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== AGF ==
== When will changes be made to the UCoC? ==


"Assume good faith...All Wikimedians should assume unless evidence otherwise exists that others are here to collaboratively improve the projects, but this should not be used to justify statements with a harmful impact."
The text is still Anglo-centric and contains untranslatable fragments, which is unacceptable for the international community. When will it change? [[User:Iniquity|Iniquity]] ([[User talk:Iniquity|talk]]) 17:28, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
:And which parts are those? [[User:Der-Wir-Ing|Der-Wir-Ing]] ("DWI") [[User talk:Der-Wir-Ing|talk]] 18:16, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
::Can be searched on this page: doxing, good citizenship. [[User:Iniquity|Iniquity]] ([[User talk:Iniquity|talk]]) 18:18, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
:::How are those Anglocentric and untranslatable? Those concepts don't exist outside of English? [[User:EEng|EEng]] ([[User talk:EEng|talk]]) 18:48, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
::::Yes it is. These are very narrow terms that do not exist outside of this language. [[User:Iniquity|Iniquity]] ([[User talk:Iniquity|talk]]) 19:00, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
:::::I see 28 wikis with an article on doxing according to [https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q15901411#sitelinks-wikipedia Wikidata]. So it has at least some non-anglo adoption. For what it's worth Iniquity, the UCoC EG Revisions committee received two rounds of suggestions from a translation team inside the WMF and worked hard to incorporate those changes. Bigger picture, in places where the UCoC EG Revisions Committee had a hard time using language that wasn't English/Anglo centric, we created a guide for translators about the intent of the word so that it could be accurately translated. Please note I am speaking only for myself and not for any other member of the EG revisions committee or the committee as a whole. Best, [[User:Barkeep49|Barkeep49]] ([[User talk:Barkeep49|talk]]) 22:10, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
::::::28 languages out of over 300? :) Moreover, as you can see, this is "newspeak" for many of the list. But I'm more worried about the strange "good citizenship". Why do you just refuse to remove them? They do not carry any semantic load at all, why not use Simple English? We have been asking for this for more than two years and no answer. [[User:Iniquity|Iniquity]] ([[User talk:Iniquity|talk]]) 23:11, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
::::::> we created a guide for translators about the intent of the word so that it could be accurately translated.
::::::Where it is possible to see? [[User:Iniquity|Iniquity]] ([[User talk:Iniquity|talk]]) 23:13, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
:::::: @[[User:Barkeep49|Barkeep49]], can you help? [[User:Iniquity|Iniquity]] ([[User talk:Iniquity|talk]]) 15:19, 13 January 2023 (UTC)
:::::::I don't know if the translator notes will be made available to community translators or only to the Foundation employed translators. That's something foundation staff would have to decide hence why I did not answer when you asked before. Best, [[User:Barkeep49|Barkeep49]] ([[User talk:Barkeep49|talk]]) 15:50, 13 January 2023 (UTC)
:::::::: @[[User:Barkeep49|Barkeep49]], and you don't know who to ping, who to ask about it? [[User:Iniquity|Iniquity]] ([[User talk:Iniquity|talk]]) 17:19, 13 January 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::Correct, I do not. There are specific people whose job it is to engage with the community. I do not know who is supposed to do so here at meta for the UCoC. Best, [[User:Barkeep49|Barkeep49]] ([[User talk:Barkeep49|talk]]) 17:29, 13 January 2023 (UTC)
The phrase "People who identify with a certain sexual orientation or gender identity using distinct names or pronouns" is one item in a section of four items. The other three items are complete, grammatical sentences; this one is not. Please revise it to be a complete sentence so that translations do not retain the error. I posted about this error in 2021 and 2022, but it has still not been fixed. A simple fix could be "People who identify with a certain sexual orientation or gender identity may use distinct names or pronouns". [[User:Jonesey95|Jonesey95]] ([[User talk:Jonesey95|talk]]) 06:49, 13 January 2023 (UTC)


So AGF will now be enforced on projects without AGF as a guideline? Presumably, there are projects where AGF is just an essay, where guidelines don't provide any guidance on this, or, like [[n:en:|my home project]], [[n:en:Wikinews:Never assume|where there is an explicit prohibition on assumptions of faith, good or bad]]. [[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] ([[User talk:Heavy Water|talk]]) 18:19, 20 June 2023 (UTC)
:@[[User:Jonesey95|Jonesey95]] there will be a revision of the actual code of conduct approximately a year after final passage of the EG, which is when feedback like that can be considered. The current revision process was focused strictly on the enforcement guidelines (and basically to the areas that were identified as lacking in previous community feedback). Best, [[User:Barkeep49|Barkeep49]] ([[User talk:Barkeep49|talk]]) 15:51, 13 January 2023 (UTC)


: @[[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] I have always had concern about AGF and its many, equally off-putting analogs whereby any expression of disapproval, suspicion, critique or normal human emotions like frustration put the editor into a gray area right off the bat. I'm not sure of the correct venue to raise such concerns, but in my experience this approach typically goes nowhere precisely because anyone can ignore reason, then cite AGF and a slew of other rules you're arguably in violation of when you call them a jackass. If you happen to have an incredible amount of restraint, patience and persistence and can't be cited for anything else, open-ended catchalls like WP:NOTHERE (a blatant contradiction of AGF by any reasonable interpretation) usually get the job done. AGF is enforced exactly when it is convenient for them to do so. Otherwise there are plenty of other expedient rules and essays that provide grounds upon which any given user may be summarily ejected from the encyclopedia that anyone can edit. Perhaps I'll write an essay of my own on the subject. What do you think? [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])
== Differences .. Localization ==
The "https://foundation.wikimedia.org/wiki/Policy:Universal_Code_of_Conduct"
has a right-hand sidebox with "Wikimedia Policies" heading and "Wikimedia Projects,incl. subtitles"."Foundation Board and Staff,incl. subtitles"."Other,incl. subtitles".
Please explain why the box is absent. N.B.... A mirror gives a reverse image. [[Special:Contributions/110.174.50.79|110.174.50.79]] 23:04, 16 January 2023 (UTC)


: @[[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] And since "assume good faith" only enforceable to the extent that we ''say'' what we ''assume'', the rule could be equivalently stated as ''"do not question the motives of others."'' Without euphemistic phrasing that uses adjectives like "good" and "faith", the rule sounds exactly as Orwellian as it is. How ''should'' one make critical statements? If users are obliged to understate criticism and act as though others have no possible ulterior motive then critical discourse is severely debased. The expression of critique, discontent and frustration all go hand-in-hand and they are no less important than the expression of joy or any other "positive" message. When policy demands that users "avoid negativity" they should consider what that really means. What would we have besides a twilight zone of fawning, obsequious consumers and grinning, unchecked psychopathy? [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])
==[[Universal Code of Conduct#3.1 – Harassment]]==
{{green|'''Insults''': ...In some cases, repeated mockery, sarcasm, or aggression constitute insults collectively, even if individual statements would not.}} <br /> Oh, this one is going to be an interesting application when dealing with editors who hide behind "misunderstood personal humor" to get away with put-downs of other editors they follow like moths to a flame. It will be interesting to see how many Admins will actually reprimand editors they have personal relationships with on and off wiki. [[User:Pyxis Solitary|Pyxis Solitary]] ([[User talk:Pyxis Solitary|talk]]) 15:49, 17 January 2023 (UTC)


: The rest after part two is fairly straightforward and more or less amounts to "don't harass people or wreck the site". Part two strikes me as unusual because it's presented as advice. One can't interpret it as a set of positive obligations because policy statements like "Be ready to challenge and adapt your own understanding, expectations and behaviour as a Wikimedian" are nonspecific and obviously outside any given project's authority to enforce. It seems worthwhile to make the distinction between enforceable policy and statements like ''"Practice empathy."'' The needle in the haystack here is AGF, which at first appears to fit in with the rest of the ostensibly well-intended (if banal) advice but when re-worded to properly match the scope of a project's authority to enforce, turns out to be ''"do not question the motives of others."'' In compliance with AGF, I assume of course that this is all coincidental. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])
== open bar for misgendering ==


::Indeed. Really, at least at en.wp, AGF is the rule from on high &mdash; when it's convenient. The framework of en.wn's [[n:en:Wikinews:Never assume|never assume]] initially seems like it would turn users into a hostile bunch always suspicious of each other, but I've observed it actually ''lowers the temperature'' of community politics, even where strong interpersonal conflict is present. In fact, the honesty allowed by freedom from AGF and actual enforcement of [[n:en:Wikinews:Etiquette|the ''de jure'' etiquette guideline]] seems to make arguments clearer and allow us to summarily deal with disruptive elements, without politeness and often with what the UCoC defines as "insults". "We expect all Wikimedians to show respect for others" without "exceptions based on standing, skills...in the Wikimedia projects or movement": Even on en.wp, individuals judged not to meet {{w|WP:CIR}} ("skills") or vandals/spammers ("standing") don't get shown "respect". In the eyes of the community, they've lost it. And what would} "respect" entail? Apologizing when blocking them?
''Respect the way that contributors name and describe themselves. People may use specific terms to describe themselves. As a sign of respect, use these terms when communicating with or about these people, where '''linguistically or technically''' feasible''


::UCoC enforcement at projects with policies or guidelines conflicting it like en.wn's will be interesting to watch unfold; I expect, per "1 – Introduction" the WMF plans to take OFFICE action when a project isn't enforcing the UCoC in favor of its own policies or guidelines.


::I find it unsurprising in the three months since I raised this question no WMF staffer has responded, even when, last month, I left a message on the talk page of a staffer involved in discussions above. But I have to AGF here, don't I? Oh well. I hope someday en.wn will be successful enough for the entire community to fork off (hey, I wonder if I'll get OFFICE-glocked for saying that). [[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] ([[User talk:Heavy Water|talk]]) 14:54, 13 September 2023 (UTC)
I already pointed it out, but nobody bring me valid answer.


::: Perhaps the best remedy is exposure, e.g. essays, articles, etc. that concisely and accurately describe how rules like AGF are abused to avoid accountability and worded euphemistically to serve as a debauched stand-in for principle. We have no bearing on this policy except by public critique. Most of us are hardly born critics, least of all myself. We want to cooperate and one's calling, if they feel they have one, is almost always constructive. So many people would rather not exist at all than abandon their purpose. One faces a serious dilemma because messing around with the umpteenth variation of the multi-armed bandit problem or some obscure conjecture about conformal mappings while this demented twilight zone is progressively imposed upon the entirety of western culture starts to seem like grotesque misassignment of priorities. Knowing you're right but being at a lost for words while some two-faced shyster lectures you about social justice, gender prounouns, etc. is well likely to be the most annoying moment of one's life. We are in this position partly for lack of good examples to learn from. Perhaps I should attempt to curate some, or make up a course on the subject for Wikiversity. In any case, I'm not just going to let things go their way, nor should anyone else. Orwell wrote an excellent essay, "On Politics and the English Language". The essay is accurate in that Orwell recognizes the problem and identifies many of it salient components, but it is also an imprecise and somewhat awkward essay. Even Orwell was taxed in attempting to describe and generalize the issue. Anyway, I will probably use some of what I've written here in an essay of my own. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])
The fact is that in linguistic, there's the hypotetical words which doesn't exist in use but are a possibility (ex "leaf"+ "-less" = "leafless", it doesn't exist in use but it's linguistically correct and respect the way adjectives including the idea of without/loss are forms from nouns, like in topless or braless) and by so are linguistically feasible, there's also the words that does exist in use and, indeed, are possibility, and by so are linguistically feasible (it's the case of singular they, and other non binary pronouns are ze, xe,em, per, etc). Its the same things for other languages, french (iel, al ul ol ael etc) german (dey, hen, em, sier, and en''')''' spanish (elle).


