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I find it quite conflicting that arbitrator CaptainEek said {{tq|"I want to stress that being named as a party is not a sign of wrongdoing"}} [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case&diff=prev&oldid=1139461249] while arbitrator Barkeep49 said {{tq|"I believe in only adding a party where there is some expectation that evidence of misconduct can be shown"}} [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case&diff=prev&oldid=1139377933]. [[WP:ARBGUIDE]], [[WP:ARBINFO]], and [[WP:ARBPOL]] all appear to be silent on the issue. We have over two dozen parties to this case. Is there really evidence of any kind to support misbehavior for each of them? If not, what criteria do you use then to name parties to a case? This needs to be clarified, and preferably codified for the future. --[[User:Hammersoft|Hammersoft]] ([[User talk:Hammersoft|talk]]) 18:33, 15 February 2023 (UTC) |
I find it quite conflicting that arbitrator CaptainEek said {{tq|"I want to stress that being named as a party is not a sign of wrongdoing"}} [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case&diff=prev&oldid=1139461249] while arbitrator Barkeep49 said {{tq|"I believe in only adding a party where there is some expectation that evidence of misconduct can be shown"}} [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case&diff=prev&oldid=1139377933]. [[WP:ARBGUIDE]], [[WP:ARBINFO]], and [[WP:ARBPOL]] all appear to be silent on the issue. We have over two dozen parties to this case. Is there really evidence of any kind to support misbehavior for each of them? If not, what criteria do you use then to name parties to a case? This needs to be clarified, and preferably codified for the future. --[[User:Hammersoft|Hammersoft]] ([[User talk:Hammersoft|talk]]) 18:33, 15 February 2023 (UTC) |
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=== Statement by Renaati (non-party) === |
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In a case like this I think it needs to be recognised firstly, that some parties cannot be assumed to be arguing in good faith, and secondly that the content cannot really be separated from the conduct. In order to determine if someone is engaging in a pattern of misinformational contributions...you have to determine if the contributions are actually misinformation. A procedural insistence on going "oh that's content, we don't deal with that" will result in serious issues going unaddressed - again. It is necessary to consider the whole picture. "Divide and conquer on technicalities" is a tried-and-true method used by certain types of disruptive actors in this and related areas, and it needs to be recognised and dealt with. |
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I also caution against falling into the false neutrality trap. Neutrality does not mean giving all sides equal weight. Some sides are clearly bunk and should be discarded. Sometimes there is a verifiable correct side to a debate. In all cases but especially in the case of Holocaust history, it is critical to understand that, and not be swayed by demands for undeserved consideration for perspectives that don't follow the facts. An opinion is not valid simply for existing. Treating unsubstantiated fantasies and outright lies as if they have the same weight as verified facts and authoritative research has real consequences. Similarly, beware of the whataboutism trap, where one side being annoying is used as justification to disregard anything they were actually right about. Does this IceWhiz guy's sockpuppeting suck? Yes, but that doesn't mean the historical revisionism stuff isn't a big - arguably bigger - problem too. |
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This case should be taken up, possibly by the arbitration committee, but maybe instead by a higher-level task group that's empowered to employ professional assistance and to work on content as well as conduct. This is a deep-rooted issue that's not limited to the Holocaust in Poland subject area, or even limited to Wikipedia, and I suspect it's going to need a powerful executive with wide-ranging authority to fix it, if it can be fixed. [[User:Renaati|Renaati]] ([[User talk:Renaati|talk]]) 13:22, 16 February 2023 (UTC) |
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===Statement by Anthonyhcole (non-party)=== |
===Statement by Anthonyhcole (non-party)=== |
Revision as of 19:00, 16 February 2023
Requests for arbitration
Holocaust in Poland
Initiated by the Arbitration Committee, invoking its jurisdiction over all matters previously heard and exercising its authority to revisit any proceeding at any time at its sole discretion.
Potential parties
All parties listed were named in "Wikipedia's Intentional Distortion of the History of the Holocaust" (link). Editors named in the article but not included are those who are indefinitely blocked/banned, who are deceased, or who are or were sitting Arbs. Parties may be added or removed at the discretion of the Arbitration Committee if a case is opened. Inclusion in this list, or as a party if a case opens, does not mean that misconduct has or will be found.
- Buidhe (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Ealdgyth (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA)
- Ermenrich (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- François Robere (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- GizzyCatBella (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Jacinda01 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- K.e.coffman (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Lembit Staan (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Levivich (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Mhorg (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Mick gold (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- My very best wishes (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Nihil novi (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Paul Siebert (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Piotrus (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Poeticbent (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Szmenderowiecki (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Voceditenore (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Volunteer Marek (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Xx236 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Drmies (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA)
- El C (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA)
- GoldenRing (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Sandstein (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA)
- TonyBallioni (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA)
- Ymblanter (talk · contribs · blocks · protections · deletions · page moves · rights · RfA)
- Confirmation that all parties are aware of the request
- Buidhe
- Ealdgyth
- Ermenrich
- François Robere
- GizzyCatBella
- Jacinda01
- K.e.coffman
- Lembit Staan
- Levivich
- Mhorg
- Mick gold
- My very best wishes
- Nihil novi
- Paul Siebert
- Piotrus
- Poeticbent
- Szmenderowiecki
- Voceditenore
- Volunteer Marek
- Xx236
- Drmies
- El C
- GoldenRing
- Sandstein
- TonyBallioni
- Ymblanter
- Proceedings being revisited, in part or in whole
- Piotrus
- Eastern Europe
- Eastern European disputes
- Eastern European mailing list
- Russavia-Biophys
- Antisemitism in Poland
- Warsaw concentration camp case request
Statement by Buidhe
Statement by Ealdgyth
You know... a bit more guidance on exactly WHAT this means would be nice. What are you LOOKING at and what do you want to see. (And I'm going to proactively request a LOT more words, because frankly, after the last few times I submitted evidence and had it not understood because it was within the word/diff limits, I'm tired of being asked for evidence that is hamstrung by evidence limits.) Ealdgyth (talk) 20:28, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
Old links to previous thoughts:
- My thoughts on an Amendment request for Eastern Europe from April 2019
- Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Antisemitism in Poland#Statement by Ealdgyth from June 2019
- Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement/Archive280#Statement by Ealdgyth from Jan 2021
- User:Ealdgyth/Holocaust in occupied Poland arb com evidence#Summary from Jan 2022
- Warsaw Concentration Camp from Dec 2022
This is not an exhaustive list at all. I'm pretty sure I weighed in on the lifting of the topic bans for VM and GCB, and I know I've weighed in on many other Arb Enforcement threads that I can't find easily (incidentally, I'd love to see links to the discussions that lifted those topic bans). Nothing is resolved or fixed yet. There is still a disinclination to actually look past the surface and get into the meat of the issue - which is distortion of the articles through various means. Instead, it's still a battleground (the comments here at this page show several examples of it) that has too many people interested in scoring points against the "other side" (and that holds true for both "sides") rather than actually fixing the articles. As for the existing procedures - they aren't working. The sourcing restriction is a joke - when one of the arb enforcement threads resulted in a warning for Buidhe for removing sources that did not fit the sourcing reqs, it's clear that the sourcing requirement isn't working (see the Jan 2021 comment listed above). In that example, the Mark Paul source that's been discussed to death in the past as an unreliable source was restored over Buidhe's objections and Buidhe was told by the admins at that enforcement that basically, no matter the requirement for using only high-quality sources AND the fact that previous discussions had come to the conclusion that Mark Paul did not meet the enhanced sourcing requirements in the topic area, the onus was on her to prove AGAIN on the talk page that the Paul source (and others) did not meet the requirements. I think we can see that the sourcing requirement isn't working. On whether I think arbitration now would solve the issues? Given the track record of past arbcoms, forgive me for not having a lot of hope that anything will change. But sure, let me try again. Please read my above past statements. They still ALL apply. It's still a battleground where too much time is spent chasing Icewhiz and not enough time fixing articles. And why should I try to fix them when it's likely that I'm just going to have to fight tooth-and-nail to exclude obviously unreliable sources like Mark Paul? (Please note that I'm as opposed to including anything that pushes a "all Poles were collaborators with the Nazis" POV also.) The subject of the German actions in Poland in the Holocaust (and by extension, the whole of Eastern Europe) is one where nothing is easy and it's too easy to fall prey to POV-pushing. What's needed is calm discussion without battleground behavior and the willingness to compromise. That's not happening, and the only reason it's not nastier right now is that much of the attention is now focused on Russian-Ukrainian issues due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. This is a bit over 500 words, but I'm going to beg folks' indulgence on it.
- As for being listed as a party, I knew that allowing myself to be interviewed might lead to an ArbCom case with me being mentioned. I did think hard about it, but in my opinion, it's important that we (as in Wikipedia) get our articles on this topic right. I don't necessarily agree with everything in G&K's article, and I'm certainly not a fan of Icewhiz, but I do think we need to make sure our articles are correct as possible. I'm actually surprised (and rather pleased) that ArbCom took the initiative and is trying to solve the problem, so I'm not fussed about being listed as a party. Ealdgyth (talk) 00:08, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Ermenrich
I'm not entirely sure what to post here and honestly, given how unpleasant this topic area is, I'm not sure I want to say anything. I have been mercifully uninvolved in this topic area for quite some time, and was mostly involved through the fact that some of the same editors also edit articles related to other aspects of Polish history. I was quite amazed to see that I've been cited in the Grabowski/Klein article. Let me simply say that I'm fairly certain that there is some truth to what Grabowski/Klein write about the topic area (which is certainly peer-reviewed, Floquenbeam, see [1]).--Ermenrich (talk) 22:38, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by François Robere
Statement by GizzyCatBella
Note:
- Jacinda01 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) (listed as party here) (with a total of 16 edits) is a (possible, but I'm sure it is) sock-puppet of Icewhiz (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
See edit by a block sock puppet named Bob not snob -->[2] See the same edit of Jacinda01 restoring blocked sock puppets entry 24 hours later.
Do you still want to hear from them? - GizzyCatBella🍁 22:20, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
Jacinda01 is mentioned by G.&K as follows:
In September 2020 and February 2021, Buidhe and a user called Jacinda01 added these facts to Muszynski's Wikipedia biography, using the mainstream Polish newspapers OKO Press and Gazeta Wyborcza as their sources.
(link) - GizzyCatBella🍁 23:16, 13 February 2023 (UTC)- Edited: Please also note that G.&K. fail to mention in their work that the sock-puppet of Icewihz made the exact entry as Buidhe and Jacinda01. This important part has been ether intentionally or forgetfully (🧐?) omitted. - GizzyCatBella🍁 17:45, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- The succession was as follows:
- Buidhe - September 19/2020 - mentioned
- Bob not Snob - February 8/2021 - omitted
- Jacinda01 - February 9/2021 - mentioned
- The succession was as follows:
Update: As of today (February 15/2023) Jacinda01 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) has been blocked as sock puppet. - GizzyCatBella🍁 19:02, 15 February 2023 (UTC) link - to found sock-puppet accounts of Icewhiz - GizzyCatBella🍁 19:30, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Opinions and queries to ArbCom:
- 1 - The most valuable thought that ArbCom members should reflect on -->Statement by Zero0000 - GizzyCatBella🍁 14:18, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- 2 - This comment by Beyond my Ken addresses a crucial point that needs to be yet plainly defined and backed by a blueprint of some sort. Why user User:Chapmansh, the co-author, is not included as a party? User Chapmansh was involved in the content output of this topic area (notice agreeing with Icewhiz and Xx236 party, as an example) Why special treatment? - GizzyCatBella🍁 02:52, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
- 3 - If case is accepted - one important thing needs to be introduced that will deter the usual mud-throwing to settle old scores and insure that ArbCom deals with real issues - (as HJ Mitchell already suggested) --> Those users who commence presenting evidence are automatically added as parties. - GizzyCatBella🍁 08:42, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
- 4 - Are statements from non - extended confirmed accounts permitted despite WP:APL50030? - GizzyCatBella🍁 17:14, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Personal attack issue
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Statement by Jacinda01
Statement by K.e.coffman
Statement by Lembit Staan
Statement by Levivich
If anybody thinks I've done anything disruptive, I'd ask the diffs to be presented so I can answer for my conduct and we can get on with adjudicating it (in any forum). If nobody thinks I've done anything disruptive, I'd ask to be removed as a party. In the meantime, I'm not going to comment on other editors' conduct while my own conduct is under review. Levivich (talk) 18:24, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Thanks, Animal lover 666. While I could answer Wug and Izno's questions about the scope of current disruption, as soon as I post something critical of someone else, I'll be met with a "counterattack". I'm glad arbs have stepped up to help, but for reasons explained by Floq, FFF and others, I strongly disagree with naming everyone mentioned in the paper as parties (it's fine as a list of people to notify, but it's illogical, incorrect, and very unfair as a list of parties, even in a 'mere' case request; while I agreed to be interviewed for the paper, others did not, and nobody controls whether they're mentioned in someone else's article). This may become the second time I'm a party to a case in which I'm not accused of any wrongdoing (or am I? I don't know). If I have done something wrong, I will answer for my conduct like anyone else, but I am a volunteer and I refuse to be "drafted" like this. I will not participate in a gladiator contest where I exchange accusations and evidence with others so the arbs can give a thumbs up or thumbs down at the end. Some may say this is our way; well, then find someone else to fight in the arena. Besides, the same problems identified in the paper are happening on this very page. I'm glad arbcom wants to help, but frankly I have nothing to show them that they haven't already seen. Levivich (talk) 17:23, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Barkeep49: Please tell me what you think I did wrong so I'm not waiting and wondering. Levivich (talk) 17:46, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- I'm surprised you still think your motion was reasonable, and I don't think it's fair to vaguely mention "other things" without specifying them, and instead suggesting I review a giant page to find it for myself. If you want to "sua sponte" start a case against me, I think you should be a filer and not an arbitrator of that case. Same holds true for every party on this list and every arb. If Arbcom wants to fact-check the paper, or conduct a general review of the topic area, it can do that without naming any parties at all; indeed, it shouldn't even be thinking about parties until after the review, otherwise it's pre-judgment. Parties should only be added on some kind of specific showing of probable cause--that's true for any case, IMO. Levivich (talk) 18:08, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Barkeep49: Please tell me what you think I did wrong so I'm not waiting and wondering. Levivich (talk) 17:46, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
I also want to endorse the suggestion that if Arbcom reviews this topic area, it asks the WMF to hire an expert (similar to what it did in the Croatian investigation) to help them; someone who could answer questions like "what is the definition of 'The Holocaust'" etc. Levivich (talk) 20:21, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Mhorg
Statement by Mick gold
I'm not sure how to respond to being informed about this issue, except to echo the concerns articulated by Floq. Especially his bullet point #2. Mick gold (talk) 12:06, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by My very best wishes
After checking the article by Grabovsky and Klein and the corresponding issues in WP, I can see the following:
1. A number of specific edits mentioned in the article were indeed problematic. However, all of them were made by currently blocked or inactive accounts. All such edits were fixed already.
