Parts of this article (those related to July 2012 running out of mods needs updated for 2024) need to be updated.(August 2024) |
On Wikipedia, trusted users may be appointed as administrators (also referred to as admins, sysops or janitors),[1]: 327 following a successful request for adminship. Currently, there are 839 administrators on the English Wikipedia.[2] Administrators have additional technical privileges compared with other editors, such as being able to protect and delete pages and being able to block users from editing pages.
On Wikipedia, becoming an administrator is often referred to as "being given [or taking up] the mop",[3] a term which has also been used elsewhere.[4] In 2006, The New York Times reported that administrators on Wikipedia, of whom there were then about 1,000, were "geographically diverse".[5] In July 2012, it was widely reported that Wikipedia was "running out of administrators", because in 2005 and 2006, 40 to 50 people were often appointed administrators each month, but in the first half of 2012, only nine in total were appointed.[6][7]
However, Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia's co-founder, denied that this was a crisis or that Wikipedia was running out of admins, saying, "The number of admins has been stable for about two years, there's really nothing going on."[8] Wales had previously (in a message sent to the English Wikipedia mailing list on February 11, 2003) stated that being an admin is "not a big deal", and that "It's merely a technical matter that the powers given to sysops are not given out to everyone."[9]
In his 2008 book Wikipedia: The Missing Manual, John Broughton states that while many people think of administrators on Wikipedia as judges, that is not the purpose of the role.[10] Instead, he says, admins usually "delete pages" and "protect pages involved in edit wars".[10] Wikipedia administrators are not employees or agents of the Wikimedia Foundation.[11]
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