Template talk:COI: Difference between revisions

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎!votes: Oppose
Line 453: Line 453:
::::* {{ping|WhatamIdoing}} In the first case you mentioned - they leave it. The only way I can imagine the it being OK to remove the tag in the case you propose is if the COI editor made only a single series of contiguous edits followed by the COI Notice so they could revert back to a previous version without impacting other editors work. Any other way and the removal, how it was removed and the state they leave the article in could easily be as problematic, or more so, than the initial COI edits. It is not just the content a COI editor adds which can be problematic, it is their ''editorial judgement'' in general which is compromised. <p> We have IAR to give a bit of slack to ''never'' so it can be used to prevent labyrinthine rules from growing to deal with infinite what-ifs. 'Never' locks down the 99.999% of what-ifs with a clear, concise rule that can not be wiki-lawyered at a drama board and IAR gives the safety valve for edge cases like that. <p> For your second hypothetical - why should I bother removing the tag? I can 'ping a few friends' to have your head examined without removing the tag {{smiley}}. But in all seriousness, someone placing a COI tag on something I wrote would first make me take a look at that content and see if I had some bias I had missed then go ask someone to review it. I would probably go to COIN to address why they think I have a COI assuming it was not an obviously bad faith claim, in which case its off for [[WP:POPCORN]]. <small> (I once had a COI editor claim I was a CIA officer or some such who was out to get the subject of 'their' article because I had [[Template:User MARS|this template]] on my user page. I laughed for ''hours''.) </small><p> (Thanks! Good to be back!) [[User:Jbhunley|<span style="font-family:Monotype Corsiva;font-size:14pt;color:#886600">Jbh</span>]][[User_talk:Jbhunley|<span style="color: #00888F"><sup> Talk</sup></span>]] 03:10, 9 February 2018 (UTC)
::::* {{ping|WhatamIdoing}} In the first case you mentioned - they leave it. The only way I can imagine the it being OK to remove the tag in the case you propose is if the COI editor made only a single series of contiguous edits followed by the COI Notice so they could revert back to a previous version without impacting other editors work. Any other way and the removal, how it was removed and the state they leave the article in could easily be as problematic, or more so, than the initial COI edits. It is not just the content a COI editor adds which can be problematic, it is their ''editorial judgement'' in general which is compromised. <p> We have IAR to give a bit of slack to ''never'' so it can be used to prevent labyrinthine rules from growing to deal with infinite what-ifs. 'Never' locks down the 99.999% of what-ifs with a clear, concise rule that can not be wiki-lawyered at a drama board and IAR gives the safety valve for edge cases like that. <p> For your second hypothetical - why should I bother removing the tag? I can 'ping a few friends' to have your head examined without removing the tag {{smiley}}. But in all seriousness, someone placing a COI tag on something I wrote would first make me take a look at that content and see if I had some bias I had missed then go ask someone to review it. I would probably go to COIN to address why they think I have a COI assuming it was not an obviously bad faith claim, in which case its off for [[WP:POPCORN]]. <small> (I once had a COI editor claim I was a CIA officer or some such who was out to get the subject of 'their' article because I had [[Template:User MARS|this template]] on my user page. I laughed for ''hours''.) </small><p> (Thanks! Good to be back!) [[User:Jbhunley|<span style="font-family:Monotype Corsiva;font-size:14pt;color:#886600">Jbh</span>]][[User_talk:Jbhunley|<span style="color: #00888F"><sup> Talk</sup></span>]] 03:10, 9 February 2018 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' Such tags should not be placed without discussion as this is a serious accusation with BLP implications. We should have a bot removing all such malformed tags as there's far too many of them cluttering up our pages and they tend to linger for years otherwise. [[user:Andrew Davidson|Andrew D.]] ([[user talk:Andrew Davidson|talk]]) 15:46, 9 February 2018 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' Such tags should not be placed without discussion as this is a serious accusation with BLP implications. We should have a bot removing all such malformed tags as there's far too many of them cluttering up our pages and they tend to linger for years otherwise. [[user:Andrew Davidson|Andrew D.]] ([[user talk:Andrew Davidson|talk]]) 15:46, 9 February 2018 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' A cleanup tag's purpose is to attract editors to the article to fix problems that have been identified. Tags should never be used merely on suspicion, and must be accompanied by an identification of the problems on the talk page for the benefit of whoever comes along to try to fix them. Tags without a discussion should be removed as a matter of routine. This proposal is nothing more than an attempt by Jytdog to give himself a justification for restoring tags without talk page discussion by the pretext of accusing whoever removes the tag of having a COI. Unacceptable behaviour. --[[User:RexxS|RexxS]] ([[User talk:RexxS|talk]]) 18:10, 9 February 2018 (UTC)


===rfc discussion===
===rfc discussion===

Revision as of 18:11, 9 February 2018

When not to use this template?

The current documentation for this template specifies some of the dos and don'ts of its application, but I am wondering if maybe we should have in the "don't" category something like, "Do NOT use this template to mark pages where the editor who edit or created the page has already made a COI declaration on his/ her userpage, the article talk page, or in the edit summary of his/ her edits unless the article requires additional editing for neutrality— in other words, do not use the template to simply mark an article as having been created by an editor with a COI but rather to mark such articles with content neutrality problems which, once resolved, would allow for the removal of this tag." I don't get the sense that this talk page gets much traffic, so may need to open this up for an RfC if no one responds to the discussion. KDS4444 (talk) 05:11, 16 August 2017 (UTC)[reply]

If the article has issues related to COI, just because an editor has declared they are paid on the talk page does not void concerns. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 19:13, 19 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
As requested. That's true, James. But there is a genuine concern expressed by the indeffed paid shill above that the template might be (ab)used by being placed merely because an editor had a COI. The primary purpose of all maintenance templates (of which this is one) is to clean-up and improve the article. Putting some onus on the tagger to actually identify at least one specific neutrality concern relieves some of the burden on those editors who will come along and do the clean-up – I mean, why make them duplicate the work of finding the neutrality concern(s)? Otherwise we risk ending up with lots of articles tagged and not enough gnomes arriving to do the clean-up. Eventually, the tag will lose its impact, if overused. Tags that lead to a talk-page discussion expounding the tagger's reason(s) are surely much more likely to fulfil their primary purpose? FWIW, I don't agree with the wording as it was, but I think your cut trimmed out too much of what I genuinely worry about. --RexxS (talk) 23:02, 19 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Removed this text "Do not use this tag simply to mark an article which you believe or even know with certainty was created or edited by someone with a conflict of interest if the editor with the conflict has already made a declaration about this on his/ her userpage, the article talk page, or in a COI edit summary, as this disclosure makes use of the tag redundant."
The problem is that this appears to imply that simply disclosing does not mean one needs to write neutrally. This text is also not needed as we already say "the article may be biased by a conflict of interest" Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 01:12, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
When I place this tag, I usually add the following to the talk page:

I've added a conflict of interest tag to this article. This signifies to readers that the article has been extensively edited by someone with a conflict of interest, and is likely to have bias, in the form of missing negative content, overemphasis on "positives", non-neutral language (all of which are violations of the WP:NPOV content policy), and is likely to have unsourced or poorly sourced content, in violation of the WP:VERIFY content policy. It is likely that the content promotes the subject of the article, in violation of the WP:PROMO policy. Independent editors need to review the article and correct it, and then may remove the tag. If you do so, please leave a note here. Thanks.

