] ([[User talk:LinaMishima|talk]]) 14:31, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
::::The claims have to do with the physical structure of water and are consistent with quantum electrodynamics. This is not chemistry, however, and as you note this is a content issue not properly resolved here. &mdash;[[User:Whig|Whig]] ('''[[User talk:Whig|talk]]''') 14:39, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
::::::Um, no QED has nothing to do with water memory. This is completely bogus, and I have the benefit of a PhD in mathematical physics and several years worth of graduate study in QFT.--[[User:Filll|Filll]] ([[User talk:Filll|talk]]) 03:50, 26 January 2008 (UTC)

:::::They are most certainly not, if you actually understand the science involved. The scales at work with homeopathy are such that said claims have no basis remaining in fact. But that is a discussion for elsewhere. I shall have a search for specific discussions, but for now try reading [http://www.badscience.net], [http://www.quackometer.net/blog/], [http://stargoss.co.uk/badhomeopathy/modules/news/], [http://www.dcscience.net/improbable.html], [http://dcscience.net/]. I certainly do not agree with the overly aggressive tone of some of these, but their content is generally sound. If you wish to discuss this further, it would probably be an idea to head over to my talk page [[User:LinaMishima|LinaMishima]] ([[User talk:LinaMishima|talk]]) 14:51, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
:: Additionally, serious scientist are researching homeopathy.[http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/321/7259/471][http://www.chestjournal.org/cgi/content/abstract/127/3/936][http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00425633?recr=open&intr=homeopathy&rank=2] [[User:Anthon01|Anthon01]] ([[User talk:Anthon01|talk]]) 14:28, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Read the commentary attached to the BMJ article. This points out a number of flaws, and shows that conclusions cannot be drawn at this time. There is a common misunderstanding that scientists do not investigate pseudoscience. The difference between science and pseudoscience is that scientists are happy to investigate fully any claim, and are willing to change their opinion on a subject based upon the evidence. The evidence currently for Homeopathy is extremely lacking, and furthermore there is no means for any method of action to actually exist, given the dilution beyond the Avogadro limit. Again, to conclude, investigation does not automatically lend merit. [[User:LinaMishima|LinaMishima]] ([[User talk:LinaMishima|talk]]) 14:50, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
:'''content dispute:''' as much as I have a professional opinion on this matter, this is clearly a content dispute, and as such I'm not sure if it is really an appropriate matter for ArbCom. [[User:LinaMishima|LinaMishima]] ([[User talk:LinaMishima|talk]]) 14:31, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
::I would like to apologise to ArbCom, the Clerks and other uninvolved parties for being part of a discussion which is really off-topic here and belongs elsewhere. Sorry. [[User:LinaMishima|LinaMishima]] ([[User talk:LinaMishima|talk]]) 15:08, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
::: I'm sorry, I was distracted by the fact that [[Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Pseudoscience#Generally considered pseudoscience]] is clearly a content ruling, so I thought to ask here. On reflection I realize this question should be asked on [[Wikipedia:Fringe theories/Noticeboard#Is homeopathy pseudoscience?]] and I have copied the discussion there. [[User:MilesAgain|MilesAgain]] ([[User talk:MilesAgain|talk]]) 05:39, 26 January 2008 (UTC)

{{hidden end}}

=== [[Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Palestine-Israel articles]] ===

Is there any chance the wording of the "discretionary sanctions" remedy could be tweaked to allow uninvolved admins to place a specific article (or closely related set of articles, if necessary), on article probation? I believe this would help, given the current thread at [[WP:AE]] and attendant squabbling at [[Jewish lobby]]. I suppose you could argue that article probation here might be redundant (seeing as all Arab-Israeli articles are kind of on article probation anyway) but it helps as a solution on especially problematic articles - the tag at the top lets people know there is a long-term issue. Furthermore, it means the article as a whole can be monitored and you don't have to pick through contributions elsewhere if deciding when to topic-ban. Best, [[User:Moreschi|Moreschi]] <sup> [[User:Moreschi/If|If you've written a quality article...]]</sup> 17:39, 22 January 2008 (UTC)
:I'm not sure this is necessary Moreschi. If there's problematic editing on the page, article ban the participants on the page who are taking part in the problematic behaviour. If there's problems on numerous pages with certain editors, topic ban them. If they carry on editing these pages then should be blocked. [[User:Ryan Postlethwaite|'''<font color="#000088">Ry<font color="#220066">an<font color="#550044"> P<font color="#770022">os<font color="#aa0000">tl</font>et</font>hw</font>ai</font>te</font>''']] 17:53, 22 January 2008 (UTC)
::The sanctions are so broadly written that I think they allow for pretty much everything. I will probably place all editors on [[Jewish Lobby]] on 1RR per week ''for that article'' pending an attempt to more deeply analyze the problem. The sanctions are written against "any editor" not "any article," but articles don't write themselves, and I'm pretty sure that "any editor" includes "all editors of article X". [[User talk:Thatcher|Thatcher]] 18:09, 22 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Yes, this is what I was trying to say. The ability to place a specific article on 1RR (and put in extra sanctions against uncooperative editing etc) is what's needed in some cases, because some articles are so darn controversial it's just natural to edit-war (the poor darlings can't help themselves). But Thatcher's work-around is rather neat, and will serve equally well. [[User:Moreschi|Moreschi]] <sup> [[User:Moreschi/If|If you've written a quality article...]]</sup>
::::[[User:Tariqabjotu|Tariqabjotu]] has brought to my attention, in connection with a different matter altogether, an apparent edit war involving the same editors at [[New antisemitism]]. It's evidently escalated well beyond the issues at [[Jewish lobby]], to the point of the article having being protected. I'm not involved in any way with either article and not really up to date on what has been going on, but maybe one of you guys could take a look. Now my request for clarification: would such an article be covered by this arbitration in the first place? I'm not certain how broadly the link with the Palestine-Israeli conflict is going to be interpreted, though looking at the article's content it does seem to be indirectly related to that conflict (which is mentioned at various points). Does an article have to be about Palestine-Israel, or is it sufficient that it should have some sort of non-trivial link to the conflict? -- [[User:ChrisO|ChrisO]] ([[User talk:ChrisO|talk]]) 23:32, 22 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::"The area of conflict in this case shall be considered to be the entire set of Arab-Israeli conflict-related articles, broadly interpreted." In my view a broad interpretation does include [[New antisemitism]]. [[User:Sam Blacketer|Sam Blacketer]] ([[User talk:Sam Blacketer|talk]]) 00:09, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
::::::That is plenty wide to cover about anything, clearly the intent of the ruling. <span style="font-family: verdana;"> — [[User:Rlevse|<span style="color:#060;">'''''R''levse'''</span>]] • [[User_talk:Rlevse|<span style="color:#990;">Talk</span>]] • </span> 00:20, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

(unindent) The remedies were deliberately wide, to indicate in a way, simply, that we feel that
# Administrators on this area may need to use their judgement and adminship to bring the edit war (and warriors, and some editors who need to modify their conduct) back within '''acceptable limits''', and
# The edit war has exhausted patience, and we are therefore now inclined to give uninvolved administrators wide ranging scope to '''achieve''' that end (as described in the decision).
Note that a stricter application of "drawing a line on unproductive behavior" is not the same as "anything an admin does will be okay". However a user who cannot or will not take note of the need to edit productively and appropriately in their conduct ("[[WP:IDIDNTHEARTHAT]]"), has now basically got only two choices in this arena: voluntarily do not edit there, or be prevented from editing in an unhelpful manner, by admin action. What counts as "unproductive" or "inappropriate" is pretty much "any action that contradicts high quality collaborative creation of a neutral encyclopedia article for readers".

Bottom line: the encyclopedic community is not expected to endorse some areas being a perrenial edit war, for any reason, and the belief that somehow they should, is misplaced. Disputes are fine ''provided'' they are carried out appropriately, which includes non-disruption, listening to uninvolved administrators, and editors actively and genuinely working to achieve resolution via NPOV.

An approximate summary of my own personal thoughts. If in doubt the remedy wording overrides any comment I might make. [[user:FT2|FT2]]&nbsp;<sup><span style="font-style:italic">([[User_talk:FT2|Talk]]&nbsp;|&nbsp;[[Special:Emailuser/FT2|email]])</span></sup> 01:59, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

:Thanks very much for these very informative comments. I hope one of the clerks will archive this thread somewhere (maybe on the arbitration page?). -- [[User:ChrisO|ChrisO]] ([[User talk:ChrisO|talk]]) 21:37, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
::Yup, main case talk page, after it's stale for a couple more days (in case any other Arbs wish to comment) [[User talk:Thatcher|Thatcher]] 00:56, 25 January 2008 (UTC)


=== Request extension of [[Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Martinphi-ScienceApologist|RFAR/Martinphi-ScienceApologist]] to deal with multiple article disruptions ===
=== Request extension of [[Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Martinphi-ScienceApologist|RFAR/Martinphi-ScienceApologist]] to deal with multiple article disruptions ===

Revision as of 19:32, 29 January 2008

A request for arbitration is the last step of dispute resolution for conduct disputes on Wikipedia. The Arbitration Committee considers requests to open new cases and review previous decisions. The entire process is governed by the arbitration policy. For information about requesting arbitration, and how cases are accepted and dealt with, please see guide to arbitration.

To request enforcement of previous Arbitration decisions or discretionary sanctions, please do not open a new Arbitration case. Instead, please submit your request to /Requests/Enforcement.

This page transcludes from /Case, /Clarification and Amendment, /Motions, and /Enforcement.

Please make your request in the appropriate section:


Current requests

Homeopathy

Initiated by Adam Cuerden talk at 11:12, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties


Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request

All have been notified on their talk pages, and a further notice was placed at Talk:Homeopathy, for anyone who would care to join.

Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Endless discussion, bringing other admins in... but really, the case is such that we need some guidance from on high.

Statement by Adam Cuerden

It is fairly widely accepted that Homeopathy is one of the major battlegrounds in Wikipedia, and has largely divided into two camps, with much hostility between them.

The purpose of this case would be to help sort out some of the perennial issues. What are the standards of evidence for medical studies (clarification of WP:RS. Perhaps the influential John Ioannidis study would make a useful starting point). Can we get some guidelines for how to balance weight between mainstream science and homeopathy? (WP:Undue weight How about balancing it in the lead? (WP:LEAD) What about sub articles?

If we could get some good guidelines, many of the disputes would be short-circuited, and we might have a good chance to move past the war and into a new era of guided editing.

This is not a standard case, but it's possible it'll do a lot more good than all the other ones.


For the record: I largely agree with docboat, with the one quibble that references can be of several levels of quality, and low-quality ones (e.g. pilot studies, very small studies, low-impact or questionable journals) that disagree with higher-quality ones should be trumped by the better ones, with how much they're trumped corresponding to the divide in quality.

I'm afraid I don't agree with Aburesz/Arion 3x3, as I think that would go against the policies WP:Undue weight and the last paragraph of WP:NPOV/FAQ#Pseudoscience, but such stark differences in opinion are one of the reasons that this case should be accepted - a few clarifications and all of us will know where we stand, and can then work within our better understanding.

As you can see, we're all willing to try and get along - I suppose there may be exceptions later, and if so, well, that may force considering more traditional Arbcom sanctions in those cases. But we are coming to you as a group that wants to get along, and so I would think that Thatcher's suggestion, while perhaps helpful in some cases, would not help with those of us who really would like to work together on friendly terms, but who have such different interpretations of policy that we need some guidance to be able to do so.

Statement by Orderinchaos

While I fully respect what Adam is trying to achieve, and hope that it comes about, I don't think ArbCom would have much of a role in setting down content standards. Not sure though what the best way would be of obtaining consensus and an agreeable list of standards on such a divisive topic - my guess would be some kind of mediation. Orderinchaos 12:17, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Thatcher

Adam frames the dispute as a series of content questions. The remedies proposed below for all pseudoscience cases, if enacted, will allow uninvolved admins to impose sanctions on editors whose behavior is disruptive, which in theory will enforce a more reasonable and less tendentious editing environment in which those content questions can be addressed through the normal editing process.

Statement by Docboat

If we take Homeopathy as an example, this can well serve the larger area of alternative sciences and philosophies, so this is well worth considering, as Adam suggests. There are, as I see it, two main issues:

  • Firstly, when explaining a topic of a fringe or minority group, can an editor push a minority view which is clearly unreferenced, but whose view is passionately held and defended by a group of like-minded believers, and contrasting this with a situation where a minority view is clearly referenced, but held to be untenable by those who espouse a different belief, show different references, and demand that the minority view references be struck because of {insert justification for rejecting the reference here} to better reflect a majority concensus.
  • Secondly, when the topic concerns a fringe or minority group subject, to what extent does the mainstream majority viewpoint need to be given priority in debunking the topic to reflect the views current among society or the strongly held views of mainstream editors?

The homeopathy topic has been plagued with editors whose viewpoint is both minority (pro-homeopathy) AND unreferenced AND closed-minded to the point of wishing to write an article which is 100% pro-homeopathy. We have editors whose views are minority AND referenced AND open-minded. There are editors whose views are mainstream (anti-homeopathy) AND referenced AND open-minded to homeopathic concepts. And we are also plagued with editors whose views are mainstream, AND referenced AND closed-minded - even to the point of espousing the aim of re-writing the topic to reflect a completely 100% opposition to the topic. This is normal in any area of Wikipedia - kooks abound in normal life. But what we are seeing is a breakdown in a preparedness to listen to the other, a driving away of reasonable editors, an attempt to coerce, frighten, bully editors of either persuasion. Only a few have adopted this attitude, but it is a pernicious attitude, a destructive attitude, and is completely foreign to the concept of advancing knowledge, understanding and scholarly collation of information. So what do we, as a community, wish to do about this?

For the record, I would state that it should be the case that an article in an encyclopaedia must do the essential following:

  1. Provide referenced facts
  2. Describe and discuss the topic at hand

If a minority viewpoint is being examined, the topic needs to be focused on that topic, first, foremost and in detail. Opposing viewpoints belong in the article after the topic has been adequately explained. So that in controversial topics, such as Creationism the idea is completely examined in the first part of the article, derivatives of the topic are explained, and then the topic is examined from the opposing viewpoint. In this way, someone investigating a topic can be informed completely from the viewpoint of the topic described, and then sees the whole evidence for opposing viewpoints. This is, IMHO, is not only clearer, with less confusion in conflicting statements and parenthetical additions, but equally importantly denies any reasonable editor the justification for reverting statements with which they disagree. There is no need to revert - they simply add to the information in the other part of the article. An unreasonable editor will be quickly identified, and can be sanctioned by community action.

Thank you Adam, for bringing this to a larger audience.

Statement by Arion 3x3

In the Homeopathy article, as in other examples of articles on alternative medicine or spiritual beliefs, there have been strong views asserting that the "skeptical" point of view must take precedence over the neutral presentation of the subject of the article. The more extreme positions insist on the deletion of articles and content, as has happened in the last 2 months.

I maintain that this is a general encyclopedia that should be a handy source of information, and a starting place for people wanting to pursue further research into a topic. It is not a "Skeptics Encyclopedia" in which mainstream scientific opinions are portrayed as the only reality, and non-mainstream topics are dismissed with insulting labels ("pseudoscience", "fringe", "junk science", etc.), and scientific evidence that does not fit the current mainstream is ignored or dismissed, with endless questioning of their validity and where they have been published.

Taking the specific example of the article about homeopathy: it is about homeopathy, pure and simple, not about "homeopathy and how it is viewed within mainstream medicine". However "homeopathy and how it is viewed within mainstream medicine" could (and should) be a subsection of the article on the topic of "homeopathy".

Attempts by some of the editors to get the homeopathy article edited to Wikipedia's NPOV standards have unfortunately been countered by juvenile humor, threats, and false claims that supporters of homeopathy want to remove all criticisms of homeopathy. This atmosphere on Wikipedia must change. Arion 3x3 (talk) 13:56, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • Clarifying comment For "skeptical", read "scientific" --RDOlivaw (talk) 14:08, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Response Ordinary skepticism (which I maintain) acts to refine and improve scientific knowledge, but "organized skepticism" is something different and alarming. This attitude rejects, deletes, and ridicules all evidence contrary to dearly held beliefs (almost bordering on religious dogma). Arion 3x3 (talk) 15:08, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Arthur Rubin

Still seems to be a content dispute. However, if the ArbComm were to consider it on the basis of deciding what policies determine the content, the mainstream medical or scientific view should dominate, per WP:UNDUE and WP:FRINGE. It is fringe science, at best. Reputable studies which show an effect should be included, but so should the consensus scientific view that it's not a real effect. (As for the fact that scientific studies are done, scientists frequently test the validity of theories they don't believe. Coincidentally, none of those have produced positive results....) — Arthur Rubin | (talk) 14:06, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by semi-involved user ScienceApologist

Well, here I am again.

One of the issues here is that WP:NPOVFAQ#Pseudoscience was a content decision made by arbcomm which has led to some very weird protestations. Unfortunately, arbcomm did not give guidelines on how to determine when things were "obvious" or "generally considered" pseudoscience and so the arguments rage with most POV-promoters of homeopathy claiming that it isn't pseudoscience and everybody else saying that it is. This resulted in a rather pointy deletion request for Category:Pseudoscience that seem to be driving certain administrators into bizarre tailspins. There are plenty of competent editors who are capable of writing a neutral version of the article, but their efforts tend to get thwarted by a cacophony of alt. med. POV-pushers who clog the talkpage discussion and the edit history with provacative and outrageous claims. Most of the talkpage right now is trying to explain basic scientific ideas to these people who are basically unwilling to listen: but if we cannot start out on the same page and if homeopathic supporters cannot undestand that water memory is not a scientific concept, then editing will continue to stagnate. Mediation will not work at this point because there are literally dozens of editors and one single mediator would go nuts trying to handle the morass. Maybe a cadre of admin-tool bearing mediators who had the imprimatur to block at a moment's notice would be able to help, but anything less that that will just degenerate into the madness we see now. I believe that it is time that arbcomm took WP:DE and WP:TE seriously and began a concerted effort to remove true believers from disrupting the attempted discussions.

ScienceApologist (talk) 14:18, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Jehochman

I request that Arbcom accept this case because a battleground has developed at homeopathy and related articles. Editors are unable to resolve the dispute through collegial discussion and instead have resorted to out of process means, such as vexatious requests for comment and counter-attacks in the form of community ban proposals. Disruption is spilling into multiple forums and there has been no movement toward resolution. While ArbCom cannot decide the content issues, they can restrict the troublemakers and establish remedies to provide a better editing environment so good faith editors from all sides can work together. Jehochman Talk 14:41, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitrators: do you see, a lot of people are pleading for help? If homeopathy and related articles are placed on article probation, and any particularly disruptive editors are identified and subjected to appropriate remedies, I think that would greatly improve the situation. Adam Cuerden has been run though the mill because he made a good faith effort to control a very bad situation. You should entertain his request and address his concerns for the good of the encyclopedia. These are your responsibilities. If the case is overly-broad, you can accept it anyways, and set appropriate boundaries. Jehochman Talk 15:49, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:MrDarwin

I'll consider myself an "involved" party due to the homeopathy discussions going on at several plant species articles; for example see here, here, here, here, and to a lesser extent at here. I've been abstaining from these discussions for the last couple of days--initially to cool off, but now I have serious doubts as to whether I will be returning to edit at Wikipedia at all. Some rather acrimonious edit wars and heated discussion have been going on there, not about whether homeopathy is scientifically sound or clinically supported-virtually all involved editors agree that it is not--but whether it can be appropriate to mention homeopathy at all in articles about plant species that are used in homeopathy.

