Wikipedia talk:Deletion policy
- Talk from 2002 -> Wikipedia talk:Deletion policy/2002
- Talk from 2003 -> Wikipedia talk:Deletion policy/2003
- "seven day rule" -> Wikipedia talk:Votes for deletion/lag time
- policy for redirects -> Wikipedia talk:Deletion policy/redirects
- feature suggestions -> meta:searches and redirects
- Various points from the Village pump in September 2003
- use of the word "unencyclopedic" -> Wikipedia:Unencyclopedic
- Wikipedia talk:Deletion policy/schools
- Should VfD be renamed? -> Wikipedia talk:Votes for deletion/title
- Case studies: wikipedia:archived deletion debates
- speedy deletion: Wikipedia talk:Candidates for speedy deletion
- Archive November 2003 to October 2004
- Archive October 2004 to December 2004
Unlisting a page from VfD
There appears to be confusing about the meaning of this section of the policy. See Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/Unbibium. I think that section should be revised for clarity. Eric119 18:12, 8 Dec 2004 (UTC)
What's your suggested rewording, Eric?Dr Zen 00:55, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- The purpose of this topic was to make the policy clearer. Not being sure of the intent, I don't know what the wording should be. Eric119 04:26, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I would be in favor of this if the time limit were changed to 72 hours, to account for those of us who don't check in every day or take off for a weekend. --Stevietheman 22:44, 22 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I sometimes go for weeks between checking VfD, but I don't think a time limit of weeks would be a good idea. A 24-hour time limit sounds good to me because it would allow a reasonable sampling of VfD-active people to take a look at the proposal. If the system is set up right then I shouldn't have to approve every VfD proposal personally. Bryan 16:37, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- But three days is reasonable compared to "weeks". Some active VfD people don't take weeks off at a time, but still need to feel comfortable with taking some reasonable breaks. --Stevietheman 07:15, 28 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- But you do not need every listing or unlisting to be viewed by every editor. If you did, we would be arguing that the lag on VfD needs to be more than a fortnight to allow for vacations! Do you personally need to endorse all actions on VfD? Do you not take that to be the responsibility of the community as a whole? If you were away and felt something had been delisted wrongly, why would you not be able to put it back on the list?Dr Zen 23:32, 28 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Proposed wording change
From: "To request that a page (or image) be permanently deleted, the request made on VfD, and any votes or comments relating to a listed page must be made in good faith. At the end of five days, if a "rough consensus" (what a rough consensus is is not set in stone, a few do consider a 2/3 majority a "rough consensus") has been reached to delete the page, the page will be removed. Otherwise the page remains. The page will also remain if it has been improved enough since the initial listing that the reason for the listing no longer applies. This requires a reason to be given initially when requesting that a page be deleted."
To: "To request that a page (or image) be permanently deleted, the request made on VfD, and any votes or comments relating to a listed page must be made in good faith. At the end of five days, if a "rough consensus" (what a rough consensus is is not set in stone, a few do consider a 2/3 majority a "rough consensus") has been reached to delete the page, the page will be removed. Otherwise the page remains. The page will also remain if it has been improved enough since the initial listing that the reason for the listing no longer applies. This requires a reason to be given initially when requesting that a page be deleted. If a page is listed without a reason or without its listing being signed, its listing is liable to be removed by any editor."
(My emphasis solely to point up my addition.)
This suggestion is prompted by considering Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/Lewis Moody, in which it seems an editor stuck on the VfD message, but did not list the page, which often happens (most usually because, one presumes, the lister is a newbie who isn't sure of the process). I am not suggesting these listings should always be struck out. I am suggesting we have wording that allows them to be if an editor feels they are incorrectly listed, as this clearly was. Niteowlneils does a lot of really good work converting this type of listing, and I'm not wanting to denigrate his effort, but rather to allow him and others to use their judgement and simply remove the listing (or the tag) without being challenged for going against policy.
Any comments?Dr Zen 01:06, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- That seems like a good addition, though it doesn't fully address the issue of early delisting. Do you think this is the only case when it should be allowed to delist? Eric119 04:26, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Sorry, probably wasn't too clear. I'm not suggesting a rewording for delisting section here because I'd rather see that from you and then maybe comment. This is a quite separate issue, in the same area. I think this is a case where there should be delisting allowed. However, as you know, I think Unibibium fit the bill too for the reasons I gave on that page. This is less controversial, I think.
- Personally, I feel the delisting section is clear enough. The five days is to gather a consensus to delete. If there is an overwhelming consensus to keep, and no particular discussion going on within a couple of days, I think it's fair to delist an article. This is because there is a presumption to keep and if there have been several votes to keep already, there will be no consensus to delete anyway. (I do not believe a consensus is the same thing as a majority vote.) I think this only applies to articles that are for other reasons uncontroversial to keep though -- perhaps very quick relistings of articles that had absolutely no sign of a consensus to delete would be a good example or articles that are very clearly companions of articles that passed VfD (for instance, if one Polish family's coat of arms passes, and others are listed, and the latter have only keep votes after a couple of days... well, you see what I mean). I do not believe there should be a charter for listing wars and I wouldn't support policy that encouraged that.