usually i do the clean up myself, but when the goal is to actually do a full review (if the article has been created in mainspace by a conflicted editor or passed through AfC with what is clearly a poor review) it takes time to do that, so sometimes I just tag it -- for instance when going through work of a sockfarm. The tag really should stay until somebody does that work. It really is true that conflicted/paid editors generally omit negative stuff and spin controversial stuff. That is often why they come. Jytdog (talk) 23:20, 19 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"likely to... likely to... It is likely..." As you have been told several times in the last few hours, the template's documentation requires that if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning. That's "what is non-neutral"; not mere supposition about what you believe to be "likely". Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 00:16, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
As noted elsewhere, your views here are not mainstream and indeed reflect your pervasive paid editing. You can bold all you want and it does not make your stance any more valid. There was already intensive discussion about the tag at Talk:Martin Saidler when you removed it - all your actions here are the worst sort of wikilawyering. Really. The worst -- nothing to do with the spirit of things. The article was the product of direct paid editing and nobody had done the review at the time you removed the tags. Jytdog (talk) 00:33, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

As noted by you, and only you, you mean? As for "intensive" discussion, there was only a single post attempting to justify the use of this template on the Sadler article when I removed the template, and it said, in full:

"The issue is that these articles are written by someone (a group of people) for pay. This is Wikipedia, we do not really allow "ads". We are supposed to be independent. These articles are not and thus they are tagged.

They have also not disclosed all the account that they have paid... So not exactly coming clean. If they did not wanted tagged articles they should not have bought them. They are simple contributing to our sock puppet problem"

There is nothing there that in any way meets the requirement to promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article; just as there is not in your utterly inadequate "likely to... likely to... It is likely..." boilerplate. The "spirit of things" is made quite clear in the yellow-highlighted text in the template's documentation, thanks. And you really need to drop the ad hominem. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 00:51, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

On a related point, these tags aren't supposed to "signify to readers" anything at all, because warning the readers is a violation of WP:No disclaimers in articles. Our maintenance tags exist to help editors fix articles. This has been discussed before, and the community has been clear on this point: maintenance tags are meant to be temporary, and they exist to attract editors. To the extent that readers need "warnings", then those warnings are in the "Disclaimers" link at the bottom of every page. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:33, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Another example

I wonder whether uninvolved editors would consider that "Issues with paid editing Are in need of review by someone independent. The article is also completely unreferenced. " [1] meets the requirement that if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article, with the emphasis on "what is non-neutral"? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 07:16, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

I would not hold that up as the epitome of an explanation. However, I'd be inclined to accept it as just barely sufficient, because that "explanation" does tell me that Doc James (who placed the tag) didn't identify any specific problem in the article. At a guess, I'd assume that he's concerned about informal language, such as "she was considered a Knesset member whose social agenda is very close to her heart" rather than about misrepresented facts. If the "discussion" was obviously stale – as it inevitably will become, when there's nothing obvious to fix or even to talk about – then the tag could be removed. While many editors think that 30 days is long enough to prove staleness, in most situations, I choose to wait 90 days. (Obviously, one does not remove tags that one believes are relevant and useful.)
One does, however, wonder why this particular tag was chosen. The editor that most recently substantially expanded the article has disclosed his/her status as a paid editor at hewiki, so it is not unreasonable to assume that the editor is working for pay here, too. But usually, we're working with just some editor's guess that the person is a paid editor, which is not necessarily any better than some other editor's guess that the new editor is merely an innocent fan or an enthusiastic member of the political party. OTOH, it is an undeniable fact that there are no independent sources on the page. If it were me, I'd have started by adding {{Third-party}}, as being a less drama-prone tag and more likely to result in practical improvements to the article. And, you know, unsourced material can be WP:CHALLENGEd quite easily. Fact-tagging unsourced puffery provides a straight, widely accepted path to its removal. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:43, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Both examples are typical of COI - overuse of primary/non-independent sources. The both have disclosed or DUCK COIs with serious content issues that need further review (this one has a very different version in the history with potential BLP violations which would need full review before reverting to). I second/third that the COI tag on both was warranted when placed. Widefox; talk 14:24, 1 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

"Badge of shame" language

The template instructions currently say:

Do not use this tag unless there are significant or substantial problems with the article's neutrality as a result of the contributor's involvement. Like the other {{POV}} tags, this tag is not meant to be a badge of shame or to "warn the reader" about the identities of the editors.

This language about "badge of shame" was added in this diff, by User:Insomesia who is indeffed and was a sock of Benjiboy per the SPI, a person who was relentless in promotional editing on topics where they had a COI.

The language is bullshit and has been from the day it was added. Jytdog (talk) 23:43, 19 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

The diff you cite was five and a half years ago; many people - including you - have edited the documentation during that time and none - again including you; until it was pointed out that you were acting in breach of it - have seen fit to challenge or remove it. Furthermore, we are not here to shame our article subjects. At least, I'm not. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 00:12, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Not in breach of it. We do need to change this so it cannot be further abused; it has always bugged me as "protesting too much" which indeed it turned out to be. Jytdog (talk) 00:32, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes you are in breach of it. You've edit-warred to restore the tag without any attempt to identify the problems that should have been the automatic consequence of the tag's application. The badge of shame language that you want to see removed from here is actually reflected in the documentation for all cleanup templates, added by WhatamIdoing five years ago. The only bullshit is your naked attempt at removing guidance that checks your out-of-control behaviour in shaming any article that you think might have been touched by an editor that you disapprove of. That has to stop now. --RexxS (talk) 18:04, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
This language is common to all of the neutrality tags, and I'm sure that I did little more than copy it here from another. As was discussed in great detail back in the day (perhaps it was at Template talk:POV?), there are two requirements for adding these tags:
  1. you sincerely believe that there's something wrong with the (current version of the) article, and
  2. you have to give future editors a fair chance at figuring out what needs to be fixed, by leaving a note on the talk page.
The required note can be a single sentence, or maybe even half of one, but it's got to identify something that can be fixed. "Pete Paid touched this article" doesn't count for any neutrality-related tag (because, due to failures of the WikiProject Time Travel group, we cannot yet change the past), but "Violates NPOV because it's stuffed with name-dropping" definitely does (and if Pete Paid is the editor who stuffed it full of promotionalism, then this is the specific POV-related tag that I'd recommend using). WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:30, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

proposed change

note - I have stuck in the content above the proposal, which I should have done when I proposed it Jytdog (talk) 01:37, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

A just-closed arbcom case stated in its second principle:

Because Wikipedia is intended to be written from a neutral point of view, it is necessary that conflicts of interest are properly disclosed, and articles or edits by conflicted editors are reasonably available for review by others. Editors are expected to comply with both the purpose and intent of the applicable policies, as well as their literal wording.

As I noted at the Signpost here, we as a community are living our way into what that means, exactly. We do need a way to signal that direct conflicted editing has occurred, which needs review. Readers should also be aware that the content may not be neutral. The actual COI tag does that , and pretty elegantly as well. To remind folks, what it actually says is

A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia's content policies, particularly neutral point of view. Please discuss further on the talk page.

This tag should be accompanied by there being a {{connected contributor}} or {{connected contributor (paid)}} tag placed on the talk page, and ideally something like the note I mentioned above, which says

I've added a conflict of interest tag to this article. This signifies to readers that the article has been extensively edited by someone with a conflict of interest, and is likely to have bias, in the form of missing negative content, overemphasis on "positives", non-neutral language (all of which are violations of the WP:NPOV content policy), and is likely to have unsourced or poorly sourced content, in violation of the WP:VERIFY content policy. It is likely that the content promotes the subject of the article, in violation of the WP:PROMO policy. Independent editors need to review the article and correct it, and then may remove the tag. If you do so, please leave a note here. Thanks.

