Revision as of 12:06, 19 August 2021 editMalnadachBot (talk | contribs)11,637,095 editsm Removed navbox class for mobile accessibility (Task 4)Tag: AWB← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 14:20, 21 March 2022 edit undoMalnadachBot (talk | contribs)11,637,095 editsm Fixed Lint errors. (Task 12)Tag: AWB | ||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 63: | Line 63: | ||
** The photo is in a section (but not article) on that particular game. ] <sup>]</sup> 02:33, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ** The photo is in a section (but not article) on that particular game. ] <sup>]</sup> 02:33, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*'''Overturn and delete'''. Closing admin gave no rationale despite a contested discussion on fair use issues. In these circumstances I am not inclined to defer to the usual "within admin discretion" approach. The "keep" !voters in the discussion failed to demonstrate the satisfaction of the NFCC. The delete !votes -- particularly those of Fut Perf and J Milburn -- were policy fluent, convincing, and unrefuted. How would the omission of this picture decrease the readers' understanding of the subject? NFCC8 requires that question to be answered. It wasn't. In FFD debates that concern fair use issues, the arguments/numbers balance should be more weighted towards the former than is normally the case. Here, not only is it impossible to discern how the closing admin weighed those arguments, when they are actually examined, a delete outcome is clear. --] (]) 22:58, 17 June 2011 (UTC) | *'''Overturn and delete'''. Closing admin gave no rationale despite a contested discussion on fair use issues. In these circumstances I am not inclined to defer to the usual "within admin discretion" approach. The "keep" !voters in the discussion failed to demonstrate the satisfaction of the NFCC. The delete !votes -- particularly those of Fut Perf and J Milburn -- were policy fluent, convincing, and unrefuted. How would the omission of this picture decrease the readers' understanding of the subject? NFCC8 requires that question to be answered. It wasn't. In FFD debates that concern fair use issues, the arguments/numbers balance should be more weighted towards the former than is normally the case. Here, not only is it impossible to discern how the closing admin weighed those arguments, when they are actually examined, a delete outcome is clear. --] (]) 22:58, 17 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*'''Endorse'''. Obviously correct closure. Arguments here are XfD arguments, not DR arguments. Nominate it again if you feel there is ''now'' a consensus to delete. Deletion review is not the forum for this. |
*'''Endorse'''. Obviously correct closure. Arguments here are XfD arguments, not DR arguments. Nominate it again if you feel there is ''now'' a consensus to delete. Deletion review is not the forum for this. <small>]</small><small>]</small> 00:19, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
**What is at question is the strength of the arguments used at the XfD discussion; myself and others are of the opinion that the discussion was improperly closed. Is that not the whole point of DRV? The image should have been deleted (or otherwise) based on the strength of the arguments used. ] (]) 11:49, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | **What is at question is the strength of the arguments used at the XfD discussion; myself and others are of the opinion that the discussion was improperly closed. Is that not the whole point of DRV? The image should have been deleted (or otherwise) based on the strength of the arguments used. ] (]) 11:49, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*'''Endorse''' no consensus close. NFCC #8 is not to be a crypto-IDONTLIKEIT: when consensus is split, a minority interpretation of NFCC #8's applicability should not trump the fact that the community is clearly divided on its presence, hence no consensus and hence not deleted. ] (]) 03:00, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | *'''Endorse''' no consensus close. NFCC #8 is not to be a crypto-IDONTLIKEIT: when consensus is split, a minority interpretation of NFCC #8's applicability should not trump the fact that the community is clearly divided on its presence, hence no consensus and hence not deleted. ] (]) 03:00, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
Line 75: | Line 75: | ||
*'''Endorse''' my own decision. I carefully evaluated the deletion discussion thrice, on separate occasions, to determine consensus. I found none. -''']''' <sup><small>]</small></sup> 07:30, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | *'''Endorse''' my own decision. I carefully evaluated the deletion discussion thrice, on separate occasions, to determine consensus. I found none. -''']''' <sup><small>]</small></sup> 07:30, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
** Will you say which if any of those !voting to keep, in your judgement, gave a plausible argument as to how what a reader sees in the image should be considered to significantly add to contextual understanding about the topic of the article? What is it they said that seeing this image adds, that you considered to be substantive and at least plausible? ] (]) 08:40, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ** Will you say which if any of those !voting to keep, in your judgement, gave a plausible argument as to how what a reader sees in the image should be considered to significantly add to contextual understanding about the topic of the article? What is it they said that seeing this image adds, that you considered to be substantive and at least plausible? ] (]) 08:40, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*If I had taken part in the discussion, I would have !voted "delete", on the basis that while the image in question is not replaceable, it also does not significantly enhance the reader's understanding of the topic, when used in context. But this is not FfD round 2, and JClemens' point is excellent. It seems to me that the central question of this DRV is: ''How should a FfD closer decide whether NFCC#8 is passed or failed?'' And it seems to me that the answer is: ''On the basis of the consensus at the discussion''. We elect admins to implement the consensus. Admins' power to make unilateral deletion decisions is limited to the speedy deletion criteria and to PRODs. Fastily may well have had his own opinion, but what he did was to implement the consensus and we can only endorse. '''But''' a "no consensus" close allows for an early renomination for deletion, and in this case I would suggest that the file in question is renominated in early course.