DrumCorpsWiki:Vandalism
From DrumCorpsWiki
Vandalism is any addition, deletion, or change to content made in a deliberate attempt to reduce the quality of the encyclopedia. The most common type of vandalism is the replacement of existing text with obscenities, page blanking, or the insertion of bad jokes or other nonsense. Fortunately, this kind of vandalism is usually easy to spot.
Any good-faith effort to improve the encyclopedia, even if misguided or ill-considered, is not vandalism. Apparent bad-faith edits that do not make their bad-faith nature inarguably explicit are not considered vandalism at DrumCorpsWiki. For example, adding an opinion once is not vandalism — it's just not helpful, and should be removed or restated.
Committing vandalism is a violation of the DrumCorpsWiki policy; it needs to be spotted, and then dealt with — if you cannot deal with it yourself, you can seek help from others.
Not all vandalism is blatant, nor are all massive or controversial changes vandalism: Careful attention needs to be given to whether the new data or information is right or whether it is vandalism.
Contents |
[edit] Dealing with vandalism
If you see vandalism (as defined below), revert it. It is often worthwhile to check the page history after reverting to make sure you have removed all the vandalism. Also, check the user contributions of the vandal — you will often find more malicious edits.
Additionally, leave warning messages on the vandal's talk .
[edit] Trace IP
Also, consider tracing the IP. Find owners by using:
- ARIN (North America)
- RIPE (Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia)
- APNIC (Asia Pacific)
- LACNIC (Latin American and Caribbean)
- AfriNIC (Africa)
(if an address is not in one, it will probably be in another), then add {{vandalip|Name of owner}} to the talk pages of users who vandalize.
[edit] Types of vandalism
These are the most common forms of vandalism on DrumCorpsWiki:
- Blanking
- Removing all or significant parts of articles (sometimes replacing the removed content with profanities) is a common vandal edit.
- Spam
- Adding inappropriate external links for advertisement and/or self-promotion.
- VandalBot
- A script or "robot" that attempts to vandalize or spam massive numbers of articles (hundreds or thousands), blanking, or adding commercial links. Another type of VandalBot appears to log on repeatedly with multiple random names to vandalize an article.
- Childish vandalism
- Adding graffiti or blanking pages.
- Silly vandalism
- Users will sometimes create joke articles or replace existing articles with plausible-sounding nonsense, or add silly jokes to existing articles. A better place for content that is intentionally of a joking or nonsensical nature is the Uncyclopedia.
- Sneaky vandalism
- Vandalism which is harder to spot. Adding misinformation, changing dates or making other sensible-appearing substitutions and typos.
- Attention-seeking vandalism
- Adding insults, using offensive usernames, replacing articles with jokes etc. (see also DrumCorpsWiki:No personal attacks)
- User page vandalism
- Replacing User pages with insults, profanity, etc. (see also DrumCorpsWiki:No personal attacks)
- Image vandalism
- Uploading provocative images, inserting political messages, making malicious animated GIFs, etc. Repeatedly uploading images with no source and/or license information after notification that such information is required may also constitute vandalism.
- Abuse of tags
- Bad-faith placing of speedy-deletion tags on articles that do not meet such criteria, or deceptively placing protected-page tags on articles.
- Template vandalism
- Any vandalism to templates.
- Page move vandalism
- Moving pages to offensive or nonsense names.
- Redirect vandalism
- Redirecting articles or talk pages to offensive articles or images. Some vandals will try to redirect pages to nonsense titles they create this way. This variation is usually performed by vandals whose accounts are too new to move pages. It is also often done on pages that are protected from moves.
- Link vandalism
- Rewriting links within an article so that they appear the same, but point to something irrelevant or ridiculous (e.g. France).
- Avoidant vandalism
- Removing {{afd}}, Template:Tl and other related tags in order to conceal or avoid entries to risk deletion.
- Removing warnings
- Removing warnings for vandalism from one's talk page is also considered vandalism.
- Random character vandalism
- Replacing topical information with random characters, or just adding random characters to a page. "aslkdjnsdagkljhasdlkh," for example. Be careful: only in extended cases is this vandalism; it could also potentially be a new user test.
- Changing people's comments
- Editing signed comments by another user to substantially change their meaning (e.g. turning someone's vote around). Signifying that a comment is unsigned is an exception. e.g. (unsigned comment from user)

