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AnomieBOT (talk | contribs)
(BOT) Updating discussions: Jul 21, 22, 24, 25, 26. Errors? User:AnomieBOT/shutoff/DRVClerk
AnomieBOT (talk | contribs)
(BOT) Updating discussions: Jul 22, 24, 25, 26. Errors? User:AnomieBOT/shutoff/DRVClerk
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{{Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2012 July 24}}
{{Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2012 July 24}}
{{Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2012 July 22}}
{{Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2012 July 22}}
{{Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2012 July 21}}

Revision as of 00:01, 5 August 2012

Instructions

Before listing a review request, please:

  1. Consider attempting to discuss the matter with the closer as this could resolve the matter more quickly. There could have been a mistake, miscommunication, or misunderstanding, and a full review may not be needed. Such discussion also gives the closer the opportunity to clarify the reasoning behind a decision.
  2. Check that it is not on the list of perennial requests. Repeated requests every time some new, tiny snippet appears on the web have a tendency to be counter-productive. It is almost always best to play the waiting game unless you can decisively overcome the issues identified at deletion.

Steps to list a new deletion review

 
1.

Click here and paste the template skeleton at the top of the discussions (but not at the top of the page). Then fill in page with the name of the page, xfd_page with the name of the deletion discussion page (leave blank for speedy deletions), and reason with the reason why the discussion result should be changed. For media files, article is the name of the article where the file was used, and it shouldn't be used for any other page. For example:

{{subst:drv2
|page=File:Foo.png
|xfd_page=Wikipedia:Files for deletion/2009 February 19#Foo.png
|article=Foo
|reason=
}} ~~~~
2.

Inform the editor who closed the deletion discussion by adding the following on their user talk page:

{{subst:DRV notice|PAGE_NAME}} ~~~~
3.

For nominations to overturn and delete a page previously kept, attach <noinclude>{{Delrev|date=2024 October 18}}</noinclude> to the top of the page under review to inform current editors about the discussion.

4.

Leave notice of the deletion review outside of and above the original deletion discussion:

  • If the deletion discussion's subpage name is the same as the deletion review's section header, use <noinclude>{{Delrevxfd|date=2024 October 18}}</noinclude>
  • If the deletion discussion's subpage name is different from the deletion review's section header, then use <noinclude>{{Delrevxfd|date=2024 October 18|page=SECTION HEADER AT THE DELETION REVIEW LOG}}</noinclude>
 

Commenting in a deletion review

Any editor may express their opinion about an article or file being considered for deletion review. In the deletion review discussion, please type one of the following opinions preceded by an asterisk (*) and surrounded by three apostrophes (''') on either side. If you have additional thoughts to share, you may type this after the opinion. Place four tildes (~~~~) at the end of your entry, which should be placed below the entries of any previous editors:

  • Endorse the original closing decision; or
  • Relist on the relevant deletion forum (usually Articles for deletion); or
  • List, if the page was speedy deleted outside of the established criteria and you believe it needs a full discussion at the appropriate forum to decide if it should be deleted; or
  • Overturn the original decision and optionally an (action) per the Guide to deletion. For a keep decision, the default action associated with overturning is delete and vice versa. If an editor desires some action other than the default, they should make this clear; or
  • Allow recreation of the page if new information is presented and deemed sufficient to permit recreation.

Examples of opinions for an article that had been deleted:

  • *'''Endorse''' The original closing decision looks like it was sound, no reason shown here to overturn it. ~~~~
  • *'''Relist''' A new discussion at AfD should bring a more thorough discussion, given the new information shown here. ~~~~
  • *'''Allow recreation''' The new information provided looks like it justifies recreation of the article from scratch if there is anyone willing to do the work. ~~~~
  • *'''List''' Article was speedied without discussion, criteria given did not match the problem, full discussion at AfD looks warranted. ~~~~
  • *'''Overturn and merge''' The article is a content fork, should have been merged into existing article on this topic rather than deleted. ~~~~
  • *'''Overturn and userfy''' Needs more development in userspace before being published again, but the subject meets our notability criteria. ~~~~
  • *'''Overturn''' Original deletion decision was not consistent with current policies. ~~~~

Remember that deletion review is not an opportunity to (re-)express your opinion on the content in question. It is an opportunity to correct errors in process (in the absence of significant new information), and thus the action specified should be the editor's feeling of the correct interpretation of the debate. Deletion review is facilitated by succinct discussions of policies and guidelines; long or repeated arguments are not generally helpful. Rather, editors should set out the key policies and guidelines supporting their preferred outcome.

The presentation of new information about the content should be prefaced by Relist, rather than Overturn and (action). This information can then be more fully evaluated in its proper deletion discussion forum. Allow recreation is an alternative in such cases.

Temporary undeletion

Admins participating in deletion reviews are routinely requested to restore deleted pages under review and replace the content with the {{TempUndelete}} template, leaving the history for review by everyone. However, copyright violations and violations of the policy on biographies of living persons should not be restored.

Closing reviews

A nominated page should remain on deletion review for at least seven days, unless the nomination was a proposed deletion. After seven days, an administrator will determine whether a consensus exists. If that consensus is to undelete, the admin should follow the instructions at Wikipedia:Deletion review/Administrator instructions. If the consensus was to relist, the page should be relisted at the appropriate forum. If the consensus was that the deletion was endorsed, the discussion should be closed with the consensus documented.

If the administrator closes the deletion review as no consensus, the outcome should generally be the same as if the decision was endorsed. However:

  • If the decision under appeal was a speedy deletion, the page(s) in question should be restored, as it indicates the deletion was not uncontroversial. The closer, or any editor, may then proceed to nominate the page at the appropriate deletion discussion forum, if they so choose.
  • If the decision under appeal was an XfD close, the closer may, at their discretion, relist the page(s) at the relevant XfD.

Ideally all closes should be made by an administrator to ensure that what is effectively the final appeal is applied consistently and fairly but in cases where the outcome is patently obvious or where a discussion has not been closed in good time it is permissible for a non-admin (ideally a DRV regular) to close discussions. Non-consensus closes should be avoided by non-admins unless they are absolutely unavoidable and the closer is sufficiently experienced at DRV to make that call. (Hint: if you are not sure that you have enough DRV experience then you don't.)

Speedy closes

  • Objections to a proposed deletion can be processed immediately as though they were a request at Wikipedia:Requests for undeletion
  • Where the closer of a deletion discussion realizes their close was wrong, and nobody has endorsed, the closer may speedily close as overturn. They should fully reverse their close, restoring any deleted pages if appropriate.
  • Where the nominator of a DRV wishes to withdraw their nomination, and nobody else has recommended any outcome other than endorse, the nominator may speedily close as "endorse" (or ask someone else to do so on their behalf).
  • Certain discussions may be closed without result if there is no prospect of success (e.g. disruptive or sockpuppet nominations, if the nominator is repeatedly nominating the same page, or the page is listed at WP:DEEPER). These will usually be marked as "administrative close".
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
Star Sonata (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (restore)

The page was speedily deleted under G4, which only applies if a page is a "sufficiently identical and unimproved copy... of a page deleted via its most recent deletion discussion". From what I recall, at the time of the most recent AfD, the page lacked specific references to reliable independent sources. The page speedily deleted had been improved with additional references. The AfD stated that "all are free to recreate the article with sufficient sources" once better sources were unearthed. I tried to resolve the issue with the closing administrator, who indicated that my remedy was WP:DRV. Thanar (talk) 01:44, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

  • Restore most recent version. I looked at the most recent edit and compared it to the version as it was during the last AfD in 2008. The most recent edit at least appeared to be significantly better sourced. If there are still problems with the article upon restoration, it can be sent to AfD and go through a full discussion again. But if the article is fine upon restoration, it doesn't need to be sent to AfD. --Metropolitan90 (talk) 04:22, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Restore as recommended by Metropolitan90. Warden (talk) 07:06, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Restore and send to AFD speedy deleted as A7 on the 22 July then recreated on 25 July deleted under G4, which I think is stretch given the prior history a full discussion would have reasonable option, add to that 3 prior afd discussions over 5 years. My brief look at the last version of the article doesnt convince me its meets notability requirements but no harm in having another discussion and giving editors time to address notability beyond doubt. For the record I closed the original AFD in 2007. Gnangarra 08:42, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Could we have a temporary undeletion, please.—S Marshall T/C 09:36, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Thank you, Eluchil404. Overturn the speedy deletion as outwith the criteria, but immediately list at AfD so that a proper discussion can take place and we can delete it again in the correct and orderly way.—S Marshall T/C 14:48, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Restore Surely the 22 July 2012 A7 speedy was declined and changed to a G4 speedy? So the G4 should relate back to the 26 May 2008 AfD[1] when the article was like this and so the G4 was claiming that the new version was "substantially identical". It is a good thing I am not an admin because I am completely unable to grasp that line of thought. And bearing in mind the AfD closer's advice to improve the article, the remark that "Cmon, it's been deleted twice at AfD",[2] hardly seems appropriate. Thincat (talk) 14:29, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn and list at AFD. This G4 is plainly wrong. T. Canens (talk) 16:02, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment  The first AfD, WP:Articles for deletion/Star Sonata, as per WP:NOQUORUM "received few or no comments from any editor besides the nominator" so under our current guidelines would have been a WP:SOFTDELETE if deleted at all.  Six months later, the community reviewed and as per unanimous !vote to overturn at Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2008 April 4, we get a procedural nomination at WP:Articles for deletion/Star Sonata (2nd nomination) resulting in a unanimous keep result from six editors.  Five weeks pass and an editor nominates at WP:Articles for deletion/Star Sonata (3rd nomination), with the statement, "the article has not been improved (citation wise) since the last AFD", an argument from WP:Arguments to avoid in deletion discussions:

    Delete I gave them six months for someone to add cites, they didn't, and I have lost my patience. – My Way or the Highway, 01:33, 12 October 2010 (UTC)

