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The user access level of editors affects their abilities to perform specific actions on Wikipedia. A user's access level depends on which rights (also called permissions, user groups, bits, or flags) are assigned to accounts. There are two types of access leveling: automatic and requested.
^1 Because bureaucrats were granted the ability to do this, stewards would refer most ordinary requests for removal of the sysop permission to them, but retain the right to remove the sysop permission when appropriate (such as emergencies or requests from the Arbitration Committee
This is a maintenance category, used for maintenance of the Wikipedia project. It is not part of the encyclopedia and contains non-article pages , or groups articles by status rather than subject. Do not include this category in content categories.
View the log of access to temporary account IP addresses CU, Ombuds: checkuser-temporary-account-no-preference: View IP addresses used by temporary accounts without needing to check the preference collectionsaveasuserpage: Save books as user subpage createaccount: Create a new user account for themselves or another user ACCP: createpage: Create ...
Extended confirmed protection, previously known as 30/500 protection, allows edits only by editors with the extended confirmed user access level, administrators, and bots. Extended confirmed is automatically granted to users on the edit following the account meeting the criteria of being at least 30 days old and having 500 edits. [3]
User access levels (also known as permissions, groups, rights, flags, or bits) are a common kind of a user role. Subcategories This category has the following 9 subcategories, out of 9 total.
By 2009, Wikipedia had over 10 million registered users (currently: 48,444,148), while also hosting almost as many IP-address users who choose to edit without a login. . People trying to write articles can face opposition, or get help, from many different p
Ordinary users can hardly create new user access levels. Only developers can do that; they might do so on their own initiative, or by order of some authority, or indeed after a community decision, but in the case of a community decision a record should be on the wiki somewhere, and I can't find such.