2. Edits by the currently active participants were good or at least justifiable edits. Here is one of simple examples. Many other cases are significantly more complex; they require reading and analyzing lots of sources. Yes, a number of disagreements had happen. But they have been properly discussed on article talk pages and are typical content disputes. There was no malice or POV-pushing by the currently active participants. I think that the Holocaust in Poland topic area is not broken, and the paper has not identified any problem beyond reflecting two facts: (a) people, even academics, frequently expressing different views and criticizing each other, so that following the WP:NPOV is difficult, and (b) WP is not a highest quality source. The subjects related to Poland are covered much better than ones related to Russia or certain area of natural sciences. It does not mean that no one can be sanctioned because there were conflicts between some of the parties.
3. The article by Grabovsky and Klein is not a scientific work, but a piece of polemics that has been prepared specifically to influence WP (to start this case), after off-wiki consultations with a number of contributors. However, authors have a poor understanding what is WP and how it works. They assume bad faith. They do not know that "every version is wrong version", that people are amateurs and frequently make mistakes only to fix them later, etc. I would like to notice that at least six parties to this case edited BLP page of Jan Grabowski and they had content disputes. It well could be that the publication by Grabowski had a purpose (or may have an effect) of influencing his own coverage in WP and as such might qualify as WP:COI, even though he does this indirectly, i.e. by publishing something off-wiki. And even if his intention was only influencing the coverage of the subject and punishing specific contributors, I think that was wrong. There were these interviews by Klein. She also contacted other contributors (i.e. Paul Siebert, see below, and I presume Icewhiz). That was an off-wiki coordination. Was it a productive collaboration to improve the project? I can not say because we do not have a complete list of the interviews, and we do not know what they were talking about with other participants.
4. A typical "evidence" in the article by Grabovsky and Klein is constructed essentially as follows. Someone has added or removed content that was about Jews/crimes by Nazi/whatever, hence that was POV-pushing. Such argument would not stand a chance anywhere, even here at WP/AE. Maybe this content needed to be added/removed for a number of complicated reasons, from the coverage in multiple RS to relevance to the subject. So again, despite to publication in the presumably scientific journal, this is not science, but a personal vendetta. Moreover, if I understand correctly, the authors have contacted WMF through back channels to initiate this case.
5. The article by G. and K. is not the first on the subject. Here is what going to happen. Authors of the article will carefully record all comments made during the arbitration and then publish their next paper in their sequel criticizing WP. This is going to be an excellent publicity stunt for them. You are taking the bait.
- As a note of order, I did not have any off-wiki communications with any WP contributors for many years and did not participate in any WP-related interviews.
- And yes, what Beyond My Ken said [3]. A half of their claims in the article are moot (because they are made about already fixed edits by blocked or currently inactive contributors), whereas another half is a defamation, in addition to revealing personal information. What they did maybe a scientific misconduct.
- I endorse the statement by Zero0000.
Statement by Nihil novi
Statement by Paul Siebert
After I made this post, I was contacted by one of the authors of this article, and we had a long conversation where she asked for my additional comments and information. I briefly explained her about the history of EE related conflicts, including EEML and shared some general thoughts on the roots of these conflicts. I see that a part of this information is in the article (for example, the story of fake Jewish poster or EEML case), but the authors provide much more details, so they, obviously, performed an independent search. Some facts presented in this article are shocking. I didn't know that Galukopis, a lousy journal that is totally ignored by scholarly community is being used as a reliable peer-reviewed source by nationalist users. I am also very surprised that a well sourced statements about nationalistic stance held by Chodakiewicz were removed under pretext of WP:BLP. I made just a very brief check, but it seems that some statements made by the authors may need additional confirmation. Thus, I found a generally positive review on the book "Life Is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-Occupied Poland" by Ewa Kurek and Jan Karski. It seems that at least early works by this author should not be rejected, and the editors who used her early works as a source did nothing wrong. However, that is only my first impression, I need to analyze the subject more deeply to make a definite conclusion.
I agree with the users who argue that this case should not lead to any personal sanctions: even if the users listed in the article were producing a bad content, they did that without violation of our rules, or because admins turned a blind eye on their violations. Therefore, if this case will be open, we should discuss possible measures for prevention of future POV-pushing, but not personal sanctions for POV-pushing committed in the past.
In my previous post, I shared my ideas on the measures that should be taken to improve the situation. Part of them (I mean source restriction) had already been implemented. I don't know if that led to any improvement (I hope it did), but the recent story of Galukopis (a formally peer-reviewed, but desperately lousy journal) demonstrates that it appeared to be insufficient. I think we need to discuss additional measures. We must develop a new approach to this type problems, because local sanctions against individual persons would be just palliative measures.
I also anticipate a new point of huge tensions: the Russo-Ukrainian conflict. Although everything related to Russia is considered, to some degree, toxic, I also anticipate a huge wave of Ukrainian ethnic nationalism. Remember, Ukraine is the only country in the world where such Nazi criminals and Holocaust perpetrators as Shukhevich are considered national heroes. I think a general approach to prevention of nationalist POV pushing in the Polish related area may be instrumental for dealing with the future wave of Russian and Ukrainian nationalist conflicts. That may save a lot of ArbCom's time and efforts in future. --Paul Siebert (talk) 08:22, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Piotrus
For now, I can mostly point to Volunteer Marek's comment (Edit: also the statement by uninvolved Zero0000 is something I fully endorse and encourage everyone to read) as I can't think of anything better to say except make one point.
In the past, particularly recent (I believe a few exceptions can be found in some ancient ArbCom or two), Committee tended to focus on explicitly commenting on editor's faults, but not on their merits (or even the lack of faults). For example, parties that are found innocent are not really declared as such, they are just not sanctioned. Given that Icewhiz has explicitly stated that his goal is to destroy the reputation of his "enemies", and has duped outside media outlets into repeating his slanderous claims, perhaps it is time to reconsider this and if applicable, issue some findings of innocence or good standing at the end of those proceedings. In other words, community needs to deal with harassment not only by dealing with harassers (which is difficult in cases of harassment by already banned/off wiki parties) but find a way to actively support the victims. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 02:43, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Poeticbent
Statement by Szmenderowiecki
I need two or three days to prepare a statement as I am busy IRL. Szmenderowiecki (talk) 08:46, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Voceditenore
Wow! This case is indeed casting a very wide net. I was mentioned once in passing in the Grabowski article as having pointed out the unreliability of one of the sources in Antony Polonsky. I haven't edited that article in 10 years. My contribution was some copy editing and formatting. My participation was primarily on the talk page where I was responding initially to Moonriddengirl's request for a second opinion on possible copyright problems. (At the time I was serving as a Copyright Clerk.) I've never edited any of the other articles mentioned in the previous ArbCom cases or in Grabowski's article My specialty is opera and theatre. I have no idea whether this case is appropriate nor any insights to offer on the behaviour of the other editors involved. Frankly, I'd appreciate being removed as a party as I am now pretty much retired, but I understand that may not be possible. Voceditenore (talk) 17:14, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Volunteer Marek
Right at the moment, writing impulsively from the top of my head and bottom of my heart I … am of two minds about this. Allow me to lay out my concerns and thoughts in a Pro vs. Con format, from my point of view:
Con
- Arbitration Cases are a colossal sink of time and extremely stressful for those involved. I don't need that in my life.
- This particular case is almost guaranteed to increase the level of off-wiki harassment and threats that I have experienced over the past four years. I am genuinely worried about my personal safety.
- I am concerned that like with the Icewhiz case, the Committee will devote insufficient time to studying the evidence and will do another "let's just ban everyone" ruling.
- I am concerned that some Committee members may be intimidated by external pressures. If they don't deliver the kind of verdict that Icewhiz, or Grabowski & Klein, desire, they may fear they will experience harassment similar to what I have incurred.
- Virtually all of the content that is contained in the G&K article has already been examined either by ArbCom or at AE or other venues. There's nothing new here since last summer. Indeed pretty much the entire second half of the G&K article is basically just diffs from the 2019 Icewhiz case.
- The reminder of the content of the article concerns edits made by long gone users (Poeticbent etc) with a lot of these edits dating back to 2008 or earlier.
Pro
- The article makes a series of completely false allegations directed at me and I welcome any opportunity to help me clear my name. I know there will be plenty of dirt thrown (there always is) and there will lots of yelling and obfuscation but I do believe the evidence speaks for itself. I have already compiled A LOT of analysis of the underlying issues and would be happy to present them.
While I have more "Cons" than "Pros" in the above I also feel that my "Pro" is a lot more important than any individual "Con" except for #2 and so I have not settled upon which way I lean at this moment.
As an aside I'm wondering why User:Poeticbent, who has not made any edits in four years is being included as a party, but User:Chapmansh, who wrote the article that is prompting this is being omitted? Volunteer Marek 20:37, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
GoldenRing also hasn't been around since 2022. (and to add, yes, this would be like, I don't know "quadruple" or "quintuple" jeopardy . Volunteer Marek 20:49, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
User:Ealdgyth - remember January of last year, right after the whole COIN mess? You drew up a list of things that were in need of fixin' in one particular article in this topic area. How many of the users who are perennial participants in these disputes and who are always showing up to complain about this topic area stepped up to help? How many made the effort to address ANY of the issues you pointed out?
One. Me. Nobody else did ANY work. Not even, or especially, any of the editors who are always saying there's problems in this topic area. I even went and purchased some of the sources [4] to try and solve them problems, as did you. And then I got frustrated. Not a single other person was willing to put their time and money where their mouth was and help out. I was the only one trying to listen to you. And then war in Ukraine broke out and that absorbed my attention. Looking at the article it seems like nobody has done much work on it since then (though I see that User:Izno has recently began improving it) Volunteer Marek 00:45, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
User:Barkeep49 "what Wikipedia Policies and/or Guidelines have they potentially violated and what is the evidence (diff) to support that?" For starters, WP:OUTTING. And yes, this does apply to off-wiki material, and yes, this applies to information OTHER than just a name of a person. Doxxing people off Wiki is within the committee's jurisdiction. Icewhiz was banned for off-wiki material for example but there are other cases of users getting sanctioned for posting doxxing material off-wiki (like, say, Wikipediocracy). Posting stuff off-wiki has never been a defense against accusations of doxxing. Someone can very well argue that in the end this doesn't qualify for some reason and that no Policies or Guidelines were violated. BUT, you are asking for "potential" violations and at the very least this is "potential". Volunteer Marek 06:51, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
I want to echo User:HJ Mitchell's proposal in their Addendum. If you start presenting evidence, then you're a party. Of course the ArbCom can add additional editors, whether they present evidence or not, as parties (honestly, that's how all ArbCom cases should work). If that was how this was set up I most likely would still choose to present and be a party to the case per my #1 "Pro" above.
Also - you guys know how these cases can quickly explode (including the 2019 case). This kind of provision might temper that tendency. Volunteer Marek 20:29, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Xx236
My alleged crimes include :
- I have allegedly done 9,966 edits. I do not know how to verify the number and during which period I did the mentioned edits. I do many small edits because of my limited Wikipedia expertise and my poor English. If the authors mean I am delegated by the government to disinform, why has the government selected such an incompetent person like me?
- 'Many Jews spoke poor Polish. You can't pretend to be Polish if you don't speak fluent Polish.' The statement describes situation of Jews living on the 'Arian' side under German Nazi occupation of Poland. The great Polish-Jewish poet Julian Tuwim has criticized poor Polish language of conservative Jews. Neither Tuwim nor I comment 'race' but culture.
- Here is my complete comment: "A figure of 200,000 murdered suggests anywhere from 200,000 to one million collaborators - this remainds me the Lightbulb joke - how many Poles do you need to kill a Jew. There existed criminal gangs who murdered people routinely, not only Jews." I have answered the italicized speculation by FR. The 200,000 number has never been proven by Grabowski who meant "direct and indirect responsibility", so FR misquoted Grabowski. FR writes that one needed 1 till 5 Poles to kill one Jew, which was a case of racist Polish joke. Does anyone believes that the unsourced speculation belongs to the Wikipedia?
