This user account is a bot operated by NaomiAmethyst (talk), Rich Smith (talk), and DamianZaremba (talk). It is used to make repetitive automated or semi-automated edits that would be extremely tedious to do manually, in accordance with the bot policy. The bot is approved and currently active – the relevant request for approval can be seen here. Administrators: if this bot is malfunctioning or causing harm, please block it. |
Emergency bot shutoff button
Administrators: Use this button if the bot is malfunctioning. (direct link)
Non-administrators can a malfunctioning bot to Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents.
This user is a bot | |
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(talk · contribs) | |
Operator | Rich Smith, DamianZaremba |
Approved? | Yes, BRFA. |
Flagged? | Yes. |
Edit period(s) | Continually |
Automatic or manual? | Automatic |
Programming language(s) | C, C++, PHP, Python, Bash, and Java (more info) |
Exclusion compliant? | Yes |
Emergency shutoff-compliant? | Yes |
Other information | ClueBot NG is run from the Wikimedia Toolforge infrastructure. |
Administrators may turn the bot off by changing this page to 'False'.
This bot is an exclusion compliant bot.
ClueBot NG is an anti-vandalism bot that tries to detect and revert vandalism quickly and automatically.
Special thanks to:
Questions, comments, contributions, and suggestions regarding:
For the bot to be effective, the dataset needs to be expanded. Our current dataset has some degree of bias, as well as some inaccuracies. We need volunteers to help review edits and classify them as either vandalism or constructive. We hope to eventually completely replace our current dataset with a random sampling of edits, reviewed and classified by volunteers. More thorough instructions on how to use the interface, and the interface itself, are at the dataset review interface.
Extended statistics on contributors, including edit review counts and accuracy, are available here.
For those that help with and contribute to the review interface, a user box is available for you:
This user reviews dataset edits for ClueBot NG to help automatically mass revert vandalism on Wikipedia. |
Use it with:
{{User:ClueBot NG/Review User Box}}
As ClueBot NG requires a dataset to function, the dataset can also be used to give fairly accurate statistics on its accuracy and operation. Different parts of the dataset are used for training and trialing, so these statistics are not biased.
The exact statistics change and improve frequently as we update the bot. Currently:
Currently, the trial dataset used to generate these statistics is a random sampling of edits, each reviewed by at least two humans, so statistics are accurate.
Note: These statistics are calculated before post-processing filters. Post-processing filters primarily reduce false positive rate (ie, the actual number of false positives will be less than stated here), but can also slightly reduce catch rate.
See the FAQ.
ClueBot NG uses a completely different method for classifying vandalism than all previous anti-vandal bots, including the original ClueBot. Previous anti-vandal bots have used a list of simple heuristics and blacklisted words to determine if an edit is vandalism. If a certain number of heuristics matched, the edit was classified as vandalism. This method results in quite a few false positives, because many of the heuristics have legitimate uses in some contexts, and only about a 5% to 10% vandalism catch rate, because most vandalism cannot be detected by these simple heuristics.
ClueBot NG uses a combination of different detection methods which use machine learning at their core. These are described below.
Instead of a predefined list of rules that a human generates, ClueBot NG learns what is considered vandalism automatically by examining a large list of edits which are preclassified as either constructive or vandalism. Its concept of what is considered vandalism is learned from human vandal-fighters. This list of edits is called a corpus or dataset. The accuracy of the bot largely depends on the size and quality of the dataset. If the dataset is small, contains inaccurately classified edits, or does not contain a random sampling of edits, the bot's performance is severely hampered. The best thing you and other Wikipedians can do to help the bot is to improve the dataset. If you're interested in helping out, please see the Dataset Review Interface section.
A few different Bayesian classifiers are used in ClueBot NG. The most basic one works in units of words. Essentially, for each word, the number of constructive edits that add the word, and the number of vandalism edits that add the word, are counted. This is used to form a vandalism-probability for each added word in an edit. The probabilities are combined in such a way that not only words common in vandalism are used, but also words that are uncommon in vandalism can reduce the score.
This differs from a simple list of blacklisted words in that word weights are exactly determined to be optimal, and there's also a large "whitelist" of words, also with optimal weights, that contributes.
Currently, there's also a separate Bayesian classifier that works in units of 2-word phrases. We may add even more Bayesian classifiers in the future that work in different units of words, or words in different contexts.
Scores from the Bayesian classifiers alone are not used. Instead, they're fed into the neural network as simple inputs. This allows the neural network to reduce false positives due to simple blacklisted words, and to catch vandalism that adds unknown words.
The main component of the ClueBot NG vandalism detection algorithm is the neural network. An artificial neural network is a machine learning technique that can recognize patterns in a set of input data that are more complex than simply determining weights. The input to the ANN used in ClueBot NG is composed of a number of different statistics calculated from the edit, which include, among many other things, the results from the Bayesian classifiers. Each statistic has to be scaled to a number between zero and one before being input to the neural network.
The output of the neural network is used as the main vandalism score for ClueBot NG. As with other machine-learning techniques, the score's accuracy depends on the training dataset size and accuracy.
