Page values for "Submissions:2023/What the block log tells us"

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"2023_submissions" values

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FieldField typeValue
titleStringWhat the block log tells us
statusStringAccepted
themeStringEquity / Inclusion / Community Health, Governance, Research / Science / Medicine
typeStringLecture
abstractWikitext

When someone violates the community's rules on Wikipedia, they may be blocked by an administrator. Like the rest of the project, these actions (along with the type of block, duration, and reason) are typically logged and publicly accessible. As part of a larger academic project about content moderation on Wikipedia, I've been analyzing the nearly 20-year-old block log of the English Wikipedia. In this session, I will present some of the patterns, trends, and interesting statistics I've found that may be of interest to the community. How have the number of blocks per year changed over time? What reasons for blocking are more or less prominent now than they were in years past? Is blocking a task that's evenly spread out among admins, or are a small number issuing most of the blocks? How do the reasons for blocking change as we consider users' edit counts? These are intended as example questions -- I still have some data analysis and visualization to do between now and the conference, if it's accepted, and the end result will likely include much more than just these points.

Link to slides

authorStringRyan McGrady
emailList of Email, delimiter: ,rhododendrites@gmail.com
usernameStringRhododendrites
affiliatesStringUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst, Wikimedia New York City
timeString20 minutes
requestsWikitext

n/a

presentedWikitext

No

livestreamBooleanYes
videoString