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{{old move|date=25 March 2024|destination=Misplaced Pages:Guidelines and policies|result=not moved|link=Special:Permalink/1215849995#Requested move 25 March 2024}}
== Location question ==


== Copyedit ==
My apologies if this may have been asked and answered before...Is it possible to link the article ] to the main page? I've gotten messages from editors who want to know how to start, but aside from just jumping in, they don't know how. I can't say I'm not personally sympathetic to this, as it took me over a month from my first edit to find guideline articles. The wikilinks when you start an article should be written better, it shows the basics of how to do an article, but now the policies that are behind those basics. Thank you in advance. ] (]) 19:40, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


@], I'm not sure about all the changes you're making. Off hand, here are a few that stood out to me:
:The first "policy" pages I would want a newbie to read are ], the ], and ]. Everything that comes after that -- including what's on this page -- you can learn as you go along.--] (]) 04:28, 1 April 2008 (UTC)


* "a summary of the most pertinent principles": We specified that that ] is a "popular" summary, to be clearer that it's not an "official" or "complete" one. 5P is IMO an excellent summary, but it's also just a five-point re-write of ] to sound more formal and avoid some slang. There's nothing magical about it.
==Anonymity and outing==
* "Misplaced Pages's policy and guideline pages describe its principles and agreed-upon best practices": We specified "pages" here because there are multiple meanings of policy. This paragraph is specifically talking about the written pages, rather than standard practices. (Consider, e.g., "our country's foreign policy": you don't expect that to be a single document with the word "Policy" in a fancy box at the top.) The written pages do this; the actual policies ("a definite course or method of action selected from among alternatives and in light of given conditions") is what editors do at RecentChanges or AFD, not what we write on the page.
I'm trying to locate the policy that explicitely states that contributors are promised as much anonymity as possible but I'm having trouble locating it. In which policy does it state that Misplaced Pages editors are promised anonymity? Where does it state that outing is wrong? ] and ] are essays, not policies or guidelines. ] states that blocks can be given for disclosing personal information, but doesn't state what is considered personal information as opposed to raising allegations of ]. So, which policy is used by admins when warning or blocking someone for outing another editor? ] (]) 00:28, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
** This is partially a consequence of our ] approach. Misplaced Pages uses a style closer to the ] than to the ]. That is, what matters is the principles that we support, rather than the exact wording. US law occasionally makes decisions based on the presence or absence of a comma. Misplaced Pages is more concerned with the overall effect: Does this help us improve or maintain Misplaced Pages? If yes, then that's what we want. If not, then ]
** Another way of looking at this: ] is Misplaced Pages's policy, but it's not a {{tl|policy}}.
* "Additionally, ]; the plain-English definition of the page's title or shortcut may be importantly different from the linked page.": The problem of people misinterpreting the ] shortcuts is perennial and significant. For example, there are ] of shortcuts that start with WP:NOT but don't point to ]. On occasion, we'll even see people arguing that WP:THIS requires us to do this, and WP:NOTTHIS requires us to never do this ...and they're pointing at the same section of the same page, only the editors didn't know this, because they were just guessing that the shortcut matched the rule, so they never bothered to actually read the rules.


::], which is a different page from ]. I added a hatnote to WP:Outing to clear up the confusion.--] (]) 04:07, 2 April 2008 (UTC) This is not an exhaustive list, but I also want to say that I ''don't'' object to every change you've made. What would you like to do to resolve some of my concerns? ] (]) 19:19, 28 May 2024 (UTC)


:Thanks for the kind and lengthy feedback. Here is a list of changes I will make later, based on your suggestions:
== a bit of tidying ==
:*Reintroduce ''popular'' as descriptor
:*Reword the page–attitude distinction to be clearer
:*Re-add "shortcut is not the policy" with clearer wording
:] <i><sup style="display:inline-flex;rotate:7deg;">]</sup></i> 23:25, 28 May 2024 (UTC)


== Venue ==
Especially the section under guideline was becoming a cliff's notes on "consensus on wikipedia", so I shortened it. I've also done some other small things, hopefully none are controversial --] (]) 20:47, 15 May 2008 (UTC)


I've seen a couple of claims, during the last year or two, that proposals for ] should happen at the village pump, instead of on the talk page for the affected policy/guideline/similar page. It is generally poor practice to do this deliberately, as one sometimes has Group A making a decision about Page B, and then totally surprising Group B when Group A implements the changes. There are, however, times when it makes sense (e.g., when multiple guidelines could be affected, you don't necessarily want to pick one talk page over the others) and other times when it's just what happens (e.g., a discussion takes an unexpected turn). I wonder whether we should make this more explicit. Something like "Changes to a single guideline or policy should normally be discussed on the talk page for that guideline or policy"? ] (]) 21:20, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
On that same vein, I've removed the Experimental category which is not used and tried to clarify the differnce between rejected and historical. I would like to think again about changing the name rejected to failed or not-accepted, or a better name. The term rejected seems to offend contributors but using historical as a euphamism is inaccurate. --] (]) 22:04, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
*"No current consensus"? Or "No consensus"? Or "Consensus not achieved?" Would the "Disputed" tag work? Maybe "Not-accepted" works best. ] <small>] </small> 10:43, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
::* I think that I like failed consensus. I think that there needs to be some finality, but rejected is hard on the ownership ego. --] (]) 21:38, 16 May 2008 (UTC)


:I really don’t think the ''venue'' of a policy discussion matters - what DOES matter is that as many editors as possible know that the discussion is taking place, and where to go to participate in it. So, leave lots of neutral notifications (everywhere you can think of) clearly linking to the discussion. ] (]) 22:07, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
Things keep drifting towards that guidelines should be treated discuss first.
::We say "Amendments to a proposal can be discussed on its talk page......start a request for comment (RfC) about your policy or guideline proposal in a new section on the proposal's talk page. Include the {{tl|rfc|policy}}..." Should we be more blunt? <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 22:25, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Yet, WP:Village Pump (policy) says that ''it'' should be “'''used to discuss already proposed policies and guidelines and to discuss changes to existing ].'''”
:::So… I can see why people are confused. Especially if you think there is only one “correct” to do things. I don’t. I don’t think the location of an RFC ''matters'' as long as max people are notified a) ''that'' it is taking place, and b) ''where'' it is taking place.
:::If at VPP, notify the P/G page. If at the P/G page, notify VPP. Simple. ] (]) 00:28, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
::::People should defer to existing policies and guidelines over administration pages. How long has this been there at the village pump? Village pump should be there to direct people to the right page not be the page itself in my view as outline in our policy page "The RfC should typically be announced at the policy and/or proposals village pumps, and you should notify other potentially interested groups". Should be fixed as per ]. <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 00:42, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::It's not quite as simple as that. Usually, you need to defer to the most specific information. For example, WP:V says that "Reputable newspapers" are reliable sources, but MEDRS says that they're not reliable for biomedical information. You defer to MEDRS because it's more specific, not because guidelines inherently outrank policies. ] (]) 01:48, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
::::Please see ] about adjusting the wording of the sentence at the top of WP:VPP. ] (]) 03:58, 25 July 2024 (UTC)


I agree that discussion is important, naturally :-)


<div style="float:right;width:19em;margin-left:1em;border-style:solid;border-width:1px;padding:0.6em; clear:right;">
However, from a system point of view, the current dynamics are that some people have a tendency to enforce discussion upfront. This very often ends up as a kind of indefinite filibuster that might take several months to resolve. So we want to try to stay away from giving the impression that "discuss first" is mandatory. Discussion in general is always a good idea, of course.
'''Venue'''
--] (]) 21:26, 16 May 2008 (UTC) <small>''systems point of view can at times be a tad counter-intuitive or confusing.''</small>


* For small-to-medium discussions affecting a single page: Prefer the '''talk page''' for that policy, guideline, or other page.
Ok, reedited that short text again. I don't like this one either. Basically it's just recapping the consensus system again (which uses both the project page and the talk page). Can't we just say "Guidelines are maintained through ]" ? (or is that ''too'' short?) --] (]) 21:32, 16 May 2008 (UTC) <small>''scratches head''</small>
* For small-to-medium discussions affecting multiple pages: Start the discussion at the '''talk page''' for one of the affected pages or at the ]. Notify the other pages about the central location.
:: Kim, you broke my heart! That was my favorite sentence of the whole day. Oh well so much for the tender sensitivities of ownership. If editing before discussing was ruled out, we'd all be in jail. Have a great Friday or whatever it is today on the backside of the bottom of the world. Cheers and I'll toast you with my first IPA. --] (]) 21:42, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
* For long discussions: Create a '''separate page''' (e.g., {{fake link|Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/YOUR SUMMARY HERE}}) or as a '''subpage''' of the policy or guideline (e.g., ]).
::: ^^;; I didn't mean to break your heart! Maybe we can sort something out. :-) Cheers, Have a good one! :-) --] (]) 21:50, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
</div>Maybe a note like one of these? Or maybe this is overkill?
{| class="wikitable"
|+Recommended venues –
Do your best to notify other relevant pages
!Expected discussion
!Talk page
!Village pump
!Separate page
|-
|Short
|{{tick}}
|{{tick}}
|
|-
|Long
|
|{{cross}}
|{{tick}}
|-
|About one page
|{{tick}}
|
|{{tick}}
|-
|About multiple pages
|{{tick}}
|{{tick}}
|{{tick}}
|}
] (]) 23:12, 29 June 2024 (UTC)


