Revision as of 02:56, 9 March 2006 editInkSplotch (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users821 edits →Self reference← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 20:52, 24 December 2024 edit undoBD2412 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, IP block exemptions, Administrators2,448,881 edits →Reliability versus notability of an author of a source: What about the specific context of ''quoting'' the author? For example, in Howard the Duck (film), we have: {{tq|In ''The Psychotronic Video Guide'', Michael Weldon described the reactions to Howard as being inconsistent, and, "It was obviously made in LA and suffered from long, boring chase scenes"}}, with the "Michael Weldon" there being neither of the ones with Misplaced Pages articles. | ||
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==Initial comments== | |||
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|text = {{big|'''Discuss sources on the ]'''}}<br /> | |||
To discuss the reliability of specific sources, please start or join a discussion on the ''']''' (''']'''). | |||
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{{Press |author = Samuel Breslow |title = Misplaced Pages’s Fox News Problem |date = 2022-09-29 |org = ] |url = https://slate.com/technology/2022/09/wikipedia-fox-news-reliability.html}} | |||
== Lead doesn't say what reliable source means == | |||
Todo: | |||
* <s>Fix internal links</s> (done) | |||
* <s>Write "Common knowledge" section</s> (done) | |||
* <s>Write "Science" section</s> (done) | |||
Compare with ], ] and ]. ] (]) 00:58, 14 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
(I have specific ideas for the latter two; the first, I or someone else will just need to RTFM. -- ] 08:43, 28 Feb 2005 (UTC)) | |||
:What would you propose the lead to say? ] (]) 05:41, 14 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
Yay, drafting is finished. -- ] 03:30, 5 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
::Perhaps "Reliable sources have a reputation for factchecking and accuracy. They are published, often independently from their subject." It's also troubling that the "page in a nutshell" doesn't reference reliability. ] (]) 06:19, 14 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:Good wark, Beland! ] | ] 01:21, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
::I've had a think to try to sum up the spirit of the guideline: "A reliable source is a source (four meanings in ]) that is just as willing to turn its critical attention inwardly as outwardly." I also think there is an implication that by doing this, they will necessarily be recognized for it which is the foundation for "reputation". This definition has a bias towards the source as a publisher/creator as described in ]. ] (]) 07:45, 14 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:If you want to begin with a definition, then AFAICT the actual definition is: | |||
:* "A '''reliable source''' is a ] document that experienced Misplaced Pages editors will accept for supporting a given bit of material in a Misplaced Pages article." | |||
:You have probably noticed the absence of words like ''reputation'', ''fact-checking'', ''accuracy'', ''independence'', etc. That's because those aren't actually required. We cite self-published, self-serving, inaccurate, unchecked, non-independent sources from known liars all the time. See also {{tl|cite press release}} and {{tl|cite tweet}}. ] (]) 05:02, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::The first part makes some sense, although I would appreciate some clarification on the second part. If every source is reliable for ''something'', the second sentence of this page "If no reliable sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it" is redundant. ] (]) 05:50, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::The second sentence is incomplete. It probably ought to say "If no ] can be found..." ] (]) 07:15, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Ah, I assumed the exclusion of independent was intentional. There does seem to be a distinction between sources reliable for verifying the content they express (wikivoice), and sources reliable for verifying that such a source expressed content (requiring attribution). I'll add in the "independent", although it does seem a bit like a non-sequitur. ] (]) 07:22, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::I'm not sure that it should be in the lead at all, but if it's going to be there, it should match WP:NOT, which says "All article topics must be ] with ], third-party sources" and WP:V, which says "If no ], ] sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it". ] (]) 19:58, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::Yes, I'm not sure it should be in the lede either. I tried to express this by labelling it a non-sequitur. | |||
::::::If I were to read the lede to find out what constitutes a reliable source for a statement, I would learn it's what experienced editors thinks verifies it. This is really useless, I would have no idea how to apply this guideline, which is surely the first consideration in reading a ''guideline''. Defer to experienced editors, who apparently deferred to experienced editors, who... ] (]) 00:35, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I don't think it's ''useless'', but I agree that it isn't immediately ''actionable''. It tells you what a RS actually is. What you need after that is some way to determine whether the source you're looking at is likely to be RS. | |||
:::::::This could be addressed in a second sentence, perhaps along these lines: | |||
:::::::"Editors generally prefer sources that have a professional publication structure with ] or ], have a reputation for ], accuracy, or issuing ], are published by an established publishing house (e.g., businesses regularly publishing newspapers, magazines, academic journals, and books), and are ] of the subject. Reliable sources must ] the content and be appropriate for the supported content." | |||
:::::::It's that last bit ("appropriate") that throws over the preceding sentence. If a BLP is accused of a crime, and posts "I'm innocent! These charges are false!" on social media, then that's a source with no professional publication structure, no reputation for fact-checking or accuracy, no reputable publishing house, and no independence from the subject. But it's 100% appropriate for the article to contain this information, and 100% reliable for the statement "He denied the charges on social media". ] (]) 18:01, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::The thing is, the rest of the page explains in detail what qualities are (and aren't) seen in sources that are usually accepted, so I'm not sure that duplicating that information in the lead is necessarily the best choice. Perhaps it would be better to say something like "This guideline describes the characteristics of sources that are generally preferred by editors." ] (]) 18:11, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::This ridiculous situation is a product of us not distinguishing reliable for verifying the content of a source, and reliable for verifying the existence of a source. I understand that there is some complexity with DUE on this front (SME may fall into the latter category given what we can verify is that an expert is saying this but not that it is something we can put in wikivoice), but the current approach, where we try to bundle it into "appropriate" is insufficient. | |||
:::::::::<del>Small note, we should try to keep comments such as "But it's 100% appropriate for the article to contain this information" out of the convo to keep the streams from getting crossed with WEIGHT.</del> <ins>probably too aspirational, and my comments may be read as doing this.</ins> ] (]) 21:52, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::The idea isn't "duplicating" information, but summarizing it. The lede of NPOV could say "An article's content can be said to conform to a NPOV if experienced editors accept it as appropriate to include" but this doesn't explain what it is as representing "fairly, proportionately, and, as far as possible, without editorial bias, all the significant views that have been published by reliable sources on a topic" does. ] (]) 21:50, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::@], since I doubt that the sentence should be in this guideline at all, I don't really mind you removing the word 'independent', but I did want to make sure you understood the context. As a result of your edit, we have | |||
::::::* WP:NOT saying that "All article topics must be ] with <u>], third-party</u> sources", | |||
::::::* WP:V saying that "If no ], ] sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it", and | |||
::::::* WP:RS implying that non-independent sources aren't all that important. | |||
::::::If we have to have this sentence at all, I'd rather have this sourcing guideline match the core content policies. If, on the other hand, you're thinking about the fact that NPROF thinks independent sources are unimportant, then I suggest that the place to fix that is in the policies rather than on this page. ] (]) 20:09, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::It is my understanding that several SNGs can be satisfied without (what some editors consider to be) fully independent sources, not just NPROF. | |||
:::::::Fundamentally, I think the actual policy problem is that the degree of independence that should allow a source to be used to establish the notability of a subject is poorly-defined and easily weaponized. So it seems to me that no academic is notable based on their own self-published statements, but a legitimate claim to notability can be based on reliable statements from universities and learned societies (to satisfy NPROF criteria). | |||
:::::::An author or artist can't be notable based on their own self-published statements, either, but a legitimate claim to CREATIVE notability can be based on reliable statements from the committee granting a major award. | |||
:::::::In a way, I think the older "third-party" language more clearly supported these claims to notability, whereas many editors will now argue that employers and award grantors are "not independent enough" for their own reliable claims to count for notability. ] (]) 21:17, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Indeed, an employer is not independent of the employee they tout, though an award granter (usually) is independent of the winner (though not of their award). | |||
::::::::I agree that there might be a problem, but I think that if we're going to have this sentence in this guideline at all, it should match what the policies say. | |||
::::::::How do you feel about removing this as unnecessary for the purposes of this guideline? ] (]) 21:24, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::This may be a controversial opinion, but I think an institutional employer with a decent reputation ''is'' a reliable source for the employment history and job titles of an employee, which is what NPROF requires in some cases. No "tout"ing necessary. Under those circumstances, I don't think a more purely independent source is "better" than the employer for establishing that kind of SNG notability. | |||
:::::::::Similarly, I have most certainty seen enthusiastic arguments that an announcement by an award grantor of a grantee is not independent of the grantee (presumably for reasons of "touting") and therefore does that such sources do not contribute to notabiiity under CREATIVE (even though the latter does not actually require independent sourcing, only reliable sourcing). | |||
:::::::::I would also point out again that "third party", which is what NOT says now and what WP:V said until 2020, seems slightly less amenable to weaponization in this way than does "independent", for whatever reason. ] (]) 22:20, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::I agree that employers are usually "reliable" for the kinds of things they publish about their employees, but they're never "independent". | |||
::::::::::] redirects to ], and has for years. There is a distinction – see ] – but the distinction is not observed in Misplaced Pages's rules. ] (]) 03:37, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::If we do not remove this sentence, can we add independent, and then have a follow-up sentence or footnote saying "independent sources are not required to meet some SNGs" or the sort? Seems like that would clear up any confusion by not having "independent" in the sentence. ] (]) 22:04, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::A second thought: I don't think using a narrowly "document" definition for source adequately accounts for the other meanings of source used (i.e. a publisher), and I'm not sure how you could do that. I imagine that's just a case of reliable source having multiple definitions depending on the way it's being used. This may be the source of conflict with the second sentence: a different meaning being invoked. ] (]) 06:24, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::In discussions, we use that word in multiple different ways, but when you are talking about what to cite, nobody says "Oh, sure, Einstein is a reliable source for physics". They want a specific published document matched to a specific bit of material in a specific article. | |||
:::"Document" might feel too narrow, as the "document" in question could be a tweet or a video clip or an album cover, none of which look very document-like, but I think it gets the general jist, which is that RS (and especially ]) is focused on "the work itself". ] (]) 07:22, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Yes, I am thinking more ], although you describe well what the underlying dispute is, describing a publisher as unreliable is making a presumption for specific cites. ] (]) 07:27, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::This is a known difficulty. There's the "Oh, everyone agrees that Einstein's reliable" sense and the "Yeah, but the article is ], and Einstein's ''not'' reliable for anything in there" sense. | |||
:::::I have previously suggested encouraging different words. Perhaps Einstein is ''reputable'', and an acceptable source+material pair is ''reliable''. But we aren't there, and for most purposes, the distinction is unimportant. If someone says that "Bob Blogger isn't reliable", people glork from context that it's a statement about the blog being unreliable for most ordinary purposes. ] (]) 20:10, 27 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::Yes, the definition Google gives for reliable: "consistently good in quality or performance; able to be trusted" does not caveat that it only speaks to verifying single pieces of information. This implies the Misplaced Pages definition is unintuitive. I do think this isn't the biggest problem here although it does make it confusing. ] (]) 00:35, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::We use the "able to be trusted" sense. And the question is: Able to be trusted ''for what''? There are people you can trust to cause problems. There are source we can trust to "be wrong". That's not what we're talking about. We're talking about whether we can trust this source to help us write accurate, encyclopedic material. | |||
:::::::A source can be "consistently ''bad'' in quality" and still be reliable. Many editors would say that anything Donald Trump posts on social media is bad in quality. But it's reliable for purposes like "Trump said ____ on social media", because it is "able to be trusted" for that type of sentence. ] (]) 18:21, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Context makes a difference. We should never ask: “''Is this source reliable?''” but rather, we should ask: “''Does this source reliably verify what is written in our article?''” ] (]) 22:23, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*I find the formulation added ("A reliable source is a published document that experienced Misplaced Pages editors will accept for supporting a given bit of material in a Misplaced Pages article.") quite bizarre. Firstly, it is, in effect, saying a reliable source is a source which "experienced" editors say is reliable. Isn't that utterly circular? It tells me nothing if I want to work out whether a source is reliable or not. Secondly, it fails ]. I can't see anything about "experienced" editors' opinions being decisive in the rest of the guideline. It's completely out of the blue. Fundamentally, it's not what the guideline says. Thirdly, why do "experienced" editors views get priority? I've come across plenty of experienced editors with highly dubious views about RS and relatively new editors with compelling opinions. Fourthly, "a given '''bit''' of material". Seriously, are we going to have such slangy sloppy language in the opening of one of the most prominent guidelines in WP? Apart from that it's great. I don't disagree that a summarising opening sentence would be useful, but this is not it or anything like it. ] (]) 22:16, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*:@], what would you write instead, if you were trying to write the kind of definition that ] would recommend if this were a mainspace article? | |||
*:Usually, editors start off trying to write something like this: "A reliable source is a work that was published by a commercial or scholarly publisher with peer review or editorial oversight, a good reputation, independent, with fact-checking and accuracy for all." | |||
*:And then we say: We cite Donald Trump's tweets about himself. They are {{cross}} self-published with {{cross}} no editorial oversight, {{cross}}no peer review, a {{cross}} bad reputation, {{cross}} non-independent, with {{cross}} no fact-checking, and {{cross}} frequently inaccurate. And despite matching exactly 0% of the desirable qualities in a reliable source, they are still 100% {{tick}} reliable for statements that sound like "Trump tweeted _____". | |||
*:An accurate definition needs to not completely contradict reality. | |||
*:As for your smaller questions: | |||
*:# Is this circular? No. "A reliable source is whatever we say it is" tells you what you really need to know, especially in a POV pushing dispute, which is that there is no combination of qualities that can get your source deemed reliable despite a consensus against it. It doesn't matter if you say "But this is a peer-reviewed journal article endorsed by the heads of three major religions and the committee for the Nobel Peace Prize, published by a university press after every word was publicly fact-checked, written by utterly independent monks who have no relationship with anyone!": If we say no, the answer is no. {{pb}}Does that sentence tell you everything you need to know? No. I agree with you that it does not tell you everything you need to know about reliable sources. We have been ]. | |||
*:# See ]. | |||
*:# Why "experienced" editors? Because, to be blunt, experienced editors control Misplaced Pages, and especially its dispute resolution processes. A source is not reliable just because three newbies say it is. However, it's unusual to have three experienced editors say that a source is reliable, and end up with a consensus the other way, and I don't ''ever'' remember seeing that happen with only newbies opposing that. | |||
*:# If you dislike that particular phrase, then I invite you to suggest something that you prefer. As long as it prioritizes text–source integrity – by which I mean that we're talking about whether this source is reliable for this word/phrase/sentence/paragraph rather than vaguely about "the subject in general" or "some unknown part of the thousands of words on this page" – I'm personally likely to think it's an improvement. | |||
*:] (]) 04:03, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*::I don't think putting forward a strawman and then demolishing it is particularly useful. Your strawman clearly fails for its narrowness. The current text (and the premise of the above thread) fails because it's circular (yes it is - I'll come back to that) and doesn't tell us anything about ''what an RS is''. | |||
*::To do that, one has to reach back to the fundamentals that, absent the detail of WP:RS, gives editors a guiding principle by which to judge whether a source is RS or not. For me, the fundamental concept is that RS are the means by which ] is delivered in practice. If it delivers it, it's RS. If it doesn't, it's not. I'm sure there are a number of ways this can be formulated. Here's one - I don't say it is the only one or the best one or it can't be improved. {{tq|A reliable source is a previously published source of information in any medium which has all the attributes necessary to enable a reader to check the veracity of a statement in an article and to be assured that it is not derived from editors' own beliefs or experiences.}} That's pretty much all you need to know to understand why is RS for "Donald Trump has claimed on Twitter that China created the concept of global warming" but not for "global warming was created by China" (to take your example). | |||
*::Turning to your numbered points: | |||
*::# How can it be anything other than circular? I have 37k edits over 12 years so I would think by most standards I am "experienced". So if I am in doubt on whether something is RS or not and I look at that I'm told that whatever I think is RS is RS. There are no inputs given to me other than what I already thought and what I already thought is validated. Circular. Obviously ] is how all disputes are ultimately resolved. But what you say is clearly not true - otherwise !votes contrary to policy in RFCs wouldn't be disregarded. Of course 'might is right' works from time to time here, but not always or inevitably and to embed and codify it is really inappropriate in a guideline. | |||
*::#The great thing about WP policies and guidelines is that (for the most part) they reflect commonsense. Taking a bureaucratic approach to ignore LEAD, a very commonsense guideline, doesn't make sense to me. Of course, the opening should be relatable to what is actually said in the policy. There is absolutely nothing in the current opening that foreshadows the rest of the guideline. | |||
*::#Just need to look at RFC's to see that's not how we work. And ultimately an RS dispute will end up there. And what's an "experienced" editor anyway? I can see it feeding arguments along the lines of "I've got 40k edits and you've got 2k so my opinion counts more than yours". | |||
*::#For the reasons I've given above, the current text isn't salvageable. It needs a different concept. But a "bit of material" is particularly cringworthy. | |||
*::I really think the addition should be reverted. Also, given its prominence whatever the final proposal is it needs an RFC rather than 3 editors deciding it. ] (]) 11:23, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*:::I like the direction your definition takes, except that it's not really reflective of actual practice. Here is an example of a source that has all "the attributes necessary to enable a reader to check the veracity of a statement in an article and to be assured that it is not derived from editors' own beliefs or experiences", but which is not a reliable source: | |||
*:::* Source: Soviet propaganda article in a government-funded partisan newspaper saying HIV was intentionally created as part of a American biological warfare program. | |||
*:::* Article content: "HIV was created as part of a US biological warfare program." | |||
*:::The reader can check source and "be assured that it is not derived from editors' own beliefs or experiences". That (dis)information definitely came from the cited newspaper and not from Misplaced Pages editors. | |||
*:::But it's still not a reliable source, and at the first opportunity, editors will remove it and, if necessary, have a discussion to demonstrate that we have a consensus against it. ] (]) 00:44, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*::::It's not a reliable source for exactly the same reason (in my example) as the Trump tweet is not a reliable source for the statement "global warming was created by China". It not being derived from editors' own beliefs is only an additional qualifier. The main one is that "it has all the attributes to check the veracity of the statement". When the tweet is used to say Trump said X, it has all the attributes to check the veracity of the statement "Trump said X". However, it has none of the attributes to check the <u>veracity</u> of the statement that "global warming was created by China" (expertise, independent fact-checking etc etc.) it's exactly the same as your Soviet propaganda article. | |||
*::::I'm reverting the addition to the guideline - it consensus needs to be more than a couple of editors for something as prominent as that. ] (]) 16:09, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
*:::::WP:V begins this way: | |||
*:::::"In the ], '''verifiability''' means that people are able to check that information comes from a ]." | |||
*:::::Older versions opened with statements like "Misplaced Pages should only publish material that is '''verifiable''' and is ]" () and "The threshold for inclusion in Misplaced Pages is '''verifiability, not truth'''. This means that we only publish material that is '''verifiable''' with reference to ]" () and "The threshold for inclusion in Misplaced Pages is '''verifiability, not truth'''. "Verifiable" in this context means that any reader should be able to check that material added to Misplaced Pages has already been published by a ]" (). | |||
*:::::There's nothing about veracity in the policy, nor any similar word, except to tell people that The Truth™ explicitly ''isn't'' our goal. | |||
*:::::Additionally, if we demand veracity, rather than verifiability, we can realistically expect POV pushers to exploit that. "Sure, you cited a scientific paper about HIV causing AIDS, but that paper doesn't provide enough information to 'check the veracity of the statement'." Or "You cited lamestream media to say that Trump lost the 2020 election. You can't actually 'check the veracity of the statement' unless you go count the ballots yourself." And so forth. | |||
*:::::I think we have intentionally avoided any such claims for good reasons, and I don't think we should introduce them now. The purpose of a source is to let others (primarily other editors, since readers rarely click on sources) know that this wasn't made up by a Misplaced Pages editor but was instead put forward by the kind of source that a person of ordinary skill in the subject would be willing to rely on. ] (]) 19:08, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
*::::::I think you are missing the point. "Verifiability not truth" is about something else entirely. That's about the encyclopedia reflecting what's published in reliable sources rather what an editor believes to be the truth. It's not saying that it has no bearing in determining what an RS is. Fundamentally, we need to use sources that have all the attributes that support the objective of veracity. Whether or not they do convey the "truth" is a different question - and we can't know that. All we can do is check as best we can that they have the attributes that can potentially do that. If we do anything else then we just repeat flat earth nonsense. This is basic. ] (]) 21:59, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
*:::::::You want us to define a reliable sources as having all "the attributes necessary to enable a reader to check the veracity of a statement". | |||
*:::::::But you don't think veracity has much to do with the truth. | |||
*:::::::I wonder if a word like ''trustworthy'' would serve your purposes better. That is, we can't promise you it's true, and almost none of the sources will give you the material necessary to check the actual veracity, but we can give you a source that we trusted. ] (]) 23:33, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
=== Circularity === | |||
==Semi-common knowledge== | |||
Beland, this is extensive, and I've only glanced at part, but ... Can you clarify whether this allows for material that is not known to be published but is common knowledge and undisputed among people with at least moderate knowledge of the subject? ] 09:02, 5 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
This is about the comments on the definition ("A reliable source is a published document that experienced Misplaced Pages editors will accept") being circular. | |||
:Maurreen, you have identified the grey area. Some knowledge is ''so'' obvious that it requires no proof in sources (e.g. the Sun rises in the East). Yet, for me it is obvious that high levels of ] cause ] (elevated blood calcium levels), while others would like to see proof that I'm not making this up. While this is probably undisputed, it is falsifiable due to the (relative or potential) ignorance of the readership. ] | ] 01:21, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
] is this case: "A is true because B is true; B is true because A is true." For example: "This drug was proven to work because 100% of the people taking it got better afterwards. I know they get better because of the drug (and not due to random chance, placebo effect, natural end of the disease, etc.) because the drug has been proven to work." | |||
::Does this mean we have a consensus to keep it gray? :) | |||
::Maybe we should just have a sentence somewhere along the lines of "Material which is undisputed should not be removed solely because a source is not identified"? ] 01:29, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
Circular reasoning is not: "A reliable source is whatever editors say it is". | |||
:::I didn't intend for this page to encourage anyone to remove anything; what to actually do when you find an undocumented fact or unreliable source is the question that's being hashed out at ] right now. -- ] 01:56, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
This is the old joke about reality, perception, and definition: Three ] are talking about their profession and the difficulty of making accurate calls in borderline cases. One says "Some are strikes, and some are balls, and I call them as they are." The next feels a little professional humility is in order and says "Some are strikes, and some are balls, and I call them as I see them." The third thinks for a moment and says "Some are strikes, and some are balls, but ''they ain't nothing until I call them''." | |||
:Everything is allowed, of course, but as for what's recommended as the most reliable... | |||
The last umpire speaks of definition: What makes a source be "reliable" is that editors accept it. If it is not reliable, it is not reliable ''because'' they do not accept it. They might (and should!) give reasons why they don't accept it, but it is not unreliable because of the reasons (which may vary significantly between editors, or even be completely incorrect); it is unreliable ''because'' they don't accept it. | |||
:There's a distinction between facts that one can personally verify and facts that everyone who is moderately familiar with a particular area "knows". For the second kind of "facts", I would recommend seeking reliable published sources or people with personal experience who can serve as primary sources. If no such sources exist, you could either report the statements as widely believed but unverified, or be more specific and reference "less reliable" sources and characterize their reports as unverified or speculative. Even in scholarly communities, it's easy for something to become "widely known" without actually being true. But on the scale of reliability, there are worse things. | |||
