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"Readd" is ugly

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"Readd" sounds ugly to my (non-American English) ears.

Unless someone objects (and provides sound reasons), I would like to change the essay to read as follows on or after 5 November 2007 (and then perform the appropriate re-direction):

If an editor removes a comment from their talk page, whether the comment is legitimate or not, do not add the comment back again. Respect their wishes. It's counter-productive to force the issue.

Note that users who repeatedly restore comments to a user's talk page more than three times in a 24 hour period may be blocked for violating the three-revert rule.

Alice.S 04:51, 28 October 2007 (UTC)

I agree with this. When I read the headline, I suspected it was a mis-spelled "read" and was temporarily confused why one should not "read removed comments". --NotSarenne 20:35, 3 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
If I'm not mistaken, "Readd" is incorrect even in AmEng. "Re-add" would be the correct spelling of such a construction, though in this case "restore" works just fine. --King ♣ Talk 14:47, 8 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Confusing

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I think the page should be moved to Wikipedia:Don't re-add removed comments (with a dash), because when I first saw this I thought it was a typo. Noahcs 00:19, 5 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Moved

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I have now made the consensual edit timetabled above.

Since there seemed to be no voices or sentiments against, I also took the liberty of re-directing the essay to "Don't restore removed comments" (to avoid potential hyphenization arguments amongst various WP:ENGVAR users...)Alice.S 06:50, 5 November 2007 (UTC)

Behavioural guideline

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I have today reverted an IP edit that attempted to upgrade this essay to a "behavioural guideline". If I was in error, I would appreciate an indication here as to the promotion mechanism/decision. Alice.S 11:02, 27 November 2007 (UTC)

Even vandalism and blockings?

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I came across this exchange between two editors about whether or not one should restore vandalism and block warnings that have been placed on someone's Talk page. Is this guideline saying that one shouldn't? And if so, doesn't that reduce editors' ability to track and stop vandalism? Shawn in Montreal 22:08, 1 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

You raise an excellent point for further discussion - these are still only proposed guidelines and not yet adopted. Alice.S 22:12, 1 December 2007 (UTC)
Paraphrasing a previous quote from my talk page, it seems very counter to common sense that a user would be allowed to remove warnings from their own talk page while they were in the very act of vandalism. I can understand such a guideline written in an spirit of good faith where a user removes content from their talk page that is related to a edit dispute, personally objectionable comments, or just plain vandalism. However, even under the most pedantic interpretation of WP:DRC (as it exists today), it could not intend to allow a means for a vandal to hide their warnings as they continue vandalizing, especially when it is evident that there isn't a snowball's chance in hell the vandal is going to stop. In my opinion, a persistent vandal, by his or her very actions, forfeits their right to remove warnings from their talk page. Consistently removing them should itself be a further violation of WP:3RR, not a violation against the person replacing the warnings. ++Arx Fortis 23:49, 1 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I concur - the difficulty comes in deciding who shall judge the warnings to be justified and, thus, not removeable. I am at this very moment engaged in a non-dialogue with a problematic user who instantly removes any "blemish" on his talk page. Perhaps there should be a special admins board to adjudicate on whether warnings are frivolous or inappropriate? Alice.S 23:57, 1 December 2007 (UTC)
Are there a lot of instances where vandalism warnings are applied without justification? I mean, how big a problem is that -- compared to vandalism which we know is a problem? Shawn in Montreal 00:55, 2 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In numerical terms, rather small I would guess. But I think I read somewhere that although millions of accounts and IP's have edited our encyclopedia, there is a hard core of less than 5000 users that are responsible for most of the good articles. Applying warnings as a form of harassment can be very relevant when the regulars are templated - either accidentally or deliberately. (see my talk pages "P section" for an inkling of the potential problem...)Alice.S 15:40, 2 December 2007 (UTC)

Would I have the right to modify the project page to state that this guideline not apply to removed vandalism and blocking warnings -- as they are vital tools in identifying and stopping vandalism and disruptive behaviour -- and that Wikipedia should work to find another recourse for editors who feel that warnings have been placed on their Talk pages without good cause (along the lines of what Alice.S suggests above?). Shawn in Montreal 14:50, 2 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I'm brand new here, but I've formed an impression that everything is supposed to work by the magical process of consensus. How's about proposing a form of words here for the addition and then we can comment on its merits or otherwise?
By the way, I've just changed the user talk reference you gave at the start of this section to one that won't change if Arx Fortis archives or changes his user talk page (which I thought appropriate given the project page we're discussing - girlish grin). Just revert me if you think you should! Alice.S 15:40, 2 December 2007 (UTC)

I'm relatively new, too. How about this proposed wording. What do people think:

  • It is recommended that this proposed guidline not apply to vandalism warnings and notifications that editors have been blocked for such behaviour, as they are a vital means for tracking and stopping vandalism.

How's that? (Minus the Canadian spelling, of course) Shawn in Montreal 16:32, 2 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Looks pretty good, though some valid points have been brought up.
1. The exception we are discussing should apply only to current vandals (i.e. repeating, in-progress or very recent vandalism), similar to the way WP:AIV works. In fact, it becomes rather time-consuming to provide appropriate documentation for WP:AIV if vandalism warnings have been removed from his or her talk page. It goes from a simple 'User talk:' reference to multiple 'diff' references (once you've found them all, provided you're even aware of them).
2. The exception is not intended to apply to a vandalism warning posted in the heat of a legitimate edit dispute over content provided both parties are working in good faith.
3. Lastly, the exception does not mean warnings have to remain on a user's talk page indefinitely. People who stumble across Wikipedia may vandalize without really understanding the impact of what they are doing. Thus, they may get a warning template or two. When a user demonstrates constructive contributions, they should feel free to remove warnings from their talk page. ++Arx Fortis 19:45, 2 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
My proposals would be
  1. to continue the immunity from being blocked automatically for WP:3RR to the talk page owner (but not the non-owner) on a reference to the WP:AN/3RR notice board, but remind the whitewashing talk page owner that, if there is no justification for continual deletions of good faith warnings, comments and questions, he may still find himself blocked judiciously for edit warring and/or incivility.
  2. to remove that immunity from being blocked automatically for WP:3RR to the talk page owner where he successively removes warnings that have been restored by an administrator specifically stating that he is restoring comments/warnings while acting as an administrator and extend that immunity to any ordinary user who restores (successively or not) these type of administrator sanctioned warnings/comments
  3. develop an appeal template (similar to a block appeal template) to appeal for permission to remove the latter class of warning where it is disputed or the talk page owner believes it is time-expired or has served its purpose.
If these proposals are accepted, there would need to be appropriate amendments made to WP:3RR#Exceptions Alice.S 20:33, 2 December 2007 (UTC)