—] <small>]/]</small> 09:12, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | *If I had taken part in the discussion, I would have !voted "delete", on the basis that while the image in question is not replaceable, it also does not significantly enhance the reader's understanding of the topic, when used in context. But this is not FfD round 2, and JClemens' point is excellent. It seems to me that the central question of this DRV is: ''How should a FfD closer decide whether NFCC#8 is passed or failed?'' And it seems to me that the answer is: ''On the basis of the consensus at the discussion''. We elect admins to implement the consensus. Admins' power to make unilateral deletion decisions is limited to the speedy deletion criteria and to PRODs. Fastily may well have had his own opinion, but what he did was to implement the consensus and we can only endorse. '''But''' a "no consensus" close allows for an early renomination for deletion, and in this case I would suggest that the file in question is renominated in early course.—] <small>]/]</small> 09:12, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
** But see ]. In judging an XfD, a closer has to judge the strength of the arguments, in the context of what is required by policy. And policy requires that those arguing ''keep'' in an FfD have to provide a ''rationale'' for why an image passes NFCC#8. Fastily had to judge whether a substantive rationale had been provided, and that is the specific point where I hope he will give us more clarification as to how he came to the judgement he did. ] (]) 09:28, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ** But see ]. In judging an XfD, a closer has to judge the strength of the arguments, in the context of what is required by policy. And policy requires that those arguing ''keep'' in an FfD have to provide a ''rationale'' for why an image passes NFCC#8. Fastily had to judge whether a substantive rationale had been provided, and that is the specific point where I hope he will give us more clarification as to how he came to the judgement he did. ] (]) 09:28, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*** On what basis would you have wanted Fastily to disregard the good faith opinion of an established editor? Should every !vote include the phrase "I think this passes NFCC8 because..." or be discounted? Are we to ignore any view that doesn't contain a bluelink to a policy? I think the view that you express here, Jheald, would require Fastily to enforce a rule that we don't actually have.—] <small>]/]</small> 10:29, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | *** On what basis would you have wanted Fastily to disregard the good faith opinion of an established editor? Should every !vote include the phrase "I think this passes NFCC8 because..." or be discounted? Are we to ignore any view that doesn't contain a bluelink to a policy? I think the view that you express here, Jheald, would require Fastily to enforce a rule that we don't actually have.—] <small>]/]</small> 10:29, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
****The "good faith opinion of an established editor" is worth little without decent supporting arguments. If ten people pile on and say "delete, nn" in an AfD, that counts for little if the five support the retention of the article have unearthed a number of reliable sources and expanded the article. ] (]) 11:42, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ****The "good faith opinion of an established editor" is worth little without decent supporting arguments. If ten people pile on and say "delete, nn" in an AfD, that counts for little if the five support the retention of the article have unearthed a number of reliable sources and expanded the article. ] (]) 11:42, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*****The reason why that's an entirely different matter, J Milburn, is that "non-notable" is an opinion statement that is capable of being decisively refuted. If our hypothetical five people unearth reliable sources and cite them, then those people have countered an opinion with evidence. In Misplaced Pages, as in law and the scientific method, evidence trumps opinion. But here the point of contention is about NFCC#8: the ''opinion'' that this material does not significantly enhance the reader's understanding of the topic -v- the ''opinion'' that it does. Those opinions roughly balance one other out, hence the rough consensus is hung between the two views.—] <small>]/]</small> 12:10, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | *****The reason why that's an entirely different matter, J Milburn, is that "non-notable" is an opinion statement that is capable of being decisively refuted. If our hypothetical five people unearth reliable sources and cite them, then those people have countered an opinion with evidence. In Misplaced Pages, as in law and the scientific method, evidence trumps opinion. But here the point of contention is about NFCC#8: the ''opinion'' that this material does not significantly enhance the reader's understanding of the topic -v- the ''opinion'' that it does. Those opinions roughly balance one other out, hence the rough consensus is hung between the two views.