Imagine that you have applied for a job somewhere. They do not choose to hire you. You ask why. They say "We felt like you had too little education and not enough experience". You reply: "That's wrong! I've got five advanced degrees, and I've been working in this field for a hundred years!" Even if you're 100% right, you're still not hired. So it is with sources: No matter what the rational arguments are, a source is reliable if we say it is, and it's unreliable if we say it isn't. | |||
:If this isn't clear from the front page, maybe it needs to be improved. -- ] 01:51, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
When you write above that if "I am in doubt on whether something is RS or not and I look at that I'm told that whatever I think is RS is RS", you are making the mistake of assuming the plural is accidental. It is not what "I" think; it is what "we" think. Another way to say it might be "A reliable source is a published document that The Community™ will accept", though that will draw objections for its unsuitable level of informality. ] (]) 01:10, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I was thinking of facts that one can personally verify. But no biggie either way. ] 01:53, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
::Beland, I hadn't looked at your most recent changes. I think that clarifies the matter well. Thanks. ] 01:55, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
Have a more simple "Ovrview section" .....then let page explain... KISS....somthing like | |||
:::Beland, this is really good work. Thank you for doing it. I've slightly changed the definition of fact, and I hope this is okay with you. It was: "A fact is a piece of true information about the universe, whether that be a historical event, or an ongoing social or natural phenomenon. "I changed it to: "A fact is an actual state of affairs, which can be an historical event, or a social or natural phenomenon. To say of a sentence that it is true is to say that it refers to a fact." It says essentially the same thing as before, but the latter is more consistent with how the word "fact" is used by philosophers. Do say if you prefer your own version. ] 10:45, Mar 6, 2005 (UTC) | |||
{{quotation |A reliable source is one that presents a well-reasoned theory or argument supported by strong evidence. Reliable sources include scholarly, peer-reviewed articles or books written by researchers for students and researchers, which can be found in ] like ] and ]. | |||
::::I have improved on your improvements. Yay! -- ] 02:12, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
::::: ;-) You have, indeed. "Claims of fact" is a lot better. So what is the status of this page? I'd like to start linking to it but don't know how to describe it or how it relates to Cite sources. ] 02:29, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) | |||
Magazine and newspaper articles from reputable sources are generally reliable as they are written by journalists who consult trustworthy sources and are edited for accuracy. However, it's important to differentiate between researched news stories and opinion pieces. Websites and blogs can vary in reliability, as they may contain misinformation or be genuine but biased; thus, it's essential to evaluate the information critically. Online news sources are often known for sharing false information.}} | |||
== Common knowledge == | |||
Wrote a fast essay ]<span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 16:30, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
I find the "Common knowledge" section troubling. For example, it says | |||
:''Wikipedians have should have direct personal knowledge of the facts reported. This does not include hearsay - hearing or reading about something or even learning about something in school. (See the above section "Hearsay".) For those things, you (or someone else) should be able to cite a reliable source.'' | |||
If someone says "I was there and I saw it", how can we evaluate this claim? Perhaps the person is telling the truth, perhaps lying, perhaps his memory is terrible, perhaps he was hallucinating. | |||
:@], you said: | |||
:You should evaluate them like you would any other primary source. The author of a famous book could easily also have any of these faults. For some things, having a real live person with an eyewitness account you can communicate with and ask to clarify their statements and whatnot, is certainly better than reading an eyewitness account. And getting several eyewitnesses to different instances of the same phenomena to agree is often an even better verification. But it depends on the subject matter. -- ] 03:10, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
:* A reliable source is one that presents a well-reasoned theory or argument supported by strong evidence | |||
:but if Trump posts on Twitter that China caused global warming, and we write in an article "Trump claimed China caused global warming on Twitter", where is the "well-reasoned theory" or "strong evidence"? There is no theory at all, and there is no evidence that this wasn't the one time when someone picked up his device and tweeted a joke post for him. | |||
:Or think about something perfectly ordinary, like "Big Business, Inc. has 39,000 employees". We'd normally cite that to the corporate website. There's no "reasoning", no "theory", no "argument", and no "evidence" involved. | |||
:This sort of strong source might be true for major sources on substantial topics (e.g., as the main source for ]), but it's inapplicable to most of our ordinary everyday content. ] (]) 19:14, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Should deal with the vast majority of articles. Trump posts on Twitter is not reliable for statements of fact just the opinion. The vast majority of articles dont have to deal with junk of this nature...let these cases be dealt with edit by edit. As for Big Business not sure it's even worthy of inclusion. .but if no other source contradicts the statement who really cares. <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 19:26, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Sources have to be measured against individual statements, not whole articles. | |||
:::The vast majority of articles deal with quite a lot of very ordinary content: The company said they have ''n'' employees. The singer said she got married last week. The author wrote this book. The definition of reliable source has to fit for all of these circumstances, not just the contentious ones. ] (]) 19:31, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Then what is needed is a definition of reliable source (used academically) as we have now vs a source for a statement that in no way would ever come under a peer review process or be historically relevant in the future. What is needed is more and separate information about how we can use non-academic sources. Should have a page dealing with modern media junk, company or government data and social networking sites that promote oneself. There's a whole generation coming up consisting of 50% of English-speaking editors that will never go on to formal education to understand the differences. <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">]</span>🍁 22:35, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::I think that it would be desirable to have a definition for reliable sources, but I suggest to you that this definition says much more about us (i.e., the Misplaced Pages editors who are making the decisions about which sources to "rely on") than about the objective, inherent qualities of the sources. | |||
:::::As I ], a source can have none of the qualities we value and still be reliable for certain narrow statements. It can also have all of our favorite qualities and still be unreliable for other (e.g., off-topic or misrepresented) statements. | |||
:::::IMO the unifying theme between "This comprehensive meta-analysis of cancer rates, published in the best journal and praised by all experts, is a reliable source for saying that alcohol causes 8.7924% of cancer deaths in developed countries" and "Yeah, his tweet's a reliable source for the fact that he said it" is what the community accepts for each of those statements. That's our baseline: It's reliable if we say it is, and it's not reliable if we say it isn't. ] (]) 23:41, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
I wrote something up after this, if only to clarify my understanding. Could someone here have a look and see if I am accurately reflecting what's conveyed here? Particularly the part on 'intangible preferences' I'm a little shaky on. | |||
:Strictly speaking, a source cannot by itself be described as reliable. A source can only be reliable for verifying a piece of information. | |||
:There are two types of statements a source can verify: those that are attributed and those that are not. With the former, editors look for attributes such as independence, peer-review and a reputation for fact-checking. This can indicate it is reliable for such a statement. They also look for counter-considerations, such as contradicting other sources that also have such attributes and a lack of expertise to make such a statement. | |||
:How considerations and counter-considerations are weighted, and the determination of reliability for a statement is made, comes down to any consensus editors can form. The community has some preferences for which considerations are more relevant; experienced editors are more able to apply such intangible preferences. If a source meets this, the material can be put in wikivoice. | |||
:When a source falls short of this, we can move from using the source to verify the content of what they said, to verifying that they said something. If the source has a credible claim to representing what it purports to be, it is considered a reliable source to verify the attributed claim. An example of a "credible claim": Donald Trump's Twitter may post something, but whether the tweet is a reliable source that Trump said it or merely that his Twitter account posted it is evaluated (considering the potential that his social media team tweeted it). | |||
] (]) 02:50, 2 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:I was with you until the last sentence. The difference between "Alice said" and "The people Alice hired for the purpose of saying things for her" is immaterial. | |||
I also find this sentence difficult: | |||
:The difference that matters is whether Trump's tweet can be presented as something that is true ("Trump likes McDonald's food", with a tweet saying "At McDonald's. Best french fries in the world. Love all their stuff. Should make the Navy serve this in the White House.") or only as something that he said ("Trump once tweeted that Ruritanians 'should be deported from their own country'", with a tweet saying "Those Ruritanians are strange! They should be deported from their own country!!"). ] (]) 06:31, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:''No particular technical expertise should be required to understand or verify "common knowledge" facts.'' | |||
::Both matter. We can see the former matter when we write ] as ghostwritten rather than authored by Trump even when "The people hired for the purpose of saying things for " wrote it. ] (]) 06:40, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
Many proponents of crackpot theories insist that no particular expertise is required to understand or verify their theories. | |||
:::But we can't use a ghostwritten book to say that it was ghostwritten. We need a different source for that (i.e., one that actually says it was ghostwritten). ] (]) 07:28, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
As examples, how would you deal with people who made the following assertions as "common knowledge" | |||
::::Oh I understand your point. Yes, this is contingent on external sources making comments to this effect rather than simple editor speculation, I should have made that clearer. ] (]) 07:48, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:"The Jewish lobby controls American foreign policy, especially as regards Israel". | |||
::On the second half, I've had a think. I don't think it is a distinct issue from non-primary sources. I think the key consideration from the first is independence. For the second, due to ambiguity in tone, to put it in wikivoice would be an ] claim for which the tweet is insufficiently reliable. Interested to hear your thoughts. ] (]) 08:42, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:"The Israeli settlements are illegal under international law". | |||
:::Were you using ''non-primary'' and ''independence'' as interchangeable words in this comment? ]. | |||
Are these statements acceptable in Misplaced Pages articles as "common knowledge"? ]<sup><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></sup> 03:27, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
:::Assuming 'the second' is the made-up tweet about the purely fictional ], the tweet would be: | |||
:::* primary for its contents (]) | |||
:::* non-independent of himself/his view | |||
:::* self-published because the author and the person who made it available to the public are the same. | |||
:::But it would be ''reliable''. All sources are reliable for statements that say "The source contains the following words: <exact words in the source>" or "The person posted <exact words the person posted> on social media". | |||
:::With this reliable source in hand, one still has to decide whether the content belongs in the article. ]. Just because you have a reliable source doesn't mean the inclusion would be ] or comply with rules against ] inclusion of random factoids. But even if you conclude that it's not sufficient to justify putting it in the article, the source is still reliable for the statement. ] (]) 20:01, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::No I wasn't, in fact I was trying to make the more bold claim that the principles of independence could be applied to a primary source. The idea being that if a claim is self-serving, the publisher is less reliable for its contents, necessitating attribution. There's no principle of "self-serving", but there is of ''bias'' and ''independence''; I think the latter fits better here as a biographical subject can have more or less of a vested interest in a topic, which is what an independent source is: "a source that has no vested interest in a given Misplaced Pages topic". | |||
::::"But it would be reliable." There's some imprecision here between reliable with or without attribution. You are saying all are reliable for the latter, which is true. How that attribution is given depends on whether the source "has a credible claim to representing what it purports to be". For the former, the reason there is an affirmative assumption of reliability for claims made by individuals is because they are regarded as a SME, on matters such as whether Donald Trump does indeed love McDonalds. Counter-considerations then apply for reliability: self-serving, contestable etc. | |||
::::Agree on DUE. I am trying to keep that discussion out of this one, with mixed results. ] (]) 21:53, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::* Source1 says <something>. | |||
:::::* Is Source1 reliable for the claim that Source1 says "<something>"? Yes. | |||
:::::* Source2 says <something self-promotional>. | |||
:::::* Is Source2 reliable for the claim that Source2 says "<something self-promotional>"? Yes. | |||
:::::There is no difference here. The Source2 is not less reliable for its own contents. Just because it says something self-promotional does not make you any more likely to read Source2 and think "Huh, Source2 didn't really say <something self-promotional>". ] (]) 23:36, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::The claim made by source one can be put in wikivoice, the claim made by source two should be attributed. It seems obvious to me that source two is less reliable <ins>for content</ins>, we can't trust them as easily as a source that isn't self-promotional because they have strong, relevant motives contrary to accurately reflecting the truth. They are both just as reliable as each other for "source said something". The question here is the distinction you drew: "The difference that matters is whether Trump's tweet can be presented as something that is true or only as something that he said." For the former we can present it as true, for the latter we can only present it as something he said. ] (]) 23:50, 5 December 2024 (UTC) ] (]) 00:02, 6 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I agree with you that {{xt|They are both just as reliable as each other for "source said something"}}. | |||
:::::::] attribution is required whenever editors choose (i.e., by consensus) to require it. That is not always for primary sources, not always for non-independent sources, and not always for self-promotional sources. | |||
:::::::Consider a self-published, self-promotional, non-independent primary source: | |||
:::::::* Social media post: "Congratulations to all the staff on our 20th anniversary! Thank you to all the customers who have supported us since 2004. We're going to give away treats to the first 100 customers today, and we'll have hot gas station grub all day long for the low price of $5." | |||
:::::::* Misplaced Pages article: "WhatamIdoing's Gas Station opened in 2004." | |||
:::::::Nobody would expect us to add INTEXT attribution, e.g., "According to a social media post by WhatamIdoing's Gas Station, the business opened in 2004." The source is self-promotional, but our use of it is for non-self-promotional, basic facts. We can trust the source even though the source is promotional. ] (]) 02:16, 6 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::While it may be true that INTEXT is technically only applied whenever editors choose, INTEXT also seems to make clear — "For certain ], in-text attribution is always recommended" — that when material is DUE but is insufficiently reliable to be put in wikivoice, it is generally attributed. | |||
::::::::If I may, a source can only be reliable for a given piece of material. It does not speak to the whole source as we've noted above extensively. The material the text is supporting, "WhatamIdoing's Gas Station opened in 2004" is not particularly promotional. If the material being supported was "WhatamIdoing's gas station gave away treats to the first 100 customers on this day", that the material was self-serving would be a consideration in whether it could be considered reliable or not. ] (]) 02:39, 6 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::If you see an advertisement from a business that says it will give away treats to the first 100 customers, what makes you think you can't ''rely on'' that claim? Imagine that a store near you ran an ad making exactly that claim. Would you show up wondering whether it was true? Or would you be confident that (barring extenuating circumstances, assuming the whole store hadn't burned down over night, etc.) that they actually would do this? | |||
:::::::::A promotional source doesn't give us a reason to include promotional material, but it is reliable for the facts of the promotion. A Misplaced Pages editor would likely omit any mention of giving away treats, but if they included it, they would not say "The gas station posted on social media that they would give away treats to the first 100 customers", or anything remotely close to that. In fact, INTEXT would discourage that because {{xt|"in-text attribution can mislead"}}. Adding in-text attribution in that case might make it sound like we think the advertisement was lying. | |||
:::::::::There are self-serving cases when in-text attribution is necessary. Consider "Richard Nixon said ]" vs "Richard Nixon was not a crook", because the self-serving source is not reliable for a statement of fact. But a self-serving source ''can'' be reliable for a plain statement of fact, and when it is reliable for that plain fact, it should be presented in wikivoice – or omitted entirely for reasons unrelated to the source being reliable for the statement. ] (]) 04:16, 6 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::I agree with all of this, and I did when making my comment (hence why I said "would be <em>a</em> consideration", not <em>the</em> consideration). I think we're in agreement and I don't think any of this is at odds with my initial laying out of reliable sourcing, although some more clarifications may be needed. | |||
::::::::::Coming back now to the case you initially raised of Donald Trump liking McDonalds being in or out of wikivoice, I am saying the primary consideration is whether he is getting something out of it. More important considerations don't apply as they do with your gas station promo. If he tweeted endorsing ] instead of McDonalds a different assessment of how self-promotional the material was would be made. I've lightly edited the original comment into ]. Do you think it needs further revision? Would you put it differently? ] (]) 04:46, 6 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Consider this sentence above: {{xt|If the material being supported was "WhatamIdoing's gas station gave away treats to the first 100 customers on this day", that the material was self-serving would be a consideration in whether it could be considered reliable or not}}. | |||
:::::::::::This is wrong. Whether the material was self-serving is a consideration for "how we should handle it" or "what we should stick in the article", but it's not a consideration for "whether it could be considered reliable". That source is 100% reliable for that statement. It's just not something we'd usually want to stick in an article for '''non-'''reliability reasons. | |||
:::::::::::The tendency in discussions on wiki is to fall for the ]: I'm familiar and comfortable with using the WikiHammer of Reliability, so when the actual issue is anything else, I still pull out my hammer. I ought to use the whole toolbox and say that this is undue, unencyclopedic, poorly written, off topic for this article, etc., but instead I'm going to say: It's self-serving, so it's not reliable. It's trivia, so it's not reliable. It's a tiny minority POV, so it's not reliable. | |||
:::::::::::The sentence that you wrote above should say something like this: {{xt|If the material being supported was "WhatamIdoing's gas station gave away treats to the first 100 customers on this day", that the material was self-serving would be a consideration <u>for multiple policies and guidelines, not to mention common sense, that are not about whether this source is reliable for this statement</u>}}. ] (]) 07:07, 6 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::{{tq|That source is 100% reliable for that statement.}} This doesn't contradict my statement. Whether it is self-serving is a consideration for whether it is reliable: this is why we hold "independence" as indicative of reliability. As I said above, determining whether it is reliable is a product of weighting "considerations and counter-considerations": here the counter-consideration is more impactful. It can still be a consideration even if it is ultimately overruled in a final assessment by counter-considerations. | |||
::::::::::::And "whether the material was self-serving" is also a consideration for other multiple policies and guidelines. In this case, those are more relevant here; I am not discussing them however since this is a conversation about defining "reliable sources", not NPOV. As you say, it can be a reliable source while still being UNDUE, and I don't think I've mentioned anything on the material being verifiable necessitating inclusion. ] (]) 07:57, 6 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::For: | |||
:::::::::::::* a statement in the Misplaced Pages article that "WhatamIdoing's Gas Station is giving away treats to the first 100 customers", and | |||
:::::::::::::* a source that is an actual advertisement saying the same thing, | |||
:::::::::::::then: whether that advertisement is self-serving is '''not''' a consideration for whether the advertisement is reliable for a description of the promotional activity. | |||
:::::::::::::There are no worlds in which we would say "Oh, this advertisement would be reliable for "WhatamIdoing's Gas Station is giving away treats to the first 100 customers" except that the advertisement is just too self-serving". The advertisement is ''always'' reliable for that particular statement. ] (]) 00:22, 7 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::Again, none of this contradicts what I'm saying. There's a confusion of process and outcome. While determining if this source can verify this piece of material, we necessarily have to make a judgement on whether the material being self-promotional (which can indicate a source is unreliable in verifying material) would impact such a determination. Here, you make it clear that you think it is irrelevant. Which I agree on. But to do so, you have necessarily considered its relevancy; to disregard first necessarily requires consideration. This is the consideration I am speaking of. It is an application of determining if a source is reliable as the evaluation of considerations for why it may be reliable and counter-considerations for why it may not be. "The advertisement is always reliable for that particular statement" and "a consideration in determining if such a source includes it being self-promotional possibly indicating unreliability" are simultaneously true. I think I've said my peace here and am repeating myself so if my point doesn't come across I'll leave this here, although I obviously hope it does. ] (]) 03:54, 7 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::I don't think we're going to reach an agreement. I can't think of an example of an advertisement that we would consider reliable if we judged it non-self-promotional but unreliable if we judged it self-promotional. ] (]) 18:15, 9 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::It's not the advertisement as a whole being judged as more or less self-promotional, but the material therein. An advertisement could make two claims: Coca-Cola was founded in 1886. Pepsi puts poison in their cola. There is obviously a distinction to be made to the extent of self-promotion between the claims, even though they both appear in an advertisement. ] (]) 13:09, 15 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
Coming back to this, I can see the ] makes an attempt to define reliable at odds with the above discussion: "Reliable" means that sources need editorial integrity to allow verifiable evaluation of notability, per the reliable source guideline." In addition to this, it requires sources be independent, so it's not that it's just talking about reliable ''as it relates to notability'', but making a claim about reliability in general. ] (]) 13:09, 15 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:Everything in the GNG is written "as it relates to notability". Among its awkward statements are that "Sources should be secondary", which is true(ish) for notability but has nothing to do with the definition of either ''source'' or ''reliable''. ] (]) 19:16, 16 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I would say that these are both statements on a subject about which there is a significant amount of known controversy, so whether or not one has or needs legal expertise to understand these statements is not a necessary question to decide. Though in general, I would not recommend applying "common knowledge" verification to any legal subject. If something is illegal, there should be plenty of written evidence which is more authoritative than the testimony of a random person off the street. This is another reason not to use "common knowledge" verification for the second statement. People are also perfectly free to say, "I don't agree. I think the opposite is true." If there's no rough consensus, then a claim based on "common knowledge" grounds should be removed. -- ] 03:10, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
*Part of the confusion here stems from omitting context from the discussion. The goal is for sources to “reliably” verify what ''we'' write in our articles. However, the question of whether a specific source does this (or not) depends on ''what'' we write. Are we attempting to verify a statement of fact written in wikivoice (where we state “X” as fact, verified by citing source Y) or are we verifying an attributed statement of opinion (where we note that Y said “X”, verified by citing where Y said it). The same source can be unreliable in the first context, but reliable in the second context. | |||
This, of course, does not mean we should write either statement (other policies impact what we write, as well as how and where we write it)… it only means that the specifics of reliability can shift depending on context. ] (]) 15:05, 15 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
==Inconsistency between WP:SOURCE and WP:SOURCEDEF== | |||
Beland, sources must be provided; issues of fact, legal or otherwise, cannot be decided by consensus. ] 03:40, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC) | |||
The definition of a source is not consistent between ] and ]. WP:SOURCE states that the word ''source'' has four related meanings whereas WP:SOURCEDEF states that the word ''source'' may related to one of three concepts. Here's a side-by-side comparison. | |||
:I tried to copy edit the Common knowledge section in line with Jay's concerns, but found that it all seemed to contradict ], so I deleted it. It's "common knowledge" that we're trying to keep out of Misplaced Pages. Everything must be verifiable with reference to credible, published sources. That doesn't mean that a reference has to be provided for every single claim, but there should nevertheless be references available if an editor challenges an edit, and if none are available, any editor may delete the claim. Also, there are a few references to incorrect facts, or "facts, true or false." There's no such thing as an untrue, false, or incorrect fact. A fact is an actual state of affairs, true by definition. ] 02:15, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC) | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
Also, I've just discovered that another page has been created called ]. ] 03:16, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC) | |||
|+ | |||
|- | |||
! ] !! ] | |||
|- | |||
| A {{em|cited source on Misplaced Pages}} is often a specific portion of text (such as a short article or a page in a book). But when editors discuss sources (for example, to debate their appropriateness or reliability) the word {{em|source}} has four related meanings: | |||
* The work itself (the article, book) and works like it ("An obituary can be a useful biographical source", "A recent source is better than an old one") | |||
:Have just looked at it and it's the common knowledge section created as a new page, half an hour after I deleted the section from this page. It contradicts ], ], and ]. I don't know what's going on. ] 03:21, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC) | |||
* The creator of the work (the writer, journalist: "What do we know about that source's reputation?") and people like them ("A medical researcher is a better source than a journalist for medical claims"). | |||
* The publication (for example, the newspaper, journal, magazine: "That source covers the arts.") and publications like them ("A newspaper is not a reliable source for medical claims"). | |||
* The publisher of the work (for example, ]: "That source publishes reference works.") and publishers like them ("An academic publisher is a good source of reference works"). | |||
All four can affect reliability. | |||
