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Icon-policy WoWWiki:Policies

Policy status and phases

Category policy
Copyright policy
Deletion policy
Speedy deletion
DNP policy
NDA policy
Editing policy
Disruptive editing policy
External links
Fan fiction
Guild pages policy
Images policy

Items policy
Lore policy
Naming policy
Neutrality policy
Personal articles
Player character pages
Stub policy
Three revert rule
User naming
Vandalism policy
Voting policy

See also: guidelines, administrators
policy sign

This page is an official policy on WoWWiki.

This policy has wide acceptance among editors and is considered a standard that all users should follow.

  • Feel free to propose any changes to this policy, but please make sure that changes you make follow the official process and reflect consensus on the discussion page before you put them into practice. Any big changes need to be Adopted or Decreed to be enforced as policy.
  • See WoWWiki:Policies for an overview of WoWWiki policies.
  • See Category:Policies for a list of proposed and adopted policy articles.
  • Shortcut: WW:PSP
Icon-shortcutShortcut: WW:PSP

These are the statuses and phases that policies at WoWWiki will go through before being adopted (implemented and followed by WoWWiki users) or otherwise.

Policy status and phases

Policy pages should have a status at the top that indicates whether the policy is still a proposal, ratified, or adopted. A policy can also be recalled by users or vetoed by the Admins.

  • Policy proposal – The policy proposal is open for voting.
  • Ratified – The policy is in effect, but there are changes that need to be carried out or implementation details to solve before it can be fully adopted.
  • Adopted – This policy is officially accepted by the wowwiki community insofar as those who voted represent the community. It has been fully implemented.
  • Recalled – If an adopted policy gets more no votes than yes votes at some time in the future, it becomes recalled back to a status similar to proposal status, except that if the no votes exceed yes votes for some period of time (recall time), the policy becomes a candidate for deletion.
  • Vetoed – The admins can always veto a policy outright. Their rule is law, but the users can of course comment on vetoed policies to try to persuade the admins.

Vote ratios and time

  • Ratification minimum – the winning side must have a minimum of 5 votes.
  • Ratification ratio – if the ratification minimum has been met and the yes votes exceed the no votes by 3 to 1, then the policy is has met the ratification ratio. Examples: 5:1, 6:2, 9:3, etc..
  • Ratification time – the winning side must remain winner for 1 week (7 days). However, if the ratification ratio is high (4 to 1 in favor) and the number of yes votes is high (15), 3 days is enough.
  • Recall time – also 1 week (7 days). However, if the recall ratio is high (4 to 1 against) and the number of recall votes is high (10), 3 days is enough.

The standard for a quick recall votes is lower than for adoption, since a policy that people mostly don't like is likely to cause more trouble than a policy that people do like, but some disagree with.

Decreed policies

Some policies will be established by admin via decree without voting, unlike normal policies.

Community input is still valued in cases where an admin doesn't seem to have good reasons, so maybe another admin will revert it. Like with any other policy, you can start a vote to recall it. Or a new policy proposal to change it. But be aware that if you're e.g. proposing that WoWWiki should contain exploit information, any administrator is likely to Veto it outright.

Grandfathered policies

A grandfathered policy is a something that had been in effect and actively enforced by admins as well as the vast majority of the contributors for a long time without it having been a documented policy. This kind of de-facto standard can be documented after the fact as a grandfathered policy; usually by administrators.

Like with any other policy, you can start a vote to recall it. Or a new policy proposal to change it.

Proposing a policy

To start your proposal, either create a new article, or add to an existing policy or proposal's talk page:

{{Policy proposal}}

Introduction text, if you want to write one

=== The Policy ===
Do this, or don't do that...

=== Reasoning ===
I feel that this is needed because ....

{{Policy proposal}} automatically places the page in Category:Policy proposals.


Setting up the voting booth

In the discussion page of the proposal (after your proposal if you wrote it in a talk page rather than standalone), add the following and save the page:

{{subst:Policy talk}}

This will pull in {{Policy vote}} and create an editable voting booth. {{Policy vote}} automatically places the talk page in Category:Votes in progress.

Since you are the one proposing the policy, you will likely want to follow the instructions that appear to vote in favor of your own proposal.

Starting a policy recall vote

If you disagree with an adopted WoWWiki policy, you can start a vote to recall it.

In the discussion page of the proposal, add the following:

== Vote to Recall ==
Your reason for wanting to recall this policy

{{subst:Policy/Recalltalk}}

This will pull in {{Policy recall}} and create an editable voting booth. {{Policy recall}} automatically places the talk page in Category:Votes in progress.

Since you are the one proposing the recall, you will likely want to follow the instructions that appear to vote in favor of recalling the proposal.

Banners

The following banners will appear on policy pages (proposal or otherwise) to indicate their status (and phase):

Templates

The following templates can be used for setting up votes in discussion area of policy article:

These templates will appear, but don't need to be added manually:

Categories

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