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Revision as of 21:51, 9 October 2022 editGrayfell (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers82,990 edits Don't add opinion pieces, positive or negative: Comment← Previous edit Revision as of 22:02, 9 October 2022 edit undoGrayfell (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers82,990 edits Don't add opinion pieces, positive or negative: Another commentNext edit →
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:I do not accept that the removed sentence was inherently non-neutral, nor that it was unsourced. It may have been ''uncited'', but that's not the same thing. Both Kotaku and Vice refer to "managers" as bosses, which appears to be a central point of those sources. Both explain that this terminology is somewhat euphemistic, or is at least that it is jargon that needs to be clarified, which tells us that we, as editors, should instead use simpler language. As for Kotaku being "biased", I think that's a distraction. While we don't specifically seek out sources because they are critical, we do actively want sources which are willing to look critically at the topics they cover. To put it another way, a source which repeats company talking points and refuses to look deeper is less reliable than one which looks at available information and forms conclusions accordingly. ] (]) 21:51, 9 October 2022 (UTC) :I do not accept that the removed sentence was inherently non-neutral, nor that it was unsourced. It may have been ''uncited'', but that's not the same thing. Both Kotaku and Vice refer to "managers" as bosses, which appears to be a central point of those sources. Both explain that this terminology is somewhat euphemistic, or is at least that it is jargon that needs to be clarified, which tells us that we, as editors, should instead use simpler language. As for Kotaku being "biased", I think that's a distraction. While we don't specifically seek out sources because they are critical, we do actively want sources which are willing to look critically at the topics they cover. To put it another way, a source which repeats company talking points and refuses to look deeper is less reliable than one which looks at available information and forms conclusions accordingly. ] (]) 21:51, 9 October 2022 (UTC)
:Oh, also, as for "opinion pieces", this is an article about a video game / commercial service. Reviews are a subcategory of opinion piece, after all, and readers expect that kind of thing in articles about pop culture and media. We cite opinions all the time on Misplaced Pages. The important thing is to cite reliably published opinions and attribute them as opinions, similar to any other independent primary source. But specifically, I do not accept that the Kotaku article is meaningfully an "opinion" in this situation. ] here, as everywhere. Something is not an "opinion piece" merely because it summarizes information and uses strong language to express that conclusion. Sources are not required to be neutral, editors are. ] (]) 22:02, 9 October 2022 (UTC)


==Wiki Education assignment: History and Theory of New Media== ==Wiki Education assignment: History and Theory of New Media==

Revision as of 22:02, 9 October 2022

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Reliability of sources

@Nintendoswitchfan: Hello. Please cite reliable independent sources for any information that it not routine and could be seen as promotional. It is not enough for this info to be technically true, it has to be encyclopedicially significant, and the way to show this is with an independent source that explains why it's significant. This is the standard across Misplaced Pages.

Axie Infinity's Medium account hasn't been updated in over a year, and it's not clear if this is even WP:RS, but it certainly isn't independent. Using primary sources for specific features of a video game can be construed as promotional, and since Misplaced Pages is not a platform for promotion, it is always better to summarize based on independent sources. Primary sources can be used for routine information, or in some other cases, but always with caution. Thanks. Grayfell (talk) 20:19, 10 December 2021 (UTC)

@Grayfell: Hello. This is noted. I was unable to find a more reliable source than the Medium account of Axie Infinity itself for the particular statement, so I thought it would work to use that as a primary source. I have instead rephrased the line item altogether to use an independent source and disregard the launch date and instead focus on the land feature as a whole.Nintendoswitchfan (talk) 20:32, 10 December 2021 (UTC)