::::I wondered if you were going to go there. The rejection of AGF, for en.wn, is simply a variation in its rules as a Wikimedia project, not an endorsement of right-wing politics, or any other political ideologies, for that matter. I say this to defend ''Wikinews''' reputation. [[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] ([[User talk:Heavy Water|talk]]) 23:53, 13 September 2023 (UTC)
There's not linguistic obstacle to the respect of pronouns of someone, so why add this term ? It should be removed.


::::: Go where? I do not subscribe to "right wing ideology", nor is anything I've written intended as a dog-whistle to imply that I do. Take my post at face value. Just because I am irritated at the media's rhetorical abuse of the phrase "social justice" does not mean that I resent or do not value social justice. Naturally I don't demand that you AGF, but if you'd like me to clarify my opinion on any given issue, then please just ask rather than make presumptions.
Same for "technically". The only technique we use to wrote those non binary pronouns is keyboard, and all the letter we need to wrote them are on keyboard and nothing can physically nor technically stop us from typing the letter in the good order to write a non binary pronouns. The only obstacle is an ideologic one (conservative and enbyphobic) but it's not connected to technique. So the add of the word "technically" open the door to ideological conservative abuse and should be removed. (Same for linguistically).


::::: More importantly, nothing at all was said about wikinews or AGF that could possibly be construed as an endorsement of "right-wing ideology". There's no need to imitate the media's dramatic ritual of "disavowal", though it appears I've unconsciously done so too. It is not obvious that this pavlovian, knee-jerk reaction makes no sense whatsoever in this context here? Suppose I am "right wing", whatever that means to you. Suppose Hitler escaped to Brazil and I am his bastard grandson if you like. We were having a productive discourse. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])


::::: Another instance of euphemism is the third bullet point of part 2.1: "''Respect the way that contributors name and describe themselves.''" One assumes it means that we must use someone's preferred name and gender pronouns and the correct name of their race or tribe. That's entirely fine, but then, why doesn't it say exactly that? Since the UCoC already has a strong anti-harassment policy, would that not suffice? Otherwise it is very open to interpretation and therefore easy to abuse. If one uses preferred pronouns and names, but states they disagree that sex reassignment is indicated for gender dysphoria, are they in violation of the policy as it's worded now? If so, then fine, but then the policy should say as much. I would still comply with that rule and use the site, because it's then understood by everyone that the content is not an unbiased reflection of public opinion or consensus. How is vague, sugar-coated policy with carte blanche potential for censorship "left-wing"? How is one "right-wing" for speaking against it? [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])
The add of those words don't follow the path of inclusion of the UCoC and need to be removed. [[User:Scriptance|Scriptance]] ([[User talk:Scriptance|talk]]) 15:45, 18 January 2023 (UTC)


::::::There = taking the way en.wn regards AGF and the WMF's nature as part of a broader notion about how society should operate. With "right-wing politics, or any other political ideologies, for that matter" my intent was to clarify ''Wikinews''ies didn't intend, in adopting Never assume, to promote any broader ideas for society (partly for your information and partly for anyone else who might then take a negative view toward ''Wikinews''; the project has enough opponents already). I apologize for the lot of extrapolation from your comment in interpreting parts of it as repeating right-wing talking points, possibly implying you were just POV-pushing. I guess when one sees a lot of people who ''are'' just POV-pushing and happen to be saying similar things, one thinks the conclusions are obvious. I didn't intend to halt this discussion, though. I would agree the vagueness was likely written into 2.1.3 to allow for selectivity in enforcement. Somewhat related: [[m:User:Tom Morris/WMFers Say The Darndest Things]]. [[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] ([[User talk:Heavy Water|talk]]) 05:19, 14 September 2023 (UTC)
:I agree with this. There is no need to add '''"linguistically or technically''' feasible" unless one is openly willing to accept misgendering as a principle. [[User:Hyruspex|Hyruspex]] ([[User talk:Hyruspex|talk]]) 15:50, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
:I absolutely agree. There are terms that are in increasingly common use in many languages (English: ''[[:en:Singular they|singular they]]''; français: ''[[:fr:iel|iel]]''; español: ''[[:es:Elle (pronombre)|elle]]''; Deutsch: ''[[:de:Nichtbinäre Geschlechtsidentität#Empfehlungen im Deutschen|sier]]'') but are not yet universally accepted. Many members of the [[m:Wikimedia LGBT+/Portal|WMLGBT+ User Group]] have found that "linguistically or technically feasible" (and "compelled speech") are often used as an excuse for some editors to avoid respecting trans users' gender because they don't ''like'' singular they (and, presumably, they don't ''like'' the concept of non-binary gender identities), rather than it ''actually'' being linguistically problematic.
:Surely part of the purpose of the UCoC is to defend and protect those editors from minoritised and under-represented groups who have historically been — and still are — recipients of such abuse from the wider editing community. Part of the purpose is to ensure the censure of users who previously — and currently — have a sense of impunity about misgendering other editors.
:This is an active problem on several projects, with long-standing editors from minoritised communities being harassed and encouraged to leave projects. If the Foundation is serious about both [[:en:WP:CSB|countering systemic biases]] and diversifying the editor community, then we need to be able to enforce UCoC provisions against transphobic (and other queerphobic) forms of abuse, just as we need to address the hostility experienced by editors from other minoritised and under-represented groups. — [[:en:User:OwenBlacker|OwenBlacker]] ([[:en:User talk:OwenBlacker|Talk]]), for [[m:Wikimedia LGBT+/Portal|the Wikimedia LGBT+ User Group]], 18:39, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
::In reply both to Owen and Hyruspex...recognizing that there can be linguistic and technical barriers to using pronouns/terms/descriptions is not accepting misgendering. I am concerned that people are fixating on European languages as was done in the initial comment here, with gendered structures and pronouns, and with existing and growing societal acceptance of non-binary pronouns. Obviously, I would expect anyone using one of the many languages with pronouns that are equivalent to my pronouns in my native language (English, they/them) to do so, ''because it is linguistically and technically feasible''. Please do not assume that every language has this relatively moldable gendered structure, or even gendered pronouns.
::Obviously, people who are intent on harassment on the basis of pronouns will pick whatever excuse is least asinine to try and justify their actions. In some cases, it may be the "linguistic and technical" bit, but that does not mean that linguistic and technical implications for using gendered pronouns and language do not exist. Bad excuses are bad excuses, and can be recognized as such without taking unnecessarily hardline stances. There is not much benefit that can come from trying to argue that this clarifier is going to correlate to some systemic failure in enforcement...because the assumptions behind that fail to recognize how conduct enforcement works. Conduct enforcement involves, and relies on, the navigation of nuances and exceptions and the weighing of validity of excuses. If someone who engaged in misgendering harassment is arguing that their language doesn't have non-binary pronouns (or that they're not "accepted"), and it does...that's a clear violation of the UCOC and it's irrelevant what excuses they point to.
::Also see [https://forum.movement-strategy.org/t/ucoc-roundtable-in-wikimania-2022/1338/8 this relevant series of comments] after the UCOC roundtable at Wikimania. Best, [[User:Vermont|Vermont]] ([[User talk:Vermont|🐿️]]—[[Special:Contributions/Vermont|🏳️‍🌈]]) 18:57, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
:::{{ping|Vermont}} I read the discussion, and I don't still see the necessity of "linguistic and technical feasability" because the respect of one's gender identity and expression can pass by other means than pronouns in non-gendered language. Trans and non-binary people exists in those communities and developed specific linguistics tools, as they did in gendered language, so there's just need to respect those tools, whatever the language is. SO it's still "linguistic and technical feasible" but with other means. It will always been, but in different manner, so there's no need to add those two words which are used by transphobic people to misgender trans/enby people in gendered language. See this [[:fr:Discussion_Wikipédia:Appel_à_commentaires/Code_de_conduite_de_la_WMF/archives#Cas_particulier_du_%C2%AB_respect_de_la_fa%C3%A7on_dont_les_contributeurs_et_contributrices_se_nomment_et_se_d%C3%A9crivent_%C2%BB_vs_%C2%AB_lorsque_c'est_linguistiquement_et_techniquement_possible_%C2%BB|section]] and [[:fr:Wikipédia:Appel_à_commentaires/Code_de_conduite_de_la_WMF#N%C2%B01_-_Respecter_la_fa%C3%A7on_dont_les_contributeurs_et_contributrices_se_nomment_et_se_d%C3%A9crivent._Certains_peuvent_utiliser_des_termes_sp%C3%A9cifiques_pour_se_d%C3%A9crire._Par_respect,_utilisez_ces_termes_lorsque_vous_communiquez_avec_eux_ou_%C3%A0_propos_d%E2%80%99eux,_lorsque_c'est_linguistiquement_et_techniquement_possible.|here]] to have a summary up, in french, sorry.[[User:Scriptance|Scriptance]] ([[User talk:Scriptance|talk]]) 12:33, 27 January 2023 (UTC)


