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Revision as of 00:01, 26 July 2016 editNableezy (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Page movers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers56,155 edits Gilbert Achcar in Mahmoud Abbas: new section← Previous edit Revision as of 00:16, 26 July 2016 edit undoSfarney (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users3,974 edits Gilbert Achcar in Mahmoud AbbasNext edit →
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*{{cite book|author=Gilbert Achcar|title=The Arabs and the Holocaust: The Arab-Israeli War of Narratives|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=3q5dFD61V5oC&pg=PA285|date=27 April 2010|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|isbn=978-1-4299-3820-4|page=285}} *{{cite book|author=Gilbert Achcar|title=The Arabs and the Holocaust: The Arab-Israeli War of Narratives|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=3q5dFD61V5oC&pg=PA285|date=27 April 2010|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|isbn=978-1-4299-3820-4|page=285}}
The above source has been challenged as unreliable for the attributed view removed . Is ] writing in a book published by ] a reliable source? Seems absurd even asking this, but seeking outside opinions on the quality of that source for that material. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - 00:01, 26 July 2016 (UTC)</small> The above source has been challenged as unreliable for the attributed view removed . Is ] writing in a book published by ] a reliable source? Seems absurd even asking this, but seeking outside opinions on the quality of that source for that material. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - 00:01, 26 July 2016 (UTC)</small>
:I know it is not the question you asked, but the statement quoted is wry, satirical, and complex. It is of the nature of (1) opinion rather than fact, and that opinion is based on (2) an interpretation of (3) the preferences of (4) a large group of people and state policies (5) that cannot be objectively examined. That is not just one reason but a chain composed of five weak links. In short, it is not encyclopedic. Do we have a strong reason for using it? ] ] 00:16, 26 July 2016 (UTC)

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    Welcome — ask about reliability of sources in context!

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    Deseret News

    This is a slightly stretching the remit of this board since it's a question of independence rather than reliability, but this's the closest we've got. The question is:

    Whether or not, and to what extent, the Deseret News is independent on subjects touching the Mormon Church, for the purposes of WP:GNG, which requires coverage in reliable sources that are "independent of the subject".

    The Deseret News is a notable and reliable source for the purposes of using it as a cite ref in an article, generally -- I think most people would probably agree with with that. They're a large and long-established general-audience world-and-local-news newspaper with a large circulation, a mainstream point of view, and, I'd assume, an active fact-checking arm.

    That doesn't mean they are independent of the Mormom Church for the purposes of establishing whether a subject covered by them is notable enough to have an article (that's where the "independent of the subject" clause of WP:GNG comes in).

    The paper is owned by the Mormon Church. While their editorial side appears to be pretty much like any other general-audience paper, I don't know if they would investigate wrongdoing in the Mormon Church with any vigor. Probably not.

    And they do print Mormon Church news to a much greater degree than, say, the Boston Globe or whatever. On the other hand, they are based in Salt Lake City, where the doings of the Mormon Church are important regardless. If they didn't cover the church much it would be odd, and not good business.

    So I dunno. My inclination is to read the "independent of the subject" clause fairly narrowly and the Deseret News would be outside that clause. It's a newspaper, the ownership is peripheral to what it is. Similarly as the Christian Science Monitor is independent of the Christian Science Church for WP:GNG purposes IMO.

    Contrast with the magazine Ensign which is also owned by the Mormons, but is 1) mainly directed to Mormons, and 2) mainly has articles about Mormons, the Mormon Church, and so forth. It's a house organ, basically. The Deseret News isn't.

    But I don't know. I don't read the Deseret News and I'm not really familiar with it. Maybe I have wrong idea about the paper. Anybody have an idea? Herostratus (talk) 05:15, 9 July 2016 (UTC)

    • There is a 2012 discussion about Deseret News from this noticeboard, at Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard/Archive_122#Deseret_News.  As far as I know, the Deseret News is considered to be a regional newspaper and a WP:RS reliable source.  Unscintillating (talk) 00:59, 11 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Journalistic independence is a part of Journalism ethics and standards.  As per from the Center for Journalism Ethics, there is a "long-standing principle that journalists should be independent from the groups they write about".  I reject the idea that a WP:RS can have a trial in the court of public opinion of Misplaced Pages editors, to determine that the source is in violation of the code of journalistic ethics.  Disparaging the journalists as a group like this without evidence I would think would be considered a form of WP:BLP, but I can't find it.  Unscintillating (talk) 00:59, 11 July 2016 (UTC)
      • I think this (and the AfD from which this is a spawn of) is looking at a different question than the 2012 query was. The 2012 query was more about reliability than independence. In particular, the query was, "can we use Deseret News to source Mitt Romney?" That is not a question of WP:N, as hundreds of other RSes assert Mitt's notability and Deseret News need not be used to do that. pbp 03:04, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
    • This gets more focused when identifying material that is from the "LDS Church News", which while still published by Deseret, does not present itself as the Deseret News.  Church News webpages state, "The LDS Church News is an official publication of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The publication's content supports the doctrines, principles and practices of the Church."  But at , we also get the name of the reporter, Jason Swensen.  So now, a claim that Jason Swensen has violated journalistic ethics regarding independence would appear to be a BLP issue.  Unscintillating (talk) 00:59, 11 July 2016 (UTC)
    You're completely misunderstanding the question if you think this is a WP:BLP issue somehow, to the point that your contribution becomes less than useless if you are trying to quash any discussion of this sort of thing under some bizzaro overstretching of BLP. Don't do that. Writers are of course permitted to write any number of things for any number of employers for any number of reasons. No reasonable person could stretch this into any kind of accusation against anybody. Sheesh. Herostratus (talk) 04:16, 11 July 2016 (UTC)
    It looks to me that the Deseret News is a reliable, local newspaper that would be very unlikely to criticize any members in "good-standing" of the LDS Church. Guy1890 (talk) 03:37, 11 July 2016 (UTC)
    Yup. The interesting question is, how "independent" of the LDS are they? Suppose the LDS promotes some people to Grand Poobah. How does it go down? Is it:
    1. The LDS Church tells them "Here's a list of our new Grand Poobahs. Print it."
    2. Or do they just figure on their own that their owner (the LDS Church) would be happy if they print it?
    3. Or maybe they figure "Well, most of our readers are LDS, a fair number of them would want to read about the LDS Church's new Grand Poobahs".
    If it's the first they are not independent (for LDS personnel news), if its the last they certainly are, if its the middle one its debatable. Herostratus (talk) 04:24, 11 July 2016 (UTC)
    • This may be an aside, but are not daily newspapers at the low tier when it comes to establishing notability via "significant coverage"? Local newspapers that cover topics of concern to a region are even more so, it would seem to me. The fact that a local newspaper covers a football game, for example, does not make a coach notable. K.e.coffman (talk) 04:31, 11 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Not independent: As noted on the AfD that necessitated this spinoff discussion, Deseret News is affiliated with the Mormon church, is used as an organ to promote church actions, and has a mission statement stating it follows Mormon guidelines. As such, it should not be used to assess notability of officials within the Mormon church (it can be used for other things how, including sourcing Mormon officials, provided there is also significant coverage from something not tied in to the LDS Church). Also, bad form to User:Herostratus for spinning this off. pbp 02:37, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
    It's not at all bad form to try bring in other minds and voices to consider this difficult question, particularly editors who aren't involved in any discussions directly bearing on the question. In fact, that is exactly what this noticeboard is for. So I don't take kindly to your absurd and insulting characterization of me, which is intended to quash free discussion at the Misplaced Pages. However, I'm not surprised, given the train wreck you your gang have made of Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Octaviano Tenorio. It's stone obvious that you have not considered the question for one nanosecond, you're just pursuing your agenda. So don't. It doesn't make you look good. Herostratus (talk) 03:04, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
    Dude, this is pretty clearly WP:FORUMSHOPPING. "My gang"? I don't have a "gang". Saying I have a "gang" is no more or less a personal attack than saying you have "bad form". pbp 05:32, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
    Bringing Deseret News up here is fine. It might help clarify future AFDs. --NeilN 05:42, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Moderately independent: It is slightly more openly faith-based in tone than the Christian Science Monitor, see here but it is a large regional newspaper, has standard journalistic fact-checking and ethics, carries Associated Press news stories, and the only other major paper in the area is the Salt Lake Tribune. Per the local/regional question, keep in mind that the SLC area is the largest metro area between Denver and Sacramento. Herostratus and Unscintillating pretty much outline the situation, though PBP rightly notes that it will most likely be relatively uncritical of current LDS Church leadership, though I believe it has adequate independence to meet the "multiple" source requirement if there is non-Mormon coverage on a topic. LDS members are not robotic zombies, no more than Catholics or Southern Baptists. They are a church that leans conservative but has a lot of diversity these days. This is not a mere propaganda outlet, it's a "real" newspaper and it is probably no more "biased" than a News Corporation paper. Frankly, upon a cursory review of today's edition, it's better quality paper than my town's local rag owned by a generic newspaper chain (Lee Enterprises). Montanabw 02:56, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Not at all independent when it comes to LDS-related activities and subjects. This should be self-evident. --NeilN 05:16, 16 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Journalistic independence is a part of Journalism ethics and standards.  As per the link above from the Center for Journalism Ethics, there is a "long-standing principle that journalists should be independent from the groups they write about".  It is self-evident that no professional reporter is "independent" of a paycheck and living on the planet Earth.  Do you have any evidence that the journalism ethics standards of Deseret News are substandard?  Unscintillating (talk) 17:23, 17 July 2016 (UTC)
    • First off, Unscintillating, you need stop referencing a poorly-sourced article and decouple being independent and being ethical (This has been said to you numerous times by numerous people and you've ignored it each time). And there's plenty of evidence, including from Deseret News' own pages, that Deseret News is beholden to the interests of the LDS Church and therefore not independent of it. pbp 20:48, 17 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Having read the AfDs that spawned this question, and this above discussions, I'm inclined to say that the Deseret News is not independent insofar as it seems a poor idea to use it to pass the GNG. If there isn't enough reliable sources that are independent of the Church to verify notability, I'm not sure how those dependent sources make the difference. Der Wohltemperierte Fuchs 00:24, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    • AfD has closed with a conclusion that, "I consider the primary argument around the definition of 'independent source' to be a fundamental misunderstanding of what we mean by 'independent of the article subject'. The sources aren't directly connected to the article subject but to an organisation of which he's a part, and that degree of connection isn't sufficient to discount the sources, any more than we would discount the Journal of the American Statistical Association or The Spectator as sources for biographies because most of the people mentioned will be connected to the ASA or the Conservative Party."  Unscintillating (talk) 01:17, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    So? This isn't AfD, there's no consensus here right now that Deseret News is independent, and there's already considerable blowback to that statement made as part of a biased supervote. If the admin wants his opinion heard here, let him come here. pbp 03:26, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    Use of CV in a BLP

