Wikipedia talk:Notability (people)/Archive 2008
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How to fix the Additional criteria section
I think it has become very apparent that the "Additional criteria" section in its present state is of little worth. It defines a list of people who generally may or may not be notable, which is unhelpful and confusing. An interesting discussion on this issue can be found at WT:N#Hole in Bio. In that discussion, 2005 raises an interesting point, that people often misinterpret the "Additional criteria" section by assuming it allows the creation of articles about any of the types of people mentioned, when in fact it only lists people who often end up being notable (but aren't inherently notable).
I therefore suggest that we rephrase the "Additional criteria" section into a list of types of people who will often end up being notable (according to the general notability criteria). In other words, a list of people who will often end up being mentioned in reliable secondary sources.
—gorgan_almighty (talk) 13:49, 10 December 2007 (UTC)
- I was thinking about something along the same lines. 2005 and I are primarily here due to the Poker issue---but I see those additional criteria being used as justification all the time to keep what IMHO are non-notable personages. I made this comment over on Hole In Bio discussion, but will add it here. I believe that every project should define what they believe to be notable---but their individual notability criteria are considered as "essays" as compared to guidelines. Thus, it would establish the clear supremacy of WP:N over any guidance a project issues. I would also redefine the "additional criteria" as carrying the weight of an essay---perhaps even moving it to a subpage.Balloonman (talk) 17:15, 10 December 2007 (UTC) EDIT: I just reread the section, and the first part of additional criteria is good, it is only when it starts discussing specific categories of people that it looses its value.Balloonman (talk) 17:47, 10 December 2007 (UTC)
- The purpose of that section is to remove certain classes of articles from Afd, on the general basis that if 95% of the holders of X office or position or role are notable, it is better to consider them all notable than to debate each one of them--and get totally inconsistent decisions. The true shame of the AfD process is the lack of consistency over time and between different people with the same basic notability. At least doing it as a class which for the purposes of convenience will be considered here as notable gets it 95% right. If we did each of them by afd, besides doubling the workload there which is already more than can in practice be handled, we would get somewhere between 50% and 90% of them right--and for the ones that were challenged or appeared inconsistent, debating them again and again. We cannot build an encyclopedia at afd, or by debating policy. We can only do so by writing and improving articles. AfD and policy are a way to facilitate this. By throwing tens of thousands of articles in to the debatable category, which in practice given WPedian mentality means debating every one of them, we sacrifice the chance to build articles, while ensuring that more notable people will be ruled unnotable without a corresponding improvement in the other direction. (we are already experiencing this inconsistency with many other types of articles--we should be finding ways of removing classes of articles from debate rather than putting them in.) Various proposals amounting to the above have been raised at various venues over the last year or longer, and they all have been defeated for impracticality. I came here to work. I'll debate if I have to, but I wish i didnt't have to.DGG (talk) 00:58, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- If that is the case then, the wikiprojects need to have more, not less, input into the process. Again, I would contend that the proposals of the wikiproject are on the level of an Essay, but I do believe that the projects have a better understanding of what makes subjects in their arena of expertise generally notable. The poker project tried to do just that, and our idea of creating our own guidelines was stomped on when we sought outside input. We were basically told, we couldn't create criteria of what we considered notability.Balloonman (talk) 07:37, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- The purpose of that section is to remove certain classes of articles from Afd, on the general basis that if 95% of the holders of X office or position or role are notable, it is better to consider them all notable than to debate each one of them--and get totally inconsistent decisions. The true shame of the AfD process is the lack of consistency over time and between different people with the same basic notability. At least doing it as a class which for the purposes of convenience will be considered here as notable gets it 95% right. If we did each of them by afd, besides doubling the workload there which is already more than can in practice be handled, we would get somewhere between 50% and 90% of them right--and for the ones that were challenged or appeared inconsistent, debating them again and again. We cannot build an encyclopedia at afd, or by debating policy. We can only do so by writing and improving articles. AfD and policy are a way to facilitate this. By throwing tens of thousands of articles in to the debatable category, which in practice given WPedian mentality means debating every one of them, we sacrifice the chance to build articles, while ensuring that more notable people will be ruled unnotable without a corresponding improvement in the other direction. (we are already experiencing this inconsistency with many other types of articles--we should be finding ways of removing classes of articles from debate rather than putting them in.) Various proposals amounting to the above have been raised at various venues over the last year or longer, and they all have been defeated for impracticality. I came here to work. I'll debate if I have to, but I wish i didnt't have to.DGG (talk) 00:58, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
It's become "very apparent" based on what? Your willingness to keep proposing alternate versions of the same change every three weeks no matter how badly the last one was received? We get it, you hate additional criteria establishing notability and want general only. You pushed hard for the merger that would have accomplished it, and it got stomped. I haven't seen any evidence of a paradigm shift in the community as a whole to removing specific criteria. Looking through AfD results, it would seem that editors are content with using proof that the additional criteria have been met to establish notability. If anything, fixing the guideline would be yielding to consensus and changing the guideline to reflect the way the additional criteria are actually being applied by the community rather than wikilawyering against it. Horrorshowj (talk) 01:10, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- I see you are answering not me, but someone a few items back. I'll fix the indentation, and take the opportunity to clarify.
- 1. I do not want to rely on the general criteria only or even primarily--I consider them backup for when nothing more specific is available.
- 2. I want to have specialized criteria for the different areas. I think it clarifies things to have bright-line criteria for specific subjects when possible--making adjustments and variations, using common sense, but basically separating out the likely notable from the likely non-notable in a simple deterministic way with some degree of moderate accuracy and reproducibility. I like some of the existing ones, and I would look for compromise ones in every area possible. I dont like some of them, but I'd work on changing th3e particular ones rather than abolishing them.
- 3. I do think the various wikiprojects need some general input to avoid theitr developing OWNership of an area.
- 4. To some extent, though , at his point I would support almost anything that would reach an acceptable compromise of any sort whatsoever, and let us go at least another 12 months without having to renew these discussions.
- 5. I spend too much time at AfD. We should get WP:N working well enough that we discuss only 50 items a day, not 150. then at least we could do it more carefully.
- Horrorshow, You and I might agree very well.DGG (talk)
- An opposing view: The primary criteria (as mostly clearly stated in the nutshell) should be paramount. Wikipedia is only as reliable as its sources, and the enforcement of good sourcing is a good thing. Requiring good sourcing at the creation of the article is the best way to ensure that the article content is actually based on good sources. Allowing unsourced content encourages original research. Hoping that later editors will come along and provide sources for earlier editors original research strikes me as dishonest. The earlier content was not based on the later sources as the current version purports. If the earlier editors did not contribute original research, then why not insist that they document their sources?
- If the aim is to expand the content of wikipedia to cover entire groups of people, then why not create an article about the entire group, and include redlinks for the individuals that you feel are surely notable, but for whom you don’t yet have suitable sources. For example: If you believe that all winners of a WSOP/WSOPE/WPT/EPT event are notable, then create the article Winners of WSOP/WSOPE/WPT/EPT events and include links to all such winners. This would be a clear statement that you consider the winners to be notable, and it would be useful in encouraging others to contribute sourced content and for everyone interested to keep track of progress. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 06:31, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Those exists, they are called lists.
- And the poker project already has them... and most of the WPT/WSOP/EPT winners already have articles. Those that don't, I would be more than willing to argue deserve one and would have zero fear of taking them to an AfD.
- But this idea is clearly impractical. Per this suggestion, baseball (and every project) should create an article that lists EVERY baseball player that ever played rather than describe the criteria used to determine notability. What about items where clearly defined lists are not available? There is a list of WSOP winners, that list is set in stone and can be looked up relatively easily. But other categories describe criteria---wherein creating a list would be OR.Balloonman (talk) 07:37, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Well, if most of the WPT/WSOP/EPT winners already have articles, what could be the point of stating in a guideline that WPT/WSOP/EPT winners are notable? Who would the statement guide, and to what end? If “all … are notable and have separate entries” is a verifiable statement, then add the statement to a suitable article. Don’t write a guideline around it just because it is true.
- Yes, for baseball, every other such project, rivers, moons, popes, there should exist a list of all entries. Among other things, such lists are useful for navigation purposes for the casual reader. Where lists are very long, they can be subdivided. No, such lists do not define notability. WP:N defines the wikipedia threshold of notability. Where several entries are of borderline notability, (and therefore there is very little content for them) such entries can be grouped. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 11:06, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Replying to SmokeyJoe's reply to DGG and myself. Neither one of us ever claimed that unsourced articles were acceptable, and I specifically mentioned sourcing in my post. That's covered by WP:V and WP:RS , which are not the same as WP:N . WP:N requires that an article's subject meet "significant coverage" not just verifiability. If it's verifiable that a subject meets one of the specific criteria, then they are notable is my position, and is also the general outcome for AfD. As primary sources may only be used after notability is established, there are a lot of articles that will become more weakly sourced or disappear without the general criteria being present. Also consider that AfD that wind up coming down to whether the subject meets "significant coverage" are very contentious and time consuming. It's a very subjective determination, and one where confirmation bias factors in way to much. Horrorshowj (talk) 09:36, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
- Guidance also exist to exclude that which isn't notable. The poker project set our standards high enough that, in our opinion, anybody who met our standards would by definition meet BIO. We did that to explicitly reject cases that were not notable. Namely "So and so competed in the WSOP thus is notable" or "so and so won money at a WPT tournament, thus is notable" or "So and so won a major tournament." Each of those cases is supported by the addtitional criteria section for athletes. A notion that the poker project rejects.Balloonman (talk) 16:07, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Also, by definition, any list of criteria to describe somebody who is notable SHOULD result in somebody who would be generally be notable via secondary sources. Additional Criteria, IMHO, should not expand notability, but rather help define/explain it. It should be set sufficeintly high that the vast majority of the time that somebody fits the additional criteria they would pass BIO anyway. This allows that rare exception to the rules, where there might not be coverage (ala an early Pope on which little is known) to be included.Balloonman (talk) 18:44, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, by entire groups here, I mean such groups as all member of the US house of representatives, or of each state legislature, or CEOs or each company listed in the NYSE, all all major league baseball players, which are groups much much to big to be covered in practical size of WP aricles. WP is not paper, but one ofthe conseuences is that there is a practical limit on the size of articles--we must remain accessible to dial-up users. I do not think making lists is OR by the way, as long as there are criteria and sources. They can both organize and supplement the main articles. But they can't conveniently hold much information--we are an encyclopedia, not a list of names. A list of names with a sentence or two about each is properly called a biographical dictionary. 07:42, 11 December 2007 (UTC)DGG (talk)
- RE Lists---generally, I would agree with you, they are not OR. But to do what SmokeyJoe suggests could be. Some of the criteria may be too abstract and defines parameters for notability that doesn't suit itself to making a list. In these cases, the 'list' may be one of those lists which can never be complete... for example, actors/actresses can we ever have a complete list of ALL notable actors/actresses?Balloonman (talk) 07:49, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, by entire groups here, I mean such groups as all member of the US house of representatives, or of each state legislature, or CEOs or each company listed in the NYSE, all all major league baseball players, which are groups much much to big to be covered in practical size of WP aricles. WP is not paper, but one ofthe conseuences is that there is a practical limit on the size of articles--we must remain accessible to dial-up users. I do not think making lists is OR by the way, as long as there are criteria and sources. They can both organize and supplement the main articles. But they can't conveniently hold much information--we are an encyclopedia, not a list of names. A list of names with a sentence or two about each is properly called a biographical dictionary. 07:42, 11 December 2007 (UTC)DGG (talk)
Actually Horrorshowj, you and DGG seem to be the only people who hold that view. Pretty much everyone else (including big notability guideline contributors like Kevin Murray and SilkTork) trump the superiority of the general notability guideline. There really is no need to define additional criteria when the requirement for reliable secondary sources is sufficient. Assuming a class of people to be inherently notable is arbitrary, biased, and instruction creep. As I said at the start of this thread, most of the people who fall into the classes mentioned in the "Additional criteria" section will be mentioned in reliable secondary sources anyway, so there really is no need to define additional criteria for them. No articles will be lost. Of course if you have an alternative suggestion for what to do with the "Additional criteria" section then by all means propose it. But we can't simply leave it as it is. In its current form it is breaking BIO. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 09:05, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Does this mean I don't get to sit at the cool kids table anymore? I'm willing to entertain the possibility you're correct and the majority of wikipedians feel that the additional criteria are worthless, and only "significant coverage" can allow notability. I would however like proof of such. There's roughly 100 AfD per day right? So if what you say is correct, you should have no trouble whatsoever showing me 15 cases over the last month where there WP:RS showed the subject met an additional criteria, but the article was deleted due to not meeting "significant coverage". I don't think you can do it, but I'm willing to entertain the possibility. On the other hand, I'm pretty sure it wouldn't even take me a week's worth of AfD to find 100 articles where documented proof of meeting an additional criteria was found acceptable to establish notability. Care to take me up on my offer? Very few people have this talk page on their watchlist, or check it regularly, while a few hundred go through AfD's in a day. I'm sorry but I think the latter is a better indicator of the communities paradigm than 4 regulars on this page.Horrorshowj (talk) 08:11, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
- This isn't a question of whether articles about people in the groups mentioned are often deleted or not. You'd be hard-pressed to find such articles that aren't well sourced. This is a question of whether or not we need such "Additional criteria", of whether in fact the simple requirement of reliable secondary sources is sufficient for them as well. The fewer exceptions there are to a rule, the sturdier it is and the simpler it is to implement. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 11:21, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
- I substantially agree with Gorgan and Smokey. I think that there is nothing much to BIO beyond the special cases and the special cases are for the most part arbitrary and the result of hard fought compromises which in the end make little contribution to clarity. The main section of BIO does little more than restate the principles of WP:N. The problem with removing BIO is that a thousand subject specific guidelines will jump up in its place; at least BIO is here to house the ILIKEIT opinions in a logic purgatory. --Kevin Murray (talk) 15:51, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- I speak with forked tongue. While I think it causes problems, the additional criteria section isn't going away. Support for it will overwhelm any notion to get rid of it. Thus, the discussion should be on how to fix/improve it rather than eliminate it. I think the section has major problems being on the main BIO page because it gives the criteria the weight of BIO---and most people don't assimilate the statements that meeting the criteria is not a guarantee that the individual is notable. I believe that it is incumbent upon the different projects to write essays explaining what they BELIEVE to be notable. The community as a whole can accept/reject these criteria---and should have input into them. Thus, making it clear that they are an "essay" about what people believe constitutes notability within a arena.Balloonman (talk) 16:07, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Regarding the purpose of additional criteria: I would see WP:N as an absolute minimum for inclusion. If there are no independent sources, what would an article be based on? The purpose of WP:BIO should be to further specify this requirement for biographies, in particular saying what kind of coverage is considered substantial. (E.g. we probably don't want to have articles on every local politician in the world, even if they do get covered in a local newspaper.) Frequent questions regarding notability of biographies can be answered (e.g. see the paragraph on "Non valid general criteria"), and this would certainly justify the existence of WP:BIO as a specialization of WP:N. But issuing a carte blanche for certain groups of biographies seems to be unwarranted to me. The purpose of WP:N is also to limit the scope of the encyclopedia to a reasonable, i.e. manageable amount. Before declaring certain groups "inherently notable" I would first like at least an estimate (if rough) of how many biographies could be created under that exception. If that number is so large that we could possibly never be even 10% complete, the rule is probably not well crafted. --B. Wolterding (talk) 18:46, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
- Agreed, any additional criteria should be such that it doesn't override bio... In other words, it shouldn't create exceptions---I see the value in the additional criteria in its defining what isn't notable. Eg a local politician isn't notable.Balloonman (talk) 19:30, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
Split the "additional criteria" into three parts
I agree with gorgan_almighty that the current "additional principles" is kinda useless, and with B. Wolterding that WP:N must always be an absolute minimum for inclusion: that is fundamental, and clearly dervied from WP:V. However, I that think that despite the mishmash of the current "additional criteria" section, there is some good and important stuff in there, and it could become very useful if some restructuring was done to separate, simplify and clarify the different issues and to be rigorous in eliminating the specific in favour of general principles:
- General principles, e.g.
- that once notability is established, primary sources may be used to add content;
- (one of my hobbyhorses) stressing that an assertion of notability ("Founder of a major company", "oldest-ever person in that country" does not ovveride the need for evidence of that biography
- promoting the WP:BIO1E caution against single-event notability
- Rebuttable presumptions. To avoid AfD being clogged up, there is a rebuttable presumption of notability for certain group of people for whom there is an overwhelming likelihood that substantive coverage exists in reliable sources, such as members of national legislatures. There is no point in AfD endlessly rehashing arguments from those who do not know where these sources exists, but it is vital to stress that this is a rebuttable presumption, and that it is perfectly reasonable to challenge the notability of (for example) someone who was briefly a member of the Parliament of England in 1423. There were no newspapers then and no Hansard, so for most such people there will be nothing other than a few snippets. OTOH, a late-19th century Member of Parliament could not escape newspaper coverage at least of his election, and an AfD debate on him would be a waste of time: the sources exists, even if we haven't found them yet.
(I find these presumptions of notability uncomfortable, but I think that are a regrettable necessity if AfD is not to be clogged with repetitive and unnecessary nominations). - Cautions. Some people may initially appear to meet WP:NOTE, but are rarely very significant. A good example is local politicians, who may get repeated brief mentions for their efforts to build new swings or improve the frequency of road repairs, but who may remain wholly unknown outside their home towns. I suggest that much of this sort of thing should be covered by more generalised cautions, such as stressing that coverage in national media is greatly preferable to local media (rather than just making the point about local politicians). Much of the detail which clutters the sections on diplomats, creative professionals etc, is simply over-specific instruction, and should be replaced with a general principle of of having been widely acknowleged in heavyweight WP:RS as having made a notable and enduring contribution.
If we split the "additional criteria" into three parts like this, I think that we could remove many of the existing detailed by-profession guidelines. —Preceding unsigned comment added by BrownHairedGirl (talk • contribs) 13:46, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
- If I understand you correctly, you are suggesting that certain people should be assumed notable (because we assume sources probably exist somewhere) unless someone decides to dispute that notability (eg: the 1423 politician) or unless someone decides that it isn't significant in any case (e.g. the politician building new swings). I'm afraid I don't think that would help the situation at all. If anything it completely confuses the issue. Who is this someone who would make the decisions, and according to what standard? I dislike the idea that we can "assume that sources exist somewhere". I would much prefer to take the stance of "show us the sources, or don't create the article". It also needs to be said that BIO is a guideline, and guidelines should follow current practice. The current practice in 99% of AfDs is that secondary sources are required immediately to assert notability. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 15:26, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
- Maybe I didn't express myself v well, but my intention was to actually tighten up a little on the current situation, not to loosen it! Could you perhaps re-read what I wrote, because I think you may have missed by distinction between the two types of politician (one being presumed notable, the other presumed non-notable under a general local-only rule.
- I too would like to see a "show us the sources, or don't create the article" practice, not least because it would considerably simplify the guidelines (we could rip out a huge chunk of over-specific stuff). However, there are various classes of article (such as my example of members of national parliaments) where current practice is to apply a more lenient approach to producing substantial secondary sources up-front. What I intended was a slight closing of the loophole, by making that assumption explicitly challengeable.
- Lemme try spelling it out again. Current presumption is that a Member of Parliament is notable, and this is routinely treated at AfD as "automatic notability"; this provision is not daft, because most parliaments and parliamentary elections get substantial media coverage, and I have no doubt that I could for example find substantive coverage of every British MP in the 20th century (some of it may require a lot of burrowing in old newspaper archives, but it will be there). My proposal, though, is simply to note that anyone may challenge the presumption, because there would be very good grounds for challenging it for our 15th-century Member of Parliament, but OTOH someone challenging it for a 1980s US Senator should be told to stop wasting people's time and go find the sources to improve the article.
- I think, though, that your interpretation of current practice at AfD is different from mine. I would very much like to see a provide-multiple-substantial-secondary-sources-or-we-delete approach, but what I often see happening in practice is a keep-unless-you-can-show-that-there-are-no-substantial-secondary-sources. I deplore this, because it inverts the principle of WP:V that it is the responsibility of anyone adding the material to justify its inclusion, but that is frequently the current practice. If you have any ideas on how that situation can be changed, I'd be delighted, but since this is a guideline it needs to reflect the current practice, however flawed. Maybe it's time to approach this issue as a point of policy, by strengthening WP:V to cover article inclusion as well as article content? --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 15:57, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
- I largely agree with your proposal, but the "rebuttable presumptions" seem a bit strange to me as well. There is almost no meaningful way to "challenge" the presumption that sources exist - how would you prove that sources do not exist? (You could say that "a Google search turns up nothing", but that's not very convincing.) But perhaps we can phrase the section like this: "For people who meet one of the following criteria, it is typically very likely that substantial secondary sources exist. However, if no sources are explicitely added to the article throughout an extended timeframe, this may indicate that the person in question does in fact not meet the notability criteria." So, in practice, a member of parliament would assumed to be notable per default, but if no one finds any sources for more than a year or so, the assumption was obviously wrong. Of course, the question is whether this goes too far beyond current practice. --B. Wolterding (talk) 18:10, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
- I thought that I had gotten the "rebuttable presumption" concept from current guidelines, but now I can't find it as such: I think I probably derived it from Wikipedia:Notability#_note-0's concept that non-notability is a rebuttable presumption, but that note supports your pont about the difficulty of proving a negative.
- Your give-it-a-year suggestion is one possibility, though in suspect that with the 15th century MP it would make little difference whether it was a month or a year. My thought had been that one could have a sensible discussion about the likelihood of sources, but I can see that in practice this could be very time-consuming and frustrating, because to do it meaningfully would require a familiarity with the specifics of the subject which few editors would possess in any given case.
- I guess that brings us back to the question of whether we have any specific criteria. In theory I'd like to see them go, but could AfD cope with the increased workload?
- However, I think these points may be a diversion from what I see as the main issue: that too many participants at AfD regard the requirement for substantial coverage in secondary sources as a sort of optional factor which doesn't apply to subjects they are particularly interested in. How can that be changed? I'm beginning to think that the only real solution is for the core of WP:N needs to become policy rather than just a guideline. Whether this is one by expanding WP:V or promotong WP:N is a difficult question. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 22:11, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
- I don't think this will pass as a policy---too many people don't like it. I think the easier option is to relegate the additional criteria for individual professions to that of Essay... and make any similar list on a wikiproject likewise carry the wieight of an essay. This will clearly indicate that the additional criteria descriptions are measured as an essay---not a guideline. Thus giving them SOME credibility, but keeping the guideline in tact.Balloonman (talk) 02:29, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
- I also don't think that making WP:N a policy would change much - when it comes to the crunch, AfD participants will ignore guidelines and policis alike... Moving the additional criteria to an essay: maybe that would be appropriate. Ideally that essay would include some hints about where those "presumed" secondary sources can typically be found. --B. Wolterding (talk) 17:16, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
- I don't think this will pass as a policy---too many people don't like it. I think the easier option is to relegate the additional criteria for individual professions to that of Essay... and make any similar list on a wikiproject likewise carry the wieight of an essay. This will clearly indicate that the additional criteria descriptions are measured as an essay---not a guideline. Thus giving them SOME credibility, but keeping the guideline in tact.Balloonman (talk) 02:29, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
- I largely agree with your proposal, but the "rebuttable presumptions" seem a bit strange to me as well. There is almost no meaningful way to "challenge" the presumption that sources exist - how would you prove that sources do not exist? (You could say that "a Google search turns up nothing", but that's not very convincing.) But perhaps we can phrase the section like this: "For people who meet one of the following criteria, it is typically very likely that substantial secondary sources exist. However, if no sources are explicitely added to the article throughout an extended timeframe, this may indicate that the person in question does in fact not meet the notability criteria." So, in practice, a member of parliament would assumed to be notable per default, but if no one finds any sources for more than a year or so, the assumption was obviously wrong. Of course, the question is whether this goes too far beyond current practice. --B. Wolterding (talk) 18:10, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
Speaking as an ordinary editor passing through while looking for something else, I find those additional criteria Very Useful. As consensus interpretations of WP:N for certain classes of people, they are above all easy to use. I strongly suspect that the vast majority of Wikipedians want to make an easy edit and move on, without having to try and reinterpret the guidelines every single time. —Quasirandom (talk) 23:05, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
A less obtrusive fix
As both BrownHairedGirl, gorgan_almighty have stated a guideline should follow current practice. Most of the arguments in favor of drastic changes are based on a belief that the current wording lends itself to not being strict about sourcing, which is a valid concern. Since WP:N says you can meet general or specific, claiming that you can't meet specific without meeting general is a little bizarre. I'd propose the following as something less open to misinterpretation, but not such a drastic change from current community behavior.
- A person is presumed to be notable if they meet either the general notability standards or at least one of the specific criteria listed below. In order for the subject's notability to be asserted under one the specific criteria, it is required that the assertion be verified with an inline citation from a reliable source . If no verification of the claim to meeting a specific criteria is provided, the subject's notability must be evaluated as if that claim did not exist. Horrorshowj (talk) 14:41, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
overstatement
Widespread coverage over time in the media such as the BBC, The Times or other reliable sources. We do not require widespread coverage, just multiple coverage--and we accept RSs many steps lower than then two sources listed--any regional or national newspaper, etc, etc., Further, the requirement over time is only with respect to not news--it doesnt require that sources generally be on different periods--and I'm not sure it belongs here anyway, being not that firmly established. DGG (talk) 17:48, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
- As a "specific example of sources", why not? "Widespread over time" explains the difference to WP:NOT#NEWS, I think. How would you rephrase the sentence? --B. Wolterding (talk) 17:54, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
Questions from my talkpage
I was asked a few questions on my talkpage, but rather than answer them there, I think I should respond here:
- If you want to drop them down to just essay strength and be specific to the project, then how or why would the rest of the community have any interaction with them?
- Naturally some projects are going to have self defined guidelines that are too loose/weak---that's a risk I'm willing to take, but at an essay level. Those projects that expand N/Bio will find that nobody respects the guidelines they define and cease to accept them, unless the project tightens them. Other projects will write better guidelines that people do accept because they truly do define notability within their field. These projects will garner more respect and acceptance within the community. When people refer to their guidelines, if they can readily see that 4 of the 5 criteria they establish are definitively notable, then outsiders are more likely to recognize the 5th criteria as being subject specific. For example, Wikipedia:Baseball#Guidelines is a wikiproject that has written "Guidelines" that are often cited during AfD's---and often when people aren't familiar with specific questions related to baseball. I'm not personally familiar with a number of their guidelines, but I trust them on a whole. Doing this will create a clear message that the Additional Criteria are secondary to N/BIO---they are interpretations of the guidelines. Right now, the Additional Criteria profession specifics are treated as part of the guideline and given too much credence.
- What purpose are they going to serve if very few editors ever see them?
- Yes, there will be some projects where the number of editors that see them will be few. But there are projects that many people don't know about right now. If those projects keep the guidelines in mind when writing their essays, then there shouldn't be too much problem. Many projects already have guidelines on what THEY perceive to be notable just to name a few: Baseball, Martial Arts, NASCAR, Soccer, US Roads, military, and many more. And from what I can tell, none of them are perceived as official guidelines of Wikipedia. I think this is appropriate as I cannot determine what makes many subjects notable in areas that I am not familiar with. (Plus, there is the added benefit that if a project has a very weak essay, exposure to the broader community might help with the project as a whole.)
- You argue against instruction creep, but how does Balkanizing notability accomplish this?
- I think most people agree there are problems with the additional criteria section. They are, in many places, at odds with the other instructions of Notability and Bio. But they do help establish consistency in interpretation of N/BIO. I propose pulling them out of the guidelines and making them into Essays---one's where the various wikiprojects take a more recognized role. But at the same time, defang them somewhat. Yes, there will be more "essays" but it will be clear that Bio/N have precedence---which I believe is the intent (but not practice) with the Additional Criteria profession section currently. The essays will be on how the individual projects interpret the overarching guideline---but as essays, they don't hold the weight of Bio/N. I like being able to see what "Porn" considers to be notable, even though it is a subject I would never look into.Balloonman (talk) 21:42, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
Possible template
In the spirit of this idea:
We could also create a category (ala wp:ESSAY) that links to the different interpretations.Balloonman (talk) 15:38, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
- Looks good. Nice job Balloonman. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 17:53, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
The current proposal
As this thread seems to be getting quite fragmented, I decided to start a new sub-heading to discuss this rather than posting under one of the older sub-headings, where it might not be noticed. I summarize here the main points of the proposal that seems to have the most support so far:
- Rephrase the "Additional criteria" section as proposed by B. Wolterding here: "For people who meet one of the following criteria, it is typically very likely that substantial secondary sources exist. However, if no sources are explicitely added to the article throughout an extended timeframe, this may indicate that the person in question does in fact not meet the notability criteria."
- Move this modified "Additional criteria" section to a separate essay.
- Allow individual WikiProjects to define their own notability criteria but only as essays. In other words, they can be used by the project members to decide which articles to focus on, but they can't be used to support an argument in AfD.
Personally I would be willing to accept this proposal. I don't think we should add a specific time period to #1. We can allow AfD to decide if enough time has been given for a specific article or not (which does reflect current practice). I'm a little uncomfortable about #3, as ignorant editors will still try to use such guidelines as AfD arguments, but on the other hand we can't really stop WikiProjects from creating such essays anyway. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 11:54, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
- As for 3, I would say that essays can be used to support AfD's in one way or another, but as an essay, it becomes clear that the criterion of Bio/N is paramount. The essays become the way that Wikiprojects interpret notability. It also becomes clearer that meeting the additional criteria (professional standards) section is not an guarantee that an article should be written. It also gives room for people to accept/reject the professional standards. (I qualify additional criteria with professional standards because it is only where we start talking about different fields that the problem arises.) See template idea above re XfDs.Balloonman (talk) 14:53, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
- An example of the problem I was talking about can be found at this AfD, in which many people were effectively voting "Keep per WP:BASEBALL", WP:BASEBALL being a WikiProject that defined notability criteria that weren't compatible with WP:N. Those Keep votes are mainly what swung the AfD from Delete to No consensus. Just to clarify though, I still think that the 3-stage proposal mentioned above is the right way to go. Although we should probably remove some of the bullet points currently under "Additional criteria" first (the likelihood of substantial secondary sources existing for top-level politicians probably can't be applied to pornographic actors as well). Any thoughts on what the new essay page should be titled? —gorgan_almighty (talk) 17:48, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
- And how might that discussion turned out if the notability section of baseball had the template from above? And WP:BASEBALL, which is one of the more credible essays, was explicitly labelled as an essay?Balloonman (talk) 19:26, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
Here is how I read these proposals: Say, someone is considering to write a biographical article about a person. If the person satisfies one of the listed "extra criteria" (say won an oscar award in 1955 or an olympic medal in 1956), then we may assume notability, without having to dig up more published material. Plainly documenting the award/medal (from a reliable list of winners) is enough: we simply can assume that newspapers in mid-50s extensively covered these persons (and most likely the persons also have been written about by experts of their fields). If the person can not be said to satisfy such an "extra criteria", it's required to support the article with arguments according to general criteria in WP:N/WP:BIO. Is my understanding correct or not? Oceanh (talk) 19:41, 14 December 2007 (UTC).
- Therein lies the crux of the issue, reliable sources and verifiability are the primary concern---and as written have always been a requirement. The professional standards (under additional criteria) are not guarantees that the individual reaches that level of notability to deserve an article. But as they are written/practiced today, that is what has evolved. Thus, you end up having a professional baseball player who sat the bench in one game in the 1940's getting an article because he was a professional athlete and "played professionally." The professional standards has replaced BIO/N. You then have numerous projects writing notability guidelines that are being cited as authoritative, when in fact they are not. The projects, IMHO, SHOULD write guidelines of what is notable in their realms of expertise, but they do not outweigh Bio/N.Balloonman (talk) 19:58, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
- OK – think I basically agree. Let's try to turn it the other way around: The purpose of any "additional criteria" should (ideally) be to identify cases where the general N/BIO most likely is satisfied. Criteria such as "olympic medal" and "oscar award" are probably rather clear cases, while "played professionally" is not clear at all. (My view is that professional players are notable only when they are exceptional, but in a major sport with thousands of "professionals" they can hardly all be.) Oceanh (talk) 02:33, 16 December 2007 (UTC).
- B. Wolterding's proposal is the best compromise, because it allows for common sense to assume notability for obviously notable people, while still requiring the secondary sources that assert notability to be added within a reasonable period of time. This wouldn't be acceptable as part of BIO or another guideline, as its too subjective, but the proposal is to make this into an essay instead of a guideline, which is fitting. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 10:53, 17 December 2007 (UTC)
- OK – think I basically agree. Let's try to turn it the other way around: The purpose of any "additional criteria" should (ideally) be to identify cases where the general N/BIO most likely is satisfied. Criteria such as "olympic medal" and "oscar award" are probably rather clear cases, while "played professionally" is not clear at all. (My view is that professional players are notable only when they are exceptional, but in a major sport with thousands of "professionals" they can hardly all be.) Oceanh (talk) 02:33, 16 December 2007 (UTC).
Implementation of above proposal
It seems to me that we have formed a consensus here. As Horrorshowj and DGG are no longer posting in this thread, I assume that they have no further objections to the current proposal. Add to that the fact that the proposed changes reflect current practice very well. I have therefore began implementing these changes. The progress is listed below:
- Created the essay as proposed by Balloonman at {{essay-project-note}}.
- Created Category:WikiProject notability essays, which is automatically added by the template above.
- Added the template to as many WikiProject notability essays as I could find
- Copied the "Additional criteria" section to Wikipedia:Generally notable people, and rephrased it to use B. Wolterding's suggested wording. Shortcut: WP:GNP.
- Replaced original "Additional criteria" section in BIO with a short paragraph introducing the concept of WikiProject notability essays, and linking to the category and to Wikipedia:Generally notable people. Most of the wording is taken from Balloonman's proposed template now at {{essay-project-note}}.
—gorgan_almighty (talk) 13:03, 17 December 2007 (UTC)
- Copied the new "Additional criteria" section to WP:N, as its scope reaches far beyond biographies. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 14:14, 17 December 2007 (UTC)
- This is a big improvement. Many congratulations to all involved. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 14:54, 17 December 2007 (UTC)
- Seems fine for me - and it also makes WP:BIO much more comprehensive I think. --B. Wolterding (talk) 16:14, 17 December 2007 (UTC)
- As I was perhaps one of the main advocates for the above, it is fine by me... but I did fix the template so that clicking on "essays" took you to the notability essays rather than the generic ones.Balloonman (talk) 19:08, 17 December 2007 (UTC) NOTE: I think one of the advantages of this proposal is that it avoids the inevitable conflicts between the people here at Notability and the people at the various different wikiprojects. It establishes a framework of cooperation rather than antagonism between the projects desire to establish notability and Notabilities desire not to have the guidelines devalued.Balloonman (talk) 01:00, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
You would be intentionally assuming wrong, and once again acting in bad faith. As you've been falsely claiming a consensus for months, you'll have to excuse me if I doubt your judgement of it. 4-3 isn't a strong consensus. I've listed the change on the VP policy to get more people to look at it, and would appreciate waiting until we actually have a large number of editors who have weighed in prior to any changes being made. Horrorshowj (talk) 02:26, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
Why has this been implemented in other WikiProjects? Many WikiProjects create subject-specific guidelines to make it easier to resolve deletion discussions. Most of these guidlines are similar to the politicians guideline here where one or more classes of objects are deemed notable and others not. These subject-specific guidelines will almost always lead to the same results as the general Notability guidelines at WP:N and we'll get consistency of notable topics over time as well as less hassle for AFD discussions. At the very least, you should get a much wider audience if you want to implement something like this globally. --Polaron | Talk 03:06, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- While I agree it was probably premature to institute this globally, I think the reason for having something like this is clear. Like you said, "Many WikiProjects create subject-specific guidelines to make it easier to resolve deletion discussions." This is a problem because some of the projects do a good job at defining the criteria while others don't. Some of the projects get outside input, while others don't. The opinion of the WikiProject, has to play a secondary role the guideline as a whole. If a project says, that something is notable if an author can write a "full article" on the subject (which one project does) then that is clearly expanding the boundaries of N. Martial arts has the guidline that a MA school is notable if it has "a lot of students." These may be the opinion of the projects, but they do not measure up to N. The concern arose out of the professional standards on the BIO page---but the solution is to embrace the various wikiprojects and their efforts at establishing guidelines---but defining those wikiproject guidelines authority as secondary to N/Bio/Org/etc.Balloonman (talk) 03:50, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- While you do make a good point that not all subject-specific guidelines are well-thought out, I believe the solution would be to rigorously improve these subject-specific guidelines to ensure that say 90% of the time, they will lead to the same result as the general notability criteria. My problem is that when WikiProjects try to get a wider opinion on how to improve a guideline, they are usually shut down by citing WP:CREEP, without even discussing whether the proposed guideline would lead to results consistent with WP:N. Essay status could in principle be ok but there has to be a path to upgrade that essay to a guideline without the discussion being shutdown. --Polaron | Talk 03:57, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- I sort of agree with both of you. I'd prefer not to have stand-alone instructions originating from every project, if for no other reason than to not monitor 100 talk pages. I don't like the essay thing, because it tends to get ignored at afd, humorously enough by the same sort who will cite the essay WP:CREEP as proof of why you're wrong/incompetent despite the fact that it's valid to cite according to the guideline on essays. One thing I would suggest under the current criteria is that if a criteria applies across multiple projects, allow the project to decide the qualification threshold or submit it as an up/down vote for setting the threshold for people under their project. The baseball essay is the most cited so far, with football (American) being a not to distant second for determining the level of fully professional or equivalent standing. Link to the approved project guidelines under a sub-menu from the applicable page and afd get a lot easier to decide. Horrorshowj (talk) 08:19, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- Hi Horror, I'm sorry, I didn't see this comment earlier. But if I am reading this correctly then I am confused as to why you are opposing this proposal? You mention the Baseball/football (american) "essays" which are cited at AfD's as firm guidelines. You seem to be open to the possibility of letting Projects establish somesort of guideline, but from what I can see you are most concerned with the fact that some people may forget that these are essays thus carry less weight than guidelines? Therein is where the beauty of this proposal comes into play. First, it defines a relationship between N and the various essays. When people pull out tne "unknown project essay" as a trump card, everybody will know that they are in fact essays not guidelines. Second, and I think this is the key, the template explicitly reads that wikipedians can use the essay to establish notability---but are not obligated to do so. By highlighting on EVERY essay that they are interpretations of the project of N, and not guidelines, we educate people that N/BIO/ORG/etc are primary and the professional standards are secondary.Balloonman (talk) 18:38, 21 December 2007 (UTC)
- I sort of agree with both of you. I'd prefer not to have stand-alone instructions originating from every project, if for no other reason than to not monitor 100 talk pages. I don't like the essay thing, because it tends to get ignored at afd, humorously enough by the same sort who will cite the essay WP:CREEP as proof of why you're wrong/incompetent despite the fact that it's valid to cite according to the guideline on essays. One thing I would suggest under the current criteria is that if a criteria applies across multiple projects, allow the project to decide the qualification threshold or submit it as an up/down vote for setting the threshold for people under their project. The baseball essay is the most cited so far, with football (American) being a not to distant second for determining the level of fully professional or equivalent standing. Link to the approved project guidelines under a sub-menu from the applicable page and afd get a lot easier to decide. Horrorshowj (talk) 08:19, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- While you do make a good point that not all subject-specific guidelines are well-thought out, I believe the solution would be to rigorously improve these subject-specific guidelines to ensure that say 90% of the time, they will lead to the same result as the general notability criteria. My problem is that when WikiProjects try to get a wider opinion on how to improve a guideline, they are usually shut down by citing WP:CREEP, without even discussing whether the proposed guideline would lead to results consistent with WP:N. Essay status could in principle be ok but there has to be a path to upgrade that essay to a guideline without the discussion being shutdown. --Polaron | Talk 03:57, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
Wikipedia:Notability (academics)
The intent of some people ahs been to merge Wikipedia:Notability (academics) into BIO as part of the special cases. However, with the new trend toward removing special cases to essay status, it seems that Wikipedia:Notability (academics) should be merged into the new page or reclssified as an essay. --Kevin Murray (talk) 00:04, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- I think that it would work better as an essay as it is an interpretation of BIO. Otherwise, it opens up the door for "Why shouldn't X be at a guideline level."Balloonman (talk) 01:04, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- This has been an ongoing problem. For a long time PORNBIO was used as an excuse to create more subjet specific guidelines and then academics slipped in. --Kevin Murray (talk) 01:08, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- I was unaware of this trend toward essay status: all of the special case pages I've looked at have been guidelines, though my own experience is hardly a representative sample. Is there a centralized discussion regarding this, or an essay/guideline page about it? Otherwise, I would be in favor of keeping it as a separate guideline. RJC Talk Contribs 16:25, 26 January 2008 (UTC)
- "The trend is..." is not exactly a statement of controlling precedent. There is no general policy here, and if one looks further down on the page, it will seen that the question of the role of the specific standards is still quite unsettled. But probably this particular standard is so unsatisfactory at this point that it might as well be an essay--it does not really represent the basis of decision at AfDs. DGG (talk) 06:46, 27 January 2008 (UTC)
Reversion
I want to explain why I did this in a little more detail in hopes of provoking some actual discussion. Referring back to the original attempt at demoting everything to essay and having only “significant coverage” as a notability criterion [[1]], it was defeated in a landslide. The result overwhelmingly was that, as a whole, the editors in the community liked specific criteria. There were far more participants in that discussion on various pages than any subsequent ones, so that consensus should be given substantial weight and I've deferred to it. This is at least the third time since that the OP, who was one of the few proponents of the merger, has tried getting the change into the guidelines either through this page or the main notability talk page. All of his previous attempts have started by claiming a “long standing consensus” that he was merely making concrete, and at each one I've been in opposition and demanding proof. He's been less than successful and disappeared each time he met substantial resistance until the next attempt. This has been ongoing for months, and my opposition to overruling the entire community with such a sweeping change hasn't wavered. Therefore, the claim that I suddenly have no objections due to not posting for 2 days should be absolutely ridiculous by any reasonable standard. Without the claimed reversals of position for the objectors, support stands at a bit over 50% among the few participants which isn't exactly overwhelming.
Participating in this for me has increasingly resembled arguing with stones.. If I post in direct response to someone on the other side of the discussion my point is ignored or sidestepped, if it's not in direct response I'm ignored or belittled. Looking at the arguments that didn't boil down to “anyone who disagrees with us is incompetent” there were some good points presented. No response whatsoever to the suggestion of those as a compromise. There isn't any attempt at discussion, only supporters talking amongst themselves while trying to push everyone else off the page. This is attrition, not a consensus.Horrorshowj (talk) 09:00, 18 December 2007 (UTC) Withdrawn. This came out a lot harsher than I realized at the time. While this discussion has been very frustrating for me, I should not have allowed my issue with one editor to color my perception of other's actions. I apologize to anyone I offended with this.Horrorshowj (talk) 08:54, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
- Horror, I do take extreme exception to your stereotypes above. I believe that I have addressed your questions in a calm rationale manner. Recognized your position and tried to address your concerns. I am open to compromise---I think there are problems with the professional criteria section and seek a way to fix it. But if you are going to go on the offensive, I will counter with the fact that when I respond to your questions, you have yet to come back with follow-up questions/obstacles. See the section on questions from my talk page. I addressed your questions, but the entirity of your response was Saw the response, not sure I agree with it but such is life. That does not lead to dialog constructive of a consensus. Then, having answered your questions in a polite civil manner, you describe me in the terms you did above as "arguing with stones.... my point is ignored or sidestepped." I'm sorry, but I take offense your inaccurate generalizations and distortions. Balloonman (talk) 23:43, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
- PS I just looked at the original proposal, and it was significantly different from what is being discussed here. That proposal was to relegate all of the sub-guidelines into essays. This proposal explicitly KEEPS those subguidelines as Guidelines. What is being discussed here is the establishment of a definitive relationship between N and the various Wikiprojects. It is a way to embrace activity that is already occuring on the various wiki projects. It is also a way to address the instructional creep that is entering into the subguidelines. When the discussion you point to above occurred there were only 4 "professional criteria" in BIO, now there are 7---and virtually every project wants to write their own criteria. Of course, I guess that my pointing out that you are comparing apples to oranges is belittling you. Balloonman (talk) 00:01, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
- I'm sorry for offending you. You have responded to me in a professional manner, and I appreciate that. The ongoing issues with Gorgan and I, combined with my reaction to his listing me as a trophy lead to me not handling this as well as I should. Horrorshowj (talk) 03:46, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
- While there were only 4 categories on the page at that time, 6 of the 7 were part of guidelines. Pornbio was its own guideline, and everything under the Any Biography category was already on Bio above the professional criteria. I grouped those together a while back because having them loose made the layout look cluttered. Diplomats is new, but was debated heavily on this talk page. So it's actually only grown by 1 over several months. Horrorshowj (talk) 09:09, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
When does WP:BIO define criteria for WP:N in general?
I fail to see where this discussion translates to WP:N in general and why these template are being implemented on the pages in Category:WikiProject_notability_essays along with WP:USRD/NT (which was reverted because in our opinion - it doesn't fit this policy because
- these are not essays - an essay implies someone drew it up on their own ideals without discussion and threw it up.
- WP:USRD does not deal directly with BIO as none of our articles concern living persons
Yes they aren't policies or guidelines either, however, I strongly suggest this discussion be opened up to all of WP at WT:N and gather consensus before implementing this on all of the Wikiprojects and pages you have or will be putting this on. Thank you — master sonT - C 03:01, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- I think that we can get rid of the special cases here and elsewhere, and without these there is no further point to BIO, so we can just rely on WP:N, and teach our admins how to apply it at AfD. It's really very easy. --Kevin Murray (talk) 03:21, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- I take it that you want to get rid of any and all subject-specific guidelines? That may be okay if all editors were familiar with all subjects. One cannot in good faith participate in a deletion discussion if one is not familiar with the topic. Subject-specific guidelines make unnecessary many useless AFD debated that almost always end up as keep anyway. The key then is to make sure the subject-specific notability guidelines will for the most part lead to results in compliance with WP:N. --Polaron | Talk 03:26, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- I disagree with you here Kevin. While I think the interpretations of BIO/ORG/ETC should be relegated to essays, but I don't think we should get rid of BIO/ORG/Etc. It is when we start giving specifics as guidelines that problems arise. As for MasterSon's comment about them not being Essays, they are. Essays are not necessarily written by individuals, but communities can write them as well. By labelling these essays, we are clarifying the positions of the wikiprojects opinions vs the guidelines for Essays.Balloonman (talk) 03:32, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- Polar and BM, the simplicity of the whole thing is letting others determine notability, which is what WP:N does. The criteria are simply that a topic be recognized in a significant way by an independent and credible third party source. It's when we get into defining arbitrary criteria that we get into trouble. --Kevin Murray (talk) 08:31, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- I'm afraid I agree with Balloonman and Polaron. There is worth in the main notability sub-guides, even if its just for things like BIO1E. The old proposal to merge everything into WP:N (which Horrorshowj mentioned above), was rejected, and rightly so. But the proposal that followed it to keep the main notability sub-guides but bring them inline with the general notability criteria, had strong support and was accepted (although Horrorshowj claims otherwise). Guides like Academics could be demoted into a WikiProject notability essay, as Balloonman suggests, although that isn't the purpose of this discussion thread. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 10:41, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
I have no strong opinion on the fate of the "Additional criteria" section, but I see no reason for WP:BIO to exist separately from WP:N in their absence. A subject-specific guideline that only repeats the general notability criterion is completely redundant. – Black Falcon (Talk) 08:47, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- I am in favour of relegating the "Additional criteria" section, but while I often agree with Black Falcon, I disagree in this case. Even after the changes have been implemented, WP:BIO still includes several important points which are applicable to all biographies, such as BIO1E, the specific point about
, and the sections on Lists of people and on Articles on Wikipedians. Additionally, the footnotes contain a lot of biog-specific material such as the notes on independence of sources. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 12:56, 18 December 2007 (UTC)The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for biographies.
- That's true, but I don't think it's enough to justify a separate guideline page. The section for "Lists of people" could easily be merged to Wikipedia:Lists (stand-alone lists)#Lists of people and the section "Articles on Wikipedians" could be expressed in one short sentence: "Some Wikipedia editors have articles about themselves (see Wikipedia:Wikipedians with articles); however, their status as Wikipedian editors by itself has no effect on their notability." The section "Articles not satisfying the criteria" is applicable to articles on all topics, so it could be merged into WP:N.
- That would leave only the footnotes, most of which (derivatives, self-publication, intellectual independence) could be merged into WP:N, and WP:BIO1E, which alone doesn't justify a separate page. To be fair, this may just be a reflection of my belief that we should make notability decisions almost exclusively on the basis of coverage in reliable sources (I deliberately include "almost" to account for cases where coverage almost certainly exists, but is simply difficult to access - e.g. a rural town of 5000 in Mozambique). I haven't been following the discussion above, but if the goal is to emphasise the need for coverage in sources (which I support), why don't we simply change "Additional criteria" to "Indicators"? Black Falcon (Talk) 18:46, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
Horrorshowj's comments on my Talk page
After he reverted my implementation of this proposal, Horrorshowj posted a rather skewed thread to my User Talk page, that I believe is relevant here. So I'm quoting it and my reply to it below. Please add any comments here rather than on my User Talk page.
- I'm finding it impossible to assume you're acting in good faith
You've been falsely claiming a consensus for your vision of bio for months. I've taken you to task and asked for proof of this, at which point you've disappeared each time. You've consistently been dishonest and misrepresented previous discussions, apparently on the theory that no one will check your claims. Now you have the audacity to claim that I have no objections to the change after the last several months. How the exactly does this work? Which argument of mine have you ignored or sidestepped that suddenly convinced me to support you?
I was out of the discussion for all of 48 hours. It's completely unethical for you to make this claim without even the slightest effort at verifying it. Horrorshowj (talk) 03:05, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- Firstly I deplore your efforts to bend the truth. I would point out that I have never made an edit to BIO or any other policy/guideline/essay that did not have reasonable consensus, and had no active objections at the time. Most of the edits you've claimed in the past that I made "against consensus" were in fact made by other editors who commented in favour of the changes in the relevant discussions. Since no objections were raised at the time, and consensus seemed to have been reached, those other editors took it upon themselves to inact those changes, as I would have done, but didn't. An example of this is the notability guideline reforms, to bring the sub-guides inline with the general notability criteria. Although I was involved in those discussions, it was Kevin Murray, as well as several others, who inacted those changes. I believe they were right to do so, as consensus seemed to have been formed, but it was they who did it, not me. This is very different from what you claimed later on, that I had gone round effectively vandalising the notability sub-guides against consensus. If you don't believe that there was consensus for those reforms, then go look at the talk page archives yourself or ask Kevin Murray to confirm it for you. It is not my job to dig though the archives and pull out old discussions for you.
- There is no requirement on Wikipedia to inform every Wikipedian on there User Talk page when a new proposal is proposed. Discussions are visible to all on the relevant Project Talk pages. It is your job to watch these pages if you wish to be involved in discussions. You could at the very least watch the Village Pump, and follow links from their to the relevant discussions. If a change is made that you don't agree with, then propose that the change to reverted and state your reasons. Don't claim that there was no consensus simply because you weren't involved in the discussion.
- I am a great believer in establishing consensus, and I believe that was sufficiently done in this current case. This is very different from the way you seem to operate. As far as I can see, your attitude is that any amount of people can discuss it on the Talk page as much as they like, but if anyone dare inact the changes on the actual guideline, you'll revert and claim bad faith. I am very concerned about your ownership issues.
- I assumed that you had no further objections, because you didn't raise any objections to the latest proposal. If that assumption was incorrect then I apologise, but it seems to be clear the consensus is against you.
- —gorgan_almighty (talk) 10:18, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
Furthermore, I would like to say that your right to discuss proposals on here does not translate to a veto. If you oppose a proposal, then provide good, compelling reasons why you oppose it. Saying simply that you oppose it is unhelpful and will not grant much wweight to your argument. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 11:33, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- Horrorshowj is of course welcome to express his/her concerns and objections, but the discussion is no way helped by the allegations of bad faith. I hope that other editors in replying will try to avoid any further arguments ad hominem and try to focus on the issues here rtaher than on misunderstandings between editors. Thanks. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 12:59, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
A question
I've read this thread carefully (and it's a bit daunting for a request for input from VP:P) and I still have a question, which seems to have been answered two different ways on the thread:
Do the notability "essays" dilute the requirement for reliable sourcing?
It seems like the proposal is making a case that various subprojects should be able to define "common sense" notability requirements, which "imply" the presence of good sources, and therefore should be able to defer "delete" outcomes in AfDs.
I worry that this runs aground of LOCALFAME: subcommunities in WP (in my case, people who edit computer security articles) will have their own idiosyncratic notions of who is "notable" ("he spoke at the Midwest's biggest security conference! He must be notable!").
--- tqbf 18:43, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
- RE question 1: IMO, it would actually strengthen the requirement for reliable sourcing. Right now, as the professional standards are often used as justification for keeping an article, RS are not expected. How often in XfD's do we read, "Well, the person was a professional baseball player" or "The subject passes this section of BIO/MUSIC/NUMBERS/Etc thus, of course it is a KEEP." That is then followed by a dozen people citing the same "guideline" as gospel without looking to see if there are any reliable sources. Right now, the additional criteria professionl criteria section is used without regard to the rest of BIO/N---if a person meets one of the additional criteria, they are notable even if they clearly aren't!
- RE your second concern: See my answer above RE Questions from my talkpage. In short, what I argued up there is that yes, we will have some projects writing weak essays. But those already exist and are sometimes cited in AfD's. What this proposal does it is defines the relationship between the official guidelines and the various wikiprojects that have written their own guidelines. It essentially says that the wikiprojects can write their own guidelines, that can be used by those unfamiliar with a subject, to gain understanding of what notability within a field might be. But, it clearly states that the guidelines of N/BIO/ORG/etc have precedence. The various wikiprojects are spouting their interpretation on notability. If the project writes a strong essay, then it will gain more credence. If the project writes a weak essay, that opens the door to the guy who spoke at "the Midwest's biggest security conference" then the project's guidelines will be discarded. IMHO, this is what the professional standards of the additional criteria was always supposed to be---an interpretation on the guidelines. Not a guarantee that meeting them assures notability (which is how they have come to be implemented.)Balloonman (talk) 00:41, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
- I think the requirement for WP:V must be read as an addition to WP:N. We do not and should not write an article about everything where there are two newspaper articles. We have found various excuses not to actually do this in WP:NOT, NOT NEWS being the most widely used--even though every single use of it is bitterly debated. Obviously, we need sources to write an article. But as various dedicated local historians have shown, with enough effort it is possible to find sources for almost every living human. We avoid this by the requirement that they not be primary sources--and this distinction is now challenged, for in the other direction it has become clear that in the 21st century there are things obviously notable for which in fact he only sources are primary. It's time in my opinion we ended this foolishness and indirect, though I must say I do appreciate the opportunity this has given me to developing my skills at WP:AFD. Abundant debates there have made it clear that for about 2/3 of WP articles brought there, one can find good policy reasons for either keeping or deleting.
- This is illustrated by the project-specific qualifications: there are only two ways to view "interpretations" -- either they make some things notable that would not fit in the general rules, or fewer--or they mean that the general rules are so general that they are of no practical use in deciding on the notability of actual articles. DGG (talk) 04:14, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
- DGG, I am not sure of what you are saying here?Balloonman (talk) 07:15, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
- I agree with Balloonman that we need to tighten the rules for verification. I agree with the idea that an unsubstantiated claim to notability is worthless. However, dropping the additional criteria to essay level will not accomplish anything worthwhile. People will still base judgment for notability on the essays, and if they weren't requiring proof before they still won't. If the standard is set that the essays will be disregarding in disputes of notability, then what actual purpose are they going to serve? All we'd be doing is empowering the projects to be masters of meaningless decisions and increasing their administrative load. Horrorshowj (talk) 07:25, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
- I think the argument that this will increase the administrative load of a project is an empty argument. I don't think there is a project out there that wouldn't accept or even embrace the opportunity to write out guidelines on their own. In fact, how often is time currently spent fighting different projects that want to write their own criteria? In the past few weeks, I've seen at least 3 or 4 projects making independent proposals. This is an administrative task they want.
- As for the viability of these essays, you contradict yourself above. First, you say, they will still base their judgment on the essays, but then you indicate that these essays will be meaningless. But I do not believe they would be meaningless or that articles would be kept/deleted solely based upon the essays. The proposed template will highlight the fact that people are allowed, but not required, to use the essays. Thus, pointing to the fact that an athlete competed in the 1932 Olympics will no longer be a free pass to notability. People will start to ask more questions. At the same time, however, the fact that the Olympics is part of the established "essay" it will give credence to the notion that said Olympian is inherently notable. Going to my area of interest, Poker. IMHO anybody who has won a WSOP bracelet is notable. WSOP bracelets are the gold standard in the Poker world. Winning the "US Poker Open", however, IMHO doesn't carry the same level of prestige. If somebody proposes a bracelet winner and a Aussie Millions winner for AfD, a person unfamiliar with the subject could look at what the Project considers to be notable. It may not be a free pass for the WSOP winner, but it will definitely impact the credibility of arguments for the Aussie Million winner. I see the most value of the essays in not the affirmative of who is notable, but in the restrictive sense of who isn't.Balloonman (talk) 08:30, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
- My argument isn't actually contradictory, it's referring to two possible implementations of the proposal. The demarcation is provided by "If the standard is set". Sorry I should have picked stronger wording. The way I see it, are three possible trends from the essay downgrade:
- It is allowable to give credence for notability using the essays and closing admins give those arguments weight. People who don't require proof of the claim to notability now still aren't going to. Project essays are going to have less neutral input than BIO, and examples have already been provided that the essays aren't always stringent. Editors like me who spend a lot of time on AfD's now get watch a few dozen talk pages for changes, instead of just 3, and either stop or only show up when it's part of our project. I know the counter-argument is going to be that the admins will eliminate those that don't actually have proper documentation, but that's part of their job description now. It happens, but even the admins will admit nowhere near as often as it should. If it goes this way, we're just giving more bites at the apple, we are not tightening up anything. I will grant you that projects would love to write their own essays under this setup.
