Revision as of 00:13, 4 May 2012 editWereSpielChequers (talk | contribs)Bureaucrats, Administrators342,569 editsm →BizProd: typo← Previous edit | Revision as of 04:18, 4 May 2012 edit undoFlatscan (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers6,165 editsm →Proposal re.: Wording change needed to stop forbidding copying of properly licensed free content: fix W: prefix to Misplaced Pages:Next edit → | ||
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This MediaWiki message, found at the bottom of each of the zillion edit pages our editors use, needs changing! : | This MediaWiki message, found at the bottom of each of the zillion edit pages our editors use, needs changing! : | ||
<div style="margin-top: 1em;" id="editpage-copywarn2"> | <div style="margin-top: 1em;" id="editpage-copywarn2"> | ||
* Please ] from copyrighted websites – only ] resources can be copied without permission. | * Please ] from copyrighted websites – only ] resources can be copied without permission. | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
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So, I now propose we go with the following <small>(Credit to ] for coming up with this revision and listing some pros and cons.)</small> | So, I now propose we go with the following <small>(Credit to ] for coming up with this revision and listing some pros and cons.)</small> | ||
<div style="margin-top: 1em;" id="editpage-copywarn2"> | <div style="margin-top: 1em;" id="editpage-copywarn2"> | ||
* ] from other websites unless permitted by ]. | * ] from other websites unless permitted by ]. | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
Revision as of 04:18, 4 May 2012
Policy | Technical | Proposals | Idea lab | WMF | Miscellaneous |
If you want to propose something new that is not a policy or guideline, use the proposals section.
If you have a question about how to apply an existing policy or guideline, try the one of the many Misplaced Pages:Noticeboards.
Please see this FAQ page for a list of frequent proposals and the responses to them.
- Blocks for promotional activity outside of mainspace
- Voluntary RfAs after resignation
- Two-factor authentication for page movers
- Proposed rewrite of WP:BITE
- LLM/chatbot comments in discussions
Proposal re.: Wording change needed to stop forbidding copying of properly licensed free content
This MediaWiki message, found at the bottom of each of the zillion edit pages our editors use, needs changing! :
- Please do not copy and paste from copyrighted websites – only public domain resources can be copied without permission.
However, it's often perfectly fine to copy and paste content from copyrighted websites. Nearly all of our own websites' content is copyrighted. Much essential Misplaced Pages content comes from copyrighted websites that license their copyrighted work. The CC-BY-SA 3.0 License itself was copied from the copyrighted website http://creativecommons.org! The improper instruction of the first half of the sentence, "Please do not copy and paste from copyrighted websites" is not rectified by the second half. In this discussion in a less-trafficked forum, several alternatives were considered.
So, I now propose we go with the following (Credit to Richardguk for coming up with this revision and listing some pros and cons.)
- Do not copy and paste from other websites unless permitted by Misplaced Pages copyright policy.
Advantages: brief, comprehensive. "Please" is unnecessary when warning people not to break the law.
Disadvantages: unspecific, no reference to copy-pasting from sources other than websites, no explanation of public domain and other exemptions. But anyone relying on public domain exemptions can reasonably be expected to have enough diligence to check the detailed rules.
For the sake of brevity, the text is deliberately ambiguous about who must have "permitted". This is intended to combine the notion of the source site permitting copying and the notion of Misplaced Pages policy permitting pasting.
"Copyrighted websites" is changed to "other webites" because many casual users don't know that nearly all websites are copyrighted, but they are so it is safer and simpler to cover everywhere – except Misplaced Pages itself.
The important thing here is to firmly deter potential abusers, briefly guide casual users, and usefully steer diligent users.
Thoughts? Let's get this fixed! --Elvey (talk) 03:54, 14 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm not sure about that wording.
- "Please" isn't redundant, we are asking editors to behave in a way that helps the project stay within US law. That doesn't mean each and every editor worldwide is under compulsion of that law.
- Permission to copy can only come from the copyright holder, by definition. A website is not a legal person, so while it may document such permission it certainly doesn't grant it.
- Misplaced Pages policy guides the behaviour of editors to help keep the project legal, but can't grant such permission either.
- Either "copyrighted websites" or "other websites" is improperly narrow, missing all manner of offline sources. The problem behaviour is the insertion of copyrighted content without the permission of the copyright holder, irrespective of the mechanism of insertion or the medium of the source. It is just as bad (and in some ways more problematic) to type in verbatim text from a printed work.
LeadSongDog come howl! 13:08, 17 April 2012 (UTC)
- So, precisely speaking, there seldom or never such a thing as a "copyrighted website", it is the material within it that is/may be copyrighted. (?) North8000 (talk) 13:22, 17 April 2012 (UTC)
- Hardly ever is a website under just one copyright, usually there are a great many for different parts of the site.
The website itself is not the publisher or owner of the site either. This site, en.wikipedia.org is not the Wikimedia Foundation which publishes it, and its content copyrights are held in very small chunks by millions of contributors, mostly under pseudonyms recorded in page histories. Similarly, NYTimes.com is not The New York Times Company, but in any case much of its content originates with other papers, distributed by wire agencies such as the Associated Press and Reuters. It is, for all practical purposes, impossible to be certain who owns the copyright to something we read whether it is on a website or on dead trees. The responsible action, then, is to entirely refrain from verbatim copying unless we know the source is in the public domain. Usually that knowledge is by dint of its age. So if we were to revise the line, I'd suggest simply "Please do not add copied content unless it is in the public domain." (The preceding post is copyright LeadSongDog, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0) LeadSongDog come howl! 17:57, 17 April 2012 (UTC)
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- I have to agree with the original poster. So often I see people here on Misplaced Pages using "copyrighted" to mean "copyrighted and not available under a license that is compatible with our own license" — we need to remember that copyright is the only thing that makes our licenses at all binding. Of course, if we added "without permission" after "copyrighted websites", I'd be happy with that, because a Misplaced Pages-compatible license is precisely the kind of permission that we need. Nyttend (talk) 02:25, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
- Same here; what Nyttend said. – OhioStandard (talk) 07:18, 25 April 2012 (UTC)
- Agree about avoiding to frame the issue as "public domain" vs. "copyrighted", which is somewhat misleading. But I'm not quite happy about the proposed alternative either – we need something very simple, something that gets just the central message across to the clueless user, and without the reader having to first follow a link to the extremely confusing WP:Copyrights page. For the purpose of simplicity, I would think that even a slight amount of oversimplification is a reasonable price to pay. Perhaps something along the lines of "Do not copy text from elsewhere, unless it has been released under a free license". Fut.Perf. ☼ 07:35, 25 April 2012 (UTC)
- Support any such improvement as anyone's mentioned so far; the "public domain" vs. "copyrighted" dichotomy is legally wrong and so misleading as to be worse than pointless. I've long detested it. — SMcCandlish Talk⇒ ɖ∘¿¤þ Contrib. 08:08, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Copying straight from external websites is against policy as far as I'm aware anyway. We don't copy information, we re-write it into our articles and source the material accordingly. This is why I Oppose. MrLittleIrish © 19:29, 2 May 2012 (UTC)
- Support per Nyttend. We routinely copy from EB1911 or the DNB, for example, and AFAIK the policy is that we attribute to avoid plagiarism, not that we do not copy. --Tagishsimon (talk) 19:46, 2 May 2012 (UTC)
Circular Reference Menace
I am unsure of what appropriate policies there are to deal with this or if more are needed. As wikipedia mautures the number of other web sources that draws from its information increases. Though I wish to avoid exmaples to avoid diverting the discussion to specific examples, there seems to be both a risk and examples of the following:..
- Dubious or incorrect information is added.
- This is not picked up on.
- Sufficient time passes for other sources to use this information.
- Other editors add these as sources.
- An editor wishing to correct the original misinfomration faces an edit war with others who use the "sources" as evidence.
- Thoughts please? Dainamo (talk) 18:15, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
- This is part of why we must not only have sources, but reliable sources. If a source is getting info from Misplaced Pages, it doesn't qualify as an RS.--Fyre2387 18:56, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
- It is not that simple, incorrect information originating from wikipedia has been published in respected newspapers and even scientific publications (see the "glucojasinogen" entry in wp:List of hoaxes on Misplaced Pages). It is a recognized problem, but we can do very little about it from our end. The problem is with journalists not checking their facts. See also this comic. Yoenit (talk) 21:00, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
- Yes, it is not that simple. But it is a serous problem at times. Two weeks ago I had a loooong discussion with a user who insisted that although a website said some of its information was from Misplaced Pages, given that we do not know which parts came from Misplaced Pages, it could be considered WP:RS! Eventually after wasting a few hours of my life someone else shot that argument down. But there needs to be "clear policy" that as soon as a website says its content is Misplaced Pages-based then it is a no-no as a source. How can that get formed as a more clear statement? History2007 (talk) 14:24, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think wp:CIRCULAR is fine, what is your problem with it? Yoenit (talk) 23:12, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- Yes, it is not that simple. But it is a serous problem at times. Two weeks ago I had a loooong discussion with a user who insisted that although a website said some of its information was from Misplaced Pages, given that we do not know which parts came from Misplaced Pages, it could be considered WP:RS! Eventually after wasting a few hours of my life someone else shot that argument down. But there needs to be "clear policy" that as soon as a website says its content is Misplaced Pages-based then it is a no-no as a source. How can that get formed as a more clear statement? History2007 (talk) 14:24, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- Does it make it clear that if a website uses "any" Misplaced Pages information to compile an article of its own, then the entire website is useless as a source? The other user's argument was that some of it is Misplaced Pages, some is not and so it has been compiled from multiple sources and it can be used. So the "one bullet, the website is dead" argument should be clarified there. It should probably say: "if a website uses any Misplaced Pages information, that usage alone will automatically disqualify the website as a source for Misplaced Pages". That is what I would like to see stated clearly. I will suggest it there anyway. History2007 (talk) 08:54, 22 April 2012 (UTC)
- If we can't tell which parts are from Misplaced Pages and which are from other sources (and by "tell" I mean, the source clearly identifies which material comes from which source), then the source is not reliable. It's not so much that the whole source is unreliable, rather that we cannot reliably tell which parts are and which aren't. Of course, if the source doesn't even attribute Misplaced Pages and it's a generally reliable publisher, then (as we cannot prove either way) there is little we can do except local consensus not to use it. — HELLKNOWZ ▎TALK 09:24, 22 April 2012 (UTC)
- Yes, and another source of the problem is that the material in Misplaced Pages has loose quality control standards, so we have good reason to be worried about unintended circular attribution. Maybe we need to change our copyright policy to require attribution, to protect us from ourselves. Unscintillating (talk) 11:40, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- I believe a major problem is braoder than circular referencing. There appears to be no concensus on what is a credible source. Many commercial and non commerical websites have authors with dubious credentials and something that is "apparently" a fact gets referenced, added to wikipedia, copied to other sites and we might end up with cocophony of inaccurate information in school text books in a matter of decades. Dainamo (talk) 08:24, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Yes, and another source of the problem is that the material in Misplaced Pages has loose quality control standards, so we have good reason to be worried about unintended circular attribution. Maybe we need to change our copyright policy to require attribution, to protect us from ourselves. Unscintillating (talk) 11:40, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
Cite templates insert current date
When citing in an article, I exclusively use the "reference" icon and/orcite templates on the edit toolbar. When you select "Insert current date", on the citation templates, they insert the European style of dating. This gives the article a consistent style of dating on the references. It never occured to me before today that it should be otherwise, especially when you sign a talk page that also dates in the European style. As soon as Grace Towns Hamilton appeared on the Main page as a DYK today, there was a good-faith edit that switched around some - but not all - of the citation access dates to the American style. The editor was using Template:Use mdy dates I reversed it back, because the Notes section was then inconsistent on the access dates. I have noticed once or twice before (and can't remember the editor) someone coming in behind me doing scatter-shot changes to the date style in the article. You can find a conversation about today's Here. This is not about any specific editor, as far as I am concerned. This is about how future articles are written. If we use the citation templates, we're going to get the European style dates. Nobody can force any editor to sit there and manually override the cite templates on every citation, especially with multitudes of editors not knowing they're supposed to override the automation of it. And while today's edit was in good faith, the hit-and-miss of it messed up the consistency of the access dates on the inline citations. I think this is an inconsistency that should be reconciled to avoid future confusion. And just as a post thought, I used to manually insert the American style dates into the citation, but back then some other editor came along and reversed my American style to insert European style. Maile66 (talk) 18:22, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- My reversal has now been reversed by a different editor. Misplaced Pages needs to get itself together on this issue.Maile66 (talk)
- But, we are "together". See: MOS:DATEUNIFY. I don't understand what the problem is.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 18:42, 21 April 2012 (UTC)- I understand what you mean, because I already went to that. What I'm saying - is that if the citation date style and the body text date style are to be the same, then the citation templates should not have "insert date" at all - but maybe force the editor to type in a date. The insert style is going to insert the European version. That's the inconsistency.Maile66 (talk) 18:46, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- Go talk to the people who are maintaining that tool? What buttons people put on their tools, and how they're implemented, aren't really a Misplaced Pages policy issue (and, incidentally, there was still at least one month d, year formatted reference dates in the version you reverted too...).
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 18:52, 21 April 2012 (UTC)- To set the date style, see Misplaced Pages:refToolbar 2.0#Automatic date insertion. ---— Gadget850 (Ed) 19:21, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- But that would use the same date style on all articles, unless you go back and change it, right? Then it's the same problem, just a different style causing it. However, I don't agree that it's necessary to remove the option entirely to address this. Nikkimaria (talk) 20:48, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- You can ask the refToolbar folks to add an option, but response has been slow. You can try ProveIt GT which works in a similar manner— I can't remember how the date works. I use the script User:Ohconfucius/script/MOSNUM dates to clean up dates in a consistent style. ---— Gadget850 (Ed) 23:11, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- But that would use the same date style on all articles, unless you go back and change it, right? Then it's the same problem, just a different style causing it. However, I don't agree that it's necessary to remove the option entirely to address this. Nikkimaria (talk) 20:48, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- To set the date style, see Misplaced Pages:refToolbar 2.0#Automatic date insertion. ---— Gadget850 (Ed) 19:21, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- Go talk to the people who are maintaining that tool? What buttons people put on their tools, and how they're implemented, aren't really a Misplaced Pages policy issue (and, incidentally, there was still at least one month d, year formatted reference dates in the version you reverted too...).
- I understand what you mean, because I already went to that. What I'm saying - is that if the citation date style and the body text date style are to be the same, then the citation templates should not have "insert date" at all - but maybe force the editor to type in a date. The insert style is going to insert the European version. That's the inconsistency.Maile66 (talk) 18:46, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- But, we are "together". See: MOS:DATEUNIFY. I don't understand what the problem is.
- I don't believe that there is any rule that the dates in the citations and the dates in the article body need to match each other. The rule is that dates in the citations must match the dates in other citations, and that dates in the article text need to match the dates in other parts of the article text (except for direct quotations), but the dates in the citations do not need to match the dates in the article text. You may therefore use mmddyyyy in the article and ddmmyyyy in the citations, if that's what you want to do. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:12, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
A Challenge To The Idea Of Notability In Music
I think your criteria of what's important in music is wrong and is too heavily dependent on commercial considerations.
I think there should be space for musicians that have created a body of work that's already on MusicBrainz perhaps. I strongly feel that less financially successful... less famous... but serious musicians, like my uncle 'Rockie Charlies Merrick', President of Soul... who was known globally...but on a small scale for his live appearances over 40 years... that his recorded work and the work of other serious musicians like him... should be searchable and preserved.
I feel working musicians with verifiable bodies of work should be able to catalogue their works in the Wiki system so they're not lost to future interested persons/researchers.
In my uncle's case, he built up a significant following over 40 years in the industry. I feel that Wiki is missing out on the chance to preserve important things in the interest of the easy way to make a music catalogue. How is it that a teen-ager who did nothing more than sing to a backing track quite badly could be 'notable' but he isn't?
I rediscovered his work last year during a song-a-day-for-a-year project that I successfully completed. I'm here in this discussion room today because I had intended to share my experiences and what I'd learned after spending all of 2011 writing songs everyday and exploring social media from the point-of-view of a novice... learning by doing. Although I studied Music in university, I knew nothing of how to the music industry actually functions, nor did I have experience in social media or anything remotely IT related.
A technical writer that I know wrote a summation of my work and an editor friend of mine was going to submit it on my behalf, when I decided I didn't want to do it that way. My project was non-commercial and after reading your guidelines, I felt unsure of myself. I felt that according to Wiki, I needed to sell lots of copies of my music be notable, but my project wasn't the least bit commercial at the time. And now, regardless of what happens once the songs are remixed and sold in albums or placed by publishing companies, I can't help but feel there's something wrong with the value placed on money and awards.
In my travels, I've discovered world music that may never be cash-cows for the corporate entities which dominate the music industry and most 'significant' music charts. I re-discovered the music of my uncle, who was overlooked for the 'big-time' in his life, but made some incredible Blues music that should not be lost.
There can still be strict guidelines on self promotion, but I feel there's something wrong with the way you judge what's important and what's not important in music.
I told my friend that I would find it hurtful, after studying music to the post-graduate level... to have my work rejected on it's own merit, but to have these same songs accepted once I or someone acting on my behalf sold enough copies of some of them. That's how your system looks to me... closed to anyone that hasn't sold enough copies of their work or won an award that's mainly (not always) based on how many units were sold.