    Unscintillating (talk) 15:47, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment  The history of speedy deletes for this article deserves a separate comment.  To repeat, in AfD#2 there was no nominator !voting to delete and six editors !voted keep, a unanimous result.  Yet twice in the subsequent history of the deletion log, administrators have marked speedy delete with A7, which is "no indication of importance".  I understand that the Wikimedia Foundation requires administrators to unreasonably consume time in deleting worthless articles, but I don't see that this justifies unreasonably marked speedy deletes.  The history of G4 in this article is almost as incomprehensible.  The deletion of 2008-08-13 for G4 is a stretch at best, it appears to be a new article.  But the deletion of 2009-09-03 as G4 (with an "a7" thrown in as a comment) was clearly not for a "re-creation", this was a newly written article 14,500 bytes long.  The G4 currently being discussed is now the 3rd G4 for this article.  Unscintillating (talk) 15:47, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment  A contributing factor to this confusion seems to be that deletions are not recorded in the Revision History of articles.  Unscintillating (talk) 15:47, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • I would claim that this wiki page qualifies for A7. There's just no point to have an article for something so obscure. It's not scientific or historical in nature, so I'd claim the article falls more under general advertisement, and its existence is an abuse of Wikipedia. If you want the video game to have a web presence, then start a wiki specific to it.80.186.49.244 (talk) 21:19, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment The general criterion for whether or not to have an article is WP:Notability. Even if a topic is obscure, "obscure does not mean not notable" (WP:OBSCURE). So there is a point to having articles on obscure topics. Finally, the nature of a topic (scientific, historical or otherwise) does not determine whether an article constitutes an advertisement. The main safeguard against advertising is maintaining a neutral point of view in the article (WP:NPOV) which can be achieved regardless of the nature of the topic. Thanar (talk) 22:02, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
While the topic is obscure, it is also not notable. It has not received enough attention to warrant the article existing. "If a topic has received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject, it is presumed to satisfy the inclusion criteria for a stand-alone article or stand-alone list." The video game has not achieved this. Full stop. Furthermore, "the subject's website, autobiographies, and press releases are not considered independent". The wiki article that has been deleted heavily relied on the subject's website for sourcing its content. Hence, I reach the conclusion that this article was created purely for advertising purposes and not to disseminate any information of note.80.186.49.244 (talk) 23:22, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
There are 7 references in the article version that was speedily deleted. Five of these (3 reviews and 2 developer interviews) are to 4 independent sources, namely G4TV.com, GameZone.com, tleaves.com, and onRPG.com. The 2 references to self-published sources were used only for player base statistics and appear to meet the requirements of WP:SELFSOURCE. Regardless of debate about the quality of the independent sources, I would not characterize the article as heavily relying on the subject's website for sourcing its content. Thanar (talk) 02:02, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Restore obviously, AfD it again if someone desires, but the more pertinent question is "What is User:Malik Shabazz, who is an administrator, doing nominating an article for G4 when it clearly doesn't apply and he has the tools to know that?" I expect it's probably not documented that admins have to check ahead of time before tagging something G4, but since it's also logical to assume that an admin tagging a G4 already has looked at it, a failure to do so can lead to assumptions of applicability. Thus, we need at least one of a nominating admin and a deleting admin to NOT take shortcuts in investigating the applicability, or else this will happen again. Jclemens (talk) 06:18, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse G4 deletion - The AfDs weighed references included: frappr.com, gametunnel.com, GameZone.com, lyceumarchives.com, mmorpg.com, pc.gamezone.com, pc.ign.com, rappr.com, starsonata.com, strategyinformer.com, tgr.com. Admin Sandstein was clear in his close of Star Sonata (3rd AfD nomination) that the topic lacked sufficient references to substantial reliable third-party coverage. WP:G4 excludes pages only if the reason for the deletion no longer applies. Admin Y correctly exercised admin's discretion as part of the 25 July 2012 G4 deletion to conclude that the additional referenced material of g4tv.com, onrpg.com, tleaves.com, web.archive.org, and youtube.com in the G4 deleted article failed to overcome the reason for the deletion. Nothing in this DRV discussion has established otherwise. The above arguments based on conclusory opinion rather than fact should be discounted per Admin guideline re rough consensus. Since the reason for the deletion still applies, the G4 deletion should be upheld. To the DRV closer, please note, prior a AfD for this topic have been concerned with suspected single-purpose accounts or canvassed users.[3] -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 14:30, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • WP:G4 does not exclude pages "only if the reason for deletion no longer applies" as you claim. Rather, it lists 3 categories of pages which are excluded: "This excludes pages that are not substantially identical to the deleted version, pages to which the reason for the deletion no longer applies, and content moved to user space for explicit improvement (but not simply to circumvent Wikipedia's deletion policy)." The page in question fits the first category, and thus is excluded from WP:G4. Thanar (talk) 22:59, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • If someone recreates a page that is not substantially identical to the deleted version but the reason for the deletion still applies to the recreated page, enforcing the AfD consensus via speedy deleting under G4 makes sense. Otherwise, AfD consensus could easily be overcome. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 05:36, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Even when an article is deleted at AfD, the article often undergoes changes during the AfD and the deleted version often is not substantially identical to the originally nominted version. Since the originally nominted version would not be substantially identical to the deleted version, an editor would need only restore the originally AfD nominted version to get around G4 in such a case, if what you say is true. That doesn't make any sense. Sufficiently identical and unimproved relate to the article text on its face as well as whether the reason for the deletion no longer applies. For the recreated Star Sonata article, Admin Y correctly exercised admin's discretion as part of the 25 July 2012 G4 deletion to conclude that the additional referenced material of g4tv.com, onrpg.com, tleaves.com, web.archive.org, and youtube.com in the G4 deleted article failed to overcome the reason for the deletion. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 14:49, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Restore and list Uzma's point is well taken, and I do think if the article had come back with exactly the same sources the G4 would likely be appropriate. But new sources should really be examined by the community. Hobit (talk) 16:41, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment A search for more sources turned up another Gamezone article covering the original release. Also, Star Sonata was one of 3 role-playing games listed on Gamespy’s 101 Free PC Games of 2012. Gamezone and Gamespy have been established as reliable sources in the field of video gaming per past consensus. Thanar (talk) 17:42, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn and leave alone. It is just unimaginable that the above comments by Unscintillating would not boil an editor's blood. It seems that this article or subject has enemies and individuals who are adamant to have it deleted. Nothing new. However, it is the duty of DRV and senior editors to see this, to put their personal feelings of an article aside and to do all in their power to prevent any abuse of discretion. Thus, overturn and ban editing of this article only for those who keep re-nominating AfD.Turqoise127 19:44, 1 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Restore As Metropolitan90 mentioned, the most recent version definitely doesn't qualify for a G4 deletion, it has been substantially changed and updated since it was originally deleted. As for noteability this game has been covered by G4TV, Gamezone, Gamespy, OnRPGas well as numerous smaller gaming blogs and employs 9 people based on a press release as shown on Gamasutra . -FracOMac (talk) 17:51, 2 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
Brocas Helm (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (XfD|restore)

I strongly believe that the page was deleted wrongfully. The article, nominated for deletion for the second time, was deleted with five votes, because the posters agreed that the band doesn't meet the WP:Band requirements and isn't notable. However, trying to appeal to the deletion's initiator first, I've proved that the band fulfills the needed requirements and is, in fact, notable metal group that has a strong cult following. Still, we didn't come to a conclusion. Hawk18727 (talk) 15:52, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
  • Ashton Kutcher on Twitter – It is clear from the discussion here that there is no consensus whether the deletion should be overturned. By focusing on the policies related to process (as opposed to policies related to content), the scope of an impartial DRV closer is often more limited. Both sides in the DRV bring up valid points and arguments, and both sets of arguments are substantiated by certain facts of the AfD.

    Administrator instructions at DRV give two principal outcomes when the DRV itself is unable to reach consensus: maintaining the status quo and relisting. In deciding between the two options, I have further examined the facts of the AfD as discussed in the DRV to determine if either A. a fresh discussion might lead to a clearer determination, and B. if aspects of the deletion process were tainted in some way.

    Although it was not discussed in great detail in the DRV, the issue of multiple relisting of the AfD was mentioned by a number of editors, and this concern was not substantially addressed. WP:RELIST gives two reasons why a discussion should be relisted: A. insufficient discussion or B. insufficient participation based on policy. Based on my inspection of the AfD, neither of these two criteria were met. This was further exacerbated by the first two closers—relisting admins are described as closers by WP:RELIST—participating in the later discussion, casting a perceived lack of neutrality over their relisting actions.

    Evaluating these facts and the lack of consensus to overturn, it is my determination that the article should be relisted at AfD.

