Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style/Archive 202#RfC: Linking to wikidata

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RfC: Linking to wikidata

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There is no consensus.

The main question was basically for comments on whether Wikidata links should be used in situations where they would basically replace an unsuitable redlink or unsuitable external link in the main prose of an article (e.g., non-notable individuals, companies, concepts, events, etc... that have no hope of an article). Confusion and disagreement arose from the perception that the question was more over whether Wikidata should be linked at all. There is significant support for restricting Wikidata's use when it comes to replacing redlinks, and there is also significant opposition to a blanket ban on Wikidata. No clear consensus in any direction seems apparent.

Some of the concerns apart from that:

  • User experience (UX) — some feel Wikidata is highly user-unfriendly in its presentation and the usefulness of the data presented to the average site visitor. This, combined with the way the links appear may be confusing and the destination page unexpected and/or unreadable (MOS:EGG). Some proposals for how to vary the link presentation were given but none gained clear consensus.
  • WP:ELNO violations with implied same-site continuity — for example, when a living person (BLP) is linked to wikidata, there might be implied continuity (i.e., people think it's still Wikipedia) and that the destination page's content may be unpredictable, harmful, factually inaccurate, or another form of BLP violation. I read this as basically an argument that if the link were otherwise an external link, it would present problems for conforming to several enumerated points of the guideline on what not to externally link (ELNO).
  • General concern about unreliability of Wikidata — the policies/guidelines behind this range from reliable sourcing / opaque verifiability to original research.
  • Disambiguating non-notable entities — some felt that preserving the links helps with that end.
  • Interwiki/interlanguage link comparison — some feel that they should be in the same class as wiktionary or interwiki links. Some feel that it's sufficient for backlinks to the article from Wikidata to automatically appear in the traditional box on the left.

I'd suggest a reasonable waiting period (to avoid !voter fatigue) and a rethink of how to best present the question again with clearer options, as some of the main non-specific objections seem to stem from procedural concerns. I'd also suggest further discussing the role of WP:SISTER (incidentally, whether it's truly even a legit guideline, and if not should it be) and then clarifying how it interacts with/pre-empts/is superseded by WP:REDLINK, WP:ELNO, WP:SPAM, and/or MOS:EGG/WP:MOSLINK, as that seems to be the main point of intersection.

--slakrtalk / 04:28, 23 February 2018 (UTC)

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{{anchor|Linking to wikidata}}

I have noticed another editor adding links to wikidata for people who fail notability requirements to have articles on wikipedia. In some cases, the he links to wikidata after the article on the person was deleted in WP:AfD. Before I start reverting his edits, I like to know if this is an acceptable practice. I don't know much about wikidata and what gets included there, but it would seem to me if a person is mentioned in an article (usually as part of a list) and is not notable enough for his/her own article, then there shouldn't be a link to anything. Here's an example of what I'm talking about: Mayors of Teaneck, New Jersey That article has a lot of links to wikidata. I appreciate input on this.--Rusf10 (talk) 05:15, 14 January 2018 (UTC)

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If someone wants to see how the article looked with the Wikidata links: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mayors_of_Teaneck,_New_Jersey&oldid=817759493 ―Justin (koavf)TCM 08:07, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

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  • Such links strikes me as a bad idea for multiple reasons:
  • # WikiData doesn't comply with en.WP's WP:Biographies of living people policy or our core content policies.
  • # Wikidata is not prose, so doing this is going to sharply transgress the principle of least surprise, and the reader may really have no idea what's happening at all.
  • # This isn't like linking to Wiktionary for WP:DICDEF material; that's linking to a sister project for material that should not be on Wikipedia at all because of what kind of material it is. Bios do not constitute such material.
  • # If a subject is arguably notable and should have an article here, it should be a redlink. If it's not, it should not be linked at all.
  • # It's WP:GAMING the system to keep promoting non-notable subjects.
     — SMcCandlish ¢ >ʌⱷ҅ʌ<  14:02, 15 January 2018 (UTC)
  • I agree with SMcCandlish here. I followed the wikidata links and my first thought was that this is a very elaborate and space-consuming way of presenting absolutely no information whatsoever. I think these links are a terrible idea. Reyk YO! 14:06, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:: How can a database of information contain "absolutely no information" unless it is an empty record, which this entry is not? --RAN (talk) 20:46, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

  • I would consider indeed to revert this completely. I already shiver when a person who fails our local inclusion standards, but is notable for e.g. Spanish is cross-wiki linked to the Spanish article (which is rather difficult to see even). I see this as nothing short of an inline external link to the website or social media account of non-notable subjects. We could consider an EditFilter for this, at least to detect such cases. --Dirk Beetstra T C 14:08, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:Wouldn't it make sense to keep the information without the link, though? Wikidata is also a sister project, and having items decorated with information about their meaning is a basic principle of the semantic web; it could be invaluable for automatic treatments of our content, or creating an improved browsing tool in the future. Our WP:BUILD policy supports the principle of creating a connected network of information that brings related items together.

:I can imagine a specific template for this purpose, similar to how we already have WP:INTERWIKI tags. It should be a systematic effort though, and not the initiative of a single editor, so this should be discussed at the village pump, not at the manual of style. Diego (talk) 14:30, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

::Generally WP:EL discourages external links within article bodies. The problem is EL operates on the basis that the EL's are about providing more information on the subject of the article, not unrelated information about someone who appears in the article. When it comes to lists, the only links within the list should either be a link to the relevant Wikipedia article, a properly cited reference, or an external link at the end to an appropriate resources on the subject of the article. In the above example, the wikidata EL's don't provide any further information on the subject 'Mayors of Teanick' than is already covered by an appropriate reference. Only in death does duty end (talk) 14:39, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:::Links to Wikidata are under Wikipedia:Wikimedia sister projects, not WP:EL. The question here is whether we can make such links useful to readers (the requirement by that guideline); this doesn't need to be with a direct link to the URL, maybe we can explore more useful ways. Perhaps we should simply follow WP:SOFTSISP and create a soft link, to avoid WP:Astonish wighout losing the utility? Diego (talk) 14:53, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

::::It's unclear to me what use there is in linking to completely empty wikidata entries, as is the case here. Reyk YO! 15:00, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::Can you give an example of a linked empty Wikidata entry? --RAN (talk) 20:30, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::The Karl Wagner entry was an example of a link to a contentless entry. It's a big sprawling page with pretty boxes everywhere but no information. Reyk YO! 21:24, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

  • Which Karl Wagner? Karl Edward Wagner (1945–1994), American writer of fantasy stories

Karl Wagner (bobsleigh) (born 1907), Austrian bobsledder who competed in the early 1950s

Karl Wagner (luger), German luger who competed in the 1920s

Karl Willy Wagner (1883–1953), German pioneer in the theory of electronic filters?

:::::::I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic, but those big boxes are the information stored in Wikidata (properties and values), together with the unique ID. Diego (talk) 11:31, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::Wikimedia sister project links are also covered by WP:EL. All external links are covered by WP:EL except for the named exceptions. See WP:ELMAYBE. The 'external' in EL is 'external to wikipedia' not 'external to wikimedia'. -edit- to expand, in an article about a person on Wikipedia, it may be acceptable to add a link to wikidata per ELMAYBE if wikidata contains more/useful information that is not covered within the article (leaving aside the issue of wikidata being unreliable for the moment). In an article about something else, in which the person is named, its almost certain the wikidata entry will not contain useful information to that article, as the wikidata material would be linked to the person. Only in death does duty end (talk) 15:24, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::But WP:EL covers links within an article; it does not cover soft redirects. Diego (talk) 15:41, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::Those are not soft redirects. Only in death does duty end (talk) 20:44, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::I know that. My proposal was changing them to soft redirects, because that's how the relevant guideline WP:SOFTSISP says that links to sister projects should be handled. Diego (talk) 10:24, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

  • Much of this discussion is redundant, it seems to me. Links to Wikidata now appear automatically under "Tools" in the left margin of the desktop version as soon as there is a Wikidata item that links to the article. So there's never a need to add a link to Wikidata (or Wikispecies) in the External links section. Peter coxhead (talk) 15:28, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

::See the above example RE Mayors of Teaneck, the wikidata links added to the Wikipedia article are not to wikidata items that link to the article page. (The wikidata link under tools goes [https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q16146998 here]. Only in death does duty end (talk) 15:33, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:::Rusf10 already considers the case closed and has removed the links. An example would be Frank White Burr. -RAN (talk) 21:07, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::User:Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ), the response here was a near unanimous consensus against linking to wikidata, but if you want to drag this on, go right ahead. It is also worth mentioning that the article for Frank White Burr was deleted as per WP:Articles for deletion/Frank W. Burr. The result was not redirect either, but that's another issue.--Rusf10 (talk) 21:19, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::Taking out the wikidata links might be jumping the gun a little, although I don't think consensus will change, but I do agree with taking out that big blob of hidden text. I'm not sure what it was even for. Reyk YO! 21:34, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::{{Tq|"the response here was a near unanimous consensus"}} Well, given the one-sided comments posted above, that's perhaps understandable, but the RfC has only been open for two days, and has not been centrally advertised (which is required for something so sweeping), so it's too soon to suggest consensus has been reached. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 12:20, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::Re. "centrally advertised": [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template%3ACentralized_discussion&type=revision&diff=820755720&oldid=816722326 sorted] --Francis Schonken (talk) 12:35, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::While the links in the Mayors of Teaneck list are indeed to different items than that of the equivalent to the page, the links mentioned by Peter do indeed render moot any suggestion that Wikidata is not a suitable target for us to link to, or that there is not consensus to regard it as such.

:{{Tq|"WikiData doesn't comply with en.WP's WP:Biographies of living people policy or our core content policies."}} Neither does Commons, nor Wikisource, nor any of our sister projects, including other Wikipedias. This point is completely irrelevant. Wikidata, does though comply with WMF policy on BLPs.