::Yes, "Common knowledge" generally contradicts "No original research", which is why it is troubling. I'm not sure why ] recreated it as an article. ]<sup><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></sup> 05:46, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
|| A ''source'' is where the material comes from. For example, a source could be a book or a webpage. A source can be reliable or unreliable for the material it is meant to support. Some sources, such as unpublished texts and an editor's own personal experience, are prohibited. | |||
:::I posted an explanation to ]. -- ] 05:50, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
When editors talk about sources that are being cited on Misplaced Pages, they might be referring to any one of these three concepts: | |||
==Independent primary sources== | |||
* The piece of work itself (the article, book) | |||
Continuing the copy edit: I like the discussion about different types of sources, but found this one problematic: | |||
* The creator of the work (the writer, journalist) | |||
* The publisher of the work (for example, ] or ]) | |||
{{strong|Any of the three can affect reliability.}} Reliable sources may be published materials with a reliable publication process, authors who are regarded as authoritative in relation to the subject, or both. These qualifications should be demonstrable to other people. | |||
What is an independent primary source? | |||
|} | |||
So: does ''source'' have three meanings or four? —] (<span style="color:gray">he/him</span> • ] • ]) 17:19, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
Independent primary sources: | |||
* Each had direct personal experiences which they are recounting | |||
* Have not discussed their experiences with each other, which could contaminate their memories of events | |||
* Do not have a common influence which could taint their stories in the same way. | |||
:Yes! ] (]) 18:22, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
That sounds as though we are saying editors may do their own original research and then use it. If we're not saying that, what do others feel the purpose of this section is? ] 03:00, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC) | |||
:The one from WP:V is correct, as it was ]. Either the two should match, or the RS should be removed. ] (]) 18:43, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Thing is… I think these are meant to be ''examples'' more than definitions. We could probably come up with additional things that we might call a “source”… so it isn’t limited to just 3 or 4. ] (]) 18:49, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I believe the original goal was to give newer folks a heads up that when one editors says something about 'the source', and another editor says something about 'the source', they might actually be talking about different things, like warning travelers that the word ''biscuit'' has different meanings ] vs ]. | |||
:::IMO it is not fundamental to any of these pages, and could be split out to an essay/information page like ]. ] (]) 19:13, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::It is fundamental, those are things/persons that affect reliability. Those, each, are what editors need to examine. ] (]) 12:57, 2 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::What I mean by this is: I think that WP:V and WP:RS were intelligible to ordinary editors before these words were added, and I think WP:V and WP:RS would still be intelligible if they were removed again. Their presence (in at least one of the two) might be helpful, but their absence would not actually render the policy and guideline meaningless. ] (]) 01:20, 3 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:For whatever reason, it looks like SourceDef tries/or tried to tuck the missing one from Source into its introduction and perhaps through that or over time it got a bit mangled. ] (]) 13:11, 2 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::What do you think about blanking all but the first paragraph, and then pointing people to ] for more information? ] (]) 00:05, 8 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Do these pass ]? == | |||
:There are plenty of primary sources who aren't Misplaced Pages editors. Like say we're researching an article on the dot-com explosion. Say the two founders of a company have both written books on the subject. We'd want to compare what they have to say. But what if they used the same ghostwriter? Did they compare notes after the fact but before publishing so they'd have a consistent story? A more independent source might be the book written by the CEO of a competing company, or maybe the company's janitor, or a journalist covering the company during the period of interest. Maybe the page needs some more diverse concrete examples to get the point across. -- ] 04:57, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
There have been 41+ recorded cases of starvations in Gaza, but a from medical professionals in Gaza estimated that the true number is at least 62,413. The estimate is based on the IPC classification; see the . The figure was also referenced in this by anthropologist Sophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins. | |||
::I think the point that needs to be stressed throughout is that all material in Misplaced Pages must have been published in a credible publication already. The way you have written the primary-source section makes it sound as though editors are allowed to go off and do their own research (as though they're journalists), then come back here and report the results. They are not allowed to do this, and this cannot be stressed often enough, because many of them think if they have personal knowledge of something, they're allowed to chuck it in the encyclopedia. Here's an example: there's a rumor that the Apple logo (apple with a bite out of it with gay-pride colors) was designed around the suicide of ], who invented one of the earliest computers, and who was homosexual in the UK when it was illegal there; and who was therefore persecuted, and killed himself (it appears) by biting into a poisoned apple. This was in the Alan Turing article without a reference, and I couldn't find one. So I recently e-mailed the designer of the Apple logo, and he told me the truth behind the design. However, so far as I know from him, this has not been published anywhere. Therefore, I can't use that knowledge in Misplaced Pages. Even if you see something with your own two eyes, it can't go into Misplaced Pages until it has been published elsewhere first. This is why I'm unclear what you're trying to achieve with ], and I'd really appreciate it if you could explain it to me, because it seems to be going against everything that several of us are trying to achieve at Misplaced Pages, which is accurate, well-referenced, encyclopedic entries. ] 05:09, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC) | |||
The question is whether either of these sources passes ], making it suitable to include the estimate in something like wikivoice (e.g. the ] infobox reads {{tq|Estimated at least 62,413 dead from starvation}}). | |||
I don't see any evidence of vetting by the scholarly community, but the argument has been made that the authors' expertise and/or publication by ] (a research group which hosts a compilation of papers by its contributors) might suffice. This has been discussed ] and more recently ]. — ] <sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>\<sup>]</sup> 16:41, 7 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
Well, given the discussion on ], not everyone would seem to share the same view. Quoting ]: | |||
:This is already being discussed at ]. ] (]) 16:49, 7 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:''I do not believe that it is a productive use of editors' time to track down sources for claims like "rain is composed chiefly of water", or "animals can die of starvation", or "the nose is an organ associated with the sense of smell", or "the round orange thing visible in the sky is called the sun", or any other item of undisputed general knowledge.'' | |||
== I would like some feedback on what I perceive to be a reliable aviation source. == | |||
I can see his point. On the other hand, some of these facts do deserve some explanation with references to outside sources. How do we know the liquid in rain is the same as the liquid in the ocean? It certainly tastes different. On the other hand, something like defining the word "sun" in reference to a commonly visible object is not something one really needs to turn to an outside source for. (Certainly you would if you wanted to explain what the sun actually was.) In fact, sometimes Misplaced Pages can give you a better sense of the meaning of a word than a professionally prepared dictionary, both because the entry is longer, and because we are able to be more up to date. On the other hand, I would trust the etymology in the dictionary more than what Misplaced Pages says, at least for our current state of accuracy on those types of facts. Unless there's a referenced source, of course. And there should be. | |||
I was recently looking to use AussieAirpower as a source in an aircraft article. I was surprised to see two people say it wasn't a reliable source. Here is why I believe it is. | |||
In your particular case, the designer of the logo is the ultimate primary source. Their comments should be cited directly. If those comments have not been published, I would be happy with a simple Usenet posting, as long as there is no significant doubt of the authenticity of the post. It's also worth noting that authors of reputable books cite personal correspondence all the time. I'm not sure it's worthwhile to exclude this from Misplaced Pages, especially if it can be excerpted directly. I like that "No original research" prevents Misplaced Pages from becoming like an academic journal, where people publish their experiments and novel theories. But I'm not sure I like excluding "scoops" all together. Especially when there's really no question that they are accurate. | |||
The primary author writes for Janes, which is very highly regarded, worked as a research fellow at the Australian Defence Studies Centre, consulted for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute and many others. So his opinion isn't just held in high regard, governments pay for it. He is he a current research fellow for the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics as well as the editor for AussieAirpower.Peter Goon co authors a lot of the work, a qualified aircraft engineer and RAAF officer, graduate of the US navy test pilot school with extensive military test flying and who has developed and certified many aircraft technologies. | |||
I'm sure there are plenty of published works about the meaning of the word sun, and of course the science of the sun. But there are very few, if any, published sources about how people in wheelchairs ride ] buses. And yet there are many Wikipedians who could confirm the accuracy or non-accuracy of something I choose to write on it. In practice, these types of facts are tolerated in Misplaced Pages; in fact, they represent a significant chunk of its content so far. I think these facts should stay, and I'm not too worried that no sources are cited. I don't think it's "original research" as ] defines it, because the ideas presented are not particularly novel; they are mundane and easily verified. Or maybe I'm wrong, and there is a contradiction with the policy as written. If so, then maybe that policy should be changed to reflect current practice. Unless we decide that our current practice should move toward the existing policy instead. Personally, I see a lot of benefits to "consensus-based fact finding", but I also see a lot of potential pitfalls. I've re-written ] as a statement of when this technique is ''not'' appropriate, and left the remaining situations in a gray area, because it seems not everyone so far agrees on how they should be treated. Hopefully we can at least agree where the black should be, as a starting point for determining if there is any white left. | |||
To me this seems like an ideal source on matters relating to things like radars and aircraft? However other seem to elevate the work of regular reporters above this and deem the think tank unreliable? | |||
I've also clearly labelled these two pages as proposals, not policy, lest anyone be confused. I'm interested to see what other perspectives we'll be getting on them in the coming weeks. -- ] 05:50, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
An example article is linked here. https://www.ausairpower.net/APA-Zhuk-AE-Analysis.html ] (]) 23:58, 7 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:Beland, if you're saying material can be published without references, you're up against the entire culture of Misplaced Pages, notwithstanding what any individual editor says. Tell me: you say you'd accept a single Usenet post from the designer of the Apple logo. How would you verify it was him? Please take me through the steps. ] 05:58, Mar 12, 2005 (UTC) | |||
:@], please take this question to ]. Alternatively, if you think it needs people who understand the subject area, you can post it at ]. ] (]) 00:04, 8 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Slim, I don't get this statement: "If you're saying material can be published without references, you're up against the entire culture of Misplaced Pages." | |||
::Thank you. ] (]) 00:57, 8 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::To me, that is at least inconsistent with the number of articles without sources. ] 07:15, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
== Preprints bullet, general audience writing about scholarship == | |||
:::This common failing points to flaws in the articles themselves, not in the policy or theory. ]<sup><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></sup> 05:51, 14 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
Right now, the Preprints bullet says in part {{tq2|Preprints, such as those available on repositories like arXiv, medRxiv, bioRxiv, or Zenodo are not reliable sources. Research that has not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog, as anybody can post it online. Their use is generally discouraged, unless they meet the criteria for acceptable use of self-published sources, and will always fail higher sourcing requirements like WP:MEDRS.}} | |||
::Well, if something like that is published in a public place (actually, Wikiquote might be even better than UseNet, since that's what it's for), then other editors can e-mail or otherwise contact the source and verify the authenticity of the statement. It's not unlike how newspaper editors check their reporters' quotes - they call up the source, and ask if the reporting is accurate. I would say that if two independent reporters agree, and there's no particular reason to doubt them (they're not known hoaxsters or habitually sloppy; even better if they're regular Misplaced Pages fact checkers), then the quote has been satisfactorally verified. -- ] 21:41, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
Would it be clearer to replace that with something like {{tq2|Preprints, such as those available on repositories like arXiv, medRxiv, bioRxiv, or Zenodo, have not undergone peer-review and therefore are not reliable sources of scholarship. They are self-published sources, as anyone can post a preprint online. Their use is generally discouraged, and they will always fail higher sourcing requirements like WP:MEDRS.}} | |||
The similarity to blogs is that they're self-published, and there's no need to compare them to blogs to say that, especially since they're unlike blogs in other ways (e.g., in citing literature). I also removed the phrase about the criteria for acceptable use of self-published sources, as preprints generally come from "expert" sources, which is an exception for using SPS. Notwithstanding that preprints generally come from expert sources, their use is discouraged because we don't want readers to confuse them with peer-reviewed research and because editors should use reliable non-self-published sources when available, which often exist in the peer-reviewed literature. | |||
Also, does it make sense to add something <u>about</u> popular discussions of scholarship (e.g., in a magazine)? ] (]) 22:44, 16 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::It's very unlike how reporters verify material. Reporters don't just make a couple of phone calls then chuck stuff in the newspaper; or at least they're not supposed to. They usually go to college or university for a number of years to learn how to do it, or serve an apprenticeship; they carefully verify the identities of people they speak to, by telephone and by meeting them (it's considered bad form to interview by e-mail); they verify the information with other, independent sources; they submit the story to their editor; it gets checked by a managing editor, proofreader, copy editor, fact-checker (just one or all four, depending on the set-up); and if it's a sensitive story, with the lawyers, editor-in-chief, and publisher; and if it's very sensitive, with the owners. Misplaced Pages doesn't have these checks and balances and that's why we rely on information from publications that do have them. ] 09:11, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC) | |||
:Whatever the outcome is, it is silly to say "they are not reliable sources. they can be reliable sources." ] (]) 23:33, 16 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Also, if a book author cites a personal letter from someone as a source, and that is cited in Misplaced Pages, how is the verification process really any different? Try to contact the source, check for other secondary sources that might confirm or deny the quote (or more often, a slightly skewed summary of a quote), check against what else is known about the source, etc. Maybe we all trust the book author more than a random Wikipedian, but it really depends on the individuals involved. We can also ask questions of the Misplaced Pages editor, but likely not the book author. Quotes are relatively easy to verify. If a Wikipedian did a science experiment, it'd be hard for other Wikipedians to try to replicate the results, especially since most of us wouldn't have the right expertise. The appropriate thing is for them to publish in a regular academic journal, that people that ''do'' have the expertise and ability to attempt replication actually read and write for. Likewise, a novel scientific, medical, legal, or historic theory (or the like) should be put through the grinder of expert peer review before it hits Misplaced Pages as ''fact''. Otherwise, a lot of things would end up here that we can't appropriately evaluate and accuracy would suffer. I think it's also poor form for people to cite their own research, because this essentially becomes self-promotion. ''That's'' what "No original research" is for. But many Misplaced Pages articles do cite single studies a lot when they have interesting relevant results, and that's informative. | |||
::The passage is fine as is, IMO. See also ].  <span style="font-variant:small-caps; whitespace:nowrap;">] {] · ] · ] · ]}</span> 00:03, 17 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I was prompted by an exchange on the Autism talk page where another editor seemed to interpret "Research that has not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog, as anybody can post it online. Their use is generally discouraged" along the lines of "the use of sources that have not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog and their use is generally discouraged" (i.e., interpreting it as text about other sorts of sources, not limited to preprints or non-peer-reviewed scholarship more generally, as is the case with some conference proceedings). Not an accurate reading of those sentences, but it made a couple of us wonder whether the wording of the preprints paragraph could be improved. ] (]) 17:03, 17 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::I encouraged FOO to start this because of that discussion. We don't need a sentence that can be quoted out of context to say that "Research that has not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog", because that isn't true. Outside the hard sciences, research is routinely published in non-peer-reviewed books, which are definitely not "akin to a blog". Research gets published in magazines and newspapers. | |||
::::I like the proposed re-write. ] (]) 23:05, 17 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Autocracy corrupting reliable sources, censoring what is published == | |||
:::I'm not sure I follow your points here. If a book quotes a letter, we quote the book. We don't need to do any further verification. ] 09:11, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC) | |||
As media are increasingly careful to avoid lawsuits like , self-censorship will limit the neutral information available to publish. It is said that RFK will even censor releases by the FDA. In this type of media environment, truths must be published underground or at least in less well-resourced publications. How can reliable sources definitions deal with this new state of affairs? ] (]) 20:20, 17 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I don't see what the point would be of having a policy that says, "no you can't say how people in wheelchairs get on buses until some schmoe publishes a description on their blog". -- ] 22:11, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
:We should be lending greater weight to academic and NGO sources and less on newsmedia. ] (]) 21:35, 17 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::If you were really to put your mind to it, you could find a published source regarding how wheelchair-bound people get on buses, because buses have been designed in a certain way to facilitate wheelchair boarding, and therefore the designers of buses will have written this down somewhere. But no one is going to challenge you over edits related to such issues. It's a question of commonsense. ] 09:11, Mar 14, 2005 (UTC) | |||
::When writing about politics, it's a good idea to look for sources from other countries, too. | |||
::For drug information, look for ] and other scholarly sources. ] (]) 23:19, 17 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== This is curious... == | |||
::::Here's an actual example where I think that insisting on a published source is too restrictive. I made to the article about the ] in lower Manhattan. My edit added a paragraph about the effects of the 9/11 attack. The basis for my edit was that, as of 9/11, I was employed in that building. Before the attack, I often saw tourist groups being guided through the ornate lobby. After the attack, we couldn't get into our office for two weeks, and when we did it still took several more days to get back phone service and electricity. I no longer work there, but I go there on business, so I know that there's now a sign near the entrance saying that tourists can't go past it. There's now a guard at a desk in the lobby who verifies that you have business there. I have no idea whether of any of this information has been published anywhere, let alone in a "reputable" source. This isn't "original research", just something I've observed. Should this paragraph be removed unless someone can find the information reported elsewhere? Maybe such a source could be found "f you were really to put your mind to it," but maybe it couldn't; in any event, I don't think that scouring the Web or the stacks at the New York Public Library to confirm this point is the highest priority for someone who's willing to spend time improving Misplaced Pages. Of course, a different standard will apply if an editor claims to have bribed Giuliani and wants to assert that in an article, based on alleged personal observation, without further reference. ] 12:07, 19 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
The ] recommends using to determine bias in various media sources. | |||
==Importance== | |||
---- | |||
:''From ].'' | |||
What are the standards of importance for sources? (prompted by recent dispute on ]) Sure, we have to ], but who and what kind? Does the source need to be a professor of the article's topic? Do they have to be an "expert"? A professional? A friend or relative? Should creationist sources be allowed? ] 03:19, 1 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
Below, I have matched the most left-leaning and right-leaning sources listed, alongside their status as a ] on Misplaced Pages. | |||
:For example: mythology. | |||
:May no discipline other than mythology comment on myths, or just not on Misplaced Pages? Why? What about when other fields studies include myths, such as music with texts or tone painting depicting myths. Would a source simple need to be respected in both fields? Actually all three: mythology, poetry, and musicology? (four including history?) Freud may not be an expert in the history of myth, but that does not mean he may not have insight. Also, he was an example, and possibly a poor one, so don't waste your words tearing him apart. ] 06:13, 1 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
'''STATUS''': | |||
I don't know if there is an easily defined standard, but if the purpose is quoting someone on the definition of the term, that individual ought to be highly respected and sourced by other scholarly published references in the field. To use your example, Freud, although he may be entertaining, certainly would not count as notable for defining a field other than psychoanalysis and its offshoots (say, dream analysis or something along those lines). DreamGuy 03:32, Mar 1, 2005 (UTC) (from ]) | |||
] - generally reliable | |||
:Shouldn't this be part of ] or a related policy? It's really a different issue to the importance of different subjects. ] |] 01:39, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC) | |||
] - no consensus | |||
] - generally unreliable | |||
] - deprecated | |||
] - blacklisted | |||
'''NR''' - not rated | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
::For some topics/encyclopedia articles, there are dozens of books written by people who have each spent years researching the topic. For other articles, we're lucky to find a couple of magazine articles written by journalists who spent a couple of days, total, interviewing a couple of people. | |||
|+ Status of left and right leaning media sources | |||
:: * For less-documented articles, I'd rather have those 2 "less reliable" references than no references at all. | |||
|- | |||
:: * But for well-documented topics, I'd prefer the well-researched books over the magazine articles. | |||
! LEFT !! Statue !! RIGHT !! Status | |||
:: What do you think about setting a guideline of "10 to 20 references are preferred. In articles with more than 20 references, the less-reliable references (and any quotes that depend on them) may be deleted." ? --] 07:01, 30 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
|- | |||
| ] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
|] || ] || ] || NR | |||
|- | |||
|] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
|] || ] || ] || ]] | |||
|- | |||
|] || ] || ] || NR | |||
|- | |||
|] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
|] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
|] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
|] || NR || ] (politics and science) || ] | |||
|- | |||
|] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
| ] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
| ] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
| ] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
| ] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
| ] || NR || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
| ] || ] || ] || ] | |||
|- | |||
| || || ] || ] | |||
|} | |||
When there are 20 shades of blue paint available, and just 5 shades of green...everything starts to look kind of...blue. --] (]) 17:46, 23 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== primary vs. secondary sources == | |||
:Maybe far-right media should start instituting stricter standards for accuracy and fact checking. But also most of the media on the "Left" column is not meaningfully left-wing anywhere outside of the United States. All in all I'd suggest this chart signifies nothing except that the US Overton Window has slid dangerously to the right and allowed a whole bunch of disinformation to be mistaken for news. ] (]) 17:48, 23 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
Continuing in the same track as the "Independent Primary Sources" discussion item above, I think that our discussion of primary vs. secondary sources is naive and incomplete. The subheading "Get close to the source" doesn't describe Misplaced Pages's practices, actual or ideal. For example, if we had a subject with considerable scholarship--say, the childhood of a famous US President--then we should absolutely use primary sources, but '''only''' in order to check that the secondary sources we are using are actually based on the evidence they claim to be based on. Just reading the primary sources, then synthesizing a new analysis of the subject, in this case, would be original research (or "novel conclusions" as I prefer). ] 23:58, Jun 2, 2005 (UTC) | |||
::Do we have an article in the mainspace about various ratings? ] (]) 19:39, 23 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I would have to agree. I have no desire to get into the politics of this, but Allsides is not a reliable source because it just reflects US opinions. Editors should judge sources based on the quality of those sources, without ''any'' regard of their supposed 'leaning'. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 22:25, 23 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::The main point here is that the sources in the table have been selected to make a point. ''The Guardian'' is an internationally respected newspaper and ''Breitbart'' is a bundle of crap. It's nothing to do with left or right - there's no equivalence. In the right column, the internationally respected media (the Guardian equivalents) are deliberately omitted. No '']'', '']'', ], '']'' etc etc. The two columns are not complete sets - just arbitrary selections. ] (]) 23:11, 23 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::The source rates the ''WSJ'' (for news) and ''FT'' as being centrist, and the OP did say that they included only left- and right-leaning sources. ''The Times'' (i.e., of London) does not appear to be rated by Allsides. So of your list, only the ''Telegraph'', which is slightly right according to this source and which earns both ] (most) and ] (trans/GENSEX content) at ], seems to have been overlooked. ] (]) 01:11, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::Allsides is junk, and the other such websites are no better. That they rate the sources like that only shows they are repeating common US opinions, and this is an international project. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 01:24, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::The "source" is nonsense. WSJ, the Times and FT are famously "right". If they're "centre" so is the Guardian. The "source" seems to only classify "far right" as right. ] (]) 08:36, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::That source differentiates between news and opinion: They classify the WSJ as center for their news and right for their opinions. | |||
::::::Our article on ] says they have been called "] to ] ], ], and ]", but not "right". Our article on ] similarly declines to simply call them "right", but provides a range of descriptions over time. I would think that if they are famously right-wing, then we'd have enough sources to just straight-up say that in the articles. ] (]) 20:15, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Reliability versus notability of an author of a source == | |||
