Wikipedia:Tip of the day/July 8, 2006

The three-revert rule

Many people know that if someone reverts an article more than three times in 24 hours, they may be blocked to prevent edit warring. But did you know that:


 * Although reverts on different articles don't count towards the limit, different reverts on the same article do count. So if you revert Paragraph A twice and Paragraph B twice in 24 hours, you have made four reverts and may be blocked.
 * If you revert three times, wait for 24 hours and start reverting again, you may be blocked for 'gaming' the rule. The three-revert rule is an electric fence, not an entitlement.
 * Although you can't be blocked for repeatedly reverting vandalism, many Wikipedians mistake edits for vandalism when they are not. For example, edits that don't respect the neutral point of view policy are not vandalism.

The easiest way to avoid being blocked for reverting is to revert as little as possible and discuss with your fellow editors instead. Some editors limit themselves to one or no reverts a day.

Read more: Three-revert rule

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