(Continued from 'Does "notability" apply to the content of articles? -- Proposed add to guidelines: "N/A to article-contents"',above.)
This is what was added to the guidelines 21:22, 20 February 2007 by Lonewolf BC, but then deleted from them 03:32, 21 February 2007 by Centrx. It's of two parts: The upper bit went at the end of the introduction of the guidelines, and the lower part was a last section of the guidelines.
Centrx's reason for deleting it (copied from "Problems with recent changes", above): Also, as explained above, notability is relevant to whether article content is included. The notability of the information and the reason for the notability of the subject is explicitly referenced in WP:BLP and WP:RS, and otherwise is the major factor in whether information is included in an article and how it is organized. —Centrx?talk • 19:38, 20 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Notability guidelines do not specifically pertain to the content within an article. For content issues, see verifiability, reliable sources, and trivia.
Notability guidelines pertain to article topics, but do not specifically limit content within articles.
Notability guidelines pertain to article topics but do not specifically limit content within articles. For issues of article content, see especially the guidelines on verifiability, reliable sources and trivia.I think that is still not immune to the pig-headed, but it would be better than nothing. -- Lonewolf BC 23:09, 25 February 2007 (UTC-8)
-- Lonewolf BC 09:56, 3 March 2007 (UTC-8)
I will be posting this chart at Wikipedia talk:Notability/overview, where I hope that many people will join in a discussion of the bigger picture of the comprehensive notability infrastructure. --Kevin Murray 14:14, 23 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Timothy Noah of online news magazine Slate just published an article about Wikipedia's notability guidelines. I thought it might be of interest to editors discussing this guideline. http://www.slate.com/id/2160222 · j e r s y k o talk · 13:22, 24 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Well with the Slate article, and the Washington Post article, we now have two independent reliable sources, so "Wikipedia notability" is now officially notable! Dhaluza 16:33, 26 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Yikes, there are so many circular arguments to this.
Having now read Noah's articles (as well as hearing him on NPR's "Day to Day" this morning -- see Talk:Timothy_Noah for article links, I see his point. "Notability" by its very nature is subjective. When enough people agree that someone or something is "notable," that's just a matter of a bunch of subjectivities getting together and taking a vote, & more often than not even their votes about "notability" is based on some kind of privileging. E.g., in the past (& often in the present), people couldn't be considered notable by whoever had the power to enforce the notability standards of the time unless they were white, or male, or spoke the right language, or knew how to read & write. (Language & literacy having very much to do with an article on a particular notable person I'm working on right now.)
In practice on Wikipedia, I've recently come across a couple of AfD discussions that revolved around notability. One involved someone I personally know (or knew), who was a political candidate deemed by many as not being "notable" unless she won her election (for U.S. House from Alaska), in spite of other achievements in her past. Okay, if you wanna look it up, here she is. Most of those who deemed her not notable were from other parts of the country, and knew little about Alaska politics, nor certainly about her local activities that made her very notable indeed to Alaskans, whether they like her or not. Including me, & not just because I used to know her. She got two AfD discussions, the first resulting in her deletion, the second in her bio being returned to Wikipedia. I was not part of these discussions -- I came across them afterwards. But it was ridiculous. How does someone not winning an election then mean they aren't "notable"? Is it the votes that make them notable, or not? What about their other achievements? It was that close to this person -- who a lot of people in Alaska would consider notable, as so would a lot of Native Americans -- having her bio removed based on "nobody outside Alaska except a few Indians knows or cares about this person." What hooey.
The other AfD, involving an Alaska academic, involved notability not so much because the guy is not notable, but because the original editor didn't provide enough information & sourcing. But poor editing & sourcing is an altogether different problem then whether or not someone is "notable." This AfD should be concluding in the next couple of days, & looks like he will be retained, mainly just because of significant work over the past couple of days (I'll pat myself on the back) to provide some real info.
Whether or not "notability" guidelines are retained in some form, (1) they need to be fixed somehow; (2) editors need to distinguish what the real problems with an article are before marking them AfD -- it's often not really a question of "notability" but of a lousily researched, lousily written, lousily source article about someone/something that does really count; (3) editors debating an AfD need to be mindful about their own biases & limitations that comes naturally out of them being, always, subjective persons with limits to their knowledge.
Okay, there's my two cents. -- Yksin 13:37, 27 February 2007 (UTC-8)
IMHO a town/suburb/neighbourhood such as Gladstone Park, Chicago or East Gosford, New South Wales are notable, yet I doubt the majority of them are the subject of multiple, non-trivial works. My personal guidelines for notability are...will someone search for this article in its own right? The answer to this question should also be the same answer to the question should this article be on Wikipedia? Todd661 19:08, 24 February 2007 (UTC-8)
The proponents of Wikipedia:Notability (academics) are trying to claim that this has been accepted as a guideline. Please join the discussion at Wikipedia talk:Notability (academics). I think that the primary criterion is sufficient to deal with Academics, but if further "rules" are needed, they could be condensed and included at People. There is little new and less which is valid. --Kevin Murray 11:40, 26 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Wikipedia:Notability (films) has been nominated for deletion. Please visit the deletion nomination to discuss this nomination. --Kevin Murray 16:53, 26 February 2007 (UTC-8)
There is currently no requirement in this guideline that the sources used to denote and verify notability should be in the English language. Should this be an essential requirement for an English-language encyclopaedia? The question arose because I came across an article on the Sabah Tshung Tsin Secondary School which is currently awaiting assessment. There is one reference and three external links in the article but they are all in Chinese. As a non-Chinese speaker it is impossible for me to verify the content of the article though I would imagine that it is reasonably accurate. Dahliarose 08:07, 27 February 2007 (UTC-8)
I added a sentence in discussing independence to alleviate the concerns of the proponents of Wikipedia:Notability (news). It seems that page really boils down to a simple sentence:
Please see what you think and let's see whether this is reasonable. --Kevin Murray 16:18, 27 February 2007 (UTC-8)
It is laudable that we try to make a change here (in conjunction with making WP:NOTNEWS a good essay) rather than create a whole new guideline, but please please please remember: NEWS stories are tricky buggers to nail down. NO MATTER WHERE we try to draw the line of "multiple coverage over multiple days" there will be exceptions. I'd be happier seeing something along the lines of "WP:NOT] a news archive" added to WP:NOT, simply because it is (or should be) part of the core definition of what Wikipedia aims to be and what it shouldn't aim to be (the same with NOT dicef and NOT directory). Wikinews is a better place for any and all news stories regardless, until such time as they have become part of the lasting historical record, which encyclopedias can then handle. It's quicker to explain with two examples why news stories are so problematic:
Example 1. A (non-notable) person is killed. After a two week man-hunt a (non-notable) suspect is arrested and charged. A month later his trial begins. It takes 6 months, after which he is convicted. Two weeks later he is sentenced. He appeals his conviction and the appeal takes a few more months before he is acquitted or the sentence is upheld. All of these points in the process are covered by the news media, giving "multiple coverage over multiple days".
