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{{Short description|Section of the Main Page}} | |||
{{dablink|This page relates to the "In the news" section of the ]. You might be looking for ].}} | |||
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{{Shortcut|WP:ITN}} | |||
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{{About|the section of the Main Page|coverage of Misplaced Pages in the news|Misplaced Pages:Press coverage}} | |||
{{for|proposing new items to be posted|Misplaced Pages:In the news/Candidates}} | |||
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{{ITNbox}} | {{ITNbox}} | ||
The "'''In the news'''" ('''ITN''') section on the ] serves to direct readers to articles that have been substantially updated to reflect recent or current events of wide interest. ITN supports the central purpose of ]—making a great ]. | |||
{{Shortcut|WP:ITNMP}} | |||
Unlike Misplaced Pages's ] ], Misplaced Pages is ] and does not accept ] of journalism or first-hand reports. Wikipedians are allowed to create and update encyclopedic articles of timely interest based on reliable sources. ITN originated in the aftermath of the ], when entries were created and put on the Main Page within minutes of the attacks. The entries led to an infusion of interest by editors in creating a Main Page section that linked to articles providing readers the context behind the news. | |||
The '''In the News''' (ITN) section on the ] features up-to-date encyclopedic content reflecting important international current events. This page describes the inclusion criteria for ITN, as well as the procedure to place an item. ITN supports the central purpose of ]—making a great ]. ITN items (also known as "blurbs" or "hooks") link to encyclopedia articles that have been updated to reflect an important current event; it does not act as a newspaper, nor does it link to news articles. | |||
Events posted on ITN are listed in approximately reverse chronological order, with the more recent entries appearing first. They are generally not sorted by any degree of importance or significance. Events are added based on a consensus on the ] page, using two main criteria: a) the quality of the article, including material added or updated to reflect the recent event, and b) the general significance of the developments. | |||
] and does not accept original works of journalism or first-hand reports. However, many Wikipedians are motivated to create and update encyclopedic articles of timely interest. Because Misplaced Pages is an online encyclopedia, it does a much better job with such entries than a ] encyclopedia. ITN originated in the ], when entries were created and put on the Main Page within minutes of the attacks. The entries led to an infusion of interest by editors in creating a section on the Main Page, which linked to articles providing readers the context behind the news. | |||
__TOC__ | |||
== |
== Purpose == | ||
{{shortcut|WP:ITNPURPOSE}} | |||
Candidates for ITN are evaluated on two main grounds: the quality of the updated content and the significance of the developments described in the updated content. In many cases, qualities in one area can make up for deficiencies in another. For example, a highly significant event, such as the discovery of a cure for cancer, may have a sub-par update associated with it, but be posted anyway with the assumption that other editors will soon join in and improve the article. Conversely, an editor may write an in-depth update on a topic normally considered marginal, thus convincing commentors that it is deserving of inclusion. A successful nomination will normally go through several procedural steps before being placed on the ITN template. | |||
* To help readers find and quickly access content they are likely to be searching for because an item is in the news. | |||
* To showcase quality Misplaced Pages content on current events. | |||
* To point readers to subjects they might not have been looking for but nonetheless may interest them. | |||
* To emphasize Misplaced Pages as a dynamic resource. | |||
== Criteria == | |||
{{shortcut|WP:ITNCRIT}} | |||
Candidates for ITN are evaluated on two main grounds: a) the quality of the article and its updated content, and b) the significance of the developments described. A successful nomination will normally go through several procedural steps before being added to the ITN template. | |||
=== Updated content === | === Updated content === | ||
{{shortcut|WP:ITNUPDATE}} | |||
Each blurb on ITN contains an emboldened link to an article for which cited updates have been provided. Changes in verb tense (e.g. "is" → "was") or updates that convey little or no new information beyond what is stated in the ''In the news'' blurb are insufficient. The decision as to when an item is updated 'enough' is subjective, but a five sentence update (with at minimum three references, not counting duplicates) has generally been considered more than sufficient, while a one sentence update is considered extremely questionable. In the case of new event-specific articles, the traditional cutoff for 'enough' has been around three complete, referenced and well-formed paragraphs. | |||
Each ITN item contains an emboldened link to an article providing a substantial quantity of directly relevant information, attributed to reliable sources. Typically, the article has been updated to include this text or created in response to the recent/current event. | |||
The decision as to when an article is updated ''enough'' is subjective, but a five-sentence update (with at minimum three references, not counting duplicates) is generally more than sufficient, while a one-sentence update is highly questionable. Changes in verb tense (e.g. "is" → "was") or updates that convey little or no relevant information beyond what is stated in the ITN blurb are insufficient. | |||
Updated content must be thoroughly referenced. As with all Misplaced Pages articles, citations must be to ]. While articles in topics such as sporting events and economics lend themselves to tables of numbers, updates must be at least in part written in prose to qualify for ITN consideration. | |||
In the case of a new, event-specific article, the traditional cut-off for what is ''enough'' has been around three complete, referenced and well-formed paragraphs. An example of the minimum required update for a new article is <span class="plainlinks"></span> at the time of its posting. | |||
Articles that are subject to serious issues, as indicated by ], will not normally be accepted for an emboldened link. | |||
If the recent/current event relates directly to previous occurrences (e.g. a major award honoring past achievements), the article can be considered sufficiently updated when there is consensus that it contains appropriate, up-to-date coverage of the entire chronology, irrespective of when the text was written or how many sentences pertain specifically to the recent/current event (apart from the requirement that it be mentioned). | |||