::::::: Thank you for saying so, I was worried that you might have decided to terminate the conversation right there. It would have been a bad example, so I'm glad that's not the case. Not that there are many young, impressionable children reading policy discussions on wikimedia's talk pages, but I've had conversations that ended in a similar manner on sites like reddit. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])
:There may be both linguistic and technical issues, even though they are rare and I totally agree that they should not be used as an excuse just because one doesn’t like to respect others’ gender identities.
:* Linguistic: Suppose someone’s preferred pronoun is “ze”. With which pronoun would you refer to this person in German or French? Neopronouns don’t have direct translations in other languages. You’ll probably use a gender-neutral pronoun, but that would still not 100% respect what ze uses. Another possibility is using the English pronoun in non-English text, but that’s harder to understand <em>and</em> may still not be what that person actually prefers.
:* Technical: As long as you type your message on a talk page, there should indeed be no technical issues. However, when the text is produced by the software or a template, the software/template may not be able to figure out the person’s preferred pronoun. Both the software and templates can access the pronoun set in the preferences, but the preferences allows only one non-binary pronoun (which is “they” in English); if someone prefers a neopronoun, templates can only use it if a system for storing neopronouns machine-readably is developed on the given wiki and the given user actually uses it (writing it on the user page in free text won’t suffice), while the software cannot use it reliably at all (individual software messages could be updated to act like templates, but the number of software messages is so large, and continually growing, that changing all of them is practically impossible).
:[[User:Tacsipacsi|Tacsipacsi]] ([[User talk:Tacsipacsi|talk]]) 17:44, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
::* linguistic, that's linguistically feasible so your argument is out of the point. ANd it's an hypothesis, no usual facts. Plus, for your information, it's always better to ask a non binary person wich pronouns she use in her own language, but you can still do it for other languages. It's usal to see on twitter "they/elle".
::* Technical. Do you have any basis or exemple (of templates, of software, of people using those in theirs casuals interractions with others?) ? For the moment it's only hypothesis, I build the UCoC on concret. Plus the UCoC regulates interaction between users, not between software and users. In fact "Respect the way that contributors name and describe themselves" is adressed to wikipedian, not to software.[[User:Scriptance|Scriptance]] ([[User talk:Scriptance|talk]]) 19:08, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
::*:There are several thousand languages in the world. What if there is one where it is not possible what you demand? They are then forced the either stopp communicating or violating the UCOC. [[User:Der-Wir-Ing|Der-Wir-Ing]] ("DWI") [[User talk:Der-Wir-Ing|talk]] 19:43, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
::*:* Linguistic: What if the user whom you want to mention doesn’t speak the language you want to mention them in? People may specify their preferred pronouns in multiple languages, but no one will specify them in <em>all</em> languages, especially not in ones that they don’t speak. And yes, it’s an hypothetical example, but it’s realistic, isn’t it?
::*:* Technical: There are some languages (as far as I remember Slavic ones) where even the greeting is gendered. I couldn’t find an actual example for that, but I could find e.g. [[ru:Шаблон:Hello]], which mentions the user’s mentor in a gendered way (open the wikicode and search for <code>gender</code>). And I also think that for this point, software localization should also be in scope – as long as software isn’t translated by AI, there is a human in the end typing the text (even if they don’t address it at a specific other human), whom this rule can be addressed at.
::*:[[User:Tacsipacsi|Tacsipacsi]] ([[User talk:Tacsipacsi|talk]]) 22:18, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
::*::Indeed there are thousands of languages, and English comes with hundreds of variants and dialects. So a hard requirement to use certain pronouns implies a hard requirement that people speak to you in a subset of the available languages or variants. For example, in a mostly genderless language like spoken Finnish, [[wikt:minä|minä]] (I) comes in different variants depending on the region, so requiring people to use a certain variant would imply requiring that they learn a certain regional variant of the language.
::*::People often want to tell others in which languages they prefer to communicate: we have babels for a reason! It's common for English-language users to be upset when they receive messages in a non-Latin script. Writing messages in English will get you blocked in some non-English wikis. Communicating in certain variants of English may get you in trouble due to misunderstandings with people who ''think'' they understand the individual words you're using but don't understand the overall meaning of your language.
::*::It's impossible to require that everyone know every language and variant thereof. So in practice I believe that the idea here is to make people communicate less. If you're not sure how your message will be received, just don't communicate. It's a very common approach in social media websites, where typically there's too much communication. [[User:Nemo_bis|Nemo]] 19:38, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
:::{{ping|Tacsipacsi}} I remember you! It was you who [[m:Talk:Universal Code of Conduct/Policy text#logical issue of "when linguistically feasable"|already answered me]] on the same subject, with the same out of nowhere argumentation and based on non-realistic hypothesis. It's a bit strange.
:::* Linguistic Why would you mention one person in a language she doesn't spoke? It's nonsense and non-realistic (How can you even honestly think it is?)
:::* Technically As I said to Vermont, enby and trans people are not existing only in english language, but all around the world, and by so, developped linguistic strategy in differents languages, hardly-gendered or non-gendered one's, so people just need to inform themselves in enby and trans linguistics tools in the appropriate language and to use thoses tools. Easy. And for the software translation, as I did some, there's just need to [[betawiki:Portal_talk:Fr#Neutralisation_des_traductions_59231|open the discussion]] with other translators to have non-misgendering translations. For the template, I don't speak russian, and I don't even know if the template is used a lot, or what it means, so we can't discuss about it (and maybe the {gender} parameter is regulated throught translatewiki or others, by the way, following the UCoC, there's just need to modify the template to have at least a non-misgendring template). Easy.
::: Again, you can't bring valid arguments to keep "linguistic or technically" words because they don't exist.So please stop and move on. Thanks. [[User:Scriptance|Scriptance]] ([[User talk:Scriptance|talk]]) 12:55, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
::::Hello. I am a non-binary person who continues to be non-binary when I use, or am described in, non-English languages, but I recognize that some languages simply do not have grammatical gender of this kind, or whose grammatical gender (or aspects of it) is truly limited to binary, i.e., there being no non-binary alternatives.
::::I will note: I personally (as someone with no knowledge of this besides a few news posts/fluent friends) do not think that using non-binary gender in French is anywhere near linguistically infeasible...or the other European languages you noted in earlier replies. Your argument seems to be that I should recognize languages other than English exist, my argument is that you should recognize languages other than European ones exist. ''Not every language has gendered pronouns.'' Not every language has gendered speech. Some have incredibly strict gendered speech. Some have relatively flexible gendered speech. Some governments impose restrictions on speech, whether positive or negative from a gender equity standpoint.
::::The "linguistic and technically feasible" caveat is necessary to allow for the infeasibility of using gender-affirming speech in languages where such speech is ''infeasible'', not where it is simply not preferred by a given speaker. I understand the concern about it actively being used as an excuse, but we cannot remove legitimate exceptions because people may try to misuse them. It is the job of whatever enforcing entity will exist, likely the U4C, to ensure positive enforcement of this. Best, [[User:Vermont|Vermont]] ([[User talk:Vermont|🐿️]]—[[Special:Contributions/Vermont|🏳️‍🌈]]) 03:01, 28 January 2023 (UTC)
::::: Hello, I'm enby too. No my argument isn't limitated to no english languages, but also to non-european language, no matter how they are gendered. I think there's enby people in those languages who develops linguistics strategies, because of their agentivity they can do that. It's way I don't think there's linguistic issue in any language or technical ones. If the language is non-gendered it's good for enby people, if it's hardly gendered they surely developped tools to be nicely gendered, there's just need to respect and use those tools. The problem is that french admin stick on the "linguistic or technially feasible" and the "neutral masculine" from the french academia to misgender enby people, and they hardly oppose to any involvment from anyone not belonging to wpfr [[User:Scriptance|Scriptance]] ([[User talk:Scriptance|talk]]) 10:58, 28 January 2023 (UTC)


::::::: Not that you asked, but you may or may not be interested in an essay I'm writing on the subject of political media in the United States: https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Socialism/America%27s_political_idiom It's a work in progress and presently quite a mess but the point is pretty clear. I inserted a couple of comments that I made here too. The left/right dichotomy as it exists in the media (and therefore also to some extent in the public's mind) is essentially just hokum. One long-running TV drama. Pomp and pantomime. I'd go on but I'd just be repeating what I've already written in the essay, and I don't want to get off topic.
== Ambiguity in the question ==


::::::: Suffice to say, that (for example) there's significant possibility Clinton was/is a serial rapist (see Hitchens 1999) and Kissinger a mass murderer (Hitchens 2001) and both go about unmolested while we are here blathering ritual "disavowals" of ideological motive for fear of reprisal is a perfect example of the demented, pavlovian behavior that we seem to feel is expected of us and that we have come to expect from others. It seems trite to complain about "political correctness", but it really is a cancer. Suppose one didn't want to humor gender pronouns or the concept of gender being different from sex. Suppose they club baby seals on the weekends. In moral terms they'd still be well ahead of the people we're expected to endorse for the sake of "political correctness". Anyone who has any genuine ideological perspective at all probably is, because they are willing to stand on principle, however misguided it may or may not be. I won't let it be implied that ideology (that is, to have an ideal) is unacceptable or anti-social. UCoC part 2 and so much other policy in that vein are, in spirit, just fine. It's the way they're worded and enforced that promotes an awful culture, but of course to isolate this problem one must insinuate bad faith, one must be negative, one must be critical. I'll be surprised if our conversation has any immediate bearing on UCoC or other policy, but it's still a worthwhile conversation to have, if for no reason other than to hash it out for readers and for our own skills in critical discourse. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])
The language on this page and on the actual vote page swaps and switches between two different questions. I see the question written as "Êtes-vous favorable à l'application du Code de Conduite Universel sur la base des directives révisées?", which in English is something like "Do you support the implementation of the Universal Code of Conduct on the basis of the revised enforcement guidelines?" This, plus the attempted explanations on the page [[m:Universal Code of Conduct/Revised enforcement guidelines/Voter information]], could ''either'' mean:
# Do you support the implementation of the Universal Code of Conduct on the basis of the enforcement guidelines {{small|(which happen to have been revised since they were originally proposed)}}? ''or''
# Do you support changing the way that the Universal Code of Conduct is implemented by shifting from the earlier version of the enforcement guidelines to the revised version of the enforcement guidelines?


::::::: Not touching that one, eh? I can understand, with your project being up in the air. But then, I'm a bit confused myself. What's the point of news if you have to walk on eggshells and avoid uncomfortable or inconvenient topics? Hitchens was no crackpot. He was the archetypal far-left pundit. Anyway, my suggestion is to do away with part two of the UCoC entirely, which I feel is strongly supported by this discussion. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])
These are two completely different questions. The first question is about support or opposition to the statement of UCOC principles together with the UCOC enforcement guidelines. The second question says that the UCOC is a ''fait accompli'' and implies that it is going to be implemented with either the old guidelines or the new ones; the community is given the choice of choosing between the old and the new guidelines.


The result of the vote will be open to eternal debates about interpreting the community's intention: support/opposition to UCOC, or support/opposition to changing the enforcement guidelines. If the dominant vote is "yes", then WMF can interpret it as support for a global UCOC+enforcement; if the dominant vote is "no", then WMF can insist on the interpretation in question 2, meaning yes for UCOC but with the pre-revision guidelines. This is a bit like the votes for the EU "Constitutional Treaty": either vote yes, or if the vote is no, then vote again or shift the vote from people to parliaments.


: After considering the problem a bit more, I'm convinced even AGF would be relatively benign if not for the following sentence: ''Criticism should be delivered in a sensitive and constructive manner.'' This encourages people to take criticism personally. Honest and straightforward criticism of an author's work must not be taken as criticism of its author or treated as incivility, regardless of the extent to which the work is contradicted. Obviously a critique should not be barbaric, but nor should its value and acceptability as a contribution be subject to additional and ill-defined qualifiers such as "constructive" or worse yet "sensitive". Nor should it be debased by euphemism and other attempts at sparing the ego of the author, who would almost certainly prefer a plain-language critique to being patronized if they themselves are participating in good faith. I can humor gender pronouns and other such things, but it seems to undermine the stated mission of many projects if criticism and critics themselves are dispensed with simply by feigning indignation and treating their contribution as a personal attack rather than another form of collaboration, no less valuable than the next. One need not make any statement about the author so AGF is easy enough to comply with so long as a distinction is made between an author and their work. The editor is entitled to humanity, decency and other such niceties. However in publishing their work, are they not obliged to accept criticism of that work? One can hardly even call that a vestige of accountability, but merely acknowledgement that no contribution should be immune to criticism and that criticism shouldn't be subject to the possibility of arbitrary sanction by needlessly vague policy. I hope but do not expect that someone will offer a counterargument if not seriously consider removing this part of the policy, which is far-reaching in its effect. Wikipedia alone is frequently a first-page result on most search engines for any given query. If one asks the amazon echo a question, it often quotes Wikipedia. It seems there ought to be some degree of accountability at least for policy. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 01:40, 9 October 2023 (UTC)
I understand that many well-intentioned people put in a lot of work on this, but somehow the result is nowhere near the standards that can be expected from a wiki community. Having a major vote on an ambiguous question, where one of the interpretations is that there is no possibility of opposing the UCOC at all, is close to pointless. [[User:Boud|Boud]] ([[User talk:Boud|talk]]) 02:20, 19 January 2023 (UTC)