Example 2. A civil war breaks out but is quickly suppressed by the government. From start to end the war takes less than 6 months. It is likely to become part of the historical record and has received "multiple coverage over multiple days".
So Ex 1 receives "longer" coverage than Ex 2, but it is still just a run-of-the-mill murder case no matter which way you cut it. The length of time of news coverage is NOT proportionate with the notability or "encyclopedicness" of the event. Trying to nail down a rule based on "multiple coverage over multiple days" is fraught with difficulty, which is why WP:NOTNEWS has a completely different set of criteria, based on news events having to "transcend being mere news" as a measure of their encyclopedic notability. Zunaid©® 05:44, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Again, is there any example of a topic that only has "one substantial source" but no other reliable sources? —Centrx?talk • 19:55, 27 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Centrx, I have listed several examples in answer to this question before. The most notable example of single sourced articles are geographic places using census data. There is consensus that all towns or villages, no matter how small, are notable and deserve comprehensive coverage in Wikipedia. This guideline is not the place to debate that issue. We simply need to make sure this guideline is consistent with that practice. Dhaluza 02:19, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
I added a sentence that I think conveys what was meant by this, at least it fits with the examples: the "at least one substantial work" indicates prospective notability, but is not in itself sufficient to demonstrate actual notability. With the examples: the historical military figure has these obscure works (they exist, there are multiple sources about the topic), but they not currently known to us; the towns have articles with relatively weak sourcing but there do exist good sources, generally. —Centrx?talk • 16:48, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
One editor has tagged as "Rejected" or proposed on the talk pages the deleting of a whole series of guidelines or proposals, including WP:MALL, WP:CONG, WP:NOTNEWS , Wikipedia:Notability (royalty) and WP:SCHOOL and has also created a MFD to delete Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Wikipedia:Notability (films). I would to make sure all interested editors have an opportunity to contribute to the discussions. Is it sufficient for the editor seeking to tag the material as rejected to so note on the discussion pages, and just assume that those who are interested will have watch-listed the pages? Should notice be given at a forum such as Village Pump or Community Portal for such a radical pruning of guidelines? Edison 07:15, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
I made some changes to the section titled "Rationale for requiring a level of notability," including changing the section title to "Why Wikipedia has a notability policy." Since I'm not sure that they meet the consensus standard, however, I rolled back my changes for the time being pending comment by others. You can read my version at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Notability&oldid=111589127
If I don't see strong objection to this change, I'll go ahead and reinstate it in a few days. --Sheldon Rampton 07:45, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
As per: User:Kevin Murray:
This page appears to never have been stable. Looking at the archive history, people have argued this page since its inception.
The very first entry on this talk page probably sounds familar:
Archive two Wikipedia_talk:Notability/Archive_2#Consensus
Archive three Wikipedia_talk:Notability/Archive_3#Should notability be a guideline?
Archive four Wikipedia_talk:Notability/Archive_4#This_should_stay_a_guideline...
Archive five, six and seven: Nov 2006–Jan 2006 a large portion of the discussion is about this being a guideline or policy.
In fact the history of this page has always been controversial, with, it appears, no real consensus. See Wikipedia:Notability/Historical/Importance and Wikipedia:Importance which was the original names of this article.
Travb (talk) 09:08, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
I referenced earlier why the notability guideline is not shrubbery or CREEPy, and Uncle G does exceptionally well at this in User:Uncle G/On notability. But let me present my example.
I can write an article about my car which satisfies all core policies. Public records are available containing vehicles, and the car was once involved in an accident, resulting in a police report. All of this information is neutral (satisfying NPOV), is not my original research (as it's compiled by government agencies or was written by a police officer), is attributable to publically-available sources (government and police records), and goes beyond a directory entry due to description of the accident (satisfying WP:NOT). What prevents this type of garbage article is this notability guideline. There are countless subjects which are verifiable, attributable, can be written about in a neutral manner, and yet are not encyclopedically suitable. It is entirely acceptable, and even necessary, for a project intended as an encyclopedia to limit its scope. Seraphimblade Talk to me Please review me! 15:50, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8) If you wrote an article about the make and model of your car, that would be reasonable. But to write an article about the the individual vehicle would be absurd. We don't need the crutch of Notability to see that. We can say that some people are suitable subjects for an article, but most are not. We can also say that models of cars are suitable, but individual vehicles are not. So we can define what is absurd, without setting an arbitrary white-line standard. Dhaluza 16:05, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
On 26 May 2006 I was indefinetly booted for daring to question the blissful wikipedia "trip to Abilene" which User:Dhaluza igeneously aluded to above. I am NOT going to make that same mistake twice. I am also not going to focus on the forest, because most people (including myself) seem hardwired to see only the trees. I will take User:Dhaluza advice, and add the disputed tag, as a comprimise for now to those who believe this should remain as a policy. User:Seraphimblade As far as User:Seraphimblade eliquent argument, thank you for teaching me more Latin. reductio ad absurdum is not a term I had heard of before. I was simply going to be less courteous and call your argument a Straw man argument, but reductio ad absurdum sounds more poetic. User:Seraphimblade, in his last two sentences explains exactly why we don't need WP:NN, by quoting other policy which would cover his eliquent "reductio ad absurdum" argument, I quote:
User:Seraphimblade not once, but twice states that WP:NN should remain policy because it is commonly used to delete articles. In my experience, this is not something to be showboat about. In my experience I have seen partisan wikipedians, many who contibute little actual content to wikipedia, use WP:NN as a POV weapon to remove articles which do not match their own narrow POV. Until this issue is addressed on the actual policy page, I will continue to oppose this "trip to Abilene" policy. Wikipedians, particuarly in my expereince POV warriors, actively promote WP:NN, but what about WP:NOT? Wikipedia is not a battleground, (which WP:NN is being used to promote) and Wikipedia is not a paper encyclopedia? If this entry needs be shortened as per Wikipedia:Talk page guidelines please let me know.Travb (talk) 16:48, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Centrx writes “get consensus on talk /before/ downgrade” Why? You’ve got it backwards. Consensus is required to upgrade to guideline. Without consensus, it should not be maintained as a guideline, as the previous consensus was a false consensus. SmokeyJoe 16:53, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Note to Travb: Please stop refactoring the comments. Not only is it annoying, but you are disrupting the flow of the discussion by breaking who each person is responding to. --Farix (Talk) 17:11, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
May I suggest that the dispute over the disputed tag is prima facia evidence that the page is disputed. May I also suggest that perhaps removing the tag and sweeping the dispute under the rug is actually fueling the dispute, and that putting the tag on the article might be the best way to calm the situation and get the discussion moving in a more constructive direction? Dhaluza 18:22, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Looking back on this page, I see a remarkable number of typographic mistakes by well-respected and generally sensible editors. The frequency is inversely proportional to the length of time between postings. A reasonable hypothesis to explain this little piece of OR is that this discussion is moving too fast for people to exercise their common sense.
The matters being discussed here affect basic WP editing, and will affect the acceptability of present and future articles. The discussion on this page affects number of other pages, and similar matters there affect this. It amounts to a constitutional revision, though not quite to a new constitution. It is not practical for relatively small number of people to do this a a relatively great hurry and produce something that will have general acceptance. Perhaps it would be sensible to wait a while at this point, and then find a systematic way of proceeding. And only then discuss it point by point and try to get a wider participation. If things go as they seem to, I expect to find AfD arguments saying: Yes, thats what it says in the policy page, but it doesn't make sense and never had the consensus claimed for it. I propose a wikiconstitutional break until the middle of March, during which time coherent position papers can be prepared and posted, and then another 2 weeks for them to be read and understood before the discussion resumes on April 1. And then I have a radical idea, which I only dare suggest because I'm a relative newbie here: each participant in the discussion be limited to one post per day.
When a discussion reaches the point that everyone agrees it is all totally disputed, but disputes the words to use to say it, it is time to take a recess.DGG 20:45, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Note that I was perfectly civil and did not say anything about their character or their person, only the manner and effect of the deletion of notability guidelines, which disrupts the functioning of Wikipedia as an encyclopedia. Edison 06:46, 2 March 2007 (UTC-8)
GOAL: Let's try to brainstorm a better WP:Notability within 10 days, using the present text as a starting point. A notice has been added to the Community Portal to bring new editors into this process.
Note some comments have been moved to rebuttal per instructions above
Discussion of Nifboy 10:05, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Rebuttal to Brianyoumans 22:14, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Rebuttal to Brianyoumans 22:54, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Rebuttal to Black Falcon 22:24, 28 February 2007 (UTC-8)
Rebuttal to Neier 04:44, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Rebuttal to Farix (Talk) 04:40, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Reply to Seraphimblade 04:50, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Rebuttal of point made by DGG 11:47, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Partial rebuttal to Farix 04:40, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Rebuttal to point raised by Edison: You have cited County Roads again as an example of something that should not be notable, why? Perhaps you have not worked on geographic subjects. Consensus at AfD supports notability for all towns and villages, no matter how small. The corollary from this is that significant roads that connect several of these towns are also notable, because it is necessary to mention them in a comprehensive article about each town. So the USROADS project has sensibly decided that State and County roads in the US generally meet this requirement, and it is better to have comprehensive coverage of the subject, rather than debate notability of the few marginal examples. So I think this is an excellent example of why a narrowly constructed authoritative Notability guideline misses the mark in a non-trivial number of areas. We should not force these projects to WP:IAR to build an encyclopedia. Dhaluza 04:06, 2 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Majorly's protection of the page seems unwarranted. The excited status dispute has been contained to tags, and there are non-contentious incremental improvements waiting to be made.
I would change:
"A topic is notable if it has been the subject of at least one substantial or multiple, non-trivial published works from sources that are reliable and independent of the subject and of each other.
To
A topic is notable if it has been the subject of substantial coverage by one or more secondary sources that are reliable and independent of the subject and of each other.
SmokeyJoe 03:33, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
I disagree. I was going to recommend the page for protection myself this morning, but then I didn't have to because it was already done. We couldn't even agree on how to tag the article, much less what to do with the content. I think it's time for everyone to take a time-out. Dhaluza 13:04, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
As per WP:Consensus:
"Silence is consensus" i.e., no silence = no consensus.
Several editors have argued on Wikipedia:Notability that there is a clear consensus (silence) about:
But the edit history of Wikipedia:Notability, the talk page of Wikipedia:Notability, ***, ****, shows there has never been consensus (silence) about Wikipedia:Notability.
I would respectfully ask that the editors who argue that there is "clear consensus" about Wikipedia:Notability please stop immediately. Based on the history and the lack of silence around Wikipedia:Notability, the "clear consensus" argument is dubious and misleading.
At the very least, can we all agree that there has never been silence about Wikipedia:Notability?
HISTORY OF Wikipedia:Notability
Travb (talk) 12:45, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Travb claims that WP:Consensus says "silence is consensus." He infers that without silence there is not consensus. I searched WP:Consensus and did not find anywhere that it says that. What I see in that page is that there can be consensus even with a minority complaining loudly. It only refers to "silence" in terms of a phrase added and not objected to implying that others consent to the change. Consent to a change is not the same as consensus for a guideline or policy. In a world of deletionists, inclusionists, and anarchists there can be no requirement for absence of oppisition for something to be a guideline. It only has to be a statement of observed practice, which often boils down to what get deleted or kept in AFDs so far as issues of notability and attribution go. Edison 14:34, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
The point has been raised above that this Notability guideline was marked as a guideline out of process. The only relevant policy I can find is in WP:POLICY which states that guidelines are "authorized by consensus." The first application of the guideline tag I find in the page history was 09:04, 23 September 2006[11] which was reverted at 20:55[12] and immediately restored at 21:02[13]. It was tagged as a proposal again at 12:20, 27 September 2006[14] and immediately reverted at 13:33 [15] followed by several more reverts. The dispute over the guideline tag reoccurred frequently after that (but I won't clutter this discussion with all the diffs).
So, based on my quick check of the history, it appears the argument that this may not have properly achieved consensus as a guideline may have merit, which affects the discussion on how to move forward. If my analysis is incorrect, please post additional details below, but please focus on the topic at hand (if you want to comment generally, please do so in another thread). I note that the editors who have placed the guideline tag are still party to the discussion (although the original objecting editors apparently are not) so perhaps they can fill us in on how we got where we are. Dhaluza 19:08, 1 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Articles on non-notable subjects are frequently nominated for Proposed Deletion and Articles for Deletion, and the article's merits are discussed, assessed and frequently ultimately deleted via those processes, as can be seen through precedents.
Notability or lack thereof are subjective, but both are valid arguments in discussions such as on WP:AFD, as well as for the creation of subject-specific guidelines.
Hi.
Perhaps maybe we should have a Wikipedia:Encyclopedicity guideline/policy instead. We've only defined what is not encyclopedic, not what is. This seems like a superior alternative to notability, since for one it does not carry the connotations of "fame", "I heard about it", etc. but rather of "what is suitable for an encyclopedia", which makes a whole lot of sense. There is presently a redirect at this page to a boiled-down WP:NOT, which is not helpful with defining what encyclopedicity is. 74.38.32.195 12:43, 7 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Since this page has been edit protected for a relatively long time now, it is time to decide how to proceed. As outlined in the original straw poll discussion thread, a wide range of options were originally presented, with a follow-up poll needed using a narrower set of options based on the results of the original poll. As the original poll showed that this guideline did not have broad consensus, and the "Discuss" option had the least support, two basic choices remain:
Although some editors suggested deleting and possibly salting this page, those options should be held for a follow-up discussion only if the guideline is rejected. A number of editors also suggested the "rebuild" option, which was associated with the proposal tag {{proposal}}; but again, this option should be held for a follow-up discussion if the page remains active, and a proposed resolution of the dispute is produced.
Please indicate your choice below as Disputed or Historical, and add brief comments supporting your choice. As before, please limit your comments to how to proceed with this particular page only, and make general or extended comments in another appropriate thread.
--Dhaluza 17:17, 7 March 2007 (UTC-8)
i am writing about Peter Anderson, and it keeps getting deleted. He is real!
Jodie kennedy 21:55, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
The above topic is endemic of the problems caused by the name "notability". What we're really looking at here is "What should we have articles on?" Therefore, I propose moving this guideline to the title "Encyclopedic suitability", since that's the real subject of discussion. Seraphimblade Talk to me Please review me! 19:57, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
If I'm not mistaken, the "encyclopedic suitability" idea fails to address one of the major objections to this guideline/policy/essay. It remains an arbitrary fiat ruling by a small number of editors. Like every other crufty piece of wikilawyering, editors will accept or ignore it as they see fit. I'll probably ignore it insofar as it aims to inform decisions at AFD and DRV. NOT's advice does me, and don't see why it needs anything other than commentary and expansion: When you wonder what should or should not be in an article, ask yourself what a reader would expect to find under the same heading in an encyclopedia. Angus McLellan (Talk) 14:53, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
(indent reset) However, then we simply enforce our own biases. We would not, for example, put our own opinions of George W. Bush in that article, only sourced and verifiable information. We are, in fact, forbidden from doing so by a global policy which applies to every last article we have. In turn, it is possible to globally establish notability in a verifiable manner. We do that through this guideline. The assertion is "This subject is notable." The response is "Very well, show that it has been noted, by people who do not routinely or by requirement do so, and are not affiliated with the subject." Or in short, "Cite your sources to establish that." Seraphimblade Talk to me Please review me! 17:05, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
It is extremely difficult to keep track of this debate. I would like to make two points. First, there really is no hard and fast distinction between primary and secondary sources, as I and others explained above. A lot of the criticism of use of primary sources is really criticism of trivial sources. Second, the real confusion here is because we are different from other encyclopedias. There an expert editor or other expert determines what articles should exist. Then, and only then, are sources identified and an article written. Since we do not determine the need for an article by experts, we need to find another way, but sources are not the answer. That is for the inclusion of material in the article. --Bduke 23:33, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
I disagree with the characterization that my argument does not agree with WP:ATT. I've been heavily involved in creating the entire primary/secondary distinction in Wikipedia. So if you feel that my remarks don't reflect ATT can you specify exactly where so I can address that? A primary source is simply the first published source which asserts a particular fact. Secondary sources never assert independently fundamental new facts except interpretive ones on the primary sources they are discussing. If a paper on physics is presenting a new fact than it's a primary source. If a paper on physics is discussing flaws among four other papers previously published, then it's a secondary source. It's discussing the underlying primary sources. Wjhonson 08:13, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
"Primary sources are documents or people close to the situation you are writing about. An eyewitness account of a traffic accident, and the White House's summary of a president's speech are primary sources."
"A sociologist thesis based on his research of primary sources is a secondary source."
Response to a bunch of stuff since my last comment. It seems that my modern chemistry review article is both a primary and a secondary source at the same time depending whether the author is reporting his own work or criticising others. Also the Bergen encyclopedia is now a tertiary source but it contains what you wanted to ignore as a primary source because it was trivial (details of every street and school in Bergen). The distinctions are not obvious. --Bduke 09:00, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
Given that this thing is approaching half a meg, would anyone object to siccing Werdnabot on it? Anyone archiving by hand is braver than I. Seraphimblade Talk to me Please review me! 17:32, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
The big problem, unfortunately, is that no matter how good a guideline we can make, if nobody follows it and instead sticks to homebrew definitions, it does no good. mike4ty4 00:01, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
Notability is a rather uncommon word in English. It is subjective. It is a term of art Wikipedia editors use to say "worthy of being included here". Recourse to dictionaries for this word will just have one running in circles.
That being said, the idea of notability is the union of two concepts, one objective and the other subjective:
I don't claim this my original insight into editing the Wikipedia. It seems to cover the people, places, and things in hobbies where there might be between 100 and 1000 people involved in the that hobby globally for which there is a good article here already creating the context or a related article for the subject.
I created this as new section because the above sections drifted into verifiability and attribution. patsw 17:42, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
Seraphimblade seems to have hijacked this section for the pragmatic question of "new article" or "merge". I'm speaking to the meta-discussion: i.e. how we discuss among ourselves what "notability" is -- as a point in a continuum from self-evident to all to whim. patsw 22:15, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
We used to talk of whether an article asserted notability. Such comments as "the oldest cricket club in Yorkshire", "the oldest Scout Group in the UK" and "this School is 500 years old" are all assertions of notability and would lead to the article being kept. Impact, superlatives, etc., have a lot to do with whether we cover a subject in its own article, although of course, as the first post in this section says, there are other factors. Seraphimblade, you are still mixing things up. "When there is enough verifiable independent information about that specific subject to make a comprehensive, neutral article about it." is when we write the article. We need to determine before that whether we want the article. The information may be enough and verifiable and independent, but still not worthy of an article. Examples are all the streets in Bergen (well "enough" might be problem for some of them, but certainy not all). We are back to you defining trivial. --Bduke 23:51, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
I am trying to make sense of what the argument is about that has lead to this guideline being protected, and I am lost. Can someone list the main points and what the current thoughts are on these points? Jeepday 12:49, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
Sounds ugly, could we maybe just list the options and address things in stages? Sounds to me like it boils down to two paths. If Choice 1 is true then we don't need to discuss the issues related to Choice 2. If Choice 2 is true then discussing Choice 1 just clouds a complex issue.
Signed Jeepday 00:13, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
Why do we need a higher bar than "can an encylopedia-quality article be written on this topic"? Night Gyr (talk/Oy) 04:44, 7 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Why not aim to be comprehensive anywhere we can meet our standards? Night Gyr (talk/Oy) 07:59, 7 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Actually, I think a better example would be films. Numerous films are released to theaters every year. Many are forgettable, mediocre, insignificant in the scheme of things. But we have articles on them anyway. Why? Because we can cite numerous sources - reviews, box office takings, cast interviews, dvd commentary - that we can synthesize into an encyclopedic article about films that no one will have heard of a hundred years from now. Night Gyr (talk/Oy) 08:06, 7 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Also, I think Sjakkalle hit exactly my point. "it survives on Wikipedia mainly by virtue of being an excellently written article." Excellently written and sourced articles that violate no policy deserve to be kept, even if they cover obscure or local topics.
Isn't this a Reductio ad absurdum where one editor's verifiable fact can be an article without even asserting, much less creating a consensus of worthiness, anticipated Wikipedia reader interest, reliable sources, etc. among other editors in cases where there is a dispute over its inclusion. If Iantresman is correct, how could an article have been deleted for any reason other than its verifiability in the past? patsw 20:19, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
I just found this phrase on a place calling this link "\{\{Notability\}\}":
"If you are familiar with the subject matter, please expand the article to establish its notability, citing reliable sources. If notability cannot be established, the article is more likely to be considered for deletion, per Wikipedia:Guide to deletion. (See also Wikipedia:Notability)"
But I think you mean "more than likely" rather than "more likely" because there is no target for the comparison suggested by "more". Carrionluggage 21:35, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
What's up with all the footnotes? That stuff belongs in the main body of the page. — Omegatron 21:54, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
I was wondering if this is a good way to think about this whole "notability" thing. Notice, at the very beginning of this page (WP:N), we have:
"Notable is defined as "worthy of being noted" or "attracting notice"."
So that's what we start with. Notable will mean just that: worthy of note, or attracting notice. So therefore we need to determine what attracts notice, or what is worthy of making note of. That follows from a simple dictionary definition.
Now, we could see if something is worthy of note, or attracting notice, to see if someone has already made note of it, and how many people or other entities have done so, and in what forms, and in how much there is. For example, a couple of people discussing in a bar at 9am some girl they saw is too trivial (for one, it is a very short mention, for another, it could not possibly be WP:ATTributed to any reliable, hard sources). But several meaty articles being published in high-quality academic journals about some hypothesis from multiple people/teams, something that's been covered continually on the news, had TV programs devoted to it, lots of press material, etc. would be much more significant, thus "worthy of note", or "attracting notice", hence it would be "notable" and suitable for inclusion in WP (provided of course it meets all other relevant policies).
Thus we could then start with something:
"Two people discussing some X in a bar at 9am does not establish X as being sufficiently notable for Wikipedia."
"Continued coverage in quantity in well-known channels like academic journals and the mass-media of some X is likely to establish X as having sufficient notability for Wikipedia."
Of course, these are two extremes, and a good bar will have to be somewhere in the middle. Personally, I think the criterion on WP:N is a good start even if it's not perfect and needs some revising, since it attempts to measure how well something "attracts notice" and thus how "worthy of note" it might be. Regardless, I think if one wants to come up with a good N guideline, we should start with that first elementary definition -- the very first sentence on the WP:N page.
What do you think? mike4ty4 02:51, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
...that discussion is ongoing at Wikipedia:Article inclusion, which may act as a possible replacement of this page altogether. Please hop on over and give your input. --badlydrawnjeff talk 20:39, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
What type food can be notable? Any type? I noticed lot of sweet foods. So can I write any article about sweet cofectionary? What about other type of food (spicy)? I didn't find any food notability. I want to know more.--NAHID 19:04, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
As suggested in the Consensus topic earlier, I propose that instead of manual judgement about whether a subject is notable or not, we should instead base notability on how frequently it is accessed or edited. Wikipedia is now a sufficiently commonly-used tool that accesses are likely a good indication of how many people seek knowledge about a topic. If enough people seek information on a subject, who has the right to say that it is not sufficiently notable when clearly there are a fair number of people who are taking notice of it? Thus I suggest that the only measure of notability which should be utilised in Wikipedia is the number of accesses to a page.
I would, in fact, suggest that an automated method should be devised - either through bot or underlying code - which automatically nominates for deletion articles which are receiving insufficient traffic. There should be a grace period of a week or two in which the deletion can be appealed on the basis that the subject is notable but not widely known, and any appeals should be reviewed by the administrators who can put a manual stay on deletions based on notability of any article. Lacking an appeal (or on rejection of an appeal), articles should be deleted (preferably automatically, to lessen the load on the administrators).
This approach would remove most of the superfluous articles on Wikipedia, put far less of a burden on editors and administrators, and prevent the misuse of the notability criteria that we see today. Some few articles would likely be caught up in the system which shouldn't, but those which should really have been kept can always be appealed through the current deletion review system. -Xiroth 18:17, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
I really don't see what's wrong with the existing primary criterion of WP:N. Where notability is in question, it can be established by demonstrating multiple non-trivial coverage in independent sources. Because this is an absolute standard (except for those articles that fall in special categories), it ensures fair and equal treatment for all articles, rather than relying on Wikipedia editors' subjective judgements. WP:NOT is not enough on its own; whether or not an article constitutes a "directory entry", "vanity page" or "dicdef" is entirely a matter of opinion, and basically boils down to either WP:IDONTKNOWIT or WP:IDONTLIKEIT. Fundamentally, if the subject of an article has received multiple coverage in the mainstream media or in reference books, then they are by definition notable. If they haven't, then they probably aren't notable. What's so confusing or problematic about that? Walton Vivat Regina! 09:01, 5 March 2007 (UTC-8)
An educator at a school was recently charged with a crime, as reported in reliable newspapers. To what extent is this relevant to the article on the school? Should organizations get some degree of protection similar to BLP? Gimmetrow 06:24, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
Wikipedia:Notability (science) is a recent proposal which has received little attention pro or con, but it is being advocated for immediate adoption as a guideline. Please join the discussion. It seems redundant to me, but should be considered within the notability scheme. --Kevin Murray 23:08, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
I have again deleted * "Non-triviality" is an evaluation of the depth of content contained in the published work, exclusive of mere directory entry information, and of how directly it addresses the subject.3
The "Non-triviality" assertion is not supported by the given citation, “notability” in the OED. As cited, the entry is clearly false.
The attempted redefinition of “trivial” and “notable” is, I think, the underlying cause of confusion over what WP:N says, and what it means to say. SmokeyJoe 23:15, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
I'm very wary to make a change to the tag based on a straw poll, so I'll bring it here first: It's apparent to me that there's no consensus for this to be a guideline right now, so what should we do in the interim while we discuss the options? --badlydrawnjeff talk 14:24, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
In comparing WP:N and WP:INCLUSION, the general practical implications appear to be similar. I think the differences and areas of contention are in how the documents are phrased and whether we should attempt to define "notability" or instead should focus on making sure articles are "substantive and sufficiently referenced". Both roads seem to lead to similar places, it's mainly some of the details that differ. (See the thread WP:INCLUSION#WP:N and WP:AI for some more detailed analysis.) Dugwiki 17:41, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
I think the only thing lacking consensus is whether "notability" is the right name for the basic requirement that we only have articles about topics covered in sufficient sources. The new inclusion is meant to strip away a lot of the crap that's grown up around it, but the intended result is basically the same. Night Gyr (talk/Oy) 19:41, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
From discussions well above, it is clear to me that WP:N does not have consensus as a guideline, and indeed never did. The most appropriate tag at this stage would be {{essay}}, to remain in place until it takes a form that is a realistic proposal for consensus. {{essay}} is useful in the interim to help prevent the frequent misuse for AfD of the argument, without elaboration: “fails WP:N”. SmokeyJoe 23:26, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
I've noticed articles about Marketing, Management, Human resource management, Chemistry, Economics, Media and other similar topics are existed in wiki. Can any user write something new about these topics (Or totally new)? How can user judges its notability? Thanks--NAHID 07:15, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
P.S. The topics I mentioned above aren't available in wikiversity. Why? In wikiversity, sub topics are available.
I've added the disputed tag. I'm aware this may open an edit war, in fact it already seems to have. That's not my intent. But I think anyone objecting to it needs to re-read this talk page. I did not agree with the way this page was protected, nor the length of time it was protected for, but this talk page clearly demonstrates that this guidance is in dispute. The page should reflect that. When a consensus is built in support for the guidance offered, or the guidance is amended to reflect a consensus, then remove the tag. Adding the tag will help drive people to participate in building the consensus and will reflect the situation. Hiding Talk 08:00, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
I took Smokey Joe's lead and condensed it. Hopefully for more clarity along with brevity. I removed the assertion that primary research can be used in the articles; this seems to conflict with higher level WP policy, although it seems reasonable to have some exceptions clarified in the detail sections below. Please consider helping this idea to evolve rather than reverting. Joe was bold, so I've been bold, hoping to fine tune his work without losing the spirit. --Kevin Murray 22:29, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
I'm excited to see great progress in editing the new lead without reversions and much controversy. This might be evolving into something worthwhile. --Kevin Murray 18:23, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
Back in February, WP:ORG was merged into WP:CORP . The merger occurred with no resolution of the wording of the former Wikipedia:Notability (organizations). The issue of "notabilty" for non-commercial organizations remains unresolved. Given that the final determination of the guideline may affect many articles and that WP:ORG/WP:CORP is oft-cited in AfDs, it would be helpful if more than a handful of editors participated in the discussion. Agent 86 00:09, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
Seeing that many article that deleted is due to lack of english sources, I propose the following
I know that it violated world view; however, many AFD, based upon WP:N (and inclusive, including WP:PORNBIO), got approved this way. No matter how we see this, the use of WP:N need to be rehaul, particularly when dealing with articles that is very popular or notable in other places Reasons that we need to clarify:
The main reason this argument is brought up is due to the need to save ourself future trouble when it comes time to defend or propose AFD. George Leung 22:57, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
Disagree. There are objective criteria that make a subject worthy of inclusion in the Wikipedia (i.e. "notable" in the context of this guideline) -- biggest, longest, richest, and first, last, only, etc.
But not everything that goes into the encyclopedia has objective merit. Editors look to subjective measures of importance, impact, or inclusion as an aspect of making the Wikipedia (or an article, list, or category) comprehensive in a context where being comprehensive is sought.
Editors therefore use subjective judgment in this regard to reach a consensus and that's the editing process, or at least what I observe and participate in.
Frankly, any situation where editors accept a common set of facts as true, and yet come to different interpretations of them is exactly what "subjective judgment" is. So what's wrong with subjective judgment? patsw 21:40, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
There has been lively discussion following page protection, and I think it is time to move the question. A few suggestions for a straw poll have been proposed above, and I have combined and modified them somewhat. I think the main issue before us is how to proceed once the page protection expires. So I have tried to summarize the various points raised recently into a taxonomy of five general areas. Please select one and add a brief explanation of why you think it is the best way to proceed. You can also add nuance to your position if you don't completely agree with one item, but please use another thread for extended commentary. With five choices and a diversity of opinion, no one choice is likely to get consensus on this go around, so this should only be considered a preliminary canvassing of the community, and a subsequent poll will probably be needed after alternatives with minimal support are dropped, and the choices refined. Please note that this straw poll specifically relates to next steps for this particular page only, and is not a poll on the concept of Notability or any other guidelines.
--Dhaluza 16:14, 2 March 2007 (UTC-8)
TALLY to this point: (counting full votes twice, this or thats one for each, fnords not at all, only bolded text): 22 Keep, 3 Discuss, 5 Revise, 21 Rebuild, 15 Discard. Brianyoumans 16:51, 5 March 2007 (UTC-8)
NEW TALLY to this point: (counting full votes twice, this or thats one for each, fnords not at all, only bolded text): 24 Keep, 3 Discuss, 5 Revise, 21 Rebuild, 15 Discard. Brianyoumans 17:39, 7 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Would it be appropriate to AfD 2005 Texas vs. Ohio State football game? I mean individual football games. So what if it's the first meeting between the two teams, the game seems inherently non-notable. I hesitated to be bold because it looked well-sourced but in theory any article about any individual sports contest could be well sourced. Any thoughts. IvoShandor 09:28, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
Centrx's reason for deleting it (copied from "Problems with recent changes", above): Also, as explained above, notability is relevant to whether article content is included. The notability of the information and the reason for the notability of the subject is explicitly referenced in WP:BLP and WP:RS, and otherwise is the major factor in whether information is included in an article and how it is organized. —Centrx→talk • 19:38, 20 February 2007 (UTC-8)
A number of the comments on this page seem to be of the type: "Well, I want articles on topic X to be kept/deleted, so let's adjust the notability guidelines accordingly" or "Well, articles on topic X obviously do/don't deserve to be in an encyclopedia, so let's try to find a way that excludes them". This is really nothing more than adjusting guidelines based on WP:ILIKEIT and WP:IDONTLIKEIT. I think it is counterproductive to try to change or keep the general notability criterion in order to allow/exclude certain topics.