== Availability/stability of sources == | |||
Should sources be used or quoted in an article if the author of the quoted piece is not themselves a ''notable'' individual, with their own Misplaced Pages article? Is there any policy in Misplaced Pages that could be interpreted as requiring the author of a source to have their own Misplaced Pages page, or to be Misplaced Pages-notable? Conversely, if there is no such requirement, where is this specified? ] ] 03:02, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
Another aspect of ''reliability'' of sources, that is their ''availability'', started in a new section on the page; | |||
:Reliability is not notability, notability is not reliability. ] (]) 03:09, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
the section ''What to do when a reference link "goes dead"'' imported from ], seems more on its place here than in that style guideline. | |||
:: Where is this written? Asking for a friend. ] ] 03:22, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Although this has been asked before, I'm not sure that we ever wrote it down. However, it obviously follows from the answer to "Are reliable sources required to name the author?" in the ]: If you can cite a news article that doesn't have a byline, then sources can be cited even if the authors are not known to be notable. Obviously any such rule would be a nightmare, though perhaps we'd be a little amused by the chicken-and-egg aspect (nobody can be notable first, because only sources written by already-notable authors would count towards notability) while Misplaced Pages burned to the ground. | |||
The corresponding section on the talk page of that guideline read: | |||
:::I suspect the other editor is using notable in its real-world sense, e.g., to prefer sources written by known experts or other reputable authors. ] (]) 06:22, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::: What about the specific context of ''quoting'' the author? For example, in ], we have: {{tq|In '']'', Michael Weldon described the reactions to Howard as being inconsistent, and, "It was obviously made in LA and suffered from long, boring chase scenes"}}, with the "Michael Weldon" there being neither of the ones with Misplaced Pages articles, ] and ]. ] ] 20:52, 24 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
=== Dead link details === | |||
Perhaps much of the details at ] should be in ''']''', ''']''' or ''']'''. The summary in this article should kindly remind DON'T DELETE DEAD LINKS and point at the details of restoration methods. (] 04:18, 17 October 2005 (UTC)) | |||
* ] deals, basically, with the "external links" section, and advises that you ''should'' delete dead links: clearly the wrong advice for links used as citations. ] also really doesn't discuss links as references, except for a passing remark on the discouraged use of inline links rather than fuller references. ] is about footnoting mechanisms: this would be entirely off-topic there. So this would appear to be the correct place to take up the topic. We might want to refactor material between ] and ], but it wouldn't be a matter of moving that one section. ] and ] would certainly be wrong: this isn't a style issue, and has nothing to do with footnoting ''mechanisms''. -- ] | ] 04:52, 17 October 2005 (UTC) | |||
All in all I think the section should maybe better be moved to ], because "being available" is of course one of the many aspects of "being reliable" - for instance a web source that is unavailable 90% of the time, is IMHO not the most ''reliable'' source, if there's another website with similar content being available 95% of the time. --] 06:58, 18 October 2005 (UTC) | |||
:That material is in ]. There's no need to repeat it here, and the English was hard to understand in places. WP:CITE is about when to use links and where to put them. This is about quality of sources. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 07:38, 18 October 2005 (UTC) | |||
==What is a ''reliable'' source?== | |||
In theory, the policy of quoting ''reliable sources'' makes sense. As the policy so eloquently states, you don't rely on the advice of a plumber for dentistry. However, the definition of a reliable source is often in the hands of the rich, the powerful and the well-educated. We take it for granted that scholars are more ''objective'' than used car sellers, that teachers know more than students, that the young know more than the old (or is it the other way round?) | |||
You see the problem? | |||
Are we taking it for granted that the 'experts' have the authority? Would that the real world was so simple and straightforward. | |||
Take this example. Once, a scholar made a translation of the New Testament that was roundly condemned by some of the most learned scholars of the day. In fact, he was accused of wilfully mistranslating the holy text. He was finally captured by church authorities, strangled and burnt at the stake. His translations were bought up by the clergy and destroyed. | |||
Yet that man was William Tyndale. His translation of the Bible is acknowledged to be pivotal in setting the standard for later translations. Some of his translation choices that were so contentious at that time are now accepted by all. | |||
Or, let's take a contemporary example. The policy as it stands says that Hamas should ''never'' be relied on. Really? Is this plain commonsense or is it evidence of a particular world view? | |||
] 10:43, 19 October 2005 (UTC) | |||
: I don't agree with much of the above, but I do wonder about the mention of Stormfront, Hamas, etc. as essentially uncitable on anything but their own opinions. Wouldn't it be OK to cite them, for example, on the death date of one of their own members? -- ] | ] 03:11, 1 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
Jmabel, you didn't make clear what you disagreed with. The example of Tyndale ws to illustrate the point that the conventional experts aren't always right. ] 13:14, 2 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::Groups like Stormfront may be used as primary sources about themselves, just not as secondary sources about anyone else, and even when using them as sources about themselves, it has to be done with caution. We don't repeat every wonderful thing they might choose to describe themselves as, for instance, even if we were to attribute it. The date one of their members died could be said to be about them, so I wouldn't see a problem with using them as a source for that. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 03:58, 1 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::: Rather than a binary "reliable" vs. "unreliable", perhaps it would be better to think of sources in a spectrum, where each individual source has other sources that are "more reliable" or "less reliable. For example, this "". (Perhaps there's a better illustration of the idea that "conventional experts aren't always right" -- such as those ] proved wrong, or "There is little doubt that the most significant event affecting energy is the advent of nuclear power ... a few decades hence, energy may be free -- just like the unmetered air...." -- ], scientist and member of the Atomic Energy Commission, 1955.) --] 22:13, 27 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
== Tertiary sources: using other contemporary encyclopedias as sources for our own articles? == | |||
I am quite surprised to learn that ] apparently recommends making use of tertiary sources such as other encyclopedias (]). Do we really want to promote the use of articles from other encyclopedias as sources for our own articles? It doesn't sound good to me; in fact, I think it's quite embarassing to have articles citing 'Encyclopedia X' among their references (or worse, as the only source). I think we should instead stress the absolute importance and primacy of ''primary sources'' (which is what I would think belongs in section called 'get close to the sources'). See also ] and ]. — ] ] 12:32, 3 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
:Mark, what do you mean by primary sources? ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 12:37, 3 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::I expected that question — while I was penning down my concern I thought I should try to find a better or more inclusive wording, but the real issue I wanted to draw attention to was the apparent recommendation to use other encyclopedias as sources. | |||
::What constitutes a primary source differs in every field of study, I think. I'm working mainly on languages and linguistics, and I would consider specific grammars or descriptive articles in academic journals primary sources for articles on languages and the like; for articles on linguistic topics, I think primary sources are broader works by academic linguists as well as theoretical articles in academic journals. | |||
::On second thought, I should note that secondary sources that transparently cite their (primary) sources are OK to me, too — the real problem of most mainstream encyclopedias is probably that they usually don't cite their sources. To give an example: I would find it very embarassing if ] was based on EB2005's '', even if their article is quite good and complete and as such reliable. Luckily, our article is based on a lot of primary and secondary sources instead. Now why is the latter scenario better than the first, even though both might (possibly) have resulted in similar articles? Or am I wrong and isn't it better to tell our editors: "Hey, rather than grazing other encyclopedias, you could go read some real books and articles?" — ] ] 12:59, 3 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
Anyone any thoughts about this? — ] ] 10:35, 5 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
: I generally wouldn't use an encyclopedia for most source purposes, but I would use it to fact-check what we've already got. -- ] | ] 04:27, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
: One tertiary source I do often use is book reviews of secondary sources. -- ] | ] 04:27, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
Just something to think about: academic papers and other primary/secondary sources are meant to serve as sources for research. Encyclopaedias, on the other hand, are meant for fact-checking and as portals for further research, so the former set is probably the better set to use as a source. ] ] 02:13, 7 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
I don't see a reason why other encyclopedias can't be used as sources, as long as we are assured that they are reasonably reliable. One advantage of using an encylopedia over research papers is that encylopedias only contain information that is agreed upon by a majority of mainstream scholars, while "primary sources" may contain new theories and viewpoints of researchers that do not enjoy extensive support. I was myself struck in a seemingly endless discussion with an editor who wanted to introduce a new viewpoint published in a journal as The True History of the Hindu-Arabic numerals. ] (]) 00:23, 1 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
::the problem is that general encyclopedias like EB no longer rely on experts, except for "prestige" signed articles. (They kept Einstein's 1911 article on relativity for over 50 years, and put his name in all their PR.) Eb relies mostly on freelancers who do batches of articles at $x per-word. (I worked at a library nearby in Chicago where the freelancers worked.) The freelancers check a few (unnamed) reference books and write up their article, which goes unsigned. They also update the signed articles usually without consulting the original author. (those are signed "X.") The headquarters staff does NOT fact-check the article, it only copy-edits for EB style. When people write in to point out an error, unless it is a howler the note is usually filed away until the next scheduled update, which may be 5 years from now. The result is that EB is ok for high school kids but not a very reliable source for Wiki. Much better are the many new topical encyclopedias that are indeed written by experts and each article is reviewed by scholars. ] 13:10, 25 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Blogs == | |||
I noticed blogs are not viewed as a reliable source for anything other than information about the blogger. Should we not clarify that this can vary, however? For example, in ], the government keeps the mainstream media on a tight leash, and non-mainstream media is very limited and cannot cover everything. Prominent politicians (such as ], ] and ]) have thus started blogging to keep the Malaysian internet populace informed. Are these blogs citeable? Some of them have already been cited in Malaysian articles. (For instance, Fong, an alumnus of the ], has had her blog cited in the article on IIUM.) Should this practice be continued? I think maybe we should be permitted to cite blogs where the bloggers give their full names and make it clear they are not using a pseudonym. Just an idea. ] | ] 10:54, 5 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
:Good point, John. I think the page does say something about blogs being acceptable where the blogger has some relevant professional interest, but we could add something like "and where it's clear that the blogger is using his or her real name," and perhaps use your example to illustrate the point. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 18:21, 5 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::So I'll add it, then? ] | ] 12:03, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
:::Sounds good to me. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 21:28, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
:: It might be interesting, in Misplaced Pages space to start a page, maybe even a project, related to blogs as sources: which ones qualify as citable and to what extent (citable for facts, citable as significant sites of opinion). Or perhaps an equivalent of AfD for deciding a source was citable? Here are two examples I would want to be able to cite for tech-related articles: | |||
::* , Michael Kaplan's blog on ], which I can say first-hand is often the "rough draft" of official Microsoft documentation in its area, and sometimes out years earlier. | |||
::* , why should this be any less citable than his books? | |||
:: -- ] | ] 05:21, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::That's a good idea. ] was wondering today whether there was a page where he could make a note of a poor source, because of some errors he found in a book. It got me wondering whether we could set up a page for editors to note books that might seem like good sources but that are flawed in some way. I wonder if that could tie in with your blog-page idea. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 05:36, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
:::That is an interesting idea. Books and webpages, IMO, aren't very much different, except that books tend to be more accurate because their publishers pour a lot of money into them. Dedicated webmasters can create material just as good as or even better than some books on the same topic. It would be good to have a way of finding out "Is this reliable?" ] | ] 12:03, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::: This could make for an incredibly cool Misplaced Pages-space project, probably also with potential to spawn encyclopedia-space articles about many of the more useful sources. I don't have time to work on it right now, but I think it would be a great idea. -- ] | ] 21:01, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::::Does anyone have the time to get it going? I'll drop Andjam a note about this discussion, and Slrubenstein. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 21:27, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
:::::With regards to books, I've discovered that wikibooks has the option of describing perceived errors. For example, I've added to ] some of the errors I suspect ISBN 0949853054 of having. ] 12:53, 7 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
Blogs, as are most other webpages, are fairly poor sources for anything, and if a print source is extant that is highly preferable. Blogs are invariably about primary material elsewhere, and bloggers very frequently regurgitate opinion formed elsewhere, even if not cited by name. | |||
The exceptions to the rule, as stated above, need to be inspected closely to come up with some sort of a working definition of what exactly constitutes a "citable blog". A blog by a prominent personality may in itself be citable. But are these statements actually "on the record" as far as journalists etc are concerned? If they are, then these may be valuable sources of information. | |||
Another conundrum is the matter of affairs conducted exclusively on blogs (i.e. formation of public opinion solely on blogosphere with little meatspace antecedent). This merits further discussion. ] | ] 22:08, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::The current disctinction that we have between primary sources and secondary sources allows a blog to be used as a primary, but not a secondary, source. ] explains what is required to be viewed as a reliable secondary source. Very few blogs qualify, and if they did they might not be called "blogs". I think that if online newssources fill the existing qualification they could be used. I don't see a need to change the wording of the guideline. If there were a blog by US VP Cheney for example we could use it as a primary source for his opinions, but not as a secondary source for reliable information. On the other hand, an official "office of the Vice President" website would probably be viewed as a usable secondary source. -] 23:32, 6 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
I like the idea of the Errata Wikibook. | |||
Should these guidelines suggest that, when spot-checking a book to see if it really does say what some wikipedia article claims it says, we recommend also checking the ] for that book? | |||
--] 07:01, 30 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
Another problem with outright banning blogs as sources is over at ]. Since political epithets ofter originates and are used in the blogs and rarley gets mentioned in acedemic papers published in peer-reviewed journals it means the no blogs rule can be (and has been) used for selective censorship. For instance it may be impossible to find any non-bog source to words like "freeper", "idiotarian" and "moonbat". // ] | |||
: A quick search turns up the following : "Those of us who believe that our president has to be accountable are not all 'deranged moonbats.'" (George W. Bush is no FDR, Los Angeles Times, November 18, 2005). "Entire Web sites spring up to monitor what journalists do, to call us 'Idiotarians,' to condemn us as anti-Semitic or anti-Muslim ..." (The truth is out there somewhere, The Toronto Star, January 8, 2004) "The war supporters, many of them known as 'Freepers' because of their devotion to FreeRepublic.com, insist it is unpatriotic and demoralizing to protest the war ..."(A Weekly Battle Over War in Iraq; Two Camps Stand Ground by Walter Reed, The Washington Post, October 30, 2005) -- ] 15:34, 9 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
:: But none of those are primary sources, only secondary sources and some thus argue that they are not usable. // ] | |||
:When the term has no currency outside of blogs, then blogs are a ''primary'' source for the fact that is is used in blogs. But if it hasn't precipitated out of the blogosphere, it has to have quite a presence in the blogosphere to reach encyclopedic notability. - ] | ] 02:15, 10 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
:: It may be used outside of blogs, but then perhaps only when people talk about the term and that is thus a secondary source and not usable. See ] and you understand the problem. // ] | |||
:::Why is a secondary source "not usable"? We use secondary sources all the time. History books, for example. In a word usage case like this, a secondary source would generally be preferred: trying to gather evidence from primary sources for notability of a word use borders on original research, really more of a lexicographer's job than an encyclopedist's. -- ] | ] 00:34, 11 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
It is ] and ] who demands a primary source that is not a blog, personal website or of a biased organisation or simmilar. The problem is that those who use it as a political ephitet (i.e. the primary source) are... well, not very unbiased so it's unusable for that reason. The usage may ofcourse be covered in newspaper articles, books, academic papers and so on, but those are secondary sources and they are claimed to be invalid. // ] | |||
: Can you point me to the basis on which you are saying that secondary sources are not usable? As I said above, this is a case where I would consider a secondary source not just acceptable, but preferable. -- ] | ] 08:07, 12 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
"Unfortunately those are secondary sources, so they may be true, or may not be.", "so you could you provide a ''primary source'', of him saying that directly, like not an editorial about him", "What other primary sources do you posess", "Although this may be a scholarly, encyclopedic source, it is not a primary source", "What you'll need to prove me and Jayjg wrong is primary source proof.", "your sources you just provided are either secondary sources", "it has to have been in one primary source used that way" (all quotes from ]). He and ] demands a primary source that is not a blog, personal website or of a biased organisation or simmilar. // ] | |||
: Speaking of sources: you are giving no indication where any of this is written, so they are devoid of context. I see nothing from ] at ], the talk page of the article where you said you were being prevented from using these citations. All I see from Jayjg there are some objections to including "Anti-Semitism" and ''"Judenhass"'' as political epithets. I'm not sure if I agree with his rationale, but that is another matter. -- ] | ] 06:37, 13 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
As I wrote earlier it's from ]. The comments from ] are archived by now. // ] | |||
The ban on blogs is absurd. For one, the term is entirely too vague to be in any way meaningful, as it covers everything from Washington Post columnists to Livejournal posts. --] 05:34, 7 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
==Bulletin boards== | |||
Forgive me if this point has already come up. | |||
"Posts to bulletin boards and Usenet, or messages left on blogs, are never acceptable as primary or secondary sources. This is because we have no way of knowing who has written or posted them." | |||
A reasonable policy in principle, but what happens if the author or poster can be reliably identified as a public figure? Shouldn't exceptions be allowed in such instances -- ie. shouldn't Wikipedians be permitted to cite these sources to reference the opinions of such figures? ] 23:52, 7 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
:This is just a guideline. There may sometimes be a good reason for ''not'' following it in particular cases. ] ] 23:55, 7 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
::An example of where not to follow it would be an article about a Usenet group (i.e. ]). Without some use of Usenet postings as sources, it'd be virtually impossible to write articles about them. It be ideal if we could draft language to make explicit some common-sense exceptions. -] 00:00, 8 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
I question the blanket provision against citing, only with regard to determining if something is a neologism or not. In AfD discussion one often sees "ran Google search, did not find this term, likely to be a neologism, delete as non notable" or similar. A recent AfD I was a party to seemed to turn on whether a term even existed or not. Copious evidence was presented that large numbers of blogs/forums/discussion groups and so forth used the term, suggesting that the term does exist and is used by significant numbers of people. If you can demonstrate that hundreds or thousands of sites use a term, is that not sufficient to demonstrate that the term is widely used, even if you cannot produce a verifiable source like the New York Times actually using it? I do not suggest that a single board is sufficient, or that you should take claimed meaning verbatim, but it does seem a valid argument against neologism. (if it is not, then the converse given in the lead sentence of this paragraph, is, in my view, not valid either) Thoughts? (note that this does not mean that an article might not nevertheless be deletable on other grounds) ++] 22:30, 12 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
: This is currently an issue for ]. But it cuts two ways, depending whether the blogs are being used as a primary or a secondary source. | |||
: Right now, the bulk of the article is about a usage that can only be found (at least so far) on blogs and personal web sites. It is found on enough blogs and personal web sites that it clearly has some currency, and should certainly be mentioned in the article (although, I don't really see why the article should largely consist of a near-manifesto for what is essentially ] by another name). On the other hand, there is an uncited claim that the usage derives from ]. Should be verifiable, you say? What's the citation? Well, a Google search reveals that one of those blogs claims that von Mises said this in private correspondence. Right. | |||
: Which is to say, that the blogs, taken collectively, are a perfectly good citation as a primary source for this word being used, with a more or less consistent meaning, in the libertarian blogosphere, but they are not an appropriate secondary or tertiary source for the claim that von Mises coined this usage in private correspondence. (And I guess I should copy most of this to the talk page of that article.) -- ] | ] 06:34, 13 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
==References/external links name-change proposal== | |||
There's a proposal at ] to change the References header to "Sources", and External links to "Further reading". So far, the proposal has been accepted by all the editors on the page, but because ] is a policy page, I'm putting it out for further discussion before changing it. | |||
The reason for the proposal is that using "References" and "External links" is confusing. Sources are supposed to be listed under References, and any further reading is listed under Further reading or External links. But many editors think that any external links, whether used as sources or not, should go under External links, so then they list any material that isn't online, like books, under References, even if not used as a source. To cut through all this confusion, the proposal is to change the headers to Sources and Further reading, which are self-explanatory, and don't make the online/offline distinction. Comments would be welcomed. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 22:06, 25 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
== Experts == | |||
I think that for sources on ''minor'' points of an article, a personal web page of a known expert in his field is better than nothing (I would prefer a peer-reviewed paper by a known expert, but these are not always available). | |||
For example: ] is a known expert on floating-point arithmetics, and one of the architects of ]. He has a web page with tons of papers, some published, some unpublished. When he says something on the issue, I think he is a more reliable source than many non-specialists who publish on related issues in peer-reviewed papers. Yet, according to our rules, we cannot cite his papers! This is absurd. | |||
Another example: if on the article of ] I wanted a source for some statement I make (say, about the efficiency of ]), I would quote what ], designer of the system, said on the issue. He is probably the best expert on what he did himself. Yet, by our own rule, we should prefer to quote some non-specialist writing a textbook on programming. Again, this is absurd. | |||
So I propose a change of policy: ''for want of better sources'', we can quote reputed experts writing on their own topic on home pages, Usenet postings etc. Of course, this should not be the only source, and should only be done for uncontroversial specific specialized aspects of a topic. ] 11:14, 1 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
:What are ''minor points'' of articles, what is a ''reputed expert'', and what is ''for want of better sources''? To give an example, I and a few other editors have been trying to keep the original research and fringe theories of {{user|Roylee}} out of Misplaced Pages (much is documented ]). What policy captures the problem better than Reliable Sources as it stands now? — ] ] 12:14, 1 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
::#''Minor point'': something interesting and worthy of mentioning, but which is not one of the defining characteristics of the topic being discussed. Considering IEEE-754, for instance, the fact that floating-point operations on x87 can incur "double rounding" is an interesting but minor point, while the division into mantissa and exponent is a definining characteristic. | |||
::#A ''reputed expert'' is a person that is consistently esteemed by his peers as a specialist of a particular domain in an established field (as in "peer review"). This is how peer-reviewed publications work: at some point, you have reputed experts making up "editorial boards" and "program committees". In the above case, William Kahan is a reputed expert on floating-point because he was one of the main designers of IEEE-754, is a ] laureate and an ]. | |||
::#''For want of better sources'': when we do not have a textbook or peer-reviewed paper discussing the same issues. | |||
::So there is clearly a difference between people like Kahan or Leroy, on the one hand, and unknown Wikipedians like Roylee. ] 14:49, 1 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
:I think the page does already say we can use blogs and personal websites if a well-known professional in the field has set one up under his or her real name, though we can't use Usenet postings because there's no way of knowing who has posted them. However, even though personal webpages of this kind are sometimes allowed, they should be used with caution, because there's no form of third-party fact-checking when someone self-publishes, and we have to ask ourselves why someone well-known and good at what they do has to rely on self-publishing information that appears to be worthy of publication. Other publications may have good reason not to want to publish it, and if they don't want to, we probably shouldn't want to either. | |||
:By the way, published articles don't have to be in peer-reviewed journals, David, just published somewhere reputable. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 14:29, 1 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
== Important RfC: please weigh in == | |||
An RfC has been opened recently concerning an editor who has spread fringe theories and original research over a wide array of articles (>100) making clever use of cross- and self-referencing, thus making his contributions looking reliably sourced and verifiable to editors who assume good faith. Finding a solution to this problem is of imminent importance to Misplaced Pages's future reliability and verifiability. Please weigh in at ]. — ] ] 14:09, 3 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