- Arguments based on notability essays carry no weight at AfD. This appears to be what Kevin Murray is suggesting above. If the essays aren't usable at AfD, then they are worthless and there is no reason for a project to write them. It's an overblown to-do list with more room for outside participation.
- Essays are potentially usable at AfD, but it's optional for the closing admin to give them weight. This seems like the least likely, and worst outcome. 17 well reasoned arguments, 14-3 split and consensus can go in either direction based on whether the admin allows essays or not? Worst case scenario, but I think this pushed the majority of AfD into appeal based on claims of improper weight being given to the essays in either direction.
- I hope my points are clearer now. I see now you're correct that administrative workload isn't a relevant argument against this.
Horrorshowj (talk) 02:55, 20 December 2007 (UTC)Horrorshowj (talk) 08:39, 20 December 2007 (UTC)- Horrorshowj, I understand what you are saying about admins arbitrarily giving undue weight to essays. The idea is that essays defining notability, page style, etc should never be given weight at AfD. Essays can sometimes be useful at AfD, but that mainly applies to the essays that define particular terms (such as WP:RS). Its important to realise that WikiProjects already write essays about what they consider to be notable. That's nothing new. Part of this proposal is to give clear guidance on the fact that those essays do not trump the general criteria - they are informative only. This is clearly stated in the {{essay-project-note}} template which would be placed above any such essay. I believe this will help alleviate the problem you raised above. In cases where admins still give undue weight to essays, those AfDs should be taken to DRV, as the admin was wrong.
- Stepping aside from the problem you mentioned above, I think that notability essays written by WikiProjects can essentially be defined as a summary of what experts in the particular field consider notable. I think its useful to have such essays around, for informative purposes only. This might sound like a surprising opinion from someone like me, who usually trumps the general notability criteria exclusively, but I think its good because it seems to strike the right balance between the requirement for secondary sources, and common sense. This view seems much more in-line with the views that you would normally put across, and to be honest I'm surprised you don't agree.
- —gorgan_almighty (talk) 11:21, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
- I hope my points are clearer now. I see now you're correct that administrative workload isn't a relevant argument against this.
- I'm getting a bit concerned that rather than truly having essays, we are coming up with a euphemism for subject specific guidelines, and we are going to have all kinds of inconsistent and contradictory standards for notability. Rather than determining topic inclusion based on WP:N we will have cross jurisdictional issues for singing professors, is it MUSIC or PROF? At least keeping the problem contained here at BIO reduces the confusion and maintenance. --Kevin Murray (talk) 23:51, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
- I disagree. What we are proposing here is nothing new. WikiProjects already write essays about what they consider to be notable. Anyone is allowed to write essays on anything, and having an essay about what an supposed group of experts in a particular field considers notable is useful. Its not instruction creep, because it isn't instruction at all - its purely informational. But there has always been a bit of confusion at AfD about whether these expert-written criteria trump the general criteria or not. What we are trying to do here is to establish clear guidance saying that those expert-written criteria do not trump the general criteria. This leaves no doubt about what takes precedence at AfD. The alternative you suggest is to leave things exactly as they are, which would be a big mistake. Currently, we have a list of types of people who are inherently notable. This is unhelpful, because it doesn't indicate who considers them notable, or for what reason. Such a list can't be updated, because it doesn't fall into the jurisdiction of any experts in a particular field (not that we would want "expert opinion" being given as a justification for official guidelines, anyway). But worst of all, having such lists inside BIO (which is an official guideline) elevates them to the position of official guidance, which can be used to challenge the general notability guideline at AfD. We definately don't want that. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 10:36, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
- Excellent response Gorgan. I think you've just hit the nail squarely on the head as to why I am pushing for this. The other reason why I am pushing for this is because a lot of time is spent by N/BIO people shooting down the different wikiprojects essays on the subject and garnering bad blood between the two. What we are trying to do is establish a parameter that can avoid this bad blood while making it clear that N/BIO/ORG/etc have precedence over the various project guidelines.Balloonman (talk) 14:45, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
There's a sort of non-formal rule that any verifiable place, no matter how insignificant, always deserves an article. Should "places" be exempt from the general notability guidelines, or do we now start nominating obscure places for deletion? These types of articles will almost always be kept even if there are no reliable secondary sources that cite them (primary sources do exist for some of these). Again, if a subject-specific notability guideline (or essay) would lead to a set of objects where an overwhelming fraction (say 90%) of them would be notable under the general guidelines, wouldn't that make everybody's job easier while still following the notability guidelines? --Polaron | Talk 18:53, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
- COMMENT: By place, I assume that you mean City/State/village? I've seen places like caves, waterfalls, etc deleted.Balloonman (talk) 19:24, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, including unincorporated communities and census-designated places. Basically, any locality that has a name and has people living in it. --Polaron | Talk 20:01, 20 December 2007 (UTC)
What's next
Ok, this discussion kind of faded into oblivion over Christmas break, but I don't think it should simply disappear. Here are, I believe the indisputed facts:
- WP:BIO has always required RS and V. Those are primary considerations.
- The additional criteria section was never intended to override the above fact, but to help define it.
- In XfD's the usage of an additional criteria has come to be used as a trump card, even if RS/V can't be established.
But it doesn't stop there, I believe the following is also true and generally accepted as such. Because of these additional criteria exists, many wikiprojects create their own criteria.
- When they create the criteria and notify the folks here at WP:BIO/WP:N, their proposals are stomped on as instructional creep or unnecessary. This creates bad feelings between the projects and the people at notability. Furthermore, it forces the people here to constantly battle over the same issues.
- When they create the criteria and don't notify the folks here, their proposals are posted on the individual project pages. Then when cited in an AfD, they usually are cited in a manner wherein they carry the same weight as those found on wp:BIO. In other words, the criteria given by WP:Baseball/WP:NASCAR/etc is accepted as the same as that of the additional criteria section---until/unless somebody disputes that fact in which case the debate is opened again.
Thus, the conflict continues and a lot of time/energy is wasted rehashing the same debates---but with different people from different projects. The proposal here is a rather simple one:
- Define a relationship between the criteria established by the various projects and WP:N. Ultimately, the project's guidelines are that of an essay written by many users. (Even if the project has a 'vote', it doesn't make it into a guidelines.) Thus, I think these criteria should be clearly labeled as such via a template---such as {{essay-project-note}}. (Note: We don't have to call them essays---perhaps "Wikiproject Criteria" or something?)
- Encourage, not discourage, projects to establish subject specific criteria. They know what is notable within their area of expertise. By establishing these guidelines they can help out at XfD's--- for both KEEP/DELETE---but as they are clearly labeled as secondary to the generally accepted guidelines and can be accepted/ignored by the wider community. (NOTE: The projects are going to write essays anyways, regardless of what the people here at WP:N/BIO want.)
- The above proposed template will then create a category of wikiproject specific criteria---again labelling them as secondary to the guidelines.
I think this proposal will save a lot of heartache and grief. It is not instruction creep because it clearly establishes the guidelines as primary and won't change the fact that projects already write their own criteria. It defines the relationship in such a way that avoids instruction creep.Balloonman (talk) 23:17, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
- WP:V is a policy, RS is just a disputed mass of details on the interpretation of it. Neither of them amounts to notability, just gives the minimal basis without which there is no way to write an article. Either we write an article about everything we can verify, elementary school athletes and all, or we have criteria. The default guideline is the basic notability criterion N=2RS, but this leads to counter-intuitive results, which are dealt with in one of three ways
- elaborating on what constitutes RSs to achieve the result wanted
- having subject-specific guidelines
- fighting everything out individually
- for my example, i can certainly construct RS guidelines to exclude elementary school athletes: local papers aren't reliable for notability for events limited to their locality and not covered elsewhere, for they include everything anyone sends them. andso on, depending on the result wanted.
- So we should define criteria for each subject, define them as clear cut categorical guidelines, and eliminate the need for extensive individual discussions, which tend to come out with random results. The guideline will sometimes be in error, but i dont see how they can be more in error than our present practice. I wouldnt worry about the general WP:N, for that is rightly under attack as inherently undependable.
- "The purpose is not to guide discussion at AfD, but to keep articles from needing discussions at AfD. DGG (talk) 04:46, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
- So you represent one end of the spectrum, the side that would support having additional criteria guidelines for virtually every subject imaginable. The side that if taken to its ultimate extreme would have more "additional criteria" guidelines than we could shake a stick at. In all honesty, philosophically, I agree with you. I would love to see each project/area write out solid definitive guidelines that could be utilized and relied upon. From a practicality point of view, hashing out that many additional criteria guidelines would become impractical. I mean a quick look at this page alone shows that Pornstars, Religion, Diplomats, families, crime victems, criminals, congressmen, athletes, poker players, and old people have all been discussed here in the recent past. Then there are other areas/subjects which have written out guidelines that are never brought up here-but are then used to defend the existence of articles.
- The other side of the spectrum, which gorgan_almighty and Kevin Murray are prime examples, vehemently opposes this approach as it introduces instructional creep and becomes impossible to stay on top of.
- This proposal is a compromise proposal between those two camps because it makes it easier for general guidelines about subject specific criteria to come into existence without having the projects and BIO/N people clashing. It places that burden on the shoulders of the people who know the subject specifics the best---the various wikiprojects. (As noted previously, this isn't anything that the projects aren't doing already and will continue to do regardless of what the folks at BIO/N say. With the inclusion of the Additional Criteria section, more and more projects are going to create their own guidelines.) Thus, it achieves your and my desire to have these guidelines out there. If I'm looking at an article on Cricket it is helpful to know what people familiar with that subject thinks are notable---what is the Cricket equivalent to having "competed in a fully professional league?" Their criteria explains what it is and why there is a difference. Prior to reading their interpretation, I had no way of knowing. I bet you that 95% of the people reading this discussion even knew that WP:CRICKET had written notability guidelines! But, their guidelines would come in very helpful in understanding how WP:BIO relates to the sport of Cricket. I'd rather have the project provide their interpretation of BIO/N BEFORE an article is written or taken to AfD.
- At the same time, this proposal addresses the concerns of the instructional creep folks because it clearly establishes these subject specific guidelines as secondary to BIO/N. They would no longer have to get into every debate and shoot down every project that wants to come up with subject specific criteria. The subject specific guidelines are clearly delineated as subservient to the main BIO/N guidelines.
- As for your comment about "to keep articles from needing discussions at AfD." Yes, I agree... but the reality is that XfD's is where the issue will come about. To fall back into my area of interest---Poker. Wikiproject Poker considers WPT/WSOP/EPT events to be the highest level of poker, but does not consider somebody notable for merely playing in said events. If somebody comes along and writes an article wherein their only claim to fame was that they played at the WSOP Main Event or won the Aussie Millions, then the projects participants would probably oppose said article. If, however, you are dealing with a WSOP bracelet winner, the participants of the project would vigorously fight for keeping said article. In fact, nominating a bracelet winner for deletion would probably be met with snide comments about how idiotic said AfD was.Balloonman (talk) 09:07, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
Lists of people section
Based on a conversation at WP:N, several editors, myself included, believe that the guidelines related to list content, including any requirements that exist for notable list entries, should be located at a single place, in Wikipedia:Lists#Listed items (recognizing also that that section, as currently written, needs expansion to capture WP practice around list content). Accordingly, I would propose moving the Lists of People section from this guideline to that one, putting a "please see . . ." link on this page to refer to it. Comments, thoughts? UnitedStatesian (talk) 13:21, 7 January 2008 (UTC)
- Not hearing anything on this for over a week, I am going to go ahead and make the move. UnitedStatesian (talk) 22:58, 14 January 2008 (UTC)
This seems to be a standard one-event person; would it make sense to merge it into James Dean? --NE2 18:16, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
- Yes this is a good merge candidate. Horrorshowj (talk) 05:12, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, but in the merge, don't delete any info. I always wondered what happened to the man, and now that he's dead, all this bio info is interesting and legit. Even as a footnote. But put it SOMEWHERE in the Dean article, and if you can't figure out how to, that's a sign that Turnupseed needs his own bio, even if a short one. I wouldn't be making this argument if he was alive. SBHarris 05:34, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
"intellectually independent"
"A biography written about a person contributes toward establishing his or her notability, but a summary of that biography lacking an original intellectual contribution does not." I think this means that the summary does not add any additional notability to thatt provvided by thebio, not that the summary if that is all we have does not to some degree establish notability. Comments? suggestions for rewording to make it clearer? DGG (talk) 01:33, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
Daniel Martin (Scholar)
I recently posted an article on Daniel Martin, a Jack Kent Cooke scolar, Peace activist and writer. It was deleted for lack of notability, "importance" and "significance."
Let me preface this by saying I have no intention of writing an article about myself, I'll let someone else do that someday (if ever). I only want to suggest that we take a good look at what we mean when we say "IMPORTANT and "SIGNIFICANT".
I must adamantly make a case for the Daniel Martin (Scholar) article - not on my personal behalf, but on the behalf of anyone who has made acceptional academic achievements and has, as a result been recognized with a highly prestigous national award. The Jack Kent Cooke Foundation Scholarship, received by Daniel (myself) as a result of years of hard work and community leadership, is the most selective, lucrative transfer scholarship in the Western Hemisphere.
I believe it's a very poor reflection on our society when a junk filmmaker can crap out a movie about two guys getting stuck in the desert with a beautiful lesbian (see Never on Tuesday and get acknowledged on Wikipedia just because it was released by a studio - or another can be born into a wealthy family like my friend Brad Wyman (with all due respect), yet never achieve anything productive save 1 hit film about a mass murderer - see Monster. This reflects the same skewed value system that awards a top teacher with $30,000 a year while Julia Roberts can pump out a flop for $20 Million.
While I do understand that not just ANYONE can have a wikipedia article about them and their achievements, I do believe those who've been recognized with extraordinary awards by extraordinary people - see Jack Kent Cooke - should be recognized truthfully with the appropriate citations and proof. Jack Kent Cooke once said his legacy would be his scholars - and as the legacy of Mr. Cooke, I believe myself and other scholars should stand as societal role models and be recognized in the academic community for our achievements. I still believe, despite the cynical attitude of some, that Wikipedia is a real part of the academic and knowledge community.
Who are you to say that my achievement in not "IMPORTANT" or "SIGNIFICANT", yet Adam Rifkin's Never on Tuesday get's it's own entry - and for what???
I think this scholarship - and what it stands for - is pretty damn significant - and so did a multi-multi millionaire entrepreneur like Mr. Cooke, who owned the Redskins and the Lakers and the Chrysler Building, and so did the selection committee of dozens of top professors, politicians and nobel laureates who picked me and 24 other students out of over 25,000 potential candidates.
So I urge you, in your role as an admin, to permit and guide an article about a Jack Kent Cooke Scholar - not for me or the sake of individual ego, I'll leave off the writing of my own article and do one on a fellow scholar - but for the sake of honoring extraordinary *recognized* achievements that I hope can one day inspire people to be strong in character, discipline and hope - things that define a Jack Kent Cooke Scholar. We deserve to stand next to the Adam Rifkins and Brad Wymans of the world, and I believe we can.
There's a real world out there, with real heroes. Let's lift them up too.
Thank you, Eleutherosmartin (talk)
If you would like more information about the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation, feel free to visit the Foundation website. Daniel has also been recognized in the Chronicle of Higher Education. Such secondary sources will be cited in full in any forthcoming articles about JKCF scholars.
Eleutherosmartin (talk) 04:56, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
- The place to ask for restoration of the article is a WP:Deletion Review--or just write a better one with more evidence. The article that was deleted started "Daniel Martin is a recipient of the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation 2005 Undergraduate Transfer Scholarship, the most prestigous award granted to American community college students transferring to 4 year institutions" and said nothing about his individual accomplishments. In my personal opinion that should have been enough to pass speedy, but I can't imagine that it will be considered notable in wikipedia--people have to have actually done something important, not just won a scholarship to leann how to do something. In the past, the consensus has been against considering even Rhodes Scholarships by themselves to be notable. Many people who win one go on to do things appropriate for an encyclopedia, and then of course there are articles. But I notice from the foundation';s website that it awards 650 scholarships a year, and this would seem to cast some considerable further doubt against making any one of them individually notable. People who learn to make films dont get articles till they make them, and achieve a certain recognition in their field; your friend Brad has a filmography of 33 films. DGG (talk) 20:06, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
- I think it being an autobiographical entry would be seen as pushing it over the line for deletion under A7, if not also qualifying it under G11 as advertising. Horrorshowj (talk) 22:59, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
- The place to ask for restoration of the article is a WP:Deletion Review--or just write a better one with more evidence. The article that was deleted started "Daniel Martin is a recipient of the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation 2005 Undergraduate Transfer Scholarship, the most prestigous award granted to American community college students transferring to 4 year institutions" and said nothing about his individual accomplishments. In my personal opinion that should have been enough to pass speedy, but I can't imagine that it will be considered notable in wikipedia--people have to have actually done something important, not just won a scholarship to leann how to do something. In the past, the consensus has been against considering even Rhodes Scholarships by themselves to be notable. Many people who win one go on to do things appropriate for an encyclopedia, and then of course there are articles. But I notice from the foundation';s website that it awards 650 scholarships a year, and this would seem to cast some considerable further doubt against making any one of them individually notable. People who learn to make films dont get articles till they make them, and achieve a certain recognition in their field; your friend Brad has a filmography of 33 films. DGG (talk) 20:06, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
- Wikipedia is not a Who's Who...Balloonman (talk) 02:14, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
- And the notability of the foundation is irrelevant: notability is not contagious! --Orange Mike | Talk 15:32, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
Amateur athletes
I refer you to Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Thomas Wilcher which is an interesting debate, where currently consensus is 100% for keeping someone who falls foul of WP:BIO#Athletes, implying that our guideline needs adjusting. Comments welcome - there on the specifics of the deletion, here on whether or not to amend the guideline. --Dweller (talk) 11:56, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
- I am not sure why Wikipedia:SPORTS#Amateur_sports_people is no longer the guiding policy. Wikipedia:Bio#Athletes is biased against athletes in sports that don't have organized professional sports where in their sport they might be the equivalent of a professional minor league athlete or a professional second-tier major league athlete. Wilcher is a case in point where the former guidelines accomodate a contribution but the lattter does do not. As with anything it is a matter of where to draw the line in the sand for notability. In this case, the current article would support a the revision of the guidelines. Admittedly, the current article does omit the transition from being a three-time NCAA All-American to being a football coach. This transition may have included some time on the professional track circuit, but the current article does not explain this possibility.--TonyTheTiger (t/c/bio/WP:CHICAGO/WP:LOTD) 15:16, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
- The proposal at Wikipedia:SPORTS seems to have been closed as rejected last autumn. There's some discussion about it at Wikipedia_talk:Notability_(sports)#Status. --Dweller (talk) 15:31, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
- The larger proposal was rejected, but small parts of it may be acceptable.--TonyTheTiger (t/c/bio/WP:CHICAGO/WP:LOTD) 18:54, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
- The proposal at Wikipedia:SPORTS seems to have been closed as rejected last autumn. There's some discussion about it at Wikipedia_talk:Notability_(sports)#Status. --Dweller (talk) 15:31, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
In all honesty, it looks like this article is going to be kept but not for the right reasons (current policy). It is being kept because an active group of editors who have all taken part in the editing of the {{Michigan Wolverines Football}} template that very recently looked like this have led the charge to have it kept. Others have followed along.
This sort of implies that there may be a groundswell to revise policy so that biography articles of athletes with specific credentials not falling within current policy are kept. I would very much like to come to an agreement that would cover power conference Division I basketball and BCS conference Division I (whatever its new name is) football. Such a policy could very well cover other DI sports such as baseball and hockey, but I do not follow them closely enough to say for certain. Note, I think for non power conference and lower division schools, just being drafted or ever having played may as notable as being a first rounder or a current player is for a power conference.
User:Cbl62 and I are the most active editors of the Michigan template and have a general agreement on who is important, but some specific discrepant credentials. I think the last version before the template was collapsed is a good starting point. I propose that each BCS football school and power conference basketball school create such a template. All persons on such a template will not be contested by AFD. However, there needs to be an agreement on two classifications: All-Americans, Active Alumni, Current All-Conference and Other Important Figures.
In addition to being first, second and sometimes third and honorable mention All-American teams there are various types of first-team All-Americans: 1.) unanimous, 2.) consensus, 3.) regular and, for lack of a better term, 4.) unrecognized. In any given year usually between six and ten All-American lists are recognized toward determining consensus and unanimous. Any player named as first team on all lists is unanimous and on half is considered consensus. Other first team honorees are considered regular All-Americans. However, in any given year there are lists not recognized that also produce All-Americans. Notable Michigan Wolverines include Rick Volk, Bubba Paris, Billy Taylor (American football) to name a few. The relevance of this consideration is that many All-Americans are leveraging their athletic scholarships to get an education and pursue graduate professional programs who in the abstract might fail an AFD. These lists of credentials will help us to protect a general class of athlete without the burden of case by case analysis. I am for keeping all articles of class 1, 2, and 3 players. I am not against a policy that would keep all class 4 All-Americans as well.
The controversy on active alumni, on the template involves the 53-man roster, injured reserve and the 8-man practice squad. However, although this is a problem for the template it Is likely that all three types of players constitute professional athletes and would not be a point of contestation for AFD. All three types of players should be kept in an AFD process although I think a player must have made a 53-man roster in the current season to be eligible to be on a template, IMO.
I believe a player’s bio should be kept once he becomes first team All-Conference (either coaches or media) in a power conference until his graduating class has become professional athletes.
The catch is “Other Important Figures” and Cbl and I disagree on what should be here. He is protecting former major record holders for the most part. I would define it as Professional athletes, Olympic Medalists and All-Americans from other sports and possibly cut it off there, which means almost none of the guys in other would be kept on the template by my definition although they would be kept on WP. This would include articles like Elmer Gedeon and Thomas Wilcher being protected by the football team template. I am not sure where to go with this, however, I think the institution football templates should be considered as part of the issue as a reinforcement of policy by making it easy to monitor. Of course, when all sports come up with equitable lists my other important figures might not be the right list.
This still does not give us specific reasons to save another article I created (Jennifer Martz), but it would take us in the right direction.--TonyTheTiger (t/c/bio/WP:CHICAGO/WP:LOTD) 07:36, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
- I agree totally with your opening comments, but you then lose me in the welter of jargon about American amateur sport. Wikipedia:SPORTS was an attempt for each sports WikiProject or other experts to devise its own cast-iron criteria for notability. The overal policy failed, but individual WikiProjects (I'm most familiar with WP:FOOT and WP:CRIC) have long had their own notability criteria defined at the WikiProject home. Perhaps such guidelines can be collated into a template and appended into WP:BIO? I think that then the separate amateur section can be disposed of, as the reader of the policy will be interested in knowing how to judge (to name two sports that treat amateurism somewhat differently from the norm) athletes or cricketers, regardless of pro or amateur status. --Dweller (talk) 11:47, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
I'm a deletionist with sports articles, but I don't see nothing wrong with the article linked here, amateur athletes can have articles if there is enough reliable sources covering them. If they don't, well delete. Secret account 02:44, 25 January 2008 (UTC)
- We should follow a very simple notability guideline: If the person is subject of 2 or more non-trivial reliable sources, and if someone cares enough to write an article on them, then the person is sufficiently notable for an article. Johntex\talk 04:44, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
How do we define "generally"?
I am a bit confused about this part of the guideline: "A person is generally notable if they meet any of the following standards. Failure to meet these criteria is not conclusive proof that a subject should not be included; conversely, meeting one or more does not guarantee that a subject should be included." In practice, I think that this line is roundly ignored. Meeting one of the criteria is considered, in practice, a guarantee of notability, and failing to meet a standard is regarded as lack of notability. Are these criteria designed to eliminate the need for what we might conventionally think of as sources that establish notability? For instance, would an athlete who plays a single game for a professional team and no more and is never the subject of a significant coverage in secondary sources qualify as notable? Croctotheface (talk) 17:41, 29 January 2008 (UTC)
- Well, if the number of one line, one or two game articles out there is any indication, I'd say so. •Florrie•leave a note• 22:11, 29 January 2008 (UTC)
Extreme Sports Athletes
Hello,
I just was wondering as to if we could lay down some more specific criteria for extreme sports athletes. The standard definitions of athlete notability don't really apply to them. Any thoughts? I'd argue that anyone winning an X Games or a Gravity Games medal would count for sure, but beyond that, I'm admittedly just not familiar enough with all of the possible criteria. I'm not a huge extreme sports enthusiast. Magazine coverage? Video appearances? Tours? What should the guidelines be? The Extreme Sports WikiProject doesn't seem to be active and hasn't for some time, so they won't be a good place to go for some guidance. matt91486 (talk) 21:50, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
- As long as they satisfy WP:NOTE there is no need for anything specific. If they do indeed "win" X games or Gravity Games then there should be sources per WP:RS easily found. Even making specific criteria doesn't stop articles getting dragged up to AfD. Adding easily verifiable WP:V references to an article stops the nom being made in the first place. Better to train editors to properly reference their subjects. Sting au Buzz Me... 22:06, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
- Well, yeah, I understand it won't make anything immune from AfD, but I just thought perhaps some more guidelines would be helpful. At least, I'd like it included as a category if another big attempt for general sports notability is tried to put together. I know they weren't part of the last failed proposal. Just wanted to call some attention to it to get it out in the discussion. I probably won't create too many articles on individuals, I'm just doing some transcribing of medals of X Games to the site and getting marginally annoyed by the amount of redlinks, haha. matt91486 (talk) 05:50, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- As long as they satisfy WP:NOTE there is no need for anything specific. If they do indeed "win" X games or Gravity Games then there should be sources per WP:RS easily found. Even making specific criteria doesn't stop articles getting dragged up to AfD. Adding easily verifiable WP:V references to an article stops the nom being made in the first place. Better to train editors to properly reference their subjects. Sting au Buzz Me... 22:06, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
Athlete notability?
On the notability page, it states that all players who played in the major leagues get notability. However, that is very ambiguous. Does that mean all players, or only the "important" ones? If you look at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Josh Bunce, there are some mixed feelings about that article. Josh Bunce did play in the major leagues, but over 100 years ago. Back then, there is very little info about the major leagues, almost none about him. So let's say he only played 1 game, got at bat once (hypothetically). He got a walk. So does that make him notable? According to this guideline, it does. But practically, it doesn't make sense to have an article.
What I'm trying to get at here, is that if they get automatic notability, they don't always have information to warrant an article. As it seems, there is about zilco more info to add to that article, and it will remain a stub. Soxred93 | talk count bot 00:54, 11 February 2008 (UTC)
- Yes if they play in the country's premier league of the particular sport they get notability. It seems strange to me sometimes when a player makes it to that level but otherwise has a pretty poor record, that they still get to have an article here. Consensus consistently saves these sport stars articles at AfD's though. It is a shame when articles on educators or doctors (people who work hard to benefit our communities) struggle to meet notability criteria. Athletes seem to be an almost sacred subject around Wikipedia? That athlete in the article you mentioned will most likely be kept, even though an editor (and yourself) is putting up a good case against it being kept. Perhaps an addition to the criteria for athletes is required? Something that makes it clear that WP:RS should be met to satisfy WP:V (which is an official policy whereas wp:bio is only a guideline). The problem is as mentioned consensus here has made his participation in that one game [2] enough to call him notable? Pretty crazy when you look at the link and see all the zero's. Unless a change is made to the section on additional criteria for athletes we are going to continue seeing this happen. Sting au Buzz Me... 02:24, 11 February 2008 (UTC)
- the public has paid enough attention to athletes over the last 2500 years that there are always sources for people at the top levels. As someone who pays no attention to them at all, i may find this a little out of kilter with my own interests, but that's what the world finds notable. Just competing in the Olympics made a man famous in 500 BC, and it still does..DGG (talk) 05:04, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
Criteria for notable religious leaders in ISKCON
- Questions On the official Governing Body Commission website it states that there are "around 48" members. [3] So my question is are all 48 notable due to membership on the GBC of ISKCON? These 48 could be a good starting place for a discussion on a minimum standard for notablilty for religious leaders in ISKCON. I believe there needs to be some criteria set for establishing, "what is a notable ISKCON religious leader?" Any thoughts? Thanks. Ism schism (talk) 18:20, 17 February 2008 (UTC)
- Well, with respect to the RC church is is accepted that every bishop is notable, and there are about 4800 of them. True, it has sometimes been disputed, but in practice every such article is sustained at AfD, as a major figure similar to a mayor of a city. DGG (talk) 05:01, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
Clarify that relationships do not automatically preclude notability
The guideline says: "Invalid criteria: That person A has a relationship with well-known person B is not a reason for a standalone article on A". Can we clarify that this relationship does not preclude notability either? I'd just like it to be clear that secondary coverage of person A that occurred just because of their relationship to person B still qualifies as coverage of person A. I've seen a few comments like "oh, they just did that article on her because she's the daughter of some rock star". True, that's why they did it, but it's still an article about her. —Torc. (Talk.) 20:53, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
- I took a shot at adding a clarification. Comments of course welcome. UnitedStatesian (talk) 14:56, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
- I think that works. I just wanted to confirm the thinking before making the change myself, but this is even better. —Torc. (Talk.) 19:36, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
Clarify athlete notability
{{helpme}}
Mo Keita Devlin McGregor (talk) 10:51, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
You haven't asked any question, so I've nullified your helpme by adding "tnull". I think you're usually supposed to put the helpme on your own user talk page, anyway, which is here. And put a question with it. Thanks. --Coppertwig (talk) 13:45, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
Guideline vs. Policy
Virtually all BLP AFD's and the like that I've ever seen have centered on WP:BIO, and I'm wondering why it's not tagged policy, as it appears to be de facto accepted policy. Since policies are just written description of existing practice, why is this? Lawrence § t/e 23:07, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
- I think the "guideline" designation is retained in order to preserve the advice that: "As the occasional exception may arise, [the guideline] should be approached with common sense." You may also be interested in this related discussion concerning the status of the general notability guideline. Black Falcon (Talk) 00:08, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
Auto archiving
I'll be adding this page to a bot to be auto archived. I'll likely set it up for archives by year and adjust the number of days before archiving based on the size of the talk page after a few runs. Vegaswikian (talk) 19:55, 26 February 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks. I cut out a chunk of material this morning as this page is out of hand. Maybe, one day, auto archiving of Talk pages will be the default... --ElKevbo (talk) 21:05, 26 February 2008 (UTC)
- OK. I'll set it up now and it should run tomorrow night. Vegaswikian (talk) 07:25, 27 February 2008 (UTC)
"Intellectually independent"
I find this provision problematic. The footnote says:
“ | Sources that are pure derivatives of an original source can be used as references, but do not contribute toward establishing the notability of a subject. "Intellectual independence" requires not only that the content of sources be non-identical, but also that the entirety of content in a published work not be derived from (or based in) another work (partial derivations are acceptable). For example, a speech by a politician about a particular person contributes toward establishing the notability of that person, but multiple reproductions of the transcript of that speech by different news outlets do not. A biography written about a person contributes toward establishing his or her notability, but a summary of that biography lacking an original intellectual contribution does not. | ” |
The difficulty is that almost all newspaper articles about an issue will tend to be derived from the same sources (except when a news organization undertakes its own investigation of something, which is relatively unusual), and so none are intellectually independent in this sense.
Also, if a politician's speech about a person is reproduced fifty times, rather than once, that surely does establish the notability of the politician, or of the contents of the speech, so the "multiple reproduction" advice is surely misleading. Ditto with the biography advice -- if lots of outlets summarize a biography, it does indeed increase its notability. SlimVirgin (talk)(contribs) 18:19, 27 February 2008 (UTC)
Local politicians
Just being an elected local official, or an unelected candidate for political office, does not guarantee notability, although such a person may be notable for other reasons besides their political careers alone.
Certainly true for candidates - we do want to remove the possibility that the fact that someone got on a ballot somewhere means they should have an article. But it strikes me that many local government officials probably are going to get enough local press coverage to mean that they would qualify for articles. I also somewhat question the criteria. There are 17 members of the Philadelphia City Council. There are, on the other hand, 28 members of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from Philly. The members of the city council are, for the most part, going to be more important than most of the state representatives. But the state representatives are given automatic notability, while the city councilmen have to meet a vaguely defined standard of "significant press coverage". They can certainly all meet that, but that's just the point - they can all meet it. One can easily imagine somebody creating a stub on, say, Jim Kenney (a fairly prominent city councilman, elected at-large by the whole city), and then having it be speedy deleted for failing to "make a claim to notability." I remember last year people were trying to delete the aricle on Tom Knox, who ended up being the runner up for mayor, on the grounds that candidates for local office are presumed to be not notable unless demonstrated otherwise. I'm not too familiar with other countries, but it seems to me that it would be good to try to find categories where it is very likely that virtually everyone will be sufficiently notable to qualify, so as to make it less likely that good articles will be speedy deleted by trigger happy people.
I know more about American politics than other countries, but I'd think the following ought to qualify:
- Mayors of cities of over 50,000 or so.
- City Councilors in the largest cities
- Major mayoral candidates in the largest cities
- Major County officials in large counties with significant self-government (e.g. Montgomery County, Maryland, which functions more or less like a big city government)
- Probably most District/State's Attorneys, at least of larger jurisdictions.
All of these people, I think, would be more prominent than your average member of the lower house of a state legislature, who are automatically considered notable. Anyway, I'm not committed to any particular formulation, but I think the idea that some freshman state delegate can be assumed to be important, while no mayors can, is silly and needs to be corrected. john k (talk) 20:29, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
Note the redlink that you showed of Jim Kenney, the deleted content was an attack on a nn high school teacher, as for your comments, if there are reliable sources outside of the local newspaper, I don't see the reason why an article can't exist. Secret account 02:40, 25 January 2008 (UTC)
Firstly, I know that the Jim Kenney article that was deleted was not about the councilman. But if somebody put up a stub that said
Jim Kenney is a Philadelphia at-large city councilman.
It seems as though there's a solid chance it would be deleted as making "no claim to notability," because, apparently, serving on the city council of the sixth largest city in the country is not as notable as serving in the lower house of the state legislature of Wyoming (which has about a third as many people as Philly, and whose House has about three times as many members as the Philly City Council). Beyond that, what's wrong with the local newspaper? If there's dozens of Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News articles about the other Mr. Kenney (no relation), and there are, why does that not count as notability? And the point is not whether an article can be exist, it's about where the presumption of notability should be. At the moment, the presumption of notability is that any state legislator is notable, and any mayor or city councilman or district attorney is not. This is perverse, for reasons I've tried to explain. The mayor of any decent sized city is going to be a more important political figure than all but the most powerful state legislators, and the same is true for the DA. In the largest cities, city councilmen are generally going to be more prominent than state legislators, as well. The guidelines should reflect reality. john k (talk) 14:21, 25 January 2008 (UTC)
I weakly support this proposal since I strongly support the aim of the efficacious use of Wikipedians time, freeing them for editing articles by avoiding arguments where the outcomes will (or probably should) be reversed. I am concerned that the guidelines, as written, should not be too US-centric. |I would propose a rebuttable assumption of notability for all elected/appointed legislators/politicians (but not officials) up to and including the third tier of administration (where the national legislature is the first tier). Alice✉ 18:11, 25 January 2008 (UTC)
The section here doesn't explain our practice for municipal politicians as thoroughly as the one at WP:OUTCOMES, admittedly, but much of what you're proposing here is, in fact, already our existing practice — at least for the first four criteria you listed. Even right down to the fact that 50K is generally (although not universally) accepted as the approximate cutoff for presuming a mayor to be notable just for being a mayor. (Mayors of smaller places may still be notable for other reasons, of course, and mayors of larger places can still be deleted if their articles aren't properly sourced.) I don't know if there's a clear consensus on the notability or non-notability of DAs or state attorneys, however. Some expansion and clarification here would be fair, certainly, but I don't think there really needs to be too much debate about it since you're really just codifying what's basically the unwritten norm as it is. Bearcat (talk) 23:19, 22 February 2008 (UTC)
- I think that once an article on the councilman is written and properly sourced, it would supersede the guideline on state vs. local office holders. For instance, some County-level politicians New York represent areas larger then Wyoming as well, and receive plenty of press coverage. I've seen articles get shot down because they are a stub, "Jim so and so is a county legislator/town councilman, etc", and others survive because they provide plenty of secondary sources which establish their notability. Mrprada911 (talk) 05:23, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
- It's good to hear that this is the standard more or less already. Still, I think some codification here would be nice. john k (talk) 00:09, 28 February 2008 (UTC)
- To test the situation, I created a stub on William D. Euille, the mayor of Alexandria, Virginia. Let's see if it gets AfDed. john k (talk) 00:16, 28 February 2008 (UTC)
- And there it goes, a notability tag... john k (talk) 13:29, 28 February 2008 (UTC)
Politicians vs. pornographic actors
I do find the criteria anomalous for these two professions, and no doubt for others too. A time-serving party-hack backbencher in an upper house in a state or provincial parliament, or the dullest, stupidest US congressional representative qualifies as notable (there's even an inclusory rider for local politicians). But a highly professional pornographic actor who's listed at IMDb and has scores of google entries needs to have won an award or have "made unique contributions to a specific pornographic genre, such as beginning a trend in pornography, or starring in an iconic, groundbreaking or blockbuster feature" (sic) – this seems out of proportion. Does it reflect a rightwing Christian push here to minimise content on WP about sexual topics? Gay pornographic actors, for example, have a unique role WRT the formation of the identity of gay individuals, and more broadly of gay culture. This role should fitly be covered by WP by providing information on more than just the very few high-flyers who fit the current tight regulations. WP itself has the potential to make a unique, non-commercial, balanced contribution to public knowledge on the vehicles of a significant cultural movement. This should not be constrained by overly narrow criteria. I'm not suggesting that there be no criteria at all, but rather more practical, less instrusive ones.
I'm inclined to broaden the criteria slightly for the actors and to tighten it slightly for politicians, frankly. Tony (talk) 14:06, 1 March 2008 (UTC)
- Perhaps you don't know much about politicians I don't know much about porn starts, so I don't extinguish them. Here's a very boring politician: Edmund Backhouse (MP). As he has an obituary in The Times, so he is "notable", even though the obit. displays his essential dullness. However, his son and grandchildren were BRILLIANT. The WP article on Edmund Backhouse shows him to be a link with a whole lot of things that were going on in 19th Century Britain, and that's notable. Perhaps it will emerge that he played a major role in some aspect of his political life that moulded the future or was part of some scandal, which will enliven the article. Tell me the name of a porn star who has changed the world! Vernon White . . . Talk 22:21, 1 March 2008 (UTC)
- Seems completely tangential to my point. Individual pornographic actors, as a whole, have an identifiable effect, and may be interesting and/or worth documenting even though they themselves haven't "changed the world". Just like politicians ... Tony (talk) 22:28, 1 March 2008 (UTC)
- So why do you want to tighten the notability criteria for dull politicians? Sometimes, they suddenly emerge as significant e.g. British MP Derek Conway. If he had been excluded from WP for dullness we would have been hard put to assemble an article when his misdemeanour went public. His WP article prior to the scandal was significnatly useful to his constituents and anyone proposing to compete that Westminster Parliamentary seat, but hadn't the buzz of a porn star's article, no doubt!. Vernon White . . . Talk 23:43, 1 March 2008 (UTC)
- Seems completely tangential to my point. Individual pornographic actors, as a whole, have an identifiable effect, and may be interesting and/or worth documenting even though they themselves haven't "changed the world". Just like politicians ... Tony (talk) 22:28, 1 March 2008 (UTC)
One Event merge
It was done. We discussed it. But now we have a content fork and two slightly different One Events! SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 12:14, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
Copy of what I posted on the BLP talkpage: "Following discussion (started here), the "notable for one event" section was felt to be an inclusion criteria more suited to the inclusion guideline rather than content policy. The section was moved. It has now been moved back. I feel there is room for discussion on this issue. I'm putting a merge tag on it, which will direct discussion to" (here). SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 12:16, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
The last discussion: Wikipedia_talk:Notability_(people)#Suggested_merge_from_WP:BLP1E_to_here_-_Redux. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 12:19, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
Looking back it wasn't a wide discussion. 4 people in favour (gorgan_almighty, Wikidemo, TexasDex and me) and one oppose (AnonEMouse). So another discussion is appropriate. 12:23, 31 January 2008 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by SilkTork (talk • contribs)
- I missed it. I think wider discussion would be needed. My first thoughts: (1) having this or similar language in WP:BIO seems interesting: I for one can see the advantage of extending this part of WP:BLP to apply to subjects who are no longer alive; (2) removing the language from WP:BLP seems disastrous to me: the special emphasis on strict policy enforcement when writing about living people will no longer apply and, worse, language specifically developed to protect living people would be demoted from policy to guideline. Avb 22:42, 6 February 2008 (UTC)
- The changes to the shortcuts seem to be problematic, as editors are not aware of the fact that WP:BLP1E no longer redirects to the BLP policy and has been replaced by WP:ONEEVENT. Shouldn't this be reverted also? See Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Vicki_Iseman. Avb 00:36, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
- By all means, mention it here, but BLP is a policy with teeth, and is absolutely intended to stay that way. It's imperative that coverage of biographies be carefully considered and enforced. Is this a "notability guideline" or a firm policy? That's really the question a merge discussion would need to address. – Luna Santin (talk) 06:38, 6 March 2008 (UTC)
See also #Shortcut WP:BLP1E should not link here below. Avb 02:16, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
High school sports champions, are they notable?
At Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Matt Boyd (wrestler) there is a debate about whether a state champion high school athlete is notable. I'd like more input there because this could set a big precedent. There are thousands of state champions a year in high school sports, so this could create a standard for thousands of articles. Metros (talk) 01:04, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
- I generally dislike attempts to make broad generalisations about the notability of a class of articles, and think that it would be better to consider whether "he or she has been the subject of published secondary source material which is reliable, intellectually independent, and independent of the subject" (Wikipedia:Notability (people)#Basic criteria). Black Falcon (Talk) 01:11, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
- Well those looking to keep the article are citing WP:BIO's athlete section: "Competitors and coaches who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports (who meet the general criteria of secondary sources published about them)". So I think it's important to discuss whether this guideline covers high school state championships or not. Metros (talk) 01:16, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
- Somehow, I don't think that most high school champions are at the 'highest level in amateur sports'. So that part would not appear to include these athletes. Vegaswikian (talk) 02:14, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
- The highest level of amateur sport is the Olympic Games. A high school athlete generally wouldn't be considered notable unless they broke a world record or something. It would still need the published sources to back it up. Sting au Buzz Me... 02:23, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
- Somehow, I don't think that most high school champions are at the 'highest level in amateur sports'. So that part would not appear to include these athletes. Vegaswikian (talk) 02:14, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
- Well those looking to keep the article are citing WP:BIO's athlete section: "Competitors and coaches who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports (who meet the general criteria of secondary sources published about them)". So I think it's important to discuss whether this guideline covers high school state championships or not. Metros (talk) 01:16, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
Shortcut WP:BLP1E should not link here
We have a mess: The WP:BLP1E shortcut links to this guideline, confusing many editors.
To put it as simply as possible: Months ago (December 11, '07), when the "People notable only for one event" section was moved from WP:Biographies of Living Persons to this guideline, the WP:BLP1E shortcut went with it. When the section was moved back to WP:BLP (Dec 18), the shortcut stayed at the similar section in this guideline, where it remains today. (I think we can assume this was unintentional; no need to blame anyone for a mistake.) On Jan 9, WP:ONEEVENT was later added as a new shortcut to that WP:BLP section ("Articles about people notable only for one event").
Editors regularly cite WP:BLP1E in deletion discussions, and many of them think they're citing the more authoritative WP:BLP policy rather than a notability guideline. This happened in Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Vicki Iseman, where I, Doc Glasgow, and others cited it that way. It turned out that half-way through the discussion the confusion was (let's hope) cleared up (if other editors read the comment). Who knows what mischief this mistake has caused in other AfDs. User:Risker also commented later that he was surprised about the change. To belabor the obvious, the whole point of having a "shortcut" is to make it easier to cite policy. Editors should not have to check constantly to see that the shortcuts they use are pointed toward different articles. The citations here show that the problem remains. The fact that "BLP" is part of the WP:BLP1E link continues to suggest to any editor that the shortcut points to the BLP policy.
Five ideas to fix this:
- Move the shortcut back to WP:BLP -- This would create a similar problem. I assume some editors have now learned to use WP:BLP1E to refer to the guideline section here. We need to end the confusion, not spread it around.
- Do nothing and editors will gradually learn where the new link goes. But this is a problem and it can be fixed, so it shouldn't be allowed to keep confusing editors.
- Remove the shortcut and allow it to be a redlink This would alert editors everywhere to the change, but it would confuse many editors reading archived AfDs.
- Create a permanent disambiguation page for the shortcut. This would create the least confusion and disruption. It would not educate editors about the change as fast as a redlink would (editors following the link would have to ask the person who made the reference whether the link was meant for WP:BIO or WP:BLP). I favor this option.
- Create a temporary disambituation page for the shortcut Set a date three or six months from now, announced on the disambiguation page, that we'll move the shortcut back to WP:BLP. It would be nice to be able to get rid of the disambiguation page, but I think that could create confusion for anyone looking at the archives: Some editors probably were using the shortcut to intentionally link to WP:BIO.
Noroton (talk) 22:58, 8 March 2008 (UTC) (minor point added Noroton (talk) 23:17, 8 March 2008 (UTC))
To state the obvious, a BLP shortcut should link to BLP. Who knows how many historical debates were changed when that shortcut was moved. Please puit it back. Anything else is counter-intuitive. --Docg 23:30, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
- It's not obvious to me. In three months, some editors meant to use it to link to the WP:BIO page. Moving it back creates a new problem in the archives. A disambiguation page will eventually cause use of this shortcut to die out, which hurts nothing. Noroton (talk) 23:34, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
- No. It cannot be deleted in three months, since that would make a nonsense of arguments I (and many others) have used over the last years. Things done "per WP:BLP1E" would be left meaningless. Why on earth should a BLP shortcut link anywhere but WP:BLP? Create a dab if you must, but it will have to remain permanently. And there is certainly no reason to delink WP:BLP1E from their historic and intuitive target. Correct the error, dab it for a while if you really must.--Docg 23:42, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
- No, reread Option #4. By "die out" I mean the habit of using it will die out, meaning that fewer and fewer editors will be bothered by the disambiguation page. Of course we need to keep it permanently for the archives. Your preference doesn't address the unknown number of editors who have learned to use it to refer to WP:BIO. Returning the shortlink to WP:BLP creates a new problem for those references. A smaller problem, but still a problem. To avoid that problem, it's worth the hassle of the disambiguation page, IMO, although that's a guess. Noroton (talk) 23:55, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
- As I say, create a temporary dab if you want. But I can't understand why anyone would "learn" to use a BLP shortcut other than as shorthand for BLP. And I can't see why using BLP1E to refer to the BLP section on "one event" would (or should) die out. I'll certainly continue to use it.--Docg 00:26, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
- No, reread Option #4. By "die out" I mean the habit of using it will die out, meaning that fewer and fewer editors will be bothered by the disambiguation page. Of course we need to keep it permanently for the archives. Your preference doesn't address the unknown number of editors who have learned to use it to refer to WP:BIO. Returning the shortlink to WP:BLP creates a new problem for those references. A smaller problem, but still a problem. To avoid that problem, it's worth the hassle of the disambiguation page, IMO, although that's a guess. Noroton (talk) 23:55, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
- No. It cannot be deleted in three months, since that would make a nonsense of arguments I (and many others) have used over the last years. Things done "per WP:BLP1E" would be left meaningless. Why on earth should a BLP shortcut link anywhere but WP:BLP? Create a dab if you must, but it will have to remain permanently. And there is certainly no reason to delink WP:BLP1E from their historic and intuitive target. Correct the error, dab it for a while if you really must.--Docg 23:42, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
- I would say that the shortcut should be directed back to its original target as that is the historical and logical usage for it. I wouldn't imagine that many editors have been using the shortcut to link here, and directing the shortcut to a dab page seems counter-productive. Dan1980 (talk ♦ stalk) 00:59, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
- We have no idea how many new editors have learned to use the shortcut to WP:BIO and how that compares to the bother caused by a DAB page (any editor who links to the DAB page will likely be asked what they meant to link to; eventually editors will get tired of being asked and will use the WP:ONEEVENT shortcut, meaning use of WP:BLP1E will be more trouble than it's worth and the habit of using it will die out). Either returning the link to WP:BLP (Option #1) my preference (#4) will cause less disruption, or the other two options will. Which is why it's a judgment call best settled by consensus. Noroton (talk) 01:15, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
WP:BLP1E seems now to be in fairly common use as a link to that part of the BLP policy, it seems a more natural target for the redirect than its previous destination. There's also an argument for policy trumping a content guideline. When redirects change destination, the assumption is that links will be updated over time. I think BLP1E has been a shortcut to the policy for too long - in particular it has been used in a lot of deletion summaries that cannot be changed, whereas I suspect its previous use is one pages where the link could be retargeted. We don't usually disambiguate shortcuts, and I'm not very convinced by the benefits in this instance. Is there any indication of how many pages link to WP:BLP1E meaning to refer to the notability guideline, rather than the biographies of living people policy? It might be possible to get a bot to fix them... WjBscribe 01:19, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, that makes sense.--Docg 01:22, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
- See also #One Event merge above. Avb 02:12, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
I am fairly certain that most users of the shortcut were intending to link to WP:BLP, i.e. the policy rather than the guideline, whether or not the shortcut actually went there; from my experience, most people who use this shortcut have been doing so for quite some time. If the shortcut is moved back to the policy, what would be the negative impact? Would those discussions originally linking to the guideline not now convert to linking to the policy? I do not see how this would be a problem, really. The policy, after all, supersedes the guideline. Risker (talk) 03:37, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- The basis of this is wrong. OneEvent was moved from policy to guideline because it had been placed in policy by mistake. There was a reversion which has now left us with two OneEvent sections. Given the choice people will tend to want to refer to a policy, but the entire section (read it carefully folks!) is actually not stating policy - it's giving guidance. How anyone can say that "we should generally avoid having an article" is a policy statement with teeth is beyond me! It's guidance and advice. It's saying that the consensus of the community prefers that we focus on the event rather than the person, but that an individual can write an article on an individual caught up in just one event - and we have plenty of examples of that. Policy is something that guides what we do or do not do. If OneEvent was policy then several hundred articles on individuals notable for one event would have to be redirected.This is a guideline. And as such the section on BLP should again be deleted. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 08:35, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- The policy is worded more strongly than this guideline. While intellectually I agree with you that what is written in WP:BLP more closely resembles a traditional guideline than policy, most Wikipedia policies would never meet the definition of "policy" in the real world. I believe that the community consensus is that a guideline isn't strong enough for being able to quickly address many of these BLP1E articles. Risker (talk) 11:50, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- "policies are considered a standard that all users should follow, whereas guidelines are more advisory in nature." The paragraph is clearly advisory on content. And I would dispute that the paragraph has enough community consensus to be policy. The fact that it was challenged, and after a largely undisputed discussion, moved here, shows that it does not have the clear and widespread community consensus to be declared policy. It's a notability issue, and one that people can properly question and debate and put forward arguments for why a particular person should have a standalone article. It properly does not belong in a serious policy on the issues surrounding articles on living people. That policy should be for the serious matters than can get Wikipedia into trouble. This is a long running issue and one that might best be served by having a wider discussion by putting the BLP section itself forward for AfD. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 15:01, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- Getting back to the actual issue here, SilkTorq, given that the section is back up at WP:BLP, what should we do with the WP:BLP1E shortcut? I'd be grateful for some constructive input on the question at hand. Noroton (talk) 15:55, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- "policies are considered a standard that all users should follow, whereas guidelines are more advisory in nature." The paragraph is clearly advisory on content. And I would dispute that the paragraph has enough community consensus to be policy. The fact that it was challenged, and after a largely undisputed discussion, moved here, shows that it does not have the clear and widespread community consensus to be declared policy. It's a notability issue, and one that people can properly question and debate and put forward arguments for why a particular person should have a standalone article. It properly does not belong in a serious policy on the issues surrounding articles on living people. That policy should be for the serious matters than can get Wikipedia into trouble. This is a long running issue and one that might best be served by having a wider discussion by putting the BLP section itself forward for AfD. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 15:01, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- The policy is worded more strongly than this guideline. While intellectually I agree with you that what is written in WP:BLP more closely resembles a traditional guideline than policy, most Wikipedia policies would never meet the definition of "policy" in the real world. I believe that the community consensus is that a guideline isn't strong enough for being able to quickly address many of these BLP1E articles. Risker (talk) 11:50, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- The basis of this is wrong. OneEvent was moved from policy to guideline because it had been placed in policy by mistake. There was a reversion which has now left us with two OneEvent sections. Given the choice people will tend to want to refer to a policy, but the entire section (read it carefully folks!) is actually not stating policy - it's giving guidance. How anyone can say that "we should generally avoid having an article" is a policy statement with teeth is beyond me! It's guidance and advice. It's saying that the consensus of the community prefers that we focus on the event rather than the person, but that an individual can write an article on an individual caught up in just one event - and we have plenty of examples of that. Policy is something that guides what we do or do not do. If OneEvent was policy then several hundred articles on individuals notable for one event would have to be redirected.This is a guideline. And as such the section on BLP should again be deleted. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 08:35, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
I feel that it should point to the guideline section as the policy section should not exist. And I feel at this juncture we should be looking for a wider group of people to discuss the matter. This has been an on and off discussion since it was first raised in October last year. I don't think it is fully settled. I'll put it up for discussion later, following the results of that debate the question of what to do with the shortcut will be settled. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 17:01, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- I think that's probably wise. There's two things here 1) should the policy exist 2) where should the shortcut point. We are confusing the two. As long as the policy exists as part of BLP, then the BLP1E named shortcut should properly point to BLP. I think the policy is fine, but it is legitimate to debate that, as you say with a wider group.--Docg 17:25, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
- Listed: Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons. I've not previously listed a section of a page, so I may have made mistakes. But it looks fine. I hope we get a decent debate rather than the matter being largely ignored - interest in this issue appears to have been sporadic and low key so far. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 11:47, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
Discussion now taking place here. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 00:30, 12 March 2008 (UTC)
Activists
A category of problematic bios are those of people that are best defined by their activism. I've come across - lately - a surprising number of them. These are people who end up with some media coverage but are in no way exceptional.
Activists
Because an activist is a person who uses public methods to promote and bring about political or social change, he or she will have press coverage. Activists promote left wing and right wing causes, liberal and conservative agendas, environmental and business policies. Not every activist is worthy of notice. Ralph Nader is a notable activist. On the other hand, your mom may have had letters to the editor published in your local paper. Your mom may have founded and is the president of the ‘Moms for a Safer Main St’ advocacy group. A photo of your mom may have appeared on the front page of your local paper showing her chained to a stop sign. Your mom may have been the subject of an article in your local paper titled “Mom! Activist!” All of this may be well documented and sourced but it isn’t worthy of notice or unusual enough to deserve attention to be included in Wikipedia. An activist has to be particularly important.