Below, is aproposed change to the template instructions:

Do not use this tag unless there are likely to be significant or substantial problems with the article's neutrality as a result of the contributor's involvement of a contributor with a disclosed or apparent conflict of interest. Like the other {{POV}} tags, this tag is not meant to be a badge of shame or to "warn the reader" about the identities of the editors, but it is intended, as it states, to alert readers and editors that there "may be" significant problems with the content.

-- Jytdog (talk) 00:55, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Discussion

This seems directly contradictory to the intentions of everyone who has collaborated to make the template and document its correct use, so that it assists us in working to build and improve Wikipedia - not last the text highlighted in yellow in the documentation: if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning.. For those reasons, and those given above, and lacking any sound reason why any change, much less a relaxation of the highlighted requirement to state what is actually wrong with the article in question, is needed, I oppose this proposal. We don't tag articles because there "may" be a problem, but only when we know there is one. (I assume that, as a Wikimedian in Residence, I'm allowed a say?) Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 01:03, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Your (expected) opposition is noted; i look forward to hearing from others. Jytdog (talk) 01:04, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Your expected noting of my opposition is noted. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 01:08, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support Looks like a useful simplification. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 01:06, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support Jytdog is right. I coincidentally came here and noticed the blocked socks on this talk independently. Hindsight on this talk is everything. What we have above are several blocked socks/banned editors who haven't disclosed they have a COI with COI, and basically subverted the discussion and template. I'm shocked, but seen similar before. My understanding is that block evading socks talk contributions can be struck, which would highlight the level of corruption here for readers. (the banned one shouldn't be struck if I understand right)
As for the badge of shame argument, Andy has a fair point, which I've considered the majority view until now. Turns out I was a bit misled though, considering above.
I'm not sure they have to be the same issue...
I for one have always thought the "badge of shame" vs no tag argument was a false dichotomy. I just kept quiet, and carried on using the COI template slightly too much (mia culpa). Disclosure with a template can be made separate from a badge of shame, and serves readers well in several ways - both legally and editorially. Now we know the discussion above and template were subverted, maybe it's time for a fresh look without the cheaters?
"badge of shame" reminds me of Red triangle (Channel 4). Nonsense.
Speaking aloud:
0. WiR must be the role models in this regard, so their input part of the solution, not part of the problem (as opposed to the input from undisclosed COIs, PAIDs and sockfarms which we all agree about)
1. advertorials have disclaimers (they aren't badges of shame, so why do we use that language here - note that advertorials wouldn't be flagged up if the advertisers could edit the rules!)
2. adverts that appear to be content on TV requires flagging
3. product placement doesn't (?), paid reviews do etc
4. We must have a duty to flag up something when in the balance of probability it's COI (not just beyond reasonable doubt, or after disclosure). e.g. extra scrutiny required, even if superficially all seems well. More than just a sitewide legal disclaimer. Surely, that's the right precautionary way. That's for readers, editors and reputation. Ducks are ducks, and if it's more ducky than not, it should be labelled as such. This provides an incentive mechanism for disclosure that we fail to have currently.
5. I'd go the other way - an informational template that's less obtrusive, so not a badge of shame whilst providing reasonable notice of a more likely than not lack of disclosure, which is all COI should be about. For further info, the location of COI tags on the talk can be mentioned. Widefox; talk 02:49, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Rarely addressed is systemic bias: COI isn't just an issue for article content. The advice in COI is toothless - leave it for non-COIs. COI editors are incentivised to ignore that, not disclose and get an article now, and get SEO/Google knowledge graph, and dilute our value. For the project, it is a systemic bias. Once COI articles are created, that leads to multiplying systemic bias (we get new content that almost certainly can be fixed, yes, but it will need fixing, and it biases us towards commercial interests, commercial naming and POV titles, recentism etc), with finite volunteer resource being drawn into identifying and fixing COI (especially PAID) content issues which multiples that bias. WiR are a desirable counter bias. This is not new, "Freedom in a commons brings ruin to all." -Hardin 1968, tragedy of the commons was 1833, where he concluded "freedom is the recognition of necessity". Widefox; talk 12:56, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose: First such a change which is a change in purpose needs wider community input per an RfC. Second, any article at any time may lack neutrality; we cannot begin to tag articles because of potential lack of neutrality. A tag then should be accompanied by discussion on the talk stating where the lack of neutrality is, potentially. My major concern is with just what we have here. A Wikimedian in Residence has been harassed on Wikipedia for the job he must do. We as a community support both Wikipedians and Wikimedians in residence and understand they are not being paid to control articles but to make knowledge more available. Jytdog has continued mean spirited attacks and accusations and as his comments indicate has a basic misunderstanding of what a Wikimedian in Residence does and means. Such a template change seems to give an excuse for behavior that allows for ad hominem attacks, and wikihounding a Wikimedian in residence and his work; we don't need that.(Littleolive oil (talk) 15:43, 20 January 2018 (UTC))[reply]
@Littleolive oil: You say A Wikimedian in Residence has been harassed on Wikipedia for the job he must do but unless I'm very much mistaken, the edit warring to remove the tag which led to this had nothing whatsoever to do with Andy being a WiR. SmartSE (talk) 16:17, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
And yet it led directly to the proposer of these changes stalking Andy's edits and making this piece of harassment based solely on Andy's disclosed position as a WiR. I do not find that behaviour acceptable. Do you condone it? --RexxS (talk) 16:48, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Smartse: I am dealing with family issues and traveling again in the next day or so so don't have the time to list diffs of the harassment but I invite you to look at Jytdog's edits. This for example,[2] and in particular this, "Like many of the men who make Wikipedia toxic, instead of simply doing the work that the tag is meant to address, Andy chose to storm in and Tear Down That Tag and then make wikilawyering, useless drama, wagging his Ego around. Not good for the encyclopdia or anything, really."(Littleolive oil (talk) 16:57, 20 January 2018 (UTC))[reply]
@RexxS: the Joecollier part of the tag is normal, the part listing Andy complicated. Is there a link for COI with WiR? In theory WiR shouldn't need tagging (is that true?) as they should be the role models for this. How that works in practice due to WP:COIBIAS shortcut been removed from current COI page dunno. As for the details of that tag and history between editors I don't know, but the tone of the interactions indicate some resolution between parties desirable. I have to say it takes a brave editor to work in the no man's land of COI. Widefox; talk 12:11, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Widefox: The tag was unnecessary and denigrates the work of a WiR. Andy was working as a WiR at History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group ("an academic organisation specialising in recording and publishing the oral history of twentieth and twenty-first century biomedicine") and he used their resources to create and improve articles on notable biomedics. There is no conflict of interest and Joe Collier was certainly not a "client" of Andy's in any sense of the word. The policy is explained at meta:Terms of use/FAQ on paid contributions without disclosure, particlarly "These requirements shouldn't keep teachers, professors, or people working at galleries, libraries, archives, and museums ("GLAM") institutions from making contributions in good faith! If you fall into one of those categories, you are only required to comply with the disclosure provision when you are compensated by your employer or by a client specifically for edits and uploads to a Wikimedia project ... Disclosure is only necessary where compensation has been promised or received in exchange for a particular contribution. A museum employee who is contributing to projects generally without more specific instruction from the museum need not disclose her affiliation with the museum ... a Wikipedian in Residence who is specifically compensated to edit the article about the archive at which they are employed should make a simple disclosure that he is a paid Wikipedian in Residence with the archive." Andy had already gone beyond what was required by being transparent about his editing there, and his reward was to have a template slapped on with a big $ sign baldly stating that Andy had been paid "on behalf of Joe Collier". That is utterly unacceptable, and we need to treat our WiRs with a lot more sensitivity. They are not paid editors. --RexxS (talk) 14:25, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yup RexxS, I'm here to talk about the template, but I agree with you, that was my reaction too, hence "complicated". I don't have a reason to even check Andy's edit(s), as I've always admired his work, so I haven't. Thanks for the link. In my long post above I made it clear that WiR are trusted and do these things professionally, so my trust is with Andy, and anyone questioning that should do it, as you say, carefully. Widefox; talk 19:22, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Littleolive oil: when you say "we cannot begin to tag articles because of potential lack of neutrality", that's the central question isn't it, as the definition of conflict of interest is conflict of interest is independent of the occurrence of impropriety. Therefore, a conflict of interest can be discovered and voluntarily defused before any corruption occurs. ... a risk , so if not disclosed before editing we have a conundrum. 1. use COI tag only for disclosure (and we cannot know for certain if an editor has a COI or not, but ducks are ducks), or 2. use COI tag as a cleanup tag for say a POV check/tip of the iceberg . 2. is how it's used currently. We have cleanup and POV check tags already. To restrict COI tag usage to only when additionally also specifying identified content issues, that's more like the cleanup tag, and risks conflating COI with content issues. The "badge of shame" argument conflates impropriety. Widefox; talk 20:16, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Widefox: Would you please examine the opening paragraph of WP:CLEANUPTAG ("an information page [that] describes the editing community's established practice on some aspect or aspects of Wikipedia's norms and customs")? In particular Their purposes are to foster improvement of the encyclopedia by alerting editors to changes that need to be made sets the tone, but the rest is also important, such as Cleanup tags are ... not ... a method of warning readers about an article. ... Avoid "drive-by" tagging. Tags must be accompanied by a comment on the article's talk page explaining the problem and beginning a discussion on how to fix it, or for simpler and more obvious problems, a remark using the reason parameter as shown below. Tagging editors must be willing to follow through with substantive discussion.
The {{COI}} is a cleanup template. There's no doubt about that, and it is one of several listed at WP:TC #Neutrality and factual accuracy. The more specific template {{autobiography}} and the less specific template {{POV}} carry just the same restrictions: no drive-by tagging; start a discussion; not to be used as warning. For all the reasons that we insist on those restrictions on the other cleanup templates, we shouldn't be misusing this template by ignoring what the community deems proper in the use of these sort of tags. --RexxS (talk) 21:02, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@RexxS: Yes I know. I'm here to talk about the future of the tag. As SarahSV's example, I don't buy that volunteers must have to proofread paid editors work, give exact cleanup instructions on the talk, all under time pressure. That sounds perfect for the paid editor though. There is WP:VOLUNTEER to consider. Opinions gravitate around two poles when dealing with COI/PAID, as I describe in WP:BOGOF which is a lot broader discussion than what the exact usage of the COI tag was historically. Hasn't the COI always been problematic as COI is about the editor, not the edits, running against our fundamentals here? Widefox; talk 21:54, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Widefox: I have two underlying concerns with the proposed change:
