The name Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Pppery is undoubtedly a topic of great relevance today. Throughout history, Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Pppery has been the subject of study, debate and controversy in various fields and disciplines. From science to literature, through politics and popular culture, Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Pppery has left an indelible mark on society. In this article, we will explore different facets of Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Pppery, examining its impact on today's world and its relevance for the future. From its origins to its evolution today, Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Pppery has captured the attention and imagination of millions of people around the world.
Final (195/71/9); ended by Maxim (talk) at 17:59, 7 August 2023 (UTC) Bureaucrat chat closed by Primefac (talk) at 18:02, 8 August 2023 (UTC)
Pppery (talk · contribs) – For my second-ever RFA nomination, and first since 2016, I present Pppery, who coincidentally registered their account just a couple days before I started that April 2016 nomination. Since then Pppery has amassed over 66,000 edits (~top 1500 by count). His clean block log, lengthy user log (over 1800 pages moved and 600 pages patrolled) and drama-free talk page attest to his pleasant and civil interactions. Gerda thought he was Precious after only four months of editing! Administrator's Noticeboard search finds just 48 unproblematic items, many relating to him providing technical advice, and some where he reported 3RR violations that resulted in blocks. His top-notch technical abilities caught my attention long ago. He's been very helpful with my merge bot's task 2. I told him he was ready for this back in September 2021. He's been saying he wants to be an administrator since March 2019 and I trust that it's finally time for the community to say that his adminship has begun... – wbm1058 (talk) 05:43, 29 July 2023 (UTC)
I'll second what Wbm1058 said above. And I'll also add that in my view, the editor clearly meets my criteria for adminship. I should also probably point out that they are already an administrator on MediaWiki, and a patroller on Commons (Special:CentralAuth/Pppery). And as for "need", they are very active, well, on my watchlist, active nearly everywhere, lol. But in particular, helps out a lot in the more technical side of Wikipedia. And has been helping out at WP:CFD, where there has been an ongoing backlog of late. All in all, a worthwhile candidate. Please hand them the mop so they can get to work : ) - jc37 20:16, 29 July 2023 (UTC)
Dear candidate, thank you for offering to serve Wikipedia as an administrator. Please answer these questions to provide guidance for participants:
What administrative work do you intend to take part in?, specific examples of venues I will likely work in are Wikipedia:Requests for history merge, Wikipedia:Categories for discussion, and Category:Wikipedia fully protected edit requests, all of which have relatively few active admins or have had relatively few active admins at some point in the past. I tend to dabble a bit everywhere, and will likely do the same as an admin. The one area I do not intend (at this time) to regularly work in is blocking - if I run into a blatantly disruptive account or IP that needs blocking, I will probably block it, but I don't intend to make that a regular occurrence.
You may ask optional questions below. There is a limit of two questions per editor. Multi-part questions disguised as one question, with the intention of evading the limit, are disallowed. Follow-up questions relevant to questions you have already asked are allowed.
a decision about which I have strong feelings, and will instead participate in them.
closing AfDs, or blocking people, or some other areas of adminshipwhere
content creation provides experience that would be helpful. As an administrator, you will come across a number of areas in which you can use the tools, even outside of those you originally intend to pursue. Do you intend to refrain from taking actions in areas where content creation is important experience, and how will you determine what those areas are? If you do feel qualified in the future to enter those areas, how will you approach that transition? I also invite you to expand on your answer to Q7 here, if you so desire.
