MarioWiki:Vandalism: Difference between revisions
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==Vandalism== | ==Vandalism== | ||
To begin, you must understand what vandalism is. Take this quote from [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Vandalism|Wikipedia]]: | To begin, you must first understand what vandalism is. Take this quote from [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Vandalism|Wikipedia]]: | ||
<blockquote>'''[[Wikipedia:Vandalism|Vandalism]]''' is any addition, deletion, or change to content made in a deliberate attempt to compromise the integrity of the encyclopedia (such as swearing, deleting letters to make inappropriate words, etc.) (see also [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Newbie experiment|Newbie experiment]]). The most common type of vandalism is the replacement of existing text with obscenities, namecalling, or other wholly irrelevant content. | <blockquote>'''[[Wikipedia:Vandalism|Vandalism]]''' is any addition, deletion, or change to content made in a deliberate attempt to compromise the integrity of the encyclopedia (such as swearing, deleting letters to make inappropriate words, etc.) (see also [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Newbie experiment|Newbie experiment]]). The most common type of vandalism is the replacement of existing text with obscenities, namecalling, or other wholly irrelevant content. | ||
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==Recent Changes== | ==Recent Changes== | ||
You can help prevent vandalism on the wiki by patrolling the [[Special:RecentChanges|Recent Changes]] and look for bad edits. If you find them, revert them and stop the user who made them with warnings or blocks, depending on how severe the vandalism is and whether or not the user in question has a history of vandalism. See the [[MarioWiki:Warning Policy|Warning Policy]] and [[MarioWiki:Blocking Policy|Blocking Policy | |||
]] for more information. | |||
: | Anyone can revert bad edits and hand out warnings, but only [[MarioWiki:Administrators|Administrators]] ([[MarioWiki:Patrollers|Patrollers]], Sysops and [[MarioWiki:Bureaucrats|Bureaucrats]]) can block people and officially patrol Recent Changes. The following is a step-by-step outline of how admins can go about patrolling the wiki: | ||
:*First of all, every edit on the page with | :*First of all, every edit on the page with an <span class="unpatrolled">!</span> next to it has not been inspected yet. | ||
:*Click on the ''diff'' link next to an edit that has | :*Click on the ''diff'' link next to an edit that has an <span class="unpatrolled">!</span> next to it to see the difference between the two most recent edits. | ||
:*If the page is not vandalism, then click the | :*If the page is not vandalism, then click the [{{fakelink|Mark as patrolled}}] link next to the edit. | ||
If there are so many <span class="unpatrolled">!</span> signs that you can't possibly check them all, then look for these things: | If there are so many <span class="unpatrolled">!</span> signs that you can't possibly check them all, then look for these things: | ||
:*A new page, symbolized by | :*A new page, symbolized by an <span class="newpage">N</span>, is important to check out. | ||
:*An edit made by a red username, or a user name spoofing another user's name, needs to be inspected. | :*An edit made by a red username, or a user name spoofing another user's name, needs to be inspected. | ||
:*An edit without a description is often made by a vandal in a hurry. Check these out. | :*An edit without a description is often made by a vandal in a hurry. Check these out. |
Revision as of 20:07, October 28, 2011
Here's how to help restore pages that have been vandalized.
Vandalism
To begin, you must first understand what vandalism is. Take this quote from Wikipedia:
Vandalism is any addition, deletion, or change to content made in a deliberate attempt to compromise the integrity of the encyclopedia (such as swearing, deleting letters to make inappropriate words, etc.) (see also Newbie experiment). The most common type of vandalism is the replacement of existing text with obscenities, namecalling, or other wholly irrelevant content. Any good-faith effort to improve the encyclopedia, even if misguided or ill-considered, is not vandalism. Apparent bad-faith edits that do not make their bad-faith nature inarguably explicit are not considered vandalism at Wikipedia.
- Vandalism is not synonymous with trolling, although some trolling is vandalism:
Trolling is deliberate and intentional attempts to disrupt the usability of a wiki for its editors, administrators, developers, and other people who work to create content for and help run that wiki. Trolling is deliberate violation of the implicit rules of Internet social spaces. It is necessarily a value judgment made by one user about the value of another's contribution.
Recent Changes
You can help prevent vandalism on the wiki by patrolling the Recent Changes and look for bad edits. If you find them, revert them and stop the user who made them with warnings or blocks, depending on how severe the vandalism is and whether or not the user in question has a history of vandalism. See the Warning Policy and Blocking Policy for more information.
Anyone can revert bad edits and hand out warnings, but only Administrators (Patrollers, Sysops and Bureaucrats) can block people and officially patrol Recent Changes. The following is a step-by-step outline of how admins can go about patrolling the wiki:
- First of all, every edit on the page with an ! next to it has not been inspected yet.
- Click on the diff link next to an edit that has an ! next to it to see the difference between the two most recent edits.
- If the page is not vandalism, then click the [[[:Template:Fakelink]]] link next to the edit.
If there are so many ! signs that you can't possibly check them all, then look for these things:
- A new page, symbolized by an N, is important to check out.
- An edit made by a red username, or a user name spoofing another user's name, needs to be inspected.
- An edit without a description is often made by a vandal in a hurry. Check these out.
If the page you find is vandalism, like if the page is blank, or if profanity has been added, you can revert the edit:
- While in the differences page, click previous diff and/or next diff until you find the most current non-vandalized version.
- Click on the Revision as of 00:00 link above that version and click "edit" at the top of the page. Alternatively, you can find the last good version and click on the date (not the diff) in the page history.
- Type "reverted vandalism" or "reverted spamming" in the edit summary. The shorthand for this is "rv/v" or "rv/s", respectively.
- Save the page (without making any changes).
- Now the page is the version that you selected, in effect removing the vandalism.