Updated content must be thoroughly referenced. As with all Misplaced Pages articles, citations must be to ]. While articles on topics such as sporting events and economics lend themselves to tables of numbers, updates must be at least in part written in prose to qualify for ITN consideration. References should be correctly formatted and not ]. | |||
Articles that are subject to serious issues, as indicated by ] at either the article level or within any section, may not be accepted for an emboldened link. | |||
=== Significance === | === Significance === | ||
{{shortcut|WP:ITNSIGNIF}} | |||
Unlike the TFA and Did you know sections of the Main Page, ITN rejects items deemed trivial. The criterion was previously written as "a story of international importance or interest". This standard is highly subjective and the focus of much of the disagreement over particular candidates. The most common form of opposition on this ground is that the news is "too local" and not of interest to people in the commenter's country of origin. | |||
Whether a topic is significant enough for inclusion in ITN is often contentious. Two criteria include: | |||
*The event can be described as "current". That is, appearing currently in news sources and/or within the time frame of ITN. | |||
=== Procedural === | |||
*There is ] to post the event. | |||
# There is a sufficiently updated article, cited to credible sources. | |||
# A blurb conforming to ] is listed at ] or one of its subpages | |||
# The item has been nominated and received multiple supports at ], with an emboldened link to the updated article. A freely licensed image to accompany the item may be suggested. | |||
It is highly subjective whether an event is considered significant enough, and ultimately each event should be discussed on its own merits. The consensus among those discussing the event is all that is necessary to decide if an event is significant enough for posting. Generally, proof that an event is being covered, in an in-depth manner, by news sources is required. Caution should be taken when assessing news sources for prominence, because most major news outlets provide individualized experiences for each user, based on geography and browsing history. What one user sees as a top headline may be buried for others, and vice versa. Do not assess whether a story is "prominent" or not based on where you see it reported on major news websites for this reason. Other principles may be helpful: | |||
==Special cases == | |||
=== Deaths === | |||
The death must meet one or more of the following criteria: | |||
#The deceased was in a high ranking office of power, and had a significant contribution/impact on the country/region. | |||
#The deceased was a very important figure in their field of expertise, and was recognised as such. | |||
#The death has a major international impact that affects current events. The modification or creation of multiple articles to take into account the ramifications of a death is a sign that it meets the third criterion. | |||
*The length and depth of coverage itself (are the articles long and go into great detail, or are the articles short and cursory?); | |||
In addition, the article needs to have at least a paragraph of prose about the person's death (in accordance with ITN updating criteria), and the article as a whole must be B-class and/or be satisfactorily filled out with no major omissions of the person's life and effect. | |||
*The number of unique articles about the topic (does each major news source dedicate its own reporting staff to covering the story, or are they all simply reposting the same article?); | |||
*The frequency of updates about the topic (is the article posted once and forgotten about, or is it continuously updated, and are new articles related to the topic appearing all the time?); | |||
*The types of news sources reporting the story (is the topic being covered by major, national news organizations with a reputation for high-quality journalism?). | |||
These sorts of principles are useful in convincing others to support or oppose posting a story. None are solely sufficient to override consensus. Remember, the people you are attempting to convince is the rest of the community, not the admins, and it is rarely helpful to badger others who may have a different opinion. | |||
Deaths should ''not'' be added without a ] at ] and are recommended (but by no means "must") to be listed at ]. | |||
==== Arguments to avoid ==== | |||
:For previous discussion about this criteria, see ]. | |||
{{shortcut|WP:ITNATA}} | |||
Historically, the community has tended to frown upon certain types of arguments related to the significance of a story. Any user may, of course, support or oppose a candidate for any reason, but be aware that the following arguments have historically not garnered much support: | |||
*Arguments about a story relating to a particular geographic region, country, ethnicity, people group, etc. are generally seen as unhelpful. Almost all news is of greater interest to a particular place and/or group of people than to the world at large, and arguing that something should or should not be posted, solely because of where the event happened, or who might be "interested" in it because of its location, are not usually met with concurrence from the community. | |||
=== Sports and other recurring events === | |||
*Arguments that deal with the appropriateness of topics ''in general'' but also ignore the ''specific story being discussed'' are also usually not supported by the community. Opposing a specific story merely because one opposes all stories of that type (such as elections, or sports, or disasters) do not often generate agreement from the community. This also holds true for arguments based on similar stories which have coincidentally appeared recently, such as multiple elections on the same day, etc. Please assess and comment on the merits of each story on its own accord, not in relation to ]. | |||
Certain regularly recurring events are considered of sufficient interest to be placed on ITN every time they occur. These are listed at ]. Items listed here are considered exempt from having to prove their notability through discussion on the candidates page and may be posted as soon as a cited update is added to the article. Discussions on proposed inclusions and removals should take place on the talk page there. | |||
*Arguments based on ethics or morals—for example, refusing to support a story because ], or refusing to support a story because one finds the story itself reprehensible—are usually rejected by other members of the community. Bad things may appear in the news, and what is being assessed is not the moral or ethical "goodness" of the story, but its prominence in the news and significance. | |||