=Link to Wikidata in existing tables if they are not getting an article =

  • Link to the name in Wikidata if they appear in a table. Mayors of Teaneck, New Jersey is a good example of people that will not get full articles. If someone thinks they can expand an entry into a full biography, nothing stops them if they meet WP:GNG. Linking to Wikidata allows us to disambiguate people of the same name and link to other authority control identifiers like VIAF and LCCN. No one is arguing that being in Wikidata makes you Wikipedia notable. This is for people who do not have a full biography and most likely never will. It is no different than linking to the Italian Wikipedia for people there, that will not get an article in the English Wikipedia. Do not link to people in Wikidata for "Notable people from X" in location articles. Being in Wikidata does not make you notable, but notable people can be in Wikidata where the biographical data is too thin for a full article. --RAN (talk) 20:26, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

::It is different, because Italian Wikipedia contains useful information to a reader which is more compliant with our local policies. Wikidata does not. Only in death does duty end (talk) 20:47, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

:::What useless information is in Wikidata? --RAN (talk) 21:00, 15 January 2018 (UTC)

::::Let me turn that question around.... what USEFUL information is at Wikidata? Blueboar (talk) 06:15, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::Interwiki links. And, um, ... I think that's it really. As an example of what's wrong with Wikidata, its page on one of the Teaneck mayors [https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q6324382], an immigrant from India to Tanzania and then the US, lists his citizenship as US, based on zero sources. It's a plausible guess that he's a naturalized citizen (maybe Teaneck requires its mayors to be citizens, I don't know), but as far as I can tell it's only a guess, and if true is only true for a certain period of time and doesn't tell the whole story. That sort of thing would not be acceptable in a BLP here, and I think it violates WP:ELNO #2 and #12. —David Eppstein (talk) 06:22, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::You do realize that there is a template {{Unreferenced}} in the English Wikipedia that is posted in over 5,000 articles. I stopped at 10 pages of 500. There are over 10,000 paragraphs in biographies of living people with no reference and there are over 10,000 dates of birth in biographies of living people that are unreferenced. I stopped the search at 10K, you can run it longer. "Unreferenced at this point in time" is not the same as "inherently unreferencable". --RAN (talk) 22:18, 19 January 2018 (UTC)

  • Only link to the interwiki links section of Wikidata items in cases where there are articles for something in three or more Wikipedias but not in English. This is the way {{tl|Interlanguage link}} does it (though the choice of Wikidata link vs. direct link(s) to other Wikipedias is at editors' discretion), solely for the purpose of allowing the reader to use the links, and it avoids presenting the reader with too many or too few language links and allows the reader to skip past the offensive, objectionable and completely untrue piles of useless data large number of tangentially relevant statements and links to other databases that some items have. Jc86035 (talk) 03:14, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::It's useful to specify when two Wikipedia articles speak about the same person. Pernell Roberts, Helen Schucman and Saybrook University all speak about the same Eleanor Criswell. Wikidata links allow this information to be conveyed to the reader and otherwise it wouldn't be expressed in Wikipedia. I see no need for a subject to be notable for us to specify that when a subject is talked about in multiple articles to specify that it's the same person. ChristianKl❫ 10:16, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::Like this: {{ill|Eleanor Criswell|wikidata|Q26973029}}? --Francis Schonken (talk) 10:24, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::It would be possible to create a redirect for every person that's mentioned in a Wikipedia article and let that point to that Wikipedia article but I'm not sure that's a clean solution either. If a person is only mentioned on two pages and on one of those pages there's a link to a redirect to the same page, that feels more like an hack. ChristianKl❫ 17:25, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

  • Just thinking out loud: what if our 'page' of a non-existent article (the red-linked page) is interwiki-linking to other Wikipedia's articles (including wikisource/wikidata/etc) of said article if articles exist there (it may help the reader to more information, or editors to a quick start if they wish to create the article)? --Dirk Beetstra T C 07:39, 16 January 2018 (UTC)
  • Did you mean what we do with {{tl|ill}} templates, which makes linking to more than one page on other projects possible, starting from a redlink? --Francis Schonken (talk) 07:47, 16 January 2018 (UTC)
  • Roughly, though without telling the page which interwikis to show (though I then don't know how a page would detect the existence etc.). --Dirk Beetstra T C 07:51, 16 January 2018 (UTC)
  • : Technically, one can call multiply Wikidata entries from the same page, and actually Wikivoyage heavily uses this.--Ymblanter (talk) 07:54, 16 January 2018 (UTC)
  • :E. g. "{{ill|De Danske, Norske og Tÿdske Undersaatters Glæde|wikidata|Q25430997|lt=De Danske, Norske og Tÿdske Undersaatters Glæde, TWV 12:10}}" would link to multiple articles on other Wikipedias & Commons (via the Wikidata item). Would that approach what you had in mind? Note that at the TWV list I had used "{{ill|De Danske, Norske og Tÿdske Undersaatters Glæde|commons|Category:TWV 12:10 – De Danske, Norske og Tÿdske Undersaatters Glæde fremstillet udi en uskÿldig Fornöÿelse med Musique|da|De Danske, Norske og Tydske Undersaatters Glæde|no|De Danske, Norske og Tydske Undersaatters Glæde|lt=De Danske, Norske og Tÿdske Undersaatters Glæde, TWV 12:10}}" instead, with three direct links to the sister projects instead: this has the advantage of one-click reach of these other pages, but the disadvantage of not linking to any future other Wikimedia project which may have an article on this before en.Wikipedia (although it would also not take more than two clicks via any of the linked pages to any future additional page on the same topic elsewhere). --Francis Schonken (talk) 08:15, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

With regards to Wikidata links within tables of items: a while ago I created Template:Wikidata icon which allows for this in a visually clear way (without having to have the Q-number showing to the reader). This is useful for list articles where not every item in the list is necessarily appropriate for a standalone Wikipedia article [yet?] but THEY ARE ALL applicable for Wikidata items (practical example), or when the infobox is about two separate things described in the same article (practical example). Wittylama 12:51, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

: [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mayors_of_Teaneck%2C_New_Jersey&type=revision&diff=820761601&oldid=820729273 Like his]? --Francis Schonken (talk) 13:20, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::The horror :-) Adding meaningless (to readers) "flags" to items in lists or in the middle of text just to indicate that some other unreliable site has "information" (well, some structured data) on this item, which in most cases will leave them disappointed anyway, is a bad idea. There is no reason to spam one specific site simply because it is a "sister site". That specific example sends readers to an unsourced page with an external link to Findagrave, where the Findagrave page doesn't even include the information that he was mayor of that town. Why would we ever want to promote such links (either disguised as bluelinks, or by giving them a pretty icon)? Fram (talk) 13:29, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:{{U|Francis Schonken}}, yeah - like that would be an example use case. And {{U|Fram}}, setting aside your hyperbole, the value of having wikidata links in this kind of circumstance (list of items where not every item will/does have a WP article) is to give readers access to more, relevant, information about the subject than could be appropriately added within the context of the given table. It is easy to find a relatively empty item to point to as proof that no such links should be added. Equally, it would be easy to find a high quality item to 'prove' the reverse. The point of these links in tables is that we can give our readers access to further free-licensed information in a structure that we can control (as opposed to external links). We can ALSO, when we desire, add a column for external links, references, other authority-control numbers if applicable, and in such cases it would be possible to move a WD item reference to that column in addition/replacement to the external. That would need to be seen on a case by case or article by article basis. In the mean time, having an unobtrusive WD icon (instead of its WD Q-number) is a convenient way to indicate to readers that more information exists and STILL leaves open the possibility of the words in WP being red-linked, blue-linked, or not linked at all. Wittylama 15:58, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::I'd avoid doing that with a flag-like icon though, it seems too counter-intuitive. E.g. at the Mayors of Teaneck, New Jersey page: what club does this gentleman belong to?... this red-green-blue striped flag is not the icon of a political party I know. --Francis Schonken (talk) 17:22, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::Anyhow, I listed the template for deletion, see the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Don't think this kind of WP:EGG flag link is something we should be doing. --Francis Schonken (talk) 21:04, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::I find it premature to list a template for deletion that pertains precisely to the discussion being held here in this subsection: about the use of WD links within tables - clearly one outcome will prejudice the other. If you have an alternative image/icon to propose, go ahead, but the WD icon is standard visual iconography across our sister websites - unless we want to treat en.wp as a special exception (like we do with the Wiktionary logo). Wittylama 10:31, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

=Discussion (linking to Wikidata RfC)=

What I would like to comment about here is the statement (actually, several statements) in the above section that Wikidata is universally not useful except possibly for interlanguage links. May I please remind the community that we had (and still have) a severe problem that our information quickly gets outdated. If (a random example) a mayor of Diyarbakır gets reelected (the example is so random, that I did not even look up whether they have a mayor and whether this is an elected post), the information about a new mayor is unlikely to propagate to the English Wikipedia any time soon. It can be propagated first to the Turkish Wikipedia (which is understaffed due to the Wikipedia ban in Turkey), and then someone may be so nice and come here to update the article - or may not, depending on whether they speak English and feel comfortable to edit the English Wikipedia, whether they had enough coffee in the morning, and whether they have promised their girlfriend to go to a movie tonight. Indeed, I am currently going through articles on Ukrainian localities and occasionally remove information about their mayors which someone added there 10 years ago and never cared to update. In the pre-2012 era it was actually recognized as a problem and there were some discussions on how to handle this problem - not so many, because who cares about mayors of cities outside English-speaking world. One example I remember was the project organized by WereSpielChequers with the goal to follow whether a person is designated as living on some projects and as dead on other projects. At the time I thought this was a brilliant idea. It worked by using a bot which was checking info on different language versions on Wikipedia and made project-specific lists. It was fully superseded by Wikidata (which is, at the end of the day, still more reliable than just a collection of data from different language versions on Wikipedia), and, as far as I understand, stopped working. One (not the only one, but I would dare say the main one) idea of the early Wikidata was to host all this information centrally, so that updates do not take ages to propagate from one project to each other and get stuck there, possibly without sources. Now, whoever votes above "never use Wikidata", basically undersigns that they failed to accomplish this task. The task does not necessarily have to be accomplished by direct import of data via templates (and at this stage I would discourage the direct import because of the vandalism issues), but it can be dome differently, for example by using bots and creating lists off the main space. But by voting "never use" you guys send the project - not Wikidata, but the English Wikipedia - back to the middle of the 2000s. (For the record, I do not think there are many advantages in using Wikidata in the case from which this RfC started - the Wikidata entries about mayors may have useful info such as for example DOB reliably sourced to databases, but indeed nobody cares, since they are not notable for Wikipedia, and Google gets the same results faster; if they are notable, I agree it should be a redlink).--Ymblanter (talk) 07:50, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