Thuja occidentalis may not be the best example as I believe the notability and undue weight objections may have some merit in this particular case--but the objections to mentioning the use of this species in homeopathy go far beyond notability and undue weight. What bothers me about this case is that (1) a small group of editors who have demonstrated no knowledge, expertise, or even a particular interest in botany have been editing, more or less by fiat, several plant species articles to expunge any and all references to homeopathy, without seeking or even considering consensus or compromise from the Wikipedia:WikiProject Plants project editors, many of whom have been working on these articles for several years (and none of whom are attempting to promote homeopathy); (2) this group of editors continues to mischaracterize other editors as "pro-homeopathy" when what those editors are trying to do is to acknowledge the well-documented use of several plant species in homeopathy; and (3) that it has become apparent that no source will be admitted as "reliable" by this group of editors, not even publications by professional botanists in the peer-reviewed botanical literature.

What I would like to see clarified is: when is it appropriate to include mention or discussion of homeopathy in an article, how to do so both factually and neutrally, and what kind of documentation is necessary to support that mention. Homeopathy is without scientific credibility or clinical support, but it has a very large number of believers and practitioners, and numerous clinical studies have examined it, if only to debunk it; for those reasons alone it is significant. Moreoever, the use of numerous plant species in homeopathy is notable enough to appear over and over in both the medical and botanical (never mind the homeopathic) literature. Many of these plants species are notable either primarily or significantly because of their medicinal usage, and in this context homeopathy is one of the significant uses of those plant species. But the repeated deletion by several editors of even the most factual, neutral, and reliably sourced mention of homeopathy smacks of censorship to me. If even botanists cannot be considered reliable sources for the uses of plant species, then I don't know who possibly can. I am not a proponent or believer of homeopathy, and this subject doesn't even particularly interest me, but I simply cannot continue to contribute to Wikipedia under these conditions. MrDarwin (talk) 15:34, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by semi-involved LinaMishima

Arion 3x3 states "In the Homeopathy article, as in other examples of articles on alternative medicine or spiritual beliefs". This is all well and good for spiritual beliefs and approaches to healing. However homeopathy is well-documented to present itself as a scientific subject. When considering due weight, we must consider the framework within which a subject presents itself. If a subject presents itself as a spiritual matter, then the majority of the weight must be applied to discussion of the spiritual aspect, comparisons to other beliefs, and so on. However, when a subject claims all the trappings of science (such as journals, proofs, methods of action, and so on) and rarely argues to be taken as a belief rather than as a science, a subject must be presented within the framework it desires for itself - science.

The need for a clarification is for matters of weight, reliable sources, and civility. Not only do we need clarification on how due weight is to be applied to a subject, but we need clarification that then the concept of reliable sources for that framework can then be applied. Finally, parties involved in this are acting quite uncivil. The skeptic/scientific crowd distinctly does have its bad eggs and members who take questionable approaches to arguing, however the 'believers' and supporters as a group features far fewer members willing to compromise, concede, and accept the other side's view points. Diffs may be found showing how scientific approach editors state that they do not believe but accept the possibility, only to then have the supporters reply with attempts to 'prove' the possibility, only inflaming debate further when they already are being accommodated. Talk pages and wikipedia is not the appropriate place for attempting to convert people to believe similarly.

The spill-over of the disputes into the plant articles is certainly proof that policies need clarification. When topics spill over into other articles and different forums, there is always some underlying problem, as is also evident in the TV episodes case. I have not been involved in that debate yet, however I feel that for some articles the brief mention is justified, whilst for others it is not.

Despite all this, however, I am still not sure if this should go to ArbCom. Although I believe that the routes to dispute resolution will fail due to vote stacking and the ability of one side to be utterly unshakable in their belief to the point of upsetting others, this does not excuse dispute resolution processes from being followed. For the matters of policy interpretation that need clarification, I strongly advise an arbitrator to find a previous case to place such motions within, so that only the policy clarifications are discussed and they are discussed swiftly. LinaMishima (talk) 15:48, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by semi-involved Infophile

I don't think anyone's going to disagree with me if I state that on Wikipedia, pretty much everything related to Homeopathy is a battleground, and as a result of this, a mess. I found out about this huge battle from spillover onto the Quackery article during the period where Homeopathy was protected (well, one of the periods). MrDarwin's noted that it's also spilled over onto plant articles, and it's also shown up in chemical articles (My biggest involvement here was in a discussion at Talk:Potassium dichromate).

I can sympathize with MrDarwin's concerns about how editors are acting on those articles, carrying out a seek-and-destroy mentality with regards to any mention of Homeopathy. It's an unfortunate side-effect of the tactics they've had to take when debating with actual Homeopathy promoters (I apologize if anyone finds "promoters" offensive. Yes, that happened). If they're given an inch, they take an article. The only way to prevent articles from descending into complete trash is to hold a solid line against them. When facing a foe who shows no chance whatsoever of changing their mind, anyone who wavers in the slightest will be completely overrun. Since Wikipedia rules of etiquette involve being at least somewhat open-minded, you can see how this becomes a problem.

Now, of course, this is just how I see the debate, with the closed-minded Homeopathy supporters forcing the mainstream editors to be equally closed-minded. I'm sure others will see it as being the other way. Maybe a neutral party will be able to decide independantly which is true. Anyways, I have to get out right now, so I don't have a chance to say everything I wanted to here. I'll finish this up when I get back (sorry if this poses any problem). --Infophile (Talk) (Contribs) 16:30, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Okay, I've decided I won't say too much more if/until this case is accepted. However, I would like to strongly urge ArbCom to take this case. Things here are headed towards a disaster of some sort, and I predict that if nothing is done now, down the road there will be significant trouble of some sort. I can't say exactly what it would be, but it would likely include massive incivility as frustration keeps building up on both sides. Something needs to be done here before that happens. --Infophile (Talk) (Contribs) 19:16, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by recently-involved User:Jossi

First, a disclaimer: I have never taken an Homeopathic remedy, and understand from my own research (which is very recent) that Homeopathy's claims of being a scientific endeavor are not based on visible evidence. I came to the Homeopathy page on January 22, after seeing that the page was protected for more than 30 days. I unprotected the page and made a statement in talk about this, encouraging editors to work together and find common ground. See Talk:Homeopathy#Page_unprotected_and_How_to_write_a_lead. As an attempt to cool-off things, I proposed a voluntary 1RR pledge here: Talk:Homeopathy#Edit_warring, which did not last for long, despite an initial interest in exploring that possibility (the article has been protected again yesterday due to edit warring). Since that time, I have found myself in the midst of an ongoing battle between edit-warring factions that have been already described by other editors above, in which any attempt to bridge gaps results in bad faith accusations by *some* editors against those trying to build these bridges. I concur with MrDarwin and Docboat: ArbCom may need to hear this case and place further restrictions on this and related articles. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 17:21, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

In response to arbCom member The Uninvited Co. below, I would kindly ask to review the editor behavior issues that have been raised here, and completely ignore all aspects related to content. Doing that may help the ArbCom see the need to hear this case. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 19:01, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A voice of reason: User:Jim Butler. I hear you and commend you on your effort. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 03:37, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:Peter morrell

I have edited this article for almost 2 years and it is as bad now as it has ever been. I agree entirely with User:docboat, User:MrDarwin and User:Arion 3x3. It is and will continue to be impossible to add anything useful to this article as long as the edit warring and ad hominem attacks continue. There is no consensus except a broad disagreement on just about everything. Most of the people involved in the heated debates know little about homeopathy, have no intention of studying it neutrally and yet have a strong emotionally-held belief that it is garbage. How can you do any rational business with such people? There has to be some method of letting the subject speak for itself on its own terms without always being crowded out by all these conflicting and largely uninformed views fighting and jostling for position and shouting down others; they're acting like a pack of hyenas. Until some peace and mutual respect returns, then no progress can be made on the substance of the article. Peter morrell 17:49, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by involved MilesAgain

A few days ago -- prior to my ever having edited Homeopathy -- I added an explicit statement that homeopathy was pseudoscience and quackery to the introduction, and included several peer-reviewed sources in support of those statements. I was reverted within an hour. I asked here on WP:RFAR under requests for clarification whether homeopathy is generally considered pseudoscience, or just disputed science. I moved that discussion to WP:FTN, and the overwhelming consensus among uninvolved editors was that it is generally considered pseudoscience. I realized that the quackery issue called for dispute resolution and opened an RFC asking whether homeopathy should be unequivocally described as quackery in the intro. I then added, on the talk page, a dozen more sources from peer-reviewed medical journals and academic press monographs supporting the fact that homeopathy is malicious quackery, because homeopaths openly admit to advising people to refrain from immunization. Other sources made statments about the totality of recent research supporting the fact that homeopathy is pseudoscience. Even the pro-homeopathy editors agreed that discouraging vaccination costs lives. However, only a few people agreed that homeopathy should be explicitly called quackery in the introduction, so I added a {{POV}} tag with a link to the section with my concerns on the talk page. The tag was reverted three times, and I brushed up against 3RR replacing it.

Any situation where there is edit-warring over a POV tag clearly involves behavior issues, and other methods of dispute resolution have already been attempted, so I urge the committee to accept this request. MilesAgain (talk) 17:59, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by involved Whig

I would encourage the ArbCom to take some action to review and correct the behavior of participants in the Homeopathy articles. I would abstain from discussion of content issues here which are not generally within the purview of the ArbCom, but focus on the incivility exhibited by some editors. Several RfCs may also be relevant to this case.

As far as talk of two sides, there are more than two perspectives represented in the discussions, and there are editors who have been neutral. Conduct issues are independent of this. Insofar as NPOV is the guiding principle of Wikipedia, there should be some reinforcement of the meaning of this policy.

It may also be appropriate to include Quackwatch in this ArbCom case. —Whig (talk) 18:27, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by involved User:TimVickers

It has been possible in the past to produce a consensus version of the lead (see Talk:Homeopathy/Archive_21#Proposal_for_lead) for the discussion that resulted in one reasonably successful version. However, such consensus versions are only ever metastable and the text is constantly pushed either in one direction or the other. One of the main problems is an inability of many editors to see that a neutral point of view is not synonymous with a sympathetic point of view. Similarly, an article devoted to describing an area of belief and practice in alternative medicine should not read like an attack piece in a tabloid newspaper. I am skeptical that ArbCom will have any significant effect on this dispute, but you are welcome to try! Tim Vickers (talk) 18:32, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by semi involved User:Abridged

One of the basic premises of Adam's request above is that "we are a group of people who want to get along." My experience has shown that this is far from the case. People who want to get along are not dismissive towards each other, don't apply insulting labels to each other, and actually listen to what the other has to say. Unfortunately, editors on these articles do not bother to follow established wikipedia guidelines for civility and edit warrring. Just yesterday there was an edit war over the "pseudoscience" label. I think that at the end of the day, this is a content dispute. The only way out if it will be for people to really work with each other to reach consensus with some difficult compromise on each side. Given the current behavioral standards the editors in this subject area adhere to, I am not enthusiastic that this will happen. Abridged talk 19:08, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by semi involved User:Jim62sch

Short of banning this subject, which Wikipedia rightfully cannot and will not do, homeopathy will be a tendentious issue for the life of WP. Arbcom cannot effectively arbitrate nor define WP:NPOV, WP:V, WP:RS, WP:Undue weight, WP:NPOV/FAQ#Pseudoscience, WP:FRINGE, et cetera, ad nauseum, ad infinitum. Looking at editor behaviour on this particular article would be equally pointless as Homeopathy is essentially a battle-ground of the "believers" versus the "non-believers", and tendentiousness knows no bounds or sides in the debate.

True, there have been some calmer editors: User:Wikidudeman tried very hard to get the article as neutral as possible (to no avail), User:Jim Butler has tried to keep things balanced, same with User:Art Carlson. However, most of us have very definite opinions that really boil down to science vs mysticism (yes, this will tick some editors off, but I can think of no other way to phrase it). As those two "disciplines" or "thought paradigms" are diametrically opposed, this will always be a contentious subject; and as the propenents of both paradigms are quite passionate, there will never be a viable truce. True, editors on each side could be banned from the article, or general topic, but they would simply be replaced, continuing the process for the forseseeable future. &#0149;Jim62sch&#0149; 22:29, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:Jim Butler

I'm involved only recently and at Adam Cuerden's invitation, and am optimistic that we can work this out. Not sure we need a case here as much as cooling-off.

Still, some things that might be considered:

(A) Adam makes a good point re educating readers about science, and the hazards of misleading readers about the weight of individual studies. I wouldn't keep such studies out of WP, but per WP:WEIGHT, we might as a rule have a "see also" template at the top of sections citing individual studies, linking to evidence-based medicine and such. That would provide adequate context, as we should. Having done so, it's OK to go into detail about homeopathy theory, even when superseded by science, on homeopathy pages. Overall, WP:WEIGHT says it all:

"Minority views can receive attention on pages specifically devoted to them—Wikipedia is not a paper encyclopedia. But on such pages, though a view may be spelled out in great detail, it must make appropriate reference to the majority viewpoint, and must not reflect an attempt to rewrite majority-view content strictly from the perspective of the minority view."

(B) Regarding WP:NPOVFAQ#Pseudoscience: those criteria were good and generally clear, but there are two possible things to clarify:

  • What is the demarcation between "obvious pseudoscience" (tiny fringe, Time Cube-like stuff) and other areas that followed ("generally considered pseudoscience" e.g astrology, "questionable science" e.g. psychoanalysis etc.)? Though not explicit, it appeared to be that the latter are well-known and have attracted V RS commentary from scientists. If so, cool.
  • We do need to source claims of consensus. WP:NPOVFAQ#Pseudoscience tells us that we may categorize as pseudoscience topics that "are generally considered pseudoscience by the scientific community". Meeting that criterion requires a source, right? Per WP:RS#Claims_of_consensus:
"Claims of consensus must be sourced. The claim that all or most scientists, scholars, or ministers hold a certain view requires a reliable source. Without it, opinions should be identified as those of particular, named sources."
Scientific-consensus-type sources can be found in articles like this:
Lacking such sources, my understanding is that may not use category:pseudoscience, although we may and certainly should include criticism from reliable sources in articles. This stuff absolutely belongs in WP; only with the "category:pseudoscience" tag should we be more restrictive.

Does the above make sense to most editors, and if so, do we really need an ArbCom case? regards, Jim Butler(talk) 22:32, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by JzG

ArbCom has successfully tackled other issues which boil down, as this does, to faith versus science, and in the process given valuable guidance, but this is not possible with this request as framed. There may be an issue amenable to arbitration though, if it can be distilled out. Guy (Help!) 22:39, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:Shot info

All the useful editors in articles such as this one have or are in the process of being driven away by the modern Wikipedia's obsession with keeping as many ill informed editors, obvious socks and meat puppets and POV-pushers as possible. Rather than dealing with the DE and TE problem, ArbCom just allows the problem to fester perhaps reasoning that the admins will keep control, while simultaneously persecuting any admins who do retain a modicum of control. Either way, ArbCom is currently presiding over the MySpaciation of Wikipedia due to a lack of allowing bold admins to do their job. Shot info (talk) 00:22, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:Wanderer57

I agree with what Jzg wrote above, about distilling out an "issue amenable to arbitration" from this very broad request for arbitration.

I reviewed the archives of Talk:Homeopathy, of which there are now 26. I think it significant that in every single one of these archives, there is discussion (often heated) about whether the article is NPOV/POV. In many cases, there is debate about the meaning of the term NPOV.

It would be a huge step forward, IMO, if ArbCom would create a defined framework in which editors could create and then seek approval for a consensus definition of NPOV that would serve as a practical measure of the NPOVness of this and other highly polarized articles.

Wanderer57 (talk) 01:16, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I would add that four editors represented here who have a huge amount of experience of editing Homeopathy talk about NPOV as an important if not critical issue. Specifically, Adam Cuerden, Tim Vickers, Whig, and Filll. Wanderer57 (talk) 04:49, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Scientizzle

I've been involved in the morass at homeopathy for only a couple of weeks now. Among the general issues that have recently clogged up that talk page: the amount of the lead section devoted to outlining the scientific criticisms, the inclusion of Category:Pseudoscience (volatile consensus seems to be headed towards "Generally considered pseudoscience"), and the inclusion of {{Infobox Pseudoscience}} (which seems relatively disfavored for several reasons). Almost all the disputes concern the relevance and weight of scientific viewpoints regarding the topic.

I think there is an important, and specific, clarification that should be made in this case, perhaps expanding and tweaking the prior ruling in the pseudoscience arbcom case and it's effects on WP:NPOV:

Obviously, if this were to be confirmed or denied, it would be a valuable for discussions on the position disagreements between notable non-mainstream views and the general scientific consensus, in categorization issues (such as we've experienced at homeopathy), enacting any sort of one-way linking paradigm, and in evaluating undue weight issues. If it's rejected, specific guidelines on the manner in which to balance the scientific viewpoint (as Adam and Docboat have brought up) with the alternative claims would be advisable, particularly in determining the amount of validity to be given unscientific claims.

Such a distinction would not limit the appropriate explanations and elaborations of these topics, but would help guide the role of scientific criticism(s) within the relevant articles. Establishing a reasonable threshold for determining each dispute's scientific consensus is probably best determined in a case-by-case basis on the appropriate article talk pages, but a delineation of the specific role of the scientific viewpoint as a function of NPOV is becoming more necessary.

Statement by Filll

I first came to the homeopathy article around July of 2007 and found it an ugly disorganized mess. At that point, it was not heavily visited or edited, and I began trying to organize it and clean it up and add cited references. Many of my fellow science advocates were shocked that I was doing this.

As I made progress, User: Wikidudeman appeared and promised us he would clean it up for us in a sandbox. Although we were skeptical, I have to admit that Wikidudeman did a masterful job in forging a compromise between various camps. If there is a hero here anyplace, it is Wikidudemann and I think he has not received anywhere near enough credit for this unbelievably impressive effort. We should be almost canonizing Wikidudeman for this. And coming from me, and my previous skepticism, that is saying a lot.

Then the live homeopathy article was replaced by the sandbox article. What had been a quiet article when I first visited it became overrun by a large number of new editors who were not part of the consensus in the sandbox. Part of this is good, but also it led to more conflict. I suspect that Wikidudeman's rewritten article was more heavily linked and therefore appeared more prominently in google searches, bringing in more new editors. I also wonder if there was not some off-wiki canvassing for new editors as well, although I do not know.

The biggest problem it seems to me with WP homeopathy discussions is a misunderstanding of what constitutes NPOV on the part of some of the nonmainstream editors. There is a lot of selective reading, or misreading, or ignoring of the NPOV policy and related policies, and this leads to fighting and conflict.

I suspect that the core of the situation, the root as it were, is that we are essentially attacking people's livelihoods and careers, or they think we are. They do a search for homeopathy on google, and the 2nd hit is this Wikipedia article. They go to read it, and in the body and even in the LEAD, the WP article states that homeopathy is dismissed by the medical and scientific establishments and homeopathy is unlikely to work given what we know about chemistry, physics, etc and that there is no confirmed evidence for it.

This outrages many readers, and some of these readers are professional homeopaths. They see this as a direct affront and contrary to what their training and experience is. Some see the continuing persecution of Big Science and Big Medicine and Big Pharma, and even a conspiracy or two. And they feel that we are almost taking the food out of their children's mouths, and they are incensed and come to Wikipedia as editors to "fix" the situation. And then they run into NPOV etc. And we have a huge fight. Because what does NPOV really matter when we are talking about destroying people's livelihoods, right?

