Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Ban Appeals Subcommittee (BASC) was formed by the Arbitration Committee to hear appeals, by email, from users who are banned or blocked by community processes. BASC is a last resort, available only if other means of appeal are exhausted. If you: are community banned from Wikipedia entirely, or you are blocked indefinitely; and
Banned users, too, have special rules for their appeals. See WP:UNBAN for procedures of ban appeal. Users banned by the community (but not under ArbCom bans or blocks designated to be appealed to ArbCom only) are normally unbanned only after a community discussion at the administrators' noticeboard determines whether there is consensus to lift ...
Administrators may use the interface to assist in reviewing the appeal, but ultimately each review is an individual administrator responsibility. Generally, each appeal should follow this process: Direct appeals containing threats, libel, and abusive language to Tool Admins for UTRS ban; Determine whether this appeal contains all needed ...
The only truly officially documented step in the process is the last one, an appeal to the Ban Appeals Subcommittee via an email to the Arbitration Committee. This is regarded as the " court of last resort " in unblock appeals, as the BASC will refuse to hear appeals that have not already been heard at a lower level, nor those pertaining to ...
(The Center Square) – Whether Illinois should be enjoined from enforcing the state’s gun and magazine ban starting Monday is now up to a federal appeals court. Illinois enacted the Protect ...
The Appeal Committee is a proposed committee of functionaries empowered to appeal sanctions imposed by administrators or by the community. The transfer of this responsibility from the Arbitration Committee to the Appeal Committee should reduce the workload for arbitrators and provide a more efficient, adaptable and far-reaching appeal process.
A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday set a fast-track schedule to consider the legal challenges to a new law requiring China-based ByteDance to divest TikTok's U.S. assets by Jan. 19 or face a ban. The ...
BattlEye is a proprietary anti-cheat software designed to detect players that hack or abusively use exploits in an online game.It was initially released as a third-party anti-cheat for Battlefield Vietnam in 2004 and has since been officially implemented in numerous video games, primarily shooter games such as PUBG: Battlegrounds, Arma 3, Destiny 2, War Thunder, and DayZ.