: Courtesy {{ping|WereSpielChequers}}, the ping failed the first time.--Ymblanter (talk) 07:52, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:I do agree to the sentiment expressed here - but thinking in real BLP-level situations: what if a living person's data here is extracted from WikiData, and someone is changing the WD data it results in BLP violations here; I can block someone from changing data here but I can't block someone on WikiData from changing data here. Then there are cases of incongruent data (the way that WD is displaying data is not how we want to display it, or the data can be displayed in multiple ways while all being correct - http://example.org; https://example.org; http://www.example.org .. all correct, all different - try to get that 'aligned' with a local choice, while other wikis chose another option), or data that we cannot display but comes in through the WD-backdoor (blacklisted external links are one example of that).

:If the WD's own policies are not violated, then there is nothing that we can do to not have our policies (or even global decisions) violated except for breaking the link with that WikiData item (which, at some point, becomes impossible to maintain). --Dirk Beetstra T C 08:08, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:: If you want my personal opinion, we should have bot transfer and a system similar to pending changes (or may be even incorporate it into pending changes). Such edits typically need reliable sourcing anyway, which can seldom be recovered from Wikidata.--Ymblanter (talk) 08:12, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::: May be I should expand on this a bit. The main problem of Wikidata is that it is understaffed, and I do not expect this to change any time soon. I do not expect Wikipedia editors to start editing Wikidata on a regular basis, even if the interface becomes very simple (which is kind of what we are close to). On the other hand, this is a real problem which needs to be solved. IMO the only way in principle to solve it is to shift it to the projects whereas kiiping at the same time Wikidata as a central repository of information. Bots are probably the easiest way to do it, though I am pretty open to other workable solutions.--Ymblanter (talk) 08:20, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:: Btw I can block someone for vandalism on Wikidata (and do). If you see instances, especially coming from registered users, which require administrative intervention, pls let me know.--Ymblanter (talk) 08:13, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::That is great .. but just a small fraction of the problem (though in case of BLPs and banning cases a rather big problem - though I doubt you can block an editor on WikiData who is blocked here just because he is blocked here for making such changes). You can not solve the dissimilarity problem (except through big hacks in every single wiki's translusion template for each parameter that would suffer that problem, or defining the same parameter on WikiData 800+ times (once for each Wiki)), nor the problem that WikiData can have data that we transclude here that here gives problems (e.g. solve this: blacklist an url here, then add it to WikiData so that it transcludes here and then try to edit a page that transcludes the data here ..).

:::Regarding sending Wikipedia back to the middle of the 2000s .. that would not have happened if editors would not have been so eager to delete the data here after having it on WikiData - then breaking the link would not have resulted in loss of data here (except that we don't display the data anymore that was since added to WikiData .. which actually we never had here anyway). --Dirk Beetstra T C 08:51, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::: I do not know - in the example with Shrivallabh Vyas the original vandalism was on the Wikipedia side [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shrivallabh_Vyas&diff=468096923&oldid=455663562], and if the guy were still alive, we would return to the same vandalized article now. In any case, all this information can be imported back to Wikipedia overnight, I just do not see any point in doing this. We can outline complex templates as well and go back to 2003 - but would anyone benefit from this?--Ymblanter (talk) 09:10, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::Short answer: yes. Except for a couple of things (interwikis), most data on WikiData is similarly incorrect as here, and as I and Fram outline, there is data on WikiData that we decided already not to use (but which is difficult to filter out - is WD's date-of-death referenced to a NYT obituary: transclude - is WD's date-of-death referenced to Find-a-Grave: do not transclude). Is http://www.example.org the same as what WD mentions to be https://www.example.org?). Go on and on. And all local editors have to find a solution, while it is so easy: can I find a reliable source for the date-of-death: no - don't edit, yes: write it and reference it. Someone adds a date-of-death with a Find-a-grave reference: revert (or better, check and use a proper reference if available), now I have to jump through hoops to see whether the date-of-death is properly referenced on WikiData (and as it is referenced, we will display it). Can you see how easy it is to vandalise en.wikipedia? And I haven't even started about those excessively high-speed bots that are running on WikiData that could wreak havoc on thousands and thousands of pages on 800+ wikis in a short time if they would have an undetected bug. --Dirk Beetstra T C 09:25, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::: I do not see how it contradicts to the soultion I proposed. One possible implementation (not the only one and possibly even not the best one): Take a bot; let it find an article which has no date of death, whereas the Wikidata item has; if Wikidata item is unsourced or sourced to Wikipedia -> make a bot leave a message at the talk page; no infobox -> make a bot leave a message at the talk page; if the Wikidata item is sourced and there is an infobox in the Wikipedia article -> have a bot edit the infobox and mark the edit as needed a human attention (via pending changes or differently, needs to be figured out) -> a human comes and sees whether this is NYT of Find a grave -> a human edits the article, everybody is happy.--Ymblanter (talk) 09:32, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::'Take a bot; let it find an article which has no date of death, whereas the Wikidata item has; if Wikidata item is unsourced or sourced to Wikipedia -> make a bot leave a message at the talk page; no infobox -> make a bot leave a message at the talk page; if the Wikidata item is sourced and there is an infobox in the Wikipedia article -> have a bot edit the infobox and mark the edit as needed a human attention (via pending changes or differently, needs to be figured out) -> a human comes and sees whether this is NYT of Find a grave -> a human edits the article, everybody is happy.' .. or just have a tracking category with 'hey, there is a WD item but no local data .. ' and have a human editor coming and add it here. 'have a bot edit the infobox and mark the edit as needed a human attention (via pending changes or differently, needs to be figured out)' .. so yes, whether through transclusion or through a bot, you still want to run the risk of transcluding BLP violations ...

