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Arbitration report

Proposed decision posted in Infoboxes case; Tea Party movement case continues

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By Neotarf

A proposed decision has been posted in the Infoboxes case that includes statements on metadata and microformat issues. The Tea Party movement case continues, following a stalemate over the proposed decision.

Open cases

Infoboxes

A proposed decision has been posted in the Infoboxes case. Arbitrators were quick to agree on the principle that global consensus “cannot be overruled by a local consensus” and a finding of fact that “the use of infoboxes is neither required nor prohibited” and therefore to be determined by local consensus at each individual article. Agreement on metadata was less quick. (See the extensive discussion of metadata issues at the evidence and evidence talk pages; see also microformat).

While there was general agreement that “Anyone may edit, use, modify and distribute the content for any purpose and the re-use of the information should be facilitated, where it is not detrimental to the encyclopedia,” a more narrowly tailored statement that “metadata aligns with the goals of the encyclopedia where it is not detrimental to our content or our scope” found less agreement, with concerns expressed over whether there had been sufficient community discussion to establish clear consensus, best practices, or guidelines for its use.

The case, brought by Ched, involves the issue of who should make the decision to include an infobox in an article and to determine its formatting, as well as what is perceived to be some editors' aggressive addition or reverting of infoboxes to articles without discussion.

Tea Party movement

The committee has now posted a “more traditional decision including specific findings and remedies against specific editors” after failing to reach an agreement on the original proposed decision and on a controversial “motion for final decision” that would have imposed a 6-month article/page ban on 14 editors from “editing the Tea Party movement article, the article talk page, and all subpages of the article and talk page”. (See the August 7 and August 14 arbitration reports). Findings of fact have been proposed for 9 editors (not including the proposer of the case). Remedies, including topic bans or restrictions, and two interaction bans, have been proposed for 11 editors. Two editors who have been proposed for sanctions have not yet had findings of fact posted.

Other requests and committee action

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Clarify wording

As a party, I probably should not speak, but would like to clarify the wording "what is perceived to be some editors' aggressive addition or reverting of infoboxes to articles without discussion." - Evidence is of adding infoboxes without prior discussion (which I frequently do for short stories and compositions (as the normal way of editing), - never any more for composers because I learned that infoboxes for Classical music biographies are contentious). Evidence is also of reverting infoboxes with little edit summary and no discussion started. "Aggressive" seems not a good term for both actions. A way of defining and reaching consensus is needed, for articles or even topics (such as operas, where the project recently made a new template available). Feel free to read the talk page of the case and especially the workshop were promising ideas were proposed which didn't find their way to the decision page, if you ask me. --Gerda Arendt (talk) 11:20, 26 August 2013 (UTC)[reply]



       

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