- In any case, this is a wiki. We should be able to delist articles anyway. If anyone really wants them gone, they can reinstate the listing. I'm only suggesting a policy change to minimise disruption and make this explicit in the particular circumstances I suggest.Dr Zen 04:55, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Okay, I hope this wording makes things clearer. I am beginning to think your interpretation is correct. Here bold indicates changes from the original paragraph.
- If there is overwhelming consensus for another action than deletion, leave the page listed on Wikipedia:Votes for deletion for a short while, so the original poster can see why it wasn't deleted, and what did happen to it. This will prevent needless reposting of the same item. After the original poster has seen the explanation, or in any case after about a day, the page can be delisted from VfD. If another user thinks the early delisting was appropriate, the page may be listed again until the lag time is completed.
- Do you agree with this? In any case I think we should get more support before changing the policy. Eric119 16:42, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Yes, I like it a lot. But how about my change to the other paragraph? Would you be willing to endorse both changes and seek consensus on them?Dr Zen 00:07, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Do you agree with this? In any case I think we should get more support before changing the policy. Eric119 16:42, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Deletion unlisting mechanism
See also Wikipedia:Deletion unlisting and of course Wikipedia talk:Deletion unlisting. Andrewa 00:29, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Proposed "no futures" policy
We have a policy on Wikipedia that we do not permit autobiographies, no matter how notable the autobiographer. The reason is that large numbers of autobiographies are submitted, the probability of their being vanity is overwhelming, and if we had to debate each one seriously we would waste huge amounts of time.
We have a number of other similar policies, such as ignoring votes for adminship by users whose first edits are to debate; again, we can't prove they're all sockpuppets, but the likelihood is overwhelming.
In both cases we use a simple rule that is correct most of the time, because the harm created by insisting on careful deliberation of these issues far outweighs any harm done by the rare possibility of losing a valuable biography because nobody but the notable person is willing to write the article.
Along the same lines I'd really like to see a strong, simple "no-futures" policy about books/movies/games/software that are just about to be released. I think it should be policy to delete such articles even if the topic of the article is arguably notable, because:
- a) Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a newspaper, and there should be no rush to include things;
- b) Barring such articles from Wikipedia prior to the book, movie, game, or software's release does Wikipedia little if any harm, while allowing Wikipedia to be used as a publicity medium does a great deal of harm;
- c) a "no-futures" rule is relatively simple to understand and relatively uncontroversial to apply, whereas any criterion involving "notability" is highly contentious.
I'm not crazy about silly articles like 6939, but that's not nearly as important. Articles like that aren't the greatest thing in the world for Wikipedia but they don't do a great deal of harm, either.
If, however, would-be promoters perceive that it is relatively easy to use Wikipedia as one way to create "buzz," and that countering such efforts is slow, laborious, and ineffective... that does hurt Wikipedia. [[User:Dpbsmith|Dpbsmith (talk)]] 21:28, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
This would also disallow discussion of upcoming elections and the like, wouldn't it? I have to say I'd be broadly in favour of a no-futures policy for artefacts, but some are culturally important (for example, when they cause a stir, such as The Passion of the Christ did). But your argument is rather persuasive. A descriptive Wikipedia is a good thing. A predictive one is asking to be used by people with an agenda. I think that it would be very unpopular if it was extended to elections etc but I think it's broadly supportable if restricted to artefacts and caveated to allow controversies *about* artefacts to be included (I realise of course that this would allow fans of Galactic Strike to claim that version XV has caused enormous ructions in the Galactic Strike "community" but we could happily define "controversy" to include "makes it to a newspaper".Dr Zen 00:16, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC)
I strongly support this suggestion. To me, the benefits far outweigh the costs. I do not think it needs any exceptions, either (not even for elections or for The Passion of the Christ). Wikipedia is not WikiNews. An encyclopedia loses very little by choosing to discuss the controversy after the fact rather than attempting to discuss it during. Rossami (talk) 01:05, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC)
What no Second Coming?Kappa 01:31, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC) (lol)- How about Unbibium? Clearly disallowed under this policy as it stands. Also, any predicted particles are strictly disallowed.Dr Zen 02:19, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I intend the policy to apply to books, movies, games, and software.
- That would clearly allow discussion of future elections and Unbibium and predicted particles.
- There's a category of article which I will call "extrapolative vanity." 6939 is a good example; so, arguably is Unbibium. So would be an article on the nonexistent binary prefix "nobibyte." I dislike these articles myself. In my opinion, which others will not agree with, topics like these are vanity because they are created for the personal pleasure of creating an article, rather than to serve a useful purpose. But they're just "cruft," and they don't need any special policy. List them in VfD and debate them under existing policy.
- I want to exclude articles that are about forthcoming books, movies, games and software. Perhaps I can go further and say "books, movies, games and software that are to be released within the next six months."
- Yep, if it's so vaporous that there's no date, it wouldn't fall under the policy. That would not mean it's automatically included, just that there's no special policy about it.
- I support this idea, but I think it still needs some work. And I think you've overstated the existing policy on autobiography, it's not a ban at all. And several sysops simply ignore any policy that doesn't suit them, which complicates things a bit. Andrewa 15:01, 11 Dec 2004 (UTC)
I support this idea, and suggest adding TV series' to the list. Niteowlneils 01:51, 11 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Question: Imagine notable actors A, B and C are all currently involved in a movie project, which would seem to make this project of some interest to readers. What if anything should be said about this project, and where?
- If the project is a sequel to an existing movie, there could be a note about it in the article about the existing movie. If it is an adaptation of a well-known existing source (book, stage musical, video game, comic book), there could be a note about it in the article about the source. Even if several actors are involved, it is very likely that one of them, or some other person, is more closely connected with the project that the others. For example, if it were rumored that certain actors were being considered for a seventh episode, it could logically go in the article on George Lucas. Links are our friend here, as the articles about the actors could contain a brief mention of the project and a link to the article with the fullest account. And links are necessary, unless you're going to put copies of the material in the article about each actor.
- Note that this would serve Interested readers perfectly well. Regardless of how the information is organized, the most likely way a reader would find it is by using the name of one of the actors as their entry point. An actor's name is short, familiar, and a reader would be more likely to know the exact form and spelling that for the title of a forthcoming movie, which is subject to change anyway. The second most likely is text search. [[User:Dpbsmith|Dpbsmith (talk)]] 16:31, 11 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- [[User:Dpbsmith|Dpbsmith
- Yep, I support this one. Let future books, films, games, etc. be briefly mentioned in related articles before a seperate article is created. No info lost, but it still stops the creation of a lot of little questionable articles. [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm|(talk)]] 19:03, Dec 11, 2004 (UTC)
- I definitely support. Strongest argument I think is that an encyclopedia doesn't have to function as a newswire or other news service. It's hard to imagine, say, Britannica writing an article about something ongoing instead of just waiting until it had finished. I think there is some room for discussion about whether it ought to apply to matters of national or global importance, but in general I think a policy applying to entertainment media would go a long way toward enabling everyone to quickly get rid of these cluttering entries. Katefan0 20:03, Dec 11, 2004 (UTC)
- Oppose. I believe, however, that the article-writer (hopefully not a person connected with the item in question, but even if) will be honest about the matter and declare that it's a future item. I think, just as I've seen a "this describes a current or ongoing event" tag, there should be a "this describes a future event" tag.
- If the future item is verifiable and will be released with high probability, I think it's reasonable to maintain an article on it. "I will write this book when I have time" is not acceptable. An in-progress version of Windows, or a complete-but-not-yet-released book or movie is.
- It's true that Wikipedia doesn't lose much by expunging futures, but why debate, then delete a page if you know it will have to be remade when the book or movie comes out? EventHorizon 04:04, 12 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Yes it seems like this should be a "merge" policy rather than a "delete" policy, then relevent information could be re-extracted when the time came. Kappa
- Support. The policy that futures may be discussed in a related article, but may not receive their own article until they're actual, seems to handle most of the problematic cases rather well. -- Antaeus Feldspar 05:21, 12 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Requiring seconding
A proposed 'graph added at Wikipedia:Deletion policy#Unlisting a page from VfD would remove VfD entries that don't get additional support within 24 hours. --Jerzy(t) 08:13, 2004 Dec 15 (UTC)
- This superficially appealing idea should be defeated, as it offers insignificant benefit in return for costs that would be significant and do not have dependable upper bounds.
- It was put forward on the basis that
- seven pages would be bumped from VfD
- apparently as of 21:52, Dec 11, 2004. (The 7 come from the 6th, 7th, 9th, and early on the 10th, which were then all over 1 day and up to 5.92 days old -- bear in mind that in practice, for efficiency and in order to ensure each listing gets at least its full 5 days, the oldest 1-day section is removed as soon as convenient after midnight, and at midnight, the removable entries range from 5.0 to 6.0 days old. Thru the course of each day, the list starts containing about 5.0 days' worth and expands to about 6.0 days' worth ) Without trying to count the entries present at that time, surely it would be comparable to the present
- 35 under Dec 10th
- 47 under Dec 11th
- 40 under Dec 12th
- 39 under Dec 13th
- 49 under Dec 14th
- totalling 210 for a 5.0-day range.
- So the justification is that this plan will permit discarding 3.3% of the listings. But it's not even true that that reduces the size of VfD by 3.3%:
- When would these removals be done? Either
- continuously, with each entry under "Dec 10" being checked on Dec 11, as soon as convenient after passing its 24-hour point, or
- in a daily batch, with all the entries under "Dec 10" being checked at the same time early on Dec 12, as soon as convenient after midnight.
- In the first case, the saving is reduced by a factor that ranges from 1/5 to 1/6 (.20 to .17, or an average of about .18) over the course of the day, reflecting the not yet eligible 24 hours' worth (that represent a decreasing share of the 5 to 6 days' worth); in the second, the saving is reduced by from 1/5 to 2/6 (.20 to .33, or an average of about .27), reflecting the not yet eligible 24 hours' worth, plus 0 to 24 hours' worth of eligible but deferred lisings (which together represent an increasing share of the more slowly increasing total).