So things become more and more tense and combative and unpleasant. Recently on a couple of occasions people have started to claim that the phrase "homeopathy promoter" is offensive (an RfC was filed over this), and even worse, as sensitivities are inflamed.

So actually, in my opinion, one of the most important, valuable things that could be done is a clear and unambiguous statement, with examples, defining NPOV. The current situation and even the name "NPOV" is too unclear. Many interpret the "neutral" in NPOV to mean "no negative or contrary discussions or material, particularly in the LEAD", because negative material is not neutral, after all.

This leads to many difficulties and fights. Even to get agreement to include the word "controversial" in the first sentence or two a few months ago was quite difficult, and I would think that is one of the most obvious things one can say about homeopathy, is that it is "controversial".

The tensions are too ugly at the moment for me to even fix copy editing problems in the text. From time to time I try to discuss what NPOV means on the talk page but I am usually beaten back by a storm of angry attacks and so I retreat. People are just too angry for any real work to be done, and the same arguments happen over and over and over.

I think homeopathy is pseudoscience, at least some flavor of pseudoscience, but I am unsure if this needs to be mentioned in the article, and if it is mentioned, how prominent it needs to be. It seems to just make a bad situation worse, but I do not know. I am far more interested in maintaining overall NPOV than just fighting over the word "pseudoscience".

I do believe we should describe homeopathy on WP, but I think that this poisonous atmosphere is making it impossible to be productive. I tried to broker a compromise at the Plant articles mentioned above, but the other side, some of them botany enthusiasts and some homeopathy proponents, were not interested in a compromise. I suggested that we allow about 50 "minihomeopathy" articles or mentions in homeopathically notable animal mineral and vegetable components used to produce homeopathic remedies, so that we would not end up with 1000 or 10,000 or more homeopathic miniarticles. This was summarily rejected with prejudice. I gave up and then the two polarized sides were deadlocked again and tensions were escalating.

I am still interested in writing more homeopathy articles and even at this point have another article on homeopathic concentration scales in the sandbox, that I am writing with world-renowned homeopathic scholar, User: Peter morrell. We have been somewhat remiss on working on it over the last few weeks, but we will get back to it because I think it is both exciting and potentially highly useful for the homeopathic and scientific and medical communities trying to understand homepathy.

Clearly, contrary to what some have charged, I am not anti-homeopathy content at all. I am just interested in making sure that we include the mainstream science side in some reasonable proportion (although it is not clear how one might determine this proportion; by number of practitioners, number of patients, dollars expended, research presence, etc) for NPOV. And I want to make sure we do not end up with literally thousands of little paragraphs and subsections promoting homeopathy and about homeopathy throughout WP that would be impossible to maintain in the proper balance.

For full disclosure, I will confess that I have inadvertantly and unknowingly purchased and used homeopathic products on more than one occasion and even thought I experienced some benefits, although I know that placebo is a powerful effect. Wearing my scientist hat, I know it is extremely easy to fool oneself as well.

I think if Arbcomm decides to take this on, with one or two simple pronouncements or directives, they could probably take a lot of air out of this festering situation that appears to be spreading to other articles. For example, there is some effort to include short paragraphs in all articles on famous people that are known to have tried homeopathy, even if they rejected it subsequently because they thought it did not work. This, in addition to the moves to include homeopathy in a large number of plant, chemical, mineral and potentially animal articles, would lead to an extremely confused and diffuse body of homeopathy articles, homeopathy references, paragraphs, miniarticles etc in Wikipedia, which I am not sure would be viewed favorably by all concerned.

Quick Point of Fact by Adam Cuerden

The article has been full-protected for a week, yet again. This is only shortly after a month-and-a-half (or thereabouts) full protection, and there might have been another protection between the two. Clearly, there are major problems here, so I would strongly encourage taking the case.

Statement by Art Carlson

This article needs help. I see POV warriers on both sides. I assume and believe they are acting in good faith, but I don't see them doing what it takes to come to a consensus. Considering the difficulty and heat seen here in deciding what constitutes NPOV, I think it is necessary that a higher and less passionate instance clarifies Wikipedia policy and how it applies in concrete instances. Some points that could be clarified, which will have wider significance than just this article (and therefore are not strictly a content dispute), are

  • the type and amount of evidence needed to justify characterizing a field as pseudoscience (or quackery, or fraud, or unethical),
  • when it is appropriate to cite primary sources (scientific studies), when secondary sources (reviews and meta-analyses) are also available, and
  • guidelines for the portion of a non-mainstream article which should be representative of the proponents, of the mainstream, or (somehow) neither.

Good night, and good luck. --Art Carlson (talk) 14:53, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

P.S. Involvement: I am involved in editing this article, but I usually keep a low profile. I am personally "anti-homeopathy", but find myself often taking "pro" positions in the battles here out of principle.

Clerk notes

(This area is used for notes by non-recused Clerks.)

Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (0/2/0/0)

  • The Uninvited Co., Inc. 18:12, 28 January 2008 (UTC) I do not believe that it is within the committee's capabilities to solve the problems raised here. We're not going to issue a remedy handing an unequivocal win to either the pro-homeopathy or pro-science caucuses. You're left with WP:NPOV and WP:RS.[reply]
  • Decline. The scope of the arbitration case outlined is extraordinarily nebulous. It is not possible to imagine a resolution which would work without straying recklessly into areas of making content findings. Sam Blacketer (talk) 21:36, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Alice

Initiated by Jose João (talk) at 22:28, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request
[1]
Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Statement by Perspicacite

Alice has followed me from page to page for months in an attempt to get revenge for my daring to edit Tokelau, 'her page'. Previous 24-hour blocks have apparently not gotten the message through, and she has once again resumed her harassment, ranging from posting insults within articles to 3RR violations. She's even tried (unsuccessfully) to change the notability policy, solely to justify deleting articles I've started. I would have thought banning an editor who, despite a high volume of edits has yet to actually contribute to Wikipedia, would be a quicker process. As for previous dispute resolution, several editors have tried to step in here and nothing has been resolved. Jose João (talk) 22:28, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Ryan Postlethwaite

I'm not sure that arbitration intervention is required at this point in time. I see Alice has one 3RR block from January this year and that's it. I must admin I haven't looked into huge detail here, but I have viewed a couple of AN/I threads involving Alice. I would say that this is not harassment which requires arbitration rulings as the behaviour is not at the stage which has exhausted all other attempts at dispute resolution, and as pointed out earlier, it's not that serious. At first glance, this looks more like a glorified content dispute over a number of pages, with a few user conduct issues on the side. Should this be rejected by the arbitrators, I urge you to go through lower level dispute resolution such as a user conduct RfC to guage the communites thoughts on the matter, and hear suggestions how Alice could change her editing paterns so you no longer feel she is stalking you. Ryan Postlethwaite 22:49, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
On a second look, I see that this is not all Alices' fault. I urge the committee to take a look at Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#Civility issue: User:Perspicacite at AfD where there is evidence of extremely questionable behaviour from the initiating party of this request for arbitration. My advice - Perspicacite and Alice should simply keep away from each other. Ryan Postlethwaite 23:00, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by uninvolved Orderinchaos

Not seeing anything for ArbCom to do here - this proceeding seems to have been initiated in bad faith. I've just had to warn the initiator for removing comments on an AfD. Orderinchaos 23:13, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by uninvolved One Night In Hackney

Wikipedia:Requests for checkuser/Case/W. Frank is relevant here. Even before any checkuser, there is strong evidence that Alice is a sockpuppet of User:W. Frank, a disruptive editor involved in Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/The Troubles, and this sockpuppet account is causing ongoing disruption. One Night In Hackney303 18:36, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Note, checkuser now confirms W. Frank and Alice are one and the same. One Night In Hackney303 04:22, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Clerk notes

(This area is used for notes by non-recused Clerks.)

Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (0/4/0/0)

  • Decline at this time. Insuffient evidence of a problem that administrators and the community cannot resolve either through ordinary measures or earlier stages in dispute resolution. Filing parties should please note that where there has been no earlier dispute resolution, it is all the more important to provide us with diffs showing evidence that there is a serious problem requiring arbitration. Newyorkbrad (talk) 23:52, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Decline. I doubt it is true that Alice started following Perspicacite around because of the latter's edits to Tokelau, given that she did not reverse them. The community is capable of dealing with the problems here. Sam Blacketer (talk) 11:49, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Reject per Newyorkbrad. FloNight (talk) 14:41, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Reject per Newyorkbrad. Try resolving this through other means first, since it appears you've not tried that yet. If that doesn't work, we can consider the case again. Deskana (talk) 11:56, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Franco-Mongol alliance

Initiated by Jehochman Talk at 15:07, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Other parties may need to be added.


Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request

[2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Statement by Jehochman

This is long festering dispute about the addition of ahistorical information to Middle Ages articles. Not unlike Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Sadi Carnot we have a longstanding editor who appears to be publishing original research in Wikipedia, misrepresenting sources, and frustrating the deletion process and consensus by tendentiously reinstalling content that the community has decided to remove.

Mediation of the content dispute was attempted, but User:Tariqabjotu closed the case because the process was failing. PHG has now decided to increase the drama a notch by calling for Elonka to resign,[8]. The claims of bad faith are flying. Before this degenerates further, I request that the Committee scrutinize the behavior of all parties. Jehochman Talk 15:07, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I am very concerned that severe damage is being done to the encyclopedia through the addition of unverifiable, ahistorical information to a large number of articles. The community has been unable to control the problem. This has been going on for half a year. Rather than blocking PHG, which would be highly controversial, though justifiable in my opinion, I am bringing the matter here instead. ArbCom has sharper tools, and hopefully can craft a less restrictive remedy. Previous discussions in other forums have failed to produce any sort of resolution. The problem appears to be getting worse, not better. Arbitration sooner rather than later will help reduce the amount of disruption and bad blood. Jehochman Talk 15:34, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Here's a deleted article: [9] Mongol raids on Jerusalem
Here's a listed source: [10]
How does this source, which makes about five passing references to Jerusalem, the most on point one being, "the Frankish Crusaders, clinging precariously to a narrow strip of Syrian coast, both hoped and feared that the Mongols might drive the Muslims from Jerusalem and restore the holy places to Christian possession.", support an article that starts out with, "In 1260, the Mongol ruler Hulagu conquered vast parts of the Holy Land, usually in alliance with the Franks and the Christian Armenians."? Jehochman Talk 14:06, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Rlevse

I have full protected this page for two weeks. This seems to be a content dispute. It also appear Elonka did not use her admin bit in this issue and therefore is a regular editor in this matter. I posted a notice on the talk page to encourage peaceful resolution by all on the talk page.RlevseTalk 15:33, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Tariqabjotu

It's tough for me to say whether this case is a content dispute (which ArbCom doesn't usually address) or a conduct issue. However, I'm inclined to encourage the ArbCom to treat this as a conduct issue and look at it as such. I know many editors who have not been following this page will immediately declare it as a content dispute, but this has long outgrown that description. Nearly every other available avenue of dispute resolution, including a mediation which I led, has been tried and -- particularly in the mediation case -- failed miserably. The article and its talk page, for the most part, can speak for themselves; we see repeated accusations of ownership, a slow-motion edit war, assumptions of bad faith, continuous allegations that sources are being misrepresented -- all the elements that together make a resolution to the now five-month dispute impossible by any other means. Additionally, the actions of certain editors on the article have made the conditions for less involved editors that want to contribute to this article just about unbearable. We have a serious problem here, one that calls into question the integrity of this article, and perhaps dozens others. Investigating the sort of behavior alleged here is not unheard-of, and I request that ArbCom do so again. -- tariqabjotu 16:01, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Just a quick reply to something Justin said: there is an Evidence phase within arbitration cases and this is not it. I assume Jehochman, and any others with specific allegations, will present such evidence when the appropriate time comes. -- tariqabjotu 18:32, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Justin

I, like User:Tariqabjotu am having difficulty deciding whether this issue is truly a content issue or a behavioral issue. However, I tend to lean towards the former and the evidence presented by User:Jehochman are all examples of content disputes. I'm extremely troubled by Jehochman's accusations (provided without dif's) of original research, and disagree with his assertion that there was a consensus to remove the content PHG added back into the article. I believe the Sadi Carnot arbitration isn't a particularly good analogy to this problem. The primary issue in that dispute was admins reverting each other, which hasn't been the case for this dispute.

I would also note, that I made a request for page protection for the article some time before User:PHG was given a 24 hour block. It was ignored until the block took place, and then denied after input from an involved admin. [11] I applaud User:Rlevse for the two week page protection, as I do believe this will resolve the issues at hand. I have absolute faith that all of the editors involved will work toward a consensus, and eventually that consensus will be reached (with or without User:PHG agreeing). I consider User:Jehochman's suggested remedy of indef blocking an editor with nearly 30,000 edits completely beyond reason. The page protection should offer more than enough time for involved editors to find a consensus version of the article. Justin chat 17:31, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Response to Tariqabjotu: Granted, the ArbCom request doesn't require posting evidence, but an admin made some pretty extraordinary claims about a longstanding editor. By failing to give any evidence to his accusations, it appears that the motive was to poison the well. PHG's disruptions of the article in question were definitely inappropriate, but the sentence "publishing original research in Wikipedia, misrepresenting sources, and frustrating the deletion process and consensus by tendentiously reinstalling content that the community has decided to remove," is a fairly heavy-handed accusation. Jehochman followed up these accusations with a suggested remedy of indef blocking.
Given all of that, I think that since both the accusations and suggested remedy are fairly extreme, it would have been prudent to back up his accusations with evidence. Perhaps PHG has some behavioral problems outside of the article in question, and if that's the case, I'm sure the ArbCom members (and those of us that are unaware of other problems) would like to see evidence of it. In lieu of that, all of us are forced to assume Jehochman made his claims in bad faith or that PHG is indeed a bad faith editor as his claims assert. Neither case is preferable, hence my original point. Justin chat 20:58, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Shell Kinney

This case should most definately be accepted; while an underlying content dispute was the catalyst, the behaviors of the editors involved, in particular those of PHG, have spiraled out of the community's ability to control. For example:

  • Since the abortive FAC last September, numerous attempts have been made to improve the article; all significant changes (and even some minor ones) have been reverted by PHG [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] who displays rather clear ownership issues [20].
  • The minority POV which was originally under dispute has now sprawled to more than 50 paragraphs in this article (even though the edit summary said "revert" [21]) and has been systematically inserted into scads of other articles creating more than a little bit of disruption that is requiring some rather serious cleanup efforts. (See this talk page post for the list of articles known to have been affected) The behavioral side of this issue stems from PHG is abusively edit warring, subverting myriad other articles and creating numerous POV forks in an attempt to "win" a content dispute.
  • PHG has also canvassed in an attempt to skew the consensus. [22] [23] [24] [25]
  • At least 6 other editors (myself included) are currently working productively on the article via talk page discussion; this was especially apparent during the 24 hours when PHG was blocked from interfering. These editors do not all agree, so this is not about one side winning the dispute.

The committee also needs to be aware that this dispute has attracted certain editors who, for one reason or another, wish to disrupt Elonka's activities on wiki such as editors from past or current Arb cases which she was involved in.

We're not asking ArbCom to intervene in a content dispute and, in fact, don't need any intervention since absent one highly disruptive editor, talk page discussions are resolving the content issues. However, I would strongly urge the Committee to review the clear behavioral problems that stemmed from this dispute. Shell babelfish 19:24, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Orderinchaos

This seems to be yet another argument between those promoting fringe theories or views and those holding a mainstream view on historical issues. Elonka appears to have been trying to defend the NPOV on this and related articles against what seems to be some odd behaviour on the other side. The dispute has gone on so long now (several months) that it's way beyond whatever it started out being about and now is essentially an issue where consensus has failed, and it may well be that some of the individuals on one side never had any intention of accepting a consensus removed from their own view. I would agree with Jehochman and Shell Kinney's points above, and WJB's points below. Orderinchaos 23:19, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Daniel

I have deleted and protected Wikipedia:Requests for mediation/Franco-Mongol alliance, to protect the privileged nature of Mediation Committee mediation (see also Wikipedia:Arbitration policy#Hearing). Daniel (talk) 03:06, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Elonka

My statement is going to be about two views here, one in how I see this on-wiki, and another off. On-wiki, I don't think it's appropriate to have an ArbCom case on this at this time. I see ArbCom as something that is needed for complex user conduct cases, where the community has not been successful in dealing with them via other means. In this particular case, the community has been successful. We had one editor, PHG, who has been camping on an article in violation of WP:OWN, who has been using bad sources and has been misinterpreting good sources, and has been creating multiple POV forks. See User:Elonka/Mongol quickref for a few paragraphs that give context about the history involved, and the related content disputes. The proper way to handle this via Wikipedia procedures (without ArbCom) is to identify problems with the article(s), build consensus on the talkpage(s), and proceed with cleanup. Which is exactly what we've been doing lately. Now, it is true that in the early part of this dispute, meaning Fall 2007, things were exacerbated because we didn't have very many participants who understood the history involved, so we ended up with a kind of stalemate between me and PHG, with him saying, "Here's the history," and me saying, "No, that's not history, that's you cherry-picking and misinterpreting sources." Over the last month (January 2008) though, we have gotten more editors in to look at the situation, and consensus-building has been much easier (except for PHG). So, in a case where we have one editor who is not willing to work in a cooperative and collegial manner with other editors towards consensus-building, we already have Wikipedia procedures in place -- we have uninvolved administrators who can look into the situation, and warn and block as necessary. There is no need for ArbCom, as all that ArbCom would be able to do would be to confirm the same thing that any uninvolved administrator would: "PHG is being disruptive, PHG is reverting obsessively, PHG should be blocked if he continues to disrupt." We don't need a multi-month ArbCom case that wastes dozens of hours of time on the part of multiple good editors, to come up with that same conclusion.

And now, the off-wiki aspect. There are times in my life that I've got lots of free time for Wikipedia, and there are times that I don't. This coming month is going to be a "don't" time, since I've got a major tradeshow coming up in a few weeks. So if it's decided that there is going to be an ArbCom case on this, I just won't be able to participate much. Which will put ArbCom and the other participants in an awkward situation where they're forced to decide on either proceeding without me, or by further extending the case to allow time for me to assemble my own evidence. Which (my free time availability) I know is not one of the major factors on "should a case be accepted or not," but I wanted to make the Committee aware.

My own off-wiki time constraints aside though, I still recommend that this case not be accepted. The community is already dealing with the situation, and I can't see as any ArbCom decision would really change much about how the situation is proceeding. What would the result be? "PHG has been disruptive, PHG is cautioned to work in a collegial manner with other editors. Anyone engaging in disruptive behavior can be blocked by any uninvolved administrator." Which is what we're already doing. --Elonka 09:14, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by PHG

I have been contributing to Wikipedia since 2004/03/06, with over 23,389 edits to date, all referenced from reputable published material. I created more than 200 articles, and 8 articles which I created or unstubbed reached FA status (Boshin War, Imperial Japanese Navy, Hasekura Tsunenaga, Indo-Greek Kingdom, History of Buddhism etc...). I also have contributed hundreds of photographs from Museums around the world. My main interests revolve around cultural interaction through the Ages, and I enjoy developing content on these subjects. I am a multinational business manager, with over 20 years experience working in Asia, the US and Europe. I am a fervent supporter of Wikipedia:NPOV policy, according to which all significant views should be presented in articles.