I know this seems like a personal question, but since music is my life, I guess is personal. I think any owner of original copyrighted material should be able to catalogue the facts about their work and connect their Wiki page as composer/songwriter...to their MusicBrainz page. Maybe even sync the two pages with updates?
I just wonder if you might not be able to find a better and more fair way to make musical works searchable regardless of the commercial side of things.
My name is Rhonda Merrick and I wrote this (I admit...long) email to say that I disagree with the way the Wiki community seems to decide what's important and what isn't in music. I'm asking you as a community to find a more fair way to be inclusive rather than exclusionary based on commercial success. I welcome ideas and discussion on this issue.
Thank you. Rhondamerrick (talk) 12:23, 26 April 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Rhondamerrick (talk • contribs) 12:14, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- While the poster may not understand how major of a role "coverage in sources" carries both at the music notability guideline, and in the other route (wp:notability) available, I think that the message asking for self-review is a good one relative to the other parts of the music SNG. North8000 (talk) 12:28, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- (e/c)The notability guidelines for music are essentially an offshoot of the main notability guideline - that is to say, if something has been covered in other sources, we should probably host an article about it. The reason the music guidelines focus largely on commercial success is because commercial success gets written about elsewhere; if an artist has created a platinum-selling album or charted highly on a country's national chart, chances are very good that they have received coverage in reliable sources for doing so. At the end of the day, Misplaced Pages reports on what other sources say; to do otherwise would be original research. To take your uncle as an example; he may not have been as famous as Justin Bieber, but if people out there have written about him (and that Nola.com source is a good start), we can write an article about him too. Feel free to start one; it looks to me as if there are plenty of sources to provide material. Yunshui 雲水 12:30, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- I do however, Strongly Oppose the suggestion that musicians be encouraged to edit their own articles. MusicBrainz, whilst a good idea, is user-generated content and thus not suitable as a source - so why link it? - and suggesting they link to other pages about themselves is just an invitation for floods of linkspam. For every Rockie Charles, there's a spotty teenager with a record deck in his bedroom, who's determined to make a Misplaced Pages page on his alias "DJ Wickedfly Pixieknuckles" to promote his latest mixtape. That is not what we're here for. Yunshui 雲水 12:36, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Rhonda: The Music notability guideline is supposed to be subserviant to general notability policy. If your uncle doesn't meet the music notability guideline, then maybe he meets general notability policy? The fact that a newspaper wrote a full-length article about him, Rockie Charles, the 'President of Soul,' dies at age 67, suggests that he may be notable. Do you have any other newspaper articles about your uncle? Were any books (not self-published) written about him or covered him? A Quest For Knowledge (talk) 12:42, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- BTW, that newspaper article says that Jeff Hannusch interviewed Rockie Charles for his book, "The Soul of New Orleans". If Rockie Charles is covered in that book, that's evidence that he might meet the general notability policy. I also found another newspaper article about him: Rockie Charles, 'President of Soul,' shines in the Blues Tent A Quest For Knowledge (talk) 15:22, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think A Quest For Knowledge's point regarding the General Notability Guidelines is very important and oft overlooked. So to emphasize, if a subject meets the General Notability Guidelines, the special notability guidelines do not matter, they exist primarily to provide advice on what subjects are likely to meet the general guidelines. Monty845 16:08, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- As per WP:N, notability means that a topic is "worthy of notice"<full stop> Unscintillating (talk) 11:53, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think A Quest For Knowledge's point regarding the General Notability Guidelines is very important and oft overlooked. So to emphasize, if a subject meets the General Notability Guidelines, the special notability guidelines do not matter, they exist primarily to provide advice on what subjects are likely to meet the general guidelines. Monty845 16:08, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- BTW, that newspaper article says that Jeff Hannusch interviewed Rockie Charles for his book, "The Soul of New Orleans". If Rockie Charles is covered in that book, that's evidence that he might meet the general notability policy. I also found another newspaper article about him: Rockie Charles, 'President of Soul,' shines in the Blues Tent A Quest For Knowledge (talk) 15:22, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
May sanctions that are actively in effect be removed from a user talk page
You are invited to join the discussion at Misplaced Pages talk:User pages#May sanctions that are actively in effect be removed from a user talk page. Particularly, may an editor remove active block notices and community sanctions from thier talk page? Monty845 17:30, 26 April 2012 (UTC) Template:Z48
Time to make WP:BRD policy?
There have been two cases recently that have troubled me, and I am sure I am not imagining the gradual erosion of consensus editing. I am not a particularly aggressive editor, but I seem to find myself being dragged into more and more edit wars over the last few months. As an example there was a case at Misplaced Pages:Administrators'_noticeboard/Edit_warring#User:71.239.128.44_reported_by_User:Betty_Logan_.28Result:_31h.29 where I was threatened with a block for "tag-team" reverting. In that case, myself and three other editors reverted unsourced SPA edits against a consensus to the article. The problems were clearly discussed on the talk page but the SPA failed to address them; after semi-protection was turned down we continually reverted this editor (even after he was blocked and returned) but ended up being instructed not to make any more reverts to the article ourselves. I am not here to question the admin's interpretation of rules in this case, I freely admit I reverted a few times, but I wasn't really supplied with satisfactory guidance i.e. dispute resolution takes us to a consensus (which we have), it doesn't enforce it; I mean the SPA was reported and SemiP requested, and the situation just wasn't dealt with, which resulted in the continuous reverting. There has also been a more troubling case involving User:Armbrust, which resulted in a week long block and his retirement—I am actually pretty worried about him because he divulged very personal information which seems to indicate he is in a vulnerable state. He severely broke 3rr though, the admin was correct to block him, but in both my case and that of Armbrust we are ending up with situations where hard-working editors are facing blocks, and I am seeing this more and more with decent editors.
The main problem here is that editors are coming along with a total disregard for consensus editing, the defensive editor takes actions to protect the integrity of the article and both editors end up receiving a block. The net effect which we are seeing more and more of is that more productive editors are copping for blocks in trying to retain the integrity of the encyclopedia. It seems to me WP:BRD is a good ethos that if everyone was forced to follow, then Misplaced Pages would generally just be a nicer place to be. If BRD was a policy, we wouldn't have lost a brilliant editor like Armbrust. I'm quite happy to obtain a consensus for my edits, but similarly I don't like seeing my work trashed if I've spent an evening on it. Does anyone?
My proposal (or something to this effect) is to make BRD an active policy, applied to any type of edit that 3RR would apply to. BRD effectively dictates that you need a consensus to initiate changes to the articles. So if someone reverts you, then reverting the edit that reverts you should result in an automatic block. BRD insists that if someone reverts you then you should start a discussion on the talk page; a policy could add if the reverter doesn't respond in 24 hours then you are free to restore the edit, if they do and still challenge it then the policy would insist on a third opinion before you restore the edit. After effectively been barred from taking action to remove unsourced SPA edits from an article, and the loss of a great editor like Armbrust which will be severely detrimental to the Snooker Project (he designs and implements all our templates) I am becoming increasingly tired of pretty much entering a combat zone on virtually every article. I think enforcement of BRD as a policy would just make Misplaced Pages a more pleasant place to be. I think the bottom line is that people join because they like to contribute, and they leave because they hate to see their work trashed, so a move over to true "consensus" editing would be a good thing. Betty Logan (talk) 20:13, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Involved Editor - Regarding the IP incident, I ended up filing an AIV filing before the 3RR filing was processed, which resulted in a 31h block and appears to have settled the problem. In part this was because the last time I filed a 3RR request I was explicitly told by the closing admin that I could have gotten faster results by going through AIV. I don't think it was appropriate for Betty to receive a warning in this instance as multiple editors were reverting a single editor who was not engaging in dialog before reinstituting their contested edits. I reviewed the 3RR filing and I didn't see anything to suggest I had opened myself up to a possible block, but if so then I think it would have been appropriate if I'd been warned directly (i.e. on my Talk page) as well. It also would have been an act of good faith, and I think an argument could be made that no editor should face a 3RR-related block unless they have been explicitly warned beforehand.
BRD policy break 1
- I don't think I'd support making BRD a formal policy, but I certainly think that Betty was operating in good faith and certainly not alone, and this may be a case where either the particular clerk involved needs to be told that their actions were unwarranted, or 3RR handling should be reviwed so that we don't have editors operating in good faith and not unilaterally facing blocks for allegedly being disruptive by reverting a clearly disruptive and unilateral editor. Doniago (talk) 20:47, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- I really appreciate the support Doniago, but ultimately the admin can only interpret policy as he sees it I guess, so I don't really think he should be put under the cosh for a judgment call, he didn't actually block anyone. If not enforcing BRD, I would like to see a better framework in which a consensus can easily be restored without putting editors in the block dock. Another recent case involved a newly minted editor attempting to split an FA rated article (without any discussion) which I reverted twice, and still managed to a get a block warning for that. Betty Logan (talk) 21:07, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- BRD is a good concept to keep in mind whenever edit warring starts to arise, and action can be taken by the community when an editor flagrantly violates it repeatedly, but it is a terrible concept to try to implement as a policy since basically it can be thrown so much around whenever a disagreement comes up. It is effectively one strike, and it would harm new and experienced editors alike against those that like to wikilawyer. --MASEM (t) 20:54, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
Yes, please. Way overdue, in my opinion. Bold edits are fine, reverts are fine, but when people insist on forcing their bold edit in against consensus is when things go off the rails. 28bytes (talk) 21:13, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think a better solution would be to shift the edit warring policy to carve out an exception when one side of the war has made all reasonable attempts to engage in discussion and where the other side has completely ignored those attempts. If you have provided detailed edit summaries on each revert that also direct to a place to discuss, started a talk page conversation, and left the other editor a talk page message, and other editors have agreed with the reversion, until the other editor responds some how, its clear who is following the spirit of the edit warring rule. Monty845 21:15, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- That would certainly be a step in the right direction. If BRD is the type of editing framework we actually want then sanctions should be less severe against those editors that are making a serious attempt to apply it? Betty Logan (talk) 21:18, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Conditional support. There are those who've used BRD as a way of justifying nearly any revert and then saying discussion needs to occur, even when there's no actual objection to the original edit, ie. saying that any show of boldness is reason for reverting, and all edits should be discussed first (believe it or not, I've come up against this more than once, and have had to describe the spirit of BRD to opponents). I'd like it to become policy that a revert of a revert is unacceptable without discussion except in specific cases (the actual spirit of BRD), but the little loophole it provides for arguing down boldness should also explicitly be closed within the policy if it is promoted. Equazcion 21:26, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- I certainly don't want to reduce boldness of the first edit, it's actually my favorite part of the guideline. The problem really is the revert of the revert (sorry if this doesn't come across well in my proposal)—after all it is not the bold edit that starts an edit war, and it is not the revert, it is the revert of the revert that breaks the BRD cycle. Betty Logan (talk) 21:47, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Comment. I've just returned to editing after a long break so am slightly hazy on the "rules" so i may be on the wrong track here. But I've always been puzzled why 3RR should trump BRD for articles with low editing traffic. Many articles have maybe only a couple of active editors at any one time. If the bold editor isn't prepared to D then, other than resorting to cumbersome/ineffective admin processes, the "preserver" of the existing consensus is always going to be the one at most risk of hitting the 3RR buffer first. DeCausa (talk) 21:29, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Very much support Often editors say that BRD is "not policy" and therefore their failure to discuss and multiple reverts are not against policy. BRD is in fact already policy, because you can't do things any other way without edit warring. It just needs the official seal. However, it should be made clear in BRD that it is not an excuse for reverting if there is no dispute concerning content. Also agree that there should be a time limit for discussion: if you revert someone, be ready to discuss. Policy has to be gaming-proof. B——Critical 21:53, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Absolutely not I believe that this is being brought up with the best of intentions, but the side effect of making BRD some sort of policy would be that most changes could be reverted with impunity. We already have enough trouble with ownership issues, there's no need to make them worse. Incidentally, this is a bit of a perennial proposal, and the use of either AN or the VP to try to implement this is not the best of ideas. This discussion should really be on Misplaced Pages talk:BOLD, revert, discuss cycle, where similar proposals have failed to gain consensus for years now. There are several archived discussions that I encourage supporters to skim through as soon as possible.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 22:10, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- The alternative is to allow "bold" editors to enforce their edits by warring them in up to 3RR. B——Critical 22:14, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- I believe this is part of a much larger problem of people dismissing sound reasoning in favour of the "official policy" seal of approval. BRD and also the MoS are based on reasoning, which means that anytime someone decides to do things differently, they need to have an overriding reasoning for that particular occasion (which may well exist). But instead of engaging in honest discussion and thereby being forced to explain their reasoning (which may as well not exist), many simply dismiss the rationales collected in the MoS and pages like BRD. Imho, the solution cannot be declaring all of those pages policy. The solution would be to elevate the status of sound reasoning and specifically require overriding rationales for any departure from the MoS or other pages. The best place to set that in stone would be IAR: If a rule prevents you from improving or maintaining Misplaced Pages, ignore it, but be prepared to present the reasoning for your decisions. --213.168.72.198 (talk) 22:13, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose, because we already have WP:EDITWAR and we don't need more than that. On the other hand, I would support the creation of a policy that mandated an instant, irrevokable, lifetime ban from all Wikimedia sites as soon as someone invokes the argument "It isn't a policy, so I don't have to follow it." That is the weakest defense of one's actions. Making this a policy will not change such behavior, but it will add to the confusing network of Misplaced Pages policies which we're allowed to ignore if it makes the encyclopedia better anyway. Seriously, if someone claims they don't need to discuss an edit which is in dispute because BRD isn't a policy, then they have no business at Misplaced Pages anyways, regardless of what this page is labeled. --Jayron32 22:19, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- I very much agree with your sentiment, but let's be honest here: this has never been enforced, and most likely never will be in any meaningful way. Heck, with the direction things are going, the only remaining policies to be considered binding and properly enforced will soon be CIVIL and NPA. I'm an exopedian, but even I can clearly see that we as a community have never been further from reason-based sanity. Throwing people out for refusing to enter honest and open discussion of their edits sounds too good to be true. And unfortunately, it is. Pretty soon, even inquiring about an edit will be regarded as "harassment". You know it's true. --213.168.72.198 (talk) 22:27, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Stongly oppose. I have no doubt of Betty's good faith. She is a good editor. I have been in situations such as this, but the answer is true collaboration and not just good faith or consensus. This is not a criticism of Betty, just a reminder that consensus changes and cannot always justify as a revert. The B part of BRD is bold editing and by applying BRD as policy and not just an essay suggestion you then remove the incentive to change consensus and edit boldly. It also become a "directive" which goes against the spirit of Misplaced Pages and number three of the Five pillars which states: "Misplaced Pages is free content that anyone can edit, use, modify, and distribute. Respect copyright laws, and do not plagiarize sources. Non-free content is allowed under fair use, but strive to find free alternatives to any media or content that you wish to add to Misplaced Pages. Since all your contributions are freely licensed to the public, no editor owns any article; all of your contributions can and will be mercilessly edited and redistributed" That last part would have to be changed. Are we saying that we can no longer be merciless with our bold editing if we can justify them. Forget for the moment that many editors will ignore even logical and well thought out, to policy, arguments that go against what they want. This is a very important part of Misplaced Pages, and yes it can be ugly and can be intense but this is directing more than conduct, but personal behavior. Yes, there can be some very aggressive editors...and there are just as many passive aggresive editors and those that use Notice Boards as a regular routine in their edting behavior and conduct....BRD as policy will create such havoc as this site has never seen on notice boards. Its not a baby step. It's a drastic step and it's main aim itself is controling behavior. Directing it...not just guiding it.--Amadscientist (talk) 19:35, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
BRD policy break 2
- Jayron, the problem with EDITWAR is that it just doesn't seem to work that well. If you look at the case I was involved in (four editors reverting a SPA that had previously been blocked and attempting to engage him in discussion), all five of use effectively "edit-warred" but circumstances for the reverts were radically different. One set of reverts represented a consensus, and were accompanied by attempts to engage the SPA, while the otehrs were a unilateral action making no attempt to address the policy concerns of their edit. And while 3RR is a bright red line, I've notice it being smudged a lot recently too, with a new mantra "three reverts is not a right". It seems to me that we want editors editing within the BRD framework, and I don't think the current guidelines actually complement that ethos. Even a small change to the 3RR rule, so that multilateral action backed by consensus would be permitted to revert an editor operating unilaterally would be a huge improvement. If the lone editor feels he is being gamed by a tag-team then he can always request a 3O or and RFC. Betty Logan (talk) 22:33, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- If the lone editor feels he is being gamed by a tag-team then he can always request a 3O or and RFC. -- Allowing tag-team reverts would make this despicable and already far too widespread practice completely impossible to counter -- especially for less than perfectly well-established users. No new user even knows about RFC, let alone has the time and patience to do that in order to defend an edit. You might as well deactivate IP editing and new registrations. DR is a farcically impossible obstacle course as it is, gamed to oblivion and beyond. All it takes is a healthy measure of intellectual dishonesty, and networking. Just goad the newbie into a violation of CIVIL and/or NPA, and you will never have to answer to any of their valid points. This is already the reality of how Misplaced Pages "works". --213.168.72.198 (talk) 22:46, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- People (meaning the general community) don't pay much attention to RFC's either, aside from the "big ones". How many people are aware of Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/All?
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 23:02, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- People (meaning the general community) don't pay much attention to RFC's either, aside from the "big ones". How many people are aware of Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/All?