Well, you're both vastly better informed than I am. I've struck my suggestion. Yours should be the basis upon which further discussion takes place. Thanks, Shawn in Montreal 20:52, 2 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

So nothing ever happened with this?
I admit it is not exactly an every day problem, but I would say maybe once a month or so I encounter someone who evades a block for much longer than they ought, creating a lot of other work for people in the process, because they remove the warnings from their page and other editors coming along to add more warnings/assess the possibility of a block simply do not bother to check the page history.
My proposal would have been that you can't delete a good faith warning for 24 hours or something like that. (Obviously bad faith warnings would be considered vandalism and wouldn't count) That way, nobody is stuck with a warning, but at least we can see a little bit of short-term history about who has tangled with the offending editor/vandal. --Jaysweet (talk) 16:23, 7 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The recommendation of WikiProject user warnings is to put the name of the warning template in your edit summary. As an example, when 208.27.127.62 (talk · contribs) made this vandalism edit, I placed [1] {{subst:uw-vandalism3|Charles Duke}} --~~~~ on their talk page with an edit summary of {{uw-vandalism3}}. Speaking as a blocking admin, I always check the talk page history first when investigating a WP:AIV report. Blocking is quick and easy when you see a progression of four recent warnings like this in the edit summaries. --Kralizec! (talk) 16:38, 7 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well, I use Twinkle, so Twinkle does what Twinkle does.
I guess the problem is not so much with admins not checking history after a WP:AIV, but with vandal patrollers not checking history when they give a warning (including myself). It's an extra step, and with the amount of vandalism going on, it's an extra step I'm not likely to start doing any time soon.
If there were some pressing reason to let people immediately remove good faith warnings from their talk pages, then I think the extra step would be justified. But I see no legitimate reason to immediately remove a good faith warning. None at all. I mean, there are plenty of illegitimate reasons, like you find it embarrassing that you got caught, or you want people to fail to realize you have already been warned, etc. But I don't see any legitimate reasons for immediate removal of a warning.
If the person reforms and becomes a good Wikipedian, they can remove the warning then. I don't think anybody has a problem with someone removing stale warnings...
I really don't understand what possesses the Wikipedia community to think this is a good idea, but hey, I don't write the checks, so whatever.. --Jaysweet (talk) 16:46, 7 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

What about IP addresses?

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Should this essay specify registered users? I have no problem with a registered user deleting warnings from their talk page; that counts as tacit acknowledgment of them in my book. Anonymous users - IP address accounts - present another issue. Because there's no continuity of users, removing the comments leave an impartial record to the reader. How can they understand why they were blocked with only a block message on the page, because a previous anonymous user on that IP deleted the warnings? Likewise, it makes it harder for persons patrolling vandalism to assess how much has been coming from the IP.

I have no problem with old warnings being taken off IP address pages, but I think fresh ones (last 30 days) should stay - and I think this essay should address that. —C.Fred (talk) 23:17, 5 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I concur. Excellent point, Fred! Alice.S 23:23, 5 December 2007 (UTC)
It is my experience (prior to when I used an account) that users are not supposed (or allowed?) to remove messages from anonymous talk pages (IP talk pages), regardless of if the messages are warnings or discussion....and it is recommended that users create an account in order to maintain their own talk page. ++Arx Fortis (talk) 06:26, 6 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yet there are plenty of anonymous IP users - self included - who have no particular interest in establishing a registered account, and yet maintain USER and/or TALK pages. I am unaware of any policy or guideline or even essay which suggests we are somehow second-class citizens here, with fewer rights. I acknowledge that the price of my anonymity is that if my IP is randomly assigned to some schmuck who vandalizes and gets the IP banned, them's the breaks. 71.9.8.150 (talk) 23:20, 6 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Some very interesting points were brought up above. Keep it up! HaereMai (talk) 05:48, 9 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Intro sentence

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On my talkpage, there has been a very short discussion of the way the first sentence reads. How about: If an editor removes a comment (legitimate or not) from their talk page, do not add the comment back.

or (legitimate or otherwise) ?

I broke sentences up in this essay because I felt they were long and bulky. Perhaps a recast of that sentence will retain pertinent info without sounding stuffy/stilted or hastily-written? MKoltnow 00:38, 15 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The current wording, a good faith attempt to address this issue, is worse IMHO. Add back the comment is not proper in American English and sounds very wrong to my ears. To me it is just like : "throw the baby down the stairs her blanket." I like the proposal made above by MKoltnow, so I'll put that in for now and see if anyone objects. JERRY talk contribs 03:52, 15 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In case I ever need to say it, how exactly would I voice the command to "throw the blanket down the stairs to reach the owner (a baby) who is situate at the foot of the stairs" in American English (grin)?
Seriously, I do think that your version reads much better than mine. Well done! Alice 11:14, 15 January 2008 (UTC)
"Throw a blanket downstairs to the baby". JERRY talk contribs 19:16, 15 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think I'm going to have to file an Rfc about American Cultural Imperialism - surely "Throw her blanket downstairs to the baby" ? (huge grin). Alice 19:22, 15 January 2008 (UTC)
You make a good point, I was leaving out the possibly important data that the baby was female, and somehow owned the blanket. But at least the baby survived my version. :) JERRY talk contribs 19:51, 15 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thinking on it a bit more, your last version is still a bit ambiguous. In your version it is possible that the baby is a boy and/or does not own the blanket, but some other unspecified female owns the blanket. "I see Jane left her stuff up there again; throw her blanket downstairs to the baby, because he wants it." There may not be a short way to make this absolutely clear without other sentences around it to provide context. All the more reason to avoid regional variations of english which make a particular incorrect interpretation more likely to some editors. JERRY talk contribs 19:56, 15 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Complaining to ANI about removal of warning templates

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"If an editor removes such a warning shortly after being told not to, then this should be reported to WP:ANI or WP:AIV for administrator attention." - I know this is an essay, but even so, that is not the case, and that sentence should probably be removed. Users have the right to remove any warning or message from their own talk page, whenever they like. Neıl 15:39, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

