Administrators can protect and unprotect pages. Protection of a page or image usually means that a non-admin cannot modify it.
The majority of pages on all Wikia should remain publicly editable, and not protected. Pages may, however, be temporarily or permanently protected for legal reasons (for example, license texts should not be changed) or in cases of extreme vandalism or edit warring.
Uses
- Protecting highly vandalised pages, such as the Main Page on large wikis.
- Maintaining the integrity of the site's logo and favicon.
- Maintaining the integrity of key copyright and license pages.
- Protecting the interface and system messages in the MediaWiki namespace (these are protected automatically)
A temporary protection is used for:
- Enforcing a "cool down" period to stop an "edit war", upon request.
- Protecting a page or image that has been a recent target of persistent vandalism or persistent edits by a banned user.
There is no need to protect personal .css and .js pages like user/monobook.css or user/cologneblue.js. Only the accounts associated with these pages (and admins) are able to edit them. (For more information on using these pages, see the help page on Central
Rules
- Protecting pages preemptively is generally discouraged. Only protect when there is persistent vandalism coming from many IPs/accounts, or if there is an ongoing edit war that is showing no signs of cooling down. Blocks should be used instead of protection whenever possible.
- Do not edit protected pages that are subject to dispute except to add a notice explaining the page's protection.
- Do not protect a page you are involved in a dispute over. Administrative rights are not editor privileges—admins should only act as servants to the user community at large.
- Avoid favoring one version of the article over another, unless one version is vandalism.
- Temporarily protected pages should generally not be left as such for very long. Expiry times should usually be used in these cases.
- Talk and user talk pages are not to be protected except in extreme circumstances. An exception applies to user talk pages for banned users that are being persistently abused.
- Protection is not an endorsement of the protected version. Do not edit a page protected in a dispute to change it to another version.
- To maintain the open nature of the wiki format, protection should be used sparingly. Always consider other options, such as blocks and dispute resolution, before resorting to protection. Whenever possible, use an expiry time to keep the page protected for as little time as possible.