Please, comment and support / oppose. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 17:10, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
Comments
I do not think that this addition is needed. The guidance it offers is essentially what one would get from applying this notability guideline's requirement for substantial coverage in reliable, independent secondary sources with WP:NOT#NEWS. Also, I feel that the sentence "An activist has to be particularly important." introduces a significant element of subjectivity and should, if this section is added to the guideline, be avoided. Black Falcon (Talk) 17:30, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Notability is notoriously subjective :-) I agree that the not a newspaper guideline, as well as the fringe theory guideline, the essays on recentism and exceptionalism, and the avoidance of 'the righting of great wrongs' all envelope the problem of the notability of an activist. However, I think it would be helpful to explicitly state that simple media coverage of an activist does not make the activist notable. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 17:42, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- I do not agree that notability, as defined on Wikipedia, is all that subjective. While judgment is required to determine whether sources are reliable and whether coverage of a subject is substantial or trivial, evaluating the 'presence of substantial coverage in reliable sources' is significantly more objective than evaluating the 'importance' of a subject. Black Falcon (Talk) 18:12, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Considering the endless debate devoted to determining whether a source is reliable or not, whether the material available is trivial or not, notability does seem to be 'subjective'. Notability, 'reliable source' and 'importance of subject' all should be straight forward but on Wikipedia, it is endlessly debatable. My favorite debate at the moment is Wikipedia:Notability (fiction). Anyway, I think emphasizing that media coverage is not sufficient for notability is necessary. This has been true on the notability guideline for a long time. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 18:41, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Do you mean 'media coverage in relation to a single event' (WP:BIO1E) or 'routine local news coverage' is not sufficient for notability, or are you referring to any type of news coverage? Black Falcon (Talk) 18:49, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- What is the baseline media coverage for any occupation / avocation? Activists like actors, journalists, athletes, and professors generate a certain amount of media coverage simply by doing what they do. All professors are not notable even though all professors must publish or perish. In any walk of life, there is an ‘A-list’ of people within that group who are notable and defining that ‘A-list’ is problematic. I don't have an answer but like art and obscenity, I know it when I see it. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 19:29, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Although I can certainly appreciate the feeling of "I know it when I see it", I do not think that principle is viable in deletion discussions that involve multiple people who often see things in completely different ways. More generally, I prefer having a standard minimum threshold to the idea of an 'A-list' for different groups of people. If, on average, activists receive more coverage than archivists, then I see no reason not to have more articles about the former than the latter, nor any reason to exclude biographies about people who are not necessarily among the best-known in their profession (which is what an 'A-list' implies). – Black Falcon (Talk) 19:36, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- What is the baseline media coverage for any occupation / avocation? Activists like actors, journalists, athletes, and professors generate a certain amount of media coverage simply by doing what they do. All professors are not notable even though all professors must publish or perish. In any walk of life, there is an ‘A-list’ of people within that group who are notable and defining that ‘A-list’ is problematic. I don't have an answer but like art and obscenity, I know it when I see it. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 19:29, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Do you mean 'media coverage in relation to a single event' (WP:BIO1E) or 'routine local news coverage' is not sufficient for notability, or are you referring to any type of news coverage? Black Falcon (Talk) 18:49, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Considering the endless debate devoted to determining whether a source is reliable or not, whether the material available is trivial or not, notability does seem to be 'subjective'. Notability, 'reliable source' and 'importance of subject' all should be straight forward but on Wikipedia, it is endlessly debatable. My favorite debate at the moment is Wikipedia:Notability (fiction). Anyway, I think emphasizing that media coverage is not sufficient for notability is necessary. This has been true on the notability guideline for a long time. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 18:41, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- I do not agree that notability, as defined on Wikipedia, is all that subjective. While judgment is required to determine whether sources are reliable and whether coverage of a subject is substantial or trivial, evaluating the 'presence of substantial coverage in reliable sources' is significantly more objective than evaluating the 'importance' of a subject. Black Falcon (Talk) 18:12, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
Support
- I think it is helpful in notability debates to emphasize that occupations that attract media attention do not make every one within that occupation notable. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 20:03, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
Oppose
- I oppose adding a section on activists. It is an ambiguous term and the concept is covered elsewhere as explained by Black Falcon. I think that the proposal is well meaning, but brings additional verbiage without improving the process. So many proposals are made because there is a general lack of understanding of the key notability criteria. If people understood and applied WP:N, there would be no need for all the special cases here at BIO. --Kevin Murray (talk) 18:20, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Totally agree with you. But...as everyone here knows...when you get into an idiotic debate about notability, it sure helps to have a specific guideline to whack back. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 18:33, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Yes and no. In the shorter term you are right, but if we could focus our energy on one excellent guideline and then educate our AfD closers on how to apply it, we could streamline the process. AfD should not be a vote and these should only be closed by well trained people. --Kevin Murray (talk) 18:53, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Totally agree with you. But...as everyone here knows...when you get into an idiotic debate about notability, it sure helps to have a specific guideline to whack back. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 18:33, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Per my comments above, I feel that this is just a special case of WP:NOT#NEWS and does not require a unique section. Moreover, though the proposal is intended to add clarification, I believe it also brings additional subjectivity into the guideline. Black Falcon (Talk) 19:39, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- Agree with Black Falcon for the most part. While I'm not philosophically opposed to the creation of additional criteria, this version is useless. Thing is I can't think of a workable version to suggest for this particular group of people. Horrorshowj (talk) 02:04, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
One Event merge
Discussion here. SilkTork *YES! 15:24, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Ambassadors
I removed the sectin on ambassadors, which appeared to be just a non actionable commentary about why they might not seek notability. So what! If they aren't notable who cares why. --Kevin Murray (talk) 15:25, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- Looks like that was already reverted. The ambassador section was the result of a pretty long debate according to the top archive, so you might want to discuss the change first.Horrorshowj (talk) 02:14, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
Time to effect the merger of Academics with BIO
Absent strong objections at the talk page for WP:Academics I think that it is time to merge this page into BIO. The better parts of this process have been incorporated into BIO for some time and this is now just a redundant page. Perhaps further ideas in clarification of BIO could be included in an essay. --Kevin Murray (talk) 18:26, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
- But there is also no strong support. I, for one see
no need of such merge.--Aldux (talk) 23:36, 15 March 2008 (UTC)
- In fact, there is substantial expressed strong opposition to the merge, see the current discussion at Wikipedia Talk: Notability (academics)#Time to make the merge. Regards, Nsk92 (talk) 11:59, 16 March 2008 (UTC)
There seems to be a consensus that there is not a consensus to merge Wikipedia:Notability (academics) to Wikipedia:Notability (people). --SmokeyJoe (talk) 00:13, 25 March 2008 (UTC)
Entertainers and Pornographic actors
The general criteria for entertainers is "significant roles in notable films, television, stage performances, and other productions", while the specific sub-criteria for Pornographic actors is "featured multiple times in mainstream media". It might be appropriate to clarify the wording on this. A Porn actor with significant roles in notable films would be seen as notable, as would a regular actor who "featured" multiple times in notable films. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 14:20, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- I've merged the two statements:
- "Actors (including pornographic), comedians, opinion makers, models, and television personalities:
- Has had significant roles or been featured multiple times in notable films, television, stage performances, and other productions. "
- By "featured" the assumption must be that the individual had at least a named part. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 14:32, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry, but no. There are quite a few notable performers who have not been "featured" in accordance with your definition. Media attention is different than significant roles or performances, as well. As to the pornographic actors, I strongly urge you to return that to the previous definition, or at minimum discuss with the Pornography Wikiproject. Your change has suddenly made at least another 25,000 porn actors notable. Risker (talk) 15:54, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with Risker. Having a minor role in a notable adult film shouldn't be enough to establish notability for porn stars. Epbr123 (talk) 16:04, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- The criteria for a non-pornographic actor seems to be more exacting than for a pornographic actor, and I'm looking for a level playing field. "Significant roles in notable films" is tougher than "featured multiple times in mainstream media". This criteria for regular actors would actually rule out a lot of the existing minor actors, like Susan Diol who has played "supporting roles in over forty different series" yet these roles "rarely appear in more than one episode" - which means the roles are not "significant". There seems to be a willingness for articles to remain on actors who have appeared in many roles, and I think we just need to find the right wording for that. As we also need to find the right wording for pornographic actors who do the same thing. Under the existing guideline wording, the advice would be that as a regular actor Susan Diol should be deleted in an AfD, but if she were a pornographic actor she would be kept. I'm keeping the two sections apart this time, but making similar wording adjustments as before - see what people think. SilkTork *YES! 22:31, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- I think your trying to merge the wrong two statements. The current porn-star criteria which corresponds to "significant roles in notable films, television, stage performances, and other productions" is actually the criteria "starring in an iconic, groundbreaking or blockbuster feature" rather than "Has been featured multiple times in notable mainstream media". You may be overestimating how often porn stars appear in notable mainstream media. Epbr123 (talk) 00:00, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- I've kept the sections apart. Minor word changes. The criteria you cite appears to relate to porn films rather than mainstream. The wording I've amended is adding "notable" to the "mainstream media" criteria to match that of the regular actors who also have to appear in notable films. This is then - as far as mainstream films are concerned - giving porn and regular actors the same status rather than making it easier or more difficult for either in the stated criteria. SilkTork *YES! 11:36, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- I don't feel that's making things fair as far as mainstream films are concerned. A pornstar who appears in a notable mainstream film would be more notable in their field than a normal actor who appears in a notable mainstream film. Appearing in a notable mainstream film shouldn't carry the same weight for the two different professions. Epbr123 (talk) 14:08, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- "More notable in their field" is at the heart of this issue isn't it? Should there be a unified notability criteria - one that applies to all topics, but with guidelines to assist in assessing separate fields so that we are consistent across the project; or should we have different criteria for different fields? SilkTork *YES! 15:28, 20 March 2008 (UTC)
- I don't feel that's making things fair as far as mainstream films are concerned. A pornstar who appears in a notable mainstream film would be more notable in their field than a normal actor who appears in a notable mainstream film. Appearing in a notable mainstream film shouldn't carry the same weight for the two different professions. Epbr123 (talk) 14:08, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- I've kept the sections apart. Minor word changes. The criteria you cite appears to relate to porn films rather than mainstream. The wording I've amended is adding "notable" to the "mainstream media" criteria to match that of the regular actors who also have to appear in notable films. This is then - as far as mainstream films are concerned - giving porn and regular actors the same status rather than making it easier or more difficult for either in the stated criteria. SilkTork *YES! 11:36, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- If it's so much easier, how many male performers other than Ron Jeremy can meet the specific criteria you're citing? Even among female performers it's very rare to meet that one and need it. Porn actor is actually among the most difficult to qualify under, because in practice it usually comes down to major award history.Horrorshowj (talk) 01:56, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- I'd like to see the criteria for porn actors to be the same as for regular actors. I don't think it should be either easier or harder for a porn actor to attain notability. That a porn actor may star in a number of non-notable films should be given the same weight as a regular actor who stars in a number of non-notable films. Both the regular and the porn would need a reliable third party source to comment on them to meet WP:V to start with - but if they have that, and they have been prolific, that should be enough for notability. Or are you saying that in regard to porn actors, by their very work they will star in a large number of non-notable films and so the criteria should be tougher otherwise the project will be swamped by hundreds of articles on trivial porn actors? SilkTork *YES! 11:36, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- I don't think it makes much sense to handle them the same from a notability standpoint. The majority of porn movies released are not features, they are compilations. Due to the historically lax enforcement of their intellectual property rights by industry members it's not unusual to find the same scene pirated into several other compilations. So film counts aren't always a useful measure of notability in porn. Further, the median income for a full time porn actress is around $100K from what I can tell, while conventional actors are lower. So if a porn actress makes it past the 10 month point, it's not uncommon for them to appear in a much larger number of films than a prolific conventional actor. It's not unheard of for a porn performer to have a decade long career, with hundreds of performances, yet have virtually nothing written about them and comparatively low name recognition(ie Davia Ardell, C.J. Bennett and Angela D'Angelo). This is admittedly a US and heterocentric comparison as gay porn performers and hetero performers in other countries tend to have a lot lower number of career appearances.Additionally, the industry has embraced the web for distribution on a scale that mainstream entertainment won't. If the majority of content is web distributed it doesn't make sense to shackle them to a standard that's based on am archaic film distribution model.
Horrorshowj (talk) 10:59, 26 March 2008 (UTC)Horrorshowj (talk) 06:02, 27 March 2008 (UTC)- Then if no one else is writing about them, we should mirror that, and not write. We never second guess sources, and we don't give more weight to something than they do. If they decide it's of no weight at all, by deciding not to write, we mirror that—and do not write. Many people are prolific in their fields and yet this is not considered noteworthy by those who write our sources, so we do not write about that person either. Porn is no different. We have significant amounts of independent reliable published material or we do not. This is especially important when we are discussing biographies on people who are largely still alive in an industry that's controversial to begin with. Seraphimblade Talk to me 11:21, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
- Thank you. I really appreciate the condescending argument about why being prolific shouldn't be a notability standard for porn, after I just spent an entire paragraph arguing that it was an irrelevant indicator. I changed the order of my arguments to make it a bit more readable, hope that was the problem. Horrorshowj (talk) 06:02, 27 March 2008 (UTC)
- Then if no one else is writing about them, we should mirror that, and not write. We never second guess sources, and we don't give more weight to something than they do. If they decide it's of no weight at all, by deciding not to write, we mirror that—and do not write. Many people are prolific in their fields and yet this is not considered noteworthy by those who write our sources, so we do not write about that person either. Porn is no different. We have significant amounts of independent reliable published material or we do not. This is especially important when we are discussing biographies on people who are largely still alive in an industry that's controversial to begin with. Seraphimblade Talk to me 11:21, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
- I don't think it makes much sense to handle them the same from a notability standpoint. The majority of porn movies released are not features, they are compilations. Due to the historically lax enforcement of their intellectual property rights by industry members it's not unusual to find the same scene pirated into several other compilations. So film counts aren't always a useful measure of notability in porn. Further, the median income for a full time porn actress is around $100K from what I can tell, while conventional actors are lower. So if a porn actress makes it past the 10 month point, it's not uncommon for them to appear in a much larger number of films than a prolific conventional actor. It's not unheard of for a porn performer to have a decade long career, with hundreds of performances, yet have virtually nothing written about them and comparatively low name recognition(ie Davia Ardell, C.J. Bennett and Angela D'Angelo). This is admittedly a US and heterocentric comparison as gay porn performers and hetero performers in other countries tend to have a lot lower number of career appearances.Additionally, the industry has embraced the web for distribution on a scale that mainstream entertainment won't. If the majority of content is web distributed it doesn't make sense to shackle them to a standard that's based on am archaic film distribution model.
- I'd like to see the criteria for porn actors to be the same as for regular actors. I don't think it should be either easier or harder for a porn actor to attain notability. That a porn actor may star in a number of non-notable films should be given the same weight as a regular actor who stars in a number of non-notable films. Both the regular and the porn would need a reliable third party source to comment on them to meet WP:V to start with - but if they have that, and they have been prolific, that should be enough for notability. Or are you saying that in regard to porn actors, by their very work they will star in a large number of non-notable films and so the criteria should be tougher otherwise the project will be swamped by hundreds of articles on trivial porn actors? SilkTork *YES! 11:36, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- I think your trying to merge the wrong two statements. The current porn-star criteria which corresponds to "significant roles in notable films, television, stage performances, and other productions" is actually the criteria "starring in an iconic, groundbreaking or blockbuster feature" rather than "Has been featured multiple times in notable mainstream media". You may be overestimating how often porn stars appear in notable mainstream media. Epbr123 (talk) 00:00, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- The criteria for a non-pornographic actor seems to be more exacting than for a pornographic actor, and I'm looking for a level playing field. "Significant roles in notable films" is tougher than "featured multiple times in mainstream media". This criteria for regular actors would actually rule out a lot of the existing minor actors, like Susan Diol who has played "supporting roles in over forty different series" yet these roles "rarely appear in more than one episode" - which means the roles are not "significant". There seems to be a willingness for articles to remain on actors who have appeared in many roles, and I think we just need to find the right wording for that. As we also need to find the right wording for pornographic actors who do the same thing. Under the existing guideline wording, the advice would be that as a regular actor Susan Diol should be deleted in an AfD, but if she were a pornographic actor she would be kept. I'm keeping the two sections apart this time, but making similar wording adjustments as before - see what people think. SilkTork *YES! 22:31, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with Risker. Having a minor role in a notable adult film shouldn't be enough to establish notability for porn stars. Epbr123 (talk) 16:04, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry, but no. There are quite a few notable performers who have not been "featured" in accordance with your definition. Media attention is different than significant roles or performances, as well. As to the pornographic actors, I strongly urge you to return that to the previous definition, or at minimum discuss with the Pornography Wikiproject. Your change has suddenly made at least another 25,000 porn actors notable. Risker (talk) 15:54, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Large fan base or "cult" following
The fan base/cult wording was added in 2005 after this discussion. It was designed to replace the previous arbitrary wording of "a total audience of 5,000 or more", and as such was very effective. I'm wondering if the wording now looks rather vague. I'm very supportive of the notion of "cult" - indeed, the ethos of this project appears to be to be one in which organised, respectable and often neglected or maginalised cults can thrive. However, Cult appears to be difficult to pin down, and if this is to be a helpful guideline to those engaged in a dispute during an AfD, then something clearer than "something popular or fashionable among a particular section of society" would be needed, as by that definition most entertainers would qualify. SilkTork *What's YOUR point? 14:57, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- Related to this, I was editing Kiva Kahl, whose website is five years out of date, and her "multiple TV appearances" are 12 times on Letterman in a five-year period. She only seems to be notable in very small areas (brief mentions of things she's worked on, etc). So I think some sort of lower limit needs to be created. MSJapan (talk) 03:21, 24 March 2008 (UTC)
Athletes
I have noticed a flurry of AFDs which defy common sense by citing WP:ATHLETE as a reason to delete articles about players who have been drafted by a major league professional team but not yet played in said league. These AFDs tend to attract identical arguments and counter-arguments:
- "Delete Fails WP:BIO#Athletes. The article can easily be restored if he ever plays professionally. ~~~~"
- "Keep Using the notability guidelines in order to delete things temporarily until all the formalities are in place, and forcing someone to recreate the article from scratch, is an exercise in pointless bureaucracy. ~~~~"
Not mentioning any names as I don't wish to embarrass individual users, but wouldn't explicitly adding something like "or has been selected as a major league draft pick" to this guideline put an end to at least part of the above nonsense (that of specific wiki-projects block-voting for temporary deletion based on a literal interpretation of the current wording)? — CharlotteWebb 18:16, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- Agree and disagree. Wouldn't it be better to have an article per major league professional sport that might list those draft picks who end up never playing. How many draft picks never play anyway? If it is just one or two a season, it seems moot. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast (talk) 18:21, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- I suspect that the various Wiki projects like this restriction, as they can then have a bit of excitement all trying to create the article at once whenever a player makes a professional debut. Catchpole (talk) 18:30, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- Well for each year in each sport we already have an article about that particular draft, which lists each player drafted that year whether they play or not. In the case I'm referring to above, the draft has already happened but the regular season hasn't started yet, so that distinction cannot be made. However, in other sports realms wherein I've dabbled, I have noticed that this excitement of creating articles for each player usually occurs on draft day, and then only if the articles do not already exist (they usually do due to our coverage of collegiate athletics). — CharlotteWebb 18:48, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
- Yow, let's not. It's bad enough we have articles on all existing professional athletes in any case, most aren't noted enough to warrant one. Extending it to potential ones would be moving in exactly the wrong direction. Seraphimblade Talk to me 01:08, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- While the percentage of draft choices who never play varies from sport to sport, I have to agree that it's not to much of an impediment to require that the person actually play to warrant an article. So no on full credit for draft choices unless there's something else involve, eg Len Bias or Maurice Clarett.Horrorshowj (talk) 02:21, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- How is deleting an article as "too soon", only for it to be re-created from scratch a few weeks later as "just the right time" anything other than an impediment? Duplicated effort amounts to wasted editor-hours. — CharlotteWebb 15:50, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- Well, quite realistically, it needs to move the other direction. Even existing professional athletes shouldn't have articles unless they're actually covered by multiple, reliable, nontrivial sources. So let's make the wait longer. As in anything, independent and reliable sources provide significant coverage, then we do, not the other way around. And for those athletes who are never covered so, we should never have an article, perhaps a brief mention in a team or "List of" article. Seraphimblade Talk to me 09:29, 21 March 2008 (UTC)
- Just the right time doesn't arrive for a lot of these people. In some sports it's under 1/2 the draftees that ever play in a regular or post season game. This is not an insignificant hurdle to having competed in the sport professionally. We can only write articles about people based on what has happened, not what might happen. It's unfortunate that people are creating articles on subjects that don't pass any of the notability guidelines, but I don't see that this should be handled differently. I have no issue with having an article on all the competitive athletes in fully professional leagues since that's the consensus to do so, but expanding it further is a mistake. Horrorshowj (talk) 08:28, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- How is deleting an article as "too soon", only for it to be re-created from scratch a few weeks later as "just the right time" anything other than an impediment? Duplicated effort amounts to wasted editor-hours. — CharlotteWebb 15:50, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- While the percentage of draft choices who never play varies from sport to sport, I have to agree that it's not to much of an impediment to require that the person actually play to warrant an article. So no on full credit for draft choices unless there's something else involve, eg Len Bias or Maurice Clarett.Horrorshowj (talk) 02:21, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- Yow, let's not. It's bad enough we have articles on all existing professional athletes in any case, most aren't noted enough to warrant one. Extending it to potential ones would be moving in exactly the wrong direction. Seraphimblade Talk to me 01:08, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
- This situation has been arising frequently with articles on Major League Soccer draftees. Each year, clubs draft several players, only some of which will eventually play for the club. It is telling that the MLS website's all-time register of players only covers those that appeared in a league or playoff match. E.g., the "B" list ([4]) doesn't include Michael Behonick who was drafted in 2003 and was later signed to another club in 2006, but never appeared in a match. (The Behonick article passed AfD only because he has played in another fully professional league - the USL First Division). In short, I think there are good reasons to wait until a draftee actually plays in the league as many will never appear for the club (or attain notability). Best regards. Jogurney (talk) 19:41, 27 March 2008 (UTC)
Authors
I've clashed with another editor on his/her good-faith interpretation of the language under "Creative professionals" which says, "The person's work ... (d) is represented within the permanent collections of several ...significant libraries." Given that a large library may have literally hundreds of thousands of books in its collection, by no means all of them notable or by notable authors; and given that a self-publisher or vanity-publisher client may send out hundreds of copies of their works in hopes of getting them into libraries, should we modify this language in some way? WorldCat makes it easy to find even the most obscure of volumes across the planet, and in some ways makes this language rather treacherously misleading. --Orange Mike | Talk 13:13, 4 April 2008 (UTC) (book reviewer and writer)
- I think the "best-selling" status of some authors should be noted and represented in some way -- of course the statistics should be easily found, such as on the NY Times best-sellers list, or in a reliable and notable independent review, even if the statement is simply that the author is "best-selling", without qualification. We expect notable media outlets presenting independent reviews to get their facts straight. - CobaltBlueTony™ talk 13:26, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Agreed, it seems like an odd criterion to apply to authors. For an artist to have a work on display at a major art gallery would be a fairly good indication of notability... but the most significant libraries are also the most comprehensive (read: indiscriminate), so it doesn't work for authors. The British Library, for example, keeps a copy of every book published in the UK, so anyone who has ever self-published a book in Britain has a good claim to notabiliy by this criterion. Something is wrong here. Places on a bestseller list would be a better indicator, for authors of popular works at least; independent book reviews in credible sources would be a better indication still. Iain99Balderdash and piffle 14:02, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Notability is not something that can be codified; we can say that "best-seller" is one way to be considered notable, but we shoot ourself in the foot if we say that the inverse is also true -- not all notable books made it to a best-sellers list (esp. with best sellers list being a modern invention).
- As always, if there are two significant sources about a topic, it is considered notable, and should be sent to AFD for closer inspection if someone is concerned that it is not notable. John Vandenberg (talk) 14:46, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
I think another important distinction to address is whether notability in the case of an author is being fulfilled by aesthetic literary merit - i.e. are they a "quality" author - or should it be a matter of prominence, how many people have read the author's works.
The 1st one can be proved with published literary reviews in respected sources, of course, but outside of that it's prone to the perils of subjective argument - I've run into people who will with a straight face say that Melville and Hemingway are utter crap and deserve no critical attention whatsoever. While both aspects of literary notability are valid and I think both should be a sufficient criterion for Wikipedia notability, I think it's important to recognize that the 2nd one is easier to firmly demonstrate (for modern books in particular, thanks to the internet) and more encyclopedic in nature. On a personal count, I have absolutely no patience or respect for Western novels (e.g. Louis L'Amour) for example, but I would say that any Western writer of prominence should definitely have an encyclopedia entry. I think we should take advantage of the experience of people like Orange Mike in the publishing industry and try to describe ways that prominence can be evaluated in a manner independent of PR efforts. I know there are people who work in the publishing industry whose entire job is to weed out the true prominence of authors so I'm sure we can put something together. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 02:35, 5 April 2008 (UTC) |
Also, to hearken back to the Tracy_Price-Thompson issue that started all of this (which I think was a matter of someone not looking closely enough at some obviously third-party-authored material and erroneously labeling it as advertising, rather than an actual dispute over notability), I am genuinely curious whether it's the opinion of those assembled here whether a PR effort could actually result in a non-notable author being present in hundreds of libraries. (I genuinely do not know the answer to that and I'm asking; the few libraries I've been to regularly, from small town public libraries to academic libraries at large universities, all were quite vigorous about getting rid of books they didn't want, even frequently ones by clearly notable authors if they feel they have too many copies.) --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 02:48, 5 April 2008 (UTC) |
- Yes, we have to modify it. The minimum modification would be to change it from several to "many". As stated above, essentially everything published by a non vanity publisher does end up in several libraries. for example, a number of libraries make a point of collecting one copy of all current fiction from established publishers. A number of academic academic libraries purchase routinely almost anything put out by an academic press that is of non-local interest. What "many" might mean in this context is another matter. I'm going to BOLDly make the change right now. (it was just a little more complicated in wording than changing the one word, because artworks in several museums is in fact generally considered sufficient.) However, OM, libraries where I've worked, normally discard almost everything that comes in the mail unsolicited, though they do look it over first. If you'll check vanity fiction in worldcat, you';ll find only two or three libraries usually, generally the ones in the author's home town. For obvious public relations purposes, they'll generally accept anything from a local author. But of course that isn't notability. I agree with SB above, that multiple works in hundreds of libraries usually do indicate a certain degree of notability. DGG (talk) 04:10, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
"...does not guarantee notability": local and unelected politicians
I think there's a bit of a hole in the wording of the bullet on local and unelected politicians. It says that simply being one does not guarantee notability, which is fine. But then it says that "such a person may be notable for other reasons besides their political careers alone." Which is also fine. The trouble is that there are a reasonably large number of people who are
- local or unelected politicians,
- not notable for reasons besides their political careers, and
- the subjects of significant coverage by reliable sources independent of them.
These people are notable per WP:N. However, the inclusion of "for other reasons besides their political careers" can create the impression that local and unelected politicians can only be notable if they have a claim to notability other than their political careers. Accordingly, I would like to suggest that the wording of that bullet be changed to:
- Just being an elected local official, or an unelected candidate for political office, does not guarantee notability, although such people can still be notable if they meet the primary notability criterion of "significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject".
I'd also be quite open to deleting the quote, leaving only the wikilink. Thoughts? Sarcasticidealist (talk) 06:59, 20 March 2008 (UTC)
- Having heard no dissent, I've gone ahead and made the change, although other editors should feel free to follow steps two and three of WP:BRD if they don't like it. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 09:39, 21 March 2008 (UTC)
- One editor did see fit to take the second step of WP:BRD, but not the third. Since I've already made my case here, and nobody has disputed my case, I've reverted for now (since, really, what else could I do?). But I'd welcome some debate on the change. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 06:54, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- It seems reasonable. Also, I would like to adress another topic that concerns you, that is, your removal of the passage on ambassadors. This had been previously concorded upon, and had been inserted following consensus: could you please formulate the nature of your objections?--Aldux (talk) 15:44, 22 March 2008 (UTC)
- The only discussion I've seen is two sections above, where both editors commenting seem to disagree with the addition. Could you direct me to where the consensus to add it was achieved? Sarcasticidealist (talk) 17:34, 22 March 2008 (UTC)
- See Wikipedia talk:Notability (people)/Archive 7#Diplomats. Also, as far as I can read, there's just the view of the editor who removed the section, while the other didn't take position.--Aldux (talk) 18:08, 22 March 2008 (UTC)
- The only discussion I've seen is two sections above, where both editors commenting seem to disagree with the addition. Could you direct me to where the consensus to add it was achieved? Sarcasticidealist (talk) 17:34, 22 March 2008 (UTC)
I think most would agree the information itself is notable, but not necessarily the people themselves. I think it would be useful to include information on accepted alternatives rather than simply deleting the articles. Candidate information is certainly important and useful (which imo equals notability), but that doesn't mean every never-been-elected candidate requires his/her own article. Look at the box at the bottom of United States general elections, 2006. United States general elections, 2008 has a similar box, but few states have articles and only Pennsylvania state elections, 2008 has one properly set up. This makes me wonder if people just don't know where they should be putting this information. Include this information and I don't think we'll have nearly as many create/delete iterations to worry about. (It would also help to include the relevant link in the 'See also' sections of the incumbents.) Flatterworld (talk) 19:47, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
Have to keep the old wording
Put the wording back, please. The issue is that there was no discussion. We have to be careful that Wikipedia does not become a campaign stop for every politician. People were still quoting and abiding by the old wording yesterday: Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Mark Clarke (politician). Nobody knows you changed it. Blast Ulna (talk) 06:59, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Well, I did whatever I could, by proposing the change on the talk page before making it. Have you read my basis for proposing the change? Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:02, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, but I don't think you intended it quite the way it came out. Blast Ulna (talk) 07:08, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- That's possible; could you clarify what you mean by that? Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:09, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- I don't think you fully appreciated that the guideline was carefully worded to keep out unelected politicians who will use Wikipedia as a platform to get elected. Blast Ulna (talk) 07:30, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- That's possible; could you clarify what you mean by that? Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:09, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, but I don't think you intended it quite the way it came out. Blast Ulna (talk) 07:08, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- In the Clarke AfD, I argued "Delete, hasn't won yet; consensus finds that politicians who haven't won elected office and are not otherwise notable (such as by being retired athletes or whatever) don't get Wikipedia articles. This keeps Wikipedia from being a campaign PR outlet, and the articles from being endless POV battlegrounds." That consensus was re-established by the deletion of Mark Clarke (politician). Blast Ulna (talk) 07:03, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- (ec) No, the consensus was not re-established. What was established in that debate (in which I !voted delete) was that Mark Clarke wasn't notable, and that unelected candidates aren't inherently notable (which is preserved in my wording). There was certainly no agreement that unelected candidates are inherently non-notable. The classic question to distinguish between the two is what makes Rudy Guliani notable? All he is is a local politician and an unelected candidate for national office. Of course, he is notable because he's received substantial coverage by third party reliable sources, which is exactly what WP:N (WP:BIO's parent) says. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:09, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Look, I'm shocked that you would unilaterally change the guideline, than quote yourself in an AfD. This change is dangerous, and I think you should seriously reconsider it. Everybody knows that if an unelected person is notable for something else besides their candidacy then they are notable. You fixed something that wasn't broken. Blast Ulna (talk) 07:15, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- First, it wasn't unilateral. I proposed it on the talk page, there was no opposition (one other editor expressed support), so I went with it. Now, a couple of weeks after the fact, there's opposition, so I'm discussing it. That's how changing policy works. Moreover, the change I made was in no way radical: I took the part I added directly from WP:N. It wasn't even a change in policy so much as a change in wording.
- But, in any event, let's both leave this aside and see if anybody else joins in. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:20, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Also, with regards to it not being broken, have you read my original rationale for the change? Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:24, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- I did. Have you considered my point about politicos and their PR machines? Blast Ulna (talk) 07:30, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Yes. I frequently support the deletion of unelected candidates (just like I did for Mark Clarke) because they don't meet WP:N. If the content of the article is a blatant advertisement, it can be speedy-deleted. My change had no effect at all on our ability to delete promotional candidate nonsense. A further question for you: what actual change to policy do you think my change made? Unelected candidates who had received significant coverage by reliable third party sources were always notable, per WP:N. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:37, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- The difference is that the "significant" coverage cannot be for their candidacy alone. The reasoning is similar to that used in WP:PROF, where most professors publish, and so would be notable, but the bar is set much higher for them. Blast Ulna (talk) 07:40, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Yes. I frequently support the deletion of unelected candidates (just like I did for Mark Clarke) because they don't meet WP:N. If the content of the article is a blatant advertisement, it can be speedy-deleted. My change had no effect at all on our ability to delete promotional candidate nonsense. A further question for you: what actual change to policy do you think my change made? Unelected candidates who had received significant coverage by reliable third party sources were always notable, per WP:N. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:37, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- I did. Have you considered my point about politicos and their PR machines? Blast Ulna (talk) 07:30, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Look, I'm shocked that you would unilaterally change the guideline, than quote yourself in an AfD. This change is dangerous, and I think you should seriously reconsider it. Everybody knows that if an unelected person is notable for something else besides their candidacy then they are notable. You fixed something that wasn't broken. Blast Ulna (talk) 07:15, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- (ec) No, the consensus was not re-established. What was established in that debate (in which I !voted delete) was that Mark Clarke wasn't notable, and that unelected candidates aren't inherently notable (which is preserved in my wording). There was certainly no agreement that unelected candidates are inherently non-notable. The classic question to distinguish between the two is what makes Rudy Guliani notable? All he is is a local politician and an unelected candidate for national office. Of course, he is notable because he's received substantial coverage by third party reliable sources, which is exactly what WP:N (WP:BIO's parent) says. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:09, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
(undent) That is false. Subjects can be notable under WP:N by reason of significant coverage for any reason. Indeed, here are a couple of examples of AFDs for candidates that were closed as keep under the old wording:
- Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Donna Edwards (second nomination)
- Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Willis Ricketts
Most unelected candidates have their articles deleted, but that's not because unelected candidates can't be notable by reason of their candidacy; it's because most unelected candidates don't receive the volume of coverage required by WP:N. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:57, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- I disagree with the current wording. It is too vague on what is significant, and tags on a rewording of the Basic Criteria given above it; I'm not sure why. Every mayor will have some press coverage, stuff like running for election, ribbon-cutting and so forth. Is there a way to rephrase the wording so that the older notion that the average small town mayor or the average candidate for dog-catcher isn't accorded notability for being written up in the local newspaper? Noble Sponge (talk) 06:14, 8 April 2008 (UTC)
Some principles
It's obvious that there's some belated resistance to the changed wording, so let's try to work out a compromise. I'd suggest that we use the starting principles, which I think we're all in agreement over, as a starting point:
- Local politicians and unelected candidates are not inherently notable (this is a longstanding wording in WP:BIO#Politicians).
- They can be notable if they've received non-trivial coverage by reliable sources independent of them (this is from WP:N and also from the top of WP:BIO).
- They can be notable for reasons other than their political careers (this is the wording I took out of WP:BIO#Politicians because I thought it was self-evident - is somebody really going to claim that a notable, say, athlete suddenly becomes non-notable because they run for office and lose?)
The status quo before the change was that the first and third points were mentioned explicitly at WP:BIO#Politicians. The second one wasn't, which was problematic because people would look at WP:BIO#Politicians and say "Oh, unelected candidates are automatically non-notable unless they have some claim to fame unrelated to their candidacies," which is of course false (on account of the second bullet). So, with all of this in mind, does anybody want to propose a wording? Sarcasticidealist (talk) 06:32, 8 April 2008 (UTC)
- What's wrong with just saying they're notable if they have received non-trivial coverage by independent reliable sources? Do we really need to specify beyond that?--Father Goose (talk)
- We need to ask ourselves, "why did anybody bother to create a separate treatment of politicians within Notability (people)?" There's no section for architects or chefs or gangsters. Blast Ulna (talk) 05:35, 9 April 2008 (UTC)
- The problem as I see it with the changed wording is that it's going to be used not by the exceptions such as Giuliani, whose notability is self-evident, but by an unelected local politico to argue that a burst of news reports about their candidacy in reliable sources is their shoe in. (See WP:NOT#NEWS and Wikipedia:Notability#Notability requires objective evidence. I think the change is a problem unless you find a way to guard against this.--Fuhghettaboutit (talk) 22:37, 9 April 2008 (UTC)
- Could you explain how you think this change changes policy (as distinct from wording)? Also, are you expressing disagreement with the principles I've listed above, or just the wording? I've already conceded that the wording probably doesn't have consensus, so I'm more than happy to entertain alternate wordings. But if you disagree with the principles, I think we might have a bigger problem. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 22:39, 9 April 2008 (UTC)
- If a local politico has had more than trivial news coverage (even if local), I don't see why the encyclopedia is better by prohibiting an article about said politico. If there's verifiable and neutral information about anybody I'm going to have to vote for (or against), I want that information, and Wikipedia is the right place for it. Maybe we need a high-participation wikiproject to ensure that such articles don't become coatracks or self-promotion, but they belong on Wikipedia all the same.--Father Goose (talk) 06:57, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
- Totally agree with you (and sorry that I missed your point above). The bottom-line notability criterion is non-trivial coverage by reliable third party sources - no question about that. The only question comes in when we get into "presumed notability". If an article about a city councillor goes to AFD, and there's no evidence of substantial coverage, I !vote delete. But if an article about a Congressman goes to AFD with no evidence of substantial coverage, I say "Well, hold on, this is a Congressman and I'm sure there are reliable sources out there, so let's leave it as a stub and keep it until somebody finds the sources we need," and then !vote keep. That keep !vote is supported by this guideline, which says that "Politicians who have held international, national or sub-national (statewide/provincewide) office, and members and former members of a national, state or provincial legislature" are presumed to be notable.
- I think we all agree that local politicians and unelected candidates aren't inherently notable (although some people think that, for example, mayors of cities with more than a given population are inherently notable), and I think there's general agreement that this guideline should say, as it has for as long as I've been around, "Just being an elected local official, or an unelected candidate for political office, does not guarantee notability." The question is what that should be followed with: the old wording was "although such people can still be notable for reasons other than their political careers", which I thought was misleading because it didn't contemplate the possibility that a local politician or an unelected candidate might be notable by reason of their political careers. Accordingly, I proposed replacing it (and eventually did replace it) with "although such people can still be notable if they meet the primary notability criterion of "significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject."" Several editors objected to that change, which is why we're here. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 07:08, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
- I still don't see why we need to declare any politician "presumed notable"; congressmen and the like are definitely going to have substantial reliable coverage, and if no reliable information about them is available, we can't cover the topic even if it is "notable" by some other standard. WP:N should work fine here, with no further specification. Is it that some people ignore WP:N and say "unimportant politician, delete"? If so, that's a problem with AfD, ultimately, not WP:N, which gets it right.--Father Goose (talk) 08:19, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
- I like the presumed notability because it speeds things up, but your point is well-taken. I don't see any real practical effect to eliminating it since, as you say, Congressmen's articles would still stay (but more of them would probably be nominated for AfD, and those that were would be closed less quickly). Anyway, though, the position that we should do away with inherent notability for politicians is outside the current confines of this debate (although if anybody else favours eliminating them, by all means let's discuss it). Sarcasticidealist (talk) 08:27, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
- Do we define significant (or trivial) coverage? How do we define it? Do we use more footnotes? Right now in the People notable for only one event section it singles out "standing for governmental election" as an example of not meeting notability standards. Should we put that text in the politician's section, and maybe come up with another example for People notable for only one event to replace it? Blast Ulna (talk) 09:10, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
- I like the presumed notability because it speeds things up, but your point is well-taken. I don't see any real practical effect to eliminating it since, as you say, Congressmen's articles would still stay (but more of them would probably be nominated for AfD, and those that were would be closed less quickly). Anyway, though, the position that we should do away with inherent notability for politicians is outside the current confines of this debate (although if anybody else favours eliminating them, by all means let's discuss it). Sarcasticidealist (talk) 08:27, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
- I still don't see why we need to declare any politician "presumed notable"; congressmen and the like are definitely going to have substantial reliable coverage, and if no reliable information about them is available, we can't cover the topic even if it is "notable" by some other standard. WP:N should work fine here, with no further specification. Is it that some people ignore WP:N and say "unimportant politician, delete"? If so, that's a problem with AfD, ultimately, not WP:N, which gets it right.--Father Goose (talk) 08:19, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
- The problem as I see it with the changed wording is that it's going to be used not by the exceptions such as Giuliani, whose notability is self-evident, but by an unelected local politico to argue that a burst of news reports about their candidacy in reliable sources is their shoe in. (See WP:NOT#NEWS and Wikipedia:Notability#Notability requires objective evidence. I think the change is a problem unless you find a way to guard against this.--Fuhghettaboutit (talk) 22:37, 9 April 2008 (UTC)
- We need to ask ourselves, "why did anybody bother to create a separate treatment of politicians within Notability (people)?" There's no section for architects or chefs or gangsters. Blast Ulna (talk) 05:35, 9 April 2008 (UTC)
- actually, I have suggested some time ago that major party candidates for national legislatures at US State Governor or equivalent can be presumed to be notable. People usually dont get such nominations without substantial prior activity. That would be another few thousand articles a year only, andit would avoid a lot of needless AfDs. I would certainly not extend this to people running for the nomination--it doesnt take any degree of notability to do that. DGG (talk) 03:25, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- How about a rule of thumb; if the person has received at least 50,000 primary or general election votes, win or lose, they are likely to be notable. This would mean any mayor of a big town (population over 100,000, since they would usually have gotten over 50% of the votes, and the children can't vote), county commissioners of highly populous counties like Los Angeles County, and Councilpersons of really big cities. For example, in United States Senate election in Wyoming, 2006, the Democratic loser Dale Groutage got 57,000 votes. (I picked Wyoming because it is one of the least populous US states.) Or in this example Philadelphia mayoral election, 2007; the number of votes clearly is related to the existence of an article. (With a natural cutoff of 40,000 votes, but we are trying to set a lower bound for likely notability, not an upper bound for non-notability.) Blast Ulna (talk) 09:02, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- I have yet to see a case where numbers were a good way to approach these kinds of problems. A subject is presumed notable if it has received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject, from WP:N. How is that not exactly the criterion we want to use for politicians? Should we specifically mention that local media are okay for the purpose of reliable sources?--Father Goose (talk) 10:34, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- I take the opposite view; being mentioned only in local media is a sure sign of non-notablility, I think this would be true of anyone, not just politicians. Take for example Steven Gast, a high school principal with quite a bit of press. Would you say these local sources are good enough to allow him an article? Blast Ulna (talk) 15:02, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- It looks like there is enough material there to create a reasonable biographical stub on Mr. Gast. I'm hard-pressed to say why we shouldn't. If the answer is that he is in some way abstractly "non-notable", that to me equates to "Wikipedia doesn't cover minor subjects", a position for which I see no underlying reason.--Father Goose (talk) 04:15, 13 April 2008 (UTC)
- I take the opposite view; being mentioned only in local media is a sure sign of non-notablility, I think this would be true of anyone, not just politicians. Take for example Steven Gast, a high school principal with quite a bit of press. Would you say these local sources are good enough to allow him an article? Blast Ulna (talk) 15:02, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- I have yet to see a case where numbers were a good way to approach these kinds of problems. A subject is presumed notable if it has received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject, from WP:N. How is that not exactly the criterion we want to use for politicians? Should we specifically mention that local media are okay for the purpose of reliable sources?--Father Goose (talk) 10:34, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- How about a rule of thumb; if the person has received at least 50,000 primary or general election votes, win or lose, they are likely to be notable. This would mean any mayor of a big town (population over 100,000, since they would usually have gotten over 50% of the votes, and the children can't vote), county commissioners of highly populous counties like Los Angeles County, and Councilpersons of really big cities. For example, in United States Senate election in Wyoming, 2006, the Democratic loser Dale Groutage got 57,000 votes. (I picked Wyoming because it is one of the least populous US states.) Or in this example Philadelphia mayoral election, 2007; the number of votes clearly is related to the existence of an article. (With a natural cutoff of 40,000 votes, but we are trying to set a lower bound for likely notability, not an upper bound for non-notability.) Blast Ulna (talk) 09:02, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- Just one point, If we're going to use numbers, they need to be as percents--its the way to be fairer across different places. . I think any jurisdictions do this for assigning financial support, or seats in a proportional election. DGG (talk) 23:53, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- In defense of my 50,000 vote idea, I would like to point out that it is a lower bound for automatic notability, and that a person could still be notable below it by the ordinary route of having sources. Would/should Larry Kilgore have his own page? He got pretty low percentages, but 50,119 votes... In the same Texas gubernatorial election, 2006, there was a candidate named Star Locke who has dozens of mentions in the news, but nobody has ever even tried to create an article on him. If you look over the coverage, he is mentioned as an "also running" or as "little known." Nevertheless, his proposal of a 100% tax on video games did get the attention of media outside Texas. So why no article? I think he fails "People notable only for one event". Blast Ulna (talk) 14:53, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- Just one point, If we're going to use numbers, they need to be as percents--its the way to be fairer across different places. . I think any jurisdictions do this for assigning financial support, or seats in a proportional election. DGG (talk) 23:53, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- See Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Scott Schertzer for a disappointing AfD where a mayor of a small community was ruled not to be notable despite (I think) meeting the primary notability criterion. I didn't take it to deletion review, but I think some of the participants misinterpreted policy. --Eastmain (talk) 03:36, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- It's exactly that sort of AFD that motivated my proposal in the first place. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 04:41, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- I can't see the article, so I'm curious; what was his claim to notability? Google News has a few local hits only. Blast Ulna (talk) 15:13, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- It's exactly that sort of AFD that motivated my proposal in the first place. Sarcasticidealist (talk) 04:41, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
Military officers?
I remember reading somewhere that among the ideas that have been discussed and rejected is the notability of generals and flag officers. However, I propose that we state that anyone that can be proven to have held the highest position in any branch of any military be considered notable. I don't mean any general or admiral, or any full general or full admiral, or even any marshal or admiral of the fleet: rather, the one person who has no superior officer in their branch of their military, or the chief of staff if there is no single commanding officer. Those at the top level of many different occupations are guaranteed notability on this page, such as professional athletes, film stars, or elected legislators. Moreover, someone who "has received a notable award or honor, or has been often nominated for them" is considered notable: surely being awarded the position of top admiral of a navy or top general of an army is a notable and honorable award. Could we add such a criterion, with someone else please writing the exact wording? Nyttend (talk) 23:51, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- Why is that criterion needed? What head of an entire nation's military would fail the basic criterion? And if he/she did, how could we write a sourcable, quality article about him/her? Rossami (talk) 00:42, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- An example is Daoud Soumain, on whom we had quite little information, and who knows but that someone might have AFD-ed it in its first stage, when there was only one source: of his death. My point of view on the notability criteria is that we could legitimately have an article on a member of the New Hampshire General Court (representing only about 1000 people) if all we had was a mention in a list of representatives. Similarly, if we had an article on some professional athlete who had competed in a single professional match, a single source saying that (and nothing else about him/her) would be enough to establish a short stub. In today's world, most military heads (with Soumain as an exception) are easy to find enough information on, but this idea would be to ensures that our coverage of top military leaders, incorporating all of the present and past holders of those officers, would be complete regardless. Nyttend (talk) 01:14, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- As well, since military officers aren't at all mentioned in this page, adding such a criterion would be a good example of explaining the basic principles of WP:BIO, especially if someone were to question whether being a top military officer were good enough. After all, a function of this page is to ensure that people with only one source, such as the predynastic pharaoh Tiu, get their own articles, and that people don't question the existence of those articles. Nyttend (talk) 01:19, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
- As for Chad, there is a French language newspaper published there [5] --Northwestern University has at least a partial file, as probably do some libraries in France. More likely to be available, there are also the CIA publications, and various publications from Jane's, such as its "Jane’s Sentinel Country Risk Assessments" database, and Africa Confidential, and UN documents. I'm not an African specialist, but a specialist librarian in a suitable library should be be able to find something, such as the African Division of LC. DGG (talk) 18:16, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
- This depends on the country and the branch of the military. In the United States, I would say anyone who held a cabinet-level post or was a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for long enough to take any official action deserves an article. However, if hypothetically some 19th-century 1-star General was promoted to Secretary of the Army the day before a new President took office, he would have to earn his notability some other way. Outside the United States or for defunct regimes, I would say that if there is a related WikiProject or a concerted effort to create articles on all highest-ranking military officers, then defer the decision to the people working on that effort. If there is no such effort, then look to see what the precedent is for that particular country or regime: If the country has 95% of officers listed, then ago ahead and allow the new article, if only 20% are listed, then allow or not based on the notability of the existing articles. If there are few or no such people listed and the person is not notable otherwise, then go ahead and delete it and start improving Wikipedia by creating articles on the more notable military officers from that country or regime. davidwr/(talk)/(contribs)/(e-mail) 17:01, 17 April 2008 (UTC)
I would say no. While I suspect there exists enough information to source an article about any head of a service, there doesn't seem to be any good reason to grant notability. Let's take CNO for example. Each of those has an article, but each article references multiple source while grant notability in their own right. Protonk (talk) 05:31, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
Hugo Kuranda was an Austrian skeleton who participated in one "highest level" competition and neither started nor (obviously) finished. Of the four sources for him available at the time of this writing (ie. before all the mirrors spread him across the interwebs)
- 1 is from the English Wikipedia
- 1 is from the German Wikipedia
- 2 have nothing to do with this Hugo Kuranda that I can tell
A search of the library catalog at the University of Texas and Jstor yield no results. Even within the context of "every Olympian ever is notable," do we really need a page on him when he's already mentioned at Skeleton at the 1948 Winter Olympics since he didn't technically "compete" or "participate"? Cheers, CP 15:31, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
- Not finishing means that he started the race but something happened to keep him from crossing the finish line. He still competed. Nyttend (talk) 16:56, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
- One does not expect to find material on such topics in JSTOR, or for that matter in library catalogs, except for the best known athletes. One would expect to find it in printed sources of his period in his home country--In this case, in 1948 & a little earlier Austrian newspapers and sporting journals--and possibly in other printed sources devoted to the particular sport. One can't say there are no sources without looking where they might be expected to be found. DGG (talk) 17:52, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
- True, but it's still a good-faith search, since I also searched the Google news archives, which go back many many decades and do produce foreign language results.
- It's moot anyhow now, since apparently he did start. In my defense, the information was changed either during or after the time I made this inquiry. Cheers, CP 21:36, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
- One does not expect to find material on such topics in JSTOR, or for that matter in library catalogs, except for the best known athletes. One would expect to find it in printed sources of his period in his home country--In this case, in 1948 & a little earlier Austrian newspapers and sporting journals--and possibly in other printed sources devoted to the particular sport. One can't say there are no sources without looking where they might be expected to be found. DGG (talk) 17:52, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
To be honest, this is becoming a significant problem. I've done some basic, but obviously not thorough, searches on all of the following people, and they don't really seem to have any non-trivial sources for them. Why is it that someone can add page upon page of people whose notability could be (and is) summarized in list format yet to have them turned into redirects, you basically have to prove that you've scoured every source known to man? What ever happened to the onus of notability being placed on the individual who adds the material? I did check out the Google News Archives, which does present material from other languages, so it's not simply a matter of "famous in their own language."
Should all of these people have articles? Maybe a better search would show that some should, but certainly not all of them. Italo Casini, Werner Huth, Gaetano Lanfranchi, Christian Hansez, Jacques Maus (not the same guy as the business leader), Armand Delille, Hugo Weinstengl, Johann Baptist Gudenus (admittedly, the inter-event thing could be notable), Hans Eisenhut, Charles Jenny, Alexandru Lonescu, Ulysse Petrescu, Gerhard Hessert, Rene Baronlunden . These represent only a fraction of them. These were just the ones created in the past 24 hours or so.
I guess there's nothing to be done, but I've been working on doing research to slowly reduce the number of people in the "Possibly living category," and this sort of thing frustrates the heck out of me. If it were anyone other that athletes, they could be prodded or AfDed... Cheers, CP 14:30, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
- Per a suggestion on my talk page, I will try redirecting these pages, since I have performed a good-faith search. We will see how it goes. Cheers, CP 17:28, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
Proposal to change "Notability" to "Something else" and use Notability (for people) Only
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
For two years now, I've been constantly getting entangled with WP:BIO and WP:N, WP:NOTE, WP:NOTABILITY. Why can't we make it a little easier and just call "Notability (people)" simply "Notoriety". Instead of saying "he is a notable person", we can say "he is a notorious person". Instead of saying, "Sorry your article on President Joe Chung from Birmania does not meet notability (people) (see WP:BIO)...", we can say "Sorry your article on President Joe Chung from Birmania does not have enough notoriety (see: WP:BIO)...". Then you can have if you like WP:NOTORIOUS and WP:BIO. Maybe take WP:N from notability? (I know that's pushing it). For these and other reasons, I think it's time to make it a little easier to differentiate between the Notability and Notability (people) guidelines. Anyone opposed to this change? Jrod2 (talk) 23:12, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
- The two words have different meanings. Notability basically means the person or thing is notable or eminent. Notoriety basically means infamously known.--Sting au Buzz Me... 23:19, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
- Strongly opposed - in American English usage, at least, "notorious" carries strong overtones of disapproval. To refer to "the notorious President Chung" is to imply that he is a very bad guy; like "famous" versus "infamous." This is so very true that I find myself wondering whether somebody is jesting with me; but I'll WP:AGF and answer this seriously. --Orange Mike | Talk 23:21, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
- Ok, ("commonly used in an unfavorable sense; as, the notoriety of a crime} Very good, can you come up with a something to make it a little easier to differentiate between the Notability and Notability (people)? That's all I am asking, people. Jrod2 (talk) 23:38, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
- To be honest, I think "Notability (people)" makes more sense than any other title, since Wikipedia:Notability (people) is a specialised extension of Wikipedia:Notability. For the most part, the general principles of notability are the same in both guideline pages. Black Falcon (Talk) 23:41, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with you 100%. Actually, Notability should only be used for people and the other guideline WP:N, well, we should find something else... It would be better having one type of notability, and that's basically my point, forgive that stupid name proposal above. In addition, as you read their first two paragraphs, there is a significant textual difference between these two terms, even though, "in a nutshell", they appear to be very similar. Jrod2 (talk) 23:49, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
- I'm afraid I don't quite understand ... when you write "Notability should only be used for people and the other guideline WP:N", are you referring to the word "notability" or the concept? Black Falcon (Talk) 00:16, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- The concept of having two terms that are the same, yet, they are used on different article topics is in my view confusing. Give me a few minutes and I will show you how that's possible among users. Thanks. Jrod2 (talk) 00:24, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- Oppose It seems more encyclopedic to determine eligibility for an article on the basis of whether the person is "Notable" as evidenced by whether reliable sources have taken note of him, than whether he is "Notorious" like a gangster or a celebrity. Edison (talk) 00:18, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
-
- Gee, are you noting that I responded to your proposal as it stood 2 minutes before I hit the "save" button? If you want to propose a major change to a policy or guideline, why don't you think about your proposal for a bit, then post the version you want people to respond to, then let it stand or fall on its merits, rather than revising it constantly and striking out parts while people are responding to it, then complaining they responded to the "old" version of 2 minutes earlier?! Once you hit the "save" button you no longer "own" the proposal. You are free to withdraw it and submit a new proposal. Edison (talk) 14:31, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- Per Black Falcon: "when you write "Notability should only be used for people and the other guideline WP:N", are you referring to the word "notability" or the concept?' ' Let's assume that at the Audio_mastering article, an editor "X" creates a new section called "Stem Audio mastering" and also places an external link to an article he wrote where he further expands on the concept. However, another editor "Y" feels that "the subject is not notable" and starts deleting everything done by the editor "X". Another user ( editor "Z") agrees saying "No question about it, editor "X" is "violating WP notability guidelines". Meantime, a new editor called editor "W" is reading all these and he doesn't know whether the actions of the opossing editors are based on the lack of notability by the editor "X" or the lack of notability on "Stem Audio mastering". This whole example can become even more complicated when yet another user enters the dispute arguing that "even though the section and the editor "X" may have some notability problems, the site where the article resides is notable, because it has a high search engine ranking and as long as there is a consensus for notability on the subject, the edits maybe valid". Do you get the idea about how confusing it can be to new comers? Jrod2 (talk) 00:47, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, I agree that it can be confusing; however, I do not see hwo renaming either Wikipedia:Notability or Wikipedia:Notability (people) would reduce that confusion. In both guidelines, the meaning of the term "notability" is identical. Moreover, much of the confusion I've seen seems to stem from misunderstanding of what "notability" means on Wikipedia. As noted here, notability guidelines do not apply to the content of articles; instead, "notability" is a mechanism for determing whether a particular topic merits a distinct article. Black Falcon (Talk) 00:55, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- Would you agree that by separating out those two terms that you so clearly know, at least, it would help new comers distinguish what you just said? In addition, what you said about not limiting directly to article content, only emphasizes the differences between Notability (people) and Notability, which is my original point. Jrod2 (talk) 01:03, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- I don't think so... The concept of "notability" is the same in both Wikipedia:Notability and Wikipedia:Notability (people), and neither guideline applies to the content of articles... Black Falcon (Talk) 02:06, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- Look, the point is not whether these guidelines apply to the content of articles or as to whether are similar in concept or not. The point is that they should be clearly differentiated because of the reasons I said in the example above. In essence, these two terms exist because experienced users know when is appropriate to cite them, not because someone thought it was the best term name for both guidelines. If they seem to you they are, let's explore how different they are, then. The best way to illustrate this is by making an example: Not very long ago, I Proded an article called Holger_Lagerfeldt. I did this because I read on this person's biography that he had several charted hits, he had 50 platinum and gold records and that he was a celebrated engineer, music producer and mastering engineer today, etc, etc. I checked the citation links and they all took me to a website in Denmark. Without doing too much research, I confirmed that he owned it. The only link that appeared to have no WP:COI issues was a Billboard link, but it didn't mention him by name. One more thing, on the biography, there was an external link section which had all his websites listed including one which he named "online-mastering.XX". This is probably what caught my attention in the first place. To make things very suspicious, the user who made the "bio" article was from Denmark. And sure enough, after somebody removed the Prod template and the article went to AfD, Lagerfeldt showed up to defend his position. It all appeared to look not so good for him, if you asked me. However, a very resourceful editor, who wanted to "keep", found 2 citations from bona fide music charting sites, quoting him as co-author in 2 songs, one of which charted at #21 in the US. To make a long story short, this Lagerfeldt AfD was keep by one reason and one reason only; he met WP:MUSIC notability for co-authoring 2 songs that made it to the charts. But, he he didn't meet notability WP:BIO in order to be considered for a biographical article as an engineer, producer and mastering guy. I am sure he didn't care so long as he was able to keep his content, including those external links. The issue of the 50 gold and platinum records until today is lacking WP:V. Having said all that, Notability (people) needs to meet either WP:BIO or WP:Music and we still haven't been able to separate engineers and producer and include them within WP:Music guidelines. Don't ask me why. All I can think of is, if I did away with notability (people) and create, say WP:Celeb (for celebrity} in alignment with WP:Music guidelines and finally, WP:Author (for authority} in alignment with WP:BIO, maybe things wouldn't be so complicated? Jrod2 (talk) 03:14, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- I'm afraid I don't see that as being less complicated... Perhaps it would help not to think of notability (people) and notability (music) as different or competing concepts or terms (you wrote "these two terms", when there is really only one term: notability), but rather to view them as specialised instances of a larger whole (i.e notability). So, Wikipedia:Notability is a general notability guideline that covers all topics, Wikipedia:Notability (people) is a notability guideline for people, and Wikipedia:Notability (music) is a notability guideline for musicians, musical groups, and musical compositions. In the end, "notability (people)" is not a unique term but rather a shorthand way of writing "notability, as it applies to people". I hope this clarifies my meaning; if it does not, then I'm sorry I could not offer a better explanation. Black Falcon (Talk) 13:55, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- Oppose the "doing away with" notability (people) and the creation of WP:Celeb. Celebrities are covered just fine by WP:BIO now.--Sting au Buzz Me... 05:41, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- First, let's see how many notabilities there are:
- WP:Notability
- WP:Notability (people)
- WP:Notability (web) and the "proposed"
- WP:Notability (fiction)
- Black Falcon argues that they all read the same, while Sting au says that "WP:BIO is covered just fine"? First, let me say that, there are significant differences on those definitions to view these terms as somewhat independent in meaning as they were written by many editors for specific purposes. But, you both miss the point. It's not about renaming for the purpose of changing the meaning of those guidelines. Simply put, to make it easy for users (especially newbies), to understand what is talked about when debated and heated arguments about "notability" arise. If I use my first example again (The Audio mastering article) as an analogy, where each editor had a case of notability to cite from, yet, one user reading the debate needed specific direction to understand what type of notability they were talking about. In my second example (The Lagerfeldt article) one had to literally specify what type of "notability" earned Lagerfeldt the right to keep his own biography (WP:MUSIC or WP:BIO) and the reason why. I believe that by naming WP:Notability (people) different from WP:Notability would make it, at the very least, a bit less difficult to read through debates on talk pages, and any sort of improvement to an already efficient system should always be welcome.
- So, you have at present WP:Notability (people) which in terms relies on WP:MUSIC or WP:BIO for guideline definitions.
- By taking away WP:Notability (people) and using for example WP:Celeb (for celebrity} in alignment with WP:Music guidelines and WP:Author (for authority) in alignment with WP:BIO guidelines, it would make it clear and more efficient to say "The user didn't meet WP:Author, but has a musical credit as per WP:Celeb, that allows him to keep his article page". Now this is how it reads with today's terms: "The user doesn't meet WP:Notability (people) per WP:BIO, but he does have WP:Notability (people) as a musician with that music credit which allows him to keep his article page per WP:MUSIC.
- Let me ask you guys, what reads more comprehensibly? Also, There won't be as many errors in citing the wrong guidelines (How many of you have typed WP:N instead of WP:BIO on a notability dispute by accident?) Some users who are directed to the wrong guidelines may perceive the other user as incapable of making an argument and may inflame a notability dispute. This benefit is only secondary. Look, you have already mastered the art of wiki and you may not even understand my point. You have forgotten what is is to be relatively "new" at Wikipedia. Ask yourselves, is Jrod a stubborn sun of a gun or maybe does he have a point and I should be neutral? Again, the main thing is to make it easier to write and read for everyone. That's my point. Jrod2 (talk) 17:01, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- I've been following this discussion and just don't see the confusion that you are describing. More precisely, I don't think that the changes proposed would make a significant difference to a new user. The problem is not that "notability" is a technical term with a context-specific meaning. The basic themes that are described on all of those pages (even including WP:CORP which no one's mentioned yet) are the same.
The underlying issue is that we need to synchronize and probably re-consolidate the pages. The page on the criteria for inclusion of biographies used to be a single page. For various reasons that seemed to make sense at the time, the page was split and re-split. And over time, additional pages (like the correllary for web content, etc) was added in parallel. In my opinion, the experiment in decentralization has failed. Renaming won't fix that problem. Rossami (talk) 18:46, 22 April 2008 (UTC)- The point is not whether there is confusion or not. You and the others think there isn't because you are very familiar with these terms and definitions. The point is that this would make it a bit simpler to read and write. Thus, any improvement to this end should be welcome by all users. Jrod2 (talk) 19:25, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
Royalty, and in general any other group
Are members of royal households automatically notable? In particular, newborns, children, or adults who would not otherwise meet notability criteria? Comments in Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Princess Eléonore of Belgium indicate that Wikipedians are divided on whether high-ranking royalty or even all royalty are automatically notable.
The same can be said about other groups not specifically mentioned in WP:NOTABLE.
I would like to add the following below Politicians:
===Members of other seemingly notable groups===
Other groups such as Royalty, University Presidents, and Astronauts seem notable on their face, however, that may not always be the case. For example, a newborn member of a Royal family who is 100th in line for the throne may be submitted to Articles for Deletion and be deleted for lack of notability. Before creating such articles, check the deletion history of other articles about members of the same or a very similar group to see if they were deleted for notability reasons.
--end--
davidwr/(talk)/(contribs)/(e-mail) 16:50, 17 April 2008 (UTC)
- That's a pretty vague and subjective set of criteria. My personal feeling on this matter is that holders of titles are notable. The heir apparent or heir presumptive to a reigning monarch is notable. I'm even willing to extend notability to the children, however young, of an heir apparent or presumptive. I don't think the children of anyone else are automatically notable, though. You should be aware of Wikipedia:Notability (royalty), a failed proposed guideline. --Dhartung | Talk 18:27, 17 April 2008 (UTC)
- The purpose of a guideline is to give guidance. In this case, the guidance for people who are members of notable groups who are not themselves notable independently of the group is "think, and check precedent." Personally, I think "think before editing" aka "use your head" should be a general Wikipedia guideline. davidwr/(talk)/(contribs)/(e-mail) 19:26, 17 April 2008 (UTC)
Wikipedia has huge issues with letting vast numbers of non-notable people slip through the cracks and have article when really they fall into a few categories: non-notable members of notable groups and non-notable items on notable lists. Really, I believe that keep votes for royalty almost always go unsubstantiated or have weak back-up. I have never seen a solid why as to why we should keep infants. Wikipedia is not a genealogical repository. For instance, the only notable thing about Eléonore of Belgium is that she's the daughter of a the crown prince and in line of succession, right? We have a few articles where she belongs: Line of succession to the Belgian throne, Belgian Royal Family, Prince Philippe, Duke of Brabant and Princess Mathilde, Duchess of Brabant. No more, really, she doesn't belong anywhere else. She's a footnote, a section, a short paragraph, whatever, but NOT an article. Make a list of any group of people, maybe that list is notable, and give one of them a famous parents... It doesn't mean that they have to have an article. Here's what I would propose as criteria for notability of royalty: Royalty as a group is inherently notable but individuals within it are not automatically notable. A royal is notable where there is substantial or important news coverage regarding actions or events in his or her own right, aside from announcements of vital life events such as birth and death (EVERYONE usually gets those, they're called birth announcements and obituaries, but being born and dying aren't automatically notable). This is why Prince Henry of Wales is notable but even his cousin Viscount Severn really isn't. Charles 23:41, 17 April 2008 (UTC)
- You forgot three things about Eléonore of Belgium: 1) At 5th in line, she is extremely high on the list of successors, 2) she is a direct descendant of the current Crown, and 3) her birth has been found newsworthy by a major newspaper in Australia. This, plus there is no consensus to delete the article - a large majority are voting to keep - indicate she has notability by virtue of her position in life. davidwr/(talk)/(contribs)/(e-mail) 23:49, 17 April 2008 (UTC)
- I maintain that most of those people voting "keep" will disappear and never edit the article, they just want to keep it because they like it. Tell though, knowing everything we know about the princess, why can't she be dealt with in a section or listing on the pages of her parents? High on the list of successors? Put her on Line of succession to the Belgian throne. Direct descendant of the current crown? Put it where it matters, on the pages of her parents. Her birth has been found noteworthy by an Australian newspaper? We're not a newspaper and they aren't Wikipedia, she is entirely non-notable outside of the things I've mentioned. She's a few days old, soiling diapers, puking up milk and she has a famous family. Arguably, the children of Brangelina are much, much, much more notable, but we don't have articles on them. Also, we don't have an article on Dannielynn Birkhead, but rather of a paternity case. It's a matter of association and other notable events and people for these children and also for most royal children like the Belgian princess. Not notable, end of story. Charles 00:13, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
- First, it is totally irrelevant whether or not the people on afd are going to edit the article. If I feel--and can make a convincing argument to the effect--that a certain article does not meet the threshold for deletion then it doesn't matter what I will or will not edit. The purpose of saving the article from deletion is not so that I can work on it. It is so that other people who might have some experience in the subject can work on it. Second, it doesn't matter if these people have short, unadorned articles from now until they reach age 20. It reflects their lives. We don't demand that all articles be of the same form as, say, the article on the revolutionary war, because not all subjects have that much coverage and are as notable. Likewise it should be fine if an article about a royal languishes as a stub for years if there is nothing to extend it. Protonk (talk) 04:06, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
- I maintain that most of those people voting "keep" will disappear and never edit the article, they just want to keep it because they like it. Tell though, knowing everything we know about the princess, why can't she be dealt with in a section or listing on the pages of her parents? High on the list of successors? Put her on Line of succession to the Belgian throne. Direct descendant of the current crown? Put it where it matters, on the pages of her parents. Her birth has been found noteworthy by an Australian newspaper? We're not a newspaper and they aren't Wikipedia, she is entirely non-notable outside of the things I've mentioned. She's a few days old, soiling diapers, puking up milk and she has a famous family. Arguably, the children of Brangelina are much, much, much more notable, but we don't have articles on them. Also, we don't have an article on Dannielynn Birkhead, but rather of a paternity case. It's a matter of association and other notable events and people for these children and also for most royal children like the Belgian princess. Not notable, end of story. Charles 00:13, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not opposed (as odd as it may sound, given how I have disagreed with him in at least two other threads) to Charles's approach. I think, as a guideline, the "royalty is notable as a group or concept but not as an umbrella for notability" is a VERY good place to start. I would be cautious in having that read as the whole guideline because we really do have the capacity to include marginally notable people. More than that, as an electronic resource, wikipedia has a special incentive to include more information rather than less (no, this isn't WP:HARMLESS). this allows categories and lists to be better fleshed out. It reduces red links in existing articles (yes, I also know that the purpose of articles is not to fill in links to other articles). It is part of what makes wikipedia different from paper references--aside from the contribution base and size limits. But, on balance, Charles's guidelines are good places to start as long as there is a significant enough harbor for marginally notable royals (which I don't feel there is yet).Protonk (talk) 04:06, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry I didn't reply right away. Are you still watching this page? I think we should hammer out some ideas and get consensus somewhere. Charles 00:04, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- We used to have a policy that defined in detail which members of currently ruling royal families were automatically notable, which would have included the Belgian baby. What happened to that? Ok - Wikipedia:Notability (royalty) - we should maybe restart that; it was actually followed in several XFD debates when still not formally adopted, and made life much simpler. Johnbod (talk) 21:53, 25 April 2008 (UTC)
Picking over the remains of WP:N/CA
Insufficient discussion at Wikipedia:Notability (criminal acts) has led to the proposed guideline being marked as rejected. Some of the work done here was designed to describe how certain notability guidelines and other policy elements interact with each other in regard to the victims of crime, and the crimes themselves, particularly how the articles are focussed. I wanted to point this out in case anyone thought there were elements that could be salavaged and proposed for inclusion in other parts of the notability guidelines. Alternatively, if people have missed this proposal, and want to reopen discussion, feel free to change the tag back to an active proposal. Best wishes Fritzpoll (talk) 15:30, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- I would support Wikipedia:Notability (criminal acts) if it can be re-directed from a new shortcut like "WP:NOTORIOUS". Users on the discussion above objected to the use of the term on notability (people) because it implies an infamous celebrity or event.Jrod2 (talk) 19:03, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- Not sure I understand...if you want to link through using a new shortcut, then just place a redirect on the page WP:NOTORIOUS. If you want to reopen discussion on the guideline, then by all means make the shortcut, change the tage on the guideline page and try to get some discussion going. I'll happily support you, but as the originator of this proposal, it would be a little pointy of me to reopen it! Fritzpoll (talk) 22:58, 25 April 2008 (UTC)
- I would support Wikipedia:Notability (criminal acts) if it can be re-directed from a new shortcut like "WP:NOTORIOUS". Users on the discussion above objected to the use of the term on notability (people) because it implies an infamous celebrity or event.Jrod2 (talk) 19:03, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
Royal births and otherwise-non-notable royalty
The notability of non-royal is a contentious issue and at least one Wikipedia:Notability (royalty) proposal was rejected in early 2007.
Recent AfDs such as the failed AfD for Princess Eléonore of Belgium (keep) and failed AfD for Lady Marina-Charlotte Windsor (no consensus) show that most members of the Wikipedia community think very-high-ranking royalty are notable even at birth, are divided over whether medium-ranking royalty are notable at birth, and agree that lower-ranking notability are not notable merely for being born.
Wikipedia:Notability (people) needs to be updated to reflect this. I'd like to add the following but I want to get some input first:
- Special Cases
- Royal children
- Notability is typically not inherited. High-ranking royalty are an exception to this rule since they are typically receive press coverage from the day of their birth, they are extremely likely to be famous as adults, and most importantly because for very high-ranking noble births the consensus is that they are notable by virtue of being born (see: failed AfD for Princess Eléonore of Belgium (keep)). There is no firm consensus of "where to draw the line" in a given royal family (see failed AfD for Lady Marina-Charlotte Windsor (no consensus)). Before creating an article, consider whether other children in the same royal family have full articles, stub articles, or redirects and check their talk pages and histories for deletion and redirection actions and discussions. Before deleting or redirecting an existing article, if there is any chance that any editor would consider the infant notable, discuss it and try to gain a consensus.
davidwr/(talk)/(contribs)/(e-mail) 18:29, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
Problem with your post: Lady Marina-Charlotte Windsor is not "high ranking" and "high ranking" differs between the opinions of any given two people. I suggest creating sections in the parents' articles. Where the sections become too large (without, of course, the use of filler like godparents and hobbies) then an article can be considered. Notable for being born represents a huge flaw or loopholes in Wikipedia policy and guidelines. Also, please do not cite Lady Marina-Charlotte among "showing most members think..." when the outcome was no consensus, it is misleading. See here for children of a Prince of Luxembourg, higher ranking than Marina-Charlotte: WP:Articles for deletion/Prince Jean of Nassau. Charles 18:54, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- The goal of this update is to update the guideline to reflect actual historical usage, not to recommend what you or I would personally recommend. Notable for being born represents a huge flaw or loopholes in Wikipedia policy and guidelines. - this means either policy and guidelines need to adjust to reflect historical usage or we as editors need to come to a consensus that the historical usage was a bad idea and we will do something else in the future. I am trying to do the former now, the latter deserves a much larger discussion. Such a discussion would be clearer if WP:Notability (people) reflected actual usage before that discussion got underway. My intent with the Lady Marina example was to show there is a range in the line of succession where editors disagree and there will be no consensus in an AfD action, and editors need to be aware of that before creating or deleting articles in this range. I also hope it's clear that this range is not well-defined: You know you are in it when someone objects and the resulting discussion is not lopsided one way or the other.
- By the way, in Wikipedia:Arguments to avoid in deletion discussions#Notability is inherited, it mentions that books and music do allow for some form of inherited notability. For example, if there were an obscure, non-notable album by The Beatles, it would probably get an article even if it were otherwise not notable. davidwr/(talk)/(contribs)/(e-mail) 20:20, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- I'd interpret high-ranking as meaning actual established royalty, not people with royal titles but without any actual thrones, and as referring only to the royal family, and not to other nobility, and with a bias towards major countries--which in practice here seems to mean the UK, in contrast to Luxembourg. The reason is the empirical popular interest in these--notable is what people think notable, & in this case the relevant people is the general public. We accept beauty contestants and reality show winners on the same principle--demonstrated great popular interest, not anything intrinsic in their accomplishments. The analogy is with other heads of state and heads of government: children, siblings, and parents are notable. Since royal status is in fact inherited in the Real World, the people in the further line of inheritance including collaterals are notable down to a certain level. Apparently the borderline is shown by the lack of consensus one way or another for Lady Marina. davidwr has a good discussion of possible places to draw the line in that article, and I approximately agree with his views there. DGG (talk) 23:10, 25 April 2008 (UTC)
- Empirical notability - I think you hit the nail on the head: If the world thinks the person is notable, regardless of the reason e.g. who his parents are, he's notable. The only caveat I can think of is the concept of "notability is not temporary" and the concept that a single event usually does not confer WikiNotability. Children of celebrities are typically notable only as long as they are associated with a famous parent and therefore are not WikiNotable merely by virtue of family, but some royals, particularly those near the top of the accession list or those in countries like England with royalty-obsessed paparazzi, will be in the public eye pretty much for life. davidwr/(talk)/(contribs)/(e-mail) 23:35, 25 April 2008 (UTC)
- Your proposal is frankly too vague to help. I've just reviewed the whole talk archive at at Wikipedia:Notability (royalty), which actually shows relatively little disagreement, except on the fundamental "notability is not inherited" issue, and a good deal of improving on the earlier drafts. It really just ran out of steam after a year & was shut down by 3 admins, mainly on the grounds it was not needed - I'm not sure how well that decision has stood the test of time (I wasn't involved in the page btw). I think portions of the wording there, which was given considerable polishing, are the best place to start. In fact AfD decision precedents seem to reflect what the proposal contained - they clearly show notability can sometimes be inherited - and adding it here could save a lot of effort. Johnbod (talk) 03:41, 26 April 2008 (UTC)
Radio personalities
I'd like to propose adding some text to the entertainers section to address notability of radio personalities. Something along the lines of (changes are highlighted):
Entertainers
Actors, comedians, opinion makers, models, and television and radio personalities:
- Has had significant roles or been featured multiple times in notable films, television, radio programs
with a large audiencein the top 25% markets, stage performances, and other productions.
The caveat on radio programs of "a large audience" is to ensure that every DJ, producer or Program Director from small stations with limited reach are not automatically considered notable by this standard. Opinions?--Rtphokie (talk) 16:24, 23 April 2008 (UTC)
- Looks like an invite to every shock-jock and self-important pontificator in any market over 15,000 to add him/herself into Wikipedia and whine if they're purged; we already have that problem with television weathermen, etc. I cynically suspect it will also add to the U.S. bias of the project. Full disclosure: a while back I speedied a minor East Coast radio shock-jock; he then encouraged vandalism of my userpage on his show, and my vandalism count jumped. I may be construed as biased. --Orange Mike | Talk 16:46, 23 April 2008 (UTC)
- Support Being a a radio DJ is being a radio "personality", but it should be included on WP:Notability (music) not WP:Notability (people). The criteria for inclusion should be the range of the radio station and the location itself. I am not sure what will constitute a powerful range, but being in New York City myself, I know that all radios I listen to here are not being transmitted from someone's bedroom. In addition, a shock host like Amus or Howard Stern need no verifiablity, but if another who is not as famous wants to be included in WP, the same criteria for inclusion should be applied. So I will support with the guidelines made clear. Jrod2 (talk) 16:10, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- Comment The biggest issue isn't with DJs playing music, it's with talk shows so WP:Notability (people) seems to make more sense to me than WP:Notability (music). I've prod'd and AFD'd a number of morning zoo, shock jocks, big jock and little women shows as well as several other shows and radio personalities on local stations. In some cases these AFDs were rightly shot down because it turns out that these shows are syndicated and are notable beyond the home station's market. In other cases, local fans of a show have snowball'd a AFD into a keep. It's been hard to get a good discussion going on this, some concensus to point to would help a lot.--Rtphokie (talk) 19:41, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- Update I've updated the language above, any comments? As an example, defining a large radio market as the top 25% of the markets in the U.S. would includes New York City-Wilmington, DE, the first market that misses that cut is El Paso, TX. Syndicated shows would fit nicely in this model as any notable one would be in those top markets. This is a similar standard to how the radio industry judges shows and markets anyway. For the sake of argument if the top 50% of markets were selected as the standard instead, the last market included in that is Rockford, IL and the next market which gets left out is Fredericksburg, VA (which I grew up near and can assure you, nothing notable is going on there).--Rtphokie (talk) 19:41, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- I would say, someone like Brian Lehrer from WNYC radio in New York, should be used as an example per notability (people). Jrod2 (talk) 20:23, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- I don't think this is a good idea, at least as written, for several reasons:
- 1. As previously noted, it seems like a very US centric guideline. Other countries may not have their markets as rigidly stratified and valued in the US. Smaller countries by area or population in particular would be exposed to a systematic bias against their broadcast personalities.
- 2. The threshold doesn't seem particularly logical even where applicable. Even in the US, would being one of the lower rated shows in the top 25% of markets really indicate a larger audience than being highly rated in the top 10% and a large number of smallish markets? What about broadcast personalities who work in a country's secondary or tertiary language?
- 3. Every internet radio personality meets the guideline by virtue of being available in every market. I don't think this was the intention, but they need to be covered by the guideline.
- 4. Same issue but more so, what about satellite radio?Horrorshowj (talk) 22:20, 27 April 2008 (UTC)
- Valid concerns, how do we improve it to resolve these concerns?--Rtphokie (talk) 21:12, 3 May 2008 (UTC)
Kazue Takahashi
Can anyone find any biography sources for Kazue Takahashi, an article I am working on at User:Kitty53/Test page 2?Kitty53 (talk) 20:41, 3 May 2008 (UTC)
Athletes - "compete"?
The policy is not 100 % clear. Does "compete" mean the same as "play in a reghular season game"? Or are sitting on the sidelines during televised games and playing in scrimmages and the like sufficient? Bearian (talk) 15:32, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
- The question came up due to the creation of quite a few new articles articles about (American) football players who went undrafted in the NFL Draft but were signed as free agents by various teams. Many of these players will play in preseason exhibition games but few will actually make the squad and play in games that count. Most are not otherwise notable based on their college football careers. Does every warm body that a team brings in to a training camp merit an article? Playing even once in a regular season NFL game is sufficient to establish notability by long-established precedent, and it's a clear-cut distinction. If this isn't the line between notability and otherwise, then where is it? --Finngall talk 16:18, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
- I take "compete" to mean "play" in a regular season game. If we allowed those that hung out during the preseason we'd have probably twice as many football articles on people that probably aren't notable. Wizardman 18:19, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
- This is a perfect examples of the folly of subject specific guidance. It is either ambiguous or it is unreadably dense fodder for wiki-lawyers. You would be better served by considering WP:N which asks the question, is the player noticed in verifiable third party sources in a significant way. E.g., has an article been written about him in an established journal (online or in print). If there is no verifiable information about the player, then we can't write a WP article anyway. Splitting hairs beyond that is academic. Cheers! --Kevin Murray (talk) 18:42, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
Fansite rules?
I am not sure, but can someone remind me what the rules are for listing of fansites on biographies, should I be removing them? Govvy (talk) 19:34, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
- I'm sure it's discussed several different places. You might start at WP:NOTLINK. WP:EL also has a lot of guidance, as does WP:LINKSPAM.
And, of course, if a link has unsourced derogatory material about a non-public living person, the link itself might in some cases fall afoul of WP:BLP. Likewise, if the fansite contains material which violates the copyrights of others, we are prohibited from linking to the site. A surprising number of fansites violate the copyrights of the artist they allege to be supporting. Rossami (talk) 19:59, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
Should there be something specific in WP:BIO about the treatment of WP:BLP1E cases or situations that look might look like WP:BLP1E cases? At the moment, it is sometimes difficult to reconcile the two, e.g. in this AfD discussion: Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Joshua Packwood. Nsk92 (talk) 16:57, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
Playboy change
A recent AfD for Kimberly Evenson hinged around whether being a Playmate was in itself notable. What I would like to do is to clarify the second half of the first clause of the PORNBIO section. Currently it reads:
- "...or from a major pornographic magazine, such as Penthouse, Playboy, or Playgirl, as well as their counterparts in other pornography genres."
What I would like to do is to clarify that a designation such as Playmate or Penthouse Pet are themselves notable; after all that was the intent of that particular phrasing. What I'm thinking of is something like this:
- "...or received a notable designation from a major mass-market pornographic magazine, such as Penthouse, Playboy, Playgirl or equivalent (such as Playmate or Penthouse Pet)."
Hopefully, that wording should allow Playmate through while easing out lesser items such as Cyber Model of the Week. Thoughts from the peanut gallery?? Tabercil (talk) 16:58, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
Recent changes to WP:ATHLETE
It strikes me as kind of funny that we could spend months discussing debating and reasoning with each other at WP:FOOTY to reach consensus over WP:FOOTYN only for it to be shot down by WP:BIO because they didn't want it to supersede WP:ATHLETE yet the meaning of WP:ATHLETE can just be changed by anyone who wants to, with no discussion or attempt to find consensus and WP:BIO folk don't object at all. If one guys opinion on how the notability criteria should be written can over-rule hard won consensus, something is badly wrong with the way we assess notability. Perhaps it is time to let us clearly define notability sport by sport instead of expecting two (now three) sentences to cover all the sports in the world. EP 19:48, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- We call it the bold, revert, discuss cycle at Wikipedia. Per the Consensus policy, he has the right to make a change, but you have the right to revert him. I'm not sure that I agree with his change, but I respect him and trust his judgement. If you want to revert him and don't know how, contact me and I'll help. Cheers! --Kevin Murray (talk) 20:02, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- He was reverted by someone else already, and been asked to bring his proposal here for discussion. --Kevin Murray (talk) 20:04, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, I have reverted for now since there seems to be a challenge to the previous change. I have no position on the issue myself. I do have a minor procedureal concern since the discussion at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Football mentioned by Wizardman in his edit summary does not seem to have been referenced on this talk page. However, feel free to re-revert if nobody intends to actually actively contest the change in question. Nsk92 (talk) 20:09, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- The discussion is under the WP:ATHLETE heading on that page. I inadvertently made the page very us-centric originally, and as a result was just putting it back to the way it was for the most part. Wizardman 20:18, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- I have no objection either way. It is in my mind meaningless unless you can define what "compete" means and as I've said before, how can you write an article if you don't have the verifiable content which would give you a pass from WP:N. It's a logic circle jerk. Cheers! --Kevin Murray (talk) 20:25, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- The discussion is under the WP:ATHLETE heading on that page. I inadvertently made the page very us-centric originally, and as a result was just putting it back to the way it was for the most part. Wizardman 20:18, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, I have reverted for now since there seems to be a challenge to the previous change. I have no position on the issue myself. I do have a minor procedureal concern since the discussion at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Football mentioned by Wizardman in his edit summary does not seem to have been referenced on this talk page. However, feel free to re-revert if nobody intends to actually actively contest the change in question. Nsk92 (talk) 20:09, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- He was reverted by someone else already, and been asked to bring his proposal here for discussion. --Kevin Murray (talk) 20:04, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- My point was not to criticise Wizardman's changes, it was to state that we worked extremely hard at WP:FOOTY to reach consensus over what is a notable acheivement for a football/soccer player, taking into account acheivements at club level, international level, and youth level, and the acheivements of historical players. We tried to make the guidelines clear and unambiguous and to make them applicable to World football not just football in Anglo-countries. We worked out our differences with discussion and debate and finally came up with something succinct and unambiguous that we all felt we could support. Then WP:BIO said NO WAY this cannot be allowed to supersede WP:ATHLETE. A couple of months down the line and someone comes along and paints the sacred cow a different colour and no-one even seems to notice except the folk at WP:FOOTY. I thought WP:FOOTYN got shot down for questioning the status-quo, I now see that this is clearly not the case as wholesale changes to WP:ATHLETE went completely unnoticed. Perhaps someone would care to explain why our hard work was dismissed so easily? EP 20:36, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- Please see my comment above. It is all folly as described in the essay WP:CREEP. With the best of intentions rules are written faster than articles and multiplying faster than rabbits. We seem to be stuck with a few notability criteria beyond the basic WP:N because of tradition, but they just don't work. --Kevin Murray (talk) 20:46, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- If you have seen any recent football related AfD's you will have noticed the endless debates over the same issues coming up time and again, often ending in completely different outcomes, because of pile-on voting and different interpretations of what WP:ATHLETE actually means. the subject specific criteria were meant to resolve this inconsistency and prevent the same old policy discussions endlessly clogging up individual AfDs. The idea that our guidelines represent the tiniest fraction of the content written on football/soccer is frankly ridiculous. Football represents 3% of the articles on Wikipedia and the number of articles is growing faster than anyone can keep pace with. A few sentences of unambiguous guidelines to cover this vast subject area would be of enormous benefit to those few dedicated people who are trying to keep it under control. EP 21:06, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- Here is the unambiguous policy WP:V and WP:I in conjunction with WP:N. No independent verifiable sources about the player no article at WP. The problem is that AfD is poorly run by WP:ILIKEIT principles. --Kevin Murray (talk) 21:10, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- Personally I would say most of the problems stem from Admins who close AfDs by counting votes rather than using the discussion to help him to assess whether the article meets the relevant notability criteria. This problem is made worse by ambiguous criteria designed to cover all sports which just appeared one day in June 2005 and was then expanded into something almost identical to the current guideline on September 10 2005. I really cant see why something drawn up by one long gone editor nearly three years ago takes precedent over something discussed, debated and analysed by experts in the area over a number of weeks and supported by consensus. It's crazy EP 21:36, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- Here is the unambiguous policy WP:V and WP:I in conjunction with WP:N. No independent verifiable sources about the player no article at WP. The problem is that AfD is poorly run by WP:ILIKEIT principles. --Kevin Murray (talk) 21:10, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- If you have seen any recent football related AfD's you will have noticed the endless debates over the same issues coming up time and again, often ending in completely different outcomes, because of pile-on voting and different interpretations of what WP:ATHLETE actually means. the subject specific criteria were meant to resolve this inconsistency and prevent the same old policy discussions endlessly clogging up individual AfDs. The idea that our guidelines represent the tiniest fraction of the content written on football/soccer is frankly ridiculous. Football represents 3% of the articles on Wikipedia and the number of articles is growing faster than anyone can keep pace with. A few sentences of unambiguous guidelines to cover this vast subject area would be of enormous benefit to those few dedicated people who are trying to keep it under control. EP 21:06, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- Please see my comment above. It is all folly as described in the essay WP:CREEP. With the best of intentions rules are written faster than articles and multiplying faster than rabbits. We seem to be stuck with a few notability criteria beyond the basic WP:N because of tradition, but they just don't work. --Kevin Murray (talk) 20:46, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
- Neither version seems ideally clear and unambiguous to me, but (or therefore) there seems to be no good reason why major sports should not have their own more detailed criteria. I remember from a recent AfD that Chess notability seems not very clear, and this (either version) would be little help there. Johnbod (talk) 21:45, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
Maybe we should try reviving Wikipedia:Notability (sports)? Wizardman 16:34, 17 May 2008 (UTC)
- Sports articles, and more particularly football (soccer) articles, are a consistent part of Wikipedia articles. There's no reason not to establish a notability guideline for sports-related articles, built by subject experts with a huge consensus. Thus, I support to revive Wikipedia:Notability (sports) and make it effective, including WP:FOOTYN into it. --Angelo (talk) 22:38, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
- I fully support this suggestion, how would we go about reviving WP:SPORTS? EP 22:58, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
Reality TV contestants
I seem to have missed the debate on failed proposal WP:REALITY, which looks interesting. Do we have a working rule of thumb consensus on which reality contestants will or won't fail at AfD? --Dweller (talk) 10:48, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
- My personal guideline is based on "notability is not temporary." If they will be notable 5 years after they are off the show, they I will vote KEEP. This usually means they went off to do something later or are likely to do so, or they did something that makes them more notable than other winners. For example, if participating in a show is expected to launch a TV or music career like American Idol then I would vote "keep." However, for more than half of the season winners of Big Brother (television) and Survivor (TV series) and the vast majority of non-winners I'd vote "delete" but recommend they be in some kind of list related to the show. davidwr/(talk)/(contribs)/(e-mail) 14:54, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
Contradictory WP:ATHLETE
The first bullet states that baseball players must be in a fully professional league. The next bullet includes anyone in a high-level amateur sport. Amateur sport, taken literally, includes all college baseball players. I'm sure the overall intention is to excluse the average college baseball player. Therefore, I propose tweaking the second bullet to remove this ambiguity. --brewcrewer (yada, yada) 15:28, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
- That's why the "coverage in secondary sources" part was added. Some college athletes that never played professionally are still notable - Eric Crouch for instance. But every walk-on and towel boy...not so much. --SmashvilleBONK! 15:57, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
- Okay, so the correct understanding of the second bullet is that ametuer athletes are notable if there's seconday coverage about them. That being the case, "secondary sources" is an important condiditon and it shouldn't be in parentheses. How about rephrasing the second bullet to the following:
Competitors and coaches who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports and who meet the general criteria of secondary sources published about them.
- ? --brewcrewer (yada, yada) 20:58, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
- Okay, so the correct understanding of the second bullet is that ametuer athletes are notable if there's seconday coverage about them. That being the case, "secondary sources" is an important condiditon and it shouldn't be in parentheses. How about rephrasing the second bullet to the following:
Stage actors
Generally speaking, the originator of a lead role can be considered notable (or, at least, that fact can be taken into consideration when attempting to determine his notability). Replacement actors -- actors who take over the role throughout the course of a show's run -- are generally not notable (unless they were notable prior to taking the role). WP:ENTERTAINER should be changed to reflect this. — MusicMaker5376 14:35, 30 May 2008 (UTC)
- I would qualify that by saying that the originator of a lead role (meaning a "starring" or major featured role) in a Broadway, West End or other large-scale professional production, can be considered notable. A replacement actor should not be considered notable for one production alone, unless the actor has a number of other important credits or is notable for some other reason. I agree that WP:ENTERTAINER should be clarified to reflect this. -- Ssilvers (talk) 15:01, 30 May 2008 (UTC)
- Actors may also be notable if they have a leading role in a notable revival. They don't necessarily have to have originated the part. This is especially true for new shows being transported back and forth between London and New York with different casts, and for actors getting nominated for major acting awards in revived shows. There have also been cases where replacement cast members have caused a media stir and in those cases, since there is independent third party coverage, it may make them notable as well. Nrswanson (talk) 02:11, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- Agreed. — MusicMaker5376 15:06, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- The standard for replacement actors seems quite inconsistent with the standard for athletes, who are notable merely if they "have competed in a fully professional league". Even if one reads "fully professional" in the most restrictive sense of only including the top-level professional leagues, this would still include any rookie or journeyman athlete called up on one or more occasion to play in the place of an injured veteran player. IMHO, an actor who permanently takes over a leading role in a major Broadway production is surely more notable than a rookie player for a Major League Baseball team. There are, after all, many more Major League Baseball players at any given time than there are leading actor/actresses on Broadway and other venues of similar stature. Rhsatrhs (talk) 04:26, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- We're talking about actors, not athletes. — MusicMaker5376 15:06, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- I can see that we are talking about actors, and I believe that the inconsistency between the standards for actors and athletes is a relevant point. There are two ways to resolve the inconsistency: either by tightening the standard for athletes, or loosening the standard for actors. I could go either way on that myself. The one thing I don't think is appropriate is pretending that the disparity isn't important. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rhsatrhs (talk • contribs) 16:27, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- Pointing out the disparity doesn't help fix it. What is your opinion on WP:ENTERTAINER? The problems with WP:ATHLETE have also been raised. You can voice your opinions there. — MusicMaker5376 16:39, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- I think that what would we could do to help fix the disparity right here in WP:ENTERTAINER is to somewhat expand the list of criteria. My first concrete suggestion is to recognize a "rising star" exception to the "featured multiple times" requirement, so that an actor who, in a very short time-span, goes from community theater to a leading role in an award-winning Broadway production, even as a replacement, qualifies as notable. The same would be true for an actor making his or her debut in a major film, even if the film is a re-make and the role was therefore created by some other actor long ago. I'm sure we could come up with a reasonably tight definition of "rising star" if we put our minds to it. And hopefully, this would establish a precedent that justifies tightening the standard for athletes similarly, so that it would not recognize veteran journeymen, but would recognizing rising stars.Rhsatrhs (talk) 18:17, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- We're not here to recognize rising stars; we're here to recognize actual stars. That's what notability is -- actual notability, not expected notability. Your argument would imply that every actor who's played Enjolras in Les Miserables -- on both sides of the Atlantic -- in a combined run of over FORTY YEARS is notable. That's just silly. — MusicMaker5376 18:59, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- A rising star is an actual star if given a starring role in a major production in a major venue. He or she may not turn out to be an enduring star. Is notability a permanent condition? No, it is not. Many who pass WP standards for notability today will not be notable in 100, 10, or even 5 years. Their articles will eventually be deleted. Each of the Enjolras actors may have been notable at the time of their taking that role, and had WP existed at the time may have been deserving of an article, which would in many cases by now have been deleted.Rhsatrhs (talk) 19:47, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
- I find that utterly ridiculous, especially in application to contemporary figures. "Not temporary" means "lasts forever", and forever is a very long time. The idea that notability lasts forever suggests that if an article appeared in the first edition of a traditional printed encyclopedia, it would never be justifiable to remove that article from the second, fifth, or 25th edition. Who are we to pretend we know who will still be considered notable 10, 100, 200 or 1000 years from now? Does anyone actually believe that every one of the performers listed on Top-selling American Idol alumni will be considered notable by objective standards even 20 years from now? I could find loads of "List of..." type pages in WP for which the same question applies, and definitely not just amongst the entertainment-related lists. And yes, I do understand the difference between notable, famous and notorious. Even outside of vbiographies, in pure academic areas, how can we possibly pretend to know what article subjects will still be notable forever? We can't. In a huge number of cases, we can only answer the question "is this notable today?", and anything beyond that is merely an educated guess. Rhsatrhs (talk) 01:56, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
Sportspeople
How about extending the criteria to include officials as well so that the wording of each criterion would be "Competitors, coaches and officials ...". Wikipedia already has several articles about baseball umpires, hockey referees, soccer referees and the like. It seems reasonable to accept these as being just as notable as the players and coaches are. Thanks. Truthanado (talk) 01:56, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
- I agree. I know some specific Wikiprojects have their own project guidelines for referee notability, but it would be good to have this set on a larger scale as well. matt91486 (talk) 17:01, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
- Good point by Truthanado. Masterpiece2000 (talk) 03:07, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
- I oppose for the reasons enunciated in the "coaches" section above. It's unclear what exactly is meant by "official". Referees, maybe, but promoters, team managers, commissioners, league functionaries? No point in automatically including them all unless there's good sources about them. I've reverted for now. Sandstein 06:05, 12 June 2008 (UTC)
- There is no need for this degree of special instruction. If the coach, promoter or team janitor meet the criteria for WP:N then they should have an article. Trying to make a special case for these professions is counter productive. --Kevin Murray (talk) 13:32, 12 June 2008 (UTC)
- Good point by Truthanado. Masterpiece2000 (talk) 03:07, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
- I agree. I know some specific Wikiprojects have their own project guidelines for referee notability, but it would be good to have this set on a larger scale as well. matt91486 (talk) 17:01, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
More WP:ATHLETE (Coaches)
The amateur criterion has gone from overly encompassing to almost a little restrictive. My main concern is that it would seem that any D1 college head football coach would be notable, but what I am running into is that coaches (specifically southern African-American coaches) that coached at smaller D1 schools in the 1940's-1960's aren't having secondary sources due to the climate of the time. I am considering adding a third bullet with something to the effect of "Head coaches of amateur teams of the highest level in which the programs have significant reliable secondary coverage." --SmashvilleBONK! 16:42, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, I'm going to add it. If anyone wants to reword it...obviously go ahead. --SmashvilleBONK! 16:45, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
- It also occurs to me that this would apply to Olympic coaches as well, so it is now: "Head coaches of individual athletes or amateur programs who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports (granted the athletes or programs have met the general criteria for secondary sources)." --SmashvilleBONK! 16:57, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
- I have a problem with this; it seems to allow "inhereted notability" to override a lack of sources. The community has consistently rejected inherited notability (see WP:NOTINHERITED). I am going to revert, but would welcome additional input from other editors. UnitedStatesian (talk) 05:45, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
- If no sources can be found, an article ought to be deleted regardless of the topic. — CharlotteWebb 13:49, 13 June 2008 (UTC)
- I have a problem with this; it seems to allow "inhereted notability" to override a lack of sources. The community has consistently rejected inherited notability (see WP:NOTINHERITED). I am going to revert, but would welcome additional input from other editors. UnitedStatesian (talk) 05:45, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
- oppose. Restrictiveness is something the WP:ATHLETE guideline doesn't have so I oppose proposals seeking to further increase the reach of that guideline.⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 13:22, 29 May 2008 (UTC)
- Also oppose. Unlike athletes and politicians, say, there's no benefit in a complete coverage of coaches and officials. It's also too difficult to determine whether one of these people has "competed" in a fully professional league. Addition reverted. Sandstein 06:01, 12 June 2008 (UTC)
- Obviously if one cannot determine whether or not they have coached in a "fully professional league", one should assume they have not (pending sources sources stating that they have). — CharlotteWebb 13:49, 13 June 2008 (UTC)
- Also oppose. Unlike athletes and politicians, say, there's no benefit in a complete coverage of coaches and officials. It's also too difficult to determine whether one of these people has "competed" in a fully professional league. Addition reverted. Sandstein 06:01, 12 June 2008 (UTC)
- Support. I had previously understood "compete in a fully professional league" to mean "participate, as a player or as a coach, in a fully professional league" anyway (caveat: if sources are plentiful, the status of the league is irrelevant). — CharlotteWebb 13:49, 13 June 2008 (UTC)
- Support including coaches. Coaches are just as notable as players at the same level of play. There is no need to exclude them. Besides, the text has read "Competitors and coaches" for at least several months, indicating implicit acceptance by the Wiki community. I see nothing to justify a change. Truthanado (talk) 01:37, 14 June 2008 (UTC)
- Oppose any expansion of ATHLETE, it's already far, far too inclusive and violates verifiability. Seraphimblade Talk to me 14:19, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- Comment. Including "coaches" is not an expansion of ATHLETE; they have been there all along. Coaches have been included in the guideline for months, easily verifiable on the "history" page. They were removed during a revert of an edit that added "officials", which was correctly reverted; removing "coaches" in that revert was not justified because there is no consensus to change what the guideline has been for months. Truthanado (talk) 19:42, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- Oppose WP:ATHLETE is already far too inclusive. Masterpiece2000 (talk) 03:30, 17 June 2008 (UTC)
This criteria is problematic. "Been featured multiple times in notable films, television, stage performances, and other productions" leads to the inclusion of every two bit actor that has gotten a tiny role in a few notable movies. At the end of the day, this unnotable actor had been "featured." This afd made me realize this problem. --brewcrewer (yada, yada) 19:24, 14 June 2008 (UTC)
- Really, this is one of the most far-reaching and overinclusive sub-notability guidelines left; most of the rest have been trimmed back. I'm really rather surprised; I would think our emphasis of caution regarding biographies on living persons would mean, among other things, that we only write bios if they can be exceptionally well-sourced. And we certainly need to trim this one back quite a ways, back in keeping with the primary notability guideline, right now it's allowing far too much garbage. Seraphimblade Talk to me 14:31, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- How about changing "Has had significant roles or been featured multiple times in notable films" to "Has had significant roles in multiple notable films" - --brewcrewer (yada, yada) 15:13, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- I would suggest changing it to "Has been featured significantly in multiple reliable sources independent of the article's subject." Either proper sourcing exists to write the article, or we shouldn't have a separate article on the person. We could always mention them briefly in a film's article if they were significant to that film but there is little biographical source material available. Seraphimblade Talk to me 15:16, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- But that's just a repeat of the parent WP:BIO notability standard.--brewcrewer (yada, yada) 15:47, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- Exactly! Why do we need a subguideline that differs from WP:BIO? UnitedStatesian (talk) 03:47, 17 June 2008 (UTC)
- But that's just a repeat of the parent WP:BIO notability standard.--brewcrewer (yada, yada) 15:47, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- I would suggest changing it to "Has been featured significantly in multiple reliable sources independent of the article's subject." Either proper sourcing exists to write the article, or we shouldn't have a separate article on the person. We could always mention them briefly in a film's article if they were significant to that film but there is little biographical source material available. Seraphimblade Talk to me 15:16, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- How about changing "Has had significant roles or been featured multiple times in notable films" to "Has had significant roles in multiple notable films" - --brewcrewer (yada, yada) 15:13, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
More Angie Gregory and Lori Jean Wilson (Actress)
Both Lori Jean Wilson & Angie Gregory's pages are being considered for detetion. I feel that any actors with credits on IMDB.com should be allowed on Wikipedia. IMDB is a credited source. What's the problem?
Ashleyjuddfan (talk) 23:32, 2 July 2008 (UTC)
- IMDB.com is maintained by contributing editors. It is generally considered to be a reliable source, however its contents alone do not establish notability. Wikipedia:Notability in a nutshell says notability is demonstrated by multiple sources. An article whose sole source is IMDB might be a reasonable candidate for deletion. If the topic of the article is truly notable, it should be easy to find multiple sources. To make a blanket statement "It's on IMDB therefore it should have an article" is not keeping within the spirit of Wikipedia. Truthanado (talk) 12:36, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'm on IMDB myself: Richard Fife's IMDB page. 2 of the 4 credits were put there by me, though. With only one exception (Writing credits for movies covered under WGA union rules) IMDB content is only evaluated when it's blatantly ridiculous or someone complains, otherwise it is simply put up as is. Therefore, it is not a reliable source. However, even if it was, it still only represents a non-critical database of facts, which do not by themselves confer notability. Does the assistant production accountant on, say, "Kitt Kittredge" warrant a Wikipedia page on the grounds that they're listed on the IMDB? Not really. - Richfife (talk) 19:46, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
PornBio Distinction
What counts as mainstream media, and why does pornography itself not? 69.156.28.230 (talk) 04:28, 27 June 2008 (UTC)
You have to be joking??Andycjp (talk) 01:10, 9 July 2008 (UTC)
- There are many reasons why an additional level of notability is used for biographical articles of pornographic actors. First off, there are so many of them; removing the additional level means opening the door to tens of thousands of additional actors. Secondly, it requires higher standards to assist in ensuring that only those who are actually career porn actors are included, instead of just anyone who did a sex scene in a film one time. Finally, even the porn wikiproject thinks it should be limited in this way; see this archived discussion from this page. This is a policy, folks. Bold isn't necessarily good, not without discussion. Risker (talk) 02:16, 9 July 2008 (UTC)
You misunderstand me. I am trying to reduce the number of actors of dubious merit here, not increase it. An actor who never makes it beyond blue movies is NOT worthy of inclusion in an encyclopedia.Andycjp (talk) 03:55, 9 July 2008 (UTC)
- Not necessary. Ron Jeremy, for instance, achieved a certain measure (*cough*) of notability strictly for his work in porn. He would be notable even if he had not done a non-adult film. —C.Fred (talk) 04:22, 9 July 2008 (UTC)
- And Ron has done non-porn film work... but that's neither here nor there... Tabercil (talk) 05:07, 9 July 2008 (UTC)
- As one of the people who's finger prints are on the notability guidelines for pornography, I feel the guidelines as they stand now are just about right. They aren't so tight as to exclude truly notable people, e.g. Christy Canyon who is legendary in the field of porn but with a minimal mainstream profile these days, yet not so loose as to allow any old starlet to come in as a lot of porn starlets frankly have the industry lifespan of mayflies. As an example of the shortness of careers, take the film A Good Source of Iron 4 from 4 years ago - the IAFD entry for it lists 6 females in it, yet only one of them has appeared in more than 25 films and none of the stars is considered notable by the current Wikipedia standards. And we good folks in the WikiProject Pornography are active in pruning out the non-notable - a large percentage of the entries on the project's Deletion notification page were started by members of the project. Tabercil (talk) 05:07, 9 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'll just put in my .02 that it saddens me that we have special notability criteria making notability easier to establish for porn stars, entertainers, and sports figures, but we have no special criteria for religious figures, philosophers, inventors, journalists, and countless other people who, by any reasonable definition, are more likely to have made a greater contribution to knowledge. Best, --Shirahadasha (talk) 19:13, 9 July 2008 (UTC)
WP:ATHLETE is turning Wikipedia into the MySpace of athletes
English peasant correctly pointed outthat the current WP:ATHLETE was invented it was not a product of careful debate as it should have been.
- WP:ATHLETE until 2005
- Athletes who are widely known, widely acclaimed, or highly successful in their sport.
- WP:ATHLETE after 2005
- Sportspeople who have played in a [high-level] fully professional league...
That single edit, designed to appeaze sports fans, made every single professional athlete worthy of a Wikipedia article. Most of them are not notable both per definition (1)(2) and per WP:BIO, WP:ATHLETE simply makes them worthy of an article.
WP:ATHLETE is now used to succefully protect very low quality articles such as these: Ânderson da Silveira Ribeiro and Antonio Rodrigues dos Santos, both are 19 and non-notable.
Wikipedia in english has over 10,000 soccer player profiles so we are slowly becoming the MySpace of athletes. ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 23:29, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
- I understand your point and share much of your concerns. I am not that familiar with the entries for other sports, so I am going to comment with focus on articles pertaining to association football. I have noticed many footballer biographies that exist here based on (apparently) a consensus that whoever has played football professionally at any point in history, is notable. Now, I would not ever compare this encyclopedia with MySpace, but I would hope that the notability considerations for athletes are taken a look and are improved, to avoid the inclusion of thousands of non-notable, unaccomplished individuals who just happen to play football for living. One simple change would be to add a rule not to accept the entry unless the subject has either 1) Played officially for a national team, at full or youth level; 2) Is playing at least his third professional season at the club level; 3) Has been direct part of a very notable achievement (e.g. scoring a goal which made history by either being crucial in obtaining a trophy or by setting some record). ----ChaChaFut (talk) 23:32, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
- Your proposal is good, but why can't athletes be subjected to just WP:BIO like you and me?⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 23:45, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
- I wouldn't have a problem with that. We need hundreds of existing articles poor in content and quality (of most notable subjects who definitely deserve an entry) to be improved a lot more than we need new articles of "new" athletes --ChaChaFut (talk) 23:55, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that there are a lot of very insignificant footballers getting articles, but I don't think Ânderson da Silveira Ribeiro is one of them, he has played in the highest tier of club football in Brazil. I would strongly oppose any attempt to bring in notability criteria that would rule out articles on some players in important leagues like the Premier League, Argentine Primera La Liga and Serie A simply because they are too young to have played 3 seasons, yet promote insignificant U-17 or schoolboy players that have never even been near a game of professional football. We already have consensus based football specific criteria at WP:FOOTYN, a fact that EconomistBR is aware of, and chose to omit from his statement. EP 23:57, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
- It's your fault! WP:FOOTYN is merely an "advice", the template itself says: It is not a policy or guideline. You need to transform WP:FOOTYN into a Wikipedia:Notability (people) guideline because "advices" are not as relevant as guidelines. ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 05:10, 2 June 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that there are a lot of very insignificant footballers getting articles, but I don't think Ânderson da Silveira Ribeiro is one of them, he has played in the highest tier of club football in Brazil. I would strongly oppose any attempt to bring in notability criteria that would rule out articles on some players in important leagues like the Premier League, Argentine Primera La Liga and Serie A simply because they are too young to have played 3 seasons, yet promote insignificant U-17 or schoolboy players that have never even been near a game of professional football. We already have consensus based football specific criteria at WP:FOOTYN, a fact that EconomistBR is aware of, and chose to omit from his statement. EP 23:57, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
- I don't disagree with you either, EP. My "third season" comment/proposal was just brainstorming, please take it FWIW. But I have always wondered why so many people are OK with a guideline that appears to be designed so that whoever has played any amount of professional football at any point in history, is automatically considered notable and worthy of having his biography found in an encyclopedia. --ChaChaFut (talk) 00:12, 2 June 2008 (UTC)
- I wouldn't have a problem with that. We need hundreds of existing articles poor in content and quality (of most notable subjects who definitely deserve an entry) to be improved a lot more than we need new articles of "new" athletes --ChaChaFut (talk) 23:55, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
- These professional athletes are considered notable with one professional game because of the amount of reliable sources that being an athlete accrues. This press coverage assures that they will meet the requirements of WP:BIO. matt91486 (talk) 17:04, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
I agree that there is a huge problem with this standard. It is similar to the problem with asteroid articles. So similar, in fact, that the discussion going on at Astronomical Objects might provide some useful insight into a potential solution for this and many similar challenges that are arising with excessive articles all over Wikipedia. J293339 (talk) 22:40, 8 June 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with EconomistBR. I don't think every single professional athlete is worthy of a Wikipedia article. There are biographies of minor crickters and soccer players. We have to do something about this. Masterpiece2000 (talk) 03:17, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
- I don't see how it's really a problem, to be honest. WP:PAPER isn't an issue, and they have sources. It doesn't get in the way of any articles about any more academic subjects. matt91486 (talk) 01:18, 11 June 2008 (UTC)
- Verifiability, however, is often an issue here, to wit: "If no reliable, third-party sources can be found for an article topic, Wikipedia should not have an article on it." And we shouldn't! Listification can in many cases be a good alternative (we still "have the information", for those tremendously concerned about it, but don't have thousands of permastubs containing it), and in other cases we just need some good old editing and trimming. This is one of those cases, and I imagine in many cases, listification could be a perfectly fine solution, with wikilinks to the players who are actually notable. Seraphimblade Talk to me 14:28, 15 June 2008 (UTC)
- I don't see how it's really a problem, to be honest. WP:PAPER isn't an issue, and they have sources. It doesn't get in the way of any articles about any more academic subjects. matt91486 (talk) 01:18, 11 June 2008 (UTC)
It seems to me that a lot of these players don't have anything actually notable except their being a member of a certain team on their page. Have they done anything specifically notable? Shouldn't these articles be merely merged with the articles about the team they play on? From looking at his page, all I have learned about Ânderson da Silveira Ribeiro (sorry to pick on him specifically) is that he was born, and plays on a football team. I would think until he does something to make him stand out (either in football or something else) then he doesn't really deserve a page. He may be known to football fans, but to people who are not fans knowledge of him wouldn't even be considered trivia. However, perhaps there is more info about each of these players. Sports fans can be quite fanatical about the players and the game in general. Upgrading these articles to include more info on their notability would be great, if possible. But otherwise, merging them would probably be a better idea. (Ppudate (talk) 21:27, 17 June 2008 (UTC))
- Many of these articles are about notable players who are covered in multiple reliable sources. Unfortunately, most of the coverage is in languages other than English (especially for Brazilian footballers). Thousands of people pay to watch these professionals play on a weekly basis and their exploits are covered in multiple media sources. As most Wikipedia editors are not very proficient in languages other than English (myself included), many of these articles lack the detail and sources that articles about footballers in English-speaking countries have, but I don't think that's a good reason to exclude such articles. Eventually, editors proficient in Portuguese, Spanish, etc will come along and improve these stub-quality articles. Also, the other language Wikipedias often have articles about these players that can be translated into English and used to improve the English Wikipedia's articles. Best regards. Jogurney (talk) 02:18, 18 June 2008 (UTC)
- My opinion is that Wikipedia's inclusion of athletes who are already covered in specialized encyclopedias (such as independently published yearbooks or almanacs) is simply a manifestation of the first pillar. Even though the coverage in those sources is often trivial, it is also verifiable, npov, and not original research. Trying to mandate a merge into a team article gets really confusing with players who move from one team to another; and, it may also cause a disproportionate amount of text in the case where the team article may be a stub, except for the list of every single player in the team's history. Neier (talk) 14:53, 19 June 2008 (UTC)
- With reasons mentioned by EconomistBR, I have put three articles up for deletion, namely Mohd Mardani, Ram Shanker, and Rivaldo Costa Amaral Filho for deletion. the first two players have article that have not even been updated in two years at least. While the Rivaldo Costa's article is only created only when the player join a Singaporean club by a local fans. Under the current criteria, anyone who sign a professional contract and play a minute of the game professionally is important enough to have an article. With the number of professional leagues around, even a very lowly ranked one in Maldives, practical all players can be included. These simply does not make sense at all.Frankie goh (talk) 08:38, 20 June 2008 (UTC)
- All three of those articles are going to be kept, one has already been snowball kept and the other two probably will be in the next few hours. If a player is in a professional league they deserve an article, because there's every chance someone will look them up - just because we don't live in the countries they play in does not make them non-notable. There's an element of systematic bias with it, really, because if they were playing in a so-called "bigger" league sporadically there wouldn't be a problem. I think we have to remember that, in Brazil, a player playing 17 games for a well-supported club is akin to playing 17 games for an Aston Villa or a West Bromwich Albion. Esteffect (talk) 20:04, 21 June 2008 (UTC)
I think this is getting out of hand, at least with respect to baseball. Being a minor league player means somebody might look you up. So does being a calculus instructor at a community college. The two are about equivalent in notability -- both might be looked up on a local level, but do not merit inclusion in Wikipedia. RayAYang (talk) 22:00, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- This is getting out of hand and there is no solution. Sports fanatics are devoid of common-sense when it comes to articles about athletes, they don't make any concessions and all they do is repeat WP:ATHLETE over and over.⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 15:10, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
I was just coming here to complain about WP:ATHLETE when I noticed it's already being done. I'm sorry, this is getting way out of hand. Just the past couple of days have given us Samuel Cojoc, Alexandru Bourceanu, Laurenţiu Iorga and Adrian Popescu (footballer born 1975), none of whom has the least modicum of notability - they're all young men who happen to have signed a contract and kicked around a football. matt91486, where are the sources, let alone the press coverage, on these guys? Jogurney: these players are Romanian, I speak Romanian, and I can tell you the sources simply aren't there. And isn't it almost laughably idealistic to think that "editors proficient in [language X] will come along and improve these stub-quality articles"? The number of Romanian editors doing serious work here is about 5, and I assure you none of us is rushing to add information on these nonentities. Unless we go for mass deletion after moving back to the 2005 standard or something like it (which we should, before the think really explodes), rest assured, 99% of these will remain permanent micro-stubs. Neier: first, where are the yearbooks and almanacs you mention, and second, why on earth have many thousands of "X is a player on Y team" stubs polluting the encyclopedia, even if statements of that sort do happen to be "verifiable, npov, and not original research"? Esteffect: since when must we cater to the off-chance that "someone" will look up a player? We are an encyclopedia, not a directory.
In short: athletes should - must, if we are to retain some standards - be subject to stricter standards. Some form of notability must be asserted. Belonging to a professional league is simply not sufficient; it does not imply inherent notability. We need the third-party references and evidence of real notability that we demand in WP:BIO. If we can have six possible demands for academics, surely some are in order for athletes too. Biruitorul Talk 05:21, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- Don't even try nominating those articles for deletion. Sports fanatics aggressively defend every single athlete article that arrives at the AfD debate and win every single time.
- As for the "micro-stubs", they told me: "they do their job". I am not kidding.
- I too argued that ATHLETES must satisfy WP:BIO like everybody else, but sports fanatics scoffed at the idea.
- Sports fanatics are so uncompromising, unyielding and radical that instead of having to deal with them I much rather favour splitting all articles protected by WP:ATHLETE from Wikipedia into something like Wikisports.
- PS: There is a difference between sports fans and sports fanatics.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 15:10, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
- Hello Biruitorul, and thank you for engaging in a polite discussion on this matter. I believe the new sub-stub articles you listed are probably insufficient to pass WP:ATHLETE and should be listed for deletion or prod'ed. With respect to articles about footballers playing in non-English speaking countries that pass WP:ATHLETE and sources, I don't think its unrealistically idealistic to believe new local editors will improve these articles. I have seen it happen many times in my short time with Wikipedia. Best regards. Jogurney (talk) 18:42, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- With regard to Stub articles - how different are stubs for mildly notable (OK, almost non-notable in some cases) to the proposed stubs that are potentially going to be generated for 2+ million 'places' around the world that was discussed...errm, somewhere...on Wikipedia recently?. I believe many will be improved. I agree the criteria is a bit flaky on the real notability from - someone who plays one game for Colchester automatically gets considered notable, but there needs to be some form of clear definition or fixed criteria. If there is any scope for debate there will simply be endless arguments about whether one is notable or not. The current criteria at least has a clear line drawn in the sand. I'd be happy to support a change to stricter criteria as long as it can be clearly defined and inclusive of all who are in actuality truly notable. Although, if Belmont Soccer Club is notable, then pretty much every athlete that has played a professional game also is. I guess famous is always going to be subject to ones perspective.--ClubOranjeTalk 02:17, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
Religious Figures
There are 654 Roman Catholic bishop stubs, which, to my mind, beg the question; What are the notability criteria for religious figures? J293339 (talk) 22:31, 8 June 2008 (UTC)
- I think the notability criteria for religious figures would be s/he should have done something for theology. I have not worked on the biographies of religious figures. I am not the best person to answer this question. Masterpiece2000 (talk) 03:13, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
- notability in theology is the standard for theologians, people whose profession is to study and write on theology. Bishops may do that, incidentally ,but their role from the very 1st century has been as administrators. They have been considered notable as such due to the community impact and the availability of sources, for all bishops of every territorial church throughout history.
The ones in the RC church are particularly well documented. We probably have a few tens of thousands of additional articles to go. WP NOT PAPER. DGG (talk) 18:59, 13 June 2008 (UTC)
Please follow the basic guideline of whether or not there is significant third party recognition of the person (see: WP:N) --Kevin Murray (talk) 19:07, 13 June 2008 (UTC)
- I've been seeing a lot of discussion pages lately where people are using WP: PAPER as an argument to ignore WP: N, especially in fields where there are a lot of information sets without a lot of actual information. My opinion is that the information is notable collectively, but not individually. For instance, a series of tables detailing the raw
factsdata about a bunch of unspectacular bishops would be fine. But only a tiny fraction of them have made individual contributions that meet WP: N. Wlink their names in the table, andleaveredirect the rest.J293339 (talk) 22:24, 13 June 2008 (UTC) - We went through this last year when someone got the bright idea of trying a deletion campaign against them to prove the sanctity of the general standard. Every one was snowball kept within a day. If it's documented in the article that they are/were an actual Roman Catholic bishop, don't bother nominating it. The position itself is held at AFD to have enough notability that holding it meets the bare minimum. Effectively it's a holdover, regional, political office from when the church held temporal power. Some of the African Dioceses are responsible for multiple countries, and there are Vatican stationed bishops that write policy for the entire church or act as ambassadors to the Orthodox and Anglican churches. Please let it go so we don't have to deal with proposed additional criteria for religious figures again.Horrorshowj (talk) 12:33, 22 June 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, my intent was to generate some discussion of the fact that the general standard is not being applied. If the argument that keeps these kinds of articles in business is that "the position is notable, therefore everyone who's ever held it is notable," then there are already additional unspoken criteria, because that's far looser than the general standard. But I'm about ready to give up, since nobody seems to want a collection of useful information, anyway. Also, I find "let it go" condescending and not at all constructive. J293339 (talk) 16:10, 23 June 2008 (UTC)
- A proposal for a WP:Notability (religious figures) guideline was made some time ago, but it was dropped for lack of consensus. I agree that we in fact have de facto unwritten special notability criteria. I don't think having special criteria is inappropriate. Wikipedia has written special notability criteria for porn actors, entertainers, and sports figures, among others, that are explicitly looser than the general standard. I don't think it should be harder for religious figures to get into the encyclopedia than people in these categories. Nonetheless, the current state of affairs is that the community has rejected proposals for written guidelines explaining what the looser criteria should be, but it continues to adhere to unwritten ones. Best, --Shirahadasha (talk) 19:14, 9 July 2008 (UTC)
- In my mind, as is the consensus, that any Roman Catholic or Anglican Bishop who has garnered significant press ought to be on WP. Bearian (talk) 16:23, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
Interaction of WP:BIO1E and politics
I worry that the current language is problematic -- we're deleting (or discussing deleting) articles about candidates for the coming election, about whom people would understandably be interested. In some cases, it's being read to say that all notability connected with being a candidate for an election doesn't count in favor of a biography, if that election is the only cause of the person's notability. The one event rule is a good rule for the victim of a bloody crime, or some other thing that is a 15 days' wonder, but an election (especially, say, a statewide election) is going to be the focus of intense interest for 6-18 months by a significant chunk of the population, which seems to me to be moving it into a different setting altogether. Long before I created an account on Wikipedia, I was using it as a relatively neutral place to get information on my candidates. It would be a shame if we were to render ourselves useless to people across the country as far as elections go, by deleting articles about candidates -- particularly when it's the candidate, rather than the race, that gathers widespread attention, even if the primary cause of the attention is their candidacy. RayAYang (talk) 05:23, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- The rule is OK for a one day wonder. If something has been in the media for 15 days, then I would say that is presumably notable and shouldn't be excluded. WP:BIO1E is intended to prevent multiple articles on the same topic, not to exclude the topic altogether. Your election example is a good example of this. Why should it be excluded.Assize (talk) 13:23, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- This has been discussed a number of times before. (See here for one example.) The gist of the problem is volume. There are many thousands of legislative and elected judicial seats around in the US alone, each running for election every few years and each election accruing several candidates. For example, there are 435 congressional districts in the US. Those seats come up for reelection every 2 years. While a few are uncontested, most of those seats have 2-5 people running for each of the major party nominations and another 1-5 minor party candidates running in the election. At the state-level, well, one user once laid out the Texas example - one of 50 states (and while a large state, not the largest legislature). Texas has 150 seats in the state House of Representatives and 31 seats in the state Senate. Each stands for reelection every 6 years and again has at least 2 candidates per election. Now start adding county-level, municipal, etc. The numbers just explode.
Complicating matters, most of those candidates lose the election and the vast majority of those never return to politics. When we have allowed those kinds of articles, a year after the election we had an unmaintained article that said "X is now selling insurance in Slough" (to paraphrase an AfD comment from long ago). The articles become essentially unverifiable soon after the election and become an maintenance nightmare.
Even while the election is underway, we have terrible problems with the neutrality of the content. They tend to be written or at least heavily edited by partisans. (Mind you, that's true for many of Wikipedia's articles on controversial subjects but these pages about minor political candidates get too little traffic for us to gather the critical mass of educated and interested editors who will watchlist the page and keep it honest.) The consensus to date (and I strongly support the previous decisions) is that being a candidate is not, in and of itself, a reason to deserve an encyclopedia article. Other inclusion criteria might apply but Wikipedia is not a directory of political candidates. Organizations such as the League of Women Voters do a much better job than we ever could presenting impartial and verified information about candidates to voters. Rossami (talk) 19:08, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- Ah. I see. I wasn't proposing, necessarily, that candidates for office be declared notable per se. I was proposing, rather, that we think of a way to clarify the BIO1E guidelines so that people don't say "oh, yes, despite being the originator of multiple policy proposals and becoming a hero to many groups around the country, he would never have been notable if we exclude all events related to the campaign season under BIO1E". Not all candidates are notable, but some candidates rise above the noise, and declaring an entire campaign season to be "one event" is a little bizarre. If I sound vague here, it's because I'm dissatisfied, but am not sure what to do. RayAYang (talk) 19:15, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not suggesting another loophole in WP:BIO to create a stub. I'm saying that if a topic (whether a candidate or not) has generated enough coverage in 15 days to write something decent, it shouldn't be deleted because of the one event rule. The one event rule should only be relevant to incidental or insubstantial mentions. Assize (talk) 21:29, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'm with Rossami on this one; we've got enough clutter as it is. As a former major-party nominee for state legislator, I can guarantee you that we aren't notable for that. A week after the votes are counted, we're forgotten, and the public has moved on. WP:BIO1E fits very well here. --Orange Mike | Talk 17:50, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
- Very well. After a day or two patrolling endless new candidate stubs, I'm convinced :) RayAYang (talk) 18:44, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
- And as the victim of one of your patrols resulting in an un-notified redirection (effective deletion) of an elected nominee of a major political party for national U.S. office (u.S> Representative in this case) I am furious. Of course these people are notable! If you honestly believe the people who run the United States are irrelevant, powerless nobodies, or that a major nominee for U.S. Senator or U.S. Representative is on exactly the same level of someone running for dogcatcher in some tinytown, I suggest you think again. Perhaps the guidelines should be clarified that no, we don't want articles about every wannabe candidate just because they're candidates, but those at a certain level are notable by definition. I don't think that's rocket science to figure out, and I'm appalled that the above posters would even suggest that. Flatterworld (talk) 17:32, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Moving the relevant parts of the discussion on RayAYang's talk page here:
I am simply pointing out the obvious differences of how Republican and Democratic articles about nominees have been treated. I am not about to stand by while Wikipedia becomes a media and blogger laughingstock for appearing to be some sort of partisan 'tool'.
I have indeed taken part in previous discussions on this subject, including those about the supposed 'non-notability' of Dan Seals and Bill Foster. (I would point out the notability of Foster's Republican opponent Jim Oberweis appears to hinge on his inheritance of the family dairy business - yet he has an article. I don't begrudge him that, but it's ludicrous that Foster's article was repeatedly deleted. Not merged, but deleted. Once Foster was elected that of course became a moot point, but the Oberweis article remains. Double standard.)
I have also taken part in the discussions about the Congressional Candidate/Nominee template and its use. I have also worked on many articles about various 2008 Governor, House and Senate races. What I vehemently object to is the "too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry" attitude in that information is being shunted from one article to another, and then deleted or reduced to a sentence or two. I'm not interested in playing games of tag or keep-away, nor am I interested in constantly recreating material. If extensive candidate information (including the relevant infoboxes and external link templates) is not to be allowed in Campaign articles, then the candidate should have his/her own article. If it is to be accepted, I have no problem with that solution. So far, I've gotten nothing but a bunch of Catch-22 excuses in various 'discussions', resulting in the material disappearing.
That said, I continue to disagree with the opinion that major party nominees for major national office in the United States aren't notable per se. We're not talking about no-hopers being put forth to fill out the ballot, but serious contenders. They are all being reported on by third-party sources, quite extensively by the media as the election gets closer. Many are known for their other accomplishments as well, but imo that is icing on the cake. But again, my interest is more that the material is included, less the specific type of article. Flatterworld (talk) 17:40, 28 July 2008 (UTC)- Your argument is clear, articulate and passionate. Nevertheless, I disagree. Solely being a candidate, even a major party candidate, is not and never has been a useful criterion for inclusion in the encyclopedia. The problem comes from those non-notable throw-away candidates who are run by the party with no support and solely to have a name on the ticket (the "no-hopers" that you said you don't think your argument should apply to). We have no objective way to discriminate between the no-hopers and the "serious contenders". Every attempt to do so has led to even more partisan bickering and fingerpointing that we already had. Mere candidacy is just not a useful guide for us. If someone truly is a serious contender with significant independent coverage on which we can base an encyclopedia article, then the primary notability criterion applies regardless of his/her candidacy. If not, then we don't have enough for an article.
If there is an appearance of disproportionality because our inclusion standards in other areas are too low, the correct answer is to raise those standards, not to create a race to the bottom. But, by the way, I also do not think that extensive candidate information belongs in an article about the campaign, either. Most of these people would never be covered in a traditional encyclopedia - and not merely because they are paper. They are subjects that are too trivial to draw the kind of long-term, informed, educated attention to monitor the page and make sure that the content stays verified, balanced and unvandalized. Rossami (talk) 18:19, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- Your argument is clear, articulate and passionate. Nevertheless, I disagree. Solely being a candidate, even a major party candidate, is not and never has been a useful criterion for inclusion in the encyclopedia. The problem comes from those non-notable throw-away candidates who are run by the party with no support and solely to have a name on the ticket (the "no-hopers" that you said you don't think your argument should apply to). We have no objective way to discriminate between the no-hopers and the "serious contenders". Every attempt to do so has led to even more partisan bickering and fingerpointing that we already had. Mere candidacy is just not a useful guide for us. If someone truly is a serious contender with significant independent coverage on which we can base an encyclopedia article, then the primary notability criterion applies regardless of his/her candidacy. If not, then we don't have enough for an article.
- Very well. After a day or two patrolling endless new candidate stubs, I'm convinced :) RayAYang (talk) 18:44, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'm with Rossami on this one; we've got enough clutter as it is. As a former major-party nominee for state legislator, I can guarantee you that we aren't notable for that. A week after the votes are counted, we're forgotten, and the public has moved on. WP:BIO1E fits very well here. --Orange Mike | Talk 17:50, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not suggesting another loophole in WP:BIO to create a stub. I'm saying that if a topic (whether a candidate or not) has generated enough coverage in 15 days to write something decent, it shouldn't be deleted because of the one event rule. The one event rule should only be relevant to incidental or insubstantial mentions. Assize (talk) 21:29, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
Poster children
Are people who the media use to put a human face on a story considered notable? For example, take Elaine Riddick Jessie, she is a victim of the Eugenics Board of North Carolina, and her story is often told in the context of stories about this atrocity and the reparations that have subsequently been made. My take on this is that according to WP:ONEEVENT, she is not notable, and anything salient from her article should be merged into the article about the "event". However, she has received significant media coverage, so one could argue that she is notable on that basis. There are surely many other articles about people that fall into this gray area. So, the general question is, are poster-children notable, and does the current text of WP:ONEEVENT sufficiently address this? Steve CarlsonTalk 05:32, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think poster children are the poster children for WP:ONEEVENT (awful pun sadly intended), and are not notable. The difficulty lies in that, quite often, the media will focus on them more strongly than the event, quite possibly on aspects of their lives unassociated with the original event that brought them to prominence. In those cases, they may end up notable. RayAYang (talk) 06:35, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- So is there a clear heuristic that editors can use to make that distinction? Steve CarlsonTalk 07:03, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- Judging from the AfD debates and the amount of grief WP:ONEEVENT causes at that boundary, probably not. It's often a question of judgment, which can be problematic -- allows regional, nationalistic, political, etc., biases to slip through. My ongoing complaint with the way the one-event rule interacts with politics is precisely a case of this, I think. From the wording "standing for election" I suspect it was written in a country with a parliamentary system, where people vote for the party, and the candidate is just an extension of the party. In America, it's often the reverse and elected officials are elected in their own person. Which means that just about every challenger in a major race in America falls smack into that gray area. This leaves room for interesting biases, regional and political, to help determine who gets an article and who does not. RayAYang (talk) 17:07, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think we need to do what we generally do, which is follow the sources. The world decides what is notable, and we just record it. This of course means the relevant portion of the world--the business world for businessmen, and so forth. If the general public decides someone is notable because they are used in a prominent way in multiple major newspapers, so be it. We can just possibly agree to accurately determine what is in the responsible media. We can not hope to determine ourself what is deserving of being in the media, or what constitutes true notability. It's analogous to our following verifiability, not truth. We can determine one, but not the other. What qualifications do we have for deciding what or who is important in the world? We are however as experienced workers at an encyclopedia, qualified to determine what the world thinks notable, and write articles about that. At least, that's the view which is consistent with basic wikipedia practice. On the other hand, if we think we are qualified, we need specific criteria for each subject. Perhaps w can develop that direction.DGG (talk) 17:49, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- For me, the crux of the matter is, if the person received coverage in the media, were the stories about them, or were they just mentioned in context of a bigger story? For elections, at least here in the U.S., only the candidates who are being taken seriously (and are therefore notable) get dedicated coverage in reliable news sources. Minority candidates are mentioned in passing in articles about the election in general, but rarely get dedicated coverage. I think we might be able to craft a policy that reflects that distinction, it certainly seems operationalizable. Steve CarlsonTalk 17:58, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- The problem with ONEEVENT is that editors focus on the words "one event" and go through all sorts of contortions to make multiple incidents one event. For example, is President Bush notable only for being elected president which is one event. Instead, it should be called LOWPROFILE, and the focus is on the amount of coverage over a period of time. A person who gets coverage for one day (eg. rescues a person, etc) isn't "high profile" unless the media discusses it for a number of days. However, where a person whose name keeps coming up over a long period of time (eg. infamous criminals) would qualify because of the extended interest in the person. These are far more objective standards than editors saying "That ain't notable" for no discernible reason Assize (talk) 23:18, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- For me, the crux of the matter is, if the person received coverage in the media, were the stories about them, or were they just mentioned in context of a bigger story? For elections, at least here in the U.S., only the candidates who are being taken seriously (and are therefore notable) get dedicated coverage in reliable news sources. Minority candidates are mentioned in passing in articles about the election in general, but rarely get dedicated coverage. I think we might be able to craft a policy that reflects that distinction, it certainly seems operationalizable. Steve CarlsonTalk 17:58, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- I get that, but if an "event" is revisted every year by the media on its anniversary and they drag out the same poster child story every time, even though they haven't re-interviewed the person and there aren't any new developments, is that person really notable? Steve CarlsonTalk 02:43, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
- If you define "notable" as being famous or important (which most editors seem to do), then no. If you define "notable" as it is defined in WP:N, then yes, because the secondary sources are rehashing the events which makes it in terms of WP:N "worthy of notice". Assize (talk) 04:01, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
- I get that, but if an "event" is revisted every year by the media on its anniversary and they drag out the same poster child story every time, even though they haven't re-interviewed the person and there aren't any new developments, is that person really notable? Steve CarlsonTalk 02:43, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
- That's my point, I think that WP:N has this big loophole and that certain parts of it should be revised to eliminate notability claims based on passing mentions in articles about other topics. Steve CarlsonTalk 07:54, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
- The biggest loophole in WP:N is WP:BIO. Person are notable for one event through that. A sportsperson plays for one game and is notable. The issue about repeated mentions doesn't arise under WP:N because you are supposed to have "sources [which] address the subject directly in detail". WP:ONEEVENT is applied to undo this by saying that even if you are addressed in detail, you still don't qualify. If a person or topic gets repeated mentions over a period of time, it simply has to notable (provided that it has been addressed directly in detail somewhere). Assize (talk) 13:06, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
- That's my point, I think that WP:N has this big loophole and that certain parts of it should be revised to eliminate notability claims based on passing mentions in articles about other topics. Steve CarlsonTalk 07:54, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
- My own view is that the WP:N general notability criterion, 2RS=N, is worthless except as a matter of desperation for things none knows about. If applied literally, it would put in too many things almost nobody wants to include, and keep out too many things almost everyone wants to have in. We are not so stupid as to use it that way, since we all do want to build an encyclopedia, so we have added dozens of radical exceptions in each direction--sufficient to neutralize the policy altogether. I think most articles are decided by other rules entirely--either specific rules, or things that everyone has tacitly agreed to follow. I'm not going to list them here, though the situation we're discussing is only one of many. The net result is we decide what I consider right at least 90% of the time (and most people might say the same, each person just picking a someone different 90% than I would.) What we need to do now i eliminate the legal fiction and say what we mean. Some things are agreed to be suitable for an encyclopedia. some arent. lets say which are which in plain language,without relying on convoluted exceptions and strained interpretations, and define the areas of disagreement. And then argue about these, on the basis of what we ought to have, not what some nonexistent authority has told us we must do--this is a wiki, and the rules are whatever we want to have them. (Yes, I still would maintain WP:V as a basic principle, but what';s necessary for verification is another and much more flexible thing than for notability. we dont need secondary sources or even third party sources to write much of the routine which is the basis of most articles, just good enough sources. I'd continue to maintain the principle that we're not after the absolute truth, which is beyond our capabilities--we are all human at the best of it and putting us in a collective only somewhat improves our accuracy. DGG (talk) 21:55, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
- The problem with that approach is that inclusion is dependent on the opinions of the active editors in AfD's, which is subjective. An objective encyclopedia needs objective rules and guidelines. Unfortunately, most AfD's are not objective, and arguments amount to little more than listcruft, schoolcruft, crimecruft, etc. A 90% success rate at AfD is pretty poor. If I went to a cash dispenser and only got the right money 90% of the time, I'd be outraged. There's nothing fundamentally wrong with WP:N. It's only all the exceptions that cause the problems. Besides, if somebody thinks that each shade of green should be notable, then a new guideline can be made. Assize (talk) 03:18, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
- You misunderstood the 90%. You're trying to predict what a relative random sort of people will do. A lawyer who can win 90% of jury trials would be very exceptional indeed, unless they limited themselves to really obvious cases. My guess for whether the AfD decisions in non obvious cases are correct is much lower than 90%--I think its about 70% at best. But we have to decide somehow. DGG (talk) 03:09, 29 July 2008 (UTC)
- I agree it's the exceptions that cause the problems, but I think some of that can be attributed to vague language in the WP:N guidelines that allow for liberal interpretation. Seems to me the place this conversation started was discussing the looseness of "significant coverage", which, quoting WP:N means "that sources address the subject directly in detail, and no original research is needed to extract the content. Significant coverage is more than trivial but may be less than exclusive." My argument is that this is way too vague, and allows editors a lot of wiggle room in AfD discussions. What does "directly" mean? What does "in detail" mean? I've had AfD's that have failed because people could find the subject's name in an article in some local rag. That's just not what I think of when I hear notable. And that's where the exceptions enter, to limit this looseness. WP:ATHLETE is there, in part, to keep amateurs from satisfying "significant coverage" by appearing in some local rag a few times. WP:COMPANY, WP:MUSICIAN, WP:ACADEMIC, etc, for similar purposes. Instead of creating all these exceptions, why not tighten up the language in the core policy? Steve CarlsonTalk 04:27, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
- I total agree. The language is why we're having problems with Politicians as well. 'News' about a candidate for mayor of a tinytown presiding over the local cake-baking contest is clearly not significant coverage in judging the person as notable or not, yet the policy language is being stretched to claim extensive media coverage about a major party nominee for national elective office is ALSO not considered significant coverage. Flatterworld (talk) 17:27, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- The problem with that approach is that inclusion is dependent on the opinions of the active editors in AfD's, which is subjective. An objective encyclopedia needs objective rules and guidelines. Unfortunately, most AfD's are not objective, and arguments amount to little more than listcruft, schoolcruft, crimecruft, etc. A 90% success rate at AfD is pretty poor. If I went to a cash dispenser and only got the right money 90% of the time, I'd be outraged. There's nothing fundamentally wrong with WP:N. It's only all the exceptions that cause the problems. Besides, if somebody thinks that each shade of green should be notable, then a new guideline can be made. Assize (talk) 03:18, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
- My own view is that the WP:N general notability criterion, 2RS=N, is worthless except as a matter of desperation for things none knows about. If applied literally, it would put in too many things almost nobody wants to include, and keep out too many things almost everyone wants to have in. We are not so stupid as to use it that way, since we all do want to build an encyclopedia, so we have added dozens of radical exceptions in each direction--sufficient to neutralize the policy altogether. I think most articles are decided by other rules entirely--either specific rules, or things that everyone has tacitly agreed to follow. I'm not going to list them here, though the situation we're discussing is only one of many. The net result is we decide what I consider right at least 90% of the time (and most people might say the same, each person just picking a someone different 90% than I would.) What we need to do now i eliminate the legal fiction and say what we mean. Some things are agreed to be suitable for an encyclopedia. some arent. lets say which are which in plain language,without relying on convoluted exceptions and strained interpretations, and define the areas of disagreement. And then argue about these, on the basis of what we ought to have, not what some nonexistent authority has told us we must do--this is a wiki, and the rules are whatever we want to have them. (Yes, I still would maintain WP:V as a basic principle, but what';s necessary for verification is another and much more flexible thing than for notability. we dont need secondary sources or even third party sources to write much of the routine which is the basis of most articles, just good enough sources. I'd continue to maintain the principle that we're not after the absolute truth, which is beyond our capabilities--we are all human at the best of it and putting us in a collective only somewhat improves our accuracy. DGG (talk) 21:55, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
Recent undiscussed change to the One-Event rule
For those who didn't notice, User:Flatterworld attempted to change the One-Event rule this morning. A diff of the two old versions is linked here. Please discuss whether this is desirable.
This new rule goes contrary to recent AfD discussions, including most strikingly the case of Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Chris Rothfuss. I believe this is an extension of a discussion Flatterworld and I have been having over the Glenn Nye article, where I merged the article into the election, and he was displeased with the result. You are invited, if you are interested, to see the discussion here.
I have come to believe (following a discussion earlier on this page where I brought up the question of the One-Event rule and politics interacting) that one-shot not yet successful candidates have no place on Wikipedia, and are part of what the One-Event rule seeks to prevent. Best, RayAYang (talk) 14:46, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- Addendum: User:Flatterworld made a comment in the section above on the interaction of the BIO1E and politics. Presumably, it is his argument for his change. RayAYang (talk) 15:45, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- My point was the undiscussed change by Shinmawa, which I have now undone. We don't play by separate sets of rules at Wikipedia. Flatterworld (talk) 17:22, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- All I did was add the phrase "Cover the event, not the person", which was copied over from the same "One event" section of WP:BLP, which has been the consensus view for a very long time. It is unfortunate that we have both WP:BIO1E and WP:BLP1E, but there is no real difference on the "Cover the event, not the person" aspect depending if the subject is alive or dead (and WP:BLP is actual policy), so I was WP:BOLD and copied it from WP:BLP to here for consistency's sake. As for the diff that RayAYang brought out above, I have nothing to do with that. -- ShinmaWa(talk) 01:57, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
Biographies of living minors
As a charity, I believe that we should veer towards caution when dealing with the biographies of persons aged under 18. They are generally agreed to be incapable of expressing an informed choice, and therefore should be protected. [6] is in my view wholly inappropriate - it is a puff piece about a minor American wanna-be that is motivated by profit as opposed to the welfare of the young person who is the subject. As a signed up anti-censorship member I vote for suppression of biog articles of all living minors on the grounds of privacy. Excalibur (talk) 01:11, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry, but I'm going to have to oppose you. Someone as notable as Miley Cyrus should clearly have an article. Unsourced statements should obviously be removed and we should be extremely careful about libel, per WP:BLP, but Miley is a public figure and within the scope of Wikipedia. I would not at all support a ban on articles about living minors on the grounds of privacy.
- That said, we should always be careful of harm, and there may be cases when I would oppose an article on privacy/BLP concerns. If say wikipedia had been around in 1970s, I would've opposed an article about the minor involved Roman Polanski's indictment, since she was not named in the US press at the time. We should always be careful when dealing with living people, and especially careful with minors, but that's not reason to not have an article on someone such as Cyrus. Vickser (talk) 01:54, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with Vickser that the example given is a particularly inappropriate instance for the problem. A very successful public figure in entertainment gets an article regardless of age--the controversy section there does indeed need considerable attention about undue weight. A much more relevant case was the guy in Australia who announced his party on the internet. One that I helped not just delete but got oversighted was a mid-teenager whose pornographic self-movie maliciously got put on the internet. DGG (talk) 22:47, 2 August 2008 (UTC)
There's currently a spate of AfDs on Association Football players who are being deleted, most of the time with good reason, on the basis of lack of notability. However the wording of WP:ATHLETE is not helpful here and I think that a rewording may be helpful. There is a great dal of debate over what the status is with players, using football as an example, who have competed in high level tournaments, such as FIFA youth tournaments and who have attracted substantial press coverage worldwide not meeting the criteria due to not playing for their club.
A good example of this is under discussion at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Greg Dalby, a player who has significant coverage under WP:N has an AfD, the vast majority of which people are supporting deletion because he fails WP:ATHLETE.
I'd like to suggest a rewording of WP:ATLHETE, obviously something which you may not be in favour of, in order to streamline AfDs and reduce the number of them, as follows:
- Competitors who are professionals, who have competed more than once in a fully professional league.
- Competitors who have competed in an international tournament of high standing* and who have attracted significant coverage.
- Competitors who are recognised world champions in their event.
An international tournament of high standing being, for examples The Olympics, the Commonwealth Games, FIFA tournaments such as the uXX Tournaments or the FIFA World Cup or Confederations Cup, or international UEFA tournaments, or PGA Tour compeitions or European Order of Merit competitions or FIVB beach volleyball tournaments or FINA swimming competitions, or, . This is not meant to be an exaustive list but gives slightly better clarification. BigHairRef | Talk 08:46, 4 July 2008 (UTC)
- See consensus based guidelines at WP:FOOTYN, these should be formalised. EP 16:32, 4 July 2008 (UTC)
- I agree, the WP:FOOTYN guidelines should be formalised (and adjusted if necessary); this would save a lot of grief. It's arguably the biggest sport in the world, so no reason not to have extra guidelines. Nfitz (talk) 18:39, 6 July 2008 (UTC)
- I would object about the "significant coverage". I think it would be better to say instead "significant, third-party, reliable sources which fully covers the subject in detail". A handful of simple name citations in the web for a footballer are not a proof of notability; they could instead give notability when the subject is covered in detail by a significant number of reliable sources. --Angelo (talk) 18:46, 6 July 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that the WP:FOOTYN guidelines should be formalized. How do we proceed? Jogurney (talk) 19:19, 6 July 2008 (UTC)
- Definitely agree that WP:FOOTYN guidelines should be formalized! -- Alexf42 18:39, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- I took part in the debate to help produce the WP:FOOTYN guidelines/essay, and hence also believe they should be formally adopted. Peanut4 (talk) 21:09, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
Amateur sports
I also think we need to clarify the amateur sports section, i.e. "Competitors who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports."
To me and several others, this means players who have played at the highest level in amateur sport where there is no professional level above it.
However, some editors take it to mean the highest level of amateur sport when there is professional level above it. To me this is an obvious fallacy, as it could be used to justify keeping an article on a fifth division football player where the top four leagues are professional.
If there are no objections, I will amend the policy to clarify this. пﮟოьεԻ 57 18:34, 6 July 2008 (UTC)
- I certainly object. There is nothing in the guidelines to note that the amateur sport clause only applies if there isn't a professional level. I don't think that was the intent. Nfitz (talk) 18:38, 6 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think so instead. For what I know, that clause was made for sportsmen who participated at the worldwide level in a "minor" sport, such as fencers who took part to the Olympic games, and not to include over 3,000 Serie D players (Serie D being the highest non-professional level of football in Italy, composed by 168 teams) who however have no media coverage at all. As fencing is not a professional sport, they would be included thanks to that clause. I think a clarification is actually necessary, and I would fully support it. --Angelo (talk) 18:46, 6 July 2008 (UTC)
- I also object, the reaosn I proposed the poloicy change is that. There's a large number of bios which are in AfD or have already been deleted for being 'amateurs', i.e. they've not played at pro level in their sport where one is available who arguably are considerably more notable than many pros. The best example I can think of is who is more notable (and apologies for the anglocentrism I'll try and think of another analogy but it'll probably be wrong) someone who has played in the final of an won the FIFA U17 World Championship, or a professional footballer who has played one in the Blue Square Premier division in England but then retired? Maybe a good example might be someone who has won the highest AAA prize in Baseball or someone who played as a reserve pitcer for the The Orioles once for a third of an inning before injuring themselves and never playing baseball again? Someone must have a better one thatn that but that's the best I can do I'm afraid! BigHairRef | Talk 00:56, 7 July 2008 (UTC)
- I would support such a change, myself. Right now, WP:ATHLETE is being used essentially as a "free pass" for countless articles on very minor professional athletes who would not otherwise pass our notability criteria. As for why this "free pass" exception was ever implemented, I don't know - but this was covered in a recent discussion above. Right now ATHLETE is too permissive. Clarifying this guideline in the manner suggested above would be a wise move, in my opinion. As far as the concern being voiced by BigHairRef regarding sub-professional athletes who are more notable than some professionals, if this is the case these amateurs should be able to satisfy the general notability guidelines given the existence of multiple, independent sources to verify this claim. Shereth 21:04, 10 July 2008 (UTC)
- I agree generally speaking. I think personally that the pros "free pass" (choice of phrase to clarify we're talking about the same thing) is too easy to pass, and the amateur's too. Essentially for both sets it should be the generall notability criteria which will pass, with the guidelines at WP:ATHLETE helping to clarify when certain things they have done are notable which aid their case for inclusion.
- Would it be safe to say that we all agree that simply because any given sport has part(s) of it which is/are played by professional sportsmen (for example professional (association) football or professional ice hockey), that one can still pass either the WP:ATHLETE or WP:N guidelines (whichever apply in the situation) despite being "only" an amateur, as long as they are notable enough? BigHairRef | Talk 01:00, 11 July 2008 (UTC)
- Absolutely. If an article passes the general notability criteria, then WP:ATHLETE should never even enter the equation. I have, in fact, seen discussions where people were arguing to delete an article because an individual could not pass WP:ATHLETE, in spite of passing WP:N and WP:BIO with flying colors. The fixation on one sub-policy is disgraceful. Shereth 15:50, 11 July 2008 (UTC)
- Many people (including me) agree with that. However, as can be seen in discussions such as Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Roger Espinoza, it is not unanimous. Neier (talk) 01:40, 13 July 2008 (UTC)
- Absolutely. If an article passes the general notability criteria, then WP:ATHLETE should never even enter the equation. I have, in fact, seen discussions where people were arguing to delete an article because an individual could not pass WP:ATHLETE, in spite of passing WP:N and WP:BIO with flying colors. The fixation on one sub-policy is disgraceful. Shereth 15:50, 11 July 2008 (UTC)
- Would it be safe to say that we all agree that simply because any given sport has part(s) of it which is/are played by professional sportsmen (for example professional (association) football or professional ice hockey), that one can still pass either the WP:ATHLETE or WP:N guidelines (whichever apply in the situation) despite being "only" an amateur, as long as they are notable enough? BigHairRef | Talk 01:00, 11 July 2008 (UTC)
- Then would it be fair to say that consensus agrees that any sportman (amateur or otherwise) should not be considered "non-notable" simply because they do not pass the test of WP:ATLHETE? Would it be OK for me to edit the sub-policy regarding this? I ask not in the usual "am I allowed to sense" but rather to allow anyone who has an objection to raise to make their objection. It just seems that this is at least one thing we're all agreed on? I won't edit the policy for at least 72 hours from signing this to ensure that there's at least a chance that someone who has been watching the convo dosen't miss an opportunity? I think that WP:BOLD probably dosen't apply here. BigHairRef | Talk 23:35, 13 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think most people already understand that WP:Athlete is just a piece of WP:BIO and no one's trying to say that everyone absolutely must meet WP:Athlete. To name some recent cases, Nikola Saric was kept due to a national award and substantive articles in third party sources about him. Josh Magennis also snuck away with a keep thanks to a pair of articles about him in icwales and a feature piece in the internationally published Belfast Telegraph. Athletes can and do get kept for passing the test of significant coverage in 3rd party sources. However, most youth, reserve, and college players have not been the subject of significant third party coverage and I think the vast, vast majority of them should not be kept. When people say "Delete, fails WP:Athlete" what I think most of them really mean is "This person is claiming to be notable due to athletics. I believe he does not pass the parent guideline of general notability, nor the particular clause he is claiming of WP:Athlete. If he were shown to pass, say WP:Music, or WP:PornBio, I understand that his failure of WP:Athlete would be irrelevant." That's my take, anyway, on what people say when they mention a failure of WP:Athlete, etc. Vickser (talk) 13:28, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
- This is common to all of the additional criteria, not just sports, so perhaps the start of the additional criteria section should read: "If a person does not meet the basic criteria test, a person may also be presumed to notable if they meet any of the following standards." Assize (talk) 03:40, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
How about we get rid of the garbage athlete permastubs entirely, and limit standalone articles to those athletes for whom the level of independent coverage genuinely supports it, be they professional, amateur, or otherwise? Why does level matter more than sourcing? Seraphimblade Talk to me 04:05, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- Because we could probably find 10 times the amount of material on a lpayer at the 8th level of English football than we could about one who plays international football for a non-English speaking or third world country. пﮟოьεԻ 57 12:46, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think that is the point. If you can find 10 times the material on a player, then you don't not the exceptions in WP:BIO because they would be notable under WP:N because of the abundance of secondary sources. Whilst I agree the "permastubs" are pointless, there is consensus for them to remain. Assize (talk) 13:19, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
- Well, you and I are agreeing they're pointless, so apparently not unanimous consensus. I'm not even sure if there is, I've certainly been hearing a lot of "Why do we have these at all?" If the level of sourcing means we end up covering more of X than of Y, than so we do. That's not systemic bias, it's following what our reliable sources say and do rather than second guessing or trying to "correct" them. That's what we do, whether or not we like the result in a given case. Seraphimblade Talk to me 15:51, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
- I too agree that all those athlete permastubs are pointless. The notion that you can find "10 times the material on a player" is wrong, an illusion. What you find are 100 sources mentioning the player, those sources don't ever talk about the player or his life, at very best those sources give that player's stats and that's it.
- Articles protected by WP:ATHLETE should be split from Wikipedia and transfered to another project. Sports "fanatics" are not interested in changing the status quo or in making concessions.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 21:43, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
- Perhaps it's because they haven't been presented with a convincing reason to do things differently.--Father Goose (talk) 22:37, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
- Well, you and I are agreeing they're pointless, so apparently not unanimous consensus. I'm not even sure if there is, I've certainly been hearing a lot of "Why do we have these at all?" If the level of sourcing means we end up covering more of X than of Y, than so we do. That's not systemic bias, it's following what our reliable sources say and do rather than second guessing or trying to "correct" them. That's what we do, whether or not we like the result in a given case. Seraphimblade Talk to me 15:51, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think that is the point. If you can find 10 times the material on a player, then you don't not the exceptions in WP:BIO because they would be notable under WP:N because of the abundance of secondary sources. Whilst I agree the "permastubs" are pointless, there is consensus for them to remain. Assize (talk) 13:19, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
I suggest, as a first step maybe we could change WP:ATHLETE to read:
- Competitors who have competed in the highest tier of a fully professional league.
- Competitors who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports where there is no fully professional league.[1]
This is not ideal, but at least it would get rid of all the minor league baseball players, and the like. Thoughts? Would this need a RFC, or if we here agree, could we just do it? RayAYang (talk) 00:52, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'm happy to be corrected but given the relatviely minor alterations needed I don't think a RfC is necessarilly needed. On the other hand, I would propose the following wording being better.
- Competitors who have competed in the highest tier of a fully professional league.
- Competitors who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports.
- This would mean that where someone is truly notable being an amateur despite there being a professianal element to their sport. An example would be the winners of the Amateur football world cup for example. I would suggest that a clarification as to what the highest level of amateur sports means similar to the list I made above.
(Repeated here for ease of finding The Olympics, the Commonwealth Games, FIFA tournaments such as the uXX Tournaments or the FIFA World Cup or Confederations Cup, or international UEFA tournaments, or PGA Tour compeitions or European Order of Merit competitions or FIVB beach volleyball tournaments or FINA swimming competitions)BigHairRef | Talk 03:53, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- I would oppose making people who compete in the under-XX FIFA tournies automatically notable. That's adding a lot of people who wouldn't otherwise meet our notability criteria. Do you really think someone who played for Ghana in the 1989 FIFA U-16 World Championship and went on to do nothing else in football would be notable? I would say representing a country in a senior competition (world cup, olympics, etc.) should qualify, but anything youth should not. If someone's such a big deal that they get a bunch of coverage for what they do in a junior tournie, then they'll qualify under general notability. Merely having a place on a junior international team should not make someone notable. How about:
- Competitors who have competed in the highest tier of a fully professional league.
- Competitors who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports where there is no fully professional league.
- Competitors who have represented their country in a prestigious senior international tournament. (Olympics, FIFA World Cup, etc.)
- And I do think that if people want to go ahead with any of the suggested revisions, my guess is that a RfC would probably be appropriate. Switching from just a fully professional league to the highest tier of fully professional leagues means making hundreds if not thousands of articles on players now eligible for deletion. Anything that effects that many articles should get a proper hearing. Vickser (talk) 04:19, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Such a change should not affect the notability if they have received the coverage. Assuming they qualify under WP:N the fact they don't meet WP:ATHLETE should not matter. On the other hand I cut and pasted the wrong pair of suggestions, I thought I'd scrolled up to my original ones, just to clarify, I'd not be in favour of the insertion os the words "highest tier. BigHairRef | Talk 06:30, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, obviously, if people meet WP:N they don't need to meet WP:Athlete. However, I think there's an issue now where anyone who's played one minute in a Football League One game counts as notable since it's a fully professional league, even though there would only be passing mentions of them in third party WP:RS and they wouldn't be otherwise notable.
- Maybe we need to fully discuss what direction WP:Athlete needs to be reformed in? It seems like many of us feel that WP:Athlete is too loose and includes people who wouldn't have enough reliable sources to justify them under WP:N alone, while you seem to be arguing that there are too many people who have WP:N who we're excluding. Is that a fair assessment? If so, then I'd think the solution would be tightening up WP:Athlete and encouraging reliance on WP:N whenever there's a doubt. That way people who are notable under normal terms still count, while people who don't have significant coverage in reliable third party sources but who have played a game in League One or similar still get excluded. Vickser (talk) 06:57, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Such a change should not affect the notability if they have received the coverage. Assuming they qualify under WP:N the fact they don't meet WP:ATHLETE should not matter. On the other hand I cut and pasted the wrong pair of suggestions, I thought I'd scrolled up to my original ones, just to clarify, I'd not be in favour of the insertion os the words "highest tier. BigHairRef | Talk 06:30, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- And I do think that if people want to go ahead with any of the suggested revisions, my guess is that a RfC would probably be appropriate. Switching from just a fully professional league to the highest tier of fully professional leagues means making hundreds if not thousands of articles on players now eligible for deletion. Anything that effects that many articles should get a proper hearing. Vickser (talk) 04:19, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Broadly spekaing I'm in agreement with the summation of the positions. I'd generally be more in favour of weighting it more towards WP:N than the situation currently is.
- THe main issue I have is the number of people who could be notable but have been deleted in AfD as "Not meeting WP:ATHLETE" with no mention of whether or not they may also meet or fail WP:N. Generally speaking people are relying on the various WP:BIO sibcategories as alpha and omega if you forgive the theological reference, despite the fact it's been made clear in the guidelines that they are additionall to not a replacement for WP:N.
- As an additional point I'm also in favour of tightening up WP:ATHLETE as there are a large number of people currently who get in on your League One example. I wouldn't be in favour of automatically removing all leagues etc beyond the top one but more in favour of putting in a number of games, such as must have played in at least 5 games in a professional league for example. Numbers would be a point which could be discussed but perhaps it would be a suggestion to tighten up the criteria without suddenly deleting probably 25-30% of the footballers articles we have? BigHairRef | Talk 09:30, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Question What is meant by competing in the highest tier of a fully professional league? I think it needs clarification before any changes WP:ATHLETE. Jogurney (talk) 14:18, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Reply As I understand it, there are many sports (such as baseball in the US) where leagues are explicitly ranked by tier, and competitors aspire to move up to the next tier. In these leagues, only the highest level players would be considered automatically notable. Notability of other players would have to depend on other criteria. RayAYang (talk) 17:48, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- support - support proposal to 'tighten up WP:Athlete and encourage reliance on WP:N' , proposal which is similar to 'weight it more towards WP:N' .
⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 15:04, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Comments: There are amateur sportsmen who are notable in sports which are professional. Tiger Woods (silver medal, three US Amateur wins, youngest US Amateur winner) and Sergio Garcia (British Amateur and European Amateur winner) were clearly notable before they turned professional. College football stars are very notable. Also, to talk about the "highest tier" of a professional league ignores the differences in strength of different leagues. The Football League Championship (ie the second tier in England) is stronger than all but a handful of "highest tier" leagues in other countries. Jmorrison230582 (talk) 18:26, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Maybe we should specify that WP:ATHLETE, like most other guidelines, is meant to offer a rule of thumb. There will be exceptions, which is what the broader WP:N is for. As for "strength" of league, that is of interest to sports fans, but irrelevant to Wikipedia. Our criteria is *notability*. To illustrate: it is indubitably true that any modern military company today has more firepower than the Immortals of Cyrus the Great, or the Companions of Alexander, or, for that matter, Napoleon's Imperial Guard. However, the latter are notable, but generic modern military companies are not. RayAYang (talk) 19:24, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think you misundertood the point. A professional footballer playing in a highest tier competition with little prestige and paid attendance (e.g., the top tier football league in the Faroe Islands) is less likely to be notable than a footballer in a second tier competition that is widely televised and supported (e.g., the English Championship). Hopefully, that is clear. Jogurney (talk) 20:43, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Very good point RayAYang, but unfortunately sports fanatics aren't interested is common sense, they want to come to Wikipedia and see that each and every player of their team has a pretty little permastub devoted to him. They want to turn Wikipedia into a sports sites. We must split WP:ATHLETE protected articles from Wikipedia.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 21:23, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- That tone is not necessary. matt91486 (talk) 21:26, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'd like to second Matt's concern about tone and encourage you to WP:AGF. I'd be fine getting identified as a sports fanatic, and I assure you, I'm interested in common sense. I think this debate will go better if we accept that the people working on the sports projects have the best interests of wikipedia at heart, just like you. Vickser (talk) 21:46, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think you misundertood the point. A professional footballer playing in a highest tier competition with little prestige and paid attendance (e.g., the top tier football league in the Faroe Islands) is less likely to be notable than a footballer in a second tier competition that is widely televised and supported (e.g., the English Championship). Hopefully, that is clear. Jogurney (talk) 20:43, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Maybe we should specify that WP:ATHLETE, like most other guidelines, is meant to offer a rule of thumb. There will be exceptions, which is what the broader WP:N is for. As for "strength" of league, that is of interest to sports fans, but irrelevant to Wikipedia. Our criteria is *notability*. To illustrate: it is indubitably true that any modern military company today has more firepower than the Immortals of Cyrus the Great, or the Companions of Alexander, or, for that matter, Napoleon's Imperial Guard. However, the latter are notable, but generic modern military companies are not. RayAYang (talk) 19:24, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
I oppose restricting athlete notability to some nebulous top-tier league. Generally speaking, the only significant change to WP:ATHLETE that I'd support is the formalization of WP:FOOTY project notability. Typically, if one looks hard enough, there ARE sources about athletes that mention aspects of their lives, etc. Just because you personally (to the Economist) think that this is a problem for the site, to have many sports related articles, is irrelevant. No one is trying to only make Wikipedia a sports site. It's a site for all notable forms of information. Your personal feelings about the frivolity of sport, which you have articulated in one previous debate with me on the subject, really shouldn't factor in. Sports get media coverage, and this confers notability. matt91486 (talk) 21:30, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- That said, though, Ray, I am all in favor of getting rid of articles on 99.9% of minor league baseball players. Lower football leagues aren't really the same thing though. I'd say if we wanted to get rid of one without the other, we could say that professional leagues that serve as feeder leagues don't confer notability, which would get rid of soccer reserve leagues, minor league baseball, the NBDL, the hockey junior leagues, etc. That seems like the best solution to me, personally. matt91486 (talk) 23:04, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Um, do I know you, or are you comparing me to somebody else? I don't think I've called sports frivolous on Wikipedia ... as for me, I got drawn here mainly because I was patrolling too many stub articles on minor league players and the like, and thought something should be done. Anything that wipes out stub-quality articles on minor league players who don't satisfy WP:N's more general criteria is fine by me. RayAYang (talk) 23:27, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry, I was meaning to say that the Economist said they were frivolous - the first post was directed to him. The second comment was directed to you. Sorry for any confusion. matt91486 (talk) 08:33, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- Um, do I know you, or are you comparing me to somebody else? I don't think I've called sports frivolous on Wikipedia ... as for me, I got drawn here mainly because I was patrolling too many stub articles on minor league players and the like, and thought something should be done. Anything that wipes out stub-quality articles on minor league players who don't satisfy WP:N's more general criteria is fine by me. RayAYang (talk) 23:27, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
- That said, though, Ray, I am all in favor of getting rid of articles on 99.9% of minor league baseball players. Lower football leagues aren't really the same thing though. I'd say if we wanted to get rid of one without the other, we could say that professional leagues that serve as feeder leagues don't confer notability, which would get rid of soccer reserve leagues, minor league baseball, the NBDL, the hockey junior leagues, etc. That seems like the best solution to me, personally. matt91486 (talk) 23:04, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
I agree with formalizing WP:FOOTYN.--Latouffedisco (talk) 11:40, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- I have not violated WP:AGF, insulted anyone or even mentioned names.
- Sports fans are realy shooting themselves in the foot with WP:ATHLETE
Name | England | Scotland | Brazil | Italy | Argentina | France | Germany | Spain | TOTAL |
Number of articles | 6,686 | 2,233 | 2,411 | 1,375 | 1,320 | 1,571 | 1,152 | 1,083 | 17,831 |
17,831!!! For soccer athletes alone, Wikipedia hosts over 17,000 articles ("profiles").
- This is an alarming number, which is why I accuse sports fanatics of lacking common sense.
- As this number grows, more and more people become convinced that there is a problem with WP:ATHLETE. So really, it's a matter of time (years) before WP:ATHLETE is changed.
Note:17,831 as of July 26, 2008. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Football_(soccer)_players_by_nationality ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 16:53, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- There are about 2.500.000 articles in en.wiki: 17,831 is not an important figure compared to this (Please note that I'm not saying en.wiki should'nt have 2.500.000 articles in other domains, this is not the point). I just want to show you that WP is not becoming a soccer database and that it is not an alarming number, as you said. WP is for soccer fans such as me, a great opportunity to build a free encyclopedia related to soccer. With more time, articles will be better, for sure, we are just at the beginning of what we're looking for. See for instance Wikipedia:Editing_policy#Perfection_is_not_required.Cheers from a soccer fan.--Latouffedisco (talk) 17:45, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- If you're going to base your argument on numbers, how many articles about politicians are there? Jmorrison230582 (talk) 21:25, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
As I already stated several times, I think we should enforce WP:FOOTYN and make it become part of WP:BIO. I can ensure you the WP:FOOTY project is one of the largest in the whole Wikipedia, and also full of a lot of valid and experienced users who know for good about all policies and guidelines around. WP:FOOTYN is the result of all the opinions of this WikiProject, and I think it's time now to make it become an official guideline, either as part of WP:BIO or a revived version of Wikipedia:Notability (sports) accepted by the entire community. --Angelo (talk) 21:09, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- Angelo, It doesn't make sense to try to have very specific guidelines on every type of athlete, any more than every type of artist, musician, doctor or professor. No manageble set of rules will ever be comprehensive enough to do the job. If a player meets WP:N then he is probably notable, otherwise we just become a list of trivial data or personal opinions. --Kevin Murray (talk) 21:16, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- I am not really suggesting to override WP:N, I just want to refine the current notability criterions in order to make them less prone to possible misinterpretations and subjective opinions (I took part to a load of AFD cases, and I am experienced about that, trust me). We already have similar notability criterions for entertainers, politicians and even porn stars, so I don't understand your concerns. Several users noted we have a lot of football player articles in this encyclopedia, and personally I feel that is actually one more reason to have an additional notability rule of thumb. I hope you understand what I mean. --Angelo (talk) 21:34, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- If you don't have additional criteria for football players, you would end up with a lot more football player articles, i.e. players who have only played at a semi-professional level. Players in the Conference National or the Scottish Football League Second Division still get significant coverage and could survive an AFD proposal under WP:N, but don't under the more restrictive rules of WP:ATHLETE. Jmorrison230582 (talk) 07:42, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- I am not really suggesting to override WP:N, I just want to refine the current notability criterions in order to make them less prone to possible misinterpretations and subjective opinions (I took part to a load of AFD cases, and I am experienced about that, trust me). We already have similar notability criterions for entertainers, politicians and even porn stars, so I don't understand your concerns. Several users noted we have a lot of football player articles in this encyclopedia, and personally I feel that is actually one more reason to have an additional notability rule of thumb. I hope you understand what I mean. --Angelo (talk) 21:34, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- Angelo, the examples that you mention entertainers, politicians and even porn stars are equally flawed, BIO in general is a failure, but the abuse of those loopholes seems less pervasive at this time. The concept of WP:N is very simple -- we only include those topics which are "noticed" by credible independent third party sources. The subtle difference between WP:N and WP:V is that the latter only requires verifiable third party source, which includes primary sources (e.g., unrefined statistics), where WP:N requires that the topic be discussed by the source which qualifies it as notable. Why is this not adequate for athletes? The objection to the criteria for athletes at BIO is that we are generating articles on any pro player whether or not he/she has been noticed by the media or historians. This puts the onus on wikipedians to determine who is notable on a case by case basis, and that is too subjective. We end up with fans and zealots promoting a bunch of nobody-topics with speculative primary research in the text. --Kevin Murray (talk) 15:28, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Exactly, most brazilian soccer players articles aren't noticied by media or historians.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 16:08, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Angelo, the examples that you mention entertainers, politicians and even porn stars are equally flawed, BIO in general is a failure, but the abuse of those loopholes seems less pervasive at this time. The concept of WP:N is very simple -- we only include those topics which are "noticed" by credible independent third party sources. The subtle difference between WP:N and WP:V is that the latter only requires verifiable third party source, which includes primary sources (e.g., unrefined statistics), where WP:N requires that the topic be discussed by the source which qualifies it as notable. Why is this not adequate for athletes? The objection to the criteria for athletes at BIO is that we are generating articles on any pro player whether or not he/she has been noticed by the media or historians. This puts the onus on wikipedians to determine who is notable on a case by case basis, and that is too subjective. We end up with fans and zealots promoting a bunch of nobody-topics with speculative primary research in the text. --Kevin Murray (talk) 15:28, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
What is it with Economist and his beef with football/soccer players? By my reckoning there's over 12,000 articles on players of Major League Baseball, so that's 12,000 article on players in one league within one country in one sport, compared to 17,000 footballers (or however many it is) from the entirety of the planet. What does Exconomist think should be done about all those baseball player articles, just out of interest..........? -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 21:26, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
- I have a problem with the WP:ATHLETE in general, I am just using soccer as an example, but it could be golf, basketball etc...⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 16:08, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
Relying on WP:N
A couple of editors seem to think that by sticking to "only played in the top division of a fully pro league" and placing more emphasis WP:N that we will somehow rid Wikipedia of loads of articles on obscure footballers. However, the opposite may well be true. Media organisations such as the BBC provide comprehensive coverage of not only all six fully-professional leagues in England and Scotland, but also three non-fully pro leagues (Football Conference and the Scottish Second and Third Division), meaning that sources for articles on semi-pro players in these divisions are very easy to find.
Changing the WP:ATHLETE criteria and placing a greater emphasis on WP:N would probably actually lead to the creation of tonnes more articles, specifically on:
- Players who sign for the 158 clubs covered in detail by the BBC but never actually play.
- Player who play for the 44 clubs in non-fully pro leagues covered in detail by the BBC (at least 660 assuming a miniumum squad of 15 players at each).
Therefore I advise that placing more emphasis on WP:N is a really bad idea, and that WP:FOOTYN is the way to go. пﮟოьεԻ 57 15:49, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Why would extensive coverage of a league qualify minor players from the league? The coverage would have to be specifically about the player in sufficient detail to have the basis for an article. If such were to occur, then an article would be merited regardless of the amount of new articles generated. It's not about reducing the amount of articles; it's about reducing the amount of vanity spam and fan crap. --Kevin Murray (talk) 16:32, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Because each team has extensive coverage - semi-pro clubs like Histon have their own page where you can find articles on semi-pro players such as Damien Reeves, which can be used to create articles based on reliable third party sources... пﮟოьεԻ 57 16:51, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Don't forget there's also sites like nonleaguedaily.com, which report solely on non-league football. If I was feeling pointy I'm sure I could find a couple of news stories there that would allow me to write an article on a player who plays in the Midland Football Alliance in front of crowds of 80...... -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 06:57, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- Because each team has extensive coverage - semi-pro clubs like Histon have their own page where you can find articles on semi-pro players such as Damien Reeves, which can be used to create articles based on reliable third party sources... пﮟოьεԻ 57 16:51, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- If you want to reduce the amount of "vanity spam and fan crap", then I'm not sure any new policy is required. I would hazard a guess that every single article on a footballer can be reasonably expanded to contain factual, unbiased info. Peanut4 (talk) 11:02, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- Just to make it clearer, I suggest a little change in WP:FOOTYN, namely the first sentence which says "Players are deemed notable if they meet any of the criteria below", changing it with "Players are usually deemed notable if they meet WP:N plus any of the criteria below". I hope it works. --Angelo (talk) 16:35, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- WP:N should be the only criteria.
- Only 10% of all soccer players' articles would survive an AfD if WP:N were used instead of WP:ATHLETE.
- In practice there is absolutelly no difference between WP:FOOTY and WP:ATHLETE, it simply rewords WP:ATHLETE. And as Kevin Murray said, it is too specific.
- Also WP:FOOTYN is an aberration, it was created by soccer fans, for soccer fans in order to satisfy every single desire of a soccer fan. Basically we have soccer fans making up the rules they have to follow since only soccer fans take part on the discussion.
- WP:FOOTYN wants to carve out from Wikipedia a protected turf for soccer fans onto where they can play and screw around.
- WP:FOOTYN is a dishonest and corrupted idea. The whole thing pretty sad.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 16:37, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Alright. Subjects like Dean Bouzanis [7] and Josh Magennis [8] were kept under (debatable) claims of WP:N despite failing WP:FOOTYN. Now, you can maybe understand why we're proposing an additional notability guideline for footballers, can you? --Angelo (talk) 16:41, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Angelo, I would say that your examples probably meet WP:N and these should be included. The sources seem independent and the coverage sufficient (more than mere mention). I'm not trying to reduce the number of article, just reduce the number of complex and conflicting rules which are permeating WP. --Kevin Murray (talk) 16:57, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- In this case, get prepared to open the doors and allow at least another 1,000 football player articles, from English non-league (i.e., amateur) players to 15-year old "young football promises" who never took part in a really competitive game. In any case, I oppose such move, we're talking about notability of people who plays football, so more precise criteria are just necessary and fundamental. --Angelo (talk) 17:02, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- A, are the sources biased or unreliable? --Kevin Murray (talk) 17:10, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- It's quite normal local newspapers often talk about local football teams and their respective players, isn't it? And this happens usually regardless of the league that team is actually playing in, trust me. Since I've seen local newspapers in my home town (Mazara del Vallo) talking about part-time footballers of an Eccellenza team (fully amateur league) who earn a salary working as carpenters, fishermen and other lower-class jobs, I think it's a big concern. --Angelo (talk) 17:16, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- A, WP:N generally excludes local coverage, but the examples you gave seemed more regional. Clearly there is potential for conflict there. But the problem needs to be solved globally for all of WP, not by individual areas of interest. Local coverage is no more acceptable for politicians, museums, and restaurants. It's about evaluating the sources, not the category of the topics. --Kevin Murray (talk) 17:26, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Italian local newspapers are usually published in at least provincial basis (e.g., Il Giornale di Sicilia in my zone, or Il Tirreno in Pisa's, just to make two examples of places where I've lived in), with more locally- (or provincially-) oriented pages in them. For what I can remember, Canada and the UK share this condition with Italy. --Angelo (talk) 17:32, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- A, WP:N generally excludes local coverage, but the examples you gave seemed more regional. Clearly there is potential for conflict there. But the problem needs to be solved globally for all of WP, not by individual areas of interest. Local coverage is no more acceptable for politicians, museums, and restaurants. It's about evaluating the sources, not the category of the topics. --Kevin Murray (talk) 17:26, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- It's quite normal local newspapers often talk about local football teams and their respective players, isn't it? And this happens usually regardless of the league that team is actually playing in, trust me. Since I've seen local newspapers in my home town (Mazara del Vallo) talking about part-time footballers of an Eccellenza team (fully amateur league) who earn a salary working as carpenters, fishermen and other lower-class jobs, I think it's a big concern. --Angelo (talk) 17:16, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- A, are the sources biased or unreliable? --Kevin Murray (talk) 17:10, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- In this case, get prepared to open the doors and allow at least another 1,000 football player articles, from English non-league (i.e., amateur) players to 15-year old "young football promises" who never took part in a really competitive game. In any case, I oppose such move, we're talking about notability of people who plays football, so more precise criteria are just necessary and fundamental. --Angelo (talk) 17:02, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Angelo, I would say that your examples probably meet WP:N and these should be included. The sources seem independent and the coverage sufficient (more than mere mention). I'm not trying to reduce the number of article, just reduce the number of complex and conflicting rules which are permeating WP. --Kevin Murray (talk) 16:57, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- You're wrong - only 10% of articles taken to AfD would be deleted if WP:N were the sole criteria - media sources like the BBC sport website provide comprehensive coverage of the top five levels in English football and the top four in Scotland - I'm sure you could find numerous reliable sources for any semi-pro footballer in these leagues - e.g. Damien Reeves, who is mentioned in 115 articles, a few of which are only about him. пﮟოьεԻ 57 16:51, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- There is active discussion at WP:N to find better and broader solutions to encyclopedic inclusion. WP: N is pretty good, but in some cases it may be too restrictive; I can not think of an instance where it is too lax if properly evaluated and applied. Angello's solution of rewording to "usually deemed notable" has been tried before, it is just mushy wording that solves nothing and creates more subjectivity. The issue throughout all the notability structure is when is it OK to write an article that passes WP:V and not WP:N, e,g., when the topic has not received significant notice from independent third parties, but we have enough primary source information to write a meaningful article. This is a big issue at Fiction, where the work is self-documenting; even if obscure, the plots and characters are verifiable from the text of the fiction.--Kevin Murray (talk) 16:49, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- However, the real change in my proposal is not the "usually deemed notable" part, but the fact that football players should respect WP:N in addition to the other WP:FOOTYN criteria. It is a bit more restrictive than now, actually. --Angelo (talk) 16:54, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- A, see my comment above. It's not about what the rules are. It's about having fewer and simpler rules which are consistent across the project. You made my point when you said, if there are rules for porn stars then why not footballers? There should be one set of rules for all the topics, lest we create cabals ruling a corner of WP. --Kevin Murray (talk) 17:00, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- You're actually talking about a "bigger picture", but I don't think it could really work. As I already stated, WP:N is quite a subjective rule, and controversial cases such as the ones I linked above (but I might easily show you a lot of other similar ones) actually need more precise rules of thumb. By the way, I'm not quite a supporter of WP:N, it might easily elect almost anyone to an article in the way it is written now (independent third-party sources are just what's necessary to make a subject notable). As an example, I often let others note I was even interviewed once by a local newspaper to share my thought about the present and future of weblogs; it is an independent third-party source, so would it allow me to an article? I don't really think so. In the end, building "bigger pictures" like the one you're mentioning is quite a big deal, and needs a huge consensus to be established, and sincerely I don't see the chance to make it now and here. So, here are my concerns, from a Wikipedia football editor of four years. --Angelo (talk) 17:16, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Angelo, I'd like to invite you to join the current discussion at WP:N. We seem to differ a bit on inclusion, where I think that my standards are a bit lower than yours for inclusion of articles, but more strict than your for the development and inclusion of rule-sets. I'd like to cut way back on the rules, not just in the notability infrastructure. Less rules and those that are left should be concise and clear -- not rambling justification etc. Just the facts, please! --Kevin Murray (talk) 17:31, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- You're actually talking about a "bigger picture", but I don't think it could really work. As I already stated, WP:N is quite a subjective rule, and controversial cases such as the ones I linked above (but I might easily show you a lot of other similar ones) actually need more precise rules of thumb. By the way, I'm not quite a supporter of WP:N, it might easily elect almost anyone to an article in the way it is written now (independent third-party sources are just what's necessary to make a subject notable). As an example, I often let others note I was even interviewed once by a local newspaper to share my thought about the present and future of weblogs; it is an independent third-party source, so would it allow me to an article? I don't really think so. In the end, building "bigger pictures" like the one you're mentioning is quite a big deal, and needs a huge consensus to be established, and sincerely I don't see the chance to make it now and here. So, here are my concerns, from a Wikipedia football editor of four years. --Angelo (talk) 17:16, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- A, see my comment above. It's not about what the rules are. It's about having fewer and simpler rules which are consistent across the project. You made my point when you said, if there are rules for porn stars then why not footballers? There should be one set of rules for all the topics, lest we create cabals ruling a corner of WP. --Kevin Murray (talk) 17:00, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- However, the real change in my proposal is not the "usually deemed notable" part, but the fact that football players should respect WP:N in addition to the other WP:FOOTYN criteria. It is a bit more restrictive than now, actually. --Angelo (talk) 16:54, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Alright. Subjects like Dean Bouzanis [7] and Josh Magennis [8] were kept under (debatable) claims of WP:N despite failing WP:FOOTYN. Now, you can maybe understand why we're proposing an additional notability guideline for footballers, can you? --Angelo (talk) 16:41, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
Excusive dependence on WP:N would simply mean that we'd end up with zillions of articles on extremely minor players from the internet era but potentially lose articles on players who played hundreds of top-division games 20 or more years ago - surely this is systemic bias at work.....? -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 22:01, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
- Most soccer player articles would fail miserably under WP:N. The sources only mention their names, those sort of sources aren't enough to establish notability.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 10:09, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- Chris, there is a bias toward "recentism" throughout the project, but I do think that there is an implicitly lower standard for how much recognition it takes to satisfy notability for a historic figure. I don't deny that we have problems, but let's solve them for the whole project rather than one area. I think that sports, celebrities, and entertainment (fiction, movies, games) get undue scrutiny from snops and undue emphasis from fans -- a volatile mix. On the one hand, why shouldn't we have verifiable articles on what interests people; on the other I don't know if there is another hand. --Kevin Murray (talk) 23:54, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
Can I just make the point that I feel EconomistBR is extremely close to major WP:CIVIL violation with comments like calling the members of the football project "dishonest" and "corrupt"? -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 06:57, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- That was unecessary, I clearly meant WP:FOOTYN and not WP:FOOTY or its members. I corrected that mistake, but a simple reading of what I wrote makes it clear that I am attacking the "policy". I don't do personal attacks.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 10:09, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- To Kevin Murray: I think your intentions are good, but it will be hard to reach a wide consensus on WP:N, but I agree that some sports article are emphasized. That's why I'm in favour of Angelo proposal. In France, it will be easy to create articles on 4th or 5th division that are fully amateur and semi-regional leagues. These criterias will allow us to work on important footballers/topics related to football rather than correcting stats/removing bias from a French 4th division player who meets WP:V and WP:N. Hope you understand my concern.--Latouffedisco (talk) 08:05, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- WP:FOOTYN is a rewording of WP:ATHLETE. Making matters worse WP:FOOTYN would establish a very dangerous precedent, precedent that of having sports fans making up their own policies.
- WP:FOOTYN will create a huge area where sports fans can create and enforce their own rules and guidelines.
- That's why I repeat WP:FOOTYN is a dishonest and corrupted aberration.
- Kevin Murray is totally right when he says: "There should be one set of rules for all the topics, lest we create cabals ruling a corner of WP."
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 10:09, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- So presumably you're equally opposed to the existence WP:ENTERTAINER, WP:MUSIC, WP:CREATIVE, WP:PORNBIO and WP:POLITICIAN? Because I have to say, this whole debate does come across as something of a vendetta against articles on sportspeople...... -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 10:22, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- I am opposed to every policy that permits the mass creation of permastubs just to satisfy fans or interest groups.
- I am focusing on WP:ATHLETE because the numbers scream, at 2,400 Brazilian soccer players articles (no other Brazilian category comes close to that) it should have been simple to establish that there is something wrong. The fact that it wasn't simple shows that there is something putrid going on, mainly the influence of interest groups such as soccer fans, or the "cabals ruling a corner of WP" as Kevin Murray put it.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 22:26, 29 July 2008 (UTC)
- I think you're confusing the issue here. WP:FOOTY is not for football fans - it is for people who are knowledgable about football and want to share their knowledge. If you want something for fans, go to somewhere like rivals.net. Comments like "WP:FOOTYN is a dishonest and corrupted aberration" are ridiculous because (a) it is not dishonest (how on earth is it dishonest - where is the lie??), and (b) it is not corrupted - it was devised to stop the creation of articles on non-notable footballers, not to aid their presence.
- You seem to be avoiding the fact that because football, even down to semi-pro level, recieves such comprehensive coverage in the British media, finding enough reliable third party material on footballers at even the fifth level is incredibly easy, and that moving towards a reliance on WP:N would result in the creation of hundreds (possibly over a thousand) more articles which we currently delete due to the existence of the WP:ATHLETE criteria. пﮟოьεԻ 57 10:21, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
- Media mentions soccer players names, that's fact doesn't convey notability to them. Such soccer players should only be mentioned on Wikipedia and not have an entire article devoted to them.
- We have over 20,000 soccer players articles, are they ALL notable and relevant? Of course not, but since articles mentions those players' names sports fans use those sources to mass create articles. WP:ATHLETE allows that.
- WP:FOOTYN implicitly is trying to transfer the power of policy creation to soccer fans, that's why WP:FOOTYN is dishonest and corrupted.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 22:26, 29 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not sure what your defintion of media sports coverage is. You seem to imply that articles are being created just because names are mentioned in match reports. Whilst in fact the scope is far wider than that - transfer news, interviews, quotes from managers and pundits etc. Such sources exist for players beneath the WP:FOOTYN cut-off point, and I reckon I could easily create a number of start-class articles about players of such a level that satisfy WP:N.
- WP:FOOTYN and WP:ATHLETE therefore exist not as a way of allowing masses of football articles onto to Wikipedia, but rather to restrict them. If you want rid, you'd have to accept that more football articles would be created, which is in fact what WP:FOOTBALL spends most of its time stopping! This is not what you or I want, and yet whilst you advocate WP:N you clearly also seem to be pushing your own agenda, a restrictive criteria of notability for sports articles. So is it more the case that you want the power transferred from the much-loathed "sports fans" to you, and people who share your opinions? HornetMike (talk) 00:25, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- EconomistBR, I think you misunderstand how WP:N works. It simply requires significant coverage in reliable sources. You seem to have a problem with WP containing articles about footballers that you are not aware of, but as others have mentioned the US and British press coverage footballers in a great deal of detail, including lower-level players that you are very unlikely to ever hear of. I realize the press in other nations may not cover footballers to such a degree (but then again my proficiency in foreign languages is very limited). If you want to limit the amount of footballer articles on WP, the best idea is to supplement WP:N with a more restrictive set of rules that requires an objective level of achievement in the sport (as WP:FOOTYN does). Best regards. Jogurney (talk) 14:08, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- So presumably you're equally opposed to the existence WP:ENTERTAINER, WP:MUSIC, WP:CREATIVE, WP:PORNBIO and WP:POLITICIAN? Because I have to say, this whole debate does come across as something of a vendetta against articles on sportspeople...... -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 10:22, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
I don't see how having this many articles can POSSIBLY be a bad thing. Having more content (WP:PAPER) hardly seems bad. So I'm not sure why you are so fixated on there being 20,000 articles on footballers. Think of how many articles are in Category:Politicians? Content is a good thing, not a bad thing. Having 20,000 articles does nothing to prevent valid articles on other notable subjects. So, I mean this in the nicest way possible, what on earth is the big deal? matt91486 (talk) 04:21, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- Call it a sense of ... dissonance and fairness. I have, from time to time, made comparisons between minor "professional" players and local community college instructors. Both are of approximately the same interest; the latter of arguably more intense interest. But Wikipedia is meant to be an encyclopedia, not a database of everything. The existing rules represent a major exception, which are completely at variance with the traditional customs and expectations of Wikipedia, as embodied in the more general concept of notability. RayAYang (talk) 14:33, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- One way in which WP:ATHLETE is helpful is in fighting WP:BIAS. By setting standards in worldwide professional sports like football, it sets an even level that athletes from all over the world can meet. Footballers from other less developed countries will be at a huge disadvantage if we were to short-sightedly move to a WP:N only policy. Suddenly, national team players from many countries would not be considered notable, despite competing on the highest stages, while amateur players in the United Kingdom would be considered notable. There are sometimes problems with really good sourcing for players from Eastern Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; however, I think it's ridiculous to contend that those athletes are less notable because of less internet presence and online media in those countries. A switch to a WP:N only policy would be incredibly Eurocentric, and especially Anglocentric. Standards aren't dishonest at all, it's just a measure to give everyone equal standing. I'm not sure we've done a great job of articulating that point. There will be certain exceptions, and when a player has received exceptional media attention, I'm in favor of including that article for meeting WP:N. There have been sometimes when I've voted against WP:FOOTYN in those cases. But as a whole, the standards that are set do a good job putting people on an equal, worldwide playing field and help make Wikipedia a worldwide resource, not just a resource for the English lower leagues. But in cases in which notability is clearly established with myriad sources and a player doesn't meet the set levels, then that article can still be included on its own merits, meeting WP:BIO. I hope that clears up what I mean. matt91486 (talk) 17:25, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- Just because the BBC writes a 50 words news article about someone that doesn't mean we can or should have an article about that person on Wikipedia. Those examples showed the point I was trying to make, the sources only mentions their names, transfers or soccer statistics, nothing else. They are still non-notable soccer players.
- The biggest problem of having 30,000 article related to soccer players is that 90% of them are low quality. If those articles had any quality I would stop complaining, I would. Worse soccer fans don't show commitment about raising the quality or even setting quality standards.
- Wikipedia's overall quality is lowered by those 30,000 articles and new ones are being created everyday thanks to WP:ATHLETE.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 21:30, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not quite sure what more you require for a footballer other than "names, transfers or soccer statistics". A detailed summary of their position on the Iraq war? I mean, it's such information that informs all football articles, even those at the very top level. Should they be deleted too?
- When it's comes down to it, it's not really WP:N you care about, but rather imposing your own standards of notability on football players. Hence your claim they shouldn't exist. How exactly is that different to the supposed crimes of WP:ATHLETE.
- As for the apparent negligence of football fans, you could level the same argument at writers of any topic that receives wide coverage - there are plenty of poorly written articles on actors and politicans. The hard-working editors on projects that support these areas work to clean up these articles, but there will always be a higher quantity of IP/inexperienced users. Does that mean such articles should be deleted? Of course not. To do so would contradict the ethos of Wikipedia. HornetMike (talk) 23:34, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
- The 40,000+ athlete articles indicate that the notability criteria (WP:N) is being distorted in order to satisfy the interests of private groups, but that's a minor problem.
- The 30,000 soccer player articles are of really low quality, most are a collection of random, incomplete and outdated soccer statistics on irrelevant soccer players.
- Making matters worse, new ones are being created daily, thanks to WP:ATHLETE.
- Worse still, there is no commitment to improve, update or even standardize them on the part of the soccer fans.
- Those 30,000 articles lower the average Wikipedia article quality, even though they increase the brute quantity of information.
- By lowering the average quality you reduce Wikipedia's relevancy.
- But you are right when you say that this problem is replicated on other areas.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 20:24, 31 July 2008 (UTC)
- Not all articles have to be FA quality to be helpful. That's a common misconception. Stubs can be helpful too. matt91486 (talk) 00:35, 1 August 2008 (UTC)
- One way in which WP:ATHLETE is helpful is in fighting WP:BIAS. By setting standards in worldwide professional sports like football, it sets an even level that athletes from all over the world can meet. Footballers from other less developed countries will be at a huge disadvantage if we were to short-sightedly move to a WP:N only policy. Suddenly, national team players from many countries would not be considered notable, despite competing on the highest stages, while amateur players in the United Kingdom would be considered notable. There are sometimes problems with really good sourcing for players from Eastern Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; however, I think it's ridiculous to contend that those athletes are less notable because of less internet presence and online media in those countries. A switch to a WP:N only policy would be incredibly Eurocentric, and especially Anglocentric. Standards aren't dishonest at all, it's just a measure to give everyone equal standing. I'm not sure we've done a great job of articulating that point. There will be certain exceptions, and when a player has received exceptional media attention, I'm in favor of including that article for meeting WP:N. There have been sometimes when I've voted against WP:FOOTYN in those cases. But as a whole, the standards that are set do a good job putting people on an equal, worldwide playing field and help make Wikipedia a worldwide resource, not just a resource for the English lower leagues. But in cases in which notability is clearly established with myriad sources and a player doesn't meet the set levels, then that article can still be included on its own merits, meeting WP:BIO. I hope that clears up what I mean. matt91486 (talk) 17:25, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
Someone said it the other day: in no other fields do all professionals get Wikipedia coverage. I want to mention an example where a footballer survived AFD because he had played four minutes in Norway's top league of football. Punkmorten (talk) 16:51, 1 August 2008 (UTC)
- I !voted to delete that article, as you can see. That subject would probably have failed WP:N, that is why I am mentioning of WP:FOOTY as an additional criterion, which does not override WP:N but instead tries to interpret it by putting a factual mark. Articles who meet WP:FOOTYN but fail WP:N should be deleted in any case, that's what I'm trying to say and propose here. --Angelo (talk) 17:46, 1 August 2008 (UTC)
- One problem with that is that we go to AfDs with players who clearly meet WP:N but fail WP:ATHLETE and incomprehensibly we still get more delete votes than keep. See the current AfD for Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Richard Sukuta-Pasu for example. So while WP:ATHLETE or WP:FOOTYN is perhaps a little overly inclusive, it does provide a relatively clear guideline - with perhaps the exception of what qualifies as a "fully professional" league. Nfitz (talk) 19:27, 2 August 2008 (UTC)
Yeah, WP:ATHLETE needs to be tightened. I was recently scolded for putting a speedy tag on a stub volleyball player (who will be playing in the Olympics)... I don't think merely being in the Olympics is enough to guarantee an entire article for each athlete. For the Beijing Olympics, that's potentially ten thousands permastubs, because most athletes playing in the Olympics will not win anything or receive any coverage (beyond their name being listed somewhere). Really, like politicians, academics and other living (or dead) people, some set amount of coverage by reliable sources needs to be implemented in the guidelines, to avoid turning Wiki into a phonebook/directory of non-notable athletes.--Boffob (talk) 23:00, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
Notability of baseball players being discussed...
...at Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Baseball#Minor_league_players.27_AFDs_closed.__My_proposal_on_disputed_notability_guideline. —Wknight94 (talk) 17:43, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
Who cares?
Hi! I'm amazed at the amount of time == energy wasted discussing notability, debating notability and deleting "non-notable" articles. Old school editors, perchance, decry the disk space but if WP is truly "describing the world" that includes all 6.x billion of us. And all of our ancestors.
Let's say that every 3rd string goatback in the Berzikistan Steppe League HAS an article. So what? That's an extra US$ 1.32 (ca 2008 CE) in disk. Who cares? Let it go.
There are so many more important things to do! Saintrain (talk) 06:04, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
- The two important reasons behind maintaining our "notability" standards are the parent policies verifiability and neutrality. If information about a subject isn't verifiable (i.e., no reliable sources can be found), then it doesn't belong in a reference work that is trying to provide reliable information to its readers. Even if information is verifiable via nontraditional media, we don't want Wikipedia to become a place for self-promotion or personal attacks. Thus we can generally only have articles about those goatbacks who have already been written about by a publisher with a reputation for accuracy and neutrality.--Father Goose (talk) 08:14, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
- Also, content bloat results in more search hits for any given search term, making it harder for users to find what they are looking for. Constraining what is notable, and therefore included, limits how bad this problem gets. Steve CarlsonTalk 08:29, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
- Father Goose, the recent discussions on deleting articles based on 'notability' (including but not limited to politicians) have nothing to do with verifiability and neutrality, or even third-party coverage. Steve Carlson, we have disambiguation pages for that purpose. The problem is not notable/not notable, but just how high the bar is being set, and why it varies by topic. Flatterworld (talk) 15:41, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
- Father Goose: that neither establishes nor detracts from notability. If the NYT writes extensively about some crooked alderman, is s/he more or less notable than one written about by the Berzerkistan Picayune and Advertizer?
- Steve: is this a problem now or a potential problem if the hardware/infrastructure/search algorithms/usage patterns remain unchanged for the next 10-20 years? If the amount of time devoted to "notability sweeps" were employed in a "quality-weighted" search algorithm then the whole of WP would benefit. Saintrain (talk) 23:50, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
- Fair enough, there are two mediating factors where sources and subjects are concerned. One is WP:NOTNEWS: news coverage of events that are basically the same as a million other news stories are considered poor encyclopedic subjects. The other one is unfortunately a product of our systemic bias; subjects of local interest elicit a whocares? response at AfD, even when the sourcing is completely in order.
- Personally, I don't agree with the exclusion of content of limited or local interest, as long the article itself meets all of our core content policies. Calling such articles "not notable" is a misrepresentation of Wikipedia:Notability. Like others point out here, disambiguation pages and other search aids can keep even huge numbers of articles accessible. (Wikipedia's current search engine sucks rocks, but the fix for that is to upgrade the search engine, not to limit the number of articles the encyclopedia contains.)--Father Goose (talk) 02:10, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
- WP will always have dust bunnies but, if nobody sees them, who cares? WP is not a [[WP:PAPER}paper]] encyclopedia, which is judged by the quality of ALL its articles. If a fluff article appeared on the same page as Cleopatra it would detract from the book as a whole. The only WP articles on the "Cleopatra page" are (I hope. I didn't actually look) Egypt, Ptolemy, Caesar, Antony etc. Not fluff. Fluff articles are effectively invisible. "The internet will never be useful because of all the junk websites."
- Certainly, junk articles that get high google or otherwise interfere with the good stuff need, ahem, attention. That should be the trigger.
- (I've been looking at (some, nobody could look at all, bleh!) the notability criteria of (among others) minor politicians. Wouldn't it be cool for the editor who first wrote the article about the school board clerk who later becomes Dictator of Mars? Like getting a Babe Ruth rookie card. :-)
- Thanks! I'm done. This has been fun. Saintrain (talk) 17:32, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
- The scarce resource that drives our need for inclusion criteria is not server space or search engine capability. Our constraining resource is and always has been editor time and attention. We have over 2 million articles. Every one of them must be watchlisted, maintained and protected from vandalism by a critical mass of editors with interest in and knowledge of the topic. And they have to be watched and protected forever, not just by the editor who created the page and then leaves the project after a year or two. Otherwise, the vandals add subtly false content (first "correcting" the player's statistics, then "correcting" his age, ...) leaving us with a page that no one can trust and which discredits the entire project. We have enough problems defending the articles that have enough editors to watch them. We can't afford to waste resources and energy defending trivia that doesn't attract that necessary critical mass of informed reader/editors. Rossami (talk) 03:38, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- Well said! --Kevin Murray (talk) 04:33, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- I agree 100% with you. It's really nice to see other editors worried about the long term quality of Wikipedia. Watching, improving and updating over 2 million articles is a huge undertaking that requires the work of tens of thousands of editors.
- The issue of who is watching these 2 million pages? bugs me all the time. And they really do "have to be watched and protected forever."
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 04:52, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- Wikipedia:Flagged revisions is the long-term answer to this problem. Also, why do you (Rossami) make the assumption that any "corrections" made to an article are going to be wrong? If something is sourced, it's easy to spot a "fake correction"; if it's not sourced, it's all suspect anyway. And to date, I've seen more people making useful corrections on Wikipedia than ones bollixing it up.
- We have all seen that, in fact (well, except for the poor bastards on vandal patrol). The fact that Wikipedia has flourished throughout its history instead of imploded is simple proof that its net direction is that of improvement, not degradation. There are certainly some errors that go undetected for a long period of time (this is true in "real" publishing as well), but our anti-vandalism techniques and tools have improved to the point where it's rare to come across any vandalism in an article. At some point (far in the future, I expect -- there is still so much work to do), our ability to improve the encyclopedia will plateau -- but by then, I can't imagine we won't have some form of static, reviewed versions in place that are immune to vandalism.
- I find the views voiced here staggeringly pessimistic -- alarmist, really. Wikipedia works (thank goodness), and whenever a given problem become acute (not just anticipated), we change our methods as necessary to keep Wikipedia working. Other models may take Wikipedia's place in the future (including, probably, progressive reformation of Wikipedia itself), but I really don't see the place turning to shit. A bigger danger is that it will become stale -- the people "running" it will close it off more and more to new contributors (and new articles, on, say, soccer players) -- and everybody else will move on to a place not overrun by a siege mentality.--Father Goose (talk) 05:40, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- There is nothing alarmist about Rossami's argument. Resources ARE limited and scarce, are you going to dispute that as well? Are you?
- Rossami brilliantly argued that the notability criteria allocates and maximizes the utility of the resources. Simple.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 06:21, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- Response to personal attack by Father Goose (Last 3 lines of his comment)
- Resource scarcity is the reason why we have 30,000 low quality soccer player articles, there was no editor time (resource) to update them. But since "resources are limiteless Utopians" are running Wikipedia, we will have 30,000 more crappy articles in no time ruining Wikipedia's credibility and reliability.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 07:20, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- Good morning, FatherGoose. You are correct that the obvious vandalism is much more quickly identified and reverted these days. The subtle vandalism, however, is extremely difficult to detect and correct. You assume in your argument above that "sourcing" is a silver bullet to anti-vandalism. Someone, however, has to take the time to actually look at the alleged source to verify 1) that it exists and 2) that it actually supports the editor's change. That gets right back to my point about each article needing the critical mass of informed and interested editors who will watchlist it and conduct that verification.
I wish we lived in a world where no one committed that kind of pointless vandalism. And I'm happy to say that we do live in a world where that vandalism is far more rare than we ever thought it would be when this project started. But it is unrealistic to say that it never happens - or to say that we can ignore the potential problem. Please remember that the creation of the inclusion criteria were themselves a reaction to a current and acute problem. They were not created in a vacumn or based on theoretical concerns. The inclusion criteria are actually part of the evolution of controls that you put your hopes in.
I'll also note that I personally remain skeptical about the viability of [[Flagged revisions as the answer. I will be happy if I'm proven wrong but I don't think that it can live up to its hopes. Rossami (talk) 14:52, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- Well said! --Kevin Murray (talk) 04:33, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with FatherGoose that some of the attitudes presented here are alarmist. Vandals certainly do target stub articles for misinformation, but there are numerous editors like myself that revert such vandalism and add the proper warnings to their pages. I don't think fears of vandalism should be used to limit the scope of WP, so long as their are editors willing to watch the articles. Jogurney (talk) 11:27, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- You didn't read Rossami's comment, did you? He said exactly that, the number of "editors willing to watch the articles" as any other resource is LIMITED, which means that the numbers of articles has to be restrained, restrainment performed by the Notability criteria. Again nothing alarmist about that.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 20:00, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- It's pretty easy to keep a watch on the more popular articles, but the more obscure articles are frequently hijacked. I've watchlisted a lot of obscure articles which I worked to save from AfD or moderated through 3O; there is constant manipulation and POV pushing in the dark corners of WP. There is also the "goldfish" syndrome where a constant series of nibble-edits eventually twists the content of the article. What Rossami said above about articles is also very true of rules, especially the goldfish effect. --Kevin Murray (talk) 15:26, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
The current notability standards are not purely an outgrowth of the need for verifiability and neutrality. Were that the case, we could have stubs listing minimal information for every human being in the phone book, and detailed articles on the voting composition of most precincts. Rather, there is a certain set of expectations lent by the world encyclopedia, which includes an expectation that only knowledge, as opposed to indiscriminate information, will be included. What exactly constitutes knowledge in the sense of an encyclopedia is partially a matter of tradition, partially a matter of definition, and partially a matter of user interest. This sentiment is somewhat conveyed in the policy governing what Wikipedia is not, and finds partial instantiation in the various types of notability guidelines, which are mostly (but not all) elaborations and rules of thumb for the general notability criterion. For instance, the rules for academics relate more to the level of contribution to human knowledge they have made, rather than the mere popular notoriety they have attained. RayAYang (talk) 14:18, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- Very good comment! "only knowledge, as opposed to indiscriminate information, will be included" - I wouldn't mind having that as a guidance instead of the Notability criteria because Notability doesn't always mean knowledge.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 20:25, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
pageviews as a proxy for maintainability
- Damn pluralism! We're all right!
- An unambiguous and neutral measure of notability is page views; (page views / time period) < X then AfD. Little human intervention/debate until then and the latest flash in the pan's page isn't administrated to death and dies of natural causes.
- If (page views / logged-in edits) exceeds Y1 (10-ish?) or (page views / anon edits) > Y2 (3-ish?) then something's (gold)fishy and needs human attention.
- Still think it'd be cool to get a rookie card. Saintrain (talk) 19:08, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- I agree with that as well, I actually thought about using "page views" as an argument on the AfD debates! I wouldn't mind having this turned into a back-up policy to what RayAYang said. What Rossami said however is relevant and true no matter which policy is used, Editor Time as a resource is LIMITED and therefore must be allocated properly and not wasted.
- ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ Talk 20:25, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- (edit conflict) That is a very interesting proposal. Notability is a proxy for our ability to maintain an article. (It also serves some other purposes but that, in my opinion, is the most important one.) Could some measure of pageviews per time be a better long-term proxy for our ability to maintain an article? We might need some subtle tweaking of the metric to weight the pageviews for diversity - a page pinged by 100 in a month by 100 different IPs is likely to be better watched than one page that's pinged 100 times a day by the same IP. I could see a parallel standard based on some count of watchlists by active users. This might be a very creative way to objectively identify those "backwater" articles that are most at risk. This might be a proposal to elevate from WT:BIO to WT:N. Rossami (talk) 20:33, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
- That seems to be a ridiculous criteria. Why should it have any bearing on articles that are kept? People search for sex related topics more than legislators from African countries - that doesn't mean that we should be deleting the latter articles. I think there are tons of logical fallacies argued about maintainability, but really, we just need to keep doing our part and eventually, as user contributions continue to grow, things will be covered. The fact that some editor may not be watchlisting something is just not a reason to start deleting things. If this is really the concern of yours, you can always get the static Wikipedia computer discs when they're put together. matt91486 (talk) 21:30, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
Can someone look at this article, and comment on whether Barrios meets WP:BIO or WP:MUSIC. Thanks! --Ronz (talk) 16:07, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
Contemporary Authors
Hi all,
Just wondering, should an entry in Gale's Contemporary Authors series be enough to confer notability on a writer? I'm not 100%sure what their inclusion criteria are. Thanks. Zagalejo^^^ 01:18, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
- yes, its sufficient, because the criticism and data they give there is sufficient to permit an article. They count as a sufficiently RS. DGG (talk) 06:16, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
Has had significant roles in multiple notable films, television, stage performances, and other productions.
Notability criteria should be objective. What is the objective interpretation of a significant role? Taemyr (talk) 10:41, 20 August 2008 (UTC)
Chess ~ Magic:TheGathering!?!
I find it ridiculous that according to note #9 players of chess, poker, and some contemporary card games are to be treated on an equal basis, if some chess players (eg Bobby Fischer, Garry Kasparov are literally world famous, results of chess tournaments are often reported in regular sports-news programmes, the concept of human vs. computer in chess is a source of never-ending debate etc etc... To support my claim to remove "chess" from the list, and rather mark it as an exception, I point out that as common practise this part of the guideline is ignored. (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Chess_players) DubZog (talk) 20:02, 14 August 2008 (UTC)
- Is chess more important than poker? Depends on who you are. As a judge, I would find MTG more important. Stifle (talk) 08:28, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Mayors
Generally speaking, mayors are likely to meet this criterion,
This could potential be better clarified because the actual role of a mayor varies quite widely with an impact on how significant they are - in the UK at least a Mayor is usually just the presiding officer of the Council who performs various local civic functions, whilst the direction of the council is set by the Leader who is the head of the largest party (or agreed coalition) on the council. The Mayor is often a long standing councillor appointed on the basis of seniority more than anything else and on most councils can be held by a member of any party regardless of political control (although when the numbers are tight the Mayor's casting vote can become crucial). They may accumulate references in local papers (which are often poorly served online for verification) but often general notes that they opened a fair, presented prizes, welcomed the Queen on a visit and the like. In general they're not going to be significant notable figures for this even if they are Mayor for one of the big cities.
Complicating this is the recent creation of elected mayors who basically combine the roles of the ceremonial Mayor with those of the Leader of the Council and significant direct powers; with the title "Mayor" largely for a US influenced domestic and international understanding. Timrollpickering (talk) 21:04, 6 August 2008 (UTC)
- FWIW, essentially all US mayors are elected.DGG (talk) 06:15, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
- I would generally say that an elected mayor is notable. An unelected one isn't simply because he/she is a mayor. If, however, as an elected councillor (or comporable) in a previous or later job (elected or otherwise) meets the notability guidelines, then clearly they would be notable. Therefore, perhaps the line quoted above should become Generally speaking, elected mayors are likely to meet this criterion, (with or without bolding as necessary). --Ged UK (talk) 10:31, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- FWIW, essentially all US mayors are elected.DGG (talk) 06:15, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
Proposed Bio - Susan Salvo - is she considered notable enough?
First let me say that I am submitting this bio about my wife - which may be a total conflict of interest or wikipedia faux pas since I probably can't be totally neutral. Please give me feedback about appropriateness of the article. All feedback is appreciated, even brutal critique (although, perhaps not until the initial swelling subsides). That being said, here is some basic info in regard to her presence as an American Massage Therapist, author, and instructor.
Susan G. Salvo, B. Ed., L.M.T, N.T.S, C.I. is a Nationally Certified, State Licensed Massage Therapist, and Natural Therapeutic Specialist. In 1982, she completed a 1000 hour program at New Mexico School of Natural Therapeutics. Ms. Salvo's training includes: polarity, infant massage instructor, myotherapy, Trager, hakomi, reflexology, sports massage, craniosacral therapy, neuromuscular therapy, body mobilization techniques, spa specialist, and watsu. She has studied under many talented people including Bonnie Prudden, Ben Benjamin, David Lauterstein, Bob King, Benny Vaughn, Maria Mathias, and Harold Dull.
She owns and operates Bodyworks Massage Therapy by Susan Salvo and Associates which she founded in Lake Charles, Louisiana in 1983. In 1987, Ms Salvo opened the Louisiana Institute of Massage Therapy in Lake Charles, which is a premier massage school. Ms. Salvo is a charter member of the Louisiana Chapter of the American Massage Therapy Association. In 1989, she was honored with their Member of the Year award and, in 2003, with their Lifetime Achievement Award. In 1987, she founded the Louisiana AMTA sports massage team, which is still active today.
Ms. Salvo is a nationally known author, having written Massage Therapy: Principles and Practice and Mosby’s Guide to Pathology for the Massage Therapist, both published by Elsevier. Ms. Salvo has participated with the National Certification Board of Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork as a member of their test item writing committee and with the Federation of State Massage Therapy Boards as a member of their standard setting team. She has contributed a chapter “Geriatric Massage” for Modalities for Massage and Bodywork scheduled to be published by Elsevier in 2008. For the text Teaching Massage, produced by the Associated Bodywork Massage Professionals, she contributed the chapter entitled “Teaching Massage to Students with Special Needs” scheduled to be published by Lippincott, Williams, and Wilkins in 2008. Salvo co-authored a chapter entitled “The Atlas of Massage” for Muscle and Bone Palpation Manual with Trigger Points, Referral Patterns, and Stretching also scheduled to be published by Elsevier in 2008. Ms Salvo is one of the featured experts interviewed in the documentary film, History of Massage Therapy in the United States released in 2007.
Ms. Salvo has been instructing adult learners since 1983. She holds associate in history degree and a baccalaureate degree in education from McNeese State University, where she is currently working on her Master of Science degree in education. Ms. Salvo is the director of the Louisiana Institute of Massage Therapy (www.LaMassageSchool.com ). She is a well known and talented instructor, who guest lectures at massage schools, hospitals, and universities across the country.
In 1995, Louisiana Governor Edwin W. Edwards presented Ms Salvo with the Pacesetter Award for business achievement. Later that year, she was honored with the title, Business Person of the Year by the American Business Women’s Association. The following year, she received the 1996 State Small Business Person of the Year Award from Louisiana Governor Murphy J. “Mike” Foster, and the first Eagle Award for Business Achievement by the Calcasieu Parish Police Jury. In 1997 the Times of Lake Charles featured her as one of “Forty Under Forty” for outstanding achievement among local business people. Mbreaux (talk) 04:49, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
- It would need to be more neutral and have citations from reliable sources to comply with the verifiability policy. You should also consider whether you should wait for someone else to write about subjects where you have a conflict of interest. Stifle (talk) 08:31, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks for being upfront regarding your relationship with Ms. Salvo. While she may or may not be notable (it probably will depend on whether she's gotten much press coverage), Wikipedia guidlines indicate that you should wait for someone else without this conflict of interest to generate the article. - Boston (talk) 15:25, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
Notability of people within the buisness world
I have recently come across several AFD conversations involving people in the buisness world and have found the guidelines listed here to be very unhelpful. I was wondering if it would be possible to design a more specific set of notability guidelines for individuals in the buisness world. My general comment would be that there are a lot of local buisness publications out there which may feature what I would consider to be non-notable people sense they often have very little effect outside of their own individual communities and may even have only a nominal effect within their own local community. These people also often have no effect on the buisness world as a whole or their field in anyway but because they are featured in a local buisness magazine(s) articles are kept in many AFDs. I think we need to create some stricter and more specific guidelines in this area because as of right now potentially millions of articles on buisness people could be written.Nrswanson (talk) 15:35, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
- I wouldn't have thought that 'local buisness publications' would be considered notable enough. It usually needs to be national, or at the very least regional. --Ged UK (talk) 15:42, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
- Can you give some examples of the AfD's to which you are referring? UnitedStatesian (talk) 15:56, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
- Well they sometimes slip through the cracks I guess Ged UK. Just depends on who is looking at the AFDs. Case in point, the current discussion on Bruce McAbee. In my opinion this is a borderline article under current guidelines, but I really don't think this sort of individual should be able to qualify for a wikipedia article. There are hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of individuals like McAbee in the buisness world. Another point that I think needs clarity is whether the leader (or former leader) of notable company is necessarily notable. Do the actions of a notable company necessarily transfer to the individual making them notable. Nrswanson (talk) 15:57, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
Ambassadors
Are ambassadors inherently notable? I think not, others think so. I've invited a few to discuss. Stifle (talk) 08:26, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- I think they are. If one country has a problem with another country's policy/response to an issue, the first person they contact is the ambassador. Ambassadors are therefore of critical importance to international relations. --Ged UK (talk) 09:40, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- It depends of the country. I doubt the Italian ambassador in Myanmar is somewhat important (I don't even know if there is any), whereas I would have no doubt to say the US ambassador in Russia has some kind of notability due to his role. --Angelo (talk) 10:05, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- So presumably by extension the USA is more important than Myanmar or Italy? I think that we're liable to get ourselves into a big country v little country and importance debate if we aren't careful. That's one of the reasons I think all ambassadors are inherently notable: they perform essentially the same functions, and are senior members of the diplomatic corps. ;--Ged UK (talk) 10:11, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- However you can't deny the Italian ambassador in Myanmar has much less coverage than his US equivalent in Russia. I think there is no way to establish a definite rule, it's all a WP:N issue in fact. --Angelo (talk) 10:21, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- I would just like to note that the local political status of ambassadors is not the same in all countries. The only example I can give is Israel, where most ambassadors are pure civil servants, but a quota of eleven are political appointments, naturally sent to the more "important" places (US, UN, UK etc.). In the Israeli case these 11 are almost certainly notable, while the others (especially those of small embassies) may not be. DGtal (talk) 13:38, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- I would disagree; if they are the official voice of Israel in say, Mayanmar, or wherever, they are notable. If Myanmar had an issue with some Israeli policy or other, the first person they would speak to from Isreal would be the Ambassador. --Ged UK (talk) 13:46, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- I would just like to note that the local political status of ambassadors is not the same in all countries. The only example I can give is Israel, where most ambassadors are pure civil servants, but a quota of eleven are political appointments, naturally sent to the more "important" places (US, UN, UK etc.). In the Israeli case these 11 are almost certainly notable, while the others (especially those of small embassies) may not be. DGtal (talk) 13:38, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- However you can't deny the Italian ambassador in Myanmar has much less coverage than his US equivalent in Russia. I think there is no way to establish a definite rule, it's all a WP:N issue in fact. --Angelo (talk) 10:21, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- So presumably by extension the USA is more important than Myanmar or Italy? I think that we're liable to get ourselves into a big country v little country and importance debate if we aren't careful. That's one of the reasons I think all ambassadors are inherently notable: they perform essentially the same functions, and are senior members of the diplomatic corps. ;--Ged UK (talk) 10:11, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- The Italian ambassador to Myanmar undoubtedly has press coverage in Italy, where she will normally be a very senior pubic servant, it being a sensitive post, and our difficulty in finding it is a result of the cultural bias Wikipedia is supposed to help overcome. True, the Italian ambassador to the UN is likely to be actually famous, at least in Italy, but they are both notable. A political appointee is of course easier to document, being invariably prominent for something else besides diplomacy--career government officials of all sorts even at the highest levels are usually not all that much reported on in secondary sources of the kind searched by google, and by an d large we don't have people with the resources to do much else. Notability is, among other things, being at the top levels of one's profession, and in a carer or appointed foreign service, ambassadors are just that--as compared to all the minor foreign office personnel. Countries too small or impoverished to have a sufficient number of impressively notable diplomats get around this not be appointing unnotable people, but by appointing the same high-level person to multiple countries. The 2RS rule is merely the rule for default for fields where levels are hard to determine and there's no other rational criterion. All we need to write an article is notability in any reasonable sense and sufficient reliable sourcing to do the article, which for this will usually be a primary government source. All the same, I don't see the point of entering ambassadors as separate articles if literally all there is is the name on a list without any information about the career, unless we have some expectations of finding more. DGG (talk) 14:00, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- Indeed, the most senior post a diplomat can aim for is an Ambassador. If you're an Ambassador, you are notable in your field, almost certainly. I would be worried if we attempted to say that the US Ambassador to somewhere was more important than Myanmar's or similar, as this is simply likely to repeat the cultural bias. --Ged UK (talk) 14:28, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- Technically speaking, the highest aspiration of a diplomat is to become foreign minister. This can or cannot happen depending on the country. However, I worry some about a sense of proportionality. Too many ambassadors strike me as likely to be permastubs, unmemorable in any worthwhile historical sense, etc, to summarize: non-notable. As in, quickly now, you are all educated: name two American ambassadors of the last 50 years to anywhere on the continents of Africa, South America, or North America. Any two will do -- no cheating now. :) You get the picture. I can do it only with great difficulty, and I'm a moderate fan of diplomatic history. Usually an ambassador gets some press mention when he/she presents credentials, and only incidental mention thereafter. Inside the State Department hierarchy (in the US), an ambassador falls below Deputy Assistant Secretary, which falls below Assistant Secretary, which falls below Undersecretary, which falls below Deputy Secretary, who is the deputy to the Secretary of State. Despite their relatively high protocol ranking, in terms of real influence and effect they are usually comparative ciphers. I think sticking to the primary criterion is better, but I can see an argument for doing it the other way, given their ceremonial importance. RayAYang (talk) 18:34, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- Indeed, the most senior post a diplomat can aim for is an Ambassador. If you're an Ambassador, you are notable in your field, almost certainly. I would be worried if we attempted to say that the US Ambassador to somewhere was more important than Myanmar's or similar, as this is simply likely to repeat the cultural bias. --Ged UK (talk) 14:28, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I would support a claim of inherent notability for ambassadors. Regardless of the circumstances of their background, career diplomat or campaign contributor, an ambassador is the official representative of one sovereign state to another. While I agree that it may be tougher to find English language sources for the Pakistani Ambassador to Bangladesh, there are official biographies and articles available for huge numbers of them. A reliable source supporting that a specific individual is ambassador from Country A to Country B would satisfy me. Alansohn (talk) 14:35, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- I Just had a look about how the Italian ambassador in Myanmar is actually covered through the Internet. I only managed to find 300 Google hits, many of them being about different subjects with the same ambassador's name [14], only a few of them being actually reliable sources. Personally I feel inherent notability in cases like these makes no sense, we're talking about subjects who might easily fail WP:N in fact. --Angelo (talk) 14:45, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
No, I wouldn't say so. Ambassadors are likely to have received non-trivial coverage in reliable sources, meaning that they meet the general notability criterion, but this is not the same as saying that all ambassadors are "inherently notable". –Black Falcon (Talk) 15:35, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- I would say they are "inherently notable" and that it is important for us to know they are despite the lack of available info in some cases. If one were to rely upon what info can be found about a given ambassador, one might easily determine they are not notable but this is a case of system bias. To illustrate what i am talking about, I'll mention my article about João Maria de Sousa. The article is crap, perhaps the worst I have written, and that's because he's Attorney General of a non-English speaking, underdeveloped African country and I could find very little info on him in English. We won't be able to find decent info on many ambassadors but they still do, at least, deserve their stubs or whatever. If I recall correctly, all professional atheletes are "inherently notable". To say that they are and ambassadors are not would be really bizarre. - Boston (talk) 15:18, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
- I strongly disagree. Notability is useful to Wikipedia only as a proxy for our probable ability to find enough sources and to attract enough informed and interested editors to create and maintain a quality encyclopedia article. Encyclopedias are, by definition, tertiary sources. If we can find no reliable sources on a foreign ambassador, we have nothing on which to base the article and even a stub is inappropriate. Only once sources exist can we begin to attempt to write a verified, neutral biography. If such sources do not exist (and the examples make it clear that for at least some ambassadors they do not), then we can not presume that an article can be created - that is, we can presume them to be "inherently notable" in the way that we use that concept here at Wikipedia. Rossami (talk) 19:25, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
- Did I imply we should fabricate information or that normal Wikipedia rules about references, no OR, and non-POV don't apply? That certainly wasn't my intent. My point is that saying "John Doe was the Canadian ambassador to Costa Rica from 1930 - 1935" is an appropriate stub and should not be deleted if that fact is verifiable. Again, the notion that "John Doe was 1st baseman for the Boise Applepickers from 1930 - 1935" is an acceptable stub but that "John Doe was the Canadian ambassador to Costa Rica from 1930 - 1935" is not an appropriate stub is absurd. - Boston (talk) 01:13, 28 August 2008 (UTC)
- I certainly did not read your comment to make that implication. But I disagree with your conclusion. Saying that a topic is inherently notable does imply a suspension of at least the usual sourcing requirements. If all that we can verifiably write on the topic is that "John Doe was the Canadian ambassador to Costa Rica from 1930 - 1935", I do not consider that to be an acceptable stub. (Neither do I consider the baseball example to be appropriate - if we've fallen into that trap, we must eventually fix that too.) If all we can say is that one short line, our readers are better served reading it in some larger article and redirecting the title to the proper target. Stubs are acceptable when they eventually lead to decent articles. Perma-stubs, however, are bad for the encyclopedia. Rossami (talk) 02:56, 28 August 2008 (UTC)
- I would certainly agree that a one-liner on an ambassador should be merged and redirected to a list of Y-ish ambassadors, and tagged {{r with possibilities}}. Stifle (talk) 08:45, 28 August 2008 (UTC)
- I certainly did not read your comment to make that implication. But I disagree with your conclusion. Saying that a topic is inherently notable does imply a suspension of at least the usual sourcing requirements. If all that we can verifiably write on the topic is that "John Doe was the Canadian ambassador to Costa Rica from 1930 - 1935", I do not consider that to be an acceptable stub. (Neither do I consider the baseball example to be appropriate - if we've fallen into that trap, we must eventually fix that too.) If all we can say is that one short line, our readers are better served reading it in some larger article and redirecting the title to the proper target. Stubs are acceptable when they eventually lead to decent articles. Perma-stubs, however, are bad for the encyclopedia. Rossami (talk) 02:56, 28 August 2008 (UTC)
- Did I imply we should fabricate information or that normal Wikipedia rules about references, no OR, and non-POV don't apply? That certainly wasn't my intent. My point is that saying "John Doe was the Canadian ambassador to Costa Rica from 1930 - 1935" is an appropriate stub and should not be deleted if that fact is verifiable. Again, the notion that "John Doe was 1st baseman for the Boise Applepickers from 1930 - 1935" is an acceptable stub but that "John Doe was the Canadian ambassador to Costa Rica from 1930 - 1935" is not an appropriate stub is absurd. - Boston (talk) 01:13, 28 August 2008 (UTC)
- I strongly disagree. Notability is useful to Wikipedia only as a proxy for our probable ability to find enough sources and to attract enough informed and interested editors to create and maintain a quality encyclopedia article. Encyclopedias are, by definition, tertiary sources. If we can find no reliable sources on a foreign ambassador, we have nothing on which to base the article and even a stub is inappropriate. Only once sources exist can we begin to attempt to write a verified, neutral biography. If such sources do not exist (and the examples make it clear that for at least some ambassadors they do not), then we can not presume that an article can be created - that is, we can presume them to be "inherently notable" in the way that we use that concept here at Wikipedia. Rossami (talk) 19:25, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
Obituaries used to establish Notability
Sorry if this has already been discussed - I couldn't find it.
I've come across a number of situations like this where an obituary or a memorial article in a minor publication is used to justify notability. It seems to me if that person wasn't notable while living, then the memorial article or obituary should be usable to establish notability. I think it should be added to the project page. Toddst1 (talk) 13:06, 30 August 2008 (UTC)
- Only if the publication would meet the criteria used for assessing verifiability and reliable sources if they were alive. I don't think just because someone has an obituary published automatically means they are notable. --Ged UK (talk) 14:49, 30 August 2008 (UTC)
- Watch out for paid obituaries, which wouldn't qualify as independent. Many newspapers will run a detailed obituary for a non-notable person if the family pays a fee, and only a funeral home announcement if no money changes hands. Such an obituary can't be used for a source.Kww (talk) 15:09, 30 August 2008 (UTC)
Heads of organisations
I was surprised to find little guidance as to whether being head of a notable organisation might confer notability. There are a lot of ways this might happen: being Chair or MD/CEO of a national or international company; national or international charity; NGO/quango; ... Is this specifically addressed anywhere? Richard Pinch (talk) 15:53, 8 September 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, in WP:NOTINHERITED (which is an essay, admittedly, but a respected one). The short answer, as spelled out there, is that an article on the head must establish the notability of that person independently, by citing significant coverage in reliable SECONDARY sources. There is no problem, of course, mentioning them in the article on the org. if they don't have sources showing they are notable. 17:18, 8 September 2008 (UTC) (by User:UnitedStatesian )
- Got it, thanks. Richard Pinch (talk) 17:30, 8 September 2008 (UTC)
- There is not quite as much agreement on this as the previous reply indicates. In practice most sources on a company generally also deal with the CEO at that time, and vice-versa, and it is often difficult to decide on how much of the notability is independent. I'd certainly say that anyone who is CEO or the equivalent of a significant enough company is almost certain to have sufficient sources. I would not necessarily extend that to all companies in Wikipedia. The practical difficulties are a/ that most people here are not familiar with the necessary sources b/it is in practice sometimes difficult to distinguish the sources from press releases, and c/in many cases the independent notability stems from negative events and is sometimes dubious under BLP. My personal opinion is that in practice this could be best solved by a blanket statement that CEOs of companies beyond a certain level are to be considered notable as an exception, since it is always possible to find adequate V for the noncontroversial events in their career. (what level is another matter--there is obviously going to be a grey zone--my general suggested solution to grey zones is arbitrary fiat for convenience, with merges below that level, always accepting the possibility that in any one otherwise nonnotable case there might be sources for N. DGG (talk) 23:05, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
- Got it, thanks. Richard Pinch (talk) 17:30, 8 September 2008 (UTC)
Currently there seem to be two sections that deal with one event notability: One that resides into this article, and one that resides into the BLP guidelines. Both of these subsections practically state the same, but each of them has a separate set of redirects to them. Would it be an idea to merge these two sections into one large section, or at least make the texts identical? It seems rather silly we got two seperate guidelines that cover virtually the same issue. Excirial (Talk,Contribs) 19:26, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
- There is a good deal of overlap between the two. I wouldn't object to leaving the section on this page up, and removing the one from BLP1E. However, the section in BLP1E is more conservative -- it says that we simply should not have articles on one-event private persons, whereas the BIO1E rule is more of a "we should not have articles on these people if we can cover them well in the context of the original event." I could see how a close reader would prefer to leave the two up. The BLP1E rule is slightly more respectful of privacy, and the BIO1E rule is slightly more inclined towards checking notability. RayAYang (talk) 22:09, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
Notability of clergy
I tagged a bio page with a notability tag, which was removed by the page's creator. Conversation with the editor has proven fruitless thus far, but his position seems to be that 27 years as a bishop qualifies the person as notable. My question is, does the mere fact of having been a bishop make a person notable? I've looked at a couple of bishop bios, and they all seem to have more to their resumes than just their jobs (for example, one was involved in an important election; another published books of hymns, and so on). I'm getting nowhere with the editor, who has added no further information regarding notability to the article, but I'm interested in people's thoughts on this. Exploding Boy (talk) 23:19, 17 August 2008 (UTC)
- When I patrol new pages, I always 'pass' bishops as being notable as they are senior representatives of a major church (assuming that it is a major church). I would equate them to elected politicians in the sense that the represent (or claim to!) the views of a large number of people in a wide range of fora. In the UK for example, bishops are currently entitled to sit in the House of Lords and take part in legislative debates (at least for the time being). --Ged UK (talk) 10:17, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
- I found one article about a bishop that did not survive AfD but I believe most survive; not because their position makes them inherently notable but because they pass the general notability criteria — usually there is significant coverage of them in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject (e.g. newspapers). All but a few bishops will satisfy this criteria and it is probably the best criteria for us to adhere to. It avoids the need to discuss which bishops would be inherently notable based on subjective criteria (e.g. size of the church population, years in service, etc.) Accurizer (talk) 11:42, 31 August 2008 (UTC)
- If it's cited that he actually held the post, then it's almost impossible to delete Catholic or Anglican bishop via AfD. The position is/was a regional political office, so there is a little justification for it being considered inherently notable even in a non-religious context. Agree with Accurizer, it saves time not to debate the inherent notability of specific ones within the churches. Ask the editor what their plans are for expanding the article, and if it's a new editor you might point them at some of the decent bishop stubs to give them an idea of what to aim for.Horrorshowj (talk) 13:29, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- The whole situation is a bit frustrating, I'll grant, and I think it's partly because of the attractiveness of a bright-line criterion. A person is either a bishop or he isn't. If he he is you can check the box and move on. As for being head of a corporation, well, you have to decide if it's a big enough corporation, and where do you draw that line. And this applies to a number of other professions also. Let's compare four different people:
- Person A was an executive vice-president and Head of Eastern United States Operations and later of Strategic Planning for United Parcel Service. As such he had a major impact on the direction of this large and important company and impacted the lives and careers of many people.