:::::::Your example of Shrivallabh Vyas is nice .. say I vandalise a page here, my vandalism gets transported to WikiData and then transcluded on 800+ other wikis, here my vandalism is wiped, but because we are transcluding WikiData data, it gets back-transcluded until we also wiped the WikiData entries (and in the meantime, on 800+ other wikis N00bs might want to edit the data themselves because something wrong is transcluded). I am getting a headache. --Dirk Beetstra T C 09:40, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::Another solution might be: make sure that the WikiData data is of such a level that we can trust it. But that is not the quality control that WikiData has, worse, it is demonstrating to bot-import notoriously unreliable sources or plain spam. --Dirk Beetstra T C 09:47, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::: Realistically, it is not going to happen without engagement of a much larger set of users than current Wikidata users, and they are obviously not going to be angaged if Wikidata is banned here. This is not a solution.--Ymblanter (talk) 09:57, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::(EC)Well there is the point. ENWP requires information that is compatible with its policies. Until Wikidata can provide that, its of minimal usefulness. I doubt anyone seriously expects that to happen anytime soon as I don't see a horde of wikidata users waiting to leap into action to tidy up its unsourced/badly sourced/non compliant info, so yes, there is no solution other than to not use Wikidata for almost all purposes. Only in death does duty end (talk) 10:17, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::: Well, the notion that Wikidata is a service provider and Wikipedia is a customer is just entirely wrong. Wikidata is the data repository, and Wikipedia is not the only user of this data, and I believe not even the biggest user. Everybody uses data in different ways. It is up to the user to decide which data is acceptable and which is not. The data selection must happen on the Wikipedia side. It will never happen on the Wikidata side; it is perfectly acceptable in Wikidata (and will always be acceptable) to have different (contradicting) data cited to different sources. And actually Wikipedia users do select the information. Now it just happens via the Google search. If anybody thinks that Google is more reliable than Wikidata - fine, but this is just short-sightedness. You guys just believe that someone needs to bring you data and ask you to accept it - and when it does not happen, you are pointed out to a repository and get asked to select data yourself, you get upset and say that the repository is evil. Do you know Wikipedia is unreliable? Yes, sure. Is this morally wrong to cite data referenced to Wikipedia? I guess not. Do you expect this data to magically become reliable because it is not on Wikipedia anymore but on Wikidata? No, I guess not. Just do not use it. Use smth which is reliably sourced, and ideally check the source before using it.--Ymblanter (talk) 10:26, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::Yet another point to made. Exactly. And I think it is time that this customer decides not to use the data. --Dirk Beetstra T C 10:32, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::: This is ok. Use Google if you think it is better. It sure never gets vandalized and always reports reliable information.--Ymblanter (talk) 10:34, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::No, but as I said just below, if I have the choice between going to WikiData and then having to use google to check whether WikiData is correct, or I have to use Google directly, then I chose the latter. --Dirk Beetstra T C 10:41, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::: You are a physicist, right? You should know then that finding a solution and checking the validity of an existing solution ate two completely different things, of quite some different degree of complexity and necessary computational effort.--Ymblanter (talk) 10:45, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::Chemist, to be precise. I know, but I am also aware how a wrong DOE can completely go wrong. And I am sorry to say, but I am afraid that WikiData took the wrong approach - if they would have started to serve the Wikimedia community by serving them properly they would have engaged Wikipedians to supply more reliable data. And with that reliable data they would automatically have started to serve the community outside of Wikimedia as well. It is now such an entangled mess that it is hard to use for the Wikimedia community, and anyone outside of that. --Dirk Beetstra T C 10:56, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::::: (ec) I actually do agree that Wikidata from the beginning should have concentrated more on importing data from databases and less on importing data from Wikipedia, and only sort out these issues later. However, I do not think it is inherently wrong to store there data imported from Wikipedia. They should just not be reimported back here, and it is not actually difficult to prohibit such import for example at the template level, but of course nobody would do this if the template is likely to be attacked by a member of an anti-Wikidata brigade, with all this work destroyed overnight. Definitely, if one views Wikidata just as an extension of the English Wikipedia, which must deliver data in exactly the same format and which would conform with exactly the same policies (changing as well when policies change) as the English Wikipedia, then it is not reasonable to have it as a separate project, it should be just part of the English Wikipedia. Concerning more engagement, I disagree, there was no additional engagement on Commons (which is understaffed as well and would seriously benefit from an influx of more constructively-minded and less trigger-happy users) even despite the fact that the Commons requirements are stricter than the Wikipedia requirements.--Ymblanter (talk) 11:11, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::On the contrary, Wikipedia is the customer, and Wikidata is the service provider. The service they wish to provide is a data repository of content factoids to be used on all projects. Much like commons is a media repository. As the service provider wikidata needs to comply with our, the customer's, requirements. Until it does so, we can choose not to use its services. That wikidata editors do not understand that wikidata exists to serve the other projects is not our problem. Only in death does duty end (talk) 11:01, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::: I am afraid you completely misunderstand what Wikidata actually is.--Ymblanter (talk) 11:12, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::From the front page of WikiData: "WikiData acts as central storage for the structured data of its Wikimedia sister projects including Wikipedia, Wikivoyage, Wikisource, and others." That is all completely true. As such, the data should all flow in the direction of WikiData, and not necessarily the other way. And I would argue, lets just have it flow that way, and not back - I am sorry, but it simply doesn't work, the data cannot be reliably used, even for simple, non-sensitive data. We've tried, we failed. --Dirk Beetstra T C 11:27, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::: I see indeed that you argue this way. I just disagree with this vision and find it extremely short-sighted.--Ymblanter (talk) 12:41, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::Well you need to tell your fellow wikidata editors to stop attempting to use it that way. As it stands (as Beetstra above quotes) wikidata is a central data repository - the intent of which is that data is used on Wikimedia projects. I cant put it any simpler to you, you clearly don't even understand the scope of your own pet project. Only in death does duty end (talk) 11:34, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::: Well, sure, you are not active on Wikidata, you are way less active than me have on the English Wikipedia, but you understand better than me and also better than everybody else how it should work, and you are sure what you say would be taken seriously. Fine, I can survive this.--Ymblanter (talk) 12:39, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::::Much like your response to Fram this is another example of your 'NA NA NA CANT HEAR YOU' bullshit when you hear something you don't like and cant refute. Perhaps you over-estimate how seriously you are taken. Saying 'that's not wikidata's purpose' when it is both the stated purpose (as a central data repository), and the purpose its currently (being attempted by wikidata editors) to be used for on ENWP (drawing information from Wikidata for use in articles) is either extreme ignorance or flat-out falsehood. Only in death does duty end (talk) 13:25, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::::: Well, both communities felt confident enough to award me administrator privileges, something which I have not seen you to achieve with either of them. But, as I said, you are certainly entitled to have your opinion on the subject, even if it is completely uninformed and aggressive. This is ok with me. I am not even going to report you for a personal attacks. But I hope you will excuse me if I stop spending my time replying you.--Ymblanter (talk) 13:33, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::::::No you have said Wikidata's stated purpose is not in fact its purpose. Unless you back it up with some evidence that's a false statement. Please provide the requested information as to what wikidata's true purpose is. Clearly with all your experience you should be able to satisfy a simple question as to what wikidata is for. Only in death does duty end (talk) 13:37, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::::::: I do not feel I should be communicating with someone who (i) calls me a liar thus lying themselfves; (ii) on top of this have difficulties understanding elementary text.--Ymblanter (talk) 13:44, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::::::::Right, I will take that as 'No I cant state wikidatas purpose'. Glad we are clear. Only in death does duty end (talk) 13:55, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::::::::::Ymblanter, Only In death is not the only editor wondering whether the purpose of Wikidata is compatible with Wikipedia’s purpose. so, while I respect your decision not to respond to his/her comments, I would appreciate an answer to the question... what IS the purpose of Wikidata? Blueboar (talk) 16:04, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::::::::::: The link which I provided right below says Wikidata is a free, collaborative, multilingual, secondary database, collecting structured data to provide support for Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons, the other wikis of the Wikimedia movement, and to anyone in the world.--Ymblanter (talk) 16:07, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::::::::: Taking this out because it was hatted: d:Wikidata:Introduction. With this, I better quit the discussion, since I was already claimed to say smth I did not say, and this is probably not going to stop.--Ymblanter (talk) 14:18, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

{{hat|Losing focus here: please comment on content ("Wikidata"; "links"; "Wikidata and links") not on fellow editors. --Francis Schonken (talk) 14:10, 16 January 2018 (UTC)}}

::::::::::::::::::::True that. Understanding elementary texts is a basic requirement. Correctly writing such texts apparently not though... Fram (talk) 13:50, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::::::::Yeah, pulling rank to win an argument seems like a concession of defeat to me. Reyk YO! 13:53, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::::::Only in death, you seem to have misunderstood the discussion. Ymblanter is an admin, you are not, so you are wrong and lose. Arguments and evidence only count between people from the same class, but people from a lower caste should never doubt the correctness of the higher castes. Please stop wasting Ymblanter's time by offering arguments and the use of a brain. Be glad that they are magnaminous enough to grant you the right to an opinion; if you don't stop, I'll start an ANI discussion Tbanning you from having an opinion and directly addressing admins. Fram (talk) 13:48, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::::::::I'm not sure even ANI has (yet, despite some attempts in the past) tbanned someone for having an opinion... Expressing it yes ;) Only in death does duty end (talk) 13:55, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::::::::::::: I see, you guys have chosen a nice tactics: First, to misinterpret what I said, second, accuse me in lying and throwing a bunch of personal attacks on me, and then stating that I should prove that I am not lying. May be I can then explode, and sure you would be happy to bring me to ANI, or may be even to Arbcom. However, this is not going to happen. Who is genuinely interested in the subject, can go to d:Wikidata:Introduction, and then discuss it there if you are unhappy. Here, I do not see much point. I tried to be polite, it did not work. This is unfortunate, but I am not going to start call people names.--Ymblanter (talk) 14:05, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

{{hab}}

:::::::::I agree, they are obviously not engaged if WikiData is banned here, they are now also not engaged because of the massive problems that WikiData has because of the way that they started to collect data (import, import, import .. import ..). If all Wikipedia editors with some remote interest in the data would all walk over to WikiData to get it all correct (which is now a gargantuan task) we would not be editing Wikipedia anymore, and because of the mess WikiData is people would not get engaged there to get it correct. WikiData would have engaged many more editors if they would have put quality first, now people don't get engaged because of the lack of quality, and because of the task at hand to get it up to scratch. And in the meantime you expect, with the current policies of importing WikiData has, to just take it because it is the best you can do? 'Format C:'/'are you sure?'/'yes', and start over .... --Dirk Beetstra T C 10:13, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::: See my response above. Right now you are using Google, and nobody suggests to ban Google. You just have wrong expectations from Wikidata. What you want will never happen.--Ymblanter (talk) 10:28, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::I know that it is not going to happen .. Jimmy Wales sending me 1 million dollar is not going to happen either. I will just have to live with it. And if I have the choice between checking with Google to see whether WikiData is correct, and if it is not using Google to get the correct data, or skip WikiData and just get the correct data from Google directly, then I choose the latter option. WikiData has its place in this world, but no place on en.wikipedia. --Dirk Beetstra T C 10:39, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::"in the example with Shrivallabh Vyas the original vandalism was on the Wikipedia side [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shrivallabh_Vyas&diff=468096923&oldid=455663562], and if the guy were still alive, we would return to the same vandalized article now." The vandalism was here first, true, but it was corrected here as well before the removal of Persondata happened.[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shrivallabh_Vyas&diff=next&oldid=697008011] Neither that correction from 2016 nor the addition of the correct date of death this month were done at Wikidata, which still showed the original error or vandalism from enwiki (which was never visible to readers here in the first place). Fram (talk) 09:48, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::Agreed, that BLP data is not transcluded (unless by choice, we have special templates for living people that can completely rely on WikiData data), but twitter feeds are. It is just a matter of finding one that is not on WikiData, transclude some vague account here, wait for WikiData to take my value (that is why we have WikiData-only maintenance categories like :Category:Twitter username_not_in_Wikidata, right, to tell WikiData that they can take our data? I still fail to see how that maintenance template is improving en.wikipedia, we have the data ..), and then wipe the data here. It is good we are more careful with BLP data, but we transclude a lot from WikiData. --Dirk Beetstra T C 10:22, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

: There is no evidence that in general, Wikidata is more up-to-date or correct than e.g. enwiki. Shrivallabh Vyas died on 7 January 2018, as correctly noted and sourced in enwiki. According to Wikidata[https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q16239418] he was dead since 2011, which was sourced to "imported from English Wikipedia" in July 2014. Which is weird because at the time the enwiki article[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shrivallabh_Vyas&oldid=603335112] said (correctly) that he was alive. So Wikidata is not simply outdated, but filled with false information, referenced to an unreliable source, which didn't even have that information at the time. Saying "never use Wikidata" is not "send the project - not Wikidata, but the English Wikipedia - beck to the middle of the 2000s." but protect the project from using a generally inferior, unreliable source. Fram (talk) 08:20, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:: To make it clear, I am not going to respond to any arguments provided by Fram, since in my experience this is a loss of time. Other people may try if they want.--Ymblanter (talk) 08:22, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::"My claims are rubbish, so I'll try a personal attack instead". If you can't stand criticism of your hyperbolic claims and don't know how to react when it is shown that even the imports from enwiki by Reinheitsgebot (10,947,043 edits at Wikidata!) can't be trusted, then just don't participate in these kind of discussions, it would be even less lost time for all of us. Fram (talk) 08:36, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