Shouldn't the issue at hand simply be: is there enough information available on this subject to write (at least) a stub-class article? That there is plenty of information on Pokemon cards (an example from this talk page) or other subjects that some editors consider "crufty" is no reason to try to find ways to devalue those sources (that's a subjective preconception that Pokemon is inherently unencyclopedic). Conversely, that there are no independent, non-trivial sources on a Carthaginian general to allow us to write at least a stub-class article on him/her is no reason to try to find ways to get this individual included by changing guidelines (an example similar to one in discussion above). Exceptions can be made under WP:IAR, but the whole premise of a guideline should not be to make a positive or negative exception for articles on a certain subject. I urge all of us involved in this discussion to keep this in mind. Thank you, Black Falcon 11:13, 2 March 2007 (UTC-8)
As one of the authors of that complicated policy, I'd like to pipe in here. I certainly am not claiming priority in interpreting what we were aiming at, but it was a very long, complex, adversarial conversation that led to the wording. Let me say, that *if* an article is based entirely on primary sources, then it probably does not pass the bar that states that it must be "the subject of multiple, non-trivial, third-party...". In other words, the issue should not come up *here* at all, since it cannot pass the lower bar. My second point is, that if I were to read an article which was evenly divided between paraphrasing secondary sources and quoting primary ones, that is 50-50, I'd have no problem with it. In fact I'd think it's quite good. And yes, I advocate, in all cases, quoting primary sources, not paraphrasing them. That way leads to madness. Wjhonson 13:32, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Wikipedia_talk:Notability/Categorization
I've started this page to help us out in the case that we decide to rebuild this guideline. I think the steps on that page would allow us to write something useful and informative. The plan that I've outlined there obviously isn't in stone... feel free to tweak it. I've started this ahead of the outcome of the above because it will take some time to do thoroughly and with consensus at each stage. The first part doesn't take any time for people to contribute to: it's just a categorization of a bunch of topics onto each side of the notable/non-notable dividing line. Please add to this list. We might not end up using it if the decision from above is not to rebuild but it will be good to have in the case that we do. Sancho (talk) 10:06, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Really, it is that simple. Seraphimblade Talk to me Please review me! 10:28, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Was this a bad idea? I thought the best way to learn a classifier of topics into the categories notable and non-notable would be to first find a collection of training examples, then to extract the features from those training examples that are most discriminating as regards their class membership (notable or non-notable), then to build a classifier that performs best on our training examples as well as a set of test cases that weren't considered during our building of the classifier. Is there a better way to build this guideline? If there is a better way, or if you just don't like this idea of learning an accurate classifier, then I can request that this categorization page that I started be deleted. Let me know... Sancho (talk) 13:28, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Here's several more hits of random article, let's see what pops up. SERVO Magazine, permastub, directory entry, I can find no secondary sources that mention the magazine. Next hit is Miss BC World, which is quite evidently notable and not a permastub. Grote Nederlandse Larousse Encyclopedie, it's a stub now, but I seem to find a lot of material in Dutch on that, so that's probably not a permastub. Estimated Family Contribution should be merged to FAFSA if the information can be sourced (which I'm sure it can), I'll probably do that myself shortly. It is a permastub as a standalone article though. Alabama (song), it's a state song and I'm sure secondary sources are out there regarding its history, adoption as the state song, etc. Certainly would not be a permastub. Val Fuentes, only things I can find on him are name-drops, should be merged to his parent band. Standalone, it's a permastub. Albarella, I can't find a thing for secondary sources on that, appears to be a permastub (and borderline G11). Oliver Dohnányi, currently is a terrible mess, but there is enough secondary material for an article. Not a permastub. Dexter Smith, permastub, all I can find is some directory/statistics information and a couple of very short quotations from him in sports media. Royalton Hotel, all I can find for it at first blush are ads, but there might be something on it. That one's unclear, but certainly may be a permastub. Seraphimblade Talk to me Please review me! 12:04, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
1. Servo--I see no reason why there might not be articles referring to the magazine in reliable moderated robotics blogs. I accept these as a source. But i found two university official sites using it as a source, one for class assignments. 2. Dutch Larousse. I find refs to articles in it, but the others are just listings in library or book dealers catalogs. 3. EFCA is how to do it, and I doubt its encyclopedic nature or the authority of the interpretation 4. Alabama, OK I cannot find a way to dispute that one. 5.Val Fuetes, I see a few reviews in what might be reputable online sources. 6.Albarella. should be in at least 2 printed or online tourist guides. Just a lazy article that didnt bother to look. 7. Dohnany, yes. , but people have tried to delete similar as unsourced because they dont recognize the name & assume the links are spam. 8. Dexter Smith, again, I would need to check specialized publications. Many athletes below our usual current level will have articles somewhere 9. Royalton, there will certainly be travel guides. and given a history in 1898, printed newspaper sources. So it is possible to find agreement on some of the most notable. But not necessarily on any of the others. Its the others that are the problem. I'm not saying my arguments are necessarily right, just that arguments can be made, I can't decide on borderline cases at an article/minute. DGG 14:08, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
I am puzzled by all the discussion about stubs and permastubs. If you look at paper encyclopedias, you will find very long articles and very short, even two sentence articles. If there is little to say about something, but the topic is separate from other topics and the name is something a reader might search for, then we should have a small article. There is no need to merge it to something else. We can take off the stub tag, particularly if it is going into WP 1.0 or some more stable version. --Bduke 14:24, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
I agree with Dhaluza. There is no need to merge something that is self-contained and notable. Anyway, how do you determine what the parent article is? --Bduke 16:14, 4 March 2007 (UTC-8)
I encourage editors to read the section on dealing with non-notable subjects in these guidelines again. Deletion is not the only way to deal with non-notable subjects. Nominating zax (tool) for deletion in order to make a point was poor form. The problem with that article was that no-one had yet written an article with a broader scope into which it could be merged. It is only as of today that we even have an article about the trade of slater. The zax is discussed in published works in discussions of slater's tools as a whole. The guidelines say very clearly to rename, refactor, or merge articles where the subject is discussed in published works as part of a broader scope, and to create any necessary broader-scope articles if they don't already exist. Stop treating deletion as if it were the only tool in the toolbox! You are Wikipedia editors. You can write articles, too, as well as deletion nominations. Please follow the guidelines. Uncle G 04:59, 6 March 2007 (UTC-8)
I created this as a separate page, although it's mainly a renaming, in an attempt to clear a lot of things up about notability, and to hopefully replace it with a leaner, (not really) meaner policy. Ideally, we'd throw out all of the stuff that we use to explain to newcomers that "no we don't really mean the same thing by notability as the rest of the world" and make it explicitly clear that what we're talking about is a standard of availability of sources. I realize some may disagree with my characterization (those who view notability as a bar of historical significance or other higher standard than basic sourcing), but this is mainly meant to remove the subjectivity. If people really want significance as a standard, it shouldn't be conflated with sourcing. Night Gyr (talk/Oy) 06:15, 5 March 2007 (UTC-8)
As I noted in the straw poll above, I have serious issues with letting the availability of sources dictate our notability requirement (short version: the primary notability criterion confuses the concepts of notability and verifiability, and it leads to a lot of systematic bias since media coverage around the world is uneven). I have written down what I think is a better standard for notability, although I freely admit that it is highly subjective, and will be debated on a case by case basis if it were the only criterion. Here goes:
I think this will include all towns and villages, as well as most islands, lakes, rivers and streams of reasonable size. People expect articles on settlements and major geographical features in encyclopedias. It will not include most car crashes because even though media might cover them, almost all people would turn to a newspaper and not an encyclopedia if they were interested in reading about such events.
As the only notability criteria, this definition sucks of course. I can see that right now, but if you want to point it out as well, then by all means do so. If this were the only criterion, we would never have any agreement on whether or not a sizable number of readers are interested in reading about an individual elementary school (it doesn't seem we are getting one now either but never mind that). I hold this standard only as a first iteration to defining notability in the context of Wikipedia. I am very much in favor of more specific guidelines for narrower categories such as WP:MUSIC. (Note how that guideline, instead of focussing on independent media coverage, focuses on things the musician has released and sold and performed, instead of what that is the type of thing which might make a person interested in seeing an encyclopedia article.) Sjakkalle (Check!) 07:47, 5 March 2007 (UTC-8)
We need a page for, if nothing else, discussing AfD. There are a number of pages that discuss what gets deleted, and then there are the pages that describe what we want in an article. Lastly, there's a lot of sand in between where we draw lines.