- 'Haaretz, Jerusakem [sic] Post, JTA frequently publish lies.' I support my opinion but I would remove 'frequently' and continue the list. 'lies' is my POV, the journalists may be ignorant.
- I have no access to the Forward article, so I do not know the context. I do belive that the Wikipedia is not a list of opinions of accidental people, Lang was a professor of philosophy. I should have expressed my opinion in more moderate words, but comparing a historian to Irving was a character assasination. I have recently read a text by Ewa Kurek, as far as I understand she quotes real Jewish accounts, but does not explain the 1940 context, when the Germans murdered and imprisoned people outside ghettos and did not inside them.
- I am listed below the accusation 'systemic editing to distort factual articles'. I have never conciously distorted any article. I have made errors like people do. Is it allowed to attack editors this way?
- Regarding the 3 million estimate - the number includes victims of Soviet crimes, Ukrainian and Belarussian victims. According to a recent report the Germans are responsible for 2 million of ethnic Polish vicitms. However any such division of the vicitms is based on Nazi definition of a Jew, which is controversial.
- "For the last few years, Wikipedia's articles on the Holocaust in Poland have been shaped by a group of individuals (...) with a Polish nationalist bent. Their Wikipedia names are (...)Xx236(...)" I have been topic banned so I have not 'shaped articles'. Xx236 (talk) 10:18, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Drmies
I'm not sure what we are doing here. Are we going to judge the behavior of Wikipedia editors on-wiki based on the statements in an article? We're not judging the article, of course--but there's plenty judging to be done. And then there's this, "Editors named in the article but not included are those who are indefinitely blocked/banned, who are deceased, or who are or were sitting Arbs"--well, I was an Arb, a sitting one (?), but I'm named. I don't know why Arbs, current or former, should be excluded in the first place, but clearly I'm not excluded. So I would have a few things to say, about the article mostly, but also about initiating an Arb case based on something that cites a banned editor so heavily and is flawed in ways outlined by other editors, particularly User:Zero0000, in a process that seems flawed or at least questionable from the beginning, as Floquenbeam for instance signaled. What are we doing here? Drmies (talk) 15:37, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- I am somewhat cheered by Barkeep49's rationale for accepting the case--so we're essentially going through this because the ball was dropped earlier. And using a peer-reviewed article as a jumping board is a valid rationale--it's just sad that it's this peer-reviewed article. No, I'm not going to fault the reviewer or the journal editor, I guess, for not checking everything, but as I noted elsewhere, being cited incompletely can be seriously misleading, as happened to me. Which one of the two authors was responsible for that, I can't tell, but if "source misrepresentation" is going to be part of it, as Sandstein suggested, than User:Chapmansh (not on the list?) has something to answer for as well. Drmies (talk) 15:52, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Barkeep49, it is not so that off-wiki behavior is completely outside the scope of the committee. Outside evidence was looked at for the Gamaliel case, because, if I remember correctly, there was off-wiki harassment, and off-wiki material was part of the Lightbreather case as well. I believe that there are a few editors here who believe, rightly or wrongly, that the article was a hit job and that a banned editor may have unduly influenced the writing of the article, and that users were doxxed. Since the EEML is listed here as within scope, or under scrutiny, or relevant, or whatever, the question of doxxing is no doubt going to come up in more ways than one, and I know you all have received a notice about that (that notice, I supported it, because I believe ArbCom should discuss and maybe decide on that by now ancient issue). In other words, Wikipedia editors can be and have been held to account for off-wiki behavior. Drmies (talk)
Statement by El C
In so far as myself being instrumental in having ArbCom rescind VM's EE TBAN; in so far as myself being instrumental in having GCB's EE TBAN lifted at AE; in so far as myself being especially lenient on Piotrus' post-EMML CANVASS violations — my guilt is bottomless. No admonishment ArbCom might give me could come close to that which I direct to myself. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.
All I can say is that I made these pivotal mistakes in good faith; but the outcome is what it is nonetheless. I felt Icewhiz's egregious harassment of them served as a sufficient mitigating factor, but now I feel like I got duped. More so than any other time on-wiki before or after. In hindsight, the red flags were all there, so again, I don't have a good defense for having faltered so spectacularly.
I'm not sure to what extent I'll get to participate in this proceeding due to unrelated RL events, so, at this time, I'd like to make one correction to the journal article as it pertains to myself. The article quotes me as saying (and makes me seem as if) "I don't see a problem" with the obvious "false statement on most property being returned to Jews." But what I meant was that this wasn't a problem as a BLP violation only. Obviously, as an admin, I had no authority to weigh in or decide on the content, regardless of my own views. Oh well, I'll take that; I deserve so much worse. El_C 17:17, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- I think it's important to note that WP:APLRS was designed for this topic area (exceptionally so) in order to enforce the use of sources that represent demonstrably high scholarly rigor. If it is found that some editors are consistently falling short of its ethos, I'd submit that that is definitely something that is within the remit of ArbCom to remedy. El_C 23:33, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by GoldenRing
I lurk but am not active here and am no longer an administrator. If there is specific input the committee would like from me then please ask but my involvement here is so far in the past that memory will be a significant issue. What I do remember is that there is almost certainly POV-pushing on both sides but that the subject is so large and complex, and the vast majority of sources so non-English-language, that even figuring out what is going on is beyond anyone who has a full-time job. POV-pushing is not necessarily conscious POV-pushing; it is a topic where it takes a lot of caution to reflect the complexity of the situation in the WWII context where we are prone to reduce everything to good/bad narratives. I don't have great ideas on how to fix this and I think that's fairly reflected in how my comments are treated in the linked article. GoldenRing (talk) 10:51, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Also, what Sandstein said. GoldenRing (talk) 14:09, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Sandstein
As an administrator formerly active in AE in this topic area, I am surprised to find myself named a party to a sua sponte arb case, and echo Floqenbeam's questions and concerns. I do not intend to participate in the case unless asked to by arbitrators, and accordingly request to be removed as a party.
With respect to whether a case is warranted, I don't really have an opinion, since I've not followed developments in this particular contested topic area for several years now. I suppose that the allegations made in the Journal of Holocaust Research article that I understand triggered the present case, as well as any related allegations of serious offwiki misconduct, do warrant investigation. But I'm not sure that this can be done independently of attempting to adjudicate the underlying content / historical dispute (which is apparently about the degree of complicity of various groups in the Holocaust in Poland). Perhaps the focus of the case, if the Committee decides to open one, could be to examine any allegations of serious editorial misconduct (source misrepresentation, tendentious editing, etc.) on the part of individual editors with more focus and thoroughness than an ad hoc AE thread would be able to. Sandstein 13:28, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by TonyBallioni
Statement by Ymblanter
I do not see how I can contribute here. The episode which is mentioned in the article was extremely unpleasant to me, but the arbitrators know this, and the user who needs to be blocked is not going to be blocked, so I am not sure why I am being dragged here.--Ymblanter (talk) 20:34, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
- And this episode was already considered by ArbCom, and I was cleared of accusations of misconduct. Ymblanter (talk) 08:10, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- Probably not very important, but the article was translated to Polish and published in Gazeta Wyborcza [5]--Ymblanter (talk) 12:20, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Blablubbs
I usually keep my distance from DS CT topic areas and arbcom drama, but I did read the recent paper by Grabowski & Klein with great interest; I'm glad to see that this is happening, and I commend the committee for being proactive in tackling this issue. --Blablubbs (talk) 20:22, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Alanscottwalker
In the absence of an English Wikipedia mechanism to have an "ad-hoc" or "blue-ribbon" commission to investigate, make recommendations, etc, I think we (you) should do this, and it at least should consider, no further sanctions, but still examine what allegations appear supported, not supported, or need further context. Alanscottwalker (talk) 20:38, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Floq
I have no opinion on if this case request should be accepted, so maybe I should be posting on a talk page somewhere. Clerks/Arbs can feel free to move this. But my gut finds the way the case request has been opened troubling, for reasons I have a hard time formulating in my head. My (weak) attempt at translating what my gut is feeling:
- Maybe the very large potential parties list is intended to get a lot of opinions on whether to actually have a case or not? But the fact that ArbCom created the case request itself (and Barkeep's comment) certainly makes it look like the odds are pretty good you're going to open one, and the only question is what gets looked at and who gets listed as a party in the actual case. I would certainly have a sinking feeling if I were listed there, just because someone mentioned me in an article.
- Are potential parties expected to comment here, at this stage, even if there is no reason to believe they did anything wrong? Usually, being a "party" pretty strongly implies you'd better comment at the case request or you'll regret it later... is that true here? Seems like there are probably a lot of "innocents" caught in this drag net.
- Not sure what the rationale is for omitting past or current Arbs from the potential parties list, but on the surface it sure seems like a bad look. I would assume any current Arbs mentioned in the article will recuse, and could thus be listed as potential parties; is that incorrect? I haven't looked thru the article and made a list of everyone mentioned; is the problem that almost all the current Arbs are mentioned? And in any case, why would former Arbs not have to deal with this, while mere mortals have to?
- This is outsourcing the selection of potential parties to non-Wikipedians. That just seems wrong. Will you do the same the next time Wikipediocracy has a blog post?
- I don't know, that's the best I can do putting it into words, but this huge potential parties list (wide-ranging for mortals, but with past and present Arbs immune) feels like something that is going to turn ugly and not help with much.
--Floquenbeam (talk) 21:51, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
p.s. Note to self: Remember to never volunteer to help out in contentious areas.
One more question: the article markets itself as an essay. Are we sure it was "peer reviewed" in the normal sense of the term? Not a rhetorical question, a real one. i could be misunderstanding. --Floquenbeam (talk) 21:56, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Deepfriedokra (non party)
I can only echo and amplify Floq's concerns. -- Deepfriedokra (talk) 23:29, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
- This is the sort of melodrama that led me to stop working in AE. Emotionally overly engaged individuals sometimes look for bad guys and vindication that they are right and the good guys. AE and ArbCom serve only to address behavioral issues. They do not decide content disputes. There are other mechanisms for content disputes. Sometimes, those who disagree with an AE or ArbCom decision conclude that the person/people making the decision must be bad guys. It could not be that their behavior was overzealous or just plain inappropriate in any way. And I think that is a factor here to a greater or lesser extent. -- Deepfriedokra (talk) 10:08, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
- I think the Arbs are more likely to do a good job with this case than the WMF. And I'm not prepared to instruct them. -- Deepfriedokra (talk) 14:32, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Robby.is.on
I don't edit in the topic area of the Holocaust in Poland but I've been following discussions about it at various Wikipedia venues for a few years now, where far too often Polish nationalists have kept the upper hand thanks to what to seems like well-organised concerted efforts. I've skimmed Grabowski and Klein's scientific paper and what it describes is absolutely horrific and disgusting.
One thing I frequently observe is that the Polish nationalist group gangs up on other editors. After I twice came to François Robere's defence at their Talk page, GizzyCatBella turned up to my Talk page to inquire about me which I found chilling: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Robby.is.on/Archive_3#Puzzle_clarification_request
(edit conflict) Ah, I see GizzyCatBella's ever-watching eye has picked up my emotional outburst at TonyBallioni's Talk page. Keeping everyone in check, I guess.
I sincerely hope Grabowski and Klein's paper works as a wakeup call to the many people who haven't taken the issue of historical negationism seriously. Robby.is.on (talk) 23:51, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Barkeep49: Where's the alleged personal attack? The fact that articles in the Holocaust in Poland topic area have been full of anti-semitic content is well-evidenced by the Grabowski and Klein paper. Have you read it? Robby.is.on (talk) 00:01, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- GizzyCatBella, is there a language problem? "anti-semitic crap" clearly didn't refer to any specific comment. Robby.is.on (talk) 00:26, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Banedon
Addressed clerking request
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@Barkeep49: @Wugapodes: - perhaps your responses to Ealdgyth's statement should be in its own section? Possibly in the header (to clearly define the scope) or in the comments by arbitrators section? Banedon (talk) 01:59, 14 February 2023 (UTC) |
Statement by Flibbertigibbets
In terms of integrity, the editors in question could choose to abstain from editing certain topics.
I revisited Wikipedia after outside parties alerted me to an arbitration request that addressed my concerns about issue framing on the aforementioned topic. I am disinterested in editing Wikipedia because I feel it is too contentious and lacks an operable process.
I am of the perception that systemic editing to distort factual articles is taking place to create a subjective narrative to objective. My perception, and observations regarding GizzyCatBella (and others), is very consistent with the findings in the reasearch article which I consider to be accurate.
In Re Comment from @User:HJ_Mitchell "I'm not sure what ArbCom can usefully do here, given that any "actual arbitration would require looking at the content" and the content creators. A shortfall in process does not ameliorate the need to investigate the presence of inaccurate and biased information. (and those promulgating distorted information)
There is no internal process to check the veracity of content; and there are no checks on content creators other than back and forth interaction between editors. The arbitration requires a look at the content and an examination of the content creators. With no process for doing so.. (there is no curation, which will become a necessary adaptation given AI as an information competitor)
There is a moral imperative to investigate and address inaccurate and biased information (and those who are creating content to frame issues to objective)
Per the article - and then where I saw the confirmation.
