Group 4 Dispute Results: Difference between revisions

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'''Note:'''This page has been linked to multiple times on Wikipedia. Just something to be aware of us as you make comments here (and of course anywhere on this wiki, it being on them fancy tubes and all). [[User:Kp|Kp]] 18:36, 8 January 2008 (EST)
'''Note:'''This page has been linked to multiple times on Wikipedia. Just something to be aware of us as you make comments here (and of course anywhere on this wiki, it being on them fancy tubes and all). [[User:Kp|Kp]] 18:36, 8 January 2008 (EST)
:Thanks, Senator. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] 18:56, 8 January 2008 (EST)
*Thanks, Senator. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] 18:56, 8 January 2008 (EST)
*I've tried to clean this up a bit and move the large chunks of WP content onto their own pages so that we (and anyone visiting) can use this page to discuss reflections, thoughts, and other sort of meta responses. [[User:Kp|Kp]] 13:40, 9 January 2008 (EST)


=Attempt At Consensus on the Waterboarding/Definition RFC page=
=Overview and Brief History of the Project=
 
 
==Preliminary Discussion==
 
[[Group 4 Preliminary Discussion Archive]]


==The Debate==
==The Debate==
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Although looking at the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding/Definition RFC page] may lead one to believe that the debate is "Is waterboarding torture?", as far as we can tell, the debate is actually (or was intended to be) "Is it disputed that waterboarding is torture?" or -- to put it another way -- is it conclusory / does it violate Wikipedia's NPOV policy to declare as the lead statement "Waterboarding is a form of torture..." [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] 23:00, 8 January 2008 (EST)
Although looking at the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding/Definition RFC page] may lead one to believe that the debate is "Is waterboarding torture?", as far as we can tell, the debate is actually (or was intended to be) "Is it disputed that waterboarding is torture?" or -- to put it another way -- is it conclusory / does it violate Wikipedia's NPOV policy to declare as the lead statement "Waterboarding is a form of torture..." [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] 23:00, 8 January 2008 (EST)


==Talk Page RfC Proposal==
==The RfC Proposal==
 
After diligent review of the existing arguments and thoughtful discussion of the merits, our group came to what we believed was a fair compromise.  We created a new section to the RfC page, and initiated a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding/Definition#Another_Attempt_at_Consensus call for consensus.]
 
*A copy of our original proposal on the RfC page and the ensuing response on the RfC page is available here: [[Group 4 RfC Proposal and Responses]].


After diligent review of the existing arguments and thoughtful discussion of the merits, our group came to what we believed was a fair compromise.  We created a new section to the RFC page, and initiated a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding/Definition#Another_Attempt_at_Consensus call for consensus.]
*Lciaccio, Shamulou, Pri2008, Theokrat, and Vhettinger are group members in this discussion.


==Results==
==Reported for Possible Sock Puppetry==


Although now the situation has [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Incidents#Harvard_class_project_disrupting_Wikipedia_via_meatpuppetry_on_articles escalated] considerably, as of around 5pm this was the state of the section we created:
As a result of the comments that were made on the RfC one wikipedian, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jehochman Jehochman], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Suspected_sock_puppets/Shamulou reported a possible incident of sock puppetry]. A copy of that report is available here: [[Group 4 Accused of Sock Puppetry]].


===Another Attempt at Consensus===
Furthermore, there is a section on the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding/Definition Waterboarding/Definition RFC page] following our [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding/Definition#Another_Attempt_at_Consensus call for consensus] which was previously entitled "confirmed meatpuppetry on Waterboarding", but which thanks to Eryck's aggressive and well-reasoned lobbying has now been changed to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding/Definition#Harvard_student_group_discussion Harvard student group discussion]. 


The original request called for legitimate sources presenting evidence of a valid dispute.  It appears to me as if [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Waterboarding/Definition#Torture_or_not_Torture_--_it_is_Disputed this section] contains several sources that qualify.  I therefore think that a changed wording to "'''Waterboarding''' is an extreme interrogation technique generally considered to be torture." is justified based on the non-fringe opinions evincing a genuine dispute.  Opinions? -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 17:39, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
There is also a section on the regular Waterboarding Talk page which still bears the title [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding#confirmed_meatpuppetry_on_Waterboarding confirmed meatpuppetry on Waterboarding], but the text of this section is not the same as that on the RFC page.
*'''Agreed'''.  as per above. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 17:51, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:This has also now been changed. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding#Harvard_student_group_discussion]-[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] 15:38, 10 January 2008 (EST)
*'''Agreed'''.  The original article on waterboarding contains a substantial discussion of the current debate on whether waterboarding is torture.  [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterboarding#Classification_as_torture Classification as Torture].  Given the discussion of the debate in the Wikipedia article itself and the legitimate sources linked to by nom and presented by other commentators, I think modified wording away from "waterboarding is torture" is appropriate. The language proposed by nom modifies "waterboarding is torture" into a less conclusory statement, but retains a strong statement that waterboarding is "generally considered to be torture." [[User:Shamulou|Shamulou]] ([[User talk:Shamulou|talk]]) 17:48, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
::Good work, LT! [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] 14:28, 11 January 2008 (EST)
*'''Agreed'''. For the reasons I cite above in [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Waterboarding/Definition#Comments_on_note_to_the_closing_admin Comments on note to the closing admin]. In addition, #1 and #4 cite both the BBC and the Wall Street Journal. Both are credible sources that indicate the issue is at least considered to be disputed in at least two countries. [[User:Pri2008|Pri2008]] ([[User talk:Pri2008|talk]]) 17:55, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
**'''Comment'''. I agree, these were the sources I found most compelling, despite misgivings about the credibility of some of the other sources cited.  I firmly believe waterboarding ''is'' torture, but at least these two opposing views are informed and non-fringe, making this an opinion, not fact.. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 18:18, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
*'''Not so bad'''. But I would prefer a summary description of the practice instead of "extreme interrogation technique" (I used to favor something like that but have been persuaded its not such a good idea for the present).  I would also like to see the phrase "generally considered torture" to be  a separate sentence stating "It is often considered torture".  Partyly, I am not so sure that I agree with "generally" since a fair number of people apparently do not consider it torture.  About 2/3 consider it torture. To me that is "often", but not quite "generally".  Using the word "often" also implies some sort of temporal aspect to the issue, which many people seem to raise: "how its done and when its done" matters to them when deciding if it is torture. (By the way, thanks for the suggested lead). --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] ([[User talk:Blue Tie|talk]]) 18:30, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
*'''Acceptable'''. The current language really does need to be changed, if for no other reason than the fact that the existence of the "Classification" sections makes the statement "waterboarding is torture" seem conclusory, regardless of the facts.  So long as the word "considered" is included, though, I feel like the point is made that there exists some debate, and given that, the strong presumption from "generally" seems fine.  There really DOES seem to be numerically overwhelming consensus (a minority of the citizens of a single country, even a hugely important country, notwithstanding).  I'm less sure about "extreme," if only because that's a indisputably subjective term, and probably shouldn't be included in the first line of a Wikipedia article.  Although I certainly agree that waterboarding is "extreme," there aren't objective reasons why it must necessarily be considered so. [[User:Theokrat|Theokrat]] ([[User talk:Theokrat|talk]]) 18:48, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
**I would also agree to wording that removes the word extreme from the proposal. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 18:53, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
**I agree.  "Extreme" is a subjective term, and the statement that "waterboarding is an interrogation technique generally considered to be torture" is strong enough without "extreme." [[User:Shamulou|Shamulou]] ([[User talk:Shamulou|talk]]) 18:57, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
***I like that change.  I also think "generally" is also a subjective term, but I find myself only weakly objecting.  The problem I have is that I do not think generally is exactly right, because it conveys the notion of "as a rule". But, on the other hand, what other adverbs are appropriate?  "Frequently" almost makes it sound like it might not even be half of the time.  The same goes with "often".  "Popularly" might almost be more accurate than anything but I am not sure it sounds right to sort of indicate that it is popular for people to be thinking about torture! I do not like the word "generally" as much as I do not like these other words I have mentioned above.  The word "widely" seems pretty good and I would favor that.  Also, as I have said previously, I think that ultimately the lead should be re-written when the details in the article are right, but I think that this lead is very close to one that might have a consensus.  I praise this effort.  --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] ([[User talk:Blue Tie|talk]]) 19:08, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
* '''Strong oppose''' Weasel words: "considered to be".  By whom?  Newspeak: "interrogation technique".  No, waterboarding is verifiably a torture technique, per the reliable sources. Do not change the article from a plain statement of verifiable fact.  Wikipedia is not a political battleground.  [[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup> 19:33, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
**They're only weasel words if used in lieu of references.  Considering the extensive sources in the article pointing to those who consider it to be torture, that is not the case here.  I agree that Wikipedia is not a political battleground, but the change I propose is, in light of the evidence of dispute, the most factual and encyclopedic statement of what waterboarding is.  That is what we're aiming for, ne ce pas? -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 20:12, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
**I think it's inappropriate to classify the question of whether or not something is torture as a 'verifiable fact'.  The very nature of the question implicates human conceptions, and it would still be a ''concept'' even if there was unanimous agreement.  What this proposed change to the lead statement attempts to do is reflect the general direction in which (credible reports of) human conceptions lean, while acknowledging (a) that it is a concept, and (b) that it is not universally shared. [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] ([[User talk:Vhettinger|talk]]) 20:29, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
*'''Agreed''' with the edit that removes the word "extreme" (mainly because in a sentence that includes the word 'torture' the word 'extreme' seems redundant).  I slightly prefer 'generally' to 'widely', but don't feel strongly one way or the other. [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] ([[User talk:Vhettinger|talk]]) 19:46, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
*'''No.''' The current lead is fine. "considered to be" is weaselly, "interrogation technique" comes straight out of recent political discourse. Encyclopedias shouldn't be written according to recent political controversies. [[User:Akhilleus|Akhilleus]] ([[User talk:Akhilleus|talk]]) 21:13, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' The question should be Is it NPOV to state 'Waterboarding is torture,' in the lead sentence of the article when several expert legal authorities state that it is not torture in any case; that it is torture only in some cases; or that they cannot themselves be sure? [[User:Ra2007|Ra2007]] ([[User talk:Ra2007|talk]]) 22:02, 8 January 2008 (UTC)


Generally supportive comments on this issue can be found on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Theokrat our] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Vhettinger various] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Pri2008 talk] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Lciaccio pages].