If you do feel qualified in the future to enter those areas, how will you approach that transition- I'll make that decision in the future, but it's really a matter of gaining experience, listening, and learning from what the other admins do. I could not have told you that I would undergo a significant namespace shift toward mainspace in 2021 at any previous time, for instance. The one exception is that I will continue doing new page patrol in pretty much the same way as I already have been, since I held that right prior to adminship and have not (AFAIK) received any significant flak over that activity.
respond promptly and civillyand try to reach some sort of agreement. If no agreement can be reached then, well, it may end up at one of the formal processes for contesting administrator actions and the action in question will either be endorsed or not. You can see a recent example of someone challenging an administrative action I made before this RfA at User talk:Pppery#1970s assassinated South American politicians.
if not id:match( '^%x%x%x%x%x%x%x%x%-%x%x%x%x%-%x%x%x%x%-%x%x%x%x%-%x%x%x%x%x%x%x%x%x%x%x%x$' ) then
return false
end
%x{8}%-%x{4}%-%x{4}%-%x{4}%-%x{4}%-%x{12} which would be more readable. It would be possible to address the fact that every single one of the p.<ID>link functions start with if not id:match(' <REGEX>' ) then
return false
end
local cat = p.getCatForId( 'MusicBrainz release group' )--special cat name
if label then
return ''..cat
else
return '] ' .. cat
end
Optional question from Adumbrativus
But the discussion was unanimous and couldn't have been closed any other waycould have been omitted perhaps, but it really wasn't a substantive refutation of Thinker78's arguments because I hadn't really followed them. So, no, I wasn't really knocking down a straw man in the way you describe, merely following a garden path (think garden path sentence) and needing more nudging than usual to be knocked off it.
Please keep discussion constructive and civil. If you are unfamiliar with the nominee, please thoroughly review his contributions before commenting.
Oppose with regret at this time, largely per Tryptofish above(diff). So far the only support to mention me is the co-nomination statement. I believe that Pppery's "social influence" on the project will be limited to a relatively small group of technically-oriented editors like myself. Obviously he has zero influence with typical self-identified "content creators". – wbm1058 (talk) 15:42, 4 August 2023 (UTC)
as a sysop, you wield the tools wherever you go, even when you're not using the toolset. Indeed, this is often where being a sysop carries the most weight.Best, KevinL (aka L235 · t · c) 15:34, 4 August 2023 (UTC)
just as a trial I tried asking for a paragraph on an article I am writing: it fabricated two sources entirelyis my point. That's bargain-bin content creation which anyone can do now. ChatGPT and other generative AI technologies can create endless information. GPT-4 offers decent writing for about 3¢ per 750 words, and it's the same (if not better) quality as anything in Category:All articles lacking sources. What AI can't do is consistently cite to reliable sources (Bing tries but fails). What we need are people who can sift through the tsunami of information and create a place that's a hub for reliability. Otherwise we'll be obsolete. People are going to get burnt by ChatGPT feeding them BS, so we need to be a place that people can trust. This will be a far more important skill going into this future and that's why I supported the nom, who participates with speedy deletions, deletion discussions, and other content curation platforms.
"Do you believe that content creation is a good indication of suitability for adminship?". To answer in the affirmative is to say that a good content creator would automatically be a good admin. GrammarDamner how are things? 20:54, 1 August 2023 (UTC)
First off, I did not write that code... I'll answer the question anywayNot really the foot you want to step off on if you are trying to show us that you are less combatative. Coming from an admin, many editors would mentally add "you peon". You need to work on that. For what it is worth, the response was sound: that is the way I would have tackled changing a template that is on a godzillion pages too. However, some editors will note the contradiction between "major rewrite" in Q2 and "minimum changes needed to achieve my goal and not do unrelated refactorings" in Q23. The current completely refactored version is superior, although I personally would like the template to be more flexible and configurable. Also, while the opting into the "prompt me for an edit summary if I forget" feature is a good idea, it would be even better if it worked properly. The software waves through edit summaries that consist purely of comment, but when someone consults the stats they are not counted. I strongly believe that understanding policies and guidelines is purely ancilliary to the more important function of content creation. The admin toolkit is not for your agrandisement, it is there to help the content creation process. The editors who lack the tools will turn to you for assistance, and occasionally for guidance. They may not understand our policies and guidelines (that's your job). You really need to reconsider Q18. "I'm arguably WP:INVOLVED" is a sound response, but "arguably" is a weasel word. When you are answering an RfA question, the questioner is probing for your knowledge of the subject, so you should have stated what circumstances would constitute involvement. In particular, "I expressed disinterest in using admin tools in conduct-related matters" is just fine—we don't expect every admin to work in every area—but what you and every admin aspirant needs to understand is that when you are an admin all conduct will be seen in that light whether or not you are using the admin tools. Otherwise, the editors in the Oppose column who think you might be on a trajectory towards ArbCom will be proven correct. Hawkeye7 (discuss) 21:38, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
But no, it turned into another one of those RFA dramas that we inevitably have every few months. The opposes racked up over Q7, and then I thought this was another one headed for withdrawal. But the supports held their own, enough that this will likely go to a 'crat chat (the RFA equivalent of extra time, or, more accurately, a shootout?)