: I can't help feeling a bit dense for not isolating this sentence earlier. I probably would have if it were not set within the other, equally wishy-washy prose of part two, all of which makes a vaguely irritating impression and strikes me as unnecessary. But it's this sentence that singles out and places constraints upon criticism while subtly conflating an author with their work that I feel is the most harmful and which I should probably have picked up on sooner. In any case, I feel the above paragraph is a strong prima facie argument for the removal of at least ''that'' sentence from UCoC, and perhaps also for a guideline to the effect of what I've written above. While I'm not sure it will be acknowledged by those whom it may concern, I'm pretty damned sure it won't be refuted. As always, comments, concerns, suggestions, hate mail and so forth are all welcome. Personally I'm delighted by any sort of feedback. While I don't presume that I myself am worthy of anyone's attention, I find the apparent disinterest in conversation on wikipedia and its sister projects wholly bizarre and unnatural, and much of the conversation that does occur is administrative, so to speak, rather than actual discourse. I don't know how anyone could stand to be so cagey and standoffish all the time, but that's my impression of the typical editor, and this is also true of other social media sites and often in real life as well. Sometimes I feel that most people hardly even act like humans. Strange times. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 03:09, 9 October 2023 (UTC)
:I agree the question is confusing. In English I think the only reasonable interpretation is (1) and I think this vote is already a re-do of the previous vote which failed to gain support for the UCoC.
:I wonder if translators were given guidance on how to interpret the text of the question, and whether anyone checked for inconsistencies across the translations. [[User:Nemo_bis|Nemo]] 07:40, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
::I mean, the previous vote passed (albeit, using the standards that the WMF just chose, which wasn't being pushed by more than a tiny minority of the editors who attended a ratification call); but neither that vote nor this one can be interpreted as being exactly either of these.
::The phrasing on the voter information page is both clearer and less clear. It's much more targeted on the "enforcement guidelines", but it lacks a top-level line just clearly stating the vote question. Since the page has lots of translation versions, that would still work language to language. [[User:Nosebagbear|Nosebagbear]] ([[User talk:Nosebagbear|talk]]) 14:40, 20 January 2023 (UTC)


: Besides AGF and the vague qualifications on critique, the remainder of UCoC part two mostly just amounts to public relations fluff. The entire section could and probably should be replaced with '''Observe common decency and show respect to other users.''' This is a broad yet clear directive that concisely sums up the whole of part two, or at least the parts that are worthwhile. Incidentally, if privileged users are not behaving in accordance with the UCoC and the issue isn't resolved on that project, what recourse do other users have? I realize that the WMF does not want to hear about each and every dispute that occurs, but it often appears that privileged users are not accountable to these rules in the slightest so long as there's a consensus among themselves. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 23:36, 26 December 2023 (UTC)
== "Most important" in why we should vote? ==
:Hi @[[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]],
:I have wiki-met you on the [https://en.wikinews.org English Wikinews] site where I have been sporadically contributing since I was indefinitely blocked on enwp in 2017. I wanted to tell you that I never understood why the enwn opposes AGF. BTW this is only one of the several reasons why I do not participate on enwn very often. [[User:Ottawahitech|Ottawahitech]] ([[User talk:Ottawahitech|talk]]) 17:17, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::@Heavy Water: I forgot to mention that I have contributed to several discussions about the UCOC at WD and COMMONS IIRC, but until I followed you here I had no idea this is where members of the community can participate openly in discussion. I had assumed that discussions were taking place on META where I am infinitely blocked, so cannot participate [[User:Ottawahitech|Ottawahitech]] ([[User talk:Ottawahitech|talk]]) 17:34, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:::I guess the discussion is not taking place here, after all. This is all very strange if the wmf-staff really wants to hear our views. [[User:Ottawahitech|Ottawahitech]] ([[User talk:Ottawahitech|talk]]) 00:37, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
::::{{ping|Ottawahitech}} The general lack of public discourse is striking. It's remarkable not just on this page or on this website but in general. I'm somewhat at a loss to explain this as well, though political and intellectual quietism seems favorable to the status quo and I suspect it's at least in part an intentional effect of broad social engineering. People don't really talk about public matters in general. The pomp and undignified exposition that is western political media is probably designed to be somewhat repellent and perhaps as a result it has become fashionable simply not to have an opinion on such matters, i.e., to be "neutral". What you've written essentially comprises a reductio ad absurdum argument. That is to say, they do not care for our input. This doesn't mean we can't or shouldn't offer it. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 08:31, 8 March 2024 (UTC)
:::::@[[User:AP295|AP295]]: I am not sure that the wmf-staff does not want to hear us.
:::::I have seen several UCOC notices [[Wikibooks:Wikibooks:Reading room/General|published on the English wikibooks]] and have responded to a couple, but last I looked the [[User:RamzyM (WMF)|staff member]] who posted them had not responded yet.
:::::There could be other reasons for the lack of discussion here, I think? [[User:Ottawahitech|Ottawahitech]] ([[User talk:Ottawahitech|talk]]) 18:13, 8 March 2024 (UTC)


== "without expectations based on age ... Nor will we make exceptions" ==
I'd missed it the first time I read through the voter info page, but I'm confused by the single bullet point, stating {{xt|Most importantly, voting will: Ensure that your Wikimedia project’s views are represented in the global vote.}}


Is this a typo?
This is confusing on a few different bases: surely, in practical terms, the most important effect of the vote is the actual role it plays in whether the(se) enforcement guidelines are implemented or not?
{{tqb|This applies to all contributors and participants in their interaction with all contributors and participants, <u>without expectations based on</u> [''without exceptions based on''] age, mental or physical disabilities, physical appearance, national, religious, ethnic and cultural background, caste, social class, language fluency, sexual orientation, gender identity, sex or career field. <u>Nor will we make exceptions based on</u> standing, skills or accomplishments in the Wikimedia projects or movement}}. [[User:Gitz6666|Gitz6666]] ([[User talk:Gitz6666|talk]]) 01:31, 7 January 2024 (UTC)
::{{ping|Gitz6666}}, thank you for catching that. Text has been updated. [[User:PEarley (WMF)|PEarley (WMF)]] ([[User talk:PEarley (WMF)|talk]]) 16:59, 9 January 2024 (UTC)


== Grammar ==
Less severely "wikimedia project" is a little unclear - is "Wikipedia" or "English Wikipedia" my wikimedia project? They have my utmost empathy on this point - trying to find phrases that work for both language-split local projects (e.g. en-wiki, fr-wiktionary) and singular projects (Wikidata, Wikicommons) is hard just in English (as we over in the movement charter process are discovering for ourselves!) But I am interested which was intended. [[User:Nosebagbear|Nosebagbear]] ([[User talk:Nosebagbear|talk]]) 14:48, 20 January 2023 (UTC)


Section 2.1, bullet point 3, sub-bullet point 3: "using" should be changed to "may use" for consistency with the other three sub-bullet points. As currently written, this sub-bullet point is just a noun phrase while the other three are full sentences. [[User:Einsof|Einsof]] ([[User talk:Einsof|talk]]) 14:15, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:The claim {{xt|Most importantly, voting will: Ensure that your Wikimedia project’s views are represented in the global vote}} is absurd, and again suggests a lack of serious wiki editing of the text. It is extremely unrealistic to claim that participation of one individual will [[:wikt:ensure|ensure]] that the collective view of that individual's project is represented in the vote. The diversity of individuals' views within each project is huge. Even someone ''wishing'' to represent the collective views of the project is unlikely to be able to do so without a lot of work (e.g. start and wait for a clear closing of an RfC in that project on how the project should answer the ambiguous question of the vote). And even if individuals ''could'', in principle, do this, would they in reality? Especially given that this is a secret vote, without any pretence at representative democracy, how many of us will/did try to ''represent'' their projects? [[User:Boud|Boud]] ([[User talk:Boud|talk]]) 01:28, 22 January 2023 (UTC)


== This includes imposing schemes on content intended to marginalize or ostracize ==
== And? ==


Not the first person to ask, and not the first time I'm asking. What does the last UCoC sentence mean? Is this "imposing schemes" + on + "content intended to marginalize", or is it "imposing schemes on content" (which are) "intendend to marginalize". Marginalize or ostracize whom? Any real-world examples of such behavior? Translators had a hard time understanding this sentence. [[User:PEarley (WMF)|PEarley (WMF)]]?
Sorry about ignoring the infobar earlier. Anyways, the following sentence seems strange to me: "We want these communities to be positive, safe and healthy environments for anyone who joins (and wants to join) them." The and implies a scenario where a user could potentially join a community against their will. This seems to me to be something that is not really possible in how our wikis work: there's no mandatory participation and the limited "social" features of the sites (namely user and discussion pages) are all configurable by logged in users. A simple change to "or" would be better to properly signify a union of the two groups which were likely the intended objects: people who have joined + people who want to join. [[Special:Contributions/2803:4600:1116:12E7:4558:3292:C28C:EF8F|2803:4600:1116:12E7:4558:3292:C28C:EF8F]] 07:17, 27 January 2023 (UTC)


:And when you change it to a "or", someone will come and ask what of the two possibilties is now true. Also, the intended meaning is "...anyone who joins and anyone hasn't joined yet but wants to/ has intentions to join" [[User:Der-Wir-Ing|Der-Wir-Ing]] ("DWI") [[User talk:Der-Wir-Ing|talk]] 08:58, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
<small>''"I could have done it in a much more complicated way," said the Red Queen, immensely proud.''</small> [[User:Ponor|Ponor]] ([[User talk:Ponor|talk]]) 17:45, 30 January 2024 (UTC)


:In context, the entire sentence seems redundant. Removing it would make the code less complicated still. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 04:03, 2 February 2024 (UTC)
== "Listen and try to understand what Wikimedians of different backgrounds want to tell you. Be ready to challenge and adapt your own understanding, expectations and behaviour as a Wikimedian." ==


I imagine translators have a hard time with the UCoC for the same reason they'd probably not be able to translate "smoke free" into "smoking is prohibited" unless they already understood the idiom. Much of the UCoC seems to be constructed in the vacuous dialect of contemporary [[w:Public relations|PR]], rather than by aiming for a clear and easily-interpreted set of rules. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 04:17, 2 February 2024 (UTC)
This seems very problematic to me, as it sounds like if someone doesn't like what I might say, or how I might say it, it therefore becomes MY obligation to adapt to THEIR preferences, when the other party adapting to mine is an equally valid expectation. I'm a foul-mouthed American who has the right to free speech, something many countries sadly lack. As one example, just because the 'Swastika" symbol is illegal in Germany, it is NOT illegal here, and if you were to visit Japan, you would see them frequently as it is a religious symbol to many Japanese people. I think it relates to Buddhism, but I'm not certain of that, only that seeing them, while at first was a culture shock for me, as despite the fact they're legal here, they are rarely displayed for any reason, sans endorsing the government of WWII Germany.


== Proposed revisions - values both civility and scholarly inquiry ==
I'm new to being a registered 'editor' here, and have yet to edit anything, though I came very close to something I thought could have been written by an unapologetic socialist. The letter of this rule implies that I have to adapt to his or her political philosophy rather than challenging or changing it.