    I am well aware of the eyebrow-raising appearance of relisting where the substantial process violation was relisting itself. This relisting follows strictly from DRV process, however, and can be better thought of as a AfD reboot where participants are reminded to comment clearly on the reasons behind their policy and guideline based arguments (and/or why the arguments of other participants are not based upon policies and guidelines). – IronGargoyle (talk) 01:05, 6 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
Ashton Kutcher on Twitter (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (article|XfD|restore)

I think this debate is pretty closely related to User:Jimbo Wales' statements made in his 2012 "State of the Wiki" address which WP:POST to "cover all topics, even if they are pure pop culture, because if the Wikimedia movement does not cover it, the people will go somewhere else" as stated in Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2012-07-16/Wikimania. Given that the Big Kahuna has spoken on the issue, I would like to consider the propriety of this close on two grounds. First, why was this relisted when it was 10 keep and 4 delete? Why was it again relisted when 14 more votes came in to make this 17 keep and 11 delete? Then a bunch of comments came in to make it about 33 delete and 23 keep. More importantly, since Scottywong (talk · contribs) closing rationale which states that WP:INDISCRIMINATE dominates WP:GNG flies in the face of Jimbo's "State of the Wiki" address, we should reconsider whether we want to discard the GNG-based notability of this pop culture topic. TonyTheTiger (T/C/BIO/WP:CHICAGO/WP:FOUR) 06:25, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

  • Overturn the enormous, blatant supervote. Correct outcome was no consensus.—S Marshall T/C 07:28, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn Good case made. You can see the article [4] and see it clearly has references to major news sources commenting on how popular the twitter account in itself was, and its accomplishments. Dream Focus 08:50, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn to keep, (with the always available option to start merger discussions) -- Consensus, as the close states, was meets the GNG. Also, there were 11 sources -- including two textbooks -- cited in the discussion showing e.g.., marketing, advertising, and mass media significance of the topic, in addition to other cites in the article and which maybe found. The policy rationale stated in the close was unfortunately a supervote, not dictated by policy text, nor based in evidence and reason (as noted by the second extensive relisting comments during the discussion, which were in fact substantive comments on every purported delete vote under the cited policy, and which therefore cannot be credited). Alanscottwalker (talk) 11:56, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse: this DRV is essentially giving Jimbo a supervote, and I, for one, don't believe we should trade quality for eyeballs pbp 13:21, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse the vast majority of the Keep comments argued that the article met the GNG. This is a good counter to arguments that the subject is not notable, but the fact that a topic is notable does not mean that we should have an article on it. We can and do delete pages on notable topics for other reasons. Many Delete comments however raised the issue of WP:NOT, and few people attempted to rebut this argument. It's not a case of a policy overruling a guideline, as the closing statement says, because meeting our notability guideline doesn't mean that a page should be included. Hut 8.5 13:22, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Yes it does; that is what "presumed" means. The GNG accords the keep presumption, and it is not rebutted for the closer by differing opinions about NOT. Alanscottwalker (talk) 03:06, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
If we take the view that articles about notable topics should be kept, then it would become impossible, even in principle, to delete something for being a violation of WP:NOT, WP:POVFORK, WP:BLP, etc. Notability is only one reason for deleting something. Hut 8.5 09:20, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Looking at it from that direction, on what basis would you conclude that WP:NOT isn't a reason to delete something; since, by the same token, any article we have already could be deleted if it ran afoul of WP:NOT? Darryl from Mars (talk) 11:14, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
This doesn't strike me as very relevant. Enforcement of all our policies depends, to some degree, on editorial judgement. The prospect of editors deciding that any article should be deleted under WP:NOT isn't any more realistic as the prospect of editors deciding that any article should be deleted under WP:N or any of our other reasons to delete something. Hut 8.5 13:27, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Er, sorry, maybe I wasn't clear; or I don't understand. Are you saying that, deciding when WP:NOT is a reason to delete is based on editorial judgement, e.g, when people say it's a reason to delete? Darryl from Mars (talk) 15:18, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
There is an element of editorial judgement, yes, just like every other policy. Hut 8.5 18:15, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
What I was trying to ask you was, since you suggest that few attempts were made to rebut the WP:NOT arguements, and also that arguing its notability doesn't rebut WP:NOT arguements, What would be a rebuttal to them? To use a less troublesome example, you can suppose I accused 'Naval Battles of WW1' or 'Zeppelins' of being indiscriminate. Darryl from Mars (talk) 23:25, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
This is getting a bit off topic. The point about WP:NOT is that there are topics which are verifiable or notable which do not belong here because we are writing an encyclopedia and our sources usually aren't. In the case of celebrities this principle is especially important because the media frequently give extensive coverage to almost all aspects of a celebrity's life, no matter how trivial or unencyclopedic. For obvious reasons the mere existence of sources do not counter these concerns. To rebut a concern based on WP:NOT you have to provide some sort of argument that the topic of the article is the kind of thing that could be included in an encyclopedia. For the two examples you cite this is easy - if nothing else you could just cite the fact that actual encyclopedias cover these topics. Hut 8.5 19:59, 27 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Rather, it may have finally gotten to the point; if the rebuttal is simply making the argument that it is suitable for inclusion, those arguments were made in spades; and certainly (before anyone accuses them of being bare assertions instead of arguments) to more depth than the 'this is unencyclopedic'/'WP:NOT' arguments they were addressed to. You weren't the closing admin, of course, so he may have a different idea of a rebuttal in mind, but if that's what you're basing your judgement of 'few attempted to rebut' on, it's worth taking another look. Darryl from Mars (talk) 13:05, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
It's more subtle than "suitable for inclusion". For an article to be suitable for inclusion, it must satisfy a number of policies. Amongst them, the topic must be notable and the topic music be encyclopedic. (WP:NOT relates specifically to the latter.) Notability and encyclopedicity are not the same thing: there are encyclopedic topics that are not notable, and notable topics that are not encyclopedic. A rebuttal to the NOT concerns would have to demonstrate the encyclopedicity of the topic, not the notability. Hut 8.5 20:50, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
As I say, such arguements were made. For reference, encyclopedic. I can understand now though how they'd fall short if you expect them to prove something isn't a member of a list that's explicitly not exhaustive. Darryl from Mars (talk) 22:52, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
You're not listening to me. Encyclopedicity is not synonymous with being suitable for inclusion in Wikipedia, nor does it have anything to do with notability. Arguing that WP:NOT is inherently flawed or unenforceable isn't going to get you very far since the community doesn't agree with you. Hut 8.5 10:49, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Hut, We take the view that Notability accords the presumption because that is what it says and with good reason, it is based in evidence of reliable sources. As with any article, the article is also subject to content consensus, such as is detailed in policy, but content consensus by reference to policy was not reached, so the presumption holds and the delete closer acts on the presumption, with content addressed in due course and by other processes. It is not impossible, but it is subject to evidence, presumption, standards, and consensus arising from those things. Alanscottwalker (talk) 13:29, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
A topic is presumed to merit an article if it passes the GNG. This means that an article about such a topic will be kept unless someone can demonstrate some other reason why it should be deleted (such as WP:NOT). That does not mean that the GNG says the topic should be kept, nor does it have any bearing on the question of whether WP:NOT says the page should be deleted. It only specifies what happens if WP:NOT doesn't say the page should be deleted. Hut 8.5 15:13, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The presumption is given and it is not rebutted by a lack of consensus over NOT, especially bad arguments that NOT applies to anything one doesn't like. As Darryl's questions make clear, your view of sources and NOT is unworkable and ultimately irrational. It amounts to putting fingers in our ears and saying 'no source can tell us this should be written about, we don't care about sources, and whether they have treated this as a business, marketing and mass communication, etc. topic.' (And by the by, NOT is a content rule -- it is only tangentially an organizational aid.) Alanscottwalker (talk) 16:48, 27 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I don't really understand what you are trying to say here. It seems you're trying to argue that WP:NOT only affects the content of articles and isn't a valid basis for deleting them. If that's the case, then the community (and policy) doesn't agree with you. If you want to argue that the deletion should be overturned on the grounds that there was no consensus that WP:NOT means the page should be deleted, then that's a legitimate view, but it doesn't have anything to do with notability or the GNG. Hut 8.5 19:59, 27 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
My argument is rather the later, and not the former (I am not "trying to argue" that). (The NOT observation is an aside, although it goes to understanding RS and their relationship to NOT. NOT generally approaches things from content up (not topic down), by looking at content supported by RS and saying this content does not fit or does not fit in this manner; it does not say ignore the RS, it says look at them, and be guided by their content, article content, and by the categories explicated in NOT -- it does not list 'forbidden topics,' because there are none for an Enlightenment project, but some content is unsuitable and a whole article therefore may have unsuitable content, and some very specific types of articles listed at NOT are likely to have all unsuitable content. In a complementary way WP:N also says be guided by the sources - they are both based in evidence of RS.) -- Alanscottwalker (talk) 22:22, 27 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The policy does not say anything like your description. Deletion is appropriate if an article violates policy and it is not possible to fix the problem through normal editing. Here the concerns relate to the topic of the article, rather than its content, and any potential rewrite would suffer from the same problems. Hut 8.5 20:50, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Yes. Your position is, it is a matter of evidence free assertion, without regard to RS, or text of the article, or specific policy; and that is why there would be no consensus, nor even a real discussion, because consensus cannot occur around evidence free assertion, so the presumption holds and the closer does not get to choose among evidence free assertions. I, however, disagree that it is a matter of evidence free assertion, and the keep side brought the better evidence. Alanscottwalker (talk) 12:40, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Re: Your position "Many Delete comments however raised the issue of WP:NOT". WP:NOT specifically requires that the article be a certain thing that Wikipedia is not. WP:NOT provides four categories 1. Style and format, 2. Content, 3. Community, and 4. And finally ... with 18 different certain things. The close, those participating in the AfD, and those endorsing the close in this DRV failed to establish the certain NOT thing around which rough consensus developed as the basis for deleting the article. Your DRV endorsement of the close avoids specifically addressing the close's centering on WP:INDISCRIMINATE (and to some degree WP:NOTDIARY) as the NOT basis to delete is because you know there was not rough consensus to delete under either of these certain NOT things. There were only two AfD participants who mentioned "INDISCRIMINATE" in their delete !vote and zero participants mentioned NOTDIARY in their delete !vote. Contrary to the AfD close, rough consensus did not developed around INDISCRIMINATE or NOTDIARY as the basis for deleting the article avoiding addressing INDISCRIMINATE or NOTDIARY in your AfD close endorsement merely highlights this. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 12:53, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Counting the number of people who linked to INDISCRIMINATE or NOTDIARY does not provide an accurate picture of the discussion. (FWIW I think you miscounted: four delete !voters mentioned INDISCRIMINATE at some point, and although NOTDIARY wasn't mentioned, NOTNEWS was - NOTDIARY is a subsection of NOTNEWS.) Plenty of other delete !voters either referred to WP:NOT in their comments or were clearly invoking WP:NOT or the principles behind it. Discounting their opinions because they didn't link to the right policy section is pure wikilawyering. Hut 8.5 20:50, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Break 1