"For the last few years, Wikipedia's articles on the Holocaust in Poland have been shaped by a group of individuals ('editors' or 'Wikipedians' in Wiki parlance) with a Polish nationalist bent. Their Wikipedia names are Piotrus, Volunteer Marek, GizzyCatBella, Nihil novi, Lembit Staan, and Xx236, as well as previously active editors Poeticbent, MyMoloboaccount, Tatzref, Jacurek, and Halibut. Their massaging of the past ranges from minor errors to subtle manipulations and outright lies." My initial perception re Gizzycatbella was formed here Talk:Memorials_in_Canada_to_Nazis_and_Nazi_collaborators and then a view of contributions; there was nothing I could do within Wikipedia process to counter the momentum of the narrative of editors that have "substantial social capital." Flibbertigibbets (talk) 01:38, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
(Follow up revised on reflection) - Currently, I observe that the statements presented here rely more on Rationalization_(psychology) rather than on taking responsibility. It is important to take personal responsibility so arbitration is not necessary. In terms of integrity, the editors in question could choose to abstain from editing certain topics.
Instead of taking this approach, there are calls for internal proof and resistance to outside intervention for necessary internal reforms. It is important to note that a significant external perception exists regarding the failures of internal processes and editor bias, making the need for proof unnecessary. Having integrity means taking personal action to address the concerns listed in the research paper. Flibbertigibbets (talk) 13:47, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Adoring nanny
I have concerns about the Grabowski/Klein article[6] underlying this case. Grabowski states up front that the figure of 3 million non-Jewish Poles killed during WW2 is "false". Looking around at sources on the Web, I agree that many estimates are lower, but Grabowski doesn't make a case for such a categorical assertion. I see the US Holocaust Museum says[7] that It is estimated that the Germans killed between 1.8 and 1.9 million non-Jewish Polish civilians during World War II. But that number doesn't include non-Jewish Polish military deaths during the German invasion, military deaths during the 1939 Russian invasion, military deaths later in the war, non-Jewish Poles who died due to wartime conditions, non-Jewish Poles killed during the 1944-5 Russian advance, or non-Jewish Poles murdered by the Russians before or after the German occupation, such as the Katyn massacre. What is Grabowski's methodology for counting non-Jewish Poles killed during WW2? And on what basis does he say that the 3 million number is "false"?
Furthermore, the Grabowski article makes much of VM's deletions at Marek Jan Chodakiewicz. Reading Grabowski, one gets the impression that VM was whitewashing Chodakiewicz. Yet a version of the Chodakiewicz article[8] that was recently stable for 9 months is highly critical. And when I spot-checked the most recent VM deletion [9], it looked reasonable to me.
Perhaps peer review is less of a guarantee of reliability than we consider it to be.
- Zero0000 said[10] it much better than I could. The GK article should be viewed as the work of a party in a dispute. Adoring nanny (talk) 20:41, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Joe Roe
I'm quoted in the paper as saying that I think the 2019 committee did a poor job with the previous case, which I stand by. Part of that was circumstances (after WP:FRAMBAN and a spate of resignations we were down to six active arbs), but part of it was systematic. As Grabowski & Klein argue themselves, a volunteer committee without subject-matter expertise is just not suited to handle cases like this, where surface-level conduct issues mask deeper problems of source representation and (alleged) coordinated POV-pushing that even specialists have a hard time untangling. So although we definitely have to do something about this, I'm not too optimistic that a second arbitration case is going to work, even though this iteration of the committee is doubtless more capable than we were by September 2019. If you're going to try, I'd think the two major mistakes we made, and which I hope you'll be able to avoid, were shying away looking deeply into the content/sourcing issues (though you also have to avoid imposing your own interpretation on them – perhaps the Grabowski & Klein article helps here?) and being too quick to fall back on god will recognise his own. – Joe (talk) 07:18, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by DeCausa
I think ArbCom should take ths case and commend it for proactively raising this. I don't edit in this area and don't know enough about the article subject matter or the specifics of what's gone on to have a clear view. But (1) I've observed from the outside the ongoing issues, including the Icewhiz saga, and it's clearly unresolved and the outcomes of previous processes questionable. One way or another this boil needs lancing. (2) I've read the Grabowski and Klein essay and even if only 20% of it is true, action is needed to address the issues raised. The essay is getting serious traction IRL. It can't be written off as a "talk page rant" and it's "all been said before". There's too many specifics, too much supporting material cited, and too much credibility in the essay's acceptance for publication in a mainstream peer-reviewed journal to be easily written off in that way.
While I don't edit in this area and don't know the rights or wrongs of this particular issue, I recognise generically the issues relating to a single minded POV group controlling an area of editing. I think we must all know examples of it, sometimes in highly sensitive or political areas such as this one, sometimes in low prominence and esoteric areas. Whether it's happenened in this particular case, I can't say. It is a cancerous presence in Wikipedia though. Optimistically, I would hope that Arbcom could find "the answer" to that generically. That's a ridiculous long-shot of course. I think a key question is that if it is found that Grabowski and Klein's analyis is substantially true, then what went wrong with our processes previously and what needs to change to those processes stop it happening again should be within scope of the case. (I'd emphasise the if once again in that sentence.)
The reason not to accept this case is that there is a massive question mark over whether Arbcom is the right process to get to the complex heart and the truth of it. But it's the best we've got. Good luck. DeCausa (talk) 11:44, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Timtrent
As a non party I can only look on in some dismay. I have read as much of the external papers as I can bear, and find that we are not clean on this article (or set of articles) in this area. It appears to me that our checks and balances are likely to have been subverted, perhaps by accident, perhaps on purpose.
I am emotionally unable to work in the Holocaust area because of family history, though not in Poland as far as I know, so my part here is limited to suggesting that not only does Arbcom take the case, but that their taking of it and decision making in it should be subject to an external audit by an independent and professional auditor.
I suggest the external audit not as a criticism of current or past Arbcom processes and decisions, but to seek to ensure in the world outside Wikipedia that everything reasonable has both been done and been seen to be done. I recognise that this will cost WMF money, but I believe it will be money well spent. Further, it will give our Arbcom team additional confidence in their decision making. 🇺🇦 FiddleTimtrent FaddleTalk to me 🇺🇦 10:00, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- For the avoidance of doubt I do not mean a financial audit. I mean and audit of process, with outcomes that show that all best practices have been adhered to. The overall topic is intractable (0.9 probability) but the Arbcom investigation needs to show process, fairness and relevant other agreed criteria, and to be demonstrated to have done so. This is an important matter for WMF as a whole, let alone EnWiki. 🇺🇦 FiddleTimtrent FaddleTalk to me 🇺🇦 19:32, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- I would suggest further to Arbcom members that they will almost certainly benefit from the direct assistance and onvolvement of WMF in this issue, something I am sure has been considered already prior to their suggesting this case. Since the overall topic is academically challenging, Arbs are likely to find it exercises all of their skills and more to reach a conclusion, whatever their skillsets indvidually and jointly. 🇺🇦 FiddleTimtrent FaddleTalk to me 🇺🇦 00:08, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Zero0000 (non-party)
- Peer review. One of the most persistent wiki-myths is that journals fact-check the articles they publish. Actually reviewers are only expected to check the correctness of articles in some limited disciplines like mathematics. Of course reviewers will report any errors they notice, but reviews generally focus on originality, relevance, clarity and potential interest to readers. It is unlikely that any reviewers looked at all the diffs and almost impossible that any of them studied the background to those diffs (which would require deep knowledge of Wikipedia as well as much more time than a typical reviewer devotes to a review). It is not valid to assume that peer-review bestows correctness. (I write as someone with almost 50 years of experience in academic publishing, albeit in a different field.)
- The Holocaust in Poland is the subject of fierce debate within academia, not just within Wikipedia. The debate spills into the public and political arenas even up to relations between governments. Few of the involved academics can be correctly described as neutral. In the case of Polish-Jewish, Grabowski is the main representative of one side of the debate and his article should be judged with that in mind. Our task in Wikipedia is to fairly present all sides of the debate, not to privilege one side. We need editors who can, within the constraints of policy, present all notable opinions present in reliable sources. Few editors can do this, not least because a large fraction of the sources are in Polish. Losing the main editors who can do justice to either side would be a disaster.
- Reading Grabowski's article. Editors who support his position are angels who are incapable of doing wrong, while those holding other views are devils pushing antisemitic canards. Black hats and white hats like old Westerns. All mistakes made by the black hats are deliberate, and a Wikipedia-wide conspiracy involving admins is hinted at darkly. Many of the examples have long disappeared, but this self-correcting nature of WP is not acknowledged. Nothing in the article, including historical claims, should be taken on faith and only adherence to reliable sources should be judged, not adherence to the "truth".
- The first example I checked. In 2007, Jacurek copy-pasted Holocaust survivor testimony about the difficulty of hiding. It included "Jews with the physical characteristics of curly black hair, dark eyes, dark complexion, a long nose were in special jeopardy". When Moonriddengirl flagged the copyvio in 2009, Piotrus responded by summarising and paraphrasing, reducing this sentence to "Jews with the specific physical characteristics were particularly vulnerable." For Grabowski, this was a malicious hint that "Jews are racially different from ethnic Poles" (p14). We should take this seriously?
- Personally I cannot envisage a useful outcome to this case and if it was up to me I would not embark on it.
Statement by GRuban
I don't envy the role of the arbitrators here. They basically have three options:
- Decide that Volunteer Marek and company need to be hung up by their heels ... and thereby firmly enstate the frightening precedent that if you disagree with an Arbcom decision, you need to go write an article about it in a peer reviewed journal.
- Decide that the article is tainted by association with Icewhiz, and basically ignore it ... and thereby firmly enstate the no less frightening precedent that even writing an article in a peer reviewed journal won't change an Arbcom decision.
- Go point by point down the many claims of the article, extensively reviewing each one on its merits ... which basically means becoming experts in judging Polish WWII historical scholarship. Lordy.
As DeCausa writes, it's an act of courage to put this case up for consideration. I hope the arbitrators accept it and do it justice. Now, as Zero0000 writes, I find it hard to imagine what justice could even look like here. But that's why Zero, and I, are not arbitrators, for which I find regular cause to be grateful. Whatever the decision will be, many will be unhappy. Maybe I'll be unhappy. Heck, I'm unhappy just reading the journal article, clearly two sets of dedicated, knowledgeable, well-meaning people interested in this topic area hate each other with a passion. That's not the Wikipedia I like to think about. Yet, doing justice here is the job the arbcom signed up for: being the few and the proud, the man in the arena. That is what it means to be human, to know that you could make mistakes, even that you will make mistakes, and yet to try. You have to try, because not trying is definitely wrong. Go get 'em. --GRuban (talk) 14:22, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Addendum: I notice two of our arbitrators are making statements in direct contradiction to each other on what it means to be listed as a party.
- User:CaptainEek writes
I want to stress that being named as a party is not a sign of wrongdoing. It is a sign of knowledge about the issue.
- User:Barkeep49 writes
I would like to reiterate my question of for people who are saying that we need to add Chapmansh as a party, what Wikipedia Policies and/or Guidelines have they potentially violated and what is the evidence (diff) to support that?
- User:CaptainEek writes
- These can not both be correct statements. You're the arbitrators, gentlebeings. Make up your minds, does being named as a party mean solely a sign of potentially violating Policies or Guidelines or is it solely a sign of knowledge about the issue? See, already a mistake, and we haven't even started the case. Don't let it discourage you; you're the only arbcom we've got. Correct the issue and move on. --GRuban (talk) 18:12, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by North8000 (Non party)
Regarding the articles in question, shortcomings in policies and guidelines lead to these problems on contentious topics. This can and often happens without violating the letter of conduct rules. I wish you the best and thank you for trying to resolve this using the tools that you have which is dealing with it as a conduct issue. But I'm not optimistic on that and please don't hurt any editors where it is not clearly warranted. North8000 (talk) 14:26, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Outing/ doxing Wikipedia editors has to be taken very seriously. Including off wiki-activities. Wikipedia needs anonymity to compensate for it otherwise being the most privacy-violating major website in the world for editors...it provides a publicly searchable database of everything an editor ever did and exactly when they did it. And broadcasting some otherwise-obscure "public" item needs to be considered to be a form of it. I urge you to take up anything related to that. North8000 (talk) 20:38, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Chess
I'm not involved in this, but User:Chapmansh acknowledges that she is the Shira Klein that wrote this article. I'd like to flag for the committee that she is currently overseeing a Wiki Education course called Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/Chapman University/Jewish Life from Napoleon to Hitler (Spring 2023). She also taught this course in 2021, [11] and student editors in that edition of the course focused on the Holocaust. Given that she has prompted an ArbCom case about coordinated editing on Wikipedia w.r.t. POV-pushing in Holocaust topics, it may be prudent to not oversee a coordinated editing group on the subject of the Holocaust. Chess (talk) (please use {{reply to|Chess}}
on reply) 16:01, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- I should add on that while I don't see any behavioural problems with edits in that course in 2021, given that this case is shaping up to be the culmination of one of the biggest sagas of WikiDrama in this website's history, it would probably best for student editors to avoid being brought into it. Chess (talk) (please use
{{reply to|Chess}}
on reply) 16:33, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
If ArbCom does accept this case, the number of words editors are alotted should be greatly increased. The essay has hundreds of diffs; editors need space to rebut all this. Even the linked essay complains about how evidence is made unclear when constrained by the committee's strict word limit.
Increasing the word/diff limits during evidence should be broadly agreeable to all parties.Chess (talk) (please use {{reply to|Chess}}
on reply) 17:40, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
@Nishidani: I would say that your proposal as currently stated would violate WP:5P3. On a fundamental level, our lack of a formalized peer-review process is what distinguishes us from Nupedia and Citizendium. Knocking down WP:5P3 because we need to enforce WP:5P2 (WP:NPOV) is probably not a good idea, given that our project is explicitly founded on all five of the pillars. If there's a big takeaway from this drama, it's that one "who fights monsters" (i.e. Icewhiz) ruins one's credibility by compromising on ethical principles. That being said, some kind of Wikipedia:GLAM/Wikipedian in Residence program for a Holocaust research institute would be a proposal that I believe could get more consensus. At the very least, the lengthy piece from Grabowski and Klein shows that knowledgeable academics are willing to engage with this website on controversial topics.