- If the lone editor feels he is being gamed by a tag-team then he can always request a 3O or and RFC. -- Allowing tag-team reverts would make this despicable and already far too widespread practice completely impossible to counter -- especially for less than perfectly well-established users. No new user even knows about RFC, let alone has the time and patience to do that in order to defend an edit. You might as well deactivate IP editing and new registrations. DR is a farcically impossible obstacle course as it is, gamed to oblivion and beyond. All it takes is a healthy measure of intellectual dishonesty, and networking. Just goad the newbie into a violation of CIVIL and/or NPA, and you will never have to answer to any of their valid points. This is already the reality of how Misplaced Pages "works". --213.168.72.198 (talk) 22:46, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Jayron, the problem with EDITWAR is that it just doesn't seem to work that well. If you look at the case I was involved in (four editors reverting a SPA that had previously been blocked and attempting to engage him in discussion), all five of use effectively "edit-warred" but circumstances for the reverts were radically different. One set of reverts represented a consensus, and were accompanied by attempts to engage the SPA, while the otehrs were a unilateral action making no attempt to address the policy concerns of their edit. And while 3RR is a bright red line, I've notice it being smudged a lot recently too, with a new mantra "three reverts is not a right". It seems to me that we want editors editing within the BRD framework, and I don't think the current guidelines actually complement that ethos. Even a small change to the 3RR rule, so that multilateral action backed by consensus would be permitted to revert an editor operating unilaterally would be a huge improvement. If the lone editor feels he is being gamed by a tag-team then he can always request a 3O or and RFC. Betty Logan (talk) 22:33, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Support. The event Betty's went through is the second time in less than a week (see Misplaced Pages:Administrators'_noticeboard/IncidentArchive748#What are legitimate grounds for a precipitate block for edit warring.3F) where it looks as though admins looked only at the edit history of the articles before deciding on a course of action. I don't know which is more worrisome - deciding that edits reverting SPA POV pushers spread out over several days or weeks are a violation of the 3rr rule - or not examining the talk page to see that Misplaced Pages's guidelines about using discussion were being followed by the editors who are trying to protect the article. The attitude that one SPA account can edit against an established consensus is also troubling. There may be better solutions that come up from this discussion but until admins are willing to be more thorough in investigating edit conflicts making BRD policy is a good place to start. Ohms Law as you should well know Consensus can change and just because those of discussions of the past rejected it does no mean that it can't be discussed again. How are good editors of long standing supposed to protect themselves against lazy admins - or worse as in the case from the 20th - admins. Jayron the current EW policy is being poorly applied and isn;t protecting good faith editors. This problem Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard#Loss of more and more and more established editors and administrators can only get worse when long term editors are treated poorly in favor of SPA POV pushers. MarnetteD | Talk 22:22, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- That isn't a policy problem though, it's a behavior issue. Talk to the admins who are involved in these things.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 22:35, 26 April 2012 (UTC)- That doesn't do much good when the admins refuse to discuss it as was the case in the events of April 20th (especially when they go offline just after the block) or act like Betty did something wrong in the case that started this thread. Nobody is asking admins to be perfect but this trend of not being thorough is doing damage and editors need something to protect them. MarnetteD | Talk 22:41, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- True, it's a behavioral issue, but one that seems to persist. We could say it's something that requires further educating people as issues arise, but that means continually having to go through the same old arguments. The situation appears to be that people only respect actual policies, and right now the correct behavior isn't adequately described in policy. BRD represents the elaboration we need. I don't think it's unreasonable to include it as an extension of the edit warring policy, to illustrate what people need to do to adhere to policy in further detail, the same way RS could be said to extend V (as a crude example). Equazcion 22:42, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- So, we go through the same old arguments. Big deal. That's better than the alternative. Incidentally, this is one of those "same old arguments" too, and I personally don't understand the continuous desire to halt discussion about these sorts of issues. Well, actually, I do understand it, I just don't think it's a good idea to follow through on that thinking.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 22:58, 26 April 2012 (UTC)- Well, being that they're the same, and they're old, and policies are meant to illustrate accepted practices so that they don't have to be continually described to people -- I think that's the reason. Equazcion 23:00, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- Here's the thing though: a lot of policy already covers the topics that often come up. The "problem" is that the policy coverage doesn't match the personal views of the person who's trying to make a case (if they're even aware of the policy). Aside from that, policy doesn't really matter anyway, which is to say that it's not supposed to be legislation.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 23:12, 26 April 2012 (UTC)- Sure, it's not supposed to be, but it is respected as such in the vast majority of situations. This argument (and many others here, I'm noticing) could be used to simply say no more policies should be created. Is that what the issue really is? Policy doesn't work and since people can abuse them we shouldn't be making them at all? I don't think this is logical. Policies DO work in most cases. There are people who abuse and ignore them, and those cases end up in the spotlight, but on the whole, they help avert most of the issues they're intended to. Equazcion 23:17, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- I'll gladly say it outright: no new policies should be created. Unless something extraordinary happens, or something fundamental changes, I can't imagine anything new that could be policy. I also don't think that a vocal minority of people who want policy to be legislation (or noobs who assume that it is) should be a reason to actually make it into legislation. If we have to jump through hoops the make edits, then nobody will make edits at all. Which brings up a point: how in the world would a BRD policy be enforceable? Would people patrol Special:RecentChanges looking for reversions, or something? But, I agree with the fact that existing policy works. Adjusting policy due to the unusual "spotlight" circumstances such as the ones that prompted this proposal is generally a bad idea, in my opinion.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 00:04, 27 April 2012 (UTC)- This one's only in the spotlight because of this proposal. Edit warring, even if it ever gets to the EW noticeboard, is generally not, and that's where this would help -- the vast numbers of times these situations occur in everyday editing. BRD doesn't constitute jumping through hoops -- it's basically already what we all have to do. There would be no special patrol required, any more than an NPA patrol is. It would just be something constructive editors can point to in a dispute. Equazcion 00:10, 27 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- It's possible that I'm wrong, but the main motivation for this proposal seems to be two similar AN/I incidents that have occurred in the last couple of days. I agree that BRD doesn't constitude jumping through hoops, but that's largely because it's not policy. If you read it through the prism of it being policy, it would clearly entail quite a bit of jumping though hoops (which is why it's current and historical content emphasizes the fact that it's not appropriate in all situations).
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 02:28, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- It's possible that I'm wrong, but the main motivation for this proposal seems to be two similar AN/I incidents that have occurred in the last couple of days. I agree that BRD doesn't constitude jumping through hoops, but that's largely because it's not policy. If you read it through the prism of it being policy, it would clearly entail quite a bit of jumping though hoops (which is why it's current and historical content emphasizes the fact that it's not appropriate in all situations).
- This one's only in the spotlight because of this proposal. Edit warring, even if it ever gets to the EW noticeboard, is generally not, and that's where this would help -- the vast numbers of times these situations occur in everyday editing. BRD doesn't constitute jumping through hoops -- it's basically already what we all have to do. There would be no special patrol required, any more than an NPA patrol is. It would just be something constructive editors can point to in a dispute. Equazcion 00:10, 27 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- I'll gladly say it outright: no new policies should be created. Unless something extraordinary happens, or something fundamental changes, I can't imagine anything new that could be policy. I also don't think that a vocal minority of people who want policy to be legislation (or noobs who assume that it is) should be a reason to actually make it into legislation. If we have to jump through hoops the make edits, then nobody will make edits at all. Which brings up a point: how in the world would a BRD policy be enforceable? Would people patrol Special:RecentChanges looking for reversions, or something? But, I agree with the fact that existing policy works. Adjusting policy due to the unusual "spotlight" circumstances such as the ones that prompted this proposal is generally a bad idea, in my opinion.
- Sure, it's not supposed to be, but it is respected as such in the vast majority of situations. This argument (and many others here, I'm noticing) could be used to simply say no more policies should be created. Is that what the issue really is? Policy doesn't work and since people can abuse them we shouldn't be making them at all? I don't think this is logical. Policies DO work in most cases. There are people who abuse and ignore them, and those cases end up in the spotlight, but on the whole, they help avert most of the issues they're intended to. Equazcion 23:17, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- Here's the thing though: a lot of policy already covers the topics that often come up. The "problem" is that the policy coverage doesn't match the personal views of the person who's trying to make a case (if they're even aware of the policy). Aside from that, policy doesn't really matter anyway, which is to say that it's not supposed to be legislation.
- Well, being that they're the same, and they're old, and policies are meant to illustrate accepted practices so that they don't have to be continually described to people -- I think that's the reason. Equazcion 23:00, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- So, we go through the same old arguments. Big deal. That's better than the alternative. Incidentally, this is one of those "same old arguments" too, and I personally don't understand the continuous desire to halt discussion about these sorts of issues. Well, actually, I do understand it, I just don't think it's a good idea to follow through on that thinking.
- True, it's a behavioral issue, but one that seems to persist. We could say it's something that requires further educating people as issues arise, but that means continually having to go through the same old arguments. The situation appears to be that people only respect actual policies, and right now the correct behavior isn't adequately described in policy. BRD represents the elaboration we need. I don't think it's unreasonable to include it as an extension of the edit warring policy, to illustrate what people need to do to adhere to policy in further detail, the same way RS could be said to extend V (as a crude example). Equazcion 22:42, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- That doesn't do much good when the admins refuse to discuss it as was the case in the events of April 20th (especially when they go offline just after the block) or act like Betty did something wrong in the case that started this thread. Nobody is asking admins to be perfect but this trend of not being thorough is doing damage and editors need something to protect them. MarnetteD | Talk 22:41, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- That isn't a policy problem though, it's a behavior issue. Talk to the admins who are involved in these things.
- Oppose. WP:BRD is advice directed toward editors seeking to follow best practices and minimize problems. Such individuals typically are inclined to abide by its spirit (regardless of how the page is tagged), so making it a policy wouldn't change their behavior. It would, however, invite exploitation by parties more interested in rules-lawyering than in peaceful collaboration.
Disruptive editing (including edit warring) already is proscribed (and can result in blocks when necessary). If WP:EW isn't being adequately enforced, the solution is to take steps to ensure that it is, not to transform a helpful rule of thumb into a blunt instrument with which to accost fellow editors. —David Levy 22:49, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- My proposal is just a starting point David. Have you any suggestions for how EW may be adapted to encourage editing more in the style of what we would like to see. If you take my case, four editors reverting a SPA that was adding unsourced POV material, being prohibited from reverting the SPA despite a consensus and despite engaging the SPA in discussion on the talk page, do you think blocking any of the editors reverting the SPA is really justified? If not, what alteration would you make so that admins don't administer the rule to that effect? Betty Logan (talk) 23:15, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Whether the issue you describe reflects flaws at WP:EW or merely the policy's misapplication is something that should be discussed. At this juncture, I have no solution to suggest, but I'm interested in working toward one. —David Levy 23:30, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- My proposal is just a starting point David. Have you any suggestions for how EW may be adapted to encourage editing more in the style of what we would like to see. If you take my case, four editors reverting a SPA that was adding unsourced POV material, being prohibited from reverting the SPA despite a consensus and despite engaging the SPA in discussion on the talk page, do you think blocking any of the editors reverting the SPA is really justified? If not, what alteration would you make so that admins don't administer the rule to that effect? Betty Logan (talk) 23:15, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
BRD policy break 3
- Oppose. Well meaning, but introduces a second mover advantage that would actually aid POV warriors and editors with page ownership issues in many cases. Resolute 22:54, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Yes. It amounts to taking a blunt object or pointy stick and turning it into a magic sword for people to yield the moment a bold edit is made. It puts a weapon in the hands of the "owner" of articles.
- Oppose – Why in the hell do we need yet another policy to bolster an already existing policy (Misplaced Pages:Edit warring) that is sorely in need of either total reassessment and overhaul? Fix the current edit warring policy before introducing anything else. Also, as Masem said, it would only be another policy people will likely wikilawyer or abuse. --MuZemike 23:00, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Are you all not reading what we are writing? Or are you just ignoring it? The EW policy did not work in either case we have brought to this discussion as two editors who weren't edit warring were accused of it and one was blocked. Please give us a solution as to how you are going to prevent this. MarnetteD | Talk 23:07, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Did you read the message to which you responded?
ResoluteMuZemike explicitly acknowledged that Misplaced Pages:Edit warring is sorely in need of total reassessment and overhaul (i.e. that it's broken and should be fixed). Opposition to a proposed solution isn't tantamount to denial that a problem exists. —David Levy 23:18, 26 April 2012 (UTC)- Actually I did and I was not responding to MuZemike's post. That is why I used the term you all rather than typing in his name. There have been several posts acting like our concerns are not worth considering. I can't help that my post came immediately after his anymore then I can help your misinterpretation of it. MarnetteD | Talk 23:35, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm sorry about the confusion, but you indented your message as a reply to MuZemike (who explicitly referenced the policy to which you referred), so I'm not sure how you expected anyone to realize that he/she was excluded from "you all" (or, for that matter, that "all" didn't actually mean "all").
- To which users were you referring? Who has stated that nothing should be done to address the concerns (as opposed to opining that the proposed change is not a good solution)? —David Levy 00:06, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- BTW Dave Resolute didn't make that edit that you think he did. Easy mistake to make though so don;t worry about it. MarnetteD | Talk 23:45, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Indeed, I typed the wrong editor's name. (I've corrected that above.) —David Levy 00:06, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Actually I did and I was not responding to MuZemike's post. That is why I used the term you all rather than typing in his name. There have been several posts acting like our concerns are not worth considering. I can't help that my post came immediately after his anymore then I can help your misinterpretation of it. MarnetteD | Talk 23:35, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Did you read the message to which you responded?
- Also it is certainly preferable to keep SPA POV editors confined to the talk page rather than letting them do damage to an article and BRD does that. MarnetteD | Talk 23:09, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- ...and those are just examples of a rather prominent problem. Equazcion 23:10, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- If a group of editors formulate a consensus for an article, and make genuine attempts to engage a unilateral editor in discussion which yields very little effect, then there should be some criteria in EW protecting them from potential blocks. An admin's discretion doesn't cut it, because discretion is actually a freedom to interpret the rules either way. EW as it stands reflects too little faith in editors to edit according to policy. If consensus is king, then itsurely trumps unilateral editing which is soemthing EW should account for. Betty Logan (talk) 23:36, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- So let's discuss improving WP:EW. —David Levy 00:06, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Basically EW really needs to be worded so that an article consensus isn't vulnerable to a SPA. An unilateral view cannot form a consensus (whether it is right or not), so the onus should be on the solo editor to either find someone who backs his position or to stop attempting to push through the same edit that has been rejected, either through his own volition or by a sanction. If someone supports his position then you can go down the dispute resolution route, but I don't see the point in wasting everyone's time by taking a SPA to DR when a regular editorial consensus on an article talk page can take care of it. If an admin feels that the SPA's case isn't being fairly heard, he can advise him on a course of action, but I don't think an admin should be able to administer blocks to a multilateral effort to enforce an article consensus against a SPA. Betty Logan (talk) 00:54, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- So let's discuss improving WP:EW. —David Levy 00:06, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Are you all not reading what we are writing? Or are you just ignoring it? The EW policy did not work in either case we have brought to this discussion as two editors who weren't edit warring were accused of it and one was blocked. Please give us a solution as to how you are going to prevent this. MarnetteD | Talk 23:07, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose BRD itself says that it shouldn't be used in all cases, and that it's only likely to work in the hands of a skilled editor. If we label it as a policy, we're going to see people insist that it always be followed. In effect, we'd be imposing 0RR rules on all bold editors. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:39, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Which is what we should do, yes, that's the point: if you do a bold edit and get reverted, then discuss rather than just reverting again. OR ELSE, revise the definition of edit warring so that the person who reverted the first time is not edit warring when they revert a second time. B——Critical 23:41, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- 0rr- Hmm that means no edit warring. Sounds good to me. MarnetteD | Talk 23:45, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- You don't understand why the indiscriminate enforcement of such a rule would cause problems?
- Someone attempting to own an article would effectively be able to dictate that nothing be changed without discussion. —David Levy 00:06, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- We may as well enable Flagged Revisions.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 00:08, 27 April 2012 (UTC) - So the alternative is to let people edit war changes into articles? Give a good alternative rather than opposing this. B——Critical 00:16, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I (and others) already have: WP:EW. If it's broken, let's fix it. —David Levy 00:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- We may as well enable Flagged Revisions.
- Which is what we should do, yes, that's the point: if you do a bold edit and get reverted, then discuss rather than just reverting again. OR ELSE, revise the definition of edit warring so that the person who reverted the first time is not edit warring when they revert a second time. B——Critical 23:41, 26 April 2012 (UTC)
- Comment I think !votes here should reflect specific opposition to BRD becoming policy, rather than a generic opposition to policy creation in general. "It would give people something new to wikilawyer" really just shows a lack of faith in the concept of policies to begin with. If you don't think policies work and creating new ones causes more harm than good, that's your prerogative I suppose, but I just want to shed some light on what such statements are really saying. Reiterating my comment from above, some people will ignore and abuse policies, and those are the cases that hit the spotlight. I'll be audacious enough to say that bureaucrats, checkusers, arbs, and other "higher-ups" will be used to dealing with the headaches those situations create, and will therefore be more inclined to want to avert those than the lower-level editing troubles most editors get into every day, where having BRD as policy would be a tremendous help. Policies generally do work, and while potential for abuse is a valid concern, that's far from all there is to consider here. We shouldn't be letting potential for abuse of policies in general scare us away from creating any new policies altogether. Equazcion 23:49, 26 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- We are citing specific ways that the proposed policy would be harmful. It isn't a matter of opening the door to loopholes. The intended effect, as described, would be problematic. —David Levy 00:06, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- David, I could be wrong but your opposition comment seems to only point to the potential for the abuse of new policies. Could you tell me which part was not? Equazcion 00:15, 27 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- No, I was very careful to not use the word "abuse". I referred to "exploitation" (because said behavior, while problematic, would fall under the policy's intended effect). You evidently overlooked my WP:OWN example (something already mentioned by others). As I noted, it isn't a loophole. Under the proposed policy, a user would be entitled to veto all changes to an article and dictate that they not be restored without discussion. —David Levy 00:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- What would you say should be done instead, in those situations? Another revert? Equazcion 00:49, 27 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- In most cases, probably not. My point isn't that BRD is bad or shouldn't be applied. It functions well as advice to bold editors, not a policy invoked against them.