The ANN generates a vandalism score between 0 and 1, where 1 is 100% sure vandalism. To classify some edits as vandalism, and some as constructive, a threshold must be applied to the score. Scores above the threshold are classified as vandalism, and scores below the threshold are classified as constructive.
The threshold is not randomly chosen by a human, but is instead calculated to match a given false positive rate. When doing actual vandalism detection, it's important to minimize false positives to a very low level. A human selects a false positive rate, which is the percentage of constructive edits incorrectly classified as vandalism. A threshold is calculated to have a false positive rate at or below this percentage, while maximizing catch rate. False positive rate is set by a human, and the bot stays at or below that false positive rate, while catching as much vandalism as possible. The false positive rate is not fixed, but is adjustable.
To make sure the threshold and statistics are accurate and do not give inaccurate statistics or a higher false positive rate than expected, the portion of the dataset used for threshold calculations is kept separate from the training set, and is not used for training. Also, only the most accurate parts of the dataset (currently, the ones that are human-reviewed from the review interface) are used for this calculation. This ensures that all statistics given here are accurate, and that false positives will not exceed the given rate.
After the core makes its primary vandalism determination, the data is given to the Wikipedia interface. The Wikipedia interface contains some simple logic designed to reduce false positives. Although it also reduces vandalism catch rate a small amount, it also reduces false positive rate, and some of these are mandated by Wikipedia policy.
The first two of these rarely reduce catch rate, but both prevent a fair number of false positives. Note: The false positive rate (and catch rate) are calculated in the core, before post-processing filters. This means that actual false positive rate will be less than stated false positive, often by a significant factor.
The source code for the bot is public, and can be found on github. Please ask the devs for access. If you would like to run the bot for yourself on your own wiki, you should discuss with the devs all the factors involved in making it work properly. You should also be aware that it will only run on a Linux/UNIX system, and the source code can be rather difficult to compile (many dependencies) unless you're experienced with Linux/UNIX systems.
ClueBot NG maintains an IRC-based feed of its data, primary intended for use by other automated tools, located at #wikipedia-en-cbngfeed on the Libera Chat network. It is essentially a copy of the Wikipedia RC feed, but with ClueBot NG's analysis data added. It includes everything the Wikipedia RC feed does, with the addition of the ClueBot NG score and whether it was reverted or not. Format is edit line \003 # score # reason # Reverted or Not reverted
.
Note that edits in the feed may not necessarily be in precise order, because ClueBot NG processes them in parallel. Non-reverted edits are usually processed in under a second. Reverted edits can sometimes take up to 10 seconds or more to process due to API lag on reverting.
ClueBot NG is not a person, it is an automatic robot that tries to detect vandalism and keep Wikipedia clean. A false positive is when an edit that is not vandalism is incorrectly classified as vandalism.
The bot is not biased against you, your edit, or your viewpoint (unless your edit is vandalism). False positives are rare, but do occur. By handling false positives well without getting upset, you are helping this bot catch almost half of all vandalism on Wikipedia and keep the wiki clean for all of us.
False positives with ClueBot NG are (essentially) inevitable. For it to be effective at catching a great deal of vandalism, a few constructive (or at least, well-intentioned) edits are caught. There are very few false positives, but they do happen. If one of your edits is incorrectly identified as vandalism, simply redo your edit, remove the warning from your talk page, and if you wish, report the false positive. ClueBot NG is not (yet) sentient — it is an automated robot, and if it incorrectly reverts your edit, it does not mean that your edit is bad, or even substandard — it's just a random error in the bot's classification, just like email spam filters sometimes incorrectly classify messages as spam.
The reason false positives are necessary is due to how the bot works. It uses a complex internal algorithm called an Artificial Neural Network that generates a probability that a given edit is vandalism. The probability is usually pretty close, but can sometimes be significantly different from what it should be. Whether or not an edit is classified as vandalism is determined by applying a threshold to this probability. The higher the threshold, the fewer false positives, but also less vandalism is caught. A threshold is selected by assuming a fixed false positive rate (percentage of constructive edits incorrectly classified as vandalism) and optimizing the amount of vandalism caught based on that. This means that there will always be some false positives, and it will always be at around the same percentage of constructive edits. The current setting of the false positive rate is listed in Statistics above.
When false positives occur, they may not be poor quality edits, and there may not even be an apparent reason. If you report the false positive, the bot maintainers will examine it, try to determine why the error occurred, and if possible, improve the bot's accuracy for future similar edits. While it will not prevent false positives, it may help to reduce the number of good-quality edits that are false positives. Also, if the bot's accuracy improves so much that the false positive rate can be reduced without a significant drop in vandalism catch rate, we may be able to reduce the overall number of false positives.
If you want to help significantly improve the bot's accuracy, you can make a difference by contributing to the review interface. This should help us more accurately determine a threshold, catch more vandalism, and eventually, reduce false positives.
To report a false positive, or to see a full list of all false positives, see here.