- Person B was president of the largest bank in his small city for many years, active in community affairs, head of the state chapter of the Rotary Club, and in three years headed the annual New England United Way drive. He also commanded troops in combat as a lieutenant (field promotion), was vice-chairman of the state Democratic party and served on the state parole review board, was president of the state chapter of Amnesty International, and raised children who included a United States congressman, a federal judge, and the author of the best-selling Napoleon In Hell series of novels.
- Person C time-served and brown-nosed his way into the bishoporic of an obscure diocese in rural Indiana where he demonstrated marked incompetence and lack of energy and proceeded to drink himself into a stupor for 22 years before dying, an event that was noticed by few and regretted by none.
- Person D glad-handed his way into seat in the North Carolina State Legislature for the 1823-1824 session, where he accomplished nothing beyond a remarkably poor attendance record and was defeated for re-election as a cipher. His only other significant accomplishments in life were driving his wife to suicide and skinning a dog alive in a drunken rage. He later sank into such obscurity that his place and date of death is unknown.
- Of these, only person D is guaranteed an article (all state legislators are). Person C probably gets an article. Persons A and B certainly do not get articles. Is this right? I guess not, but it's defendable. Bright line criteria do make running the encyclopedia easier, which has some value. Herostratus (talk) 03:48, 13 June 2011 (UTC)
- The whole situation is a bit frustrating, I'll grant, and I think it's partly because of the attractiveness of a bright-line criterion. A person is either a bishop or he isn't. If he he is you can check the box and move on. As for being head of a corporation, well, you have to decide if it's a big enough corporation, and where do you draw that line. And this applies to a number of other professions also. Let's compare four different people:
Notability of athletes
I am not sure whether this is the proper forum for this point, so I apologize if this is out of place. Anyway, I wanted to comment that the criteria given for determining the notability of athletes seem to be out of line with the criteria for other walks of life. It results in counting people as "notable" who seem really trivial to me.
As an example, when viewing my former high school's "notable alumni" most of the listed people are athletes I've never heard of, who are long dead, and whose athletic careers seem to be remembered only for having existed. (That is, if you go to there own page there's little more detail about them other than the most basic biographical data to confirm what teams they played on during what years.) Thus, while they meet the special criteria for athletes, they don't seem to meet the basic criteria (i.e., the depth of coverage is not substantial).
The criteria seem much more broad for athletes than for other sorts of people, for example movie actors ("significant roles in multiple notable films") or academics ("regarded as an important figure or is widely cited by their peers or successors"). Ehb (talk) 21:00, 2 September 2008 (UTC)
- two parts of this I can quickly answer--long dead has nothing to do with it, as a basic principal is that notability is permanent--that if we can get the information we cover previous events and people from previous periods as comprehensively as the present. We are not the encyclopedia for the internet era only. Never heard of likewise -- who is equally likely to recognize people from all sports and in all countries? DGG (talk) 03:09, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
- There's still the issue of really low notability criteria for athletes compared to the rest. Any of the ten thousands athletes who participated in the Beijing Olympics could have their own article according to WP:ATHLETE, but the vast majority of them (those who didn't win anything and did not receive significant coverage) would not pass any other notability criterion and in those cases, articles created would be permanent stubs/phonebook entries/epitaphs, consisting only of really basic information. It clashes with WP:NOTDIR and most of WP:N. It's been debated again and again, but nothing has been done. Why do athletes get a free pass in Wiki?--Boffob (talk) 20:56, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
- I absolutely agree with Boffob. I have encountered numerous articles about professional athletes, many of whom played a handful of seasons and never did anything noteworthy. I consider them to be clutter and submit that the notability of athletes should be held to the same standards as any other discipline. Best, epicAdam(talk) 22:42, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
- It is true that the criterion regarding professional althletes is more inclusive than other parts of WP:BIO. However, it actually is one of my favorite provisions of WP:BIO because it is much more objective than the rest, and is a great labor-saving provision for the AfDs. In practice even someone who only played professionally for a few seasons will (almost always) have received significant amount of coverage in the national media of the country where they played. Or at least enough coverage so that the general WP:BIO provision ("he or she has been the subject of published secondary source material which is reliable, intellectually independent, and independent of the subject") will almost always be satisfied in such cases anyway. However, I do not have a particularly firm opinion about this and if a viable alternative for raising the bar is offered, I'd like to see it. Also, could you point to a few specific examples of athletes who did play professionally but who, in your opinion, should not be considered notable? Nsk92 (talk) 23:23, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
- It's nice to have a completely objective criterion, but it's just too low. If WP:ACADEMIC worked the same way, you could make perma-stubs out of every professor that ever worked at an accredited university. It just isn't enough. I don't mind professional athletes who've done a few seasons without being stars of their leagues/team (if they do pass WP:BIO, reliable sources can be found), but, for example, making bio stubs for every single member of the Algerian Olympic volleyball team (how did they fare anyway?) with nothing but name and date of birth is simply not useful. You need coverage of the individual beyond the name by a reliable source.--Boffob (talk) 00:08, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- It is true that the criterion regarding professional althletes is more inclusive than other parts of WP:BIO. However, it actually is one of my favorite provisions of WP:BIO because it is much more objective than the rest, and is a great labor-saving provision for the AfDs. In practice even someone who only played professionally for a few seasons will (almost always) have received significant amount of coverage in the national media of the country where they played. Or at least enough coverage so that the general WP:BIO provision ("he or she has been the subject of published secondary source material which is reliable, intellectually independent, and independent of the subject") will almost always be satisfied in such cases anyway. However, I do not have a particularly firm opinion about this and if a viable alternative for raising the bar is offered, I'd like to see it. Also, could you point to a few specific examples of athletes who did play professionally but who, in your opinion, should not be considered notable? Nsk92 (talk) 23:23, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
- two parts of this I can quickly answer--long dead has nothing to do with it, as a basic principal is that notability is permanent--that if we can get the information we cover previous events and people from previous periods as comprehensively as the present. We are not the encyclopedia for the internet era only. Never heard of likewise -- who is equally likely to recognize people from all sports and in all countries? DGG (talk) 03:09, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
- These are only a few examples: Alexandre Volchkov, Alexei Tezikov, Alfie Turcotte. They all happen to be hockey players, but that's because I just picked the names off the top of a list. They are representative, however, of professional athletes from all sports that have these ridiculous stubs which say really nothing of note except that they existed. If people want to find team rosters, there are plenty of sites that provide them, there's no need for Wikipedia to be a sports directory. -epicAdam(talk) 15:18, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, all of those can be expanded fairly easily. [15], [16], [17]. Generally speaking, most MLB, NBA, NFL and NHL players can be proven notable with some effort. It gets tougher with pre-Internet era players, because the sources needed aren't available for free and may not even be listed at Google News Archive. But there is material out there if you look. Zagalejo^^^ 18:12, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Those three examples have been drafted and played a number of professional seasons. I think the athlete notablility is effective. No one knows all of the athletes, but as long as they meet the WP:athlete criteria along with basic other notablility criteria (that's already been stated.) If you look at most minor league sports teams, not all the athletes have wiki pages, in most cases only the veteran players or players playing down a level are. I don't know the whole roster of the New York Yankees but that doesn't mean those players aren't notable because I don't know.Bhockey10 (talk) 17:02, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
- The issue is not whether the articles could be expanded, but rather if they should even exist at all. If simply being mentioned in the papers is the standard for notability, then anybody could be notable at any time. That's why it is not the only standard used to determine whether some one is in fact notable. The general notability guideline for bios are: "The person has received a notable award or honor, or has been often nominated for them" and "The person has made a widely recognized contribution that is part of the enduring historical record in his or her specific field." I don't understand why this standard can not also be applied to athletes. Wikipedia should only have articles on athletes who achieved something, not those that simply got their name in paper after being signed, released or traded. Best, epicAdam(talk) 21:22, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- You're overlooking the basic notability criterion: "A person is presumed to be notable if he or she has been the subject of published[3] secondary source material which is reliable, intellectually independent,[4] and independent of the subject." That's all that's needed, really. (In practice, it's often more complicated than that. But a few newspaper articles are usually enough to save any topic from deletion.) Zagalejo^^^ 21:30, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Blurbs on the sports page about who was traded where is not an appropriate measure for the notability of an athlete. Like I said, if that were the only criterion then anybody could be notable. For example, if I got hit by a car and several newspapers published information about the accident and mentioned my name, that alone would not make me notable, right? I just think that it's too easy to say "Well, Foo was mentioned in the paper, so he must be important" and ultimately clutters Wikipedia with worthless information in violation of WP:IINFO. Best, epicAdam(talk) 21:46, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Well, there is a fine line between what violates WP:NOT#NEWS and what doesn't. Sometimes you have to use common sense. You have to hang out at AFD for a while to get a feeling for what most people are looking for.
- I will say that coverage of modern major league athletes, even the benchwarmers, goes far beyond simple trade reports. There's a massive amount of sports information out there. Zagalejo^^^ 22:11, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Blurbs on the sports page about who was traded where is not an appropriate measure for the notability of an athlete. Like I said, if that were the only criterion then anybody could be notable. For example, if I got hit by a car and several newspapers published information about the accident and mentioned my name, that alone would not make me notable, right? I just think that it's too easy to say "Well, Foo was mentioned in the paper, so he must be important" and ultimately clutters Wikipedia with worthless information in violation of WP:IINFO. Best, epicAdam(talk) 21:46, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- You're overlooking the basic notability criterion: "A person is presumed to be notable if he or she has been the subject of published[3] secondary source material which is reliable, intellectually independent,[4] and independent of the subject." That's all that's needed, really. (In practice, it's often more complicated than that. But a few newspaper articles are usually enough to save any topic from deletion.) Zagalejo^^^ 21:30, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, all of those can be expanded fairly easily. [15], [16], [17]. Generally speaking, most MLB, NBA, NFL and NHL players can be proven notable with some effort. It gets tougher with pre-Internet era players, because the sources needed aren't available for free and may not even be listed at Google News Archive. But there is material out there if you look. Zagalejo^^^ 18:12, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- These are only a few examples: Alexandre Volchkov, Alexei Tezikov, Alfie Turcotte. They all happen to be hockey players, but that's because I just picked the names off the top of a list. They are representative, however, of professional athletes from all sports that have these ridiculous stubs which say really nothing of note except that they existed. If people want to find team rosters, there are plenty of sites that provide them, there's no need for Wikipedia to be a sports directory. -epicAdam(talk) 15:18, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Out-indenting because I'm not replying directly to any of the previous discussions. There really isn't any reason to have a special inclusion guideline for athletes. No one should be creating articles about anyone until they've found multiple, reliable, third-party sources discussing that person. Once that's done, WP:N is satisfied. People have gotten into this really bad habit of trying to guess whether sources are available, and that isn't the standard we should be applying. What WP:ATHLETE should have are only the exclusion criteria: high-school quarterbacks don't get articles, even if there are multiple write-ups in their local papers. The guy that bowls a 300 at the Bowl-O-Rama doesn't get an article, even if every paper in the county had a paragraph about it. That's useful stuff. Claiming that editors don't need to have sources for articles about athletes is neither desirable nor useful.Kww (talk) 21:38, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- For info, I have made an attempt at clarifying the amateur sport issue. The original wording ("Competitors who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports") allowed for articles on players who have played at the top level of cricket in Israel, rugby in El Salvador or football in American Samoa. This was clearly not right. I have thus clarified it to state ("i.e. sports where there is no fully-professional league anywhere"), as this means that if there is a fully professional league elsewhere, and they are not playing in it, this is likely because they are not actually good enough (and in rare cases where they are good enough but haven't made the move, they will probably have represented their country, which also qualifies them). пﮟოьεԻ 57 08:15, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- I have reverted this change, partly because there is no consensus to make it but mostly because it's bad form to tinker with policies and guidelines just because you're arguing in an AfD and the rules don't say quite what you want them to say. Let the AfD run its course, then we can discuss your proposed change. Reyk YO! 09:19, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- Reyk, perhaps you could also undo this change which was also made without consensus, no I didn't think so EP 16:33, 25 September 2008 (UTC)
- I'm almost always involved in AfDing non-notable athletes (partyly due to the moronic rule that IPs can remove WP:PRODs from articles without explanation), so there would never be a good time to make the change. This has been discussed many times before, with clear consensus (at least from WP:FOOTY members) that it is being misused by non-specialists in AfD debates. пﮟოьεԻ 57 22:07, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- That doesn't really help. If this is an ongoing debate and there's likely to always be an open discussion about it, then the time to make a change is after discussing it here or at WP:FOOTY and gaining a mandate from the community. Not off your own bat. You're on a mission to delete all the LoI player articles and the rule doesn't say precisely what you want it to say, so you took it upon yourself to change it. You did so even though four relevant AfD discussions demonstrate no consensus for this change (2 deletes, one keep and one still being debated), before discussing it here and within about a quarter of an hour of raising it at WP:FOOTY, before anyone's had a chance to reply, and where it now turns out you don't have the consensus you claimed to have. I think you can understand why I think that sort of behaviour is a bit dodgy. As for the issue itself I think that, for the purposes of WP:ATHLETE, semi-professional leagues should usually count as fully professional ones. Amateur leagues I think also should be OK even if pro leagues exist in other countries, so long as they are of a competitive standard against those pro leagues. By this I don't mean they have to consistently win, just not get thrashed every time. That would exclude your extreme example of the Israeli cricket teams (which would get hammered by the likes of Australia) while still leaving the door open for players in significant amateur leagues. Reyk YO! 01:44, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
- Hmm. Wouldn't your change exclude an athlete who was on a medal-winning olympic team in soccer but did not play professionally? There are lots of professional soccer clubs (particularly in the U.K.), but somebody who did not play professionally but won an olympic medal in soccer (or a World Cup medal) should be considered notable. More generally, your change would create a certain asymetry between sports that have both professional leagues and high level amateur competitions (e.g. olympic sports) and sports that do not have professional leagues at all. For example, soccer has both professional and high level amateur contests while, say, weightlifting does not have professional leagues but is an olympic sport. The currently used phrase "competed at the highest level" would appear to include participation (even without winning) in olympic games and world championships. So it would seem that your change would make a weightlifter who participated in the olympic games notable but somebody who played in a World Cup (or olympic) soccer team but did not play soccer professionally not notable. Or am I misreading this? Nsk92 (talk) 22:31, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- I have reverted this change, partly because there is no consensus to make it but mostly because it's bad form to tinker with policies and guidelines just because you're arguing in an AfD and the rules don't say quite what you want them to say. Let the AfD run its course, then we can discuss your proposed change. Reyk YO! 09:19, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- For info, I have made an attempt at clarifying the amateur sport issue. The original wording ("Competitors who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports") allowed for articles on players who have played at the top level of cricket in Israel, rugby in El Salvador or football in American Samoa. This was clearly not right. I have thus clarified it to state ("i.e. sports where there is no fully-professional league anywhere"), as this means that if there is a fully professional league elsewhere, and they are not playing in it, this is likely because they are not actually good enough (and in rare cases where they are good enough but haven't made the move, they will probably have represented their country, which also qualifies them). пﮟოьεԻ 57 08:15, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- I think anyone who has represented their country is by definition notable, and as far as I'm aware, this has always been considered to be the case. Perhaps this needs adding as a third criteria, seperate to the amateur sport part? пﮟოьεԻ 57 22:39, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- Possibly. In fact the entire WP:ATHLETE section probably needs a bit of expansion. I don't think that everybody agrees that merely having competed in the olympic games makes one notable. E.g. see comments of Boffob regarding the Algerian Olympic volleyball team in this thread above. Nsk92 (talk) 23:02, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- I think WP:ATHLETE is not sufficient to cover the whole sports world. Football (soccer) has obviously much more coverage than badminton in a worldwide basis, so I think we should instead rewrite Wikipedia:Notability (sports) and build a larger consensus in order to make it finally and officially accepted by the Wikipedia community. --Angelo (talk) 00:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
- Possibly. In fact the entire WP:ATHLETE section probably needs a bit of expansion. I don't think that everybody agrees that merely having competed in the olympic games makes one notable. E.g. see comments of Boffob regarding the Algerian Olympic volleyball team in this thread above. Nsk92 (talk) 23:02, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- I think anyone who has represented their country is by definition notable, and as far as I'm aware, this has always been considered to be the case. Perhaps this needs adding as a third criteria, seperate to the amateur sport part? пﮟოьεԻ 57 22:39, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
- I believe top amateur level is generally held to be international competition, not merely highest in country with the US being a self-appointed exception to the rule. I have to admit once upon a time I had major issues with this guideline as well, until someone made an argument for it I couldn't really counter in good faith: Which makes wikipedia a more comprehensive reference, a)we have every player who's ever been in the major leagues or b)We have every player from the majors that most of the community feels is notable? Looking at the olympics, do we really want notability to be decided based on the country with the most internet connections? Horrorshowj (talk) 10:07, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I thought I had added this earlier... there is an essay on college football notability at CFB:N that you may want to check out and add to the discussion. The essay contains links to discussion libraries on the topic of notability of players and coaches, as well as other topics.--Paul McDonald (talk) 20:33, 11 September 2008 (UTC)
When we hit 100,000 low quality articles related to athletes, we split those from Wikipedia and create WikiSports or something that pleases sports fans. Simple ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦ 03:59, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
Please review and comment on the following essay: Wikipedia:WikiProject College football/Amateur.--Paul McDonald (talk) 04:49, 6 October 2008 (UTC)
Notability of FAI league players
As can be seen here in an AfD WP:ATHLETE is being used as a reason to delete a professional footballer who plays for Cork City F.C. by stating that it is not a fully professional league. This is IMO wrong and needs to be changed to accomodate all the professional players that play in this league. So I am just opening this discussion up for suggestions on how to remedy this problem. BigDuncTalk 09:28, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- There was a similar proposal at WP:FOOTYN but it has not been accepted. пﮟოьεԻ 57 16:10, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I would think that the rules need adapting to allow them to be included. I would say this needs changing for any nation"to allow players from its top division to be included but particularly in the case of an english speaking country. I believe football fans from Ireland are likely to come to english wikipedia and look up their favourite players, and that information on them should be here. These teams may not always be fully professional but they are able to qualify for and compete in the UEFA Cup and UEFA Champions League and perhaps the criteria should include allowing players on teams who able to qualify for these competitions, i.e the highest division in each European nation. I don't wish to actively encourage thousands of articles about semi-professional players but I don't think they need deleteing if someone has gone to the effort of making a decent, and by that i mean sufficiently sourced, article. Basement12 (T.C) 16:33, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I can see two problems with that immediately. The first is that in most countries, almost any club can qualify for the UEFA Cup by winning their domestic cup - so even Bury Town can qualify for Europe. The second is that in very small countries (e.g. Andorra or San Marino), players who play in the top division are not notable by any stretch of the imagination. A sensible solution would be for players who have played either in a fully professional league, or for a fully professional club in the top division of a national league. пﮟოьεԻ 57 16:43, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Firstly if one of these small teams did win a cup I think that would be notable enough in itself and the related press coverage would be able to fully source and confer notability (are you suggesting by the way that we delete Bury Town's players :)?), but I did say only the top division and only if articles were sufficiently sourced. Ireland is clearly a slightly different case however, due to this being the english speaking wikipedia and thus, if you like, being their version. If such a thing as Andorran wikipedia existed I think it would be perfectly acceptable to have all players from the Andorran top division on there. Basement12 (T.C) 16:54, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Surely only having players from English-speaking countries is systematic bias? Anyway, what do you think of my proposal? пﮟოьεԻ 57 19:30, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- It would depend how many teams in the league would be included (I don't know how many Irish teams are pro). Surely allowing players from some teams in a league and not others would also be considered bias and cause disputes? This is why I made my initial suggestion. Basement12 (T.C) 19:42, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- It varies from league to league. In Ireland 7 or 8 of the 12 are fully professional. In Estonia it's six from 10. I'm not sure it would be bias - the players at the professional clubs are likely to be better than those at the semi-pro ones (as the full time clubs are likely to attract the best players by being able to pay more). пﮟოьεԻ 57 20:09, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I don't it would be bias either, the for the same reasons you give, I merely think that someone who wants an article on one of the other teams would claim bias. I would suggest it makes more sense to simply allow articles on players whose leagues are mostly (>50% say) professional to prevent any such problems. I don't think having articles on the 100 or so players in the rest of the Irish league for example would be any real problem. Basement12 (T.C) 20:33, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I think semi-pro competitions should count the same as fully professional ones for the purposes of WP:ATHLETE. Reyk YO! 20:44, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- That is a very very very bad idea. Clubs down to the 11th level in England are semi-professional. Is the plumber who gets paid £20 a week to play in the Suffolk and Ipswich league notable? пﮟოьεԻ 57 20:46, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Probably not, fair enough; although if said plumber had enough coverage in the press he'd meet WP:BIO with or without WP:ATHLETE. And that's the whole point. Players from the top league in countries like Ireland (and even smaller countries like Malta) do get significant coverage in independent sources. People in these debates are brandishing the (badly broken) WP:ATHLETE guideline like a club, as though it trumps the more basic and general WP:BIO, when in fact it's the other way round. Reyk YO! 21:00, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, but some people brandish around Ghits like they prove WP:N when upon closer investigation none of the articles actually mention any details about the player beyond mentioning his name in the team lineup or list of goalscorers. Let's face it, with the almost total globalisation of football and players moving abroad all the time, any player who is still playing for a semi-professional club is quite probably not very good. Does a quirk of geography (being born in a very small country) make someone with poor to average football talent notable? I'm happy to accept that players playing for fully pro clubs (regardless of the rest of the league) are notable, but not for semi-pro ones. пﮟოьεԻ 57 21:04, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Probably not, fair enough; although if said plumber had enough coverage in the press he'd meet WP:BIO with or without WP:ATHLETE. And that's the whole point. Players from the top league in countries like Ireland (and even smaller countries like Malta) do get significant coverage in independent sources. People in these debates are brandishing the (badly broken) WP:ATHLETE guideline like a club, as though it trumps the more basic and general WP:BIO, when in fact it's the other way round. Reyk YO! 21:00, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- That is a very very very bad idea. Clubs down to the 11th level in England are semi-professional. Is the plumber who gets paid £20 a week to play in the Suffolk and Ipswich league notable? пﮟოьεԻ 57 20:46, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I think semi-pro competitions should count the same as fully professional ones for the purposes of WP:ATHLETE. Reyk YO! 20:44, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I don't it would be bias either, the for the same reasons you give, I merely think that someone who wants an article on one of the other teams would claim bias. I would suggest it makes more sense to simply allow articles on players whose leagues are mostly (>50% say) professional to prevent any such problems. I don't think having articles on the 100 or so players in the rest of the Irish league for example would be any real problem. Basement12 (T.C) 20:33, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- It varies from league to league. In Ireland 7 or 8 of the 12 are fully professional. In Estonia it's six from 10. I'm not sure it would be bias - the players at the professional clubs are likely to be better than those at the semi-pro ones (as the full time clubs are likely to attract the best players by being able to pay more). пﮟოьεԻ 57 20:09, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- It would depend how many teams in the league would be included (I don't know how many Irish teams are pro). Surely allowing players from some teams in a league and not others would also be considered bias and cause disputes? This is why I made my initial suggestion. Basement12 (T.C) 19:42, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Surely only having players from English-speaking countries is systematic bias? Anyway, what do you think of my proposal? пﮟოьεԻ 57 19:30, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Firstly if one of these small teams did win a cup I think that would be notable enough in itself and the related press coverage would be able to fully source and confer notability (are you suggesting by the way that we delete Bury Town's players :)?), but I did say only the top division and only if articles were sufficiently sourced. Ireland is clearly a slightly different case however, due to this being the english speaking wikipedia and thus, if you like, being their version. If such a thing as Andorran wikipedia existed I think it would be perfectly acceptable to have all players from the Andorran top division on there. Basement12 (T.C) 16:54, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I can see two problems with that immediately. The first is that in most countries, almost any club can qualify for the UEFA Cup by winning their domestic cup - so even Bury Town can qualify for Europe. The second is that in very small countries (e.g. Andorra or San Marino), players who play in the top division are not notable by any stretch of the imagination. A sensible solution would be for players who have played either in a fully professional league, or for a fully professional club in the top division of a national league. пﮟოьεԻ 57 16:43, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I would think that the rules need adapting to allow them to be included. I would say this needs changing for any nation"to allow players from its top division to be included but particularly in the case of an english speaking country. I believe football fans from Ireland are likely to come to english wikipedia and look up their favourite players, and that information on them should be here. These teams may not always be fully professional but they are able to qualify for and compete in the UEFA Cup and UEFA Champions League and perhaps the criteria should include allowing players on teams who able to qualify for these competitions, i.e the highest division in each European nation. I don't wish to actively encourage thousands of articles about semi-professional players but I don't think they need deleteing if someone has gone to the effort of making a decent, and by that i mean sufficiently sourced, article. Basement12 (T.C) 16:33, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Does a quirk of geography (being born in a very small country) make someone with poor to average political talent notable? Answer is yes if they reach the peak of their nations government. Anyway we're getting somewhat off topic. How about my proposal of allowing articles where greater than 50% of the players league is professional, thus allowing the problematic Irish and Estonian leagues? Basement12 (T.C) 21:33, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Just a pedantic comment - the equivalent of being in government is being in the national team, which there is 100% consensus on. Anyway, I'm not happy with that proposal. Imagine, if you will, a league such as the SPL, where two clubs are massive and fully professional and the rest are tiny semi pro clubs (I'm not sure, but I think the Moldovan league is similar - there is one big pro club (Sheriff Tiraspol) and the rest are semi pro). The players at the two big clubs are likely to be notable, those at the others are not, but the 50% criteria means the players at the big clubs aren't notable. Why not just accept the WP:FOOTYN criteria (which has already been through the rigmarole of approval by the WP:FOOTY people), which says that if their club is fully pro, then they get an article? пﮟოьεԻ 57 22:06, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I know, i was asking a pedantic question myself, but you get the idea. That proposal is fine if people accept that players for the other 4/5 teams in the LOI don't get articles, i'm just not sure they will. I was also led to believe that the criteria were, and i'm quoting from a project member here, "comprehensively rejected when proposed to the wider WP community". I think any players for big clubs in small leagues, such as the Moldovan league, would end up playing in european competitions, even if just the qualifying rounds. This should, though not exactly, be enough to satisfy WP:ATHLETE criteria, particularly if it was endorsed as suitable criteria for inclusion by WP:FOOTY. Either way something concrete needs to be decided and laid down in some rules that are universially accepted and applied. My preference is to be as inclusionist as possible, my thinking being that as Wikipedia grows in becomes more acceptable to incude more and more things. Its not like all of these players are complete nobodies who no one will ever have heard of (of course some might be). Basement12 (T.C) 22:32, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- I would agree with the ...50% of the players league is professional... proposal that was laid out by Basement12. BigDuncTalk 11:30, 18 September 2008 (UTC)
- I know, i was asking a pedantic question myself, but you get the idea. That proposal is fine if people accept that players for the other 4/5 teams in the LOI don't get articles, i'm just not sure they will. I was also led to believe that the criteria were, and i'm quoting from a project member here, "comprehensively rejected when proposed to the wider WP community". I think any players for big clubs in small leagues, such as the Moldovan league, would end up playing in european competitions, even if just the qualifying rounds. This should, though not exactly, be enough to satisfy WP:ATHLETE criteria, particularly if it was endorsed as suitable criteria for inclusion by WP:FOOTY. Either way something concrete needs to be decided and laid down in some rules that are universially accepted and applied. My preference is to be as inclusionist as possible, my thinking being that as Wikipedia grows in becomes more acceptable to incude more and more things. Its not like all of these players are complete nobodies who no one will ever have heard of (of course some might be). Basement12 (T.C) 22:32, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
The issue is that WP:ATHLETE is being misapplied. It cannot be used to deem athletes non-notable who otherwise meet WP:BIO; so you cannot say "Well, the article is pretty well sourced but the athlete fails WP:ATHLETE so they're non-notable". It doesn't work that way. I can recall an extraordinary recent AfD where someone actually pointed out two newspaper articles that satisfied WP:BIO but argued to delete because of WP:ATHLETE. What it can and should be used for is to extend notability to some sportspeople who have weaker sourcing than WP:BIO demands. Suppose we have an athlete who we can verify has competed in a league or competition that satisfies WP:ATHLETE, but for some reason finding substantial coverage is difficult. Maybe we can only find their career stats and passing mentions in match reports, things like that, but not enough to meet WP:BIO on its own. We accept the athlete is notable anyway on the assumption that better sourcing in the future is certainly possible.
Now, the recent spate of AfDs for soccer players (mostly Irish but other countries as well) who do not meet the bit in WP:ATHLETE about competing in a fully professional league has highlighted the shortcomings of the guideline. It has been ridiculously easy to properly source many of these articles, thus satisfying WP:BIO and making WP:ATHLETE irrelevant. It is clear that, for most countries, the top soccer league will be covered in the media in enough depth to substantiate articles on many of the players, whether the league is professional, semi-pro or even an amateur league. I suggest we stop the pro v non-pro quibbling and just say that if a substantial proportion of players in a league or competition (a half or two thirds seems about right to me, but I definitely don't want any squabbling about exact numbers) meet WP:BIO then WP:ATHLETE should extend notability to the remaining players who'd otherwise fall through the cracks. Reyk YO! 03:59, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
- Exactly. BIO trumps ATHLETE. Athlete provides additional criteria if BIO can't be met by notable sources. --Ged UK (talk) 08:12, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
- I have sometimes made this argument, that if a certain percentage are notable, it is easier and safer to assume the others are, but I have always thought that the figure should be at least 80%, and probably higher in cases involving people. To make everyone in a group notable because half the people are defies logic--one could just as easily say that one should make them all unnotable because half of the are unnotable. We need such a high percentage that that probability of errors from trying to make individual decisions is greater than that of unnotable people being admitted by a fixed rule. Alternatively, that the trouble of the discussions isn't worth it. I expect a certain amount of trouble with the discussion now, in the beginning--the work should ease off as standards become accepted. I point out that at most recent afd discussions it is thought that the standards for athletes from the workgroup are considerably too lenient. Myself, I usually have no particular opinion on people in this area--I am just talking generally.
- I agree that something should change. The attempt to delete all these Irish players, simply because some teams in the league are not fully-professional seems to be an attempt to follow the rules to the letter, rather than applying WP:CS. Other countries come to mind, such as New Zealand. In theory WP:BIO trumps WP:ATHLETE but we've had several AfDs where a group from WP:FOOTY come in and insist the article should be deleted anyway, despite national media references. In one recent AfD, we had hundreds of recent newspaper articles about a player who had signed for a Premier league team, including many newspapers articles about this player in many countries newspapers (including my local rag in North America), and still engough people proclaimed that they didn't meet WP:ATHLETE that the article was still deleted! (and not surprisingly recreated a few weeks later, with the player regularily starting in the Premiere League). Nfitz (talk) 21:30, 28 September 2008 (UTC)
- It's a good idea to remember that WP:V, WP:NOR and WP:NPOV trump everything. Ty 00:45, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- If the FAI League of Ireland is not right for Wikipedia, then surely GAA is even less so. Every single GAA player is amateur.--86.41.70.226 (talk) 16:32, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, by one of the strange quirks of WP:ATHLETE they pass if they are playing at the highest level. If an athlete competes at the highest level of an amateur sport (where no pro league exists), they pass this guideline. Where as (it is claimed) because there are "fully pro soccer leagues" in other countries, Irish soccer players fail. It's actually this type of quirk that this discussion was opened to address. As with Tyrenius's point however, this "problem" is already solved by virtue that WP:BIO is "hierarchically superior" to WP:ATHLETE. IE: A GAA player is NOT automatically notable by virtue of passing ATHLETE - because without sufficient coverage he wouldn't make it past BIO. Similarly, a soccer player is not automatically non-notable by virtue of failing ATHLETE - if he has already passed BIO in terms of coverage and the other general notability criteria. In short, as others have noted, WP:ATHLETE doesn't trump the general notability criteria. Either "positively" or "negatively". Guliolopez (talk) 15:17, 16 October 2008 (UTC)
WP:Athlete: 1,712 soccer player articles created in 2 months
Facts:
- 1,712 soccer player articles created in 2 months.
- Average of 28 new soccer player articles every day.
- 32,094 low quality soccer player articles on Wikipedia.
- 33 countries monitored for only soccer. Other countries and other sports not included.
Date | England | Scotland | Brazil | Italy | Argentina | France | Germany | Spain | Netherlands | Serbia | Others | TOTAL |
07/30/08 | 6,695 | 2,253 | 2,413 | 1,379 | 1,337 | 1,572 | 1,155 | 1,087 | 933 | 635 | 10,923 | 30,382 |
09/30/08 | 7,021 | 2,353 | 2,478 | 1,408 | 1,387 | 1,672 | 1,296 | 1,142 | 963 | 674 | 11,700 | 32,094 |
Notes:
- Over 100,000 retired and active professional athletes from various sports are entitled to a low quality Wikipedia article.
- Other sports are not being monitored.
EconomistBR 00:38, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- WP:ATHLETE is being used to cull articles about players that have not met a certain level of achievement (playing in a fully professional league). If you do away with WP:ATHLETE, there will be many more articles created because players in semi-professional and even amateur leagues have significant coverage in reliable sources (at least in English-speaking countries). I think the better course of action is to refine WP:ATHLETE if needed and to try to improve some of those 32,000 articles if they really bother you so much. Jogurney (talk) 01:30, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- If there is substantial coverage in reliable secondary sources then WP:BIO is met, and the athlete is notable and entitled to an article, end of story. WP:ATHLETE cannot be used to "trump" that and declare non-notability, although it has been misused that way in the past. Reyk YO! 01:42, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- WP:BIO, per notability, was meant to mean: "worthy of notice"; that is, "significant, interesting, or unusual enough to deserve attention or to be recorded."[1] Very few athletes meet that. Most athletes are simply just athletes.
- But I am not here to argue I just want to inform the numbers and get the reaction about them. I don't expect or hope for change. EconomistBR 03:52, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- "simply athletes" but that's what an athlete is notable for in the first place--any additional coverage he gets for his personal affairs is incidental to his notability as an athlete or nobody would be interested enough. Analogously, politicians are notable as politicians, and only have to be notable as politicians; musicians are notable as musicians, etc.... One profession is enough for notability. and WP is the encycopedia of notable subjects, not really really notable subjects known to anybody anyway. If it were limited that way, nobody woulds have heard of us either. :) DGG (talk) 00:32, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
- If there is substantial coverage in reliable secondary sources then WP:BIO is met, and the athlete is notable and entitled to an article, end of story. WP:ATHLETE cannot be used to "trump" that and declare non-notability, although it has been misused that way in the past. Reyk YO! 01:42, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- WP:ATHLETE is being used to cull articles about players that have not met a certain level of achievement (playing in a fully professional league). If you do away with WP:ATHLETE, there will be many more articles created because players in semi-professional and even amateur leagues have significant coverage in reliable sources (at least in English-speaking countries). I think the better course of action is to refine WP:ATHLETE if needed and to try to improve some of those 32,000 articles if they really bother you so much. Jogurney (talk) 01:30, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- Comment Y'know, some see a problem with this... I think it's great! Wikipedia is not about nothing...WP:NOTHING.--Paul McDonald (talk) 01:52, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
Proposed modification
I agree with WP:BIO#Family for the most part, as it nicely jives with the essay, WP:NOTINHERITED, however I wish to propose a slight modification.
Currently this section reads:
"Being related to a notable person confers no degree of notability upon that person."
I propose:
"Being related to a notable person in itself confers no degree of notability upon that person."
My reasoning: Many famous people are in fact famous almost exclusively due to their parentage. There are many examples one could find (e.g. Chelsea Clinton, Julian Lennon, Paris Hilton, Prince Harry, Roger S. Baum, etc., etc.), however what separates the examples that meet WP:BIO from those that do not is the existence of notable factors beyond or in addition to their parentage. People who are famous partially for reasons of parentage may sometimes be conferred additional notability by their parentage. John Lennon's sons, for example, are often appreciated by fans of John Lennon's music due to their musical similarities. L. Frank Baum's descendents similarly have gained a degree of legitimacy in their literary works related to the Oz series arguably due solely to reasons of inheritance (see List of Oz books#Alternate Oz). This proposed modification may sound overly pedantic but it's a simple change and I believe it is more precise. Thoughts? -Thibbs (talk) 19:09, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
- More support for my proposition is that it would then agree with the following line from this relevant Wikipedia project space essay:
- "the fact that [the subject in question] ha[s] famous relatives is not, in and of itself, sufficient to justify an independent article" (emphasis added).
- Essentially, then, my proposition seeks to gain consensus for this seemingly minor point from a (less official) essay so that it can be included in the (more official) guideline. Does anybody object to this? -Thibbs (talk) 19:54, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
- Well it seems like everyone here supports this so that's good enough for me. I've made the change per WP:SILENCE. -Thibbs (talk) 18:47, 25 September 2008 (UTC)
I think something needs to be added to clarify that it means the person isn't notable enough for an article. Otherwise, it could be used as a reason to delete the names of a notable person's non-notable parents, spouse, and children. All articles would then eventually contain almost identical personal life sections: "Born to a mother and father in New York, Famous Person had two siblings. Person later married a woman with whom he had two children." Maybe a sentence could be added that says: Therefore, an article should not be created about someone based merely on their relation to a notable person. Ariadne55 (talk) 02:12, 17 October 2008 (UTC)
- Notability doesn't affect whether a person may be mentioned in an article about someone or something else; it only affects whether that person himself may be the subject of an article. The driver of John F. Kennedy's car in Dallas might merit a mention by name in an article about the assassination, but that doesn't mean he qualifies for an article on his own. Rklear (talk) 23:30, 2 November 2008 (UTC)
- This is mostly correct, but there are exceptions. For example, various articles about universities have lists of notable alumni, and, similarly, many pages about towns/villages/etc include lists of notable people who were born there. While it is not specifically spelled out anywhere, I think that in those kinds of cases the people mentioned need to be notable themselves in the sense defined by WP:BIO or one of the other notability guidelines. Nsk92 (talk) 23:39, 2 November 2008 (UTC)
Notability of Royalty
This came up when the birth of Emma Tallulah Behn was placed in 2008. I removed her birth because a criteria has been established for person to have 10 foreign language articles before a death was appropriate in the article and I applied it to births also. But as I started thinking about it more in became a question to me if she, and the other 3 babies in Category:2008 births, should have articles at all. All 4 of these babies are notable for one thing only, having parents/grandparents who are royalty. In the guide about arguements to avoid in deletion discussions it says that:
- Family members of celebrities also must meet Wikipedia's notability criteria on their own merits - the fact that they have famous relatives is not, in and of itself, sufficient to justify an independent article. Note that this also includes newborn babies of celebrities: although such births typically receive a flurry of press coverage, this testifies to the notability of the parent, not the child. Ordinarily, the child of a celebrity parent should only have their own independent article if and when it can be reliably sourced that they have done something significant and notable in their own right, and would thereby merit an independent article even if they didn't have famous parents.
None of these 4 have done anything in their short lives that would make them notable in their own right. So my question is, should these princesses have independent articles or should they be redirects to their parents articles which have established notability? Jons63 (talk) 12:38, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- I have also brought this issue up at WikiProject Royalty. __meco (talk) 12:50, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- It depends how far up the pecking order the royal family member is. In my viewpoint: royals are inherently notable if they are a monarch, children of a monarch, and grandchildren of the monarch. In this case, they are senior members of the Swedish royal family (the eldest is 5th in line to he throne I believe), which I believes gives them inherent notability. Though I'm not a fan of pages for certain royals and nobles, the children of a senior royal is grounds enough for an article, and enough suitable information has been provided to establish notability in their own right. I draw your attention to Princess Louise of Wessex as one example, and James, Viscount Severn as another: further back in the line of succession than these Princesses (albeit for different countries). PeterSymonds (talk) 16:05, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- But Louise and James have royal titles (well, they don't use them, but they have a legal right to them). I'd say that titled royalty almost always is inherently notable. These Norwegian girls are not princesses. Their only merits are that they are grandchildren of a monarch and that they are close to the top of the order of succession. But then again, what's Autumn Phillips's merits, apart from being the wife of a grandchild of a monarch and being the wife of someone close to the top of the order of succession? Granted, there's more to say about a 30-year-old than about an infant, but clearly her marriage is the only thing that makes her notable. (Also, this is somewhat related to the ongoing notability RFC, as all these seem to satisfy the general WP:N requirement of "significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject", so it's a matter of whether or not specific guidelines should be able to override that.) -- Jao (talk) 16:19, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- So children of sons of the monarch should have articles, children of daughters should not? That is one place you could draw the line, but it seems an odd one to me. --Tango (talk) 20:53, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- But Louise and James have royal titles (well, they don't use them, but they have a legal right to them). I'd say that titled royalty almost always is inherently notable. These Norwegian girls are not princesses. Their only merits are that they are grandchildren of a monarch and that they are close to the top of the order of succession. But then again, what's Autumn Phillips's merits, apart from being the wife of a grandchild of a monarch and being the wife of someone close to the top of the order of succession? Granted, there's more to say about a 30-year-old than about an infant, but clearly her marriage is the only thing that makes her notable. (Also, this is somewhat related to the ongoing notability RFC, as all these seem to satisfy the general WP:N requirement of "significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject", so it's a matter of whether or not specific guidelines should be able to override that.) -- Jao (talk) 16:19, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- In my opinion, monarch = yes, grandchild of monarch = no, child of monarch = maybe depending on the title(s) assumed at birth. Position in line to the throne is speculation - it's dependent on too many potentially intervening factors over the years to be evidence of inherent notability (though it would certainly be enough to support a reference in some other article).
News coverage that amounts to 'A was born to B and C' does not establish notability no matter how many newspapers print it. That's not "significant" coverage of the person's accomplishments or life. Rossami (talk) 17:56, 1 October 2008 (UTC)- Position in the line of succession isn't speculation, it can change over time, sure, but how it is at the moment is absolute.--Tango (talk) 20:53, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- It's not that their position in the succession is speculative - as you say, that's relatively stable. What's speculative is whether or not that position will ever result in the person becoming the notable monarch. Too many things could intervene to move the person up, down or even out of the line of succession. Being in the line of succession could be an interesting fact in an article about a person who is already notable for other reasons and could be appropriate in an article that is about the line of succession but merely being in the line of succession is not sufficient all by itself to make a person inherently notable. At least, not in my opinion. Sorry I wasn't clearer before. Rossami (talk) 21:40, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- No-one that isn't in direct line (or is next in line after someone in direct line with no children yet) is really expected to ascend to the throne. They're still talked about in the press constantly just because they're in the royal family, not because anyone expects them to be monarch. --Tango (talk) 22:06, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- It's not that their position in the succession is speculative - as you say, that's relatively stable. What's speculative is whether or not that position will ever result in the person becoming the notable monarch. Too many things could intervene to move the person up, down or even out of the line of succession. Being in the line of succession could be an interesting fact in an article about a person who is already notable for other reasons and could be appropriate in an article that is about the line of succession but merely being in the line of succession is not sufficient all by itself to make a person inherently notable. At least, not in my opinion. Sorry I wasn't clearer before. Rossami (talk) 21:40, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- Position in the line of succession isn't speculation, it can change over time, sure, but how it is at the moment is absolute.--Tango (talk) 20:53, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- In my opinion, monarch = yes, grandchild of monarch = no, child of monarch = maybe depending on the title(s) assumed at birth. Position in line to the throne is speculation - it's dependent on too many potentially intervening factors over the years to be evidence of inherent notability (though it would certainly be enough to support a reference in some other article).
- Being a pop star is not a hereditary position, being a member of the royal family is. That's the big difference. The grandchild of a monarch is going to be followed by the press for their entire life and will have plenty said about them - the press clearly think they're notable and that's what we require. If the press think they are worth writing lots of articles about, then they're notable enough for an article here. Just that they haven't had lots of articles written about them yet doesn't matter when we can be pretty certain they will be written over time. --Tango (talk) 20:53, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- 5th in the line of succession was judged sufficient in a well attended AFD earlier this year - Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Princess Eléonore of Belgium (it also went to deletion review and was upheld there). Davewild (talk) 21:02, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- I'm afraid it's the case where formal by-the-book approach fails; it needs more common sense and less wikilawyering. To continue Tango's point above, if the baby princes are notable (they are now), then wikipedia should extend the same courtesy to children of, say, Brad Pitt (which are not). They will be in the spotlight in the foreseeable future, too. But the practice clearly separates the two classes; keep it as is. NVO (talk) 07:48, 12 October 2008 (UTC)
- I think grandchildren of a monarch will be in the spotlight more than the children of a celebrity, unless the child of the celebrity decides to become a socialite and intentionally get in the press. It's difficult to say, though - this kind of media interest is fairly new so there isn't much evidence to go on (the press are less likely to follow a grandchild that they haven't been following since birth). --Tango (talk) 12:01, 12 October 2008 (UTC)
Creative professionals--film-related
The criterion for creative professionals that states:
- "The person has created, or played a major role in co-creating, a significant or well-known work, or collective body of work, which has been the subject of an independent book or feature-length film, or of multiple independent periodical articles or review"
should be clarified to explicitly exclude feature-length films by the professional him/herself (i.e., a screenwriter who writes a film that has been made, but is not itself the subject of "an independent book or feature-length film, or of multiple independent periodical articles or review"). Thoughts? Bongomatic 09:03, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
Newspaper writers notability question
If someone has their own column in a newspaper with significant circulation, are they notable? If the newspaper is considered notable enough to have its own article, are all the writers who work there also notable for being part of that work? If a movie does well, the guy that wrote it is notable(in accordance to the current rules). Of course it is different with a newspaper, since there are a large number of writers there, and you don't know how many people actually read each section. Most people will buy the newspaper for the general news itself, and it doesn't matter who wrote it. I'm curious about a newspaper theater reviewer whose article is up for deletion, while his newspaper he works for, which has three hundred thousand subscribers, is not. At any number of sales/circulation, does a newspaper or magazine become popular enough, so that everyone with a column in it is notable? What if it was a star detective investigator, whose articles increased the sales of the paper, or an extremely popular personality whose increased sales of the publication could be confirmed to them? I suggest a rule added to clarify, to avoid having to debate this every time it comes up. Dream Focus (talk) 13:10, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- It seems to me that simply being employed by a newspaper to write (or by a broadcasting station to broadcast) articles, even under a personal byline, shouldn't be enough by itself - something additional is required, such as winning a major award (or losing a major libel action), or the column itself being much referenced elsewhere, or, perhaps, doing the job for an exceptional length of time (e.g. Alistair Cooke for his Letter from America, quite apart from any other reason). Philip Trueman (talk) 17:24, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
Amateur sports
"Competitors who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports.". I always understood (and seem to recall older discussions confirming this) that this implicitly meant "amateur sports if the sport has no professional level", meaning that e.g. amateur soccer players, amateur cyclists, amateur tennis players, ... are not considered to be automatically (word added on the 19th to avoid confusion) notable since there are professional players in this sport. However, in this afd Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Paul LaVinn and older discussions as well, some people take the opposite position: everyone competing at the highest amateur level is notable, no matter if there is a professional level or not. If consensus is that my interpretation is the correct one, I would suggest that this is made explicit in the guideline to avoid such confusion in the future. Fram (talk) 20:52, 18 November 2008 (UTC)
- comment I would argue that the guideline is very explicit and any interpretation to exclude one in preference to the other is not even implied. A cursory review of the few lines that make up WP:ATHLETE will reveal that. The only footnote references non-athletic events such as chess and poker. I do admit that I have encountered that argument from time to time and, at least as college football is concerned, written a short essay about it here.--Paul McDonald (talk) 21:54, 18 November 2008 (UTC)
- I would also disagree with your intepretation, Fram, and have had a number of discussions regarding this at Afd, particularly with regard to soccer articles. Arguments have often been advanced that soccer is a "professional sport", which just doesn't scan. There are very few sports that are exclusively "professional" or "amateur", and soccer, hockey, baseball, football, and basketball, to name just a few, are not among them.
- The existence of a professional level of a sport cannot automatically exclude from notability someone participating at the highest amateur level of that sport. If that were the case, then no amateur figure skaters could be considered notable, for example, even those it's that level of that sport that competes at the Olympics and in national and world championships. Reggie Bush would not have been considered notable while playing college ball, or Sidney Crosby while playing junior hockey - that just doesn't make sense.
- By the same token, I also wouldn't agree with the opposite position, that everyone at the highest amateur level is inherently notable even if there is a professional level. It's somewhat sport-specific, but I think it should generally be more important for someone competing at the highest amateur level to satisfy the general notability criteria where there is a professional level of the same sport. Again by example, I wouldn't say that all Canadian junior hockey players are automatically notable or all U.S. college football players. Rather, only articles for those players that can be supported by significant coverage in reliable secondary sources would make the cut, which would generally mean first-round draft picks, award winners, participants in all-star games, etc.
- This all gets tied up in the general problem of citing WP:ATHLETE for a !delete vote at Afd. While it's a useful criteria to help establish inclusion, it cannot and must not trump the general notability guidelines as a rationale for exclusion. If the subject of an article has significant coverage in reliable secondary sources, they're more than likely notable, WP:ATHLETE or any specific project's own notability criteria be darned. Mlaffs (talk) 22:49, 18 November 2008 (UTC)
- Well put, Mlaffs! I agree that not every athlete at the college level is notable, either. I think we get too choked up over WP:ATHLETE as though it were policy, when really it is just a guideline.--Paul McDonald (talk) 22:56, 18 November 2008 (UTC)
- Mlaffs, you misinterpret the guideline. Excluding amateur players from pro sports would not mean that no amateur players are notable, far from it, but that these amateur players are not automatically, by default, considered notable. When they meet WP:N, they are still notable. Fram (talk) 08:35, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
- Actualy, Fram, I think I do understand the guideline quite well, but it appears that I misunderstood the argument you were advancing. If what you just said was how the guideline were actually to be applied, I'd have no problem with that interpretation, and I'm glad to hear that's the direction you're coming from. However, your own words above that led me to a different understanding of what you meant are the crux of the problem - "... amateur soccer players ... are not considered to be notable since there are professional players in this sport." I've seen too many people argue that "are not" means "can not ever be" - in other words, that because soccer is a "professional sport", nobody competing at the highest level of amateur soccer can ever be considered notable, regardless of their ability to satisfy WP:N. Mlaffs (talk) 13:00, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
- Ah, right. I did and do mean "are not considered automatically notable", but I did not write that, which makes your interpretation quite logical. I have added the clarification to the initial post, I hope no one minds me doing that. Fram (talk) 13:59, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
- Actualy, Fram, I think I do understand the guideline quite well, but it appears that I misunderstood the argument you were advancing. If what you just said was how the guideline were actually to be applied, I'd have no problem with that interpretation, and I'm glad to hear that's the direction you're coming from. However, your own words above that led me to a different understanding of what you meant are the crux of the problem - "... amateur soccer players ... are not considered to be notable since there are professional players in this sport." I've seen too many people argue that "are not" means "can not ever be" - in other words, that because soccer is a "professional sport", nobody competing at the highest level of amateur soccer can ever be considered notable, regardless of their ability to satisfy WP:N. Mlaffs (talk) 13:00, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
- Mlaffs, you misinterpret the guideline. Excluding amateur players from pro sports would not mean that no amateur players are notable, far from it, but that these amateur players are not automatically, by default, considered notable. When they meet WP:N, they are still notable. Fram (talk) 08:35, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
Now, the problem: according to the loose interpretation of our current guideline, there would have been at least ten thousand players a year in College football in the United States who played at the "highest level of an amateur sport" in the 1940s and surrounding decades. Wouldn't it be more logical to consider as the top amateur level, according to 1946 college football season, the teams who "played on New Year's Day in the four major postseason bowl games: the Rose Bowl (near Los Angeles at Pasadena), the Sugar Bowl (New Orleans), the Orange Bowl (Miami), and the Cotton Bowl (Dallas)."? Fram (talk) 08:24, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- Why is that a problem?--Paul McDonald (talk) 11:37, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- Oh, everyone may decide for themselves if that is a problem or not. To me, it seems rather clear that those ten thousand players a year are not all notable according to our normal standards (WP:N and so on): the line for "amateur players" was added to indicate that someone competing at e.g. the Olympics is notable (so as to avoid needless AfD's), not that every college sports player is notable. If the consensus here is that yes, every college player is notable, then so be it. But I think the current text is a problem because that result of it is not the consensus, and because it would include thousands of persons who would not be notable by our usual standards but would beincluded because a carelessly worded statement was interpreted very broadly by some people. Fram (talk) 11:59, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
I agree with you 100%, Fram. Too many people get in through the WP:ATHLETE jailbreak as it is. To expand its purview to include every college football, baseball, basketball, golf, soccer, volleyball, etc. player would be just way too much. I would agree that if notability can be satisfied through standard means--independent coverage by reliable sources, then notability could be satisfied by a college player. A lot of college football players could satisfy this requirement, but those players usually go on to play in the NFL so it becomes a moot point. But see Tommie_Frazier as an example. However, to grant notability automatically through WP:Athlete to every college player is just way too much.--User:2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 12:19, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- I think the bit about the highest level of amateur sports is only intended to apply when there is no relevant professional competition. There's no point in sneaking a low-tier competition in when there is already a higher, professional, compatition just because it happens to be the highest of the amateur ones. That's ridiculous. It's supposed to apply to things like the Irish Premier League in soccer, which is not a professional league but is the highest competition in that country and whose players generally meet the WP:BIO guidelines- as several AfD discussions have determined. Of course, you can take it too far and try to apply it to, say, the Bhutan cricket team, but that's nuts as well. A useful guide might be to ask yourself, "If there was no such thing as WP:ATHLETE, would we expect the average current player in a certain league or competition to meet WP:BIO?" If the answer is yes, then that league or competition would probably fall under WP:ATHLETE. Reyk YO! 12:44, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- Why??? Why would it only be intended to apply if there is not a professional league? It doesn't say that at all. It doesn't imply that at all. A few people think it does, but that doesn't make it so. Now, if consensus is built to change that guideline, then that becomes a different ball of wax... but until it does, the guideline is what it is.--Paul McDonald (talk) 13:57, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- Why? Because it makes sense to interpret a poorly worded and ambiguous guideline in a way that's as consistent with common sense and WP:BIO as possible. I am not arguing to automatically exclude amateur competitions if there happens to also be a professional one, just that lower tier competitions should not get a free pass merely because they are the highest of the amateur ones. I am saying that most competitions need to establish a sufficiently high level of importance and notability before WP:ATHLETE can be applied to their players. It may be that college football in America does meet that level (I don't know enough about it to have a strong opinion one way or the other), but if you find yourself at many AfD discussions for college footballers that have no sourcing except for a verification that they are college footballers and your only argument to keep is that they meet your interpretation of WP:ATHLETE, then perhaps you need to interpret the guideline in the spirit in which it was intended rather than the strict wording. It was not intended to open the door for a flood of poorly sourced articles about non-notable athletes. Reyk YO! 23:20, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- I don't think that it is poorly worded. In fact, it is very, very clear. However, there appears to be a group of editors that oppose the wording and how clear it is by attempting to interpret the wording differently than it is put forth. Hey, if it should be changed by consensus then let's go ahead! But as it is written now, it is very, very clear: highest level of professional or amateur sports.--Paul McDonald (talk) 15:12, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, it is so clear that your summary is not correct: it is not the "highest level of professional or amateur sports", it is "professional sports or the highest level of amateur sports". Anyway, it does not really matter: if consensus is that the current wording is both clear enough, and excatly what was intended, then it won't change. However, if consensus would be that (your interpretation of) the current wording does not represent the consensus of what is considered to be presumed automatically notable, then we will have to change the wording or remove the amateur level line. Fram (talk) 21:27, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- WP:WABBITSEASON we disagree.--Paul McDonald (talk) 22:31, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, it is so clear that your summary is not correct: it is not the "highest level of professional or amateur sports", it is "professional sports or the highest level of amateur sports". Anyway, it does not really matter: if consensus is that the current wording is both clear enough, and excatly what was intended, then it won't change. However, if consensus would be that (your interpretation of) the current wording does not represent the consensus of what is considered to be presumed automatically notable, then we will have to change the wording or remove the amateur level line. Fram (talk) 21:27, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- I don't think that it is poorly worded. In fact, it is very, very clear. However, there appears to be a group of editors that oppose the wording and how clear it is by attempting to interpret the wording differently than it is put forth. Hey, if it should be changed by consensus then let's go ahead! But as it is written now, it is very, very clear: highest level of professional or amateur sports.--Paul McDonald (talk) 15:12, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- Why? Because it makes sense to interpret a poorly worded and ambiguous guideline in a way that's as consistent with common sense and WP:BIO as possible. I am not arguing to automatically exclude amateur competitions if there happens to also be a professional one, just that lower tier competitions should not get a free pass merely because they are the highest of the amateur ones. I am saying that most competitions need to establish a sufficiently high level of importance and notability before WP:ATHLETE can be applied to their players. It may be that college football in America does meet that level (I don't know enough about it to have a strong opinion one way or the other), but if you find yourself at many AfD discussions for college footballers that have no sourcing except for a verification that they are college footballers and your only argument to keep is that they meet your interpretation of WP:ATHLETE, then perhaps you need to interpret the guideline in the spirit in which it was intended rather than the strict wording. It was not intended to open the door for a flood of poorly sourced articles about non-notable athletes. Reyk YO! 23:20, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- Why??? Why would it only be intended to apply if there is not a professional league? It doesn't say that at all. It doesn't imply that at all. A few people think it does, but that doesn't make it so. Now, if consensus is built to change that guideline, then that becomes a different ball of wax... but until it does, the guideline is what it is.--Paul McDonald (talk) 13:57, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- $.02 worth I think that the phrase "highest level of amateur sports" has to be considered in context. If it had been intended that this "highest level" would mean competing in a high-level amateur league (such as the Big Ten or other major college sports conference), then there would be something to that effect. The phrase "competitors who have competed in a fully professional league" means that it was intended to give the fully pro leagues a bye. A similar statement referring to high level amateur leagues could have been written, but it wasn't. Thus, I don't think the "highest level of amateur sports" stretches that far. Turning now to pure opinion, I think the current policy is good. I think that we live in a Happy Meal society, where we're spoiled to expect something in return for ordinary accomplishments, like a toy for eating lunch, a trophy for being on a Little League team, or one's own personal entry on Wikipedia. And I think that sports and entertainment has a disproportionately large share of Wikipedia. I think it's ridiculous that a cancer researcher, a heart surgeon, a chemist working on alternative fuels, the operator of a charity, etc., would have to justify their notability.... but that the guy on the football team would be presumed to be automatically notable. Again, I preface all these statements with "I think"... therefore I am happy to contribute by two cents worth to this discussion. Mandsford (talk) 22:20, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
I think that these are mutually exclusive categories. 1. Fully professional leagues 2. Highest level of amateur sports refers to sports that do not have fully professional leagues. Otherwise, why have the first rule? Everyone who meets that one would have already gotten in under the second rule. What do we need to do to make this clear?--User:2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 11:01, 23 November 2008 (UTC)
- Comment Except for those who skip college (for example) and go directly to the pros, which happens in basketball and baseball a lot. Or, those who don't go on to the pros but make contributions at the amateur level. I'd bet it happens in other sports, too.--Paul McDonald (talk) 11:52, 23 November 2008 (UTC)
If a country doesn't have a fully-professional soccer league, does its highest semi-pro/amateur level count as "highest level of amateur sports"? Juzhong (talk) 19:27, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Generally, I'd have to go with "it depends" meaning it depends on how much coverage they have in reliable sources. Off the cuff, I'd say yes--without prejudice to change my mind.--Paul McDonald (talk) 19:55, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- My view is that if a sport has no professional league at all (e.g., some Olympic sports perhaps), then amateurs can qualify, however, if there is a professional league somewhere, amateurs do not pass WP:ATHLETE. Since there are many professional soccer leagues, an amateur in a country like Myanmar does not qualify unless he plays in a fully professional league somewhere else. Jogurney (talk) 20:26, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Somebody please explain to me how people seem to keep putting a "If there is no professional league then you can use this:" in front of the second part of WP:ATHLETE, and then a " but if there is a pro league then forget about it!" after. It's just not there.--Paul McDonald (talk) 21:04, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Obviously the guideline is not as clear as you say it is because so many people interpret it differently. Most people who have commented here, or at the various AfDs where this comes up, would seem to think the most pedantic possible reading of the guideline is not the only legitimate one. You appear to be in a very small minority in holding that opinion. Even if, for the sake of argument, we were all to accept that the guideline says exactly what you say it does and that no other interpretation is possible, we'd all just end up ignoring it anyway because it undermines WP:BIO and the first pillar and leads to an unacceptable flood of articles on utterly trivial athletes. Reyk YO! 23:07, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Oh, the guideline is very, very clear. It's just grossly mis-interpreted. But hey, if you want to re-word the guideline to make it fit what you want it to say, then please do (no, really... please do! It's Wikipedia...) As for me being the minority, weeellll... in this particular discussion, yeah. But we can go find others (namely, the college football project) to find a good number other voices as well. And you can also run through all the various AfDs where this has come up and find out more about what others think.--Paul McDonald (talk) 23:12, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- I could argue that amateur competitions in a sport where professional leagues exist don't meet WP:ATHLETE because the wording says "Athletes who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports" and we're talking about a professional sport- if it extended to things like College football it would say "highest level of amateur competition". This argument has been used at various AfDs for soccer players in the League of Ireland, Maltese competitions and other non-professional leagues around the world. This argument is, technically, as consistent with the wording of the guideline as your version and equally intolerable. I reverted one editor who unilaterally declared that that was the intent of the guideline, so it would be hypocritical of me to make a similar change off my own bat. I prefer discussion and consensus. Anyway, I have no idea how to make WP:ATHLETE unambiguous and sensible without creating more loopholes and wikilawyer type abuses. I don't actually mind the current version as long as it is understood that A) it doesn't REMOVE notability from people who can be shown to have it the traditional way and B) we're free to temper it with common sense at our discretion. I'm sure you agree to (A), but I'm not sure why you're digging your heels in over (B). Reyk YO! 02:16, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- You could argue that yes... you'd just be ignoring what the guideline says very clearly. As to my "digging my heels in", I understand that this is a guideline and not a policy, so it should be tempered with discussion and can be followed or broken as consensus sees fit--but that should be kept to a minimum. If consensus is in fact going to unabashedly violate the guideline as much as you and a few others seem to claim, then all I'm saying is re-write the guideline to match consensus. I don't care if this is consensus changing, or consensus clarifying. It doesn't matter... it just needs to be done... Go ahead an put in clarification that "if a professional league exists for the sport, then the amateur league doesn't count for squat" but as it sits now, the only clarification pertains to poker, chess, and Magic the Gathering (which you see in the footnotes)... IF of course, that is what consensus supports. Until then, I'm going to read the guideline as written rather than adding my own restrictions to it just because I find it inconvenient or not to my taste.--Paul McDonald (talk) 04:42, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- I could argue that amateur competitions in a sport where professional leagues exist don't meet WP:ATHLETE because the wording says "Athletes who have competed at the highest level in amateur sports" and we're talking about a professional sport- if it extended to things like College football it would say "highest level of amateur competition". This argument has been used at various AfDs for soccer players in the League of Ireland, Maltese competitions and other non-professional leagues around the world. This argument is, technically, as consistent with the wording of the guideline as your version and equally intolerable. I reverted one editor who unilaterally declared that that was the intent of the guideline, so it would be hypocritical of me to make a similar change off my own bat. I prefer discussion and consensus. Anyway, I have no idea how to make WP:ATHLETE unambiguous and sensible without creating more loopholes and wikilawyer type abuses. I don't actually mind the current version as long as it is understood that A) it doesn't REMOVE notability from people who can be shown to have it the traditional way and B) we're free to temper it with common sense at our discretion. I'm sure you agree to (A), but I'm not sure why you're digging your heels in over (B). Reyk YO! 02:16, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Oh, the guideline is very, very clear. It's just grossly mis-interpreted. But hey, if you want to re-word the guideline to make it fit what you want it to say, then please do (no, really... please do! It's Wikipedia...) As for me being the minority, weeellll... in this particular discussion, yeah. But we can go find others (namely, the college football project) to find a good number other voices as well. And you can also run through all the various AfDs where this has come up and find out more about what others think.--Paul McDonald (talk) 23:12, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Obviously the guideline is not as clear as you say it is because so many people interpret it differently. Most people who have commented here, or at the various AfDs where this comes up, would seem to think the most pedantic possible reading of the guideline is not the only legitimate one. You appear to be in a very small minority in holding that opinion. Even if, for the sake of argument, we were all to accept that the guideline says exactly what you say it does and that no other interpretation is possible, we'd all just end up ignoring it anyway because it undermines WP:BIO and the first pillar and leads to an unacceptable flood of articles on utterly trivial athletes. Reyk YO! 23:07, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Somebody please explain to me how people seem to keep putting a "If there is no professional league then you can use this:" in front of the second part of WP:ATHLETE, and then a " but if there is a pro league then forget about it!" after. It's just not there.--Paul McDonald (talk) 21:04, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
<outdent> While this particular discussion is only a week old, the argument has been going on at least since I first started editing a year ago, and I'm sure for far longer than that. Surprisingly, I think that everyone that's commented here is essentially in agreement, when you cut through the rhetoric. The guideline is being interpreted in diametrically opposite manners by various editors, which is the very definition of a poorly-written, ambiguous guideline, no matter how clearly either side may feel it reads. I'm going to sleep on it, but I'm really tempted to be bold and do a rewrite and see what happens.