Under the current setup, reasonable objections lead to discussion. (And if they don't, further action can be taken.) Under the proposed setup, someone attempting to own an article would be entitled to effectively dictate that nothing be changed without discussion — something that few would attempt now (because they'd rightly be told that this is not BRD's intended effect).
That's my objection. The proposed change would transform BRD from a helpful rule of thumb to harmful rule of law. I don't indiscriminately oppose the creation of new policies; I oppose the creation of this policy. —David Levy 01:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- In most cases, probably not. My point isn't that BRD is bad or shouldn't be applied. It functions well as advice to bold editors, not a policy invoked against them.
- What would you say should be done instead, in those situations? Another revert? Equazcion 00:49, 27 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- No, I was very careful to not use the word "abuse". I referred to "exploitation" (because said behavior, while problematic, would fall under the policy's intended effect). You evidently overlooked my WP:OWN example (something already mentioned by others). As I noted, it isn't a loophole. Under the proposed policy, a user would be entitled to veto all changes to an article and dictate that they not be restored without discussion. —David Levy 00:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- David, I could be wrong but your opposition comment seems to only point to the potential for the abuse of new policies. Could you tell me which part was not? Equazcion 00:15, 27 Apr 2012 (UTC)
- We are citing specific ways that the proposed policy would be harmful. It isn't a matter of opening the door to loopholes. The intended effect, as described, would be problematic. —David Levy 00:06, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- That was so perfectly worded and expressed, I take my hat off to you David Levy. Thank you!--Amadscientist (talk) 20:55, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- So how could BRD be changed to address this concern, but also address the concerns of those wishing it to become policy? B——Critical 01:34, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't know. If someone comes up with a way, I'll reconsider my position. (I don't believe that making BRD a policy is desirable, but I'll keep an open mind.) —David Levy 01:46, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- So how could BRD be changed to address this concern, but also address the concerns of those wishing it to become policy? B——Critical 01:34, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- BRD specifically should not be policy, for reasons that myself and several others have specified.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 00:07, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm tired of getting the short end of the stick because other people are aggressive. How do you force someone to have a discussion instead of edit warring their changes into an article? Answer me that and I won't need to support BRD as policy. B——Critical 00:19, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The answer has been provided: fix WP:EW (assuming that it's broken). —David Levy 00:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- So that's your answer? Hand waiving? I'm talking reality/practicality here. Let's hear your fix, then we will know if BRD shouldn't be policy. B——Critical 01:11, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- My recommendation, as stated above, is to discuss WP:EW's flaws and determine how best to eliminate them. As I wrote, "at this juncture, I have no solution to suggest, but I'm interested in working toward one." My inability to produce a magic fix doesn't strip me of the right to criticise proposals with which I disagree. "Let's hear your fix, then we will know if BRD shouldn't be policy" relies on the premise that an idea automatically is good unless and until a better one is presented, which simply isn't true. —David Levy 01:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- So that's your answer? Hand waiving? I'm talking reality/practicality here. Let's hear your fix, then we will know if BRD shouldn't be policy. B——Critical 01:11, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
BRD policy break 4
- Support In fact replace WP:EW with this. Sure it will give the advantage to content creators over drive-by editors, but they should have the advantage anyway. Anything that encourages discussion sooner is a good thing in my opinion. AIRcorn (talk) 00:47, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Shall we delete WP:OWN too? —David Levy 01:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- No. If this is a policy WP:EW would be redundant. However, WP:OWN would still he relevant. Probably even more so. AIRcorn (talk) 01:48, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The proposed policy would create an entitlement to indiscriminately revert any and all undiscussed edits. How is this compatible with WP:OWN? —David Levy 02:25, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The possibility of that (which I think is very low) is the reason we don't want to delete OWN and why I said it would be even more relevant. Continued disruption by demanding every change goes through you should result in some sort of sanction. AIRcorn (talk) 03:10, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I disagree that the likelihood is low. I've come across many editors who would jump at the opportunity.
My point is that the proposed policy is incompatible with WP:OWN. Reinstating a bold edit, no matter why it was reverted (not that we can read editors' minds), would "result in an automatic block".
A user needn't preemptively threaten to revert any and all edits performed to the article without discussion. He/she might genuinely believe that his/her version is perfect and that most or all changes (even if examined on an individual basis) are bad. I've encountered this attitude on many occasions.
In its current form, BRD relies on goodwill, which eventually is exhausted. (If someone is exhibiting ownership, others will be less inclined to extend the courtesy.) Therefore, the potential for disruptive exploitation, particularly as a matter of course, is highly limited. Editors know that they can't get away with knee-jerk reversions of every change with which they disagree, so they have incentive to seek out alternative solutions (such as compromise editing and discussion without reversion).
Under the proposed policy, if someone dislikes a bold edit, he/she is unequivocally encouraged to revert it; this action is guaranteed to stand (pending the outcome of a mandatory discussion), so there's no incentive to do otherwise. —David Levy 04:51, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I disagree that the likelihood is low. I've come across many editors who would jump at the opportunity.
- The possibility of that (which I think is very low) is the reason we don't want to delete OWN and why I said it would be even more relevant. Continued disruption by demanding every change goes through you should result in some sort of sanction. AIRcorn (talk) 03:10, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- For that matter, how does it "give the advantage to content creators over drive-by editors"? It seems to me that it gives the advantage to the drive-by reverter: Aircorn boldly adds something great; I, possibly out of serious ignorance, revert it—and Aircorn is unable to re-add the information without discussing it. With me, a person utterly failing to keep up with my watchlist and therefore not likely to respond promptly to his discussion efforts. Who has the power in that situation? I don't think it's the content creator. WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:41, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- That hypothetical situation can go the other way too, where I add something crap and you have to jump through the 3RR hoops to get it put right. If you don't keep up with your watchlist and I gamed 3rr it is possible that I could keep my bad (possibly dangerous depending on the article) change in there for a long time. Dy definition the content creators are the ones who have put the original information in the articles so they get the "first move advantage". I would think most content creators would keep a close eye on there creations (you may be an exception). AIRcorn (talk) 03:10, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The kind of "bad" edits which you're referring to do tend to create a lot of heat and light, but as frustrating as that can be it's not really a bad thing. We tend to do a pretty good job dealing with those situations.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 03:25, 27 April 2012 (UTC) - The "first move advantage" to which to refer sounds an awful lot like ownership. While that would be one side of the coin, I agree with WhatamIdoing that another, equally problematic side would favor drive-by reverters over the content creators whose interests you seek to protect.
No one should be handed such an "advantage". WP:BRD works well as rule of thumb applied by conscientious editors when the circumstances dictate, not as a rule of law invoked against others. —David Levy 04:51, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The kind of "bad" edits which you're referring to do tend to create a lot of heat and light, but as frustrating as that can be it's not really a bad thing. We tend to do a pretty good job dealing with those situations.
- That hypothetical situation can go the other way too, where I add something crap and you have to jump through the 3RR hoops to get it put right. If you don't keep up with your watchlist and I gamed 3rr it is possible that I could keep my bad (possibly dangerous depending on the article) change in there for a long time. Dy definition the content creators are the ones who have put the original information in the articles so they get the "first move advantage". I would think most content creators would keep a close eye on there creations (you may be an exception). AIRcorn (talk) 03:10, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The proposed policy would create an entitlement to indiscriminately revert any and all undiscussed edits. How is this compatible with WP:OWN? —David Levy 02:25, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- No. If this is a policy WP:EW would be redundant. However, WP:OWN would still he relevant. Probably even more so. AIRcorn (talk) 01:48, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Shall we delete WP:OWN too? —David Levy 01:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose I have seen far to many cases where BRD has been used to good effect by editors to enforce ownership of an article, forcing a reasonable change to the talk page the discussion of which is then filibustered out. Mtking 00:54, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- And your solution to this is edit warring. Not a good choice. B——Critical 01:13, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- If BRD is being invoked as a means of owning an article (probably a relatively infrequent occurrence now, but one that the proposed change would encourage), it's likely that the first reversion otherwise wouldn't take place. Only when we hand editors a license to indiscriminately revert any and all undiscussed edits will they feel entitled to do so. —David Levy 01:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- This is a legit concern and has to be addressed. Anyone got any idea what could be added to BRD so that making it policy would not promote OWNership? B——Critical 01:35, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Ownership is only a problem when someone fights to keep their version of an article against consensus. It is not a problem when defending an article you have had major input in against a change you disagree with applied by a single editor. BRD itself is not necessarily a problem for ownership, the problem arises if after the discussion part the owner still insists on there version despite consensus. All it does is force the person invoking the change to show consensus for it. This is surely much better than the back and forth reversions with increasingly heated edit summaries. AIRcorn (talk) 02:03, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Ownership is only a problem when someone fights to keep their version of an article against consensus.
- No, that isn't the only circumstance in which it's a problem. Please see Misplaced Pages:Ownership of articles#Examples of ownership behavior.
- "The editor might claim, whether openly or implicitly, the right to review any changes before they can be added to the article."
- The proposed policy would create an entitlement to revert any and all changes that haven't been reviewed.
- It is not a problem when defending an article you have had major input in against a change you disagree with applied by a single editor.
- It's a problem when this is done indiscriminately (as the proposed policy would permit and encourage). Imagine having to obtain advance approval for each and every edit. Many users won't bother to go through the hassle, effectively affirming the invoking parties' ownership. ("I'm not allowed to change anything without discussion? Never mind. Have it your way.") —David Levy 02:25, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't think it would create an entitlement or encourage indiscriminate use. If it is gamed (and most policies here can be) then there should be sanctions taken against the individual. I also think you underestimate the majority of the editors here, most welcome improvements to articles on their watchlist. Currently if two people feel strongly about a point they are going to either revert war or ideally take it to the talk page. A policy encouraging them to take it to the talk page early in the piece is a good thing. AIRcorn (talk) 03:25, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't think it would create an entitlement or encourage indiscriminate use.
- I disagree. I've encountered far too many owners (whose control was limited only by the absence of a policy like this one) to believe otherwise.
- If it is gamed (and most policies here can be) then there should be sanctions taken against the individual.
- I agree that most policies can be gamed. My point is that the behavior that I describe wouldn't constitute gaming; it would fall under the explicit purpose of the proposed policy (to mandate that any contested bold edit not be restored without discussion). There are editors who genuinely believe that their versions of articles are perfect and that most or all changes (even if examined on an individual basis) are bad. Under the current setup, they know that they can't get away with knee-jerk reversions of every change with which they disagree (because BRD isn't mandatory, so others aren't required to tolerate such behavior), so they have incentive to seek out alternative solutions (such as compromise editing and discussion without reversion).
- Under the proposed policy, if someone dislikes a bold edit, he/she is unequivocally encouraged to revert it; this action is guaranteed to stand (pending the outcome of a mandatory discussion), so there's no incentive not to.
- I also think you underestimate the majority of the editors here, most welcome improvements to articles on their watchlist.
- No, I don't disagree with that. But it only takes one owner for the problem to arise.
- Currently if two people feel strongly about a point they are going to either revert war or ideally take it to the talk page. A policy encouraging them to take it to the talk page early in the piece is a good thing.
- And that's why we have WP:EW. If it's inadequate, let's improve it. —David Levy 04:51, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't think it would create an entitlement or encourage indiscriminate use. If it is gamed (and most policies here can be) then there should be sanctions taken against the individual. I also think you underestimate the majority of the editors here, most welcome improvements to articles on their watchlist. Currently if two people feel strongly about a point they are going to either revert war or ideally take it to the talk page. A policy encouraging them to take it to the talk page early in the piece is a good thing. AIRcorn (talk) 03:25, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- If BRD is being invoked as a means of owning an article (probably a relatively infrequent occurrence now, but one that the proposed change would encourage), it's likely that the first reversion otherwise wouldn't take place. Only when we hand editors a license to indiscriminately revert any and all undiscussed edits will they feel entitled to do so. —David Levy 01:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- And your solution to this is edit warring. Not a good choice. B——Critical 01:13, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Strong oppose. WP:BRD is a bad advice (even as an essay) because it encourage edit warring. If someone was bold, this is not a reason for reverting his/her edit. Talk first, then make a compromise edit. Do not revert. My very best wishes (talk) 02:45, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- What you're saying is that BOLD is bad advice. Do you honestly think every single edit should be discussed beforehand? Asking since I am regularly being reverted even on the (imho) least controversial of edits (e.g. straighforward formatting edits following clearcut MoS advice) and find myself having to subsequently explain the edit (i.e. "discuss with") the reverting editor. --195.14.222.182 (talk) 11:46, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- No, I am telling that to be BOLD ("B") is fine, but reverting prior to discussion ("R") is frequently not. In most cases this should be a "BDC" cycle: "Bold-Discuss-Compromise". My very best wishes (talk) 14:14, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I haven't seen BRD cited where the D doesn't happen virtually simultaneously with the R. The discussion is usually started by the reverter. On the other hand, asking someone to compromise after making a bold edit is a good way to empower SPA's to be able to insist on, and have their version of content represented over the more neutral version. ˜danjel 15:36, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- to be BOLD ("B") is fine, but reverting prior to discussion ("R") is frequently not -- "Frequently" meaning approximately half the time. In the other half of all cases, the edit is controversial enough to warrant prior discussion. The onus is really on all involved parties to recognize a need for and to engage in discussion as early as possible. Sometimes the editor who wants to make a change is the reasonable one and first enters discussion, sometimes it's the other editor. Whether or not a revert is warranted depends entirely on the edit itself. It all boils down to competence and honesty. The problem is that (short of an RfAr) it's next to impossible to call people out even on clearly dishonest behavior, let alone to even insinuate that they may not be perfectly neutral or competent. Thank the CIVIL brigade. --87.79.43.249 (talk) 16:39, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- @Danjel. I respectfully disagree. Making or not making revert ("R") makes enormous difference. Let's assume that I made a bold edit ("B") and someone reverted. After having quite a few disputes on this site, I would look at the nature of revert and in many cases simply stop editing this page. Sorry, but I usually do not want wasting my time in disputes with strongly opinionated people. However, if he/she simply asks why I made an edit, I would certainly respond. My very best wishes (talk) 01:52, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- No, I am telling that to be BOLD ("B") is fine, but reverting prior to discussion ("R") is frequently not. In most cases this should be a "BDC" cycle: "Bold-Discuss-Compromise". My very best wishes (talk) 14:14, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- What you're saying is that BOLD is bad advice. Do you honestly think every single edit should be discussed beforehand? Asking since I am regularly being reverted even on the (imho) least controversial of edits (e.g. straighforward formatting edits following clearcut MoS advice) and find myself having to subsequently explain the edit (i.e. "discuss with") the reverting editor. --195.14.222.182 (talk) 11:46, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Comment: The above-discussed WP:OWN issue isn't the only problem. WP:BRD works well as a rule of thumb, applied with common sense (as the circumstances dictate), not as a law to be followed to the letter.
For example, suppose that someone reverts one of my edits due to a clear misunderstanding (made obvious by the edit summary). The spirit of BRD doesn't require me to initiate a pointless discussion about a nonexistent dispute. I'll simply restore my edit (being careful to explain the nature of the misunderstanding). If that editor (or another one) still objects to my edit (for a reason unrelated to a clear misunderstanding), that's when it makes sense to advance to the "D" stage.