For those that help with and contribute to the false positive interface, a user box is available for you:
This user reviews false positive reports for ClueBot NG to help revert vandalism on Wikipedia. |
Use it with:
{{User:ClueBot NG/Report User Box}}
The Golden Wiki | ||
One of the top three most valued bots running on enwiki. Cremastra (talk) 01:17, 7 December 2023 (UTC) |
2NumForIce has given you transistors! Transistors promote WikiLove (📖💞) and hopefully this one has made your day more efficient. It is the food best preferred by bots. 🤖 Spread the WikiLove by giving someone else transistors, whether it be someone you have had robot wars with in the past or a good friend.
The thing with ClueBot NG, is that every time I try to manually revert an edit, ClueBot NG immediately beats me. That's how fast CBNG is; vandalism comes in, instantly reverted. Here's some transistors to keep you running.
Spread the goodness of transistors by adding {{subst:Transistors for you}} to someone's talk page with a friendly message!
~~2NumForIce (speak|edits) 17:35, 12 November 2023 (UTC)
Mr Reading Turtle has given you motor oil! Motor oil promotes WikiLove (📖💞) and hopefully this one has made your day more efficient. It is the drink best preferred by bots. 🤖 Spread the WikiLove by giving someone else motor oil, whether it be someone you have had robot wars with in the past or a good friend.
Spread the goodness of motor oil by adding {{subst:Motor oil for you}} to someone's talk page with a friendly message!
The Useful AI Award | |
We appreciate all you do with protecting the integrity of Wikipedia and regulating articles so that users do not have to directly engage with vandals as much! HelloHamburger (talk) 01:49, 3 March 2022 (UTC) |
HelloHamburger has given you batteries! Batteries promote WikiLove (📖💞) and hopefully this one has made your day more powerful. It is the power source best preferred by bots. 🤖 Spread the WikiLove by giving someone else batteries, whether it be someone you have had robot wars with in the past or a good friend.
Spread the goodness of batteries by adding {{subst:Batteries for you}} to someone's talk page with a friendly message!
I haven't seen much of your work, but you have been doing well it seems. Keep up the good work you wonderful bot boy!
HelloHamburger (talk) 01:49, 3 March 2022 (UTC)
TK421bsod has given you batteries! Batteries promote WikiLove (📖💞) and hopefully this one has made your day more powerful. It is the power source best preferred by bots. 🤖 Spread the WikiLove by giving someone else batteries, whether it be someone you have had robot wars with in the past or a good friend.
Spread the goodness of batteries by adding {{subst:Batteries for you}} to someone's talk page with a friendly message!
TK421bsod (talk) 20:04, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
The Anti-Vandalism Barnstar | |
Dino245 (talk) 19:45, 16 October 2019 (UTC) |
I like beer and you should too C.carleigh (talk) 23:10, 1 May 2019 (UTC) |
The Anti-Vandalism Barnstar | ||
This is for your valuable efforts for reverting and protecting enwiki from Vandalism PATH SLOPU (Talk) 05:14, 22 August 2018 (UTC) |
The Special Barnstar | |
To ClueBot NG, for making 5 million edits! Thanks for the hard work on reverting vandalism! SemiHypercube (talk) 15:38, 16 June 2018 (UTC) |
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The Multiple Barnstar | |||||||
An Anti-vandalism barnstar and a half barn star for ClueBot NG, for the bot’s work on fighting vandalism and making over 5 MILLION edits (wow, that’s almost as much as the English Wikipedia’s article count!) and counting to fight lots of vandalism. ClueBot III gets the other half Barnstar for doing a lot of talk page archiving. Thank you so much for all your hard work, and here’s to another 5 million edits of reverting vandalism, and another 600,000+ of talk page archiving! Porkchop Jr. 17:43, 14 June 2018 (UTC) |
A gift card from the Barnstar Shop | ||
This is a red gift card that the bots can use at the Barnstar Shop. Feel free to buy any barnstars there, and maybe even give them to other users! (But please don’t award yourself some.) Porkchop Jr. 18:42, 14 June 2018 (UTC) |
The Anti-Vandalism Barnstar | ||
If ClueBot NG weren’t here, we won’t revert vandalism as much as it does. Thank you for all the edits that you’ve made. 70.190.21.73 (talk) 23:14, 10 March 2018 (UTC) |
A robot for ClueBot NG | |
For reverting vandalism on a full time basis and thanks to it's creators for their hard work on it. Iggy (talk) 19:04, 18 December 2017 (UTC) |
The Anti-Vandalism Barnstar | ||
What!? This bot is faster than any other bot in Wikipedia. Excellent job at reverting vandalism, Cluebot NG. You have made almost everybody's lives easier. —Bey WHEELZ Let It RIP!✉📝Sign 20:33, 25 November 2017 (UTC) |
The Hard Worker's Barnstar | |
:) SuperTurboChampionshipEdition (talk) 15:36, 17 June 2017 (UTC) |
This page contains material that is kept because it is considered humorous. Such material is not meant to be taken seriously. |
ClueBots | |
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ClueBot NG/Anti-vandalism · ClueBot II/ClueBot Script | |
ClueBot III/Archive · Talk page for all ClueBots |