This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Scherf (talk | contribs) at 22:01, 28 November 2006 (→Is it OK for Gracenote Employees to Edit ONUnicorn's []?). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 22:01, 28 November 2006 by Scherf (talk | contribs) (→Is it OK for Gracenote Employees to Edit ONUnicorn's []?)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)As written this page appears to be a shill for AMG. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.127.173.199 (talk • contribs) 06:26, 6 April 2005 (UTC)
- Please be specific about your complaints or the POV tag will be removed. AlistairMcMillan 03:19, 7 Apr 2005 (UTC)
This article seems to be balanced. What is the problem that the POV tag is addressing? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Fatandhappy (talk • contribs) 00:39, 24 April 2005 (UTC)
removed POV tag
The POV tag inserted by the anonymous writer was removed since there is no reason given for inserting it in the first place. If there is reason for placing a POV tag, reinsert it and give a clear reason for placing it. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Fatandhappy (talk • contribs) 00:49, 24 April 2005 (UTC)
- Compare this to the AMG page. It's is more balanced than it used to be but is still biased toward AMG.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.220.148.208 (talk • contribs) 06:48, 26 May 2005 (UTC) (edit -- now that it has been reverted, it is back to being a shill for AMG).— Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.220.148.208 (talk • contribs) 06:51, 7 June 2005 (UTC)
Please be specific regarding the issues. If there is anything factually incorrect about the article, please, please cite and clarify.— Preceding unsigned comment added by Fatandhappy (talk • contribs) 10:06, 26 May 2005 (UTC)
- First, the CD database does actually have 3 million + CDs. And where is the source that says there are only 600,000 CDs ever released? Gracenote database contains many personal mixes, bootlegs, and promo CDs, as well as CD singles and magazine CDs, and even CDs ripped from mp3s recorded from vinyl.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.220.148.208 (talk • contribs) 06:51, 7 June 2005 (UTC)
The database also contains large numbers of duplicates and spelling errors, which you failed to mention. Now that the controversy over the number of actual CDs as opposed to various versions of entries about the same CDs in the database has been cited by Dpbsmith, are there any other specific problems with the article? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Kenta (talk • contribs) 11:02, 9 June 2005 (UTC)
Please stop reverting everything I add
This article is about Gracenote, and I am the founder. I know the details of its founding. I know the details of its products. I know the details of its legal history. I have changed the text to remove numerous factual errors in all of these aspects and more. More than once my changes have been reverted wholesale as "unverifiable". The facts that are supposedly unverifiable are either easy to verify if you bother to look, or are obvious for other reasons. (For example, the statement that commercialization of Gracenote bothered its former licensees, such as Roxio. That fails logic. How could there have been licensees before Gracenote was commercialized?)
I have left in mentions of controversy and legal issues, in the interest of fairness and completeness. However, those subjects should not dominate, and I have changed them so that they have an appropriate level of emphasis. And correctness. I was there, and it's just plain wrong for this page to point to non-final court rulings that were overturned or superseded, as if they hadn't been.
I will be adding more interesting content in the future, of the sort that people expect to see on a page dedicated to a particular topic. To all users with a chip of some sort on their shoulder: please cease to vandalize this page in the guise of removing "unverifiable content". I know more than any single person on this topic and AM the primary source of verification for anything Gracenote-related. -- Steve Scherf 03:07, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Please stop deleting properly sourced materials
Misplaced Pages is neither an advertising nor a promotional medium. Please do not use it as such. You are right that factual errors should be corrected. Removing sourced information that happens to be inconvenient for you (for example, links to court documents and barrister's websites), however, is not proper Misplaced Pages behavior. If you really are Mr. Scherf, please add useful, properly sourced information that befits Misplaced Pages, not a sales brochure. And please stop your attempts to whitewash history. -- Kenta 14:38, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
To Mr. Scherf
Mr Scherf, Misplaced Pages strongly discourages anyone from writing or editing articles about themselves, and especially in any controversial situation, one party to the controversy is not likely to have the sort of objectivity needed for an encyclopedic report.
I can sympathize with your frustration if completely, and objectively demonstrable, facts are being misrepresented about your company.
The "Misplaced Pages" way to deal with this is for you to post a comment here in Talk, with polite arguments and links to objective reference sources -- and request that someone else look into the issue and correct any statement you believe is factually wrong.
It will take longer to get any errors fixed, but the fixes will be more durable. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.7.11.91 (talk • contribs) 13:03, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
Vandalism
I agree with your opinion, in general. However, this is a special case. This page has been subjected to blanket reversions by vandals who apparently care nothing about the facts. It seemingly matters not at all that recent edits to this page have corrected glaring errors in the legal section, with numerous citations of court documents to back it all up, for example. The blanket reversion made just about a day ago by an anonymous vandal put back an older version of the page with totally incorrect information (not to mention unsubstantiated opinion), with a total lack of regard for the fully substantiated newer text that obviates and disproves the older text.
That's the kind of blatant attacks against this page that I'm talking about. There is nothing durable about this page. Adding links to actual facts has had no bearing on the frequency of blanket reversions and other malicious edits by vandals back to bad information. Forgive me if I say that the Misplaced Pages way is failing here, even if it (questionably) manages to work elsewhere on Misplaced Pages. It depends on contributors who are truly interested in the accurate, apolitical, factual presentation of information, without an agenda. Without that, it cannot work, and that's why it's not working here. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Scherf (talk • contribs) 15:29, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
This article has a POV problem
M. Scherf (or M. "Sooahs"),
I strongly disagree with your opinion. You have removed a number of citations from reputable and verifiable sources and replaced them with links to documents that in many cases do not support the the text. You have also created an article which is not neutral. Specifically, you have removed well documented and discussed sections such as:
- text and links which describe the controversy caused by your commercialization of the service
- text and links which describe the controversy over the actual numbers of CDs in your database
- text and links which describe the results of the lawsuit with Musicmatch
amongst other verified bits of information which were in the previous edit to the article.
Misplaced Pages is not a soapbox. As mentioned above, Misplaced Pages strongly discourages writing about one's self (or one's company). If you have changes that you feel need to be made, you are best served by following the Misplaced Pages policies, and letting others make changes based on discussion in this talk area. If you feel the article is unjust, feel free to make comments here and start a civilized discussion. Currently your comments merely display anger and do not discuss any facts, and could be interpreted as less than civil. Kenta 13:35, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
Explain please
This page is supposed to be about Gracenote. What is wrong with listing the products/services Gracenote produces? What is wrong with describing what that company is and does? By reading the original text, one might conclude that Gracenote only produces controversy and lawsuits. There was no mention of any product or service other than CD recognition, which is now only a small part of what Gracenote does. I am unclear why describing what Gracenote actually does is inappropriate for the Gracenote page, and how that is considered standing up on a soapbox?
This is a Gracenote page, not the AMG page, the freedb page, or anyone else's page. Such competitors do not belong in the introduction, taking up the majority of the section. The are now mentioned in the body and listed at the end as well. That's the appropriate placement. I would rather not even mention them on a page dedicated to Gracenote, but concede that they should be present in a reasonable context. It is not reasonable to have them dominate the introduction to an article about Gracenote.
The controversy surrounding Gracenote's creation is still in the text. It was not removed. However, it doesn't need dominate the page. Gracenote has over 100 million distinct users with probably half that active at any one time; with that many people using the service, there will always be a small fraction that are disgruntled, whether you're talking about Gracenote or anything else. Unfortunately, that small fraction (including you, apparently) is using this page as a place to air their grievances. So the controversy section was blown way out of proportion.
As for the number of CDs in the database, we have a page at that clearly states the number of CDs Gracenote's database covers. This is an actual count of the database. Our own studies of the number of lookups against this database shows that over 60% of the entries are looked up on a regular basis by multiple individuals. If these are not real CDs, then how can people be looking them up? That's 3 million active CDs worldwide, at the very least, with over 5.2 million registered CDs, be they commercial, demo, bootleg or home burn. Our page states the count clearly. Are you disputing that? Where is the evidence that this is in error or is a fabrication? It is totally absurd to think that Gracenote would just make up these numbers and publish them. For Pete's sake, freedb has something like 2 million CDs in their database and they have a lot less users than Gracenote. Where is your evidence that this is wrong- hard evidence - aside from the fact that someone who posted here wanted to stir up controversy?
And as for the legal page, I'm not really sure how to respond to what you've said. The text that was put there was incomplete and blatantly incorrect. Blatantly. That text was replaced with a correct description of events, as well as links to actual court documents to support that description. The new text contains no interpretation or opinion. It is simply a straightforward explanation of the seven court documents linked to from the page. That stated, I am very curious to hear your explanation of why these documents do not support the text? And I am also very curious to hear your explanation of how the old text supported such claims to the effect that "Gracenote's loss" in the case has opened up the market to competitors. That's especially interesting, considering that the court document clearly states that Gracenote did not lose. As for the link to Becker's CV, that was removed because, as proven by the court documents, it is incorrect. This should not come as a surprise. This is the CV of a lawyer who was on the opposing side in the case, and has no incentive to note that he lost the case on his resume. The court documents prove that the information was wrong, and therefore it should not be on the page.
I cannot fathom how you can continue to make these arguments in the face of overwhelming facts which show them to be entirely false. I can't help but conclude that these are simply tactics to stir things up here, or perhaps befuddle editors who may not take the time to really look into your claims. Regardless, the fact is that the Misplaced Pages guidelines are just that - guidelines. Anyone may edit here, discouraged or not. If this page had even a semblance of impartiality to it, and actually contained a preponderance of factual text, we wouldn't be having this discussion. I'd be happy to let others manage the page. But the fact is that this page, not to mention many others on Misplaced Pages, are under attack from people with agendas who see Misplaced Pages as a venue for striking at others. Others may sit by and allow misinformation ranging from non-fact to libel to be perpetrated against them, but I don't take that view. We've had our discussions here, and we've posted links and lots of corrections, but it's gotten exactly nowhere. Given the amount of vandalism here, we have no choice but to actively keep the page factual.
On a last note, I would note that some quite good text has been posted here by individuals that I do not know personally. They have taken it upon themselves to contribute to the page. I'm not sure why their edits should not be given credence, just because you assume it's really someone affiliated with Gracenote in every case. The user "msooahs", however, is a legal intern at Gracenote who took the time to gather the court documents and write the legal text for the page. This was initiated independent of my contributions here. That work was initiated by our counsel because the page was so totally incorrect, and it was only after they saw that I had been contributing to the page that they notified me of their intent. So even that work was done without my involvement. (I must also note that msooahs knew nothing about Gracenote's legal history until digging into the court documents. They speak for themselves, and so it matters little who posted them here.)
Finally, more than one person here has mentioned the "Misplaced Pages way" and complained that somehow I and others have not been following it. I would ask that you who have complained examine your own actions very closely before making such statements. The Misplaced Pages guidelines say you should not revert text, yet you have done so, often times across the contributions of multiple independent users (not just against me). The guidelines say many other things as well that have been violated here by those who claim to be acting true to the guidelines. I have described only a portion of it here. The total disregard for the guidelines, as well as a disregard for fact and truth here is utterly appalling. One can only conclude that those who have been perpetrating the vandalism against this page know all of this already, but are trying to hide behind the guidelines as if they have been acting in good faith. Such "Rovian" tactics have no place here. Steve Scherf 17:37, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
Explanation and Response
Your response is a wonderful example of why people should not write about themselves in Misplaced Pages.
Scherf wrote: "...Gracenote only produces controversy and lawsuits."
Though you may be in denial as one of the creators of the original CDDB and employee of Gracenote, Gracenote is in fact a highly controversial company in many ways and one which aggressively pursues lawsuits against its clients. These facts were well documented in the original article. Gosh Scherf, the controversy over your commercialization and the lawsuits was Slashdotted, written up in numerous articles, blogged, and privately discussed throughout the digital media and the internet world. Placing factual information about the products Gracenote produces is not the problem you have created. The problem is that you (and your minions) have deleted other "good, well researched contributions of many users" in order to further your own agenda of minimizing the reality that Gracenote is controversial.
Scherf wrote: "...Gracenote would just make up these numbers and publish them."
Scherf, you are in denial again. The controversy is quite real. Much of Gracenote's (and other user-created services') data is likely to be multiple versions of the same CD. Just because you claim to have 5.2 million entries in your database does not mean there are really 5.2 million CDs released in the world. Gracenote has many variations in the spellings (and misspellings) of the same CDs. The misspelled data which you aggregated was used to help close down Napster (the original one). The controversy over your claims of millions of CDs was also well documented in the original article, and you (or your employee) deleted it.
Scherf wrote: "..."Gracenote's loss" in the case has opened up the market to competitors."
Gracenote sought damages for patent infringement against Musicmatch, and only received a settlement based on a relatively minor contract issue. That is all that the documents say. It is interesting that you deleted the CV information from Musicmatch's lawyer and insinuate that he is not being accurate or truthful because he is somehow has no incentive to do so. Lawyers in California (and other states in the USA) have strict requirements regarding advertising accurately and truthfully, under severe penalty. It is also interesting that none of the Gracenote lawyers from the case mention anything about winning the case, they merely mentioned that they represented Gracenote. If Gracenote did so well by the case, wouldn't your lawyers mention the fact. Are you trying to say that Gracenote's lawyers are somehow different or better than Musicmatch lawyers? Perhaps more ethical? It would seem highly unlikely. Occam's razor would seem to dictate that the lawyers accurately describe the results of the case because of stringent legal requirements. According to the Musicmatch lawyer's CV, "The parties agreed to settle the case after Musicmatch obtained summary judgment on all patent claims." One should probably conclude from this quote as well as the court documents posted the case did not go well for Gracenote. This case was well publicized and has far reaching implications for Gracenote, its competitors, and its customers. Trying to minimize this issue in Misplaced Pages by deleting other users' "good, well researched" information is not proper behavior.
Scherf wrote: "...befuddle editors who may not take the time to really look into your claims. "
One should not doubt this is your intention, but I will assume that you are writing in good faith. My impression is that Wikipedians are generally intelligent and dilligent, and they are not so easily "befuddled" by such "Rovian tactics" as yours. Accusing Wikipedians of being somehow disgruntled with your company is just plain straight old FUD. It seems more likely that you are financially motivated to have no "ungood" information in your famous/infamous organization's article. In the meantime, this article should be returned to its original pre-Gracenote Spin Rewrite version. If you would like to have changes made such as adding product information, please do so. But please, please do not delete the facts, and Scherf, do not mess up the carpet with your dirty, dirty shoes. Kenta 14:29, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
Impartiality?
I won't bother to debate further. Your laymans understanding of law is deeply flawed, as is your knowledge of history and the technology on many points here. I could spend all day explaining every major and minor error in the text that you and (presumably) others have pushed, but even trying to deal with the glaring errors here has been fruitless. So I'll stop trying. I'll end here with a quote from your text:
"Scherf, do not mess up the carpet with your dirty, dirty shoes"
I think this illustrates why people with chips on their shoulder should not write about things of which they are incapable of being impartial. Nobody who knows the actual history, not the /. history or the myths created by crazy things posted here and there on the web, often in "fringe" publications, but the actual history, would accuse me of being "dirty". If that's the way you feel, you have no business posting here. Leave it to someone who is capable of looking at both sides, and is not afraid to have their opinion changed by facts that contradict their unwavering beliefs. To live up to what you seem to be saying about me, you (and others) should recuse yourself from further editorial responsibility. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Scherf (talk • contribs) 22:23, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
- Please stop editing topics in which you are personally involved. Misplaced Pages policy is very clear on this. If you have a problem with the content of this article, please suggest changes on the Talk page, backing them up with sources. AlistairMcMillan 22:35, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with AlistairMcMIllan. If this article is missing information, or is incorrect, Scherf, you should point it out on this discussion page and let the Misplaced Pages community make the decision to edit. I have tried to add back in impartial information based on your edits and comments. Since you obviously are not an impartial party to Gracenote, you should follow Misplaced Pages policy.Fatandhappy 03:58, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
Compromise
Hello. I see there seems to be a contentious dispute going on here. I have left a little note on the talk pages of everyone who seems to be involved reminding them to stay cool. I would like to try to help resolve this dispute. I'm not real familiar with the music industry, and today is the first time I've heard of Gracenote, so you will all have to be very patient with me and help me understand. I've read the comments here on the talk page, and dug through the page history. It looks to me like some of the differences aren't really as big as you seem to think they are.
I've created a subpage in my userspace and copied the text of this article as of this, the current version when I first looked at the page. I've begun comparing it to past versions and trying to work out a neutral, balanced version that I hope everyone can agree on. I haven't gotten very far yet because I'm trying to be meticulous. So far I've only worked on the first paragraph. The page is here. Please look at my changes to that first paragraph and tell me what you think. Let's avoid editing this main article for a few days or a week or so, and work on that temporary page. Let's keep discussion on this main talk page however. When we're all happy with the temporary page, let's copy it back to the main page.
Some of the changes I made to the first paragraph;
- changed which maintains and licenses to which is known for maintaining and licensing. Some of User:Scherf's versions indicated that that is not the only thing they do. However, it is what they are primarily known for. Other things they do can (and should!) be listed elsewhere in the article.
- accessible online over the Internet is redundant. I eliminated online.
- Took out "such as iTunes" because when I think of a computer software application I think of something like Windows MediaPlayer. When I think of iTunes, I think of an iPod. It seemed like an unnecesarily confusing way of phrasing that sentence, and I didn't think it needed an example.
- Got rid of the list of competitors in that same sentence. Scherf is right that they are getting undue weight in the intro; but what struck me even more then that is the fact that having them in there made that sentence unreadably confusing. I left one example of another service that does the same thing, All Media Guide's AMG LASSO. I think it is appropriate to note that Gracenote is not the only company providing this service, and to name their primary competitor (but ONLY one competitor). Let me know if I picked the wrong one to leave in.
I think that's all the changes I made. Let me know what you think of those changes, and my idea for working towards a compromise. I won't be working on this article any more tonight, but I'll be back tomorrow. ~ ONUnicorn (Talk / Contribs) 20:36, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
- It may technically qualify as NPOV, but the emphasis seems wrong for true NPOV. First, neither Gracenote nor any other competitor is mentioned in the first paragraph of the All Media Guide article - the assymetry is telling. Second, of a bunch of other corporate pages I just checked (Xerox, IBM, Microsoft - at least as controversial, Halliburton - ditto, IMDB - similar story of user-created data becoming commericalized over some contributor objections) most do not refer to major controversies or competitors in their first paragraphs. I can't find a "corporate biography" style guide, but the proposal Misplaced Pages:Articles about ongoing enterprises is surely on point here. Disclaimer: I am an employee of Gracenote, so I will not be doing any editing of this article myself, painful though it is to read it. Isotropy 01:48, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
Dear Kenta (whoever you are)
If your goal is to provide an impartial, factual and accurate information about Gracenote, then why do you, in addition to making edits which are inaccurate and not at all supported by any facts, deprive the users of Misplaced Pages to read the court rulings for themselves? If you are adament on your position, then why do you feel the need to remove all information relating to the litigation section which is clearly public information??? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.238.229.18 (talk • contribs)
- The link to the Gracenote legal site with legal documents is available on the bottom of the page. The document as it stands is well documented. I noticed that you not only changed the legal section, but also changed and deleted a large portion of the rest of the article, as well, so I have reverted it. Fatandhappy 14:05, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
POV Edits by Sooahs
I reverted the article back to the last version made by Euchiasmus. user:Sooahs, a Gracenote employee, has made large deletions which skew the article's POV to benefit the company. If there are specific factual discrepancies with the article, please discuss in the talk page. I agree with the protection of this page. Employees of the company should not edit directly, but should make comments on the discussion page. Fatandhappy 22:05, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
- Regardless of factual accuracy, the current article is biased in its overall structure because of emphasis. See my talk page entry above (under "Compromise") for examples from the first paragraph of POV. Sooah's first paragraph (which you reverted) was closer to NPOV than the current one, although some later paragraphs had more POV than is appropriate. Can you please explain what was POV about at least Sooah's first paragraph? By the way, why are you reverting changes, rather than trying to improve them? I understand that you feel that any contribution by a Gracenote employee is suspect, but are blanket reversions really the best response? Please take another look at "Working Towards NPOV" in Misplaced Pages:Etiquette and rethink your approach to this article. Isotropy 02:19, 11 November 2006 (UTC)