That is exactly this debate/discussion that is going on, Neil. No consensus has been reached. There are some very valid points in the sections above about certain instances where a user should not revert warnings. ++Arx Fortis (talk) 16:08, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hopefully, all Wikipedians would agree that the purpose of User Talk pages is to assist communication between editors.
Perhaps the $64,000 dollar question is whether that communication is intended to be purely, solely and exclusively a "hub and spoke" conversation between the user whose talk page the conversation is taking place on and other editors OR whether there are occasions when it would be useful (to the project in general) to quickly and clearly see important communications (without having to wade through what may be a very long edit history in the case of consistently problematic users who instantly and repeatedly delete unfavourable comments and warnings).
A compromise needs to be drawn here between the desire to protect reformed users from having a "wall of shame" and the need for problematic patterns of behaviour to be quickly and easily tracked and action taken. A balance needs to be struck between the wishes of the individual (miscreant?) editor and our project as a whole. When Wikipedia was a very small community we could err on the side of courtesy and tolerance but now that we have grown larger perhaps the balance needs to be re-drawn a smidgeon... Alice 21:21, 18 January 2008 (UTC)
I couldn't agree more with Alice. When vandal-fighters revert and warn, they often look at the existing page to see what level of warning to give out. Having to read the history to know whether existing warnings have been erased makes that task more challenging. While it's clear that users don't need a wall of shame on their talk pages, most editors separate vandal warnings by month and year. Perhaps it's reasonable to allow removal after some time--particularly one in which the editor continued to edit without warnings being issued. And let's face it, the typical editor who immediately removes a warning from his page after it's been issued is one who is likely to cause more problems. MKoltnow 22:35, 18 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Those are certainly examples of the sort of thing I had in mind, MKoltnow. I would like to expand on your fixed expiry period idea so as to avoid revert warring on User Talk pages (which is, of course, the fundamental rationale for making an exception to the general prohibition on removing another editor's comments from a talk page) and seek to agree a specific period for warnings (Templated or hand-crafted) to remain visible: One calendar month.
One calendar month is easy to calculate for humans - will robots be able to calculate that too?
I would also suggest a specific provision for any admin (except an admin removing warnings from his own talk page) to remove warnings earlier if, in his sole discretion, the warning is not needed (either because the warning is/was unjustified or has become redundant.
Finally, I would suggest that an exception be made to both of these provisions in the case of warnings left by users who have not registered and/or logged on - these IP comments should still be able to be removed at the whim of the owner of the User Talk page. Alice 23:04, 18 January 2008 (UTC)
I disagree with that last bit, we already have in there the thing about unless obviously left in bad faith... a good faith warning from an anon is no less valid than the same warning from a registered user.JERRY talk contribs 20:01, 19 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The devil is in the detail, as ever. There is a greater percentage of trolling and vandalism that comes from IP's and we want this rule to be as simple as possible to administer. Of course being an IP editor does not preclude placing a valid warning - but under my proposal they would be no more disadvantaged than at present. Essentially there are three broad classes of IP's who may be placing warnings:
  1. those who have forgotten to log on - they can simply log on and replace the deleted warning placed as an IP with one that will endure for one month under their normal user account
  2. those who refuse to log on for a variety of reasons, some acceptable, some not - they should forfeit their right to place an enduring warning since they can always ask another editor to do this
  3. those who have not yet created an account - this will be one more reason to register. Alice 06:53, 20 January 2008 (UTC)
As for the removal of recent warnings, I firmly believe that 30 days is a reasonable period of time to allow for project purposes described above to be met, while not creating a permanent wall of shame. If the users just keep immediately removing warnings, then they would likely get a test-1 warning from multiple editors doing their best to assume good faith, while allowing clearly-inappropriate behavior to perpetuate into unnecessary disruption by the problematic editor. JERRY talk contribs 20:01, 19 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That's good. Does anyone think that 30 days is too long? Alice 06:53, 20 January 2008 (UTC)
I think 30 minutes is too long. The usual response to complaints posted on ANI that read "User:X removed my warning so I reverted him and then he removed it again" is (paraphrasing) "Quit being a douche and let him remove the warning. It's in the history, so this accomplishes nothing". Remeber, the purpose of warning templates is not to mark out problem users for future reference. The purpose is to inform the user that their conduct is unhelpful and if continued may lead to a block. If they remove the template, then they have clearly read it, and the purpose has been achieved. Nobody is going to block users for removing warning templates from their own talk page. They may block "vandal fighters" edit warring to keep them on there, though. Neıl 19:59, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The purpose for the warnings remaining is not to assist administrators to see what has occurred, it is to assist editors on patrol to correctly determine the proper level to use for multi-level warning templates. Without the warnings, editors will normally continue to leave numerous consecutive test-1's when escalation is the appropriate action. Obviously an admin processing a AN/I or AIV will do thorough research and look at contributions, deleted contributions, etc, but anti-vandal patrollers will not do this, and should not be expected to. JERRY talk contribs 20:39, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Why not? An anti-vandal patroller should be looking at the user's contributions before issuing a warning template - this would show if any warnings had been removed by the user. Neıl 20:58, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That's preposterous! This level of investigation is certainly not done by patrollers reverting vandalism and leaving warning templates. They should and do put that much effort in prior to submitting to ANI or AIV, but not when just warning about a revert. We must be practical. JERRY talk contribs 21:21, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
There's a flaw in the logic here - so if the patroller isn't checking to see if warnings have been removed, then how would you know to enforce this rule that "warnings should not be removed"? Neıl 21:32, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Somebody will probably catch the removal while reviewing a special wikipedia page called "recent changes". But somebody who sees a vandalism edit and reverts it will not likely look over the editor's talk page history to decide what level of template to give. If the page is empty they will just give test-1. So the vandal would just get test-1 over and over and over and over again. JERRY talk contribs 01:09, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

[deindent] I do not concede that the only utility to leaving a warning template is to inform the user, Neill. However, even if that were conceded, is it not better that the errant user is informed by an appropriately escalating series of templated warnings rather than inevitably concluding (hopefully wrongly) that these warnings are toothless and can safely be ignored?

I do take your point, Neill, about it being possibly vague, subjective and arbitrary for the user themselves to decide when a warning has been left in bad faith. Normally I do not think that standard templated warnings would be given precedence over a hand-crafted, customised, original warnings but, in this case, I make an exception. The standard template warnings (unless recently vandalised) are unlikely to be offensive and so I have edited the wording of the essay just now to remove some of your objections, I hope. As currently worded, it is only these standard templated warnings where there is a prohibition on removal within one calendar month.