*I still think you are overthinking it. But I don’t object. Key is to leave notifications. ] (]) 23:56, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
==Rejected changed to Failed==
*Since I am always clearly right, I always expect short discussions. - ] (]) 04:33, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
(Some discussion from above is copied here for continuity)
The term rejected seems to offend contributors but using historical as a euphamism is inaccurate. --] (]) 22:04, 15 May 2008 (UTC) *:<small>Then we must always agree, because I too am always right!</small> ] (]) 01:46, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
*I think it is a bit of overkill. I agree with Blueboar that leaving notifications at the relevant pages is the most important guidance. The location of the discussion is flexible and can be moved to a separate subpage on an as-deemed-useful basis. ] (]) 14:37, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
*"No current consensus"? Or "No consensus"? Or "Consensus not achieved?" Would the "Disputed" tag work? Maybe "Not-accepted" works best. ] <small>] </small> 10:43, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
*:Love it.....we need to keep things simple for new editors. <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 18:46, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::* I think that I like failed consensus. I think that there needs to be some finality, but rejected is hard on the ownership ego. --] (]) 21:38, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
:Sometimes "rejected" does mean '''rejected'''. We need some way of summarizing the consensus. ''']''' (]) 04:31, 17 May 2008 (UTC)
::But then, even rejected ideas can resurface and gain acceptance, given that ]. I've been bold and edited {{tl|rejected}}; if people agree with the changes I've made, we'll need to a few other edits in concert with them, and should probably move {{tl|rejected}} to {{tl|failed}}.--] (]) 00:50, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
::: I support FG and have taken further steps to incorporate the new term into the text at the project page. Suggest gaining consensus then move {{tl|rejected}} to {{tl|failed}}, as FG suggests. --] (]) 13:51, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
:Sometimes "rejected" does mean '''rejected''', but usually it doesn't. Usually, it means (1) More forceful editors have declared that this wil never achieve a consensus, or (2) discussion has died down with a consensus for support. In these cases, "failed" is more appropriate. In the rare cases that a consensus has agreed to reject the proposal, this is better noted explicitly on the proposal talk page. The talk page is always a good place for summarising consensus. --] (]) 21:52, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
:: Joe, do you think that we need two tags so that one covers the rare case of "rejection", or could we remain a bit euphamistic in those cases? --] (]) 21:57, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
:::We don’t “need” two tags, but I don’t see having a variety of tags as a problem. Nearly every “rejected” I’ve seen should be a softer worded “failed”. Occassionaly, proposals are resoundingly rejected, where you could say that there has been a consensus to reject. In these cases, I would support a “reject” tag, along the lines of the overly strong tradiational one, stating that the community has rejected the proposal. Examples: The talk page of ] seems to reflect a pretty emphatic “rejection”. Another proposal I am familiar with is ], which was in my opinion emphatically, though not unanimously, rejected, and which persists with a euphemistic use of the historical tag. I don’t think it hurts for a failed proposal to have a softly worded tag. So, I am not very strong about this either way. --] (]) 02:23, 19 May 2008 (UTC)


== Universal Misplaced Pages Policies and guidelines, or individual English Misplaced Pages Policies and guidelines, or both? ==
::::"Failed" still covers "rejected", and if we have both, we'll just have fights over when something failed vs. was rejected. No need: failed is failed. <small>Athough for the real dogs, I suppose we could add a picture of to the template.</small>--] (]) 06:12, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
::::: Perhaps some humor wouldn't be all bad. --] (]) 06:15, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::Perhaps “failed” vs “rejected” fights would serve as a pressure relief valve for overheated pro-/op-ponentes. --] (]) 06:22, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::Having been in a fight over "rejected" status (with Kevin, no less), I can vouch that such fights are ugly as fuck. To minimize wikidrama, the best thing is to let down the proponents as gently as possible; all that's actually important is that a proposal that is actually dead be marked as no-go.--] (]) 08:41, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::Yes, closure without insult. --] (]) 08:52, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::OK. There is no need for "rejected". All that matters is that there is not consensus for support, that the proposal has “failed” for whatever reason. The reason should be on the talk page. Also note that not having “rejected” avoids a mechanism to game policy processes, such as has been alleged by having ] created, rejected, and possibly used to imply that the converse holds consensus. --] (]) 00:26, 20 May 2008 (UTC)


The name ''Misplaced Pages: Policies and guidelines'' suggests that the accompanying project page informs about the universal policies and guidelines valid on all Misplaced Pages language editions. In other words: all rules approved by the Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees with 'power of law' on all Wikimedia Projects, including all Misplaced Pages language editions. The text however does not make clear what the global policies are. The text doesn't inform either about the specific policies and guidelines valid for the English language edition Misplaced Pages community, established by that community within the borders of the universal WMF Policies and guidelines. The project page is made available in over 100 other languages, which also gives the impression that the page offers information about the universal policies and guidelines with validity on all Misplaced Pages projects - which it does not.
== Adding guideline enforcement tags ==


I've made the observation that mountains of misunderstandings do exist around the broad and rather complex topic ''Wikimedia Movement Policies and guidelines'' and the project page does not excel in delivering clearity here. The friendly suggestion therefore is to expand the text with:
(I hope I'm posting my question in the right place. Please feel free to redirect me to a more appropriate location.) If a Wikiproject decides by consensus amongst a small group of editors within the project that a certain presentation guideline should be followed on all pages claimed to be under the domain of the project, is the project entitled to insert and maintain hidden text placed at the top of every such article linking back to the project's guideline as an "enforcement" measure? ] (]) 15:02, 28 May 2008 (UTC)
:The short answer is: adding that hidden text does not violate the letter of any policy or guideline I can think of. The long answer is, it depends, (esp. if the hidden text could be construed as ], and I infer from how you worded your question that it is a real, rather than hypothetical, one. If so, could you share the real example so I and other editors may comment more enlightenedly? ] (]) 22:13, 28 May 2008 (UTC)
::In the case at hand, members of a WikiProject intend to exclude infoboxes from all biographical articles deemed to be under the project's domain. Once they believed they found consensus for this initiative within the WikiProject, they removed existing infoboxes from all such articles and added inline text to the tops of those articles that read, "Please do not add an infobox" and include a link to their WikiProject guideline prohibiting infoboxes. What would ] say about this sort of across-the-board enforcement? The concern here is that the "rule" was made with the consent of fewer than 10 editors (with the actual text prohibiting infoboxes being approved by only 3) but applies to potentially hundreds of articles edited by thousands of other users. ] (]) 01:41, 29 May 2008 (UTC)


* a section containing a general introduction to the legal ecosystem in which all Wiki'''m'''edia projects, including all Wiki'''p'''edia projects, are operating, with some milestones from Nupedia/Wikipedia/Wikimedia governing history;
:::To answer your question, the project in question is the ] and I would suggest that the discussion be had on that project's page as there is a lot more dialogue already on that page in regaurds to this topic. Also, Robert K S has highly distorted the reality of the situation as I have stated on the other talk page. First, hidden texts are not tags and serve a completely different function. Second, there is and has not been any attempt by the opera project to enforce or implement the removal of info boxes. The hidden text merely serves as a cautionary measure pointing out the inherant problems with info boxes that often lead to distortions of truth or inaccuracies in information. The project does not forbid infoboxes (that would be WP:OWN) but merely asks editors to talk about adding an info box on that article's talk page before adding one to the article. If such a discussion decides to add an info box than of course an info box can be placed. Third, to my knowledge the hidden text appears on very few of the opera project's articles. I would venture to say that less than fifty of the 4,500 plus articles (less than 1%) under the opera project's perview include them. For the most part, these hidden texts have only been placed on articles where info boxes have proven to be counterproductive. They have not been placed on mass and there is no policy requiring a hidden text. Fourth, there are similar positions held by other projects. (see Opera Project talk page). Finally, there are more editors that support the project's position than mentioned above. I myself am not included in the numbers above as I did not participate in any prior info box discussion. No project member has complained about the policy to my knowledge so I would assume that most project members are supportive. We are a very active group and, knowing the project members as I do, there would have been complaints if there was disagreement. You are all welcome to join the discussion.] (]) 14:08, 30 May 2008 (UTC)
* a summary of the most important actual valid universal Wikimedia Foundation Policies and guidelines, with 'rule of law' on all Misplaced Pages projects, like the WMF ], ], ] and ] (see: ], ])
* a section explaining the actual valid policies, guidelines and best-practices on the English language Misplaced Pages edition.


This will have a global effect because I did notice by reading through some of the other language project pages, that other communities simply did translate this page as being the rules valid on their Misplaced Pages edition. Unaware of the possibility that every individual community has, to establish their own specific policies, so long as these are in conformity with the framework of global policies.
==Third party paid entries okay?==
A professional writer asks other writers if accepting payment to write Misplaced Pages entries is "ethical." What is Misplaced Pages's policy on this? I have not so far found anything. Other writers are coming down on both sides...
] (]) 15:51, 29 May 2008 (UTC)


Thanks for your attention, ] (]) 12:52, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
Also, I see more and more entries that are most likely the product of industry flacks. Much of the information is useful and interesting, but also very one sided. I see this problem getting worse before it gets better,since the sheer volume of it will overwhelm other less interested sources of content. Does Misplaced Pages have a policy on industrial generated content? Is that the future of Misplaced Pages?? ] (]) 16:04, 29 May 2008 (UTC)
:I've seen a number of instances where such articles are created, but they tend to be either deleted as being irreparably spammy, or subjected to sufficient ] power-washing to render it an adequate article. That being said however, creating or editing articles is not only certainly frowned upon, but is almost inevitably fruitless because the editor's efforts are almost always frustrated by the dynamic I mentioned above. &ndash; ]] 16:11, 29 May 2008 (UTC)


:Welcome to the English Misplaced Pages, @]. When you say "This header" in your first sentence, what header are you talking about? ] (]) 20:37, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
Thanks, ClockworkSoul. So you think the phenomenon is relatively harmless to Misplaced Pages as a whole and that editors can keep up with it? I'd be concerned that industry's resources are such that Wiki editors could not keep up with, for example, massive pharma generated content. Also, I'm wondering if Misplaced Pages has developed a specific policy about this. ] (]) 16:19, 29 May 2008 (UTC)
::Thank you @] for the swift reply, welcome and question. It's about the header "Misplaced Pages:Policies and guidelines", pointing out to Misplaced Pages in general, not only the English language edition (I've changed the sentence so others will understand). The webaddress is admittedly: "en.wikipedia.org", but that doesn't mean that the content only refers to the English language version; compare it with the lemma ] on the English language version.
::My suggestion is to write on a page with this name about the general situation, and on another page "English Misplaced Pages: Policies and guidelines" about the Policies and guidelines that only are 'in power' on the English language edition / for the English language project community. Alternative: write both sections on this page, clearly divided. In case it turns out not to be easy for experienced Wikipedians to untangle the policies and guidelines in a section with global validity and a section with validity on the English language version, I would be happy to assist in figuring that out, when whished. Keep up! ] (]) 06:43, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
:::If you are concerned about the page title at the top of the page, which looks like this:
:::{{fake heading|Misplaced Pages:Policies and guidelines|level=1}}
:::then the "Misplaced Pages:" part indicates the ], and we can't actually change it on this page.
:::We could change the first sentence to say "<u>The English</u> Misplaced Pages's policies and guidelines are developed by the community". ] (]) 16:08, 25 July 2024 (UTC)


:The individual Misplaced Pages editions in different languages are separate from the Engliah Misplaced Pages. As it says in the introduction to this policy "This policy page specifies the community standards related to the organization, life cycle, maintenance of, and adherence to policies, guidelines, and related pages of the English Misplaced Pages. It does not cover other editions of Misplaced Pages." If you click on languages near the top right you get the nearest equivalent to the page in other languages, most have not achieved the level of bureaucratification of the English version 😃 ] (]) 15:32, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
::I've worked with a number of PR people from various places, and some of them have learned how to write decent Misplaced Pages articles that are informative and meet our standards. Good professionals in that business are not fools, once it's explained that this is a different medium they can write as well or better than most of us can, & they know how to be objective when they need to be. (Many never do learn, of course, and get blocked, & recognized easily if they reappear. ) The best guide to dealing with this is Durova's ] from which I've learned anything good in my approach. What needs to be encouraged I think is for them to simply declare their COI. Then the people in the subject can watch--we can deal with the amount of likely input. It's the undetected ones who do the damage. (Though even here I am aware of some who have never admitted it but do consistently decent work under multiple throw-away accounts.) ''']''' (]) 16:54, 29 May 2008 (UTC)


== Input on a search parameter in our policy template ==
:::Thanks, I relayed this to the interested writers. Forgot to thank you earlier. ] (]) 18:36, 3 June 2008 (UTC)


Pls see ]. <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 22:43, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
== New MOS for TV ==


== PAG precedence ==
The television community currently has an MOS guideline under proposal, and would appreciate all comments at ] in order to have the best possible guide for television related articles. ] ] 12:02, 3 June 2008 (UTC)


Currently, we have a commonly accepted precedence for determining which PAG we should defer to (Manual of Style < Guideline < Policy < Core Policy), but this isn’t formalised. I think it would be helpful to do so, as our policies should reflect practice, and it will avoid wikilawyering on the issue.
== Summaries? ==


As a rough draft, I would suggest changing ] from
Do we need a further category called Summary? The failed proposal for ] has been recently tagged as a Summary of multiple policies. I object to a new category (tag) which does not yet have consensus, but poses as legitimate guidance. I don't see the need for a new category, but would be less concerned if there was a clear procedure for identifying such a category and defining the level of consensus required to achieve "Summary" status. Maybe it is just a harmless euphamism at this point, but why add to the confusion? As it stands now anyone can subjectively summarize several policies on one page, and then parade the new animal as gospel to further confuse our contributors. --] (]) 14:35, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
{{tqb| If policy and/or guideline pages conflict, one or more pages need to be revised to resolve the conflict so all the conflicting pages accurately reflect the community's actual practices and best advice. As a temporary measure, if a guideline appears to conflict with a policy, editors may assume the policy takes precedence.<p>
More commonly, advice pages do not directly conflict, but provide multiple options. For example, ] says newspaper articles are generally considered to be reliable sources, and ] recommends against newspaper articles for certain technical purposes. Editors must use their judgement to decide which advice is most appropriate and relevant to the situation at hand.}}
To:
{{tqb|If policy and/or guideline pages conflict, one or more pages need to be revised to resolve the conflict so all the conflicting pages accurately reflect the community's actual practices and best advice.


More commonly, advice pages do not directly conflict, but provide multiple options. For example, ] says newspaper articles are generally considered to be reliable sources, and ] recommends against newspaper articles for certain technical purposes.
== lock page? ==


Editors must use their judgement to decide which advice is most appropriate and relevant to the situation at hand. When doing so, editors must defer to the advice with the highest level of consensus:
I don't beleive there is a lot of vandalism here, but this project page is quite important, does anyone else think it should be locked? ] (]) 05:12, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
*Core policies (highest)

*Policies
:It's typically vandalized once or twice a week. A lock might be good since this isn't a page that really needs to be altered all that often.] (]) 15:17, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
*Guidelines

*Manual of Style (lowest)
Errrrrrrr. No. :-P
}}

Because we are a wiki, and would like to keep it that way, all pages are typically left unlocked UNLESS they are subject to heavy vandalism or edit warring RIGHT NOW. Or for the case of templates, if the template is transcluded across a lot of pages, and editing would cause large scale disruption

;Checklist
* Heavy vandalism last 24h? <span style="color:red;">No</span>
* Edit Warring last 24h? <span style="color:red;">No</span>
* is template? <span style="color:red;">No</span>
** ''large scale transclusion?'' <span style="color:red;">''No''</span>
** ''vandalism causes large scale disruption?'' <span style="color:red;">''No''</span>

Conclusion: Lock page? <span style="color:red;">No</span>.

So we leave the page unlocked. :-)
(Hmm, I wonder if we could create more checklists like that for other things)

--] (]) 15:35, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

== Reviving a failed proposal ==

Hi.

I saw this:

"A failed proposal (AKA:rejected) is one for which consensus for acceptance has not developed after a reasonable time period. Consensus need not be fully opposed; if consensus is neutral or unclear on the issue and unlikely to improve, the proposal has likewise failed. It is considered bad form to hide this fact, e.g. by removing the tag. Making small changes will not change this fact, nor will repetitive arguments. Generally it is wiser to rewrite a failed proposal from scratch and start in a different direction. "

What happens though if you make ''major'' changes, but ''not'' start ''entirely from scratch'' -- you ''still'' leave ''little bits'' of the original in -- but the changes are nonetheless major, not "small". Furthermore, has there ''ever'' been a case where someone has gone against this and a unclear/neutral consensus developed into a clear for/against one? If so, what is it? ] (]) 20:54, 1 July 2008 (UTC)

: Don't make proposals. ;-) --] (]) 15:36, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

::Don't make generalizations. :> ] 15:42, 2 July 2008 (UTC)
::: Noted and improved , edit conflicted with you. :-P --] (]) 15:43, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

: (ec while extending) Don't make proposals. ;-) The proposal pathway is a lie. It is practically impossible to create new policy by making a proposal. However, anytime we edit out the proposal pathway, some people edit war it back in (and nobody else cares because they know better anyway <small>(''What? This makes it impossible for newbies to learn? No kidding! :-P )''</small>).
: If you want to change the way things are done, work out a better way of doing things with your fellow wikipedians, and just do it. If it works well, write an essay about it. (The {{tl|Essay}} template tends to lie about the importance of essays too.) --] (]) 15:36, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

::Well, requests for rollback came about through a proposal. Though I do admit it was more a decision than a policy, the policy formed more organically later...(do we even have a policy for that yet?) ] 15:45, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

::: IIRC it was implemented by a dev first, which lead to much wikidrama?
::: And our policy for all pages is ] and etc. For the project namespace, it is assumed you are writing a kind of mini-wikipedia on best practices. Similar rules apply, although some people are recalcitrant. These rules are not enforced atm, except by natural selection. (if you document best practice, it tends to stick). --] (]) 16:05, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

:: So then what is the whole ''point'' of the "proposal" thing anyway? ] (]) 03:26, 6 July 2008 (UTC)

:::People inevitably want to propose new rules. Sometimes new rules are actually needed, though most of the time, the proposals take the form of "here's how I think everybody should be behaving on Misplaced Pages", which is definitely doomed. The failure rate of the "proposal" process is overstated, but it definitely does have a high rate of morbidity.--] (]) 05:57, 6 July 2008 (UTC)

:Which proposal would you like to see resurrected, anyhow?--] (]) 00:49, 3 July 2008 (UTC)

::Uh, I didn't exactly have one in mind at the moment. It was more of a curiosity question than anything else. ] (]) 03:26, 6 July 2008 (UTC)

== Deleting an article by REDIRECTING ==

An article I wrote that recently was selected for DYK has basically been eliminated by just redirecting it to another article. There has been no discussion on this with me from this editor who recently came across a few articles I wrote on ancient Rome. This happens to be an area he writes in. If an article is to be eliminated, shouldn't it go though certain steps instead of just redirecting the title to go to another article? This article is ]. It is well referenced explaining each of the sections of the ancient history. He did not edit the article to make any improvemments, instead just redirected it (deleting the article). Is this correct? --] <sup>]</sup> 15:51, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

:I know this may sound like a radical approach, but have you tried talking to the person that did the edit? ] 15:59, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

:(ec) So revert the redirect. :-) Then discuss. (]) --] (]) 16:01, 2 July 2008 (UTC) <small>''Or like Until(1==2) wisely suggests, discuss anyway :-)''</small>

:The lengthy background to this conflict can be found at ].--] (]) 21:03, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

Both are excellent suggestions, which I have done. I suggested editing the article for improvements, giving me suggestions so that I could edit accordingly, asking for "third party" opinions and even going through the proper procedure of putting the article up for formal deletion - all of which he has chosen to ignore and just redirects the article anyway after my detailed explanation why the article should exist. He will not respond to my detailed answers as to why the article should exist, but instead has determined himself what a Misplaced Pages reader should see instead. He says ''what these readers need to see is information on the Roman Senate.'' He suggested that ''Information on the term ''patres conscripti'' ought to be included in Roman Senate'', which I had included into a "hotnote" that directed the reader to "Conscript Fathers" which material has sense been deleted. He will not go through a formal deletion - however chooses to just redirect the article instead to simplify the Misplaced Pages procedure for himself. He is quite familiar with how to delete an article as in the past this editor has tried to delete several of my articles. I believe it is more a personal thing, rather than the article itself. My details why the article should exist is at "Conscript Fathers" discussion page. Any other ideas? --] <sup>]</sup> 21:34, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

:Ask for a third party opinion at ], if you haven't already. Include a link to ] so they can familiarize themselves with both sides' views, which are well-documented there.--] (]) 01:20, 3 July 2008 (UTC)

Thanks, did just that. Now will wait to see what "third party" opinions are offered. --] <sup>]</sup> 13:44, 3 July 2008 (UTC)

==Corporate vandalism==
Individual vandalism is hard enough to deal with; but this is too complicated, difficult, and persistent for conventional handling. I'm persuaded that corporate vandalism can't be addressed by individual editors -- something quite different is required.

The ] is owned by ]. Anonymous editors with IP addresses linked to News Corp have systematically added ] real estate sales/rental advertising to the plethora of articles which focus on the neighborhoods in New York City's five boroughs. This is a systematic effort -- with reverted vandalism being quickly replaced with links to similar advertising in more recent issues of the newspaper.

What can be done about intractable
] vandalism? ''See'' ]? Is there another, more constructive gambit to be tried? --] (]) 20:18, 7 July 2008 (UTC)

== Essays ==


] (]) 04:05, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
I have noticed that essays are being linked too often as if they enjoyed the sanction of policy or a guideline. I thus suggest the following wording:


:The MOS banner states that those pages are a guideline. Do they really need their own level?
<blockquote>
:Whats an example of a "core policy", and how are these different than policies?
Essays may become ] if they can garner widespread community consensus (see ]). In practice, however, this very rarely happens. As a result, the positions, arguments, recommendations or other practices urged or advocated in an essay do not have authority. Essays, therefore, should not be linked as if representing an official policy, guideline or similar.</blockquote>
:As you can probably tell from my questions, my mental model of PAG only has three levels: policy > guideline > essay / not classified. And I would hesitate to add additional levels as it would enable wikilawyering, which is undesirable. –] <small>(])</small> 04:42, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::], <s>]</s><u>]</u>, and ] are the core policies.
::They are the policies most central to making Misplaced Pages Misplaced Pages, and making it the trusted resource it is - I think we should make this importance, and the level of consensus they hold, clear.
::I think it would also be beneficial to reflect the generally accepted stance that style guidelines are considered less important - to have a lower level of consensus - than guidelines generally.
::However, I don’t mind too much if we simplify this down to "guidelines < policies", as this will formalise most of current practice. ] (]) 04:49, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::: In the list of core policies, ] should be replaced by ]. This is in line with the explanatory essay ]. Historically, ] was created as a place to provide further explanation for which sources satisfy ] and that relationship still exists. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 05:08, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:::: You’re right, corrected. ] (]) 05:11, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:::I don't think a blanket statement that all manual of style guidelines have less consensus than other guidelines is reasonable. There are a lot of guidelines out there, and the amount of discussion each received varies a lot. ] (]) 06:34, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:I don't agree with the premise that introducing formal levels of guidance will better reflect practice and avoid wiki-lawyering. Part of the reason the community has difficulty in setting rigid levels is because in practice, it's not rare for the community to reach consensus agreement to allow exceptions for various cases. Additionally, establishing a fixed hierarchy would lead to endless debates on the appropriate level for a given collection of guidance. The second issue could be mitigated by a different decision-making method than the current consensus-based method with a "consensus can change" tradition, but that would have to come first. The first issue, though, is practically inevitable with how guidance is developed on English Misplaced Pages, with large group conversations amongst a changing set of participants, so maintaining consistency is unrealistic. It's endless work to try to codify all guidance to avoid exceptions, as they have a fractal nature: the closer you look into different scenarios, the more variations become apparent. ] (]) 06:19, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:The long-ago wording: {{tq|Where a guideline appears to conflict with a policy, the policy takes precedence.}} But then ] to {{tq|Where a guideline appears to conflict with a policy, the policy normally takes precedence.}} But then ] to: {{tq|As a temporary measure during that resolution process, if a guideline appears to conflict with a policy, editors may assume that the policy takes precedence.}} I'd like a return to the long-ago wording but disclose that In March I was in an argument where I with the weakest wording, and wish I could have quoted the long-ago wording. ] (]) 15:07, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::If memory serves, the idea of "precedence" started when there was some concern about WP:RS saying something that didn't quite align with WP:V, and an editor decided to boldly solve the problem by saying that the policy trumped the guideline.
::The problem with declaring My Policy Always Trumps Your Mere Guideline is that I think you'll find it's more complicated than that. For example:
::* The WP:V policy says that "reliable sources include:...Reputable newspapers"
::* The WP:MEDRS guideline says that newspapers aren't reliable sources for biomedical content.
::IMO there's no true conflict here, as MEDRS doesn't say that newspapers are completely unreliable for all content, but editors occasionally claim that there's a conflict, because they want to cite "Study says cigarettes don't cause lung cancer after all" in ''The Daily Slop'', and if they have to follow MEDRS, they won't be able to cast doubt on the scientific consensus.
::] wasn't really about ]; it was about whether ] is still a rule in practice. If RSCONTEXT is not a rule, then you can blindly (or defaultly) blank all uses of a newspaper that has been designated as ]. If RSCONTEXT is still a rule, then you have to slow down long enough to ask yourself whether or not ''The Daily Slop'' is reliable for a sentence that says "The movie critic at ''The Daily Slop'' gave it two bananas". ] (]) 21:24, 17 August 2024 (UTC)
:::You aren't being exact about what your memory serves or about what WP:MEDRS says, so I'm unable to address that. In the discussion I linked to the argument was whether "WP:NOTCENSORED does not override WP:RS". Context was mentioned in but not for that specific argument. ] (]) 17:44, 18 August 2024 (UTC)
::::I thought NOTCENSORED was irrelevant. ] movie reviews don't involve "content that some readers consider objectionable or offensive‍—‌even exceedingly so". Here is . He removed a sentence saying {{xt|"] of the '']'' gave the film two out of five, stating that the animated film "greatly expands on the kids' book on which it's based in a clever and engaging first half. But the second half leaves a foul aftertaste.""}} The edit summary says that the source is (in his opinion) unreliable and therefore mentioning the movie review is ]. I don't see anything "objectionable or offensive‍" in the removed sentence, and I suspect you don't either. Invoking NOTCENSORED sounded to me like someone throwing some ] spaghetti against the wall to see if anything would stick.
::::But if you want to follow that line of thinking, then consider a ]-headed wikilawyer saying "We must include this exceedingly ] per NOTCENSORED! No, I don't happen to have a reliable source for the offensive material, but that doesn't matter. NOTCENSORED is a policy, and all policies override mere guidelines, so having a reliable source is unnecessary". ] (]) 18:05, 18 August 2024 (UTC)
:::::I'll do my best to ignore your accusations and say what I thought that argument was. Material was being removed based on the "generally unreliable" objection (and the example you picked had those words). I was saying that regardless whether an RfC re RS misinterpreted, it could not suppress expressions of opinion without running into the policy which quoted {{tq|The University is not engaged in making ideas safe for students. It is engaged in making students safe for ideas. Thus it permits the freest expression of views before students, trusting to their good sense in passing judgment on these views.}}, which is not about obscenity and had nothing to do with what's in WP:Offensive material, which is not a policy and was not mentioned in the argument or any edit summary that I noticed. A reviewer's opinion is allowed, the policy is relevant, the claim that the policy does not override the guideline was met by the reference to a weakened wp:polcon. ] (]) 15:17, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
::::::A movie critic's comment is not the kind of ideas that the university president was talking about, and NOTCENSORED itself, in the first sentence, says that it's about objectionable or offensive content, which this isn't.
::::::Besides, the edit summary gave a policy-based reason: A view presented in an unreliable source is ], and therefore the inclusion was a policy violation. You were arguing that the NOTCENSORED policy ought to trump the NPOV policy. ] (]) 16:51, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
:::::::That's just another false statement about me, I'll again do my best to ignore your accusations. If anyone wants to comment about what I actually said, or even wants to address the thread topic, that might be better for the tone here. ] (]) 17:42, 19 August 2024 (UTC)


:I also disagree with making the levels more formal. We don't really need put down arguments if an editor says that they feel that a lower level is more applicable. Saying a policy normally takes precedence is enough, if they still have a problem it should be discussed. Editors have discussed things at all levels. ] (]) 20:33, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
Comments and criticism welcome. whether this wording is acceptable, some change along these lines would be helpful. ] (]) 21:17, 17 July 2008 (UTC)


:I agree with the general principle, but think that further codifying the hierarchy in this way isn't helpful. Guidelines often address exceptions / edge cases or provide more detail than we would want in policies, and for these specific areas can represent a higher level of consensus than applying the higher level policy by default. Asking editors to use their judgment (through consensus building) is sufficient. ] (]) 06:07, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
:My issue is with "do not have authority." Some positions in essays DO have authority, becasue those essays accurately describe WP practice, and that is what comes first: even WP policies derive from the practices of WP editors, not the other way around. An essay that describes this (which I hesitate to link to) is ]. I am also not convinced that essays are being linked to too often; are there particlar cases of overlinking you can't point us to, to make convincing your claim that this would be a helpful change? ] (]) 01:48, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
::Policies and Guidelines should support each other. In the rare cases when a Policy and s Guideline appear to be in conflict, the solution is to resolve the conflict… not to argue about which “takes precedence”. The issue needs to be raised on both pages (linked to a central discussion). It may be that ''both'' pages need to be amended.
::Surely if particular essays ''do'' have some level of authority, then there should be consensus to mark them at least as guidelines, to show this? Otherwise readers will have no idea whether a given essay is simply the ramblings of one deranged editor, or an established gem of wisdom like PPP.--] (]) 08:36, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
::That said, it often turns out that there IS no actual conflict… but simply a disagreement over how the language of one or the other page should be interpreted in a specific situation. ] (]) 17:35, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
:::I agree, which is why asking editors to use their judgement in the not so obvious cases, rather than simply referring to the pages position on the ladder is the best course for this text. ] (]) 16:15, 22 August 2024 (UTC)


== New PAG discussion location ==
::: Yes, I agree with that. <font face="Verdana">]&nbsp;(])</font> 08:38, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
:*Also agree. Surely if something enjoys that level of authority, it should be more than essay? Even the current wording of the essay template states ''a page containing the advice or opinions of one or more Misplaced Pages contributors. You may follow it or not, at your discretion.'' My proposed wording would simply clarify that essays should not be linked to as if carrying the weight of official policy, which I am increasingly seeing in deletion discussions. This change might also help take certain useful essays (like ], ] and ]) and push them toward guideline status. ] (]) 13:56, 18 July 2008 (UTC)


Currently, the guideline says that we should hold discussions on creating a new PAG at said PAG’s talk page.
:::The two times I've been forced to confront an "essay" or non-official-guidance, the text was used as a cudgel -- as an unwelcome gambit which was intended to thwart my hopes for any additional exchange-of-views. In each instance, the text was not presented as an aid to communication, but rather as a device to stop my insisting on further explanation. In both situations, I would have preferred something in the text which explained that the purpose of the unofficial, "non-guidance" prose was to help clarify and focus further discussion, not to block it. In lieu of an explicit caveat, I'd want language which <u>diminished</u> the presumption of so-called "weight."


This seems odd to me; for such creations we should have broad community consensus, meaning it would be better to hold the discussion at ]. This would also align with practice where we hold discussions to modify PAGs at VPP.
:::If the unofficial, "non-guidance" essay is to be conventionally used as a weapon to eliminate all reasonable burdens of proof and persuasion, then text is ''a priori'' unhelpful. This has been my experience. I would hope that this somewhat tangential comment will be seen as suggesting a broader context for the evaluating the topic at hand. The gravamen of concern should focus on how the essays are actually used -- as helpful tools for clarifying communication or as blunt cudgels for thwarting it. --] (]) 21:11, 18 July 2008 (UTC)


Is there a reason we don’t do it this way, and if there isn’t should we change it? ] (]) 07:04, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::::These are issues we've been trying to address at ], using wording in the template that emphasizes the non-binding nature of essays. Not that guidelines or policies are entirely binding either, given both ] and ] (formerly known as "no binding decisions"). Trying to cow others through ] is wrong, and ] is even wronger.--] (]) 05:27, 19 July 2008 (UTC)
::: ], just wondering, what is a "PAG"? My best guess is "policy '''or''' guideline." But that is just a guess. - ] (]) 15:07, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:::: {{ping|Butwhatdoiknow}} Your guess is correct ] (]) 16:03, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:My ] on this topic apply. Personally, I feel as long as appropriate notifications are provided at the expected locations, the location of the discussion can be flexible. ] (]) 07:25, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:Notification, not location, is the important part. Also discussions on modifying PAGs doesn't ''have'' to happen at VPP, it's just a place where they can happen. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 09:04, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::To be clear, if you feel something isn't getting enough attention additional and more prominent notification is the solution. If you list it at CENT, notified all the common noticeboards and post to the village pump, then editors will see it. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 15:12, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:It seems to me that the underlying question is: is it preferable to nudge editors (through notification) to engage policy talk pages that are new to them, or is it better to encourage editors (also through notification) to shift their attention to centralized discussions like VPP.
:I believe that the former is clearly better for the project, because it encourages more diversity and less entrenchent of perspectives on policy pages. The latter encourages waves of participation in centralized discussion in a way at much higher risk of BATTLEGROUND effects, and abandons the gains to be had from editors learning how diverse domains of the project actually understand guidelines and get work done. The ''quality'' of consensus is therefore likely to be lower if we force everything to centralized discussions (which we could probably measure using the rate of "per X", brigade-like voting at centralized venues). ] (]) 11:45, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::Why do you think they are more battlegroundy?
::It does tend to draw in a more diverse range of editors, which can make it more likely that there will be two groups who strongly disagree with each other, but isn’t a diverse range a good thing? ] (]) 14:42, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:::To answer your question, there are different kinds of diversity among editors, and I don't think they all have equal value.
:::One form of diversity is '''knowing less vs. knowing more''' about a policy/guideline topic and its history. I am not convinced that this form of diversity is especially valuable in decision-making in P&Gs (though it is sometimes helpful in RFCBEFORE). So, for example, the relatively large number of editors to be found at Village Pump, etc., who think the ] applies to everything because they are unfamiliar with the history of SNGs (including their post-2017 history) - I don't think the !votes of these editors on notability topics are especially valuable, especially when thei4 contributions take the form of a vote "per X".
:::On the other hand, another form of diversity is '''knowing about diverse aspects''', e.g., of article creation and development within enwiki. So for example, bringing together editors interested in BLPs concerning, say, athletes ''and'' academics ''and'' political figures ''and'' literary figures ''and'' entertainment figures, is likely to bring additional perspective to discussions of biographical notability more than if only those interested in a single biographical genre arw involved. And I think this is the case even if the specific proposal only concerns one type of biography.
:::So I guess my shorthand would be that soliciting the opinions of editors who know less (and aren't motivated to learn) is generally unhelpful to P&G development, but soliciting the opinions of editors who know about diverse aspects related to P&G development is helpful. Which I believe supports the practical suggestion I made above that it is better to entice editors into well-informed discussions on Talk pages, and encourage diversity that way, than it is to create a "public arena" that could facilitate knee-jerk reactions, agonistic displays, and waves of canvassed input. TL;DR: increasing thr input of editors who are uninterested in learning the background and ''status quo'' within which a question is posed, and the most likely impacts of the options presented, is unlikely to encourage outcomes that are better for the enwiki project and comminity. ] (]) 15:11, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::::My issue with this is it reads like you are seeking to minimise the input of editors with a different view on SNGs and GNG than your view. I don’t think this is aligned with our policies on ]. ] (]) 15:21, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:::::No, I'm really not promoting a particular view. I have my own specific understanding of notability on enwiki, just as North8K has theirs and WAID has theirs. History demonstrates that none of these editors holds the same view or reaches identical conclusions on the varied issues that arise with notability.
{{Cot|extended content on notability discussions, and a conclusion therefrom}}
On the specific relationship between SNG and GNG, there was a long-discussed, well-participated RfC on the topic, with a thoughtful (and uncontested) close, that gave rise to the text of ], so in this case at least there is good documentation for what the ''status quo'' is. Each of the editors I've mentioned, and many others, recognize this status quo while having different ideas about what would make better notability policy than what we have. I can't speak for anyone but myself, but I'd be surprised if any of us were trying to "minimise" the input of editors who want to change or evolve notability policy. I know I'm not.


But I would point to what almost inevitably happens in discussions of notability, which is that editors who are inexperienced in P&Gs enter discussions assuming that there is one essential standard of notability, namely the GNG, and that the community shares this view. In the course of discussion, they learn that their view is one of many, and that other standards of notability exist that are understood to apply to certain domains, in various ways. After they learn this, some of these editors retain the assumption that other standards ''should'' not exist, although they do; some reconcile the GNG with SNGs for themselves using varied reasoning; and still others become convinced that it is beneficial for different standards to exist depending on the domain. But all editors who participate in these discussions come to recognize that, in the ''status quo'' within the community, there is no one universal standard of notability.
::::Yes, this is what essays on Misplaced Pages are used for: hammers. Usually to hit newcomers with. My favorite is: don't template <s>anyone I know and like better than you</s> er, the regulars-used mostly by admins. --] (]) 19:44, 19 July 2008 (UTC)


Based on this example, there is benefit to the community from having new editors come to these discussions, learn about the issues, and develop perspectives of their own that interact in varied ways with the ''status quo'' (whether to tinker with it or to overhaul it). But there is no clear benefit to the community in having waves of editors participate without coming to understand the policies as they exist and as they currently work (or don't work). As I pointed out earlier, this is especially true when an editors' only participation in a policy discussion consists in brigade-like "per X" !votes unaccompanied by evidence of reading and reflecting on the policy topic.
:::There are a number of essays that do represent consensus (the standard required of guidelines and policies) but aren't "enforced" the way guidelines or policies are, so it's better that they're labeled as (mere) essays instead of something more enforceable. Usually this is because they are documentary in nature. ] is one such example -- it documents some of Misplaced Pages's principles and "best practices". Although its advice is important and everyone should follow it, there's little immediate consequence to not following it -- you can either stubbornly or naively ignore most of it, although you'll be barking up the wrong tree. (The parts of it you can get in trouble for ignoring are formally written up as policy, such as ].) But the purpose of pages such as PPP is to educate people about Misplaced Pages, not to coerce them into behaving a certain way. Policies and guidelines serve a very different role: they communicate that there's a standing agreement among Wikipedians that "this specific thing" should generally be done "this specific way". But that still doesn't mean they are inviolable, given ], and even when there's a good reason to enforce them, the reason should be given, instead of engaging in ].--] (]) 05:27, 19 July 2008 (UTC)
{{Cob}}
:So maybe we need a new category, to distinguish these "consensus essays" from other personal-opinion-type essays. Or just get them marked as guidelines, to keep things simpler.--] (]) 10:33, 19 July 2008 (UTC)
:::::To paraphrase something I pointed out , there is a salient difference between seeing community consensus as an emergent property of active discussion among all who want to participate, and seeing it as a mirror of the views all members of the community happen to hold at a point in time (regardless of their familiarity with the topic and its context). My sense is that enwiki has consistently held a community view of consensus much closer to the former imaginary than the latter. ] (]) 17:42, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::Why do we need so many rules? There seems to be a real control-freak mentality developing at WP, where any few people can dream up a rule and claim that since no one obejcted there was consensus. --] (]) 15:06, 19 July 2008 (UTC)
:Discussions on a page should be held on its talk page unless there is a very good reason not to. The main example is that deletion discussions should be held elsewhere, because if the page is deleted, so it the talk page, and we want records of deletion discussions.
:For a proposal, the proposal talk page is blindingly obviously the right place for discussions. The two are watchlisted together. The talk page will follow the proposal page through any future renames. Queries about the proposal will obviously go first to the talk page. Talk pages have archives that all Wikipedians can understand. Village pumps and other dramah boards have overwhelming and confusing archiving, including the tendency for the archives to host thread copies out of chronological order. ] (]) 11:59, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:This would cause bloat at VPP and make it more difficult to link the policy and the proposal:
:*Editors would have to find the link hidden the RfC statement to read the proposal instead of clicking the "Project page" tab.
:*The discussion about the proposal would then be hidden away in the VPP's vast archives, instead of conveniently in the archives of the proposed policy's talk page. A link could (and should) be provided to the archived discussion at VPP, but this is still confusion from an administrative point of view.
:If notification is provided at VPP, and that is pretty standard, than I see no benefit to moving the whole discussion there.
:As Newimpartial pointed out, discussion at the Village Pump tend to get more BATTLEGROUNDy. ] (]) 14:39, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
::The benefit is a notification is easily missed. A discussion, which will repeatedly show up on watchlists, is far less so.
::As for the rest, why do we treat the creation of PAG’s differently to the modification of them? All the arguments you present apply equally to each. ] (]) 14:43, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:::I don't think we do. Most changes to policy and guideline pages are minor and undiscussed/]. Most of the discussions happen on their own talk pages. Only a small minority of discussions about changing a single policy or guideline are intentionally started anywhere else. The village pumps are most likely to host general discussions ("I have identified a problem..." – these sometimes turn into, but are not necessarily intended to be, discussions about changing a single policy or guideline) or multi-page coordination ("...so either we need to make small changes to both WP:A and WP:B, or we need to make a big change to WP:C").
:::For reference, the WP:PROPOSAL that prompted this discussion is ]. It is currently more than 250K long, with about 400 comments. It is three times the current length of ]. Adding a discussion of that length to a page with other active discussions makes it difficult for some people (especially on mobile devices) to participate in any discussions on that page, which means that we'd be frustrating editors who want to participate in unrelated discussions and thus interfering with the main purpose of the page (i.e., to let editors participate in a variety of discussions). We've been talking during the last year about intervening to split VP discussions off when we think they're going to have 100+ comments, so "at the village pump" very likely would have ended up being on a separate page anyway. ] (]) 21:42, 17 August 2024 (UTC)
*] nice chart .<span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 16:09, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
:it is very reasonable to first discuss a idea for a new policy or guideline at the ideas page. That discussion might be a bit extended if the basic idea has problems. But after that gets off the ground the talk page for it is the right place for discussions I believe so the reasoning can be found easily when people think of changing anything. Quite enough editors will find an RfC on policy and put it on their watchlist ifinterested. ] (]) 20:44, 12 August 2024 (UTC)


== Deletion of MoS navigation template ==
It does say at the beginning of each essay "This is an essay, a page containing the advice or opinions of one or more Misplaced Pages contributors. You may follow it or not, at your discretion." I think that covers it. There is no such thing as a special class of essay that has so much following it is enforceable(though some authors may disagree), if that were the case it would become a guideline or policy.


Can we get input from those actually familiar with this..]. <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 21:09, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
If people link essays in a dispute fine, the message at the top will make it clear it is not a rule. If they claim it is a rule then talk to the user and explain their mistake. If they are doing it on purpose then existing policy regarding disruption is plenty. We don't need a special rule for this. ] 15:09, 19 July 2008 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 10:49, 29 December 2024

YOU MIGHT BE ON THE WRONG PAGE.This page is not meant for general questions, nor discussions about specific articles.
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? view · edit Frequently asked questions
I can't find proof that this guideline was adopted as an Official True™ Guideline through the WP:PROPOSAL process. Does that mean it's not legitimate?
The WP:PROPOSAL process itself was adopted in late 2008. It was based on the processes used for Misplaced Pages:Identifying reliable sources (medicine) and Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style/Medicine-related articles. Pages tagged as guidelines or policies before 2008 generally did not follow any consistent process. The older the page is, the more likely it was marked as a guideline or policy as a result of off-wiki discussions (especially in 2003 or earlier) or through a normal discussion on its talk page.
The project page associated with this talk page is an official policy on Misplaced Pages. Policies have wide acceptance among editors and are considered a standard for all users to follow. Please review policy editing recommendations before making any substantive change to this page. Always remember to keep cool when editing, and don't panic.
On 25 March 2024, it was proposed that this page be moved to Misplaced Pages:Guidelines and policies. The result of the discussion was not moved.

Copyedit

@Ca, I'm not sure about all the changes you're making. Off hand, here are a few that stood out to me:

  • "a summary of the most pertinent principles": We specified that that WP:5P is a "popular" summary, to be clearer that it's not an "official" or "complete" one. 5P is IMO an excellent summary, but it's also just a five-point re-write of WP:Trifecta to sound more formal and avoid some slang. There's nothing magical about it.
  • "Misplaced Pages's policy and guideline pages describe its principles and agreed-upon best practices": We specified "pages" here because there are multiple meanings of policy. This paragraph is specifically talking about the written pages, rather than standard practices. (Consider, e.g., "our country's foreign policy": you don't expect that to be a single document with the word "Policy" in a fancy box at the top.) The written pages do this; the actual policies ("a definite course or method of action selected from among alternatives and in light of given conditions") is what editors do at RecentChanges or AFD, not what we write on the page.
  • "Additionally, the shortcut is not the policy; the plain-English definition of the page's title or shortcut may be importantly different from the linked page.": The problem of people misinterpreting the WP:UPPERCASE shortcuts is perennial and significant. For example, there are hundreds of shortcuts that start with WP:NOT but don't point to WP:NOT. On occasion, we'll even see people arguing that WP:THIS requires us to do this, and WP:NOTTHIS requires us to never do this ...and they're pointing at the same section of the same page, only the editors didn't know this, because they were just guessing that the shortcut matched the rule, so they never bothered to actually read the rules.

This is not an exhaustive list, but I also want to say that I don't object to every change you've made. What would you like to do to resolve some of my concerns? WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:19, 28 May 2024 (UTC)

Thanks for the kind and lengthy feedback. Here is a list of changes I will make later, based on your suggestions:
  • Reintroduce popular as descriptor
  • Reword the page–attitude distinction to be clearer
  • Re-add "shortcut is not the policy" with clearer wording
Ca 23:25, 28 May 2024 (UTC)

Venue

I've seen a couple of claims, during the last year or two, that proposals for WP:PGCHANGES should happen at the village pump, instead of on the talk page for the affected policy/guideline/similar page. It is generally poor practice to do this deliberately, as one sometimes has Group A making a decision about Page B, and then totally surprising Group B when Group A implements the changes. There are, however, times when it makes sense (e.g., when multiple guidelines could be affected, you don't necessarily want to pick one talk page over the others) and other times when it's just what happens (e.g., a discussion takes an unexpected turn). I wonder whether we should make this more explicit. Something like "Changes to a single guideline or policy should normally be discussed on the talk page for that guideline or policy"? WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:20, 25 June 2024 (UTC)

I really don’t think the venue of a policy discussion matters - what DOES matter is that as many editors as possible know that the discussion is taking place, and where to go to participate in it. So, leave lots of neutral notifications (everywhere you can think of) clearly linking to the discussion. Blueboar (talk) 22:07, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
We say "Amendments to a proposal can be discussed on its talk page......start a request for comment (RfC) about your policy or guideline proposal in a new section on the proposal's talk page. Include the {{rfc}}..." Should we be more blunt? Moxy🍁 22:25, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
Yet, WP:Village Pump (policy) says that it should be “used to discuss already proposed policies and guidelines and to discuss changes to existing policies and guidelines.
So… I can see why people are confused. Especially if you think there is only one “correct” to do things. I don’t. I don’t think the location of an RFC matters as long as max people are notified a) that it is taking place, and b) where it is taking place.
If at VPP, notify the P/G page. If at the P/G page, notify VPP. Simple. Blueboar (talk) 00:28, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
People should defer to existing policies and guidelines over administration pages. How long has this been there at the village pump? Village pump should be there to direct people to the right page not be the page itself in my view as outline in our policy page "The RfC should typically be announced at the policy and/or proposals village pumps, and you should notify other potentially interested groups". Should be fixed as per WP:POLCON. Moxy🍁 00:42, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
It's not quite as simple as that. Usually, you need to defer to the most specific information. For example, WP:V says that "Reputable newspapers" are reliable sources, but MEDRS says that they're not reliable for biomedical information. You defer to MEDRS because it's more specific, not because guidelines inherently outrank policies. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:48, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
Please see Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy)#The header for this page about adjusting the wording of the sentence at the top of WP:VPP. WhatamIdoing (talk) 03:58, 25 July 2024 (UTC)


Venue

  • For small-to-medium discussions affecting a single page: Prefer the talk page for that policy, guideline, or other page.
  • For small-to-medium discussions affecting multiple pages: Start the discussion at the talk page for one of the affected pages or at the Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy). Notify the other pages about the central location.
  • For long discussions: Create a separate page (e.g., Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/YOUR SUMMARY HERE) or as a subpage of the policy or guideline (e.g., Misplaced Pages:Verifiability/First sentence).

Maybe a note like one of these? Or maybe this is overkill?

Recommended venues – Do your best to notify other relevant pages
Expected discussion Talk page Village pump Separate page
Short checkY checkY
Long ☒N checkY
About one page checkY checkY
About multiple pages checkY checkY checkY

WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:12, 29 June 2024 (UTC)

Universal Misplaced Pages Policies and guidelines, or individual English Misplaced Pages Policies and guidelines, or both?

The name Misplaced Pages: Policies and guidelines suggests that the accompanying project page informs about the universal policies and guidelines valid on all Misplaced Pages language editions. In other words: all rules approved by the Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees with 'power of law' on all Wikimedia Projects, including all Misplaced Pages language editions. The text however does not make clear what the global policies are. The text doesn't inform either about the specific policies and guidelines valid for the English language edition Misplaced Pages community, established by that community within the borders of the universal WMF Policies and guidelines. The project page is made available in over 100 other languages, which also gives the impression that the page offers information about the universal policies and guidelines with validity on all Misplaced Pages projects - which it does not.

I've made the observation that mountains of misunderstandings do exist around the broad and rather complex topic Wikimedia Movement Policies and guidelines and the project page does not excel in delivering clearity here. The friendly suggestion therefore is to expand the text with:

  • a section containing a general introduction to the legal ecosystem in which all Wikimedia projects, including all Wikipedia projects, are operating, with some milestones from Nupedia/Wikipedia/Wikimedia governing history;
  • a summary of the most important actual valid universal Wikimedia Foundation Policies and guidelines, with 'rule of law' on all Misplaced Pages projects, like the WMF Bylaws, Terms of Use, Universal Code of Conduct and UCoC Enforcement guidelines (see: summary 1, summary 2 by the WMF)
  • a section explaining the actual valid policies, guidelines and best-practices on the English language Misplaced Pages edition.

This will have a global effect because I did notice by reading through some of the other language project pages, that other communities simply did translate this page as being the rules valid on their Misplaced Pages edition. Unaware of the possibility that every individual community has, to establish their own specific policies, so long as these are in conformity with the framework of global policies.

Thanks for your attention, Kevin Bouwens (talk) 12:52, 24 July 2024 (UTC)

Welcome to the English Misplaced Pages, @Kevin Bouwens. When you say "This header" in your first sentence, what header are you talking about? WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:37, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
Thank you @WhatamIdoing for the swift reply, welcome and question. It's about the header "Misplaced Pages:Policies and guidelines", pointing out to Misplaced Pages in general, not only the English language edition (I've changed the sentence so others will understand). The webaddress is admittedly: "en.wikipedia.org", but that doesn't mean that the content only refers to the English language version; compare it with the lemma Misplaced Pages on the English language version.
My suggestion is to write on a page with this name about the general situation, and on another page "English Misplaced Pages: Policies and guidelines" about the Policies and guidelines that only are 'in power' on the English language edition / for the English language project community. Alternative: write both sections on this page, clearly divided. In case it turns out not to be easy for experienced Wikipedians to untangle the policies and guidelines in a section with global validity and a section with validity on the English language version, I would be happy to assist in figuring that out, when whished. Keep up! Kevin Bouwens (talk) 06:43, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
If you are concerned about the page title at the top of the page, which looks like this:
Misplaced Pages:Policies and guidelines
then the "Misplaced Pages:" part indicates the namespace, and we can't actually change it on this page.
We could change the first sentence to say "The English Misplaced Pages's policies and guidelines are developed by the community". WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:08, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
The individual Misplaced Pages editions in different languages are separate from the Engliah Misplaced Pages. As it says in the introduction to this policy "This policy page specifies the community standards related to the organization, life cycle, maintenance of, and adherence to policies, guidelines, and related pages of the English Misplaced Pages. It does not cover other editions of Misplaced Pages." If you click on languages near the top right you get the nearest equivalent to the page in other languages, most have not achieved the level of bureaucratification of the English version 😃 NadVolum (talk) 15:32, 25 July 2024 (UTC)

Input on a search parameter in our policy template

Pls see Template talk:Misplaced Pages policies and guidelines#Search parameter like our MOS template?. Moxy🍁 22:43, 24 July 2024 (UTC)

PAG precedence

Currently, we have a commonly accepted precedence for determining which PAG we should defer to (Manual of Style < Guideline < Policy < Core Policy), but this isn’t formalised. I think it would be helpful to do so, as our policies should reflect practice, and it will avoid wikilawyering on the issue.

As a rough draft, I would suggest changing WP:POLCON from

If policy and/or guideline pages conflict, one or more pages need to be revised to resolve the conflict so all the conflicting pages accurately reflect the community's actual practices and best advice. As a temporary measure, if a guideline appears to conflict with a policy, editors may assume the policy takes precedence.

More commonly, advice pages do not directly conflict, but provide multiple options. For example, Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources says newspaper articles are generally considered to be reliable sources, and Misplaced Pages:Identifying reliable sources (medicine) recommends against newspaper articles for certain technical purposes. Editors must use their judgement to decide which advice is most appropriate and relevant to the situation at hand.

To:

If policy and/or guideline pages conflict, one or more pages need to be revised to resolve the conflict so all the conflicting pages accurately reflect the community's actual practices and best advice.

More commonly, advice pages do not directly conflict, but provide multiple options. For example, Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources says newspaper articles are generally considered to be reliable sources, and Misplaced Pages:Identifying reliable sources (medicine) recommends against newspaper articles for certain technical purposes.

Editors must use their judgement to decide which advice is most appropriate and relevant to the situation at hand. When doing so, editors must defer to the advice with the highest level of consensus:

  • Core policies (highest)
  • Policies
  • Guidelines
  • Manual of Style (lowest)

BilledMammal (talk) 04:05, 12 August 2024 (UTC)

The MOS banner states that those pages are a guideline. Do they really need their own level?
Whats an example of a "core policy", and how are these different than policies?
As you can probably tell from my questions, my mental model of PAG only has three levels: policy > guideline > essay / not classified. And I would hesitate to add additional levels as it would enable wikilawyering, which is undesirable. –Novem Linguae (talk) 04:42, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
WP:OR, WP:RSWP:V, and WP:NPOV are the core policies.
They are the policies most central to making Misplaced Pages Misplaced Pages, and making it the trusted resource it is - I think we should make this importance, and the level of consensus they hold, clear.
I think it would also be beneficial to reflect the generally accepted stance that style guidelines are considered less important - to have a lower level of consensus - than guidelines generally.
However, I don’t mind too much if we simplify this down to "guidelines < policies", as this will formalise most of current practice. BilledMammal (talk) 04:49, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
In the list of core policies, WP:RS should be replaced by WP:V. This is in line with the explanatory essay WP:COPO. Historically, WP:RS was created as a place to provide further explanation for which sources satisfy WP:V and that relationship still exists. Zero 05:08, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
You’re right, corrected. BilledMammal (talk) 05:11, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
I don't think a blanket statement that all manual of style guidelines have less consensus than other guidelines is reasonable. There are a lot of guidelines out there, and the amount of discussion each received varies a lot. isaacl (talk) 06:34, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
I don't agree with the premise that introducing formal levels of guidance will better reflect practice and avoid wiki-lawyering. Part of the reason the community has difficulty in setting rigid levels is because in practice, it's not rare for the community to reach consensus agreement to allow exceptions for various cases. Additionally, establishing a fixed hierarchy would lead to endless debates on the appropriate level for a given collection of guidance. The second issue could be mitigated by a different decision-making method than the current consensus-based method with a "consensus can change" tradition, but that would have to come first. The first issue, though, is practically inevitable with how guidance is developed on English Misplaced Pages, with large group conversations amongst a changing set of participants, so maintaining consistency is unrealistic. It's endless work to try to codify all guidance to avoid exceptions, as they have a fractal nature: the closer you look into different scenarios, the more variations become apparent. isaacl (talk) 06:19, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
The long-ago wording: Where a guideline appears to conflict with a policy, the policy takes precedence. But then Kotniski weakened it to Where a guideline appears to conflict with a policy, the policy normally takes precedence. But then WhatamIdoing weakened it further to: As a temporary measure during that resolution process, if a guideline appears to conflict with a policy, editors may assume that the policy takes precedence. I'd like a return to the long-ago wording but disclose that In March I was in an argument where I quoted WP:POLCON with the weakest wording, and wish I could have quoted the long-ago wording. Peter Gulutzan (talk) 15:07, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
If memory serves, the idea of "precedence" started when there was some concern about WP:RS saying something that didn't quite align with WP:V, and an editor decided to boldly solve the problem by saying that the policy trumped the guideline.
The problem with declaring My Policy Always Trumps Your Mere Guideline is that I think you'll find it's more complicated than that. For example:
  • The WP:V policy says that "reliable sources include:...Reputable newspapers"
  • The WP:MEDRS guideline says that newspapers aren't reliable sources for biomedical content.
IMO there's no true conflict here, as MEDRS doesn't say that newspapers are completely unreliable for all content, but editors occasionally claim that there's a conflict, because they want to cite "Study says cigarettes don't cause lung cancer after all" in The Daily Slop, and if they have to follow MEDRS, they won't be able to cast doubt on the scientific consensus.
The discussion you linked to wasn't really about Misplaced Pages:The difference between policies, guidelines and essays; it was about whether WP:RSCONTEXT is still a rule in practice. If RSCONTEXT is not a rule, then you can blindly (or defaultly) blank all uses of a newspaper that has been designated as WP:GUNREL. If RSCONTEXT is still a rule, then you have to slow down long enough to ask yourself whether or not The Daily Slop is reliable for a sentence that says "The movie critic at The Daily Slop gave it two bananas". WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:24, 17 August 2024 (UTC)
You aren't being exact about what your memory serves or about what WP:MEDRS says, so I'm unable to address that. In the discussion I linked to the argument was whether "WP:NOTCENSORED does not override WP:RS". Context was mentioned in the thread but not for that specific argument. Peter Gulutzan (talk) 17:44, 18 August 2024 (UTC)
I thought NOTCENSORED was irrelevant. WP:NYPOST movie reviews don't involve "content that some readers consider objectionable or offensive‍—‌even exceedingly so". Here is an example of the objected-to edits. He removed a sentence saying "Kyle Smith of the New York Post gave the film two out of five, stating that the animated film "greatly expands on the kids' book on which it's based in a clever and engaging first half. But the second half leaves a foul aftertaste."" The edit summary says that the source is (in his opinion) unreliable and therefore mentioning the movie review is WP:UNDUE. I don't see anything "objectionable or offensive‍" in the removed sentence, and I suspect you don't either. Invoking NOTCENSORED sounded to me like someone throwing some WP:UPPERCASE spaghetti against the wall to see if anything would stick.
But if you want to follow that line of thinking, then consider a WP:POINTY-headed wikilawyer saying "We must include this exceedingly WP:Offensive material per NOTCENSORED! No, I don't happen to have a reliable source for the offensive material, but that doesn't matter. NOTCENSORED is a policy, and all policies override mere guidelines, so having a reliable source is unnecessary". WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:05, 18 August 2024 (UTC)
I'll do my best to ignore your accusations and say what I thought that argument was. Material was being removed based on the "generally unreliable" objection (and the example you picked had those words). I was saying that regardless whether an RfC re RS misinterpreted, it could not suppress expressions of opinion without running into the policy which quoted The University is not engaged in making ideas safe for students. It is engaged in making students safe for ideas. Thus it permits the freest expression of views before students, trusting to their good sense in passing judgment on these views., which is not about obscenity and had nothing to do with what's in WP:Offensive material, which is not a policy and was not mentioned in the argument or any edit summary that I noticed. A reviewer's opinion is allowed, the policy is relevant, the claim that the policy does not override the guideline was met by the reference to a weakened wp:polcon. Peter Gulutzan (talk) 15:17, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
A movie critic's comment is not the kind of ideas that the university president was talking about, and NOTCENSORED itself, in the first sentence, says that it's about objectionable or offensive content, which this isn't.
Besides, the edit summary gave a policy-based reason: A view presented in an unreliable source is WP:UNDUE, and therefore the inclusion was a policy violation. You were arguing that the NOTCENSORED policy ought to trump the NPOV policy. WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:51, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
That's just another false statement about me, I'll again do my best to ignore your accusations. If anyone wants to comment about what I actually said, or even wants to address the thread topic, that might be better for the tone here. Peter Gulutzan (talk) 17:42, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
I also disagree with making the levels more formal. We don't really need put down arguments if an editor says that they feel that a lower level is more applicable. Saying a policy normally takes precedence is enough, if they still have a problem it should be discussed. Editors have discussed things at all levels. NadVolum (talk) 20:33, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
I agree with the general principle, but think that further codifying the hierarchy in this way isn't helpful. Guidelines often address exceptions / edge cases or provide more detail than we would want in policies, and for these specific areas can represent a higher level of consensus than applying the higher level policy by default. Asking editors to use their judgment (through consensus building) is sufficient. Scribolt (talk) 06:07, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
Policies and Guidelines should support each other. In the rare cases when a Policy and s Guideline appear to be in conflict, the solution is to resolve the conflict… not to argue about which “takes precedence”. The issue needs to be raised on both pages (linked to a central discussion). It may be that both pages need to be amended.
That said, it often turns out that there IS no actual conflict… but simply a disagreement over how the language of one or the other page should be interpreted in a specific situation. Blueboar (talk) 17:35, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
I agree, which is why asking editors to use their judgement in the not so obvious cases, rather than simply referring to the pages position on the ladder is the best course for this text. Scribolt (talk) 16:15, 22 August 2024 (UTC)

New PAG discussion location

Currently, the guideline says that we should hold discussions on creating a new PAG at said PAG’s talk page.