Excerpted from [[:meta:User:Jaredscribe/UCoC]], where I will be proposing more revisions for the annual review.
[[User:KevyKevTPA|KevyKevTPA]] ([[User talk:KevyKevTPA|talk]]) 03:21, 29 January 2023 (UTC)


==={{slink|Policy:Universal_Code_of_Conduct#2_–_Expected_behaviour}}===
No need to went on godwin point at first message. The text quoted just ask to have empathy and to consider others as sincer (rules that are already on wp -at least on wpfr). It's nothing special, normally you adapt yourself to news things, it's just enjoining you to do it. [[User:Scriptance|Scriptance]] ([[User talk:Scriptance|talk]]) 14:47, 29 January 2023 (UTC)
<blockquote>"In all Wikimedia projects, spaces and events, behaviour <strike>will be</strike> <strong>should be</strong> founded in civility, <strong>scholarly inquiry, logical discourse</strong>, collegiality, respect <strong>for verifiable truth and for eachother</strong>. <strike>solidarity and good citizenship.</strike>" </blockquote>


These changes are proposed for the reasons stated by [[w:Aristotle|Aristotle]] in the [[w:Nicomachean Ethics|Nicomachean Ethics]] to justify his abandonment of the Platonic [[w:theory of forms]]: '''While both are dear, piety requires us to honor truth above our friends.''' --[[s:Nicomachean_Ethics_(Ross)/Book_One#Part_6|Book I chapter 6, 1096a.16]]. But the phrase as currently formulated in the official UCoC neglects to mention scholarly discourse, inquiry, or logic as valuable behaviors. It offers instead 5 synonyms for civility, which taken together may be used to imply and enforce "compliance" with a group consensus, which would be a recipe for [[w:groupthink]]. [[User:Jaredscribe|Jaredscribe]] ([[User talk:Jaredscribe|talk]]) 01:15, 3 February 2024 (UTC)
== Don't change what works. ==


:{{ping | Jaredscribe}} While I agree with the spirit of this, I think that all of these things are predicated upon critique. "Civility" is often used somewhat euphemistically to mean agreeableness, itself favorable to assent. If anything, the UCoC needs a statement that protects critique and critical contributions. It also has far too many redundancies. Generally it contains too much redundant or meaningless PR language. Christopher Hitchens put the point rather well when he wrote "'' In place of honest disputation we are offered platitudes about “healing.” The idea of “unity” is granted huge privileges over any notion of “division” or, worse, “divisiveness.” I cringe every time I hear denunciations of “the politics of division”—as if politics was not division by definition. Semi-educated people join cults whose whole purpose is to dull the pain of thought, or take medications that claim to abolish anxiety. Oriental religions, with their emphasis on Nirvana and fatalism, are repackaged for Westerners as therapy, and platitudes or tautologies masquerade as wisdom.''" Of course he wasn't talking about Wikimedia, but the point is no less relevant here. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 08:16, 6 February 2024 (UTC)
I mean that is unnecessary to change thing what works. [[User:Whiny15|Whiny15]] ([[User talk:Whiny15|talk]]) 14:43, 29 January 2023 (UTC)
::Yes - Civil, logical, scholarly critique should be protected, even when it is in dissent to whatever opinion is prevailing. Have you considered writing an [[w:WP:Essay]] with you opinions? Do you have a user page somewhere with a manifesto? A proposed rewrite of the [[w:WP:Civility]] policy? I concur that there is a need for this, and my proposal was a start. You may contribute to my [[m:User:Jaredscribe/UCoC#Commentary%20and%20Analysis]], if you wish. [[User:Jaredscribe|Jaredscribe]] ([[User talk:Jaredscribe|talk]]) 03:57, 11 February 2024 (UTC)

::: A manifesto? Do I strike you as a Ted Kaczynski? I hope that's not the impression I give. I would like to see a provision that protects critical contributions and another rule that prohibits dishonesty. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 19:37, 12 February 2024 (UTC)
== What happens to your account if you do not agree to follow the UCoC? ==
::: Though since you've asked, I do have a relevant essay on wikiversity, https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Policy_and_Standards_for_Critical_Discourse. It's a critique on the design and policy of popular user-driven websites. I may end up moving it if wikiversity ever improves the documentation on content organization and namespaces and I figure out exactly how to organize my essays. However, I am blocked on wikipedia and the essay is only partly about Wikipedia anyway. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 00:51, 14 February 2024 (UTC)

::They are not predicated upon critique, but upon conduct and discussion. Not all discussion must or should be critical, although critique is one aspect of discussion that should be protected when it is done competently and in good-faith. Much critique on wikipedia is not done that way, in my experience, which is the motivation for guidelines like this.
I voted against the enforcement of the UCoC, as I believe that what you had already worked, and there is no need to mess with something which was perfectly fine as it was. If it ain't broken, don't fix it. With this having been said (and I'm not for one moment, intimating that I will refuse to abide by the UCoC), what would happen to any user across wikis, were they to refuse to abide by the UCoC? Would they be blocked globally, or would this be similar to the "Foundation ban" for, for example, making legal threats, etc? Just curious :) [[User:DaneGeld|DaneGeld]] ([[User talk:DaneGeld|talk]]) 22:09, 25 February 2023 (UTC)
::I propose that all dialectic - including talk pages, edit summaries, user talk pages, in person meetups, multiple live drafts (as in [[w:WP:Bold-refine]] - should be founded in '''"scholarly inquiry"''' and '''"analytical discourse"''' ('logical discourse'), which includes critique but starts before goes far beyond it.

::[[User:Jaredscribe|Jaredscribe]] ([[User talk:Jaredscribe|talk]]) 23:32, 18 February 2024 (UTC)
:@[[User:DaneGeld|DaneGeld]] - unless you're in one of the much reduced category of individuals required to specifically affirm the UCOC, "nothing" is the ''direct'' answer, in the sense that the refusal isn't sanctionable. Actually violating the UCOC would be akin to violating any other conduct policy on your (or their) projects, assuming that anyone is willing to enforce it (which would be likely on your three main projects, for example).
:::Again, I agree with the spirit and think such a change would be an improvement, but that's not saying much. Deleting the sentence entirely would be better yet. Phrases like ''founded in scholarly inquiry'' still amount to wooden language. That is, non-specific and somewhat meaningless. A statement such as I suggest would protect dissenting contributions and critique without such ambiguity. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 12:46, 20 February 2024 (UTC)
:If no-one enforced issues covered by the UCOC but not by their local conduct policies, that's what the U4C and systemic project failures cases are for. [[User:Nosebagbear|Nosebagbear]] ([[User talk:Nosebagbear|talk]]) 17:31, 26 February 2023 (UTC)
:[Not a UCOC committee member, nor a staff member - my $0.02 [[User:Nosebagbear|Nosebagbear]] ([[User talk:Nosebagbear|talk]]) 17:31, 26 February 2023 (UTC)

== Current status ==

Hi. [[m:Universal Code of Conduct/Project#Current status]] seems to be outdated. Furthemore, what are the next steps, beyond the review of the Enforcement guidelines by the Board of Trustees?

Best, — '''[[User:Jules*|<span style="color:#FF7E42">Ju</span><span style="color:#FF5F42">le</span><span style="color:#F82621">s*</span>]]''' <sup><small style="border-bottom:1px solid">[[User talk:Jules*|<span style="color:#000">talk</span>]]</small></sup> 12:30, 21 March 2023 (UTC)

== Open letter ==

I think it's over, so I can write. The adoption of UCOC is the worst process I have seen in the Movement and the Foundation. Complete disregard for communities, terrible English-centric text containing untranslatable terms, disregard for members on discussion pages, closed decision-making mechanisms.

I am glad that it was finally accepted, but I hope that the Foundation has drawn the right conclusions and those who organized this process will no longer make any decisions and will be expelled from all processes. [[User:Iniquity|Iniquity]] ([[User talk:Iniquity|talk]]) 10:11, 12 May 2023 (UTC)

== "without expectations" ==

From section 2:

> This applies to all contributors and participants in their interaction with all contributors and participants, without '''expectations''' based on age, mental or physical disabilities, [...]. Nor will we make exceptions based on standing, [...].

This dictates that the rule of "behaviour being founded in respect" apply without expectations based on age and such. I do not comprehend what this statement would imply without reading between the lines, but I'm not a native English speaker. In the French translation, it's translated as "et ce sans distinction d’âge," ("without ''distinction'' based on age,"), which appears to be something else.<br/>
Should the English text be reworded for clarity? [[User:M!dgard|M!dgard]] ([[User talk:M!dgard|talk]]) 21:31, 23 January 2023 (UTC)
: {{ping|M!dgard}} This is more likely to be seen at [[m:Talk:Universal Code of Conduct]] [[User:Pppery|Pppery]] ([[User talk:Pppery|talk]]) 16:30, 29 January 2023 (UTC)

== EG? ==

{{ping|GVarnum-WMF|PEarley (WMF)}} shouldn't the [[Policy:Universal Code of Conduct/Enforcement guidelines]] be linked anywhere in this doc? Maybe a "see also" part in the footer? [[User:David Wadie Fisher-Freberg|David Wadie Fisher-Freberg]] ([[User talk:David Wadie Fisher-Freberg|talk]]) 07:22, 11 April 2023 (UTC)

:I agree. It should've been done already, especially since non-WMF editors aren't allowed to do it themselves. Tagging [[User:GVarnum-WMF]] and [[User:PEarley (WMF)]]. [[User:Adrianmn1110|Adrianmn1110]] ([[User talk:Adrianmn1110|talk]]) 08:04, 25 April 2023 (UTC)
::{{ping|David Wadie Fisher-Freberg|Adrianmn1110}}, thanks for the note, I've added a template at top linking to the guidelines. [[User:PEarley (WMF)|PEarley (WMF)]] ([[User talk:PEarley (WMF)|talk]]) 14:03, 26 April 2023 (UTC)

==Typo edit request==
in <nowiki><!--T:87--></nowiki>
;Cross-wiki: Affecting or occuring on more than one project. See also: Global.
/s/occuring/occurring
:Thank you, --[[User:M7|M7]] ([[User talk:M7|talk]]) 07:16, 25 May 2023 (UTC)

:@[[User:M7|M7]]: Fixed it! Thank you for the alert! --[[User:GVarnum-WMF|Gregory Varnum (Wikimedia Foundation) [he/him]]] ([[User talk:GVarnum-WMF|talk]]) 11:30, 25 May 2023 (UTC)
::@[[User:GVarnum-WMF|GVarnum-WMF]] - are we able to provide a list of typos in the UCOC for correction? There's quite a few and fixing them to let us focus on the substantive issues when we get to amendment time, that would be great. [[User:Nosebagbear|Nosebagbear]] ([[User talk:Nosebagbear|talk]]) 18:23, 30 May 2023 (UTC)
:::You are certainly welcome to submit them, although I would need to run them past our Legal department before adopting any changes (sometimes what someone sees as a typo is actually an intentional term usage by a lawyer). --[[User:GVarnum-WMF|Gregory Varnum (Wikimedia Foundation) [he/him]]] ([[User talk:GVarnum-WMF|talk]]) 06:57, 1 June 2023 (UTC)

== Why are we over in Foundation Wiki? ==

Why have we moved both the dictated policy, the community-backed policy, and the discussions on the two over to Foundation-wiki?

Foundation-wiki is both harder to find, harder to edit (especially if you don't have an account), and splits from meta where these aspects should logically belong. [[User:Nosebagbear|Nosebagbear]] ([[User talk:Nosebagbear|talk]]) 18:25, 30 May 2023 (UTC)

:As part of that, dozens of links in both the live and archived talk pages have become broken links - does Foundation-wiki have the bots that would correct such issues on major wikis? If not, they'll need to be corrected manually by whoever moved them. [[User:Nosebagbear|Nosebagbear]] ([[User talk:Nosebagbear|talk]]) 18:30, 30 May 2023 (UTC)
::We will work to update those links once non-archive content is dealt with. --[[User:GVarnum-WMF|Gregory Varnum (Wikimedia Foundation) [he/him]]] ([[User talk:GVarnum-WMF|talk]]) 06:52, 1 June 2023 (UTC)
:I am also curious why moving to Foundation Wiki. It would be difficult to maintain translation page and facilitate discussion, since there is only few volunteer admins (exclude Global Sysop as what they can only do is anti-vandalism). Thanks. [[User:SCP-2000|SCP-2000]] ([[User talk:SCP-2000|talk]]) 19:03, 30 May 2023 (UTC)
::@[[User:SCP-2000|SCP-2000]]: Can you elaborate on how it will be difficult to maintain? Note that there will be a growing number of staff-based admins as this wiki gets used more, but I am curious about ideas related to more volunteer admins. Regarding the reduction of duplication, the pages have always been "officially housed" on this wiki - the duplicates on Meta-Wiki existed because this wiki could not previously facilitate translations or discussions. As those barriers have been removed, the primary reasons for duplication no longer existed. Given the legal reasons behind hosting the "primary versions" on this wiki have not changed, the problems with maintaining duplications appear and potential benefits with addressing them seem to outweigh risks (some of which are inherit with this wiki existing at all). However, I am at this point more interested in trying to address potential problems with this less duplicate oriented setup than debating a return to a setup we already know was not working. --[[User:GVarnum-WMF|Gregory Varnum (Wikimedia Foundation) [he/him]]] ([[User talk:GVarnum-WMF|talk]]) 06:56, 1 June 2023 (UTC)
:It just says loud and clear, that the UCoC is no project from the community any more, but something against the community by some usurpers in the ivory tower.
:The WMF is just the janitor of the real bosses, the communities, it must never ever have the last word over the real bosses, that would be a putsch. [[User:Sänger|Sänger]] ([[User talk:Sänger|talk]]) 14:36, 19 June 2023 (UTC)
::{{ping|Sänger}}: I believe that there is a saying "He who pays the piper calls the tune". Editors contribute by waiving their copyright, but the WMF puts up the cash and also absorbs the knocks if there are legal issues. [[User:Martinvl|Martinvl]] ([[User talk:Martinvl|talk]]) 15:24, 19 June 2023 (UTC)

== AGF ==

"Assume good faith...All Wikimedians should assume unless evidence otherwise exists that others are here to collaboratively improve the projects, but this should not be used to justify statements with a harmful impact."