(i) It removes an existing tag, in use on 12,000 articles, from its purpose of attracting neutral editors to cleanup non-neutral editing caused by conflicted editors. The argument that I don't buy is someone who spots non-neutral content can't start a discussion on the article talk page, if they can't clean it up themselves for whatever reason. That's the absolute minimum required for all cleanup tags. Nobody's asking them to proofread all of the paid editor's work and give exact cleanup instructions. But I'm not willing to see drive-by tagging without any review by the tagger. That can result in a tag that says "There are problems here. Please fix them." leading to another editor wasting time searching for problems that may not exist. We have to accept that it's possible a conflicted editor did not introduce non-neutral material, and consider the effect of the tagger crying wolf will have on that small number of editors willing to do this sort of cleanup work. It's simply counter-productive. It's also against WP:DISCLAIM to turn it into a template "to alert readers ... that there "may be" significant problems with the content." We don't do that.
(ii) If this template can be added to an article merely on suspicion of non-neutral editing, or simply because the tagger decides that an editor is a paid editor, then it will be used as a bludgeon against Wikimedians in Residence, whom the proposer is convinced are paid editors. We don't need that. --RexxS (talk) 22:32, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support. Unless I'm missing something, the proposal doesn't really change what the instructions say, but it does make them clearer. SarahSV (talk) 17:06, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
    • @SlimVirgin: The current wording is: "Do not use this tag unless there are significant or substantial problems with the article's neutrality as a result of the contributor's involvement. Like the other {{POV}} tags, this tag is not meant to be a badge of shame or to "warn the reader" about the identities of the editors." (I assume Jytdog proposes to just replace that paragraph with theirs, but they are far from clear on that point). Note that the proposal changes "is" to "are likely to be" in the first sentence - that alone is not a mere clarification, it is a significant change. Another section of the documentation requires the editor applying the tag to promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article, and it is also unclear how one is supposed to do that, if there is only a "likelihood" of that being the case. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Pigsonthewing (talkcontribs)
    • @SlimVirgin: Thank you for fixing my missing sig; would you kindly respond to the associated comment, which I addressed to you? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 18:01, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
      • If you find that BP is rewriting its own environmental record, you know there are going to be problems, and the point of the tag is to warn the reader. Editors shouldn't feel they have to list the problems before they can use the tag, because that might require a lot of work. If the current wording gives that impression, it's important to change it. The addition of "likely" doesn't mean articles can be tagged for no reason. The current instructions are contradictory: "Use this tag to alert readers that the article may be biased by a conflict of interest ... Do not use this tag unless there are substantial problems with the article's neutrality ..." (bold added). SarahSV (talk) 18:17, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
        • "If you find that BP is rewriting its own environmental record, you know there are going to be problems", Indeed Sarah, but the solution is not to use a cleanup template to warn readers. I agree we need a warning template when that happens, for all the reasons you state, but at the end of the day, somebody has to do the cleanup (if it exists), and if not the editor who notices the issue, then who? There are two issues being confounded here: warning readers that there a grounds to suspect the article is non-neutral; and attracting editors to cleanup problems identified. They are very different things, and we need to keep this template (along with its "No discussion = No tag" requirement) for the latter, or we'll drown the already sinking backlog of articles to cleanup. --RexxS (talk) 18:57, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
          • @RexxS: I'm usually in favour of "no discussion = no tag", but in the case of COI there are two problems. First, cleaning up COI editing can be extremely time-consuming because you often have to start from scratch. With something like BP, it might take months of educating yourself about complex issues. Second, if we say to the unpaid workforce that they're not allowed to flag an article unless they're willing to clean up after paid editors, they will just say "fine, we won't bother", which leaves the reader in the dark. SarahSV (talk) 21:01, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
            • But surely, Sarah, there are a whole range of middle options? I do appreciate the amount of cleanup work that paid editors leave for us, but some unpaid volunteer is going to have to do it. I'm not insisting that the editor who notices contributions from a conflicted editor has to be the one who does the cleanup, but I am suggesting they are in a good position to make a start. If they simply tag on suspicion, where there is a possibility that no problem actually exists, what does that do for editors who spot the tag, and then potentially waste their time looking for problems that are not there? That would be an even quicker way of making sure they say "fine, we won't bother", and we lose them from cleaning up other genuine problems. Tagging on suspicion is a terribly inefficient use of multiple editors' time, so I don't agree that editors should be tagging without identifying at least one concrete issue that should be fixed, even if they don't have time to clean it up themselves. In that case, surely they can at least note that issue on the talk page, so that the next editor doesn't have to duplicate their research before they can make a start. That's what the current documentation encourages, and that's what I feel sure it is best to retain. --RexxS (talk) 21:47, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
        • SarahSV, the language that expanded the purpose of the template to include alerting readers to the mere possibility of an NPOV policy violation was added by Jytdog in 2016. It might be simplest to remove that line. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:12, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
          • I support reverting that addition (unless, of course, Jytdog can show a discussion leading to project-wide consensus for it). Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 10:24, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
            • SarahSV's example is useful. COI isn't about any specific identified content issue (see "a risk" above). But, I agree practically how it works here it's more workable to combine it with identified content issues. In her example, PAID editors externalise their editing costs in what we all agree takes significant finite volunteer resources (plug my essay WP:BOGOF for the answer). I think this discussion conflates too many issues, but I'm for a fresh look at the template, without conflating WiR or specifics as done here, now that we've uncovered the corruption of COI editors of this. Widefox; talk 20:52, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
          • WhatamIdoing, I agree with that line. Alerting the reader is part of the point of the template (especially given that one of the purposes of Wikipedia is to eliminate the reader–editor distinction). As a reader, if I look up an article about a drug, I want to know if it has been written by the drug company. That template might be the only thing that alerts me. SarahSV (talk) 00:01, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
            • We've had those conversations off and on for years, and we've never been able to get community consensus for placing reader-facing tags on articles merely to state that the article was definitely edited by paid drug company representatives (to use your example), much less for placing tags on articles when we merely, and therefore perhaps wrongly, suspect that the editor might have had a COI and merely, and therefore perhaps wrongly, suspect that the editor might have introduced biased content. The consensus (in the past; CCC still applies) is that when/if we identify actual content problems, we can fix them or tag them, but the mere suspicion of POV problems based on the contributor's identity isn't enough.
              IMO the main advantage to this rule is that the drug company's reps are put on the same footing as the anti-drug activists (who have no legal duty to be plausibly truthful about their claims, for example). It is also consistent with the principle that we should "focus on the content, not the contributor", which most editors hold as an ideal. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:06, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
              • Agree WhatamIdoing that there's polarised opinions on dealing with this, but just like SPI, a ducks a duck. I'm not confident that we're on top of COI, as shown at COIN and how many articles are deleted when COI exposed. This should be WP:BOLD not WP:RECKLESS, but unfortunately for WP, it is currently WP:BRAVE. COI guidance being subverted by COI editors indicates that old consensus isn't working. Widefox; talk 16:52, 23 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Strong oppose: This proposal will dilute the value of this template in identifying problems, by using it to mark where there is simply a suspicion of a problem. That has never been the intention of these sort of templates and the proposal will damage our efforts to actually kerb genuine non-neutral articles created or amended by paid editors. My detailed reasons are below. --RexxS (talk) 17:52, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
    • Not sure how this proposed change to this template relates to WiRs? Most of the time they do not directly write about the institution itself and thus would not have a COI... Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 20:44, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
      • Indeed James, but see the support vote above from Widefox. You can clearly see how the issues have become conflated within minutes of this proposal being raised. Of course edits by WiRs shouldn't be anything to do with tagging problems caused by paid editors, as I explain below, but not everybody sees the issues in the same way that we do. --RexxS (talk) 21:56, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
(to RexxS) my long post [3] was writtn before the proposal, which I marked as (ec) into a support vote. If you'd prefer I will refactor to put the bulk before the section to clarify they're unrelated. Widefox; talk 13:11, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Just a quick note. I posted a proposal for discussion - floating a balloon. This looks like it will need an RfC and I will make it one, in a while. For now there is the opportunity to refine the proposal. If folks have ideas about how to improve the proposal, I am very open to hearing them. For folks who oppose any change in this direction -- well, I get that, and you will have the opportunity to oppose at the RfC. I'll wait a week or so to post the RfC to see if any ideas about refining it arise. Jytdog (talk) 19:31, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
    • In terms of writing an RFC, I think two things should be addressed:
      1. This is a significant change in meaning, User:SlimVirgin's comments notwithstanding. The old meaning is something close to "I have identified at least one fixable problem in the current version of this article, and I'll tell other editors what that is on the talk page, in the hope that some editor will fix it". The new meaning is close to "I'm just guessing that this article (probably about a person/organization/product/music/book/art that I've never heard of) was written by a paid editor, and I'm just guessing that there might be a problem, so let's slap this tag on it". Editors might choose to have this change, but we should admit that it actually is a change, and that there are practical consequences from this change (like not being able to leave a useful note on the talk page about what needs fixing).
      2. It's almost nonsensical to say, in the same sentence, that you're not supposed to "warn the reader" about the COI, but you are supposed to "alert the reader" about the COI. While lawyers for ladder manufacturers can tie themselves up in knots over whether to label each message with either a "warning" or an "alert" icon, in everyday practice, there's no daylight between those two. Either this tag exists for to tell readers something, or it doesn't. WP:NDA has said for the last decade that these tags are not meant to tell readers anything. We tell readers everything that they really need to know via WP:General disclaimer. I think we should stick with that principle, but if we're not going to, then I think we should consider an RFC to change the guideline first, and this template's documentation only later. (That way, the template's documentation will never conflict with the long-standing guideline.) WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:03, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
      • WAID what a crazy misreading. As clarified in an above section, the language about "badge of shame" was added by a person who was trying to protest their edits being challenged because that person made them - it said originally and still says "this tag is not meant to be a badge of shame or to "warn the reader" about the identities of the editors." Do you see what the object of the preposition about is? The added language says " but it is intended, as it states, to alert readers and editors that there "may be" significant problems with the content". Do you see the part that is underlined and bolded? "Content" is not "editor".