- Thank you for being civil, and for acknowledging Sooah's version of the article had significant POV issues. The reason I reverted the article to the the version immediately prior to Sooah's version is simply because Sooah had reverted the entire article to the version Sooah originally rewrote (in its entirety) previously. As you noted, blanket reversions are not the best response, especially by someone who may be biased, such as an employee of the company that is the subject of the article. I merely reverted to the version that others had been editing before Sooahs reverted to the October 26th version. Personally, I have tried to avoid editing the article since user:Scherf, another Gracenote employee, left me a note on my user talk page two times which I felt to be a personal attack, as well as offensive and insulting. Other, non-Gracenote employee Wikipedians may edit this article at will and remove any POV, if in fact there is any POV issue. Wholesale reversions by employees of the company are not appropriate, and this has been noted several times by a number of users. Please ask that Sooahs (and others at Gracenote) read Misplaced Pages:Etiquette and other Misplaced Pages policy pages at the office when you meet. Additionally, can you please note where any factual errors occur in the article? It would make it easier to note these errors so that others may edit to correct the discrepancies. The "structure" of the article is something evolved over a period of years and through the efforts of number of Misplaced Pages editors, viewing Gracenote from the outside - the way that Misplaced Pages funtions best. Fatandhappy 12:54, 12 November 2006 (UTC)
Is it OK for Gracenote Employees to Edit ONUnicorn's Sample Page?
Because that would really improve the climate around here, and give us a way to make our point without pissing people off.Isotropy 02:31, 11 November 2006 (UTC)
- That's one reason why I started it; but I didn't think anyone had paid any attention to my comment at all. ~ ONUnicorn 14:55, 13 November 2006 (UTC)
- I reverted Scherf's reversion to the latest Voice of All version. Scherf had reverted the entire article back to an old version posted by Sooahs. This is frustrating since a Gracenote employee (founder?) made the revisions immediately after Voice of All unprotected the page. SteveSmurf 00:08, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed, this is frustrating. Just reverted the article to fix user:Scherf's revisionism which deleted most of the original article and replaced with POV a company press-release type of article. User:Scherf has been requested numerous times to point out the inaccuracies in the article, but has yet to do so. I am at a loss to identify the vandalism to which Scherf refers. Fatandhappy 15:59, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'm sorry, I'm not interested in a Gracenote page that has numerous factual errors, and contains gratuitous negativity. Fatandhappy can say all he/she/it wants about being civil and how blanket reversions are bad. That does not explain why Fatandhappy and others have continually reverted all text anyone adds here to correct errors in a supported way, but just doesn't happen to be negative. They are determined to keep negative text in place simply because they are detractors of Gracenote. It makes little sense for Gracenote employees to be barred from posting here when people from the opposite extreme (much more extreme in the negative than Gracenote supporters have been in the positive) are free to perpetuate negative commentary at will. I do not accept that as valid Misplaced Pages policy, and the guidelines clearly support my view. As long as people with negative POV problems continue to post here, I am obliged to do the same. To Fatandhappy: Pay all the lip service to the rules that you like, Fatandhappy, but you have consistently reverted things that were supported with links to facts, while in your comments claiming they were not. You have also reverted corrections to logical impossibilities, also while inexplicably claiming they were unsupported. I have filed a request for mediation for the Gracenote article with you listed as one of the requested participants, and you posted negative comments to the discussion in an apparent attempt to scuttle the mediation. You have shown that you cannot edit the Gracenote article in good faith, and your apparent rejection of mediation is further evidence that you are not interested in being impartial. You should recuse yourself from further editing of this page, as should Kenta and others who have engaged in negative, nonfactual editing. If you are truly impartial, how about adding links to Gracenote in all of the