If you believe that, then you should actually read the entire
Wikipedia:BOLD, revert, discuss cycle, rather than guessing what it says based on the title. This essay, for example, says that BRD is an optional method for use by experienced editors, and it encourages them to negotiate with only the person who reverted the initial bold edit. The policies do not support this, because (as BRD itself says), this is not always appropriate.
This page is within the scope of WikiProject Wikipedia essays, a collaborative effort to organise and monitor the impact of
Wikipedia essays. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the
discussion. For a listing of essays see the
essay directory.EssaysWikipedia:WikiProject EssaysTemplate:WikiProject EssaysWikiProject Wikipedia essays pages
This page is within the scope of WikiProject Editor Retention, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of efforts to improve editor retention on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Editor RetentionWikipedia:WikiProject Editor RetentionTemplate:WikiProject Editor RetentionEditor Retention articles
@
Valereee, why do you think this needs to be mentioned here?
Despite the name, "Enforced BRD" is not BRD. It's just a temporary form of
WP:0RR, with permission to re-revert if you post on the talk page and wait 24 hours.
WhatamIdoing (
talk)
00:00, 22 July 2023 (UTC)reply
Why not apply
WP:1RR as a
hard rule to be applied to any editor on any page for 24 hours after performing any BRD edit? Ignore whether it is a revert, or an indirect reinstatement of a previous version of the page, it may be done only once, until a talk page post and the passing of 24 hours.
@
WhatamIdoing, I feel like people aren't aware of it. I was in a discussion recently at the user talk of an experienced user who was blocked over it and credibly claimed they weren't aware of the new implications.
Valereee (
talk)
01:15, 22 July 2023 (UTC)reply
I think that a re-write of the surprisingly uninformative edit notice and the talk page banner would be far more effective. I'd start by removing the links to this page, and I think it's worth considering repeating the entire contents of the footnote at
Wikipedia:Contentious topics#cite note-4 in both places.
WhatamIdoing (
talk)
02:23, 22 July 2023 (UTC)reply
Bold, revert, monologue
Should we include any guidance for the case when, after a revert, the bold editor explains their reasons in talk but the reverter does not respond? Is it reasonable to attempt the edit again after, say, a week, with an edit summary linking to the justification in the talk monologue, or does a refusal to join the discussion effectively kill the edit?
Certes (
talk)
21:33, 12 August 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Certes, in such a situation, BRD per se is not really possible. The idea with BRD is that in a difficult situation, an experienced, diplomatic editor makes a bold compromise edit, and then chats up whichever one (1) person is sufficiently unhappy with the edit to revert it, and negotiates with that one editor until they have both agreed to something better than what was there before.
If the "Very Interested Person" doesn't respond, then BRD collapses, and the bold editor has to take a different approach. These could be any of the
Wikipedia:BRD#Alternatives or just the everyday, consensus-oriented
Wikipedia:Editing policy#Talking and editing rules (the ones that are so fundamental that experienced editors seem to forget they are also official policy).
In the situation you describe, many editors (including me) use an edit summary like "Per talk page" and post a "Since there were no objections during the last week..." comment on the talk page. It would, of course, be patently unreasonable to let any uncommunicative, drive-by reverter
WP:OWN the article by saying that anything that gets reverted can't ever be tried again.
WhatamIdoing (
talk)
00:41, 13 August 2023 (UTC)reply
To prevent edit warring
The fact that BRD does help to prevent
edit warring is hard to deny, so why literally remove mention of it from the lead? That may not be "the key point" (a highly undefined and personal interpretation not necessarily shared by anyone else), but that is one of its most common functions and results.