        I kept the part about "badge of shame" and editor, because my sense is that there are people who feel (or who worry about other people feeling) hounded about COI stuff and believe that this is important to say. I would just as soon get rid of it, but I didn't want to be overbold. If you think it would fly without that "badge of shame"/editor business, I would be fine with that.

        But it is not self-contradictory. Jytdog (talk) 01:16, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

      • @WhatamIdoing: it was you who added the WP:NDA sentence about clean-up templates and readers in 2016. [4] My understanding of clean-up templates is that part of the point of some of them, and the COI template is one, is precisely to alert both readers and editors, and given that any passing reader could become an editor, we can't proceed as if the distinction is rigid. SarahSV (talk) 00:10, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
        • I agree with User:Slimvirgin. After the Wifione case which appears to have resulted in real harm to a number of readers in India, we should also be warning readers when their is a concern. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 02:20, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
          • Actually, I think you'll find that the most salient line was added by User:Dbachmann in March 2008.
            I agree that there should be no rigid line between reader and editor – this is why we display these templates to everyone, rather than showing them only to accounts that have previously edited – but the point of all maintenance tags, including this one, is "please click the Edit button and fix it", not "you should trust the contents of this page significantly less than you trust the contents of any other page on this wiki". WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:22, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
              • Of course I agree this indicates someone without a COI should look into the article in question and fix it. As there is no deadline this of course could take some time to occur. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 19:45, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Wikimedians in Residence

This proposal exposes one of the current problems with the community's relationship with Wikimedians in Residence (WiRs). A lack of clarity about these roles leads to editors opposed to paid editing to treat them as if they were paid editors. They are not. They represent one of the most important and fruitful outreach opportunities for the Wikimedia projects, and one of the richest collaborations available to the sponsoring institution. When we recognise that the University of Oxford has a long-term WiR; that the National Library of Wales has created a permanent post for a WiR; that the University of Edinburgh is actively encouraging other Universities to copy their WiR program; we start to see the extent to which WiRs have an impact.