    Can someone please point me to prior decisions regarding the use of a CV as a RS or acceptable source in a BLP, please? 14:58, 16 July 2016 (UTC)

    There's a general guideline at WP:SELFSOURCE, might help.— Preceding unsigned comment added by Montanabw (talkcontribs) 09:31, July 17, 2016
    As rule of thumb the reliability of info in a CV depends on how detailed and specific it is. If someone claims to have published a certain paper, or held a certain position at a particular institution, it tends to be reliable (and it usually can be cross-checked). Claims to have published "over 100 papers" or the like are less reliable, because who knows if this includes conference presentations, newspaper op eds, or whatever. Shock Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 16:40, 17 July 2016 (UTC)
    Good point, Shock Brigade Harvester Boris. Sooooo....if a CV is published with oversight by an editorial review board by say...a notable university that lists their faculty with respective CVs, would it be appropriate to consider it a RS? 19:11, 17 July 2016 (UTC)
    What you describe would probably be reliable... But we would need to know the specifics about both the article and the source to give you a definitive answer. Blueboar (talk) 19:40, 17 July 2016 (UTC)
    Blueboar, here is link to the CV, the direct link to home page of website, and link to a short bio on the faculty page. 03:11, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    I don't see any reason to doubt what's in the CV; it's garden variety stuff. I do have to quibble with one of your earlier remarks. Appearance of a CV on a university website doesn't imply "oversight by an editorial review board" on the part of the university. I've never heard of a university vetting the contents of individual CVs -- my university certainly has never done so with mine, nor have colleagues ever mentioned such a thing. (Perhaps it's different in Pakistan.) Shock Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 03:23, 18 July 2016 (UTC)

    Shock Brigade Harvester Boris, perhaps you can help me understand something I find a bit confusing. It may be causing me to give academia too much credit. I was inclined to think that a CV or article or most anything else published on a university website which is managed and overseen by the university would be considered a form of "peer reviewed academic publication". With that in mind, I looked to WP:RS which states: Material such as an article, book, monograph, or research paper that has been vetted by the scholarly community is regarded as reliable, where the material has been published in reputable peer-reviewed sources or by well-regarded academic presses. Your thoughts? 04:44, 18 July 2016 (UTC)

    A CV posted on a university website isn't a peer-reviewed publication, Atsme. In fact, it's not a publication at all in the sense that that term is used by academics. Peer-reviewed publications include articles published in (some) scholarly journals, books, etc. A university website is not peer reviewed (though it might host copies of peer-reviewed articles). Cordless Larry (talk) 14:02, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    I'm glad you brought that up Cordless Larry because digital media was my next topic. I certainly can't speak for all university websites or say for certain they are neither peer reviewed nor editorially monitored, and I'm not that well-versed in the subject. Perhaps you have some insight you can share? I tend to think that websites published by Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Smithsonian, etc. are peer reviewed and editorially monitored, but again, I have no way of knowing for certain and you say they're not. I am also of the mind that we are in a bit of a rut when it comes to being overly dependent on "paper published", as in website material originating from physical books, journals, magazines etc. and their online versions with far less credibility being given to "published" material originating on a website, specifically news websites that began as digital publications and lack the history. Ironically, I wrote a craft improvement article in a trade magazine back in 1997 predicting a paperless future and can't help but wonder how prepared we (WP) are in order to properly take into consideration those changes when determining notability. I do know that government websites are peer reviewed including their online reports, news updates, etc. and that the published material is overseen (and screened) by an editorial director or webmaster. Confusion arises when published articles on either university websites or government websites are considered "promotional" when a member of staff or a donor is the topic of a BLP. I also noticed that WP is slowly recognizing online social websites such as FB as an acceptable source per WP:SELFPUBLISHED. What has stirred my curiosity of late is how material published on the internet will be gauged and tracked with regards to impact indices, website impact factors (Alexa?), and so many other aspects. The internet is open to the world, and it appears WP has the technology to somehow gauge the societal impact of its articles on a global scale? If not, for future reference, any idea how that will be achieved? I think the BLP we've collaboratively discussed at AfD is a good example regarding the issues of impact factors. Other than the traditional methods of gathering impact indices, how do we determine how many readers are benefitting from the ePublished works, especially if that work is downloaded and distributed in classrooms? 16:07, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    I wonder whether you are conflating peer review and editorial control, Atsme? Most websites will have an editor, who might do some fact-checking of content, but that's not the same as peer review. I know from experience that in all UK universities I have knowledge of, staff write their own website biographies and these are not subject to much control unless question are raised over their accuracy. As for news items, scholarly peer review can takes months to complete, so it simply wouldn't be practical for those to be peer reviewed. On the paper/electronic distinction, the vast majority of respected scholarly journals are now published electronically, and an increasing proportion of books are too, so I'm not sure that I understand your argument about us being reliant on paper publications. Cordless Larry (talk) 16:17, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    Note that I'm not saying that something has to be peer reviewed for it to be reliable, though. I think it's fine to use a CV as a source for basic facts about a person, as long as we are sure that the CV is genuine and accurate. Cordless Larry (talk) 16:27, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    Actually, my reference to peer review is rather loose and does not refer to a controlled peer review process as with a medical or scientific paper and review process prior to entry into a journal. My use in this instance refers to peers being the primary readers of, say an alumni section, faculty list with bios, university news, student updates, and the same as it would apply to government. If a mistake or misinformation is discovered in an article, report, bio, etc., they would bring it to the attention of the webmaster (oversight editor). 17:09, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    Ah, OK. Understood. As far as I am aware, universities don't have formal mechanisms for that form of peer review of their websites, although I'm sure they would respond if a claim of inaccuracy was made. Cordless Larry (talk) 17:14, 18 July 2016 (UTC)

    I have to point out that in the case of a CV published on a University's web page, they probably used the same document -- or its predecessor -- in their vetting of the applicant -- to hire the person! So, presumably, the university believed the person wasn't lying on their CV/resume! People do, but that's a different issue -- and one that gets people fired. So even if the U doesn't edit or vet the CV, they just say, "send it to IT..." there is a presumption of verifiability that one wouldn't get, say, if they published their CV on their own blog... Montanabw 06:14, 19 July 2016 (UTC)

    I never use CVs for the purpose of notability as it is self-published (but it may be used to support non-controversial article content). I don't know how American/European universities function, but the existing practice in universities in Singapore is that Professors have a dedicated webspace where they host their personal webpage and they upload their CVs themselves. There is no editorial check - the process doesn't involve any human sysadmin unless the prof specifically asks for help. Even in that case, the sysadmin doesn't check the content of the CV but only assists with technical issues. --Lemongirl942 (talk) 14:05, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Same in American universities. The submission process for my CV is "vi CV.html". For all practical purposes CVs are self-published. Shock Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 14:11, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Yep self published. They are counted as reliable for straightforward information about a person unless something else says otherwise. And like everything they are not infallible even on straightforward facts. Dmcq (talk) 14:36, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    Issue with sourcing at Hyder, Alaska

    See Talk:Hyder, Alaska#Law enforcement for background. Unscintillating opened a thread at Misplaced Pages talk:Editing policy#Hyder, Alaska, which another editor almost immediately closed as off-topic, suggesting passing the buck to this page instead. I suspect that this NYT story was the impetus behind resurrecting this issue from the dead after so many years. Both that story and Hyder's entry at the Community Database Online, maintained by the Alaska Division of Community and Regional Affairs, offer the impression that Hyder is served by the Ketchikan-area post of the Alaska State Troopers on a strictly infrequent basis and sees no other law enforcement presence. Neither goes into sufficient enough detail, but what mention they do make contradicts the sources Unscintillating mentioned. What little interaction I've had with Niteshift36 reveals a propensity for turning every discussion into a ridiculously protracted argument, which was providing me with zero incentive to seek out higher-quality sources. I'll give it a try if I make it to the library this week, though. As far as details: if Hyder's telephone service is tied into Stewart's local exchange, I would think that to mean that calling 9-1-1, even from the American side, gets you a dispatcher in Stewart rather than one in Ketchikan. Also, I know little about Canadian jurisprudence, but in Alaska, a town the size of Stewart wouldn't have a judge, but might have a magistrate. I also don't know enough to say whether or not that would make any difference, but I would tend to agree with an earlier comment that such a situation would require an international treaty. RadioKAOS / Talk to me, Billy / Transmissions 07:00, 18 July 2016 (UTC)