===Note===
==Moving on up . . . to the ANI==
Lciaccio, Shamulou, Pri2008, Theokrat, Vhettinger, and kevparks are group members.


=Reflections=
After revealing who we were on the sock puppet report the discussion was then [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Incidents&oldid=183159795#Harvard_class_project_disrupting_Wikipedia_via_meatpuppetry_on_articles moved to the ANI] where it received a significant amount of comment. While the discussion has been removed from the current ANI a copy of it's archived form is available here: [[Group 4 ANI Incident Archive]].


As you can see above, our efforts were praised by one Wikipedian who had been plugging away at this issue for a while.  However, we also met with strong disagreement that quickly dissolved into accusations of meatpuppetry.
* Lciaccio, Vhettinger, and kevparks are group members in this discussion.


These allegations led to a whole debate about whether what we were doing (the nature of the assignment, the way we approached the assignment, etc) violated either the official policies or the spirit of Wikipedia. 
==Further Fallout==


A party calling himself Jimbo Wales then began repeatedly vandalizing this site.  Although the site is restored for now, the warning that previously existed at the bottom of this page (since removed) suggested that there may be more attempts coming. [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] 23:01, 8 January 2008 (EST)
At some point while the discussion was going on in the ANI, there was a call for vandalism of our course wiki at [http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?showtopic=15174&hl= Wikipedia Review].  TAs, a few course members, and friends came to the rescue, and the matter seems resolved for now.
:I think that most of this has passed. I've been reverting some pages and I believe wikisysop and others have caught the rest. [[User:Kp|Kp]] 23:52, 8 January 2008 (EST)


*While there was the initial call for vandalism, there is actually some interesting discussion worth reading over at the review now. [[User:Kp|Kp]] 13:34, 9 January 2008 (EST)
=Reflections=


==Wikipedia Culture==
==Wikipedia Culture==
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*Honestly, I believe that much of the uproar arose because there was a clear group of parties involved in this controversy, and that group was not incredibly large (only about 5-6 active players); when we showed up, we doubled that number and all had the same basic opinion (with minor variations).  I think this shows a considerable flaw in the talk-page format: it relies upon the presence of a discrete and small number of individuals, arriving at the page by chance, working things out among themselves.  The process has no way of adapting to a sudden influx of individuals all at once; although one or two can insert themselves into a conversation at a given time without too much difficulty, a group of them cause things to break down, as all of the original participants suddenly discover that their (relative) power over the discussion has shrunk dramatically.  Unfortunately, to my mind, the current system of talk-pages is too ingrained at this point to be entirely overhauled, and I figure that means that any sort of organized effort, particularly one that, like ours, arises outside the bounds of Wikipedia, simply cannot function effectively on that site, because it's going to excite too many participants who have too much investment in the issue already. [[User:Kratville|Kratville]] 01:47, 9 January 2008 (EST)
*Honestly, I believe that much of the uproar arose because there was a clear group of parties involved in this controversy, and that group was not incredibly large (only about 5-6 active players); when we showed up, we doubled that number and all had the same basic opinion (with minor variations).  I think this shows a considerable flaw in the talk-page format: it relies upon the presence of a discrete and small number of individuals, arriving at the page by chance, working things out among themselves.  The process has no way of adapting to a sudden influx of individuals all at once; although one or two can insert themselves into a conversation at a given time without too much difficulty, a group of them cause things to break down, as all of the original participants suddenly discover that their (relative) power over the discussion has shrunk dramatically.  Unfortunately, to my mind, the current system of talk-pages is too ingrained at this point to be entirely overhauled, and I figure that means that any sort of organized effort, particularly one that, like ours, arises outside the bounds of Wikipedia, simply cannot function effectively on that site, because it's going to excite too many participants who have too much investment in the issue already. [[User:Kratville|Kratville]] 01:47, 9 January 2008 (EST)


I'm reposting this because it appears to have been deleted and is, I think, useful commentary. [[User:Ac|Ac]] 10:00, 9 January 2008 (EST)
*'''Comment from a completely non-involved Wikipedian'''. This is, after all, a free-to-edit Wiki ;). Please feel free to completely disregard anything I say - ''I speak entirely for myself, and don't necessarily represent the views of the entire Wikipedia community''. I've read the whole fiasco on ANI, as well as the sockpuppetry case, and this page, but as of yet I haven't commented on the whole situation anywhere. I really wanted to get back to this group as a whole, and felt that leaving a message here may be the best route. Firstly, I have to disagree with a number of users on Wikipedia: I don't think that this was a case of sockpuppetry, or meatpuppetry. However, I agree with them that it certainly looked like that, without all the facts. This is why I ''do'' think that it would have been beneficial for you to disclose your position immediatley. Also, as you rightly point out above, picking an article where tensions were already at breaking-point perhaps wasn't the wisest decision, but in all fairness, short of spending a few weeks looking at the disputes beforehand, I honestly don't see how you could have realised this fact before jumping in, and so I feel that this was nothing more than an unfortunate but unavoidable mistake. Finally, in response to this comment from Lciaccio: "I failed to see what a sense of community thrived on these boards, and how great the disdain for those percieved to be outsiders". You kinda got that both right and wrong. Yes, the core Wikipedia community is certainly tight-knit, and, very unfortunatly, there are some occassions when outsiders are not welcomed as they should be. However, I don't really feel that this is the case here. I think Jehochman got it bang-on when he posted this on the ANI: "These are students. We hope they have learned something—that online communities do not like being experimented upon". It's really not so much that you, a bunch of outsiders, jumped in and were rejected by the community, but more that when people learnt of your project, (especially when links to this page were posted), they felt uncomfortable, uneasy about being part of essentially an experiment without their consent. I know that, especially having read through this page, I sorta feel "Hmm, here I am participating in Wikipedia for enjoyment, but I could quite easily be being watched, analysed or even used in an experiment without my knowledge". That's certainly not entirely you or your lecturer's fault - anyone can do it - I suppose that this wiki page that I'm editing right now just highlighted the fact so plainly. I do, however, feel that it would have been courteous for you to be as transparent about the project as possible from the outset. '''In conclusion''', yes, you could certainly have handled the situation better in some ways, but no, it's really nowhere near as bad as some users are making out. As far as I can tell, none of you have been blocked from Wikipedia, so I sincerely hope that we haven't lost you as editors - being from Harvard, I should think you'd be a greater asset to the project than Joe Bloggs off the street ;). I really hope that I haven't intruded here - as it's a free-to-edit Wiki, I don't think I have, but feel free to ignore me completely ;). Finally, just to reitterate, ''the above represents entirely my own views, and not that of the entire Wikipedia community'' (though I'd hope that a fair few would agree with me :P). Regards, [[User:Islander|Islander]] 06:08, 9 January 2008 (EST)
*'''Comment from a completely non-involved Wikipedian'''. This is, after all, a free-to-edit Wiki ;). Please feel free to completely disregard anything I say - ''I speak entirely for myself, and don't necessarily represent the views of the entire Wikipedia community''. I've read the whole fiasco on ANI, as well as the sockpuppetry case, and this page, but as of yet I haven't commented on the whole situation anywhere. I really wanted to get back to this group as a whole, and felt that leaving a message here may be the best route. Firstly, I have to disagree with a number of users on Wikipedia: I don't think that this was a case of sockpuppetry, or meatpuppetry. However, I agree with them that it certainly looked like that, without all the facts. This is why I ''do'' think that it would have been beneficial for you to disclose your position immediatley. Also, as you rightly point out above, picking an article where tensions were already at breaking-point perhaps wasn't the wisest decision, but in all fairness, short of spending a few weeks looking at the disputes beforehand, I honestly don't see how you could have realised this fact before jumping in, and so I feel that this was nothing more than an unfortunate but unavoidable mistake. Finally, in response to this comment from Lciaccio: "I failed to see what a sense of community thrived on these boards, and how great the disdain for those percieved to be outsiders". You kinda got that both right and wrong. Yes, the core Wikipedia community is certainly tight-knit, and, very unfortunatly, there are some occassions when outsiders are not welcomed as they should be. However, I don't really feel that this is the case here. I think Jehochman got it bang-on when he posted this on the ANI: "These are students. We hope they have learned something—that online communities do not like being experimented upon". It's really not so much that you, a bunch of outsiders, jumped in and were rejected by the community, but more that when people learnt of your project, (especially when links to this page were posted), they felt uncomfortable, uneasy about being part of essentially an experiment without their consent. I know that, especially having read through this page, I sorta feel "Hmm, here I am participating in Wikipedia for enjoyment, but I could quite easily be being watched, analysed or even used in an experiment without my knowledge". That's certainly not entirely you or your lecturer's fault - anyone can do it - I suppose that this wiki page that I'm editing right now just highlighted the fact so plainly. I do, however, feel that it would have been courteous for you to be as transparent about the project as possible from the outset. '''In conclusion''', yes, you could certainly have handled the situation better in some ways, but no, it's really nowhere near as bad as some users are making out. As far as I can tell, none of you have been blocked from Wikipedia, so I sincerely hope that we haven't lost you as editors - being from Harvard, I should think you'd be a greater asset to the project than Joe Bloggs off the street ;). I really hope that I haven't intruded here - as it's a free-to-edit Wiki, I don't think I have, but feel free to ignore me completely ;). Finally, just to reitterate, ''the above represents entirely my own views, and not that of the entire Wikipedia community'' (though I'd hope that a fair few would agree with me :P). Regards, [[User:Islander|Islander]] 06:08, 9 January 2008 (EST)