—] <small>]/]</small> 12:10, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
******You're misrepresenting the nature of the debate. Ok, maybe there was not ''evidence'', as "evidence" is harder to come by in these discussions than in the example I gave, but we do have reasonable arguments. In this case, there were no reasonable arguments supporting "the ''opinion'' that it does"; only assertions about the significance of the ''event''. This isn't just a case of "opinions roughly balance one other out", as not everyone there ''was'' just saying "well this is my opinion". You're just falling into the trap of vote counting; "well, there is not chance of evidence, so we'll just count the votes and see which ''opinion'' wins out". ] (]) 00:08, 19 June 2011 (UTC) | ******You're misrepresenting the nature of the debate. Ok, maybe there was not ''evidence'', as "evidence" is harder to come by in these discussions than in the example I gave, but we do have reasonable arguments. In this case, there were no reasonable arguments supporting "the ''opinion'' that it does"; only assertions about the significance of the ''event''. This isn't just a case of "opinions roughly balance one other out", as not everyone there ''was'' just saying "well this is my opinion". You're just falling into the trap of vote counting; "well, there is not chance of evidence, so we'll just count the votes and see which ''opinion'' wins out". ] (]) 00:08, 19 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*******Well, that's largely true. I ''am'' throwing up my hands and saying, "there's no evidence, just opinions, and the opinions balance out." And it's also true that I see no reasonable basis on which to prefer the one over the other. I don't agree that I'm vote counting and I don't see where you got that idea from. I also don't agree that there were "no reasonable arguments" on the "passes NFCC#8" side. A neutral closer might well infer users' positions on that, on the basis of ], without needing the arguments to be spelled out, and this is indeed what Fastily seems to have done.—] <small>]/]</small> 02:00, 19 June 2011 (UTC) | *******Well, that's largely true. I ''am'' throwing up my hands and saying, "there's no evidence, just opinions, and the opinions balance out." And it's also true that I see no reasonable basis on which to prefer the one over the other. I don't agree that I'm vote counting and I don't see where you got that idea from. I also don't agree that there were "no reasonable arguments" on the "passes NFCC#8" side. A neutral closer might well infer users' positions on that, on the basis of ], without needing the arguments to be spelled out, and this is indeed what Fastily seems to have done.—] <small>]/]</small> 02:00, 19 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*** One problem with that guideline, and the above argument, is that policy is supposed to describe practice, not restrict it. If a bunch of people say "IAR keep" giving an encyclopedia-building reason that isn't covered by the letter of current guidelines, and one person argues to delete looking at the letter of the current guidelines, what happens? If policy is only changed in advance by discussion, then the minority of one would win. In the Wiki-way, however, IAR is a core policy, and coherent arguments based on the pillars should be accorded appropriate weight, which is ''more'' than that of simple guideline-based wikilawyering. This isn't relevant to many debates where the arguments on one side are things we know we don't care about, of course, but when multiple editors are each citing conflicting interpretations of policy, (IAR included) then extreme caution should be applied in seeking to overrule the community's numerical voice. ] (]) 18:39, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | *** One problem with that guideline, and the above argument, is that policy is supposed to describe practice, not restrict it. If a bunch of people say "IAR keep" giving an encyclopedia-building reason that isn't covered by the letter of current guidelines, and one person argues to delete looking at the letter of the current guidelines, what happens? If policy is only changed in advance by discussion, then the minority of one would win. In the Wiki-way, however, IAR is a core policy, and coherent arguments based on the pillars should be accorded appropriate weight, which is ''more'' than that of simple guideline-based wikilawyering. This isn't relevant to many debates where the arguments on one side are things we know we don't care about, of course, but when multiple editors are each citing conflicting interpretations of policy, (IAR included) then extreme caution should be applied in seeking to overrule the community's numerical voice. ] (]) 18:39, 18 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
****I agree entirely, ''when reasonable arguments are given''. In this case, the "argument" appears to be "the event is important, so we should be allowed to use non-free content to show it off, no matter how useful or otherwise the picture actually is". That makes a mockery of our NFCC. ] (]) 00:10, 19 June 2011 (UTC) | ****I agree entirely, ''when reasonable arguments are given''. In this case, the "argument" appears to be "the event is important, so we should be allowed to use non-free content to show it off, no matter how useful or otherwise the picture actually is". That makes a mockery of our NFCC. ] (]) 00:10, 19 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
Line 102: | Line 102: | ||
