Following 
https://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikien-l/2015-August/111154.html I am 
hereby disclosing a message I sent to the BASC 2 months ago, which 
unfortunately remains entirely current AFAIK.

No one has indicated whether the bug is known or not.

-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject:        BASC status and transparency (was Re: [arbcom-appeals-en] 
Appeal by Chealer)
Date:   Mon, 18 May 2015 16:25:21 -0400
From:   Filipus Klutiero <chea...@gmail.com>
To:     Chris McKenna <thryduulf.w...@gmail.com>, English Arbitration Committee 
mailing list (appeals) <arbcom-appeals...@lists.wikimedia.org>



Hi Chris,

On 2015-05-17 17:09, Chris McKenna wrote:
Thank you for writing to us. The Ban Appeals Subcommittee will now consider your 
appeal and report its decision to you in due course. The current turnaround time for 
ban appeals can be checked at <http://enwp.org/WP:BASC#turnaround>. While I 
appreciate that you would like more precision than that, we are unable to be more 
specific as the length of time an appeal takes depends on many factors including the 
availability of individual members of the committee and the specifics of the appeal.

What I meant was not that a single measure was insufficient. I was just pointing out that as for any static document 
which contains "Currently", reliability is limited. Rather than "Currently, you can expect [...] ", 
this could read - for example - "As of December 2014, you can expect [...] ", or "Currently (last 
updated December 2014), you can expect [...] ". That would make appealing... more appealing ;-) In this case, one 
may get the information from page histories, but this is less trivial with templates.

While we're at it, according to our own article on tilde, the usage we make does not 
exist in English. Also, "you can expect" is vague - it would be best to say - 
for example - that the average time is x, or that the vast majority of appeals are 
processed in x, depending on what was meant (apparently the latter).

We do not make appeals public as a matter of course as this is not normally in 
the interests of all parties, and in some cases would compromise privacy.

I did not mean to say all cases should be entirely public - I can understand some privacy issues. 
But I do not see why a public process would not "normally" be "in the interest of 
all parties" - or at least, in the project's interest, which is what we should consider. 
Speaking for my case, it would certainly be at least in my interest for the appeal to be public.

Then again, if the subcommittee wants to keep some or all of its internal 
communications private, that is a lesser issue. Simply opening external 
communications would solve most of the transparency problems, including the one 
which prompted this discussion, i.e. the capacity of potential users to 
evaluate whether an appeal would be heard (and secondarily, how fast) without 
requiring someone else keeping an up-to-date assessment (though that could 
remain a useful indicator to get a quick idea). As a bonus, potential users 
could evaluate the appropriateness of appeal results.

I rarely (less than once a month on average) make a benevolent online 
contribution to a project if I cannot do so publically, unless that is due to 
exceptional circumstances (say a buggy ITS). As a radical transparency 
advocate, I may not be a reference, but I am surely not alone.

Of course, if you care about the possibility of appealing privately, supporting 
both options can complicate your work or require investment. I honestly believe 
though, that for a project which champions openness like Wikimedia, and for an 
activity as critical as ban management in an open wiki, this should be 
seriously considered. The WMF might be able to allocate resources to help 
implementing this.


Finally, regarding the submission problem I noted, my third attempt to submit 
worked, unlike the first 2 which failed quietly. Even though there was no 
error, and even though I had never used Email this user before, it was 
relatively obvious that submission had failed since there was no confirmation 
(and I had requested an email copy which did not arrive). Still, I am willing 
to help if that issue is unknown or not fully understood yet. I was using 
Debian 8's Iceweasel 31 in the first attempts. I made the successful attempt 
using Chromium, so this may be browser-specific.

[...]

For the Ban Appeals Subcommittee,

Thank you

*---
Chris McKenna (Thryduulf)*
thryduulf.w...@gmail.com <mailto:thryduulf.w...@gmail.com>

Unless otherwise noted, opinions expressed in this email are solely my own and 
do not necessarily represent the views of the Arbitration Committee as a whole.

On 17 May 2015 at 17:50, Chealer <chea...@gmail.com <mailto:chea...@gmail.com>> 
wrote:

[...]


--
Filipus Klutiero
http://www.philippecloutier.com



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