=The Brouhaha=
**I have two minds about this post. I certainly understand how some might interpret the assignment as an experiment. But I’m not convinced that it was. WP is open to all users, and we participated as I imagine many novices might. We neither attempted to sabotage the project nor attempted to force WP users to react in ways they might not otherwise react. Our participation was extremely limited because: 1) we edited a talk page, not the actual article; 2) we did not reframe the RFC but rather refocused it as originally framed; 3) we attempted to find micro-consensus amongst ourselves but ultimately posted our individual opinions; and 4) our suggestions were neither outrageous nor clearly disruptive in and of themselves. Perhaps we should have disclosed our project. But what would that have accomplished? Ex ante disclosure would only have been relevant in so much as it would have allowed WP users to alter their behavior. But I think that would have ultimately resulted in either over- or under-weighting our comments. Most of us are new users, and according to WP norms, our opinions should be weighted accordingly. I somehow doubt that would be the case had we disclosed our identity as HLS students.
It appears that much of the vandalism of this wiki stemmed originally from the debate; someone posted at [http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?showtopic=15174&hl= Wikipedia Review] for people to come here and vandalize.
==Accusation of Sockpuppetry==
{{sspa}}
===[[User:Shamulou]]===
;Suspected sockpuppeteer
{{user5|1=Shamulou}}<br/>
<!-- Do not edit above this line.  Add suspected sock puppets and IP addresses below this line -->
 
;Suspected sockpuppets
 
{{user5|1=Pri2008}}<br/>
{{user5|1=Theokrat}}<br/>
{{user5|1=Vhettinger}}<br/>
 
<!--If there are additional suspected sockpuppets to be included, add them above this comment using the form {{user5|1=SOCKPUPPET}}<br>, replacing SOCKPUPPET in each case with the user name that you suspect is a sockpuppet of the puppetmaster. (Leave out the "User:" prefix.)  Leave the <br> tag after each one and add or remove lines as necessary.  Remove this comment once completed. -->
 
;Report submission by
<!--Sign your name BELOW this comment line with 4 tilde characters "~~~~" -->
[[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup> 21:25, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
<!--Do not use "==" or "===" style headers in this report.  Such headers disorganize the report page.  Please use ";" style (as below)-->
 
;Evidence
All four accounts were made their first edits within 24 hours of each other [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joss_Whedon&diff=prev&oldid=181854859][http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Treaty_of_Paris_%281810%29&diff=prev&oldid=181794841][http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lagrime_di_San_Pietro&diff=prev&oldid=181776189][http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Welsh_Corgi&diff=prev&oldid=181727106] at four different pages, and then about five days later they all appeared at [[Talk:Waterboarding/Definition]] in rapid succession, expressing the same POV and supporting each other.[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Waterboarding/Definition&diff=182988074&oldid=182986323][http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Waterboarding/Definition&diff=182989482&oldid=182988675][http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Waterboarding/Definition&diff=182998853&oldid=182995652][http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Waterboarding/Definition&diff=183011112&oldid=183008099]  This may be a case of newly recruited editors who are unaware of our social norms that prohibit canvassing in order to establish a false consensus, or it could be outright sock puppetry.  Other editors may be involved, but I will not name them since it is unclear who may be doing the canvassing. 
 
See also the recent case, [[Wikipedia:Requests for checkuser/Case/GooseCreek]] which focused on the same locus of dispute. [[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup> 21:25, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
;Comments
None of these users are sockpuppets.  They are four seperate individuals who are participating in Wikipedia as part of a [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Main_Page course project].  The first assignment was to create a username and edit a Wikipedia entry, which is why they all did so at the same time. (Right before the assignment was due).  I explained my own participation in this class clearly on my own userpage.
 
The second assignment was to participate in a dispute.  The only required coordination was that we agreed to choose a single dispute to weigh in on.  At each step of the way, each person has been contributing according to their own personal opinions, evinced by the fact that we do not all agree.  The fact that we happen to agree is incidental. No one person, including myself, had an opinion on the subject until after we had chosen this AfC and began reading and participating in it.  Indeed, I was originally of the opinion that the lead section should stand.  My mind was changed when I read the BBC and Wall Street Journal references. 
 
Our professor, [[Jonathan Zittrain]] is actively involved in Wikipedia and was a presenter at Wikimania.  The parameters of the assignment in no way implicate the Canvassing and Sockpuppet policies you mentioned; I doubt if he would have given us a task that violated Wikipedia social norms.  As a longstanding Wikipedian myself, I also participated in a manner carefull to obey general Wikipedia standards, such as ensuring that each person came to their position independently and felt free to voice their opinions on Wikipedia without defering to the positions of any other group member. 
 
I understand that is is very distressing for you that so many people are taking a position contrary to your own. However, since no Wikipedia norms have been violated, the fact that several law students happen to disagree with you is just something you'll have to live with, and handle through the normal channels of debate and discussion. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 22:07, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:This sounds dubious. Where on that wiki does it mention this Waterboarding article as part of it's coursework or project? <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 22:11, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:I think there is an unintentional tendency for newcomers who know each other in real life to support each other on-wiki. This is due to sympathy, not conspiracy. Jonathan Zittrain and I attended Yale together.  Please ask him to contact me via email so we can debug this. By the way, [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Group_4_Dispute_Results conducting experiments] on high profile Wikipedia articles is not acceptable in any way. [[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup> 22:22, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
; This Harvard project
I think this needs wider admin review on AN or ANI: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Group_4_Dispute_Results
 
These people are debating and affecting encyclopedia content as part of a class project. How long has this been going on, with this string of new SPAs flooding the [[Waterboarding]] article that we've seen? It's been ''highly'' disruptive, especially as this "project" was not disclosed. <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 22:14, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
Commentary like this on this Harvard page:
* ''"# Should we weigh in on whether Wikipedia should keep the statement "waterboarding is a form of torture"? If so, what is our position? Khoffman 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)"''
 
Make me EXTREMELY uncomfortable, especially given the comments on that page that the class "orally" decided to pursue the Waterboarding article. If a class decides to take a matching position orally, ''that'' is meatpuppetry. <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 22:18, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
: As a courtesy to [[Jonathan Zittrain]], my old friend, I ask that his students not be blocked.  This matter should be discussed, and a consensus achieved as to how we will handle this. At minimum we need full disclosure of any coordinated editing that has occurred so we can correct the discussion.  A considerable amount of time and effort may have been wasted here.  I am not amused. [[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup> 22:26, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Incidents#Harvard_class_project_disrupting_Wikipedia_via_meatpuppetry_on_articles Sent to ANI]. <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 22:31, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
;Conclusions
*This is under discussion at [[WP:ANI]], and further comments should be made at that location. The actions described here probably do violate Wikipedia's policy against sock/meat puppetry, but the class members do not appear to be intentionally violating policy. [[User:Akhilleus|--Akhilleus]] ([[User talk:Akhilleus|talk]]) 22:40, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
----
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=="Incident" Discussion on Admin Noticeboard.==
 
=== Harvard class project disrupting Wikipedia via meatpuppetry on articles ===
{{resolved|Everyone has said their bit, now let's all get back to work.}}
{{archive top}}
Jehochman stumbled across this, and asked me to bring it to ANI. Please read [[Wikipedia:Suspected sock puppets/Shamulou]] first. Next, read this page on Harvard.edu (archive link):
 
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/?title=Group_4_Dispute_Results&oldid=2120
 
The [[Waterboarding]] article here, and it's RFC, and talk pages, have been a constant stream of SPAs, and [[Wikipedia:Requests for checkuser/Case/GooseCreek |confirmed sockpuppetry]]. We now have this evidence that a class orally agreed to take on the waterboarding article (see that Harvard page, search for "oral"), and we have such lovely gems as:
 
:''"Should we weigh in on whether Wikipedia should keep the statement "waterboarding is a form of torture"? If so, what is our position? Khoffman 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)"''
 
