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Usually, if it's a clear cut case, any uninvolved (independent) administrator will make a decision. The blocking administrator may be consulted for their comments on your request (this is a common courtesy). The process can take hours or a few days; for major discussions sometimes it can take a week or more.
The standard offer applies to community-based indefinite blocks and bans in situations where things didn't work out: normal people, short fuses, etc. It doesn't extend to extremes, and it is ultimately up to the administrative community (on a case-by-case basis) whether the blocked or banned editor is eligible at all.
This is a guide to current practice at Wikipedia's requests for adminship (RfA) process, the mechanism by which editors are considered for administrator status. To become an administrator, there needs to be a clear consensus that you are committed to Wikipedia and can be trusted to know and uphold its policies and guidelines.
However, administrators, or other experienced users, may be willing to informally offer an opinion if you ask them privately (for example, via user talk page). Fix bugs. You can report them at Phabricator. Make someone an administrator. Only bureaucrats can do this, and only following community consensus at Wikipedia:Requests for adminship.
There is a need for transparency of admin processes and a need for protecting privacy. I really don't know the solution here except to get rid of @ AmandaNP : 's table. Which reduces some transparency but I'd rather do that then not provide a UTRS ticket # when unblocking accounts or IPs.--v/r - T P 04:32, 2 October 2023 (UTC)
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The Orangemoody scam worked like an extortion racket. Targeted articles would be nominated for deletion, or denied approval for publication. Then other editors, presumably working for the same firm, would offer their services to reinstate the article and "protect" it from deletion or unwanted changes — for a monthly charge.