Welcome to the Counter Vandalism Unit Academy, Main! I have created a CVUA page, which is a space where you can work with me in this course.

During this course, you will be asked to edit this page to provide answers, and to revert actual vandalism. Don't worry if your CVUA page only has a few sections; the sections are intentionally left out; this is called instructional scaffolding. As you complete more sections, I will add more sections.

When you see links, make sure to read through all of them, so that you have more understanding of a topic.

After you graduate, this page will be moved to your userspace, which will serve as a permanent record of your course. And don't be afraid to ask me questions in the talk page!


Start Here

edit

Gadgets & Tools

edit

There are some very useful tools for monitoring and reverting vandalism, and more. Here's some that I recommend. Throughout this course, I will recommend more tools only available to more experienced users.

Twinkle

edit

Twinkle is a very useful tool that can not only monitor vandalism, but also report users to admins, tag pages, request deletion/protection, and much more. Gadgets Check the box that says Twinkle.

RedWarn

edit

RedWarn is another popular tool for vandalism. It is a bit more user-friendly, but has less features. Install RedWarn

Recent Changes

edit

Recent Changes is the first anti-vandalism tool. It's built into MediaWiki (the software that powers Wikipedia), and is very customizable through filters and highlighting. I would like to share my custom filters: BigBadWolf

Diff

edit

Diffs are how every anti-vandalism tool work. It looks like this: (based on Help:Diff's example diff at revision 1114924787)

(add reference)
m (haha)
 
Line 8: Line 8:
  This line is unchanged.   This line is unchanged.
Something is changed here. + Something is your mom.
  This line is unchanged.   This line is unchanged.

Diffs let you identify content added/removed/changed. Without diffs, it would just be a scramble of wikitext.

Policy Introduction

edit

Wikipedia has policies regarding what is considered vandalism. Please read Wikipedia:Vandalism in addition to this section, to learn what's vandalism.

What is vandalism?

edit

The term "vandalism" on Wikipedia is deliberately preventing Wikipedia's purpose, which is creating a free encyclopedia. However, even if misguided, good faith edits are never vandalism.

Make sure to look into the edit more, and not reverting an rvv. Incorrect warnings could "bite" newcomers, and that isn't good. And please don't rv an rvv, I could have lost rollback. Some edits look like vandalism, when they are really test edits, which is good-faith. Or reverting good-faith removal of content from BLPs that violate the BLP policy, even without an edit summary. Also the terms say "For your own protection you should exercise caution and avoid taking any actions that may result in criminal or civil liability under any applicable laws." a.k.a. the moment you click Publish Changes, you're legally responsible for it.


Warning & reporting to admin

edit

When you use a tool or manually warn a user, you'll see different options. Different warning templates, levels, and also single-issue warnings. As I have explained in the #Start Here section, use these accordingly.

If a user continues to vandalize after the final warning, you'll want to report them to the admins through AIV, which stands for Administrator Intervention against Vandalism. Take a look at the AIV page to learn more. Note that you can use Twinkle (TW → ARV) or RedWarn (  → Report to AIV). For username policy violations, use UAA instead (this can also be used with Twinkle and RedWarn).

Always select the correct warning. It is important, as some edits are not vandalism.

Complete

edit

To finish this section, use the button below to answer questions and go to the next section:

Complete