Combined with the fact that the recorded on-Wiki at Harvard material is only part of the information (they say they are discussing the article), we have no way of knowing just how tainted the entire [[Talk:Waterboarding]] and RFC process there is (it's been incredibly, incredibly contentious and rancorous). What can or should be done here? I have no idea what to do with this page anymore and have gone out of my way to step away from it, after the waves of SPAs basically became too much to handle, and various admins began to try to organize discussions on there (Jehochman, Henrik). <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 22:30, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:At Jehochman's request, I'm trying to keep an eye on it. [[User:El_C|El_C]] 22:35, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
::According to the [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Syllabus syllabus], this assignment is due at midnight. So maybe this will be over soon. Perhaps someone can contact the professor(s) and explain to them how the assignment has disrupted our normal working processes. Since the assignment was to [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Day_3_Assignment_-_Participate_in_Wikipedia_Dispute_Resolution_-_due_midnight_Tuesday "try to help resolve the dispute via the talk pages"] perhaps we can suggest how the students should be graded, as well. [[User:Akhilleus|--Akhilleus]] ([[User talk:Akhilleus|talk]]) 22:37, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Found this at the assignment page [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Day_3_Assignment_-_Participate_in_Wikipedia_Dispute_Resolution_-_due_midnight_Tuesday here] "Your group is ''free to coordinate your comments as little or as much as you want''. You can decide to include comments on the talk page from individual group members, or from the group as a whole."  (italics mine)[[User:R. Baley|R. Baley]] ([[User talk:R. Baley|talk]]) 22:39, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:::: Notice there are actually six active groups.  -- [[User:SEWilco|SEWilco]] ([[User talk:SEWilco|talk]]) 22:55, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::Several of them went after other RFCs, from a quick glance. <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 23:00, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
: (ec) [[WP:BITE]] not. Full disclosure: [[Jonathan Zittrain]] and I were classmates long ago. As a courtesy that we should extend in any similar situation, I request that the students who were involved in this incident be warned rather than blocked. They will hopefully become ongoing contributors to Wikipedia. Nonetheless, we need full disclosure of what happened, and some sort of remedy for the mess at [[Talk:Waterboarding]] and [[Talk:Waterboarding/Definition]] (the RfC page). [[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup>
::Suggest  [[Jonathan Zittrain]] be whacked over the head with an entire case of frozen [[WP:TROUT]] and we all move on. [[User:Raymond arritt|Raymond Arritt]] ([[User talk:Raymond arritt|talk]]) 22:46, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
*Let me get this straight, a group of Harvard law students teamed up to work on a Wikipedia article? And this is a ''bad thing''? ˉˉ<sup>[[User:Anetode|'''anetode''']]</sup>[[User_talk:Anetode|╦╩]] 22:50, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:: When they coordinate their views in class and then represent that as multiple independent positions on-wiki, then yes, that is a problem. <strong>[[user:henrik|<font color="#B38F00">henrik</font>]]<small>•[[user talk:henrik|<font color="#AFA29F">talk</font>]]</small></strong> 22:54, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Their coordination was not backed by malicious intent and the discussions documented on their wiki are not dissimilar from the ones encouraged on ours. Leave all the wikipolitics alone for a second and consider whether we want to encourage content contributions and thoughtful debate. If even one of those students enjoyed the experience or learned from it, then our whole free content encyclopedia concept was in some small way a success. ˉˉ<sup>[[User:Anetode|'''anetode''']]</sup>[[User_talk:Anetode|╦╩]] 23:09, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Also, the assignment is to [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Day_3_Assignment_-_Participate_in_Wikipedia_Dispute_Resolution_-_due_midnight_Tuesday jump in to hot-button disputes]. When a group of inexperienced users arrives at a disputed page, it doesn't tend to resolve conflict, it exacerbates whatever problem already exists. [[User:Akhilleus|--Akhilleus]] ([[User talk:Akhilleus|talk]]) 23:00, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
::::I must say I'm a little confused, it would seem to me the best way to resolve an ongoing dispute (particularly one that is 'hot-button' and has had little progress) would be to have a group of independent, rational, minds try and craft a solution that might work for everyone. Perhaps by attempting to reach rough consensus (instead of insisting that one party must be wrong or right) we took the wrong approach, but I'm not sure what the problem is proposing a solution (on the talk page mind you, no substantive edits were ever made to the main article, just some grammatical corrections). [[User:Kevparks|Kevparks]] ([[User talk:Kevparks|talk]]) 00:05, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
*Let's (since this is a talk page we can be informal) just say that it appears to be a violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the Wikipedia rules about sock & meat puppetry. I suppose that as lawyers they're going to have to learn about those differences. I'd really rather that they hadn't used us to practice on. I suppose it is better than waterboarding us, whether or not it's torture! [[User:OtterSmith|htom]] ([[User talk:OtterSmith|talk]]) 22:59, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:Maybe it's just me, but it looks like a straight violation of meatpuppetry rules. Outside and undue influence, coordinated viewpoints, and so on, all entering an already contentious and overheated article RFC. <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 23:02, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
*(edit conflict)I'm still unclear as to why this is meatpuppetry/sockpuppetry.  It seems the accusation was based on some misinformation, which I hope to clear up.  First, these are all individuals, not clones, and no one is using a false identity.  Second, no one was asked to take any position other than through the normal channels of persuasion and argument otherwise found on this site.  There are two things that would give me pause were I in your position, namely the wording on the course website and our group page implying that we can post as a group and decide on a single position.  Since we did not decide to coordinate our efforts as suggested by the assignment (i.e. posting as a group) the first concern is not implicated by our actual behavior.  And the comment "What is our position" was written by someone new to Wikipedia before we did any actual editing.  Since I had been researching Wikipedia dispute processes and policies, '''I made clear to the other group members that they must voice their own opinions as individuals to avoid violating these.'''
 
:Keep in mind that none of the edits done before noon were by any of us, it is only a few posts under "Another attempt" that were made by group members.  And yes, this assignment will be done at midnight.
 
:I have heard some deeper, more valid concerns voiced here, namely that the very idea of a class agreeing to work on a single dispute violates Wikipedia norms in general, and that newcomers who know each other IRL are likely to agree with each other out of courtesy, or for other reasons.  These are valid objections, and if these are sufficient for asking us to refrain from participating, then I would agree to cease voicing my own opinions on the matter. However, I think it more likely that law students are simply likely to share views in general, having the characteristics that brought us here to begin with, which is a separate concern, albeit one that might also invalidate our participation.
 
:However, if these "general social norms" are what is being violated here, I would ask that the approach being taken be softened.  Since it is not at all clear to me under the current circumstances that we are indeed "meatpuppets", I would ask that people stop posting things such as "Confirmed Meatpuppetry" and the like. It appears as if the accusations here are especially harsh, and might stem as much from the fact that our opinions as to a fair resolution differed as it did from objections to our behavior itself. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 23:03, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
::The waterboarding article in particular was an especially bad selection for this ill-advised class project. The article has had a steady parade of sockpuppetry, and [[WP:SPA|single purpose accounts]] that have been congregating there, leading to already raised temperatures and unpleasantness. The sudden appearance of another batch, at once, and with similar lockstep positioning and reasoning had about zero chance of going over well. <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 23:06, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:: (further comments) I am not amused by this whole mess. The Waterboarding debate has to date been very contentious, with strong opinions, heated arguments and a lot less-than-constructive comments. One should note that this article has been a near constant source of problems for a long time now. New SPAs have been showing up regularly, and multiple warnings and several blocks have had to be issued so far. The process to build consensus is just barely moving along, due to problems like this. <strong>[[user:henrik|<font color="#B38F00">henrik</font>]]<small>•[[user talk:henrik|<font color="#AFA29F">talk</font>]]</small></strong> 23:05, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
*Whatever you want to call it, this little "experiment" at our expense was extremely disruptive. Sometime within the next hour I'm going to protect the article to prevent further disruption, unless convincing arguments are made to the contrary. [[User:Raymond arritt|Raymond Arritt]] ([[User talk:Raymond arritt|talk]]) 23:07, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
::: I was going to chip in for the kids but sounds like (Lciaccio above) the Harvard Lawyers can speak for themselves adequately. If they can't manage it, I'll go get some Duke Lawyers to help them out :-) [[User:PeterStJohn|Pete St.John]] ([[User talk:PeterStJohn|talk]]) 23:10, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:::Let's also keep in mind that there are six different groups from this same class working on at least five different articles. Links to the individual groups can be found [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Day_3_Assignment_-_Participate_in_Wikipedia_Dispute_Resolution_-_due_midnight_Tuesday here]. [[User:Pairadox|Pairadox]] ([[User talk:Pairadox|talk]]) 23:10, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
::I don't see how protection is warranted, since none of us ever touched the article.  All we did is voice our views on the talk page. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 23:11, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Your contribution history shows three edits to the article. So much for "none of us ever touched the article." [[User:Raymond arritt|Raymond Arritt]] ([[User talk:Raymond arritt|talk]]) 23:17, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
::::Sorry, I forgot about my own minor edits.  I changed:
::::: "[[Ted Poe|Representative Ted Poe]] stated on [[Glen Beck]] show in response to the question "Do you believe [[waterboarding]] is torture?", Poe state "I don't believe it's torture at all, I certainly don't." " to
:::::"In response to the question "Do you believe [[waterboarding]] is torture?" on the [[Glen Beck]] show, [[Ted Poe|Representative Ted Poe]] stated "I don't believe it's torture at all, I certainly don't." 
::::I don't generally keep track of the edits I make to fix grammar or wording problems.  And this was an attempt to fix very poor English based on my own anal nature, having nothing to do with the project. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 23:24, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
::::: No, they haven't done any substantial changes, Lciaccio is correct in that. She did a few minor changes fixing typos, correcting grammar and other minor edits, but that isn't something we should discourage. Thanks for fixing those problems. :-) <strong>[[user:henrik|<font color="#B38F00">henrik</font>]]<small>•[[user talk:henrik|<font color="#AFA29F">talk</font>]]</small></strong> 23:30, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
*It should be noted that, of the 6 groups, the waterboarding group (Group 4) appears to be the only one that caused serious disruption to Wikipedia. Group 2 should be commended for [[Talk:Comparison of high definition optical disc formats|openly stating their assignment and affiliation]] and discussing issues appropriately on the HD formats talk page. That said, I think we should ask the professor not to assign this in the future. The potential for trouble is just too great. [[User talk:Crotalus horridus|<font color="#11A"><b><tt>***&nbsp;Crotalus&nbsp;***</tt></b></font>]] 23:12, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:: Yes, the behavior of Group 2 was exemplary. Had the waterboarding group behaved similarly I would have had absolutely no problems with the assignment. <strong>[[user:henrik|<font color="#B38F00">henrik</font>]]<small>•[[user talk:henrik|<font color="#AFA29F">talk</font>]]</small></strong> 23:32, 8 January 2008 (UTC)  
 