How BRD is handled is a bright red line. Violating BRD is often an act of edit warring, and that violation is often the only way to prove who started an edit war. Whoever violated BRD is the one who started the edit war, and admins can see that as convincing evidence and hand out warnings and blocks accordingly. I've seen this done many times by admins who understand this as an important function of BRD. It hurts nothing to mention this in the lead. The deletion is a bizarre ownership move as this is not a one-time exclusionary move but repeats a pattern of ownership aimed at limiting the description of BRD. Be more open to the realities of how others use it and understand it. BRD is more important than one editor's limited description would allow. Expand your mind. --
Valjean (
talk) (PING me)
17:37, 4 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I would say myself that BRD is primarily designed to discourage reverting, particularly straight up reverts (BRR). One doesn't need to be discouraged from edit warring, you just must not do it, BRD or no.
Selfstudier (
talk)
18:00, 4 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I agree, that is if you mean re-reverting without discussion. In this situation, reverting the revert of an initial bold edit would be an act of edit warring and possibly the start of an edit war. It may end there, or it might get repeated, in which case the matter has escalated to a full-blown conflict. We don't want that, and we want to stop it from even starting. Why? Because of some fundamental PAG and principles here. Here are a few:
No one has a right to own content or their own edit or article they have created.
Everyone has a right to make an initial bold edit (that isn't just driveby vandalism or purely NOTFORUM nonsense).
Everyone has a right to revert that bold edit if they have legitimate concerns about it.
We expect editors to work with other editors, no be solo editors who will not respect the input from other editors. That input happens on the talk page.
BRD mandates that BRR does not happen, that edit warring not happen, that collaboration with others is the way forward. It tells the one reverted to discuss on the talk page in an effort to seek a consensus version or other solution.
Does that make sense to you? Is that more-or-less close to your point? ("One doesn't need to be discouraged from edit warring, you just must not do it, BRD or no.") BRD just puts in words how to understand the situation and stay away from that bright red line between you and an edit war. Don't cross it. --
Valjean (
talk) (PING me)
18:58, 4 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Another "one of its most common functions and results", especially when it's (IMO incorrectly) interpreted as "Nyah nyah nyah, I get to revert you and you don't get to revert me – I don't have to discuss anything but you can't edit until you get written proof of consensus on the talk page (which I'm going to refuse to participate in because I'm so busy reverting content creators)", is preventing change to articles, but I don't think that is worth mentioning in the very first sentence, either.
Hyperbole doesn't help here. That "Nyah nyah.." is obviously not a legitimate type of reversion, as described in my point 3 above: "Everyone has a right to revert that bold edit if they have legitimate concerns about it." BOLD added. Yes, there are people who abuse BRD. Let's stay focused on its proper use. No one is disputing the importance of "to find consensus". It's just not the only value of BRD. BRD dictates a process that prevents actions that avoid or block reaching the actions on the talk page where consensus can be reached. Edit warring prevents a consensus discussion from occurring. BRD's value in preventing edit warring is vital if you want "to find consensus". --
Valjean (
talk) (PING me)
19:46, 4 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I'm not so sure that many editors think "I'd like to avoid an edit war, so I'm going to use BRD in this situation." But let's assume they do. Thinking about
WP:CREEP, why do we need to say that in the first sentence? -
Butwhatdoiknow (
talk)
20:12, 4 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I think many stop when reminded of that BRD formulation of the red line. Consensus cannot happen if edit warring gets in the way, and BRD helps to prevent it. It gets people to not do BRR and gets them to discuss. That's what we want. This is not an either-or situation. It's both, and they are often intimately linked, so mention of both makes sense. --
Valjean (
talk) (PING me)
20:38, 4 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I mention it above. BRD is a clear formulation that warns to not BRR. There is a red line after BR. Go to the talk page and discuss after it. Don't edit war by re-reverting. --
Valjean (
talk) (PING me)
06:13, 5 October 2023 (UTC)reply
It is allowed to rerevert, even in a 1R situation. If an editor does that habitually, that's a problem, a behavioral problem, but it isn't edit warring, technically.
Selfstudier (
talk)
11:00, 5 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I don't think of BRD as creating a "red line". A red line sounds like some sort of mandatory situation (a red stop sign, a red "Do not enter" sign).