    • Thanks for starting a discussion with a personal attack on me (and not having the courtesy of leaving a notice about it for me). Your good faith and not bothering to try to discuss it at the talk page sets the best tone for productive discussion. The thread at the Editing policy page should be closed. That's not where that discussion belongs. The page clearly states: "This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the Editing policy page." What is actually at issue here is the claim that the RCMP provides law enforcement services to Hyder. No source has been produced that says that. The NYT article you linked to does not make that claim. The Alaska Community Database doesn't make that claim. While you try to make this about me, you've ignored the fact that an IP editor removed it in June, which is what revived the issue. I have removed it, another experienced user (Reyk) and an admin (Drmies) have also agreed that the statement in question is unproven. I left it in the article for a month with a fact tag. None have been produced. That's exactly how it got left in so long.... people just quit caring that it was not sourced. This is the simplest of matters: The statement is unsourced and V clearly says it can (and should) be removed. Restoring unsourced material is little more than vandalism. Niteshift36 (talk) 13:34, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    I'm confused about "not leaving a notice". Are you saying that I'm misunderstanding the purpose of {{U}} versus another template? Or are you saying that I didn't go to your talk page because I figured that a notification template would accomplish the same thing? I believe I already mentioned that I live in a place with limited amounts of summer. As such, I prefer to take what little time I have for this at present to try and get work done, not providing fodder for people who appear more interested in feeding off of others' energy all the time than in trying to really move the encyclopedia beyond being yet another website that's into aping other websites.
    BTW, the rest of this was hair-splitting to the point of being mind-splitting. And what's up with "experienced user Reyk" and "admin Drmies"? It implies that you're trying to paint me as a newbie. Take a better look. I may choose to not be around tomorrow to celebrate the occasion. RadioKAOS / Talk to me, Billy / Transmissions 12:51, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Using that template isn't really a notificatio. It just shows I was mentioned in a comment. I don't necessarily go to those. It would have been appropriate to put a notice on my talk page. There's no hair splitting at all my friend. The part about the RCMP is unsourced. That's Misplaced Pages 101. Source it or don't restore it. Then you go back to complaining about how I answered you. Yes, I pointed out that ReyK was an experienced user and Drmies is an admin because you keep acting like the removal is something I just made up on my own. I haven't spent much time looking at your experience, but again, WP:V is Misplaced Pages 101, so I'm confused how someone with all your experience is struggling with that. Niteshift36 (talk) 13:35, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    "WP:V is Misplaced Pages 101". Sure enough, I just now read yet another article for the first time which was well-referenced, but was also incomprehensible when read as a whole because the existence of citations following statements happened to be the only element tying it together. So if you're one of the folks helping to lead us down that slippery slope, thanks a lot. It further begs the question I've been asking for years and no one has dared to answer: if we're following other websites that closely, why can't I just bypass the Misplaced Pages article and go straight to that other website and not have to deal with the inevitable errors in translation? I have to be concerned about whether that's already happened and that I'm continuing to contribute to something which has already jumped the shark. As for my experience: ever heard of BITNET or CompuServe (speaking of jumping the shark, but that was decades ago)? If any of you were as interesting as the folks I remember back during the glory days of alt.flame, then I just might have a lot more of a stomach for endless talk page discussions. RadioKAOS / Talk to me, Billy / Transmissions 13:24, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    • There isn't a verifiable, reliable source that makes the claim. Period. And yes, I started on Compuserve... whatever that has to do with this. WP:V is the issue here, you don't have a source. So whay are we here? Niteshift36 (talk) 13:52, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    • User:RadioKAOS, I don't really get your point. You're saying that it is possible that sources exist that make the claim that Canadian police monitor this US town? And that there are two primary sources published by an Alaska government service that "offer the impression" that this is the case? I think Misplaced Pages needs to do a lot better than that. "Offer the impression" is original research, and the NYT article which was claimed to be a source for such statements didn't actually verify them. In other words, I really don't know what we're doing here. This doesn't even amount to a discussion of reliable sources, since the clearly reliable source (NYT) does not support the statements. Drmies (talk) 14:22, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    Pretty much no and no except for the part about giving appropriate weight to the NYT (my search of their website indicates that this is the first time they've mentioned Hyder since 1961). If I read the previous thread and Unscintillating's comments correctly, there are a wide enough variety of sources out there which a) aren't exactly in lockstep; b) don't offer significant enough mention for anyone not intimately familiar with the situation to really know one way or the other. The latter is why I say "offer the impression", because nothing has surfaced which makes this clear. This opposed to the POV-pushing route of picking one particular source out of thin air and treating it as gospel truth. The further this discussion typifies "drama board", the less incentive I have to pour through my library or local public libraries, where conclusive sources are quite likely to reside. You know, just like at least some of us used to do back before there was such a thing as knowledge about the Internet beyond a few academics and government employees World Wide Web Google.
    Unless there is a requirement to be a U.S. citizen to obtain a police certificate in Alaska, there is also the possibility of the RCMP sending Mounties assigned to the Stewart detachment to Sitka for cross-certification, but I've never heard of such a thing. I did, however, read something produced recently by historians for the Yukon–Charley Rivers National Preserve about the Klondike Gold Rush era which may be relevant. They told of an episode where two Mounties were chasing a suspect down the Yukon River from Dawson City and crossed the border. Shortly after, they were met by Joseph W. Ivey, the collector of customs for the District of Alaska. Ivey held the Mounties at gunpoint and asked if they had extradition papers. When told no, he told them to go back to where they came from, and subsequently apprehended the suspect on his own. RadioKAOS / Talk to me, Billy / Transmissions 12:51, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    • What POV pushing? You keep acting like Unscintallting's source actually said this stuff. It didn't. It's unsourced and the matter is just that simple. BTW, I have tons of experience that's applicable to articles too, but that's not how Misplaced Pages works. We don't rely on WP:OR, WP:SYNTH or "I've heard of it" as the basis. We use relilable sources. Do you have one of those that makes the claim that the RCMP handles law enforcement in Hyder? If not, what are we doing here? Niteshift36 (talk) 13:35, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    I was hoping the wikilink I provided in the second sentence at the top of this thread would suffice. Evidently not, so I'll repeat what Unscintillating said in the previous closed thread: "All sources agree, even if without satisfactory detail, that the RCMP are active across the international border at Hyder. The phrase that foreign police "pop in to say hello" is attributed to Ken Jennings. Three Google book sources repeat the phrase that "the police are of the Mountie variety". A Google book source from the University of British Columbia Press dated in 1975 calls the role an unofficial presence, but an editor in 2006 claims that Canadian judges in Stewart are paid by Alaska to handle misdemeanor cases under US law." So Unscintillating came up with a few scattered sources which say one thing. I came up with a few scattered sources which say another. None of them discuss the matter, as Unscintillating put it, in "satisfactory detail". That lack of detail, plus the jurisdictional issues brought up more than once, means that relying upon one source and discarding the rest may serve Wikipedian process, but may not serve the actual issue at hand. While the NYT is obviously farther removed from the issue than the sources Unscintillating mentioned, are you trying to say that they don't deserve appropriate weight? This addition of a further reading section is not entirely relevant to the specific article it was added to. The 1917 legislature passed the Bone Dry Law, initiating a Alaska-specific prohibition which both preceded and outlasted that of the rest of the United States, which means that Alaska's early saloon history largely predates the establishment of the territory in 1912. Tim may not have been aware of all this and instead likely added it because providing readers with exposure to the works of academic and other respected publishers could very well be a part of why we're here (and he's stated on his page that he performs this task regularly). Still, the jurisdictional issue remains. Without a sufficient explanation of how that might actually work, I would view the RCMP visting Hyder in the course of their official duties the same way I would view the military police from Fort Wainwright that I see walking through the bars around town on Friday and Saturday nights: they can certainly coordinate with civilian police if they witness or are involved with something, but the only thing they can actually do would involve their own boys and eventual prosecution under the UCMJ. RadioKAOS / Talk to me, Billy / Transmissions 13:24, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    • A wikilink? How is that a reliable source? The rest of your long response is mainly how you interpret things or impressions you might get. Once again, you are lacking a source that supports that claim. So why are we here talking about MP's at Ft. Wainwright? Niteshift36 (talk) 13:52, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    • (responding to ping) I agree with Drmies and Niteshift36 here. The issue is not the reliability or unreliability of the sources. It's that they don't make the claim they're being cited for. I'm also not sure what the point is of attacking Niteshift36 in this discussion. It doesn't seem to serve any useful purpose. Reyk YO! 15:08, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    • We're all neutral, even if you don't understand what a COI is. I think what you're grasping at is WP:INVOLVED, which is not a COI and only applies to admin actions, not discussions. Reading comprehension, try is sometime. Niteshift36 (talk) 13:52, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Is this referring to me and what I may have said about Niteshift36? I recall a recent RFC where Niteshift was completely dominating the discussion until they were told to stop. Specifically, they were told something along the lines of "It's obvious that you're more interested in pushing your POV than in gaining consensus, which is the purpose of an RFC". Does that ring any bells with anyone? It could be a double standard: there was a more recent RFC where another editor was doing the exact same thing, including making comments which were downright hostile. Not only was that editor not similary admonished, but his particular admin clique seemed to be encouraging his behavior. No surprise there, as they achieved the "consensus" they were seeking by likely scaring away potential commenters. RadioKAOS / Talk to me, Billy / Transmissions 12:51, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    • First off, nobody told me to stop anything. Second, you clearly miss the point: That your limited experience in some other matter doesn't excuse you from not acting hostile right out of the gate. You started a discussion by attacking me, without any attempt to engage in any sort of discussion at all. Niteshift36 (talk) 13:35, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    • What source? The NYT source doesn't make that claim. What have I brought? Well, the actual correct policies for a start. That already beats your offering. Niteshift36 (talk) 13:52, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    I must apologize at least in part. Since I desire to have a life, I therefore have no desire to keep straight every single controversy. As such, I had some details wrong. I was actually referring to this failed TFD. Furthermore, it was me who had something to say in reply to an endless series of not-necessarily-useful responses not dissimilar what I'm seeing in this thread. Perhaps you missed it because you already had moved on once the keep votes started pouring in? Also, I wonder how many of those delete voters who harped about "reliability" would turn right around and try to claim that every bit of US-PD material found on here is 100 percent factually accurate. RadioKAOS / Talk to me, Billy / Transmissions 13:24, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    • So your desire to "have a life" justifies starting off with a personal attack? If you bother to look, there are plenty of delete votes in that, so let's not pretend like I was the only one who thought it should go. And yes, yours was the very last comment, 9 days after the nom......and 3 days after my last response in it. So gee, I guess you'll have to excuse me for not remembering that you were there. Niteshift36 (talk) 13:52, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    • I started reading this section, but gave up halfway through the rants. From looking at the article talkpage, the sources, as used for the statement police services are provided by the mounties, do not support the material. Per WP:V "any material whose verifiability has been challenged or is likely to be challenged, must include an inline citation that directly supports the material", "The cited source must clearly support the material as presented in the article" and "Any material lacking a reliable source directly supporting it may be removed and should not be restored without an inline citation to a reliable source." Here is a hint on how to get a decent answer from this noticeboard: "Material for inclusions" "Is this source reliable to use for this material?". Only in death does duty end (talk) 15:01, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Well, maybe this noticeboard doesn't address the proposed footnote to WP:V currently being discussed at WT:V, to balance WP:BURDEN with WP:PRESERVE, but then this discussion was initially posted at WP:Editing policy with a context of developing policy rather than resolving the issue at Hyder.  Unscintillating (talk) 01:22, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
    • To repeat what I said in 2012, still visible on the talk page,