When we treat WiRs in the same way as we do paid editors, we damage the community in two ways:

  1. There is a negative, chilling effect on WiRs. They are made to feel as if their work is being viewed as nothing more that editing-for-hire, and yet their work barely - if ever - touches on a subject where they have any meaningful potential for conflict of interest. They feel the insinuation that they are not capable of editing neutrally, and they are invariably some of our most experienced editors.
  2. The real problem paid editors who may be insufficiently experienced, or perhaps insufficiently bothered, to meet our concerns about neutrality of editing, now have a weapon. They can hide behind all the good work that WiRs do, by constantly arguing about the impact on WiRs that this measure or that measure, designed to kerb the excesses of paid editing, would have.

We need to make it completely clear that Wikimedians in Residence are not paid editors. If I were a Fellow at a college (a salaried position) and contributed to an article about the college Principal, an eminent professor of nanotechnology, do I automatically have a conflict of interest? No, of course not. Is there a potential for CoI? Yes, of course, but no more so than for any other eminent professor of nanotechnology that I knew personally at another college or institution. These potential conflicts are not correlated to the pay, but to other connections, and we do a disservice to everyone (except the shills) by confounding conflict of interest with conflict of loyalty.

I propose that we commit as a community to ensuring that WiRs are given the same rights and treatment as other normal editors, and that we establish zero tolerance for those that either with intent or carelessly harass these valued contributors. --RexxS (talk) 16:44, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

The discussion about this tag is only marginally related to WiR but RexxxS your post above is all confused.
Here is what the COI guideline currently says, at Wikipedia:Conflict_of_interest#Wikipedians_in_residence,_reward_board:

WiRs must not engage in on-Wikipedia public relations or marketing for their organization, and they should operate within the bounds defined by Core characteristics of a Wikipedian in Residence at Wikimedia Outreach. They must work closely with a Wikipedia project or the general Wikipedia community, and are expected to identify their WiR status on their user page and on talk pages related to their organization when they post there.

And the PAID policy says, at WP:Paid-contribution_disclosure#Wikipedians_in_residence

Wikipedians in residence who are paid must disclose which organization (GLAM or similar) pays them.[1]

Breaking that down and keeping in mind that there are two aspects - disclosure and the need for review:
  • WiRs who are paid, are paid editors. They need to disclose that just like any paid editor. Our PAID policy is clear on that. (no "free pass" about disclosing)
  • When a paid or unpaid WiR writes about the institution hosting them, they have also have a COI, and that needs to be managed like any COI. (relationship disclosed + prior review)
  • When a WiR uses the resources of their host institution to improve articles about other stuff (e.g. the classic example of images from the british museum used to illuminate articles) we do not consider this COI editing and welcome them to edit directly (no need for prior review) This is the case where we give WiR a "pass" from how we normally think about paid editing and COI issues.
WiRs walk a fine line and they need to be careful not to step over into promoting their host organization. A WiR promoting their host organization is a perversion of the WiR program.

References

--Jytdog (talk) 18:05, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I think that clarifies considerably the difference between our approach to WiRs. Our policies on WiRs serve to protect both the WiR and the encyclopedia from inadvertent CoI, but you are seeking to expand them beyond their intent. WiRs who are paid are not paid editors, any more than anyone else who receives a salary at work. Contrast that with those who are editors-for-hire, who offer their editing services to whoever will pay them; for them, pleasing their client supersedes improving the encyclopedia, although they may kid themselves it does not. That is emphatically not the case with WiRs. Here's what meta:Terms of use/FAQ on paid contributions without disclosure says:
  • These requirements shouldn't keep teachers, professors, or people working at galleries, libraries, archives, and museums ("GLAM") institutions from making contributions in good faith! If you fall into one of those categories, you are only required to comply with the disclosure provision when you are compensated by your employer or by a client specifically for edits and uploads to a Wikimedia project.
  • The same is true with GLAM employees. Disclosure is only necessary where compensation has been promised or received in exchange for a particular contribution. A museum employee who is contributing to projects generally without more specific instruction from the museum need not disclose her affiliation with the museum. On the other hand, a Wikipedian in Residence who is specifically compensated to edit the article about the archive at which they are employed should make a simple disclosure that he is a paid Wikipedian in Residence with the archive. This would be sufficient disclosure for purposes of requirement.
Note carefully that last statement. WiR's are required to disclose their affiliation with the place where they work, only when editing the article about that institution. But you want not only to require them to disclose when they edit an article of someone associated with their employer, but to tag that article with a "Paid editor" template. That's not how we should be treating our WiRs, nor is there any basis in policy to require it. If a WiR makes an effort to voluntarily disclose that they are editing an article what they may have a second-hand connection with, that should be applauded, not used to stick the opprobrium of "paid editor" on someone who does not meet our definition of such, either by the letter or spirit of our policies and guidelines. --RexxS (talk) 18:48, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
i think i understand where you are coming from but you are breaking the english language by saying that paid WiRs are not paid. Our policies and guidelines do have some "technical term" usages (like "neutral point of view" which means something very specific and kind of odd here, grounded in stuff deep in the guts of WP where sources have authority, not editors), but "paid" is not one of them. If you are paid to edit WP, you are paid.
Way too many people think "paid editor" = "shill here to screw up WP" and likewise think that "COI" also = "evil". Or they act over-defensively out of some concern that they believe that other people think those things... and a lot of the "smoke" that clouds community discussions, often comes from those "concerns about concerns" kind of argumentation.
Neither paid editing nor COI are inherently bad. They are what they are and we have ways of managing them both.
What is bad, are efforts to thwart our normal processes for managing them.
Sometimes that thwarting isn't really thwarting at all, but is done by people who just don't understand the corrent thing to do, and are happy to do the correct thing when they learn what is correct.
Sometimes that is from people knowing what is correct and doing the wrong thing anyway. That was the heart of the Salvidrim arbcom case. Jytdog (talk) 18:56, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I think some of what you wrote above, is about what is going on currently with regard to Pigsonthewing. That is a very specific thing, that does not belong in this discussion. I will explain on your talk page. Jytdog (talk) 19:04, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I think you must understand that as a trustee of WMUK for some years, I've been involved in many decisions to establish Wikimedians in Residence in the UK. These were and are some of our finest editors, and the partners involved included a wide range of hugely respected and prestigious institutions. I personally know many of these Wikimedians, and respect their work and bona fides as editors, so you can see I have my own conflict of loyalty that I have to manage.
I didn't say that "paid WiRs are not paid". I did say that "paid WiRs are not paid editors". I still maintain that is the case almost all of the time. My advice to them has always been "don't edit the article of the institution where you work". Not because that's a requirement, but because it avoids even the appearance of CoI. By and large, WiRs recognise that and are pretty good at managing it - usually confining themselves to factual updates and similar, along with the required disclosure. In my experience, they are far better at it than most GLAM employees that I train, who often want to start by "improving" the article on their place of work.
I will state that I don't think that "paid editor = shill here to screw up WP", nor that "CoI/CoL = evil". Nevertheless, I do think that both "paid editor" and "CoI/CoL" = "huge potential for problematic editing that we could do without". But that's not in sync with the community and I accept that.
I agree with you about the Salvadrim case. It's as if Wikipedia had its own seductive "dark side of the force". What a pity. --RexxS (talk) 19:31, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah the Salv thing was somebody who had a lot of fixed ideas about COI (namely, that concerns about it are a lot of baloney that overly fastiduous people worry about) and thought he wasn't affected by it. That is what the big mea culpa on his userpage was about. Him waking up to the fact that he too is all too human and that his judgement too is affectable.
Thanks for describing your relationship with the WMUK GLAM/WiR programs. I was not aware of your background with that.
On the COI thing generally -- there is probably nobody who edits WP, who doesn't have a COI on some subject here. Most of us just self-manage that for example by not editing where we have a COI; the whole COI management process only comes into play when people edit or behave in ways that demonstrate unmanaged COI. And we of course have it in play as a default for commercial paid editors. And there is a form of it for WiR, who are obligated to disclose at minimum. And I really do believe you when you say that training for WiR urges folks not to edit about the institution. That is managing COI too.
One thing i thought about this morning while doing the dishes was that I am unaware of the background of those programs. Was there some big ruckus at some point over whether those programs are "kosher" or not? People associated with them get so intense about them not being paid or COI or whatever in ways that I find ... well, surprising... and it makes me wonder if there was some huge battle or ugliness in the past that I am not aware of that makes folks react that way. Do you know of any? Jytdog (talk) 22:24, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"A Wikipedian-in-Residence (WiR) is different from both: a) a paid editor; or b) a project leader or participant, whether or not those in the latter group have an organisational sponsor/champion." There are considerable issues with non-neutrality, paid editing, and COI on Wikipedia but when editors attempt to rewrite our own guides to suit their own notions of what is meant then we must stop. Jytdog you are attempting to rewrite Wikimedia in Wikipedia/Wikimedia by redefining what paid editing means for the Wikimedian in Residence. You are conflating paid editing on a specific article with the more general paid to expand an organization/ library / museum - a role that is supported and endorsed by Wikipedia. And as you followed Andy to his Wikimedia work introducing Wikimedia to this discussion I don't find your comment above about conflating this template with Wikimedian in Residence credible.(Littleolive oil (talk) 19:15, 20 January 2018 (UTC))[reply]
Nope - those passages in the PAID policy and COI guideline have been there a long time. I am sorry you are confused on these issues. Too many people are. Jytdog (talk) 19:25, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