  • Respectfully, yes, I do think that Wikidata fails at the task it's intended to perform. From what I have seen it is cluttered with empty, out of date, or simply erroneous entries. There's enough of that on this site already, and it is no solution to delegate responsibility for it onto another. That doesn't solve the problem, it just makes the problem present in two locations instead of one. Reyk YO! 08:38, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

: My point was actually that Wikipedia (specifically, the English Wikipedia) fails to perform the task - to solve the problem I outlined.--Ymblanter (talk) 08:51, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::Is a lot of data on enwiki outdated? Yes. Does Wikidata solve this problem? No. Correctly identifying a problem doesn't make your solution automatically correct. Wikidata may be an improvement for small, rarely edited wikis (and certainly for those wikis which are largely bot-populated in the first place, like Cebuano or some invented languages). No one here is arguing to abolish Wikidata or to restrict how other wikis may use it. But enwiki, with all its problems, generally is more up-to-date and reliable than Wikidata is (for starters, we don't accept wikis or findagrave as sources, while Wikidata explicitly supports bot importing such sites as references), so replacing our data with data from Wikidata is in general a bad idea (and yes, you can find counterexamples). Using bots on enwiki to import selected, vetted, well-sourced series of data from Wikidata may be useful in some cases, and bots providing in projectspace lists of articles where e.g. the date of birth or the date of death mismatches between enwiki and Wikidata is something few people would object to. But none of this means that not using Wikidata live in articles is throwing enwiki back in time, it means that people look at the actual situation, not the ideal one, and realise that Wikidata is not (yet?) an improvement. Fram (talk) 09:05, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

  • @YMBlanter thanks for the plug for the death anomaly project. Yes I designed it and it did identify a lot of anomalies between wikipedia language versions. A large group of us across about 11 languages then fixed those we could across many many language versions of Wikipedia. It didn't stop because Wikidata superseded it, it stopped because our bot writer retired. If someone is interested in writing a new bot for it please get in touch, it might be easier to code now that we have Wikidata. What I'm not sure of is whether Wikidata has equivalent volunteers using it to identify and list anomalies such as "people who are alive according to one language version of Wikipedia but not according to another". Call me overly cautious, but I'd prefer a data integration project that had such anomaly finding at its core. You would still find cultural anomalies because, for example, different language versions of Wikipedia have made different decisions as to how old someone needs to be before you assume they are dead; and more embarrassingly, if we have two unsourced bios for the same mid twentieth century sportsperson one describing the person as dead and the other as living, it is tricky to resolve if you can't find a source in a language you know. But I for one would be more comfortable with Wikidata at this stage if it led on anomaly finding rather than populating infoboxes. ϢereSpielChequers 12:40, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:: I think there are a lot of pages of a similar intent on Wikidata (I am not immediately sure though whether there is one specifically on death anomaly - {{ping|Pasleim}} probably knows everything about it, but even if there is not one, it can be I guess easily written. The problem is then more on the projects' sides - who is going to use this bot-generated lists to actually use it and how this information would propagate to the projects.--Ymblanter (talk) 12:46, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::That requires making the data available on the those language versions of Wikipedia that could be persuaded to take part. ϢereSpielChequers 13:50, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

=Using Wikidata to identify entities unambiguously=

In the discussion above I've proposed using the knowledge that some entity (person, building, art work...) has a Wikidata entry and keeping that information withing our article when relevant, not as a link to that entry, but as metadata for the entity as described in our article. I want to ask those editors supporting a ban of links to Wikidata what do they think about this proposal. Such metadata could take the form of a template that creates no visible link, but that is visible when editing the article - and maybe in a Special page or at Page information.

The idea would be to unambiguously identify topics of discussion which are not notable enough to have a Wikipedia article, but that are nevertheless verifiably identified as an existing entity that has a unique identifier at Wikidata. Adopting this practice throughout the project would provide invaluable to automated and semi-automated tools for processing articles, and could help research projects to better analyze the knowledge contained in our encyclopedia.

Note that the only information in Wikidata that we would be using by this approach is the existence of the entity registered, not any of the properties stored there. We are already doing this for topics that have a Wikipedia article; and we have parameters in the infoboxes templates that allow us to specify fine-grained usage of information in those topics, or avoid using them when we don't trust them. Diego (talk) 10:43, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:{{Rto|Diego Moya}} But how sure are you that all the data collected for WikiData-personality Donald Trump is talking about ONE physical incarnation of Donald? The way WikiData is sometimes importing data I would not be surprised that they could very well have imported data from Donald Trump (yes, I know, a Google search can also here on Wikipedia result in information being included about another Donald). And with a less notable personality (especially the ones which do not pass our bars) the risk of confusing the data is only bigger. --Dirk Beetstra T C 10:50, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::{{ec}} The editor adding the template should make sure that d:Q22686 correspond to the entity[humang being] that has property[45th President of the United States of America], of course. That responsibility would belong to a Wikipedia editor, not a Wikidata one. It's no different than adding an internal wikilink to an article; the editor should make sure that the target topic is the same one being described at the origin article. This would allow us to increase this hyper-linking to entities that are not notable. Diego (talk) 10:56, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::{{Rto|Diego Moya}} but that is in core the same problem as discussed above. When transcluding an official website from WikiData you have to make sure that it is actually the one of the subject here. But we can do the same thing without WikiData. We now link to a redlinked person, and if we know that there are two distinctly different we make sure we disambiguate. With WikiData you just add a layer of complexity to that. --Dirk Beetstra T C 11:01, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::We seldom disambiguate redlinks, and that wouldn't work accross the interwikies for items that have different names in different languages. The idea would be to use an unambiguous identifier (the bit that is provided by Wikidata and not redlinks), and make sure that all our articles in all language 'pedias point consistently to the same ID when they refer to the same object. A good place to do this is at WP:CSC items that have been included in a list because they fail the notability criteria or short, complete lists of every item that is verifiably a member of the group - precisely the case in the example provided in the discussion. Also, aren't redlinks only for entities that we deem likely to be notable at some point? Diego (talk) 11:06, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::And we don't disambiguate those because we don't care whether non-notable subject A is the same or not as other non-notable subject A or that they are the same non-notable 'subject A'. But it is a function of WikiData, having two 'subject A's who are disambiguated by identifiers. But until WikiData IS that reliable database that does that, we should not use it on Wikipedia, as the unreliability of WikiData data may very well mix 2 'subject A's, or split one 'subject A' into two persons, or display very wrong information on the correct 'subject A'. --Dirk Beetstra T C 11:33, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::Have you just said that we don't care about the items described within our own articles if they happen to be not notable? Note that the reliability would be provided by us using the same identifier consistently in several of our articles; not by looking at what's stored at Wikidata for that identifier. We'd be using Wikidata only as a placeholder to make sure that we're not needlessly replicating identifiers. This could benefit both projects, I see it as Win-Win. Diego (talk) 11:41, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::No, we use references to make the statements about the person reliable. Whether the John Doe in article A is the same or different from the John Doe in article B is from a greater perspective not important until they link to the same article. WikiData is the central repository of data, en.wikipedia is, per pillar, not. --Dirk Beetstra T C 11:47, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::And I do agree, it would be great to be able to disambiguate those two John Does .. but again, if they are both non-notable on en.wikipedia grounds, then how I am to expect that WikiData is capable to properly deconvolute the data between those two John Does .. they will each link to two different WikiData IDs and have no data to identify them properly with sufficient reliable data. At best you know that one is from here, and the other from there (if it is not accidently the same person who moved inbetween). There will be John Does out there that cannot be sufficiently distinguished. It may be what WikiData aspires to do, but I would not keep up the hope that Wikipedia will at some point turn into a more reliable source based on such assumed data. --Dirk Beetstra T C 11:56, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::{{ec}}The way I read WP:Build the web, registering that John Doe is the same in articles A and B is important "to enable readers to access relevant information on other pages easily" and "deepen their understanding of a topic by conveniently accessing other articles", which can't be done if we don't have the information to begin with. We do that with wikilinks to articles for items that are notable, and wikilinks to sections for items that are discribed within a larger article. I don't see why the same principle couldn't be extended as well to items that are described within our articles but don't have whole sections of their own; this information would allow us to reliably "find all articles where John Doe (Q1234567) is mentioned", or know that the Eleanor Criswell at Saybrook University is the same one listed as the spouse of Pernell Roberts. ({{cn}}, by the way).