      The statement in question says, "and calling the police means a Canadian Mountie will respond".  The source for this statement is, "the police are of the Mountie variety".  The editors here have shown general agreement that they think this source is reliable in this statement...Unscintillating (talk) 05:33, 3 July 2012 (UTC)

      My statement at WP:Editing policy was,

      All sources agree, even if without satisfactory detail, that the RCMP are active across the international border at Hyder.  The phrase that foreign police "pop in to say hello" is attributed to Ken Jennings.  Three Google book sources repeat the phrase that "the police are of the Mountie variety".  A Google book source from the University of British Columbia Press dated in 1975 calls the role an unofficial presence, but an editor in 2006 claims that Canadian judges in Stewart are paid by Alaska to handle misdemeanor cases under US law.

      One possible next step here is to restore the text that was acceptable for years, based on <ref name="Whitfield2004">.  Unscintillating (talk) 01:25, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
    • You've made claims before about what a source supports and they were found to be untrue. The talk page isn't a reliable source. You need to produce one. Period. Posting this at Editing policy was incorrect, as that is not where you discuss individual article. BURDEN and PRESERVE are just two of many policies/guidelines/essays that you grossly misrepresent. Restoring your unverifiable (and likely incorrect) information isn't a "possible solution" at all, as it runs contrary to WP:V. Find a source.... that is your only possible solution. Niteshift36 (talk) 02:02, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
    • The general nature of your complaint about one of the two sources you removed is that if a source says that foreign police "pop in to say hello", this is a comment about social relationships, not a suggestion that the RCMP are also representing police authority.  I think that this is a simple matter to read for meaning.  On the other hand, I've not been able to verify the connection to Ken Jennings.  But for talk page analysis of WP:DUE weight, reading for meaning says that the meaning is that the RCMP are active as a police presence in Hyder.

      However, the second source you removed stated, "the police are of the Mountie variety".  Your claim is that this statement, "didn't even talk about the subject", diffUnscintillating (talk) 12:15, 24 July 2016 (UTC)

    This isn't a source, but as a resident of Southeast Alaska, to the best of my knowledge, if a police presence is required in Hyder, Alaska State Troopers are dispatched from the Ketchikan post and are flown in on a floatplane. Like many rural Alaskan communities, that is the full extent of police presence. Just because the RCMP are physically nearby doesn't mean they have any jurisdiction in Alaska. NorthBySouthBaranof (talk) 03:15, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
    • The sum of your comments is that you are not aware of special rules in Hyder.  We have evidence from reliable sources that there is more happening.  The 1975 source from a university press called it an unofficial presence.  We have the book source, cited in the article for years, that states that "the police are of the Mountie variety".  Your viewpoint has been addressed repeatedly on the talk page of the article, and all sources, both reliable and unreliable, either continue to agree or don't disagree that there is something more going on.  The fact that someone in Southeast Alaska is not aware of an RCMP presence in Hyder is consistent with the fact that we don't have satisfactory detail about what is going on.  Please look at the theory presented on the talk page post in 2006 that separates the handling of felonies from the handling of misdemeanors.  A recent 2016 source states, "If you call the Alaska State Troopers, they’ll dispatch the Royal Canadian Mounted Police."  Compared with 1975, long distance phone calls have changed, so this is not a static story.  Unscintillating (talk) 12:15, 24 July 2016 (UTC)

    Daily Mail

    We're being hit with a Daily Mail controversy at Talk:2016 Nice attack, mainly due to User:John's tireless crusade against the newspaper: here, Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, something at Amber Rudd about the Daily Mail, Chris Grayling, David Davis, Amber Rudd, Theresa May, Tony Blair, Andrea Leadsom, Appropriate Adult (still using the "no tabloids on BLPs" line), and [https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=2016_Atat%C3%BCrk_Airport_attack&diff=prev&oldid=727744025 2016 Ataturk Airport attack. And that's only in the span from July 1 to July 18!

    Now the excuse is that he is against tabloids, but it is curious that Daily Mail, one of the UK's largest newspapers, is described in tabloid journalism as a "middle market" tabloid, as opposed to red tops. According to the Daily Mail article, it has received various awards on journalism. So it seems like he is single-handedly trying to create a policy against using this newspaper, which I don't think is really well rooted but in any case we should have a RSN verdict about. From what I've seen, Daily Mail tends to pick up everything it can, which occasionally means it has wrong facts but most of the time makes it an invaluable resource for digging deeper into an issue. My response would never be to delete it, but to find extra sources for contentious claims made from it. Anyway, I think we need people here to provide some guidance about the source. If we need a crusade against it, then is there a better way to do that than having one editor grinding his axe? And if we don't, can you tell him to knock it off? Wnt (talk) 14:47, 18 July 2016 (UTC)

    Previous discussions: 201 (hostile-ish), 196 (hostile), 192 (inconclusive), 163 (inconclusive), and something resembling a vote at 151, which said that it was OK to use for non-contentious claims and on a case by case basis. John was involved in many of these conversations as a detractor. The question is, do we have any real change from the previous consensus that it is OK to use unless there's a reason not to? In which case the current pattern of deletions is unjustifiable. Wnt (talk) 14:57, 18 July 2016 (UTC)

    • Generally speaking the Daily Mail is not to be considered a reliable source, no matter how hot they may be on the news. I know this is one of John's interests, but, Wnt, what could be your problem with this edit? Did you see what was removed, and how poorly sourced it was? What was supposed to mean? Note 14 was a council web link, now dead; another superscript note may have pointed to this, , a primary document which I think has nothing to do with the text it is possibly supposed to verify. That the Daily Mail is mentioned in those three paragraphs (once, with a note to "15", which is a BBC article) most likely has nothing to do with why John removed--I'm pretty sure he removed it because a. this is a BLP, and that trumps a hell of a lot, and b. it was so poorly formatted that the sourcing was completely unclear. Drmies (talk) 14:58, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    @Drmies: I'm not going to try to argue that every edit was bad there; that's not my point. The question is whether we want editors seeking out and exterminating every reference to the Daily Mail on principle. And I am not convinced that's really the right thing to do. Wnt (talk) 16:11, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    I understand, Wnt, but it's just unfortunate that the first one I clicked on didn't make your point for you. I think there are plenty of sources which should be looked at in context, and it is possible that the Daily Mail is one of them, that it should be accepted in some circumstances for some kinds of things if there's nothing else (oh, wait, you already pointed at something like that: "non-contentious claims and on a case by case basis"). But if that is the case, then the examples of crusadery should be well chosen, and they should come with some kind of annotation about why this citation in this case is OK but was removed for no good reason at all. Thank you, Drmies (talk) 16:21, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    @Drmies: My point is only that we presently have someone systematically removing Daily Mail references from a wide range of current events articles under the blanket justification that tabloids don't belong in BLPs, and the first thing we need to do is figure out if that's what we want. There's also a question of how this is done - should there be talk page notification to restore the fact with a better source if possible? - and whether there should be a way to whitelist exceptions. It isn't a good situation that RSN has left this source in an endless limbo where one editor can be enforcing a policy against it that nobody else knows about. Wnt (talk) 11:10, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    Wnt, I don't see that it is proven that John is systematically culling this. In the one example I detailed, I think it is questionable that it be an instance of systematic culling. And do you want editors to notify the rest of the world for one particular edit? If the source is in limbo (I don't necessarily agree with the metaphor--"case by case basis" is not limbo), so be it. Any references that are kept by consensus can be marked as such on the talk page. Drmies (talk) 12:13, 19 July 2016 (UTC)

    Generally speaking, the Daily Mail is reliable for matters outside the area of "celebrity gossip" and noting that headlines are not articles. Alas - I know of zero really "reliable sources" for celebrity gossip - thus I would favour elimination of such gossip even when sourced to The Guardian. I have pointed out a few times now that newspapers no longer perform "fact checking" and this has not changed. In fact, more "non-facts" than ever get into newspapers than ever before. Collect (talk) 12:19, 19 July 2016 (UTC)