:::Why not contact the press?  If we could assume that Harvard-trained lawyers were all altruistic, honorable, and on the right side of every issue this would be an innocent thing.  However, the last thing we need is a class of alpha lawyers who feel that organized efforts to manipulate reference works is a legitimate tactic.  There are more of us than there are of them.  Let's just hack [[Lexis]] and change some Supreme Court rulings on [[Fair Use]] law to our advantage, shall we?  [[User:Wikidemo|Wikidemo]] ([[User talk:Wikidemo|talk]]) 23:16, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
::::Perhaps Wikidemo should review the [[Wikipedia:Please do not bite the newcomers|Bite]] policy. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 23:32, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::Gee, dodging the question like that and turning against the questioner almost think you were a lawyer or something. Oh wait... [[User:Raymond arritt|Raymond Arritt]] ([[User talk:Raymond arritt|talk]]) 23:34, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::: There's no need for comments like that, Wikidemo and Raymond. We can't assume that new users should be instantly familiar with every bit of etiquette and culture on this site. <strong>[[user:henrik|<font color="#B38F00">henrik</font>]]<small>•[[user talk:henrik|<font color="#AFA29F">talk</font>]]</small></strong> 23:36, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::::Well, he/she knew enough to cite [[WP:BITE]]... [[User:Raymond arritt|Raymond Arritt]] ([[User talk:Raymond arritt|talk]]) 23:39, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
::::::::As an alternative suggestion - why not write a very polite e-mail to Mr (or is it Prof?) Zittrain, or whoever set the assignment, explaining what our concerns are about the project and suggesting he considers these when setting future projects - eg by encouraging students to become familiar with Wikipedia rules and avoiding off-wiki collaboration. I reckon this would do the trick just as effectively as any public fuss. As for what has happened already - well, it's over now.[[User:Hobson|Hobson]] ([[User talk:Hobson|talk]]) 23:41, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:::::::::(ec) Yes, that would be the best solution. Jehochman says he's acquainted with the prof, so maybe a personal note would be the best approach. Most of the groups weren't disruptive, so clearly it wasn't a deliberate attempt to disrupt and the prof just needs to make sure everyone knows the ground rules. [[User:Raymond arritt|Raymond Arritt]] ([[User talk:Raymond arritt|talk]]) 23:46, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::Lciaccio isn't a new user, s/he's been around for a few years. It's surprising that s/he didn't understand that the sudden arrival of the law students at the RfC would naturally result in sock/meatpuppetry concerns, but perhaps s/he hasn't edited enough on contentious subjects. [[User:Akhilleus|--Akhilleus]] ([[User talk:Akhilleus|talk]]) 23:43, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::: Nope, generally I just try to fix up articles.  I tried to review some disputes over the last few days to become familiar with the process, but I guess they weren't contentious enough to prepare me.  -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 00:12, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::::::I have tried to answer every question posed to me, and I don't believe I have dodged a single one.  Wikidemo's comment was not a question, but a snipe.  I know in other online communities and in real life, it is proper to point out when this is happening.  I didn't realize Wikipedia's etiquette and culture dictates otherwise. But perhaps I should have followed my mom's advice there; it seems a better policy to smile and ignore such comments.  -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 00:12, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:(unindent) I don't think [[WP:BITE]] applies to groups of lawyers-in-training coordinating to perform edits, however innocent their motives may be.  We might as well credit them with [[constructive knowledge]] of the rules and the consequences of breaking them; after all, in their future profession ignorance of procedure is no excuse for not following it. They didn't get into Harvard by being helpless newbies.  The assignment has to do with understanding how Wikipedia handles disputes.  Might as well show them to the real Wikipedia, not a watered-down version.  Nobody is going to suffer any real consequences here.  I am half serious that we don't want to expose one of our most serious vulnerabilities to the very group best equipped to exploit it, that a small group of intelligent people acting in coordination and adept in the world of rules and argumentation can easily manipulate our articles, and thereby affect public perception. They may be idealistic now, but a few years out in the world and a more cynical lawyer would use the same techniques with bad motives.  If that made the news it would be all the more salient a learning exercise.  [[User:Wikidemo|Wikidemo]] ([[User talk:Wikidemo|talk]]) 00:02, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
*(ec)''' These pages need checking:'''
:From [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Group_1_Dispute_Results#The_Topic Group 1][http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:The_Wall_Street_Journal#Proposed_trimming_of_quoted_text_on_News_Corp._purchase]
:From [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Group_2_Dispute_Results Group 2][http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Comparison_of_high_definition_optical_disc_formats#Studio_support_Picture_will_need_to_be_changed_-_at_some_stage]
:From [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Group_3_Dispute_Results#The_WSJ Group 3][http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_and_domestic_violence]
:Group 4 is waterboarding.
:From [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Group_5_Dispute_Results Group 5] this [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Murray page]
:From [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ipc/Group_6_Dispute_Results Group 6] possibly lots of pages, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Porter this one 1st (congressman Jon Porter)]</br>
[[User:R. Baley|R. Baley]] ([[User talk:R. Baley|talk]]) 23:25, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
 
* [[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup> pours everyone a cup of [[WP:TEA|tea]] and hands out [[WP:AGF|AGF-flavored scones]].  These are students.  We hope they have learned something&mdash;that online communities do not like being experimented upon.  If you wish to learn about us, participate sincerely, observe and even write about what you see; but do not provoke conflicts or violate social norms by conducting [[breaching experiment]]s. I hope to speak with the professor and give him some ideas how to conduct this exercise in the future in a way that will avoid disruption.  Happy editing, all, [[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup> 00:00, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
::Tell him that next time, when his students arrive bearing gasoline... They should, out of courtesy, not add it to any of our very largest bonfires. <sup>[[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#fff;background:#000;border:1px solid #ccf">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<strong style="color:#fff;background:#000;border:1px solid #ccf">talk</strong>]]</sup> 00:09, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
tl;dr, but will try to read in a second here. Just wanted to throw in my voice that I don't see anything wrong with this situation, whatsoever. These students are still individuals, and simply because they're a group in the real world doesn't make them meatpuppets. What would the difference be if they were all Wikipedians who first discussed something on one talk page, then went to another, larger discussion? I imagine real-life collaboration with fellow Wikipedians to be something that will only increase, and will be to Wikipedia's benefit. Treat these individuals just as you would any other Wikipedian, and lets not assume meatpupetry every time a project is taken up off-wiki. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 00:11, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
*'''Suspensions'''. Since a number of people here are recognizing that there has not been outright malice or sockpuppetry, is there a call to undo the five suspensions?  I'm obviously biased here, but that seems excessive under the current circumstances. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 00:15, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
*Link to thread posted to WikiEn-L. <sup>[[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#fff;background:#000;border:1px solid #ccf">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<strong style="color:#fff;background:#000;border:1px solid #ccf">talk</strong>]]</sup> 00:22, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
*: (ec) I already requested that the students who were involved in this incident be warned rather than blocked. Lciaccio, when one person who holds a certain belief finds a few friends who agree, and gets them all to create accounts and stack one of our discussions without any sort of disclosure, that's a problem. If five people want to join Wikipedia, great, but they should edit independently, or they should disclose the relationship. As remedies, I propose that the No Canvassing template be added to [[Talk:Waterboarding]] and [[Talk:Waterboarding/Definition]], and that the comments of the parties involved here be noted to say that they were acting in collusion. [[User:Jehochman|Jehochman]]  <sup>[[User_talk:Jehochman|Talk]]</sup> 00:25, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
**All their accounts are currently suspended.  And, once again, what you are alleging never happened.  We all went into this without an opinion on the matter.  -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 00:40, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
::(ec) I've always thought meatpuppetry was when you found people to support your view for a specific reason, for a gain of some sort. This sounds more like ''individuals'' developing a micro-consensus, then presenting those arguments to a larger group. Considering they were not perviously involved in these disputes, they'll actually more likely to give an honest, neutral, response to the discussions. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 00:43, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
Another thought, after reading even more about this, browsing the assessment pages, and seeing what was actually done.. It seems to be that it is the regular Wikipedians that have [[WP:OWN|ownership]] issues. Nothing bad has happened, there is no actual break in policy, and as such we are in no place to ask them to stop or to stop them by force. Monitor the situation if you wish, but do so fairly and with an open mind. It doesn't matter if these were heated debates or not, ''anyone'' at any time is welcome to become involved. We don't own the articles, nor do we own the debates. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 00:30, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
:Ned, this set up warning bells for many users because one editor already was caught up by Checkusers for abusing multiple accounts to sock puppet a certain position in the debates and RFC, and very aggressively at that. There is a very, very aggressive SPA account active on those talk pages who went out of his way to insist that the confirmed sockpuppeter was misrepresented, and that editors at his university were all just doing a school project (UPenn, in that case). Then mere days later, these new Harvard users all showed up, at once, with relatively the same shared positioning. A multiple of new accounts all moving in force together, when this article has this ongoing SPA/trolling/sockpuppetry problem: how was this supposed to look and be read? As far as ownership, I challenge that. If some users (not sure who you were implying there) wanted to play ownership of that article, it certainly wouldn't be the handful that are trying to constantly get more people to '''[[Talk:Waterboarding#Another_failed_attempt_to_boot_the_opposition|look at the cesspool it's been turned into.]]''' <span style="font-variant:small-caps"><font color="#800080">[[User:Lawrence Cohen|Lawrence Cohen]]</font></span> 00:39, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::So they still didn't do anything wrong, but had unfortunate timing and an unfortunate target article? Shame on them... -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 00:42, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Yes, they waded into a snakepit with no idea of what they were getting into. For a professor to ask students to edit Wikipedia is not necessarily problematic (we had no problem with the minor edits on Day 1 of the assignment); to explicitly send them straight off to ''dispute resolution'' &mdash; one of the nastiest aspects of our community &mdash; was irresponsible. It's irresponsible because it puts the students in an unfair position where both their actions and motives will be questioned, and they will be mistaken for sockpuppets. It's not fair to Wikipedia either; we were trying to judge consensus among Wikipedians, and single-purpose accounts only impede that process. [[User talk:Crotalus horridus|<font color="#11A"><b><tt>***&nbsp;Crotalus&nbsp;***</tt></b></font>]] 00:46, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::::Some of their suggestions are very good. For newbies, they're doing pretty darn good. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 00:50, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::::I well understand the reasons that the opinions of new users should be given less weight, especially considering the risk of canvassing and sockpuppets present in single-purpose accounts.  But does their lack of editing history make their views of so little weight that the mere act of posting them to a discussion page is grounds for suspension?-[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 00:56, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::Only group 4 was disruptive, as far as I can tell. The others, 2 in particular, did fairly well. The problem is: what happens if this sort of assignment were to catch on? We can handle one class, but what if there were 100 of them? Even if 5/6 of the groups behave themselves, that still leaves 1/6 causing disruption, and multiply that by all the potential classes out there and we've got a real problem. [[User talk:Crotalus horridus|<font color="#11A"><b><tt>***&nbsp;Crotalus&nbsp;***</tt></b></font>]] 00:54, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::::::I don't think that would become a real problem. Remember, this is all being documented for their assignment, and causing intentional disruption is a good way to fail that assignment. By it's very nature, we're guaranteed that these situations will be reviewed by other people, and are far less likely to go unnoticed than some disruptions we've had. I actually hope this does catch on, and that they (while likely learning ways to help avoid the panic) do more projects like this in the future. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 01:00, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:Sure we do. As the collective community (or members of it) that compose Wikipedia and the Wikimedia Foundation, we do indeed own the articles as long as they are on Wikipedia. Of course, all of our contributors become part of that community (unless they remove themselves by their actions). WP:OWN is aimed at individual action, not collective, and WP:CANVASS and policies on meatpuppetry reflect the community consensus on these types of activities. <sup>[[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#fff;background:#000;border:1px solid #ccf">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<strong style="color:#fff;background:#000;border:1px solid #ccf">talk</strong>]]</sup> 00:38, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::The community welcomes these editors with open arms. It is specific individuals that have the OWNership issues. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 00:44, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
*I'm very surprised that (as I noticed from the discussion above), we don't have an article on [[Constructive knowledge]], an important legal concept. Maybe some of these editors would be interested in writing that? [[User talk:Crotalus horridus|<font color="#11A"><b><tt>***&nbsp;Crotalus&nbsp;***</tt></b></font>]] 00:43, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
Frankly, I'm inclined to mostly side with the students and professor. I think the one thing that some of them did wrong was not be up front about their assignment. Other than that, I don't see any good evidence they were coordinating to promote a particular POV or intended to be disruptive. If the parameters of the assignment included that they should be making their own decisions, following our policies, and not intentionally disrupting Wikipedia, I don't see how having a few fresh, knowledgeable, and intelligent editors hurts anything.
 