- Is 24 hours an acceptable time limit? The least efficient time to read VfD listings is when the date on their section is the current date. The section is being edited an average of at least 42 times that day (corrections, including repairs necessitated by edit conflicts, add to that, and ed-confs are more common than 24/42 (= one edit every 34 minutes) suggests, because a disproportionate share of edits are done at popular times of the day when the danger of edit conflicts is higher. The high number of edits requires either reloading the list repeatedly (and rescanning, if not the whole list, at least both the start and end, since no clear instruction about which end to add to is well established, nor likely to be fully adhered to even if it should become well established). Without trying to identify the personality traits involved, there is every reason to believe that first-day readers are not typical of all VfD readers. A 48-hour window may well be required to give 24 hours of effective availability. That would change the reduction factors to 2/5 to 2/6 (average .36) for continuous review and 2/5 to 3/6 (average .45) for once-per-day batch review.
- Objective costs of review.
- For continuous review: In the absence of marking every VfD "needs second" at the end of its section's day, or of marking every VfD "seconded" when that occurs, review teeters between too many editors checking already seconded VfDs for lack of second, and so few checking that some unseconded VfDs survive beyond the normal review period. Such survival further lowers the savings in VfD-entry count; it may induce more early checking in the future, but only if editors' attention is being wasted by their making subconscious late checks. Further, each scan must check all the day's entries, unless (presumably around midnight) someone sorts, by nomination time, the 40-ish-item list that has been appended to at both ends throughout the day; note that this sorting requires manipulating an edit window guided by what is seen in a rendered window, and/or (depending on mental agility and levels of compliance with an add-only-at-end standard) repeated manipulations followed by fully rendered previews of the section.
- For batch review: unlike with the current daily VfD maintenance, where almost a glance suffices to detect the built-in signals (no heading with the current date, earliest heading being 6 instead of 5 days earlier than the day of month), either an artificial signal ("This section has been checked for un-seconded nominations") or multiple checks are required. Unless the page is in some sense "locked" before starting checking, two checkers may duplicate the effort.
- Subjective costs. The policy is complicated, for reading and recalling, by a nearly worthless rule. Those who don't trust the policy will sabotage it by voting Del and changing their vote near the VfD's close date. Claims of identifying sockpuppets will have to be fought out early in each VfD's life cycle, or allowed to defeat the policy.
- Summary: this can o' worms ain't worth eatin'.
- --Jerzy(t) 08:13, 2004 Dec 15 (UTC)
- I disagree with you assessment. My primary concern is the amount of time and effort wasted by these votes. Assessing, closing, and archiving a page listed VfD/Old takes me at least two minutes. Finding the nine pages that could currently be removed under this rule (Bash.org, Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi, Tightlacing, Electroactive polymers, Robart's library, Chimichurri, Lemon Party, Portia, and Saqabila]]) took me only two or three minutes. Removing them would only take a few minutes more generating a net saving just for the admin clearing out VfD. The time saved by VfD loading faster, and by other readers of VfD not having to asses and vote on pages that are definitely going to be kept is all net profit for Wikipedia. That the VfD page will be some 3% shorter is another added benefit. The net improvement is marginal, but it is still improvement. - SimonP 09:11, Dec 15, 2004 (UTC)
- It also gets some of the most most controversial nominations - ones that are credibly accused of being "abuse of the VfD process" - out of the discussion stream. I want them out because as editors, we have a tendency to respond to them in flamboyant and emotional terms. I've noticed that this emotional language has a negative effect on our ability to remain objective during the analysis and discussion of the serious nominations. (Side note: We have been better than average the past few days. Are the upcoming holidays mellowing us?) Rossami (talk) 14:52, 15 Dec 2004 (UTC)
A recurring objection to proposed changes with time limits is that it will be hard to check every item. But this supposes that one single person will do so. Of course they won't. There are lots of people who access VfD at different times. It just needs one to spot a lack of seconding and whoosh, it's delisted. If one is missed, it's not a big problem.Dr Zen 23:42, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)
images, categories, templates in CAT:CSD?
Am I alone in thinking that the speedy delete tag should only be used for articles, and not images, categories or templates? So far, I have skipped images, categories and templates because I am not sure that they are covered by any of the criteria for speedy deletion. Is there an existing policy on this? Right now the wording in CAT:CSD makes it seem like it's only for articles. Any ideas? --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 18:06, Dec 16, 2004 (UTC)
- Wikipedia:Candidates for speedy deletion includes specifications for redirects, categories, images, and user and talk pages. -[[User:Aranel|Aranel ("Sarah")]] 01:21, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Should there not be a reference to precedents?