    Kindly note, moreover, that actual studies of scientific "press releases" found a majority of "reliable sources" not doing any fact-checking on them, and the complaints about the DM are almost entirely about headlines, and not about the actual content of articles. I am a firm believer that no headlines should be used as a source of "fact" about a topic, and those who hate the DM because they think all of its articles show a political bias should examine their own biases, alas. And iterating one's own opinions about any source does not make then stronger arguments, as far as I can tell. Collect (talk) 12:57, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    Their political biases are irrelevant, it doesn't matter; what does matter is whether they print is reliable; and as you will see if you read the links I posted, it very often is not only unreliable, but false. Laura Jamieson (talk) 18:43, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    Has it occurred to you that boingboing.net (Cory Doctorow has an article on "kickstarting" an anti-Trump comic: Dan Taylor sez, "Prepare for the TRUMPOCALYPSE! When there is no more room in HELL, the dead will TRUMP the Earth. An all-new comic book from the creative team that brought you HERO HAPPY HOUR. If you think the idea of Donald Trump as President of the United States is scary, wait until you get a look at him as a zombie overlord amassing an army of undead to rule the world.") might have a bias? That listverse.com is not a reliable source in itself (10 Disgusting Facts About The Human Mouth! or 10 Fascinating Bastard Children of Popes!) ? Or that HuffPo might have a bias ("Labour equalities spokeswoman Baroness Thornton told the Lords today that ministers should “not to pander to the racists by echoing their messages for short term gain”. She said all mainstream democratic parties should ensure “racists and extremists are pushed back into the political margin where they belong” and that the government should make sure this was “reflected in the language its ministers and its MPs use”. - the editorial "article" is quoting political opponents of the DM as though it were "fact")? It is true, amazingly enough, that all newspaper headlines are not actually sources of separate "fact", and it is also true, amazingly enough, that people who hate the "racist fascist extremism of the Daily Heil" may be too involved in opinions, and not involved enough in facts. Collect (talk) 14:00, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    • The more important point, of course, being that if something is printed in the Daily Mail and actually true, then it will almost certainly be sourceable from somewhere else more reliable. If it's in the Daily Mail and you can't find it elsewhere, that probably tells you something. Laura Jamieson (talk) 12:40, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    Which is not what WP:RS states, of course. The DM covers more medical press releases from medical journals than do other newspapers. Collect (talk) 21:35, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Why in the name of Satan would you want to use a tabloid newspaper to source something from a medical journal? I'm afraid you've lost me there. Laura Jamieson (talk) 09:35, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    Unfortunately, while we certainly don't want to use the rabble-rousing stuff here, their solid facts are often true. One criterion for using "facts" from the Daily Mail would be that if it's discreditable, and said of someone who's in a position to take libel action, it's probably a reliable fact. Not necessarily correct, but OK for our purposes. Richard Keatinge (talk) 12:46, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    The Daily Mail has been successfully sued for libel multiple times, so it doesn't seem like the possibility of a libel suit is much of a deterrent, and that standard would imply that we should treat contentious claims as more reliable than non-contentious ones.
    there's virtually never any good reason to use the Daily Mail for anything. There's no official policy banning Daily Mail citations, and best practices would dictate that editors try to find another source for materials that are non-problematic rather than simply removing them. Nevertheless: I have yet to see a case where the Daily Mail would be both necessary and sufficient as the lone source for a statement about an LP. Nblund 16:40, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Clearly people aren't reading what I posted above, or they're deliberately ignoring it because of their own political biases. There is never any reason to use the Mail as a source because if what they print is a fact, it will be covered in other sources of all political stripes, from the Guardian through the Times to the Telegraph. If you post something sourced to the Mail which can't be easily sourced elsewhere, any editor is absolutely correct to remove it, because there's a good chance it's unreliable. Ditto the Sun, the Mirror and the Express. And this isn't a right/left thing; one of the pieces removed by John above was a story about the Conservatives fiddling crime figures. Nor is it a "I hate the Daily Mail" thing; their sports journalism, for example, is notably excellent. Laura Jamieson (talk) 18:47, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    • What Wnt writes does not seem quite right. He appeared on Talk:2016 Nice attack with the same diatribe about the Daily Mail and user:John. His posting was immediately hatted as a thinly disguised personal attack on John unrelated to creating the content of the article. He made a number of points but failed to understand what was involved in editing the article. At no stage will we use the Daily Mail for the article. The French newspapers and news services, BBC News, the British broadsheets, and the top US newspapers cover all new content. Sometimes the Daily Mail will put a salacious spin on a story and contain inaccuracies. So when it's a matter of an article on a national disaster and a moderate sensitively judged approaach, their sensationalism and errors are unacceptable. This is an example of an unacceptable report. Nothing in it is reliable. They cannot even label the Palais de la Méditerranée properly. So John was quite right. We have to be very careful of sources allowed in articles like this. I am not quite sure what Wnt is hoping to achieve here. The Daily Mail's front page calling Tony Blair a MONSTER OF DELUSION made me want to vomit. As commentators on BBC News recalled, the Daily Mail had been gungho for the second gulf war. However having said that, their soduko is marvellous. And I like their reprints of the recipes of Elizabeth David, Cocquilles St Jacques, Tarte tatin, etc. Was there a Salade Niçoise? Mathsci (talk) 19:26, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    And might you tell me where in their article did it use that phrase "Monster of delusion"? " Sounds to me like a headline - and I consider headlines to have been written by headline writers and generally aimed at attracting readers. Even the The Guardian headlines are not a "source" for claims of fact. Sorry - the fact that headlines in many newspapers are designed to get readers has been true for well over a century. What counts are the facts stated in actual articles. Collect (talk) 13:45, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    @Mathsci: What's so bad about that "unacceptable" report? They have a huge amount of information there, pages and pages of text, photos of the driver being shot from multiple angles that Misplaced Pages should kill or die for, or at least write a Fair Use rationale to steal. They remind me a bit of Misplaced Pages, or at least what Misplaced Pages ought to be, vacuuming up data and not being terribly concerned if an occasional bit of it contains some minor error. And just like with Misplaced Pages, yeah, if you're citing them directly without looking for a source to back up what they say, you're committing a faux pas.
    Now regarding the speed with which you "hatted" my response , which was raised after another editor (user:Ianmacm) said that this was something John was doing Wiki-wide and which I was simply looking to quantify ... well, I'm not sure what that proves except that you're good and fast at tearing down other people's comments. However important that skill seems to have become on Misplaced Pages as a royal road to power, I would express skepticism it actually applies to this RSN question. As for it being a "personal attack", well, it's not personal since it's about what happens to our articles, and whether it's an 'attack' is what I'd like RSN to figure out - I've determined he's doing this, and now I'd like an answer whether he's doing something wrong. Wnt (talk) 01:45, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    If you want to play Mr Obtuse, please go and do it with someone other than me. During the immediate aftermath of this national disaster, you already played the clown on the article talk page with the sensitivity of an enfant gaté. Look at the current wikipedia article. Read the content just added from Libération that came from the lips of the Procureur de la République à Paris, François Molins. BBC News has not attempted to lead their readers through a series of wild and hopelessly inaccurate conjectures totally wide of the mark. Amongst other things, they reported the French government directive about spreading false rumours, on the internet or through social media, that had been issued during the pre-existing state of emergency in France. Many of those rumours are like things that can be read in the Daily Mail. Does the headline mesh at all with what Procureur Molins said? No. That is just the start. If you want further discussions on this particular topic, I suggest you pack your bags, get on the next plane, train or packet boat to Nice and continue this conversation with any obliging Niçois in the foyer of the Hotel Negresco or a café in Nice, Vieille Ville. You should probably remember to buy medical insurance, because you're likely to be admitted to hospital with multiple bruising, possibly worse. Merci et bon voyage ! Mathsci (talk) 06:16, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Again - headlines != articles. Headlines = attempts to get readers. Only. Collect (talk) 21:35, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    @Mathsci: If your goal was to write a comment I completely don't understand, you've succeeded. Oh, after a while I figured out what unflattering thing wikt:enfant gaté means - you might want to give it an entry in Wiktionary. But why people in Nice, France are going to beat me up if I suggest the Daily Mail is a passable source, or even if I suggest someone said the fanatic who did the killing yelled "allah akbar" first, according to not only the Daily Mail but a French news source, well, that is just so bizarre a thing to say I can't even see how you worked your way up to it. Wnt (talk) 15:34, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    If you had to look up enfant gaté, it's probably better that you don't visit Nice in the immediate future. The only documented material on someone crying Allahu Akbar is in the regional paper Nice-Matin in a 5:40 video of interviews they conducted with residents of Nice the day after. It's all recorded in the WP article. There's no mention of yelling. Pépé était chez lui, sur son balcon, lorsque le camion a percuté les corps sur la promenade des anglais. "On a entendu plusieurs fois Allahu akbar, trois fois", détaille-t-il. J'ai vu qu'il prenait le volant à droite, à gauche, dans tous les sens, pour viser un maximum de visite. C'était horrible, il y avait des enfants par terre, en morceaux, des femmes, des personnes âgées... Ce n'est pas évident, ni à vivre, ni à raconter. The Mail's no use for that. I'm quite surprised you can't read French. Mathsci (talk) 16:12, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    This is a perennial topic on the noticeboard. The Daily Mail often prints inaccurate or misleading stories, and is sensational in its presentation. However, it is a national newspaper which is a member of the IPSO regulatory body, subscribing to its Code of Conduct, and within the range of seriousness of editorial approach lies well above the Daily Star. When editors try to argue that it can never be used as a RS for anything, or for certain types of topic, they are conflating their dislike of its style and approach with an objective assessment of its editorial integrity and its usability as a source. For example, it hads on occasion obtained exlusive interviews with key players in a story and it would be ridiculous to exclude this material from the encyclopedia because you don't like the political slant of the the editor.Martinlc (talk) 08:14, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Relatively few people actually argue it can *never* be used. The general feeling is that it can sometimes be used, depending on the situation and content. This of course is unacceptable to those who want to use it to source gossip orthose who want a definitive 'it can/cant be used' decision. The real problem is of course, if the Daily Mail actually obeyed the various codes of conduct over the years this wouldnt be an issue. There are documented cases where they clearly have, premeditated, decided not to. So arguing it has editorial integrity is a red herring. For every time they have gotton an 'exclusive' there are instances where they just make shit up. To the point where how do you know an exclusive is an exclusive and not just fantasy? Only in death does duty end (talk) 08:26, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    "The Daily Mail has been awarded the National Newspaper of the Year in 1995, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2003 and 2012 by the British Press Awards". It's a reputable newspaper, however distasteful and occasioanlly mistaken it is.Martinlc (talk) 10:05, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    And the Daily Mail has been found guilty of libel in 2001, 2003, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2014. Its certainly a reputable newspaper. The substance of that reputation is arguable. Only in death does duty end (talk) 10:47, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    I think we've got to accept the Daily Mail as a reliable source in Misplaced Pages terms though I have no great love of it. If what it says looks wrong instead of just deleting its rubbish could editors try to just find a better source that says something sensible please. If there is a real controversy both can be given as in documenting the controversy. It is probably right to document anything in it that looks a bit fishy to it rather than stating it as a fact. Dmcq (talk) 14:24, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    Note: Recent cases England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions Daily Mail sued - as was everyone else including The Times, AP etc. The Times. Actually a slew of them, for some reason. I fear we must consider The Times as "not reliable" as a result. "The Times refused to act responsibly. It is such conduct which invokes the concept of deterrence as a marker and a warning that such conduct cannot represent responsible journalism". Collect (talk) 14:34, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    • Having read through this discussion and the one at Talk:2016 Nice attack, I have to say that I'm with the "rarely use this as a source" crowd. The way I see this is that the Daily Mail is worse than Fox News but better than Breitbart. Any fact sourced to it which could have a political bent is suspect. Anything else, however seems to be alright (with the obvious exception of celebrity gossip, for which I do not believe there exists any reliable sources). And again, we run into that old truism: If it's true and sourced to the DM, it can almost certainly be sourced to a more reputable voice. If it's only found in DM, then there's a good chance it's not true. But there will be cases where a fact doesn't have any political connotations, and was only reported on by the DM. In those cases, I'm okay with using it, although I would hope for a better source eventually. MjolnirPants Tell me all about it. 14:54, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    My position on this is the same as Laura's, posted above: "There is never any reason to use the Mail as a source because if what they print is a fact, it will be covered in other sources ..., from the Guardian through the Times to the Telegraph. If you post something sourced to the Mail which can't be easily sourced elsewhere, any editor is absolutely correct to remove it, because there's a good chance it's unreliable." That's wholly sensible to me. Neutrality 15:31, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    It is said that when asked which books in the library of Alexandria should be burned, the caliph said: "all of them, for if they contradict the Quran, then they are are heretic and should be destroyed, while if they are in accordance with the Quran, then they are redundant because we already have the Quran, and they can be destroyed". Now, I find the Daily Mail usually ridiculous, but I don't find the above argument incredibly sensible. LjL (talk) 15:45, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Can you remember any information that was (1) reported by the Mail yet (2) was not reported by any other, more reliable source and (3) was still noteworthy enough to include in an encyclopedia article? A very small amount of material would seem to fit that bill.
    Now, perhaps "never" is a little strong — if there was some opinion piece that was published in the Mail, that might be noteworthy to include as part of the spectrum of opinion, and if there was some minor detail that was only reported in the Mail but was not contentious, maybe that would qualify — but overall, the amount of data that can only be sourced to the Mail yet is still important enough to include is very, very small. Neutrality 20:49, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Read the studies as to medical journal press releases - the DM covers more of them than do the other papers, and, according to the report, did so accurately. And as for "celebrity gossip" I would not even use the New York Times. Collect (talk) 21:35, 20 July 2016 (UTC)
    Collect, I'm not able to find the report you're citing, but the Daily Mail's coverage of science and medicine has been roundly criticized. Nblund 16:13, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    Indeed, to add on to what Nblund is saying: the Daily Mail has been consistently criticized for its often misleading scientific and medical reporting. Ben Goldacre, for example, an academic, researcher, and writer on medical/science reporting, has often criticized the Mail, writing, for instance: "You will be familiar with the Daily Mail's ongoing project to divide all the inanimate objects in the world into ones that either cause or prevent cancer. Individual entries are now barely worth documenting, and the phenomenon is best appreciated in bulk..." Neutrality 18:19, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    There is at least one case where it would seem eminently sensible to cite DM, and this would be for photos. They often have an extensive collection of photos that are very clearly taken at an event, and I strongly doubt you would accuse them of misrepresenting those. Wnt (talk) 01:30, 22 July 2016 (UTC)
    Slate.com: "Daily Mail and others public fake photos of Bently the dog". Guardian.com: Osama Bin Laden Corpse photo is fake (grisly photo)Nblund 01:54, 22 July 2016 (UTC)
    Well, the second source says "It was used on the front pages of the Mail, Times, Telegraph, Sun and Mirror websites". The Sun and Mirror are listed in tabloid journalism as "red tops", but I wasn't aware of any special denigration of the Times or Telegraph. This doesn't suitably distinguish the Mail from other British media unless you want to source everything to the Guardian, which proudly says it wasn't taken in by this one (though it did link to it). Wnt (talk) 12:48, 22 July 2016 (UTC)
    OK, here's the sort of thing I like to source to the Mail: There are times when I suspect what makes some people call the Mail "unreliable" is that they don't cooperate with a state-ordered deception; they don't call Ali Sonboly "David S.", and they let you see the raw video taken by the Hero of the Beer Bottle who provokes him into revealing himself. There's a lot to be said for a paper that just shows you what they know rather than putting effort into hiding it from you. Wnt (talk) 20:14, 24 July 2016 (UTC)