When I created the Franco-Mongol alliance article in August 2007, I soon entered into heated discussions with Elonka whether there was actually an alliance or not and other details. She first tried to have the article renamed, but failed (here). Despite the quantity of authors who specifically described this alliance (here), she kept arguing that the view was "fringe" and did not deserve balanced representation with the alternative view ("only attempts at an alliance"...). She then tried quite violently to discredit me through the Administrator notice board, but again failed (here), thanks to several users who spoke up for me. I responded by pointing out her behaviour (here), without asking for punitive action. Actually her actions in relation to this article generated many of the Opposes in her recent nomination as Admin (here). She still spends a huge amount of time leaving enormous diatribes against me on various Talk Pages and User Pages (here or here for example). I even had to file a claim for harassment (here). Besides, I'm glad I'm not the only one: Elonka has a huge history of dubious disputes and litigations with many other contributors as well (an example).

Recently, Elonka again attacked the Franco-Mongol alliance page, trying to force her own rewrite, deleting 130k of content established collaboratively over a period of 6 months and over 300 academic sources, through false claims of consensus (Talk:Franco-Mongol alliance#False claim of consensus). I think this conduct is unrespectfull of Wikipedia rules and unethical. She also has thrown false accusations in order to smear me (Talk:Franco-Mongol alliance#Why is the "longer version" get even longer?), and resorted to personal attacks, calling me a lier [26], when she is actually the one lying about facts, like claiming I added 50k of new content through a reinstalment of deleted content (here). On the Franco-Mongol alliance article I have only been upholding Wikipedia's rule that is there is no consensus for a replacement of a main article by an individual's own version, then the status quo should prevail. I expect every Wikipedian to uphold these rules as well.

What the heck? I'm here to share knowledge and contribute fascinating, referenced, stuff about ancient history and cultural interaction, and I must say I am not at all interested in Wikipedia politics or lobbying day long against specific users. Best regards to all. PHG (talk) 11:01, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Wjhonson

I am not an involved editor in this case. Wikibits of this situation have deposited themselves on various other pages and it peaked my interest to take a look. My rough estimate of the problem is that there was an initial failure to strive for consensus. The catalyst appears to be a complete re-write done in user space was plopped down in situ on top of a large established article. Frankly, were that to happen to an article I had largely contributed to, I would probably react in the same way as PHG. I do not find the approach initially taken in this case to be any remote attempt to strive for consensus. As the talk page clearly shows, many editors were against the rewrite and many were for it. However in that situation, normal consensus building would be to leave the status quo article as it. "Consensus decision-making is a decision-making process that not only seeks the agreement of most participants, but also to resolve or mitigate the objections of the minority to achieve the most agreeable decision. Consensus is usually defined as meaning both general agreement, and the process of getting to such agreement. Consensus decision-making is thus concerned primarily with that process." A more temperate approach, if the underlying issue were size would have been to fork the content. A more temperate approach, if the underlying issue were neutral-point-of-view would have been to take disputes to that Talk board. As well we have a reliable sources noticeboard, and a Talk page at original research. The approach taken in this case, has led, over many months, here. I think that's a fair indication, in light of the thousands of articles PHG has contributed to, that an ArbCom ruling would be effective.Wjhonson (talk) 11:27, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by uninvolved Durova

I've watched this conflict from afar since the Franco-Mongol alliance FAC of last summer. History is a field where autodidacts often have trouble due to unfamiliarity with priority of sources and historiography. A fair portion of books in the field have been written by untrained persons, some of which are excellent and some of which ought to be classified as humor or fantasy. The more faciful versions get repeated by other autodidact authors because they seem interesting, so absurdities sometimes gain the illusion of a pedigree among readers whose only means of guessing what constitutes mainstream history is to count the number of published books that advance a given hypothesis. This dynamic has manifested in any number of ways at Joan of Arc although the problem is less burdensome now that the article is featured (that Joan of Arc was a man, that she escaped execution, that she was the bastard daughter of the queen of France, etc. etc.). These editors aren't necessarily intending to violate WP:NPOV; they simply lack the knowledge base and critical training to determine what's fringe and what's mainstream.

The most serious assertion at this RFAR is misrepresentation of sources. I have seen no actual evidence to substanitate this. I request that the Committee accept this case to determine one way or the other. DurovaCharge! 13:16, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by WJBscribe

I am in two minds about whether this matter is appropriate for ArbCom. On the one hand, we do have mounting user conduct issues - especially the increasingly ludicrous ownership of the central article by PHG - and a failed attempt at mediation. On the other, we have a dispute heavily routed in content that is hard to process without getting involved in those issues. Involving itself in matters of content is something ArbCom prefers not to do but where the central issues are about accuracy of information, representation of sources and neutral POV it is hard to separate conduct and content. Violation of content policies is misconduct but it is hard to determine whether such conduct breaches have occured without taking a view on the content questions. Ultimately either PHG is trying to push a misleading account of the events covered by the article or he is not.

If ArbCom is willing to have a thorough look at this issue - including the underlying problems with whether Wikipedia policies on neutral point of view and fringe theories have been followed - then there are clear merits in pursuing this case. If only the most superficial of conduct issues will be touched upon, then this will likely prove a waste of time. A general admonishment for participants to work towards consensus isn't in my opinion going to be of help here. WjBscribe 15:12, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Kafka Liz

After silently following the dispute at Franco-mongol alliance for some months, I eventually got involved over what I saw as persistent problematic behaviour on the part of PHG. My initial concern stemmed from the creation of a series of forks that PHG presented as good faith attempts to shorten the main article, but in reality served to preserve and expand upon strongly disputed sections. Further examination of the article and its history convinced me that PHG's activities were in violation of two fundamental areas of Wikipedia policy, namely WP:OWN and WP:NPOV (specifically WP:UNDUE). Attempts by myself and other editors to work with PHG regarding these concerns have been met first with polite stonewalling and evasive answers, then accusations of "being polemical and systematically banding together, [27]" and finally silence. I now see PHG resorting to various strategies of gaming the system: engaging in slow revert wars to evade 3RR, wikilawyering [28], and simply refusing to respond directly to the concerns of others.

I concur with the statements put forth by Jehochman, Shell Kinney, Orderinchaos, and WJBscribe, and believe Jehochman's reference to the Sadi Carnot case is particularly fitting to the case at hand. Kafka Liz (talk) 17:32, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by (fairly) uninvolved Iridescent

As someone who's spent an inordinate amount of time spatting with Elonka over this — and as a former occasional collaborator with Sadi Carnot (albeit not on the problematic articles) — I do agree that Arbcom ought to get involved here. After a lengthy argument with Elonka after I accused her of edit-warring on the issue, I actually went and checked the contributions of PHG more thoroughly, and on inspection he's the very model of a true problem editor. As with Sadi Carnot, he makes enough valid and high-quality contributions that they mask the problem edits, unless one goes looking for them. On the articles in question, his "sources" seem to be a mix of mistranslations, fabrications and self-published crackpots, and he's using these sources to replace material from numerous multiple independent sources.

There's always going to be a problem with articles like this, in that they rely on sources derived from other sources far removed from the original sources (unless we happen to have an editor floating around who speaks mediaeval Armenian); however, his pet theory (that Jerusalem was captured by the Mongols) would have been so significant, one would have to assume it would be chronicled in both Christian and Islamic histories; in this case, I think it is reasonable to assume that absence of evidence is evidence of absence.

Normally, this would just be a content dispute on a very low-traffic article that wouldn't warrant an Arbcom intervention. However, this saga is starting to have spin-off effects on the rest of Wikipedia which in my opinion warrants a high-level intervention by either Arbcom or Jimbo to put a stop to the whole mess. Not only is this dispute starting to be used by WR et al as anti-Wikipedia "evidence", but it's already derailed one RFA of Elonka's and (almost) derailed another*, and is starting to waste a lot of time of a lot of regulars who could be more profitably be doing something useful.iridescent 15:33, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

*I know I opposed both of Elonka's RFAs for other reasons, but they should not have failed for this reason and I freely admit I was wrong; the accusation of edit-warring was unfair in this case.

Statement by uninvolved TimVickers

Any editor who writes that another contributor has "attacked the Franco-Mongol alliance page" and complains about "hijacking of this page" is, in my opinion, suffering from serious ownership issues. This is not a simple content dispute, the behavior of the editors involved needs to be examined in detail. I recommend the committee accept this case. Tim Vickers (talk) 18:02, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by John Kenney

My familiarity, at this point, with what ArbCom does, exactly, is not all too clear, so I can't say directly whether Arbcom should accept this case. I do think that PHG is a serious problem editor, that his contributions are full of incredibly tendentious arguments, and that he holds ground with a tenacity that makes it difficult for normal editing practice to arrive at consensus in improving these articles. As Tim Vickers notes above, PHG has serious ownership issues with articles he creates, and, further, he is very difficult to reason with. Something certainly ought to be done about him. john k (talk) 20:19, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Adam Bishop

My problem is not so much the content, just that there is too much of it, and that PHG has no idea how to read, study, or write history. It's embarrassing to read and is a perfect example of why Wikipedia is untrustworthy. But now it is too big to fix. If it were up to me, I would recommend deleting it and everything else that has been written about it, leaving it for a few months, and then restarting from scratch...but that's just me. I'm not sure this needs to be subjected to yet another Wikipedia process, but I agree with John that PHG is a huge problem. I know that PHG has been here for a long time and had worked on a large amount of articles on obscure topics, and that is usually a great thing, but after my experience here, I wonder whether those articles are as awful as this one is... Adam Bishop (talk) 08:44, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Clerk notes

(This area is used for notes by non-recused Clerks.)

Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (5/2/0/0)

  • Accept to look at user conduct issues that are interfering with reaching consensus. The Community has not been able to sort this out. FloNight (talk) 21:03, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept; per Flonight there is disruption of article writing; serious issues of user conduct are alleged and there has been a failure of mediation. Sam Blacketer (talk) 23:43, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. Newyorkbrad (talk) 23:49, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Decline, we are unlikely to be able to help. The Uninvited Co., Inc. 03:59, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. Deskana (talk) 11:42, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 16:11, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Decline, I'm inclined to agree with UC. I've asked a few editors to give their opinions. I may change my mind based upon further review. Paul August 18:20, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Jeffrey O. Gustafson 2

Initiated by Ryan Postlethwaite at 20:11, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties

Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request

[29][30]

Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

With respect to the sock case itself, there has been;

Other discussions:

Statement by Ryan Postlethwaite

In this recent checkuser discussion it was confirmed that the administrator Jeffrey O. Gustafson had been using a sock puppet account to edit, whilst still using his administrator account. Yeah, people are allowed alternate account, but there is strong evidence that this was used abusively to help him win a content dispute. Part of the evidence is seen below (for an explanation of each edit, please see Wikipedia:Suspected sock puppets/Jeffrey O. Gustafson);

Date Article Jeffrey Edward
2007-10-24 SPD (disambiguation) [31][32] [33]
2007-10-07 Talk:Chris Jericho‎ [34][35] [36]
2007-09-06 Spoo‎ [37] [38]
2007-09-04 Mythbusters/Carlos Hathcock [39][40] [41]
2007-07-20 Koishikawa Annex, The University Museum, The University of Tokyo [42] [43]

I would like to ask the arbitration committee to investigate this properly as they are the best people to deal with sensitive CU data, and make sure that this is the only occurrence. Administrators are trusted members of the community, and by using sock puppets in this fashion they lose that trust, so I also believe that the committee should accept this case to consider desyopping, especially given that Jeffrey has had previous instances of severe misconduct. Ryan Postlethwaite 20:11, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Thatcher

It looks to me like Jeffrey was setting up a new account in order to vanish the other one, as he hasn't edited since December 7. Under those circumstances, he probably should have left his prior dispute with Rod behind him. It would have been my choice to ignore the matter, and leave Jeffrey's new identity as one of those "open secrets" that people don't talk about. For the record, I can confirm that other than the stale and rather minor reverts listed above, there is no checkuser evidence of inappropriate behavior by the owner of these accounts.

Having read Rod's RFA, this still looks like a tempest in a teapot. There was no massive swing in votes, just a couple of editors who opposed based on the comments of the Blake account. And I'm not sure I would call Blake's comments "unethical" as there was no use of multiple accounts in the RFA. It was misleading, and stupid because it exposed the account if it was an attempt to vanish and start over, but I don't think it was as dramatic as has been suggested. Thatcher 21:13, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by uninvolved AnonEMouse

Note that this came up from the currently ongoing Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Rodhullandemu. The EMB account opposed due to Rodhullandemu's previous conflict with JOG, Rodhullandemu complained that he seemed to be being opposed by a sock puppet, EMB expressed outrage at being accused of being a sock puppet, then a number of people opposed either per EMB or in reaction to R's accusing JOG, a respected admin, of sock puppeting. This is not a "stale and rather minor revert" issue, this is darn close to an active attempt to scuttle another person's adminship request. Please accept. --AnonEMouse (squeak) 20:41, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

There are possibilities that JOG is not the same person as EMB, and if so an ArbCom statement to that effect would also be appreciated, and again, looking into the case seems warranted. --AnonEMouse (squeak) 21:49, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by uninvolved Ronnotel

I would like to point out the brief but decidedly one-sided discussion on this issue at WP:AN/I. The issue of starting with an RfC was briefly considered by the community but rejected in favor of Ryan's action. In addition, I concur with Jehochman synopsis (below) and believe the potential for disruption of the RfA process was high. Ronnotel (talk) 20:45, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Regarding the RfA, I agree that the RfA was probably not in danger. However, being an admin is a position of trust. There is no possible interpretation of Jeffery's actions that can be construed as accidental. He quite purposefully created a ficticious alternate persona in an attempt to lend credibility to his objections to the RfA. And, in fact, it was convincing enough to begin swaying other editors. The community simply cannot turn a blind eye to this type of behavior from an admin. It was done in a devious manner and with devious intent.
The claim by User:Edward Morgan Blake that he is not User:Jeffrey O. Gustafson only escalates the importance of this case. Either (i) a string of unfortunate coincidences converged in a highly unlikely but innocent way and two users need to have their names cleared, or (ii) we have continuing misbehavior by a highly disruptive individual and the remedies should not necessarily be limited to removal of the sysop bit. I'm confident that ArbCom is equipped to discover the truth, whatever it may be.

Statement by Jehochman

The crux of the matter is unethical use of a sockpuppet at Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Rodhullandemu. Edward Morgan Blake's oppose vote had begun to snowball when I noticed that User:Daniel was opposing the RfA because the candidate had suggested the possibility of sock puppetry. Rather than leaving the accusation hanging, I investigated, hoping to prove it false. Unfortunately, I found substantial evidence of sock puppetry, leading me to file Wikipedia:Suspected sock puppets/Jeffrey O. Gustafson. Then, with the support of several administrators, I filed Wikipedia:Requests for checkuser/Case/Jeffrey O. Gustafson.

The diffs cited by Ryan are merely evidence connecting the two accounts. The serious issue is that Jeffrey O. Gustafson appears to have presented his opinion at RfA as if he were an uninvolved party, when in fact he was very involved in the underlying dispute. This would cast his opinion in a false light and deceived other editors. After the well was poisoned, two other editors opposed the RfA citing the sock puppet's opinion. The potential for harm here was very great, and this sort of behavior cannot be ignored. Jehochman Talk 21:58, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Upon reviewing the edits of both accounts, I said, "Either it's one person, or they are two people taking turns on the same computer." [44] I stand by this remark. Edward Morgan Blake has not fully explained the observations, because two roommates sharing a Wi-Fi connection would be expected to occasionally edit at the same time. The record shows far less interleaving than expected. I recommend that the case proceed in order to clear up this apparent discrepancy. We need guidance on how to handle the roommate explanation because any editor operating multiple accounts can claim that they are roommates. We have no way to verify such claims except by reviewing the contributions. We also need to know whether people living or working together are so closely connected that they are constructively responsible for each other's edits when their edits support each other. Jehochman Talk 14:11, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If a satisfactory explanation has been provided to the Committee by email, then there is no need for a case. I do not think very much additional information can be obtained by starting a case, nor do I see much benefit in dragging this out. It would be preferable for the Committee to decide what remedies, if any, are needed based on the opening statements and linked reports. Jehochman Talk 18:14, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by JodyB

Jeffrey O. Gustafson appears to have chosen to use a second account to create an impression that an uninvolved third party was troubled by the action of the RFA nominee. This appears to be a deliberate action carefully chosen to oppose the nominee. Jeffrey O. Gustafson is no fool and is well-versed in our rules and policies. It is well within reason to assume the above facts are an accurate representation of what happened.

However, there exists the possibility that there is an innocent answer. Therefore, I encourage the committee to accept this case as a proper forum to flesh out the real facts and deal with any violations appropriately. Jeffrey O. Gustafson is an administrator with considerable influence and activity. We ought ensure that he, like all, lives up to his mandate of trust. -JodyB talk 21:55, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Revolving Bugbear

Disclosure: I nominated Rodhullandemu for adminship.

The fact that the Edward account apparently lied in his initial statement (provided that he is in fact a sock of the Jeffrey account) is indeed worrisome. While we don't actually have a policy, as far as I'm aware, that says you're supposed to be truthful in your dealings with other Wikipedians, this kind of deception is troublesome because it denies the other party -- in this case Rodhullandemu -- a level playing field. The bigger problem, though, is the berating of Rodhull by Edward when Rodhull intuited that Edward was a sock. Provided that Edward is indeed a sock, this is clearly disruptive -- he is accusing Rodhull of something he knows to be false, because he knows the sock allegations are true.

Given the fact that Jeffrey previously had his sysop tools suspended, the deceptive oppose coupled with the deceptive accusations appear to me to be a case of using a sock to avoid scrutiny. - Revolving Bugbear 22:38, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Ral315

I'd urge the Committee to take this case, primarily because there lies an uncertainty about how the existing policies on sockpuppeting apply. The sockpuppet was not used to double-vote as far as I can tell; that's usually an issue with sockpuppets. In fact, I see no evidence to state that prior to this RFA, that the sockpuppet was used for nefarious purposes. The question becomes, where does this particular situation fall -- using a sockpuppet to appear as if you're another user, concerned about issues between Rodhullandemu and your primary account. I don't believe this has ever been ruled upon, and I think it's a particularly important distinction, given that there's no real proof that Jeffrey/Edward's conduct was in bad faith. Personally, I believe the most likely scenario is that Jeffrey made the vote in a misguided attempt to oppose the RFA without showing activity on his main account, an attempt that clearly backfired. In any event, clarification of how this policy should be applied in cases like this might be worth exploring, as I'm willing to bet a similar situation will arise sooner or later. Ral315 (talk) 23:37, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by MastCell

If Jeffrey O. Gustafson was exercising his right to vanish, then he shouldn't have tried to settle an old score. If he wanted to settle an old score, he shouldn't have used an alternate account to do so. If he used an alternate account to settle an old score, then he shouldn't have played at false innocence and attacked Rod for calling him on it. If there's an alternate explanation for the checkuser and historical evidence, then Jeffrey ought to provide it privately if needed to ArbCom.

