Download Article
Download Article
Wikipedia comes under the top 10 most viewed websites in the world, having billions of monthly readers. [1] X Research source [2] X Research source With such popularity, the wiki faces frequent vandalism. Wikipedia administrators have the power to protect pages and restrict editing to only certain groups of individuals. This article will show you a couple of ways you can use to find out if a page is protected or not.
Steps
-
1Open the page you want to examine. If you have the URL, simply type it in your browser and press ↵ Enter . If you only have the page name, append it to
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
to form the link. Otherwise, you can use the search bar at the top to search for the article. -
2Look for a padlock symbol on the top-right. If you see one, it means that the page is protected. On Wikipedia, different types of padlocks reflect different levels and types of page protection. They are:
- No padlock: No protection. Anyone can edit the page. This is the default protection level for pages.
- Pending changes protection: Edits by unregistered or newly registered accounts (and subsequent edits by anyone) are only applied for everyone to see after review by a Pending Changes Reviewer or administrator .
- Semi protection: Only autoconfirmed accounts (those at least 4 days old with at least 10 edits) can edit the page.
- Extended confirmed protection (previously known as 30/500 protection): Only extended confirmed accounts (accounts at least 30 days old with at least 500 edits) and bots can edit the page.
- Template protection: Only administrators and "template editors" can edit the page. This type of protection is usually only used for templates and modules.
- Full protection: Only administrators can edit the page.
-
Interface protection:
Only interface administrators can edit the page. Known as "indefinite protection" outside Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and JavaScript pages.
Other modes of protection: - Create protection: Only administrators can create the page.
- Move protection: Only administrators can move the page.
- Upload protection: Only administrators can replace the file with a new version.
- Office protection: Only Wikimedia Foundation staff can edit the page.
- Cascade protection: Full protection pages transcluded onto the protected page. This type of protection is uncommon. [3] X Research source [4] X Research source
Advertisement
-
1Open the page you want to examine. If you have the URL, simply type it in your browser and press ↵ Enter . If you only have the page name, append it to
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
to form the link. Otherwise, you can use the search bar at the top to search for the article. -
2Look for a link called "View" or "View source". It is usually the second option found in the toolbar at the top-right of the article. Generally, if you see the link, it means you do not have the required permission to edit the page. This may mean that the page is protected, or that you are blocked from the site. Click on the link to explore further.
- If you see "Edit" or "Edit source" instead of the mentioned links, follow the subsection about using the edit button instead.
-
3Infer information from what appears on your screen. You may see a block notice or a protection notice, or both (the protection notice should appear before the block notice in such a case). If the page is protected, a padlock along with details of the protection will appear. To know more about what each padlock means, look at step 2 of the subsection about checking for a padlock .
Advertisement
-
1Open the page you want to examine. If you have the URL, simply type it in your browser and press ↵ Enter . If you only have the page name, append it to
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
to form the link. Otherwise, you can use the search bar at the top to search for the article. -
2Look for a link called "Edit" or "Edit source". It is usually the second option found in the toolbar at the top-right of the article. Generally, if you see the link, it means that you have the appropriate permission to edit the page. This may mean that the page is unprotected, or that it is protected but you happen to have the required privileges to edit the page. Click on the link to explore further.
- If you see "View" or "View source" instead of the mentioned links, follow the subsection about using the view button instead.
-
3Look for a notice in a red box. If the page is protected, you shall see a notice in a red box informing you of the protection. The included log entry will give the date and time, actioning user's username, action taken, duration (if applicable), justifying reason (if any) and give you a link to view the page history. If you want, you can click on the View full log link available at the bottom of the notice to examine the protection log .
Advertisement
-
1Open the Wikipedia protection log . It lists all protection actions made by site administrators. Note that you do not have to be logged in to do the following steps. You can either go to the link directly or select "Protection log" from the dropdown that appears on the main public logs page.
-
2Enter the target page. Once you're at the protection log page, enter the name of the page you'd like to know the protection status of in the Target (title or User:username for user): field. Ensure that you copy the name from the URL and not any custom title. As you start typing, a dropdown will appear for you to choose the relevant article from.
-
3Execute the search. After adding the name of the page, scroll down to find Show and click on it. This will list the protection actions for that page for you to review.
-
4Examine the log entries. Any action taken on the page, unless hidden from public sight by an administrator or bureaucrat, will show up in the log. Determine if the page is protected by looking at the latest entry. It will show the date and time, actioning user's username, action taken, duration (if applicable), justifying reason (if any), and a link to view the page history.
Advertisement
Expert Q&A
Ask a Question
200 characters left
Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered.
Submit
Advertisement
Video
Tips
- While using the protection log, if you want to examine a page that isn't an article, like a page in the template space or the user space, prefix the relevant namespace before the page name (e.g. Template:how-to ) to ensure you don't accidentally perform a search in the main space.Thanks
- The steps and the screenshots in this article are catered to the English Wikipedia. If you want to do this for a different language project, replace the en in the URL with the relevant "WP code". A full list of the WP codes can be found here .Thanks
Submit a Tip
All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
Name
Please provide your name and last initial
Thanks for submitting a tip for review!
Advertisement
Warnings
- If you are blocked, you won't see the Edit option regardless of the page's protection status.Thanks
- Misuse of editing privileges, especially on protected pages, can cause you to lose them and in extreme cases, possibly get blocked.Thanks
Advertisement
References
About This Article
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 67 times.
Advertisement