I would've thought examination of the precedents page would form part of the VfD process at some point. Why is it not referenced on the deletion policy page? Dan100 17:28, Dec 20, 2004 (UTC)
Counting User votes who choose 'invalid' reasons
There are many situations where users haven’t read the ‘deletion policy’ thoroughly and site reasons which make articles candidates for operations other then deletion. Like I have seen that some articles are merely voted for deletion, because they are some what ‘NPOV. Instead of giving ‘disputed banner’ to them they are voted for deletion. So if a user see ‘NPOV’ as problem but votes for deletion, instead of improvement, should it be counted equal to another voter who sees a valid reason not to delete?
- No. Votes for delete are votes for delete. We don't through ought delete votes without a rationale, and theres no reason to second-guess the votes as somehow based on invalid reasons. We only need some rough consensus to delete the article. If we also needed all users voting to have an identical understanding about what qualifies for deletion, we could never delete anything. Cool Hand Luke 20:36, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I have to disagree. We may not throw out delete votes that don't give a rationale but such votes are in fact in contradiction of deletion policy, where we specifically instruct people to explain their reasoning even in cases where it seems obvious. If a vote is a vote is a vote no matter what the reasoning behind it is, why are we putting people through the useless bother? The entire voting process is an attempt to tap the best judgement of our experienced Wikipedians; to count a vote even when it provably represents bad or the worst judgement is only an administrative convenience. -- Antaeus Feldspar 22:13, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Actually, I find no list anywhere that pretends to be an exhaustive list of rationales for deletion, so why should we pretend there is such a thing? Granted, POV is one of the things not requiring deletion, but I charitably interpret these votes as "No potential to become encyclopedic." That's the reason I see many POV votes: they believe the topic is inherently POV (unencyclopedic). Cool Hand Luke 22:25, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I'm not going to take the time to check now, so if I'm wrong let me apologize in advance, but I thought that while POV was not grounds for deletion, a topic that is intrinsically POV in itself and "cannot be made NPOV" was. You know, articles that are the equivalent of "have you stopped beating your wife?" Like...trying to think of a harmless hypothetical here... "List of reasons why Brahms is a greater composer than Wagner." [[User:Dpbsmith|Dpbsmith (talk)]] 03:50, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Actually, I find no list anywhere that pretends to be an exhaustive list of rationales for deletion, so why should we pretend there is such a thing? Granted, POV is one of the things not requiring deletion, but I charitably interpret these votes as "No potential to become encyclopedic." That's the reason I see many POV votes: they believe the topic is inherently POV (unencyclopedic). Cool Hand Luke 22:25, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I have to disagree. We may not throw out delete votes that don't give a rationale but such votes are in fact in contradiction of deletion policy, where we specifically instruct people to explain their reasoning even in cases where it seems obvious. If a vote is a vote is a vote no matter what the reasoning behind it is, why are we putting people through the useless bother? The entire voting process is an attempt to tap the best judgement of our experienced Wikipedians; to count a vote even when it provably represents bad or the worst judgement is only an administrative convenience. -- Antaeus Feldspar 22:13, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Ironically, the problem I'm seeing more of right now is not users advocating deletion on the false grounds that POV is a reason for deletion, it's users advocating "keep" on the false grounds that POV is a reason for keeping. Admittedly, most of these users also tend to be run-in voters, obviously recruited from outside to show up and cast a vote, but the fact is that many of them announce straight-out that the article should be kept, not because it does or could be made to discuss a subject in an NPOV fashion, but because it does or could be made to advocate their own POV above others. Saying that an admin can't weight such votes that are openly and explicitly against Wikipedia's goals seems just crazy. -- Antaeus Feldspar 17:30, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- What wikipedia is not and wikipedia:deletion policy both seem to be lists of grounds for deletion, although I'd contend that the deletion policy is the more relevant of the two, purely because I'm inclusionist. I also concur with Zain that delete votes need to be justified by that policy, or should be given less weight when an admin decides on the consensus. Dan100 23:21, Dec 20, 2004 (UTC)
- I was basically interested to find what is the 'official policy' and how does 'deletion process' actually works is it simple counting with only checking 'sock puppets' or the arguments given by the users are also given weight. Actually I was voting first time for Deletion (or opposing deletion). You also voted for that particular article and suggested merge and delete It is Wikipedia:Votes_for_deletion/List_of_Palestinian_children_killed_by_Israelis_in_2004 Although there are some legitimate reasons to delete them like 'memorialism' making contents non-Encyclopedic. That can be fixed by changing the content to some thing like List of incidences of deaths of Palestinian children, involving Israeli military operation equitant to List of terrorist incidents. This will reduce POV and will add encyclopedic value. If you want to see, which incidences (how many and when) involved children death during military operation? I think it is quite reasonable to say that people will be interested in seeking such information, for research and other purposes. So page should be marked for cleanup. So I believe it is more a cleanup then delete. But of course I might be wrong.
- The only thing which I wanted that is it mere 'counting' or 'weighting and counting'.