competitor pages you and others have injected here? And put those links at the top of the link list, instead of links to their own websites, like you have done here. Also, remove all mention of those competitors' products by name (or at all) like you have done here. How about consolidating all of the AMG pages into one page, especially the ones devoted to entire products alone? How about listing all of the legal actions they have been involved in, especially the ones they started and the ones they lost. AMG has had its share, which is how it got its reputation for shady acquisition of data. Look it up if you are really, truly interested in impartiality. And once you have done all of these things, then you will have shown your impartiality (but not necessarily your ability to deal in facts). Until then, please cut the facade you are trying to put up here in the discussion. At least I am not hiding who I am and what my goals are. Steve Scherf 02:28, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- And that is the issue. Misplaced Pages is not a free advertising service for your company. If you don;t like the criticism, tough. It has sources. If you've got an issue with that, you should be filing complaints against the websites that the statements originate from, not the people who are quoting them here to provide a balanced article. As for some bias, personally, I had no idea what gracenote was when I first came here. The article is only 'overly negative' in your biased eyes. You may find it hard to take criticism, but tough, this is an encyclopedia that provides ALL VERIFIABLE POINTS OF VIEW, not just a corporate endorsed point of view about their product. As for competitors being mentioned, the only way you could possibly be concerned about it is if it was stealing potential business away when people view the article, meaning that you are using it as an advert which Wiki is not. As an encyclopedia, we are supposed to provide links to related subjects in a 'if you found this interesting, you may also be interested in reading about' kind of fashion. The Kinslayer 10:09, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- I wouldn't give a rat's you-know-what about criticism here, if it were only factual. I have pointed out numerous inconsistencies here, but nobody seems to care. They prefer the negative "facts" over the "positive" facts, because, gee, we don't want these Gracenote people to benefit from this page... Here's a little something for you to think about. We don't care about advertising, and this is hardly the place we'd go if we wanted to advertise. The reputation of Misplaced Pages would quash any such desire anyway, even if it were something we wanted. What we DO want is something that does not spread misinformation about Gracenote, which this page does. When we have people coming to us asking, "I thought XYZ, but it says something else on Misplaced Pages", it's a problem. And as a person who seems interested in the quality and improvement of Misplaced Pages, I would think that you would be interested in fixing those things. The text you and others keep putting up, apparently only because, god forbid, my text shouldn't stand no matter what, is CHOCK FULL of errors and logical inconsistencies. For example, why, oh why, does this statement continue to persist in your edit: "commercialization of CDDB by Gracenote also caused friction with its former licensees"? I have said here at least once that this statement makes no sense, because before the commercialization of CDDB there were no licensees - how could there have been?! So how could commercializing CDDB have angered these nonexistent licensees?! Come to your senses. You are reacting emotionally to the fact that some person with a perceived POV bias is posting, and you are inexplicably willing to blindly accept obviously broken text as a result of that emotional response. USE YOUR BRAIN. I would rather not spend even a millisecond more here fighting with you people, but there seems to be nobody willing to actually check up on the factual issues here. I am perplexed why links to things that have been proven to be incomplete and misleading, such as the link to the "summarization" on Becker's page, continue to persist in your edits. I am guessing that you are not a lawyer and do not understand (or have not even bothered to read) the 7 legal documents we provided links to, but if you spend the time to understand them (or to have a lawyer explain them to you) you will see what I mean. What about the statement that large licensees like Microsoft dropped Gracenote? Where is that statement supported anywhere on the web? Did you read the Wired article linked to from the page? How about the full transcript of the Wired interview also linked to? If you had read those, you would understand that Microsoft was never a licensee, so the claim that they dropped Gracenote is totally impossible and false. Microsoft initially used third parties (who in turn used a wide variety of data sources, sometimes their own hand-entered data), not