Is this a tempest in a teapot? Maybe, in the sense that this should not be a long, drawn-out ArbCom case but rather a quick one. Between the previous case and this, there's clearly enough evidence that Jeffrey O. Gustafson's sysop bit should be removed. Only ArbCom can do that, so I think the case should be accepted. At the very least, Jeffrey has some 'splaining to do if he wants to retain the sysop bit. In the absence of a response, the account ought to be desysopped and Jeffrey can begin anew if he likes, though ideally he'd avoid using his new accounts to go after his old nemeses. MastCell Talk 00:51, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Solumeiras

This case should go before the Arbitration Committee, and not for the reasons stated above. There has been past concern about this user's admin actions, and a previous Arbitration ruling. With regard to Thatcher's point above about this being an "open secret", well, in my opinion taking the case would deal with the manner effectively. --Solumeiras (talk) 00:39, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by the_undertow

All these diffs and assuming good faith are nice, but I find it unsettling. It seems fairly simple. It's fraudulent voting. ...Jeffrey was thoroughly creeped out by (told to me via private correspondence)... He is not speaking in third person - as the word 'correspondence' nullifies that. It's not an alternate account when you use it to speak as if you were a separate entity - and continue to mention your established one. Therefore we have an admin, who used a sockpuppet, to fraudulently vote and disrupt an RfA. Couple this with the fact that this could have completely gone unnoticed if it were not for the candidate himself doing the research and this is truly as bad as it gets. If Jeffrey had an oppose he should have voiced it as himself. There can be no legitimacy to any of this behavior. the_undertow talk 01:17, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Casliber

Agree with previous - to put it simply, this editor has violated community trust, which is a prerequisite for sysop status. Hence, desysopping to me seems fait accompli, with the option of seeking readminship via RfA at some time in the future if they can regain the community's trust. cheers, Casliber (talk · contribs) 02:39, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Edward Morgan Blake

I am not Jeffrey. I made no secret that I know Jeff in "RL" - we are room-mates, using an unsecured wifi connection - we share similar interests and used that as a basis for finding room-mates in the first place. He did not ask me to oppose the request for adminship of Rodhullandemu, I did that on my own and I imagine he is unaware that I commented. When I was accused of being a sock puppet, it didn't even occur to me that the connection to Jeffrey - I did not even consider the IP. This is all mortifying for me, in part because I seem to have gotten Jeffrey in a great deal of trouble. --Edward Morgan Blake (talk) 04:29, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

This statement was copied from User talk:Edward Morgan Blake at Edward's request by User:B. See diff. --B (talk) 04:38, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Rodhullandemu

Disclosure:This case arises from my RfA, which is still ongoing.
I have very little to say until the closure of my candidacy; however, the more I see of this, the more unanswered questions there are. A full and proper investigation is required. --Rodhullandemu (Talk) 06:53, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Ned Scott

What the.. haven't we been over this before? BEFORE freaking out over the "omg holy checkuser results" bring up the issue with the involved users before making a big ruckus about it. How many past arbcom cases has this been stated (in better words, no doubt)? I'm pretty sure there has been at least two. A perfectly reasonable explanation has even been given, and we don't even have evidence of any abuse. -- Ned Scott 04:13, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Tariqabjotu

The fact that Edward is denying that he in fact is Jeffrey is insulting, and clear proof ArbCom needs to take a look at this. Given Jeffrey's last edit (07:04, Dec. 5) came just five minutes before Edward's first edit in a month and a half as well as in his series of continual editing (07:09, Dec. 5), either the two users are the same person, or this is the coincidence of the century. -- tariqabjotu 06:37, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

General bemusement from Nick

I don't see what the Arbitration Committee hopes to achieve with this case, we've got an admission that Edward Morgan Blake knows Jeff Gustafson and we've got an admission that they're using the same IP address, which is much the same as the Checkuser evidence which confirmed they are editing from the same IP address. Checkuser evidence isn't magic pixie dust, it can't confirm the human who was responsible for edits coming from a specific IP address, which is really what is needed here. The Arbitration Committee and the Checkusers are unable to disprove Edward Morgan Blake's comments above without resorting to relatively weak (and in my view relatively useless) circumstantial evidence, such as edits happening around the same time, in similar areas, all incidents which could represent one room-mate asking another to back him up, the exact same behaviour which happens on IRC, via e-mail and via instant messaging with thousands of editors every day.

I would say that JOG is sufficiently knowledgeable that if he genuinely wanted to sockpuppet, he could do so in a manner which would be undetectable to Checkuser. He doesn't strike me as a chap so completely without clue that he would sockpuppet from his usual IP address, unless he wishes to be caught.

The Committee might manage to confirm this is meatpuppetry, perhaps as a result of good faith editing rather that collusion between the parties here, but I can't see any benefit in examining this case further, there's no real evidence to examine. I'd recommend the case be dismissed but with the proviso that administrators and bureaucrats are made aware that EMB and JOG might be acting together and any comments are closely examined as part of determining consensus. Nick (talk) 12:41, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Comment by TenOfAllTrades

Regarding Nick's comment above, it is well within the scope of ArbCom to consider evidence beyond the Magic Wiki Pixie Checkuser Dust. In cases where sockpuppetry is suspected, admins rely on a variety of heuristics based on user conduct: stylistic tics, editing times, interactions between editors, participation in related disputes, etc.. The ArbCom regularly makes judgements based on such user-conduct evidence—with or without corroborating Checkuser information.

While ArbCom is not bound by precedent, it is worth nothing that they have in the past ruled that

For the purpose of dispute resolution when there is uncertainty whether a party is one user with sockpuppets or several users with similar editing habits they may be treated as one user with sockpuppets. (source)

This principle has long been part of the sockpuppet policy, as well.

If the ArbCom so chooses, they may also request additional evidence from the involved parties. Some form of documentary evidence could be forwarded to the ArbCom (or to a trusted third party like a Board member or Foundation's counsel) to prove that JOG and EMB both exist and share a physical address. While it's certainly not in ArbCom's power to compel production of documents, they are entitled to ask. Should the ArbCom find the existing circumstantial evidence sufficiently compelling, as a precautionary measure they may make JOG's continued adminship contingent on the provision of exculpatory documents. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 16:38, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Acalamari

To be honest, I believe Edward Morgan Blake when he says that he’s not Jeffrey O. Gustafson, and instead, just a friend. Jeffrey O. Gustafson has been an administrator for over two years, and he is well familiar with policy, and should know about the rules regarding sockpupptry. I know that there have been issues with Jeffrey O. Gustafson in the past, but I personally do not think that he would attempt sockpuppetry, nor do I believe him to be untruthful. I hope that the Arbitration Committee will examine this case thoroughly (which, I am very sure that they will), so we don’t end up losing two contributors, with one being an improved admin. Acalamari 20:22, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Orderinchaos

I agree with Nick and Acalamari's points above. Jeffrey, as the last ArbCom and many other incidents demonstrated, is more than capable and fearless enough to take IAR by the horns under his own nick, and has done so on many occasions. However, I have never found him to be dishonest. There are certainly some questions raised, but I believe they are two different people. Re Tenofalltrades, I don't think real world documents unless offered in the first instance by the parties should be the basis of anything - Wikipedia is a relatively anonymous online environment and that sort of thing may set a precedent which would scare good faith contributors in controversial areas. There are other ways to confirm identity. Orderinchaos 23:47, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by the accused

I have had some time to calm down over the past 36 hours, as sometimes oftentimes my anger has a tendency to get the best of me. I will be emailing the committee tomorrow - there is some personal information involved that I am not comfortable revealing on wiki. I will likely post something afterwards for whoever is interested. In a nutshell: What Blake Said. --Jeffrey O. Gustafson - Shazaam! - <*> 18:30, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I have emailed the Committee via their mailing list (I think the message is still in the queue - I have not received an auto-response), and will forward the message verbatim to any trusted user who requests it via email, which I have re-enabled. I cannot guarantee a speedy response, but I will do my best. --Jeffrey O. Gustafson - Shazaam! - <*> 06:51, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Clerk notes

02:01, 25 January 2008 Henrik (Talk | contribs | block) unblocked Edward Morgan Blake (Talk | contribs) ‎ (Unblock for arbitration proceedings) - Penwhale | Blast him / Follow his steps 01:49, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (2/2/0/2)

  • Awaiting statement from Jeffrey O. Gustafson and/or Edward Morgan Blake. Could the filing party or a Clerk notify Edward Morgan Blake of the case and follow his talkpage for any statement please. (I am aware of the checkuser finding that JOG=EMB, but even if this is the same individual he might not necessarily check both pages.) Newyorkbrad (talk) 20:57, 24 January 2008 (UTC) Accept and address in an expedited manner. The issues are straightforward and there should be no need, one way or the other, for lengthy proceedings. Edward Morgan Blake should be unblocked for the purpose of allowing him to participate. Newyorkbrad (talk) 04:49, 25 January 2008 (UTC) Now awaiting elaboration from Jeffrey O. Gustafson. See his statement above and User talk:Jeffrey O. Gustafson. Newyorkbrad (talk) 22:46, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. --Deskana (talk) 13:10, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. FloNight (talk) 01:53, 26 January 2008 (UTC) After my first read of Jeffrey O. Gustafson's email statement and I'm unclear that an arbitration case is the best way forward. I need to further review the statement and the other on site statements. FloNight (talk) 17:48, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. The Uninvited Co., Inc. 04:02, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Decline for now pending prompt receipt and review of Jeffrey's promised email. Paul August 18:54, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Decline. Jeffrey's statement satisfies me. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 18:17, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Ehud Lesar

Initiated by Grandmaster (talk) at 07:09, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Involved parties


Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request

[45] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50]

Confirmation that other steps in dispute resolution have been tried

Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents/Ehud Lesar, Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Arbitration_enforcement/Archive11#User:Ehud_Lesar

Statement by Grandmaster

I realize that arbitrators are really tired of endless disputes at Armenia – Azerbaijan related area, and that recently a request for another Armenia – Azerbaijan case has been rejected. I was the one who opposed the new case, and I believe that it was a right decision. However this case should not be treated as another Armenia – Azerbaijan case, involving every user who contributes to that topic. This is a case about the block of a particular user and circumstances surrounding it. So it should be considered outside of general A-A framework and cover only the users involved in this particular situation.

This issue has started when User:Fedayee, User:Eupator and some others started a campaign of harassment of User:Ehud Lesar, accusing him of being a sock of User:AdilBaguirov, who was banned for 1 year by AA1. They were making accusations without any reliable evidence confirming that the 2 users were somehow related. Checkuser showed no relation between Ehud and Adil: [51] [52] However this did not stop the aforementioned users from making accusations and baiting Ehud. Just some examples:

[53] [54] [55] [56] [57]

Finally the sock allegations were discussed at WP:AE and rejected [58] with the statement: No confirmation of sockpuppetry. At the same time Ehud was placed on 6 months rv parole like most of other users on the topic. Fedayee and his supporters were told to present their evidence for formal investigation to Wikipedia:Suspected sockpuppets. However, this never happened. I can assume that instead they sought other ways. On 9 January 2008 the admin User:Khoikhoi, who was absent from Wikipedia for a few months (since October 2007, to be precise), suddenly turned up and banned Ehud. I can only presume that this admin was approached off wiki and given certain information about Ehud. Otherwise it is hard to explain why a user who was absent from wikipedia for months would turn up with the single purpose of banning one user. I might be wrong, but this looks very strange. Ehud asked to be unblocked, and his request for unblock was granted by User:LaraLove. However Ehud was soon reblocked after the discussion at Lara’s page by User:Nishkid64, despite User:LaraLove refusing to support this block. [59] Ehud contacted me soon after he was blocked and asked for help with this case, and I took the issue to WP:ANI. [60] A lengthy discussion at WP:ANI gave no results. Ehud was willing to prove that he was a real person in real life and not a sock by various methods, including phone call, webcam chat, etc, but Nishkid64 and the group of users who supported him did not agree to any of his proposals. Nishkid64 asked for a scan of Ehud’s ID with all the info other than picture and name blacked out, but Ehud was reluctant to share any sensitive private info with admins who blocked him. He was willing to prove his identity by any means that would not violate his privacy, or share it with one of the top bureaucrats of wikipedia, who would guarantee his privacy. But even this sort of identification was not considered a sufficient prove by his accusers, who insisted that this user should remain blocked despite the lack of any prove that he was a sock. So we have a very strange situation when a user was blocked after allegations about him were rejected at WP:AE by an admin, who was away from wiki for many months, then unblocked and reblocked again. Clearly there was no consensus in the wiki community that this user was a sock, and there was no evidence to support the allegations of sockpuppetry, as cu returned negative results. While it’s never been proven that Ehud was a sock, Nishkid64 demands that Ehud needs to prove that he is not sock. I don’t understand what happened to presumption of innocence and “innocent until proven guilty” principle. The only basis for Ehud’s block was this collection of frivolous evidence complied by Fedayee, and which I addressed here. It was also addressed in much detail at WP:ANI thread, but did not result in any change of the attitude of the blocking admins. It is very strange that no attempt at any investigation has ever been made and there were no attempts at seeking consensus at WP:ANI or any other board before making such a block. So I would like to ask the arbitration committee to review all the circumstances surrounding this block, and take measures for verification of identity of Ehud, who is willing to cooperate. Also, it might be in the interest of the entire wiki community to establish some sort of a procedure for users who were blocked as result of sockpuppetry allegations to contest their block and prove their real life identity without violation of their privacy. I made inquires with many people, but it seems that no one is aware of any established procedure for such situations. Thank you very much.

In response to Thatcher. The problem is that all users representing either Azerbaijani or Armenian side are interested in the same topic and have the same POV, depending on what side of the story they represent. If users are to be banned for sharing the same views, then not many would remain. There should be some procedure for verification if the user is genuine or not. Otherwise innocent people will keep on getting banned just because they happen to share the same views or making edits that may remotely resemble those made by other users.

Fedayee

I agree with Atabek. The evidence presented by Fedayee, which resulted in Ehud’s block, is very frivolous. Atabek mentioned some points, but here’s more. Fedayee says in his evidence:

If we search on talkpages, we find that only Adil has ever called Sevan, Geycha.

But if one takes a look at Talk:Lake Sevan, he can see that the name of Geycha was used there since 2005, long before Adil joined Wikipedia. Moreover, if we check the history of the article about the lake, we’ll see that the one reverting to Adil’s version and sharing the same views with him about the historical names of the lake was none other than Khoikhoi, the blocking admin: [61] Please see the edit summary in the diff. So it was not just Ehud sharing the same views with Adil on certain subjects. If people are blocked on the basis of such evidence, then we have serious problems here. I posted more counterevidence here: User:Grandmaster/Ehud, where I addressed all major points in Fedayee's evidence.

The claim that only Adil and Ehud spelled the old name of the lake as Geycha is false and can be easily disproved. Adil joined Wikipedia on 13 May 2006. However back on 18 February 2006 the admin User:Beland stated on the talk of Sevan:

I added the rendering "Geycha" because someone used it in the article Siunik. -- Beland 15:08, 18 February 2006 (UTC) [62][reply]

And the name of Geycha (spelled exactly like this) was added to the article about Siunik back in October 2004. [63]

Ok, how come then that this spelling is exclusively Adil’s, if it was spelled that way long before he joined wiki, and that’s the way the name is spelled in Azerbaijani language? I find it strange that Nishkid64 blindly trusts whatever claims Fedayee makes without taking the time to check them.

Response to Nishkid64

Nishkid64, you said that "it appears that Grandmaster and Atabek have now hinted that Ehud Lesar's real name is not "Ehud Lesar", as he had claimed many times before on-wiki and through e-mail". Please tell us where exactly did Ehud say that he contributed under his real name? That's what you have just been claiming in you previous post.

As for Geycha, I have already demonstrated that unlike what you say in your response to 5a, Adil was not "the first person on Wikipedia to make that point". See Talk:Lake Sevan. I understand that you only had good intentions, but I think the admins should not blindly trust any evidence presented to them, but do some investigation of their own.

Nishkid64, you said that "I asked Ehud Lesar to confirm that his real name was "Ehud Lesar". He never made any indication that Ehud Lesar was not in fact his real name". But he never told you that Ehud was his real name either, right? Then why did you say that Ehud claimed that he contributed under his real name "many times before on-wiki and through e-mail". Now it turns out that not only he did not claim so "many times", in fact, he did not claim so even once. I don't know if Ehud is his real name or not, but it might as well be a made up name. I'm not Grandmaster in real life too. People have a right to chose any names for themselves, as long as they don't violate wiki policies. But how does his wiki name prove that he is a sock, and what difference does it make?

It appears that you and Atabek were defending the name, "Ehud Lesar", but then later did a 180 and suggested that it wasn't his name.

That's not right. I was never defending the name, I was defending the user and was trying to bring to your attention that he was a real person in real life, regardless of whether he contributed under his real or made up name.

Adil

With regard to Texas, that state is the same for Azerbaijanis as California is for Armenians. Texas has the biggest Azerbaijani community, because most of US oil companies are based in there and many Azerbaijanis work for them. So Adil surely is not the only Azerbaijani in the state with 20 million of population, plus Adil only occasionally visits that state, while Ehud is based there permanently. And Adil's appearance in Wikisource is not a coincidence either, I emailed him a couple of days ago and informed him about the Ehud's unfair block. He has a right to be aware of charges brought against him. If he chose to contribute in the meantime to another Wikimedia project, he has a right to do so. Of course, none of the above facts is a proof that Ehud is Adil's sock.

VartanM

I don’t understand how my words that Ehud should be given a chance to prove his existence in real life could be interpreted as a statement that Ehud is that user’s real life name. Ehud exists in real life, but his name is not necessarily the same as his wiki name. It might be or not be the same, but I never said that it was the same. What’s the point in such distortion of my words? Same with most of other evidence presented by VarrtanM and Fedayee. I addressed all important points in my counter evidence. VartanM says further:

The bulk of counter-evidence (which doesn’t even try to address some very important pieces) is based on the false belief that dismantling each piece without considering their interconnection and more importantly the bigger picture would be enough.

First, all the important pieces were addressed and in my opinion it was clearly demonstrated that the sockpuppetry allegations were baseless. And second, if individual pieces of Fedayee's evidence are frivolous, how the collection of them can be accurate?

Statement by Nishkid64

I first saw Fedayee's evidence at WP:AE. He was convinced that Ehud Lesar was AdilBaguirov, an editor banned by ArbCom until August 2008. I evaluated the evidence, and sought the opinions of others. I also contacted Jayvdb (talk · contribs) on IRC and asked him for his thoughts. I don't remember what he said exactly, but I'm sure that he didn't give a clearcut opinion of the evidence. Based on the evidence, I was convinced that this user was a sockpuppet of Adil. I was a bit hesitant of the block, and I wanted to contact Khoikhoi (talk · contribs), an administrator who's quite knowledgeable of the Armenia-Azerbaijan debate, and seek his opinion about the evidence. I didn't get to contact Khoikhoi, but I saw that he echoed my thoughts and he blocked the user indefinitely. Per Dmcdevit's comments here, he had evaluated the evidence and decided to take administrative action. LaraLove (talk · contribs) unblocked the user on the basis that there was no evidence for sockpuppetry. I did not want to be accused of wheel warring, so I contacted her and asked her if she was okay with me reblocking the user. She didn't think there was any evidence for the block, and I should do what I believe is best. As a result, I reblocked Ehud. Subsequently, Grandmaster initiated an AN/I discussion. An agreement (I don't see how one could be reached in this situation; one side wants a block, the other wants an unblock) could not be reached.