  • Endorse If Jimbo wants to change the way we apply policy then he is welcome to raise an RFC and seek community consensus but the close is clearly a balancing of competing policies and guidelines and I strongly believe that an argument based on a guideline should have less weight than an argument based on a policy. That is precisely what the closing admin did so this looks well within their closing discretion. Arguments to overturn based on the GNG is really missing the point of DRV. Spartaz Humbug! 13:56, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse The close was a correct reading of WP:NOT, a valuable policy for maintaining an encyclopedia of our breadth. ThemFromSpace 16:15, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • It was closed by citing WP:NOTDIARY and WP:INDISCRIMINATE(both link to the same place) which only concerns Summary-only descriptions of works, Lyrics databases, and Excessive listings of statistics. The closing administrator should actually read the policy they are referencing in their closing rational. Dream Focus 16:27, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • WP:INDISCRIMINATE is not restricted to those three areas. These are specific examples of the application of the policy where particular guidance is needed. And WP:NOTDIARY and WP:INDISCRIMINATE do not link to the same place. Hut 8.5 16:31, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
      • The way it loads up it looked the same place, my mistake. Diary says "Not every match played, goal scored or hand shaken is notable enough to be included in the biography of a person." Not relevant here, since the article featured coverage about it, and why the twitter account was notable. And WP:INDISCRIMINATE says "Wikipedia articles should not be:" and list three examples only, it not mentioning anything else. Dream Focus 16:39, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
        • INDISCRIMINATE does not only say what you describe, it also says that merely being true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in the encyclopedia. The policy does not set any limits on the application of this principle and it applies everywhere. Policies which are intended to be exhaustive lists, such as WP:CSD, explicitly say so. NOTDIARY does contain the word "notability", but it is used in its normal English sense of "worthy of notice", rather than as a reference to Wikipedia:Notability. (Note that the policy is talking about something being "notable" enough for inclusion in a wider article, which is explicitly not what WP:N is about.) Hut 8.5 16:53, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse. INDISCRIMINATE is absolutely correct. AK's use of Twitter may, in a sense, pass GNG if considered in isolation from common sense but, quite probably, so would his toilet habits. Formerip (talk) 17:33, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn to keep WP:INDISCRIMINATE does not apply so WP:GNG must be followed. Obsene out of policy supervote. CallawayRox (talk) 18:09, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • Please explain how WP:INDISCRIMINATE does not apply. The policy states that "merely being true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in the encyclopedia" and that fits perfectly here. The discussion shows that there was a consensus of 'x on Twitter' pages being inappropriate on Wikipedia. Till 13:35, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
      • That statement applies to all possible information, whether suitable or not, certainly -that- applies. However, to argue that there was a consensus that this article actually was not suitable per the spirit of WP:IINFO that actually excludes thing is...a stretch. Darryl from Mars (talk) 13:55, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment - As this debate progresses, I think it will be enlightening to compare how editors are voting here (whether or not to overturn an article deletion) vs. the "Obama on twitter" DRV (whether or not to overturn a kept article). It will call into question whether some are honestly examining the XfD and looking at the admin's actions, or if they are just casting a Round 2 vote. Tarc (talk) 19:06, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse. It wasn't an easy one to close, and I don't envy Scotty in doing it, but in the end, it was his read of consensus and I think his faith was good and none of his actions were improper, thus I can't find a reason to overturn. Hut 8.5 sums it up nicely as well, and I agree with his sentiments here. Dennis Brown - © Join WER 19:42, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn IINFO does not apply to twitter feeds, closing rationale was based on the assumption that it does, and thus a fatally-flawed supervote. Topic meets GNG, does not run afoul of anything in WP:NOT, close should be vacated as not policy-based. Jclemens-public (talk) 19:50, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
"IINFO does not apply to twitter feeds" How did you determine that? I reject the notion that IINFO only applies to summaries, lyrics databases, and statistics. The top of WP:NOT makes it clear that "The examples under each section are not intended to be exhaustive." -Scottywong| babble _ 02:49, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
That much is true; it could apply, but did you really feel that the view that it did apply reflected some kind of consensus? Darryl from Mars (talk) 04:02, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I thought that the argument was made repeatedly by different people, and was never convincingly refuted by anyone, so yes. -Scottywong| gossip _ 15:06, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Well, far be it from me to say what should convince you, but if the arguments that there was value to the article or that is was suitable for inclusion don't count as refutations; I'm especially curious to know what -would- qualify. Darryl from Mars (talk) 01:45, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn supervote to no consensus. One man's stupid article is another man's useful information, no consensus that WP:GNG is trumped by stupidity here.--Milowenthasspoken 00:36, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment There's a step in Scottywong's reasoning I didn't get to see; he affirms the basic premise of WP:NOT "merely being true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in the encyclopedia", which was stated, talks about other articles that aren't necessarily suitable, which were mentioned, then at some point concluded this article isn't suitable. He can't have reached that conclusion from what he said alone (All it states is that P does not imply Q), so I'd want to know what consideration lead him to conclude 'not Q' was representative of the discussion before voting here. Darryl from Mars (talk) 00:46, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse- close appears to me to be a sensible reading of the discussion. The delete !votes were clearly better argued. Closing a long, contentious discussion with a detailed rationale should be encouraged rather than shouted down with "I disagree with the close therefore supervote". Reyk YO! 05:05, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn The practise of relisting until a desired result is obtained seems to be an abuse of the process, contrary to WP:GAME. The second relisting seems especially egregious. The admin at that point says "there seems scant regard for actually building a compelling case for deletion" and the !keep voters were ahead at that point. So why was the discussion relisted? This seems to be the process, lampooned by Brecht, of dissolving the people and electing another, when they fail to conform to the wishes of the nomenklatura. Warden (talk) 07:36, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse - The "supervote" argument is generally the last gasp of the ARS-minded to try to get their article back at any cost. There's nothing wrong with how the admin judged the arguments and weighed consensus. Tarc (talk) 13:02, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
ARS-minded? ;-)—S Marshall T/C 14:49, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
On the bright side, I didn't say ARSE-minded at least. ;-) Tarc (talk) 15:09, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
For the record, I am not ARS minded. Alanscottwalker (talk) 13:59, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse. There is some irony in complaining about the closing admin exercising a supervote while trying to invoke Jimbo's name as if he himself is a trumping supervote. Jimbo's opinions are his opinions, and not policy. As such, that argument is irrelevent to DRV. Given the size of the discussion on these foo on Twitter articles at the village pump, I also think it was logical to ensure the discussion had sufficient participation ot guage a true community reaction to these articles, rather than simply hoping that the right people !vote at the right time. Something tells me that if the delete !voters held the numerical advantage on the relists, Tony would not have complained about the AfD being left open. Also, Tony should be reminded that vote counting is not how these discussions are weighed. Even at a 10K 4D breakdown, if each side has presented arguments of similar weight, then we have not yet reached a consensus. Relisting would be appropriate in such a circumstance, especially given the size of the community discussion I mentioned previously. Ultimately, we are left with the "but but but it meets GNG!" argument. I am in agreement with Scottywong that the WP:NOT policy trumps the WP:GNG guideline here. Certainly Ashton Kutcher's Twitter presence is worthy of inclusion, but at his main article. There is no need to cover such a trivial thing in such tedious detail. Resolute 15:07, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse. Plainly within admin discretion. T. Canens (talk) 16:03, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • Here's my question. When two sides evenly divide on if a given policy applies in a given situation and it isn't a black-and-white issue, does the admin get to make that call? Evaluating strength of argument is all well-and-good, but at some point isn't it "agrees with me"? Hobit (talk) 03:02, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
AfD isn't a vote count, and a 50:50 divide of votes is irrelevant. Your argument amounts to "noone can objectively weigh up consensus", which is a non-argument since it happens all the time. Admins are expected to weigh up the arguments and assign weight to them based on how they reflect policies and guidelines (i.e common practice on wikipedia). The best example of how vote counting is irrelevant is with an AfD where all vote keep and one individual points out it's a copyvio: that one vote trumps all the rest. IRWolfie- (talk) 10:53, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I agree, in clear-cut cases a single !vote can be enough to override a hundred votes. The argument here is if this case is clear cut. I (and I think most of us arguing overturn) believe that the key issue is if this is indiscriminate information. I don't see a way, other than finding consensus on the issue, to determine that. And I don't see consensus in that discussion. I'm guessing Tim (whose views I greatly respect) does see consensus (or something close to it), and I'm asking him to explain why he sees that in a situation where I don't see it at all. Hobit (talk) 22:16, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I probably should have commented in less absolute terms. Personally I'd probably have closed this one as NC as well, but I do have a view w/r/t these "on Twitter" articles so take what I'm about to say with a grain of salt. I'm usually pretty reluctant to overturn AfD closures; this is not because the closing admin is somehow in a better position to assess the debate, like the relationship between trial and appellate courts, where the trial court is the only one that actually hears live testimony and has significant personal interaction with the lawyers, and so is in a better position to find facts. Rather, it's because it's essential to have finality at some point. This is especially important for divisive and difficult AfDs. It's already a very difficult task to close the debate; I do not want admins be even more discouraged because they are going to be second-guessed by DRV. When the AfD is as divisive and difficult as this one, as long as the admin provides a facially reasonable rationale in light of the debate, I'm not inclined to overturn it. That said, there may be some cases where the close, despite being facially plausible, is nonetheless so obviously wrong that I'd want to overturn it; all I can say, to quote Justice Stewart, is that I know it when I see it, and the close in the case before us is not it.