In particular, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is knowledgeable, neutral, and has experience with English-language encyclopedia writing (see the Holocaust Encyclopedia). If we are going to seek external input, I believe it would be less controversial and less abusable to collaborate with institutions rather than than particular individuals.
Many people have brought up the WP:FRAMBAN as a poor example of arbitrator conduct, but I would say that the WP:FRAMBAN shows the Wikimedia Foundation views the Arbitration Committee as being able to speak on behalf of the broader English Wikipedia in de:shitstorms. If there is a need for outside intervention, ArbCom should be the body to request this help from the WMF. Chess (talk) (please use {{reply to|Chess}}
on reply) 23:03, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Clovermoss
I'm at a loss in regards to what to say about the underlying subject matter because I don't understand what's going on here and everything is way above my level of expertise (which is none). But given that Jacinda01 was named as a party and GizzyCatBella's response to that, I thought I might have something relevant to say. I'm sure that in a CT (and given what I understand about the whole Icewhiz craziness) is that they're actually are a lot of sockpuppets running around and that'd be frustrating to deal with. But not everyone is a sockpuppet. I consider Levivich to be one of my friends. I think it's unfair that people imply that he's a sockpuppet (even as recently as this past summer [13]). If this is beyond the purview of the case, I understand. Personally I'd just feel better if someone said this sort of thing was not okay. Clovermoss🍀 (talk) 17:00, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- To clarify my concerns a bit more, reading this may be helpful. Clovermoss🍀 (talk) 18:21, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Mzajac
I'm not familiar with this dispute, but I am active in adjacent subject areas.
I have a lot of concerns about the way this is framed through a public shaming by a third party. I hope it doesn't set the specific agenda of any resulting action. But it certainly points to a serious broad problem of which this is merely one manifestation.
Editing in contentious topics is fraught. Despite the existence of discretionary sanctions and general sanctions, dealing with these topics is working in a hostile environment. There is little general community or admin reinforcement of good behaviour or discouragement of bad behaviour. Bitter disputes are in evidence and threatening to escalate constantly, and one is always deciding between giving up on an article or subject, or having to choose to stand up for some principle of guidelines or content against unreasonable argumentation and passive and overt denigration of one's arguments, one's views, and even one's identity. An editor cannot count on the protection of the behavioural and editing guidelines, unless they are willing to aggressively pursue cases in intimidating dispute-resolution forums where the results appear to depend on the whim of a random or not-so-random admin who decides to close the dispute. It is not hard to become constantly on edge in the face of implied threats to try to bring action, even over purely good-faith editing.
I don't know if there are "groups" coordinating "zealous handiwork." I've been on either side of both cordial and unpleasant disputes with several of the named editors. But an editor in a contentious topic can definitely feel the tyranny of coincidental WP:BIAS by a random majority in a particular discussion.
I hope the Arbitration Committee does take this on as an opportunity to identify systematic problems with editing in contentious subjects and make recommendations or take action to improve them. A good start would be to simply encourage consistent and fair enforcement of the existing contentious-editing rules to tamp down the general level of fear and loathing. —Michael Z. 17:21, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Implicit in all this is that if the community, admins, and arbitrators had done a better job of ensuring ensuring a collaborative and self-moderating environment, all these names would not have been publicly pilloried in the first place. I'd rather we acknowledge our shared responsibility and address systemic problems, than see Arbcom selectively pursue someone because they happened to be active in some particular academics' chosen subject area when they were acting within the parameters permitted by our flawed system. Let's not start any show trials unless the reign of terror is to equitably extend to every single contentious topic where biases differ. —Michael Z. 18:26, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Finally, what precedent is set? If one doesn't want to file a complaint, maybe shop around an academic paper, get a publication credit, and have ArbCom do all the work? Publish a study to get 25 articles in one subject field cleaned up? Cite some editors' diffs to get them topic-banned?
- Possible results should consider what stimulated the action. Not that no one should face responsibility for their actions. But a public complaint from off-wiki seems like an opportunity to publicly address a systemic problem. It's potentially risky to set it up as a rationale with serious repercussions to individuals. —Michael Z. 22:36, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Tryptofish (non-party)
I share the concern expressed by some others, about relying on an outside publication as the impetus (in part!) for a case. I've had a professional lifetime in dealing with academic journal peer review, and, as for how ArbCom should understand it here, well, it's complicated. What journal reviewers might look for in "scholarliness" is different from what Wikipedia thinks of as "objectivity/NPOV". It's entirely possible that the authors of the paper wrote with an agenda.
In accepting a case, I urge ArbCom to spell out, from the start, some precise expectations about what does or does not constitute evidence for the case. What ArbCom traditionally treats as evidence – diffs and such – should be relied on as evidence, whereas "the academics who wrote the paper said so, and that's embarrassing for us" should not stand on its own as evidence. --Tryptofish (talk) 17:47, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- I share Floq's view about it being a "bad look" to omit the usernames of current and past Arbs, even if this is only a matter of appearance and not of substance. Just as a matter of good appearances, I think ArbCom should list, above, the usernames of all Arbs mentioned in the article, simply as information, and not necessarily with a sense of making them parties. --Tryptofish (talk) 19:19, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Before starting the case, it will also be essential to articulate the scope, and to do so in a precise and narrow way that doesn't let it spread beyond manageable bounds. Perhaps limit it to:
- Misrepresenting what sources actually say,
- Pushing to include/exclude sources in ways that disrupt consensus, and
- Attacking/impugning/harassing other editors.
- --Tryptofish (talk) 20:29, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Before starting the case, it will also be essential to articulate the scope, and to do so in a precise and narrow way that doesn't let it spread beyond manageable bounds. Perhaps limit it to:
Discussion with Barkeep49, but not central to my statement.
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@Barkeep49: Because you posted about adding Chapmansh as a party, an additional issue beyond those you listed is that they are currently conducting a class assignment here within the case topic area: [14]. I do not know whether or not there are actual conduct issues there, but this is within jurisdiction. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:00, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
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I agree with HJMitchell that it looks like ArbCom will accept its own case request without entirely knowing what it's about or how to resolve it, and with Hammersoft that individual Arbs have said diametrically contradictory things about whether parties will have been prejudged. I think that it is absolutely essential that ArbCom spell out exactly how the case will work, who will or will not be eligible to be a party and why, what kinds of evidence will or will not be in scope (including off-site outing), what kind of "standing" the academic article will have, and how discussions will be organized/threaded, beforehand. Opening the case and then trying to figure these things out will go very badly, so please don't think that you can put it off. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:03, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by TrangaBellam
A Twitter account eponymous to one of the mainstays of this (would-be) case has accused two highly reputed scholars of publishing material ghost-written by Icewhiz. While such paranoia may or may not be justified in light of Icewhiz's disruptive activities, such behaviour does disservice to our project. Clerk note: link has been recieved by ArbCom
I will also urge Arbcom to tread cautiously; pace what Piotrus and others say, the Polish Right's view on Holocaust is rejected by almost every acclaimed Holocaust scholar outside of Poland. It won't take long for the authors of the essay to get a long list of signatories in support. And the cited evidence is extraordinarily strong; they have, clearly, done their homework. TrangaBellam (talk) 19:58, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- ThadeusOfNazereth hits the nail on the head. As Levivich (and I believe, others) have noted, the go-to behaviour of a set of certain POV pushers has been to scream "Icewhiz" and claim immunity. I have no sympathies for a Office-banned editor but the conduct of the rest — esp. around core content policies — needs probing by ArbCom. TrangaBellam (talk) 19:58, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Firefangledfeathers (non-party)
Some editors have wondered whether the paper at hand was peer-reviewed. I emailed the journal's editorial team, and I received a response that said "Indeed, the article "Wikipedia's Intentional Distortion of the History of the Holocaust" was subject to peer-review prior to its publication." I forwarded the full email to Arbcom. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 19:02, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
I understand the case for excluding Chapmansh as a party is based on the lack of diff evidence for misconduct. I urge the arbitrators to consider whether it makes sense to single Chapmansh out for this treatment, since many of the listed potential parties have had no such evidence presented against them. If the committee accepts this case, do they intend to remove all potential parties for whom no diff evidence has been provided? Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 23:32, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Thanks Bk49. The two-prong test is reasonable: (a) an articulation of which PAGs have been potentially violated and (b) diff evidence for such a violation. I assume that allegations/diffs in the paper count. I looked as far as the first four parties, and the first three don't yet pass the test, failing both prongs. François Robere is mentioned in the paper as participating in an edit war, and diffs are provided. You mention "implicit suggestion of uneven treatment", but I was more concerned about possible future uneven treatment: that editors will be named parties in an accepted case despite lack of specific allegations and evidence, with no one speaking up for them to say "why?". Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 07:01, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by SamX (Non-party)
I have some thoughts I'd like to share, but not enough time to adequately summarize them. I should be able to post by 06:00 UTC. — SamX [talk · contribs] 19:31, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
A disclaimer: I am not involved in this dispute, have (AFAIK) never edited in this topic, and have no more knowledge of Jewish/WWII history than any other college-educated adult.
I echo the concerns outlined by GRuban. I'm concerned that the committee's usual approach of addressing conduct issues while delegating the content issues to the community just won't cut it here. What is being alleged is a calculated, long-term effort to undermine Wikipedia's NPOV and manipulate article content by misrepresenting sources, introducing non-neutral and unreliable sources to articles, and giving undue weight to narratives that are not taken seriously by mainstream academics. To properly evaluate the merits of this extraordinary claim, I believe the committee needs to examine both article content and user conduct, as the two are inextricably intertwined. I'm aware that this would directly violate Wikipedia's arbitration policy, but I worry that failing to do so would result in a decision based on a narrow view that could have serious long-term consequences for the reliability of Wikipedia, which is a big deal. Social media platforms with billions of daily users like Facebook and YouTube outsource fact-checking to Wikipedia. A myopic decision here could result in untold numbers of people being fed a distorted view of Jewish/WWII history, which could have very real consequences given the recent amplification of violently antisemitic rhetoric by mainstream public figures. ArbCom needs to get this right.
I'm concerned that the committee, as a group of self-selected volunteers, is not equipped to do so. I have unending respect for arbitrators for dealing with the unending succession of maelstroms tossed in their direction, and I'm impressed by their willingness to stick their necks out by initiating this process. Unfortunately, I believe a complete examination of the claims made in the article may require an expertise in Jewish/WWII history, which (AFAIK) the sitting arbitrators lack. I urge the committee to consider consulting with an independent outside expert, or several experts. Again, this would be a radical departure from established practices, but I think a liberal application of IAR to uphold Wikipedia's five pillars is justified and necessary given the unprecedented nature of this proceeding.
Of course, this is all very easy for me to say. I'm neither Jewish nor Polish, and haven't touched this topic with a 100-meter laser pointer. I haven't been the subject of doxxing or harassment by a vicious LTA. My opinion probably shouldn't carry much weight here, but I figured it might be worth sharing. — SamX [talk · contribs] 04:37, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by ThadeusOfNazereth (Non-party)
I am not a party to this case and have no plans to participate in any way when ArbCom inevitably accepts this, but I want to note my disappointment at the wide array of WP:ASPERSIONS being cast here, including people alleging the peer-review process was bypassed, that the article was somehow ghostwritten by a banned editor, and that one of the authors wrote the article to improve their own Wikipedia coverage. To an uninvolved editor, it reads like conspiracy-minded fear-mongering, and is frankly evidence that whatever results from this case will be doomed from the beginning. ThadeusOfNazereth(he/him)Talk to Me! 19:40, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Comment from Harry Mitchell
I'm not sure what ArbCom can usefully do here, given that any actual arbitration would require looking at the content and would therefore be without its remit. I would suggest that the journal paper in question be given limited weight at least because of the obvious association with Icewhiz. As academics, the authors should be well aware that being "right" does not justify misconduct; an academic who behaved the way Icewhiz has towards other Wikipedia editors in a university or academic publishing environment wold no more be allowed to publish in the name of that institution than Icewhiz is allowed to edit Wikipedia. It is disappointing that somebody whose conduct was so abhorrent has been treated so sympathetically in the journal.
The dispute on Wikipedia will not go away until the dispute in the real world does, as is the case for all ethno-political conflicts, which make up the vast majority of the recognised contentious topics. We try to manage editor conduct but administrators and arbitrators are not qualified to be arbiters of content. We also have limited means at our disposal to deal with people who have no interest in following our policies and who have the time and resources to create many accounts to evade blocks or topic bans.
One thing that might help, if there were academics who would play ball, is to have some sort of arbitration (in the real-world sense, not the Wikipedia sense) where a panel of academics can discuss things like reliability of sources and factual accuracy with Wikipedia editors, but the results of those discussions would be binding unless new sources were presented.