One other point to consider would be robot-placed template warnings. I think these should be in the same class as IP template warnings and removable at whim. What do others feel? Alice 02:32, 21 January 2008 (UTC)

Neil is right. This isn't going to happen. Admins are not going to be willing to block users over something as (to put it quite honestly) dumb as removing a warning template, especially since users frequently issue them in error (or deliberately issue them wrongly). Admins and vandal patrollers alike simply need to look through the history of the user's talk page and the user's contribs to determine what level is appropriate. I also find it rather odd that warning templates would be privileged over other comments to be unassailable in this way. Warning templates are nothing more than a shortcut so you don't have to repeatedly type the same message. They do not have any status above some other type of comment. (Note that I never use templates when notifying users they have been blocked for edit warring. Does this mean that my notices can be removed, while someone who uses a block template will have their message remain for 30 days?) Heimstern Läufer (talk) 03:24, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, there would be no change under the proposal as presently formulated. Your handcrafted block warning could be removed at present and it could in future under this proposal. The rationale for this is that your handcrafted individual block notice might (in your illustrious case, unwittingly) have been unnecessarily offensive, whereas the templated block notice has had the benefit of calm and sober reflection (and discussion) by more than one editor. This seeming anomaly is intended to address Neil's point about who gets to decide if a warning is an offensive one or not. The point about who decides if it is in bad faith or not would be addressed by an administrator - so presumably you could tell the blocked user that he technically can (but is advised not to) remove the hand-crafted part but not the template part until the expiry of one calendar month. If this advice is ignored you would have no more and no less grounds to take further action than you do now. I don't propose spelling out in the essay that the calendar month prohibition on removal is toothless, though. Alice 08:16, 21 January 2008 (UTC)

Oppose I'm coming here from WT:UTM, but I speak only for myself. I see no good in this proposal, and a very large potential for harassment. At any rate, this is only an essay and thus cannot mandate any such thing.

Here is an anecdote: Recently I observed an editor (who should have known better, having over 19000 edits) making a third revert to a wikiproject guideline page to restore their proposed changes despite several calls to bring the matter to the talk page for discussion. I reverted and gave the user a {{uw-3rr}} warning, although I incorrectly implied in my edit summary that the user had already passed 3rr rather than run right up to the edge of it. The user then tried to get me to discuss the issue on my talk page, to which I replied that discussion of the issue belonged on the guideline's talk page. The user proceeded several times to demand I discuss it in the wrong place, to which I replied by removing the demands with an edit summary pointing to the appropriate forum for the discussion. Then, ignoring the WP:3RR exception for a user's own user pages, they proceeded to place a bad-faith 3rr warning on my talk page and send an email threatening to report the situation (I wish they would have, really). Under your proposed changes to this page (were it enforceable), I would have to either pester an admin or keep that bad-faith warning on my talk page for a month, which would only contribute to that editor's attempt to harass me over that issue.

To make checking the history easy, WP:UTM recommends that the warning template and level be included in the edit summary so anyone interested need only glance down the history page to see record of recent warnings. IMO, this is sufficient. Anomie 03:35, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Two small points:
  1. I don't see anyone above suggesting that users be blocked for removing templates within 30 days. Sometimes guidance alone is quite effective without sanctions. Especially as the text removed (see section below) specifically included the rejoinder: "Do not edit war over warnings."
  2. You say "pester" but in the example you gave there would have been absolutely nothing prohibiting you from explaining, directly underneath the bad faith warning, your explanation of exactly why you thought it unjustified (as an alternative to pestering an administrator) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Alice (talkcontribs) 06:47, 21 January 2008 UTC
Err, did I say anything about blocking? And how is "wall of shame with explanation" a good solution? Anomie 13:26, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

removed text from lead paragraph

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"Do not, however, edit other people's comments to change what they wrote (even if you think you're helping)."

Although I have no contention with this statement, it seems completely unrelated to the lead paragraph, and possiblt unrelated to the point of this essay. Discuss... JERRY talk contribs 06:11, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The sentence you excised was my re-phrasing of another editor's addition, and I thought it less dangerous for the first paragraph to read:
"If an editor removes a comment from their own talk page, (legitimate or not), it should remain removed. By removing the comment, the user has verified that they have read it. The comment is still in the page history, so it is not important to keep it visible, just to prove that they were told about it. Do not, however, edit other people's comments to change what they wrote (even if you think you're helping)."
so as to avoid a naive (or wikilawyering) editor suggesting that he could just remove at will those portions of criticism that he objected to. We're talking "normal" comments here, not the warnings that we propose should endure for 30 days, so I think that this restatement of existing WP:TALK guidelines is helpful and appropriate at that point. On balance, I think it should be restored and if you don't disagree, I'd be grateful if you would. Alice 07:03, 20 January 2008 (UTC)
Ah, I understand what it was referring-to, now. I have put in a new second paragraph that states this in detail, and offers some common-sense exceptions. I also moved the bit about 3RR to the end. Let me know what you think. As before, change it if it needs improvement. Thanks, JERRY talk contribs 16:25, 20 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Section removed

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Even though this is just an essay, the following section has been removed because it directs editors to violate official Wikipedia policy:


Both the official policy on vandalism and the guideline on user pages are very clear that registered users may remove messages at will from their own talk pages. While I personally agree with the thrust of this essay, the right to delete comments from your userspace talk page has been official Wikipedia policy for over two years, and telling editors otherwise is an invitation to disaster. --Kralizec! (talk) 04:18, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

That's the exact same point I made - glad to see I'm not alone on this. Neıl 12:44, 22 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Summary as was edited is not policy

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Removal of comments, warnings

WP:UP#CMT WP:BLANKING

Policy does not prohibit users from removing comments from their own talk pages, although archiving is preferred. The removal of a warning is taken as evidence that the warning has been read by the user. Deleted warnings can still be found in the page history.

Awotter (talk) 06:15, 1 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Disagree

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I largely disagree with this essay. The user talk page does not exist only for the user in question (unlike, say a user's personal email address). It is designed to help the wiki function smoothly. When users remove comments prematurely, or without archiving, that makes it difficult (though of course, not impossible) for others to see warnings and concerns the user has heard in the past. Thus, I tend to revert such blanking when the page contains warnings; I always add a note recommending the user archive instead. I have done so recently, which is indirectly what brought me here. Superm401 - Talk 03:56, 4 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