Okay. The only reason I did not remove the line completely was because it seemed like it might be something a reliable source would talk about. If neither of us could find a decent source, it's probably safe to discard it as trivia. We should not assume that anything in particular belongs, so we have to be willing to discard content that is unsupported. That is editing, after all.
My recent revert re-added a copy/paste of the sentence. I will hold off on removing that to avoid H:ECs. Grayfell (talk) 20:36, 10 December 2021 (UTC)
As a compromise, I have added template:better source needed. Tech Times doesn't appear reliable, either. Several of the articles on that site are obvious advertorials in praise of specific products or services, but the site completely fails to disclose this. This outlet may need to be raised at WP:RSN if it hasn't already, but that will have to wait. Grayfell (talk) 20:46, 10 December 2021 (UTC)

forkast.news

@Nintendoswitchfan: If you really think it's important to include forkast.news, please discuss it here first. Per many prior discussions at WP:RSN, crypto outlets generally have very poor reputations for maintaining editorial oversight, disclosing conflicts, etc., and this one doesn't appear to be an exception. It's far from the worst site I've seen, but since this article is just a "fast facts" style summary of basic facts with almost no original analysis, it does a very poor job of explaining why this bit about a big number is even significant at all.

Further, the site's about page includes several very poor signs, including this paragraph:

Forkast.News is an independent news platform open to working with companies and brands to better reach their customers by educating our audience about their products and services through our creative arm, Forkast.Studio. Our sponsors and partners are a mix of startups, established brands, and those that we helped become established brands.

This is basically an admission that they are producing a mix of "native advertising" and churnalism, and the site fails to distinguish between this and any actual reporting that might be produced. If you want to restore this source, or site it elsewhere on Misplaced Pages, I recommend getting another opinion at WP:RSN first. Grayfell (talk) 21:12, 11 March 2022 (UTC)

Understood on this. My initial thought was because Tech In Asia is considered as reliable and cited them as the initial source, that it would be okay too still have forkast.news there as they were the main source of the Tech In Asia source. But you are right about the note on advertising, and I will keep that in mind for any sites that I cite. Nintendoswitchfan (talk) 06:36, 12 March 2022 (UTC)

Removed Sky Mavis "startup" info

I removed a paragraph under the game description section that was full of fintech puff related to Sky Mavis' valuation and whatnot. If that was notable, it would be in the page for Sky Mavis. This article should remain on the topic of the video game, not on the "startup" behind it. Mewnst (talk) 02:12, 27 January 2022 (UTC)

Don't add opinion pieces, positive or negative

Misplaced Pages had a big problem with crypto puff pieces, so much so that there is a WP:GS (see https://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:General_sanctions/Blockchain_and_cryptocurrencies) still in effect for this topic. However, it seems like editors are overcorrecting in the other direction here, using no sources or much less reputable sources to talk about specialized topics if they are in negative light. This is a strong no-go. The goal of Misplaced Pages is not to "be against crypto", it is to be an encyclopedia for all things, including crypto.

An example here is a biased opinion piece being repeatedly added by an editor to this article. The "reference" is https://kotaku.com/axie-infinity-nft-crypto-hack-landlord-scholar-pokemon-1848800557, a strongly worded opinion piece from a non-RS. Just as you could find puff pieces about Axie extolling the virtues of what they are doing, there are opinion pieces in the opposite direction. None of them are relevant to an encyclopedia article. This is not a blog.

To the user @ApLundell - do not add unsourced opinions to crypto articles, especially under general sanctions and especially without a reference. The statement " They acted as workers for "bosses" who rented out Axies to them so they could play the game on the bosses' behalf" absolutely does not belong in the article lead. This is a watered down version of a much stronger version that you have been repeatedly adding to the article. It is incorrect and unsourced.

There is a separate issue of nuance here. I'll assume good faith but the repeated vandalized edits seem like agenda-driven editing. If you look at RSes like the CNBC piece from 2021, it talks about making money post-pandemic in a poor economy. There are lots of real RSes like from Bloomberg that talk about the same. Reducing it to disgruntled articles based on a market cycle is not the way to edit an encyclopedia article.