Finally, I do think it would help if some the more prolific editors in the topic area voluntarily took a step back to allow cooler heads to prevail and avoid the perception that it is dominated by small groups of closely aligned editors. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 19:44, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Addendum: Since ArbCom is obviously going to accept its own case request even though it's not sure what problem it wants to solve nor whether it's capable of solving it, it might be an idea to proceed initially without a list of parties but a clear idea of the sort of evidence you want to receive, but everyone who presents evidence (except for uninvolved admins acting as such) automatically becomes a party and parties can be added as evidence is presented. That might stand a chance of leading to inquisitorial rather than adversarial proceedings. It might also remove the stigma of being listed as a party, and assuage some of the concerns about party selection being based on the JHR piece. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 12:43, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Folly Mox
(Disclosure: I emailed the committee prior to posting here, but have further thoughts at this stage.) Mainly I'm here to +1 the idea that User:Chapmansh should be added as a party to the case. Clearly the committee has already received evidence from her (in the form of the precipitating paper), and I think the optics are best for all involved if she is formally invited to participate in the case process.
- @Barkeep49: my concerns regarding Chapmansh are twofold: first that there's the impression to outsiders that only administrators and "the distortionist clique" are involved in the discussion, and more saliently that Chapmansh may not even be aware of the proceedings. Their last edit was nearly three weeks ago, and despite being involved in WikiEd they may not watchlist ARC, AN, or VPP. The same purpose would be served by a discreet email or talk page message along the lines of "we opened a case about the issues discussed in a paper you are credited as coauthor on; if you have any further information that didn't make it to the final publication now's the time to tell us".
- @Buffs: it seems silly and dangerous to invite a foundation-banned harasser to comment on an arbitration case simply because their edits are involved, but Icewhiz does seem to have been invited already through his probable sock User:Jacinda01 (see above comment by User:GizzyCatBella).
Statement by Buffs (Non-party)
Despite a ban, procedurally shouldn't Icewhiz be invited to participate? It is more than a little unseemly to repeatedly condemn someone without the opportunity to even speak in their own defense (also, I'm not saying I endorse such behavior; this is merely a procedural note). This clearly seems to be a backdoor attempt to disrupt WP by a blocked editor with battleground behaviors, however, that does not mean that all of these complaints are without validity. Such claims should be examined on their own merits and decided accordingly. The disruption should be assessed as well. Buffs (talk) 20:35, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Barkeep49: I understand, but it's also kind of my point. By taking up this matter (and it's my understanding that the impetus of this is Icewhiz himself) you are effectively including a wide swath of his opinions in the matter. This effectively makes public publications a back door to having views aired even though they are banned. If we've decided to discount their opinions, a summary statement from WMF would be much more appropriate, not a hearing to discuss said claims. I think it would be MUCH more effective and appropriate to open such a ban to have such opinions aired publicly so they can be publicly rejected/accepted. YMMV. I do not envy your choices in this matter and wish ArbCom the best of luck. Thank you for responding to my remark; no reply is needed unless you want more info.
- I think that, given the volume of information presented, ArbCom should allow reasonable extensions to the word limit. Buffs (talk) 21:40, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- @SilkTork: if all you are looking for is for someone to submit this request, consider it my request (I've never been involved until now). This is a current problem whose roots lie in the past. It needs to be resolved. Buffs (talk) 18:50, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement from Ppt91 (Non-party)
Issues raised in the article are urgent and some of the evidence presented is chilling. While I do have reservations pertaining to the methodology of the Grabowski/Klein publication, its at times worryingly personal tone, and its apparent lack of effective solutions to the problems outlined (especially relative to the sheer number of problems), I think that questioning the validity of the article as a whole is a very dangerous path to take. I believe that the case has serious potential ramifications for the reliability of Wikipedia more broadly and that its importance goes beyond the conduct of named and/or editors involved. (For the record, I do not wish to make any comments regarding the conduct of parties named or involved, and my statement refers only to the importance and relevance of this case.) The Arbitration Committee should accept this case to, at the very least, thoughtfully deliberate on the problem and determine whether any recommendations or solutions can be found before the case reaches WMF. The article's mention of the Croatian Wikipedia Disinformation Assessment and WMF's direct involvement–which seems to be the only resolution the article seriously proposes–makes me worried that the subject of Wikipedia's apparent historical distortion of the history of the Holocaust might rapidly escalate to a point where it will no longer be within the ArbCom's scope. I am not trying to cause panic and/or rush the process; I firmly believe it should and can still be deliberated on and resolved by the enwiki community. Ppt91 (talk) 21:07, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Nishidani (Edit: reply amended to fit within word limit). I am deeply grateful for your thoughtful statement. It is likely the most incisive take on the matter I've read. Two broader points I wanted to add/clarify.:1. The main issue in the article relates to what they perceive as persistent ideological bent rooted in the long-standing historiographical dispute in Poland specifically. Since 2015, ultranationalist views are indeed no longer fringe and the government's attempts to intervene in scholarship are egregious. The authors seem to extrapolate historiographical conflict in Poland to address the Holocaust more broadly, which is problematic to say the least. Often without sufficient evidence or with outdated evidence, they draw a direct comparison between involved editors and vicious right-wing individuals in Poland. Nonetheless, their fundamental case for the lack of NPOV—related to secondary sources used for enwiki articles discussed—is still solid and I think can still be addressed by ArbCom and editors.:2. I believe that Snyder's work is terrific and also think highly of Browning. However, engaging external academics might escalate the case and, as I mentioned in my original reply, could lead to the direct involvement of WMF. Any possible media coverage resulting from their involvement would be detrimental to the case; the Fram case in 2019, while obviously completely different, was covered by Slate and BuzzFeed which, if I remember correctly, had significant impact on how the case would later progress. Ppt91 (talk) 18:52, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Jeppiz (Non-party)
I'm not named and not involved, and have never (as I can recall) edited the subject area. The case comes from an academic journal, and I comment as frequent academic reviewer, author and editor. Zero0000 put it very well. Peer-review is virtually never a fact check (as many non-academics think). Peer-review is no guarantee for being right. What is more, peer-review varies a lot. In top journals in my field, peer-review means three independent reviewers writing several pages of comments, an associate editor adding their own assessment, and the editor-in-chief finally deciding. In most good journals, two reviewers write a page or two. In more minor journals, one or two reviewers may write only a paragraph or two, no AE involved.
With due respect to the journal in question, it would qualify as a minor journal (looking at the journal metrics at its web page) in which peer-review would typically be rather easy. Again, no disrespect intended to the journal, and I cannot know its review process; generally speaking, journals with these metrics do not feature extensive peer-review processes.
I'm no expert neither on the Holocaust nor on Poland, and cannot speak to the accuracy of the article (although I can comment on the methodology of it, which I find simplistic and would have challenged if used in my own field). My comment is merely to point out that the accuracy of the charges in the article cannot be assumed to be verified just because it is peer-reviewed. Jeppiz (talk) 22:42, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Sideswipe9th (Non-party)
I'm not an editor who is active in the Polish Holocaust content area, it's not a topic I'm overly familiar with or interested in. However I did read the paper that lead us to this point, and I was the editor who started a related discussion on this at VPP. I started that discussion because I recognised the generalised behaviours that were described in that paper playing out in other contentious content areas in which I am active.
While I'm certain that editor conduct will form a significant proportion of this case should it be accepted, I would like to strongly urge that the committee not just look at conduct issues in isolation. I would like to request that as part of their assessment, the committee also looks at how our current policies and guidelines enable or allow for this type of issue to both occur. While removing disruptive editors from a contentious topic would naturally help with the immediate conduct problems, by not addressing the shortcomings that allowed for this to become an issue the committee is basically setting itself up for another case in this or any number of other CT content areas in the future.
I recognise that actually changing PAGs is out of scope of the committee's role. However presenting the community with information on how PAGs can and are being subverted along with recommendations for how the community itself could endeavour to solve the issue by updating the relevant PAGs is (I think) not. Sideswipe9th (talk) 02:08, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Mz7
I would encourage arbitrators voting accept to provide additional clarity on what they expect the structure of this unusual arbitration case to look like. This is the first time I've ever seen ArbCom request a case sua sponte—typically, a case would be requested by a particular party to a dispute who would presumably also be a main participant in the evidence and workshop phase. In this case, however, it seems the relevant controversy involves in large part observers who are unlikely to actually participate on-wiki in this case. Because of that, I'm not sure how effective a traditional arbitration case is going to be at collecting evidence to "break the back" of a dispute. Perhaps one solution would be to proceed by entering the entire Grabowski/Klein article into evidence as if the authors had written the essay on-wiki, and then use the evidence phase to allow others to respond to or complement the claims made in the article. Mz7 (talk) 03:12, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by The ed17 (non-party)
Would it be possible to engage an uninvolved historian who focuses on the Holocaust in Poland to help Arbcom wade through this case's thornily intertwined content and conduct issues? Ed [talk] [majestic titan] 04:09, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Pinguinn (non-party)
@Barkeep49: If the bar for Chapmansh being added as a party is I believe in only adding a party where there is some expectation that evidence of misconduct can be shown
, why are 20+ people being listed as suggested parties simply for being named in the article which Chapmansh wrote? Even though the users on that list are not being formally accused of anything (yet), it still remains that they are potential parties but the person who named them is not a party or at least on the list themselves. Pinguinn 🐧 04:52, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- Echoing Firefangledfeathers and Floquenbeam above, my concern about incongruous treatment is less about getting Chapmansh added as a party and more for the people already named as potential parties. I'm uncomfortable with the concept of someone writing an offwiki article calling out users by name and ArbCom using the names wholesale for a list of potential parties to a case. Certainly not all of these users will end up being parties, but we ought not to defer to outside actors to determine even this potential list. This case's aim is to critically examine the claims and evidence presented in the article, and the authors' choices of who and who not to name in the article is a conscious part of that presentation and should not be taken at face value. Pinguinn 🐧 06:06, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Beyond My Ken (non-party)
The comment above by Zero0000 is the most significant statement of this situation that I have read, and I associate myself with it. I urge ArbCom to give it particular attention for guidance as to whether or not to take this case. Beyond My Ken (talk) 06:41, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- I also endorse the #Comment from Harry Mitchell, the #Statement by Drmies and the #Statement by Floq, all of whom speak good sense. Beyond My Ken (talk) 01:35, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
- As someone on the outside looking in, I am completely mystified by an Arbitration which has clearly been provoked by an article in an academic journal, and the decision not to include as a party the co-author, User:Chapmansh, who is an editor here. If the extensive list of parties named are listed because of claims made in the article, surely if the evidence shows that those claims are, to any extent, inappropriate, then Chapmansh should be judged for their attacks on those editors, whether they took place on-wiki or off. By opening the case, ArbCom has itself brought that off-wiki behavior onto Wikipedia, and made it the proper subject of examination here. Beyond My Ken (talk) 01:56, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Elmidae (non-party)
I suggest that before accepting as a committee, Arbcom make clear to themselves and others the exact conduct issues that can be under consideration. I believe going in with the broad ambit of "editor conduct in this area" contains a trap, which is that the most prominent question would seem to be "Has a group of editors systematically introduced bias into articles in this area?" - that being the fundamental bone of contention over the last years (at least to my knowledge), and the focus of the journal article. I would suggest that this is a question that Arbcom can not tackle without, in effect, making a ruling on a very complex content issue - that is, what is the objective academic and public consensus, and are we representing it? This type of question is what the WP groupmind excels at, via the slow and grindy process of talk page discussions. The committee is simply not equipped to do that. It can't even reasonably accept evidence on that question without choosing a side in the content dispute that is splitting not only Wikipedia but general scholarship. At the same time, it is exactly the question that a casual observer would expect to be front and center; again, mostly due to the paper that kicked this off being entirely focused on it. So I would urge the arbitrators to clarify their thinking on this matter, and whether there will be enough of a conduct issue left to get a good grip on, if the core concern has to be cut out. --Elmidae (talk · contribs) 08:47, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by User:Animal lover 666
The handling of major off-wiki topic disputes on-wiki is plagued by the following issues:
- Most editors on Wikipedia are either strongly biased on the topic or highly ignorant about it. Admins and arbs generally fit the latter; they are expected to, and generally do, recuse when they are the former.
- There is little relationship between the relative truth behind these disputes and the relative sizes of the groups trying to skew Wikipedia in each direction.
- It's very easy for established users who share a strong bias to group together and to pick up less established users along the way.
- Sanctions are given by admins who are ignorant in the topic. As a result, they are more likely to be based on a consensus by a group dominated by skewed users than by the reliability and true representation of the underlying sources. A user who was wrongly banned is more likely to sock than to abandon the topic to the other side, and sock fighting will discourage innocent newcomers from helping out.
- All external sources are either biased themselves, or summarize biased sources with what they believe to be a neutral balance (although they may be wrong). Any attempt on our part to generate NPOV is OR.
- Newcomers who would help try and neutralize the skewing users are likely to have few other edits, which tends to make their opinions considered worth less.
- The unlikely case of a user with a real understanding who tries to fix things is likely to eitherbe scared off or to be able to remain by fighting back; in the latter case, they will ultimately be sanctioned for the fighting. He who fights monsters will either become a monster himself and be punished for it (e.g Icewhiz) or be scared away from the fight; it's nearly impossible to handle a group of monsters simultaneously.
Unless these issues can be solved on all topics, we will never be able to reach our goal of NPOV. This is what's happening here.
- @Levivich:According to the linked article, you are on the solution side, and your evidence would be likely to be useful here. According do the openning statement, all users whose names appear in the article are listed as parties, unless they are dead, indef-blocked or -banned, or ArbCom members (current or former). Animal lover |666| 11:37, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Nosebagbear {Non-party}
Arbcom is going to have a nightmare of a job here, as whatever the article may desire, they can't start ruling on content issues in the process of trying to work on the conduct aspects.