*'''Overturn and delete''' – notability does not override the non-free content criteria, which was nowhere close to being addressed by those arguing for retention. Moreover, local consensus cannot set aside the official policy on non-free content. –] 17:02, 21 June 2011 (UTC) | *'''Overturn and delete''' – notability does not override the non-free content criteria, which was nowhere close to being addressed by those arguing for retention. Moreover, local consensus cannot set aside the official policy on non-free content. –] 17:02, 21 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
:<small>Discussion noted at ], ] ] (]) 11:37, 23 June 2011 (UTC)</small> | :<small>Discussion noted at ], ] ] (]) 11:37, 23 June 2011 (UTC)</small> | ||
*While I would agree that this should be ''deleted'' under failure to provide any reason to use under NFCC#8 (and that "two men playing chess" is a free text replacement for the image, per NFCC#1), I have to go on the policy approach that DRV is not AFD#2 and to '''endorse''' the closure as Fastily's interpretation of the results. I don't agree with his conclusion, but a "no consensus" is a legitimately possible read off the few !votes and ensuing discussion that occured, taking into account how NFCC#8 is highly subjective. Because of this, closing admins should not be making subjective judgement calls when appropriateness is split. Those that believe this should be deleted should consider a second AFD in a few weeks with stronger arguments based on why the image was failed to be deleted before. To us at NFCC, this may be the type of case that we can used to narrow what is are appropriate historical images, (with believing that as this image is used now, it is not appropriate. --] (]) 13:03, 23 June 2011 (UTC) | *While I would agree that this should be ''deleted'' under failure to provide any reason to use under NFCC#8 (and that "two men playing chess" is a free text replacement for the image, per NFCC#1), I have to go on the policy approach that DRV is not AFD#2 and to '''endorse''' the closure as Fastily's interpretation of the results. I don't agree with his conclusion, but a "no consensus" is a legitimately possible read off the few !votes and ensuing discussion that occured, taking into account how NFCC#8 is highly subjective. Because of this, closing admins should not be making subjective judgement calls when appropriateness is split. Those that believe this should be deleted should consider a second AFD in a few weeks with stronger arguments based on why the image was failed to be deleted before. To us at NFCC, this may be the type of case that we can used to narrow what is are appropriate historical images, (with believing that as this image is used now, it is not appropriate. --] (]) 13:03, 23 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
*'''Overturn and delete'''; The ] article contains no mention of the image in any respect. The match is referred to of course, but the discourse between the opponents after the match isn't discussed at all, nevermind there's no discussion of the image itself. The article readers perfectly fine without the image. It's not connected to the text in anyway. I also note the rationale's stated purpose is "illustration of article's subject". If that's all it takes to include non-free content, then there's absolutely no limit to the amount of non-free imagery we can have here. In sum; exceptionally weak rationale, no connection to the text, no sourced discussion of the image. Blatant failure of ] #8 and #1. --] (]) 15:19, 23 June 2011 (UTC) | *'''Overturn and delete'''; The ] article contains no mention of the image in any respect. The match is referred to of course, but the discourse between the opponents after the match isn't discussed at all, nevermind there's no discussion of the image itself. The article readers perfectly fine without the image. It's not connected to the text in anyway. I also note the rationale's stated purpose is "illustration of article's subject". If that's all it takes to include non-free content, then there's absolutely no limit to the amount of non-free imagery we can have here. In sum; exceptionally weak rationale, no connection to the text, no sourced discussion of the image. Blatant failure of ] #8 and #1. --] (]) 15:19, 23 June 2011 (UTC) | ||
|- | |- |
Latest revision as of 14:20, 21 March 2022
< 2011 June 16 Deletion review archives: 2011 June 2011 June 18 >17 June 2011
|
---|
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
The closing admin incompetently counted votes and set for a "no consensus", giving no weight to the fact that keep voters were in pure ignorance of criterion #8 our non-free content police, and asked for we to keep a non-free image of two man playing chess just because that was an important chess game (or because it was a "functional image"). It's the closing admin's duty do identify unsustainable arguments in such discussions, since it's much more likely for an average Wikipedian to be completely clueless about our non-free content polices than otherwise. Also, since non-free content is supposed to be the exception here, we need to achieve consensus in order to keep it, deleting being the default option for no-consensus. And even if cases where the closing admin is incompetent enough to know about it all, and decides to blindly count votes, he is supposed to at least know how to count properly, and understand that 1 nominator plus 3 deletes is more than just 3 keeps. The closing admin was asked to review the this (and some other equally obnoxious) closings but he stood by his mistake. damiens.rf 20:46, 17 June 2011 (UTC)
In summary, when closing this debate, I found: Taking into account the loose wording of WP:NFCC#8 (which is frequently open to highly opinionated interpretation), and seeing how the number of rational !votes to keep and delete were almost split equally down the middle (4:3), I logically defaulted to close the debate as no consensus. -FASTILY 20:28, 18 June 2011 (UTC)
|
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |