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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Aaron Brenneman (talk | contribs) at 19:09, 2 November 2005 ([]: And this begs the question that if something passes ''one'' section of the proposed guideline can it then rope something ''else'' in?). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 19:09, 2 November 2005 by Aaron Brenneman (talk | contribs) ([]: And this begs the question that if something passes ''one'' section of the proposed guideline can it then rope something ''else'' in?)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Archives:
30 October 2005 2 November 2005.

Websites

Articles on websites, forums, internet memes and flash animations appear regularly on VfD. It strikes me as odd that we have inclusion guidelines for bands (WP:MUSIC) and people (WP:BIO), among others, but not for websites. It has been established that Misplaced Pages is not a web directory; in other words, the vast majority of websites likely do not deserve a Misplaced Pages entry. On the other hand, sites such as Yahoo and eBay obviously do. So, I'd like to open discussion on what criteria would work for inclusion of websites. Radiant_>|< 12:34, Jun 24, 2005 (UTC)

Massive refactoring

Previous discussion

This was fifty closely printed pages. A large portion of this discussion was repetive, so I have summarised the debate to date.
brenneman 06:25, 2 November 2005 (UTC)

I think it's inappropriate to clear discussion that's only a week or two old, and ask that you reinstate at least the last few sections. Phil Sandifer 08:08, 2 November 2005 (UTC)
I understand what you're saying, and certainly won't object if anyone else wants to do so. I did make a link to the unexpurgated discussions at the very top of this page. However, I'm sure that you noticed that things were, well, venemous? A little fresh air couldn't hurt, and if you'll look over what was cleared not much was actually being said. And, by the way, why have you changed you sig? I was thrown until I realised that Snowspinner = Phil Sandifer. - brenneman 08:24, 2 November 2005 (UTC)

Guidelines for Websites

These points have met almost no resistance, however a few questions have been asked.

  1. Alexa <= 10,000
    • Does (for arguments' sake) a single day/week/month of ranking lower than this mean the site is "locked in"?
    • Historical data is preserved for how long by Alexa?
  2. Major media attention within the last 2 years
  3. Forum >= 5,000 members
    • How are these 5K defined? Active, total, etc.

Webcomics

These points have met almost very little resistance, again a few points could use clarification.

  1. Alexa <= 100K
    • A compelling argument for why webcomics get a much easier pass needs to be presented.
  2. Coverage or inclusion outside the webcomics community.
    • This is exactly as 2 above.

These points have not been well discussed, but have not proven "thorny" per se.

  1. Significant award.
    • How are these to be chosen? I.e. what's "significant"?
    • Will the list be explicit or tacit?
  2. Notable author.
    • When to merge, when to split?

These points have proven highly contentious.

  1. Membership in a syndicate.
  2. Top 20 in a large webcomic hosting service.

These topics are not currently in the proposal, however have been discussed, and are thus reproduced in full here.

  1. Having a printed collection listed at Amazon with a sales rank of 100,000 or better.
    • This would be in line with other Misplaced Pages guidelines regarding publication
    • Some questions regarding what constitutes "self published" in this area exist.
  2. Coverage within the webcomics community. If a webcomic has significant, detailed coverage in an editorially-written section of a combination of the major sources devoted to webcomics, or has warranted continuing mention in a single source, it should be included. Due to the subjective/popular nature of all these sources, and the relatively small size of the webcomics community, it is recognized that the issue of conflict-of-interest may arise. If articles from said sources that are written about a comic under consideration are seen to be promotional in a "conflict-of-interest" manner, this category for inclusion must be disregarded as a means of viewing a comic as notable (ie. A comic must become notable under its own power, not because of a self-interested comic author/writer).
    Popular webcomic sources currently include:
    • Comixpedia.com (.org is the wiki)
    • The Webcomics Examiner
    • Websnark

Open and/or hot items detailed

Discussion to date has been a trifle unproductive. Could we try to stay on task, assume good faith, be civil, and be concise?
brenneman 06:25, 2 November 2005 (UTC)