- Zain 23:34, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Voting is only one component of a deletion debate. Any admin making a deletion decision is expected to read the discussion and the arguments, and take these into account when deciding if an article should be deleted. One element of this evaluation is whether or not the votes correspond to current Wikipedia policies. - SimonP 00:13, Dec 21, 2004 (UTC)
- What If some one suspects that the Admin who put it on delete, did because of 'POV'. So he or his fellow Admin won't do the justice? Zain 01:14, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Admins are discouraged from making the final decision if they are personally involved in the discussion. Also any Admin or user is free to check them on it. -[[User:Aranel|Aranel ("Sarah")]] 01:21, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- The general principle that I operate under is that while, occasionally, articles can be kept with more than two-thirds of the votes in favour of deletion no article can be deleted if it doesn't meet that criteria. - SimonP 01:27, Dec 21, 2004 (UTC)
- Admins are discouraged from making the final decision if they are personally involved in the discussion. Also any Admin or user is free to check them on it. -[[User:Aranel|Aranel ("Sarah")]] 01:21, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- What If some one suspects that the Admin who put it on delete, did because of 'POV'. So he or his fellow Admin won't do the justice? Zain 01:14, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Well No personal attack but I found such example while voting, there is a person who is on the list of admins Wikipedia:List of administrators, on the voting page of Wikipedia:Votes_for_deletion/List_of_Palestinian_children_killed_by_Israelis_in_2004. Now there is an admin voting for deletion because of POV in the article but this is not all. Now more interestingly he points to another article for deletion. (not relevant to the discussion) but still he does. Let me quote him exactly " Get rid of Operation Days of Penitence Fatalities while you're at it" Now when I clicked it, It was encyclopedic because It had 133 deaths, But of course I can think that may be I can say that he thinks because of his Opinion that it is non-Encyclopedia. But that's more when I saw history and talk page, He was one of the Most Active Editors and Talker on this page. Although I according to wikipedia guide line, should try to have 'good faith' but in situation like this as you can see it is very difficult to have 'good faith', in situation like this when 'admin' acts like this, what can we expect? I explicitly said on one stage that Wikipedia is being used to Hiding information instead of share. There are some times when it is difficult to assume 'good faith'. I tried to explain about editors on Talk Page of WikiProject Countering systemic, but after this incidence I found that such phenomenon also exists with in the Admins. As I am relatively new to wikipedia, I don't know, do I have to live with such things on wikipedia, Or can I do some thing to 'counter' it.
- Zain 11:59, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Votes should be votes. And, in the end, the acting sysop's judgment should be the sysop's judgment. (And when we lose, we should try to be good losers...)
- The role of policy is that it should, and does, have a strong influence on votes. But it's the votes that count.
- Really, policy is just a codification and predictor of the way people are likely to vote. A lawyer consults the lawbooks because a competent lawyer's understanding of the law is a good predictor of how a competent judge will decide in court; but that's all it is.
- And really, everyone should relax a bit because VfD outcomes are not all that important. Articles that have been kept can still be edited mercilessly, turned into redirects or whatever by the ordinary editing process. And, conversely, when an article is deleted it doesn't really stop anyone from writing an encyclopedic article on the same or a similar topic, just so long as it isn't a re-creation of the deleted article.
- We have votes for deletion and votes for undeletion. We have a VfD process that works as well as it works. When there is consensus, it works. When there truly isn't consensus, layering more and more process isn't going to create consensus. We don't need to have meta-discussions and meta-votes on which VfD votes should be counted.
- In cases where there isn't policy, people should just vote their opinion and their best judgement—and not yell too much at others whose opinions differ. [[User:Dpbsmith|Dpbsmith (talk)]] 03:44, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- What If article is Encyclopedic but some people may not like it (as we know that ‘systemic bias’ does exist in wikipedia), and they may communicate within them self to increase delete votes (using email or chat or phone). If you check the ‘user contribution’ section of these users and their ‘favorites pages’ you will find that they have same POV. And they normally don’t get into deletion process (looking at their contribution) but for this particular instance they have all ‘grouped up’ to increase delete vote. So because of such a phenomenon which basically gives statistics against particular group, in this case it is difficult to say thing like ‘4 year child was holding a rocket launcher, when he was killed’. Number can be reduced but can’t be eliminated except deleting the page. If it can’t be done no matter how many edits you may do article will still have a ‘sting’ in it. So deletion of such articles under such situations should not be done by ‘counting vote only’ system. We should have some ‘countering’ mechanism.