The text you want to add says "The BOLD, revert, discuss cycle (BRD) is one of
many optional strategies that editors may use to . . . prevent
edit warring." I have two concerns regarding the proposed change.
1. The text does not achieve your goal of providing a warning to avoid re-reverting.
This is an essay and structurally merely gives these tips, in the context of a particular sequence (of many possible sequences) or portions of that sequence:
Be bold (once). This is a norm, nothing to be afraid of.
If #1 has occurred, feel free to revert it as the next step. This is a norm, nothing to be afraid of.
If #1->#2 has occurred, there should be discussion rather than making the edit again. This is the end of the particular sequence that this essay refers to.
Edits to content under RfC discussion may be particularly controversial. Avoid making edits that others may view as unhelpful. Editing after others have raised objections may be viewed as disruptive editing or edit warring. Be patient; make your improvements in accord with consensus after the RfC is resolved.
No doubt above mentioned point and good faith
WP:BRD are both are important in their own place.
1) My present understanding is above point suspends BRD un til positive consensus during RfC process. (Correct me if any alterations needed in the understanding)
2) If my above understanding is correct then, BRD should get into suspension from time of: a) any user expresses intention of RfC b) Since any user starts formal Pre-RfC discussion or starts discussing RfC question C) from when formal RfC begins d) If any other option then pl. discuss?
3) I suppose, presently
WP:BRD and
Responding to an RfC do not find mention of each other in respective pages. Should that find a mention? If yes, then also do suggest sentence for the same if possible.
Purpose of this exercise is more clarity and lesser confusion for users novice to RfC processes and less inadvertent instances of friction among users. (
Bookku,
talk)
07:07, 16 June 2024 (UTC)reply
Just for record: I know you would not have used pronoun "you're" for me personally, but disclaimer for the sake others, personally usually I follow proper WP:DR procedures with positive constructive consensus building. I raised this question since I do help in role of discussion facilitation on some talk pages intermittently.
Bookku (
talk)
06:28, 17 June 2024 (UTC)reply
Yes that seems good essay. In brief, the spirit of
WP:QUO would mean, except for some exceptions, take only positive consensus into account once discussion begins.
Bookku (
talk)
06:34, 17 June 2024 (UTC)reply
QUO means "don't get into an edit war during a discussion." I'm not seeing it suggesting anything about what kinds of consensus to "take into account" in the discussion itself. -
Butwhatdoiknow (
talk)
15:02, 17 June 2024 (UTC)reply
Actually I am reading QUO along with Responding to an RfC (and discussing just initial stages of discussion): "..Be patient; make your improvements in accord with consensus after the RfC is resolved. ..". If a discussion is non-RfC or Pre-RfC and if everyone involved is agreeing on part of issues positively, that much consensus can be updated in the article. That's my understanding, correct me as necessary.
Bookku (
talk)
15:45, 17 June 2024 (UTC)reply
Don't mess with disputed content while dispute resolution is underway, if its a quo situation, the discussion closer will decide that as well. This won't stop people trying to insert their own preferred version into the thing regardless but that's bad practice once dispute resolution is underway.
Selfstudier (
talk)
17:03, 17 June 2024 (UTC)reply
Wikipedia:Requests for comment#Responding to an RfC is only applicable during the RFC itself, and it is not a prohibition against all edits. Avoid making edits that others may view as unhelpful does not mean that you can't make edits that people will (probably) think are actually helpful.
If a pre-RFC discussion (or any other discussion) resolves the problems without needing an RFC, then that's great news. If there is a dispute, and you all come up with a solution that the currently involved editors find basically satisfactory, then someone should consider awarding {{
subst:Diplomacy Barnstar|1=message ~~~~}} to the editors who helped find that compromise/solution.
WhatamIdoing (
talk)
17:46, 19 June 2024 (UTC)reply