In the end, an article about some guy's Twitter account is surely on the lower end of the importance spectrum of our four million articles; the harm caused by the article being wrongly deleted - if it is indeed wrong to delete it - for a year or two is, in my judgment, substantially less than the waste of time and effort being spent to decide if it is indeed wrongly deleted right now. Let it settle for a while, and we can revisit this in the future when the consensus may have become clearer. T. Canens (talk) 01:37, 4 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

It appears you may mistake the harm of wrongful deletion. The harm of wrongful deletion falls heavily on content creators (and readers), and their discouragement in creating (and reading) well sourced articles is of worse harm to the pedia. Alanscottwalker (talk) 09:43, 4 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Might want to take another look then. I count about a half dozen who mention INDISCRIMINATE, two who discuss the diary aspect, and another large collection of voters who discuss WP:NOT (which, of course, contains WP:INDISCRIMINATE). This appears to be an enormous, blatant, misleading DRV vote. -Scottywong| verbalize _ 02:46, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse The original posters rationale amounts to wanting a supervote from Jimbo. Also policy does trump guidelines, not the other way around. As I mentioned below WP:NOTSTUPID discourages anticipating bad ideas and expecting a line specifically addressing articles of this type doesn't make a lot of sense either, we shouldn't reject decisions based on technicalities from a literal reading of policy. IRWolfie- (talk) 10:49, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse I have to say IRWolfie pretty much sums it up here. The original poster seems to want a supervote from Jimbo and I find that extremely ironic. Clearly this page does not belong as a separate topic. It should be mentioned briefly on his page and that is about it. -DJSasso (talk) 16:55, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Break 2
  • overturn to NC As this topic isn't specifically noted in WP:NOT as being unacceptable, we need some reasonable consensus that it does apply, and that consensus simply wasn't there. The RfC, once closed, might well provide that consensus. But we aren't there yet. In any case, at the least this should be a redirect (as the article as been around and there is an obvious place to redirect to...) Hobit (talk) 03:02, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • This is an interesting argument. I take it then that I can create an article like Derek Jeter at Yankee Stadium, fill it with reams of trivial details over every play, hit, home run and out, Jeter has made at that stadium then claim it cannot be deleted because WP:NOT does not specifically mention that articles on baseball players' performances at specific stadia is bad? Man, I'm impressed! Which school did you get your wikilaw degree from? Resolute 15:19, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
      • I'd like to think an editor as senior as yourself could manage to make a point without a personal attack, perhaps you'd care to refactor that? In any case, there are two relevant points here. #1 Such a thing is specifically covered under WP:NOTSTATSBOOK. #2 If 20 good-faith editors felt that some specific topic not covered under WP:NOT shouldn't be covered by WP:NOT while 20 did feel it should be covered, I'd hope you'd agree there was no consensus one way or the other. This is very much a matter of opinion, nothing else. And we clearly see opinion is evenly split. Hobit (talk) 19:10, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
        • Meh, adding flavour to a comment on how you are trying to wikilawyer the WP:NOT argument isn't a personal attack, sorry. Also, to my theoretical article NOTSTATSBOOK would not apply, as I would not be creating a list of statistics. Rather, I would be writing, in prose, a tediously detailed account of the player's history at that one stadium. Where both my theoretical article, and this formerly-real article does fall down is at WP:NOTDIARY. As it, using both sportspeople and celebrities as examples, notes both that not everything written about [them] is notable and that over-detailed articles full of trivia are a bad thing. And giant articles about a celebrity's Twitter presence is very much an example of this. Resolute 13:38, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
          • So just to be clear, you didn't just wiki-lawyer out of NOT:STATSBOOK? I guess since you haven't actually written it it'd be silly to challenge that though. Anyways, things like 'tedious' 'giant' 'trivia' 'over-detailed', the bases of that argument, are exactly the things for which there was no convincing consensus. Darryl from Mars (talk) 14:09, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • I think that Hobit makes a quite reasonable and logical argument. Nothing at WP:NOT applies directly. WP:NOT exclusions are usually taken to be very specific, and that is consistent with the large number of specific exclusions. Participants in the debate did not go into depth as to how any part of WP:NOT applied (juts making vague references). WP:INDISCRIMINATED most certainly doesn't doesn't clealy apply. While some did specifically mention WP:NOT, or its elements, there was no clear (or not clear enough) debate contrasting WP:NOT with the evidence that others have written about the topic. The discussion was therefore not concluded, and with so may particiapnts speaking past each other, it should have been closed as "no consensus". --SmokeyJoe (talk) 01:54, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Arguing that it's not specifically mentioned is arguing on the grounds of a technicality, WP:NOTSTUPID discourages anticipating bad ideas. WP:IAR also points out that it is not the specific wording that matters. IRWolfie- (talk) 10:38, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
That it's not specifically mentioned is simply a fact. The argument right here is that, therefore, it can't be assumed to apply, there should be a clear consensus/justification. Darryl from Mars (talk) 10:57, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
While it is true that WP:NOT doesn't specifically say "There should be no Wikipedia articles on the Twitter activities of celebrities" nor does WP:INDISCRIMINATE list Twitter activity as an example, you might want to take a look at the top of WP:NOT, where it says "The examples under each section are not intended to be exhaustive." The fact that the subject of celebrity Twitter use doesn't specifically appear in WP:NOT is most certainly not evidence that the policy doesn't apply to that subject. It would be quite ridiculous to expect or require a policy to exhaustively list every last example of specific subjects to which it applies. -Scottywong| confabulate _ 17:02, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, clearly it is possible that it applies. But I wouldn't assume it applies here the same way I wouldn't assume it applies to zeppelins. I would expect evidence or argument that it does apply to be the standard. You have to accept, as well, that there are things which WP:NOT doesn't mention, which are suitable for inclusion? Right? There seems to be a lot of misunderstanding when I mention this, there are three classes of things: listed in NOT and thus unsuitable, not listed in NOT but still unsuitable, not listed in NOT and suitable. This case was obviously not listed in NOT, the disagreement consisted primarily of whether or not it was suitable. What I ask you is, by what metric, or what arguements, did you surmise that the 'unsuitable' arguments were the stronger? Darryl from Mars (talk) 23:19, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Let me echo Darryl here. Folks are saying "it's clearly indiscriminate", but there doesn't appear to be actual consensus that it is indiscriminate. Some cases are specifically listed out at WP:NOT, some aren't. Those that are clearly have consensus. But if it's not there then it needs to be shown that it has consensus. You can (and probably should) argue common sense. And that's what WP:IAR is for. But using IAR generally requires consensus.
"Ignore all rules" does not mean that every action is justifiable. It is neither a trump card nor a carte blanche. 
Rule ignorers must justify how their actions improve the encyclopedia if challenged. Actually, everyone should be 
able to do that at all times. In cases of conflict, what counts as an improvement is decided by consensus.
  • Endorse this was simply the right call, the topic is not notable independent of the subject which is Ashton Kutcher, the citations were all about Kucther not @aplusk and therefore since Notability is not inherited and every FART of his that is reported in the press does not merit an article since that essentially is giving it UNDUE WEIGHT this was the right call to delete, a section in the BIO of Mr. Kutcher would suffice but a DIARY was not necessary.LuciferWildCat (talk) 19:08, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    The twitter account was notable for its achievements, and references did mention how popular it was, etc. That was mentioned in the AFD. Dream Focus 20:43, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    References that mention how popular Kutcher is on Twitter can easily be summarized in a few sentences on Kutcher's article. Resolute 13:13, 3 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse: there is no proof that Aston Kutcher on Twitter is not Ashton Kutcher, the topic lacks subject and thus is excluded per WP:NOT. — Dmitrij D. Czarkoff (talk) 21:28, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    It appears your argument is "contentfork," a rationale not mentioned as a reason for delete close consensus. And about which there would substantial disagreement, as the article is about a particular use of a written mass medium. Alanscottwalker (talk) 12:12, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    You may take it for snowy endorse. WP:UNDUE would also exclude this topic as a separate article of this size. That said, I agree that the topic is excluded per WP:NOT and particularly WP:NOTDIARY. — Dmitrij D. Czarkoff (talk) 22:35, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Without a more direct reply, Overturn to No Consensus. Lots of people said '~Q'. Lots of people said 'Q'. Lots of people said 'P'. People said 'P does not imply Q'. None of the statements of '~Q' were argued well, or argued from any relevant or realistic premise at all for the most part. How then, those statements could be considered generally stronger than the contradictory statements (irrespective of their caliber of argument) without the use of preconceived and unargued premises continues to mystify me. Darryl from Mars (talk) 09:25, 1 August 2012 (UTC) Q = suitable for inclusion, P = notable; more or less. [reply]
  • Endorse. Administrator discretion--and well-argued, too--and weak keep arguments means a deletion. --CalendarWatcher (talk) 12:00, 3 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Break 3
  • Weak endorse or weak overturn - Seriously, we're discussing the merits of arguments on some article about some celebrity's Twitter use that has very little impact whatsoever. I say "weak" because, well, I have compelled myself into condensing or deleting Twitter stuff used by high-profile people. Recently, we have turned "Barack Obama on Twitter" into Barack Obama on social media because... it must not be solely about Twitter use any longer. If anybody wants to create Ashton Kutcher on social media, that would be fine by me, as long as it is NOT solely about his Twitter use. --George Ho (talk) 03:34, 4 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • I would note, that this isn't random AfD of random "X on Twitter" article: this deletion discussion (and DRV for that matter) will set the bar on the whole "Xon Twitter" thing, which is worth any amount of time spent, regarding the cumulative effect on Wikipedia future content development directions. — Dmitrij D. Czarkoff (talk) 11:59, 4 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
Jesse Liberty (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (XfD|restore)

I was the nom for the AfD of this BLP, which resulted in delete. The subject was unhappy (1, 2) that his page was deleted. Ferox Seneca also had some concerns about the outcome, prompting the closing admin, T. Canens, to restore it to Wikipedia:Article Incubator/Jesse Liberty.
Ferox Seneca has diligently researched available sources, discussed at Wikipedia talk:Article Incubator/Jesse Liberty. With the research complete, we agree that virtually all the sources are unquestionably WP:PRIMARY. The only sources on which we've disagreed are the short capsule bios accompanying the subject's interviews, which I believe are supplied by the subject himself and insufficient to establish notability. T. Canens has recommended a DRV as the best way to close the matter and I agree. I recommend endorsing the outcome at AfD and the decision to delete. Msnicki (talk) 23:47, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