- Zain 12:18, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Encyclopedic is a subjective term. There is no way to determine objectively whether or not it is valid to claim that an article is not "encyclopedic". If it's a POV concern, obviously the administrator who handles the decision will want to consider that. (And if he or she doesn't handle it in a way that you consider proper, there are plenty of other administrators who can check it. The entire debate and decision process is public. For that matter, you can check it whether or not you're an administrator.) -[[User:Aranel|Aranel ("Sarah")]] 15:01, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Please see the example of an 'admin' which i gave earlier and click on the link and then follow links to see why I see a problem. Zain 15:04, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- That's why I pointed out there there is more than one administrator. In fact, there are lots of administrators. Someone else can take care of it. If you have issues with a particular administrator, you should discuss them with him or her. -[[User:Aranel|Aranel ("Sarah")]] 20:59, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Please see the example of an 'admin' which i gave earlier and click on the link and then follow links to see why I see a problem. Zain 15:04, 21 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- A vote is a vote is a vote. Consensus building (and democracy) can't be bogged down by endless examinations of where people's votes come from. It just isn't worth it. --Stevietheman 06:07, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- I disagree. A consensus ought to be a concord. (It's nothing to do with democracy -- a consensus means the majority take account of the minority, not overrule them because they have the numbers!) People should discuss why they think an article should be deleted or not, in detail if necessary, in an attempt to find a resolution that all are happy with. Read the NPOV policy, which expresses very well the idea of resolutions that satisfy all.Dr Zen 06:25, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- A vote is a vote is a vote within consensus (unanimity minus a specific number, usually), not just democracy. Certainly, if someone wants to engage with others and explain their vote, they will. But if someone doesn't want to explain their vote, I defend their right to vote and that be the end of it. We don't all have the time for the happy, puffy world of concord. But we will act responsibly in participating in votes, whether we explain our vote or not.
--Stevietheman 06:46, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- If you do not give a reason for your vote, which you are requested to do by the deletion policy, it ought to be ignored.Dr Zen 23:34, 28 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- That's downright crazy and mean-spirited. And if that's the policy, it ought to be changed. --Stevietheman 16:15, 29 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Extracts from 'Official policy guidelines'
Deletion policy is not very clear on it. Wikipedia:Deletion policy says in section Commenting on a listing for deletion
- " When someone has listed an article for deletion on one of the lists, anyone else may comment on the request. When expressing an opinion, please include your opinion, your reasoning, and sign with ~~~~ "
I doesn't say whether reasoning is optional or must. It uses the world 'please', which keeps the question open. If it implies any of these believes, it is too vague.
But this is half of the story if user gives reasoning but these reasoning are not valid another question arises. It is also vague in Wikipedia:Deletion guidelines for administrators it says in its section Rough consensus.
- " administrators can disregard votes and comments if they feel that there is strong evidence that they were not made in good faith. Such "bad faith" votes include those being made by sock puppets, being made anonymously, or being made using a new userid whose only edits are to the article in question and the voting on that article."
Now if some body simply doesn't want an information offending his believes will it be considered 'good faith' this is very questionable. Second thing is that almost gets no mention of invalid reason.
Zain 00:05, 29 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Some older discussions about votes: Wikipedia_talk:Votes_for_deletion/title Dan100 09:26, Dec 27, 2004 (UTC)
Conclusions. Wikipedia has no clear 'official policy' on it
Well I think it is clear from the different point of views in above discussion. Wikipedia does not have any 'clear official policy' on 'votes with invalid reasons'. If there is a 'clear official policy', at least it is not clear to voters and to admins.
Zain 10:55, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)
RFC
Does this page still need to be listed at WP:RFC? Maurreen 01:03, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)
"Inherently" POV pages
While I suppose we all know what you mean, I'm not sure it's a good idea to include this. Some would argue that "childlove movement" is "inherently POV" for example. This inclusion would encourage its listing for deletion at the expense of other solutions. I don't think this actually is a loophole. A page that is "inherently" POV needs to be moved to a new title and NPOVed. That solution exists and should apply. We are cautioned that bias is not a reason for deletion. Please don't try to make it one.Dr Zen 04:26, 29 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- But it is if nothing can be done to fix the POV. For example "Atrocities committed by walruses against baby seals" can never be NPOV. So by careful literal application of what I wrote to adjust the policy, we can avoid having to keep articles that cannot be fixed. The current policy allows keeping problem material like that. Inherently POV=cannot be fixed. - Taxman 05:03, Dec 29, 2004 (UTC)
- The page is moved to "Interaction between walruses and baby seals" and the page is edited to meet NPOV. Sorry, I just don't agree that this should be in the policy because people will use it to try to delete pages they don't like and claim that because it's in the policy it must be supported by the community as a whole.Dr Zen 05:07, 29 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- imho, we need more emphasis on the point that the decision for deletion is based upon the article title, i.e., if the title is irreparably pov, vfd it. If it's just the content, remove it, but leave the article (at least a stub) in place. For example, battle-axe was vfd'd because somebody had inserted nonsense. This was just spamming the vfd page, it could have easily been made into a redirect to axe (tool). The same goes for "original research": if there is original research in an article with a reasonable title, just remove the original research part, don't add it to vfd! dab (ᛏ) 14:49, 7 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- A good solution to this is to ensure that broken links stay in and that an entry is made to Requested articles. Doing a deletion followed later by a recreation is an advantage for several resons
- the article history is shorter and easier to read
- the copyright attribution is clearer and doesn't seem to add needless people
- clear credit is given to the person who actually starts the page, not to vandals
- the average quality of the articles for readers is improved since they don't come across sub-stubs.