==Don't be lazy== | |||
One of the very last headlines is ''don't be lazy''. This is an inappropriate exhortation in Misplaced Pages. It implies that editors have a duty to expend a certain effort on Misplaced Pages and that some may not fulfill this duty. This assumption is not correct. Any person chooses completely feerly how much time and effort she donates to Misplaced Pages. The instructions and rules can only concern '''how''' this work is done. --] 08:04, 11 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
: I see this as only one step removed from "first, do no harm". -- ] | ] 20:27, 11 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
==What about a book now rejected by the authors on their homepages?== | |||
What about the case of two authors who wrote published books on a certain subject that they now vehemently reject on their respective homepages. Can I cite the book, but not their homepages on which they give reasons for the rejections of their books? See ] ] 22:05, 17 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
== Wikibooks:errata == | |||
Someone recently pointed me to ]. Sounds like something that may be of interest to many people who watch this page. -- ] | ] 18:24, 30 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
== Orphan journal articles == | |||
One thing that has come up a couple of times is people citing "orphan" scientific papers (that is, ones that have never been cited anywhere else) on various topics, for instance on ] (see the edit history), or perhaps the canonical example of ]. Would it be worth specifically noting that orphan papers don't generally count as reliable sources? --] 06:40, 4 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
: Certainly orphan papers should, at best, be used with caution. I'd say this is much more of a rule in the sciences than elsewhere, and (to state the obvious) should be a pretty serious warning flag in a much written-about subject matter area like nuclear power. I'd be less worried about citing, for example, an "orphan" dissertation about (for example) a ''commune'' in rural France; it might simply be the only academic writing on the (obviously legitimate) topic. -- ] | ] 07:55, 5 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Newspapers preferred over blogs == | |||
I'm trying to get a good sampling of third-party feedback on the use of newspapers as a source instead of blogs. In the case of the ] article, I have found newspaper sources that cover much of the same material as the blogs that have been used in the article. When I replaced the blog sources with the newspaper sources, Alabamaboy reverted every single one of my edits. Also, very strangely, he accused me on the discussion page of being Mr. Young himself! | |||
This is the Misplaced Pages Guideline I am trying to follow with my edits: | |||
"Publications with teams of fact-checkers, reporters, editors, lawyers, and managers — like the New York Times or The Times of London — are likely to be reliable, and are regarded as reputable sources for the purposes of Misplaced Pages. At the other end of the reliability scale lie personal websites, weblogs (blogs), bulletin boards, and Usenet posts, which are not acceptable as sources." | |||
Thus, I have replaced the blog sources with newspaper sources. Again, let me stress that this has not led to much change in the text of the article itself--what I'm trying to do here is change the nature of the sources so that they themselves comply with Misplaced Pages Guidelines. | |||
Could Alabamaboy and I get some feedback on this? I'd like a few editors to go over to the ] history and compare both versions of the sourcing--the one using newspapers, and the one using blogs. Thank you. ] 01:11, 6 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Editors should be aware that there are three reasons the article was reverted: 1) ] made the changes despite a lack of consensus and my objections on the ]. In short, the online references are refered to in the newspaper and print articles, making the online sources primary sources. The article also has many print sources which complement and add to the online sources. 2) The edits made the article less NPOV b/c they removed opposing viewpoints. While these references may be online, they are from credible named sources who are considered experts in their respected areas. 3) There is a strong possibility that ] is Robert Clark Young. Young previously edited the article about himself and most of ]'s edits since coming to Misplaced Pages have been to the Young article. I'm trying to clear this up with ]; once she proves she is not Young I'd love to get opinions from other editors about this situation. For full details, see ]. Best,--] 01:17, 6 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::] seems to have started this same conversation several places, so I guess I will paste my comments here as well. | |||
:::Before seeing ]'s comments I had written: | |||
:::#I've crossed paths with Alabamaboy quite a few times, and he usually knows what he's doing. Yes, in the case of an article where the subject of the article has been known to meddle with the article and where a new user appears and seems focused almost entirely on that article (I didn't verify this independently, if it is a mischaracterization it is his not mine), it is reasonable to ask that person if they are the same person as the subject of the article. Conversely, it would also be reasonable to assume good faith. | |||
:::#In general, if particular material can be cited from newspapers rather than blogs, we should prefer the newspapers. The only exceptions I can think of offhand are (1) if the newspaper was quoting or paraphrasing the blog (which makes the blog the primary source and the newspaper secondary) or (2) if the blog is that of someone directly involved in the story. For an example of the second case, (and I have given only a brief glance at the article), it would be entirely appropriate to quote Robert Clark Young's own blog, if he has one, or that of ], etc. | |||
::: Once I saw Alabamaboy's comments I added that I have no opinion on the claim that Berenise might be Robert Clark Young, but it sounds like the blogs are the primary sources, in which case (as I wrote above, not knowing this) they should be included. -- ] | ] 06:58, 7 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Misplaced Pages:Notability (websites) == | |||
I've recently rewritten the above page, and there is currently discussion on the ] regarding the viability of certain websites as reliable sources. Comment would be appreciated. ] ] 16:47, 6 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
==Foreign Media== | |||
How does this apply to foreign media used ''as'' primary sources ? Secondary sources ? | |||
The article "Flying humanoids" was sourced from Jeff Rense's website, which has cited Mexican media sources for sightings of these creatures in Mexico, and used Texas media as sources for material reported in sightings of these things in the US, mainly in Texas. ] 21:26, 15 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I'm not sure I understand your question. The criteria for reliable sources are pretty much the same regardless of what country the media are from ("foreign" is all a matter of where you are standing). The only clear exception is that one would be wary of media from a country with a highly censored press. -- ] | ] 06:35, 26 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
==This guideline in relation to No Original Research== | |||
This page says in bold, "We may not use primary sources whose information has not been made available by a credible publication. See: Misplaced Pages:No original research." Of course, if you then go to NOR, it says: "This is not 'original research,' it is 'source-based research,' and it is fundamental to writing an encyclopedia." | |||
This part of this guideline is fundamentally ''wrong'' and in contradiction to what NOR actually is. Unless the ''editor's writing'' is defining new terms, introducing a theory, making or refuting an argument, etc, then examination of a primary source, ''even without publication'' is entirely acceptable. The primary source '''is'''' the source for verifiability. | |||
This also extends to things personally witnessed. If an editor wrote "The airplane fell out of the sky", because they witnessed it, that is not original research. If an editor wrote "The airplane fell out of the sky because terrorists blew it up." then you have a NOR problem, the editor is ''introducing'' a theory on ''why'' the airplane fell out of the sky. ] 08:39, 16 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I think when the nit-pickers say "No original research", they sometimes mean "]". And someone simply witnessing the aircrash is not (in Misplaced Pages terms) verifiable unless it is reputably reported. Although I understand the people who place verifiability above truth, I have little sympathy if this is applied strictly to ordinary, work-a-day, articles. ] 16:22, 26 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Why is it not verifiable? The event is a primary source, and presumably, there is a crash site. Primary sources are absolutely critical in encyclopedia writing. ] 23:53, 29 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::Well, I think it is verifiable but the Misplaced Pages consenseus is that it is not. | |||
:::*]: "Misplaced Pages articles should use reliable published sources". | |||
:::*]: "Facts, viewpoints, theories and claims in articles must only be included if they have already been published by reliable and reputable sources". | |||
:::*For example, ] | |||
:::I think this is a great shame and that people should be able to put in "what they know to be true". However, I agree that a reference can properly be demanded by other editors and that if other editors dispute the "fact" it can properly be removed. Clearly cranks can put in all sorts of facts that they "know" (and others may think that I am one of the cranks) so there needs to be protection against this. ] 12:40, 30 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::I don't consider other users opinions on talk pages as authorative. I'll continue to reject the opinions of people who think primary sources aren't allowed. There is a fundamental contradiction here, and I'll stick to the KISS principle and the original sense of NPOV. If it doesn't formulate NEW opinion, conjecture, defintions, etc, then it's not original research. ] 17:46, 30 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Company web sites == | |||
Is a company's official web site a "reliable source", especially for basic details of the company such as when it was founded and their primary product lines? I realize that sources independent from the company may be better, but often the best source of information is the company itself. -- ] 16:01, 22 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
: Generally, yes. It's certainly ''not'' a reliable source for how their product compares to other products, of course, but the kind of things you are listing, yes. It's important to cite clearly, though, on anything where there might be a matter of controversy. For example, a claimed founding date is sometimes the founding date of the oldest of several merged companies. -- ] | ] 06:39, 26 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Okay, as a more specific case, I've had a disagreement about ] with another editor who insists that the "No Original Research" tenet should keep me from using Flying Buffalo's own web site as references and removed the citations. Since it's a somewhat obscure (but notable nonetheless) company, their own site is probably the best resource. They do make claims on their site that could use verification (like being the first computer-moderated play-by-mail company), but getting basic facts like the company's history and product line should be reasonable, no? -- ] 14:30, 26 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
:It seems to me that ] is a pretty close analogy. You can use their web site for information about the company but probably not about anything else. It looks to me that is just what you want to do. However, things are more subtle, as you say. What if they say they were the first compamy to do so-and-so? Is this a statement about themselves or about someone else? I think the "great caution" bit is far too cautious and there shouldn't be a problem unless the actual content quoted is genuinely in some doubt. Anyway, if you say "the company's web site says "...", surely you can't go far wrong. But I'm not an expert! ] 15:55, 26 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
::In terms of things like a listing of their products, this should be uncontroversial, to the point where it is hard to imagine a good-faith objection. In terms of anything else, if there is any doubt the text can make it clear that this is the company's own claim. - ] | ] 22:48, 29 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Wikinews == | |||
I'm having some trouble with unreliable sources around... and while I know they're true, I admit they aren't all that reliable, so I can't back it up. It's quite frustrating. After thinking a lot about it, I came up with a question that is all about its implications... Is Wikinews reliable? If not, will it ever be? • ] • ] • ] 16:28, 26 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Court cases? == | |||
A number of times I've noticed that someone cited a court case to support a particular fact: for example, "Lynchburg Circuit - Criminal - CR91003195-00." I've been unable to find anything on ] stating that this is acceptable or that this is unacceptable. Thoughts? | |||
Seems to me that this should not be acceptable. This material is not available online; in most cases cannot be ordered online for the corresponding courthouse; in some cases, it can be ordered for money. However, in most cases, one needs to actually go down to the court - in this case, Lynchburg, VA - and physically file a request to see the court records. That makes verifying the material virtually impossible for any editor not living in the locality. --] 19:50, 30 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
== I am a crowd == | |||
It seems to me that some people add information to a page without knowing if their information is correct or common knowledge; they don't even know if any experts or a majority of the population believe it to be true. They might even acknowledge it's a myth that a lot of people are mistaken about. But they take a "one-person survey" -- themselves -- and rationalize that if one person believes it is true, they cannot be the only one. Considering the millions of people there are in the country, or in the world, surely, there must be many people with the same opinion. So, they add their statement and qualify it with the introduction, "Many people believe that...", thinking that whether it is true or not, it is an important statement about society that many people believe it. ] 19:07, 31 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
:Could someone please comment on this? Is this a valid way to contribute to an article -- adding your own ideas and then waiting to see if anyone deletes or adds support to it. In a way, it could be considered original research -- surveying the Misplaced Pages community to see how widespread an idea is, without having to cite an authority or a reliably performed survey. (Sometimes, there is none for those topics that no other encyclopedia covers.) This page should mention this type of edit, and whether it is a reliable source or not. ] 20:28, 2 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
==Bulletin boards== | |||
The current version states | |||
:"Posts to bulletin boards and Usenet, or messages left on blogs, are never acceptable as primary or secondary sources. | |||
:This is because we have no way of knowing who has written or posted them." | |||
This sounds in some specific cases as excessively skeptical: some people have a prominent internet presence under their real name and there can be no reasonable doubt about their identity. What about people who list e.g. their own yahoo groups on their homepage? In those cases there can be no reasonable doubt about the identity of the posters. ] 13:14, 4 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:What if we are talking about websites or software? What the admin of the site posts should be pretty reliable. WP 10:15, 2 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Sources in languages other than English == | |||
I disagree strongly with much of the section "Sources in languages other than English". I started some of this discussion a few weeks back on ]; my issues were generally not addressed there; instead, the material seems now to have been moved here, so I will start over on this page. I will try to confine myself to my major issues with this; the following list could easily be tripled in length. | |||
Much of this section seems to me to be part of a process of dumbing down. Much as when people object to particular sources on the grounds that are not universally available either online or at the average public library, ease of verifiability is deemed to trump scholarship and accuracy. To me, the section reads like it was put forward by someone who does not do much research with non-English-language sources. It is weighted entirely to the convenience of a monoglot English-speaker who feels that language should never be an obstacle to checking all sources for him-/herself. | |||
* "… English-language sources… should always be used in preference to foreign-language sources." Should people who read Arabic prefer to use a translation of the Qu'ran to the original? Should I prefer the (often hideous) quasi-official translation of a Romanian government document to the original? I think not. | |||
* "For example, do not use a foreign-language newspaper as a source unless there is no equivalent article in an English-language newspaper." Two questions (both rhetorical, I'm afraid): | |||
*#Many of our contributors, especially on matters outside the English-speaking world, do not have native English. Are we actually telling them that not only do we expect them to write in English but to track down their research sources in English? | |||
*#Does this mean that if I translate an article from Catalan or German I am expected to re-do all of the research rather than assume good faith on the part of the original researcher? | |||
* "Readers may not be able to read source materials in other languages…" and readers may not have access to a particular book you cite, and readers may not be familiar enough with the subject matter to judge correctly handle a generally but opinionated source, and so on. Such is life. Not all sources that can be successfully used by a capable researcher reasonably expert in the topic can be successfully used by everyone who walks in off the street. Learn to live with it. | |||
As I said, I could go on. If enforced, these rules will discourage a lot of good work that has been going on. - ] | ] 06:38, 5 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I agree completely. No serious academic community would ever have a rule like this - I think it makes the English Misplaced Pages community look incurious and ill-read. As a practical matter, Misplaced Pages's extraordinary linguistic diversity means that an editor who has questions about a source written in a language they don't understand can probably find someone who can help them here or on another Misplaced Pages. This guideline should go. <small>] ]</small> 06:21, 8 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I agree with Jmabel. I'd recommend following standard academic practice as it applies to the topic of the article. If there is an important primary source in a foreign language, it should be cited, along with pointers to English translations if they exist. (The idea behind the recommendation to use "English sources" also misses the point that English itself has changed considerably during its recorded history, and the reader cannot be assumed to understand even early modern English well enough either.) --] <small>]</small> 08:49, 8 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
I am editing accordingly. - ] | ] 01:11, 13 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I support the new version. Good job. --] <small>]</small> 01:25, 13 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
But I see that someone has now restored "English-language sources… should always be used in preference to foreign-language sources", which tends to undercut the rest of this. - ] | ] 05:27, 27 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:Well, that makes no sense. Sources should be consulted primarily on the basis of their reliability and relevance. It would make little sense to write, say, an article about 17th century European philosophy without mentioning primary and secondary sources in French, German, etc. Of course, whenever English translations are available, those should be cited as well. For recent events, there may not be any high-quality English sources available. In that case it would make no sense to insist on using a low-quality English source instead of a high-quality non-English source. In other words, the proposed requirement to prefer English sources should at most hold ceteris paribus, when all sources can be considered to be of comparable quality. --] <small>]</small> 07:05, 27 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Blogs == personal blogs only? == | |||
I notice in the section of "Personal sites as secondary sources", the sentence is "Personal websites and blogs should not be used as secondary sources". | |||
Does that mean ''personal blogs'', or does it mean all blogs? The context, to me, implies the former. | |||
Is there a valid distinction between personal blogs (e.g. "hey, here's my blog") or a more focused topical blog, ranging from Slashdot to BoingBoing to Google Sightseeing and even to Daniel Drezner's personal but extremely economics-focused and heavily-traveled blog ? | |||
- ] ] 20:55, 17 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
==Citing a FAQ - FAQ's not credible sources unless written by credible authors== | |||
Someone wants to cite a FAQ that was written by people unqualified to comment on the subject --just written by various Joe Blows on the internet. I strongly believe it's not a credible source. What do I do? Is it arbitration? What's the procedure to contest the credibility of a source? (The policy should say something about FAQ's, actually). ] 21:43, 18 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Citing a FAQ - Credibility of a source is based on the source == | |||
Someone wants to prevent me citing a well-written and researched FAQ that was written by many people involved in a huge collaborative effort (just like wikipedia) over 10 years - the website where it's hosted is the largest anarchist website on the internet and the FAQ is updated constantly. I strongly believe it's a reliable source, and contains very useful information which is good for wikipedia. What do I do? Is it arbitration? He's already on probation, so I doubt it'll make much difference. What's the procedure to contest the credibility of a source? (The policy should say something about FAQ's, actually). ] <sup>]</sup> 21:52, 18 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:It's a partisan source: ''Partisan political and religious sources should be treated with caution, although political bias is not in itself a reason not to use a source. Widely acknowledged extremist political or religious websites — for example, those belonging to Stormfront, Hamas, or the Socialist Workers Party — should never be used as sources for Misplaced Pages, except as primary sources i.e. in articles discussing the opinions of that organization or the opinions of a larger like-minded group, but even then should be used with great caution, and should not be relied upon as a sole source.'' | |||
:What's being sourced, and in what article? ] ] 22:01, 18 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
]: '' Opponents argue that such relationships are not fully consensual, but coercive in nature (for example ]) '' | |||
The source is being used as a primary source to give evidence for the above claim, that "opponents of a-capitalism think... etc", since Infoshop.org are "opponents of a-capitalism". ] <sup>]</sup> 22:04, 18 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
: Somewhat OT, but pertaining to the passage from the project page quoted here: is there any reason why "Stormfront" & "the Socialist Workers Party" are mentioned in all 3 examples of an unreliable source? This repetition suggests the outlines of a now-forgotten flamefest, & rewriting these sections would improve the article. (BTW, I'm not a fan of either, so using them in one example is not out of line.) -- ] 17:07, 22 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Citing a fact-checked blog == | |||
We have an interesting situation in ]. ] has independently been keeping the tally of deaths caused by the storm, and now has than the now . His blog is properly sourced with independent primary sources, and those sources are publicly available, and I've fact-checked them without coming to any negative results. Since he has been following the story for quite a while, I think that his blog does check out as a reliable source for the death toll, as long as it continues being properly referenced. What is everyone else's view on this? ]]<sup>(] - ])</sup> 20:44, 27 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:Support use. Perhaps in the cite footnote inside the article you are working on mention that the next two sources on the list are primary sources the blog used and that spot checks validate his accurate citation, then add the next two on the list as pass through primaries? (where 2 is some arbitrary small number). If nervous, caveat that the user is advised to revalidate the blog's use of primaries for themselves? <font color="green">]</font>+]: ]/] 22:29, 27 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Is Misplaced Pages a reliable source? == | |||
I don't think that Misplaced Pages meets its own guidelines for reliability of sources; yet editors are encouraged to wikify their articles. The topic deserves mention in the main page as a notable exception to the guideline. -<font color="#2000C0">]</font> (<font color="#00FF00">]</font>) 05:03, 6 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I don't see how it could be a reliable source, since the editors have no apparent qualifications to editorialize. Whereas normally, papers are written by named persons with academic qualifications, there is no reason to trust the editorial judgement of Misplaced Pages writers. I would think that citing the editorial content from Misplaced Pages in a scholarly article would be laughable. ] 19:53, 6 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Is there any difference between wikification of a word in a Misplaced Pages article and citation of an off-site link, for the purposes of sourcing? -<font color="#2000C0">]</font> (<font color="#00FF00">]</font>) 04:54, 7 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Blogs == | |||
It says "Personal websites and blogs may never be used as secondary sources." but I want to use a blog as a source. The situation is that the blog is used by an individual to publish his criticism of politics. In that case, I think it is perfectly acceptable to cite the blog as a source for the views of the owner. Would anyone object to my updating this article to cover this?] 19:34, 7 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I think it already covers that. Blogs may be used as primary sources for the opinions of their writers. -] 23:05, 7 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::The wording could be improved. It says "A personal website or blog may be used only as a primary source, i.e., when we are writing about the subject or owner of the website." but it would be better to say that "when we are writing about the opinions of the owner". If that change were made, then the next sentence should be removed. ] 10:10, 8 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Self reference == | |||
We've got two places where it explicitly states that things can be used as sources ''about themselves'': | |||
*At ] it says "Groups like these may be used as primary sources only i.e. as sources about themselves..." | |||
*At ] it says "A personal website or blog may be used only as a primary source, i.e., when we are writing about the subject or owner of the website." | |||
In both of these instances it seems to me that the ''last'' person we should be taking information from, and also appears to explicitly contradict the verbage higher up that says ''"Misplaced Pages articles may rely on primary sources so long as what they say has been published by a credible publication."'' Taking bias into account even in the cases of ''reputable'' entities, I'd suggest that we should never use anything as a source about itself. If there do not exist third party sources, we should be evaluating if the item belongs in Misplaced Pages at all.<br/>]]<span class="plainlinks"></span> 03:33, 8 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I think you want to use somebody as a source of what *they* say, with attribution. If the NY Times prints something negative about somebody, and doesn't say their response; it seems fair to quote the person's web site (putting it in quotes, and attributing it properly). Also, we have to consider trivial items. If NY Times says somebody is 30 years old do you want to write "(born circa 1976)" or do you want to use the exact birthdate given on their web site that matches the age? Also, occasionaly (very occasionally), the subject of the story is a reliable source. For some prominent awards, the award granter is the source information of who they gave the award to. They may be a better source than some newspapers. ] was widely reported as being ]. Except she wasn't. The official site of the pageant organization sets the record straight, even though it's not a neutral party. The pageant is even a legitmate source to use in the ] article itself. In this example, the topic was written about very heavily (warranting inclusion), but on a point a fact, very inaccurately. But, in general, of course, one shouldn't use some as a source on themselve. On a more serious example, the government is frequently a source on itself. If we did what you suggest literally, we couldn't use a lot of census data. --] 11:41, 8 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:This is quite inconsistent with the rest of our policy. We have no problems using novels as sources for their own plot summaries, or television shows as sources for their own credits. Put another way, if this rule were applied to other types of sources, then, combined with NPOV, if someone were to publish a book of untrue information about someone, their own refutation of that information would not be considered reliable, and we would have to report the untrue information as published. Lemme get back to editing the Siegenthaler article... | |||
:Unless the intention is a blanket ban or deprication of online sources - which seems rather strange for an online encyclopedia with a particular strength in newer topics that aren't covered by more traditional encyclopedias - not only should we accept that any source is reliable when talking about itself, but frankly some of the other bans on Internet sources are absurd. ], for example, would need to be heavily revised in a way that makes a complete fraud look accurate and important if we throw out USENet sources. | |||