If you or any other editor places a warning on a talk page the history remains. Any user has the right to delete them. To say otherwise or propose another layer of bureaucratic gobbledygook just seems unnecessarily intrusive. Good editors can be offended and even driven away (seen it already) and the bad ones don't care.Awotter (talk) 04:31, 4 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I know the history remains. But it's a hassle to make editors dig through it just because users don't want anyone to see negative feedback at first glance. I don't see this as complex gobbledygook. How complex is, "Don't blank your talk page."? Superm401 - Talk 07:18, 4 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It's usually not the initial action that's gobbledygook, it's the follow-up that can be a nightmare. As I'm sure you are aware now it's sometimes easy to misunderstand a policy, guideline or procedure, especially when that involves correcting a mistake or resolving a dispute. Template warnings are fine and save time, but if the situation requires patience, then direct communication would seem to me much better and that is a better respect of good faith actions. Other editors have addressed the fact that it may be a pain in the butt to review a users contribution history, but the time it saves in preventing misunderstandings is worth it.Awotter (talk) 09:11, 4 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Let's say we had a policy that warnings can't be removed, then what would happen? If someone's prepared to break policy by, say, vandalising articles, then why wouldn't they be prepared to break policy by blanking warnings? It would be a completely useless policy. Put that together with the reality that the practice of restoring warnings in the past resulted in harassment and other such ills on more than a few occasions, and the only reasonable conclusion is that this essay is on the ball on that count.
Some recommended reading: here and here. --bainer (talk) 08:43, 4 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Let me rephrase that argument, but for something different Wikipedia does ban (last time I checked). Let's say we had a policy against personal attacks. If someone's prepared to break policy by, say, vandalising articles, then why wouldn't they be prepared to break policy by attacking other editors? It would be a completely useless policy. Put that together with the reality that the practice of banning personal attacks in the past resulted in harassment and other such ills on more than a few occasions, and the only reasonable conclusion is that this essay is on the ball on that count.
Neither your argument nor the essay does much to explain why we should allow blanking. No one seems to dispute that it makes it more difficult for other editors, and the talk page clearly is meant to serve the wiki not just the editor (it isn't private email like Special:Emailuser). Moreover, the essay doesn't even give your argument. It just says the editor has obviously read what they removed (true, but irrelevant). Superm401 - Talk 13:44, 4 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
From your links, I see, "The main use of these is when a user is on a vandalism spree and is removing warnings as fast as they're getting them; otherwise it would be possible for a user to get nothing but test1s and not be blocked. Some vandalfighters don't check talkpage history when warning a user (probably to speed up their vandalfighting).", by ais523. I strongly agree with this. The reply was, "Every vandal-fighter who is worth his salt always checks the user's contributions link and so sees that warnings have been removed.", by Kusma. Great, so now vandalism patrol is more than twice as slow an automatic tools like TW don't work. And why is this again? Besides the idea that people OWN their talk page? Superm401 - Talk 13:50, 4 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I also disagree with this. A talk page is not a user's ownership --TheFEARgod (Ч) 16:26, 4 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I delete everything from my user talk page. Jecowa (talk) 18:12, 5 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
As is your right as a registered user per the WP:VAN and WP:USER policies. --Kralizec! (talk) 18:41, 5 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Ridiculous policy

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I just became aware of this absurd vandal protection "policy." This is beyond idiotic. I wonder what vandal came up with it? We can't re-add warnings/blocks of active/persistent vandals? This is genius! Why don't we give them barnstars for vandalizing instead! Red Harvest (talk) 18:23, 21 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Editing warring with a user on their own talk page is the height of futility. And to answer your question, this "policy" was not written by a vandal, it was derived from preexisting rules. Specifically, the official policy on Vandalism was updated [2] 989 days ago, and the User page guideline was updated [3] 589 days ago to explicitly state that users may remove content at will from their own talk pages. --Kralizec! (talk) 00:47, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It's not edit warring with them, it is a signpost for other non-vandal editors. It also serves as a quick reminder that others know what the perp is up to. If they want to continue vandalizing after that, then they have no excuses and should be treated accordingly. I'm continously amazed at the high regard some wikipedians, and very unfortunatley influential ones, have for vandals. Red Harvest (talk) 01:51, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Another point that should be made is that as the user is accumulating warnings I can see NO VALID REASON that a full listing of prior ones should not be included. There is a reason that the vandalism and 3RR's are coming up on their talk page. The final paragraph of the essay that I object to is all about making such information difficult for other editors to find.

Are there exceptions? Sure. If someone has not been vandalizing recently then reposting their warnings is not particularly friendly. And having a true edit war on their page reposting one over and over again (with no new additions) would be different. That's not what I'm talking about. I'm pointing to the problem of the full list of warnings not being available when someone is actively undermining the system. Why make it easy for vandals and hard on good faith editors and administrators? At wiki no good deed shall go unpunished. Red Harvest (talk) 02:09, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Not edit warring? Of course it is! What is an edit war, if not the repeated reverting of another user's edits? What are warnings for? Do you seriously think their primary purpose is to serve as scarlet letters? Or are they intended to notify a user that their behavior is potentially disruptive and/or a violation of current policy? A page's history is best revealed by... you guessed it, the page's history tab. Relying on current page display offers nothing but a false sense of security, with the added bonus of poisoning the well against reform and endorsing systemic harassment of users who set a toe out of line. – Luna Santin (talk) 20:00, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Looking into things a bit, it looks like you came to this page after getting into an argument with User:Ctjf83 over some talk page warnings you were restoring; you seem concerned that repeated disruptive behavior from some user is being swept under the rug, I think referring to User:Emir34. I notice that user is currently blocked (for 72 hours), and will probably be reblocked in the event disruptive behavior continues after this block expires. I'd be happy to look into that, if you have repeated problems with them. – Luna Santin (talk) 20:10, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It appears that Emir34‎ (talk · contribs · block log) has been blocked indefinitely for continued incivility by Toddst1 (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA). --Kralizec! (talk) 12:48, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

This essay is entirely inadequate with regards to vandals and serves as a vandal protection policy. Others have noted it above me. That final paragraph needs amendment because as has been pointed out here it is regularly misapplied by well meaning wikipedians (see Ctjf83's comments to me.) It seems that the primary effort of the wiki controlling interests is preventing the broader community of editors from getting into action sooner. It is entirely dysfunctional. The final paragraph of this essay is a reflection of that dysfunction. As such the final paragraph must go or be properly amended. Red Harvest (talk) 15:21, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

In reviewing above others have noted how impractical the current essay is and how misapplied it is to warnings. (One of them has left wiki.) Until this dispute can be resolved satisfactorily the paragraph should be stricken. It is time to put some burden on those who are attempting to foist the present unhelpful bit on the rest of us to come up with a solution. As written the essay handicaps efforts to combat vandalism by the average wikipedian and has a chilling effect on those it should instead be enlisting. Most will never notice the previous warnings if they have been wiped, that I have noticed many times. If an editor finds active vandalism and chooses to repost old warnings/blocks there is no harm in that, and quite a bit of good as it can provide an excellent, up-to-date summary. The user can still delete it from the talk page (essentially acknowledging the reminder.) By putting such information on a page during active vandalism, useless low level warnings may be dispensed with and editors will be more likely to elevate the matter properly. Red Harvest (talk) 15:46, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
This isn't some random, arbitrary thought: it's been debated back and forth for years now, by far more than a tiny handful of people on this one talk page -- you're not the first to suddenly think they've outsmarted the rest of us, and you probably won't be the last.