Membership in a syndicate

  • Lots of comparison made to WP:MUSIC.
  • General feeling was that similar standards should be applied, and that as currently defined this wasn't it.
  • No comparison/distinction made between comics with something closer to traditional syndication (e.g. Carol Lay's Story Minute on Salon Magazine) with newer models (e.g. Dayfree press)
  • This looks unlikely to pass in it's current form

New discussion on this topic

  • To me, the issue boils down to whether admittance into X collective (Keenspot et al) is an acknowledgement of the strip's quality, thereby verifiably elevating it above its peers, to the point of notability. Modern Tales is the odd one out here because, by virtue of not giving away all its strips for free, Alexa rankings aren't as good an indicator of notability, and there's not much else for distinguishing between different MT strips, save the really obvious ones. Nifboy 07:58, 2 November 2005 (UTC)
  • The problem I have with this one is small time collectives like Dayfree Press. This is not a commercial venture, but a collective of webcomics dedicated to mutual promotion of one another's wares. We've seen that some on this "syndicate" are quite popular and notable, others on it however, are not. And the only sort of notability offered, is "affiliated with Dayfree". How does one get onto Dayfree? Well, if the editor likes your comic, and he thinks it fills a gap in the portfolio, then you're in. Following those guidelines, would be like saying any band which were ever signed by a minor label would instantly be notable. Or any band that John Peel ever liked, was an instant include. Dayfree Press is made up of some notable comics, and some non notable ones, and they should be looked at individually, not with a blanket include all. - Hahnchen 14:52, 2 November 2005 (UTC)
  • And failed aborted comics which happened to once appear at Graphic Smash, like Big Dick's Ball mentioned in the previous examples. No. I already am against the "every band ever signed" guideline, I am totally totally against "every band ever signed and then disbanded and were kicked out by theire record label" guideline, or "every author who although managed a a book publishing deal, never wrote more than 12 pages of his book" guideline. - Hahnchen 14:52, 2 November 2005 (UTC)

Top 20 in a large webcomic hosting service

  • This met with mild objection in of itself, but suffered from being tied to "Membership in a syndicate" in discussion

New discussion on this topic

Coverage within the webcomics community

  • Per above, this looks highly unlikely to move unless serious concessions are made all around.

New discussion on this topic

List of comics referenced in previous discussion

To illustrate, here are the comics talked about before. Under each, if we could list which of the above criteria would apply, perhaps we could get a better idea of how close we are to being happy?
brenneman 06:54, 2 November 2005 (UTC)

A Softer World

Able and Baker

Big Dicks Ball

Boy on a Stick and Slither

Cat and Girl

Count Your Sheep

Diesel Sweeties

Dinosaur Comics

Explodingdog

Get Your War On

Girly

Goats

Helen: Sweetheart of the Internet

Her! Girl vs Pig

Hutch Owen

L33T Pixels

Life on Forbez

Megatokyo

Oh My Gods!

PvP

Questionable Content

Sam and Fuzzy

Scary Go Round

Sexy Losers

Slither

Something Positive

  • Heavy coverage outside of webcomics when author was able to get a full year's salary and quit his job from donations. I know at least Neil Gaiman's blog carried it. Phil Sandifer 16:51, 2 November 2005 (UTC)

Venus Envy

WIGU

Websites for inclusion/exclusion from medical articles (discussion reference)

There is a Request For Comment active right now on the matter of what websites to include in Misplaced Pages articles on medical subjects and the criteria for exclusion of certain websites. The persons who have been active in this WikiProject:Websites might be interested in either contributing to or considering the outcome of this discussion. See Talk:Prostate cancer for access to the discussion. Courtland 11:40, 2 November 2005 (UTC)

Well, this page is about websites as the subject of individual articles. It does not really say anything about elegibility for use as external links. JFW | T@lk 18:05, 2 November 2005 (UTC)