::::::::P.S. Again, this information would be added only for items that we can reliably identify as being the same according to our reliable sources; not according to what is stored in Wikidata. Diego (talk) 12:08, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:Creates a lot of extra clutter in the wikicode for very little actual benefit. We had things like persondata for years because of similar claims of this being invaluable metadata, but apart from then being mass-imported to Wikidata it was in the end a massive effort to have it all, and very little was actually done with it. Fram (talk) 10:54, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::And there won't be much use in the future either, if every time we propose a way to use the data, it is summarily rejected ;-)

::Apparently [https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:Wikidata_for_authority_control#AcaWiki these organizations] are using Wikidata identifiers to unambiguously identify entities. Diego (talk) 11:11, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::Good for them (or not, but anyway that's up to them). But that's not really what we are discussing, what you propose is adding metadata to specific bits of enwiki article text so some hypothetical organisation or person may use this data for whatever. While this is not impossible, it seems like a lot of clutter and effort for little result. There are countless problems and issues that need fixing on enwiki, and finding reliable references for our articles seems like a lot more necessary than tracking down which Wikidata item, if any, belongs with which bit of article text, and then adding this invisible link for the benefit of, well, not the readers, not the editors, but some nebulous hypotheticals specifically interested in subjects notable enough for Wikidata but not for enwiki. Fram (talk) 12:52, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::{{tq|not the editors}} says you. I've quoted the part of our current guideline that explains precisely how this may benefit our readers, given the right tools for navigation (just not a plain link to Wikidata). People supporting a ban on this should explain why this potential benefit is to be forbiden universally. Diego (talk) 12:59, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::I agree with Fram on this. The proven downsides in terms of reliability and maintainability far outweigh the claimed benefits. Reyk YO! 13:00, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::Care to ellaborate? What are these proven downsides in terms of reliability and maintainability? Diego (talk) 13:02, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::You've quoted that guideline, but I don't see how it applies. To quote that guideline: "Ask yourself, "How likely is it that the reader will also want to read that other article?"" I simply don't see a potential benefit, and I see many problems. Main problem is that we send readers to a page which is not intended for readers. But for editors as well, we send people to a page at an unreliable wiki as if it is a good resource to use. We wouldn't allow such links to findagrave or ancestry to be placed in article text next to names, so why would we allow or encourage such links to Wikidata? I'm not a fan of such links to Wikipedia articles in other languages either for that matter, but it's not because those are allowed for the moment that we should accept the same for links to a site with a different purpose, policies, structure, ... Adding such metadata around terms makes editing harder, as it is more visual clutter one has to ignore, avoid, maintain, ... And it encourages people to recreate articles, links, on Wikidata which we don't want here, and to add sources like findagrave which we don't want here; Wikidata is too often used as a way to avoid blocks, deletions, policies on enwiki. Fram (talk) 13:16, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::{{tq|You've quoted (have you? I don't see it) that guideline}} - I did it {{diff||prev|820753372|here}}.

::::::{{tq|Main problem is that we send readers to a page which is not intended for readers.}} - Then you haven't understood my proposal, which was to remove direct links to WikiData; but keep the fact that two parts of text in our articles refer to the same Wikidata object.

::::::This would be used for navigating between our articles, without ever leaving Wikipedia, just like wikilinks; but withour requiring directional links ("connect this article to that article), and for topics that are not notable. Navigation within Wikipedia is the main purpose of MOS:LINK.

::::::{{tq|Adding such metadata around terms makes editing harder, as it is more visual clutter one has to ignore, avoid, maintain, ...}} - Fair point; yet the amount of clutter is similar to that of reusing references within an article, so hardly unmanageable.

::::::{{tq|Wikidata is too often used as a way to avoid blocks, deletions, policies on enwiki}} - Can you please explain that? How is data on Wikidata misused to disrupt Wikipedia? Diego (talk) 13:48, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::I self-corrected my "have you?" question before your post here, but thanks for taking the time to point it out anyway. "This would be used for navigating between our articles, without ever leaving Wikipedia" how? Not by readers apparently, but how would editors use this to navigate from one article to another without leaving wikipedia? Even when you follow the link to Wikidata, you don't have the option of going back to other Wikipedia articles which link to the same item. The issue is not that the clutter would be unmanageable, everything is manageable, but that the cost/benefit ratio would be bad. We already have a lot of necessary clutter like refs, please don't add unnecessary clutter as well (the same goes for things like hidden categories, which on many articles have lost their usefulness completely now that they are swamped with cats generated by authorty control and other Wikidata stuff). As for the "Wikidata for avoidance of enwiki issues" RAN (the editor at the start of all this) is a good example. When he got into trouble here for a whole range of issues, he created Wikidata items instead, added Findagrave there, and then added links to his Wikidata items to articles here. Fram (talk) 13:57, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::Readers would be able to find connected articles by searching for the Wikidata item ID (maybe with Search, preferrably by building a tool that searched articles containing the tag with that ID). What count as unnecessary is ultimately subject to personal preference; I've stated my case of how the people writing WP:BUILD found the idea valuable, just like myself.

::::::::{{tq|he created Wikidata items instead, added Findagrave there, and then added links to his Wikidata items to articles here.}} - Only the last part would be problematic for us. If we restrict ourselves to in-Wikipedia links and didn't expose readers to the link to Wikidata, that strategy wouldn't do much good. Diego (talk) 14:08, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::But the readers wouldn't see the Wikidata ID, if I understand you correctly. So how would they do this search? In any case, you find it worthwhile, I find it a lot of hassle for something that would be rarely if ever useful (with a redlink, you can already easily click it and then use "what links here", so your proposal would only potentially help for items where we have multiple subjects for one redlink, which all have a Wikidata item, and where all of them have that Wikidata item correctly added to their text entry). Fram (talk) 14:33, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

::::::::::But redlinks should not be added to items that are not notable...

::::::::::Not havink a link to Wikidata doesn't prevent us from having a small internal link to the search page, like those for refs or notes. Diego (talk) 15:26, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::::::::Ah, I see what you mean. Again, this would add visual clutter to what the reader gets, which to me is not worth the end result. I can't imagine many readers having the question "in what other enwiki articles is this non-notable subject used as well", and considering that it would only be really useful if it was somewhat complete, I see a gargantuan effort for little positive result. A nice idea, but (as you probably guessed by now) not something I support. Fram (talk) 15:36, 16 January 2018 (UTC)

:{{Ping|Diego Moya}} Overall, I think there's merit to the idea. The accusation of "Luddism" by YMBlanter is nonsense; this is about ability of en.Wikipedia articles to comply with en.Wikipedia policies, and not have them skirted by "offshoring" to other projects. If WD information is pulled {{em|into}} WP, then it can be made to comply here. I'm not sure how that gets done, e.g. the template suggestion below. However, this RfC/firehose has obviously turned into a mess almost overnight and is unlikely to result in a consensus on anything. I would suggest letting the battleground fall to silence and you can float this idea again, with some specifics later, and not here. This is a policy debate, not a style one.  — SMcCandlish ¢ >ʌⱷ҅ʌ<  00:29, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

{{ping|Diego Moya}} Perhaps you are aware of this, but at the moment, searching for Qnumbers used in enwiki through our search interface doesn't seem to work. Q6167205 is used in Mayor of Verona, New Jersey, but [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?search=Q6167205&title=Special:Search&go=Go&searchToken=4cs52ta7u87qilqoizs51q3oh a search] gives no results. Fram (talk) 07:49, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

:Searching for insource:Q6167205 works, though. —David Eppstein (talk) 07:55, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

= Inline flag-like icon for Wikidata, at TfD =

{{FYI|Pointer to relevant discussion elsewhere.}}

Please see Wikipedia:Templates for discussion/Log/2018 January 16#Template:Wikidata icon.

The fact that the nominator was blatantly accused of bad faith in even daring to open this template for discussion says a lot about the bloc vote going on over there right now.  — SMcCandlish ¢ >ʌⱷ҅ʌ<  00:36, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

::No one should be nominating for deletion something being actively discussed at an RFC. --RAN (talk) 01:07, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

:: This is not a block vote. The nominator himself advertised the TfD here, and whoever was interested went there to vote. There was no conspiracy, at lest not than I know of. I agree though that nominating at TfD smth which is being discussed at RfC is not smart and serves no purpose.--Ymblanter (talk) 06:52, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

:::if people agree that the template shouldn't exist, then discussing any solution with this template (or anything similar) in it can be closed. Seems like a rather good purpose for a TfD. Fram (talk) 07:33, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

{{ping|Wittylama}} Since the TfD was "suspended" (not sure if that's a valid procedure), commenting here: Assuming Wikidata links in articles are retained, would {{tl|Interlanguage link}} adequately replace {{tl|Wikidata icon}} (example: {{ill|Douglas Adams|qid=Q42|display=1}} vs {{Wikidata icon|Q42}})? Jc86035 (talk) 12:13, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

  • Yeah, I do not agree with the "suspending" of the TfD discussion either. Reyk YO! 12:23, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

:Thank you {{U|Jc86035}} for your productive contribution to this discussion! I would suggest that it's not quite the same for a couple of reasons. Firstly is the visual aspect (the use of the word "wikidata" rather than the logo) but that is of smaller significance in the grand scheme of things. I used the logo when I built the template because it is consistent with our sisterproject templates and consnstent with the way we link to wikidata items on Commons - a common visual vocabulary across projects. But, as we've seen in the 'template for discussion' debate, this stylistic choice is not appreciated by all... The more substantial point I feel that makes it different is that the Wikidata Icon template is independent of whether there is a blue, red, or no-link to the item in question. The ILL template has, as its main purpose: "So long as the page on this wiki does not exist (i.e. is "a red link"), this template temporarily displays" and then there is the display=1 feature to "force" the wikidata link even if it is a bluelink. This template was designed specifically and deliberately to NOT interfere or interact with the normal link mechanics and policies on WP. So... it can be placed next to a bold word in a table or infobox, or a bluelink, redlink, or no-link and no template-alteration needs to take place if an article about that subject is created in the future (in the event of a redlink). See, for example, how it is used in the infobox in: [[The Offerings of Peace and The Offerings of War. This is an article about a pair of sculptures that are both notable for WikiDATA's perspective, but would not be worth writing about independently in WikiPEDIA - in this case the ILL template using the wikidata-field wouldn't be appropriate (I believe) because the title of the artwork in its own infobox shouldn't be linking to itself. See what I mean? Wittylama 13:03, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

::But why would we link to the Wikidata pages for these two sculptures in the infobox / image? That's not the purpose of an infobox or image. In those, the link to Wikidata should go, the accession number should go (or at least should be correct!), and the overly precise coordinates should go (have one coordinate at the top right of the article instead). Then you end with readable, attractive, informative images without the barrage of needless information it has now, coupled with two meaningless "flags" (I understand you created these with the best intentions, and that they are being used in Commons and so on, but to most of our audience they will be confusing and meaningless). What this page could use, if you want to include links to reliable, relevant databases about the two sculptures, is something like the authority control template at the bottom (but a bit more restrictive than what is usually shown). Then again, the Wikidata pages about these sculptures are at the moment only sourced to the Art Gallery of New South Wales, a link which is already in the article . Basically, the links to Wikidata add nothing here but visual clutter and redundant information in a reader-unfriendly format. Fram (talk) 13:18, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