A few points of clarification:

  • Francis Tyers (talk · contribs) first suggested that Ehud was a sockpuppet of AdilBaguirov. Khoikhoi, Alex Bakharev (talk · contribs), Daniel Case (talk · contribs) (who reviewed the unblock) and I have all found the evidence of sockpuppetry quite damning and indefblock-worthy.
  • The issue over identity confirmation was first brought up by Ehud Lesar in an e-mail he sent to me shortly after I re-blocked his account. Since I contested that he was indeed Adil Baguirov, a real-life Azeri energy lobbyist, I figured that an identity confirmation would prove his innocence.
  • Grandmaster and Ehud Lesar proposed some methods of confirming Ehud's identity. These methods could easily be faked, so I asked for other ideas. I was then asked what I thought would provide definitive confirmation. I suggested scanning his passport with the sensitive details blanked. It was only a suggestion, and I said Ehud was free to refuse to participate in such an action. On Google Talk, Ehud stated that he would not provide such identity, but after some convincing, I informed him (LaraLove had previously mentioned this) that he could contact Cary Bass or someone else through WP:OFFICE.
  • No admin "rejected" the allegations at WP:AE. Most of the discussion on hand took place before Fedayee created his user subpage filled with Ehud-AdilBaguirov evidence. Picaroon made a comment, stating he was a bit confused about the deal over Geycha (see the evidence for clarification). Jayvdb did not comment on the merits of the case, but it appears he did read it, as he asked for some point of clarification and said he would look into the matter on User talk:Fedayee/LesarBaguirov Evidence. Thatcher closed the AE discussion as "no confirmation of sockpuppetry", but he did place Ehud on revert parole. Judging from the timestamps of Thatcher's edits, I do not think he read the evidence, but I have no messaged Thatcher and asked him whether or not he actually got a chance to look over the material.
  • In the latter half of the discussion, it appears that Grandmaster and Atabek have now hinted that Ehud Lesar's real name is not "Ehud Lesar", as he had claimed many times before on-wiki and through e-mail.
Reply to Atabek from Nishkid64

1) Again, CheckUser does not confirm everything. There have been hundreds of cases on Wikipedia where sockpuppeteers easily mask their IP, thus producing unfounded CheckUser results.

2) WP:PRIVACY is a proposed policy. It just advises users that they shouldn't post such material on Wikipedia. I told Ehud Lesar that he could reject my suggestion.

3) I asked him if he could prove that he was indeed "Ehud Lesar". He never indicated that he wasn't this user. Even when I told him about the passport bit, he never said that he wasn't actually "Ehud Lesar".

4) I don't see how WP:PRIVACY is involved here.

5a) Adil was the first person on Wikipedia to make that point. Ehud Lesar made that exact same point, and given how it's not some universal view, it looks quite suspicious.

5b) Settle that matter elsewhere. This case is solely about the block of Ehud Lesar.

6) I did not really pay much attention to the Jewish username bit. The location bit came after the block, and was never used in my initial argument.

Reply to Grandmaster from Nishkid64

See what I wrote in my reply to Atabek. I asked Ehud Lesar to confirm that his real name was "Ehud Lesar". He never made any indication that Ehud Lesar was not in fact his real name. Also, judging from the AN/I discussion, it was pretty much implied that Ehud Lesar was the user's real name. Also, judging from Atabek's comments, it appeared that he was hinting that "Ehud Lesar" was not the actually identity of user:Ehud Lesar.

Please, this is not about my choice of words. Regardless of what I said, it appears many people who read the AN/I post were under the impression that Ehud Lesar was the user's real name. You and Atabek spent some time arguing Fedayee's first point about the Jewish username. You said that there are a number of Azerbaijani Jews. Atabek's later comments indicate that Ehud Lesar is not the actual name. It appears that you and Atabek were defending the name, "Ehud Lesar", but then later did a 180 and suggested that it wasn't his name. What changed?

Statement by Thatcher

The funny thing about sockpuppets and checkuser is that whenever checkuser shows that two accounts are related, people complain that IPs are shared and the checkusers don't know what they're doing and you have to look at the contributions. When the contributions show strong similarities of point of view, approach, and interest in obscure topics, people complain that checkuser shows no connection and therefore the accounts can't be the same. Any thinking person with a bit of experience at editing Wikipedia and on the internet can come up with two or three ways of appearing to be in two different places at the same time (with or without the help of a confederate), thus "proving" that he is two different people. So I'm dubious about the value of having Adil and Ehud contact the Foundation with their private IDs. Until Mediawiki enables the clairvoyance extension allowing admins to see who is typing at the other end of the pipe and to know with certainty that that person is not acting on instructions of another, or sharing the account when no one is looking, then we have to go on similarities of style, point of view, and topic interest. I was not convinced of the identity of Ehud when a complaint was posted to WP:AE, and Fedayee's evidence page was not linked to the complaint. But I have no problem if another admin with more experience of this user has made a determination.

Statement by Eupator

I'll keep this brief as I don't think an arbitration case is necessary regarding this matter. If the current compiled evidence was produced earlier, even a checkuser case would have been rejected based on the obviousness that Ehud Laser is not a legitimate user. I'm more worried about Grandmaster's conduct in regards to all of this and gross assumptions of bad faith in regards to virtually everyone. Same with User:Atabek and his persistence of insisting with Grandmaster that Ehud Laser is a legitimate user and accompanied with countless assumptions of bad faith and provocative instances of turning this matter into essentially a battleground. To go as far as to imply that two administrators with a long history of neutrality and absolutely no axe to grind were somehow not genuinely involved is mind boggling. I also don't understand why Grandmaster did not add Atabek as a party to this case as Atabek has been involved in it just as much as Grandmaster has. Everything I wanted to say about Ehud Laser I have here:Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents/Ehud Lesar I find this to be a waste of time for everyone involved.

Statement by uninvolved User:Atabek

The accusation of User:Ehud Lesar being sock of User:AdilBaguirov has no basis, because:

1) It's not based on checkuser evidence;

2) Blocking administrator showed no interest in verifying the identity of the blocked user within the limitation of WP:PRIVACY. Nishkid64's request here for Ehud Lesar to produce a copy of his passport, especially given the lack of checkuser or any evidence produced by a non-conflicting party, is in violation of WP:PRIVACY.

3) Accusation by User:Nishkid64 that User:Ehud Lesar told him or posted somewhere about his real name being Ehud Lesar is not based on any evidence produced or presented so far.

4) Charges brought up by User:Fedayee and User:VartanM that User:Ehud Lesar is not really Jewish have no supporting evidence. Azerbaijani Jews are tightly integrated into Azerbaijani society, and many support the national point of view as shown by an independent source here [64]. Moreover, accusing someone based on dislike of his account name being associated with a certain ethnicity is simply a violation of WP:PRIVACY and WP:HARASS.

5) User:Fedayee's evidence is frivolous:

6) Overall the argument that Ehud Lesar must be a sock of Adil, because he lives in Texas and has a Jewish username, is ridiculous and carries no basis whatsoever. There are a number of contributors, supporting the same POV as User:Artaxiad banned by ArbCom and caught with 34 checkuser-confirmed sock accounts so far, and residing in the same state of California [67]. This does not establish a basis to accuse them all of sockpuppetry based on assumptions about POV.

Thanks. Atabek (talk) 18:08, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Response to User:Nishkid64

4) I posted WP:PRIVACY line, which renders your arguments about whether Ehud Lesar should or should not have his name as real username, as violation. Reread the policy: Wikipedia requires no personal information from anyone who wishes to edit it.

5a) Your claim:

  • Adil was the first person on Wikipedia to make that point. Ehud Lesar made that exact same point, and given how it's not some universal view, it looks quite suspicious.

It may look suspicious that two contributors cite an external source of information, but it definitely does not establish basis for accusation of sockpuppetry or claims that Ehud is Adil. Nishkid64, from your sentence above, it's also clear that you have no evidence to prove that Ehud is Adil, but only trying to use any fact of POV link in edits of two people originating from one country to establish sockpuppetry. May as well state that you want to block all Azeri contributors on suspicions that their views mostly match those of Adil.

5b) It's an evidence of User:Fedayee making false accusation in Wikipedia and not being able to produce evidence for his claims. The case is awfully similar to User:Ehud Lesar case, with fabrication of such evidence. The purpose is single, to target contributors along national lines.

  • Since I contested that he was indeed Adil Baguirov, a real-life Azeri energy lobbyist, I figured that an identity confirmation would prove his innocence.

clearly violates, this line of WP:NPA, which is a fundamental Wikipedia policy:

  • Attacking, harassing, or violating the privacy of any Wikipedian through the posting of external links is not permitted. Harassment in this context may include but is not limited to linking to offsite personal attacks, privacy violations, and/or threats of physical violence.

You haven't produced any evidence that Adil Baguirov is a "real life Azeri energy lobbyist" either. May be worth also reading for your supporters in this issue User:VartanM and User:Fedayee.

Response to User:Fedayee

Regarding your statement:

  • Point 5b), Atabek is harassing me with that, I have made that remark once, Atabek brought it back again and again. I have replied to him that I can not post this here. He knows what happens when such information is posted here. But for this information, I have submitted it to one admin who may feel free to provide it to whomever he thinks it is appropriate.

The false claims and assumptions that you make in your communication with any administrator is your own business. However, your claim that I have off-wiki relation with another contributor is a violation of WP:HARASS, especially without any presentable evidence. So I demanded you to produce that evidence in the same medium where you made the accusation. And please, recall fundamental policies:

Unless, you produce the evidence or apologize for your false statement, I will pursue your statements further in WP:ANI as a clear violation of WP:HARASS.

Response to User:VartanM and User:Fedayee

The application of word genocide is of subjective matter. Obviously every person from Azerbaijan, including myself, considers Khojaly massacre to be an act of genocide, just like every Armenian considers Armenian Genocide to an act of genocide. So argument that Ehud is a sock of Adil because he calls Khojaly a genocide, holds no water.

Statement by Ehud Lesar

Clerk note: Because Ehud Lesar is currently blocked, I would be copying any statement made by him/her on the user talk page to this page, per my clerk note below.
In an email sent to me, Lesar said to link if the statement was too long. A cursory look shows that the formatting and length probably require the statement to be linked, hence that's what I've done.

Ehud Lesar's statement can be viewed here. Daniel (talk) 21:54, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Fedayee

The whole description of the situation by Grandmaster is full of half-truths. It is also time to decide whether or not AdilBaguirov should ever return to contribute and if it is not best to finally have an indefinite block on his account.

What information is missing here is that many users have already suspected Ehud Lesar months ago and this was also brought during the last arbitration case as arbitrators involved to the last case may remember. When Hetoum started making those accusations to Ehud Lesar, this was part of his reply: You're free to be either obsessed with or pretty much obviously impressed by him, but please stop dragging me into "being" someone I am not just NOT. [68]

Francis Tyers was one of the members (and Admin when AdilBaguirov was not yet banned) who suspected Ehud and as soon as the beginning of July of last year. [69] Then, no evidence was ever compiled which related both users yet practically everyone knew it was Adil. Everything points to him, starting from the day of his registration to his name. The pile of evidence provided against Ehud is not limited to my evidence page, others were provided elsewhere, including the evidence relating the name Lesar with Adil Baguirov. See here. [70]

The problem lies with Grandmaster’s and Atabek’s attempts to defend AdilBaguirov’s sock and having him unbanned. Grandmaster during the last arbitration case has removed the tag of the sock of Adil from here claiming there was no evidence when there was and the evidence is compelling. See this section. Fourth paragraph about DrAlban, 19 June, DrAlban was a confirmed sock of Adil, after he is banned another sock appeared (the same exact day) Zhirtibay, which Grandmaster has claimed again that checkuser did not show the account to be Adil [71]. The choice of names, the fact that they all appeared out of nowhere to support Atabek etc., just as Adil’s sock did.

It is very difficult to assume good faith with so much evidence of the contrary. Grandmaster is distorting my evidence and continues to do it here even after I have shown he is doing this. My quote on Geycha is selectively quoted to change its meaning and claims this is not accurate, while I have already answered to him that he distorted the meaning of my answer here by leaving out a very important piece in that quote. [72] Grandmaster didn’t address that but has referred to how it is spelled in Azeri, (he now continues without correcting himself). [73] I have obviously not replied to this because this is not entirely true, the ‘ç’ has no standardized pronunciation, while it could be spelled kch, tch, or simply ch, and the fact that in the modern Azeri Russianized version, there is a ‘y’ added even then, Grandmaster is not saying the truth. It is not spelled with an ‘e’ but with an ‘o.’ Khoikhoi agreeing with Adil’s version as reported by Grandmaster isn’t even true, as I have explained in the unaddressed reply here. The diff provided on Khoikhoi was a re-introduction of an edit made by Adil a day earlier. [74] Both with an ‘o’, see how there he puts the ‘o’. Adil had it right, but then changed his version; Ehud will be maintaining that version to use it for the same reason used by Adil.

Atabek’s answer is also weird; he claims that it is not based on checkuser, when a checkuser wasn’t evidence according to him to prove Tengri was his sock. [75]. Point 3 by Atabek is also ridiculous, Ehud Lesar was faking an identity, he added himself in the Jewish Wiki project, edited some Jewish related articles, and claimed to be of Jewish ancestor in his userpage. See Grandmaster’s remark here about him being Azerbaijani. Atabek claims that Jews are integrated in Azerbaijani society? And? It still does not address the issue that Ehud considers what happened in Algeria genocide when Turkish lobbyists are the ones who push the qualification the most as a counter-measure to the Armenian genocide. When searching for that term on Google, the second hit is from a journal [76] to which Adil is a contributor. Also, it does not address the fact that Ehud considers what happened in Khojaly a genocide and denies the Armenian Genocide just like Adil. Grandmaster provides evidence which would tend to show that that position is not a fringe position. Check Vartan’s reply at 21:51 [77] on that.

Point 5a) was addressed [78], [79], which was not answered by Atabek, he preferred changing the subject. [80]

Point 5b), Atabek is harassing me with that, I have made that remark once, Atabek brought it back again and again. I have replied to him that I can not post this here. He knows what happens when such information is posted here. But for this information, I have submitted it to one admin who may feel free to provide it to whomever he thinks it is appropriate.

Point 6) does not make sense; the overall argument was never that… there are many other arguments which I didn’t even start to address adequately, like the fact that both Adil and Ehud support myths about the Armenian Diaspora which were put forward by Adil off-wiki for example during the lecture he gave on Wikipedia. Also, Atabek says nothing about the particularity of the name Lesar and why it is related with Adil. Atabek is also making a false analogy which was addressed on various occasions (Azeris living in Texas, Armenians living in California). Vartan already addressed this. There are half a million Armenians in California, at least half of the entire Armenian community in the US. In fact, there are more Armenians only in California than there are Azeris in the US. If an Armenian edits from the US, there is over ½ chance that that person is from California. This cannot be compared with the fact that Adil lives in Texas (with Washington) and that Ehud lives in Texas too.

Both Atabek and Grandmaster address the evidence individually, sure, when taken alone, each piece of evidence is not enough to show the link. But when taken as a whole then everything changes. - Fedayee (talk) 00:34, 19 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Update

I was going to remain silent and not add anything new. But I could not keep silent when reading this after Vartan brought Adil’s contribution on Wikisource. This recent contribution of Adil on Wikisource after Ehud’s ban is one thing as evidence but this was needless given the obviousness that Ehud is Adil. But what strikes me as plainly provocative is this recent message by Adil which seems like personal vendetta. We, for his information, are not members of any interest group... if he wants to keep that lie about the Armenians users, he should substantiate his claim or remove that. And given his position in the Azeri community, he should be the last to write such stuff. Several members here have plenty of evidence of the contrary (involvement of interest groups). And who should we contact for the recent additions (on wikisource) by Adil Baguirov which comes from his website, when Adil Baguirov has a history of using totally fabricated sources and quotes? - Fedayee (talk) 06:19, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by VartanM

I will only address this for now before answering Grandmaster. Is Grandmaster really being honest here? Only in the administrators notice board he strongly suggested and repeated at least on three different occasions that: None of the above is a proof that Ehud is a sock and does not exist in real life. [81]. Grandmaster is not saying that he is not Adil or that there is no proof that he is not Adil, but that Ehud exists in real life, he could not have ignored that everyone was actually speaking of the identity Ehud Lesar. He is replying to the evidences on the Lesar identity and will be repeating this again [82] and again, he will say the same thing: This particular issue can be resolved very simply by verifying the existence of Ehud in real life. So far we have not received any clear instructions on how to do that. From what I see, no matter what Ehud does to prove his existence, it will be rejected by certain people, who are unwilling to accept that they made a mistake accusing this user. [83] Those statements were made when evidences were presented on the name Lesar and that faked identity. It wasn’t until recently, and weird, as both Grandmaster and Atabek started to suggest (about the same time) that the Ehud identity itself was a screen name and comparing it to our usernames. And again also to a new position held by Ehud. How can a family name that is hardly notable other than one individual who was shown to have real life relation with Adil be compared with say Vartan, popular name among Armenians, or other famous Armenians used by Armenian users?

Reply to Grandmater

If you really want this case be accepted, don’t turn it into a circular discussion. You are repeating the same stuff addressed by Fedayee as if he is denying that. The point was that even Azeri users did not spell it that way. Atabek himself called it Gokcha, and then after this whole affair started calling it Goycha, but even then he didn’t spell it with an 'e', when it is with an 'o'. The evidence provided by Fedayee is in two parts. Geycha AND Used it to refer to a republic. On both accounts Ehud spelled the same way Adil did, and used it to refer to the republic. Of course this alone would not prove it is Adil. Those evidences x, y, z, etc. should obviously be treated as x AND y AND z... The Church of Kish article for instance, was created by a single purpose account and then defended by Adil’s confirmed socks, and then Ehud Lesar engaging in there. No matter what people say, this is an obscure article, the position hold by Ehud and the SPA who created the article was defended in a journal which Adil contributes to, a website build by Adil. Is this proof alone? No! And then, the Algerian Genocide thing, is it a proof alone? No! Is the claim of Khojali genocide? Alone proof? No! Is the claim that he hold the identical position held by the scholar (whose article were edited by confirmed socks of Adil) who mostly provided the Armenian genocide revisionist position in the West. Alone proof? No, only an evidence.

What about his position about the Diaspora, which was Adil’s fighting horse in off-wiki gatherings and lectures, alone proof that Ehud is Adil? No! Is the fact that he registered hours after everyone knew Adil will be banned, alone proof? What about the name Lesar? Is the fact that most if not all Lesar's in Texas are related to the David J. Lesar's family, who runs a company which associates itself with Adil, is an evidence that Ehud is Adil? Is the fact that he editwarred and reverted for other Azeri users when they run out of revert confirmation it is Adil? No! All of those alone are not confirmation when taken alone as Fedayee said. Neither the fact that Adil is known to forge identities with foreign names. Is the fact that Adil(splitting his time in Huston and Washington DC) and Ehud both live in Texas proof alone? No, it isn’t. What about the fact that Adil's sockpuppets stopped in more than one occasion when Ehud Lesar started contributing, and didn't reappear as long as Ehud Lesar was contributing. Is the fact that Ehud claimed that it is a positive thing to be impressed by Adil a confirmation it is Adil? No! Of course, each evidence taken alone can be rejected as not being sufficient proof. Is turning a banal article into an article about destructions by Armenians like this confirmation alone?. Or here. But then, even his interest on Jewish matters is so Adil of him. See here for example.

More could be added, everything points to him, the way he edited, his interests, when he registered, his personal theories, his sarcasm and even the username. The bulk of counter-evidence (which doesn’t even try to address some very important pieces) is based on the false belief that dismantling each piece without considering their interconnection and more importantly the bigger picture would be enough. It is not enough, or else, no proof of sockpuppetry can ever be provided, even if IP address was shared, only on the assumption that there is some possibility that two people could have posted with the same IP without being the same person.VartanM (talk) 19:07, 19 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

More about Adil

Adil knows his Ehud account wont be unblocked tomorrow (never). He registered on 19 April 2007 on Wikisource and didn't start editing until 16 January 2008, [84] few days after Ehud was blocked. Knowing Adil, I'll bet that the IP won't match with Ehud. VartanM (talk) 20:30, 19 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by John Vandenberg

I was first made aware of the possibility of Ehud being Adil when Fayadee make the accusation on WP:AN/AE, as if it was fact, without any evidence at that time, despite a failed checkuser. This accusation had already appeared on numerous talk pages previously, so I warned the user to quit ABF and compile some evidence. In response, just before Christmas, I was notified that some evidence had been created; I did a quick evaluation of the users contributions and deduced that the user was possibly meat-puppeting initially, but had since moved onto a more productive approach. As a result, it looked suspect enough to investigate further, so I said I would look into it, and posted a query on User talk:Fedayee/LesarBaguirov Evidence to get the ball rolling.