I also don't see how WP:CANVASS applies, since there isn't any solid evidence presented that the intent was to votestack.  This whole thing feels a little too hostile to newbies who don't get started under our terms, IMO ([[WP:BITE]]). [[User:Sxeptomaniac|Sχeptomaniac]]<sup>[[User talk:Sxeptomaniac|χαιρετε]]</sup> 00:49, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::certainly they are votestaking, in the sense of conspiring to promote a favored view:
"Do we want, though, to make a suggestion about the multiple graphs right away in the first posting? My only thought is that we might want to have several options to lay out, possibly even with pros and cons. Or that we devise a plan for sequencing our mediation, based on what we believe the reactions may be. " (group 2) What can be clearer--they are planning to systematically  present their group position though individual contributions in such a way as to have the best tactical results. sure, one can plan to present a cross-examination in such a way--it's legitimate legal strategy; they have their rules; we have ours.  They either didn't bother to  inform themselves of our requirements for ethical participation-- or decided to ignore them. Whichever it is, it doesn't look good. I know what grade I'd give this group  '''[[User:DGG|DGG]]''' ([[User talk:DGG|talk]]) 01:01, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:I suggest we forgive any transgressions as long as they report back that Wikipedians take neutrality and integrity of articles very seriously.  Good writers + good thinkers = good citizens, usually, and the plan was slightly misguided but not ill of motive.  Also move to ask the professor to extend the assignment deadline a day and award extra credit for anyone writing an article on constructive knowledge.  [[User:Wikidemo|Wikidemo]] ([[User talk:Wikidemo|talk]]) 00:56, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::I think they took neutrality and integrity into account well enough, but didn't take into account the strong desire for transparency you find in many here.  A lack of transparency is often interpreted as an intent to hide something around here. [[User:Sxeptomaniac|Sχeptomaniac]]<sup>[[User talk:Sxeptomaniac|χαιρετε]]</sup> 01:03, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Their plan was incompetent--would they practice in a jurisdiction and not bother to read its rules? '''[[User:DGG|DGG]]''' ([[User talk:DGG|talk]]) 01:04, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::::Their plan wasn't perfect, but it wasn't bad at all. It was panic and bad timing, which no one can fairly be blamed with, that caused the initial disruption. Now that it's cleared up, I see no issue with their actual behavior, nor did they actually break our rules. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 01:12, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::I'm still unclear on how this "disrupted" the discussion. It seems to me as if the only actual disruption was the accusation of meatpuppetry itself.    -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] ([[User talk:Lciaccio|talk]]) 01:21, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
'''Can we close this''' and move on?  Quite apart from the class assignment, I'm now aware of what a mess the [[Waterboarding]] article is. It came off protection just recently and the edit warring has started right back up.  Editors there are begging for it to be protected so that things can be worked out, and I'm inclined to agree with them. [[User:Raymond arritt|Raymond Arritt]] ([[User talk:Raymond arritt|talk]]) 01:08, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:At the very least, the instructor should have his grade knocked down for not doing enough research about the assignment he was giving, not providing his students with the tools needed (links to relevant WP policies), and failure to consider the impact of this assignment on Wikipedia itself. Bad teacher, no donut! [[User:Pairadox|Pairadox]] ([[User talk:Pairadox|talk]]) 01:10, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::Hardly. Their impact has been mostly positive, rather it's the over-reactions of experienced editors that are causing the disturbance. I '''strongly''' encourage them to do this again, but for their own sake, try to avoid freaking out the natives. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 01:22, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
:::it's positive in the sense that now we are aware of the effect that there can be from groups plotting off-WP to affect our editing, and they've been transparent enough to give us actual examples of how such a group operates and thinks. I would personally deal with it here by deleting all discussions on the affected pages from the point they became involved. I've cited one example of a literal plot, and there have been others mentioned above. It will be a useful ethics lesson to all. Careless teacher, careless students. But then, i am not from harvard, so I wont make jokes about it. '''[[User:DGG|DGG]]''' ([[User talk:DGG|talk]]) 01:32, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
::::<s>If you want to be a fool and disregard their good advice and neutral insight, go ahead.</s> Off-wiki collaboration does not equal evil plotting. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 01:41, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::I'm sorry, that was a lot more harsh that I meant. I understand why you feel it was manipulative, but disagree that it actually was. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 01:55, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
===Alleged meatpuppet speaks out===
I resent the implication that this was meatpuppetry or that we conspired to vote-stack or to disrupt the normal workings of wikipedia.  At all times our intention was to put forth a good faith effort to resolve the current dispute.  Because the page was (as has been noted) something of a mess, we felt that the best way to do this would be to first discuss our impressions of the arguments that had come before, and what sort of compromise could be reached.  We saw requests for valid sources of a dispute about whether waterboarding is torture.  We saw that those sources had been offered and largely ignored. We pointed to the most obvious instance of this ignored offering, and suggested a fairly neutral solution.  Because we are separate and distinct people, we posted our opinions separately and distinctly.  It was never our intention to inflate our authority by doing this, but only that it be given exactly the weight that one experienced user and several new users' opinions should be given.  We encouraged and anticipated comment by other wikipedians, and were perfectly prepared to be outnumbered. The reaction I've seen by wikipedians has been appalling, and has certainly curbed my desire to express my view in any future dispute.  I acknowledge one fair point from our various detractors: it may have been a better idea to declare our group project outright.  We discussed it, and the reason we decided against it was because we wanted to avoid distraction from the actual issue under dispute.  I see that this has happened anyway, and I regret that. Lastly, (though the posting of this comment will render it redundant,) I just wanted to let lciaccio know that as far as I know none of our accounts were actually suspended. [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] ([[User talk:Vhettinger|talk]]) 01:37, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
===Outside view===
I am of absolutely no consequence to this discussion, but the concern I see among the "regular" Wikipedians here is one of transparency. Had the participants announced their presence and intentions, as one group apparently did, I would imagine this would have been a non-issue. [[User:Gladys j cortez|Gladys J Cortez]] 01:42, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
:Bingo. Give that lady a cigar. And with that, I'm gonna close this thing. Back to work, folks. [[User:Raymond arritt|Raymond Arritt]] ([[User talk:Raymond arritt|talk]]) 01:53, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
 
::I concur with Gladys here, and Ned Scott above, re -outside groups bringing micro-consensus to the table, not premeditated COllusion of the MeatPuppetry variety. Asserting athat all the groups were homogeneous of opinion seems fatuous at best. I'm not thrilled about the potential for abuse, but here we've got Jehochman saying he can, essentially, vouch for the professor's intent being non-malicious, and a group of students who were open. It's entirely possible the level of candor was open to interpretation, and if we get 30 Harvard eggheads as regular editors, good on us, it'll help balance out the flat earthers.  (SAT vocab and pithy references? you bet. got to look best when the bean-town brains show up.) [[User:ThuranX|ThuranX]] ([[User talk:ThuranX|talk]]) 01:57, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}
 
=Preliminary Discussion=
Dispute ideas:
 
*Is Santa Claus a mythical character? [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Santa_Claus#Santa_Claus Santa Claus]
 
*Is waterboarding torture? [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Waterboarding/Definition#RfC:_Is_waterboarding_a_form_of_torture.2C_based_on_sources.3F Waterboarding]
**I've just skimmed part of the dispute, but it seems like a good, ongoing dispute that goes to heart of the Wikipedia ethos. I'm going to finish reading through and then comment. Also, as much as I like the Gavin Newsom question, I think it's not universally accessible. [[User:Ac|Ac]] 10:47, 7 January 2008 (EST)
***Yeah, I tend to agree on that point; I simply saw the Newsom dispute and realized I could try and give a pretty decent answer to it, and figured I probably ought to. [[User:Kratville|Kratville]] 13:46, 7 January 2008 (EST)
****I was suggesting IRL to Kelly and Alexis that perhaps we should come up with some internal concensus before we comment on the site, instead of just adding our two cents individually (12 cents collectively?).[[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] 14:02, 7 January 2008 (EST)
 