But you see it doesn't matter how long paid policy and COI guideline have been in place; the Wikimedia in residence guide has very specific language pertinent specifically to Wikimedian in residence and we can't conflate that with standard COI and paid editing. COI/paid editing and Wikimedian in residence operate under separate regulations. We don't have the right to redefine either. What happens when we start defining Wikipedia and Wikimedia for ourselves is that we risk becoming fanatics and fanatics do not draw editors or create an environment people work in happily. And if people aren't happy they don't stay!(Littleolive oil (talk) 19:55, 20 January 2018 (UTC))[reply]

Purpose of maintenance tags

This template is part of the family of general maintenance templates classified as cleanup templates, and we have project-wide consensus on how they are to be used.

The purpose of a cleanup tag is documented as "Template messages may be added to articles needing a cleanup. Their purposes are to foster improvement of the encyclopedia by alerting editors to changes that need to be made. Cleanup tags are meant to be temporary notices that lead to an effort to fix the problem, not a permanent badge of shame to show that you disagree with an article, or a method of warning readers about an article." - Wikipedia:Template messages/Cleanup

This proposal is dangerous in its effect of subverting the intended purpose of the {{COI}} template, as indicated at Wikipedia:Template messages/Cleanup #Neutrality and factual accuracy. The template is to be used to alert editors to changes that need to be made. It is not a marker to indicate that the tagger has a suspicion that the content may not be neutral; it is an invitation to other editors to help clean up identified issues. It is already transcluded onto 12,231 pages - for comparison only about 12,000 editors are active enough to be eligible to vote in Steward's elections. That represents a huge backlog of cleanup and yet this proposal asks us to make the template available to use on any article that any tagger thinks might have a CoI. We need this tag to be placed on articles where the problem is identified, not suspected, just as it is for any of the dozens of other cleanup templates that are a call to other editors to take some action. If we require them to first determine whether any action is needed, we are not going to attract many to do the work. I just looked at the 10 articles in the category Category:Wikipedia articles with possible conflicts of interest from January 2008, the month I started editing. Of these, only 3 had any discussion at all on the talk page of any potential CoI, and none had identified any potential problematic text. We have got to stop using this tag as bludgeon to scare off potentially conflicted editor, or to mark the article as "tainted". We need to be sure that it can be easily removed when not applied for its proper purpose - and that is identifying non-neutral content resulting from CoI.

If the proposer wants to ensure that any potentially conflicted editor has their contribution to an article reviewed, then they should do one of two things:

  1. Do the review themselves and leave a note on the talk page spelling out what they found, along with the COI template on the article if non-neutral material has been identified; or
  2. Make a template like this:

Either of those options would be far more useful than hijacking this template, which is already overused, to fit a purpose it was never intended for. We need this template for use in the urgent, egregious cases where violations of neutrality are blatant and in need rapid attention. --RexxS (talk) 17:47, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