Under the proposed policy, the specific circumstances (and a common-sense interpretation thereof) would be irrelevant. My approach would "result in an automatic block". —David Levy 02:56, 27 April 2012 (UTC) - BRD has a few issues and as someone else said, it isn't really that great of advice. It isn't very specific and it is, in reality, an aplication of a cycle that many editors don't seem to understand the actual starting point, mid point and end points of. The B for Bold is either ignored or centered on as a "conduct issue" especially if the bold edit removes content...even with a proper summary citing policy, guidelines and discussion you are encouraged in parts of BRD to "Do not accept "Policy" , "consensus", or "procedure" as valid reasons for a revert: These sometimes get worn in on consensus-based wikis. You are disagreeing, that is okay. Do not back off immediately..." This seems to be taken out of context in many instances where BRD is invoked and itself creates aggresive behavior. It actually says "Expect strong resistance—even hostility: Deliberately getting people to revert or respond to you feels a bit like disruption. Trying to change things certainly does, even when it's an obvious change for the better! If you do this cycle perfectly, most people will grudgingly accept you. Do it less than perfectly, and they will certainly be mad at you. Do it wrong, and they will hate your guts. And this refers to just making the bold edit to begin with. Sorry, but anyone who says they are tired of aggressive editors and behavior and is invoking and using BRD is following step by step advice on how to be an agressive editor. BRD uses tactics. Hardly a relaxing behavior. The D part, in implementation is very difficult as BRD simply says at one point "The talk page is open to all editors, not just bold ones. The first person to start a discussion is the person who is best following BRD". First one wins! Woohoo! "I win! I got here first so I'm to policy and you're not....." That isn't very precise. It actually seems reckless as a policy.--Amadscientist (talk) 21:33, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
BRD policy break 5
- Oppose - While BRD is the way to go, having that in place as a policy is not going to cause newcomers and POV warriors to suddenly start following the policy, it's just going to create multiple hundreds of potential violators every day for the drama zombies to work themselves in a tizzy over at ANI. Leave bad enough alone, build use of BRD by acting that way and encouraging emulation. Carrite (talk) 04:07, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose because as it stands it can be misunderstood and misapplied as advice to revert someone who has been WP:Bold. WP:Consensus, which is a policy, already has a section Misplaced Pages:Consensus#Reaching_consensus_through_editing which approaches the same situation through the consensus model, and explains that you reach consensus through editing first. It is only when there is disagreement that we need to have the discussion. I am uncomfortable when anyone reverts the work of an established editor in good standing unless there has been discussion regarding the edit, and the consensus is that the edit is wrong but the editor refuses to change it. Reverts should only be for vandalism. It would be more in line with the ethos of co-operative and collegiate editing if Bold Revert Discuss was changed to Bold Discuss Revert. Enshrining in policy that it is OK to revert the good faith and positive edits of an established editor in good standing without discussion is Not A Good Thing. SilkTork 08:50, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose CONSENSUS, 3RR/1RR and EW are the policies. BRD is a friendly guidance towards obtaining the former, and avoiding the latter 3. (talk→ BWilkins ←track) 10:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- With all due respect, EW didn't work in our case did it? Editors that have formulated a consensus on the article talk page should be allowed to restore that consensus against a SPA. After a detailed analysis of the problem edits on the talk page, efforts to engage the SPA in discussion, a semi-protection request and two reports to the 3rr/ew board, your judgment was to bar us from making further reversions and to take the case to dispute resolution. Dispute resolution is there to form a consensus, not to enforce one. We have the consensus we just need it enforced, and editors should be able to restore a consensus against a SPA without being blocked. On a site grounded in consensus editing, consensus editing should be enforced over unilateral editing. Betty Logan (talk) 11:40, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Support Too often, the reversion cycle ends up being BRRtRD (Be Bold, Revert, Revert the Revert, Discuss) rather than BRD. The way edit warriors (who aren't actually vandalising or breaching NPOV or other seem to work, it ends up being like this
- User 1: "boldly" edits, adding problematic content;
- User 2: Reverts, starts discussion on talk page;
- User 1: Ignores (or arrogantly writes off comments on) talk page, reverts;
- User 2: Reverts, pointedly directs to talk page;
- User 1: Ignores talk page, reverts;
- User 2: Reverts again, desperate plea for User 1 to go to talk page, goes for help at concerned wikiprojects;
- User 1: Ignores all efforts to collaborate, reverts;
- At this point, if User 2 reverts again, then s/he is in breach of WP:3RR. User 1 effectively games the system without any sanction. An accusation of gaming the system probably wouldn't pass for WP:AGF reasons, or otherwise. There are some very experienced editors who use this to effectively insist on their version, without having to talk to those who are beneath them.
- While acknowledging that it might need to be reworked slightly, WP:BRD can stop this from happening. Once invoked, it should cut off the reversion cycle at the point where it is invoked. ˜danjel 11:14, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- ...by establishing the right to veto any and all bold changes with which one disagrees (pending a mandatory discussion), thereby removing the incentive to seek an alternative form of resolution (such as compromise or permitting the edit to stand while the discussion occurs). —David Levy 13:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose per Resolute. I too have seen "BRD" used as an excuse by POV pushers or editors with ownership issues on articles. BRD is an essay because it encourages editors to discuss bold changes. Making it policy would, as Resolute, give the second editor an advantage, and to an extent, even enable them to block edits from being added to an article. I appreciate the proposers intentions, but I think this may do more harm than good. Steven Zhang 11:22, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose, at least if the "D" part of "BRD" entails "waiting for consensus to be established with the help of outside input" (which seemed to be implied by the proposer's wording above). Any rule about dispute resolution that forces people to rely on outside attention from neutral parties, in whatever form (be it 3O, noticeboards or whatever) is doomed to failure. Getting outside attention is wonderful advice and may work well for those who choose to do it, but it would very quickly stop being good advice as soon as everybody was forced to do it all the time. The reason is simple: outside attention is a scarce good, and there will never be enough of it to go round for everybody. Fut.Perf. ☼ 11:30, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Very much that, and on the other hand there's already an abundance of tag-teaming and meatpuppetry among established "crews" of owners. I shudder to think how many times a tag-team would get away with e.g. having a likeminded colleague respond to a 3O. One just has to look at articles that are currently de facto owned to see the unacceptable reality of BRD as policy, which rapidly turns into a game of revert any edit and discuss the editor off the talk page or off Misplaced Pages entirely, if at all possible. How many established editors have been reprimanded, let alone blocked or banned, for gaming the system, for ignoring the spirit of P&G in this way? None, or maybe one? If P&G reflects actual behavior by (far too many) Wikipedians, we might as well declare BRD policy and replace consensus with the advice to game the system. --195.14.222.182 (talk) 12:08, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm been on both sides of the fence, and it is frustrating when you are a solitary editor and the other side makes no valid effort to engage in discussion. However, whether you are up against a genuine mulitlateral effort or a tag-team the net outcome is the same, you still need a consensus to install your edits. If you are unable to find anyone at all to support your stance then it probably is not a legitimate stance. Betty Logan (talk) 12:22, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Very much that, and on the other hand there's already an abundance of tag-teaming and meatpuppetry among established "crews" of owners. I shudder to think how many times a tag-team would get away with e.g. having a likeminded colleague respond to a 3O. One just has to look at articles that are currently de facto owned to see the unacceptable reality of BRD as policy, which rapidly turns into a game of revert any edit and discuss the editor off the talk page or off Misplaced Pages entirely, if at all possible. How many established editors have been reprimanded, let alone blocked or banned, for gaming the system, for ignoring the spirit of P&G in this way? None, or maybe one? If P&G reflects actual behavior by (far too many) Wikipedians, we might as well declare BRD policy and replace consensus with the advice to game the system. --195.14.222.182 (talk) 12:08, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Comment: I am not saying that I believe BRD should be adopted as policy. However, by the same token, I don't think I'm seeing anything from the Oppose side that I don't think could be addressed by modifying BRD to address Oppose's concerns. It seems obvious to me that adopting BRD as policy would certainly not be intended to allow any editor to summarily revert any changes to an article, and I would think any use of BRD in such a heavy-handed manner could be considered disruptive and treated accordingly (especially if such treatment was spread across multiple articles). Are there aspects of Oppose's concerns that could not be encoded into the policy? If so, which, and why not? If the primary thrust of Oppose's arguments is problems with BRD as it currently stands, I don't see anything wrong with at least attempting to change BRD accordingly. Just my two cents. Doniago (talk) 12:52, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The entire point of the proposal, as I understand it, it to make BRD mandatory. Disagree with a bold edit? Go ahead and revert it, and the other party must discuss the matter instead of undoing the reversion (with the latter "result in an automatic block").
Certainly, the blind reversion of literally every edit to a page (including typo fixes) wouldn't be tolerated. But if someone genuinely disagrees with most or all non-trivial changes to an article, how is it possible to draw a line that doesn't defeat this proposal's purpose?
Additionally, please see my comment from 2:56 (UTC) for an example of a problem unrelated to WP:OWN.
If we somehow stipulate that BRD isn't always applicable, how are we left with something materially different from (let alone better than) what we have now?
(Given the fact that you seek to stimulate discussion, not to promote a particular outcome, these questions aren't directed specifically toward you.) —David Levy 13:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The entire point of the proposal, as I understand it, it to make BRD mandatory. Disagree with a bold edit? Go ahead and revert it, and the other party must discuss the matter instead of undoing the reversion (with the latter "result in an automatic block").
- SPA exemption – The proposal clearly isn't going to fly, but at the same time we shouldn't pretend that EW rules can't be improved either. We could add an exception to the 3rr/ew rule such that editors restoring an article consensus against a SPA are exempt from sanctions i.e. we just treat it along the same lines of the current vandalism exemption. Betty Logan (talk) 13:01, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- What about established SPAs? --195.14.222.182 (talk) 13:41, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Unilateral editing doesn't trump a consensus. If the SPA is established he should seek out someone to support his view, and then it is a matter for dispute resolution. Betty Logan (talk) 13:49, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Successful networking is a hallmark of virtually all established editors, including established SPAs. They just claim "consensus". Heck, some of them manage to paint the opposition as being SPAs and edit warriors -- which they are just "bravely countering". Needless to say, any attempt of addressing such situations is doomed to fail because friends will be friends, no matter what. Maybe I've been too deep down the rabbit hole to have any illusions anymore, but there's no doubt in my mind that any policy reform proposal that might actually be effective in such situations will never be adopted. The status quo is double standard galore, and intellectual dishonesty is the catalyst. There's no formulaic way of countering that. My view is admittedly bleak, but we will have to accept the reality that established groups of people can push their POV virtually unhindered unless there's another, equally established group of people challenging them. It all boils down to the sum total of "wikipower" assembled behind a certain POV. --195.14.222.182 (talk) 14:07, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't actually dispute that networking can sometimes subvert the ultimate goals of neutality, but if no-one supports your view your edits will never stick anyway, regardless of the process. Betty Logan (talk) 14:19, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- There are too many too easy ways around that as long as "no-one" means no established editors. A large number of people may share the same opinion regarding the encyclopedic validity of certain content, but they have no chance of countering the established POV e.g. as long as they don't happen to be on Misplaced Pages during the same period. As long as there are no neutral and established observers willing to intervene on behalf of actual neutrality and honest discussion, individual challengers are easy to take down one by one. I've seen it happen far too often without any ramifications, even in the long run. What we really need is a content-focused analog to ArbCom, with the authority to make binding decisions regarding content. But the community doesn't have the resources for that. --195.14.222.182 (talk) 14:33, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't actually dispute that networking can sometimes subvert the ultimate goals of neutality, but if no-one supports your view your edits will never stick anyway, regardless of the process. Betty Logan (talk) 14:19, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Successful networking is a hallmark of virtually all established editors, including established SPAs. They just claim "consensus". Heck, some of them manage to paint the opposition as being SPAs and edit warriors -- which they are just "bravely countering". Needless to say, any attempt of addressing such situations is doomed to fail because friends will be friends, no matter what. Maybe I've been too deep down the rabbit hole to have any illusions anymore, but there's no doubt in my mind that any policy reform proposal that might actually be effective in such situations will never be adopted. The status quo is double standard galore, and intellectual dishonesty is the catalyst. There's no formulaic way of countering that. My view is admittedly bleak, but we will have to accept the reality that established groups of people can push their POV virtually unhindered unless there's another, equally established group of people challenging them. It all boils down to the sum total of "wikipower" assembled behind a certain POV. --195.14.222.182 (talk) 14:07, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Unilateral editing doesn't trump a consensus. If the SPA is established he should seek out someone to support his view, and then it is a matter for dispute resolution. Betty Logan (talk) 13:49, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't think that anyone has asserted that there's no room for improvement at WP:EW, but the correct forum in which to discuss potential changes to the policy is WT:EW. —David Levy 13:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- So what do you suggest? This proposal clearly isn't going to pass in any form, so do you recommend closing it and starting a fresh proposal at EW? I don't want to go over there and then be accused of forum shopping. Betty Logan (talk) 13:52, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- That wouldn't constitute forum shopping (in my view), but I don't recommend that you jump straight into another concrete proposal (which asks users to pass judgement on an idea that might not have been adequately fleshed out and compared with alternatives).
- I suggest that you initiate an open-ended discussion, with the goal of identifying the policy's problem(s) and arriving at one or more solutions. —David Levy 14:06, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- So what do you suggest? This proposal clearly isn't going to pass in any form, so do you recommend closing it and starting a fresh proposal at EW? I don't want to go over there and then be accused of forum shopping. Betty Logan (talk) 13:52, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- How do you distinguish an "SPA" from a newbie making bold edits? Such an exemption could easily turn into a license to bite. --Ron Ritzman (talk) 14:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I would say it is difficult since the two are possibly the same at the start; lots of editors start on Misplaced Pages with a specific purpose. However, even in that case I would say the multilateral effort to restore a clear consensus still shouldn't be vulnerable to sanctions, because a unilateral view shouldn't be able to overturn a consensus, so I would prefer to see the disciplinary framework reflect that. I don't think it would make BITE any more of an issue than it already is, since that is more about an editor's attitude to another editor, rather than an editing decision. If an editor's response is so unreasonable that it violates BITE then an admin could still issue sanctions on those grounds. Betty Logan (talk) 15:30, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- What about established SPAs? --195.14.222.182 (talk) 13:41, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose Power will lie in the hands of the reverter and that's not necessarily a good thing. It'll also force every bold editor to go into a cycle of dispute resolution as the only way of dealing with an entrenched 'owner' editor and we need less of that sort of thing, not more. In the majority of cases that I've seen, D does follow B and R and I think this is unnecessary. --regentspark (comment) 13:34, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- What do you think of proposed revision to 3RR/ew directly above? Betty Logan (talk) 13:37, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose "BRD" is just sort of way of saying "go ahead, give it a try, but if people oppose you, the other processes will apply". And "other processes" is an immense range of policies and processes. Fine if you want to just clarify that BRD is just that, but trying to define the process would require writing a book which would be a duplication of all of those other policies and mechanisms. North8000 (talk) 14:05, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose We have a policy against edit warring. If that policy needs to be fixed, discuss it and fix it. It may very well be that EW could be improved by concepts from BRD, but keep it in the existing policy.--Cube lurker (talk) 14:10, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose Like others, too often I've seen WP:BRD used as a means to exercise WP:OWN-ership over articles. BRD requires two good faith editors to work. If either editor is working in poor faith, it is a license to lock up articles in never-ending "discussion" or keep it under the eye of WP:NINJAs. --RA (talk) 22:19, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose. It seems just wrong that BRD should become policy by any method other than BRD. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 11:00, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Support Surprised to see opposition to this. I support this, accepting that there's not a consensus for making it policy at this time. But I'm interested to see the discussion continue. If BRD isn't the best practice for handling a disputed edit, I'd like to know what a better practice is, so we can encourage that. (IMO, it will still be some version of BRD.) Shooterwalker (talk) 02:47, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- BRD is under no threat as excellent advice on best practice. This discussion is about policy taggery, which stipulate minimum standards. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 03:48, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't know if we were reading the same comments here Smokey Joe, but there are some excellent arguments and points that BRD is indeed not as excellent a bit of advice to give.--Amadscientist (talk) 22:32, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think most of the problem is that some don't read the whole thing, although maybe that means the advice is not well worded. The other common problem seems to be no more than the BRD fails to solve otherwise intractable problems. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 22:45, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I don't know if we were reading the same comments here Smokey Joe, but there are some excellent arguments and points that BRD is indeed not as excellent a bit of advice to give.--Amadscientist (talk) 22:32, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- BRD is under no threat as excellent advice on best practice. This discussion is about policy taggery, which stipulate minimum standards. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 03:48, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Weak oppose BRD is fine advice, but I think the back and forth in this discussion speaks to how chaotic a full embrace of it as policy could be. North8000 put it well. --BDD (talk) 17:17, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Comment I rather like BRD as a guideline, but I think making it policy is missing the real problem. That guideline is really just a supplement to existing policies such as WP:CONSENSUS, which insists consensus through editing should always be the first resort. Unfortunately, many editors, either out of laziness or a tendentious attitude, think WP:BRD means you can revert anything and then force endless discussion. In fact, BRD encourages bold edits to try and meet the objections raised in discussion as soon as a day after discussion begins. Perhaps what we should really consider is bringing this essay or this one up to the level of a policy so that there is no confusion about when it is ok to revert and when it is not ok to revert.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 15:07, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- This makes sense to me. Jojalozzo 18:35, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
WP:BRD issues
There has been a good deal of discussion on the subject of the essay, and in some cases it has been pointed out that WP:BRD has been used as a pointy stick to poke relentlessly at other editors, insisting that they adhere to it, complaining to admin when it is not being applied and even demanding all editors use this application as a requirement. I wonder if many of the issues of BRD can't be dealt with or addressed in the opposit direction of proposing it as policy...but perhaps discussing it as it pertains to issues of WP:OWNS, WP:DISRUPT, and WP:LOCALCONSENSUS. I think the community needs to take a closer look at the essay in regards to Misplaced Pages:Tendentious editing and it's prose and text as too aggresively geared and while detailed in instruction in some areas of B and R, it is less specific in regards to the D part, leaving many editors who apply the very word of BRD (pun intended...BRD is the word! :D) to believe they are mirroring the behavior they percieve as aggressive and stalling discussion and consensus. In its current form, it could be argued that WP:BRD makes collaboration more difficult.--Amadscientist (talk) 23:05, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
Fixing EW
Here is the trouble I encounter: Person A makes a change, person B reverts and ask for discussion, person A reverts back. Person B does not want to "edit war" so leaves person A's change in the article, meanwhile begging person A to discuss. The change remains in the article so long as person A either refuses discussion or as long as the discussion lasts. The trouble is that the system rewards person A, because person B does not want to "edit war," or else punishes both parties if person B chooses more reverts. So:
Change EW to say that reverting an edit pending consensus is not edit warring.