Many of the hallmarks of RFA drama are present. We have oppose !votes that focus on the one issue identified early on that do not elaborate further (I would, however, single out Sandy's lengthy and considered oppose as one that, had it been cast much earlier (though I understand why it took so long) could have really elevated this discussion. I would advise the closing 'crats to give it a serious read). And, equally predictably, the oppose !votes have generated supports that are more in the vein of "I oppose the opposes".
When I am not familiar with a candidate, I tend to look for the names of users and fellow admins that I have known long and come to trust. There are some of those on both sides here, making good arguments as I would expect them to, but not as many as I usually see. I wonder if others are reading this and sitting it out as I had been expecting to do.
I decided a few days ago I was going to !vote neutral, something I don't think I've done before in an RFA, on the grounds that while I didn't think the oppose reasons were compelling, I couldn't find a reason to support, either. In the former instance, I think the opposes are putting way too much weight on the nominee's minimal role in content creation. "He has no DYKs! No GAs!" they cry. "And certainly no FAs! How can we make him an admin?"
Well, I think we should stop ourselves right there. Yes, I agree content work is an essential for an admin who will be (as I try to) out on the front lines reviewing and responding to reports of possible user misconduct. More times than I can count, my own experience (which grows all the time) has been invaluable in getting inside the head of a user who might be on the verge of getting blocked for what they believed with all their heart was good-faith editing and helping them realize what they were really trying to do, or how they might better do it.
But Pppery has said he does not intend to be that admin (although I have some thoughts on that later). And I respect that choice.
We need to ask ourselves, by treating community recognition as if it were a metric, indeed the only metric, of skill in that area, are we perhaps ultimately driving people away from the project, and (to return to the subject of this discussion) adminships? Newer editors who, as many newer editors do, see things like this and think, gee, I think I could be an admin one day, develop articles for GA or (worse) FA in order to get cred here, then nominate them ... only to be so shell-shocked by the comments and all the things they did wrong without even knowing about them that they just give up and leave.
We need to understand that some editors are just going to be happiest, and best for the project, improving content without collecting green circles and gold stars ... and that work can be enough to qualify them for adminship. In the absence of recognized content to show off here (not saying nominees should't do that), we can certainly look at what a nominee has done in editing articles. It may be harder for some people, but them's the breaks.
For that reason I decided that before !voting, I at least owed Pppery the courtesy of looking at an overview of his editing.
Which I did. And I found the stats paint a different picture than that I find in the opposes.
Instead of focusing on one or two articles (but I will later, because I have to), I first looked at his overall stats. And lo and behold, an editor whose opposes for RFA call content-impaired turns out to have made the greatest share of his edits, a third in total, to article namespace. In his first year article namespace edits were also his biggest share (beating out project namespace by a mere two edits, to be fair). He has always made at least 500 such edits in a year, and last that accounted for half his edits. He is on pace this year to devote an unquestioned majority of his edits to articles.
Granted, if we look at edits to pages within the individual namespaces, we do see that quite a few pages outside article space get more of his attention. But, excepting edits to one's own user talk page (which will probably be the most edited page for most of us, anyway, or at least up there, guess where Pppery has made the most edits? The Help Desk! Oh my, spare Wikipedia from an admin who frequents the help desk! What is the world coming to? (And I think it is only fair then to ask some of the most determined opposers here how many edits they have made to HELPDESK ... before anyone asks me, I freely admit (to my regret) that my answer is going to be a big fat goose egg)
Now let's turn to the individual articles Pppery has given the most attention to. As already noted, there is Magic: The Gathering rules, where some opposes weighed him in the balance and found him wanting.