:Our judgments of reliability cannot be used as blind hammers. Judgments of reliability and accuracy take skill, nuance, and attention - they are the absolute worst things to condense into 30 KB guidelines. Entire college courses are taught on the subject of identifying reliable sources. Discussions of reliability routinely echo through the upper echelons of the academy. Of all the places where unsubtle letter-of-the-law based process is destructive to Misplaced Pages, this is the biggest. ] 14:02, 8 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:: Reply to Aaron Brenneman: I agree with your view, and I think it entirely respects the spirit of the policy. Consider the following excerpt from the original verifiability policy before of SlimVirgin. | |||
:::''Self-published sources and other sources of dubious reliability may be used as primary-source material in articles about that source. For example, the Stormfront website may be used as a source about itself ''in an article about Stormfront'', so long the information is appropriate, not unduly self-aggrandizing, and not contradicted by third-party sources.'' | |||
::The key ingredient here is the concept of "primary source", a jargon to say "raw material". The main point is that the content (includiong any opinion, analysis, interpretation, evaluative claim, etc.) that is found in a primary source is only used as raw material. When you use a document as a primary source, you do not have to and usually should not restrict yourself to report the interpretation, analysis, viewpoints, etc. that are expressed in that source. For example, in accordance with WP policy, an official trial transcript can only be used as a primary source. Normally, this transcript contains the views of witnesses and arguments of lawyers. Some secondary source could refer to this transcript to attack the witnesses and the trial itself. This is the normal way to use a primary source: you analyse it, interpret it, etc. Usually, you must collect many primary sources before you do that. On the contrary, if you were to use the transcript as a secondary source, you would have to directly report the viewpoints of the witnesses and the arguments of the lawyers. The policy says that we cannot report the content of a personal website in this way. Instead, you must have a critical attitude. ] | |||
:: You may think that this does not explicitly say that we must use separate reputable secondary publications to source our critical view of the website. However, elsewhere in the policy it is clear that we cannot report primary sources without secondary sources that provide the interpretation, evaluative, etc. aspect. The first paragraph that explains this is the following. | |||
:::''In some cases, where an article (1) makes descriptive claims the accuracy of which is easily verifiable by any reasonable adult without specialist knowledge, and (2) makes no analytic, synthetic, interpretive, or evaluative claims, a Misplaced Pages article may be based entirely on primary sources (examples would include ] or ]), but these are exceptions. '' | |||
::Clearly, this says that we need secondary sources to support any interpretation, etc. of primary sources. The exceptions are articles such as ], in which the interpretation, evaluative, etc. aspects are considered to be negligible. ] | |||
::The fact that a WP article must report on secondary sources was reinforced in the next sentence (before SlimVirgin made ): | |||
:::''Misplaced Pages articles include material on the basis of verifiability, not truth. That is, we report what other reliable '''secondary''' sources have published, whether or not we regard the material as accurate. '' | |||
::The emphasis is mine. ] | |||
::The fact that a WP article must report on secondary sources is further supported in the following paragraph of ]: | |||
::: ''A ] summarizes one or more primary or secondary sources. A ] usually summarizes secondary sources. Misplaced Pages is a tertiary source.'' | |||
::BTW, it is clear that a tertiary source can also provide links to primary sources. For example, it makes no sense to request that a review article, say on molecular surface, cannot give a reference to some original pictures or any other form of primary sources that are important ingredients in the secondary sources that are reviewed. Certainly, primary-source material remain interesting and can be cited in a tertiary source. This is not at all in contradiction with the fact that a tertiary source reports on secondary sources. The logic is simple and easily understood. ] | |||
:: In my opinion, SlimVirgin is either confused about primary/secondary sources or simply he changed his position recently because he made to put the emphasis on the fact that a WP article must report on secondary sources (in a way that is consistent with common sense and the above) and then later it is again SlimVirgin that removed the term "secondary" from the sentence in . It does not matter. My argument does not rely on one specific sentence, and certainly not on the authority of one editor. It relies on the overall policy and common sense. -] 19:29, 8 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
=== Discussion of some examples === | |||
:::Just briefly, with regards to a few of the examples raised above of "valid" self-reference: | |||
:::*NY Times says somebody is 30 years old - Here we'd have to balance the possible ''gain'' from using the person's purported actual birthdate. The cases where a person's ''exact'' age would be of encyclopedic merit would be ones such as eligibility for a sporting event or accusations of statutory assault. In these cases, we're better of taking the Time's version. The question to be asked here is ''why'' would the times not have an exact date, and ''why'' would the source's version be any more accurate? It's not like they remember being born. | |||
:::*Miss Canada - This is probably a non-issue, as the correction would be reported by credible sources once promulgated. | |||
:::*Census data/Government - This is only "tail swallowing" if we view "the government" as a monolithic entitity. I can say with some authority that the Australian Bureau of Statistics wouldn't release survey results on ''itself''. We could accept an oversight committee's publications on the Iran-Contra Affair, but not a National Security Council memo on thier own spending. | |||
:::*Unpublished refutations - Someone writes a column in the NY Times saying I eat babies. I publish on my web site that I only eat ''muslim'' babies. If ''no other source'' repeats my refutations, it's entirely sound for us to report only that "brenneman eats babies". It's not our job to "redress wrongs" in this manner, and the editorial decision to reproduce this material '''is not ours to make.''' This would in fact be a violation of ] second-hand. The far-fetched Siegenthaler example ignores the fact that the refutations were widely published in reputable sources. | |||
:::*Novels and television shows - Here, unless the item is of such fringe nature that we must question its inclusion, there should be a plethora of sources. If we're taking plot summaries or casting credits from the novel or film itself, its due to laziness not because we are compelled to do so. | |||
:::*The Bogdanov Affair - I'm not familair with, but the blurb above makes me deeply concerned if the only opposing voice comes from USENet sources. Homework for me. | |||
:::Barring the last, none of the examples adress the question of information that is ''only available from the source.'' There is a dynamic tension between the desire to have wide coverage and the essential need for accuracy, and if we must choose between excluding an item and reporting dubious material, there really should be no choice. | |||
:::]]<span class="plainlinks"></span> 23:50, 8 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::I don't think it should be seen as "can a website be a primary source about itself?" Since, by definition it pretty much is. I think the pertinant question is, "can a website be a ''reliable'' source?" Note I've removed the "about itself" because, when it comes down to it, whether a website is being used as a source on itself or something else, we must evaluate the reliability of it's information. | |||
::::How about some qualifying language to that effect then? Something like, "Before relying on the information provided by a website, consider the purpose of that site. While the purpose of a website might not affect the accuracy of its content, it might indicate that the material has been altered or manipulated to change or influence its meaning. Some sites try to persuade the reader to a particular point of view, distorting the contents in obvious or subtle ways. In general, look for websites with a non-biased, balanced approach to presenting information." This is adapted from an article , written by a subcomittee of the American Library Association on working with websites presenting Primary Source material in a second-hand fashion (on-line libraries, and such). | |||
::::I don't think a policy prohibiting websites as the sole primary source in any article is the way to go, since, as others have stated, each instance should be carefully evaluated on its own merits. ]<sup>(])</sup> 00:22, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::] and other audio Doctor Who stories have to be scrapped then - no published books on them that I know of. All either primary sources or websites for those plot summaries. And you're really suggesting that for movie credits we should go to Maltin or IMDB instead of consulting the film? That's absurd. ] 00:35, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::*InkSplotch - I'm actually referring to a more general case of self reference, but the most common occurance of it would probably be websites. And there is some confusion ''still'' about what "primary source" means. If I surf to a baby-eating webpage and read an account of ] eating babies and then I type a summary of that account into a wikipedia article, the website is ''not'' the primary source there: '''I am the primary source in that example.''' This is explicitly stated on the page in the form of ''report from eye witness'' If, however, babyeaters.org has a section that says "we've got 10,000 members worlwide" then they are the primary source, but that's not what the vast amount of "direct reporting" on wikipedia is. Finally, I'm not suggesting that we prohibit websites from being the sole primary source, but that we include strong language regarding ''anything'' that can only be sourced from itself. | |||
::::*Snowspinner - It's actually not absurd at all. Your quote that ''"Entire college courses are taught on the subject of identifying reliable sources."'' is actually the heart of the issue: Misplaced Pages editors will not have taken those courses, and are thus not equipped to evaluate primary sources. If you'd like a glimpse into the horror that allowing "direct observation" of this nature yields, have a look at ]. And yes, if information on the Doctor Who audio story you've mentioned cannot be found ''anywhere except for itself'', not even in a science fiction magazine or an industry guide, than why are we including it in Misplaced Pages? | |||
::::]]<span class="plainlinks"></span> 01:31, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::::So basically, it requires specialized knowledge, and so we're not allowed to do it? That takes anti-expertise to a whole new place. ] 01:34, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I fail to understand how your reply relates to what I just said. I agreed with your earlier comment that evaluation of primary sources is specialised knowledge. How is this anti-expertice? - ]]<span class="plainlinks"></span> 01:37, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Because it requires specialized knowledge, we can't trust Misplaced Pages editors to do it, therefore we must not engage in it. Mind you, my point wasn't that evaluation of primary sources is difficult - it's that evaluation of ANY source is a complex, nuanced, and not easily reduced to simple rules. You are arguing that because of this, we can't do it. ] 01:39, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::I can't read all of the above, so I'm sorry if this has been said already, but perhaps some of the confusion over primary sources is that what counts as a primary source is relative to the position of the observer. If I drive my car into a wall, I'm a primary source for the police regarding what happened, but the police ''and'' I are primary sources for a reporter. The reporter writes a story based on what we say and that story becomes a secondary source. But in 500 years, when that day's paper is dug up from underneath the rubble of the newspaper's offices, it will be a primary source for historians, as an artifact of its time. | |||
:::::::::As for reliability and personal websites, these may be used as sources of information about the author or the group that maintains them (with caution, and so long as reliable third-party sources don't contradict them), but may not be used as third-party sources i.e. as sources of information about anyone else. This is because anyone can add anything to their own website. Exceptions to this rule-of-thumb would be when a well-known person sets up a personal website, and there is no doubt as to his or her identity. So if Bill Clinton wrote up on his blog the real story behind the Lewinsky affair, we wouldn't ignore it. | |||
:::::::::The key question to ask when evaluating a source is: "how much fact-checking or editorial oversight is this likely to have been subjected to?" The answer with most good newspapers and publishing houses is that there's a lot of fact-checking by the reporter, copy editor, page editor, managing editor, editor-in-chief, possibly the lawyers, possibly the publisher. Whether that process always works is another matter, but at least it's in place, and we have to trust that it works most of the time. With the Stormfront website, on the other hand, there is almost certainly no process in place whereby what they publish is checked for accuracy or legal problems, and that's going to be the case with most self-published sources (whether political websites run by small groups, or blogs, or vanity-press books. That's why we allow those sources to be used as sources of information about themselves only. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 02:27, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::::Aaron, you might be right about the confusion. If you surf to a website claiming first hand accounts of baby eating, and draw upon it to write an article here, that website ''is'' a primary source. ''You'' and Misplaced Pages are secondary. This is the heart of "No Original Research"...we must remain at least a secondary source. Again, I'd like to stress, "Primary Source" and similar terms are simple definitions. The ''issue'' is reliability, and I think any language which addresses information that "can only be sourced from itself" is missing the point. Reading the label on the back of a CD, or in your example, reading babyeaters.org's mission statement is not original research. Extrapolating from that into the habits of baby eaters is. ]<sup>(])</sup> 02:56, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
(carriage return, edit conflict) Basically, it all comes down to how that source is being used, and the available alternatives. A source that is being used for self-publicity purposes is in my view, not acceptable, while a source that is being used for descriptive (e.g. getting the cast of characters from a movie) is perfectly fine. Also, if we can spare not having to use the primary source, but rather a secondary source, everything is all right. ]]<sup>(] - ])</sup> 02:31, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
: For the record, in response to Snowspinner's example, yes, I absolutely think that ''for the purposes of an encyclopedia that does not allow original research'', IMDB is a better source for the credits of a movie than "the movie itself", since relying on "the movie itself" really means relying on an editor saying "I saw that movie, and it ''totally fucking said'' that Jenna Jameson played Uhura in Star Trek VI." ] 02:39, 9 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Caught this on an edit conflict. IMDB, unfortunatly, is also subscriber-edited. It's information is no more reliable that an editor saying, "I saw that movie, and..." What you're calling into question here is the reliability of the editor. If you can rent the DVD yourself, look at the credits, and see Jenna's name there, it's verified. Now, if IMDB and several other sites report the credits as a typo, then you have reliable sourcing for an entirely different kind of entry. ]<sup>(])</sup> 02:56, 9 March 2006 (UTC) |
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Lead doesn't say what reliable source means
Compare with WP:NPOV, WP:V and WP:OR. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 00:58, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
- What would you propose the lead to say? Nikkimaria (talk) 05:41, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
- Perhaps "Reliable sources have a reputation for factchecking and accuracy. They are published, often independently from their subject." It's also troubling that the "page in a nutshell" doesn't reference reliability. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 06:19, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
- I've had a think to try to sum up the spirit of the guideline: "A reliable source is a source (four meanings in WP:SOURCE) that is just as willing to turn its critical attention inwardly as outwardly." I also think there is an implication that by doing this, they will necessarily be recognized for it which is the foundation for "reputation". This definition has a bias towards the source as a publisher/creator as described in WP:SOURCE. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 07:45, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
- If you want to begin with a definition, then AFAICT the actual definition is:
- "A reliable source is a published document that experienced Misplaced Pages editors will accept for supporting a given bit of material in a Misplaced Pages article."
- You have probably noticed the absence of words like reputation, fact-checking, accuracy, independence, etc. That's because those aren't actually required. We cite self-published, self-serving, inaccurate, unchecked, non-independent sources from known liars all the time. See also {{cite press release}} and {{cite tweet}}. WhatamIdoing (talk) 05:02, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- The first part makes some sense, although I would appreciate some clarification on the second part. If every source is reliable for something, the second sentence of this page "If no reliable sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it" is redundant. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 05:50, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- The second sentence is incomplete. It probably ought to say "If no Misplaced Pages:Independent reliable sources can be found..." WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:15, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- Ah, I assumed the exclusion of independent was intentional. There does seem to be a distinction between sources reliable for verifying the content they express (wikivoice), and sources reliable for verifying that such a source expressed content (requiring attribution). I'll add in the "independent", although it does seem a bit like a non-sequitur. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 07:22, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- I'm not sure that it should be in the lead at all, but if it's going to be there, it should match WP:NOT, which says "All article topics must be verifiable with independent, third-party sources" and WP:V, which says "If no reliable, independent sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it". WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:58, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, I'm not sure it should be in the lede either. I tried to express this by labelling it a non-sequitur.
- If I were to read the lede to find out what constitutes a reliable source for a statement, I would learn it's what experienced editors thinks verifies it. This is really useless, I would have no idea how to apply this guideline, which is surely the first consideration in reading a guideline. Defer to experienced editors, who apparently deferred to experienced editors, who... Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 00:35, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- I don't think it's useless, but I agree that it isn't immediately actionable. It tells you what a RS actually is. What you need after that is some way to determine whether the source you're looking at is likely to be RS.
- This could be addressed in a second sentence, perhaps along these lines:
- "Editors generally prefer sources that have a professional publication structure with editorial independence or peer review, have a reputation for fact-checking, accuracy, or issuing corrections, are published by an established publishing house (e.g., businesses regularly publishing newspapers, magazines, academic journals, and books), and are independent of the subject. Reliable sources must directly support the content and be appropriate for the supported content."
- It's that last bit ("appropriate") that throws over the preceding sentence. If a BLP is accused of a crime, and posts "I'm innocent! These charges are false!" on social media, then that's a source with no professional publication structure, no reputation for fact-checking or accuracy, no reputable publishing house, and no independence from the subject. But it's 100% appropriate for the article to contain this information, and 100% reliable for the statement "He denied the charges on social media". WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:01, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- The thing is, the rest of the page explains in detail what qualities are (and aren't) seen in sources that are usually accepted, so I'm not sure that duplicating that information in the lead is necessarily the best choice. Perhaps it would be better to say something like "This guideline describes the characteristics of sources that are generally preferred by editors." WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:11, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- This ridiculous situation is a product of us not distinguishing reliable for verifying the content of a source, and reliable for verifying the existence of a source. I understand that there is some complexity with DUE on this front (SME may fall into the latter category given what we can verify is that an expert is saying this but not that it is something we can put in wikivoice), but the current approach, where we try to bundle it into "appropriate" is insufficient.
Small note, we should try to keep comments such as "But it's 100% appropriate for the article to contain this information" out of the convo to keep the streams from getting crossed with WEIGHT.probably too aspirational, and my comments may be read as doing this. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 21:52, 28 November 2024 (UTC)- The idea isn't "duplicating" information, but summarizing it. The lede of NPOV could say "An article's content can be said to conform to a NPOV if experienced editors accept it as appropriate to include" but this doesn't explain what it is as representing "fairly, proportionately, and, as far as possible, without editorial bias, all the significant views that have been published by reliable sources on a topic" does. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 21:50, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- The thing is, the rest of the page explains in detail what qualities are (and aren't) seen in sources that are usually accepted, so I'm not sure that duplicating that information in the lead is necessarily the best choice. Perhaps it would be better to say something like "This guideline describes the characteristics of sources that are generally preferred by editors." WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:11, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Newimpartial, since I doubt that the sentence should be in this guideline at all, I don't really mind you removing the word 'independent', but I did want to make sure you understood the context. As a result of your edit, we have
- WP:NOT saying that "All article topics must be verifiable with independent, third-party sources",
- WP:V saying that "If no reliable, independent sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it", and
- WP:RS implying that non-independent sources aren't all that important.
- If we have to have this sentence at all, I'd rather have this sourcing guideline match the core content policies. If, on the other hand, you're thinking about the fact that NPROF thinks independent sources are unimportant, then I suggest that the place to fix that is in the policies rather than on this page. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:09, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- It is my understanding that several SNGs can be satisfied without (what some editors consider to be) fully independent sources, not just NPROF.
- Fundamentally, I think the actual policy problem is that the degree of independence that should allow a source to be used to establish the notability of a subject is poorly-defined and easily weaponized. So it seems to me that no academic is notable based on their own self-published statements, but a legitimate claim to notability can be based on reliable statements from universities and learned societies (to satisfy NPROF criteria).
- An author or artist can't be notable based on their own self-published statements, either, but a legitimate claim to CREATIVE notability can be based on reliable statements from the committee granting a major award.
- In a way, I think the older "third-party" language more clearly supported these claims to notability, whereas many editors will now argue that employers and award grantors are "not independent enough" for their own reliable claims to count for notability. Newimpartial (talk) 21:17, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- Indeed, an employer is not independent of the employee they tout, though an award granter (usually) is independent of the winner (though not of their award).
- I agree that there might be a problem, but I think that if we're going to have this sentence in this guideline at all, it should match what the policies say.
- How do you feel about removing this as unnecessary for the purposes of this guideline? WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:24, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- This may be a controversial opinion, but I think an institutional employer with a decent reputation is a reliable source for the employment history and job titles of an employee, which is what NPROF requires in some cases. No "tout"ing necessary. Under those circumstances, I don't think a more purely independent source is "better" than the employer for establishing that kind of SNG notability.
- Similarly, I have most certainty seen enthusiastic arguments that an announcement by an award grantor of a grantee is not independent of the grantee (presumably for reasons of "touting") and therefore does that such sources do not contribute to notabiiity under CREATIVE (even though the latter does not actually require independent sourcing, only reliable sourcing).
- I would also point out again that "third party", which is what NOT says now and what WP:V said until 2020, seems slightly less amenable to weaponization in this way than does "independent", for whatever reason. Newimpartial (talk) 22:20, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- I agree that employers are usually "reliable" for the kinds of things they publish about their employees, but they're never "independent".
- Misplaced Pages:Third-party sources redirects to Misplaced Pages:Independent sources, and has for years. There is a distinction – see Misplaced Pages:Independent sources#Third-party versus independent – but the distinction is not observed in Misplaced Pages's rules. WhatamIdoing (talk) 03:37, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- If we do not remove this sentence, can we add independent, and then have a follow-up sentence or footnote saying "independent sources are not required to meet some SNGs" or the sort? Seems like that would clear up any confusion by not having "independent" in the sentence. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 22:04, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- I'm not sure that it should be in the lead at all, but if it's going to be there, it should match WP:NOT, which says "All article topics must be verifiable with independent, third-party sources" and WP:V, which says "If no reliable, independent sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it". WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:58, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- Ah, I assumed the exclusion of independent was intentional. There does seem to be a distinction between sources reliable for verifying the content they express (wikivoice), and sources reliable for verifying that such a source expressed content (requiring attribution). I'll add in the "independent", although it does seem a bit like a non-sequitur. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 07:22, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- The second sentence is incomplete. It probably ought to say "If no Misplaced Pages:Independent reliable sources can be found..." WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:15, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- A second thought: I don't think using a narrowly "document" definition for source adequately accounts for the other meanings of source used (i.e. a publisher), and I'm not sure how you could do that. I imagine that's just a case of reliable source having multiple definitions depending on the way it's being used. This may be the source of conflict with the second sentence: a different meaning being invoked. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 06:24, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- In discussions, we use that word in multiple different ways, but when you are talking about what to cite, nobody says "Oh, sure, Einstein is a reliable source for physics". They want a specific published document matched to a specific bit of material in a specific article.
- "Document" might feel too narrow, as the "document" in question could be a tweet or a video clip or an album cover, none of which look very document-like, but I think it gets the general jist, which is that RS (and especially WP:RSCONTEXT) is focused on "the work itself". WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:22, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, I am thinking more Breitbart, although you describe well what the underlying dispute is, describing a publisher as unreliable is making a presumption for specific cites. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 07:27, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- This is a known difficulty. There's the "Oh, everyone agrees that Einstein's reliable" sense and the "Yeah, but the article is Harry Potter, and Einstein's not reliable for anything in there" sense.