*Arguments based on personal interest and knowledge are rarely sufficient to generate agreement among the community. Merely because one has not heard of a story, or does not personally care about the story, is insufficient when assessing significance. | |||
One can get an idea for how certain topics are seen to meet the significance factor by reviewing the archives of ITN candidate discussions, which can be found organized by month at ]. Editors are cautioned from necessarily relying on consensus from past discussions to bring forward support on a new ITN candidate, since each candidate is reviewed on a case-by-case basis. | |||
== Recognition == | |||
The following templates are used to recognise articles and editors that have been involved in ITN. They also help to publicise the process and attract new contributors. Instructions can be found on each template's documentation. | |||
The following templates are used to credit the article creator and the article nominator as well as give notice on the article talk page that the article appeared on the Main Page: | |||
*'''Article creator's talk page:''' ''({{tl|UpdatedITN}})'' <tt><nowiki>{{subst:UpdatedITN|</nowiki>{{CURRENTDAY}} {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}}|{{CURRENTYEAR}}<nowiki>|Article name|7=created|subst=subst:}} --~~~~</nowiki></tt> | |||
*'''Article updater's talk page:''' ''({{tl|UpdatedITN}})'' <tt><nowiki>{{subst:UpdatedITN|</nowiki>{{CURRENTDAY}} {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}}|{{CURRENTYEAR}}<nowiki>|Article name|7=substantially updated|subst=subst:}} --~~~~</nowiki></tt> | |||
*'''Nominator's talk page:''' ''({{tl|UpdatedITN}})'' <tt><nowiki>{{subst:UpdatedITN|</nowiki>{{CURRENTDAY}} {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}}|{{CURRENTYEAR}}<nowiki>|Article name|7=recently nominated|subst=subst:}} --~~~~</nowiki></tt> | |||
*'''Self-nomination:''' ''({{tl|UpdatedITN}})'' <tt><nowiki>{{subst:UpdatedITN|</nowiki>{{CURRENTDAY}} {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}}|{{CURRENTYEAR}}<nowiki>|Article name|7=recently nominated ''and'' substantially updated|subst=subst:}} --~~~~</nowiki></tt> | |||
*'''Article talk page:''' ''({{tl|ITNtalk}})'' <tt><nowiki>{{ITNtalk|</nowiki>{{CURRENTDAY}} {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}}|{{CURRENTYEAR}}<nowiki>}}</nowiki></tt> (check if small style templates in use, if so add small=yes parm) | |||
''Note:'' If any contributor feels that they missed recognition, please leave a note on ]. | |||
=== Article quality === | |||
==Notes for administrators== | |||
{{shortcut|WP:ITNQUALITY}} | |||
=== Evaluating candidates === | |||
Articles are held to a minimum standard of quality. Articles should be a minimally comprehensive overview of the subject, not omitting any major items. ] articles are never appropriate for the main page. Articles should be well written with clear prose. Articles which consist solely or mostly of lists and tables, with little narrative prose, are usually not acceptable for the main page, and prose should be in narrative style, not ]-type writing. | |||
Whether or not a candidate meets the criteria for updated content and significance will often be immediately apparent. If you question the quality of the update, explain this so the nominator has a chance to improve the article. If you have a question about the significance, the best course of action is normally to postpone posting to allow other users to comment. Blurbs that result in discussion deadlocking in no consensus may be posted. In cases where there are multiple candidates, admins may choose to skip candidates lacking consensus. Otherwise, waiting until the timer (described below) notes that 24 hours has passed before posting may be advisable. | |||
Articles should be well referenced; one or two "citation needed" tags may not hold up an article, but any contentious statements must have a source, and having entire sections without any sources is unacceptable. ] (and the recently deceased) are held to higher standards of referencing because of their sensitive nature. Lists of awards and honors, bibliographies and filmographies and the like should have clear sources. Sources themselves should be checked for ]. Generally, orange and red clean-up tags are signs that article quality is not acceptable for the main page as well. | |||
=== Check legitimacy === | |||
Before adding an item to ITN, use the given citations to check that news story is legitimate. If you feel that the supporting media source is dubious or does not support the wording of the suggested blurb, please investigate further before putting possibly erroneous content on the Main Page. | |||
== Procedure for posting == | |||
=== *mp and chronological order === | |||
Blurbs are posted to the main page, highlighting one or more quality Misplaced Pages articles, as follows: | |||
For technical reasons, precede every blurb with the invisible template {{tl|*mp}}, including the date of the event described, e.g. {{tlx|*mp|April 1}}. Items are placed chronologically according to the event they describe, not chronologically according to the order they were placed on the template. For example, if there was a template with one item from April 1st, 2 from April 2nd, 1 from April 4th and 1 from April 5th, and an admin wished to place an item for an event that occurred on April 3rd, it would enter as the fourth item in the template. In cases where there are multiple items for the same date, normal procedure is for the most recently posted item to go on top of the date sub-queue, though admins are encouraged to place clearly more significant items higher in the template, thus ensuring that they remain longer. | |||
# There is a sufficiently updated non-stub article of sufficient quality, with credible sources cited. | |||
=== Blurbs on similar topics and updates to blurbs === | |||
# The item has been nominated at ], with an emboldened link to the updated article(s). A freely licensed image to accompany the item may be suggested. Ideally this image should be related to the top news item. If there is no suitable image available for the top item a relevant image for an item further down the list should be used instead. | |||
In cases where a blurb is suggested when there is an existing blurb on the same country or topic, the newest blurb will generally replace the older blurb. Alternately, the blurbs may be combined if they mesh well. | |||
# The event is current, and not stale relative to other events. Any event that is older than the oldest entry in the current "In the News" box is considered stale. Recent Deaths are considered separate from standard blurbs for this purpose. For purposes of determining timing and staleness, the date is considered when the event was first reported in reliable sources. This will often be the same day as the event itself, but sometimes it can be some time later, such as would be the reporting of scientific discoveries, in which the work has been done months in the past, but results are published in a reliable source some months later. In rare cases when ] allows it, an additional blurb older than the oldest entry can be added. | |||
# If there is ] to do so, the blurb is added to ] by an administrator. | |||
== Organization of the ITN section == | |||
When significant updates are made to blurbs – always supported by the emboldened article – admins may reset items higher up the template. | |||
=== |
=== Blurbs === | ||
{{shortcut|WP:ITNBLURB}} | |||
Ideally, the left and right sides of the ] of Misplaced Pages should be symmetrical, i.e. the ITN section should be roughly the same height as the section for ]. Each person will have a slightly different sense of when this occurs, depending on computer screen size, screen resolution, font size settings, etc, though it will not vary greatly among users using 'standard' settings. When ITN grows longer than TFA, the oldest item is removed. If the TFA is longer than ITN, the addition of new items are expedited, older items are re-added, or the sister ] and ] templates are adjusted so the TFA-DYK and ITN-SA columns are roughly equal. Depending upon the length of each ITN blurb and the length of the TFA, ITN will normally consist of four to eight items, as well as one image. | |||
Most In The News postings come in the form of blurbs. A blurb is a short explanation of the importance of the story in the news, with a specific article we are highlighting to direct readers to learn more information. The highlighted article should always be of sufficient quality to be posted on the main page; this usually means: | |||
*That the article is adequately referenced (a few cn tags is usually not a barrier to posting, though the article should not lack references in any major section, and ] information is given special scrutiny.) | |||
*The article does not have any other major issues. Usually, orange and red level tags are generally considered major enough to block posting to ITN, though editors are cautioned against ], especially where the article is of sufficient quality. Other tags (such as yellow level tags, or notices about merge discussions, etc.) are not themselves sufficient to block an item which otherwise has consensus; articles which are moved or merged may have their links in ITN updated through ]. | |||
*That the article is long enough to give readers a full picture of the background of the story we are posting (stubs never get posted, even start-class articles will often get opposed if they are lacking enough context to fully understand the subject) | |||
*That the article is adequately updated to provide a full picture of the facts and relevance of recent developments. While it is impossible to give a minimum word limit, it is generally inadequate if the entirety of the update is only a sentence, such that no more information is in the update than would be in the blurb. | |||
Blurbs are posted in rough chronological order by the date the event occurred. There is usually no effort made to be more specific than the date, and admins will generally not research the exact minute when an event occurred to make sure that multiple events that occurred on the same date are strictly in order. Please do not request that events be re-ordered unless the date is wrong. The number of blurbs varies from time to time, depending on the length of each individual blurb and the relative lengths of other sections on the main page. The goal is to avoid excessive ], especially between the right and left columns, and older blurbs may be periodically removed or added to achieve this. | |||
In practice, a small number of admins, generally one or two, will take on the informal responsibility of Main Page balancing. In the interests of preventing endless reverting adjustments, Main Page regulars generally submit to the edits of the 'balancers', even if those edits end up making the balance marginally worse on their own screen. If you don't already know who the balancers are, check out the recent history of ITN and DYK, generally considered the most dynamic Main Page templates, to see who is handling the fine-tuning. | |||
Some guidelines for the structuring of blurbs: | |||
===Main Page: Updates and Caching === | |||
*Blurbs should avoid ] wherever it makes the entry less accurate, clear or concise (such as addition of "...for the first time in history"). Every listed event can practically be described as a first for a specific location and/or situation. | |||
The Main Page does not necessarily update immediately after ] is changed. In order to purge the cache of the Main Page so that the present version appears, click this link: {{SERVER}}{{localurl:Main Page|action=purge}} | |||
*Blurbs should describe events in complete sentences in the present tense. They should generally use the ] ''an'' or ''a'' for events rather than ''the'' (which is used by sensationalist news to imply that readers should already know about the event). | |||
*Blurbs should generally avoid comparison to any previous event, such as ''"Largest in the region since "''. Previous events is generally out of scope of the page, and confers a ] favoring regions with a low frequency of similar events. | |||
=== |
=== Pictures === | ||
{{shortcut|WP:ITNPICT}} | |||
#One and only one image shall be included on ] at any one time. The width and height shall not exceed 100px. It shall be right-justified and have alt text. | |||
The ITN section usually has a captioned picture in the upper right corner. Pictures generally must meet the following criteria: | |||
#*This is accomplished by enclosing the image code in <nowiki><div style="float:right"> </div></nowiki> and adding |100x100px| followed by the alt text inside the image code. For example: <nowiki><div style="float:right">]</div></nowiki>. The use of the "|right" extended image markup should be avoided, as under the current MediaWiki parser, it results in unsightly and asymmetrical white borders around images in the green main page column. | |||
*The picture must be to use, with a proper license and provenance. In almost all cases, this means that the picture is available on ]. Pictures locally uploaded to Misplaced Pages for use in articles under the ] criteria are NOT eligible for publishing on the main page. | |||
# Before placing an image in the template, ensure that its copyright is well-documented and that it is legal for it to be displayed on the Misplaced Pages. '''Avoid using fair use images.''' Instead, find a related free image (PD, GFDL, CC-BY, CC-BY-SA, etc.) as an alternative. | |||
*The picture must be of a person or event mentioned in a blurb. The person or event is notated with a parenthetical comment ''(pictured)''. Generally, purely decorative elements like flags or logos are not posted; many are ineligible anyway because they are not free-use content. Maps also are rarely posted, because they usually are too difficult to read in such a small format. | |||
# Before updating ] with a new image, protect that image and add {{tl|Mprotected}} to the image's description page. If you have uploaded a temporary copy from Commons, use {{tl|C-uploaded}} or {{tl|M-cropped}}, making sure you also copy the author attribution and the licence tag). Administrators who are also administrators on Commons may protect images there, tagging them with ]. See ] for relevant info. (Commons protection will prevent local uploads.) | |||
*The picture should be for the uppermost blurb. It may be for a lower blurb if no eligible picture is available for a higher blurb. The picture's caption and the parenthetical ''(pictured)'' direct readers to the context for the picture. | |||
# When using images, parenthetically note in italicized text that the mentioned item is pictured. Example: "...leader ''']''' ''(pictured)'' is sworn in..." If the image depicts something related to or representative of the subject (but not the subject itself), the indication should be qualified accordingly . | |||
*In rare cases, none of the articles has an eligible picture, so no picture appears. This can be corrected only if a proper picture can be found. If you find a suitable picture, please report it to ] for prompt posting. | |||
# Unprotect the old image that is being removed, or speedy delete it if it has been temporarily uploaded. When deleting, don't forget to immediately check the ] of its image description page and restore any relevant Misplaced Pages-specific edits, category links, and tags (such as {{tl|FeaturedPicture}}) that were on there beforehand. | |||
=== |
=== Ongoing section === | ||
ITN has in the past been subject to criticism for its tendency to stagnate. The addition of a new ITN blurb every 24 hours will normally result in a complete template turnover in 5–7 days. To maintain this minimum level of turnover, the timer at ] will turn yellow 24 hours after the last update to encourage editors to suggest new items and admins to evaluate candidates. After posting a new item, reset the timer. | |||
{{ITN-Update}} | |||
{{Shortcut|WP:ONGOING}} | |||
== Quick guide == | |||
The purpose of the ongoing section is to maintain a link to a continuously updated Misplaced Pages article about a story which is itself also frequently in the news. The following criteria are usually used to post something to ongoing: | |||
Here is the quick guide to the process: | |||
*Any story may be proposed for an "ongoing" link through the normal use of ]. Generally, these are stories which may lack a blurb-worthy event, but which nonetheless are still getting regular updates to the relevant article. | |||
* For an item to appear on ITN, a relevant article must be updated and a blurb added to ] or one of its subpages. | |||
*In general, articles are not posted to ongoing merely because they are related to events that are still happening. In order to be posted to ongoing, the article needs to be regularly updated with new, pertinent information. Articles whose most recent update is older than the oldest blurb currently on ITN are usually not being updated frequently enough for ongoing status. | |||
* The event has to be important enough to merit updating the article and should be of international import, or at least interest. | |||
*An article listed as "ongoing" should not be taken as being considered as a featured article or otherwise maintained on the front page for reasons other than its newsworthiness. | |||
* If you are not an admin, have updated an article with an item that you feel is of international significance and put a blurb on Current events, suggest the item at the ]. | |||
* If you are an admin, familiarize yourself with both the ] and ] above. In particular, please pay close attention to the procedure for images. | |||
The items are placed in alphabetical order according to the links' displayed text. | |||
=== {{anchor|RecentDeaths}}Recent deaths section === | |||
{{main|Misplaced Pages:In the news/Recent deaths}} | |||
An individual human, animal or other biological organism that has recently died may have an entry in the recent deaths (RD) section if it has a biographical Misplaced Pages article that is: | |||
#Not currently nominated for deletion or speedy deletion. | |||
#Updated, including reliably sourced confirmation of their death. | |||
#Of sufficient quality to be posted on the main page, as determined by a consensus of commenters. | |||
=== Sports and other recurring events === | |||
Certain regularly recurring events are considered of sufficient interest to be placed on ITN every time they occur; they are listed at ]. Items listed there are usually considered exempt from having to prove their notability through discussion on the candidates page. It does NOT preempt the other ITN criteria. The relevant article(s) will still have to be updated and cited appropriately, and proposed on the candidates page before posting. | |||
If an editor has concerns about the overall recurring event, such discussions should generally not take place on ] when one instance of an event is nominated. Instead, discussions on proposed inclusions and removals on the recurring items list should take place on ]. | |||
== Recognition == | |||
The templates {{tl|ITN notice}} and {{tl|ITN talk}} are used to notify interested parties that an article was bold-linked from ITN. Instructions can be found within each template's documentation. | |||
{{ITN notice/examples}} | |||
*'''Article talk page:''' <code><nowiki>{{ITN talk|date=</nowiki>{{CURRENTDAY}} {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTYEAR}}<nowiki>}}</nowiki></code> | |||
''Note:'' No one possesses special authority to provide recognition. If an editor's contributions have not been recognized, please feel free to do so. A bot, ], will post the article talk page credits. | |||
== Barnstar == | |||
Significant long-term contributions by a user to the In The News section may be recognised with this ]: | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
!Image!!What to type!!Description | |||
|- | |||
|] | |||
|{{tlsp|InTheNews Barnstar|message <nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>|3=2=alt}} | |||
|The ''In The News Barnstar'' may be awarded to recognise significant long-term contributions by an editor to the ] section. | |||
This barnstar was designed by ] and ], and introduced in August 2010. | |||
|} | |||
<br clear="all" /> | |||
== Notes for administrators == | |||
] | |||
{{main|Misplaced Pages:In the news/Administrator instructions}} | |||
==See also== | |||
] | |||
*] | |||
] | |||
*], including a slightly more comprehensive listing of recent or current events events. | |||
:*] | |||
{{Main Page topics|state=collapsed}} | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 01:07, 30 September 2024
Section of the Main PageShortcut This page is about the section of the Main Page. For coverage of Misplaced Pages in the news, see Misplaced Pages:Press coverage. For proposing new items to be posted, see Misplaced Pages:In the news/Candidates.
In the news
Manmohan Singh- Former prime minister of India Manmohan Singh (pictured) dies at the age of 92.
- Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 8243 crashes near Aktau International Airport, Kazakhstan, killing 38 people.
- A multi-vehicle crash in Minas Gerais, Brazil, leaves 41 people dead.
- A car attack at a Christmas market in Magdeburg, Germany, kills five people and injures more than two hundred others.
view · history · related changes · edit · suggestions
In the news toolbox |
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The "In the news" (ITN) section on the Main Page serves to direct readers to articles that have been substantially updated to reflect recent or current events of wide interest. ITN supports the central purpose of Misplaced Pages—making a great encyclopedia.
Unlike Misplaced Pages's sister project Wikinews, Misplaced Pages is not an online newspaper and does not accept original works of journalism or first-hand reports. Wikipedians are allowed to create and update encyclopedic articles of timely interest based on reliable sources. ITN originated in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, when entries were created and put on the Main Page within minutes of the attacks. The entries led to an infusion of interest by editors in creating a Main Page section that linked to articles providing readers the context behind the news.
Events posted on ITN are listed in approximately reverse chronological order, with the more recent entries appearing first. They are generally not sorted by any degree of importance or significance. Events are added based on a consensus on the ITN candidates page, using two main criteria: a) the quality of the article, including material added or updated to reflect the recent event, and b) the general significance of the developments.
Purpose
Shortcut- To help readers find and quickly access content they are likely to be searching for because an item is in the news.
- To showcase quality Misplaced Pages content on current events.
- To point readers to subjects they might not have been looking for but nonetheless may interest them.
- To emphasize Misplaced Pages as a dynamic resource.
Criteria
ShortcutCandidates for ITN are evaluated on two main grounds: a) the quality of the article and its updated content, and b) the significance of the developments described. A successful nomination will normally go through several procedural steps before being added to the ITN template.
Updated content
ShortcutEach ITN item contains an emboldened link to an article providing a substantial quantity of directly relevant information, attributed to reliable sources. Typically, the article has been updated to include this text or created in response to the recent/current event.
The decision as to when an article is updated enough is subjective, but a five-sentence update (with at minimum three references, not counting duplicates) is generally more than sufficient, while a one-sentence update is highly questionable. Changes in verb tense (e.g. "is" → "was") or updates that convey little or no relevant information beyond what is stated in the ITN blurb are insufficient.
In the case of a new, event-specific article, the traditional cut-off for what is enough has been around three complete, referenced and well-formed paragraphs. An example of the minimum required update for a new article is Fuzhou derailment at the time of its posting.
If the recent/current event relates directly to previous occurrences (e.g. a major award honoring past achievements), the article can be considered sufficiently updated when there is consensus that it contains appropriate, up-to-date coverage of the entire chronology, irrespective of when the text was written or how many sentences pertain specifically to the recent/current event (apart from the requirement that it be mentioned).
Updated content must be thoroughly referenced. As with all Misplaced Pages articles, citations must be to reliable sources. While articles on topics such as sporting events and economics lend themselves to tables of numbers, updates must be at least in part written in prose to qualify for ITN consideration. References should be correctly formatted and not bare URLs.
Articles that are subject to serious issues, as indicated by 'orange'- or 'red'-level tags at either the article level or within any section, may not be accepted for an emboldened link.
Significance
ShortcutWhether a topic is significant enough for inclusion in ITN is often contentious. Two criteria include:
- The event can be described as "current". That is, appearing currently in news sources and/or within the time frame of ITN.
- There is consensus to post the event.
It is highly subjective whether an event is considered significant enough, and ultimately each event should be discussed on its own merits. The consensus among those discussing the event is all that is necessary to decide if an event is significant enough for posting. Generally, proof that an event is being covered, in an in-depth manner, by news sources is required. Caution should be taken when assessing news sources for prominence, because most major news outlets provide individualized experiences for each user, based on geography and browsing history. What one user sees as a top headline may be buried for others, and vice versa. Do not assess whether a story is "prominent" or not based on where you see it reported on major news websites for this reason. Other principles may be helpful:
- The length and depth of coverage itself (are the articles long and go into great detail, or are the articles short and cursory?);
- The number of unique articles about the topic (does each major news source dedicate its own reporting staff to covering the story, or are they all simply reposting the same article?);
- The frequency of updates about the topic (is the article posted once and forgotten about, or is it continuously updated, and are new articles related to the topic appearing all the time?);
- The types of news sources reporting the story (is the topic being covered by major, national news organizations with a reputation for high-quality journalism?).
These sorts of principles are useful in convincing others to support or oppose posting a story. None are solely sufficient to override consensus. Remember, the people you are attempting to convince is the rest of the community, not the admins, and it is rarely helpful to badger others who may have a different opinion.
Arguments to avoid
ShortcutHistorically, the community has tended to frown upon certain types of arguments related to the significance of a story. Any user may, of course, support or oppose a candidate for any reason, but be aware that the following arguments have historically not garnered much support:
- Arguments about a story relating to a particular geographic region, country, ethnicity, people group, etc. are generally seen as unhelpful. Almost all news is of greater interest to a particular place and/or group of people than to the world at large, and arguing that something should or should not be posted, solely because of where the event happened, or who might be "interested" in it because of its location, are not usually met with concurrence from the community.
- Arguments that deal with the appropriateness of topics in general but also ignore the specific story being discussed are also usually not supported by the community. Opposing a specific story merely because one opposes all stories of that type (such as elections, or sports, or disasters) do not often generate agreement from the community. This also holds true for arguments based on similar stories which have coincidentally appeared recently, such as multiple elections on the same day, etc. Please assess and comment on the merits of each story on its own accord, not in relation to other similar stories.
- Arguments based on ethics or morals—for example, refusing to support a story because the topic may be offensive to some, or refusing to support a story because one finds the story itself reprehensible—are usually rejected by other members of the community. Bad things may appear in the news, and what is being assessed is not the moral or ethical "goodness" of the story, but its prominence in the news and significance.
- Arguments based on personal interest and knowledge are rarely sufficient to generate agreement among the community. Merely because one has not heard of a story, or does not personally care about the story, is insufficient when assessing significance.
One can get an idea for how certain topics are seen to meet the significance factor by reviewing the archives of ITN candidate discussions, which can be found organized by month at Misplaced Pages:In the news/Candidates/Archives. Editors are cautioned from necessarily relying on consensus from past discussions to bring forward support on a new ITN candidate, since each candidate is reviewed on a case-by-case basis.
Article quality
ShortcutArticles are held to a minimum standard of quality. Articles should be a minimally comprehensive overview of the subject, not omitting any major items. Stub articles are never appropriate for the main page. Articles should be well written with clear prose. Articles which consist solely or mostly of lists and tables, with little narrative prose, are usually not acceptable for the main page, and prose should be in narrative style, not proseline-type writing.
Articles should be well referenced; one or two "citation needed" tags may not hold up an article, but any contentious statements must have a source, and having entire sections without any sources is unacceptable. Biographies of living persons (and the recently deceased) are held to higher standards of referencing because of their sensitive nature. Lists of awards and honors, bibliographies and filmographies and the like should have clear sources. Sources themselves should be checked for reliability. Generally, orange and red clean-up tags are signs that article quality is not acceptable for the main page as well.
Procedure for posting
Blurbs are posted to the main page, highlighting one or more quality Misplaced Pages articles, as follows:
- There is a sufficiently updated non-stub article of sufficient quality, with credible sources cited.
- The item has been nominated at Misplaced Pages:In the news/Candidates, with an emboldened link to the updated article(s). A freely licensed image to accompany the item may be suggested. Ideally this image should be related to the top news item. If there is no suitable image available for the top item a relevant image for an item further down the list should be used instead.
- The event is current, and not stale relative to other events. Any event that is older than the oldest entry in the current "In the News" box is considered stale. Recent Deaths are considered separate from standard blurbs for this purpose. For purposes of determining timing and staleness, the date is considered when the event was first reported in reliable sources. This will often be the same day as the event itself, but sometimes it can be some time later, such as would be the reporting of scientific discoveries, in which the work has been done months in the past, but results are published in a reliable source some months later. In rare cases when main page balance allows it, an additional blurb older than the oldest entry can be added.
- If there is consensus to do so, the blurb is added to Template:In the news by an administrator.
Organization of the ITN section
Blurbs
ShortcutMost In The News postings come in the form of blurbs. A blurb is a short explanation of the importance of the story in the news, with a specific article we are highlighting to direct readers to learn more information. The highlighted article should always be of sufficient quality to be posted on the main page; this usually means:
- That the article is adequately referenced (a few cn tags is usually not a barrier to posting, though the article should not lack references in any major section, and biographical information is given special scrutiny.)
- The article does not have any other major issues. Usually, orange and red level tags are generally considered major enough to block posting to ITN, though editors are cautioned against tagging an article merely to block an article from being posted, especially where the article is of sufficient quality. Other tags (such as yellow level tags, or notices about merge discussions, etc.) are not themselves sufficient to block an item which otherwise has consensus; articles which are moved or merged may have their links in ITN updated through WP:ERRORS.
- That the article is long enough to give readers a full picture of the background of the story we are posting (stubs never get posted, even start-class articles will often get opposed if they are lacking enough context to fully understand the subject)
- That the article is adequately updated to provide a full picture of the facts and relevance of recent developments. While it is impossible to give a minimum word limit, it is generally inadequate if the entirety of the update is only a sentence, such that no more information is in the update than would be in the blurb.
Blurbs are posted in rough chronological order by the date the event occurred. There is usually no effort made to be more specific than the date, and admins will generally not research the exact minute when an event occurred to make sure that multiple events that occurred on the same date are strictly in order. Please do not request that events be re-ordered unless the date is wrong. The number of blurbs varies from time to time, depending on the length of each individual blurb and the relative lengths of other sections on the main page. The goal is to avoid excessive white space, especially between the right and left columns, and older blurbs may be periodically removed or added to achieve this.
Some guidelines for the structuring of blurbs:
- Blurbs should avoid sensationalism wherever it makes the entry less accurate, clear or concise (such as addition of "...for the first time in history"). Every listed event can practically be described as a first for a specific location and/or situation.
- Blurbs should describe events in complete sentences in the present tense. They should generally use the indefinite article an or a for events rather than the (which is used by sensationalist news to imply that readers should already know about the event).
- Blurbs should generally avoid comparison to any previous event, such as "Largest in the region since ". Previous events is generally out of scope of the page, and confers a publication bias favoring regions with a low frequency of similar events.
Pictures
ShortcutThe ITN section usually has a captioned picture in the upper right corner. Pictures generally must meet the following criteria:
- The picture must be free to use, with a proper license and provenance. In almost all cases, this means that the picture is available on Wikimedia Commons. Pictures locally uploaded to Misplaced Pages for use in articles under the fair use criteria are NOT eligible for publishing on the main page.
- The picture must be of a person or event mentioned in a blurb. The person or event is notated with a parenthetical comment (pictured). Generally, purely decorative elements like flags or logos are not posted; many are ineligible anyway because they are not free-use content. Maps also are rarely posted, because they usually are too difficult to read in such a small format.
- The picture should be for the uppermost blurb. It may be for a lower blurb if no eligible picture is available for a higher blurb. The picture's caption and the parenthetical (pictured) direct readers to the context for the picture.
- In rare cases, none of the articles has an eligible picture, so no picture appears. This can be corrected only if a proper picture can be found. If you find a suitable picture, please report it to WP:ERRORS for prompt posting.
Ongoing section
ShortcutThe purpose of the ongoing section is to maintain a link to a continuously updated Misplaced Pages article about a story which is itself also frequently in the news. The following criteria are usually used to post something to ongoing:
- Any story may be proposed for an "ongoing" link through the normal use of the nomination page. Generally, these are stories which may lack a blurb-worthy event, but which nonetheless are still getting regular updates to the relevant article.
- In general, articles are not posted to ongoing merely because they are related to events that are still happening. In order to be posted to ongoing, the article needs to be regularly updated with new, pertinent information. Articles whose most recent update is older than the oldest blurb currently on ITN are usually not being updated frequently enough for ongoing status.
- An article listed as "ongoing" should not be taken as being considered as a featured article or otherwise maintained on the front page for reasons other than its newsworthiness.
The items are placed in alphabetical order according to the links' displayed text.
Recent deaths section
Main page: Misplaced Pages:In the news/Recent deathsAn individual human, animal or other biological organism that has recently died may have an entry in the recent deaths (RD) section if it has a biographical Misplaced Pages article that is:
- Not currently nominated for deletion or speedy deletion.
- Updated, including reliably sourced confirmation of their death.
- Of sufficient quality to be posted on the main page, as determined by a consensus of commenters.
Sports and other recurring events
Certain regularly recurring events are considered of sufficient interest to be placed on ITN every time they occur; they are listed at Misplaced Pages:In the news/Recurring items. Items listed there are usually considered exempt from having to prove their notability through discussion on the candidates page. It does NOT preempt the other ITN criteria. The relevant article(s) will still have to be updated and cited appropriately, and proposed on the candidates page before posting.
If an editor has concerns about the overall recurring event, such discussions should generally not take place on WP:ITN/C when one instance of an event is nominated. Instead, discussions on proposed inclusions and removals on the recurring items list should take place on Misplaced Pages talk:In the news.
Recognition
The templates {{ITN notice}} and {{ITN talk}} are used to notify interested parties that an article was bold-linked from ITN. Instructions can be found within each template's documentation.
- Article creator's talk page:
{{subst:ITN notice|article=Article name|action=created}}
- Article updater's talk page:
{{subst:ITN notice|article=Article name|action=substantially updated}}
- Nominators talk page:
{{subst:ITN notice|article=Article name|action=recently nominated}}
- Self-nominator's talk page:
{{subst:ITN notice|article=Article name|action=recently nominated and substantially updated}}
- Article talk page:
{{ITN talk|date=27 December 2024}}
Note: No one possesses special authority to provide recognition. If an editor's contributions have not been recognized, please feel free to do so. A bot, RscprinterBot, will post the article talk page credits.
Barnstar
Significant long-term contributions by a user to the In The News section may be recognised with this Barnstar:
Image | What to type | Description |
---|---|---|
{{subst:InTheNews Barnstar|message ~~~~|2=alt}} | The In The News Barnstar may be awarded to recognise significant long-term contributions by an editor to the In The News section.
This barnstar was designed by User:Melesse and User:Neutralhomer, and introduced in August 2010. |
Notes for administrators
Main page: Misplaced Pages:In the news/Administrator instructionsSee also
- Misplaced Pages:Not news
- Portal:Current events, including a slightly more comprehensive listing of recent or current events events.