When I came back from Christmas celebrations, I found Fedayee was again making the accusation on WP:AN/AE as if it was fact and canvassing for someone to block Ehud, so I blocked the user for 24hrs to prevent another thread from going offtopic with attacks on a new user, which is how Ehud should have been treated per WP:AGF.[85][86] This resulted in my talk page gather some rather interesting attacks by TigranTheGreat (talk · contribs), and then a curious JamesDS (talk · contribs) dropped in to ask a few questions (btw, JamesDS looks like a sock, but I honestly answered rather than block).

Again I reiterated that these investigations take time[87][88]. Soon after Moreschi placed Ehud on revert parole, and a few days later Thatcher closed the sock accusation on WP:AN/AE. In this time I started to research the various topics like Geycha and Zangezur Republic which are supposed to be theories of limited circulation, and I have looked for similarities in the talk page comments made by the two users. I hadnt found anything indicating a close tie when Nishkid inquired about it, and I clearly said so. Because he was certain that it was a sock, and I still wasnt convinced, I asked for more time, saying something to the effect of "I will play devils advocate, and try to find evidence that they are different people." So I then started to collate evidence that they have different editing habits; enough to raise doubts.

Before I could discuss with Nishkid, Ehud was blocked, and I decided to stayed clear of it due to lack of time to read the volumes of text that appeared on AN, and now here. I did see the two diffs that Khoikhoi used as additional justification, and didnt see reason to block based on that, but I havent caught up entirely or read everyones statements here, so perhaps there has been better proof of similarity than the initial evidence. I find the block odd, the defense of the block odd, and I am surprised that we havent yet confirmed or denied the separate identity of the two users. I am quite sure that we will find that the user is a separate person, with few touch points except for a few topics of shared interest, and Ehud being drawn into questions about Adil, which are being used as evidence of similarity. Quite simply, Ehud has been harassed, and the harassment has gone unchecked under the umbrella of "identifying socks".

As an aside since I see VartanM has mentioned it, I hassled Adil to contribute to Wikisource around April 2007 due to some PD documents he emailed me during a content dispute, and I was unaware that he had actually registered as I was only a newbie there myself at that stage. Besides that one email reply to Adil, I had never communicated with him. Grandmaster and VartanM have both started contributing since October, with increasingly frequency. It comes as only a mild surprise that Adil turned up there recently in the wee hours of the morning (my time) with some texts that are on shaky PD grounds, to which I replied by littering his talk page with the Wikisource equivalent of "non-free image" messages.

Comment by Moreschi

Tough one, this. I'm not especially familiar with Adil's edit pattern, so it's hard for me to really say. All I can assert is this: Ehud Lesar was not editing disruptively enough to merit an indefinite block on grounds of disruptive editing alone, though I did put him on revert parole. I think it's worth taking the case, if only to determine whether the evidence really is good enough. From an outside perspective I wasn't convinced, but that may have been from ignorance of Adil's behaviour pattern. Moreschi If you've written a quality article... 14:59, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by Marshal Bagramyan

In an attempt to prevent another drama from unfolding, I have came up with a long reply.

With all due respect John, your answer seems a bit out of the ordinary, following this, where you propose an evasion of 1RR for an occurrence where a user forgot to login. Also this: as if it was fact and canvassing for someone to block Ehud. What does that connote since several users have identified it was Adil ages ago and openly wanted him blocked; there is no undisclosed information there, Adil is banned. So I don't see why it must be a someone. Moreover John, with the ease that you pull the sockpuppet term, (even just now: JamesDS looks like a sock), your reservations seems selective to me, and is it not weird that you only thought about meatpuppeting on the current case? And I don’t understand what you mean when you note down: I am quite sure that we will find that the user is a separate person, with few touch points except for a few topics of shared interest, and Ehud being drawn into questions about Adil, which are being used as evidence of similarity. How can you be convinced? And your disagreement does not make sense to me; although Ehud was editing the church of Kish, this is what he had to say:I don't know and want to know who Adil is and is not. [89] The guy lives in Texas and does not know one of the most well-known Azerbaijani figures in the United States, who has built the first English language Azerbaijan resource site with several other sites and who partly lives in Texas, who hosts a web site about the Church of Kish, one of his main subjects of interest will inevitably appear on Google when searching his positions on top of everything else (note that he wrote that he can provide Azerbaijani scholars from Azerbaijan during the same period). And this: rather positive that you're so impressed by Adil Bagirov [90], how does the word positive fit in his justifications here?

Ehud wasn't banned months before because Francis Tyers was not an admin anymore and wasn't implicated much in those topics anymore. Golbez was pushed off by Azeri users long ago, and would have been atypical of him to block. Khoikhoi, who knew Adil’s editing pattern is inactive. All the admins who were concerned with Adil's disturbance aren’t involved any longer, besides Alex, who also thinks it is Adil. And John, if you notice nothing in Ehud’s demeanor which is symptomatic and deceptive, subsequently I don't think you can effectively impose policies for AA2 as an administrator. I was the first one to observe it was Adil, and Alex from his blocks of Adil, it's unambiguous he knows how Adil operates. Before even inspecting the rest of the evidence, one glance at the record of Ehud's contributions suggests that it's Adil. The entire regiment of Adil's socks have a particular signature. Verify this. He alternates leisurely inward bound in the 'juice', here it was from the most contentious and controversial articles at the time he had edited them and Jewish associated articles by their subject. He starts with Jewish related, then switches to the republic, the History of Azerbaijan, then returns to the Jews of Azerbaijan, followed by Israel-Azerbaijan relations, he then tried a tiny more heated topic with the Ethnic minorities in Azerbaijan, after that he backed off, and returned to Jewish related articles and added himself to the Israel WikiProject. Then more heat loaded the United Nations Security Council materials on the Armenia and Azerbaijan conflict. He returns on Israel related topics to ultimately leap to the warmth of the Church of Kish (which at the moment was the article which attracted the most controversy, I presume if this case is accepted the diffs to confirm that he is always dead on to find the controversial articles with the right timing will be well documented). He is then accused to be Adil, he returns to edit Jewish related articles and then jumps again on the other hot spot article of the time, the 'Azeri Waffen SS Volunteer Formations.' He finds his way on to another obscure article, which was also at the time on the middle of a controversy to do with this and also continue on another to do this with this as justification, the same list of Azerbaijani Khanates which Adil was pushing over (see history of the History of Azerbaijan talkpage). John are you still not convinced of the deception? Right during the controversy on the enforcement board, Ehud makes this edit knowing full well he will be accused even more. This obviously was the result, and following further accusations of harassment. Coincidently coinciding what few hours prior Atabek brought here to further exasperate the already tense atmosphere.

John, if you feel arbitrators should deal with the harassment, then you ought to add yourself to the case as a party, you are the admin who blocked Fedayee for that. Moreover, what does Tigran's comment have anything to do with this? It wasn't the first time you've been accused to take sides, which you perceptibly did when you blocked Fedayee and then admitted that you didn't read the evidence that you yourself requested (perhaps it was unintentional, but that was the result), and merely (from you answer here) resumed reading it after Khoikhoi's block and not even fully.

The approach both Grandmaster and Atabek take to deal with issues like these, is a little bit troubling. If they both are unaware of it being Adil, they deal with this with an incredibly curious way. Atabek, among many things, claims every person in Azerbaijan considers the Khojaly event genocide (and again, what is the purpose of yet another comparison with the Armenian genocide? Is it necessary for him to carry this on forever?) Isn't it inaccurate (when he writes all, he makes it compatible with what he wants to suggest on the position of Azerbaijani Jews)? And by the way, the way Atabek deals with the material provided is noticeably wrong; it’s manifest that the provided evidence on that particular subject (Khojaly) by Fedayee considers that Ehud was impersonating a Jew. Fedayee's point was, that it was very unlikely that any Jew will call the event genocide when not a single notable and reputable work names it as such (because there is no reason to do so), will not call what went on in Algeria a genocide and at the same time deny the Armenian genocide (not only are those nationalistic positions, but Algeria as a reference involves Turkish nationalism in this particular case not only Azerbaijani, not unfamiliar to Adil). Now they altered their version and Ehud becomes an Azerbaijani with some Jewish ancestry (in an attempt to merge Grandmaster and Ehud's contradictory position on that matter), then obviously that piece of evidence by Fedayee becomes worthless except for the Algerian Genocide bit. The issue here is more about how Ehud deceivably used a Jewish screen name and a fake Jewish identity. Unlike what Ehud started suggesting recently (that he may not be a full Jew, he seems to intentionally leave the door open for interpretations), it seems that in the past he wanted others to believe that he was solely a Jew: I do not have any kind of 'fake' identity. I am a Jew and am proud of it. Whatever I contribute to Jewish WikiProject or Azeri WikiProject or any other WikiProject is completely none of your business. [91], his reply to Vartan initiated Shalom: Shalom Vartan, shalom. Ma nishma? [92] he made such comments on other occasions: Mr. Azizbekov, I do follow Wikipedia rules. Again, you can jump back and forth trying hard to present me as a 'fake Jew', this does not and will not change my ethnicity. And came with this following remark talking in the name of Jews: Jews consider every civilian death a loss, when death in masses deliberately planned by another party: genocide. [93] So it seems there were attempts to deceive, as while most of his edits relate to controversial subjects about Azerbaijan on obscure articles which are politically heated. Ehud claimed his identity being solely Jewish and added himself solely to the Israel Wikiproject as an icing on top of a cake. Note that Grandmaster called him an Azerbaijani user. This seems to be a misrepresentation from Ehud’s part to give his arguments more weight (only a supposition, as I will be following Vartan's logic, and call each pieces as evidence instead of the proof). I am not trying to deal with whatever or not Ehud is Adil, I don't think that is even an issue of dispute, it’s a false controversy still maintained by two users.

As for Grandmaster's approach, putting this without looking like I am not assuming good faith is complicated. His answer to Vartan sums up the troubling approach he takes to deal with this subject. He starts by accusing Vartan of distorting - how, since the discussion spinning around Ehud's identity was whether or not he was Ehud Lesar, so the way Grandmaster is interpreting his own answer would have been inappropriate - he closes the reply with the following: And second, if individual pieces of Fedayee's evidence are frivolous, how the collection of them can be accurate? This is not even a reinterpretation but a fabrication (Assuming good faith, I presume unintentional). Vartan's point on the differences between evidence and proof has not been only deformed but entirely altered. In actual fact, not explicitly, neither implicitly did Vartan say anything such as that. What he held was that the pieces of evidence were not proof per say and should not be dealt individually as the individual and ultimate proofs. And Grandmaster's accusation seems highly hypocritical as he accused many newcomers of sockpuppetry, not even providing a tenth of the evidence provided for this case. Here Grandmaster labels someone an obvious sock of Fadix. And [94] accuses under the claim that the IP comes from Canada. While here he claims that Texas is huge, he accuses Fadix, who lives in Montreal because of an IP trace to Vancouver. It was found later that the IP didn't even trace there but to California, and I still don't see how the comparison between "Armenians in California" and the "Azeri in Texas" is accurate.

On another topic, Atabek removed himself from the case, when a large part of his statement is to accuse Fedayee of harassment against himself. If this accusation is relevant to the case, then obviously Atabek is an involved party, if it is irrelevant, since Atabek thinks he is not involved, then he should remove his accusations. Atabek has been involved in this much more than the initiator of the case. I don't think it is unrelated (the link accusation) having personally seen the evidence, and it makes sense, but this is to the arbitration to decide. It's also pertinent because if Fedayee's claim is right (on the connection between both users), deciding Ehud being a sockpuppet and with the history of Adil's sockpuppetry in reverting to Atabek's version, far more than to any other Azeri users version, the arbitration I consider should then deal with such a possible link. I will not get involved there since I try to step away from what Atabek edits and will not be answering to his "evidences" nor produce against him. I won't hide that I am intentionally ignoring him because of an event, which led (dyed-in-the-wool) for me to believe that his intentions are not genuine. After that the first sock of Fadix was identified, while Flavius Belisarius, now banned, massively edited on different articles making reference to the Armenian genocide, Atabek more than a week afterwards (after Fadix's sock was banned,), goes into a rampage by imitating Flavius Belisarius by doing this which seemed to be an attempt to oblige Fadix to come back with yet another sock for something which he came back for prior. More recently Atabek provoked Armenian users by using analogies between Nazi Germany and Armenia, which resulted in stirring a conflict between both sides, which was continued in an abusive way, from both sides, in the Arbitrations enforcement.

If the arbitration thinks it can open another can of worms and restrict it, it will not work. I think the case should be rejected. It goes down to whatever, that several admins and all Armenian veteran implicated users harassed him, or Grandmaster and Atabek have tried to rehabilitate a banned user. On both accounts, it cannot be restricted to Ehud Lesar, not to say Adil’s other socks not properly labeled thanks mostly to Grandmaster who kept removing the tags. Those should be dealt with too (Grandmaster should think twice, this case could result with an indefinite ban for Adil). All those socks were at the right place and at the right time, and mostly reverting for Atabek. So it all boils to, if the arbitration wants to take this case to what it really is.

Statement by uninvolved user:Pocopocopocopoco

If this case is accepted I request that all fairly recent instances where the WP:DUCK test has been used to ban users be given scrutiny and I also request that the ARBCOM committee look into what I consider abuse and gaming of the WP:RFCU process by user:Atabek and user:Grandmaster. Artaxiad (talk+ · tag · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log · CA · CheckUser(log· investigate · cuwiki) was banned about a year ago by the ARBCOM committee and it appears that he had a history of using proxies. Subsequent checkuser run against Artaxiad thus have (and had) a good chance of becoming inconclusive. After the inconclusive verdict, the user was often banned by an admin apparently by the duck test. The following users were banned in such a manner:

Bassenius (talk+ · tag · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log · CA · CheckUser(log· investigate · cuwiki)
Verjakette (talk+ · tag · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log · CA · CheckUser(log· investigate · cuwiki)
Azizbekov (talk+ · tag · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log · CA · CheckUser(log· investigate · cuwiki)
Vonones (talk+ · tag · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log · CA · CheckUser(log· investigate · cuwiki)

Those are the ones that I am aware of, there may be more. Bassenius and Verjakette were found to be likely socks of one another but it was inconclusive as to whether they were socks of Artaxiad (presumably due to his proxy use). Also, see the following evidence comparing the writing style of Bassenius, Verjakette, and Vonones. Three alleged sockpuppets of Artaxiad. Looking at that evidence, you can see that it is questionable that they were all the same person. user:VartanM may be able to provide additional evidence that they were different people from Artaxiad. One may argue that Verjakette and Bassenius were likely socks of each other so what's the big deal about indef. blocking them? The answer is that there is a chance that they were not and even if they were, they didn't seem to be socking abusively. I would also ask that the committee look at Grandmaster and Atabek's checkuser requests in Wikipedia:Requests_for_checkuser/Case/Artaxiad, especially the latest one. They are now checkusering user:Steelmate, user:Andranikpasha, against Artaxiad, completely ignoring writing style and the fact that these users have established themselves as completely distinct and independent identities. I have also somehow made it onto the latest checkuser list. I may expand upon this if I have more time. I also suggest that if this case is accepted, the name be changed to something like Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Armenia-Azerbaijan-Ducktests. Pocopocopocopoco (talk) 03:04, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Update: please make note of the response by the checkuser at Atabek and Grandmaster's recent checkuser request "This is the umpteenth time you've come here listing three or four different established identities and asking them all to be against some new account or other."[95] Pocopocopocopoco (talk) 19:40, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Clerk notes

Given Ehud Lesar is currently blocked indefinitely, should he/she choose to make a statement at this stage, I (or another clerk) can copy it from his user talk page (which he can still edit) to here. Should this case be accepted, Ehud Lesar may be unblocked to take part, at the discretion of the Arbitration Committee or community consensus. Thanks, Daniel (talk) 07:32, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitrators' opinion on hearing this matter (6/2/0/1)

  • Comment: awaiting completion of Nishkid64's statement, and a statement from Ehud Lazar, before voting. Newyorkbrad (talk) 15:35, 18 January 2008 (UTC) Accept. This is a rare situation of a sufficiently controverted and complicated sockpuppetry allegation that we should review it (compare, Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/SevenOfDiamonds). The focus of the case should be kept narrow, it should proceed quickly, and it certainly should not be allowed to turn into a forum for venting generalized grievances concerning ongoing Armenia-Azerbaijan disputes. To Kirill's point, the new discretionary sanctions ruling does not moot this request, because the question presented is not whether Ehud Lazar should be subject to editing restrictions, but whether he may edit at all. To Sam's point, while this type of issue can generally be addressed by community discussion on ANI or another board, I don't believe any discussion is ongoing and I don't foresee that any consensus is likely. I will add that there is no evidence that any administrator acted other than in complete good faith and I do not presently foresee anyone's admin conduct as a focus of the case. Newyorkbrad (talk) 23:18, 22 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Reject. Discretionary sanctions for the entire A-A area have now passed; I trust that the admins watching this area will be able to deal with this particular situation via that method, without the need for further involvement from our side. Kirill 16:50, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment for now. This is a difficult issue. It is primarily an appeal against a sockpuppetry block through challenging the evidence on which the block was founded. It seems clear that Ehud Lesar was not editing sufficiently disruptively in order to provoke a block, but that if he is closely identified with Adil Baguirov then a block is justified. The issue therefore comes down to whether the evidence of identification is high enough quality to be relied upon, with the possibility that further evidence may be conclusive. At this point I cannot be sure whether this evidence is best sifted by the Arbitration Committee or by the community. Sam Blacketer (talk) 14:41, 22 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    Accept per Newyorkbrad; there is reason to look again and I agree there is no other practical venue where it can be decided. Sam Blacketer (talk) 09:56, 23 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Reject. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 01:59, 23 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. Admins could not be able to reach a unanimous decision. Mediation is irrelevant to this case. -- FayssalF - Wiki me up® 07:20, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. FloNight (talk) 20:41, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • May accept, or not see the need, depending upon Khoikhoi's perspective. FT2 (Talk | email) 21:38, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. The Uninvited Co., Inc. 04:06, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Accept. James F. (talk) 20:53, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]



Appeals and requests for clarification

Place appeals and requests for clarification on matters related to past Arbitration cases in this section. If the case is ongoing, please use the relevant talk page. Requests for enforcement of past cases should be made at Arbitration enforcement. Requests to clarify general Arbitration matters should be made on the Talk page. Place new requests at the top.


Request extension of RFAR/Martinphi-ScienceApologist to deal with multiple article disruptions

There is an ongoing problem with articles covering fringe scientific topics. As seen in the above case request, fringe articles are clearly targeted by a determined group of editors interested in inflating the legitimacy of the topics and de-weighting the scientific or evidence-based view. It is part of the wikipedia way of doing things that neither admins, nor arbcom, can make content rulings. Admins could be given more advanced tools for dealing with disruption, though.

Two prior cases, Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Pseudoscience and Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/ScienceApologist, dealt with narrow topics and resulted in bans for a few single-purpose editors and "cautions" to ScienceApologist. As a result of Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Martinphi-ScienceApologist, Martinphi is placed on probation and ScienceApologist on civility parole, but these remedies do not begin to address the broad range of disruptive behavior and continual disruption at multiple articles. There have been multiple complaints filed against ScienceApologist, mostly groundless or incredibly minor, by editors seemingly more interested in getting rid of him than editing collaboratively, and ScienceApologist has unfortunately taken the bait more than once and responded in an inappropriate manner. There has also been edit warring on multiple articles, and at least two three disputed articles are currently protected.