I know this will be criticized as promoting ownership of articles, but if no one wants to say that, per BRD, person A is in the wrong, then what other alternatives are there besides to give person B an exemption from the edit warring rule? B——Critical 15:27, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The opposite happens just as often. A makes a change, B reverts, A wants to discuss and B obstinately refuses to engage in discussion. In your scenario, A is clearly wrong for re-reverting instead of starting a talk page discussion. --87.79.43.249 (talk) 16:20, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- True, so what are you saying, a refusal to discuss is legitimate reason to revert after a while? Maybe what we need is to revive Misplaced Pages:Town Sheriff? B——Critical 16:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- Misplaced Pages:Town Sheriff is fundamentally inconsistent with the spirit of Misplaced Pages, I would suggest leaving that idea dead, trying to revive it is likely to destroy any chance of coming to a consensus on adjusting the edit warring rules. Monty845 16:34, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- a refusal to discuss is legitimate reason to revert after a while? -- Depends on the edit in question. But yeah, the edits resp. reverts of someone who refuses to enter discussion should be revertable and exempt from 3RR. In fact, anyone who refuses to enter discussion should be swiftly banned from the project. This includes a refusal to discuss honestly. --87.79.43.249 (talk) 16:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- True, so what are you saying, a refusal to discuss is legitimate reason to revert after a while? Maybe what we need is to revive Misplaced Pages:Town Sheriff? B——Critical 16:31, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I would go quite that far, I think the normal edit warring rules should apply when there is an ongoing attempt by both sides to resolve the issue. What should not be edit warring is when one party is clearly trying to initiate a discussion and the other party refuses to discuss, then only the party refusing to discuss should be considered edit warring. Such a narrower rule would also reduce the ownership issue. Monty845 16:34, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I agree that exactly this should be addressed. I just think that BRD as policy is exactly the wrong way to go about addressing things. We need some sort of dispute resolution process to deal with this situation, immediately following the second revert, that takes into consideration both editor's positions and content and allows an amicable resolution to come about. 3RR and the current EW policy are not at all satisfactoy, primarily due to the fact that they are far too blunt instruments.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 17:43, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
This proposal (which, as noted in the previous section, belongs at WT:EW) carries essentially the same WP:OWN-related flaw present in the earlier proposal.
That we lack a rule that "person A is in the wrong" is no accident. The current policy might seem wishy-washy in this respect, but it's impossible to codify a "right" or "wrong" participant without granting the former license to control the article's content (pending the outcome of discussion).
If the reversion of a bold edit is never considered edit warring, users are permitted (and encouraged) to indiscriminately revert any and all bold edits with which they disagree, perhaps even baiting (intentionally or otherwise) others into getting themselves blocked. The incentive to seek alternative solutions (such as compromise or discussing the matter without reverting) are eliminated. —David Levy 17:47, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The problem is that there's nothing to protect person B either. That's needed to be addressed for years now, but there's always been a strange unwillingness to do so. The whole "right" and "wrong" aspects are a huge part of the problem here, since that inherently sets up a confrontational situation. Policy as it stands either forces confrontation or submission, and myself and others feel that it shouldn't. Incidentally, you're probably correct that this should be on the EW talk page, but the RFC is here, and there's clearly a motivated audience, so... we can always move it to the EW talk page later, when we're talking about concrete change proposals.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 18:00, 27 April 2012 (UTC) - Right, B has no protection. And another problem which would arise is if A only pretends to discuss. What we may need rather than a reform of EW is a beefed-up and more-often-used form of mediation. If such a mediator (like a Sheriff or otherwise) were to come in, their first move should be to say "okay, I'm here and OWNership is not going to prevail, so I can revert back to the version before the dispute." That would be per BRD and the suggestion above. Then they would mediate and use a structured process to determine what was necessary. But one way or another, I'm very tired of having my contributions trashed by those willing to revert more often than I'm willing to revert. I always discuss and I'm flexible, but the system favors people who are aggressive. Their favored version always stays in the article during the time my favored version (sometimes the longstanding version) has to defend itself. B——Critical 19:51, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- The problem with this proposal is, which change counts as the reversion that is exempted?
- So I dealt with a POV pusher a while back. The user wanted to put some remarkably biased information into a BLP. The user adds material; I remove it and start a discussion (specifically, "yet another" discussion; this particular problem user has been warned and blocked off and on for several years over this problem).
- The POV pusher restores the material and leaves a comment on the talk page. Is that change the one that's exempted from 3RR, because it's "an edit pending consensus"?
- I reply to the comment. There is never any response at this stage, because the biased material is still in the mainspace, and the user has zero incentive to engage in the discussion. (This is a known pattern with this user.) The only way to drive the user back to Misplaced Pages and to prompt a response on the talk page is to remove the biased information again. Is it my reversion-of-the-reversion that's exempted?
- And given that we're dealing, in this instance, with a person of rather limited abilities and no motivation to discover any rule that might limit the user's own actions, do you honestly expect that user not to say that all of my reversions of borderline libelous material are banned, but the user's endless reversions are 100% exempt? WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:20, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think that identifying "which change counts as the reversion" is completely unnecessary, and that approach to the problem is actually the problem with the way that we currently handle "edit warring". I'm not saying that what BeCritical is offering here is the solution (let alone the perfect solution), but it's sparking a useful conversation that I think we should continue. Content disputes are hardly handled at all still, let alone handled well, and it's about time we did something to at least try to fix that. "exempt from 3RR" is exactly the wrong approach though, as we should be moving away from needing 3RR at all, somehow.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 20:27, 27 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think that identifying "which change counts as the reversion" is completely unnecessary, and that approach to the problem is actually the problem with the way that we currently handle "edit warring". I'm not saying that what BeCritical is offering here is the solution (let alone the perfect solution), but it's sparking a useful conversation that I think we should continue. Content disputes are hardly handled at all still, let alone handled well, and it's about time we did something to at least try to fix that. "exempt from 3RR" is exactly the wrong approach though, as we should be moving away from needing 3RR at all, somehow.
"Is that change the one that's exempted from 3RR, because it's "an edit pending consensus"?" No, if you revert again, that is exempted from 3RR. He can't just come along and edit aggressively and have you, the editor who cares about edit warring, be at a disadvantage. You are just describing exactly the same problem I'm having. And it doesn't matter whether there are responses or not: an editor should not be able to edit war any change into an article. "Is it my reversion-of-the-reversion that's exempted?" Yes, that's it, and any further ones. There are other scenarios which this would not help fix, I think.
Yet another problem: what if someone is removing content which you inserted yourself a few weeks ago (or actually any content)? Then you get hit with BURDEN. There is a time factor in this: when does content become "longstanding consensus" even if you wrote it yourself? Does BURDEN mean (as it's used) that anyone removing data can demand discussion before the material is re-inserted, thus laming articles for weeks?
The main overarching definition of the problem is: how do less-aggressive editors (and those who actually contribute content) have as much power on Misplaced Pages as aggressive editors who like to wikilawyer and destroy content? I try to be less aggressive, but I lose because of it; and WP then seems very much like a BATTLE. B——Critical 02:02, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- BURDEN only applies if the material is unsourced. BURDEN does not justify removal of material that includes an WP:Inline citation.
- I think that the official answer to your question is that the less-aggressive editors have to band together. Then you revert the POV pusher, I revert the POV pusher, someone else reverts the POV pusher, etc. Unfortunately, the community can't usually be bothered to show up and defend itself in these situations. We're all too busy with our own work. IMO you should count yourself lucky if you find just one neutral editor to partner with you in such situations. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:33, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
Rough analysis
The following exercise and rough analysis helped me understand these issues better. It doesn't capture every situation but feel free to expand it if it would be useful.
Bold Editor |
Reverting Editor (Would be first to break 3RR rule) | |
Non-Consensus-Seeking | BRD fails – Bold editor re-reverts without discussing EW fails – Reverting editor breaks 3RR |
BRD fails – Bold editor re-reverts without discussing EW fails – Reverting editor would break 3RR - unenforced discussion |
Consensus-Seeking | BRD fails – Reverting editor stalls discussion EW works – Reverting editor would break 3RR, forcing discussion |
BRD works EW not in play |
I invite improvements or clarifications. Jojalozzo 22:04, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Edit warring can be as simple as Person A reverting anything even one time depending on what and how. BRD isn't policy because it is a direction to editors on behavior in very exacting terms and oddly enough...it is used to get editors to stop editing as much as it is used to stop edit warring. I have always seen edit warring as something that cannot be seen as cut and dry when you are trying in good faith to remove content in direct violation of policy. HOWEVER if policy and content can be interpreted by consensus then making any changes to EW in this manner may amount to stacking the odds in favor of WP:OWN. I have watched discussed in great detail exactly how an edit i made was to policy and guidelines and how it has context to the subject, due weight, supported by references and formatted as an inline citation and had an editor tell me I just making up policy. Took it to DR and thought a resolution had been made and then discovered the editor wanted to discuss the entire section and not just the line of prose I disputed. And that was the person who wanted the line added. So holding up DR and discussion is often times the fault of the very editor that wants the information included....EVEN AFTER IT GETS INCLUDED! LOL! So I see no reason that length of discussion should ever be a question of an editor being able to simply revert back. If we do that there will be no more discussion. There will be no point as there will always be a looming time limit in the hands of the other editor who wants to hold up discussion just to revert over a time limit. This si seeking an end run around consensus in my view.--Amadscientist (talk) 09:13, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think another way of saying this is: some people aren't here to write an encyclopedia (any more, at least). I saw a strange case at ELN a while ago. Two editors disagreed over an external link. The first editor changed his mind (that startled, gasping sound you hear in the background is coming from folks who have spent a lot of time dealing with dispute resolution) and put the link back in the article. So, everything's resolved, right? No, we had another several rounds of complaints from the second editor about how he wasn't being treated well by any other editors, and could he please get more unbiased opinions about whether he should get his way, now that he'd already gotten his way?
- I do not think that we can legislate against incompetence. It's been tried, and it hasn't ever worked before. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:41, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Sad..but true.--Amadscientist (talk) 21:47, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Yes, but there are non-encyclopedic editors who are not necessarily incompetent, especially POV pushers. A bold POV edit by an editor who will not discuss but re-reverts forces us into DR with the POV edit remaining in place meanwhile. Jojalozzo 22:53, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
Main Page: "Misplaced Pages languages" section
Moved to Talk:Main Page § "Misplaced Pages languages" sectionRequire secondary coverage for In Popular Culture/Trivia sections
I don't know if this is already policy or not (probably is), but I thought it was best to just hash this out definitively here and get it added officially to one of the policy or guideline pages.
I'm starting this section because of a discussion on Guy Fieri's talk page about the addition of an In Popular Culture section fact from a short parody in a webcomic. I believe that, since anyone can make a website and say something about any subject (even if it is a popular website, like MSPA is), we should require the In Popular Culture fact to be mentioned in a secondary reliable source, like a news article. That would, at minimum, establish the importance of the fact in relation to the subject. So, in short:
Proposal: All facts stated in In Popular Culture or Trivia sections in articles should be referenced to a independent reliable source, such as a news article.
I'm open to alternative suggestions on how to proceed here. Silverseren 01:54, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think this is a Good Idea. It would help keep these list down to relevent items if the specific pop culture reference was itself referenced. Thus, if Family Guy mentions Guy Fieri, we don't need to say so at Misplaced Pages, unless another reliable source discusses the Family Guy reference specifically. Dig it. --Jayron32 01:58, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Yeah and, more often than not, for popular shows like Family Guy, they'll be some sort of compilation/commentary book made later that will mention the reference and we can use that as a source, so it's not like this is making it so no such references can be included in an article. This is just making a bottom line for including them, so we don't get every reference anyone in the world has ever made on their blog put into articles. Silverseren 02:02, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- I concur with the seren on this one. --Orange Mike | Talk 02:04, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- This policy already exists: Misplaced Pages:"In popular culture" content. The relevant part of that states Although some references may be plainly verified by primary sources, this does not demonstrate the significance of the reference. Furthermore, when the primary source in question only presents the reference, interpretation of this may constitute original research where the reference itself is ambiguous. If a cultural reference is genuinely significant it should be possible to find a reliable secondary source that supports that judgment. Betty Logan (talk) 02:09, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- That's an essay though, so it's not really policy of anything. I would like to include a sentence (or even a part of a sentence tying it in with something else) in one of the actual policies or guidelines to make it truly official. Silverseren 02:13, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Well I think that essay would make a good basis for a policy, but in the interim maybe WP:WEIGHT applies here? Anyone can pay homage to a piece of work, but if no-one publishes any commentary on it then its significance is open to question. Betty Logan (talk) 02:24, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think that this is more or less understood already. Most anything that could be said on this is already covered by "verifiability" and "identifying reliable sources". I don't think that an explicit rule is needed... it's just content like anything else. Challenge it by removing it (or simply questioning it), just like anything else. What makes "in popular culture" or "trivia" special (aside from it's obviously... er, trivial nature). Besides, anyone interested in this topic should probably go through the archives here, as this has been discussed quite a bit in the past.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 02:27, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Yeah, well, i'm having to deal with this. :/ Silverseren 02:34, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Just to be clear, I agree with you that anything that's unreferenced in these sections should probably be removed (or internally linked, in the case of names ). I've gone through and cleaned up a bunch of them over the years. You can't keep people from adding to them, but the only things that "stick" once challenged, are the truly notable entries anyway. It's kind of a rough process, but it's somewhat effective.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 02:39, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Just to be clear, I agree with you that anything that's unreferenced in these sections should probably be removed (or internally linked, in the case of names ). I've gone through and cleaned up a bunch of them over the years. You can't keep people from adding to them, but the only things that "stick" once challenged, are the truly notable entries anyway. It's kind of a rough process, but it's somewhat effective.
- I too have run into problems with this (see Talk:Self-reference#Discussion per WP:BRD about the "In popular culture" section and lower section). It can't even be claimed that the person opposing the use of secondary sources is inexperience. AIRcorn (talk) 01:54, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Yeah, well, i'm having to deal with this. :/ Silverseren 02:34, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Personally, I oppose anything that, either by design or collateral damage, legitimizes trivia sections. I have a personal rule: If it can fit nowhere else but a trivia section, then it isn't worth putting in the article. If it is worth putting in, it will fit somewhere in the prose proper. One entry in such a list begets another begets a third, each of less value than the last. Resolute 02:53, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- I also don't think they should exist at all, but I know that I wouldn't be able to get support for banning them altogether. It's been tried in the past and failed, so I instead settled for this as a method of restricting it to things that are at least somewhat encyclopedic. Silverseren 02:59, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- WP:TRIVIA seems to be the related guideline. Perhaps something could be added to that. 64.40.54.80 (talk) 08:33, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- The problem with TRIVIA is that it contains sentences like: "It is always best to cite sources when adding new facts to a trivia section, or any other section." -- Which a determined user will invariably interpret as "citing sources isn't strictly necessary". --87.79.130.182 (talk) 11:25, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Well... it's not strictly necessary. It becomes necessary when material is challenged, though.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 15:38, 28 April 2012 (UTC)- The problem is just what has to be sourced--that the use of a character of the same name in a later work refers to the character in an earlier work? People normally do not say so explicitly, because it is usually to obvious to say. It is not in such cases a question of OR and interpretation. The true instances in such sections where it is non-obvious are pretty rare.
- A problem here is also that the sources we use are much too limited--there are a considerable number of books on popular culture--most of them are mainly in large libraries and that means for practical purposes they are inaccessible to most people working on them. they are also very hard of intellectual access--despite the occasional usefulness of Google Books, it is not really practical to try to source an individual use--it can amount to a research project of its own. (The method that is most effective is to take one such book or article, and use its examples to source as much as one possibly can throughout Misplaced Pages. *:::I propose instead a rule that reflects our actual practice: A primary reference when reasonably obvious is sufficient to source popular culture uses, but secondary references in addition are highly desirable.' DGG' ( talk ) 15:56, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- That seems to match up with what I've always done.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 16:06, 28 April 2012 (UTC) - That's grossly oversimplifying matters in an indiscriminately inclusionist fashion. Items that would only fit into a popculture/trivia section need a secondary source to verify their relevance for the topic, not just to verify the content of the info itself. Unfortunately, WP:DUE exclusively addresses the problem of fringe or minority viewpoints and nothing else. It's almost like the editors who wrote DUE are making Misplaced Pages their battleground. Ah, Misplaced Pages. --87.79.211.105 (talk) 18:22, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- That seems to match up with what I've always done.
- Well... it's not strictly necessary. It becomes necessary when material is challenged, though.
- The problem with TRIVIA is that it contains sentences like: "It is always best to cite sources when adding new facts to a trivia section, or any other section." -- Which a determined user will invariably interpret as "citing sources isn't strictly necessary". --87.79.130.182 (talk) 11:25, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
As one of the people who was attempting to have the pop culture reference placed on the page, I too think that this is a good idea and will support it. --108.65.189.25 (talk) 18:30, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- The problem that I see with this is that some types of information worthy of being mentioned as popular culture may not fit into the niches covered by news sources and may therefore be rejected. Therefore, it would make sense to require news coverage for general culture phenomena or similar things that would be covered by regular articles. However, for internet sources (although it might apply in other situations), a specific instance of a general phenomenon or the source of a phenomenon would both be citable as a valid source for that specific instance of the phenomenon. This would require that the instance either be the original source of something popular or a part of something popular (such as what originally started this discussion), popular being defined in both cases as news coverage of the general phenomenon or main popular thing. For example, something on part of the official MSPA website or something said the author, aka an official source, would be considered notable as MSPA has been covered by news sources, but something MSPA-related from some other source would require separate coverage by news sources to be considered notable. --72.74.134.38 (talk) 18:45, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- support. WP:V is a baseline policy, and should be applied uniformly. Ironholds (talk) 06:54, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think that changing a relatively common practice in Misplaced Pages for the sake of proving the victor in an argument is exceptionally poor form, though I merit you for notifying me that this discussion was happening. I think that this is logically wrong, so I will save any arguments about the length and mess dealing with retroactively instating this for another person.