I have placed {{DRVNote}} notices on the talk pages of all the editors who participated in the AfD. Msnicki (talk) 17:36, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Leaning endorse. His notability is, at best, borderline. On the one side he has gotten numerous books published and by working with him we can assume there aren't any verifiablity issues. On the other hand there is little to no direct coverage on him as a person. If the "best selling author" bit was sourced to a site more reliable than an Amazon it would good to go. ThemFromSpace 16:38, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I think it would still have to say a lot more than just "best selling". Consider the arguments at WP:FACTORS that popularity and rank don't automatically render notability. Msnicki (talk) 17:02, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Hmm, I thought there was a provision that authoring a best-selling book was a qualifier for notability. Looks like WP:AUTHOR isn't that precise. ThemFromSpace 17:14, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Never mind, I found it in the article incubator... Carrite (talk) 17:31, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse deletion - Already properly hashed out in the AfD discussion. We seem to be asked for this review due to the article's subject's own request, apparently out of a desire to see one's own name in Wikipedia, which is grossly inappropriate per WP:AUTOBIO, etc. I anticipate that a BOOMERANG may end up knocking it out of the incubator. --Orange Mike | Talk 17:37, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment - I advised Keep on an IAR basis in the AfD debate. I wish the closing administrator had been less terse with the explanation of the decision but see no doctrine-based reason for an overturn of that call. Carrite (talk) 17:42, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    IAR can't be invoked to just make up a new "writes lots of books" criteria, that's absurd. If this guy's "lots of books" have not garnered significant attention by the sorts of sources that review and discuss books, then we can't just create a hole for backdoor notability anyways. Sources need to discuss a topic before an encyclopedia can cover a topic, otherwise we're just a blog. Tarc (talk) 19:22, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Even lots of reviews of his books would still not be sufficient. Notability is not WP:INHERITED: "not every manufacturer of a notable product is itself notable". To establish the subject's notability, we would still need sources that talk about him, not his books. Msnicki (talk) 16:24, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse the correct finding, but please would T. Canens note that when he's closing against the apparent consensus, a clearer closing statement is normally expected.—S Marshall T/C 21:54, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse - (FYI: Jesse Liberty (born 1955 in Brooklyn, New York is a best-selling author and has written about 20+ books on programming (e.g. Microsoft.NET).) He's got two things working against him for a Wikipedia article: 1. His name is common, so it is difficult to find articles about author Jesse Liberty. I found 2,000+ Jesse Liberty articles, but a lot of those are about the concept liberty and happen to mention a Jesse in then near the word liberty. 2. He is a writer. The things that pop up in a search are the thing's Jesse himself wrote (e.g. Software World, May 1, 2002 (which is not about Jesse himself) or reviews of his books (which might make his books meet WP:GNG, but won't make the Jesse Liberty topic meet WP:GNG). That essentially leaves it to Jesse Liberty himself (or one real dedicated Wikipedia editor) to identify press coverage about Jesse from which to develop a biographical Wikipedia article. That effort merely brought in the usual website coverage rather than the paper printed newspapers, magazines, book converge that usually makes or breaks a topic meeting WP:GNG. Article Incubator has made great efforts to try to work with Jesse to find reliable sources from which to develop an article. The subject might be unhappy, but if he can't help a collective effort to develop a Wikipedia article on the topic by identifying paper printed reliable source material, there's not much else to do other than endorse the deletion. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 13:52, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
Barack Obama on Twitter (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (XfD|restore)

In this and the previous AfD (Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Barack Obama on Twitter) the widespread consensus to merge to Barack Obama on Social Media or Communications of Barack Obama were ignored by the closing admins. In fact all other X on Twitter accounts have been deleted or merged and a Village Pump consensus that these articles are NOT appropriate was not considered. LuciferWildCat (talk) 22:02, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

  • Endorse That's because merges and renames should be discussed on the talk page and not at AfD. The consensus of the AfD is that the topic area as a whole is notable. Broadening of the topic can be discussed separately, but it shouldn't be deleted or redirected to Barack Obama's page, because that is not the consensus. That's all it means. So arguing for a merge or rename close is kind of pointless. SilverserenC 22:17, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • The correct finding in both of those debates was "no consensus". WilyD's close as "keep" raises an eyebrow with me, but there's no point overturning to no consensus because it makes no practical difference. I don't see how a village pump discussion is capable of overruling an AfD when making a decision about whether or not to delete, and I definitely don't see a consensus to merge.—S Marshall T/C 22:56, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • One has to put a substantial amount of weight in the !vote count to find no consensus, I think. An evaluation of the argument strength and applicability of policies has to conclude keep. Note that the first AfD, closed as "no consensus", includes pretty extensive comments by the closing admin about how the deletion arguments are all based on quoting policies that don't apply. The no consensus there appeared to come mostly from the !vote count being 60%/40% (which the closing admin opened with). How much weight to give the numbers is subject to substantial discretion, and yes, my closure did "Arguments that contradict policy, are based on opinion rather than fact, or are logically fallacious, are frequently discounted.", to quote WP:ROUGH CONSENSUS. The burden on people arguing to go against policy is necessarily higher than those arguing to apply policy. WilyD 06:38, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
      • Where I agree with you, is that the meme "AfD is not a vote" should apply to everyone equally and not just to the Article Rescue Squadron. Where I disagree with you, is where to strike the balance between what policy says and the will of the community. This is fundamental stuff, enshrined among other places in the fifth pillar, IAR and NOTBURO. I find your closes very much on the inclusionist end of the spectrum and your closure statements are often very dismissive towards one side of the argument.—S Marshall T/C 07:20, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
        • Policies and guidelines are important reflections of the will of the community, too. One can't disregard them without a compelling reason - they represent a longstanding, well established consensus that reflects the thoughts, opinions, and feelings of the entire community. How to balance that against a local discussion isn't set in stone, and in a lot of cases one can reasonably disagree. I'm not sure that's the case here - I'm hard pressed to imagine any line of reasoning that isn't fundamentally a straight headcount that could result in a "no consensus" closure.
        I'll keep the point about my closure comments being blunt in mind, it's a fair one. WilyD 08:11, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
        For the record, I clearly outlined how I arrived at no consensus. There can be no mistake about my train of thought.--v/r - TP 13:39, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
            • In my time participating at DRV, I've done a fair bit of thinking about administrator discretion: where the limits are, and why. My starting point is that admins are elected to give effect to the community's will ("consensus"). Sometimes, there's a tension between the local consensus, and the broad principles agreed-on by the community; and in this case the amount of administrator discretion varies according to the circumstances. Certainly, if there's evidence of bad faith, or if it's a small and ill-attended discussion that reaches an unusual conclusion, then it's only right for the administrator to have discretion to discount !votes. Still, in such a situation the administrator is often better advised to !vote rather than closing, so that the next admin to come along will have a less flawed debate before him and can close it better.

              But this kind of thing is very different. Here we have large numbers of experienced, established, good faith users participating in a long and well-attended discussion. Per policy, such a discussion has authority to suspend the rules. In this case, administrators are not given discretion to overrule the substantial number of experienced, established, good faith users and dismiss them with a simplistic summary. Totally not. That's never been within the purview of an administrator; their role is clerk to the discussion, not chairman.—S Marshall T/C 21:48, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

              Which is pretty much what I said - if you treat it as a straight vote count (for whatever reason), you can come to a conclusion of no consensus. The moment you start evaluating the strength of the arguments, you find that most of the delete votes either rely on factually incorrect premises (i.e., citing policies that don't apply, or asserting that sources don't exist when they do), or are mere personal dislike - the "delete argument" isn't an argument at all, it's just a position. The keep arguments are well supported by policy & precedent. The keep position has arguments (most important, probably, that it well satisfies WP:N). As a discussion, it's overwhelmingly keep. Only as a straight vote can it be read as no consensus. Any discussion can IAR, but it should have a compelling reason to do so - that doesn't exist here. WilyD 06:42, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
                • I think there's fundamentally no consensus, across the whole encyclopaedia, about whether Foo on Twitter type articles ought to be separate from the main person's article or within it. I think both sides are perfectly arguable. I find it concerning that so many people (and not just you) appear to be of the opinion that the debate has a simple and obvious conclusion: it's indicative of a failure of our processes. I think that until the community has given you a clear steer about the Foo on Twitter approach, the correct answer is to close contentious debates on the subject as "no consensus".—S Marshall T/C 08:06, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
                  The correct outcome of a close, contentious debate is "no consensus". The correct outcome of a massively lop-sided, contentious debate is either keep or delete. Merely being contentious is not a good criterion for no consensus, and every day we delete in contentious discussions where "not notable" is a much stronger argument than "I like it". "I dislike it" being a much weaker argument than "well established notability" is a much less common debate, but the process is the same.
                  Beyond which, trying to treat all the Foo on Twitter articles as a class, that can have a class-wise conclusion, is a fool's errand. Barack Obama isn't a suitable target to merge all the daughter articles about him: Category:Barack Obama, Category:Ashton Kutcher may be. I don't think there's necessarily a clear consensus about whether there should be Foo on Twitter articles as a class. There is a clear consensus on whether there should be a Barack Obama on Twitter article. Those're two different questions. WilyD 08:44, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
                    • But that's exactly my point. What policy does is to treat things as a class and seeks to enforce class-wide conclusions. So when you prefer "policy-based arguments" over discussion, aren't you doing exactly what you've just denigrated?