You say there's "no harm" in restoring old warnings. I say there is almost always a better solution. If some newcomer is repeatedly vandalizing, which will achieve a block faster: reverting {{uw-vandalism4}} back and forth, or reporting the user to WP:AIV? If an established user has repeatedly attacked others, which is more likely to get attention: another ignored warning gathering cobwebs in their talk page archives, or reports to pages like WP:WQA, WP:AN/I, or WP:RFC? If a blocked vandal on a dynamic IP address blanks their talk page, which is more useful to the project: edit warring over warnings that become meaningless the moment this user's IP cycles, or dealing with vandalism that actually matters because it's in article space? If a user seeks closure by blanking warnings, in preparation to stop their disruptive behavior or take a break from editing, which outcome better serves the project: letting them go to think about their actions, or confronting them and demanding they wear a scarlet letter? If a user has stopped their disruptive behavior, and removes a warning, seeking closure, should we repeatedly restore that warning and then eventually block them for "disruption" that didn't actually disrupt anything? If a school IP has a seven month history of vandalism, which better serves the project: quibbling over an ancient {{test1}}, or reporting the IP to administrators, pointing out its history and asking for an accordingly long block? If an unrepentant vandal removes warnings, should you restore the warnings or just report the vandal for blocking? If that same vandal, once blocked, removes the warnings and insults some user, are we better served by confronting them and getting them angry so that they will be motivated to return and continue vandalizing, or by denying them recognition so that they get bored and troll elsewhere? Make no mistake: there are people who vandalize to get attention, and giving it to them only encourages more of the same.

Talk pages are rarely considered the most reliable records. Page history can be. Block logs can be. User contribs can be. WP:AN/I archives and the like can be. With so many superior alternatives, why worry about a template message on a talk page? – Luna Santin (talk) 19:53, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I realize that several of you are erroneously trying to apply this to a single event, you could not be more mistaken. There is a continued pattern of this and it doesn't take statistics to recognize it. When I identify such systematic problems, I attempt to find solutions rather than just whine about them or blow them off. I wish more editors would take the trouble, but in discussions like these it is apparent why they do not. Red Harvest (talk) 15:46, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Given it was clearly your dispute with that user that brought you here -- in the immediate sense, I mean, not trying to discount your other concerns -- I wanted to see to it that your issues with that user were addressed. That they were apparently addressed without changing philosophy regarding warnings is, I think, worthy of note. Do you have any other examples of problems? There is almost always another solution, and frequently it's a better one. – Luna Santin (talk) 19:53, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I've seen it many times when investigating vandals. I used to post the appropriate warning level myself, but quickly concluded it was a waste of time in looking at various IP vandals. From what I've seen most vandals are reverted without warning. (When I realized this I quit bothering with warnings.) Fewer still are warned at the appropriate level each time. Really, including "rvv" in the edit summary should be enough to bring up a box asking if the editor wants to submit an automated vandalization warning...and it should also be listing recent warnings and automatically suggested the appropriate level based on guidelines. With this presently consisting of manual putzing around and searches, it isn't worth most editor's time. Seeing lists of warnings wiped off the page, and that being actively encouraged here, makes it appear even more futile. If wiki wants to improve the quality and quantity of useful edits, then it needs to figure out how to engage editors in combatting vandals...rather than doing as it does now with essays like this, actively discouraging conscientious editors. Red Harvest (talk) 21:21, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I used to be strongly opposed to this policy, but have since changed my mind somewhat. The bottom line is that forbidding people from removing warnings would stimulate edit warring, and it's a tough call on which is more costly: The edit warring, or the vandals/bad accounts who manage to stay around for longer due to delete unnoticed warnings.

I definitely think that accounts need to be allowed to remove warnings at will. I have seen way too many edit wars that were easily defused by pointing to WP:DRC.

I would potentially support some very limited restrictions on IP removal of warnings, e.g. cannot remove a warning for 24 hours. But I don't feel strongly about it anymore. --Jaysweet (talk) 16:00, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Much like Jaysweet, I also used to strongly disagree with this policy. However when the issue was extensively re-examined at Wikipedia:Village pump (policy)‎ at the beginning of the year, community consensus was again quite clear that all editors (including IPs) may remove comments at will from their own talk page. As a result, I had to adjust my thinking on the issue. C'est la vie. In retrospect, I was lucky I never got blocked for violating 3RR! However as penance for my earlier "mistreatment" of editors -especially anonymous users- I now try to help other editors avoid making the same mistakes I did. --Kralizec! (talk) 23:25, 23 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
And you still miss the point. I don't care whether they are allowed to remove the warnings. I do however see it as important that others are allowed to repost them as a reminder when active vandalization is occurring. (That doesn't mean violating other rules as the current essay wrongly suggests.) Unfortunately, the current essay is counter to that, and therefore wrong. It is misapplied by other editors, and that is how I ended up here. As it is an essay with redundant and misleading statements, I will continue to ignore the final paragraph. Red Harvest (talk) 21:21, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps you misunderstand that this is just an essay that does nothing more than bring together disparate guidelines and official policies into one cohesive document. As an example, this essay encapsulates and summarizes the following:
  • from WP:VAN - removing warning from your talk page is explicitly not vandalism
  • from WP:USER - editors are permitted to remove messages at will from their own talk pages
  • from WP:3RR - restoring warnings is not an exception to the 3RR policy
  • from WP:HARASS - restoring warnings is considered to be userspace harassment
  • from WP:EW - users who repeatedly revert each other may be blocked
  • from WP:BLOCK - editors may be blocked in order to deter disruptive behavior and encourage a more productive, congenial editing style within community norms
In short, editors who repeatedly restore the same comment to another user's talk page may be blocked. --Kralizec! (talk) 21:54, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps the problem is that others are also misled by this essay and believe it is policy? That's what brought me here, another who was attempting to warn me away from doing something that was legitimate. Like it or not, many even on this page refer to it as "policy" or treat it as a guideline rather than as an essay. Ignoring the problem doesn't fix it. The final paragraph is being interpreted in a prejudicial manner that protects vandals. I don't expect to make any headway, but I will shoot down the strawman arguments that keep getting thrown about. Red Harvest (talk) 22:27, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In what ways do you feel that the final paragraph is misleading users? To the best of my understanding, it is fully supported by the six policies and guidelines listed in my reply above. --Kralizec! (talk) 22:31, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Someone posting a list of previously received warnings during a spate of uncivil or vandalistic behaviour is not harassing or engaging in 3RR. Yet the paragraph unnecessarily says an editor can be blocked for this. If there was some exclusion about such reminders/summaries of warnings, with a caution to not let that become an edit war or 3RR or such then it would be another matter. Therefore, I object to the unnecessarily prejudicial language which in my experience has been misinterpreted by other editors. Red Harvest (talk) 22:53, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The official policies and guidelines would appear to indicate that the exact opposite is true. --Kralizec! (talk) 20:05, 25 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Not really. Red Harvest (talk) 21:20, 25 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

