• {{welcome}}
  • {{welcome-short}}
  • {{welcome-personal}}
  • {{welcome-graphical}}
  • {{welcome-menu}}
  • {{welcome-screen}}
  • {{welcome-belated}}
  • {{welcome student}}
  • {{welcome teacher}}
  • {{welcome non-latin}}
  • {{welcome-anon}}
  • {{welcome-anon-test}}
  • {{welcome-anon-unconstructive}}
  • {{welcome-anon-constructive}}
  • {{welcome-anon-delete}}
Thanks, L3X1 ◊distænt write◊ 16:51, 22 August 2018 (UTC)

Special:diff/774680003

Sample essay edit

Hello! You are probably here because you clicked a link on the bottom of a Discretionary Sanctions notice (commonly referred to as DS) that appeared recently on your talk page? What does it mean? Are you in trouble? Should you amend your ways? Who is after you? Quick answers:

Act right or go night night
No
If you are not adhering to our policies, or are unsure about making an edit
No one

A DS notice is a piece of boilerplate informing you that in a certain area where you edited (whether through responding to an Request for comment, archiving something, reverting vandalism, or even fixing a small typo, that area is under a special watch for potential severe disruption, and that any non-conflicted admin can administer whatever sanctions they feel necessary to remediate the situation quickly, without requiring prior specific consent either from the community (Of which you are a part) or the Arbitration Committee.

You can find a list of topics which have DS at this list (they tend to be mostly about controversial areas of life, politics, and history). If you have any questions or concerns, try the help pages or please do not hesitate to ask at the Teahouse, Help Desk, the VIllage Pump about wikipedia policies, or on an active experienced editor's talk page. We will be glad to help you (some editors are grouches though, 50/50 on them).

If you have not read these policies before, they will help you to understand how Wikipedia operates, and will maximize your enjoyment of editing Wikipedia:


Managed to break it somehow edit