    Factchecking standards and use of press releases

    See for the discussion.

    I suggest you note that press releases are used by just about every major newspaper now - recall that staffing levels at newspapers in general are down more than 40% in less than a decade. Revenues for newspapers are down about 60% in the same general time period. For medical press releases see back in 1998 - " Of the 1060 newspaper stories analyzed, 142 referred to journal articles; of these, 119 (84%) referred to articles mentioned in press releases and 23 (16%) referred to journal articles not mentioned in press releases (comparison of proportions, P=.03). Articles described first or second were referenced in more newspapers than articles described later in the press release (P=.01 by chi2 analysis)." Yep - newspapers even back in 1998 relied very heavily on those press releases, and did not do too much work as journals not mentioned near the top of the release did not get mentioned in articles.
    2003 "Maryland. In a breakthrough discovery that may change the face of scientific communication forever, a researcher has found that, although journalists rely on press releases to bring important discoveries to their attention, they do not write news stories about every press release they receive. Even more striking is the discovery that press releases from scientific journals sometimes present incomplete information about scientific findings.
    “I’m shocked, just shocked”, said the author of the article, which appears in the current issue of Science Editor. “I never would have guessed that journalists would have such blatant disregard for what they are told is news, and I never would have suspected that journals aren’t neurotically meticulous in their press releases.” ("fake" press release used for real article following)
    (actual finding) Woloshin and Schwartz found that 23% of the press releases mentioned study limitations, and 65% quantified study results. (JAMA study)
    In short - often the fault is in the press release sent out by the actual medial journal, and something an editor would not normally call back on. (read the full article - it also deals with specific newspapers)
    (covering the Guardian, Independent, Daily Mail, and Times) In 2008, researchers at the Cardiff School of Journalism, UK, discovered that 60 percent of the articles in British newspapers the Daily Mail, the Guardian, the Times, the Daily Telegraph and the Independent had been copied from wire reports and press announcements issued by various corporations, businesses and universities. Three out of four such stories had also gone to print without being fact-checked, a trend that seems widespread: in 2012, an audit sponsored by the European Observatory of Journalism found factual errors in approximately half of all news stories published in Switzerland, Italy and the United States:60% - and including the "elite" newspapers in the same group. "Most newspaper articles (72%) were written by named journalists (the unnamed journalist category refers to labels such as ‘Daily Mail Reporter’) and in nearly a quarter of cases were there was no clear identification of who had written the story (as is often the case with Nibs). Only 1% of stories were directly attributable to PA or other wire services (see Table 2.4). At first glance, then, these data suggest that the newspapers give the impression that they depend on their own journalists rather than wires or other outside sources." then " Indeed, 30% of the stories in our press sample replicated wire service copy almost directly, and a further 19% were largely dependent on wire copy. In other words, nearly half of all press stories appeared to come wholly or mainly from wire services. " Even where a "journalist" gets a by-line.
    DM gets a hit "So, for example, a story about the health risks of eating oily fish (‘Why oily fish might not be so good for your health after all’, Daily Mail Reporter, Daily Mail, March 24th 2006, p7) directly replicates facts and quotations taken from two Press Association stories, and another from the regional news wire Mercury." but not for being "inaccurate" but for copying inaccurate material from what Misplaced Pages would normally accept as a "reliable source."
    "Despite the covert nature of much PR activity, we expected to find examples of PR playing an agenda-setting role. However, in many cases the influence of PR goes much further. We found that nearly one in five newspaper stories and 17% of broadcast stories were verifiably derived mainly or wholly from PR material or activity (Table 2.6) – which suggests that the practice is rather more typical than John Lloyd’s critique suggests."
    "For example, a Times story headlined ‘George Cross for Iraq War Hero’ (Michael Evans, The Times, 24th March 2006, p27) is an almost verbatim repetition of a press release issued by the Ministry of Defence. " also from The Times "An example of a print story that mainly consists of information from a single source of PR material is an article in The Times about a new league table of UK Heart Surgeons (‘Hand on heart, who is the best surgeon?’, Nigel Hawkes, The Times, 27th April 2006, p16). The article is almost wholly derived from a press release issued by the Healthcare Commission," uzw.
    In short - even a decade or more ago, newspapers were dominated by press release material - and the situation is worse today by far (noting that US newspaper employment is down over 40% - and the number of actual newspaper journalists is down much more as the total "newsroom" count includes the "web editors.") Back in 1998 " Like most news organizations, Business Week has no choice but to put its trust in the fairness and accuracy of its reporters, because neither money nor time allows for writers' work to be formally fact-checked. ", then "At the same time, newsmagazines are curtailing their fact-checking budgets and requiring their writers to verify those details once double-checked by others. And at many newspapers, those traditional sentinels of accuracy, editors and copy editors, are expected to focus more than ever on presentation of stories, less on their content." then " One more fact-checking caveat. Most researchers rarely trust newspaper clips. Not formally fact-checked before publication, say magazine staffers, they're just too prone to contain errors. "We're not going to trust that the New York Times has been fact-checked," says Forbes' Kroll. " Clear?
    from Forbes is fun to read - managing to note a newspaper which ran a headline "Amphibious Pitcher Makes Debut" But wait, there's more!
    The Times again " Karol Wojtyla was referred to in Saturday’s Credo column as “the first non-Catholic pope for 450 years”. This should, of course, have read “non-Italian”. We apologise for the error." In 2015 they should have caught it earlier. And delightfully The New York Times "An earlier version of this column misidentified the sea that God parted in the Book of Exodus. It is the Red Sea, not the Dead Sea." Although I suppose Lot parted the Dead Sea ...
    What we have left? No newspaper is as assiduous in fact-checking as it was even 15 years ago. Even "elite" papers routinely use press releases without actually looking to the studies puffed. Silly proof-readers are no longer used at newspapers - they rely on automated spill chuckers. And thus the theoretical belief that "good newspapers always check facts" is gone with the wind. Sorry to burst everyone's bubble - but papers that used to have a dozen (low paid) fact checkers now generally have zero. Their old group of actual proofreaders - gone forever. One newspaper (?) offers zero money for "volunteer proofreaders"! In 1909, New York City alone had on the order of 1000 compositors and proofreaders. Many "working" proofreaders get well under $25K p.a. (bottom 10% get under $19K) In New York, a person at the proposed new minimum wage for fry cooks there will make over $30K p.a.
    I trust the points are clear - so will leave with The New York Times got rid of all its remaining 125 Linotype operators and proofreaders (many did both due to cutbacks) - by 1990. In short "elite" papers also run press releases. The main and substantiated difference is down to headline writing - and the job of the headline writer is the same as the "clickbait" writer - no more, no less. If anyone uses a newspaper article, note that the real journalist does not write the headlines. Until we have genuine amphibious pitchers in baseball.