- I have previously suggested encouraging different words. Perhaps Einstein is reputable, and an acceptable source+material pair is reliable. But we aren't there, and for most purposes, the distinction is unimportant. If someone says that "Bob Blogger isn't reliable", people glork from context that it's a statement about the blog being unreliable for most ordinary purposes. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:10, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, the definition Google gives for reliable: "consistently good in quality or performance; able to be trusted" does not caveat that it only speaks to verifying single pieces of information. This implies the Misplaced Pages definition is unintuitive. I do think this isn't the biggest problem here although it does make it confusing. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 00:35, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- We use the "able to be trusted" sense. And the question is: Able to be trusted for what? There are people you can trust to cause problems. There are source we can trust to "be wrong". That's not what we're talking about. We're talking about whether we can trust this source to help us write accurate, encyclopedic material.
- A source can be "consistently bad in quality" and still be reliable. Many editors would say that anything Donald Trump posts on social media is bad in quality. But it's reliable for purposes like "Trump said ____ on social media", because it is "able to be trusted" for that type of sentence. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:21, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- Context makes a difference. We should never ask: “Is this source reliable?” but rather, we should ask: “Does this source reliably verify what is written in our article?” Blueboar (talk) 22:23, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, the definition Google gives for reliable: "consistently good in quality or performance; able to be trusted" does not caveat that it only speaks to verifying single pieces of information. This implies the Misplaced Pages definition is unintuitive. I do think this isn't the biggest problem here although it does make it confusing. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 00:35, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, I am thinking more Breitbart, although you describe well what the underlying dispute is, describing a publisher as unreliable is making a presumption for specific cites. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 07:27, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- The first part makes some sense, although I would appreciate some clarification on the second part. If every source is reliable for something, the second sentence of this page "If no reliable sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it" is redundant. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 05:50, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- I find the formulation added ("A reliable source is a published document that experienced Misplaced Pages editors will accept for supporting a given bit of material in a Misplaced Pages article.") quite bizarre. Firstly, it is, in effect, saying a reliable source is a source which "experienced" editors say is reliable. Isn't that utterly circular? It tells me nothing if I want to work out whether a source is reliable or not. Secondly, it fails WP:LEAD. I can't see anything about "experienced" editors' opinions being decisive in the rest of the guideline. It's completely out of the blue. Fundamentally, it's not what the guideline says. Thirdly, why do "experienced" editors views get priority? I've come across plenty of experienced editors with highly dubious views about RS and relatively new editors with compelling opinions. Fourthly, "a given bit of material". Seriously, are we going to have such slangy sloppy language in the opening of one of the most prominent guidelines in WP? Apart from that it's great. I don't disagree that a summarising opening sentence would be useful, but this is not it or anything like it. DeCausa (talk) 22:16, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- @DeCausa, what would you write instead, if you were trying to write the kind of definition that MOS:FIRST would recommend if this were a mainspace article?
- Usually, editors start off trying to write something like this: "A reliable source is a work that was published by a commercial or scholarly publisher with peer review or editorial oversight, a good reputation, independent, with fact-checking and accuracy for all."
- And then we say: We cite Donald Trump's tweets about himself. They are N self-published with N no editorial oversight, Nno peer review, a N bad reputation, N non-independent, with N no fact-checking, and N frequently inaccurate. And despite matching exactly 0% of the desirable qualities in a reliable source, they are still 100% Y reliable for statements that sound like "Trump tweeted _____".
- An accurate definition needs to not completely contradict reality.
- As for your smaller questions:
- Is this circular? No. "A reliable source is whatever we say it is" tells you what you really need to know, especially in a POV pushing dispute, which is that there is no combination of qualities that can get your source deemed reliable despite a consensus against it. It doesn't matter if you say "But this is a peer-reviewed journal article endorsed by the heads of three major religions and the committee for the Nobel Peace Prize, published by a university press after every word was publicly fact-checked, written by utterly independent monks who have no relationship with anyone!": If we say no, the answer is no. Does that sentence tell you everything you need to know? No. I agree with you that it does not tell you everything you need to know about reliable sources. We have been discussing that in the thread above.
- See WP:NOTPART.
- Why "experienced" editors? Because, to be blunt, experienced editors control Misplaced Pages, and especially its dispute resolution processes. A source is not reliable just because three newbies say it is. However, it's unusual to have three experienced editors say that a source is reliable, and end up with a consensus the other way, and I don't ever remember seeing that happen with only newbies opposing that.
- If you dislike that particular phrase, then I invite you to suggest something that you prefer. As long as it prioritizes text–source integrity – by which I mean that we're talking about whether this source is reliable for this word/phrase/sentence/paragraph rather than vaguely about "the subject in general" or "some unknown part of the thousands of words on this page" – I'm personally likely to think it's an improvement.
- WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:03, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- I don't think putting forward a strawman and then demolishing it is particularly useful. Your strawman clearly fails for its narrowness. The current text (and the premise of the above thread) fails because it's circular (yes it is - I'll come back to that) and doesn't tell us anything about what an RS is.
- To do that, one has to reach back to the fundamentals that, absent the detail of WP:RS, gives editors a guiding principle by which to judge whether a source is RS or not. For me, the fundamental concept is that RS are the means by which WP:V is delivered in practice. If it delivers it, it's RS. If it doesn't, it's not. I'm sure there are a number of ways this can be formulated. Here's one - I don't say it is the only one or the best one or it can't be improved.
A reliable source is a previously published source of information in any medium which has all the attributes necessary to enable a reader to check the veracity of a statement in an article and to be assured that it is not derived from editors' own beliefs or experiences.
That's pretty much all you need to know to understand why this is RS for "Donald Trump has claimed on Twitter that China created the concept of global warming" but not for "global warming was created by China" (to take your example). - Turning to your numbered points:
- How can it be anything other than circular? I have 37k edits over 12 years so I would think by most standards I am "experienced". So if I am in doubt on whether something is RS or not and I look at that I'm told that whatever I think is RS is RS. There are no inputs given to me other than what I already thought and what I already thought is validated. Circular. Obviously WP:CONSENSUS is how all disputes are ultimately resolved. But what you say is clearly not true - otherwise !votes contrary to policy in RFCs wouldn't be disregarded. Of course 'might is right' works from time to time here, but not always or inevitably and to embed and codify it is really inappropriate in a guideline.
- The great thing about WP policies and guidelines is that (for the most part) they reflect commonsense. Taking a bureaucratic approach to ignore LEAD, a very commonsense guideline, doesn't make sense to me. Of course, the opening should be relatable to what is actually said in the policy. There is absolutely nothing in the current opening that foreshadows the rest of the guideline.
- Just need to look at RFC's to see that's not how we work. And ultimately an RS dispute will end up there. And what's an "experienced" editor anyway? I can see it feeding arguments along the lines of "I've got 40k edits and you've got 2k so my opinion counts more than yours".
- For the reasons I've given above, the current text isn't salvageable. It needs a different concept. But a "bit of material" is particularly cringworthy.
- I really think the addition should be reverted. Also, given its prominence whatever the final proposal is it needs an RFC rather than 3 editors deciding it. DeCausa (talk) 11:23, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- I like the direction your definition takes, except that it's not really reflective of actual practice. Here is an example of a source that has all "the attributes necessary to enable a reader to check the veracity of a statement in an article and to be assured that it is not derived from editors' own beliefs or experiences", but which is not a reliable source:
- Source: Soviet propaganda article in a government-funded partisan newspaper saying HIV was intentionally created as part of a American biological warfare program.
- Article content: "HIV was created as part of a US biological warfare program."
- The reader can check source and "be assured that it is not derived from editors' own beliefs or experiences". That (dis)information definitely came from the cited newspaper and not from Misplaced Pages editors.
- But it's still not a reliable source, and at the first opportunity, editors will remove it and, if necessary, have a discussion to demonstrate that we have a consensus against it. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:44, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- It's not a reliable source for exactly the same reason (in my example) as the Trump tweet is not a reliable source for the statement "global warming was created by China". It not being derived from editors' own beliefs is only an additional qualifier. The main one is that "it has all the attributes to check the veracity of the statement". When the tweet is used to say Trump said X, it has all the attributes to check the veracity of the statement "Trump said X". However, it has none of the attributes to check the veracity of the statement that "global warming was created by China" (expertise, independent fact-checking etc etc.) it's exactly the same as your Soviet propaganda article.
- I'm reverting the addition to the guideline - it consensus needs to be more than a couple of editors for something as prominent as that. DeCausa (talk) 16:09, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- WP:V begins this way:
- "In the English Misplaced Pages, verifiability means that people are able to check that information comes from a reliable source."
- Older versions opened with statements like "Misplaced Pages should only publish material that is verifiable and is not original research" (2005) and "The threshold for inclusion in Misplaced Pages is verifiability, not truth. This means that we only publish material that is verifiable with reference to reliable, published sources" (2006) and "The threshold for inclusion in Misplaced Pages is verifiability, not truth. "Verifiable" in this context means that any reader should be able to check that material added to Misplaced Pages has already been published by a reliable source" (2007).
- There's nothing about veracity in the policy, nor any similar word, except to tell people that The Truth™ explicitly isn't our goal.
- Additionally, if we demand veracity, rather than verifiability, we can realistically expect POV pushers to exploit that. "Sure, you cited a scientific paper about HIV causing AIDS, but that paper doesn't provide enough information to 'check the veracity of the statement'." Or "You cited lamestream media to say that Trump lost the 2020 election. You can't actually 'check the veracity of the statement' unless you go count the ballots yourself." And so forth.
- I think we have intentionally avoided any such claims for good reasons, and I don't think we should introduce them now. The purpose of a source is to let others (primarily other editors, since readers rarely click on sources) know that this wasn't made up by a Misplaced Pages editor but was instead put forward by the kind of source that a person of ordinary skill in the subject would be willing to rely on. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:08, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I think you are missing the point. "Verifiability not truth" is about something else entirely. That's about the encyclopedia reflecting what's published in reliable sources rather what an editor believes to be the truth. It's not saying that it has no bearing in determining what an RS is. Fundamentally, we need to use sources that have all the attributes that support the objective of veracity. Whether or not they do convey the "truth" is a different question - and we can't know that. All we can do is check as best we can that they have the attributes that can potentially do that. If we do anything else then we just repeat flat earth nonsense. This is basic. DeCausa (talk) 21:59, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- You want us to define a reliable sources as having all "the attributes necessary to enable a reader to check the veracity of a statement".
- But you don't think veracity has much to do with the truth.
- I wonder if a word like trustworthy would serve your purposes better. That is, we can't promise you it's true, and almost none of the sources will give you the material necessary to check the actual veracity, but we can give you a source that we trusted. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:33, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I think you are missing the point. "Verifiability not truth" is about something else entirely. That's about the encyclopedia reflecting what's published in reliable sources rather what an editor believes to be the truth. It's not saying that it has no bearing in determining what an RS is. Fundamentally, we need to use sources that have all the attributes that support the objective of veracity. Whether or not they do convey the "truth" is a different question - and we can't know that. All we can do is check as best we can that they have the attributes that can potentially do that. If we do anything else then we just repeat flat earth nonsense. This is basic. DeCausa (talk) 21:59, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I like the direction your definition takes, except that it's not really reflective of actual practice. Here is an example of a source that has all "the attributes necessary to enable a reader to check the veracity of a statement in an article and to be assured that it is not derived from editors' own beliefs or experiences", but which is not a reliable source:
Circularity
This is about the comments on the definition ("A reliable source is a published document that experienced Misplaced Pages editors will accept") being circular.
Circular reasoning is this case: "A is true because B is true; B is true because A is true." For example: "This drug was proven to work because 100% of the people taking it got better afterwards. I know they get better because of the drug (and not due to random chance, placebo effect, natural end of the disease, etc.) because the drug has been proven to work."
Circular reasoning is not: "A reliable source is whatever editors say it is".
This is the old joke about reality, perception, and definition: Three baseball umpires are talking about their profession and the difficulty of making accurate calls in borderline cases. One says "Some are strikes, and some are balls, and I call them as they are." The next feels a little professional humility is in order and says "Some are strikes, and some are balls, and I call them as I see them." The third thinks for a moment and says "Some are strikes, and some are balls, but they ain't nothing until I call them."
The last umpire speaks of definition: What makes a source be "reliable" is that editors accept it. If it is not reliable, it is not reliable because they do not accept it. They might (and should!) give reasons why they don't accept it, but it is not unreliable because of the reasons (which may vary significantly between editors, or even be completely incorrect); it is unreliable because they don't accept it.
Imagine that you have applied for a job somewhere. They do not choose to hire you. You ask why. They say "We felt like you had too little education and not enough experience". You reply: "That's wrong! I've got five advanced degrees, and I've been working in this field for a hundred years!" Even if you're 100% right, you're still not hired. So it is with sources: No matter what the rational arguments are, a source is reliable if we say it is, and it's unreliable if we say it isn't.
When you write above that if "I am in doubt on whether something is RS or not and I look at that I'm told that whatever I think is RS is RS", you are making the mistake of assuming the plural is accidental. It is not what "I" think; it is what "we" think. Another way to say it might be "A reliable source is a published document that The Community™ will accept", though that will draw objections for its unsuitable level of informality. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:10, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
Have a more simple "Ovrview section" .....then let page explain... KISS....somthing like
A reliable source is one that presents a well-reasoned theory or argument supported by strong evidence. Reliable sources include scholarly, peer-reviewed articles or books written by researchers for students and researchers, which can be found in academic databases like JSTOR and Google Scholar. Magazine and newspaper articles from reputable sources are generally reliable as they are written by journalists who consult trustworthy sources and are edited for accuracy. However, it's important to differentiate between researched news stories and opinion pieces. Websites and blogs can vary in reliability, as they may contain misinformation or be genuine but biased; thus, it's essential to evaluate the information critically. Online news sources are often known for sharing false information.
Wrote a fast essay Misplaced Pages:What is a reliable source?Moxy🍁 16:30, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- @Moxy, you said:
- A reliable source is one that presents a well-reasoned theory or argument supported by strong evidence
- but if Trump posts on Twitter that China caused global warming, and we write in an article "Trump claimed China caused global warming on Twitter", where is the "well-reasoned theory" or "strong evidence"? There is no theory at all, and there is no evidence that this wasn't the one time when someone picked up his device and tweeted a joke post for him.
- Or think about something perfectly ordinary, like "Big Business, Inc. has 39,000 employees". We'd normally cite that to the corporate website. There's no "reasoning", no "theory", no "argument", and no "evidence" involved.
- This sort of strong source might be true for major sources on substantial topics (e.g., as the main source for Health effects of tobacco), but it's inapplicable to most of our ordinary everyday content. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:14, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Should deal with the vast majority of articles. Trump posts on Twitter is not reliable for statements of fact just the opinion. The vast majority of articles dont have to deal with junk of this nature...let these cases be dealt with edit by edit. As for Big Business not sure it's even worthy of inclusion. .but if no other source contradicts the statement who really cares. Moxy🍁 19:26, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Sources have to be measured against individual statements, not whole articles.
- The vast majority of articles deal with quite a lot of very ordinary content: The company said they have n employees. The singer said she got married last week. The author wrote this book. The definition of reliable source has to fit for all of these circumstances, not just the contentious ones. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:31, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Then what is needed is a definition of reliable source (used academically) as we have now vs a source for a statement that in no way would ever come under a peer review process or be historically relevant in the future. What is needed is more and separate information about how we can use non-academic sources. Should have a page dealing with modern media junk, company or government data and social networking sites that promote oneself. There's a whole generation coming up consisting of 50% of English-speaking editors that will never go on to formal education to understand the differences. Moxy🍁 22:35, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I think that it would be desirable to have a definition for reliable sources, but I suggest to you that this definition says much more about us (i.e., the Misplaced Pages editors who are making the decisions about which sources to "rely on") than about the objective, inherent qualities of the sources.
- As I said above, a source can have none of the qualities we value and still be reliable for certain narrow statements. It can also have all of our favorite qualities and still be unreliable for other (e.g., off-topic or misrepresented) statements.
- IMO the unifying theme between "This comprehensive meta-analysis of cancer rates, published in the best journal and praised by all experts, is a reliable source for saying that alcohol causes 8.7924% of cancer deaths in developed countries" and "Yeah, his tweet's a reliable source for the fact that he said it" is what the community accepts for each of those statements. That's our baseline: It's reliable if we say it is, and it's not reliable if we say it isn't. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:41, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Then what is needed is a definition of reliable source (used academically) as we have now vs a source for a statement that in no way would ever come under a peer review process or be historically relevant in the future. What is needed is more and separate information about how we can use non-academic sources. Should have a page dealing with modern media junk, company or government data and social networking sites that promote oneself. There's a whole generation coming up consisting of 50% of English-speaking editors that will never go on to formal education to understand the differences. Moxy🍁 22:35, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Should deal with the vast majority of articles. Trump posts on Twitter is not reliable for statements of fact just the opinion. The vast majority of articles dont have to deal with junk of this nature...let these cases be dealt with edit by edit. As for Big Business not sure it's even worthy of inclusion. .but if no other source contradicts the statement who really cares. Moxy🍁 19:26, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
I wrote something up after this, if only to clarify my understanding. Could someone here have a look and see if I am accurately reflecting what's conveyed here? Particularly the part on 'intangible preferences' I'm a little shaky on.
- Strictly speaking, a source cannot by itself be described as reliable. A source can only be reliable for verifying a piece of information.
- There are two types of statements a source can verify: those that are attributed and those that are not. With the former, editors look for attributes such as independence, peer-review and a reputation for fact-checking. This can indicate it is reliable for such a statement. They also look for counter-considerations, such as contradicting other sources that also have such attributes and a lack of expertise to make such a statement.
- How considerations and counter-considerations are weighted, and the determination of reliability for a statement is made, comes down to any consensus editors can form. The community has some preferences for which considerations are more relevant; experienced editors are more able to apply such intangible preferences. If a source meets this, the material can be put in wikivoice.
- When a source falls short of this, we can move from using the source to verify the content of what they said, to verifying that they said something. If the source has a credible claim to representing what it purports to be, it is considered a reliable source to verify the attributed claim. An example of a "credible claim": Donald Trump's Twitter may post something, but whether the tweet is a reliable source that Trump said it or merely that his Twitter account posted it is evaluated (considering the potential that his social media team tweeted it).
Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 02:50, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
- I was with you until the last sentence. The difference between "Alice said" and "The people Alice hired for the purpose of saying things for her" is immaterial.
- The difference that matters is whether Trump's tweet can be presented as something that is true ("Trump likes McDonald's food", with a tweet saying "At McDonald's. Best french fries in the world. Love all their stuff. Should make the Navy serve this in the White House.") or only as something that he said ("Trump once tweeted that Ruritanians 'should be deported from their own country'", with a tweet saying "Those Ruritanians are strange! They should be deported from their own country!!"). WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:31, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Both matter. We can see the former matter when we write The Art of the Deal as ghostwritten rather than authored by Trump even when "The people hired for the purpose of saying things for " wrote it. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 06:40, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- But we can't use a ghostwritten book to say that it was ghostwritten. We need a different source for that (i.e., one that actually says it was ghostwritten). WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:28, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Oh I understand your point. Yes, this is contingent on external sources making comments to this effect rather than simple editor speculation, I should have made that clearer. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 07:48, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- But we can't use a ghostwritten book to say that it was ghostwritten. We need a different source for that (i.e., one that actually says it was ghostwritten). WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:28, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- On the second half, I've had a think. I don't think it is a distinct issue from non-primary sources. I think the key consideration from the first is independence. For the second, due to ambiguity in tone, to put it in wikivoice would be an extraordinary claim for which the tweet is insufficiently reliable. Interested to hear your thoughts. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 08:42, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Were you using non-primary and independence as interchangeable words in this comment? They're not.
- Assuming 'the second' is the made-up tweet about the purely fictional Ruritania, the tweet would be:
- primary for its contents (WP:ALLPRIMARY)
- non-independent of himself/his view
- self-published because the author and the person who made it available to the public are the same.
- But it would be reliable. All sources are reliable for statements that say "The source contains the following words: <exact words in the source>" or "The person posted <exact words the person posted> on social media".
- With this reliable source in hand, one still has to decide whether the content belongs in the article. Verifiability does not guarantee inclusion. Just because you have a reliable source doesn't mean the inclusion would be WP:DUE or comply with rules against WP:INDISCRIMINATE inclusion of random factoids. But even if you conclude that it's not sufficient to justify putting it in the article, the source is still reliable for the statement. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:01, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- No I wasn't, in fact I was trying to make the more bold claim that the principles of independence could be applied to a primary source. The idea being that if a claim is self-serving, the publisher is less reliable for its contents, necessitating attribution. There's no principle of "self-serving", but there is of bias and independence; I think the latter fits better here as a biographical subject can have more or less of a vested interest in a topic, which is what an independent source is: "a source that has no vested interest in a given Misplaced Pages topic".
- "But it would be reliable." There's some imprecision here between reliable with or without attribution. You are saying all are reliable for the latter, which is true. How that attribution is given depends on whether the source "has a credible claim to representing what it purports to be". For the former, the reason there is an affirmative assumption of reliability for claims made by individuals is because they are regarded as a SME, on matters such as whether Donald Trump does indeed love McDonalds. Counter-considerations then apply for reliability: self-serving, contestable etc.
- Agree on DUE. I am trying to keep that discussion out of this one, with mixed results. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 21:53, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- Source1 says <something>.
- Is Source1 reliable for the claim that Source1 says "<something>"? Yes.
- Source2 says <something self-promotional>.
- Is Source2 reliable for the claim that Source2 says "<something self-promotional>"? Yes.
- There is no difference here. The Source2 is not less reliable for its own contents. Just because it says something self-promotional does not make you any more likely to read Source2 and think "Huh, Source2 didn't really say <something self-promotional>". WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:36, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- The claim made by source one can be put in wikivoice, the claim made by source two should be attributed. It seems obvious to me that source two is less reliable for content, we can't trust them as easily as a source that isn't self-promotional because they have strong, relevant motives contrary to accurately reflecting the truth. They are both just as reliable as each other for "source said something". The question here is the distinction you drew: "The difference that matters is whether Trump's tweet can be presented as something that is true or only as something that he said." For the former we can present it as true, for the latter we can only present it as something he said. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 23:50, 5 December 2024 (UTC) Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 00:02, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- I agree with you that They are both just as reliable as each other for "source said something".
- WP:INTEXT attribution is required whenever editors choose (i.e., by consensus) to require it. That is not always for primary sources, not always for non-independent sources, and not always for self-promotional sources.
- Consider a self-published, self-promotional, non-independent primary source:
- Social media post: "Congratulations to all the staff on our 20th anniversary! Thank you to all the customers who have supported us since 2004. We're going to give away treats to the first 100 customers today, and we'll have hot gas station grub all day long for the low price of $5."
- Misplaced Pages article: "WhatamIdoing's Gas Station opened in 2004."