Well, again, guess what? By character count, he's the second-most active editor on the article (and the number one editor on it by that measure hasn't edited that article in six months). By total edits he's the top editor.
We can also look at his actual edits to that article. I see an editor using edit summaries, adding, revising and moving significant amounts of content, adding sources, fixing his own mistakes, and in general showing mastery of content editing.
Then we can look at Amphetamine, an FA (Maybe we should also consider in our RFA evaluations that an editor might work on articles that have already been recognized, and do a good job there, instead of seeking to improve articles to that point, as a measure of their fitness for adminship?). This article ranks second among Pppery's most favored in article space, and while these are largely technical and made over a few days a couple of years ago, I see nothing there that changes the impression I got from the edits to the MTG rules article.
My total takeaway picture is of a user who knows his limitations in content work and stays within them. Wow. We have had so many edit who have been prolific content creators but then imploded, whether after getting the mop or not, and are now spoken of in hushed tones only. This might not be a bad idea to give the tools to an editor who seems 180 degrees away from that.
And really, we do need admins who can handle the technical side. I recall years ago at a meetup, so many years ago that RFA was looser than it is now, hearing about "some Swedish guy" who'd been given the bit primarily because he was a whiz at writing template coding and that skill was badly needed in editing a lot of protected templates. Granted, for that we have the template-editor right now ...
So instead of sitting on the fence and making a spectacle of my moral superiority for doing so, I have entered the arena and stand on what is still the majority side of the room. I have no illusions about this !vote tipping off a big cascade of late supports that will push this nomination back into the green, but before it ends I had to make my opinion known.
Before leaving, however this turns out, I do advise Pppery that adminship is never so neat. It is inevitable that at some point after you get the tools you will be contacted from out of the blue by some user you've never heard of who urgently needs your help with another user on some page about something you never knew existed (and Murphy's Law says it will happen late at night, after you've just finished a very tiring and repetititious but very necesary task, either editorial, technical or administrative, and the red "1" will appear just as you're about to log off. Trust us on this.
So at the very least you might want to do something like help clear out CAT:SD at least once a day if you can. Daniel Case (talk) 05:34, 6 August 2023 (UTC)
Applying page protection as a preemptive measure is contrary to the open nature of Wikipedia and is generally not allowed if applied solely for these reasons. However, brief periods of an appropriate and reasonable protection level are allowed in situations where blatant vandalism, disruption, or abuse is occurring by multiple users and at a level of frequency that requires its use in order to stop it.Hawkeye7 (discuss) 19:27, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
...the admin had better know what it's like as a content creator before they become an adminLightburst (talk) 01:47, 1 August 2023 (UTC)
The Wikipedia community strongly encourages editors to provide meaningful edit summaries.As an administrator, I have declined to block editors who do not provide edit summaries because they are not required by policy, but I am reluctant to support an candidate for administrator who has declined to consistently do things that the community strongly encourages. Similarly, in a hypothtical scenario, I would be reluctant to support a candidate who has made an effort to write an autobiography, even though that is only strongly discouraged rather than forbidden. I also have some concerns regarding temperament. Floquenbeam mentioned the CfD discussion about Category:Wikimedians who oppose rebranding the WMF, where the candidate wrote last year
Every time I start a deletion discussion on a user category, it gets polluted with "let's randomly ignore established consensus" non-arguments like this.To me, that comes off as "I am consistently right and everyone who opposes me is consistently wrong" reasoning, and it rubs me the wrong way, even if it was not intended. My decision has been affected also by the opposing comments from TonyBallioni, Reaper Eternal, and Beyond My Ken. Cullen328 (talk) 08:27, 1 August 2023 (UTC)
Depending on how the RfA goes I may consider turning it on.as per User talk:Pppery#Hey you), and the CfD items posted by Floq. As an admin, it's super-important to be both helpful and transparent, and I'm afraid those underlying attitudes could get in the way. Schwede66 02:46, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
good at correcting the inevitable mistakes that everyone makes).