In this argument a lot of people tend to focus on the new user. Yes its very easy to view the page history of a new user and examine any blanked warnings. What about an established editor with a busy talk page? These editors make it much more difficult to check page histories for warnings. If you have hundreds of edits to your talk page or even thousands, just how easy is it to go back through that and check what you've been warned for? Easy for edits in the last few days, but outside of that no. I really haven't seen anyone in all this time make a genuine case for what is wrong with requiring all editors archive their talk page (including warnings) in a manner that makes it easy for any editor to go back through and check what discussions have taken place there. Talk pages are supposed to be a record of communication with that editor and frankly if they get over a couple dozen edits they can be a nightmare to read if they're constantly being blanked. We have automatic bots, it takes 5 minutes to throw the code up on your talk page and you're done. I just can't think of a single good reason as to why anyone would want to blank their talk page other then just "want to" and frankly just wanting to doesn't benefit the project. Its much easier for other editors to read your archives rather than try to paste together 300 diffs and figure out exactly whats been put on your talk page.--Crossmr (talk) 08:54, 29 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I brought this up over a year ago, and no one has managed to answer it. I still object to this essay because we've had several cases where it has been a chore to piece together someone's continually blanked talk page to figure out what they've been warned for and the flow of conversation. More than once an established editor was confused into thinking a user hadn't been warned for something.--Crossmr (talk) 00:15, 26 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
If you feel strongly about the issue, propose a policy change at WP:VPP. Perhaps community consensus has changed since the last three proposed changes were shot down. While I am on record as disagreeing with the rights of unregistered users to remove warnings (aka I think they should stay), I have to admit that as an admin who processes block requests at WP:AIV on a daily basis, I am not slowed down at all by an IP who thinks he or she can "hide" by deleting messages. This is due to the fact that the talk page history is a much more useful tool to me, and the date/time of warnings is what I look at, rather than the content of those messages. — Kralizec! (talk) 01:28, 26 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
IP talk page histories are usually small. These are rarely difficult to navigate. It is the long term editors who continually blank, or selectively blank parts of their talk page that cause issues. An editor who selectively blanks certain warnings and lets the rest remain/be archived is quite likely trying to hide past deeds. Otherwise why blank them unless they're vandalism? Anyone who sees an editors talk page with an archive section would be assuming good faith and assume every non-vandalism/personal attack piece of talk that occurred on that users page is probably archived and would probably never think to check the talk page history. They might only catch this if the user has blanked a very recent warning and then think to check the rest of the several hundred edits to the talk page and then discover some issue has been going on for months or years, but no one pieced it together because of blanking instead of archiving. Through all of this consensus that has apparently been made, I have yet to see a compelling argument as to why the community should allow blanking in the first place. Other than the claim that it is the users talk page, but that isn't binding. We lock people's talk pages if they abuse them, so they are not theirs to do whatever they so choose with. A talk page is a record of communication and if that record is messed with in such a way that it becomes difficult to piece together the communication then it is an issue for the community. To me, any user's right to "their" page stops at the point where it interferes with the normal flow of everything on wikipedia. If someone is causing an issue on wikipedia and they've mangled their talk page to such a degree that it would take 30 minutes to an hour to try and piece it back together, I feel that is disruptive.--Crossmr (talk) 03:29, 26 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Registered editors have enjoyed the right to remove messages at will from their own talk page for a very long time: it was explicitly added to the official Vandalism policy nearly four years ago [4]. The chances of changing that now are probably not very high. — Kralizec! (talk) 13:44, 26 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
That doesn't make it any less disruptive. When that was written that may not have been a foreseen issue.--Crossmr (talk) 06:37, 14 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Question about this policy.

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" Users should not remove only portions of another user's comment, nor edit their comment in any way. This includes paraphrasing, correcting spelling, grammar, or factual errors. Even though these actions may seem to be helpful, they can change the intent of the original user's comment and are therefore prohibited. "

Isn't this part of this particular policy noncompliant with the GFDL?

Or is this just a Wikipedia-specific policy, even though Wikipedia is backed by the GFDL?

I'm confused...

-Axmann8 (Talk) 18:48, 1 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Actually this page is not a policy, but is instead an essay that supplements or helps explain existing policies and guidelines. Talk page comments are governed by the WP:TALK guideline. However to answer your question, talk pages exist to facilitate communication between editors, and clear communication would be pretty difficult if people could edit each other's comments. In order to prevent any possible confusion as to who said what, as a social norm we generally prohibit people from changing others' messages. --Kralizec! (talk) 19:37, 1 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Special case of administrators and remarks/questions about their administrative actions

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It's rare for an administrator to remove remarks to their talk pages which inquire about or comment on administrative actions they have taken, but it does happen, and this essay might want to be expanded to take such into special consideration. IMHO, the essay ought to recognize that administrators should be held to a higher standard of transparency than other editors on administrative issues because they are the ones in positions of power to perform administrative functions. The concern here is that an administrator's purging of remarks on his/her talk page pertinent to his/her administrative actions in some cases may constitute a cover-up designed to wipe a record of occasional but habitual abuse of privileges or standing and thereby dissuade or hamper serious inquiries being made into his or her legitimacy as an administrator. Someone checking in to an administrator's behavior should have the reasonable expectation of finding all inquiries made directly to the administrator on the talk page, which is harmonious with the many other administrator oversight processes which require aggrieved users to take their issues directly to the administrator first before presenting them to the wider community ("Before posting a grievance about a user here, please discuss the issue with them on their user talk page" at WP:ANI, etc.). Perhaps some balance can be struck between an administrator's rights as an editor to tidy his/her talk page and the need for transparency of inquiry among those with administrative privileges. Robert K S (talk) 19:54, 11 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

This essay just explains and reinforces some of the reasons behind WP:BLANKING. Any delineation between different classes of editors and what they may or may not remove from their own user space should come from Village pump (policy) after receiving the stamp of community approval. — Kralizec! (talk) 21:01, 11 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Discussion notices

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Part of the page reads as follows: "There are only four types of messages that a user should not remove: declined unblock requests while the block is still in effect, confirmed sockpuppetry notices, miscellany for deletion tags (while the discussion is still in progress) and shared IP header templates for unregistered editors."