- I made a decent enough argument on the Guy Fieri Talk Page, so I'm gonna basically just copy/paste it here:
- "Let's look at the practice of different Popular Culture sections on Misplaced Pages: The Hindenburg Disaster, Oberon, The Columbine High School Massacre, and a good deal of the listings on the Wiki about Adolf Hitler are placed without citation. This is not due to poor recording. Items placed within Popular Culture, Historical References, and Modern Culture sections are self-evident. They are factual, as displayed by their placement within the existence of the medium, and not necessarily accurate representations of the person, object, or event as they stand.
- "Where much of the encyclopedia relies on a truth built, not on hearsay, but on an accumulation of facts which, when held against a certain standard, have a certain value of "truth", as per the perception of society at large, Popular Culture sections are different. Take this issue of Guy Fieri. Now, ((the original argument suggests)) that some "secondary reliable source" needs to exist to post data. This is not so. Say that the personal website, Twitter account, or some form of direct communication with the actual Guy Fieri made a specific, self-evident statement. Let's pretend Guy Fieri said on his personal blog that his real name was "Man Fieri". While ((one)) might not be able to alter certain parts of the post (such as the "born as" name) without further data, you could certainly update the Wiki to include that he publicly announced that his real name as "Man Fieri" without having some "secondary reliable source".
- "This is an issue involving perception layers. If Guy Fieri made a statement about himself, that statement is self-evident, and can directly influence the encyclopedic dialogue involving his personal perception about himself, and the way he directly addresses it. In Popular Culture sections, it is no longer taking a view from Guy Fieri, and looking outward. Instead the perception revolves around external entities and their perception of Guy Fieri. The things that can directly affect this perception layer are facts which are self-evident. In this case, the issue is that MSPA has factually used Guy Fieri, albeit absurdly, as character in the Homestuck universe. The direct sentiment is that some external entity (the author of MSPA) has perceived the topic element (Guy Fieri) in an abstract way, and the artistic representation that come from that perception is as described in the medium of the external entity (the comic, Homestuck). The fact that this happened is self-evident. Re-stated simply: The inclusion of Guy Fieri by the artist Andrew Hussie in the MSPA Comic: Homestuck is factual, evidenced by the direct link to the comic."
- What I will add on to amend this copy/paste (besides small html modifications) is that the way that the population artistically expresses a subject is often as important- if not moreso- as the subject itself. What the patchwork argument over this issue seems to be is over an absence of notability, rather than reliability. As explained above, reliability is not an issue. As for notability, it's more complicated, and certainly less grounded in direct connections to overarching Wikimedia rulings on the subject. However, since the topic is approached for a trivial section, it downplays the necessity for absolute measures of notability, leaving any absolute rulings by a single person, or even a small collection of people, to be biased (if their only attachment to their position is based on a measure of notability). What I suggest for a solution, ultimately, is to not make any changes to the current Wikimedia policy on Popular Culture/Historical References/Trivia sections. 8472 (talk) 07:24, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- since the topic is approached for a trivial section, it downplays the necessity for absolute measures of notability -- No, you are downplaying the necessity for absolute measures of notability. Information that is accurately placed under a heading of "Trivia" (or the bowdlerized variant "In popular culture") needs to be verifiable as being relevant to accurate encyclopedic coverage of the topic as discussed in secondary sources. Any trivia item that cannot be verified as being relevant (i.e. discussed in reliable secondary sources) should be removed with extreme prejudice. --195.14.204.137 (talk) 13:48, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- There are no absolute measures of notability for any article, because categorizations are not made out of absolute packages. Relevance is not verifiable. Contentious expressions like "removed with extreme prejudice" highlight the biased nature of such a response.
- It is relatively easy to draw a subject to itself, and the image that seems 'relevant'. What individuals, media groups, cultures... do to interact with these images is much less simple to confine. If you explore the Popular Culture/Historical References/Trivia sections as listed above, you should be able to recognize the encyclopedic value of these sections as they are currently presented. If you cannot, or are unwilling to recognize the popular representations of things such as Adolf Hitler, then you are severely limiting Misplaced Pages to a very specific, and frankly fairly irrelevant spot in the minds of its users. 8472 (talk) 21:37, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- since the topic is approached for a trivial section, it downplays the necessity for absolute measures of notability -- No, you are downplaying the necessity for absolute measures of notability. Information that is accurately placed under a heading of "Trivia" (or the bowdlerized variant "In popular culture") needs to be verifiable as being relevant to accurate encyclopedic coverage of the topic as discussed in secondary sources. Any trivia item that cannot be verified as being relevant (i.e. discussed in reliable secondary sources) should be removed with extreme prejudice. --195.14.204.137 (talk) 13:48, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Um, do you really mean a "secondary" source? Because most news articles are primary sources; see WP:PRIMARYNEWS. Perhaps an independent source would be adequate. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:44, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Good point, I changed the proposal. Silverseren 21:47, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- "Primary" is not another way to spell "bad"... I think this part of that page spells it out well enough. Just because the source is primary, does not mean that it is wrong to use it. It just limits the extent of what it can be used for. I think, by definition, trivial facts are a limited extent of what primary data can be used for. I do not see the need for an independent source for the acknowledgment of primary information of the existence of trivial facts. 8472 (talk) 22:58, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- It is the very point that the facts are trivial that they need an independent source to give them enough importance for inclusion. Otherwise, trivial facts would themselves violate undue weight because of their inherent triviality. Silverseren 00:48, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I think an independent source is a good idea. An independent, secondary non-self-published source would be best, especially when the subject has zillions of references (imagine a list of pop culture references to, say, Cancer, Richard Nixon, or Coca-cola), but I think an independent source would be adequate for typical subjects. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:34, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- It is the very point that the facts are trivial that they need an independent source to give them enough importance for inclusion. Otherwise, trivial facts would themselves violate undue weight because of their inherent triviality. Silverseren 00:48, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- "Primary" is not another way to spell "bad"... I think this part of that page spells it out well enough. Just because the source is primary, does not mean that it is wrong to use it. It just limits the extent of what it can be used for. I think, by definition, trivial facts are a limited extent of what primary data can be used for. I do not see the need for an independent source for the acknowledgment of primary information of the existence of trivial facts. 8472 (talk) 22:58, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Good point, I changed the proposal. Silverseren 21:47, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm working on an essay, User:Masem/Trainspotting that addresses this matter. Basically, yes, even though most pop culture bits can meet WP:V, it enters into indiscriminate info territory, and better to rely on third-party sourcing to assert what pop culture/trivia is appropriate. --MASEM (t) 00:51, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Support Unreferenced (or self-referenced) pop culture and trivia sections encourage indiscriminate addition of further items. Secondary sources are a well understood standard to show notability and are an easy way to have some form of threshold on theses sections. AIRcorn (talk) 01:58, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- That is absurd. Using multiple sources to determine legitimacy, neutrality, and (in some cases) reliability makes sense. No singular perception can offer an honest truth- you end up leveraging the topic between multiple viewpoints to create that level of truth, so that the topic is not blemished by preference. Since you can observe that each viewpoint is going to be biased by definition, the measurement is stable between media outlets.
- However, using secondary viewpoints to determine notability is impossible. Notability cannot be achieved by leveraging between multiple sources, as each source is going to have its own notability value. Which one is more notable, Misplaced Pages, or Fox News? A Geocities page, or an official fan website? If you rely exclusively on major media organizations, then most of the information on Misplaced Pages is not notable, except through accepted generalizations about what things "matter", based on personal and cultural biases.
- I submitted a link to the Guy Fieri board about the existence of a possible citation from theMSPA Wiki. It's a Wiki article that references the reference, independent of the comic or the author. If this is not sufficient to display the "independent source to give enough importance", then I could send you . If THIS is not notable enough, then you're going to have to explain who owns the rights to make something notable. Is it a news conglomerate? Is it a corporate website? Frankly, the existence of the Guy Fieri page in general doesn't seem notable to me. He's a guy who cooks on the televisions. I know a few who actually have a pretty significant sway over cultural values- Alton Brown, Rachael Ray... Who exactly gets to decide that the man deserves an equal share of Misplaced Pages as them? Or as Frank Sinatra or Mickey Mouse?
- There is no absolute method of determining notability for any article. Notability isn't a scientific measurement, it isn't measured with the computation of logic, it can't be facilitated by a specific ruling or guiding gesture. It's perception-based. Subjective. Adding on red tape will just slow the process of adding information, not assist in the betterment of articles. This ruling would delete almost every Popular Culture section I've seen on Misplaced Pages, chasing a metric which doesn't have a definite value. You would lose much of the cultural irony and confusion over persons such as Adolf Hitler. Misplaced Pages would be less capable for showing the colorful cultures that perceive topic items with this rule alteration, and would be weaker for it. 8472 (talk) 02:36, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Um, we determine the notability of subjects by considering multiple sources every hour of the day. That is the whole purpose of WP:AFD. "Notability" means "Misplaced Pages should have a separate, stand-alone article on that subject".
- What you're talking about is WP:DUE weight, and that, too, is something that we do every hour of the day, by combining and comparing the content of multiple sources. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:34, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Um, what you linked me to is not connecting to the major argument that I'm making. I can understand where the confusion is, though. I understand that there are methods to go about determining notability. However, it bases itself off of a number of things which are not absolute. Consensus, which uses cultural bias, and Misplaced Pages norms to determine notability. It is a method of creating a means for describing notability, but it doesn't actually have the power to create the worth of the article. And, while I'm discussing WP:DUE, what I am doing is showing that measuring notability cannot be done using this logical setup. Legitimacy can be portioned out by weighing the notability of certain resources, and confirming and contrasting against other resources... But notability cannot be measured the same way, since each has a unique notability from one another. 8472 (talk) 21:43, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- When I read your last two sentences, here's what I understand you to be saying:
"Legitimacy can be portioned out by weighing whether or not certain resources qualify for having a separate, stand-alone article about the resources, and confirming and contrasting against other resources... But whether a subject should have a separate, stand-alone Misplaced Pages article about it cannot be measured the same way, since each has a unique question of whether a subject should have a separate, stand-alone Misplaced Pages article about it from one another."
Do you want to try again, using words that aren't wikijargon? WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:32, 1 May 2012 (UTC)- When one goes in with "here's what I understand you saying", it becomes negated when they conclude their input with "Do you want to try again?"
- Though you paraphrased me in a way that would make me look ridiculous, you essentially caught what I'm trying to say. Measures of reliability can use the notability integer to posit certain weight to the legitimacy and neutrality of a fact. Measures of notability cannot use the notability integer to posit certain weight to the notability of a certain resource. 8472 (talk) 03:58, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Supermarket tabloids like The National Enquirer are almot always WP:Notable. They are not WP:Reliable for almost anything. Ditto for the hundreds of hoaxes (e.g., The Archko Volume) and pseudoscientific books that have been published and have garnered attention.
- On the flip side, very few peer-reviewed journal articles are themselves notable. Most textbooks aren't really notable (for lack of independent reporting). But these are highly reliable sources. Whether a source is notable really has nothing to do with whether it is reliable. WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:48, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- When I read your last two sentences, here's what I understand you to be saying:
- Um, what you linked me to is not connecting to the major argument that I'm making. I can understand where the confusion is, though. I understand that there are methods to go about determining notability. However, it bases itself off of a number of things which are not absolute. Consensus, which uses cultural bias, and Misplaced Pages norms to determine notability. It is a method of creating a means for describing notability, but it doesn't actually have the power to create the worth of the article. And, while I'm discussing WP:DUE, what I am doing is showing that measuring notability cannot be done using this logical setup. Legitimacy can be portioned out by weighing the notability of certain resources, and confirming and contrasting against other resources... But notability cannot be measured the same way, since each has a unique notability from one another. 8472 (talk) 21:43, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- there is no clear boundary on what is indiscriminate. the use by a later work of an earlier work or character is not indiscriminate if both works are notable . Even more so, it is out of these relationships and reuses that the nature of culture has always been developed. Fortunately, if the right kind of sources are looked for, secondary sourcing about this will be available: it's not newspaper reviews that do this, but academic studies -- it what literary history, film history, popular culture studies, and similar fields are all about. It's been unfortunate that most of the people interested in these topics here aren't familiar with them (the best of all at it, was Le Grand Roi des Citrouilles, before he was forced out by the popular culture minimalists. His assumed manner here was truly irritating, but the real objection to him was that he was too effective at finding sources. There are others almost equally good, such as Col.W,, who arouse the same dislike for the same reason. Its not that the minimalists don't want unsourced material--they don't want the material, because they think its fundamental unworthy--in my opinion, an attitude that betrays their lack of understanding of the humanities & the fact so uncomfortable to naïve fans, that the field can be usefully actually studied). DGG ( talk ) 03:24, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- The problem with LGRdC's style that extends to others working in the area is that they add the connection first, and find the sources later. While it is not contentious information, nor otherwise anything immediately damaging to the work which would otherwise require removal of the info until a source is found, this has the impact of other editors picking up the same style - but often without the source seeking followup. These sections are extremely easy to grow like kuzdu, so if they aren't limited to start, it becomes hard when someone actually does start trimming down and get contested as to why they are being removed. Its why asking for sources to back up such sections in articles from the start keeps them trim though allows for appropriate growth when sources are discovered. --MASEM (t) 13:42, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Another thing to consider is that the article that sparked this discussion, Guy Fieri, the trivia that was being inserted, while meant to be a parody, could still be easily seen as defamatory and not all that appropriate to be included (calling Fieri "the third and final antichrist"). I think such an insertion needs an independent source covering its use far more than normal trivia does, just because of its content. Silverseren 17:33, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm not entirely sure that's necessary for Misplaced Pages to judge. Some people find the modern uses of Hitler, or the Columbine Massacre offensive, but that doesn't negate the importance of those modern applications. The fact exists, and it is up for the researcher to judge the moral implications. Misplaced Pages provides access to issues for a researcher to judge. Are you suggesting that Misplaced Pages should work to censor things as well? 8472 (talk) 00:05, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Actually, it's very much for us to judge, per the WP:BLP policy. Now, i'm generally the guy on the inclusion side of BLP issues, but that's only in relation to names, birth dates, and statements made by the subject themselves. I drawn the line at statements made by others that can easily fall within the realm of defamation. Such things need to be well sources before they can be included. Silverseren 00:43, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- This isn't defamation. It's the absurd consideration of a pop culture icon in a manifest imagery by an external culture. In the interest of obliterating this overarching policy-change expression, I won't get into this here. You're suggesting that all popular culture sections should be renovated because your incapacity to reach consensus on a specific argument, and then proving this by referencing specifics of that argument in this argument. If what you say about WP:BLP should be believed, then it is already explained in that policy, and irrelevant to this policy-change suggestion. If, instead, what you're intending to do is to gain further support for a specific argument that you're incapable of succeeding in independently on, then may I suggest to this argument that you stop furthering this policy-change, and deal with the other argument separately? 8472 (talk) 04:10, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Actually, it's very much for us to judge, per the WP:BLP policy. Now, i'm generally the guy on the inclusion side of BLP issues, but that's only in relation to names, birth dates, and statements made by the subject themselves. I drawn the line at statements made by others that can easily fall within the realm of defamation. Such things need to be well sources before they can be included. Silverseren 00:43, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- I'm not entirely sure that's necessary for Misplaced Pages to judge. Some people find the modern uses of Hitler, or the Columbine Massacre offensive, but that doesn't negate the importance of those modern applications. The fact exists, and it is up for the researcher to judge the moral implications. Misplaced Pages provides access to issues for a researcher to judge. Are you suggesting that Misplaced Pages should work to censor things as well? 8472 (talk) 00:05, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Another thing to consider is that the article that sparked this discussion, Guy Fieri, the trivia that was being inserted, while meant to be a parody, could still be easily seen as defamatory and not all that appropriate to be included (calling Fieri "the third and final antichrist"). I think such an insertion needs an independent source covering its use far more than normal trivia does, just because of its content. Silverseren 17:33, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- The problem with LGRdC's style that extends to others working in the area is that they add the connection first, and find the sources later. While it is not contentious information, nor otherwise anything immediately damaging to the work which would otherwise require removal of the info until a source is found, this has the impact of other editors picking up the same style - but often without the source seeking followup. These sections are extremely easy to grow like kuzdu, so if they aren't limited to start, it becomes hard when someone actually does start trimming down and get contested as to why they are being removed. Its why asking for sources to back up such sections in articles from the start keeps them trim though allows for appropriate growth when sources are discovered. --MASEM (t) 13:42, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
OpposeSupport The various policies already cover trivia, it is not as though secondary sources aren't required everywhere else as well. If anything the place in the policies that needs to be emphasised and changed a little is putting a bit into WP:DUE to emphasize relevance to the topic. In particular to say something like that just because Lisa Simpson plays a saxophone that of itself is not something relevant to the saxophone article. Something abut saxophones would be needed to make it relevant. Dmcq (talk) 08:34, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- I agree entirely that DUE is problematic in that (i) it is our only bit of policy addressing relative relevance, and (ii) as part of NPOV it (naturally) focuses solely on viewpoints, not on the general issue of relative relevance. What we need is a policy that addresses the general issue of due weight apart from just viewpoints, but that would have to happen outside of NPOV. --195.14.206.226 (talk) 15:32, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Actually secondary sources are not required everywhere else. If notability for an article is established any reliable source can be used to support content. AIRcorn (talk) 05:52, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- I think I see what you're saying. That a secondary source is required which says Marge Simpson has blue hair rather than just observing the blue hair in the series because that's a primary source. I'd agree with that. Will change to support even though weight or original research also covers that sort of thing as it may not be so obvious as what I was thinking of Dmcq (talk) 08:05, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- +1 to Dmcq for displaying how absurd this logic is.8472 (talk) 12:29, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- I think I see what you're saying. That a secondary source is required which says Marge Simpson has blue hair rather than just observing the blue hair in the series because that's a primary source. I'd agree with that. Will change to support even though weight or original research also covers that sort of thing as it may not be so obvious as what I was thinking of Dmcq (talk) 08:05, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
Essays
A recent discussion on Essays at WT:V has me thinking... I suspect that most experienced editors are comfortable with the idea that Misplaced Pages essays do not necessarily reflect community consensus, (indeed the entire point of some essays is to express minority or dissenting opinions). However, at the moment there is no way for readers to know much support any given essay has... no way to tell if a given essay reflects the opinion lots of editors, or just a tiny minority. I think it would be useful to have such information. Not sure how to do it though. Thoughts? Blueboar (talk) 16:50, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Tagging. I still think that all of the Policy, Guideline, and Essay tag templates (you know, the ones that we put on the pages themselves that say "this page documents...") need to be centralized into a standard template (first) and have some sort of "scope" parameter added which would describe exactly what you're talking about here. it's not just essays that have this problem, after all.