So once again, I am forced to revert your edits. I am not sure how much clearer to be at this point. Do not add unsourced, highly opinionated statements, whether positive or negative, to an encyclopedia article. Please also remember that crypto topics are still under general sanctions. You can reference the link above. Molochmeditates (talk) 03:48, 24 September 2022 (UTC)

I would like an explanation for how a fact with two sources is "unsourced", "opinion", or "false"?
You keep repeatedly asserting this, but never explaining it.
Moreover, I don't think it's over-emphasized. Quite the opposite. Before the hack, this was one of the most reported on aspects of the product. It's difficult to understand why the article didn't even mention it.
Given the fact that I'm trying to add a fact that is undeniably a major component of all reliable coverage about the product, it really does not seem that you are "assuming good faith" while also clearly describing my edits as vandalism that "seem" "agenda driven" in the same sentence. If nothing else, you were being dishonest in that sentence. ApLundell (talk) 19:17, 24 September 2022 (UTC)
You can look up your last edit here: https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Axie_Infinity&oldid=1111931254. The statement that you added is "They acted as workers for "bosses" who rented out Axies to them so they could play the game on the bosses' behalf." without a reference. It is unsourced because it does not have any sources backing it up.
Your previous versions used a single Kotaku reference to back up the statement. This is the reference: https://kotaku.com/axie-infinity-nft-crypto-hack-landlord-scholar-pokemon-1848800557. You can find it in previous versions where you reverted my edits, e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Axie_Infinity&oldid=1111588774. That reference is not an acceptable RS for an encyclopedia.
If you want to get into game mechanics, the game is played with a team of 3 axies per player. There are generally three ways to do this: buy, breed, rent. The statement that you are asserting as a fact could only apply to one of the ways, i.e. rent. Even then, describing players as "workers" is not accurate. Describing people who lend assets as "bosses" is not appropriate. Saying the players play the game on behalf of "bosses" is not appropriate. Literally none of the assertions of that statement are rooted in fact, much less backed up by a reliable source. Therefore they do not belong in an encyclopedia article. What you are trying to add is absolutely not "undeniably" a major component of the game. There is more nuance in the rest of the article on how the game mechanics work, including renting of assets. There are sources that talk about how it helped people and how it hurt them during the crash which is all appropriate to discuss. Molochmeditates (talk) 22:52, 26 September 2022 (UTC)

@Molochmeditates Based on the logs, it seemd to be a certain @Amezque who added the line on the ""They acted as workers for "bosses" who rented out Axies to them so they could play the game on the bosses' behalf." statement that is unsourced. I do agree that this statement should not be kept as there's no reference that explicitly states this and it's a mere opinion on how the game mechanics work. Notice how the other reliable sources don't explicitly call it like that. Though I do agree that @ApLundell can take an approach that focuses more on the reliable source's content rather than just assuming that because the source seemed to hint at a certain way the game is played, that it's fair to keep the statement on the worker-boss relationship. Nintendoswitchfan (talk) 16:47, 5 October 2022 (UTC)

I do not accept that the removed sentence was inherently non-neutral, nor that it was unsourced. It may have been uncited, but that's not the same thing. Both Kotaku and Vice refer to "managers" as bosses, which appears to be a central point of those sources. Both explain that this terminology is somewhat euphemistic, or is at least that it is jargon that needs to be clarified, which tells us that we, as editors, should instead use simpler language. As for Kotaku being "biased", I think that's a distraction. While we don't specifically seek out sources because they are critical, we do actively want sources which are willing to look critically at the topics they cover. To put it another way, a source which repeats company talking points and refuses to look deeper is less reliable than one which looks at available information and forms conclusions accordingly. Grayfell (talk) 21:51, 9 October 2022 (UTC)
Oh, also, as for "opinion pieces", this is an article about a video game / commercial service. Reviews are a subcategory of opinion piece, after all, and readers expect that kind of thing in articles about pop culture and media. We cite opinions all the time on Misplaced Pages. The important thing is to cite reliably published opinions and attribute them as opinions, similar to any other independent primary source. But specifically, I do not accept that the Kotaku article is meaningfully an "opinion" in this situation. Context matters here, as everywhere. Something is not an "opinion piece" merely because it summarizes information and uses strong language to express that conclusion. Sources are not required to be neutral, editors are. Grayfell (talk) 22:02, 9 October 2022 (UTC)

Wiki Education assignment: History and Theory of New Media

This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 6 September 2022 and 16 December 2022. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Patvil24 (article contribs).

— Assignment last updated by Patvil24 (talk) 16:27, 9 October 2022 (UTC)

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