First off, I was clearly wrong in the initial (now struck) version of Q7 when I said "Obviously not" - it's not at all obvious, and I should have known that.— Qwerfjkltalk 20:08, 6 August 2023 (UTC)
counter-factual("incorrect" ?) gives the impression it is patently wrong, but to me it seems a reasonable reading of WP:USERCATNO (not to rehash those CfDs here). — Qwerfjkltalk 06:22, 3 August 2023 (UTC)
it showed a profound lack of human understanding, of empathy, perhaps you could point to specific comments? As I understand it, Pppery was frustrated with those who created categories like these, a view that they were not alone in. I would say that calling Pppery unempathetic is excessive.
doubled down) on their position. Are you seriously suggesting this nomination had only one "right" outcome, that the arguments of those opposed were invalid? And that we should always !vote the way a discussion is closed? I'm afraid I must absolutely reject that. — Qwerfjkltalk 20:31, 3 August 2023 (UTC)
that's clearly not what I'm saying- call me obtuse if you want, but it's not at all clear to me. — Qwerfjkltalk 20:50, 3 August 2023 (UTC)
The most important trait of an admin is to know when one knows what one is doing, as I see it, means to know and accept one own strengths and weaknesses, and implies that one would avoid rushing into matters when one does not know what one is doing. Whether it is the single most important attribute of a good admin is open to debate, but it certainly is an extremely important attribute, and those who do not have it are far more likely to end up at arbitration, and lose the bit. Also, to want the tools to help with one's own work on Wikipedia seems entirely reasonable to me, and anything one uses them for becomes one's own work by virtue of the being the one doing it. As long as that work helps build the encyclopedia that is fine with me. Cheers, · · · Peter Southwood (talk): 17:24, 4 August 2023 (UTC)
hat the candidate may not understandthe art of successful RFA politicking. Shells-shells (talk) 20:51, 5 August 2023 (UTC)
indiscriminate deletionism, complete with insinuations that those you believe to be the culprits are engaged in a Nazi-like purge.
articles/categories/itemsthat a single editor believes should exist in
Enwiki/Commons/Wikidata. By my reading, not even that editor is suggesting that we need 104 million articles (which would include 10,000,000 articles on NGO's). — Preceding unsigned comment added by BilledMammal (talk • contribs)
... we shouldn't punish technical users because they don't have a boat load of FAs; is that happening? I'm not seeing it. The answer to Q7 is dismissive of content creation, the main reason we're here, which indicates the candidate may not understand how admins with tools who don't respect and understand content creation, or haven't engaged it (essentially, at all) can impede it and the editors who focus on it. But I don't see anyone calling for FAs. I do see a bigger problem in the answer to Q2. If the article the candidate considers their best work is in a February 2023 state that causes this kind of GA reaction (from a reviewer who isn't overly strict, rigid or nitpicky and who I have seen pass articles through content review with a few prose adjustments), that's cause for concern. Consider this scenario: we frequently have disruptive or tendentious or NOTHERE editors showing up at ANI, where we offer samples of their "best work" to show why they don't belong here. I'm not seeing this article as being much above that level, which tells me the candidate really might not understand the bare minimum of what makes a decent article, and what our expectations are of productive editors. Similarly, the answer to Q18 suggests an editor not actively engaged in core issues and parts of Wikipedia; I'd have liked to see the response invoke something like User:Barkeep49/Friends don't let friends get sanctioned, because the scenario is a very real problem, and Barkeep's ideas are one of the few ways change can come about. Invoking INVOLVED misses the point-- the scenario is created because the "INVOLVED" can't or don't speak up. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 13:54, 1 August 2023 (UTC)