That being said, Reyk, I want to make one point regarding your last comment above, and it's ultimately the crux of this entire debate. It's actually quite unfair to single you out regarding it, because I see the same words used over and over again at Afd, particularly on the soccer articles to which you refer, but here goes.
There is no such thing as a "professional sport" - sports themselves are completely agnostic as to professionalism. A sports league can be professional, like the NHL, or a sports league can be amateur, like the OHL. A participant in a sport can be professional, like Sidney Crosby, or a participant in a sport can be amateur, like John Tavares. But sports themselves are rarely exclusively either professional or amateur. Football is not a professional sport - there is the NFL and the NCAA, professional and amateur. Baseball is not a professional sport - there is MLB and the NCAA, professional and amateur. Hockey is not a professional sport - there is the NHL and the OHL, professional and amateur. Soccer is not a professional sport - there's the Premier League and MLS and the NCAA and local club teams, professional, professional, amateur, and amateur. Basketball, figure skating, golf, volleyball, curling, tiddelywinks, you name it - both professional and amateur leagues or competitions exist.
In that regard, the guideline as it's written is only unclear to those who subscribe to that argument - "x is a professional sport". And in practice, the result is that the guideline gets mis-cited at Afd on a regular basis. However, since this is all about consensus, it's clear that the guideline needs to catch up, while also respecting the fact that specific notability guidelines must necessarily be subservient to the general one. In fact, the more that I type, the more that I think I will be proposing a re-wording. After all, if we're going to be discussing this, we might as well have something new to discuss, n'est ce pas? Mlaffs (talk) 05:34, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Go for it as a big fan of WP:BOLD, I say "let her rip" and see what happens! What will happen is much arguing so let's all be sure to put on our WP:CIVIL hats...--Paul McDonald (talk) 06:10, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Generally, "fully professional league" has been interpreted to mean that the players are paid enough that they can live off the salary the sport pays them.--User:2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 07:41, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
Per WP:BOLD and the obvious lack of consensus for and wildly different interpretations of the current wording, I have simply removed the line about amateur sports for now. This of course does not mean that all amateur athlete articles should be deleted (they simply have to pass WP:N), nor that a better sentence with clear consensus about the actual meaning of it can not be reintroduced. Fram (talk) 08:16, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
I think that "highest level" was meant to refer to such events as the Olympics or World Championships of amateur sports.--2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 11:10, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
Glad to see that I inspired some movement here, if I can be so egotistical! I've done some tinkering - I think it's critical that we make the language here as explicit as possible to reflect a few of the principles that seem to have come through during this discussion and that have often been practice at Afd and in some of the WikiProject notability essays: 1) "highest level" usually means the Olympics/world championships; 2) professional will usually exclude amateur within the same sport, except that; 3) general notability trumps all. This makes it clear that sports themselves are neither professional or amateur, and leaves room for notable amateur athletes, such as winners of major awards, top draft picks, record setters, etc., who will generally be the subject of multiple secondary source material. I think the result is clear, rational, and supportable - of course, your mileage may vary. Mlaffs (talk) 16:03, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Disagree (you saw it coming, right?) 1) There are sports where the "highest level of amateur sports" would not qualify by these standards because those sports are not represented in olympic games, paralympic games, nor world championships--i.e. the phenomenon known as college football. 2) As worded, it makes no reference to time period... for instance, College Football was the dominant expression of American football until sometime between 1950 and 1980 (depending on who you ask). So college football in, say, 1910 was really the only kind of American football played except for a few local pro leagues, mainly in Ohio, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. 3) Kind of link to #2, it makes no reference to amateur leagus that may actually be more significant to any professional league. Women's basketball comes to mind--I could see arguments being made that Women's NCAA Basketball is more "worthy" of the "top level" than the WNBA. I don't know if that's true, but it certainly could be a possibility and we need to make sure that this new guideline allows for that. 4) BUT I like it better than before (and that might be a shocker to some people).--Paul McDonald (talk) 16:39, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- I did see it coming, so I'm neither surprised nor upset, nor am I among those who are shocked that you'd like this better. Civil disagreement is what it's all about. I've been reading everyone's comments very carefully, and reading between the lines where necessary, so I think I can address these concerns, or at least try. 1) I was actually trying to avoid getting too locked into situations like college football, college basketball, junior hockey, etc. as they're currently competed. At the core, I do think we all agree that the optimal situation is not that all college football players or junior hockey players be considered notable. The clarification regarding the importance of the general notability guidelines should cover this, as the truly notable among them will have the appropriate coverage in secondary sources. 2) It's fair comment that there is a bit of recent-ism at play here, but that may not be solvable and I'm sure it's not unique to this guideline. Again, I'd hope that the general notability guidelines will address this - to the extent that information is available about a college football player from 1910, it'll probably be coming from books, newspaper articles, etc., many of which won't be available in electronic format but all of which would be valid source material. 3) With regard to amateur competition being more notable than professional, also, fair comment. Again, I don't think most people would consider every women's NCAA basketball player down to the 12th man - er, woman - notable, but the general guidelines would allow for those who are.
- Ultimately, what I'm trying to do here is take some of the magic out of WP:ATHLETE. Rightly or wrongly, consensus has held that all professional athletes are notable, as well as those who've gone to world-level competitions. It's pretty important for that to be written down somewhere. Beyond that, people desperately need to keep in mind that WP:NOTABILITY overrides any of the specific guidelines. If that means that we suddenly get overrun with articles on every third-string linebacker or academy backup striker - and I don't think that'll be the result - then it's WP:NOTABILITY that needs to be addressed, not WP:ATHLETE. Mlaffs (talk) 17:19, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Comment even I agree that not all college football athletes should be considered notable (gasp). But here's a question worth "noodling" on: Was Daniel Ruettiger notable before the movie Rudy came out, or only after its success?--Paul McDonald (talk) 17:27, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- I'd be in favour of ditching WP:ATHLETE completely. The general notability guidelines of requiring multiple, non-trivial, independent, reliable sources are quite good enough. As can be seen from the above discussion, the current guideline is so open to varying interpretations as to be next to useless. (My reading of it is that amateur competetitors in a sport where there is a profesional league, i.e. College American Footballers are non-notable, but User:Paulmcdonald and User:Mlaffs etc. have a different reading of it). - fchd (talk) 18:08, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- In my opinion, amateur sportpeople remain non-notable. If WP:ATHLETE is changed to give notability for amateur sportspeople (which it shouldn't, IMO), then I would argue that WP:FOOTYN should be accepted by the wider Wikicommunity, as WP:FOOTBALL has some very definite beliefs aboout amateur association football (soccer) players. GiantSnowman 20:04, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
I respect all of our non-American friends who may not know exactly how significant top-level American college sports are (and I am speaking specifically about D-I college football and men's basketball, since of those two there is little dispute), so here are some numbers to consider when comparing college football to other professional leagues from Europe:
- The 44 schools from BCS conferences that played in a bowl game in 2007 had combined revenue of $1.3 billion.
- The Euroleague (professional European basketball) has a revenue of less than one hundred million.
- Looking at German soccer, the top-league Bundesliga had 2006/07 revenues of €1.3 billion ($1.7b).
- Looking at UK soccer: While top-level Premier League is obviously a major league with exceptionally high revenue (€2.2 billion ($2.8b)), The Championship clubs' revenues in 2005/6 were £318m ($470m) at an average of £13m ($20m) per club (League One for the same year totaled £102m, League Two £61m).
- A top-level football school make major revenue: Texas ($60.9 million), Michigan ($50.4 million), Florida ($48.2 million), etc.
- Stepping slightly away from football, the NCAA has a $6.2 billion, 11-year media contract.
Nielson TV ratings, researched by another member of the WP:CFB, are another interesting comparison:
- 14.4 - 2008 NCAA Football Championship game
- 17.4 - 2007 NCAA Football Championship game
- 8.4 - 2008 MLB World Series avg rating
- - 2008 NBA Finals Game One
For the above reasons, I believe WP:ATHLETE should continue to permit top-level D-I FBS college football players, coaches and teams. Clearly, when the rules were written they didn't take into account the realities of American sports. --Bobak (talk) 20:06, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- While those numbers are impressive, that indicates that the organisations and teams certainly are notable. However, that does not automatically then mean each and every individual player is notable. - fchd (talk) 20:15, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- ATHLETE is not about the teams, so it has never permitted or forbidden top level teams. As for coaches and players: if they meet WP:N, they are still perfectly allright to include. But Wp:ATHLETE is about a blanket, automatic inclusion for things considered always notable and so not wanted at AfD and so on as a waste of time. If you can come up with a sentence or couple of sentences that only includes such athletes that can be considered automatically notable, without opening the gates for other, otherwise not notable athletes (e.g. because the current notability is not comparable to the situation fifty years ago, but the guideline makes no distinction between those), then it won't be hard to find a consensus for such a change. However, stating e.g. that top level college football would mean automatic notability would not be acceptable, since that "top level" was way too broad in earlier decades and is not comparable in numbers and notability to the current top teams. Fram (talk) 20:33, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- My personal opinion is that WP:Athlete is a simple guideline and that for specific cases, we should refer to individual projects' considerations as to what is notable or not. That way, once you get through the widest gate of notability, you still have to get through other levels of checking crafted specifically for each sport. Trying to craft a blanket rule of notability for all sports isn't going to end well. It's much better to have a wide portal of entry -- the current "highest level of amateur play" -- then pare that down under a smaller subset of rules. JKBrooks85 (talk) 22:24, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- There is a ton of debate here, and I'll be honest, I've skimmed it, but I'm not going to read all of it, because as has been said, we've covered this before. My opinion on it as this: college athletes who are draft picks, receive extensive coverage as star players, awards, etc. should be notable regardless of whether or not there is a professional league in their respective sports. I think extending notability to ALL major college D1 athletes, ie, anyone on a D1 football team, etc. would be a mistake and extend the breadth of notability too far. matt91486 (talk) 00:23, 27 November 2008 (UTC)
- I think you've summed it up very well Matt. GiantSnowman 01:48, 27 November 2008 (UTC)
- Notability for amateur athletes is very simple. If they have attracted sufficient press to rite a well-cited article, then they are notable. If they haven't had much written about them than the school's bio (which is not a sufficiently neutral source to stand on its on) they they should not be covered. It would not serve Wikipedia to wait until they win an award, or to wait until they are a draft pick for a pro team. Major college sports in the US are a major business with millions of people following top players. Many of those fans want to look to Wikipedia for unbiased, encyclopedic coverage of the players. We should provide that coverage. JohnMGarrison (talk) 03:54, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
Creative professionals -- fiction writers
Per the WP:MUSIC notability guidelines, I think it may be good to apply at least one of them (#5) to fiction authors as well. Specifically, I think if an author has had two or more books published by a major publisher in any country, that should be enough to qualify them for notability. A book takes as least as much time and effort to complete as does a music album (sometimes more time). I bring this up because I find it absurd that people are arguing that someone who has had four books published by a major publisher is not notable. Thoughts? ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 03:08, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- I would think their sales figures make them notable. Is someone signed a four book deal with a company, but they all bombed, and has published nothing else, then they aren't notable. A lot of books get published by major publishing companies that don't do well at all. And musicians shouldn't be listed, unless they have a set number of sales. We need an exact number listed somewhere. Dream Focus (talk) 13:00, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- I agree - in the absence of awards, sales are a better indicator than number of books published. Consider: "Darren Warren is a crime fiction author who has self-published 10 critically-panned whodunnits starring amateur sleuth Warren Darren ... ". Philip Trueman (talk) 17:34, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- What is a good source for sales figures? ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 02:49, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Also, please note that I specifically indicated "published by a major publisher" (emphasis added). Self-published works are almost never notable, no matter how many you publish. I'm only talking about major publishers. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 04:32, 27 November 2008 (UTC)
- If someone has a large fan base, and they decide to cut out the middle man, getting people to order their book, and then paying a printer and hiring people to ship out copies, then what's the difference between that and having a major publishing company? Established bestselling writers can easily get stores to stock their books, without having to go through middlemen. Anything that is a bestseller is notable. And the New York Times Bestseller's list is a good place to search for any book, and see if it ever was a bestseller. I don't see any actual sales figures listed anywhere, unfortunately. Dream Focus (talk) 07:09, 27 November 2008 (UTC)
- Thank you for the link. As for the difference between self-publishing and being picked up by a major publisher: it takes a lot more work to convince a company to put out hundreds of thousands of dollars to publish a book than it does to print your own book. When a major publisher picks up a title, they spend all kinds of money on advertising and promotion, on printing up the copies of the book, shipping them to distributors and retailers, as well as often sending the author around on a book tour. It's a lot harder to convince a company to do that for you than it is to decide to do it yourself, and the average person isn't going to have the resources to do what a major publisher can do.
- So yes, there is absolutely a huge difference between someone self-publishing and being picked up by a major publisher, not to mention being picked up multiple times. And it's really quite rare for a publisher to sign a multi-book deal with a new author, so for a new author to have four book deals with the same publisher over the course of several years is quite good. A publisher isn't going to keep using an author that isn't selling well. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 09:28, 28 November 2008 (UTC)
- If someone has a large fan base, and they decide to cut out the middle man, getting people to order their book, and then paying a printer and hiring people to ship out copies, then what's the difference between that and having a major publishing company? Established bestselling writers can easily get stores to stock their books, without having to go through middlemen. Anything that is a bestseller is notable. And the New York Times Bestseller's list is a good place to search for any book, and see if it ever was a bestseller. I don't see any actual sales figures listed anywhere, unfortunately. Dream Focus (talk) 07:09, 27 November 2008 (UTC)
- I agree - in the absence of awards, sales are a better indicator than number of books published. Consider: "Darren Warren is a crime fiction author who has self-published 10 critically-panned whodunnits starring amateur sleuth Warren Darren ... ". Philip Trueman (talk) 17:34, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- I would think their sales figures make them notable. Is someone signed a four book deal with a company, but they all bombed, and has published nothing else, then they aren't notable. A lot of books get published by major publishing companies that don't do well at all. And musicians shouldn't be listed, unless they have a set number of sales. We need an exact number listed somewhere. Dream Focus (talk) 13:00, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
People associated with only one event
I recently copied some text from BLP into this guideline (diff). It was quickly reverted by User:Sandstein with the comment: "That has nothing to do with notability, i.e., whether somebody should have an article or not".
I'm not complaining about the reversion itself, since it was a WP:BOLD edit, but that's an extremely disappointing reason to remove the new material. That section of the guideline is specifically talking about what to do in the event that a person is not necessarily notable, but are only notable in connection with a specific event. The section already includes guidance about how to create the article about the event and how to incorporate the biograhpical information into it. That existing guidance could all be said to be nothing to do with notability but is clearly useful which is why I assume it is there. For the same reasons, it is entirely appropriate that guidance on incorporating biographical information into an article about an event be given in connection with certain rare but important circumstances.
In any case, this is a hole in Wikipedia guidelines since there is a guideline for the living, but no corresponding guideline for the dead. I would appreciate hearing people's thoughts on how to fill this hole. I already considered adding something to Wikipedia:Manual of Style (biographies), but including the material there makes less sense than including it here since that guideline is for people who are assumed to have already reached the notability threshold and have therefore been named. Another solution would be to create a new guideline Wikipedia:Manual of Style (events), but that seems like excessive instruction creep whereas all that I would like to do is make sure that existing guidelines are not inappropriately limited to only the living. GDallimore (Talk) 17:38, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Well, the text you propose is about the inclusion or removal of names in articles. Insofar as no living persons are concerned, that's a stylistic issue and should be discussed in the context of the WP:MOS. The notability guideline, on the other hand, is about whether people should have an article of their own.
- On the merits, I do not think this rule from WP:BLP should be made general. There's simply no reason not to name the names of dead people if they are verifiable and relevant to the article at issue. Dead people have no privacy to be protected, after all. Sandstein 17:47, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- I find it distressing that you imply you know better than a court of law, which often does decide that a dead person should not be named. The reasons could be many and varied and not merely related to privacy. GDallimore (Talk) 09:36, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- In the cases where there is indeed a court ruling deciding that a dead person should not be named, which will (I think) be the case for only a minute fraction of the dead people named in our articles, this issue can be discussed on a case by case basis. Such a possibility does not warrant a change in general policy. We are, furthermore, not bound by any laws except those of the United States, where the Wikimedia servers are located, and if there is any legal problem with naming a person then it is Foundation counsel who are competent to address this issue. Sandstein 13:20, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, that last point is not correct since Wikipedia counsel can only answer for Wikipedia as an entity and cannot address the legal rights and obligations of its editors. Put another way, merely because Wikipedia MUST comply with Florida law does not mean that it should or can always ignore the laws of other jurisdictions. Nevertheless, the text I added (which clearly has had carefuly thought at BLP) does not preclude a case-by-case discussion and I totally agree that such a discussion would be appropriate. For example, I can imagine myself being in favour of ignoring a local court ruling if the person involved had been famous/notable such that knowing who they were provided important context to the event. In contrast, where identifying the person provides no useful contextual information, I think I would always respect the decision of whichever body decided that secrecy was appropriate. The first situation could sometimes be relevant to Wikipedia's role as an encyclopedia; the latter, almost never
- Once it is agreed that a case-by-case discussion should be had, it is important that this is explicitly mentioned in a guideline because, without such an explicit mention, those wishing to reveal the information could cite WP:NOTCENSORED without little or no comeback. Censorship is a very "black and white" policy and is therefore over-ruled by other policies which introduce shades of grey such as the text I was proposing to add.
- Do you see now why the text I was adding is necessary for those situations where it occurs? Agreed that these are not everyday occurrences (although they are probably more common than one might expect) but this fact actually makes it all the more important that a clear policy exists when they do arise. GDallimore (Talk) 14:17, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- I am indeed opposed to any such weakening of WP:NOTCENSORED. We are bound by our mission to provide a free, neutral encyclopedia and not by court rulings (which the Wikimedia Foundation is not a party to), because such rulings may be based on local laws incopatible with our mission. A policy of the sort you propose may be justified with respect to living people, on account of privacy, but not with respect to dead people. At any rate, if the name of a dead person is verifiable through reader-accessible reliable sources, there's little point in not mentioning it in Wikipedia, whereas if it is not verifiable, it should not be included for that reason. Sandstein 16:35, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
Consensus request: "Fully professional league" criteria ought to be limited
WP:ATHLETE states that any "[c]ompetitors who have competed in a fully professional league" are notable. I would like to gather a consensus to limit that to the major professional leagues. MLB, the NBA, the NFL, and the NHL are definitely within notability guidelines. I think that the Canadian Football League and Major League Soccer push the boundary of notability, but would definitely make the second tier. (I find it illuminating that their initials go to a disam page, not to the leagues the way the "big four" do.)
I do not think that players in the NBADL, AFL or MLB's minor league should automatically be included. When it comes to the AFL, are we talking about eligible players from the AFL, the AFL, or the AFL? I just don't see how playing Arena football makes one notable enough to be useful to this encyclopedia. Guys in the Af2 make $200 a game, but it is a "fully professional league," right? There are a ton of historic NFL and MLB players who won't ever have anything other than their name, team, and playing years listed, but I don't see that as a problem, and those articles might even get fleshed out over time. But Arena football? Arena minor-league football?
Look at how many players are eligible from Minor-league baseball: there are players from AAA, AA, and A, even varied rookie leagues. And look at the mess that is minor-league hockey:
The AHL is the most highly-ranked minor league. The ECHL, IHL and CHL are on the next tier below and act as feeders to the AHL, with the ECHL being the greatest of the three "equals" due to its more official ties to the NHL. The IHL would be considered second to the ECHL and slightly above the CHL due to higher allowance of veteran players and a higher salary cap. The SPHL in turn is a feeder to the ECHL, IHL and CHL. This tier is followed by several (emphasis added) lower-grade and semi-pro leagues.
Anyone who ever played on one of these teams is notable? I just don't see it. Shouldn't the line be drawn a little higher than it currently is? Actors don't get in just because they have a Screen Actors Guild card.--User:2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 00:28, 31 October 2008 (UTC)
- "Fully Professional" has generally been accepted as one of the upper echelon leagues such that you are paid enough you don't need a day job. For American football, the only leagues from the last 15 or so years that counted were the NFL, NFL Europe, Arena Football League and I believe Canadian Football League. Baseball and soccer seem to be a bit less stringent for levels in terms of surviving AFD. This is one of those nobody is thrilled, but nobody can suggest anything that would achieve a replacement consensus situations unfortunately. Another issue is avoiding systemic bias, as top two or competitive for signing may be a relatively high threshold for the US, but is basically meaningless if we're talking about say Antigua. If you have a specific alternative to recommend, doing so would probably be the best step you could take.Horrorshowj (talk) 06:57, 31 October 2008 (UTC)
- I agree. I don't think it's likely that a US league which pays its players $200 per match would be considered "fully professional". The idea is that the league should consist exclusively of clubs that pay players enough so they don't need other employment. That said, the fully professional league is a bit of a problem for some very important clubs such as Standard Liege of Belgium because they play in a league with some semi-pro clubs. However, Standard is a very successful club and its players are likely to be notable simply for playing at the club. Best regards. Jogurney (talk) 03:33, 3 November 2008 (UTC)
- I have no opinion on the arena leagues. I would consider the World Leauge to be "minor leauge NFL" and I would consider the Canadian League to be a fully professional leauge.--Paul McDonald (talk) 03:59, 3 November 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that the CFL is a fully professional league. Besides being Canada's league, it's also the highest level of play for Canadian football, which evolved along different lines than American football. Granted, persons who play 3 downs on a 110 yard field are hoping that they can get their shot at 4 downs in the NFL, but the CFL is set up to provide that a majority of the players will be Canadian citizens. I agree fully with the statement that fully professional should mean the upper echelon leagues in each sport, and that inherent notability is something to be granted only to players who have reached the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, etc., at least as far as players in the United States are concerned. Regarding other nations, the highest "fully professional league" in another nation would have a similar bye. The key phrase is fully professional-- if the amount of money paid to the lowest level players is not enough on which to make a living, then the league is "semi-pro". Thus, Japan's to baseball leagues (Central and Pacific) would be fully pro, while the highest caliber baseball league in Italy would probably be semi-pro or amateur. Mandsford (talk) 14:14, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- I also agree about the CFL being fully professional, I phrased it the way I did earlier because: a) I've never personally seen an AFD involving a current or former player from the league; b) I'm not sure if they are under the same WP project or not. I know Arena 1 and the league of a thousand names are held by the project and at AFD to count, so I listed them as examples. Horrorshowj (talk) 09:05, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Can we not, then, discuss a change from the policy referring to teams, to relating it to the players themselves? How about notable "if the athelete plays their sport as their primary profession". Might be a bit hard to judge, though, with relation to things like major players earning more money through advertising than wages, or similar, but it's a start. - RD (Talk) 21:04, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- I also agree about the CFL being fully professional, I phrased it the way I did earlier because: a) I've never personally seen an AFD involving a current or former player from the league; b) I'm not sure if they are under the same WP project or not. I know Arena 1 and the league of a thousand names are held by the project and at AFD to count, so I listed them as examples. Horrorshowj (talk) 09:05, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that the CFL is a fully professional league. Besides being Canada's league, it's also the highest level of play for Canadian football, which evolved along different lines than American football. Granted, persons who play 3 downs on a 110 yard field are hoping that they can get their shot at 4 downs in the NFL, but the CFL is set up to provide that a majority of the players will be Canadian citizens. I agree fully with the statement that fully professional should mean the upper echelon leagues in each sport, and that inherent notability is something to be granted only to players who have reached the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, etc., at least as far as players in the United States are concerned. Regarding other nations, the highest "fully professional league" in another nation would have a similar bye. The key phrase is fully professional-- if the amount of money paid to the lowest level players is not enough on which to make a living, then the league is "semi-pro". Thus, Japan's to baseball leagues (Central and Pacific) would be fully pro, while the highest caliber baseball league in Italy would probably be semi-pro or amateur. Mandsford (talk) 14:14, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- I have no opinion on the arena leagues. I would consider the World Leauge to be "minor leauge NFL" and I would consider the Canadian League to be a fully professional leauge.--Paul McDonald (talk) 03:59, 3 November 2008 (UTC)
- This entire discussion seems to be very US-centric. Surely a policy should be made that works everywhere, and not just focusing on a single nation that is only a small fraction of the planet. Nfitz (talk) 18:52, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
Related question
Why bother deleting them at all? Everyone seems to be focusing on reasons in policy or debating semantics. It's not like we have a limit on space and a simple bio is certainly with a paragraph or two isn't hurting anything and could be potentially useful. We're not talking about your best friend or neighbor. Thoughts? — BQZip01 — talk 05:55, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- On the contrary- many people, myself included, think too many articles on trivial subjects harms Wikipedia by dragging its standards down and robbing it of credibility. Reyk YO! 06:03, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- And many more take the opposite point of view.--Paul McDonald (talk) 06:09, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Sure, why have notability at all?--User:2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 07:42, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- And many more take the opposite point of view.--Paul McDonald (talk) 06:09, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- I disagree, if we start allowing non-notable articles onto Wikipedia, then you have to question why we'd have guidelines and policy at all. Wikipedia is supposed to be a source of information, verified by independent sources (which, incidentally, are hard to come by for non-professional players), not a place for the world and his dog to have their own vanity page. If we allow non-professionals today, then what's to stop John Smith who plays Sunday League Football from creating his own page tomorrow? - RD (Talk) 21:36, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- While I certainly agree with you, please understand that there is a huge difference between a sunday afternoon league and the phenomenon known as college football. Even small school college football can have significant coverage!--Paul McDonald (talk) 22:05, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- Oh, absolutely. I'm all for a reform to the thresholds implied within WP:ATHLETE, because there certainly are some notable exceptions to the two guidelines (many of them residing within the realms of college sports in the US), but my main point was that allowing all athletes an article goes against the fundamentals of Wikipedia, and therefore shouldn't be done. - RD (Talk) 01:36, 27 November 2008 (UTC)
- While I certainly agree with you, please understand that there is a huge difference between a sunday afternoon league and the phenomenon known as college football. Even small school college football can have significant coverage!--Paul McDonald (talk) 22:05, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- As an aside, I think all Division I NCAA men's basketball/football teams and players should have inclusion on Wikipedia. The teams play on a national stage. Each member of the team receives national (or at least regional) media coverage by reliable, third-party sources, which is what our notability guidelines for people are meant to guarantee. That's where I stand on the college issue. GoCuse44 (talk) 05:56, 28 November 2008 (UTC)
Individual wikiprojects are deleting infoboxes from articles
Several people from musical Wikiprojects are systematically deleting infoboxes from biographies that are covered by their projects:
- "Rmv infobox as these are not used for classical musicians per Wikipedia:WikiProject Classical music#Biographical_infoboxes)
- "Rmv infobox as these are not used for composers, per Wikipedia:WikiProject Composers#Lead section) "
Here is an example at: Milton Adolphus
It appears that they are trumping Wikipedia biographical policy with their own subset of rules. It would be like the New York Wikiproject deciding that people born in New York City don't get infoboxes, or don't get birth dates added, or any other global Wikipedia rule. It destroys the consistent look and feel of biographies. Anyone else have an opinion? --Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) (talk) 06:33, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- I have invited User:Kleinzach to explain deboxing here. Please refrain from instant reverts before all sides speak up; maybe he has a point. But the problem is imminent: the community is split to isolated "projects" who invent rules that they believe everyone else should follow. Classical music is a perfect battlefield - most readers just don't care about it. NVO (talk) 08:22, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- What has this got to do with notability? I don't see any connection. I think you should refer it to the project concerned. Thank you. --Kleinzach 09:28, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- The project does not own the articles; whatever consensus exists among the project regulars should stay there - once it spills over into main space and attempts to enforce their prescriprions, contrary to general practice, then the question goes up. It looks like the inmates of Old Grouse Pub enforcing their "standards" in the rest of the world :)); the wary bystanders call the nearest police station they can reach. NVO (talk) 09:57, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- Don't worry, a few people will be along to tell you how horrid it is to degenerate such wonderful people into boxes, about how the birthdates are often wrong or need more explaining than an infobox can do, how the countries are often different than they were, and how many of the info types don't work. Never mind that such things affect ALL historical figures... ♫ Melodia Chaconne ♫ (talk) 12:24, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- Exactly! Now once you've done with juvenile boasting, please explain the relevance of your rant to the topic. Does formatting preclude anyone from correcting wrong dates, countries, etc.? Why does it only affect classical composers (or their editors)? Why are infoboxes appropriate in Aerith Gainsborough or, say, Julius Caesar but not in Maurice Ravel? NVO (talk) 13:24, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- That's exactly it. I fully agree with you, but I was presenting the arguments I've heard a few people give against them. I guess my slight sarcasm didn't translate well to text...I've asked the question before, more than once -- why ARE composers special compared to any other historical figure (since many of the arguments ARE related to stuff extramusical.) ♫ Melodia Chaconne ♫ (talk) 14:24, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- Exactly! Now once you've done with juvenile boasting, please explain the relevance of your rant to the topic. Does formatting preclude anyone from correcting wrong dates, countries, etc.? Why does it only affect classical composers (or their editors)? Why are infoboxes appropriate in Aerith Gainsborough or, say, Julius Caesar but not in Maurice Ravel? NVO (talk) 13:24, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- Don't worry, a few people will be along to tell you how horrid it is to degenerate such wonderful people into boxes, about how the birthdates are often wrong or need more explaining than an infobox can do, how the countries are often different than they were, and how many of the info types don't work. Never mind that such things affect ALL historical figures... ♫ Melodia Chaconne ♫ (talk) 12:24, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- The project does not own the articles; whatever consensus exists among the project regulars should stay there - once it spills over into main space and attempts to enforce their prescriprions, contrary to general practice, then the question goes up. It looks like the inmates of Old Grouse Pub enforcing their "standards" in the rest of the world :)); the wary bystanders call the nearest police station they can reach. NVO (talk) 09:57, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- What has this got to do with notability? I don't see any connection. I think you should refer it to the project concerned. Thank you. --Kleinzach 09:28, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
Now rhat everyone above has finished ranting (I hope), is it in order to repeat the query raised by Kleinzach? What exactly has the issue in question got to do with the topic of notability (which nowhere seems to mention infoboxes)? As I understand it, no WP topic's or subject's notability has been questioned in any way. Yours, puzzledly, --Smerus (talk) 15:07, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- I think its a case of forum shopping in my view. I have no opinion one way or the other but I have seen in a numerous places that they have been told that there is no policy in place requiring infoboxes. -Djsasso (talk) 15:10, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- I'd suggest to continue the discussion at Wikipedia_talk:Manual_of_Style#Individual_wikiprojects_are_deleting_infoboxes_from_articles, which is a better place to discuss this sort of issue that has nothing to do with notability. --Enric Naval (talk) 17:56, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
Is a screenwriter notable if his movie makes 70 million dollars?
I would think that the box office success of his films would make him notable, but some disagree. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Temple_Mathews Apparently the WP:CREATIVE is worded in a way that leaves some in debate about its meaning. Someone please add in your opinion on this. Dream Focus (talk) 14:02, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
- The rule currently states for WP:CREATIVE The person has created, or played a major role in co-creating, a significant or well-known work, or collective body of work, which has been the subject of an independent book or feature-length film, or of multiple independent periodical articles or reviews.
- Others seem to interpret it differently than me. Everyone please state your opinions here. It says OR multiple reviews, not AND multiple reviews. So it doesn't need any reviewers giving their opinions to make them notable. Does writing the screenplay to several hit movies make count as playing a major role in a significant or well-known work? Also, how do you define significant or well-known? We need a clear definition, otherwise its just the opinion of whatever few people are around that day. I would think if the work is significant enough to get its own wikipedia article(meeting those notable requirements already), which list it made 70 million dollars at the box office, then it meets the significant requirement. Please give me your opinions on this. Should the rule be changed to be more specific? And is this person notable? Dream Focus (talk) 11:05, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- I would parse that or to mean; either independent book/feature length film or multiple independent articles/reviews. But it really needs a rewrite, for clarity if not for content. The requirement that it is given independent coverage is important since we don't want to base our articles solely on primary sources. Taemyr (talk) 11:14, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Oh. The person has created either a significant work or collective body of work, which has been the subject of an independent book or feature length film. Alright. I understand now. Hmm.. there should be an unrelated rule to protect screenwriters though, since reviewers don't write movie reviews about the writers very often, just reviewing the overall action, the ability or the actors, or even talking about the director. Thanks for the response. Dream Focus (talk) 11:28, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- The notability guidelines should not be there to protect anyone. They should be there to insure that when we have an article we have third party sources to base the article on. Taemyr (talk) 11:47, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Oh. The person has created either a significant work or collective body of work, which has been the subject of an independent book or feature length film. Alright. I understand now. Hmm.. there should be an unrelated rule to protect screenwriters though, since reviewers don't write movie reviews about the writers very often, just reviewing the overall action, the ability or the actors, or even talking about the director. Thanks for the response. Dream Focus (talk) 11:28, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- I would parse that or to mean; either independent book/feature length film or multiple independent articles/reviews. But it really needs a rewrite, for clarity if not for content. The requirement that it is given independent coverage is important since we don't want to base our articles solely on primary sources. Taemyr (talk) 11:14, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
Does the Basic Criteria trump the Additional Criteria or vice versa?
We've just had the 2008 AFL Draft so a bunch of next big thing players are entering the league, and some are getting articles. Most are stubs, some are unreferenced, but ALL have been PRODed and/or AFD'ed. I've been assuming that if I can find reliable, independant, non-trivial references about these young players (ie a biographical story in a major paper, not just a club/league bio or a list of players drafter or a local paper story), then they'll pass the basic criteria, which should trump the WP:ATHLETE requirement. Having just been drafted, they haven't yet and can't play in the only fully professional Australian rules football league until next March at the earliest when the season starts. See Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Stephen Hill (Australian footballer) for an example. Am I misreading this guideline and does WP:Athlete trump the basic criteria, or are the deletionist-pushing editors wrong, at least in this specific case with this specific argument. See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Deletion_sorting/Australia for the full list... up to 13 AFDs now (actually more, there are so many of them, not all have been sorted correctly)... including the top 3 of the top 5 selections. including the #1 pick! The-Pope (talk) 11:42, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- WP:ATHLETE, and any of the other profession-specific sub-guidlines, is subservient to the main WP:NOTABILITY guideline - no question about it. The introduction to the "Additional criteria" section makes that clear. Mlaffs (talk) 12:40, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- I disagree that RS coverage makes people notable regardless and maintain that in this case WP:ATHLETE prevails and AFL draftees are not notable if all they are notable is for being an AFL draftee and playing football at less than a fully professional level nor at the highest amateur level of a sport. I agree people may still be notable under Wikipedia:Notability. However, these AFL draftees are not worthy of notice in an encyclopaedic sense in my view. There are many things reported in the news and that does not mean that they are worthy of an encyclopaedia article. The social pages are an excellent example of coverage of people who are not otherwise necessarily worthy of an encyclopaedia article. --Matilda talk 19:51, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- However, that is where non-trivial comes into play. Being mentioned doesn't meet RS requirements, you have to have articles about the subject. -Djsasso (talk) 19:53, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- Let's be specific then - even though there are three articles [18] [19] [20] - they are all this month and they do not in my mind make this footballer worthy of an article at present. Note he has not as I understand it played for Australia - the All-Australian Team never plays a game --Matilda talk 19:59, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- There is no requirement that the news be spread out, he is notable for being a footballer thus this is not a case of WP:BLP1E which would require him to be notable for a single event, however as a footballer he is notable for many games. As for the All-Australlia team thats a major award, which is another thing he would be notable for. -Djsasso (talk) 20:03, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- From WP:BIO#Additional criteria: "A person is generally notable if they meet any of the following standards. Failure to meet these criteria is not conclusive proof that a subject should not be included; conversely, meeting one or more does not guarantee that a subject should be included. Should a person fail to meet these additional criteria, they may still be notable under Wikipedia:Notability." I'm sorry, but I don't know how it can be any clearer that WP:ATHLETE is subservient to WP:N. My ten-year-old, hockey-playing next-door neighbour could have an article if he'd done something broader a single event in his hockey career that resulted in him being the subject of multiple, secondary source material that is intellectually independent and independent of the subject — it wouldn't matter a whit that he'd never played in the NHL, the Olympics, or the major junior leagues. Notable is notable. I've included some additional thoughts at the deletion debate noted above. Mlaffs (talk) 21:51, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- I do not think there is a general rule: the specific guidelines can be intended to provide supplementary ways of showing notability, to the GNG or to replace the GNG. Recall that the GNG says itself if does not apply without exceptions and guidelines are inherently flexible. As elsewhere, what needs to be decided is what we want to do--once we know that, we can figure out how to write the rules appropriately to that end. They are not given to us by higher authority. But "we" in this context does not mean on ly the specialists in the sport in question--they'd be expected to come up with the formulation, but theyr work must be acceptable to the community as a whole. or the articles simply will not be kept, To it it bluntly, there are three limitations which I think the general community is imposing on the sports articles. One of them is a desire for restraint. another is a general perception that great success at a lower levl does not always correspond to success at a higher one; and the third is that local or incidental or human interest stories do not make for notability (this is not said specifically in the notability criteria, but comes from the usual reading of ONE EVENT. I have no particular point here to accomplish--I do not much care what is decided here, as I am unlkely to either read or work on these articles. So I advise those who do care to reach some sort of a compromise that will be acceptable to the community. (Recall that ther is always an out for any limitations: substantial widespread coverage of ultiple events is considered to make anyone notable, no matter how intrinsically trivial the accomplushments. But even here there is a great reluctance to apply it to young children with even widely reprted athletic precocity.) DGG (talk) 08:33, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
Paralympic Games in WP:ATHLETE
I am as politically correct and liberal as the next guy, but I can't see giving participation in the Paralympic Games the same notability-exception status as the Olympics or World Championships. I can't name a single competitor. Those games do not get the coverage of the Olympics, they don't even get into the sports pages. I think that a Paralympic competitor ought to meet general notability guidelines, just like a Div I football palyer to be considered notable.--2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 06:53, 27 November 2008 (UTC)
- No they don't get the same coverage as the Olympic Games, but they do get a lot more coverage than they used to. There was significant coverage in the UK at least of the Beijing games, with a number of events covered live and a lot more on recorded highlights, plus plenty of coverage in the papers. One of the British competitors, Ellie Simmonds, is a strong contender for the Young Sports Personality of the Year Award. I agree that they should meet general notability guidelines, but then I think that should be the case for Olympic Games competitors (and everyone else) as well. - fchd (talk) 15:54, 28 November 2008 (UTC)
- Well, that's what WP:ATHLETE does-it provides an exception to general notability guidelines. I think that the consensus is for members of fully professional leagues: players that make their living playing sports, and those that are at the highest level of amateur competition. The point I make here is that the discussion on this page has been to include only the Olympics and World Championships in that highest level of amateur sports. There was a lot of discussion recently as to whether to include Division IA football and basketball players in that designation as well, and it was determined to not include them. To then include Paralympic competitors, who get much less coverage than those two groups would fly in the face of that consensus. Therefore, I removed that class of players from WP:ATHLETE and noted it in this section.--2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 09:01, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- Wikipedia: The encyclopedia for able-bodied Americans. Juzhong (talk) 09:12, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- It's a stretch to claim this would fly in the face of that consensus. The consensus about the D1 athletes is due to there being a professional league or sport which they can compete in. In order to qualify for the Paralympics you have to be disabled in such a way that you can't compete on an even playing field with non-disabled world class athletes. However, athletes still have to make it through national qualifiers, and the event is sanctioned by the same body as the Olympics if I'm not mistaken. So they have a claim to meeting highest amateur status, which D 1 does not. Also you're mistaken about it being only the Olympics and World Championships, the Goodwill and Commonwealth games have also held up as a big enough deal to warrant it. More accurate summation would be that it's major, international competition with mandatory qualifications that counts as highest amateur level. So I think they probably should qualify as well.Horrorshowj (talk) 04:18, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Juzhong, I was wondering how long it would be before the PC police came out. There is nothing wrong with a Paralympic athlete being in Wikipedia. It's just that they should meet notability guidelines. And Horrorshow, in that long discussion about Div I football, there was no mention made about sanctioning bodies. Nor was there mention of the Goodwill Games or the Commonwealth games as getting an athlete in under WP:ATHLETE. I think that a new discussion would be in order to add any of these three competitions into the standard.--2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 05:09, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Of course they should meet notability guidelines, just like any other Olympian, athlete or any other individual. Let's keep to the general WP:BIO guidelines of requiring multiple non-trivial independent reliable sources for all persons, and then we don't need to worry about what's contained within WP:ATHLETE. - fchd (talk) 12:00, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Then go ahead and remove WP:ATHLETE and you will be able to rejoice in your "neutral" enclopedia full of American high school quaterbacks and free from pollution by players from the top Albanian teams. Juzhong (talk) 12:43, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Hang on a minute, my proposal to remove WP:ATHLETE is based on the premise that the outcome will be the opposite - it will include more of the top sportsmen from around the world who don't happen to play in fully-professional leagues and not necessarily expand the number of American high school and college players as notable. - fchd (talk) 13:17, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Then go ahead and remove WP:ATHLETE and you will be able to rejoice in your "neutral" enclopedia full of American high school quaterbacks and free from pollution by players from the top Albanian teams. Juzhong (talk) 12:43, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- I'll explain this again:
- You compared them to DI sports. DI was rejected above due to having professional leagues above them. Paralympics don't have that due to the restriction. Thus your initial argument is not terribly relevant.
- You claimed that you couldn't name a single one of them. Not terribly convincing. The only olympian I can name from the last one is Michael Phelps, and until Beckham came over I couldn't name a single MLS player. However, I'm sure a lot of editors can name dozens of both. That's why "I've never heard of it" is an invalid AFD argument.
- Both the Goodwill and Commonwealth Games have held up at AFD. While they may not have been mentioned in the above circlejerk, that doesn't change the results of the AFDs. It would have been more accurate to say highest amateur level is international competition in terms of prior consensus.
- While sanctioning bodies were not mentioned for D1, we're not discussing their eligibility. The USOC governs the US Paralympic team, and the IPC and IOC have a partnership agreement in place requiring host cities to hold both. I think those are pretty good arguments for the Paralympics being considered an event of equal standing, and thus participation in them as equally notable.Horrorshowj (talk) 02:17, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
- You are correct that my ignorance of something is not proof of non-notability. What I should limit myself to is what consensus for inclusion has been up to this point. I would disagree that just because the events of the Goodwill and Commonwealth Games survived AFDs for the events themselves that the participants should automatically qualify under WP:ATHLETE. If you want them included, which until now they have not been, then you need to gather consensus for that. The above discussion only entertained those two (just because you don't agree with the result doesn't give you the right to be disgusting in your description of that discussion, btw). Fire up a discussion here on that issue and well see if others think that they should also be included. The consensus might very easily wind up in your favor this time, you know?
- As for the Paralympics, if their events were different than the ones at the Olympics, I would agree. But they are not. The highest level of competition for those sports are the Olympics and World Championships, and perhaps the Goodwill and Commonwealth Games. I understand your argument, but I just don't agree with it. There are disabled athletes that now participate straight-up with able-bodied athletes at the highest levels. --2008Olympianchitchat 07:57, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- Of course they should meet notability guidelines, just like any other Olympian, athlete or any other individual. Let's keep to the general WP:BIO guidelines of requiring multiple non-trivial independent reliable sources for all persons, and then we don't need to worry about what's contained within WP:ATHLETE. - fchd (talk) 12:00, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Juzhong, I was wondering how long it would be before the PC police came out. There is nothing wrong with a Paralympic athlete being in Wikipedia. It's just that they should meet notability guidelines. And Horrorshow, in that long discussion about Div I football, there was no mention made about sanctioning bodies. Nor was there mention of the Goodwill Games or the Commonwealth games as getting an athlete in under WP:ATHLETE. I think that a new discussion would be in order to add any of these three competitions into the standard.--2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 05:09, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- It's a stretch to claim this would fly in the face of that consensus. The consensus about the D1 athletes is due to there being a professional league or sport which they can compete in. In order to qualify for the Paralympics you have to be disabled in such a way that you can't compete on an even playing field with non-disabled world class athletes. However, athletes still have to make it through national qualifiers, and the event is sanctioned by the same body as the Olympics if I'm not mistaken. So they have a claim to meeting highest amateur status, which D 1 does not. Also you're mistaken about it being only the Olympics and World Championships, the Goodwill and Commonwealth games have also held up as a big enough deal to warrant it. More accurate summation would be that it's major, international competition with mandatory qualifications that counts as highest amateur level. So I think they probably should qualify as well.Horrorshowj (talk) 04:18, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Wikipedia: The encyclopedia for able-bodied Americans. Juzhong (talk) 09:12, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- Well, that's what WP:ATHLETE does-it provides an exception to general notability guidelines. I think that the consensus is for members of fully professional leagues: players that make their living playing sports, and those that are at the highest level of amateur competition. The point I make here is that the discussion on this page has been to include only the Olympics and World Championships in that highest level of amateur sports. There was a lot of discussion recently as to whether to include Division IA football and basketball players in that designation as well, and it was determined to not include them. To then include Paralympic competitors, who get much less coverage than those two groups would fly in the face of that consensus. Therefore, I removed that class of players from WP:ATHLETE and noted it in this section.--2008Olympianchitchatseemywork 09:01, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- And I would disagree with deleting WP:ATHLETE. it gives a bright-line rule for athletes that prevents innumerable debates about what athletes get in. Take on WP:PORNSTAR of you want to go at a ludicrous WP:N exception. To delete WP:ATHLETE would definitely require a well-publicized Request for Comment. Until then, it has to stay.--2008Olympianchitchat 07:57, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- For the record, I agree with you on WP:ATHLETE. It gives a non-subjective border between athletes which pass WP:N and those that do not. Peanut4 (talk) 13:43, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not talking about the articles for the events themselves passing AFD. I mean that having participated in them has been sufficient for articles about athletes that competed there to pass AFD. Second how does WP:PORNBIO qualify as "a ludicrous exception" when it has allowed through 1% of the number of articles Athlete has?Horrorshowj (talk) 20:49, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
- And I would disagree with deleting WP:ATHLETE. it gives a bright-line rule for athletes that prevents innumerable debates about what athletes get in. Take on WP:PORNSTAR of you want to go at a ludicrous WP:N exception. To delete WP:ATHLETE would definitely require a well-publicized Request for Comment. Until then, it has to stay.--2008Olympianchitchat 07:57, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
WP:BIO1E requires redrawing
Or, reading the arguments in Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Todd Beamer (2nd nomination), Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Sandeep Unnikrishnan and others I feel that this points to a need to redraw the set of paragraphs.
My rationale for suggesting this is that the event, the one event, that created notability of Todd Beamer, was an event of substantial notability in its own right. I do not believe that we reflect this correctly in our policies and guidelines, and feel that a redraft is necessary in order to cover what might be termed as exceptional single events. Fiddle Faddle (talk) 22:53, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
- I suggest a look at what is in the big green box at Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2007 May 23#Crystal Gail Mangum. That might help to get a grasp on what underlies the policy. There are reams of discussion in the archives of Wikipedia talk:Biographies of living persons, too, starting from the day after the big green box was written. Uncle G (talk) 01:44, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- I understand that. Thank you for the pointer. I am content if people say "We do not need to have this discussion again". It simply seemed to me to be relevant to raise it here now because the issue is (again) current. I intend to take no part in any discussion, simply to ask for it and let more experienced editors determine the outcome, if any. Fiddle Faddle (talk) 01:55, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that notability guideline(not just BIO1E) requires redrawing. There is a clear difference between the way some articles about martyrs in 26/11 Mumbai attacks were debated for deletion(some were also deleted) and the kid gloves with which some other articles are treated. This article Saab_Lofton is also an example. Have a look at the content and the discussion page. Clearly notability is not defined properly in the guidelines or is not being interpreted correctly. As it happens in common law a guideline or law is always subject to interpretations. Also precedence is always important in the interpretation in current context. The guideline should reflect the intent and the spirit should be respected not just the letter be followed. Indoresearch (talk) 09:06, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
- I understand that. Thank you for the pointer. I am content if people say "We do not need to have this discussion again". It simply seemed to me to be relevant to raise it here now because the issue is (again) current. I intend to take no part in any discussion, simply to ask for it and let more experienced editors determine the outcome, if any. Fiddle Faddle (talk) 01:55, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
Clarification of criteria
Regarding the criteria "The person has created, or played a major role in co-creating, a significant or well-known work, or collective body of work, which has been the subject of an independent book or feature-length film, or of multiple independent periodical articles or reviews." Is a "significant or well-known work" established as such by there being "multiple independent periodical articles or reviews"? --neon white talk 18:13, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
Categories of awards
WP:PORNBIO provides that a pornographic actor is notable (inter alia) if s/he:
- has won or been a serious nominee for a well-known award, such as those listed in Category:Adult movie awards.
However, an award being notable in the WP sense (i.e., that the award has received coverage) does not provide evidence that recipients of that award are notable (Ig Nobel, Razzies to name a few off the top of my head). Thoughts? Bongomatic 03:40, 16 December 2008 (UTC)
- Hmm... not sure what you mean by that. If you look at the general notability criteria, it says "The person has received a notable award or honor, or has been often nominated for them." It does not give any details or definitions of what counts as a "notable award or honor"; what PORNBIO does is that it explicitly states what counts as as notable. Tabercil (talk) 05:37, 16 December 2008 (UTC)
Royalty and nobility
Are princesses and princes inherently notable enough to have articles in Wikipedia? Or must they satisfy the basic criteria? Please explain. Thanks. Tmct (talk) 22:16, 18 December 2008 (UTC)
- A recent discussion on this was held here - Wikipedia talk:Notability (people)/Archive 2008#Notability of Royalty. Davewild (talk) 11:31, 20 December 2008 (UTC)
- ^ Participation in and in most cases winning individual tournaments, except the most prestigious events, does not make non-athletic competitors notable. This includes, but is not limited to, poker, bridge, chess, Magic:The Gathering, Starcraft, etc.