*Is Gavin Newsom still Catholic? [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Gavin_Newsom#No_longer_Roman_Catholic Gavin Newsom]
**I just put a comment in on this, since I happen to have my electronic version of the Catholic Catechism on hand. [[User:Kratville|Kratville]] 23:30, 6 January 2008 (EST)
 
 
*Should info from the Navy be included in article on Gulf War syndrome? [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Gulf_War_syndrome#Request_for_comment:_Navy_Times Gulf War Syndrome]
 
*Should Harry Potter film entry be based on original British book name? [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Harry_Potter_and_the_Philosopher%27s_Stone_%28film%29#RfC:_Philosopher.27s_Stone_vs._Sorcerer.27s_Stone Harry Potter] [[User:Khoffman|Khoffman]] 20:00, 6 January 2008 (EST)
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Non-administrator_rollback Should non-administrators be permitted to rollback on Wikipedia?]-[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] 11:47, 7 January 2008 (EST)
===Group Comments===
*I think we should go with the "is waterboarding torture?" dispute. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] 11:37, 7 January 2008 (EST)
**This was orally seconded, thirded, fourth-ed and (I believe) fifth-ed just before class.[[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] 14:05, 7 January 2008 (EST)
**Good stuff.  Sounds like we have a rough consensus to move forward with the waterboarding debate. [[User:Khoffman|Khoffman]] 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)
*Am I oversigning my posts?  I don't know Wikietiquette.  Wikitiquette?  [[User:Khoffman|Khoffman]] 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)
*How does everyone feel about meeting tomorrow (Tuesday) at noon, Hark cafe? [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] 23:50, 7 January 2008 (EST)
**I can do that [[User:Kratville|Kratville]] 01:18, 8 January 2008 (EST)
**I've got a nice little table and everything down by the cafe [[User:Kp|Kp]] 12:00, 8 January 2008 (EST)


===Discussion of Waterboarding Debate===
**I also understand the psychological reaction to feeling somehow tricked (although I maintain that we acted as novice users without trickery). Yet given that every other user is allowed anonymity and need not disclose his or her purposes in joining WP, I think it’s unfair to require a higher standard from us. Although we were required to participate for a class, we were only trying to further what we individually understood to be WP’s neutral point of view. I have no doubt that there are many benevolent WP editors out there; I also have no doubt that there is a significant minority of WP editors who participate for some reason other than to further a quality encyclopedia with a neutral point of view. The latter group does not self-identify prior to editing, and I submit WP should be far more worried about them than us.


* Overview: The Wikipedia debate on waterboarding centers around whether the statement "Waterboarding is a form of torture" should be used.  At this point, the discussion seems to have broken off into a more meta debate on Wikipedia's purpose and the role of sources in forming conclusions.  The big question for our purposes is how we can participate in the debate in a constructive way that might lead to a resolution. [[User:Khoffman|Khoffman]] 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)
**Lastly, I’d like to address our choice of topic. Waterboarding is a contentious issue, and it is true that we could have chosen less disputed disputes to resolve. But given WP's social importance, it is important to understand its mechanisms for enforcing neutrality on these kinds of highly contested issues. The way in which WP resolves whether Santa is a mythical character might be a good way to learn about how most of WP functions, but the stakes are clearly less important. "Waterboarding is a form of torture" is an extremely strong and unequivocal statement for an encyclopedia that has a reputation for taking a neutral point of view. The original RFC asked if there were sources to support the proposition that any dissent was a non-trivial, non-fringe view. The RFC was clearly going in circles because people were addressing the substantive heart of the dispute rather than the more abstract question the RFC rightly asked. In some ways, I think WP is a victim of its own success. It is now the first source many people turn to when asking questions online, but that very prestige should subject WP and the way it functions to much closer scrutiny by society. [[User:Ac|Ac]] 09:56, 9 January 2008 (EST)
* Here are a few thoughts on the issue:
** A lot of the debate is centered on whether "waterboarding is a form of torture" is too conclusory, given the contemporary debate on whether waterboarding is torture. It seems to me that the debate itself on whether waterboarding is torture is an important aspect of waterboarding as a social institution.  If we think of users looking up waterboarding on Wikipedia, they will probably want both a historical review of waterboarding and some discussion of the debate over whether it is torture.  I think the article should include a section entitled "The Debate on Waterboarding as Torture" with sources on both sides of the debate.  Similar to how an article on evolution should include a discussion of the debate over teaching evolution in public schools, or an article on global warming should include a discussion on the American political debate on global warming. [[User:Khoffman|Khoffman]] 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)
**Currentness concerns: One of the philosophies behind Wikipedia is that the articles should be timeless and not obviously tied to current events. The waterboarding debate is very current, and ten years from now people may have forgotten the debate over whether waterboarding is torture altogether.  I think a section on the debate could remain relevant, though, if it is considered a significant historical moment, rather than an ongoing debate. [[User:Khoffman|Khoffman]] 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)
*How can we contribute to the discussion?
**Should we weigh in on whether Wikipedia should keep the statement "waterboarding is a form of torture"?  If so, what is our position? [[User:Khoffman|Khoffman]] 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)
**Should we contribute by suggesting alternative solutions, such as adding a section on the debate? [[User:Khoffman|Khoffman]] 19:53, 7 January 2008 (EST)
***I agree with your proposition that adding a section to the page that summarizes this debate (along with some non-wikipedian sources, as you suggest) would be a good solution. Based on your reading of the RFC so far, do you think the crowd is amenable to something like that?  How might we go about implementing it? (Adding it ourselves, or proposing it in the debate forum?) [[User:Vhettinger|Vhettinger]] 23:47, 7 January 2008 (EST)
****Based on wht I have observed in Wikipedia, I think the latter option is better.  Although people are generally better off jumping in and making changes, once it gets to the point where there is a RFC or otherwise a lengthy debate elsewhere on the site, it is better to reach some consensus before making direct changes. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] 10:25, 8 January 2008 (EST)
***How would we distinguish this from the section that already exists ("Classification as Torture -- Classification as Torture in the United States")?    Are we thinking of putting in a section specifically on the wikipedia debate?  Is that an appropriate point to be made in a wiki article (that's an honest question; I don't have any understanding of the variety of policies, including those cited in the talk page)?  More importantly, since the first line of the article would still either say "waterboarding is torture" or it would say something else, do we think people will be mollified by the inclusion of this section, presumably fairly far down in the article?  Unfortunately, having asked those questions, I certainly have no better ideas, so I'm willing to believe this may be the best solution to a bad problem. [[User:Kratville|Kratville]] 01:16, 8 January 2008 (EST)
** Part of the problem is that those participating in the dispute don't seem to be answering the same question, leading to a bit of chaos instead of a directed debate. From what I have read, I don't see a consensus as to what is really being debated; if we could propose a reframing of the question it might help to focus the comments. Of course, that is contingent on our question being accepted.  -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] 10:33, 8 January 2008 (EST)
***Some seem to be debating whether waterboarding is torture, others claiming the existence of a dispute makes a conclusory opinion inappropriate.  My take is that the answer is between the two: the existence of a valid, informed, and non-fringe disagreement would take the "waterboarding is torture" out of the realm of fact and into the realm of an opinion (which would need to be rephrased for inclusion in the article.  Under this perspective, the relevant question is a ''threshhold'' one: are the opinions on the other side significant and informed enough to put its status into valid dispute?  So for example, the mere existence of Holocaust deniers does not mandate that we pepper that article with the word "allegedly", but the fact that atheists are a minority does not mean we state God's existence as a fact. 
***Once we set that threshhold, we can then determine whether the minority opinion meets it.  Those opinions that seem to spring from the view that only physical abuse is torture may not count towards it if the common (mental or physical anguish) definition of torture is adopted. -[[User:Lciaccio|Lciaccio]] 10:33, 8 January 2008 (EST)

Latest revision as of 02:18, 13 January 2008

Note:This page has been linked to multiple times on Wikipedia. Just something to be aware of us as you make comments here (and of course anywhere on this wiki, it being on them fancy tubes and all). Kp 18:36, 8 January 2008 (EST)

  • Thanks, Senator. -Lciaccio 18:56, 8 January 2008 (EST)
  • I've tried to clean this up a bit and move the large chunks of WP content onto their own pages so that we (and anyone visiting) can use this page to discuss reflections, thoughts, and other sort of meta responses. Kp 13:40, 9 January 2008 (EST)

Overview and Brief History of the Project

Preliminary Discussion

Group 4 Preliminary Discussion Archive

The Debate

Although looking at the RFC page may lead one to believe that the debate is "Is waterboarding torture?", as far as we can tell, the debate is actually (or was intended to be) "Is it disputed that waterboarding is torture?" or -- to put it another way -- is it conclusory / does it violate Wikipedia's NPOV policy to declare as the lead statement "Waterboarding is a form of torture..." Vhettinger 23:00, 8 January 2008 (EST)

The RfC Proposal

After diligent review of the existing arguments and thoughtful discussion of the merits, our group came to what we believed was a fair compromise. We created a new section to the RfC page, and initiated a call for consensus.

  • Lciaccio, Shamulou, Pri2008, Theokrat, and Vhettinger are group members in this discussion.

Reported for Possible Sock Puppetry

As a result of the comments that were made on the RfC one wikipedian, Jehochman, reported a possible incident of sock puppetry. A copy of that report is available here: Group 4 Accused of Sock Puppetry.

Furthermore, there is a section on the Waterboarding/Definition RFC page following our call for consensus which was previously entitled "confirmed meatpuppetry on Waterboarding", but which thanks to Eryck's aggressive and well-reasoned lobbying has now been changed to Harvard student group discussion.

There is also a section on the regular Waterboarding Talk page which still bears the title confirmed meatpuppetry on Waterboarding, but the text of this section is not the same as that on the RFC page.

This has also now been changed. [1]-Lciaccio 15:38, 10 January 2008 (EST)
Good work, LT! Vhettinger 14:28, 11 January 2008 (EST)

Generally supportive comments on this issue can be found on our various talk pages.