Zero000 correctly notes that just because something has been peer-reviewed, does not mean that the reviewers have done fact checking for each diff in it - and discussions elsewhere on and off-wiki have already raised multiple factual failings in the article, non-included interviews, significant missed or agenda-based statements (most notably regarding Icewhiz and an "unfair ban"). All of which make it questionable to start a case based off this article, and an absolute need not to allow the article to act as an evidence source. The diffs within it exist on wikipedia so can be used as free-standing evidence, but the analysis and accusations by the authors can't inherently just be bought in.
Finally, I do have a query whether certain of the accusations raised against an editor in the article would be viewed as off-wiki aspersion-casting if done in a different forum - I believe the co-author has an account? And as such that may be worth viewing alongside the primary nexus of the case complaint(s). Nosebagbear (talk) 15:33, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- I'm also somewhat querying positions such as those of @Renaati: - creating such a dual purpose function would probably require arbcom (since we're here) and a community consensus to create a WP:CONEXCEPT addition on this scale. I disagree rather more firmly with @SamX:'s pov - as they are note, ARBPOL clearly would prohibit that, and I can't see any way that ARBCOM can IAR into the community's scope without community agreement. That would be akin to the DYK team concurring amongst themselves they would IAR to decide today's FA. SamX also notes this would be done to uphold the pillars but their full approach would seem to violate pillar 3. Nosebagbear (talk) 17:55, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Nishidani (non-party)
I concur with Elmidae and Zero's wise cautions. The writers of that piece use as a primary source an editor with an aggressive ultranationalist approach to wiki. One should commission and pay a professional fee, to area experts like Timothy Snyder and Christopher Browning to rewrite two or more versions of our page, and work from there.Snyder's books find a middle ground between the two POVs here. I have zero faith, replying to Chess, in institutions, which however admirable, suffer from political and other pressures.
The words Holocaust and Shoah are used as synonyms, whereas the former is the general term for the over 10 million murdered deliberately on racial grounds, (some argue for figures as high as 17 million), while the Shoah is specific for the roughly half of that number who were Jewish victims of the same genocidal policy. In Italy a week is dedicated every year to recalling the Holocaust, but, overwhelmingly the focus is on the Shoah, and Slavic peoples are rarely featured or mentioned as also victims on a massive scale. Generalplan Ost, which emerged contemporaneously with the Wannsee decision to exterminate the Jews, foresaw the 'disappearance' of the majority (20-30 million) of Ukrainians, Russians and Poles, the annihilation of their ethnicities. When Raul Hilberg undertook to study the Holocaust he was strongly advised to ignore it by his (Jewish) supervisors. 60 years later we have,thankfully, a virtual industry of meticulous studies on every aspect of the Shoah. Histories in Eastern Europe of the phenomenon of the larger Holocaust lag far behind, and are often entrammeled by nationalist rereadings that aim to challenge the Shoah model's emphasis on Jewish victims by (a) establishing the vast scale of genocidal actions affecting their respective populations (b) deflecting narratives of complicity by highlighting cases where Poles etc., saved Jews (c) implicating some Jewish groups as culpable of a number of massacres, either as resistance groups or because of the significant numbers of Jewish communists, and the indiscriminate savagery of many USSR acts against Western Slavic peoples. All this is complicated by the political quarrels between those states and Israel over WW2 responsibilities, the institutionalization of Holocaust/Shoah commemoration, and the gruesome use of the Holocaust to promote special claims on the way the world recalls this past.Nishidani (talk) 23:48, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Hammersoft (non-party)
I find it quite conflicting that arbitrator CaptainEek said "I want to stress that being named as a party is not a sign of wrongdoing"
[16] while arbitrator Barkeep49 said "I believe in only adding a party where there is some expectation that evidence of misconduct can be shown"
[17]. WP:ARBGUIDE, WP:ARBINFO, and WP:ARBPOL all appear to be silent on the issue. We have over two dozen parties to this case. Is there really evidence of any kind to support misbehavior for each of them? If not, what criteria do you use then to name parties to a case? This needs to be clarified, and preferably codified for the future. --Hammersoft (talk) 18:33, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by Anthonyhcole (non-party)
The article makes the claim there are editors in this topic area habitually misrepresenting reliable sources and using unreliable sources (among other troubling but more easily recognised behaviours).
If you don't have the intention, time, or energy to do the reading required to identify discredited sources and misrepresentation, decline this case and pass it across to the WMF. Anthonyhcole (talk) 13:47, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Statement by {Non-party}
Other editors are free to make relevant comments on this request as necessary. Comments here should address why or why not the Committee should accept the case request or provide additional information.
Holocaust in Poland : Clerk notes
- This area is used for notes by the clerks (including clerk recusals).
- re:Ealdgyth I think this is fair. In response, I'd ask you to consider what might make sense to wait until a case is actually opened - where there is likely to be a statement of scope for instance to help you know what to focus on - and what should be written about here at the case request stage. With that said what kind of extension of the word count do you need now? As for what we're looking for I have, speaking only for myself, attempted to give some sense of that but other arbs will have different opinions. Barkeep49 (talk) 20:43, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
- I have informed Xx236 that despite their topic ban, they are welcome participate in this case if they wish (I believe that this falls under case 2, "legitimate and necessary dispute resolution"). GeneralNotability (talk) 00:22, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Holocaust in Poland <6/1/0>
Vote key: (Accept/decline/recuse)
- Normally I post an initial impression and (except for obvious declines) want to hear from the community before posting an official vote. This is not normal and so I am ready to accept. In fact one of the reasons I'm ready to accept now is because I think the decision to not accept last year has proven to be ArbCom's biggest mistake since FRAM. Since then we have had multiple private requests to do something in this topic area (TA) and now we have a peer reviewed article saying that there is a large issue with editor conduct and the resulting content in this TA. I have some problems with the article and I think Elmidae's comment at AN is the best summary of it I've seen
It's essentially a really long talk page rant with outing, published as a peer-reviewed research article in a reputable journal.
The content ultimately does not meet the OUTING threshold for me because outing is a behavioral policy that does not trump content policy and guidelines. Though I admit this article comes closer than most situations where I invoke the behavior policy point to actually being a conduct issue. But while close it remains that this article was written in the authors' roles as academics and I do not think Wikipedia should be sanctioning an academic for writing in a reputable journal on a topic of their study.So we're left with a talk page rant that has been peer-reviewed in a reputable journal alleging major conduct issues. As a Wikipedian I feel an obligation to follow what reliable sources say rather than what I wish them to say and given the numerous ways they allege our administrative processes have failed I think ArbCom has to step in and step-in in this rather unusual manner. As an Arbitrator, I think their claims need to be carefully examined, as I am not sure all of them will hold up to scrutiny, and I acknowledge, beyond their criticism of Icewhiz, that there are issues on the "other side" which also need examination. I would be remiss if I didn't note my continued feeling that Icewhiz has caused Wikipedians the most harm of any non-govenrment actor in the last 5 years. But I also wonder if the specter of Icewhiz hasn't obfuscated misconduct by a number of parties, including those who agree with Icewhiz on much of the content. All of this, and more, is why it is clear to me that ArbCom has failed the community in its obligation to solve thisserious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve
and so an examination, on a fairly large scale, of editor conduct is now needed. Because this was an unusual situation I supported using an objective standard in noting potential parties, but it is my feeling that not all of these people need the same level of examination of their conduct. I am, for instance, starting from the bias that the administrators named who were acting in their role as administrators have not violated any policies or guidelines and should be thanked rather than made an involuntary party to the case. If this is not correct I would appreciate evidence offered. And if there are people not listed above who should be made a party I would appreciate that evidence as well. To those that got all the way here, thank you for reasing this rather long accept comment. Barkeep49 (talk) 20:38, 13 February 2023 (UTC)- @GizzyCatBella: truthfully I'd have put Jacinda01 in the "why bother making them a party" category before but your suggestion about them being IW makes me more inclined to want to keep them. That said they haven't edited since 2021 and so the odds of them turning up here feel small. Barkeep49 (talk) 23:28, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Robby.is.on: I had already seen the comment before it was pointed out here and I was trying to figure out how to say something productive to you about it. Having read your comments here, I'm wondering if there would be a way to change your
emotional outburst
(as you put it) so it's still emotional without being an outburst so that I (and potentially other arbs/admins) don't need to figure out which side of the border the borderline comment falls on? Put another way, can you find a version that expresses the strength of your opinions without veering into PA territory? Barkeep49 (talk) 23:58, 13 February 2023 (UTC) - Piotr the idea of supporting victims by declaring them innocent is interesting. My one concern on first thought is that no one deserves the kind of harassment certain LTAs dish out including victims who may have violated policies and guidelines themselves. But it really is an interesting idea and so I want to keep thinking about it. Thanks for the thought. Barkeep49 (talk) 02:52, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Chess: I anticipate the committee discussing, if this case is accepted, the parties including potentially adding Chapmansh. If you have concerns about current classes I'd encourage you to use the Education Noticeboard as that is likely to get the appropriate eyes on it and perhaps have faster/better resolution than what ArbCom can offer. Barkeep49 (talk) 16:36, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Buffs: editors banned by the Wikimedia Foundation are excluded from any and all particiaption in anything around Wikipedia. It is not unseemly to speak ill of someone whose harassment has been proven to the satiisfaction of English Wikipedia, the global community, and the Wikimedia Foundation. It is instead a statement of fact in the same way that we note people who've been convicted of terrible crimes in our articles about them. Barkeep49 (talk) 20:38, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- For people who are saying that we need to add Chapmansh as a party, what Wikipedia Policies and/or Guidelines have they potentially violated and what is the evidence (diff) to support that? From what I'm reading here the issues are: improper association with Icewhiz, doxxing, and poor scholarship. But none of those have happened on wiki and all of them are beyond the jurisidiction of the committee. If the idea is simply that they be allowed to be heard on these matters, all English Wikipedia editors are given the opportunity to be heard. If Chapmansh would like the benefits of being a party (which formally include more words and diffs and informally a bit more tolerance of borderline behavior during a case) and were to request that then sure we should add them. But in general outside of requests to be a party, I believe in only adding a party where there is some expectation that evidence of misconduct can be shown, which is why the committee has sometimes chosen not to have the filer of a case as parties in the last couple of years and why I am skeptical that Chapmansh should be added here. Barkeep49 (talk) 20:47, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Tryptofish it is a fact that they are conducting a class. I have seen no allegations, let alone allegations supported by evidence (diff), that they are violationg policies or guidelines with the class that they are conducting. My expectation, which I noted in my acceptance, is that we will have fewer parties when opening this case than we have listed here today. If we're going to add a party - which isn't inconceivable to me - I want it to be because their conduct with-in the jurisdiction of the committee needs exploring. So my question here is a sincere one for those advocating the additional person be added because, as I noted already, it's not inconceivable to me that we subtract and add parties if a case is opened. Barkeep49 (talk) 21:07, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- A couple of editors have asked, in one form or another, if the same standard I'm suggesting for Chapmansh be applied to other editors. And my answer is yes, I only will support parties, if a case is opened, who I think there is some expectation that evidence of misconduct can be shown. This is why I have, from my original comment here, stated
Because this was an unusual situation I supported using an objective standard in noting potential parties, but it is my feeling that not all of these people need the same level of examination of their conduct.
This is why I have advocated in several cases during my tenure that not all parties at the case request including the filer of the case on at least 2 occasions (I believe) be included as a party when the case opens. This standard of consideration isn't one that I've just made up for this case. Of course I am only one arb and so my preferences don't always happen. So now that we (hopefully) have this implicit suggestion of uneven treatment out of the way I would like to reiterate my question of for people who are saying that we need to add Chapmansh as a party, what Wikipedia Policies and/or Guidelines have they potentially violated and what is the evidence (diff) to support that? Barkeep49 (talk) 05:07, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- I will personally be considering not just the evidence offered in the paper and this case request when looking to determine parties but also the 2021/22 case request. I approach these matters in two stages: is there enough to suggest someone is party to the dispute (a real but somewhat low standard) and if yes is there evidence of misconduct (a real and more stringent standard). We are at stage one and I don't know what the evidence in this case will ultimately end up showing for people who I think should be parties. Barkeep49 (talk) 17:44, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- So Levivich, I'm not sure you need to say anything new because there might not be anything new to respond to that you haven't already. But at least for me the threshold for including you as a party to this case has been met and I want to say so now so that if the rest of the committee agrees you aren't taken by surprise. Since you mention it, I think the Kurds case is actually instructive in that you were a party to the dispute in a way that a detailed examination of your conduct was appropriate. In the end there was no inappropriate conduct by you so nothing came of it. Crucially, though, and somewhat contrary to the narrative you present above, it wasn't incorrect from my point of view to have included you as a party given the evidence at play. Barkeep49 (talk) 17:44, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- Levivich I'd refer you to case request where I note at least one thing in a motion which I offered as I found the evidence clear and compelling even in the absence of a full case. However there were other things mentioned at that time which are there for you to review. Barkeep49 (talk) 17:51, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- So Levivich, I'm not sure you need to say anything new because there might not be anything new to respond to that you haven't already. But at least for me the threshold for including you as a party to this case has been met and I want to say so now so that if the rest of the committee agrees you aren't taken by surprise. Since you mention it, I think the Kurds case is actually instructive in that you were a party to the dispute in a way that a detailed examination of your conduct was appropriate. In the end there was no inappropriate conduct by you so nothing came of it. Crucially, though, and somewhat contrary to the narrative you present above, it wasn't incorrect from my point of view to have included you as a party given the evidence at play. Barkeep49 (talk) 17:44, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- Accept Per my opposition to the previous motion to decline and echoing Barkeep's statement above, our inaction has led to now a second instance of public censure and the continued potential for off-wiki harassment of our community members. Unacceptable then, and unacceptable now.I believe a significant portion of blame rests on the shoulders of the Arbitration Committee for failing to adequately attend to the needs of the community across the multiple times our attention was requested, and it is this plain error which justifies our unusual resumption of proceeding on our own motion. Icewhiz has been a scourge these last five years, and our inability to adequately handle his disruption has led to the breakdown of our editorial community, general decorum, and article quality. These effects are diffuse, leading to fatigue of our volunteers, and a battleground where only those willing to put up with the potential for harassment---from many "sides"---can edit. This is not how a high-quality encyclopedia is written. We were asked in 2019 to review conduct in this area, but the Committee was small and attention diverted. The number of arbitrators participating in the 2019 case (6!) would not even constitute a majority of this body. In fact, more arbitrators were in the minority to accept the 2021 request than participated in the 2019 case. We did not give our full attention in 2019, and when that error led to continued problems, we were asked in 2021 to revisit the issue. We narrowly declined, asking the community to use our existing procedures contrary to the statements of our community members who explained why these procedures have failed them so far. Our failure to respond has led to editors feeling more comfortable speaking about these issues to external academic than to the Committee tasked with resolving them, and as a result, we once again have a public article impugning our encyclopedia, administrative procedures, and editors. We cannot sit by, once again, and hope that the editors we sent away last time take time away from their other tasks while they check a procedural box for us. The community already gave us the right to revisit previous proceedings; let's not waste more of their time with the procedural game of having them ask us to remedy our own contribution to the problem. This will not be an easy issue to resolve, but the Committee was not convened to solve easy issues. We have the opportunity to give this topic the diligence and care necessary to properly resolve it. We have the attention of academics and scholars who believe our content is important. We have editors on-record laying out where our procedures have failed and with ideas on how to improve them. We have a large and active committee with few parallel obligations and the capacity to share the workload. We can leverage these resources now or wait for this decade-long problem to get still worse. The committee waited last time, and I hope we do not make the same mistake again. — Wug·a·po·des 22:02, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Floquenbeam: Speaking for myself regarding your questions:
Maybe the very large potential parties list is intended to get a lot of opinions on whether to actually have a case or not?