So AGF will now be enforced on projects without AGF as a guideline? Presumably, there are projects where AGF is just an essay, where guidelines don't provide any guidance on this, or, like [[n:en:|my home project]], [[n:en:Wikinews:Never assume|where there is an explicit prohibition on assumptions of faith, good or bad]]. [[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] ([[User talk:Heavy Water|talk]]) 18:19, 20 June 2023 (UTC)

: @[[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] I have always had concern about AGF and its many, equally off-putting analogs whereby any expression of disapproval, suspicion, critique or normal human emotions like frustration put the editor into a gray area right off the bat. I'm not sure of the correct venue to raise such concerns, but in my experience this approach typically goes nowhere precisely because anyone can ignore reason, then cite AGF and a slew of other rules you're arguably in violation of when you call them a jackass. If you happen to have an incredible amount of restraint, patience and persistence and can't be cited for anything else, open-ended catchalls like WP:NOTHERE (a blatant contradiction of AGF by any reasonable interpretation) usually get the job done. AGF is enforced exactly when it is convenient for them to do so. Otherwise there are plenty of other expedient rules and essays that provide grounds upon which any given user may be summarily ejected from the encyclopedia that anyone can edit. Perhaps I'll write an essay of my own on the subject. What do you think? [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])

: @[[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] And since "assume good faith" only enforceable to the extent that we ''say'' what we ''assume'', the rule could be equivalently stated as ''"do not question the motives of others."'' Without euphemistic phrasing that uses adjectives like "good" and "faith", the rule sounds exactly as Orwellian as it is. How ''should'' one make critical statements? If users are obliged to understate criticism and act as though others have no possible ulterior motive then critical discourse is severely debased. The expression of critique, discontent and frustration all go hand-in-hand and they are no less important than the expression of joy or any other "positive" message. When policy demands that users "avoid negativity" they should consider what that really means. What would we have besides a twilight zone of fawning, obsequious consumers and grinning, unchecked psychopathy? [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])

: The rest after part two is fairly straightforward and more or less amounts to "don't harass people or wreck the site". Part two strikes me as unusual because it's presented as advice. One can't interpret it as a set of positive obligations because policy statements like "Be ready to challenge and adapt your own understanding, expectations and behaviour as a Wikimedian" are nonspecific and obviously outside any given project's authority to enforce. It seems worthwhile to make the distinction between enforceable policy and statements like ''"Practice empathy."'' The needle in the haystack here is AGF, which at first appears to fit in with the rest of the ostensibly well-intended (if banal) advice but when re-worded to properly match the scope of a project's authority to enforce, turns out to be ''"do not question the motives of others."'' In compliance with AGF, I assume of course that this is all coincidental. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])

::Indeed. Really, at least at en.wp, AGF is the rule from on high &mdash; when it's convenient. The framework of en.wn's [[n:en:Wikinews:Never assume|never assume]] initially seems like it would turn users into a hostile bunch always suspicious of each other, but I've observed it actually ''lowers the temperature'' of community politics, even where strong interpersonal conflict is present. In fact, the honesty allowed by freedom from AGF and actual enforcement of [[n:en:Wikinews:Etiquette|the ''de jure'' etiquette guideline]] seems to make arguments clearer and allow us to summarily deal with disruptive elements, without politeness and often with what the UCoC defines as "insults". "We expect all Wikimedians to show respect for others" without "exceptions based on standing, skills...in the Wikimedia projects or movement": Even on en.wp, individuals judged not to meet {{w|WP:CIR}} ("skills") or vandals/spammers ("standing") don't get shown "respect". In the eyes of the community, they've lost it. And what would} "respect" entail? Apologizing when blocking them?

::UCoC enforcement at projects with policies or guidelines conflicting it like en.wn's will be interesting to watch unfold; I expect, per "1 – Introduction" the WMF plans to take OFFICE action when a project isn't enforcing the UCoC in favor of its own policies or guidelines.

::I find it unsurprising in the three months since I raised this question no WMF staffer has responded, even when, last month, I left a message on the talk page of a staffer involved in discussions above. But I have to AGF here, don't I? Oh well. I hope someday en.wn will be successful enough for the entire community to fork off (hey, I wonder if I'll get OFFICE-glocked for saying that). [[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] ([[User talk:Heavy Water|talk]]) 14:54, 13 September 2023 (UTC)

::: Perhaps the best remedy is exposure, e.g. essays, articles, etc. that concisely and accurately describe how rules like AGF are abused to avoid accountability and worded euphemistically to serve as a debauched stand-in for principle. We have no bearing on this policy except by public critique. Most of us are hardly born critics, least of all myself. We want to cooperate and one's calling, if they feel they have one, is almost always constructive. So many people would rather not exist at all than abandon their purpose. One faces a serious dilemma because messing around with the umpteenth variation of the multi-armed bandit problem or some obscure conjecture about conformal mappings while this demented twilight zone is progressively imposed upon the entirety of western culture starts to seem like grotesque misassignment of priorities. Knowing you're right but being at a lost for words while some two-faced shyster lectures you about social justice, gender prounouns, etc. is well likely to be the most annoying moment of one's life. We are in this position partly for lack of good examples to learn from. Perhaps I should attempt to curate some, or make up a course on the subject for Wikiversity. In any case, I'm not just going to let things go their way, nor should anyone else. Orwell wrote an excellent essay, "On Politics and the English Language". The essay is accurate in that Orwell recognizes the problem and identifies many of it salient components, but it is also an imprecise and somewhat awkward essay. Even Orwell was taxed in attempting to describe and generalize the issue. Anyway, I will probably use some of what I've written here in an essay of my own. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])

::::I wondered if you were going to go there. The rejection of AGF, for en.wn, is simply a variation in its rules as a Wikimedia project, not an endorsement of right-wing politics, or any other political ideologies, for that matter. I say this to defend ''Wikinews''' reputation. [[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] ([[User talk:Heavy Water|talk]]) 23:53, 13 September 2023 (UTC)

::::: Go where? I do not subscribe to "right wing ideology", nor is anything I've written intended as a dog-whistle to imply that I do. Take my post at face value. Just because I am irritated at the media's rhetorical abuse of the phrase "social justice" does not mean that I resent or do not value social justice. Naturally I don't demand that you AGF, but if you'd like me to clarify my opinion on any given issue, then please just ask rather than make presumptions.

::::: More importantly, nothing at all was said about wikinews or AGF that could possibly be construed as an endorsement of "right-wing ideology". There's no need to imitate the media's dramatic ritual of "disavowal", though it appears I've unconsciously done so too. It is not obvious that this pavlovian, knee-jerk reaction makes no sense whatsoever in this context here? Suppose I am "right wing", whatever that means to you. Suppose Hitler escaped to Brazil and I am his bastard grandson if you like. We were having a productive discourse. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])

::::: Another instance of euphemism is the third bullet point of part 2.1: "''Respect the way that contributors name and describe themselves.''" One assumes it means that we must use someone's preferred name and gender pronouns and the correct name of their race or tribe. That's entirely fine, but then, why doesn't it say exactly that? Since the UCoC already has a strong anti-harassment policy, would that not suffice? Otherwise it is very open to interpretation and therefore easy to abuse. If one uses preferred pronouns and names, but states they disagree that sex reassignment is indicated for gender dysphoria, are they in violation of the policy as it's worded now? If so, then fine, but then the policy should say as much. I would still comply with that rule and use the site, because it's then understood by everyone that the content is not an unbiased reflection of public opinion or consensus. How is vague, sugar-coated policy with carte blanche potential for censorship "left-wing"? How is one "right-wing" for speaking against it? [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])

::::::There = taking the way en.wn regards AGF and the WMF's nature as part of a broader notion about how society should operate. With "right-wing politics, or any other political ideologies, for that matter" my intent was to clarify ''Wikinews''ies didn't intend, in adopting Never assume, to promote any broader ideas for society (partly for your information and partly for anyone else who might then take a negative view toward ''Wikinews''; the project has enough opponents already). I apologize for the lot of extrapolation from your comment in interpreting parts of it as repeating right-wing talking points, possibly implying you were just POV-pushing. I guess when one sees a lot of people who ''are'' just POV-pushing and happen to be saying similar things, one thinks the conclusions are obvious. I didn't intend to halt this discussion, though. I would agree the vagueness was likely written into 2.1.3 to allow for selectivity in enforcement. Somewhat related: [[m:User:Tom Morris/WMFers Say The Darndest Things]]. [[User:Heavy Water|Heavy Water]] ([[User talk:Heavy Water|talk]]) 05:19, 14 September 2023 (UTC)

::::::: Thank you for saying so, I was worried that you might have decided to terminate the conversation right there. It would have been a bad example, so I'm glad that's not the case. Not that there are many young, impressionable children reading policy discussions on wikimedia's talk pages, but I've had conversations that ended in a similar manner on sites like reddit. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])

::::::: Not that you asked, but you may or may not be interested in an essay I'm writing on the subject of political media in the United States: https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Socialism/America%27s_political_idiom It's a work in progress and presently quite a mess but the point is pretty clear. I inserted a couple of comments that I made here too. The left/right dichotomy as it exists in the media (and therefore also to some extent in the public's mind) is essentially just hokum. One long-running TV drama. Pomp and pantomime. I'd go on but I'd just be repeating what I've already written in the essay, and I don't want to get off topic.