Due to the over-specificity of the third type, I propose rephrasing it so it reads as follows: "There are only four types of messages that a user should not remove: declined unblock requests while the block is still in effect, confirmed sockpuppetry notices, discussion notices while the discussion is still in progress, and shared IP header templates for unregistered editors."   — Jeff G. ツ (talk) 16:13, 21 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]

This policy protects bad editors and prevents wikipedia from operating properly

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I have been a wikipedia editor for roughly six years. Just became aware of this essay when I posted to the talk page of a possible tendentious editor and had it immediately reverted. Wikipedia relies on concensus. How are individual editors to know if a particular editor acts improperly as custom and practice, except by some sort of central mechanism for collecting complaints. The best place for this is personal talk pages. The talk pages exist for the good of wikipedia and should be treated as such. If not there, I suggest some sort of other wikipage. Admins?-- Sometimes admins are the worst offenders. All for privacy and free speach. But perhaps somoe editors use this essay to justify hiding systemic violations of the rules of wikipedia. Nucleophilic (talk) 17:57, 6 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Inserted "In the interest of a smoothly functioning wikipedia, users are strongly encouraged not to remove comments." while leaving the rest. This puts the onus against censorship, while still allowing it. Again, this is only an essay and not policy. Nucleophilic (talk) 18:30, 6 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I thought your edit was inappropriate. Can you give an example of where Wikipedia is not operating properly due to this essay? There is, by the way, quite a difference between the two. Jesanj (talk) 18:38, 6 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Note that you can still delete talk page posts, but that it is discouraged. Sets a particular tone.
In the past, this was wikipedia policy and in fact may still be, this essay notwithstanding. In my experience and that of others (see above), a few editors systematically violate wikipedia policy, even if only by incivility and POV pushing. Such editors are one of the major impediments to participating in wikipedia.
We are not talking of occasional slips, but of wholesale violations that give rise to multiple complaints. If you are not doing much wrong, this should be no problem. Just part of the process. There is also a certain deterrent effect when such offenses can be easily identified by reading talk pages. Nucleophilic (talk) 21:15, 6 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I was asking for a specific example. I'm unconvinced, but we can see what others say. In my mind, the tone you're trying to set is completely opposite from the intent of this essay. Perhaps the essay that strikes the tone you like has already been written, or you can write it. Jesanj (talk) 00:42, 7 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
sounds like a typically salty bully-min (admin bully/bullying willing minions and goons) 2A00:23EE:16E8:B931:2ED6:88C6:3F19:6E0B (talk) 11:08, 3 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Learn to spell nucleophilic 2A00:23EE:16E8:B931:2ED6:88C6:3F19:6E0B (talk) 11:08, 3 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
By looking at their talk page's history and seeing whether they deleted anything from it and, if so, what. Largoplazo (talk) 12:22, 3 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

What about restoring removed comments on other pages? Not your 'own' talk pages?

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What if something like this happens? Is it even tolerated especially when you get into an edit conflict or argument with other users? And you're basically narrowing and modifying your posts so that further conflicts occur but are then again given mention by another user.119.224.27.62 (talk) 12:31, 4 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

This essay only covers the situation where a user removes a comment from their own talk page. It says nothing one way or the other about any other kind of page. WP:TPOC covers those other types of pages. --Guy Macon (talk) 13:46, 12 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Restoring comments removed by a third editor

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If Editor A puts a comment on Editor B's user talk, and then Editor C removes the comment, can Editor A restore his/her own comment without it being considered edit warring? I can't find an answer to this in the WP namespace.

The main justification for this essay is, "By removing the comment, the user has verified that they have read it." This logic obviously doesn't apply when a different editor removes the comment.

Thanks. --Dr. Fleischman (talk) 19:33, 4 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Advice - Warning editing by warned party.

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Hi. I warned someone and they edited the warning I left, significantly changing the meaning, and then immediately archived the edited version. I'm not happy with the misrepresentation. Debating what to do. I expect to be reverted if I revert the edits to my post, but if I add a comment noting that it was edited, maybe that will be less likely to be reverted. Thoughts on what is supported by policy, anyone? There are conflicting ones - don't edit others comments, and don't edit archives… --Elvey (talk) 17:31, 14 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

While waiting for and answer to the above, I would suggest a polite request on the user's talk page explaining that the change was misleading and no longer reflects the views of the person who signed it, and asking him to correct the problem. If he corrects it, problem solved, and if he refuses, you will have evidence in case there us a future claim that the change was accidental. --Guy Macon (talk) 00:54, 15 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Contradiction

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This essay, Wikipedia:Don't restore removed comments, states:

There are only four types of messages that a user should not remove: declined unblock requests while the block is still in effect; confirmed sockpuppetry notices; miscellany for deletion tags that seek deletion of the talk page the tag is on (i.e., while the discussion is still in progress); and shared IP header templates for unregistered editors. These templates are intended not only to communicate with the user in question but also to communicate with others.

The relevant guideline, Wikipedia:User pages#Removal of comments, notices, and warnings (WP:REMOVED), which links here as a "see also", states:

A number of important matters may not be removed by the user—they are part of the wider community's processes:

  • Declined unblock requests regarding a currently active block, confirmed sockpuppetry related notices, and any other notice regarding an active sanction
  • Miscellany for deletion tags (while the discussion is in progress)
  • Speedy deletion tags and requests for uninvolved administrator help (an administrator will quickly determine if these are valid or not; use the link embedded in the notice to object and post a comment, do not just remove the tag).
  • For IP editors, templates and notes left to indicate other users share the same IP address and/or to whom the IP is registered.
  • {{Noindex}} added to user pages and subpages under this guideline (except with agreement or by consensus). Note this can safely be removed from talk pages and subpages where it has no effect. (see below)

Thus, this essay is inconsistent with the guideline. In fact, by using the word "only", the essay misrepresents the guideline's requirements. sroc 💬 09:42, 16 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

This essay had always been misguided and misapplied. Many have noted it here in talk, but it has a few champions so it is very slow to change. At any rate, it's an essay, so best to just ignore it where common sense dictates that it is wrong. (It has no rating on the "impact scale" which suggests there is little interest in it.) This talk page, including your post, does a good job of pointing out the problems.
I look at this as a relic of the days when Wikipedia was far more tolerant of vandals and other defiantly disruptive editors. There were a number of editors (myself included) who gave up on editing for a time because of how futile it all seemed, partly as a result of the naivete behind this policy with regards to warnings, etc. The intentional distortions made against me by several of the defenders of this essay were enough for me to lose respect for Wikipedia and quit editing for years. I'll always remember it as the "vandal protection policy." Fortunately, in the interim Wikipedia has become much more responsive in dealing with persistent vandalism and the like--despite this essay. Red Harvest (talk) 08:00, 19 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Proposed policy revision

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I personally think this policy should be revised in regard to warnings left on a talk page prior to a user's block. Users should not be allowed to remove warnings that lead up to a block prior to that block, because I personally feel that some problematic users are removing legitimate warning templates from their talk pages so that the warnings won't count against them and lead to higher-level warnings. After all, aren't warnings supposed to stack up with repeat offenses? ElectricBurst(Electron firings)(Zaps) 13:50, 29 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]