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Wikipedia:Being right isn't enough

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Remember the principle of WP:BRIE
Being right isn't enough....

Some of Wikipedia's most potent disputes arise when somebody is right on a particular issue, but expresses it in an obnoxious manner. This can entangle two issues together, namely what is being said, and how it is being delivered. The discussion, particularly if it's on the Incident noticeboard can descend into a meta-discussion about excusing the behaviour of an editor, because "well, they were right".

These arguments wouldn't happen if the person being right was also civil about it.

There might be several reasons why the other person is "wrong":

  • Lack of experience in writing in the topic area
  • Technical challenges with Wikipedia markup and syntax (especially seen in disputes over the Manual of style).
  • Unfamiliarity with specific Wikipedia policies and guidelines (there are a lot of them - have you read them all?)
  • Mismatch in cultural norms and familiarities (this place lets people all over the world edit here!)

In all these cases, we need to assume good faith that the other person thought they were trying to help and improve the encyclopedia. It's unacceptable, without evidence to the contrary, to assert that the person on the other side of the debate is clueless and needs to be smacked with a giant trout, and it's really unacceptable to use intemperate language in doing so. It's possible to be sanctioned, and even banned from Wikipedia, when you were actually correct on the merits of whatever discussion triggered the dispute in the first place.

A commonly heard trope around Wikipedia is, "My edits were right, so I wasn't edit warring!" It's been mentioned often enough by editors who've stepped over the line of the three revert rule (and got blocked for it) that's it's considered a cliched unblock request that is pretty much always declined.

If you work in combating vandalism, and plan on repeatedly reverting an editor, whether through blatant and obvious defacement of the encyclopedia or clear violations of the biographies of living persons policy, it's good practice to ignore the vandal and just quietly revert without comment. Goading to a vandal that you're right and they're wrong is likely to give them the attention they deserve, while goading to somebody acting in good faith who you mistook for a vandal is a significant error.

Cited examples

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"Violations of Wikipedia's behavioral expectations are not excused on the grounds that the editor who violated those expectations has the correct position on an underlying substantive dispute or the interpretation of policies and guidelines within those disputes. Those expectations apply universally to all editors, and violations of those expectations are harmful to the functioning of the project, irrespective of the merits of an underlying substantive dispute."