CDDB/Gracenote for its "Deluxe CD Player" product. And when they stopped supporting that application and rolled out Windows Media Player with CD lookup support, they used their own service. And in the same statement it talks about MusicMatch no longer using Gracenote. Never mind that MusicMatch is now Yahoo, and Yahoo is a Gracenote licensee; so that statement is misleading at best, because they are now, in effect, a licensee. Perhaps that statement is meant to be historical, but that's already discussed in the legal section, and they no longer exist as a company. I could go on, but as I've said before, I don't have all day and there is an error in just about every other sentence. You people are CLUELESS on this topic, and as a result are spreading misinformation in a manner unjustly harmful to Gracenote, and indirectly to Misplaced Pages as well. You may not care about the former, but you should care about the latter. Spend some time looking at the facts and see if perhaps the version supported by msooahs, myself and a few others here (whom I do not actually know) might have a bit of wisdom for you. You might also pay a bit of attention to the overall tone and impartiality, because the version you have been pushing has worse POV problems than the one I support. Look back in the discussion here a bit and you will see that the intro text we support was judged by at least one editor here to be more neutral than the one you and Fatandhappy have been pushing. Also, if you spend a little time looking way back in the edit history, you will see blanket reversions by the people you're supporting, with misleading and irrelevant comments, way before this edit war started. It didn't matter if edits were small or large, nor did it matter if they were supported with links to supporting information, they would revert it with misleading statements of "unverifiable". Fatandhappy is the king of falsely crying "unverifiable", and it's the bad faith actions of this and other editors that has led to the problems here. Before you or others cast your lot with them, why not think about what I've said here a bit first? Steve Scherf 22:01, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'm sorry, I'm not interested in a Gracenote page that has numerous factual errors, and contains gratuitous negativity. Fatandhappy can say all he/she/it wants about being civil and how blanket reversions are bad. That does not explain why Fatandhappy and others have continually reverted all text anyone adds here to correct errors in a supported way, but just doesn't happen to be negative. They are determined to keep negative text in place simply because they are detractors of Gracenote. It makes little sense for Gracenote employees to be barred from posting here when people from the opposite extreme (much more extreme in the negative than Gracenote supporters have been in the positive) are free to perpetuate negative commentary at will. I do not accept that as valid Misplaced Pages policy, and the guidelines clearly support my view. As long as people with negative POV problems continue to post here, I am obliged to do the same. To Fatandhappy: Pay all the lip service to the rules that you like, Fatandhappy, but you have consistently reverted things that were supported with links to facts, while in your comments claiming they were not. You have also reverted corrections to logical impossibilities, also while inexplicably claiming they were unsupported. I have filed a request for mediation for the Gracenote article with you listed as one of the requested participants, and you posted negative comments to the discussion in an apparent attempt to scuttle the mediation. You have shown that you cannot edit the Gracenote article in good faith, and your apparent rejection of mediation is further evidence that you are not interested in being impartial. You should recuse yourself from further editing of this page, as should Kenta and others who have engaged in negative, nonfactual editing. If you are truly impartial, how about adding links to Gracenote in all of the competitor pages you and others have injected here? And put those links at the top of the link list, instead of links to their own websites, like you have done here. Also, remove all mention of those competitors' products by name (or at all) like you have done here. How about consolidating all of the AMG pages into one page, especially the ones devoted to entire products alone? How about listing all of the legal actions they have been involved in, especially the ones they started and the ones they lost. AMG has had its share, which is how it got its reputation for shady acquisition of data. Look it up if you are really, truly interested in impartiality. And once you have done all of these things, then you will have shown your impartiality (but not necessarily your ability to deal in facts). Until then, please cut the facade you are trying to put up here in the discussion. At least I am not hiding who I am and what my goals are. Steve Scherf 02:28, 28 November 2006 (UTC)