This seems odd to me; for such creations we should have broad community consensus, meaning it would be better to hold the discussion at WP:VPP. This would also align with practice where we hold discussions to modify PAGs at VPP.

Is there a reason we don’t do it this way, and if there isn’t should we change it? BilledMammal (talk) 07:04, 12 August 2024 (UTC)

BilledMammal, just wondering, what is a "PAG"? My best guess is "policy or guideline." But that is just a guess. - Butwhatdoiknow (talk) 15:07, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
@Butwhatdoiknow: Your guess is correct BilledMammal (talk) 16:03, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
My previous comments on this topic apply. Personally, I feel as long as appropriate notifications are provided at the expected locations, the location of the discussion can be flexible. isaacl (talk) 07:25, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
Notification, not location, is the important part. Also discussions on modifying PAGs doesn't have to happen at VPP, it's just a place where they can happen. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 09:04, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
To be clear, if you feel something isn't getting enough attention additional and more prominent notification is the solution. If you list it at CENT, notified all the common noticeboards and post to the village pump, then editors will see it. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 15:12, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
It seems to me that the underlying question is: is it preferable to nudge editors (through notification) to engage policy talk pages that are new to them, or is it better to encourage editors (also through notification) to shift their attention to centralized discussions like VPP.
I believe that the former is clearly better for the project, because it encourages more diversity and less entrenchent of perspectives on policy pages. The latter encourages waves of participation in centralized discussion in a way at much higher risk of BATTLEGROUND effects, and abandons the gains to be had from editors learning how diverse domains of the project actually understand guidelines and get work done. The quality of consensus is therefore likely to be lower if we force everything to centralized discussions (which we could probably measure using the rate of "per X", brigade-like voting at centralized venues). Newimpartial (talk) 11:45, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
Why do you think they are more battlegroundy?
It does tend to draw in a more diverse range of editors, which can make it more likely that there will be two groups who strongly disagree with each other, but isn’t a diverse range a good thing? BilledMammal (talk) 14:42, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
To answer your question, there are different kinds of diversity among editors, and I don't think they all have equal value.
One form of diversity is knowing less vs. knowing more about a policy/guideline topic and its history. I am not convinced that this form of diversity is especially valuable in decision-making in P&Gs (though it is sometimes helpful in RFCBEFORE). So, for example, the relatively large number of editors to be found at Village Pump, etc., who think the WP:GNG applies to everything because they are unfamiliar with the history of SNGs (including their post-2017 history) - I don't think the !votes of these editors on notability topics are especially valuable, especially when thei4 contributions take the form of a vote "per X".
On the other hand, another form of diversity is knowing about diverse aspects, e.g., of article creation and development within enwiki. So for example, bringing together editors interested in BLPs concerning, say, athletes and academics and political figures and literary figures and entertainment figures, is likely to bring additional perspective to discussions of biographical notability more than if only those interested in a single biographical genre arw involved. And I think this is the case even if the specific proposal only concerns one type of biography.
So I guess my shorthand would be that soliciting the opinions of editors who know less (and aren't motivated to learn) is generally unhelpful to P&G development, but soliciting the opinions of editors who know about diverse aspects related to P&G development is helpful. Which I believe supports the practical suggestion I made above that it is better to entice editors into well-informed discussions on Talk pages, and encourage diversity that way, than it is to create a "public arena" that could facilitate knee-jerk reactions, agonistic displays, and waves of canvassed input. TL;DR: increasing thr input of editors who are uninterested in learning the background and status quo within which a question is posed, and the most likely impacts of the options presented, is unlikely to encourage outcomes that are better for the enwiki project and comminity. Newimpartial (talk) 15:11, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
My issue with this is it reads like you are seeking to minimise the input of editors with a different view on SNGs and GNG than your view. I don’t think this is aligned with our policies on WP:LOCALCONSENSUS. BilledMammal (talk) 15:21, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
No, I'm really not promoting a particular view. I have my own specific understanding of notability on enwiki, just as North8K has theirs and WAID has theirs. History demonstrates that none of these editors holds the same view or reaches identical conclusions on the varied issues that arise with notability.
extended content on notability discussions, and a conclusion therefrom

On the specific relationship between SNG and GNG, there was a long-discussed, well-participated RfC on the topic, with a thoughtful (and uncontested) close, that gave rise to the text of WP:SNG, so in this case at least there is good documentation for what the status quo is. Each of the editors I've mentioned, and many others, recognize this status quo while having different ideas about what would make better notability policy than what we have. I can't speak for anyone but myself, but I'd be surprised if any of us were trying to "minimise" the input of editors who want to change or evolve notability policy. I know I'm not.

But I would point to what almost inevitably happens in discussions of notability, which is that editors who are inexperienced in P&Gs enter discussions assuming that there is one essential standard of notability, namely the GNG, and that the community shares this view. In the course of discussion, they learn that their view is one of many, and that other standards of notability exist that are understood to apply to certain domains, in various ways. After they learn this, some of these editors retain the assumption that other standards should not exist, although they do; some reconcile the GNG with SNGs for themselves using varied reasoning; and still others become convinced that it is beneficial for different standards to exist depending on the domain. But all editors who participate in these discussions come to recognize that, in the status quo within the community, there is no one universal standard of notability.

Based on this example, there is benefit to the community from having new editors come to these discussions, learn about the issues, and develop perspectives of their own that interact in varied ways with the status quo (whether to tinker with it or to overhaul it). But there is no clear benefit to the community in having waves of editors participate without coming to understand the policies as they exist and as they currently work (or don't work). As I pointed out earlier, this is especially true when an editors' only participation in a policy discussion consists in brigade-like "per X" !votes unaccompanied by evidence of reading and reflecting on the policy topic.

To paraphrase something I pointed out elsewhere, there is a salient difference between seeing community consensus as an emergent property of active discussion among all who want to participate, and seeing it as a mirror of the views all members of the community happen to hold at a point in time (regardless of their familiarity with the topic and its context). My sense is that enwiki has consistently held a community view of consensus much closer to the former imaginary than the latter. Newimpartial (talk) 17:42, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
Discussions on a page should be held on its talk page unless there is a very good reason not to. The main example is that deletion discussions should be held elsewhere, because if the page is deleted, so it the talk page, and we want records of deletion discussions.
For a proposal, the proposal talk page is blindingly obviously the right place for discussions. The two are watchlisted together. The talk page will follow the proposal page through any future renames. Queries about the proposal will obviously go first to the talk page. Talk pages have archives that all Wikipedians can understand. Village pumps and other dramah boards have overwhelming and confusing archiving, including the tendency for the archives to host thread copies out of chronological order. SmokeyJoe (talk) 11:59, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
This would cause bloat at VPP and make it more difficult to link the policy and the proposal:
  • Editors would have to find the link hidden the RfC statement to read the proposal instead of clicking the "Project page" tab.
  • The discussion about the proposal would then be hidden away in the VPP's vast archives, instead of conveniently in the archives of the proposed policy's talk page. A link could (and should) be provided to the archived discussion at VPP, but this is still confusion from an administrative point of view.
If notification is provided at VPP, and that is pretty standard, than I see no benefit to moving the whole discussion there.
As Newimpartial pointed out, discussion at the Village Pump tend to get more BATTLEGROUNDy. Cremastra (talk) 14:39, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
The benefit is a notification is easily missed. A discussion, which will repeatedly show up on watchlists, is far less so.
As for the rest, why do we treat the creation of PAG’s differently to the modification of them? All the arguments you present apply equally to each. BilledMammal (talk) 14:43, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
I don't think we do. Most changes to policy and guideline pages are minor and undiscussed/WP:PGBOLD. Most of the discussions happen on their own talk pages. Only a small minority of discussions about changing a single policy or guideline are intentionally started anywhere else. The village pumps are most likely to host general discussions ("I have identified a problem..." – these sometimes turn into, but are not necessarily intended to be, discussions about changing a single policy or guideline) or multi-page coordination ("...so either we need to make small changes to both WP:A and WP:B, or we need to make a big change to WP:C").
For reference, the WP:PROPOSAL that prompted this discussion is Misplaced Pages talk:Notability (species)#Proposal to adopt this guideline. It is currently more than 250K long, with about 400 comments. It is three times the current length of Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy). Adding a discussion of that length to a page with other active discussions makes it difficult for some people (especially on mobile devices) to participate in any discussions on that page, which means that we'd be frustrating editors who want to participate in unrelated discussions and thus interfering with the main purpose of the page (i.e., to let editors participate in a variety of discussions). We've been talking during the last year about intervening to split VP discussions off when we think they're going to have 100+ comments, so "at the village pump" very likely would have ended up being on a separate page anyway. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:42, 17 August 2024 (UTC)
it is very reasonable to first discuss a idea for a new policy or guideline at the ideas page. That discussion might be a bit extended if the basic idea has problems. But after that gets off the ground the talk page for it is the right place for discussions I believe so the reasoning can be found easily when people think of changing anything. Quite enough editors will find an RfC on policy and put it on their watchlist ifinterested. NadVolum (talk) 20:44, 12 August 2024 (UTC)

Deletion of MoS navigation template

Can we get input from those actually familiar with this..Misplaced Pages:Templates for discussion/Log/2024 September 13#Template:Manual of Style. Moxy🍁 21:09, 13 September 2024 (UTC)