::: I've fixed the Accession number error, and removed the geo-coords from the image/infobox in that article - good points. Wittylama 21:13, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

::::I've removed all three Wikidata links (icons) from tha article, as none of them contained any information not already present in the article. It makes no sense at all to link to sister projects if that links doesn't give the reader any additional information. Fram (talk) 08:16, 19 January 2018 (UTC)

:: {{hp|Wittylama}}Almost all of the non-Wikipedia sister project links I've seen have text explaining what the link does (e.g. "Media related to article subject at Wikimedia Commons"), aside from inline English Wiktionary links, which are often unmarked per Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Linking#Interwiki links. I think usage on Commons is different because there's no Manual of Style (if you're referring to :c:Template:Artwork the addition of the logos without accompanying text seems to have been without formal consensus), and since Wikipedia has a guideline which advises against unexplained icons ("[Repeated use of icons in non-body text] should only be done if the icon has been used previously with an explanation of its purpose.") I think it would be better to at least have accompanying text to help readers understand what the icon is. Jc86035 (talk) 13:33, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

:::Hi again {{U|Jc86035}}, you make a fair argument that the other sister-project links are often surrounded by explanatory text. The purpose of this template was to UNclutter the space visually and leave the associated word UNencumbered to be (or not to be) a red or blue link. Alternatives in a table format would be to have: the full wikidata number (which is just an arbitrary number and not informative of anything); a more elaborated template (as you described like the commonscat template) but that would be very bulky; the word 'wikidata' (like in the ILL template you mentioned) but that also defeats the purpose of being small and unbotrusive to fit inside table cells. Perhaps, when the template is used repeatedly and throughout the article, such as in List of public art in the City of Sydney, then it should be prefaced with a short explanatory comment near the beginning which describes its purpose? This would be just like many articles take the time to explain the scope and features of complex tables before launching into the details. I realise this suggestion won't placate the people who dislike any wikidata links as a matter of principle.. but haters gonna hate, what can you do! Wittylama 21:13, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

::::What you could do is institute actual strict sourcing requirements on Wikidata instead of insisting that there is no problem other than "haters". —David Eppstein (talk) 21:26, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

=On "complying with BLP policies"=

There seems to be a general misunderstanding here on what Wikidata actually is. My attempt yesterday to get the point across resulted in a series of ad hominem arguments, so that these had to be hatted. I will try the second, and the last time. Whoever wants to listen, may get a chance; whoever has already an opinion, I do not expect them to listen. I will try to be brief.

Wikidata hosts data. It hosts a lot of data with very different provenance (which sometimes is not even recorded). There is data with good provenance and data with bad provenance. The data is used by external users, which include Wikimedia projects. All users use the data in very different ways. The usage of Wikidata by the German Wikipedia is very different from the usage of Wikidata by the Italian Wikivoyage and is different from the usage by the Smithsonian.

I see claims that "Wikidata must comply with the BLP policy of the English Wikipedia". By itself it does not make sense. If this means that Wikidata should only host data which comply with the BLP policy of the English Wikipedia (or with other policies) and delete all other data, this is not going to happen. Never, in any scenario. For a multitude of reasons. One of the reasons is that the English Wikipedia is not the only user of Wikidata.

The correct statement must be "The English Wikipedia must not import data which does not comply with its policies, including BLP". This is a perfectly valid statement. Indeed, Wikipedia must comply with its own policies.

The question is how this is compatible with Wikidata hosting, among others, data with bad provenance. It is clear that only data with good provenance (and by good I mean in this case compliant with the policies of the English Wikipedia) must be imported. Now, there are different scenarios how this is possible.

One scenario is that Wikidata itself must supply the data in the form which complies with the policies of the English Wikipedia, and then Wikipedia might want (or might not want) to import the data. Vandalism fighting on Wikidata aside, this is an unlikely scenario, because, as I mentioned, Wikidata also hosts and will host data which are just not suitable for import here. The conclusion that many users make is that Wikidata is badly designed, and all import must be banned. This is a perfectly valid conclusion, but it must be taken consciously. Indeed, one user here said they would be more comfortable by using Google than by using Wikidata. It is ok. I do believe that the community in general does not support this point of view (and in particular why this RfC is now heading to no consensus leaning oppose), but this is a valid point for an RfC.

Another, a way more realistic scenario, is that end users, including the English Wikipedia, must themselves select which information is suitable to import. This can be done by different means. It can be done by writing complicated lua templates, which would only import information which is sourced to sources from a whitelist, or not sourced to sources from a blacklist. It can be done by using bots and checking the transferred information manually (and in the meanwhile, it could be hidden similar to pending changes). It could be done by bots posting at the talk pages so that human users might later check it and transfer to the articles. There could be more options, or a combination of those. However, this must happen at this side, not at the Wikidata side. (Wikidata might help by better structuring data, for example, by promoting data of certain provenance to a preferred rank, but this is about it. All of these things need some development. Development is complicated and takes time. Nobody would start knowing that after two months work a member of the anti-Wikidata brigade would show up, nominate the developed template on TfD, make an appropriate ad campaign and get the template deleted. If we are going to behave like this, we can just forget about any integration with Wikidata. May be it is not needed and everybody is happy using Google, I do not know. But expectation that all of this will be done at the Wikidata side, if anybody has them, are unreasonable.--Ymblanter (talk) 08:09, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

:"My attempt yesterday to get the point across resulted in a series of ad hominem arguments, so that these had to be hatted." You are the one who refused to engage further with another experienced editor because you are an admin and they aren't.

:"I see claims that "Wikidata must comply with the BLP policy of the English Wikipedia"." I don't think anyone here has said what Wikidata must do. They can do (and actually do) whatever they like. But whether they comply or not has an impact on whether we will use their data or even link to them.

  • "Indeed, one user here said they would be more comfortable by using Google than by using Wikidata. " You have been going on and on about this. As far as I can tell, User:Dirk Beetstra (who is that "one user") has never argued for the import of data from Google, or for the direct linking to Google (search results and the like) in articles. What they claim is that, to find good sources (which is often given as an argument for the links to Wikidata, that it can be used as a pointer to good sources), they'ld rather use Google than Wikidata. Using this "Google vs. Wikidata" again and again in this discussion is an obvious strawman. (see also: "May be it is not needed and everybody is happy using Google, I do not know.")
  • "this RfC is now heading to no consensus leaning oppose" No "leaning oppose" is really noticeable. More recent votes have no more value than earlier votes. And in any case, if there is this much opposition to using Wikidata, it should give some pause to the proponents.
  • "Nobody would start knowing that after two months work a member of the anti-Wikidata brigade would show up, nominate the developed template on TfD, make an appropriate ad campaign and get the template deleted." Any examples you have in mind? For someone complaining about ad hominem arguments (and I presume you were not complaining about your own ad hominem arguments there), you sure know how to present things in a neutral way which will sway people from all sides. The only "ad campaigns" I have seen is posting a "neutral" statement at Wikidata every time some Wikidata-related discussion happens on enwiki, after which suddenly the "opposes" and "keeps" increase. Or of course "neutrally" mentioning an RfC at some Wikidata convention, after which suddenly people who rarely or never edit here and never have shown any interest in the topic come to the defense of the Wikidata side. If you know of similar "ad campaigns" from people supporting some deletion of Wikidata uses on enwiki, feel free to post examples here. But don't present this as a battle between a poor policy-compliant community who love Wikidata, and some raging "anti-Wikidata brigade" mounting "ad campaigns" to delete your hard work out of sheer malice. Fram (talk) 08:31, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

{{hat|nothing "on content" here. Second warning to stay on topic. --Francis Schonken (talk) 08:43, 17 January 2018 (UTC)}}

  • : I am not going to reply to Fram, as I mentioned earlier, but let me note they developed an unfortunate habit lying about my behavior, as if nobody can check what I actually said. One can easily check also whose statement goes first in the hatted section - surprise-surprise.--Ymblanter (talk) 08:34, 17 January 2018 (UTC)
  • :Another personal attack? Either retract the claim of lying, or tell us what exactly is a lie. As an admin who is so proud of their admin status, you should certainly know that accusing people of lying requires some good evidence with it (at least on enwiki, perhaps it's different on Wikidata?) Fram (talk) 08:41, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

{{hab}}

I'd close this subsection without further ado: it's only and exclusively about content guidance, without relation to style guidance (must I rememberremind everyone that we are here on the Manual of Style talk page? – discussion of content guidance without style aspect is hardly appropriate here). With the diatribes veering off in even less related realms while, really, people seem to have little to discuss about the style aspect, this subsection should in fact be closed ASAP. --Francis Schonken (talk) 08:50, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

: People vote above about the content guidance, not about the style guidance. But anyway it already did not go in a good direction, which I, to be honest, could have expected in advance.--Ymblanter (talk) 08:54, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

:: Re. "People vote above about the content guidance" – I didn't, so please let everyone speak for themselves.