    As asked for in the prior section. Collect (talk) 23:28, 21 July 2016 (UTC)

    • This entire wall of text is irrelevant to the point, which is the fact, as pointed out by many people above, that the Daily Mail has a long history of being an unreliable source for many things. Laura Jamieson (talk) 23:32, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    The cites were requested and furnished. And note that your seeming absolute distaste for the Daily Mail is not shared by the authors of the report cited. Collect (talk) 07:08, 22 July 2016 (UTC)
    @Collect is this directed at me? You stated that "the DM covers more of them than do the other papers, and, according to the report, did so accurately". I said I hadn't seen that report, and I still don't see any support for that statement in anything you're citing here. Nblund 01:49, 22 July 2016 (UTC)
    You asked for the material regarding use of medical press releases. Presented here as a direct consequence. And again - read the sources cited - the DM is cited as accurately using the material as written in the press releases. " Even more striking is the discovery that press releases from scientific journals sometimes present incomplete information about scientific findings." clearly points out that the newspapers are not the ones who introduce inaccuracies. And " In 2008, researchers at the Cardiff School of Journalism, UK, discovered that 60 percent of the articles in British newspapers the Daily Mail, the Guardian, the Times, the Daily Telegraph and the Independent had been copied from wire reports and press announcements issued by various corporations, businesses and universities. Three out of four such stories had also gone to print without being fact-checked, a trend that seems widespread: in 2012, an audit sponsored by the European Observatory of Journalism found factual errors in approximately half of all news stories published in Switzerland, Italy and the United States." Note "all news stories" regardless of publisher or location. Lastly, no newspaper found did any fact checking whatsoever on medical news press releases. I suggest you read the original report for further edification. I know some people have an absolute hatred of the Daily Mail, but, with regard to medical news press releases, their hatred is quite misapplied. Collect (talk) 07:08, 22 July 2016 (UTC)

    Free Thought Project and Shooting of Alton Sterling

    I am uncertain as to whether this article on the website Free Thought Project is a reliable source for the content in Shooting of Alton Sterling it is being used to support (it's currently reference 10 in that article). Given that we don't have an article on Free Thought Project, I suspect the answer to the reliability question is no. Everymorning (talk) 17:23, 18 July 2016 (UTC)

    • Well, it's number 11 now, and our text says, "...Sterling, who has a clear gunshot wound in his chest". That's not mentioned in that particular article, and no, I do not consider such websites to be reliable sources. Besides, I believe that it's unnecessary; there's plenty of sourcing available in the article to establish the basic facts. Drmies (talk) 21:24, 18 July 2016 (UTC)
    • Agree with Drmies - not a reliable source, and unnecessary in any case, because there are plenty of far better (reliable) sources that we are using. Neutrality 15:23, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    Odyssey

    First of all, not the book. My question is if the website Odyssey is, in general, a reliable source. I don't have a specific article in mind. The website, which I fully admit I have a conflict of interest with (I'm a Content Creator for them.), has articles mainly published by thousands of college students. They do, as can be discerned from their job application page, have a structured system including a Content Creator. After the Content Creator, well, creates, the written piece then goes to the Editor in Chief (also a student) and then to the Managing Editor, who is not a student, but works at the corporate offices of Odyssey. The EiC's and content creators are broken up by college campus, as can also be seen on the job application page. The MEs manage several campuses at once. While a lot part of the content is GIF-centric, a lot of it is also well-written opinion pieces or well-sourced news stories, both of which can be either local or national. There is not currently any Misplaced Pages article about Odyssey, though there used to be one, The Odyssey Newspaper, which I marked for and got speedy deletion (G11). I do not plan to create another article about them at this point in time. I merely want to know if, in general, they are a reliable source. -- Gestrid (talk) 06:00, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    Thanks for describing their editorial process, and for being so forthcoming about your relationship to this publication. Although it seems they do have some level of editorial oversight, it's not clear how rigorous that process is, or whether this publication in general has a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy, which is the threshold for being considered a reliable source.TheBlueCanoe 22:00, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

    celebsmemoir.com

    In general, is the source reliable?

    Specifically, celebsmemoir.com/adam-gontier-height-weight-body-statistics-and-net-worth/ was added a source for birth dates. I don't see any authors. I don't see an "about" page to explain if there's oversight. I would argue not reliable. Walter Görlitz (talk) 06:12, 21 July 2016 (UTC)

    Nope, - no indication of reliability—it seems essentially to be an anonymous website. Neutrality 18:11, 21 July 2016 (UTC)

    Encyclopedia.com, reliable or not?

    In an article about Frances Cress Welsing a dispute concerning the reliability of encyclopedia.com (specifically this article) has arisen. More specifically K.e.coffman has expessed doubt about its reliability. Since no consensus seems to be forthcoming, I am hereby soliciting third party opinions in the hope of achieving a clear consensus. Thanks. Kleuske (talk) 08:37, 21 July 2016 (UTC)

    Encyclopedia.com is not the source, merely the host. The actual source is Contemporary Black Biography, a journal published since 1992 by Gale. I'm just being informative - I have no idea if CBB is generally considered reliable, or if the author of this specific article, Alison Carb Sussman, is an expert in the field. Someguy1221 (talk) 08:52, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    <facepalm> Thanks. I should have seen that myself. Kleuske (talk) 09:47, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    It should be cited to the original source (Contemporary Black Biography), and the hyperlinked citation marked as "(reprinted on Encyclopedia.com)". Softlavender (talk) 09:51, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    I'll see to it. Thanks. Kleuske (talk) 17:51, 21 July 2016 (UTC)

    Is the "Investigative Project on Terrorism" a reliable source for anything, esp. BLPs?

    See Steven Emerson#Investigative Project on Terrorism. Is this an RS for anything other than itself, and in particular for the BLPs using it? This is basically a one-man show by Steven Emerson, who wrote that "“In Britain, it’s not just no-go zones,” Emerson said. “There are actual cities like Birmingham that are totally Muslim, where non-Muslims just simply don’t go in. And parts of London, there are actually Muslim religious police that actually beat and actually wound seriously anyone who doesn’t dress according to Muslim, religious Muslim attire.” which made a number of people wonder about how thorough his research was, to say the least. See also this SPLC article and Loonwatch. Doug Weller talk 13:47, 21 July 2016 (UTC)

    I think you probably already know the answer to that. After looking at the website, it has no editorial control and fails much of WP:RS, coming nowhere near the standard for BLP. It should be reliable for Emerson's own views, if he is considered relevant to the topic, but I would remove every contentious claim about living persons sourced only to IPOT with extreme prejudice. If better sourcing can't be found, it needs to go. The Wordsmith 14:10, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    @The Wordsmith: and others, forgot to say I raised this after I discovered that pdfs of a now sealed government file were being used in an article, see WP:BLPN#Islamic Society of Boston - section heading & use of a now sealed list of "unindicted co-conspirators" - after I posted there it occurred to me to look further into the website and its uses. Doug Weller talk 15:43, 21 July 2016 (UTC)
    • I would say this source actually needs to be blacklisted. Some of the PDFs that it hosts are OK, but are merely copies of the originals from elsewhere (so can be sourced from there), but everything else needs to go. Some of this stuff is effectively hate speech. Laura Jamieson (talk) 23:17, 21 July 2016 (UTC)

    Global Shark Attack File

    Would the website sharkattackfile.net be considered acceptable as a reliable source for list articles such as List of fatal shark attacks in Australia and List of fatal shark attacks in California? The website appears the be a database of information about shark attacks worldwide with some sort of editorial oversight, but it does look like it accepts reports from non-members as well. The website also lists an extensive bilbliography. Some of the individual reports like this appear to be the sole work of a case investigator (it's not clear what that means), but others such as this do cite where they got their information from. Should these "case investigator" reports (assuming the website is an RS) be treated as primary sources per WP:PSTS since they seem to be written in a similar manner like an accident report for a traffic accident, etc. Particularly in "List of fatal shark attacks in California", there seems to be an excessive amount of the information found within these reports being added to the individual entries of the attacks listed. There are also names of individuals, some of which may still be alive, mentioned in some of these reports which might possibly have WP:BLP implications. Anyway, I am interested in hearing how others feel. Thanks in advance. -- Marchjuly (talk) 01:22, 22 July 2016 (UTC)

    Can the artist's Instagram be used as a source?