I believe that a broad article probation covering the entire topic is needed to give admins the tools to deal with this long-running battle. I propose giving admins discretion to ban individual editors from pages they edit disruptively, for the short or long term, enforceable by blocking, and/or to place editors on revert limitation. Because the three previous cases have resulted in only probation for one editor and civility parole for a second, out of a large group of interested editors, has not given administrators an effective means of dealing with this long-term problem area. Thatcher 23:40, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Please propose specific language for a motion that potentially affected editors and the committee can review. Thank you. Newyorkbrad (talk) 23:43, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think it would be premature to use the ultra-broad general sanctions imposed at Israel-Palestine, but 1RR and page bans are needed to impose some sort of order here. Thatcher 00:17, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
May I comment here? Anthon01 (talk) 00:54, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, general discussion is permitted. Thatcher 01:14, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comments here are encouraged. To be most helpful, they should deal with how problems on these articles can be minimized going forward so that accurate, NPOV articles will be written and a harmonious editing environment maintained. Newyorkbrad (talk) 01:20, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think we can all recognize that Homeopathy is a controversial science, but pseudoscience is a pejorative that seems to be part of the problem here. Because what we need to move forward is an environment where editors treat one another with respect and let the sources speak for us in the article space. —Whig (talk) 01:46, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
comment: If the definition of Pseudoscience applies to Homeopathy, then WP:SPADE. This type of useage is not inappropriately pejorative. (See also List of pseudosciences and pseudoscientific concepts) -- Writtenonsand (talk) 17:24, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The definition does not fit in my opinion, but without bringing content issues here, that list is clearly NPOV disputed, and the ArbCom has spoken on this issue before. By their definitions, I believe Homeopathy qualifies as an alternative theoretical formulation, but certainly not obvious pseudoscience. —Whig (talk) 19:24, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Whatever it is, it's a problem. Thatcher 01:56, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps you should be more conservative when stating what "we can all recognize" or agree upon. I certainly don't agree that Homeopathy is not pseudoscience (it is rightly included in Category:Pseudoscience), nor do I agree that the term "pseudoscience" is a pejorative - and apparently neither does the Arbitration Committee. Dlabtot (talk) 02:09, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
To clarify what I said, I think we can all agree that it is controversial. —Whig (talk) 19:30, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think it would be premature to use the ultra-broad general sanctions imposed at Israel-Palestine - Thatcher, what are those sanctions? Perhaps some of them would be appropriate here. Fwiw, I generally support your motion. Dlabtot (talk) 05:26, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Dlabtot, here is the link to the Palestine-Israel sanctions. Thatcher 12:14, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment Thatcher, if you read past the rhethoric and look at the actual page disruptions, especially the ones that lead to a page being locked, you'll find that only one or two editors cause it while everyone else is participating on the talk page, acting civily and with respect for each other, trying to reach consensus despite individual differences in viewpoint. There really are only a handful of editors (less than five) who don't care about that process and just want their way, wiki-process be damned. The rhetoric you read from them centers around their view that the wiki-process of trying to develop consensus needs to be changed because they feel it is broken, when surprisingly this system seems to work for everyone else but them. The system isn't broke, just some editors don't care about it. Check the logs on the two articles you used as examples and see who caused the pages to be locked, and why. In both cases it's because they (admittedly) didn't care about the consensus-building process. They're the same ones that are saying massive reform needs to take place. While they're busy disrupting pages and saying Wikipedia is broken, everyone else is on the talk page trying to address actual problems. Please don't confuse their view as a correct assessment of the problem when they're the ones that are acting like WP:MASTADONS. Everyone else seems to be able to get along just fine. --Nealparr (talk to me) 01:23, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • I don't know to whom you are referring and perhaps it is best if you don't name names. Maybe. The point is that aside from a few single purpose accounts that have been banned for significant problems (Like User:Richard Malter and User:Asmodeus), three arbitration cases have not either resolved the problems of these articles or given admins tools to resolve them. Unless you can convince the Arbitrators to open a case against the 4 or 5 specific editors you are thinking of, the ability to levy page bans and 1RR limitation should allow admins to get these disputes under control. And if you are correct, then only those 4 or 5 editors will be affected. Thatcher 01:56, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
      • I would never dream of filing an arbitration case against the 4 or 5 mastadon editors who are actually disruptive, even if I wanted to, when vexatious complaints are considered part of the problem and any admin can ban me for it. As I'm sure you know, misreadings and misinterpretations are common at Wikipedia. I was just pointing out that there are far more editors willing to work together on these articles than those who don't, and that the handful of mastadons are the real problem. --Nealparr (talk to me) 05:09, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • The range of articles covered by Thatcher's proposal is remarkably broad. Of course, I've often agitated for something similar, so I can't argue with it. I'd only say that admin discretion is paramount: these articles are frequented by single-purpose agenda-driven accounts which edit-war, edit tendentiously, etc. These sanctions should not hit editors who have to deal with such accounts, but they run the risk of being used in such a manner. That said, provided there's some standard recourse for review of sanctions (via WP:AN/I and/or ArbCom), I would find myself hard-pressed to disagree with Thatcher on this. MastCell Talk 05:17, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
            • Odd you mention that, because it's exactly what led to this whole flareup. I can't mention names for fear of being sanctioned, but one editor that is a self-admitted agenda-driven editor had sanctions placed against him after two arbitrations where he was found to be consistently uncivil. He calls some people some names, someone complains, and the editor gets blocked. A few days after he is unblocked he edit wars against RfC consensus, someone complains, he gets blocked again, and two articles get locked down because of his massive edits that resulted in edit warring. A few days after that he is uncivil again and gets blocked again. In the wake of all this, a bunch of supporting editors say he's being "provoked" (though no one talked to him before the edits) and say that none of this is actually his fault but rather vexatious litigation. These editors are all riled up and calling for better tools to stop editors from "picking on him" (some of these people are admins). Look, I usually get along with the editor, and don't have a problem with him except when he's gone all angry mastadon, but sometimes we do disagree. How am I not supposed to be afraid of admins running around with banning powers on anyone they feel is disruptive?, some of whom clearly want to "avenge" him. It's just one editor who started this whole thing, while acting like your typical, angry, agenda-driven editor. Everyone else was mostly getting along. (Note: I didn't mention names and tried to be as civil as I could and still explain the situation the way it happened; please don't ban me). --Nealparr (talk to me) 06:09, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Why make the pretense of not naming names when you've done all but that? Although he cannot respond here due to his block, I've notified the ostensibly innominate user. Please, if a discussion like this ever comes up about me (even if not by name) at a place like this, extend me the same courtesy. Antelan talk 07:04, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If I had thought to I would have, but it's not like he can be sanctioned for anything I'm saying. He hasn't done anything new. My point is that these are broad ranging sanctions that could be misused, especially considering the exact circumstances involved that we're apparently not supposed to talk about because it's considered picking on someone. I don't understand any of this, quite frankly, because it focuses on possible future disruptions from a broad range of editors, when there's logs that show the locus of the dispute already in a small handful of editors. The locus is in editors who see Wikipedia as a battleground, not normal editors who get along and participate in normal content disputes. He knows how I feel about it, that I don't want him sanctioned further, and that I'd just like to see him stop being contentious. I'll send him a note. --Nealparr (talk to me) 07:25, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Honestly, if arbitration members feel it is a necessary addition to the Martinphi-ScienceApologist case to impose sanctions on a broad number of editors to prevent disruption, it's not that bad of a proposal. The current wording needs to drop the "vexatious litigation" part in a bad way though, because that's the part that is going to cause even more headaches as it's too open to interpretation. The proposal is effectively saying the ArbCom is tired of hearing about disruptions on these articles and is going to empower admins to deal with it by providing blocking tools. However, no one actually involved in the dispute is allowed to ask for help in resolving the situation because it may be interpreted as "solely to harass or subdue an adversary", in which case you'll be blocked too. Instead the only way to resolve the dispute is to hope that an uninvolved administrator happens upon the dispute by chance, reads through all the discussions, understands what's going on, and sides with you. Otherwise, you could get blocked just for telling the administrator that a disruptive editor made two reverts instead of one, or that someone called you a name. It happens. Busy admins don't always know what's going on and can interpret your good faith complaint in a bad way. I personally don't think that editors who try to work well with others, and don't see Wikipedia as a battleground, should be sanctioned and limited in what they can do here, but that's just my take on the subject. I am fully convinced, though, that imposing restrictions on what someone can complain about is just going to lead to more headaches. --Nealparr (talk to me) 11:46, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • So then, do you think that there should be no sanction for vexatious litigation? That someone should be able to bring repeated frivolous actions until they wear down their opposite number? Raymond Arritt (talk) 16:13, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
On one hand people are saying there's serious problems in these articles that to led to massive disruptions, and that editors should reign themselves in and follow normal dispute resolution processes. Then they say complaining is frivilous. The two views aren't compatible. --Nealparr (talk to me) 18:12, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sure they are compatible. Nobody is saying that complaining is frivolous. Frivolous complaints are frivolous. If someone is both litigious and can't tell the difference between frivolous and serious problems, they will quickly discover the difference. This isn't all that different from Wikipedia under normal conditions. Antelan talk 18:19, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Replied below. --Nealparr (talk to me) 19:40, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

(Unindented) If I may, here are two diffs the underscore the problem we are having with moving forward on many of these pages.[96] [97] I am not certain that admin tools alone will solve this problem. Regardless of the merits, I suspect admins, in good faith, could be found who would support both sides of these discussions. There are also admins, who in good faith, believe that discouraging "minority or fringe views" are more important than civility. Because of that, I am concern about the misuse of additional tools against editors who support the inclusion of RS/V minority views on fringe topics. Anthon01 (talk) 07:49, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • Yes, that's a valid point - it illustrates the fact that the Quackwatch article is being disrupted, as it has been for years, by voceferous opponents of mainstream medicine and Stephen Barrett, and that this is winding up those who are here to write an encyclopaedia rather than serve an agenda. So much so that several people believe you, Anthon01, to be Anthony Zaffuto, and thus almost certainly an unacceptable party on that page per the restrictions and ban on Ilena Rosenthal. Guy (Help!) 12:13, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You have made my point exactly. Here is an admin who has it in for me. IMO, he has it in for me because is certain situations I have opposed SA. It is probable that in most situations I would agree with SA. However in these cases it isn't so. Like SAs current attempt to purge wikipedia of most mention of homeopathy. Guy has admitted himself he has a prejudice against non-mainstream writers. What do I do about that? I see pattern with your accusations. They are baseless and diffless. Why don't you prove it! When are going to stop your baseless and diffless accusations? Anthon01 (talk) 15:56, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Instead of discussing the content or merits, Guy is baselessly accusing and attacking me personally. Is there a remedy for admin abuse? Anthon01 (talk) 16:03, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You've made a claim. Who are the several people? Isn't there a policy against revealing personal information "A user may be blocked when necessary to protect the rights, property or safety of the Wikimedia Foundation, its users or the public. A block for protection may be necessary in response to: ... * disclosing personal information (whether or not the information is accurate). Where do I address this issue? Anthon01 (talk) 16:27, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I assume Guy was referring to this discussion of you on the Administrator's noticeboard, but Guy can correct me if I'm wrong. Antelan talk 18:56, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Two questions here: (1) How can you reliably distinguish single-purpose and argumentative-but-new editors from new editors? To be frank, I don't trust the judgment of some administrators involved in this area when they label some editors as SPAs and trolls. (2) Under these sort of restrictions, what would have happened to User:MatthewHoffman? Would he have been indefinitely blocked? Should indefinite blocks be handed out as liberally as they are? (I see the provision here says that the blocks should be escalating - a point I wholeheartedly agree with). OK, that was more than two questions, but I don't want to see editors who participate constructively on talk pages banned merely because they argue for the wrong weight in an article. They can be wrong without being disruptive. Carcharoth (talk) 16:32, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

If the committee finds the inclusion of "vexatious litigation" to be a problem they can remove it. As anyone can see from the recent discussion of Martinphi at WP:AE, while I agree that Martinphi's current probation could allow him to be banned from pages like RFC and RFAR for making disruptive complaints, I would be very reluctant to actually do so. In response to Carcharoth, probations are usually enforced incrementally. If this expanded authority were passed, I would unprotect Homeopathy and WTBDWK and place all editors on 1 revert per week limit, while encouraging talk page discussion. The next step would be bans from the article while continuing to allow use of the talk page. Actual bans from talk space are very rare, even under Arbitration, and should obviously be used with caution. In the case of MatthewHoffman, if he was found to be disruptive, the sanction would call for an article ban, not a total ban, and he could appeal as indicated. Thatcher 17:35, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That sounds good. Are there restrictions on what other admins can do and how this interacts with other processes? For instance, what is admins disgreed on what to do and one of them carried out an indefinite block for reasons related to that article, or if a community discussion based on behaviour at that article ended up with a complete ban of a particular editor? Carcharoth (talk) 17:46, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Under the terms of the remedy, a user would have to have been banned from some articles and/or violated a 1RR limit and been blocked at least 5 times before we started talking about an indefinite ban under the remedy. Arbitration remedies do not supersede ordinary admin action but are meant to give admins more tools; they do not immunize the editor from ordinary and normal discretionary actions. Suppose an editor was placed on 1RR for all pseudoscience articles, and later edit wars on an unrelated article; he could blocked for edit warring with or without violating 3RR at any admin's discretion like any other editor can be. Likewise the community can discuss and implement a community ban for someone even without that editor having reached his sixth blocking offense under the remedy, such discussion to be subject to the usual rules for such things. Thatcher 18:03, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I would support wholeheartedly these new restrictions. I think we have been too accommodating so far and that has not resolved much. These articles can and should be able to achieve NPOV and stability if the opposing parties would allow/encourage wider participation. I attempted offer help at the Quackwatch article and some other articles, but iy is extremely tedious and after a while whatever gains are made, are lost again in the never ending disputes. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 18:35, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I would remove the ""vexatious litigation" item, though. Users need to have a way to alert admins and others without the fear that if they do, they will get dinged. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 18:42, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I understand your (and Nealparr's) concern. But the history of the present case shows that vexatious litigation has been an ongoing problem with these users. I'd rather leave this in and have it be applied with the same judgment and common sense we must use in any other administrative provision. Raymond Arritt (talk) 18:52, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ongoing problem? Let's look at that. Vexatious litigation is a "frivilous" complaint meant solely to remove an opponent, and here that's being defined as a disruption worthy of blocking. That's odd, because the whole purpose of the arbitration committee, and the arbitration enforcement page, is for people to come and complain about their opponent civily and seek remedy, presumably to have that opponent sanctioned for their actions. Again, calling that frivilous is incompatible with also treating dispute resolution seriously. This proposal criminalizes normal dispute resolution processes, with the possibility of blocking, and instead leaves the interpretation of what's frivilous up to any random admin. I have a problem with that. Namely because I was the one who pointed out that ScienceApologist has a history of being incivil in this very arbitration. I posted diffs stating that he was warned for incivility before, and then posted diffs showing that he continued doing so. In the arbitration I was accused by other editors, I think even an admin, of doing all of that just to support Martinphi. By this definition and remedy, apparently I was being frivilous and should be blocked because at least one admin thought I was frivilous. What common sense is there in that? The dispute resolution process is supposed to be about showing evidence of problems in opponents. It's probably for that reason that vexation litigation isn't in WP:DE, WP:DR, WP:HARASS or any other guideline that I'm aware of. When you have what you feel is a legitimate complaint you're supposed to take it to an authority who can help you. --Nealparr (talk to me) 19:39, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If the vexatious litigation clause were left in, it would be subject to the same admin discretion as the other remedies, plus could be appealable. Plus. if someone who had cried wolf too many times then had a legit complaint, he could ask and admin to review it and, if legit, the admin could temporarily lift the restriction. I'd rather not have to write that level of detail into a remedy that should be interpretable with common sense, but maybe it should be specified. Eh. Thatcher 19:28, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It would probably help if you established a basis for including it first before adding detail on how to interpret it. So far I've only seen people file complaints for what they believe are legitimate complaints. It's not been established that any complaint has been raised in bad faith. --Nealparr (talk to me) 19:39, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I understand it's hard to keep up with everything, but for what it's worth, several notices have been filed here, at ArbEnforcement, on the Admin Noticeboard, and elsewhere. I think there's a reasonable basis for this vexatious litigation element, and I'd be willing to go through the effort of compiling links to different filings if you haven't seen them. That said, I am OK with whatever, if anything, the Arbitrators decide. Antelan talk 20:33, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A list doesn't demonstrate bad faith is my point. All the filings against ScienceApologist could be in the list, his filings against Martinphi could be as well, it could include filings that I'm not aware of, and the list would still not demonstrate that the intent was anything other than to resolve what they felt was legitimate disruptive editing. Filing complaints is not bad faith, nor is it disruptive (as this proposal suggests) especially when everywhere you turn it's what's encouraged instead of being disruptive. --Nealparr (talk to me) 21:10, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Isn't "vexatious litigation" a self-correcting problem? Because anyone who brings (for example) a request for arbitration, becomes subject to that arbitration... I'd also like to note that this whole matter of "vexatious litigation" really seems to be a veiled reference to Martinphi's request above - which is in its essence, no different from the one we are commenting on here, except that it was brought by an involved party, and was therefore couched in more one-sided terms. Dlabtot (talk) 19:39, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Besides the built-in self-correcting mechanism, don't admin already have tools to deal with vexing complaints? Anthon01 (talk) 05:53, 22 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It would be helpful if editors can show us something which they considered to be vexatious litigation against ScienceApologist or Martinphi and explained to us exactly why they feel this way. Right now, I don't know how admins could draw the line if we as a community don't identify exactly where that line lies. -- Levine2112 discuss 02:55, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Please. We weren't born yesterday. This was pointed out in the latest of many postings to the ArbCom enforcement page, and you were involved in that discussion. This situation is characterised by entrenched positions. There are more editors pushing the pseudo / fringe POV on most of those articles, and the pro-mainstream POV is a lot closer to NPOV. No attempt has been made by either party to work with the other, and there is a constant attempt by the pseudo and fringe side to continually redraw a new average between the current article content and their POV, a creeping fallacy of false middle. The repeated postings to the arbcom enforcement page are as close to harassment as makes no difference, and it needs to stop. Guy (Help!) 21:19, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That didn't even come near to answering my question. What I am looking for is an example of what editors considered to be vexatious litigation against ScienceApologist or Martinphi and an explanation. What I am not looking for is hostility. You talk about parties coming together to work, but all I see to get from you is grief. All the time. Again, all I was asking for is an example and an explanation. Just provide a link and a rationale. That's all. -- Levine2112 discuss 04:23, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I think everyone should take a moment of reflection here - there are people who are compensated to cast doubt on modern science - they are professional PR individuals. There are no individuals compensated to set the record straight - those people are required to be volunteers who love knowledge. This is a real and substantial problem, and it resonates throughout this project. The difference between the two is obvious and readily transparent. PouponOnToast (talk) 22:11, 23 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

As a pure volunteer myself, it could easily be viewed in the opposite way, with a strong financial interest of pharmaceutical interests versus alternative medicine practices that rely on no patented methods. I think there are a wide mix of editors from every perspective, and assuming good faith is the best policy. —Whig (talk) 22:37, 23 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Motions in prior cases

Motions