Editors mentioned generally had some level of participation in the topic area and may have statements or evidence of interest. It also means they get notified immediately, so this means they don't find out from someone else that they're included in this article or that we're considering it. Parties can be added or removed at the Committee's discretion, so starting with a more objective metric and removing as necessary is exactly to avoid the issue of a party list being a "you've done something wrong and sanctions are coming" list.Are potential parties expected to comment here, at this stage, even if there is no reason to believe they did anything wrong?
Parties are invited to make a statement, but participation is voluntary.Usually, being a "party" pretty strongly implies you'd better comment at the case request or you'll regret it later... is that true here?
Personally, I don't think there should be that reading. In fact, if someone feels they don't have much to contribute, a statement of "I only commented once and have nothing to really add, can I be removed" is a valid response and a request that I would take seriously.Not sure what the rationale is for omitting past or current Arbs from the potential parties list, but on the surface it sure seems like a bad look....is the problem that almost all the current Arbs are mentioned?
The Committee as an institution was criticized generally, and while a few quotes were pulled from motion votes, the focus was on the committee.And in any case, why would former Arbs not have to deal with this, while mere mortals have to?
We already have their private correspondence related to these cases in our archives, and unless they've been active in this topic area (if my memory serves me, the one or two not currently on the committee haven't been) then they wouldn't even have access to the evidence we would be seeking.This is outsourcing the selection of potential parties to non-Wikipedians. That just seems wrong. Will you do the same the next time Wikipediocracy has a blog post?
Firstly, I think there's an obvious difference between an article written by academics published in a peer-reviewed journal on the topic and a blog post. Secondly, we selected that as the metric after considering other possibilities, so it's not like there's some automatic pipeline devoid of discretion. I would argue that being clear about where and how parties were selected is better than publishing substantially the same list and pretending we just made it up ourselves.Are we sure it was "peer reviewed" in the normal sense of the term?
My understanding is that it is peer-reviewed, the submission instructions mentions only one kind of submission which goes through double-blind peer-review. Journals with multiple sections list the editorial policies separately, for example Language lists each section with separate editorial policies. — Wug·a·po·des 23:11, 13 February 2023 (UTC)- Moved from Ealdgyth's section Speaking for myself, statements addressing the following would be most helpful (1) what if any conduct issues still exist which have not been resolved by previous cases or administrative action? (2) how effective are existing procedures in this area, and if you believe they are ineffective, what is the apparent cause of the ineffectiveness? (3) would arbitration be effective in this instance or have existing dispute resolution processes been sufficient? — Wug·a·po·des 20:44, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Floquenbeam: Speaking for myself regarding your questions:
- I'd like to set some expectations here, quoting directly from a clerk comment Guerillero made in a past case request:
I would like to preemptively warn everyone above (and those who have yet to comment) that I am going to take a dim view to incivility, well poisoning, gratuitous mud slinging, and general nastiness.
I'm well aware that this is a fraught topic area, but that just means we all need to be on our best behavior. Clerks and arbs have the power to delete or refactor problematic comments (it's in the editnotice), and we will be making use of this if needed. GeneralNotability (talk) 01:29, 14 February 2023 (UTC)- Some initial thoughts from me:
- The article that we're all talking about has a POV. It might be the "right" POV, it might not, but it is a POV, and it's part of our responsibility as Wikipedians to be able to critically evaluate a source and recognize that.
- Following up on the question of the "right" POV: the members of the Arbitration Committee, and most of the community, are not historigraphers of the Holocaust in Poland, and I for one do not speak Polish. We aren't going to be able to tell you which side is "right" here, and since this appears to be an area of significant ongoing research I expect that the "truth" will continue to change as more facts are unearthed.
- I do not care one bit for people suggesting the article was heavily influenced (or worse, ghostwritten) by Icewhiz. I certainly believe the authors downplayed the reasons for Icewhiz's ban, but I would attribute that to shared POV rather than direct influence.
- Editors who are familiar with academic research in a field will always have an advantage in source discussions over those who do not, and that's probably never going to change.
- GeneralNotability (talk) 03:26, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- Some initial thoughts from me:
I anticipate accepting, but am waiting for the community to catch up. I am currently thinking about how best to structure the case. I expect a significant amount of bytes will be spent on the context of the statements the paper makes, but I am not sure the typical case structure will accommodate that smartly. Perhaps an atypical subpage akin to a workshop where editors can discuss the specific statements made on a given page and/or the other edits that would give context to each of the footnotes, maybe with relaxed word requirements.
For evidence not directly pertaining to the specific words and footnotes in the paper, I think the usual structure and location would be reasonable.
We are also entertaining the best scope. While the paper has focused on the Holocaust in Poland, many of the parties are also active in the rest of the topic area defined in the case request (Eastern Europe). Do the issues of conduct not-specific to the topic matter of the Holocaust in Poland presented by the paper extend there also? Izno (talk) 05:00, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Levivich, to be blunt: You are likely to have evidence submitted against you as part of this case, even ignoring your presence in the article at hand. I think you will want to be a party accordingly. While I do not speak for the full committee, I think they will agree that you will be one.
- To answer a specific point about parties (Hammersoft, Tryptofish, et al), Barkeep argues based on personal preference that the party list should be a certain set of people - those most likely to have issues with their conduct brought forth. (Without ascribing words to him specifically, it is usually about saving time and energy for the people involved in the case, including the arbitrators, from dealing with evidence that doesn't ultimately matter to the core issues.) Whereas Eek attempts to explain that being included as a party does not require that expectation, and has historically been about whether the editor knew about the core issues. These two views are allowed to be contradictory. I happen to agree with Eek's interpretation and basic expectation of that role. I also believe that Barkeep's position on the point is reasonable in many cases, and it is certainly one that I will use even in this case to help me decide who should be a party. However, I do not think it necessarily a good default position in this case, and for me, starting a case like this, it made sense to be broader rather than narrower an initial list of parties, not least for the benefits of mandatory notification to people we had reasonable belief would know something about the core issues.
- (I would not be opposed to these two mostly-reasonable views of the role being described in the procedures or perhaps the guide to arbitration.)
- It is regardless a decision of the committee taking the case who are to be named parties, and we have already begun giving the question due consideration as part of the case's setup. If you believe there should be other parties, or that specific parties should be removed, you are free to provide those, as some of you already have, particularly the co-author of the paper. Izno (talk) 22:20, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- I am inclined to accept, but I am waiting to read statements. --In actu (Guerillero) Parlez Moi 07:42, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- Accept I will post a detailed rational this evening --In actu (Guerillero) Parlez Moi 14:10, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- Before I vote I want to see statements from listed parties who have not yet commented. Moneytrees🏝️(Talk) 01:10, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- Accept I believe our failure to open the Warsaw Concentration Camp request was a major mistake. Well, now we've received scholarly rebuke for our actions, and it is apparent that the entire Holocaust in Poland topic area is broken. I agree that the paper is problematic. But we cannot simply ignore it. The paper has identified a problem. That does not mean we accept its conclusions. The point of this case will be to determine what the actual scope of the problem is, and how to fix it. I wish we had a better vessel than this paper to open this case, but that sort of thinking burned us on the Warsaw request: we wanted the "perfect" request, and thus ignored the imperfect, but pressing, issue that was before us. ArbCom must fix its mistake.The Holocaust in Poland is a sensitive and important topic area. But it has fallen by the wayside in the wake of Icewhiz's banning. Icewhiz is one of our worst harassers of all time, and I'm very glad he's been blocked. I fear however that some folks have interpreted our ban of Icewhiz as 1) an implicit rebuke of his content position, and 2) an indication that the conduct issues in the topic area had been solved. Re: 1) That is not true. We were not endorsing a content position by banning him, and the goal here is not to decide which side is right. ArbCom is not, and should not, be in the business of refereeing how many proponents from each "side" of the issue there are. That is false balance, gets into issues of !VOTE, and assumes all editors are unrepentant POV pushers. 2) I think our fear of Icewhiz has clouded our judgement. We must be mindful of his socks, and his attempts to influence us. But we cannot let our fear of Icewhiz stop us from actually doing the hard work of building the encyclopedia. Otherwise, Icewhiz has already won.Overall, our goal here must be to disentangle ourselves from old paradigms and rehabilitate the topic area. As much as there is disagreement on how to handle the HiP topic area, I'm seeing general agreement that the topic area is broken. A lot of editors are expressing that they want nothing to do with HiP, which is the clearest sign that the topic is toxic. When all other processes have failed, it is ArbCom's role to step in and provide a sort of environmental remediation.I understand this is a monster case to take on, but I see it as necessary to do justice. The large party list here is to help us identify the scope of the problem. I understand the
sinking feeling
that Floquenbeam mentions. I realize it is unpleasant to be named as a party, but I want to stress that being named as a party is not a sign of wrongdoing. It is a sign of knowledge about the issue. Certainly, parties can be sanctioned, and I understand that is frightening. I want to thank folks for their patience and understanding, and I imagine we'll be doing some party tweaking based on y'alls feedback. Ultimately, the HiP topic area remains broken, and this is our chance to fix it before things get out of hand. CaptainEek Edits Ho Cap'n!⚓ 07:32, 15 February 2023 (UTC) - I'm a Decline for reasons I've already given internally to the Committee. I will explain my reasons more fully later today when I have more time, though are essentially that I feel that the nature of this problem is one that is best resolved bottom up rather than top down, and that work has already started on examining and improving the articles which a case would serve to distract, and that if and when conduct problems occur in resolving any issues in the articles the community can then ask the Committee to step in to assist. I feel that the Committee should stand ready to assist the community in this matter, but not to get involved too soon as that is taking initiative, responsibility, ownership, motivation, etc, away from the community. It can be dispiriting when an authority organisation declines to give assistance when asked, but it is equally dispiriting when an authority organisation takes away the right to conduct one's own affairs too soon. It can be difficult to get the balance right, and the Committee have been criticised for sometimes declining to get involved, so it is understandable why some in the Committee are proposing this. But I feel it would be better to wait until asked. And that such a request would be more relevant than this one which is based on older rather than recent incidents. I'd prefer we look into dealing with today's ongoing concerns rather than raking over yesterday's alleged Committee failings. SilkTork (talk) 13:31, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- The previous request became basically an unworkable vague mess, and we kicked the can down the road. So it is not surprising to find ourselves here again, the problem was not resolved then and clearly it has not gone away. I think it is fairly clear that a full case, one that is not being stage-managed by a banned troll, is needed, so I vote to accept. Beeblebrox (talk) 20:51, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- For the benefit of any outside observers who may not be familiar with how this committee operates: I think it is a good idea for us to be clear from the outset that we absolutely will not be dictating what Wikipedia does or does not say about any aspect of the Holocaust. That is not our role. Our task here is to ferret who is causing problems in these topic areas, and to remedy those behavioral issues using the tools at our disposal. Some of the tools that could be deployed here include anything from partial blocking and page protection to topic banning or full site banning, among other things. We will not simply be taking this outside paper at face value and banning anyone they identify as a problem.
- This is also not a fast process, if and when a case is accepted, it will be at least a full month before there are any decisions made. We are a committee, not a cop car. Beeblebrox (talk) 01:46, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
- Accept. I did not find the previous case request to be satisfactory and found myself bouncing back and forth a few times, but now I do not think we should kick this can further down the road. Primefac (talk) 11:44, 16 February 2023 (UTC)