User:Daniel Carrero/BLOCK

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There is some unacceptable behavior which may justify a user to be blocked from editing.

Blockable offenses[edit]

  • The block tool should only be used to prevent edits that will, directly or indirectly, hinder or harm the progress of the English Wiktionary.
  • It should not be used unless less drastic means of stopping these edits are, by the assessment of the blocking administrator, highly unlikely to succeed.

Examples[edit]

There is no hard-and-fast rule about what is considered to hinder or harm our progress. Clear examples of such behaviour usually include:

  • Deliberately harming our content by deleting useful things or adding useless content or pages.
  • Persistently wasting other editors’ time by making many edits that have to be undone, cleaned up, or otherwise modified to make them correct.
  • Causing our editors distress by directly insulting them or by being continually impolite towards them.

There are other means of protecting Wiktionary; for example, by discussion on the users’ talk pages. Usually, some effort should be made to explain to people why their edits are considered incorrect, however a short block can be given if they clearly won’t listen. In cases where a user has had something explained to them, an explicit warning should be given to them before blocking them; this can show that they have no intention of mending their ways.

Patrolling[edit]

Users who clearly have no intent to be productive may be blocked immediately.

Particularly:

  • Those editing apparently for the primary purpose of adding offensive or promotional material.
  • People making many bad edits in short order.
  • Accounts with usernames that are offensive, similar to established accounts’, or promotional.

However, there are people who make innocent mistakes; they should not be blocked instantly:

  • People making one or two unhelpful edits.
  • Those adding protologisms, or Wikipedia-style articles.

Such an account can be blocked if the user ignores a single request to desist or explanation of what he is doing wrong.

Types of contributors[edit]

Anonymous IPs[edit]

For anonymous IP addresses, in most cases, block one day, anon-users/prevent-creation only. If it recurs (the block log has entries), then check the tabçe:

Anonymous contributors: static or semi-static vs. dynamic IPs Anonymous editors only Prevent account creation
infinite Open proxies and zombies only! no other IPs should be permanently blocked. NO! YES!
> 1 month IPs which have been blocked for shorter durations before, and have returned: probable static IPs. No YES
7-31 days Vandalism which would be blocked for this duration on a registered account, on what is probably a static IP. No Yes
1-7 days Most anonymous vandalism which is from DSL/Cable ISP (SBC/Comcast/RR) IPs. Yes Yes
.25-24 hours Large ISP (AOL/BT) IPs engaged in any sort of vandalism. Yes No

Logged-in editors[edit]

Logged in accounts: Anonymous editors only Prevent account creation
infinite
  • Blatant or confirmed sockpuppets created for the purpose of vandalism or block evasion.
  • Abuse, plagiarism, persona non grata type blocks, based on community consensus.
  • Bad username accounts, including: email addresses, exploitative names, copycats, offensive names, etc.
  • Checkuser identified bad sockpuppets.
N/A N/A
> 1 month Recommended third blocks for persistent or repeat offenders. N/A N/A
7-31 days Recommended second blocks for persistent or repeat offenders. N/A N/A
1-7 days Recommended primary blocks for behavior which is counter to policy, productivity or community. N/A N/A
1/4-24 hours These blocks should rarely be given out, but if attempts to communicate with another community member fail, a very short term block can be issued. N/A N/A

Seasoned contributors[edit]

  • It is rare, but occasionally there will be a seasoned contributor, even an administrator, who is causing trouble; such cases must be handled with diplomacy.
  • It is not acceptable to block a whitelisted user or an administrator unless they already know they will be blocked for their actions.
  • The contributor must receive an explicit warning before being blocked, unless they are deliberately and maliciously ignoring current practice.

Range blocks[edit]

See Help:Range blocks for how to block a range of IP addresses.

See also[edit]