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On Wikipedia, there are these groups of editors who form these things called cabals. Typically they include a very tight knit bunch of editors and are generally slow and reluctant to let in new editors. They also don't like cooperating with editors outside their cabal when the cabal is working on a certain page or task. This is not healthy for Wikipedia and its community as a whole. I have had encounters on talk pages when I revert the actions of a cabal member and they threaten to "get their cabal involved."[1] When this happens cabals become tagteams, using their numbers to haplessly ignore the three revert rule and civility policies. Another issue is cabal ownership, a cabal relentlessy editing a page and reverting the actions of editors outside the cabal. There is also the issue of cabal voting where members of a cabal vote together, skewing the results. Sometime ago there was a discussion at Miscellany for deletion about "secret pages" that cabals leave for people to find a sign. There was a vote and it was decided these pages should be "judged on their own" instead of being deleted en masse. I'd bet you a 3.00 dollar donation to Wikimedia that a noticeable contingent of the "Keep" voters were cabal members themselves. Lastly Wikipedia is not a social networking site like Myspace or Facebook and I think cabals violate that policy by creating informal groupings of users that look more like collective friend lists than groups of dedicated editors united to improve Wikipedia.