: I should say though that I'd be quite surprised if they obliged my request in the near term. It's not as though the people who make these decisions are oblivious to these points. On the contrary. Hitchens also had something to say about this, (or rather Chomsky did, but I don't have Chomsky's original quote) "''Noam Chomsky, a most distinguished intellectual and moral dissident, once wrote that the old motto about “speaking truth to power” is overrated. Power, as he points out, quite probably knows the truth already, and is mainly interested in suppressing or limiting or distorting it. We would therefore do better to try to instruct the powerless. ''" It's irritating how often I have to cite Hitchens. It makes me look like a fanatic (which I'm not), but I suppose I should be glad to have at least one 'authority' to cite. Anyway, the points should still be made, and one should not presume they're lost upon the decision makers. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]]) 08:32, 6 February 2024 (UTC)
::::::: Suffice to say, that (for example) there's significant possibility Clinton was/is a serial rapist (Hitchens) and Kissinger a mass murderer (Hitchens) and both go about unmolested while we are here blathering ritual "disavowels" of ideological motive for fear of reprisal is a perfect example of the demented, pavlovian behavior that we seem to feel is expected of us and that we have come to expect from others. It seems trite to complain about "political correctness", but really is a cancer. Suppose one didn't want to humor gender pronouns or the concept of gender being different from sex. Suppose they club baby seals on the weekends. In moral terms they'd still be well ahead of the people we're expected to endorse for the sake of "political correctness". Anyone who has any genuine ideological perspective at all probably is, because they are willing to stand on principle, however misguided it may or may not be. I won't let it be implied that ideology (that is, to have an ideal) is unacceptable or anti-social. UCoC part 2 and so much other policy in that vein are, in spirit, just fine. It's the way they're worded and enforced that promotes an awful culture. [[User:AP295|AP295]] ([[User talk:AP295|talk]])

Revision as of 21:55, 26 March 2024

AGF

"Assume good faith...All Wikimedians should assume unless evidence otherwise exists that others are here to collaboratively improve the projects, but this should not be used to justify statements with a harmful impact."

So AGF will now be enforced on projects without AGF as a guideline? Presumably, there are projects where AGF is just an essay, where guidelines don't provide any guidance on this, or, like my home project, where there is an explicit prohibition on assumptions of faith, good or bad. Heavy Water (talk) 18:19, 20 June 2023 (UTC)Reply

@Heavy Water I have always had concern about AGF and its many, equally off-putting analogs whereby any expression of disapproval, suspicion, critique or normal human emotions like frustration put the editor into a gray area right off the bat. I'm not sure of the correct venue to raise such concerns, but in my experience this approach typically goes nowhere precisely because anyone can ignore reason, then cite AGF and a slew of other rules you're arguably in violation of when you call them a jackass. If you happen to have an incredible amount of restraint, patience and persistence and can't be cited for anything else, open-ended catchalls like WP:NOTHERE (a blatant contradiction of AGF by any reasonable interpretation) usually get the job done. AGF is enforced exactly when it is convenient for them to do so. Otherwise there are plenty of other expedient rules and essays that provide grounds upon which any given user may be summarily ejected from the encyclopedia that anyone can edit. Perhaps I'll write an essay of my own on the subject. What do you think? AP295 (talk)
@Heavy Water And since "assume good faith" only enforceable to the extent that we say what we assume, the rule could be equivalently stated as "do not question the motives of others." Without euphemistic phrasing that uses adjectives like "good" and "faith", the rule sounds exactly as Orwellian as it is. How should one make critical statements? If users are obliged to understate criticism and act as though others have no possible ulterior motive then critical discourse is severely debased. The expression of critique, discontent and frustration all go hand-in-hand and they are no less important than the expression of joy or any other "positive" message. When policy demands that users "avoid negativity" they should consider what that really means. What would we have besides a twilight zone of fawning, obsequious consumers and grinning, unchecked psychopathy? AP295 (talk)
The rest after part two is fairly straightforward and more or less amounts to "don't harass people or wreck the site". Part two strikes me as unusual because it's presented as advice. One can't interpret it as a set of positive obligations because policy statements like "Be ready to challenge and adapt your own understanding, expectations and behaviour as a Wikimedian" are nonspecific and obviously outside any given project's authority to enforce. It seems worthwhile to make the distinction between enforceable policy and statements like "Practice empathy." The needle in the haystack here is AGF, which at first appears to fit in with the rest of the ostensibly well-intended (if banal) advice but when re-worded to properly match the scope of a project's authority to enforce, turns out to be "do not question the motives of others." In compliance with AGF, I assume of course that this is all coincidental. AP295 (talk)
Indeed. Really, at least at en.wp, AGF is the rule from on high — when it's convenient. The framework of en.wn's never assume initially seems like it would turn users into a hostile bunch always suspicious of each other, but I've observed it actually lowers the temperature of community politics, even where strong interpersonal conflict is present. In fact, the honesty allowed by freedom from AGF and actual enforcement of the de jure etiquette guideline seems to make arguments clearer and allow us to summarily deal with disruptive elements, without politeness and often with what the UCoC defines as "insults". "We expect all Wikimedians to show respect for others" without "exceptions based on standing, skills...in the Wikimedia projects or movement": Even on en.wp, individuals judged not to meet WP:CIR ("skills") or vandals/spammers ("standing") don't get shown "respect". In the eyes of the community, they've lost it. And what would} "respect" entail? Apologizing when blocking them?
UCoC enforcement at projects with policies or guidelines conflicting it like en.wn's will be interesting to watch unfold; I expect, per "1 – Introduction" the WMF plans to take OFFICE action when a project isn't enforcing the UCoC in favor of its own policies or guidelines.
I find it unsurprising in the three months since I raised this question no WMF staffer has responded, even when, last month, I left a message on the talk page of a staffer involved in discussions above. But I have to AGF here, don't I? Oh well. I hope someday en.wn will be successful enough for the entire community to fork off (hey, I wonder if I'll get OFFICE-glocked for saying that). Heavy Water (talk) 14:54, 13 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Perhaps the best remedy is exposure, e.g. essays, articles, etc. that concisely and accurately describe how rules like AGF are abused to avoid accountability and worded euphemistically to serve as a debauched stand-in for principle. We have no bearing on this policy except by public critique. Most of us are hardly born critics, least of all myself. We want to cooperate and one's calling, if they feel they have one, is almost always constructive. So many people would rather not exist at all than abandon their purpose. One faces a serious dilemma because messing around with the umpteenth variation of the multi-armed bandit problem or some obscure conjecture about conformal mappings while this demented twilight zone is progressively imposed upon the entirety of western culture starts to seem like grotesque misassignment of priorities. Knowing you're right but being at a lost for words while some two-faced shyster lectures you about social justice, gender prounouns, etc. is well likely to be the most annoying moment of one's life. We are in this position partly for lack of good examples to learn from. Perhaps I should attempt to curate some, or make up a course on the subject for Wikiversity. In any case, I'm not just going to let things go their way, nor should anyone else. Orwell wrote an excellent essay, "On Politics and the English Language". The essay is accurate in that Orwell recognizes the problem and identifies many of it salient components, but it is also an imprecise and somewhat awkward essay. Even Orwell was taxed in attempting to describe and generalize the issue. Anyway, I will probably use some of what I've written here in an essay of my own. AP295 (talk)
I wondered if you were going to go there. The rejection of AGF, for en.wn, is simply a variation in its rules as a Wikimedia project, not an endorsement of right-wing politics, or any other political ideologies, for that matter. I say this to defend Wikinews' reputation. Heavy Water (talk) 23:53, 13 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Go where? I do not subscribe to "right wing ideology", nor is anything I've written intended as a dog-whistle to imply that I do. Take my post at face value. Just because I am irritated at the media's rhetorical abuse of the phrase "social justice" does not mean that I resent or do not value social justice. Naturally I don't demand that you AGF, but if you'd like me to clarify my opinion on any given issue, then please just ask rather than make presumptions.
More importantly, nothing at all was said about wikinews or AGF that could possibly be construed as an endorsement of "right-wing ideology". There's no need to imitate the media's dramatic ritual of "disavowal", though it appears I've unconsciously done so too. It is not obvious that this pavlovian, knee-jerk reaction makes no sense whatsoever in this context here? Suppose I am "right wing", whatever that means to you. Suppose Hitler escaped to Brazil and I am his bastard grandson if you like. We were having a productive discourse. AP295 (talk)
Another instance of euphemism is the third bullet point of part 2.1: "Respect the way that contributors name and describe themselves." One assumes it means that we must use someone's preferred name and gender pronouns and the correct name of their race or tribe. That's entirely fine, but then, why doesn't it say exactly that? Since the UCoC already has a strong anti-harassment policy, would that not suffice? Otherwise it is very open to interpretation and therefore easy to abuse. If one uses preferred pronouns and names, but states they disagree that sex reassignment is indicated for gender dysphoria, are they in violation of the policy as it's worded now? If so, then fine, but then the policy should say as much. I would still comply with that rule and use the site, because it's then understood by everyone that the content is not an unbiased reflection of public opinion or consensus. How is vague, sugar-coated policy with carte blanche potential for censorship "left-wing"? How is one "right-wing" for speaking against it? AP295 (talk)
There = taking the way en.wn regards AGF and the WMF's nature as part of a broader notion about how society should operate. With "right-wing politics, or any other political ideologies, for that matter" my intent was to clarify Wikinewsies didn't intend, in adopting Never assume, to promote any broader ideas for society (partly for your information and partly for anyone else who might then take a negative view toward Wikinews; the project has enough opponents already). I apologize for the lot of extrapolation from your comment in interpreting parts of it as repeating right-wing talking points, possibly implying you were just POV-pushing. I guess when one sees a lot of people who are just POV-pushing and happen to be saying similar things, one thinks the conclusions are obvious. I didn't intend to halt this discussion, though. I would agree the vagueness was likely written into 2.1.3 to allow for selectivity in enforcement. Somewhat related: m:User:Tom Morris/WMFers Say The Darndest Things. Heavy Water (talk) 05:19, 14 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Thank you for saying so, I was worried that you might have decided to terminate the conversation right there. It would have been a bad example, so I'm glad that's not the case. Not that there are many young, impressionable children reading policy discussions on wikimedia's talk pages, but I've had conversations that ended in a similar manner on sites like reddit. AP295 (talk)
Not that you asked, but you may or may not be interested in an essay I'm writing on the subject of political media in the United States: https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Socialism/America%27s_political_idiom It's a work in progress and presently quite a mess but the point is pretty clear. I inserted a couple of comments that I made here too. The left/right dichotomy as it exists in the media (and therefore also to some extent in the public's mind) is essentially just hokum. One long-running TV drama. Pomp and pantomime. I'd go on but I'd just be repeating what I've already written in the essay, and I don't want to get off topic.
Suffice to say, that (for example) there's significant possibility Clinton was/is a serial rapist (see Hitchens 1999) and Kissinger a mass murderer (Hitchens 2001) and both go about unmolested while we are here blathering ritual "disavowals" of ideological motive for fear of reprisal is a perfect example of the demented, pavlovian behavior that we seem to feel is expected of us and that we have come to expect from others. It seems trite to complain about "political correctness", but it really is a cancer. Suppose one didn't want to humor gender pronouns or the concept of gender being different from sex. Suppose they club baby seals on the weekends. In moral terms they'd still be well ahead of the people we're expected to endorse for the sake of "political correctness". Anyone who has any genuine ideological perspective at all probably is, because they are willing to stand on principle, however misguided it may or may not be. I won't let it be implied that ideology (that is, to have an ideal) is unacceptable or anti-social. UCoC part 2 and so much other policy in that vein are, in spirit, just fine. It's the way they're worded and enforced that promotes an awful culture, but of course to isolate this problem one must insinuate bad faith, one must be negative, one must be critical. I'll be surprised if our conversation has any immediate bearing on UCoC or other policy, but it's still a worthwhile conversation to have, if for no reason other than to hash it out for readers and for our own skills in critical discourse. AP295 (talk)
Not touching that one, eh? I can understand, with your project being up in the air. But then, I'm a bit confused myself. What's the point of news if you have to walk on eggshells and avoid uncomfortable or inconvenient topics? Hitchens was no crackpot. He was the archetypal far-left pundit. Anyway, my suggestion is to do away with part two of the UCoC entirely, which I feel is strongly supported by this discussion. AP295 (talk)


