Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2007 December 27#Template:Memory Alpha
=[[Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2007 December 27|27 December 2007]]=
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style="text-align:center;" | The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the article above. Please do not modify it. |
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:{{la|Lynn valley elementary}} (restore|[http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:{{fullurl:Lynn valley elementary}} cache]|AfD) page was deleted about 90 minutes after the nomination was posted at AfD. Closing admin gave as the reason that the speedy-delete tag was on the article. AfD discussion process should trump speedy deletion process if an article is in both. Otherwise we're wasting the time of editors taking part in discussions. I was one of two editors who contacted the closing admin with the same complaint on this decision. AfD should be relisted. Noroton (talk) 20:53, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
::The discussion is only pointless if you've already made up your mind on the article. I understand that the speedy-delete tag was already on the article when it was nominated for deletion, but I consider that irrelevant: Once the AfD process starts, it should be allowed to continue under AfD procedures. The language at WP:CSD#A7 was changed to include schools after this article was speedy deleted, so technically it doesn't apply. Nevertheless, the additional language to the rule gives another reason to relist this. Noroton (talk) 22:00, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
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style="text-align:center;" | The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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style="text-align:center;" | The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the article above. Please do not modify it. |
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:{{la|Dwellers of the Forbidden City}} (restore|[http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:{{fullurl:Dwellers of the Forbidden City}} cache]|AfD) Reason by closing admin for deletion is that while notability exists within the specific topic, notability does not exist outside it. I am not aware of any policy that an article must be notable outside its specific subject to be worthy of an article. This deletion needs further discussion. --Polaron | Talk 18:00, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
:minor edit in my vote. Web Warlock (talk) 21:10, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
:: Comment by closer The basis of the close was that there is one cite evidenced showing any relationship to notability. Only one. The claim to notability is finishing #13 on a list. We don't know the significance of #13 on that list - if it's meaningful or easy to achieve. So we have a notability problem. We prefer multiple sources; we have only one, and that one although credible and the like, lists it as an ambiguous "13". Is that exceptional? mundane? in its field? We have no editorial comment, no "significant coverage" otherwise, nothing to indicate the world has taken specific interest in the sense WP:N anticipates (every product gets "new launch reviews", these don't evidence notability and this game's launch reviews were evidenced average+). We need significant interest - but have no editorials on this game, no articles on it, no discussions about it. Not one was given at the article, not one at AFD. For all that was cited this product was launched and then never discussed again, save for one numeric ranking of ambiguous significance. That is why it was closed as delete. the cites provided don't presently meet WP:N (although possibly others may exist). The comment referred to, is being currently discussed in email, it is agreed ambiguously worded. But it wasn't the basis of the close, nor a "new proposal" (many items are not much referenced outside their field) but an observation on the minimal evidence provided. FT2 (Talk | email) 02:13, 28 December 2007 (UTC) :::The only reason you can claim "one cite evidenced showing any relationship to notability" is because you are massively wrong on what is relevant to notability. Most of the other cites were in fact relevant, and your blatant error on this is the reason that the close needs to be overturned. All of the reviews are evidence of notability by the community standards as documented in multiple guidelines. GRBerry 02:26, 28 December 2007 (UTC) :::: Disagree. The purpose of sources is to evidence notability. Sources that merely rate a product on release, which every product has almost, are indiscriminate. It could be the most routine, the most non-notable almost, and someone will have reviewed it. See software reviews, where "it's been reviewed" is not alone, evidence of notability for software. The item has cites showing average reviews existed on launch. Everything gets those. Routine press releases, rpoduct reviews, brief launch interest, etc, do not indicate "notability" even if noted in reliable sources... because they are indiscriminate and do not speak to notice being taken beyond the brief, or paid-for, or routine non-discriminatory kind. Where are the reviews evidenced, which gave discriminating attention in the sense of "significant coverage" (WP:N) - ie, articles addressing this specific game or testifying to its standing, to get beyond "Wikipedia is not a collection of indiscriminate information"? We have one only, and that one all we have heard is one rating, that's of uncertain significance, not one thing more. If you could confirm which cites you are using to evidence that "reliable sources" have taken "significant notice" and given it "significant coverage", that's what was missing at AFD (as I said). We need those. If they were not noted by mistake, can you note them now? FT2 (Talk | email) 04:12, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
:: But we don't know that. It's not stated, but (at AFD) mere assumption. There's no link or cite at AFD to confirm this. I see none. "There are people to whom it is obvious" is envelope pushing at WP:OR. Notability relies on sources, not editor's own views. No sources were provided to this information, nor any second source which is preferable. FT2 (Talk | email) 01:35, 29 December 2007 (UTC) ::: There is a cite, the obvious cite; surely the article itself tells you out of what pool they selected the 30. We have a source, an article that places this as the 13th best D&D adventure of all time. It is up to the editors to decide whether or not that is a notable claim; no source can decide that for us.--Prosfilaes (talk) 01:55, 29 December 2007 (UTC)