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 16:58, 28 April 2012 (UTC)- How does a tag tell you whether an essay is supported by just 5 people or hundreds of people? Blueboar (talk) 18:09, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'd think that would depend on the tag, wouldn't it? If it's tagged with something like "Policy essay", I'd think that would imply a greater degree of support than something like "personal essay" would, wouldn't it? The same thing could be said about marking things as "core policy", or "specialized guideline". How else could this possibly be achieved?
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 18:16, 28 April 2012 (UTC)- I would view an essay as an opinion piece by an editor(s) about policy. The level of support an opinion has shouldn't really matter in an actual essay, as a reader should consider the arguments put forth and decide for themselves if they agree. Even if an essay had extreme support, the essay itself does not actually change policy or guidelines. Not until someone actually proposes a change to policy does it matter the level of support, and at that point we use our normal consensus judgements, and either adopt the change into policy, or reject it. Also, even if we wanted to judge support of essays, level of opposition woul;d matter as well. Monty845 19:21, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'd think that would depend on the tag, wouldn't it? If it's tagged with something like "Policy essay", I'd think that would imply a greater degree of support than something like "personal essay" would, wouldn't it? The same thing could be said about marking things as "core policy", or "specialized guideline". How else could this possibly be achieved?
- How does a tag tell you whether an essay is supported by just 5 people or hundreds of people? Blueboar (talk) 18:09, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- The page's and its talk page's history usually give a good idea of how much back and forth has gone into the page. If the history contains few revisions and has been principally written by only one or very few editors, it's a minority opinion. If it's long, and contains a lot of deliberation, and the essay explains its main points in terms of existing policy, it's probably a more widespread view. --87.79.211.105 (talk) 20:43, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- This isn't a bad measure, assuming the page has been around a long time. On the other hand, some essays are new or almost unknown, but their contents line up so perfectly with existing policies, that anyone who agreed with the policy would also agree with the essay. I think Monty's right: the primary point behind an essay is to present a viewpoint and (ideally) reasons for why that viewpoint is valid, so that the user can decide for himself (or herself) whether or not he agrees with it. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:50, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
Something that might be close enough to what you want: WP:WikiProject Essays has a ranking algorithm that accounts for how often an essay has been linked, viewed, and watched (see Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Essays/Assessment). Their rating system might make a decent proxy. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:53, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
rationalizing/rationalising -ize -ise suffixes in articles
I don't mean to cause great controversy, but I am wondering about a guideline to encourage -ize endings for English words that both the OED and Philippines/American English use -ize and depreciate -ise for only those words where -ize is used by both. Where the OED and American usage of -ise and -ize spellings do not match (analyse, analyze) the current policy would remain in effect. This would unify the spellings for many words and is not culturally biased as evidenced by OED endorsement. It also is more logical in terms of etymology. Again where the OED and current American English words differ either could be used as is now. This would only effect words in which they are in agreement. Thoughts? EdwinHJ | Talk 15:54, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose If we enforce whatever is common to both the OED and American English it would imply our support for just two variants of English. Currently we tolerate any version of English provided the article is consistent. ϢereSpielChequers 16:07, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- The OED is rather old fashioned in this area, ise is quite common in Commonwealth English, and there would be howls of protest if this proposed change to guidelines was made and bots were to implement it. -- PBS (talk) 17:49, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose In fact, -ise is the normal suffix in UK English. The usage preferred by the OED in this case is famous for not corresponding with UK norms. Bluap (talk) 14:33, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
BizProd
Following on from our experiences with BLPprod I would like to propose a BizProd for new articles on businesses.
As for why we should be discussing this now. A lobby group for paid editors has published a somewhat flawed report dissing Misplaced Pages and Wikipedians, and the whole issue of COI and paid editing is somewhat topical. Whilst I normally consider myself one of the more inclusionist members of the community, I'd concede that we have an unusual situation re business related topics, and that a more deletionist approach might be helpful. In my view:
- The ratio of volunteers whose hobby it is to write about business to hired hands operating covertly is probably not as healthy for Misplaced Pages on general business issues as it would be for hill forts, household pets or hurricanes.
- Some businesses have annoyed people, and I suspect that articles on businesses in general get more hostile unbalanced editing than do articles on extinct megafauna, Meteor showers or mathematical formulae.
- There are areas where our coverage is, or aims to be, comprehensive, and there are areas where we merely cover the most notable. with crinoids, cathedrals and corsairs this doesn't bring up a fairness issue. But with business it does. If we only create articles for the "main players" in a market then we are potentially giving them an advantage over smaller or newer rivals, especially if those articles emphasise the positive.
It would be fair and reasonable to respond to the existence of covert paid editing in business related articles by upping our minimum requirement for referencing new articles on businesses. So following on from the sticky prods we introduced for BLPs, we could introduce a BizProd; Any article created after 1st June 2012 where the subject is a currently trading commercial business needs at least one independent Reliable Source. For the avoidance of doubt, sports teams, musical groups, charities and cultural institutions are not subject to this form of deletion This would be a tougher and simpler standard than for BLPs, but that reflects the reality that some of these authors are actually paid to edit, and if our rules clearly state that they must be able to cite a reliable source such as a newspaper then it is reasonable to expect them to do so. It doesn't directly address the fairness issue, but IMHO there is more of a responsibility on the community to keep business articles neutral than there is for articles on waterways or wrestlers, and requiring a reliable source is a step in the right direction.
Like the BLPprod, valid ones should only be removed if the article receives a reference, and otherwise they'd be deleted after ten days. ϢereSpielChequers 16:28, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Support if and only if a BLP policy for companies is created, which I also support. Silverseren 17:42, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm not sure I'm seeing the connection. BLP already applies to information about identifiable living people anywhere on the project and that includes articles about companies. Or are you suggesting that companies be protected in the same way as people? If so that is quite tangential to this suggestion and would I hope be quite contentious. ϢereSpielChequers 18:30, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Because companies are directly related to people's livelihoods, defamatory material that is not well sourced hurts those people as well. The point of the BLP policy is to protect people from undue harm that false negative information in their article would bring. This should also hold true to companies. Besides, if you're going to create a BLP prod for companies, then they should also have a BLP policy that protects them from harm. Silverseren 18:39, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- If we accepted that argument then the same would apply for any organisation, not just a company. However the argument against protecting businesses as if they were living people is that, well, they aren't living people. The damage is indirect rather than direct. That isn't to say we should be complacent about article quality in any area. But people deserve more protection than corporate entities. However as the BizProd proposal is unrelated to your proposal to treat companies as people, why not start that proposal as a separate thread? ϢereSpielChequers 18:54, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Considering that companies are considered, legally, living people, I would think what applies to people on Misplaced Pages should also apply to them. But my qualified support remains, I only support this proposal if a BLP policy for companies is also created. Silverseren 19:01, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Debating corporate personhood here seems a bit unproductive, because it doesn't matter either way. What matters is that company articles are a continuing source of controversy, both on and off Misplaced Pages. A suggestion here is that a COMPANY policy with the same type of clear protections that the BLP policy provides will go a long way to lessening the controversies. This BizProd would then be much more easily accepted as a good thing by everyone. -- Eclipsed (talk) (COI Declaration) 19:19, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- @ Silver seren even in the US the law still has the caveat "The doctrine does not hold that corporations are "people" in the literal sense, nor does it grant to corporations all of the rights attendant on individuals". I suspect that outside the US a suggestion that we adopt a more pro business policy than even US law requires would be even more contentious. Now do either of you have any comments on the BizProd idea? ϢereSpielChequers 19:29, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Considering that companies are considered, legally, living people, I would think what applies to people on Misplaced Pages should also apply to them. But my qualified support remains, I only support this proposal if a BLP policy for companies is also created. Silverseren 19:01, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- If we accepted that argument then the same would apply for any organisation, not just a company. However the argument against protecting businesses as if they were living people is that, well, they aren't living people. The damage is indirect rather than direct. That isn't to say we should be complacent about article quality in any area. But people deserve more protection than corporate entities. However as the BizProd proposal is unrelated to your proposal to treat companies as people, why not start that proposal as a separate thread? ϢereSpielChequers 18:54, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Because companies are directly related to people's livelihoods, defamatory material that is not well sourced hurts those people as well. The point of the BLP policy is to protect people from undue harm that false negative information in their article would bring. This should also hold true to companies. Besides, if you're going to create a BLP prod for companies, then they should also have a BLP policy that protects them from harm. Silverseren 18:39, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm not sure I'm seeing the connection. BLP already applies to information about identifiable living people anywhere on the project and that includes articles about companies. Or are you suggesting that companies be protected in the same way as people? If so that is quite tangential to this suggestion and would I hope be quite contentious. ϢereSpielChequers 18:30, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- Support because this will help to improve Misplaced Pages. For example, this will help new page patrollers with clearer instructions regarding company articles. And also because it is a good first step towards drafting a COMPANY policy with the same type of clear protections against hostile unbalanced editing that the BLP policy provides. -- Eclipsed (talk) (COI Declaration) 19:51, 29 April 2012 (UTC)
- 'Oppose This will not solve any problem. In the case of individuals, what is wanted is simply a references to support the basic WP:V, and this is not necessarily going to be something that is a RS for notability . We had a particular problem is claims that simply can not be sourced at all, and the consequent possibility of spoofing. In the case of businesses, establishing the basic existence is extremely easy at least for companies in the US and Europe. Dealing with all subjects in some countries is a problem of cultural bias and lack of available sources, but a business we cannot verify will be quickly deleted--the current problem is more that of verifying non commercial entities in these countries.
- Nor do I support BIZBLP--it will be used for censorship. Harm to people is ethically very different than to institutions, at least as I and I think as most of us see it. The need to avoid discussing the minor misdeeds of nonpublic figures is basic to civilized behavior. A business enterprise is inherently out in public, and must take its chances. DGG ( talk ) 01:14, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Question Why should a charitable organization be treated differently from a non-charitable organization? They are IMO equally likely to abuse Misplaced Pages as an advertising medium and more likely to feel they're entitled to positive coverage here (you know, because they're doing such good work that even the most well-documented criticism is unfair). Furthermore, they can be subjected to fairly nasty negative campaigns, e.g., Susan G. Komen for the Cure's recent problems. Then there's the problem of defining a "charity". Is a 501(c)(4) non-profit local employee union a "charity"? How about a 501(c)(4) non-profit "civic league" lobbying group (the ACLU might be the best known: donations are not tax-deductible to these groups). How about a 501(c)(7) social club? These are all non-profits, which just means that they don't take profits home at the end of the year. Many large orgs have both non-profit and for-profit components. We handle all of these types of orgs in the same notability policy. Why split them here? WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:49, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- The rationale for treating not for profits differently is that we are more likely to be dealing with an unpaid editor. They probably have a strong POV but they should be treated as any other newbie. ϢereSpielChequers 07:46, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I've seen many instances that disagree with that rationale, especially in regards to paid employees of a non profit organization. -- Eclipsed (talk) (COI Declaration) 13:31, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I'm with Eclipsed here: fundraising staff is often paid and often looking for free advertising. They might not hire an outside agency to write an article on Misplaced Pages, but they would probably tell their existing paid employees to do so. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:35, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- I don't doubt that there will be exceptions in both directions, after all I did say that we were more likely to be dealing with an unpaid editor not that we were almost always or even just likely dealing with an unpaid editor where charities were concerned. But my experience of charities is that they tend to have more volunteers and goodwill than businesses - lots of people volunteer time for charity, how many do so for companies? ϢereSpielChequers 21:46, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- The rationale for treating not for profits differently is that we are more likely to be dealing with an unpaid editor. They probably have a strong POV but they should be treated as any other newbie. ϢereSpielChequers 07:46, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose Real people are different. Real people have expectations of privacy, and legal rights against defamation that a corp does not have. It is those two reasons that justify BLP policy and BLPPROD, not a general desire to fight against the tide of unnotable people. Furthermore, there is no reason why this proposed policy should be restricted to corps, why not extend it to all organizations? Lastly, what does Trading mean in this context? If it means that they have stock traded, that would be a very large indication of notability, as most small business are closely held. Monty845 01:56, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Trading means in commerce - everything from the corner store to the shipping company. I carefully avoided using phrases such as limited company or traded to keep this broad. But we could change it to "businesses, broadly construed" if trading has a different meaning in American EnglishϢereSpielChequers 07:46, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Question - How is this any different from current Misplaced Pages practice? When I've tried to write an article about a commercial entity, even if it is marked with {{under construction}} or {{In creation}} it still gets a PROD and often gets converted to a full AfD in spite of multiple independent sources of information with several editors willing to cut out a business article simply because they have never heard of the business, so to them personally it is non-notable. To survive such an AfD, it usually requires at least 2-3 independent reliable sources to give notability to the topic including 3rd party articles that go into depth about the company, and even then sometimes business related articles don't survive the AfD process. Perhaps I just happen to attract the deletionists of Misplaced Pages when I write these kind of articles so my experience may be different from others. Even so, what role does this proposed policy actually do that isn't already covered abundantly in existing Misplaced Pages policies and what exactly will be a kind of change in terms of what article will get deleted that according to current policy won't be right now? I don't "get it" in terms of what this policy suggestion even would do other than multiply rules and make wikilawyering even easier from conflicting rules, or indeed reducing the standard allowing more of these kind of articles to be written on flimsier kinds of sources than is currently the case. --Robert Horning (talk) 08:44, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Comment - The proposal is for "currently trading commercial business", but that leaves out private companies not on a stock exchange, and there are many of those. — Sctechlaw (talk) 23:59, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Perhaps this means something different in American English, but to me ""currently trading commercial business" means any business large or small that is currently operating. "Currently traded commercial business" would mean one whose shares were bought and sold on a stock exchange. My rationale behind stipulating that they were currently trading is that as no-one would financially benefit from writing an article on a company that had ceased trading, I would assume anyone writing about companies that have gone bust or otherwise ceased trading would be a volunteer and entitled to the same discretion as we give other newbies who submit unreferenced but uncontentious articles. If currently trading implies currently traded in American English would you care to suggest an alternative phrase? ϢereSpielChequers 21:29, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- As an often paid editor I would like to respect Herostratus' concerns on paid editors "voting" on policy for which we have a COI. But I do want to comment that BLP-like protections for organizations (should be orgs, not just businesses) should be because these articles are prone to attract bias/vandalism and have a real-life impact on the subject. This may be the single best way to improve the quality/balance of these articles and dramatically detract paid editing. Helping impartial volunteer editors clean house should take precedence over collaborating with paid editors. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 01:11, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Support. WSC's three tenets are an accurate description of the difference between editors of business articles and other subjects and justification for this proposal. (Would also support applying this to nonprofits; they may (or may not) have a nobler cause, but can be just as obnoxiously self-promotional when competing for donations, grants, publicity, etc.) Kilopi (talk) 23:47, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Oppose, largely per Monty. WSC's rationale appears to open with the completely correct premise that there are a lot more business articles than there are volunteers to maintain and check them, which is perfectly true...of pretty much any article on Misplaced Pages. If you want to improve the situation, the answer is to help work towards attracting new editors to curate existing content, not trim content so we have less to maintain. Ironholds (talk) 20:29, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
User advertising policy proposal
I've proposed an amendment to WP:NOT to clarify in policy the long-standing prohibition on commercial advertisements posted by users. Please see Misplaced Pages talk:What Misplaced Pages is not#Proposed addition to "Misplaced Pages is not a soapbox or means of promotion" for the details. Prioryman (talk) 07:54, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
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