After considering the problem a bit more, I'm convinced even AGF would be relatively benign if not for the following sentence: Criticism should be delivered in a sensitive and constructive manner. This encourages people to take criticism personally. Honest and straightforward criticism of an author's work must not be taken as criticism of its author or treated as incivility, regardless of the extent to which the work is contradicted. Obviously a critique should not be barbaric, but nor should its value and acceptability as a contribution be subject to additional and ill-defined qualifiers such as "constructive" or worse yet "sensitive". Nor should it be debased by euphemism and other attempts at sparing the ego of the author, who would almost certainly prefer a plain-language critique to being patronized if they themselves are participating in good faith. I can humor gender pronouns and other such things, but it seems to undermine the stated mission of many projects if criticism and critics themselves are dispensed with simply by feigning indignation and treating their contribution as a personal attack rather than another form of collaboration, no less valuable than the next. One need not make any statement about the author so AGF is easy enough to comply with so long as a distinction is made between an author and their work. The editor is entitled to humanity, decency and other such niceties. However in publishing their work, are they not obliged to accept criticism of that work? One can hardly even call that a vestige of accountability, but merely acknowledgement that no contribution should be immune to criticism and that criticism shouldn't be subject to the possibility of arbitrary sanction by needlessly vague policy. I hope but do not expect that someone will offer a counterargument if not seriously consider removing this part of the policy, which is far-reaching in its effect. Wikipedia alone is frequently a first-page result on most search engines for any given query. If one asks the amazon echo a question, it often quotes Wikipedia. It seems there ought to be some degree of accountability at least for policy. AP295 (talk) 01:40, 9 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
I can't help feeling a bit dense for not isolating this sentence earlier. I probably would have if it were not set within the other, equally wishy-washy prose of part two, all of which makes a vaguely irritating impression and strikes me as unnecessary. But it's this sentence that singles out and places constraints upon criticism while subtly conflating an author with their work that I feel is the most harmful and which I should probably have picked up on sooner. In any case, I feel the above paragraph is a strong prima facie argument for the removal of at least that sentence from UCoC, and perhaps also for a guideline to the effect of what I've written above. While I'm not sure it will be acknowledged by those whom it may concern, I'm pretty damned sure it won't be refuted. As always, comments, concerns, suggestions, hate mail and so forth are all welcome. Personally I'm delighted by any sort of feedback. While I don't presume that I myself am worthy of anyone's attention, I find the apparent disinterest in conversation on wikipedia and its sister projects wholly bizarre and unnatural, and much of the conversation that does occur is administrative, so to speak, rather than actual discourse. I don't know how anyone could stand to be so cagey and standoffish all the time, but that's my impression of the typical editor, and this is also true of other social media sites and often in real life as well. Sometimes I feel that most people hardly even act like humans. Strange times. AP295 (talk) 03:09, 9 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Besides AGF and the vague qualifications on critique, the remainder of UCoC part two mostly just amounts to public relations fluff. The entire section could and probably should be replaced with Observe common decency and show respect to other users. This is a broad yet clear directive that concisely sums up the whole of part two, or at least the parts that are worthwhile. Incidentally, if privileged users are not behaving in accordance with the UCoC and the issue isn't resolved on that project, what recourse do other users have? I realize that the WMF does not want to hear about each and every dispute that occurs, but it often appears that privileged users are not accountable to these rules in the slightest so long as there's a consensus among themselves. AP295 (talk) 23:36, 26 December 2023 (UTC)Reply
Hi @Heavy Water,
I have wiki-met you on the English Wikinews site where I have been sporadically contributing since I was indefinitely blocked on enwp in 2017. I wanted to tell you that I never understood why the enwn opposes AGF. BTW this is only one of the several reasons why I do not participate on enwn very often. Ottawahitech (talk) 17:17, 25 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Heavy Water: I forgot to mention that I have contributed to several discussions about the UCOC at WD and COMMONS IIRC, but until I followed you here I had no idea this is where members of the community can participate openly in discussion. I had assumed that discussions were taking place on META where I am infinitely blocked, so cannot participate Ottawahitech (talk) 17:34, 25 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
I guess the discussion is not taking place here, after all. This is all very strange if the wmf-staff really wants to hear our views. Ottawahitech (talk) 00:37, 6 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Ottawahitech: The general lack of public discourse is striking. It's remarkable not just on this page or on this website but in general. I'm somewhat at a loss to explain this as well, though political and intellectual quietism seems favorable to the status quo and I suspect it's at least in part an intentional effect of broad social engineering. People don't really talk about public matters in general. The pomp and undignified exposition that is western political media is probably designed to be somewhat repellent and perhaps as a result it has become fashionable simply not to have an opinion on such matters, i.e., to be "neutral". What you've written essentially comprises a reductio ad absurdum argument. That is to say, they do not care for our input. This doesn't mean we can't or shouldn't offer it. AP295 (talk) 08:31, 8 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
@AP295: I am not sure that the wmf-staff does not want to hear us.
I have seen several UCOC notices published on the English wikibooks and have responded to a couple, but last I looked the staff member who posted them had not responded yet.
There could be other reasons for the lack of discussion here, I think? Ottawahitech (talk) 18:13, 8 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

"without expectations based on age ... Nor will we make exceptions"

Is this a typo?

This applies to all contributors and participants in their interaction with all contributors and participants, without expectations based on [without exceptions based on] age, mental or physical disabilities, physical appearance, national, religious, ethnic and cultural background, caste, social class, language fluency, sexual orientation, gender identity, sex or career field. Nor will we make exceptions based on standing, skills or accomplishments in the Wikimedia projects or movement

. Gitz6666 (talk) 01:31, 7 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

@Gitz6666:, thank you for catching that. Text has been updated. PEarley (WMF) (talk) 16:59, 9 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Grammar

Section 2.1, bullet point 3, sub-bullet point 3: "using" should be changed to "may use" for consistency with the other three sub-bullet points. As currently written, this sub-bullet point is just a noun phrase while the other three are full sentences. Einsof (talk) 14:15, 25 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

This includes imposing schemes on content intended to marginalize or ostracize

Not the first person to ask, and not the first time I'm asking. What does the last UCoC sentence mean? Is this "imposing schemes" + on + "content intended to marginalize", or is it "imposing schemes on content" (which are) "intendend to marginalize". Marginalize or ostracize whom? Any real-world examples of such behavior? Translators had a hard time understanding this sentence. PEarley (WMF)?

"I could have done it in a much more complicated way," said the Red Queen, immensely proud. Ponor (talk) 17:45, 30 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

In context, the entire sentence seems redundant. Removing it would make the code less complicated still. AP295 (talk) 04:03, 2 February 2024 (UTC)Reply

I imagine translators have a hard time with the UCoC for the same reason they'd probably not be able to translate "smoke free" into "smoking is prohibited" unless they already understood the idiom. Much of the UCoC seems to be constructed in the vacuous dialect of contemporary PR, rather than by aiming for a clear and easily-interpreted set of rules. AP295 (talk) 04:17, 2 February 2024 (UTC)Reply

Proposed revisions - values both civility and scholarly inquiry

Excerpted from meta:User:Jaredscribe/UCoC, where I will be proposing more revisions for the annual review.

Policy:Universal Code of Conduct § 2 – Expected behaviour

"In all Wikimedia projects, spaces and events, behaviour will be should be founded in civility, scholarly inquiry, logical discourse, collegiality, respect for verifiable truth and for eachother. solidarity and good citizenship."

These changes are proposed for the reasons stated by Aristotle in the Nicomachean Ethics to justify his abandonment of the Platonic w:theory of forms: While both are dear, piety requires us to honor truth above our friends. --Book I chapter 6, 1096a.16. But the phrase as currently formulated in the official UCoC neglects to mention scholarly discourse, inquiry, or logic as valuable behaviors. It offers instead 5 synonyms for civility, which taken together may be used to imply and enforce "compliance" with a group consensus, which would be a recipe for w:groupthink. Jaredscribe (talk) 01:15, 3 February 2024 (UTC)Reply

@Jaredscribe: While I agree with the spirit of this, I think that all of these things are predicated upon critique. "Civility" is often used somewhat euphemistically to mean agreeableness, itself favorable to assent. If anything, the UCoC needs a statement that protects critique and critical contributions. It also has far too many redundancies. Generally it contains too much redundant or meaningless PR language. Christopher Hitchens put the point rather well when he wrote " In place of honest disputation we are offered platitudes about “healing.” The idea of “unity” is granted huge privileges over any notion of “division” or, worse, “divisiveness.” I cringe every time I hear denunciations of “the politics of division”—as if politics was not division by definition. Semi-educated people join cults whose whole purpose is to dull the pain of thought, or take medications that claim to abolish anxiety. Oriental religions, with their emphasis on Nirvana and fatalism, are repackaged for Westerners as therapy, and platitudes or tautologies masquerade as wisdom." Of course he wasn't talking about Wikimedia, but the point is no less relevant here. AP295 (talk) 08:16, 6 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
Yes - Civil, logical, scholarly critique should be protected, even when it is in dissent to whatever opinion is prevailing. Have you considered writing an w:WP:Essay with you opinions? Do you have a user page somewhere with a manifesto? A proposed rewrite of the w:WP:Civility policy? I concur that there is a need for this, and my proposal was a start. You may contribute to my m:User:Jaredscribe/UCoC#Commentary and Analysis, if you wish. Jaredscribe (talk) 03:57, 11 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
A manifesto? Do I strike you as a Ted Kaczynski? I hope that's not the impression I give. I would like to see a provision that protects critical contributions and another rule that prohibits dishonesty. AP295 (talk) 19:37, 12 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
Though since you've asked, I do have a relevant essay on wikiversity, https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Policy_and_Standards_for_Critical_Discourse. It's a critique on the design and policy of popular user-driven websites. I may end up moving it if wikiversity ever improves the documentation on content organization and namespaces and I figure out exactly how to organize my essays. However, I am blocked on wikipedia and the essay is only partly about Wikipedia anyway. AP295 (talk) 00:51, 14 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
They are not predicated upon critique, but upon conduct and discussion. Not all discussion must or should be critical, although critique is one aspect of discussion that should be protected when it is done competently and in good-faith. Much critique on wikipedia is not done that way, in my experience, which is the motivation for guidelines like this.
I propose that all dialectic - including talk pages, edit summaries, user talk pages, in person meetups, multiple live drafts (as in w:WP:Bold-refine - should be founded in "scholarly inquiry" and "analytical discourse" ('logical discourse'), which includes critique but starts before goes far beyond it.
Jaredscribe (talk) 23:32, 18 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
Again, I agree with the spirit and think such a change would be an improvement, but that's not saying much. Deleting the sentence entirely would be better yet. Phrases like founded in scholarly inquiry still amount to wooden language. That is, non-specific and somewhat meaningless. A statement such as I suggest would protect dissenting contributions and critique without such ambiguity. AP295 (talk) 12:46, 20 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
I should say though that I'd be quite surprised if they obliged my request in the near term. It's not as though the people who make these decisions are oblivious to these points. On the contrary. Hitchens also had something to say about this, (or rather Chomsky did, but I don't have Chomsky's original quote) "Noam Chomsky, a most distinguished intellectual and moral dissident, once wrote that the old motto about “speaking truth to power” is overrated. Power, as he points out, quite probably knows the truth already, and is mainly interested in suppressing or limiting or distorting it. We would therefore do better to try to instruct the powerless. " It's irritating how often I have to cite Hitchens. It makes me look like a fanatic (which I'm not), but I suppose I should be glad to have at least one 'authority' to cite. Anyway, the points should still be made, and one should not presume they're lost upon the decision makers. AP295 (talk) 08:32, 6 February 2024 (UTC)Reply