:: Comment; if he had argued it in the AfD, the issue about what #13th really meant would have come up, and could have been answered. As it was, it was deleted in part because the closer didn't know what that meant, despite the fact there were probably several people there who could have told him. That's bad.--Prosfilaes (talk) 01:18, 29 December 2007 (UTC) :: Closers comments: :: I feel a large part of the above is based on misunderstanding of a complex close. Probably complicated by my attempt to note a side-observation that has been taken in a way I didn't mean. ::# AFD is an unusual type of debate. Its intent is to highlight evidence, not count views, unless the views are for equally tenable policy based possibilities: ::#:: "Consensus is not determined by counting heads, but by looking at strength of argument, and underlying policy (if any). Arguments that contradict policy, [or] are based on opinion rather than fact ... are frequently discounted" Deletion guidelines for administrators ::#: That is pure traditional practice and norms. We count strength of argument, not !votes. The AFD included a majority who considered the article should be kept as notable in large reliance upon two unexceptional launch reviews. But "Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection", and WP:N consensus is that coverage with low levels of discrimination are not likely to be evidence of notability. Every product almost, from remarked upon to trivial, can produce at will one or two launch reviews, so launch reviews per se are often not evidence. So we have a case where many keeps were reliant upon the fallacious logic "Cite X shows notability => keep" where in fact cite X does not appear to show notability, as several opinions pointed out. On examination of evidence presented, the latter seem to be more likely to be right as a matter of communal consensus on the approach to "notability". So per WP:DGFA keep views must show their validity and that the topic is notable, but cannot rely on sources that don't actually speak to notability, to claim notability exists. Of the 3 cites found, two are startup reviews. Effectively, strike out all but one cite, for pure policy and norm reasons. ::# To correct one comment above, it would not have mattered if "there were probably several people there who could have told him" (WP:OR). Editors opinion cannot evidence anything at AFD. If a friend tells you an item he owns is rated #13 in its field in some reputable chart, does that evidence anything? Well, maybe and maybe not. There are many topics where #13 is non-notable, and many where it is. But their word on what it means is purely their own interpretation of it - original research. That is why alone, the mere fact of it, as stated in the one useful cite given, was not enough. ::# AFD unfortunately does not support "lets create a precedent case", as a rule. That's documented over, and over again enough that that is a precedent (WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS, WP:OTHERSTUFFDOESNTEXIST). Some common outcomes exist, but they are comparatively few. Noting that an attempt to "force" a test case achieves no such thing, seems an important piece of information to tell the nominator, I think. The case gets closed as a case; it is unlikely to set a precedent (as most cases do not, nominator's intent notwithstanding); it is simply closed as a usual AFD. ::FT2 (Talk | email) 01:35, 29 December 2007 (UTC) ::: Editors' opinions can't evidence anything at AFD? That's absurd; the only difference between topics where #13 is non-notable and topics where #13 is notable is opinion. WP:OR does not support your conclusion at all; it says "Wikipedia does not publish original research or original thought.", not "Wikipedia doesn't use original thought to conclude what's encyclopedic or not." Even without that, editors could have attested to the factual matter of what the cite said; it's absurd to use your lack of knowledge about a matter as a reason to delete, without asking the people who had the paper cite what it said or reading it yourself.--Prosfilaes (talk) 02:17, 29 December 2007 (UTC) :::: It's correct though, if you think about it. It's possible to be #13 in some lists, and still not have attention from the world (and thus be non-notable) - and if that's the case no amount of opinion might make such a topic notable. The test for notability is roughly intended to identify whether the real world (or some independent part of it) is evidenced as having deemed it worthy of especial (or "not indiscriminate") attention. If they have, it's often likely we should as well (hence the word "presumption"). See WP:N. So here is an item, and we can agree it's got a rating of #13 in its subgenre of "modules for D&D" (which is a fairly narrow subgenre)... where is any indication at AFD that the world has paid it attention? If it was deemed "worthy of notice" in the eyes of even just the game-playing world, where is a single article, significant discussion, or significant mention of it, beyond a numeric rating "#13" and being reviewed on release (like everything else ever produced was). Coverage doesn't have to be online (and it may well not be), but that is what's needed to establish notability, as stated at close. Not one party to AFD provided actual fact and evidence beyond this, and opinion does not override deletion guidelines to this extent, which have long standing communal assent and specifically state that we look at argument and policy, not head-count. FT2 (Talk | email) 06:57, 29 December 2007 (UTC)
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style="text-align:center;" | The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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style="text-align:center;" | The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the article above. Please do not modify it. |
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:{{la|Template:Memory Alpha}} (restore|[http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:{{fullurl:Template:Memory Alpha}} cache]|TfD) Discussion showed no consensus to delete. Closing administrator's close reads like somebody who came to the discussion after a week and decided that they could use their admin vote to close it to their preferred outcome instead of participating in or acknowledging the discussion. Furthermore, there are numerous cases where we have multiple styles of templates and links for one purpose, making the closing reason nonsensical at best. Phil Sandifer (talk) 05:27, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
::*I only learned about this template not too long ago, and a huge number of Wikipedians still don't know it's an option. Yes, sometimes the fact that something hasn't been adopted is a sign it wasn't a good idea, but often it simply means it wasn't noticed. -- Ned Scott 03:07, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::*They haven't been considered by a great many Wikipedians, and the rationale to linking to some wikis in this way has expanded since then. -- Ned Scott 03:22, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
:*Whatever else, noting that keep comments were made by "well established editors" is a fairly blatant appeal to authority, with its strong implication that how well-estblished the editors are has some bearing on the argument. A bad argument made by an old-time editor is still a bad argument. Otto4711 (talk) 21:59, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
:::*Many of those discussions don't even touch on the same issues, and are obviously not the end of such discussions. -- Ned Scott 03:18, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
:*There were several discussions going on at the time, so I'm not sure if I repeated it in this specific one, but I know I made plenty of statements independent of Phil's. There are reasons being given as to the benefits of having such links not just exist, but to be marked in a certain way. The utility of a link has allowed us to give some ELs their own distinction, such as review links in the album template, or IMDb links in some infoboxes. -- Ned Scott 03:15, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
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