User:NoSeptember/admin policy

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These are the policies or philosophies about how admins should interact with each other, as found on the user pages of various admins.

Some admins have extensive comments on their admin philosophy, usually contained in a user subpage. These pages are listed here.

Contents

[edit] AmiDaniel

I am not infallible. Regardless of any policies to the contrary, feel free to revert any of my actions if you believe them to be mistaken or unwise. If I believe you have wrongly reverted any of my actions, I will not revert again until we have discussed the matter.

[edit] Lbmixpro

I mostly use my admin powers for deletion, anti-vandalism, ban enforcement and unblock request handling. However, we all make mistakes. Other admins: If policy allows, feel free to revert any admin actions I have performed if you believe them to be mistaken or unwise.

[edit] Mel Etitis

Admins. The vast majority of admins with whom I've had contact have been helpful, considerate, and professional in their approach. They're human, though, and occasionally one will develop a blind spot with regard to some issue, or a far from disinterested approach, and act against Wikipedia rules. What seems to happen then is that either their behavior is ignored by other admins, or (especially when the clamour of ordinary users is loud) they're subjected to a mild finger-wagging. If non-admins had behaved in the same way, they'd likely have been blocked from editing for a while — either generally or on a specific article or topic. Simple fairness demands the same treatment for the same behaviour — but given that admins are in fact expected to behave better than ordinary editors, it would seem right that they should be treated more strictly when they fall well short.
Now that I am an admin, I hold the same view, incidentally.
Finger waggers. There's a small group of editors, mainly or wholly admins who have been here for a while, who seem to spend more time lecturing other admins than working on the encyclopædia. Their edit histories typically show an articles-to-Talk/Wikipedia pages ration of 50:50 at best, often very much lower. Together with the many vandals and fanatics who try to take possession of certain articles, they make life here a lot less pleasant and productive than it could be.

  • Update. After a brief holiday from Wikipedia of a couple of months or so, I discovered that most of the main culprits had been de-sysopped in my absence. One stress reduced...

See this comment on admin rollback.

Also see this entertaining thread.

[edit] NoSeptember

My Admin Policy: I trust that my fellow admin's actions are done for the good of Wikipedia. So if any of my admin actions are overturned I will not consider such an action to be a "Wheel War", but rather an attempt to improve Wikipedia. If I disagree with your action, I will try to discuss it with you or with the admin community, but I absolve you in advance of any presumption of acting improperly. We should all extend the same benefit of the doubt to our fellow admins, until they repeatedly prove that they are unworthy of such a presumption.

[edit] Uncle Ed (Ed Poor) former admin, a statement by

With his usual self-deprecation and wry humour, this old fart will now weigh in.

Wikipedia:Be bold can often work. I've tested the bounds and even gone over the bounds many times. But I've never gotten myself blocked. There are over 400 sysops, and I've never been blocked even for 3 minutes. And I've pulled some awful stunts, they tell me. But most of the time, I manage to bring it off.

Why does it work? Because everyone agrees that it works.

Why does it fail? It fails when too many people think that it's gone too far.

And when being bold is not enough, you simply have to back off. Leave it alone, or get help. But you can't be the Lone Ranger when the whole town wants to lynch you. And that was <adminX>'s error. He never really cared enough about what other people think.

Now I'm not perfect either, and even though most of the time I am smugly sure that I know better than the whole lot of you:

  • I realize that I'm human and fallible
  • I really do care what you all think
  • I really don't want to hurt anyone's feelings
  • I care about the success of this project

When <adminX> will adopt one or two more of the above bullet points, he'll be able to come back. And I'll be the first to welcome him, and to take his part if anyone gives him a hard time. -- Uncle Ed (talk) 00:06, Jun 21, 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Zoe

Philosophy of the moment
I believe that Wikipedia admins need to spend more time talking to each other and less time reverting other admins' actions. I believe that Wikipedia:Wheel war is an important guideline, and should be policy. I believe that, if admins spent more time talking to each other and less time trying to be first at reverting somebody else, there would be more collegiality and less stress around here.


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