                      "Weight of the arguments" is a tricky case to make because in the whole history of DRV, there's hardly ever been a supervote that the closer didn't seek to justify on the basis of "weight of the argument", "not a vote", etc. From an observer's point of view, how do we distinguish these things from the closer's personal opinion?—S Marshall T/C 10:20, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

                      No, I don't think so. Policies and guidelines guide decision making for articles individually; individual articles are all members of the class "articles", but when we make a conclusion about what to do about an article, we make a conclusion for an article, not for the whole class. Even when we consider a narrower class - say books. Some books are clearly notable, and should have encyclopaedic articles - other ones (such as the book I wrote), are not, and thus should not. Making a class-wise conclusion about what to do about all articles on books is a fool's errand - some should be kept, some deleted, some merged, some redirected - many things. Depends on the individual article.
                      You can judge the merits of weight of argument for yourself (obviously, that's why we're here at DRV). In marginal cases, there can be a bit of surruptious supervoting (even if not deliberate) but in most cases it's pretty obvious. WilyD 11:00, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Break 1

  • Endorse Within discretion, once the inapplicability of WP:TRIVIA is taken into account. --j⚛e deckertalk 23:34, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse It is about time someone closed one of these without saying reasons to delete should be given more weight just because. I have not been able to make any sense of the prior X on Twitter AFD closes.--TonyTheTiger (T/C/BIO/WP:CHICAGO/WP:FOUR) 01:43, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse Finally, one of these was actually closed per policy, as opposed to trying to hallucinate that NOT#IINFO covered Twitter feeds. Jclemens (talk) 04:42, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    When will you accept that not everyone on here shares your incredibly strict reading of IINFO? Saying that those you don't agree with are hallucinating is just uncalled for. ThemFromSpace 16:20, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    "To hallucinate" is to see something that isn't there. I'm not accusing anyone of mental instability or "hallucinations" in general, but seeing something in the title of "IINFO" that was never community consensus to begin with. Rather than look at the actual discussion that led to IINFO being used for a group of sections in NOT, people have assumed that there was a widespread decision that IINFO was a good idea, and that multiple different instances were called out. In fact, the specific sections and their examples were lumped together under one heading that was an attempt to find some commonality between the diverget parts of NOT. You and others can want things to be different, but that's simply not how they evolved, and the belief you have in the rightness of expanding IINFO to anything that is perceived to be un-encyclopedic is a belief in an illusion. Jclemens-public (talk) 19:46, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    You are stating a difference of interpretation in an "I'm right, you're wrong" way and you are telling others that their interpretations are wrong. You're not right here. You don't hold any sacred keys to truth, even though you oftentimes act like you do. This has bugged me for some time and I want you to stop. There is no single correct interpretation of IINFO. Say what you believe but don't bash others for believing differently. The correct reading is the consensus of different interpretations, not any one particular individual's hard-line stance, and the consensus was clear in this AfD. ThemFromSpace 21:26, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    Actually, when I imply that you are wrong, I do so because I believe you are, in fact, wrong. To be specific, I mean that I believe your interpretation of what IINFO means is incompatible with how it actually evolved as a Wikipedia policy. So when you articulate what you want IINFO to mean, you are doing so absent the historical context under which that header was developed. Please see User:Uncle G/On the discrimination of what is indiscriminate for somewhat of a review of how that section evolved. Like WP:NOTNEWS, there are a large number of Wikipedia editors misusing WP:IINFO to mean something that may be congruent with the shortcut, but not the underlying meaning and evolution of Wikipedia policy. Like NOTNEWS, I fear the best solution may be to retire the shortcut based on the rampant misuse like we've seen here. I'm perfectly capable of articulating when my opinion differs from yours, or anyone's, but I do not see any reason to pretend that a fundamental misunderstanding of the evolution of IINFO is merely a difference of opinion. Jclemens (talk) 04:49, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    Wow, I really thought better of you. Looks like we should move on, since there is a fundamental disconnect in our policy interpretations. Though my request to stop pretending you have the only valid interpretation stands. This is the last I have to say on the matter. ThemFromSpace 05:16, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    Don't just assert that I'm wrong about it--demonstrate, historically, how IINFO evolved as an overarching premise, rather than a convenient shortcut for a bunch of differing topics. Do that, and I'll cede the point, but based on what I've seen, I don't think that's possible. That's not so say that the community might not adopt such a stance in the future, just that you've described IINFO in a way that is at odds with its actual development. Jclemens (talk) 06:29, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Should be "no consensus". Choyoołʼįįhí:Seb az86556 > haneʼ 08:45, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment - So just redirect/merge it anyways, such a decision is not dependent on an AfD outcome, as Silver Seren so aptly notes above. Cite the precedent of the other worthless "x on twitter" articles and begin a merge discussion on the talk page. Tarc (talk) 14:31, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse Closure was a correct reading of the consensus. Due to the overwhelming coverage of Obama in general, including his online presence, this article is a good exception to our general rules. It shows that articles can be written about almost anything, provided the subjects have the necessary coverage. ThemFromSpace 16:27, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse The only close of the lot based on actual policy. CallawayRox (talk) 18:51, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment the village pump has broad consensus that these articles are not worthwhile furthermore merge is a perfectly legitimate action for an AfD and the majority consensus was to merge this article so that is what should have been done.LuciferWildCat (talk) 19:53, 25 July 2012 (UTC) You opening this DRV, there is no need to register a !vote.--v/r - TP 19:59, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • This article is the one exception to the Village Pump discussion, considering the "Barack Obama on social media" topic has had numerous full books written about it. SilverserenC 21:49, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Weak endorse: while the delete and merge comments are numerous, they're not very compelling. I don't think the admin was unreasonable in concluding that "keep" was the policy-based consensus here. Most of the delete arguments don't mention policy, or vaguely point at policies (like WP:TRIVIA) that don't really address the issue. That's not to say a better discussion would go the same way (and if I had a chance to chime in, I'd argue that this is a WP:CONTENTFORK that verges on WP:NOTDIARY, among other things.) But in this discussion, the delete commenters were largely baseless, and didn't refer to any best practice that would give their comments any weight. Shooterwalker (talk) 22:11, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • I search for the word "merge" and find most people just said keep, not merge. [5] Then apparently after it closed a few days later someone started a new AFD which fewer people noticed or bothered to participate in. Should've been closed as "Keep", not "keep for now and start another argument on the talk page about replacing it with a redirect later". Dream Focus 22:15, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse, obviously. Sadly, this was to be expected. Joefromrandb (talk) 23:29, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Speedy endorse and close: This DRV has no merit.--Milowenthasspoken 00:32, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Is Snow Endorse a thing? Tarc hates these articles and he's not even attempting an overturn. Darryl from Mars (talk) 00:42, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Hm, guess I've really hit the high life when I get name-dropped by random unknowns. I could count on one hand the # of times I've called to overturn an XfD, regardless of how I may have participated in the original discussion, as unlike much of the rabble that infests DRV, I don't treat this as Round Two of the original discussion. Tarc (talk) 01:08, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • What can I say, you strike an imposing figure of eagerness to cleanse the wiki of 'worthless' articles. Also, you're the only one that had bolded something that wasn't Endorse, and I wanted to justify the Snowy-ness of my position. Darryl from Mars (talk) 01:18, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment The neat trick that proponents of keeping this article have pulled is to conflate the notability of things that Barack Obama has said with supposed notability about the medium he said it in. While there are lots of notable things Barack Obama has said on Twitter, none of this points to the notability of his Twitter account. I might as well create an article titled Things Barack Obama said into his favorite microphone or Things Barack Obama said on a Thursday. None of the notability in the article comes from the Twitter account itself, just from the fact that Barack Obama said stuff. When ThemFromSpace writes "It shows that articles can be written about almost anything, provided the subjects have the necessary coverage", the absurdity of this kind of article is inadvertently revealed, and it shows how many editors have a deep misunderstanding of what notability actually means. Nwlaw63 (talk) 01:22, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • The notability of his Twitter account is shown through sources like this. Though I do agree that the article should be broadened to his use of social media in general, because then sources like this and this can be utilized. SilverserenC 02:17, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • You know nothing of my work. In all seriousness, though, this claim is repeated a lot, but is straightforwardly factually false. The sources provided do not focus on things said by Barack Obama, which happened to be in the Twitter medium. They (at least, a goodly number of them) focus on Barack Obama's (media campaign team's) use of Twitter. An argument based on a factually wrong premise cannot be given any significance weight. WilyD 08:46, 27 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse. I'd say that "no consensus" is better, but DRV doesn't exist to micromanage AFD closes. T. Canens (talk) 16:06, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment - Twitter is significant enough in the life of Justin Bieber and Ashton Kutcher to support Wikipedia:Summary style articles. Twitter is merely a blip in the life of Barack Obama and the word "twitter" doesn't even appear in the Barack Obama article. Yet, the Bieber and Kutcher twitter articles were deleted and the Obama twitter article kept. The Bieber and Kutcher twitter articles should have been kept and the Obama twitter article should have been deleted. This isn't about consensus and I've come to realize that well thoughtout AfD arguments are not driving the close on these x-on-twitter articles. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 14:06, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • Your argument seems to conclude that every person should have the same amount of coverage. While I don't doubt that you put a fair bit of thought into it; at least consider that the article in question here is much more connected to 'Campaign' and other Obama sub-articles, rather than the main biographical article of Barack Obama. A lot of people seem to be lead astray by the fact that most bio articles never have remotely the amount of relevant information Obama's does. Darryl from Mars (talk) 14:24, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
      • No, my argument is that a fuller treatment of any major subtopic should go in a separate article of its own and that the original article should contain a section with a summary of the subtopic's article as well as a link to it. Merely becuase Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2012 at the moment mentions the word "twitter" once does not justify the Obama twitter article. The main biographical article, in this case the Barack Obama article, is a good indicator of what is and is not a major subtopic. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 14:36, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
        • That last line is where I disagree with you. While it works for most articles; our prescripts on article size and the shear amount of information means that Barack Obama does not and I dare say could not be an -exhaustive- directory of all the possible encyclopedic topics related to Obama without failing to be an article at all. Darryl from Mars (talk) 14:51, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • I think they all need to be deleted, but as the disparate AfD results show, actually getting them deleted depends on how many fanboys/girls come riding to the rescue of a famous person that they like. If this is going to be addressed uniformly it will have to come via policy, i.e. putting some actual teeth into something like WP:NOTTWITTER. Tarc (talk) 14:31, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
      • You are not alone in this line of thinking as that seems to be the primary argument put forth by those proposing to delete all x-on-twitter articles. However, I think that is more of a reactionary bias against fanboys/girls present or potential contributions to these types articles and how that makes Wikipedia look rather than whether there should be an article on the topic. Wikipedia articles are improved over time and deleting an article when there should be an article on the topic prevents that natural improvement of the article over time. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 14:43, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Break 2