- Put another way, VFD should be about the material not title. If the title isn't good, it just needs to be moved and not VfD'd. That doesn't need any process at all since it is easy to reverse (just change the title back). Making actual material disappear does need a process since it is impossible for normal contributors to see if the material was worth having. WP:VFD should be about getting rid of spam/vandalism/unencyclopaedic stuff whilst preserving good work, even if the good work looks like spam/vandalism/ at first glance. Note that none of the standard reasons for deletion say anything at all about the title (although "no potential to become encyclopaedic" partly implies it). Mozzerati 22:08, 2005 Jan 7 (UTC)
- A good solution to this is to ensure that broken links stay in and that an entry is made to Requested articles. Doing a deletion followed later by a recreation is an advantage for several resons
I think whatever the policy is, It should be made clear. Currently it is not clear that what to do. I have seen this issue with Israeli violence against Palestinian children. It was on delete vote several times. Policy should be clear or else some pages might go for delete instead of cleanup/move.
Zain 23:29, 7 Jan 2005 (UTC)
re-creation
Does anyone object to the removal of If an article is constantly being deleted and re-created, this should be seen as evidence for the need for an article? It only encourages vanity authors to keep re-creating their articles. --fvw* 20:13, 2005 Jan 1 (UTC)
- How about if it read "recreated in different forms by apparently different people"? Kappa 20:30, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- Yes, I would. Vanity pages are dealt with clearly by this policy. Common sense indicates that this comment - frequent recreation - refers to 'borderline' cases. Perhaps, however, it should be re-worded to say "...and re-created by different people...", although I doubt anyone would really read the existing statement to mean that constant recreation by one person somehow gives a page reason for inclusion. Dan100 21:54, Jan 1, 2005 (UTC)
- I can't object to that removal; I've seen that abused in exactly the way you describe. Unfortunately, I can't think of a way to rephrase it that makes clear that "different people" means "different people who aren't connected to each other"; especially not to the kind of people who say "Oh, I'm losing this VfD so I'll put an all-call out on the message board telling everyone to go in and vote." -- Antaeus Feldspar 02:22, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- I definitely think it should be removed. --Stormie 22:34, Jan 13, 2005 (UTC)
- I too agree. I have reworded it to be a bit more precise, we'll see if it sticks. —Ben Brockert (42) 04:19, Jan 14, 2005 (UTC)
'Encyclopedic'
I propose that the page 'encyclopedic' links to in the table entry 'No potential to become encyclopedic' should be Wikipedia:Importance. (NB Wikipedia:What wikipedia is not is criteria number 7 on that page, so it will still be a fundemental part of Wikipedia policy). I believe this page will give us a much more helpful definition of what being encyclopedic is, rather just going straight to the list of things that Wikipedia is not. Further, this change would entail the page Wikipedia:Informative becoming policy (criteria number 4). This excellent page would finally give us firm guidelines for judging 'notability' etc. Dan100 09:40, Jan 8, 2005 (UTC)
- Wikipedia:Importance is a proposal that died a quiet death many months ago. The definition of unencyclopedic is simply anything listed at What Wikipedia is Not. I don't see any need, or consensus, for a broader definition. - SimonP 17:00, Jan 13, 2005 (UTC)
- SimonP's assessment is completely correct. Wikipedia:Importance is a dead end. -- Netoholic @ 19:16, 2005 Jan 13 (UTC)
- Wikipedia:Importance is a proposal that died a quiet death many months ago. The definition of unencyclopedic is simply anything listed at What Wikipedia is Not. I don't see any need, or consensus, for a broader definition. - SimonP 17:00, Jan 13, 2005 (UTC)
It did not die, it was simply never moved on to the next stage, which is what I'm doing. There were no objections to the policies. Dan100 13:51, Jan 16, 2005 (UTC)
- Read above a little deeper. Your pushing of this will be reverted. -- Netoholic @ 19:07, 2005 Jan 16 (UTC)
- Have you read the talk pages of Wikipedia:Informative and Wikipedia:Important? Both are filled with largely unresolved objections. Very similar polices also failed to receive consensus in last year's Fame and importance poll. - SimonP 19:15, Jan 16, 2005 (UTC)
Iasson's suggested VfD decision policy
This section is to discuss User:Iasson's suggested changes to deletion procedure. Iasson may change the heading if he wishes.
As I understand Iasson's position, he would like votes to be cast in the complex format that he has used in several VfD entries, which includes details like the duration of the vote, quorum, and a probation term. Furthermore, he has a formula that, when applied to these votes, produces a decision. He has put inquiries about the current procedure to administrators, which I think have been answered accurately.
I will go on the record opposing Iasson's suggestion for several reasons, including:
- It complicates the format to an extent that will confuse newcomers, and lead to many irregular votes.
- It ignores the alternate outlets for articles.
- It does not allow consideration of a user's reason for voting a particular way (maybe it was shown to be factually incorrect).
- By increasing the voting duration, it would greatly increase the number of articles on VfD at a time.
- It grossly overestimates the ratio of active users to recorded users.
- It effectively casts an automatic "keep" vote for every (recorded!) user who does not vote. Some VfD entries require specialized knowledge to judge; people might see the entry and choose to leave it to other people's judgement.
Gazpacho 08:34, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)