    I don't seem to be getting an answer to this and I've searched the archives for one but found nothing. A lot of artists have an Instagram profile and most have been "verified" with a badge to show that the account legitimately belongs to the artist. These badges can be found beside their name. The issue I'm running into with this is that there's a lack of sources for rising artists that haven't become known enough yet. In my case I have been collecting sources for Nikki Yanofsky. However she makes a lot of posts on her verified Instagram account that contain information about her upcoming songs and albums but I'm not sure if those posts can be used in citations. For example, there's a lot of hype going around the fandom about her upcoming album called "Solid Gold" and yesterday she released a single off the album called "Young Love." This is HUGE news considering that no one has been able to hear any new music from her for more than a couple years now. But it's just barely making it on her Misplaced Pages articles, both for the album and the single. I and a few other editors added Instagram citations linking to the posts that include the correct info, but they're all being taken down with the summary saying that Instagram can't be used. It had the date, time, name, and site all in it with a direct quote from Nikki Yanofsky herself.

    Misplaced Pages Introduction to referencing with Wiki Markup/4
    "Self-published media, where the author and publisher are the same, including newsletters, personal websites, books, patents, open wikis, personal or group blogs, and tweets, are usually not acceptable as sources. The general exception is where the author is an established expert with a previous record of third-party publications on a topic; in this case, their self-published work may be considered reliable for that topic (but not other topics). Even then, third-party publications are still preferable."

    I'd argue that Nikki Yanofsky is an expert on the topic of Nikki Yanofsky.

    Instagram Profile: https://www.instagram.com/officialnikki_y/ (Subject to change.)

    Me00lmeals (talk) 07:56, 23 July 2016 (UTC)

    The policy you are looking for is at Misplaced Pages:Identifying_reliable_sources#Self-published_and_questionable_sources_as_sources_on_themselves or as shorthand WP:SELFSOURCE. In short, yes - a person instagram (facebook, webpage, twitter, blog , etc.) can usually be used as on source on that person. However the restrictions given in the policy apply.--Kmhkmh (talk) 08:08, 23 July 2016 (UTC)
    The only caveat here is that the source is only about what the artist is saying. Technically, you can use this to reference a statement that the artist says their next album is coming out next year - not that their next album is coming out next year. Wnt (talk) 00:23, 25 July 2016 (UTC)

    Encyclopaedia Britannica and NPR sources as used in Chrysler for clear OR claims

    Chrysler struggled to adapt to the changing environment of the 1970s. When consumer tastes shifted to smaller cars in the early 1970s, particularly after the ], Chrysler could not meet the demand. Additional burdens came from increased US import competition, and tougher government regulation of car safety, fuel economy, and emissions. As the smallest of the Big 3 US automakers, Chrysler lacked the financial resources to meet all of these challenges. In 1978, ] was brought in to turn the company around, and in 1979 Iacocca sought US government help, eventually convincing Congress to provide $1.5 billion in loan gurantees, on the condition that Chrysler find a combined $2 billion in additional financing or cost cutting.<ref name=Brittanica>{{Citation |url= https://www.britannica.com/topic/Chrysler |title=Chrysler |encyclopedia=] |year= 2016}}</ref><ref>. ]. May 14, 2007</ref>
    After a period of plant closures and salary cuts agreed to by both management and the auto unions, the loans were repaid with interest in 1983. In November 1983 the ] was introduced, leading the establishment of the ] as a major category, and initiating Chrysler's return to stability.<ref name=Brittanica/>

    Is currently in the Chrysler article. Alas, the Encyclopaedia Britannica is not only a tertiary source, it does not make the claims ascribed to it! In fact, almost all of this section is unsupported OR, including the $2 billion claim or anything else. Nor does the NPR "timeline" remotely support anything more than "1979: CEO Lee Iacocca initiates a government bailout of the nearly bankrupt Chrysler Corp. 1980: Congress passes and President Jimmy Carter signs a loan guarantee act for Chrysler, in which the government essentially acts as a co-signer of a $1.5 billion loan for the company. During the next few years, Chrysler reports record profits. 1983: Chrysler pays off its federally guaranteed loans seven years early. The company introduces minivans, creating a new market niche with the Plymouth Voyager and Dodge Caravan." which is not what is claimed in the Chrysler Misplaced Pages article.

    Would non-involved folks please note the clear verification problems with these claims, which, I fear, are the tip of the iceberg on this article? Collect (talk) 13:41, 23 July 2016 (UTC)

    Book without an ISBN

    User:Lavrense thinks that a book without an ISBN (SILVA, Paulo Napoleão Nogueira da (1994) (in Portuguese). Monarquia: verdades e mentiras. São Paulo: GRD.) is an unreliable source. I think it is a reliable source. Please comment at Talk:Line of succession to the former Brazilian throne#ISBNs. Thanks. DrKay (talk) 06:37, 24 July 2016 (UTC)

    Her Campus

    I want to use some information from this link Taylor Swift Concert Review but I don't know it is a reliable source or not although Our Wiki have a article about this online magazine. Phamthuathienvan (talk) 06:45, 24 July 2016 (UTC)

    therichest.com

    The above is used in Charlotte Laws, specifically as the first reference in Charlotte Laws#Party crashing expert. It's used to support the claim that Laws is listed as the fourth most notorious party crasher in the world, beating Queen Elizabeth, Bill Murray, Lady Gaga and Serena Williams. The claim that a head of state is a "party crasher" sounds odd. Is this a reliable source? Autarch (talk) 17:39, 24 July 2016 (UTC)

    Possibly relevant quote from their T&C:

    TheRichest is an entertainment based website providing commentary, general information in relation to celebrities, luxury items, athletes, businesspersons, public figures, lifestyles, wealthy individuals, current trends and entertainment. Information on the site may contain errors or inaccuracies; the Website does not make any warranty as to the correctness or reliability of the sites content. The Website does not provide any warranty or guarantee as to the accuracy of the information. You acknowledge that such information and materials may contain inaccuracies and errors and we expressly exclude liability for any such inaccuracies or errors.

    So they're certainly not standing behind their clickbait listicles. Trivialist (talk) 01:52, 25 July 2016 (UTC)

    I'd say that it's not a reliable source for claims about BLPs, especially dubious claims. They openly don't even give a pretense of editorial oversight or fact checking, which is the minimum requirement for RS. PermStrump(talk) 02:17, 25 July 2016 (UTC)
    Clearly non-RS. K.e.coffman (talk) 02:21, 25 July 2016 (UTC)
    Agree with the above - not a reliable source for any claim. Neutrality 13:57, 25 July 2016 (UTC)

    Festival Genius

    Does anyone know whether festivalgenius.com is considered RS? I believe that the content is added with oversight from the actual festivals, but am not 100% sure. Can anyone familiar with the website confirm? --Jpcase (talk) 21:51, 24 July 2016 (UTC)

    What do you want to use this site for? They seem to be a run of the mill small-time commercial site. They're probably OK for very basic factual information such as festival X occurred on date Y, but nothing beyond that, and even then only if no better sources are available. Shock Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 00:03, 25 July 2016 (UTC)
    @Shock Brigade Harvester Boris: I was hoping to use this page to show that the short film Fish Heads Fugue and Other Tales for Twilight screened at the 2006 Philadelphia Film Festival. Considering the amount of detail included on the page (exact dates, showtimes, venues, and even titles of the other short films that were part of the screening), I get the impression that the site is likely a well-run operation. I've searched extensively, even using the Way Back Machine, and haven't been able to find this info anywhere else online. Also, looking a little more closely, the website's FAQ says that it "works closely with the festival". So does this seem okay? --Jpcase (talk) 18:39, 25 July 2016 (UTC)

    Newsweek

    Is an article written by Eric Markowitz and published by Newsweek magazine a reliable source for this assertion?

    • The line has been such a success that it helped revive the Sig Sauer company's business.

    This is for the SIG MCX article. Felsic2 (talk) 15:35, 25 July 2016 (UTC)

    I would say Newsweek is reliable for that statement (I assume this is the piece you meant to link to?), but from the article's edit history, it looks like the question was whether material about the gun's nickname that was attributed to newsweek and snopes.com was undue weight, not that newsweek was unreliable for all statements about the company/product. As far as reliability, yes, technically, but that doesn't necessarily mean it should be included and I'd need to look into it more to form an opinion about weight. PermStrump(talk) 18:12, 25 July 2016 (UTC)
    The statement we're discussing here is the one posted above, concerning the success of the product and its effect on the company's bottom line. Some editors seem to be saying that only books written by firearms experts are acceptable sources. I believe that Newsweek is competent to report on general firearms issues, and company revenues, if not the technical workings of firearms. Felsic2 (talk) 18:23, 25 July 2016 (UTC)
    It seems like a pretty straight forward statement. Unless there are higher quality sources (i.e., academic journals or books published by reputable publishers) questioning the validity of that claim, I think a well-respected mainstream media source is reliable for an uncontentious statement about the company's business success. The newsweek article says, "This article was originally published at International Business Times", which is also a respectable, mainstream media source. I don't see how a firearm expert would be better qualified to weigh in on whether that gun resurrected a company's sales figures. PermStrump(talk) 18:47, 25 July 2016 (UTC)
    Definitely reliable per the above. Facts such as company revenues, economic trends, what factors resulted in the rise and fall of a company's performance may all be cited to Newsweek. Neutrality 20:54, 25 July 2016 (UTC)

    Gilbert Achcar in Mahmoud Abbas

    The above source has been challenged as unreliable for the attributed view removed here. Is Gilbert Achcar writing in a book published by Henry Holt and Company a reliable source? Seems absurd even asking this, but seeking outside opinions on the quality of that source for that material. nableezy - 00:01, 26 July 2016 (UTC)

    I know it is not the question you asked, but the statement quoted is wry, satirical, and complex. It is of the nature of (1) opinion rather than fact, and that opinion is based on (2) an interpretation of (3) the preferences of (4) a large group of people and state policies (5) that cannot be objectively examined. That is not just one reason but a chain composed of five weak links. In short, it is not encyclopedic. Do we have a strong reason for using it? Grammar's Li'l Helper 00:16, 26 July 2016 (UTC)
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