  • Comment Just noting for the record that I have closed the RFC on the talk page. The consensus there seems to favor renaming the article and broadening its scope. The closing admin of this discussion can take that into account and attempt to reconcile the results of the two discussions. Beeblebrox (talk) 20:56, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse I wasn't a part of the original AfD - was not aware it was happening - but had I been there I certainly would have commented that the article should not be deleted. Perhaps a rename and broadening to cover more social media, but not delete, and not merge to the main bio. There is no essential difference here between "no consensus" and "keep", so this DRV is a waste of time, in my view. Tvoz/talk 17:42, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse Overturn to "no consensus" WITHOUT prejudice to restructuring the article - The close rationale was accurate, although I voted delete. Nevertheless, this vote should not affect the RFC consensus. --George Ho (talk) 19:09, 29 July 2012 (UTC) I realize that I was wrong. --George Ho (talk) 03:24, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • I endorse any action that prevents the Twitter article being merged with the summary style article Barack Obama, which simply hasn't the space for stuff like that. -- Scjessey (talk) 22:45, 29 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia is not paper, a paragraph on his public relations could have two or three sentences espousing his twitter usage.LuciferWildCat (talk) 19:10, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn - The closer ignores the argument about WP:NOT and instead focuses on WP:TRIVIA (which was discussed less frequently and which clearly doesn't apply to this article). Also, about 60% of editors voted to delete or merge. To close an AfD in the minority opinion when there is 20% difference between majority and minority requires a thorough explanation for why the minority's argument is far stronger and policy-based than the majority's. -Scottywong| chatter _ 21:17, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn to NC keep might be reasonable if you put the merge and keep !votes together, but I don't see consensus here. We have two sets of valid arguments with strong backers on both sides. I also don't feel the closing statement accurately reflected the discussion. Once the RfC is finished it will make sense to reevaluate this article and a NC close will make that easier to do, so changing from keep to NC actually has an impact. Hobit (talk) 22:23, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
File:Cherylgillan-288x360.jpg (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (XfD|restore)

This image is under the Open Government License, under the Controller of HMSO's offer, as it is Crown Copyright, and does not fall into a small number of exceptions listed at the linked page. This was true at the time of the deletion listing, though it was not mentioned on the license template as it is now. As a note, the other file in the old XfD is also fine, and I uploaded it later to Commons without knowing about its deletion on enwiki. —innotata 19:24, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

  • That looks pretty clear-cut to me, but if it's on the OGL wouldn't it be better uploaded to Commons rather than here?—S Marshall T/C 20:01, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • I suppose I could, though I would like to know this is the same image as that at [6] (it could be one no longer up). I thought it might be good to go through the process, especially to avoid deletion on Commons. —innotata 01:46, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
      • If it is actually free, then why not just upload to Commons and withdraw this deletion review? You know, be bold and all that. If there is any question on Commons, a new discussion will be had there. Whatever happens on this deletion review won't affect anything on Commons. SchuminWeb (Talk) 03:12, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
        • Well, this user's raised a perfectly good point at DRV and is entitled to a finding. I think it's been shown that the conclusion the FfD reached was objectively wrong, so if the user insists, we ought to reverse the FfD and have the image restored. Overturn and restore, but imo the image does belong on Commons.—S Marshall T/C 07:24, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
3 CD Collector's Set (Rihanna album) (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (XfD|restore)

This debate was closed as keep by WilyD (talk · contribs) with 4 delete !votes, 1 merge !vote and 5 delete !votes. However, many of the delete votes were not policy-driven and most complied with WP:NOTAGAIN and other arguments to avoid. There was not consensus to keep this article, especially as the first AfD resulted in delete and the previous AfD drew no consensus. SplashScreen (talk) 12:56, 22 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

there have been three AfDs. the first in September 2010 attracted minimal comments, both negative, & the article was deleted; the second, in May 2012, attracted mixed comments and was reasonably closed as non-consensus; this third attracted the same comments as in May, I might have closed as non-consensus, but it would probably have led to a third AfD right now which would also probably have given inconclusive results. This is not my usual subject, but it seems from the discussion there are two incompatible positions: On the keep side, it charted, which is the basic criterion as WP:MUSIC; on the delete, it's just a repackaging of 3 albums in one retail box which might seem by common sense worth a note, not an article. By analogy, the BOOKS guideline, though broad, wants more significant best seller status than "charted"; such repackaging would not have been kept as a set of books. Nor can I see anything similar kept in any other medium. As an outsider, I see this as an indication we need to be a little more subtle about wording the MUSIC criteria. DGG ( talk ) 23:48, 22 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I'd agree it might've been possible to close as no consensus rather than keep - the practical outcome is the same, so usually articles that're a bit gray in that respect don't merit quite a close a consideration as those on the no consensus/delete border. Perhaps I should've written weak keep? (I would have been willing to so qualify it if I'd been asked, rather than just informed a DRV was in progress.) WilyD 08:53, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
A no consensus close allows an editor to immediately relist the article AfD whereas a keep close generally keeps the article out of AfD for another three months. The practical outcome is not the same. Since a DRV has been started, I don't think you can change your close. Yes, the DRV lister should have asked you first before coming to DRV. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 14:57, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse close, somewhat reluctantly per DGG above. I don't think that a consensus to delete is present in the discussion. However, I also don't think that a consensus not to merge is clear. That is a "No Consensus" or a "Keep, without prejudice to further merge discussions" might be better closes. Eluchil404 (talk) 23:04, 24 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • The article's sourcing to Amazon is an embarrassment and the relialbe sources used in the article do not mention Rihanna's 3 CD Collector's Set. The delete argument regarding the lack of coverage in reliable sources for this album was not overcome. Wikipedia is a text based communication medium and an article that says "it charted" does not convey enough reliable source information to justify a stand alone article. I don't see how keep was the correct consensus close. -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 15:12, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn to delete. The "keep" closure was in error because it ignored that none of the "keep" opinions substantially addressed the argument that the album apparently did not attract any reliably sourced third-party coverage, which was highlighted in the nomination and is a policy-level inclusion requirement per WP:V#Notability. The fact that the album may have been included on charts is not, per WP:BAND and WP:NALBUMS, a criterium for inclusion for an album, but only for the respective musician or ensemble, and therefore the "keep" arguments amounting to "it charted" should have been discounted.  Sandstein  05:59, 30 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn to no consensus there was no consensus to keep the article, nor to delete it, the Afd outcome was essentially the same as the previous nomination. Till 13:36, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse There clearly wasn't any consensus to either keep or delete the article. I would say "Overturn to no consensus" but that would be unnecessary and just a waste of time. Statυs (talk) 21:45, 31 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
Run the World (song) (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (XfD|restore)

This AfD was closed with the rationale "policy based argument, majority of editors" by WilyD (talk · contribs). This is despite the fact that the majority of keep arguments violated WP:ATA (including one WP:JUSTAVOTE and multiple examples of WP:OTHERCRAPEXISTS and WP:NOTINHERITED) and the rather blatant fact that not one keep !voter even suggested that the article passed WP:NSONGS. The closing administrator needs to be reminded of WP:NOTAVOTE. SplashScreen (talk) 12:56, 22 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

  • The point of DRV isn`t to try to re-argue the discussion. Policies & guidelines dictated keep, and therefor most editors argued keep. A very straightforward case. WilyD 15:49, 22 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Which policies and guidelines would those be? Because multiple users noted that the article fails WP:NSONGS and not one keep !voter suggested that it passes it. Again, WP:NOTAVOTE. SplashScreen (talk) 16:26, 22 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • What we have here is a consensus vs a mass of WP:ALPHABETSOUP. The consensus rightly prevailed. The fact is, SplashScreen, that there's a good reason why WP:ATA is only an essay. The reason is that it's nothing more than a list of things some editors think other editors shouldn't be allowed to say. It doesn't have a coherent or intelligible thesis, and although parts of it are supported by a few attempts at reason, in fact the logic behind WP:ATA is in general very shaky.

    WP:NSONGS is a SNG, and Deletion Review has a long history of treating SNGs with the contempt that they deserve. If something passes the GNG then it merits an article and if it doesn't, it doesn't, irrespective of what any SNG might have to say.

    Of course, even if this title was non-notable, the answer wouldn't be to delete it. It would be to redirect it to Love?, and a redirect is of course a "keep" outcome. So even if the subject was non-notable, "keep" would still have been the way forward.—S Marshall T/C 18:45, 22 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

  • Endorse – The rough consensus was that the coverage provided met the general notability guideline. While we do have specific notability guidelines for songs, that does not mean that songs that have not charted cannot have their own articles – that is where the general guideline comes in. --MuZemike 21:24, 22 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse consensus was that the coverage that existed was adequate. No reason for the closing admin to have gone any other way. Note that SNG's are generally not held to be exclusive (i.e., a song must pass NSONGS to have an article), but more often held to be complementary to the GNG (pass GNG or relevant SNG). Jclemens (talk) 23:11, 22 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse - Wikipedia isn't here to convey a representative survey of what the Internet says about a topic. Articles need to reflect a thorough and representative survey of reliable sources. The trouble with this article is that it includes any information about the topic with little concern to limiting that information to reliable source information. However, that is a basis to improve the article, not to delete it. Those proposing to keep the article seemed to agree that there is enough information on the topic. The closer could have took that to mean the topic meets WP:GNG. A strong 'fails to meet WP:GNG argument' with a review of the existing references and a search for other references could have carried the day. Instead, the delete positions were weakly argued, giving little to the closer to work with. OPs listing was a good argument, but for some reason didn't gain much support from those maintaining a delete position. "I advise readers not to be fooled by" may have turn people off as did implying that there seems to be nothing remotely important about this song. (As an aside, closing with "policy based argument" is annoying to those having a view different from the close since it fails to state any specific policy and you're better off not posting any reason in the close. Also, I think more respect should have been given to the closing administrator by the DRV OP for his willingness to close the discussion and thus open his actions to review at DRV. You're not going to win anyone over at DRV by addressing the admin rather than limiting your comments to the close itself.) -- Uzma Gamal (talk) 15:49, 28 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.