- Nobody would expect us to add INTEXT attribution, e.g., "According to a social media post by WhatamIdoing's Gas Station, the business opened in 2004." The source is self-promotional, but our use of it is for non-self-promotional, basic facts. We can trust the source even though the source is promotional. WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:16, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- While it may be true that INTEXT is technically only applied whenever editors choose, INTEXT also seems to make clear — "For certain frequently discussed sources, in-text attribution is always recommended" — that when material is DUE but is insufficiently reliable to be put in wikivoice, it is generally attributed.
- If I may, a source can only be reliable for a given piece of material. It does not speak to the whole source as we've noted above extensively. The material the text is supporting, "WhatamIdoing's Gas Station opened in 2004" is not particularly promotional. If the material being supported was "WhatamIdoing's gas station gave away treats to the first 100 customers on this day", that the material was self-serving would be a consideration in whether it could be considered reliable or not. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 02:39, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- If you see an advertisement from a business that says it will give away treats to the first 100 customers, what makes you think you can't rely on that claim? Imagine that a store near you ran an ad making exactly that claim. Would you show up wondering whether it was true? Or would you be confident that (barring extenuating circumstances, assuming the whole store hadn't burned down over night, etc.) that they actually would do this?
- A promotional source doesn't give us a reason to include promotional material, but it is reliable for the facts of the promotion. A Misplaced Pages editor would likely omit any mention of giving away treats, but if they included it, they would not say "The gas station posted on social media that they would give away treats to the first 100 customers", or anything remotely close to that. In fact, INTEXT would discourage that because "in-text attribution can mislead". Adding in-text attribution in that case might make it sound like we think the advertisement was lying.
- There are self-serving cases when in-text attribution is necessary. Consider "Richard Nixon said I am not a crook" vs "Richard Nixon was not a crook", because the self-serving source is not reliable for a statement of fact. But a self-serving source can be reliable for a plain statement of fact, and when it is reliable for that plain fact, it should be presented in wikivoice – or omitted entirely for reasons unrelated to the source being reliable for the statement. WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:16, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- I agree with all of this, and I did when making my comment (hence why I said "would be a consideration", not the consideration). I think we're in agreement and I don't think any of this is at odds with my initial laying out of reliable sourcing, although some more clarifications may be needed.
- Coming back now to the case you initially raised of Donald Trump liking McDonalds being in or out of wikivoice, I am saying the primary consideration is whether he is getting something out of it. More important considerations don't apply as they do with your gas station promo. If he tweeted endorsing MyPillow instead of McDonalds a different assessment of how self-promotional the material was would be made. I've lightly edited the original comment into User:Rollinginhisgrave/How I understand reliable sources. Do you think it needs further revision? Would you put it differently? Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 04:46, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- Consider this sentence above: If the material being supported was "WhatamIdoing's gas station gave away treats to the first 100 customers on this day", that the material was self-serving would be a consideration in whether it could be considered reliable or not.
- This is wrong. Whether the material was self-serving is a consideration for "how we should handle it" or "what we should stick in the article", but it's not a consideration for "whether it could be considered reliable". That source is 100% reliable for that statement. It's just not something we'd usually want to stick in an article for non-reliability reasons.
- The tendency in discussions on wiki is to fall for the Law of the instrument: I'm familiar and comfortable with using the WikiHammer of Reliability, so when the actual issue is anything else, I still pull out my hammer. I ought to use the whole toolbox and say that this is undue, unencyclopedic, poorly written, off topic for this article, etc., but instead I'm going to say: It's self-serving, so it's not reliable. It's trivia, so it's not reliable. It's a tiny minority POV, so it's not reliable.
- The sentence that you wrote above should say something like this: If the material being supported was "WhatamIdoing's gas station gave away treats to the first 100 customers on this day", that the material was self-serving would be a consideration for multiple policies and guidelines, not to mention common sense, that are not about whether this source is reliable for this statement. WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:07, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
That source is 100% reliable for that statement.
This doesn't contradict my statement. Whether it is self-serving is a consideration for whether it is reliable: this is why we hold "independence" as indicative of reliability. As I said above, determining whether it is reliable is a product of weighting "considerations and counter-considerations": here the counter-consideration is more impactful. It can still be a consideration even if it is ultimately overruled in a final assessment by counter-considerations.- And "whether the material was self-serving" is also a consideration for other multiple policies and guidelines. In this case, those are more relevant here; I am not discussing them however since this is a conversation about defining "reliable sources", not NPOV. As you say, it can be a reliable source while still being UNDUE, and I don't think I've mentioned anything on the material being verifiable necessitating inclusion. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 07:57, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- For:
- a statement in the Misplaced Pages article that "WhatamIdoing's Gas Station is giving away treats to the first 100 customers", and
- a source that is an actual advertisement saying the same thing,
- then: whether that advertisement is self-serving is not a consideration for whether the advertisement is reliable for a description of the promotional activity.
- There are no worlds in which we would say "Oh, this advertisement would be reliable for "WhatamIdoing's Gas Station is giving away treats to the first 100 customers" except that the advertisement is just too self-serving". The advertisement is always reliable for that particular statement. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:22, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- Again, none of this contradicts what I'm saying. There's a confusion of process and outcome. While determining if this source can verify this piece of material, we necessarily have to make a judgement on whether the material being self-promotional (which can indicate a source is unreliable in verifying material) would impact such a determination. Here, you make it clear that you think it is irrelevant. Which I agree on. But to do so, you have necessarily considered its relevancy; to disregard first necessarily requires consideration. This is the consideration I am speaking of. It is an application of determining if a source is reliable as the evaluation of considerations for why it may be reliable and counter-considerations for why it may not be. "The advertisement is always reliable for that particular statement" and "a consideration in determining if such a source includes it being self-promotional possibly indicating unreliability" are simultaneously true. I think I've said my peace here and am repeating myself so if my point doesn't come across I'll leave this here, although I obviously hope it does. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 03:54, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- I don't think we're going to reach an agreement. I can't think of an example of an advertisement that we would consider reliable if we judged it non-self-promotional but unreliable if we judged it self-promotional. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:15, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- It's not the advertisement as a whole being judged as more or less self-promotional, but the material therein. An advertisement could make two claims: Coca-Cola was founded in 1886. Pepsi puts poison in their cola. There is obviously a distinction to be made to the extent of self-promotion between the claims, even though they both appear in an advertisement. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 13:09, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
- I don't think we're going to reach an agreement. I can't think of an example of an advertisement that we would consider reliable if we judged it non-self-promotional but unreliable if we judged it self-promotional. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:15, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
- Again, none of this contradicts what I'm saying. There's a confusion of process and outcome. While determining if this source can verify this piece of material, we necessarily have to make a judgement on whether the material being self-promotional (which can indicate a source is unreliable in verifying material) would impact such a determination. Here, you make it clear that you think it is irrelevant. Which I agree on. But to do so, you have necessarily considered its relevancy; to disregard first necessarily requires consideration. This is the consideration I am speaking of. It is an application of determining if a source is reliable as the evaluation of considerations for why it may be reliable and counter-considerations for why it may not be. "The advertisement is always reliable for that particular statement" and "a consideration in determining if such a source includes it being self-promotional possibly indicating unreliability" are simultaneously true. I think I've said my peace here and am repeating myself so if my point doesn't come across I'll leave this here, although I obviously hope it does. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 03:54, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- For:
- The claim made by source one can be put in wikivoice, the claim made by source two should be attributed. It seems obvious to me that source two is less reliable for content, we can't trust them as easily as a source that isn't self-promotional because they have strong, relevant motives contrary to accurately reflecting the truth. They are both just as reliable as each other for "source said something". The question here is the distinction you drew: "The difference that matters is whether Trump's tweet can be presented as something that is true or only as something that he said." For the former we can present it as true, for the latter we can only present it as something he said. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 23:50, 5 December 2024 (UTC) Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 00:02, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
- Both matter. We can see the former matter when we write The Art of the Deal as ghostwritten rather than authored by Trump even when "The people hired for the purpose of saying things for " wrote it. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 06:40, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
Coming back to this, I can see the GNG makes an attempt to define reliable at odds with the above discussion: "Reliable" means that sources need editorial integrity to allow verifiable evaluation of notability, per the reliable source guideline." In addition to this, it requires sources be independent, so it's not that it's just talking about reliable as it relates to notability, but making a claim about reliability in general. Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 13:09, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
- Everything in the GNG is written "as it relates to notability". Among its awkward statements are that "Sources should be secondary", which is true(ish) for notability but has nothing to do with the definition of either source or reliable. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:16, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
- Part of the confusion here stems from omitting context from the discussion. The goal is for sources to “reliably” verify what we write in our articles. However, the question of whether a specific source does this (or not) depends on what we write. Are we attempting to verify a statement of fact written in wikivoice (where we state “X” as fact, verified by citing source Y) or are we verifying an attributed statement of opinion (where we note that Y said “X”, verified by citing where Y said it). The same source can be unreliable in the first context, but reliable in the second context.
This, of course, does not mean we should write either statement (other policies impact what we write, as well as how and where we write it)… it only means that the specifics of reliability can shift depending on context. Blueboar (talk) 15:05, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
Inconsistency between WP:SOURCE and WP:SOURCEDEF
The definition of a source is not consistent between WP:SOURCE and WP:SOURCEDEF. WP:SOURCE states that the word source has four related meanings whereas WP:SOURCEDEF states that the word source may related to one of three concepts. Here's a side-by-side comparison.
WP:SOURCE | WP:SOURCEDEF |
---|---|
A cited source on Misplaced Pages is often a specific portion of text (such as a short article or a page in a book). But when editors discuss sources (for example, to debate their appropriateness or reliability) the word source has four related meanings:
All four can affect reliability. |
A source is where the material comes from. For example, a source could be a book or a webpage. A source can be reliable or unreliable for the material it is meant to support. Some sources, such as unpublished texts and an editor's own personal experience, are prohibited.
When editors talk about sources that are being cited on Misplaced Pages, they might be referring to any one of these three concepts:
Any of the three can affect reliability. Reliable sources may be published materials with a reliable publication process, authors who are regarded as authoritative in relation to the subject, or both. These qualifications should be demonstrable to other people. |
So: does source have three meanings or four? —PrinceTortoise (he/him • poke • inspect) 17:19, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yes! Blueboar (talk) 18:22, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- The one from WP:V is correct, as it was discussed and updated in 2022. Either the two should match, or the RS should be removed. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:43, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- Thing is… I think these are meant to be examples more than definitions. We could probably come up with additional things that we might call a “source”… so it isn’t limited to just 3 or 4. Blueboar (talk) 18:49, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- I believe the original goal was to give newer folks a heads up that when one editors says something about 'the source', and another editor says something about 'the source', they might actually be talking about different things, like warning travelers that the word biscuit has different meanings in the UK vs in the US.
- IMO it is not fundamental to any of these pages, and could be split out to an essay/information page like Misplaced Pages:What editors mean when they say source. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:13, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- It is fundamental, those are things/persons that affect reliability. Those, each, are what editors need to examine. Alanscottwalker (talk) 12:57, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
- What I mean by this is: I think that WP:V and WP:RS were intelligible to ordinary editors before these words were added, and I think WP:V and WP:RS would still be intelligible if they were removed again. Their presence (in at least one of the two) might be helpful, but their absence would not actually render the policy and guideline meaningless. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:20, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
- It is fundamental, those are things/persons that affect reliability. Those, each, are what editors need to examine. Alanscottwalker (talk) 12:57, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thing is… I think these are meant to be examples more than definitions. We could probably come up with additional things that we might call a “source”… so it isn’t limited to just 3 or 4. Blueboar (talk) 18:49, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- For whatever reason, it looks like SourceDef tries/or tried to tuck the missing one from Source into its introduction and perhaps through that or over time it got a bit mangled. Alanscottwalker (talk) 13:11, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
- What do you think about blanking all but the first paragraph, and then pointing people to WP:SOURCE for more information? WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:05, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
Do these pass WP:SCHOLARSHIP?
There have been 41+ recorded cases of starvations in Gaza, but a letter from medical professionals in Gaza estimated that the true number is at least 62,413. The estimate is based on the IPC classification; see the appendix. The figure was also referenced in this paper by anthropologist Sophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins.
The question is whether either of these sources passes WP:SCHOLARSHIP, making it suitable to include the estimate in something like wikivoice (e.g. the Gaza genocide infobox reads Estimated at least 62,413 dead from starvation
).
I don't see any evidence of vetting by the scholarly community, but the argument has been made that the authors' expertise and/or publication by Costs of War Project (a research group which hosts a compilation of papers by its contributors) might suffice. This has been discussed here and more recently here. — xDanielx /C\ 16:41, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- This is already being discussed at Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Noticeboard#Death estimation. Selfstudier (talk) 16:49, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
I would like some feedback on what I perceive to be a reliable aviation source.
I was recently looking to use AussieAirpower as a source in an aircraft article. I was surprised to see two people say it wasn't a reliable source. Here is why I believe it is.
The primary author writes for Janes, which is very highly regarded, worked as a research fellow at the Australian Defence Studies Centre, consulted for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute and many others. So his opinion isn't just held in high regard, governments pay for it. He is he a current research fellow for the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics as well as the editor for AussieAirpower.Peter Goon co authors a lot of the work, a qualified aircraft engineer and RAAF officer, graduate of the US navy test pilot school with extensive military test flying and who has developed and certified many aircraft technologies.
To me this seems like an ideal source on matters relating to things like radars and aircraft? However other seem to elevate the work of regular reporters above this and deem the think tank unreliable?
An example article is linked here. https://www.ausairpower.net/APA-Zhuk-AE-Analysis.html Liger404 (talk) 23:58, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
- @Liger404, please take this question to Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Noticeboard. Alternatively, if you think it needs people who understand the subject area, you can post it at Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject Aircraft. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:04, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thank you. Liger404 (talk) 00:57, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
Preprints bullet, general audience writing about scholarship
Right now, the Preprints bullet says in part
Preprints, such as those available on repositories like arXiv, medRxiv, bioRxiv, or Zenodo are not reliable sources. Research that has not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog, as anybody can post it online. Their use is generally discouraged, unless they meet the criteria for acceptable use of self-published sources, and will always fail higher sourcing requirements like WP:MEDRS.
Would it be clearer to replace that with something like
Preprints, such as those available on repositories like arXiv, medRxiv, bioRxiv, or Zenodo, have not undergone peer-review and therefore are not reliable sources of scholarship. They are self-published sources, as anyone can post a preprint online. Their use is generally discouraged, and they will always fail higher sourcing requirements like WP:MEDRS.
The similarity to blogs is that they're self-published, and there's no need to compare them to blogs to say that, especially since they're unlike blogs in other ways (e.g., in citing literature). I also removed the phrase about the criteria for acceptable use of self-published sources, as preprints generally come from "expert" sources, which is an exception for using SPS. Notwithstanding that preprints generally come from expert sources, their use is discouraged because we don't want readers to confuse them with peer-reviewed research and because editors should use reliable non-self-published sources when available, which often exist in the peer-reviewed literature.
Also, does it make sense to add something about popular discussions of scholarship (e.g., in a magazine)? FactOrOpinion (talk) 22:44, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
- Whatever the outcome is, it is silly to say "they are not reliable sources. they can be reliable sources." Rollinginhisgrave (talk) 23:33, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
- The passage is fine as is, IMO. See also WP:SPSWHEN. Headbomb {t · c · p · b} 00:03, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
- I was prompted by an exchange on the Autism talk page where another editor seemed to interpret "Research that has not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog, as anybody can post it online. Their use is generally discouraged" along the lines of "the use of sources that have not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog and their use is generally discouraged" (i.e., interpreting it as text about other sorts of sources, not limited to preprints or non-peer-reviewed scholarship more generally, as is the case with some conference proceedings). Not an accurate reading of those sentences, but it made a couple of us wonder whether the wording of the preprints paragraph could be improved. FactOrOpinion (talk) 17:03, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
- I encouraged FOO to start this because of that discussion. We don't need a sentence that can be quoted out of context to say that "Research that has not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog", because that isn't true. Outside the hard sciences, research is routinely published in non-peer-reviewed books, which are definitely not "akin to a blog". Research gets published in magazines and newspapers.
- I like the proposed re-write. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:05, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
- I was prompted by an exchange on the Autism talk page where another editor seemed to interpret "Research that has not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog, as anybody can post it online. Their use is generally discouraged" along the lines of "the use of sources that have not been peer-reviewed is akin to a blog and their use is generally discouraged" (i.e., interpreting it as text about other sorts of sources, not limited to preprints or non-peer-reviewed scholarship more generally, as is the case with some conference proceedings). Not an accurate reading of those sentences, but it made a couple of us wonder whether the wording of the preprints paragraph could be improved. FactOrOpinion (talk) 17:03, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
- The passage is fine as is, IMO. See also WP:SPSWHEN. Headbomb {t · c · p · b} 00:03, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
Autocracy corrupting reliable sources, censoring what is published
As media are increasingly careful to avoid lawsuits like ABC recently settled, self-censorship will limit the neutral information available to publish. It is said that RFK will even censor releases by the FDA. In this type of media environment, truths must be published underground or at least in less well-resourced publications. How can reliable sources definitions deal with this new state of affairs? Jdietsch (talk) 20:20, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
- We should be lending greater weight to academic and NGO sources and less on newsmedia. Simonm223 (talk) 21:35, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
- When writing about politics, it's a good idea to look for sources from other countries, too.
- For drug information, look for WP:MEDRS and other scholarly sources. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:19, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
This is curious...
The League of Women Voters recommends using this chart to determine bias in various media sources.
Below, I have matched the most left-leaning and right-leaning sources listed, alongside their status as a reliable source on Misplaced Pages.
STATUS: - generally reliable - no consensus - generally unreliable - deprecated - blacklisted NR - not rated
LEFT | Statue | RIGHT | Status |
---|---|---|---|
AllSides | The American Conservative | ||
Associated Press | The American Spectator | NR | |
The Atlantic | Blaze Media | ||
The Daily Beast | Breitbart News | ||
Democracy Now! | Christian Broadcasting Network | NR | |
The Guardian | The Daily Caller | ||
HuffPost | Daily Mail | ||
The Intercept | The Daily Wire | ||
Jacobin (magazine) | NR | Fox News (politics and science) | |
Mother Jones (magazine) | The Federalist (website) | ||
MSNBC | Independent Journal Review | ||
The Nation | National Review | ||
The New York Times | New York Post | ||
The New Yorker | Newsmax | ||
Slate (magazine) | NR | One America News Network | |
Vox (website) | The Post Millennial | ||
The Washington Free Beacon |
When there are 20 shades of blue paint available, and just 5 shades of green...everything starts to look kind of...blue. --Magnolia677 (talk) 17:46, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
- Maybe far-right media should start instituting stricter standards for accuracy and fact checking. But also most of the media on the "Left" column is not meaningfully left-wing anywhere outside of the United States. All in all I'd suggest this chart signifies nothing except that the US Overton Window has slid dangerously to the right and allowed a whole bunch of disinformation to be mistaken for news. Simonm223 (talk) 17:48, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
- Do we have an article in the mainspace about various ratings? WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:39, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
- I would have to agree. I have no desire to get into the politics of this, but Allsides is not a reliable source because it just reflects US opinions. Editors should judge sources based on the quality of those sources, without any regard of their supposed 'leaning'. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 22:25, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
- The main point here is that the sources in the table have been selected to make a point. The Guardian is an internationally respected newspaper and Breitbart is a bundle of crap. It's nothing to do with left or right - there's no equivalence. In the right column, the internationally respected media (the Guardian equivalents) are deliberately omitted. No Telegraph, The Times, WSJ, Financial Times etc etc. The two columns are not complete sets - just arbitrary selections. DeCausa (talk) 23:11, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
- The source rates the WSJ (for news) and FT as being centrist, and the OP did say that they included only left- and right-leaning sources. The Times (i.e., of London) does not appear to be rated by Allsides. So of your list, only the Telegraph, which is slightly right according to this source and which earns both (most) and (trans/GENSEX content) at WP:RSP, seems to have been overlooked. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:11, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- Allsides is junk, and the other such websites are no better. That they rate the sources like that only shows they are repeating common US opinions, and this is an international project. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 01:24, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- The "source" is nonsense. WSJ, the Times and FT are famously "right". If they're "centre" so is the Guardian. The "source" seems to only classify "far right" as right. DeCausa (talk) 08:36, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- That source differentiates between news and opinion: They classify the WSJ as center for their news and right for their opinions.
- Our article on Financial Times says they have been called "centrist to centre-right liberal, neo-liberal, and conservative-liberal", but not "right". Our article on The Wall Street Journal similarly declines to simply call them "right", but provides a range of descriptions over time. I would think that if they are famously right-wing, then we'd have enough sources to just straight-up say that in the articles. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:15, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- The source rates the WSJ (for news) and FT as being centrist, and the OP did say that they included only left- and right-leaning sources. The Times (i.e., of London) does not appear to be rated by Allsides. So of your list, only the Telegraph, which is slightly right according to this source and which earns both (most) and (trans/GENSEX content) at WP:RSP, seems to have been overlooked. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:11, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- The main point here is that the sources in the table have been selected to make a point. The Guardian is an internationally respected newspaper and Breitbart is a bundle of crap. It's nothing to do with left or right - there's no equivalence. In the right column, the internationally respected media (the Guardian equivalents) are deliberately omitted. No Telegraph, The Times, WSJ, Financial Times etc etc. The two columns are not complete sets - just arbitrary selections. DeCausa (talk) 23:11, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Reliability versus notability of an author of a source
Should sources be used or quoted in an article if the author of the quoted piece is not themselves a notable individual, with their own Misplaced Pages article? Is there any policy in Misplaced Pages that could be interpreted as requiring the author of a source to have their own Misplaced Pages page, or to be Misplaced Pages-notable? Conversely, if there is no such requirement, where is this specified? BD2412 T 03:02, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- Reliability is not notability, notability is not reliability. Nikkimaria (talk) 03:09, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- Where is this written? Asking for a friend. BD2412 T 03:22, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- Although this has been asked before, I'm not sure that we ever wrote it down. However, it obviously follows from the answer to "Are reliable sources required to name the author?" in the Misplaced Pages talk:Verifiability/FAQ: If you can cite a news article that doesn't have a byline, then sources can be cited even if the authors are not known to be notable. Obviously any such rule would be a nightmare, though perhaps we'd be a little amused by the chicken-and-egg aspect (nobody can be notable first, because only sources written by already-notable authors would count towards notability) while Misplaced Pages burned to the ground.
- I suspect the other editor is using notable in its real-world sense, e.g., to prefer sources written by known experts or other reputable authors. WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:22, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- What about the specific context of quoting the author? For example, in Howard the Duck (film), we have:
In The Psychotronic Video Guide, Michael Weldon described the reactions to Howard as being inconsistent, and, "It was obviously made in LA and suffered from long, boring chase scenes"
, with the "Michael Weldon" there being neither of the ones with Misplaced Pages articles, the Australian politician and the South African cricketer. BD2412 T 20:52, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
- What about the specific context of quoting the author? For example, in Howard the Duck (film), we have:
- Where is this written? Asking for a friend. BD2412 T 03:22, 24 December 2024 (UTC)