:: Also, reminding everyone that this talk page is under DS (see banner above on this page). The DS resulted (at least in part) from diatribes conducted at talk pages such as this one. So I'd carefully, carefully ask everyone to stay on topic. --Francis Schonken (talk) 08:59, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

::: This is ok, but would you cross out the support votes which had the motivation "Wikidata is unreliable"? Actually, very few votes deal with the style (mine did, for the record).--Ymblanter (talk) 09:03, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

::::Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Linking#Overlinking and underlinking is part of the style guidance. Some people might find this:

::::* Frank White Burr

::::terribly underlinked; others might find this:

::::* {{ill|De Danske, Norske og Tÿdske Undersaatters Glæde|wikidata|Q25430997|scores|Lyksalig Tvillung-Rige!, TWV 12:10 (Telemann, Georg Philipp)|commons|Category:TWV 12:10 – De Danske, Norske og Tÿdske Undersaatters Glæde fremstillet udi en uskÿldig Fornöÿelse med Musique|da|De Danske, Norske og Tydske Undersaatters Glæde|no|De Danske, Norske og Tydske Undersaatters Glæde|lt=De Danske, Norske og Tÿdske Undersaatters Glæde, TWV 12:10}}

::::terribly overlinked: which links to retain can be argued with whatever one thinks a viable rationale in a !voting area (I'll not be the one closing the RfC but any closer would usually weigh relative validity of reasons adhered to by various participants). My problem with the current section is that it is the second one initiated about "general" characteristics of Wikidata (we already have #Discussion (linking to Wikidata RfC), in the OP: "... that Wikidata is universally not useful ..." – emphasis added, which clearly sets the topic of that section as pro and contra that *general* appreciation), often with little connection to how that affects *linking* (this time even less than the previous time). In sum, my rationale for closing this section would be WP:NOT#BLOG or some such (and if not blog-like, at least a duplicate of the topic in #Discussion (linking to Wikidata RfC)). General advantages or disadvantages of Wikidata are hardly the topic here: the topic is whether, and if so under which conditions, we should link to Wikidata (not scores of characteristics of that website which have little or nothing to do with potential linking from Wikipedia). --Francis Schonken (talk) 07:21, 18 January 2018 (UTC)

:Speaking of "elementary text", shouldn't the section header be "complying" instead of "complaining"? "Complaining with BLP policies" is rather weird... Fram (talk) 09:16, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

::::Weird perhaps, but we see it all the time. EEng 23:29, 17 January 2018 (UTC)

  • Is there a way from a Wikidata entry to see if there is a link in a Wikipedia to that entry? --RAN (talk) 03:03, 18 January 2018 (UTC)

:There's a whole section named Wikipedia with interwiki links on each item... Sabas88 (talk) 14:41, 18 January 2018 (UTC)

::I think you are telling me that Wikidata has a field for links for articles in Wikipedia, that I know. When we create a link like d:Q000000 is that findable from within Wikidata? --RAN (talk) 17:44, 18 January 2018 (UTC)

=Living people and Wikidata=

The main concern for not linking to Wikidata is concerns about living people.

  • Wikipedia already links to Wikidata for living people that have Wikipedia entries, whatever concerns there are, already apply.
  • There is concern about errors in Wikidata, they are handled the same way they are in Wikipedia, by correcting.
  • There is concern about referencing in Wikidata, "unreferenced at the moment", is not the same as "inherently unreferencable". There are over 10,000 Wikipedia articles on living people that have unreferenced paragraphs. There are over 10,000 Wikipedia articles on living people in which the birth date given is unreferenced. I stopped the search at 10K, someone else can do a more accurate count by letting the script run longer.
  • Wikipedia already links to VIAF and LCCN as well as other Authority Control databases for living people that lists their birth year.
  • Wikipedia already links to news articles as references that may give a person's birthday, and name their minor children, and name the city they live in.
  • Wikipedia can just ban links to living people at Wikidata, not dead people, and not reference works.
  • Wikipedia already allows interwiki links to any other language Wikipedias using {{Ill}}, when an article appears there.
  • There was a concern that Wikidata's policy on living people does not 100% match the English Wikipedia policy, no other language Wikipedia does. Nor does Wikimedia Commons, Wikiquote, or Wikisource, all of which we link to. However, all do follow the Wikimedia Foundation's policy on living people.
  • People also want to link to reference works in the reference section, that do not have ISBN entries.
  • There are over 50,000 biographies of living people in which there is not a single reference to any data point displayed in the infobox.

--RAN (talk) 14:57, 19 January 2018 (UTC)

:At least for me, the main concern about linking to Wikidata is

:*Wikidata is not a reliable source

:*Wikidata is poor in vandal fighting

:*Wikidata is not reader-friendly (and Reasonator reads like what it is, a bot-created surrogate)

:*All this is the most worrying for BLPs, but problematic enough in general

:*For many links we currently have to Wikidata, there is no excuse for them: often they are links where the linked page already exists on enwiki anyway, and the sources in Wikidata are already listed at enwiki as well, so the page adds nothing at all

:I'm no fan of using {{Ill}} to other wikis either, for much the same reasons. But at least these pages are structured the same as enwiki pages, and as long as you link to the bigger language versions (like de), you may be pretty sure that they do adequate vandalfighting, notability checks, BLP checks...

:No one (I think) has brought up the issues of birthdays, minor children, ..., that seems like a strawman. Furthermore, there is no problem to link to reliable sites with this information. LCCN is considered a reliable site, Wikidata isn't.

:It has never been a problem linking to reference works which don't have an ISBN, so no idea why you bring this up. Fram (talk) 15:11, 19 January 2018 (UTC)

:No, my main concerns are not BLP. However it's inefficient to bother with complex or debatable issues when BLP is such a simple and blatantly fatal point to terminate any debate. I also need to call out the fundamentally false comment about "Wikidata's policy on living people does not 100% match the English Wikipedia policy". No. Wikidata does not have any such policy at all. Wikidata is in violation of the mission-wide resolution for all projects to create such a policy. And fundamentally, it's not even the lack of policy that's the BLP issue. The real BLP issue is the pathological community. All of Wikidata's attempts to create such a policy, up to and including today, are FUBAR because of the pathological community. A majority are opposed to living-persons-violations being listed as a blockable offense. Anything less than 90% support on that is appalling. Alsee (talk) 09:53, 4 February 2018 (UTC)

= More on styles =

  • To me, the major issue is that blue-linking to Wikidata in article text creates the impression that there is a en.Wikipedia article on the linked subject/topic... when, in fact, the reader is sent to a page at Wikidata (or to put it another way... the link is presented as a link to a page inside en.Wikipedia, when it is actually a link to a page outside of en.Wikipedia). Blueboar (talk) 01:03, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • Maybe the MOS issue would be clearer if we set Wikidata aside and formulated it more generally as "Never assign direct interwiki links to the text of an article. All such links should be made either as a soft redirect or as a special marker that is not part of the main article text (such as a footnote or parenthetical interlanguage link)."? Because much of the discussion here has focused on "it's useful" vs "it violates BLP", neither of which is really a style issue, so it would help if we could decouple link style from the more general issue of whether we should link to Wikidata at all. —David Eppstein (talk) 01:18, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • Hmm... yes... I like that (because the issue isn’t limited to just Wikidata). It also keeps the focus of the concern to the appropriate page... Deal with the STYLE problem here at the MOS, and deal with any OTHER problems that people have with Wikidata (like the BLP concern) at the appropriate other policy and guideline pages (where they relate). Blueboar (talk) 02:30, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • I'd have no objection to that for prose, but we need to change "(such as a footnote or parenthetical interlanguage link)" to "(such as a footnote, table, or parenthetical interlanguage link)". Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:33, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • How are interwiki links in tables any different than interwiki links in prose? Blueboar (talk) 12:25, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • They can have a column header. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:15, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • That would only be a valid explanation if you intend for *all* entries in a table column to link to the same interwiki site, even when there is an internal article link that could be used instead. When would that ever be a useful thing to do? —David Eppstein (talk) 20:32, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • When we have tables containing subjects significant enough to be in list articles but not necessarily the subject of their own article, and where there is more content relating to those subjects on sister projects such as images of listed buildings (monuments), texts by authors, data on species, or indeed on people. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 23:50, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • I thought it was actually a slightly different blue colour from internal links, although not by much (but I haven't checked the colour codes recently). Presumably the link *could* be more of a different colour, but I'm not sure what the history / other uses of this are. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 13:55, 20 January 2018 (UTC)
  • Hmmm... I might be more accepting of interwiki links if the link were a significantly different colour (say bright yellow). My primary STYLE concern is avoiding surprise.... we don't want our readers to be confused when they click on a link, and end up being taken to a page in a sister project (when they were expecting to be taken to an article here on WP.en). We need something that makes it very clear to the reader (before they click on a link) that they are about to be taken out of WP.en... so they will know: "ah... if I click this, I will be taken to a sister project". Blueboar (talk) 14:46, 20 January 2018 (UTC)

::Of course, only we cognoscenti will know what the yellow means... EEng 15:04, 20 January 2018 (UTC)

:::A valid point... but you could say the same about the difference between redlinks and bluelinks. Yet, everyone figures that out quickly. If we used a distinct colour for interwiki links, the non-cognoscenti would at least see that something was different about the link (and be less surprised when taken to a different project). Sure, at first, they might not know what the different colour indicated, but they would figure it out quickly. They would see a link in yellow (or orange or whatever), and wonder: "hmm, why is this link a different colour?"... (CLICK)... "ah, I see. Links in that colour take you to an interwiki page. Got it." Blueboar (talk) 16:42, 20 January 2018 (UTC)

::::I hate to break it to you, but I doubt more than 1 in 100 readers have any concept of an interwiki link, or understand that we have different "wikis", or anything like that. Red vs. blue is easy to grasp -- you get nothing, or something. EEng 19:17, 20 January 2018 (UTC)

:::::I doubt that (or at least doubt that they'd have any difficulty making the leap of understanding Blueboar outlines after an initial experience or two). Even children understand how domain names work, e.g. that www.steam.com, steamcommunity.com, and support.steampowered.com are all different "places" within the Steam gaming system. At Meta, there's already a feature (optional in the preferences) to use different link colors for different projects. (It's not perfect; it uses more than color, including underlining and other style, which can be confusing, since the underlines look like those produced by {{tag|abbr|o}} and by <{{var|element}} title="...">; but with some additional work it would be better, and it's already more useful than it is a hindrance).  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  19:04, 13 February 2018 (UTC)

::::::Children understand domain names if they happen to look at them, or have some reason to. Most people don't. EEng 03:02, 14 February 2018 (UTC)

=Another template for discussion=

For anyone interested in this discussion, there is also a discussion on the Soft Wikidata recirect template that User:Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) recently created as another way to link to wikidata within the body of an article--Rusf10 (talk) 01:26, 27 January 2018 (UTC)

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