Moving on up . . . to the ANI

After revealing who we were on the sock puppet report the discussion was then moved to the ANI where it received a significant amount of comment. While the discussion has been removed from the current ANI a copy of it's archived form is available here: Group 4 ANI Incident Archive.

  • Lciaccio, Vhettinger, and kevparks are group members in this discussion.

Further Fallout

At some point while the discussion was going on in the ANI, there was a call for vandalism of our course wiki at Wikipedia Review. TAs, a few course members, and friends came to the rescue, and the matter seems resolved for now.

  • While there was the initial call for vandalism, there is actually some interesting discussion worth reading over at the review now. Kp 13:34, 9 January 2008 (EST)

Reflections

Wikipedia Culture

Much of what happened occured when two of the users who we had disagreed with began an accusation of sockpuppetry and posted on the admin noticeboard. Indeed, most of the opinions criticizing the group stemmed from these same two users. On reflection, we might have fared better had we chosen a less emotional subject matter. The strong reactions stemmed at least in part from tempers that had flared over the matter long before our arrival.

I did spend a good amount of time reviewing disputes to get a sense of the policies and culture that would govern our contributions. Until this point, my own participation on Wikipedia was mostly fixing grammar and adding source citations. However, I probably chose a bad place to familiarize myself. Although the incidents surrounding a PR firm's creator of pages for its minor aspiring actors were interesting, they gave me no clue of how Wikipedians behave on more sensitive subjects.

I think our main failure was a lack of transparency. I was of the view that as long as we were following polcies otherwise, there was nothing that warranted disclosure. I failed to see what a sense of community thrived on these boards, and how great the disdain for those percieved to be outsiders. Absent a future assignment demanding otherwise, I would love to go back to adding the fact pattern to the entry on Perez v. Sharp, improving the Loi Gayssot‎ page, and adding famous alumi from Iona. It was far more rewarding, and contained far less emotional turmoil. -Lciaccio 23:15, 8 January 2008 (EST)

  • I'm not sure I buy the argument that disclosure was necessary and that some great evil was perpetuated against Wikipedia by our actions. The only error that we may have made was in picking an article where the tensions were already so high from previous questionable actions. If Wikipedia is actually opposed to having groups approach an issue with some knowledge that they have gained and/or conversed about IRL I don't think that this is the best way to build an encyclopedia. While we might not have specific knowledge on this issue (a position that I would actually dispute given the fact that 'what is torture' is in many ways a question of international and domestic law), I would think that Wikipedia should encourage people with specific or specialized knowledge on a subject to comment. Just because a group engages in some collective action exterior to Wikipedia ought not to disqualify them from contributing when they have more knowledge about the issue on hand that singular individuals. Kp 00:13, 9 January 2008 (EST)
    • I understand WP's concern for transparency given the degree to which a poster could remain anonymous through sock puppetry. Nevertheless, I think the entire dispute points to a fundamental tension in WP's dispute resolution system. On one hand, calls for consensus are highly decentralized and would seem to imply a highly informal process. Yet we were critiqued for not fully familiarizing ourselves with the WP dispute resolution process. Not only does this imply the process is actually much more formal than it appears, but in some sense, it also implies WP constitutes its own jurisdiction. To the extent that I believe WP is meant to be an informal community, I don't believe disclosure was or should have been necessary. What I think this dispute shows, though, is that the informal WP ethos is unsustainable where interaction is manipulable by things like sock puppetry and similar shenanigans. Ac 01:16, 9 January 2008 (EST)
  • I agree that disclosure (or lack thereof) is what folks ended up fixating upon at the end as the wrong they felt we committed. That said, I feel like a huge part of wikipedia editing is the very anonymity we tried to retain. The only information anyone has on any other user is (1) the information they choose to reveal on their userpage, and (2) their edit history. People make changes with effective anonymity, and others anonymously modify those changes if they appear incorrect.
  • Honestly, I believe that much of the uproar arose because there was a clear group of parties involved in this controversy, and that group was not incredibly large (only about 5-6 active players); when we showed up, we doubled that number and all had the same basic opinion (with minor variations). I think this shows a considerable flaw in the talk-page format: it relies upon the presence of a discrete and small number of individuals, arriving at the page by chance, working things out among themselves. The process has no way of adapting to a sudden influx of individuals all at once; although one or two can insert themselves into a conversation at a given time without too much difficulty, a group of them cause things to break down, as all of the original participants suddenly discover that their (relative) power over the discussion has shrunk dramatically. Unfortunately, to my mind, the current system of talk-pages is too ingrained at this point to be entirely overhauled, and I figure that means that any sort of organized effort, particularly one that, like ours, arises outside the bounds of Wikipedia, simply cannot function effectively on that site, because it's going to excite too many participants who have too much investment in the issue already. Kratville 01:47, 9 January 2008 (EST)

I'm reposting this because it appears to have been deleted and is, I think, useful commentary. Ac 10:00, 9 January 2008 (EST)

  • Comment from a completely non-involved Wikipedian. This is, after all, a free-to-edit Wiki ;). Please feel free to completely disregard anything I say - I speak entirely for myself, and don't necessarily represent the views of the entire Wikipedia community. I've read the whole fiasco on ANI, as well as the sockpuppetry case, and this page, but as of yet I haven't commented on the whole situation anywhere. I really wanted to get back to this group as a whole, and felt that leaving a message here may be the best route. Firstly, I have to disagree with a number of users on Wikipedia: I don't think that this was a case of sockpuppetry, or meatpuppetry. However, I agree with them that it certainly looked like that, without all the facts. This is why I do think that it would have been beneficial for you to disclose your position immediatley. Also, as you rightly point out above, picking an article where tensions were already at breaking-point perhaps wasn't the wisest decision, but in all fairness, short of spending a few weeks looking at the disputes beforehand, I honestly don't see how you could have realised this fact before jumping in, and so I feel that this was nothing more than an unfortunate but unavoidable mistake. Finally, in response to this comment from Lciaccio: "I failed to see what a sense of community thrived on these boards, and how great the disdain for those percieved to be outsiders". You kinda got that both right and wrong. Yes, the core Wikipedia community is certainly tight-knit, and, very unfortunatly, there are some occassions when outsiders are not welcomed as they should be. However, I don't really feel that this is the case here. I think Jehochman got it bang-on when he posted this on the ANI: "These are students. We hope they have learned something—that online communities do not like being experimented upon". It's really not so much that you, a bunch of outsiders, jumped in and were rejected by the community, but more that when people learnt of your project, (especially when links to this page were posted), they felt uncomfortable, uneasy about being part of essentially an experiment without their consent. I know that, especially having read through this page, I sorta feel "Hmm, here I am participating in Wikipedia for enjoyment, but I could quite easily be being watched, analysed or even used in an experiment without my knowledge". That's certainly not entirely you or your lecturer's fault - anyone can do it - I suppose that this wiki page that I'm editing right now just highlighted the fact so plainly. I do, however, feel that it would have been courteous for you to be as transparent about the project as possible from the outset. In conclusion, yes, you could certainly have handled the situation better in some ways, but no, it's really nowhere near as bad as some users are making out. As far as I can tell, none of you have been blocked from Wikipedia, so I sincerely hope that we haven't lost you as editors - being from Harvard, I should think you'd be a greater asset to the project than Joe Bloggs off the street ;). I really hope that I haven't intruded here - as it's a free-to-edit Wiki, I don't think I have, but feel free to ignore me completely ;). Finally, just to reitterate, the above represents entirely my own views, and not that of the entire Wikipedia community (though I'd hope that a fair few would agree with me :P). Regards, Islander 06:08, 9 January 2008 (EST)
    • I have two minds about this post. I certainly understand how some might interpret the assignment as an experiment. But I’m not convinced that it was. WP is open to all users, and we participated as I imagine many novices might. We neither attempted to sabotage the project nor attempted to force WP users to react in ways they might not otherwise react. Our participation was extremely limited because: 1) we edited a talk page, not the actual article; 2) we did not reframe the RFC but rather refocused it as originally framed; 3) we attempted to find micro-consensus amongst ourselves but ultimately posted our individual opinions; and 4) our suggestions were neither outrageous nor clearly disruptive in and of themselves. Perhaps we should have disclosed our project. But what would that have accomplished? Ex ante disclosure would only have been relevant in so much as it would have allowed WP users to alter their behavior. But I think that would have ultimately resulted in either over- or under-weighting our comments. Most of us are new users, and according to WP norms, our opinions should be weighted accordingly. I somehow doubt that would be the case had we disclosed our identity as HLS students.
    • I also understand the psychological reaction to feeling somehow tricked (although I maintain that we acted as novice users without trickery). Yet given that every other user is allowed anonymity and need not disclose his or her purposes in joining WP, I think it’s unfair to require a higher standard from us. Although we were required to participate for a class, we were only trying to further what we individually understood to be WP’s neutral point of view. I have no doubt that there are many benevolent WP editors out there; I also have no doubt that there is a significant minority of WP editors who participate for some reason other than to further a quality encyclopedia with a neutral point of view. The latter group does not self-identify prior to editing, and I submit WP should be far more worried about them than us.
    • Lastly, I’d like to address our choice of topic. Waterboarding is a contentious issue, and it is true that we could have chosen less disputed disputes to resolve. But given WP's social importance, it is important to understand its mechanisms for enforcing neutrality on these kinds of highly contested issues. The way in which WP resolves whether Santa is a mythical character might be a good way to learn about how most of WP functions, but the stakes are clearly less important. "Waterboarding is a form of torture" is an extremely strong and unequivocal statement for an encyclopedia that has a reputation for taking a neutral point of view. The original RFC asked if there were sources to support the proposition that any dissent was a non-trivial, non-fringe view. The RFC was clearly going in circles because people were addressing the substantive heart of the dispute rather than the more abstract question the RFC rightly asked. In some ways, I think WP is a victim of its own success. It is now the first source many people turn to when asking questions online, but that very prestige should subject WP and the way it functions to much closer scrutiny by society. Ac 09:56, 9 January 2008 (EST)