Managing vandalism

Educational level: this is a non-formal education resource.
Completion status: this resource is ~50% complete.

This is a course in how to manage vandalism in wikis. Assume Good Faith and Etiquette are important when dealing with vandalism.

One scenario

So, what might be one scenario (please note that there are other pathways/scenarios possible) with a "vandal" ?

Interaction possibilities

So, what can happen after situation 3 ? This is completely in our hands. In most projects very likely the vandal is being "fought" and is "brought" back to a previous state (and the game can continue again from that state). The more effort-taking way is to help the circle understand and realize what Wikiversity is about and ultimately making the circle contribute also to Wikiversity's mission.

Something to think:

Prevention

A way to manage vandalism is to assume good faith and not create vandals. Newcomers often try a few tests as they try to get familar with the Wiki interface, format, syntax, etc. Please do not bite the newcomers (anything can be reverted in a wiki) - if you kindly tell them to stop or use the Wikiversity:Sandbox they usually will if they are doing it in good faith.

Traits of a good vandal manager

Do not feed the troll

The following are some traits that are helpful to have if you are managing vandalism:

Motivations (for vandalism)

Maslow's hierarchy of needs

Please note that some of these are also motivational factors for "normal" Wikiversity participants.

  1. Boredom alleviation
  2. To get attention
  3. To advertise (wiki spam)
  4. For a sense of humour
  5. For the risk/thrill/'gameplay'
  6. For a sense of power or revenge
  7. To learn and 'show off' MediaWiki skills
  8. Frustration with inadequate content
  9. Disagreement with POV or dislike of specific topics
  10. To annoy or upset a particular user or group

Types of vandalism

Tree carving vandalism in Adelaide, South Australia

Actually you can list here many things they just depend on the person's creativity:

  1. Add text or pictures that may offend people (e.g., racist comments)
  2. Add nonsense (e.g., "kpa9jfs098jasd")
  3. Adding fiction/false information (e.g., "George Washington was an elephant that became a president")
  4. Remove information from pages
  5. Move pages to other names (e.g., names that make no sense or that are offensive)
  6. Spam (e.g. "visit my website to buy Viagra cheap!"

Tools

See also

This article is issued from Wikiversity - version of the Thursday, January 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.