What we don't agree on is whether the criteria, as written, does a good job of tying all these pages together. Nifboy 20:50, 5 March 2007 (UTC-8)
like this: [[yi:װיקיפּעדיע:מערקווערדיג]] thanks--yidi 06:43, 6 March 2007 (UTC-8)
Per above, there's a few things we now know:
So I'm proposing a radical change to this entire page. The page is to exist at Wikipedia:Article inclusion (this text actually exists there now, and this should become a redirect) It should be in three sections. The first, the intro/lead section:
The second section:
The third section:
And that's IT. Finis. Done. Add some links to the bottom, don't tag the page, and we've reached a workable compromise - the subject-specific guidelines continue to act as the arbiters of notability, we have a page that reflects our policies for inclusion, and there shouldn't be any problems. So why not? --badlydrawnjeff talk 14:24, 6 March 2007 (UTC-8)
(Major edit conflict - I'll add it and then return) I have concerns that the phrase "sources should be independent of the subject" keeps being said without realising that this removes a great deal of material from articles and articles themselves that are perfectly encyclopedic. It over-complicates things and is far from what we actually do. I agree about autobiographical details. These should be avoided. I agree that some non-independent sources are biased or advertising. However in many cases they are just more accurate and more detailed than independent sources. One example I know about is that some readers want to know about a Scout organisation in a particular country. I do not come from the US, so let me talk about the Boy Scouts of America (BSA). Readers want quite a bit of detail and we provide it. Secondary sources, are by and large incomplete and inaccurate. This is not surprising. Why should a newspaper or magazine article go to a lot of detail? Books will only cover parts of what is needed such as biographies of key people. To get accurate material we go to BSA sources. These are perfectly OK. The crucial point is that independent sources should be required if anyone challenges anything in an article. Until they do, almost any kind of source is adequate to avoid OR. Verification is needed if a statement is challenged. I suggest the same should be done about suitability criteria. Let the Projects define it. Put their pages that do so in a category and let them stand until someone comes along and challenges one of them as leading to inclusion of material that is unsuitable for an encyclopedia. In fact the challenge would be best as a specific AfD proposal that challenged a Project's criteria. A successful AfD would lead the Project to modify their criteria.
A few other points:
Several things were added while I was writing the above leading to an edit conflict. I agree with badlydrawnjeff in the new discussion. --Bduke 16:30, 6 March 2007 (UTC-8)
(edit conflict again - in response to Seraphimblade) A single uniform guideline does not do it either. First, we decide what we are going to write articles about. Second, but more importantly, it is likely to be too brief to cover everything and we still have to decide whether the sources are reliable, or non-trivial. I remain convinced that consensus is the only way. We are writing an encyclopedia. We include stuff that is encyclopedic, with sources. Someone comes along and says "This kind of stuff is not encyclopedic". We discuss it and come to a consensus. We also already have a great deal of stuff that does exactly that - "a school play ground soccer team is not encyclopedic" and so on and on. We codify and build on what we have. Material based on "secondary sourcing and secondary sourcing only" can still be not encyclopedic. It may simply be too local or too trivial. --Bduke 17:10, 6 March 2007 (UTC-8)
(Not sure where in the thread to put this, so I'll put it here at the bottom) There seems to be a some disagreement over whether OFSTED is secondary or primary, but that discussion is sidetracking the problem presented: that there will be a systematic bias in how many sources we have available between different countries and regions. OK, instead of OFSTED, let's look the Bergen Byleksikon (Bergen City Encyclopedia, definitely not a primary source) which gives a comprehensive coverage of all the geographical features in Bergen, Norway (which is my home town). This book has entries on
Would this mean that every street, road, driveway and alley in Bergen is notable? I know there are some who regularly call for the inclusion of such articles, but in general AFD precedent has been to delete minor roads. Saying that all these roads became much more notable in 1994 when that book was published (thereby creating a secondary source was made which gave non-trivial independent coverage) simply does not make sense. Saying that the roads in Bergen are notable while the roads in Hamar are not notable because there is no Hamar Byleksikon simply makes no sense. Nothing changed about the roads themselves when Bergen Byleksikon was published. Whether or not those roads or streets are notable today, if they were not notable in 1987 they are not notable in 2007 either. The roads play an equally significant or insignificant role in Bergen as they do in Hamar. The difference between them, whether or not a source is published, does not do a good job of discriminating the notable from non-notable stuff in this situation. Sjakkalle (Check!) 23:31, 6 March 2007 (UTC-8)
I noticed this on WP:ATT: The threshold for inclusion in Wikipedia is whether material is attributable to a reliable published source, not whether it is true.. On the old WP:V page, it said "The threshold for inclusion is verifiability, not truth.". So, it's official policy:
"The threshold for inclusion in Wikipedia is whether material is attributable to a reliable published source, not whether it is true."
So, according to this, I think then that a source-based notability criterion for topics where there are no subject-specific criteria, like the one we have now, would make sense given Wikipedia's Official Policies. 74.38.32.195 22:23, 6 March 2007 (UTC-8)
There's an AfD going on for Fazal Mohammed right now, and it illustrates one of the problems with this guideline. Basically, wikipedian sit at their computers and use google to decide the fate of articles, which leads to bias. There are a few mentions of Fazal on the web, but not enough to satisfy notability. He's from Trinidad, and he died in the 40's; of course he isn't going to have a large presence on the web. This page talks about how notability is generally permanent, then basically makes it impossible to save articles about subjects that are pre internet and not from the devoloped world. Can't we do better than this? - Peregrine Fisher 00:03, 7 March 2007 (UTC-8)
If we try to dig down to the root of the problem with this guideline, past the disputes over tags, and wording, I think you find a fundamental misunderstanding of how a consensus based organization works, and how that applies to a wiki. People who can quote chapter and verse about how you can't write a WP article without sourcing, seem to completely miss the corollary that you can't write WP policy and guidelines without consensus. Just as in journalism where "you can't write the, story you want to, you have to write the story you have the sources for" in a consensus based organization, you can't write the policy you want to, you can only write the policy you have consensus for.
Since policy has to reflect consensus, you can't beat people over the head with it, and maintain consensus. So it's futile to think you can get your ideas written into a WP policy or guideline, then quote that at AfD claiming it represents consensus, and get away with it for very long. That's just not going to fly. And I think that's what has happened here. Enough people saw enough nonsense at AfD, traced it back to the source, and said that's enough!
So I think it's time for people here to get off their soapboxes, and start listening to the different points of view, and look for common ground. If this guideline is going to survive at all, it's time to stop pushing pet theories, and see if there is anything we can agree on. Dhaluza 01:45, 7 March 2007 (UTC-8)