That is a pretty good template that I would be happy to use. Conflicted editors tend to use promotional language and poor or no sources; they tend to omit or spin negative things. The content and sourcing is often skewed from NPOV and often fails V.
Reviewing content that arises from conflicted editing takes time -- it involves doing one's own search for sources and reading them, then checking to to be sure that the content accurately summarizes what independent sources say about the subject. A good review is not just about scanning quickly to remove puffery.
The purpose of the disclosure is to draw such a review. With conflicted editors who follow the COI guideline and do AfC or propose changes to existing articles on the talk page, they follow the process to get reviewed, which is great. This tag is for situations where conflicted editors, edit directly and the content already in WP mainspace needs reviewing.
Since there is no gateway -- we are open and anyone can edit -- cases of WP:APPARENTCOI are not uncommon. Those situations need to be handled carefully for sure, and should never be used in any kind of harassing way.
But disclosure leading to careful review, is what happens in scientific publishing every day. Peer reviewers think more carefully about the paper when a COI is disclosed. In RW publishing the disclosure is also on the final published paper, so readers read with the disclosure in mind as well. We don't do that in WP after the review is done, so as editors we have to be really sure we manage the COI and do good reviews, as there is no surface marking left, after the review is actually done. The reviews we do should never be quick and cursory - they need to be careful. The notion that a COI review in WP is quick, is not accurate or helpful. Jytdog (talk) 18:15, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The "purpose of maintenance tags" is a good thing to look at, and this template has long seemed to me to be fundamentally not be fit for that purpose since the whole point of it is to comment on the contributor rather than the content. To quote myself from nine years ago, "If the article is {{Nonnotable}}, {{POV}}, {{unbalanced}}, an {{Advert}}, needs {{cleanup}} or {{Unreferenced}}, or whatever, we have plenty of templates to say what the real problem is. But if it's a perfectly fine, NPOV article that just happens to have been written by someone with a potential conflict of interest, what is the point in marking it with a {{COI}} banner?"
Thinking about it again years later, I can see one potential use for this template, but it's not one anyone above seems to be arguing over. If a COI editor has edited many articles, it might make sense to apply a template like this as part of the process of going through all those articles to clean them up. I still don't see any reason to be applying a banner that says the article "might" need cleaning up to a single article. Anomie 20:29, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The point of the tag is content. Please do read what it says. Conflicted editors tend to write content that is promotional, unsourced or badly sourced, and omits or spins negative things. The tag is specifically addressed to warn people about that kind of content. Jytdog (talk) 22:27, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I did read the tag. It says in bold "A major contributor to this article", i.e. it's focused on a person rather than on content. In non-bold, it says "It may require cleanup". Not "it does require cleanup", just "may". Does it actually require cleanup? Then use {{POV}} or another tag that says for sure it requires work and specifically why. Does it not after all? Then don't tag. Anomie 16:39, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
You appear to be heading toward an effort to delete this template. That has been tried and failed and if you try today it is even more likely to fail.
It is widely accepted in the community that conflicted editors tend to create warped content. This tag helps manage such content issues.
Every major publishing institution manages COI. This is part of how we manage it. The community is very, very unlikely to move backward on this issue. Jytdog (talk) 19:09, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Just because the vocal minority of editors who want to keep the template as a reader warning, "badge of shame", or a "maybe cleanup" out-!voted the vocal minority of editors who wanted to delete it at Wikipedia:Templates for discussion/Log/2012 March 12#Template:COI doesn't remove the fact that this template is, fundamentally, about the contributor rather than the content.
The one thing I agree with you on, though, is that it's unlikely that a new discussion at this time would result in deletion. There are enough editors here who're willing to IAR in favor of this template as a weapon to use against COI (and particularly paid) editors, and most of the discussion seems to be about how often it should be allowed to be wielded. Anomie 17:23, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, Anomie is right that this is fundamentally about the position the editor was in. To avoid the false dichotomy of either "badge of shame" or superfluous, what about a "badge of further scrutiny" (is prudent)? There is a may inherent in COI, I disagree with Jytdog, we either embrace or deny that reality. We need to shift this debate onto loftier goals of incentivising COI editors to disclose. COI is only about disclosure, as conflicted editors are allowed to edit, and their edits don't have to be bad. That's in theory. Widefox; talk 18:23, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Or, not a badge, but needing a "COI check". ie criteria before removing the tag, similar to at {{POV check}}. Widefox; talk 19:35, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Editors with a significant COI should be suggesting significant changes via the talk page rather than editing articles directly.
When they do not follow this guidance a COI tag until a proper review of their edits is carried out is justified.
Might be useful to change the "strongly discouraged from editing affected articles directly" to "are not to edit affected articles directly" Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 19:40, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Widefox: What would be the difference between a "COI check" and {{POV check}}, besides that the template would presumably be shaming the contributor rather than focusing on the content? Anomie 15:36, 23 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Anomie: Good question, badly presented:
If we can all avoid terms like "presumably shaming" that would help, as a "presumption of bad faith" is literally a WP:AGF violation, so let's refrain from that language and thinking, and agree that this tag is no different to any other tag in that respect - it should never be abused, and we do have protections generally for drive-by and disruptive editors, none of which is specific to this tag. It's a red-herring.
Disclosing COI is actually a positive, not a negative. It's a sign of process maturity. I agree a tag fundamentally about the editor not the edit is different here. Last time I checked, COI was a systemic, pervasive problem. The only solution with Ahn at COIN was a block, which I proposed and it was unanimous.
As there's a valid, logical, good faith reasoning presented here backed by solid, independent, well known economic foundation reasoned at WP:BOGOF, I think details of who/what/where/when/why of a tag can be sorted. To answer your question, I'm sure if there is a will, there's a way. COI isn't POV. Widefox; talk 16:14, 23 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I see that instead of answering my question, you began with a nitpick over wording and then went off on a tangent. Anomie 18:07, 23 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Others can decide if it is a loaded question with AGF being in the five pillars WP:5P4, or a "nitpick". Ignoring the presumption of bad faith usage, the answer is we seem to have a lack of guidance on dealing with COI - there's WP:Conflict of interest/draft#Detecting problematic conflicts of interest, and WP:COIBIAS the large section removed from COI#COIBIAS. In contrast we have WP:SIGNS, WP:SPI, WP:CRY (the latter part of CRY has "Astroturfing PR firms" which I presume all of us would mark as COI) and crucially Conflict-of-interest editing on Wikipedia. Do you want to delete the tag, as Jytdog asserted? Widefox; talk 01:25, 24 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Put another way, if COI and POV were the same, why do we have WP:NPOVN and WP:COIN? Wouldn't it be odd to have either without its tag? Widefox; talk 16:22, 23 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't say that COI and POV are the same. I asked you what the difference would be between a "COI check" template and {{POV check}}, other than that "COI check" would presumably focus on the contributor rather than the content. The fact that maintenance templates should focus on content rather than contributors doesn't apply to WP:NPOVN and WP:COIN, since they're noticeboards rather than maintenance templates. Anomie 18:07, 23 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
(answered above). That's restating another loaded question due to the presumption of an invalid maintenance template (about the editor != about the edits). It exists. My point being that they're both valid and different. I agree the COI tag is an outlier maintenance tag, but it's not my position that due to it being an outlier that it is either invalid or doesn't have utility. Your questions indicate that's your view. It may be useful in more than one way. (From a strict maintenance template perspective, maybe it should only be temporary until the content issues have been found, IDK). The bigger issue is our credibility. A COI tag is a tip of the iceberg maintenance template for the serious content issues that aren't as visible (e.g. astroturfing PR), why are we worrying about the tip of the iceberg when the article is sunk by content issues? I agree that goes both ways. Worth spotting tips of icebergs though. Widefox; talk 01:25, 24 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Widefox, I think that User:Anomie has a point. From the POV of the editor (not reader) who is trying to clean up a tagged article, do you/should you do anything significantly different for a COI check versus a POV check? WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:43, 24 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
WhatamIdoing agree it's a good question. It speaks to exactly what I'm saying here - why don't we have more documentation for the answer (apart from what I linked to above) and the doc sentence Use this tag to alert readers that the article may be biased by a conflict of interest, and to request help with an article that is biased or has other serious problems as a direct result of the editing done by the subject of the article or by a person with a close connection to the subject (e.g., public relations employees). Widefox; talk 19:22, 24 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The sentence you quote was added relatively recently, without discussion, and the POV in it (as evidenced by this page) is not universally held in the community (and has been explicitly rejected in past discussions). So that is rather weak "documentation". Also, it's not really relevant to the question of what to do if you are the editor who received that "request [to] help with an article that is biased or has other serious problems", rather than the editor who wants to add the tag.
So, what do you personally do if you see such a tag?
I've been thinking it over, and I'm not sure, but I think I'd overall do the same thing with a POV and a COI tag. Maybe with a COI tag I'd look more at recent editors (or the very first) than I would with a POV tag, but that might actually be a worse idea than just checking the talk page, looking at a few independent sources, and trying to figure out what needs improving (regardless of which tag was added). WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:31, 25 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Break 1

User:WhatamIdoing I'm quoting it, but I've never edited it. Let's see the history...hmm...I may be one of few editors on this talk that hasn't edited it! Thank you for editing it WhatamIdoing. More guidance on handling COI would be useful, agree? I don't agree with your edit here though [5] If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning. (emphasis own) 1. consensus is editors with a COI should make edit suggestions on the talk rather than edit the articles directly per WP:COI, it's not appropriate to allow editors with a COI to 2. remove a COI tag, and 3. PAID editors are not legally allowed to edit at all per WP:ToU without 0. disclosure, wouldn't you agree? "justified" can be replaced by "not legally allowed" in that specific case! 4. COI is different to POV and {{POV check}}. May I say, for that specific case, as we are not legally allowed to water down the ToU, so I don't consider the current wording of the doc without a single mention of the ToU or disclosure requirements as complying with the letter and spirit of the ToU. Those aspects must be added, irrespective of if the contested wording quoted stays.

Normal edit consensus building on the doc has been subverted by blocked socks and banned editors who've not disclosed they have a COI about changing the COI guidance COI and PAID editors require COI disclosure in all places including talk, docs, policy and guidelines but that did not happen.... User:KDS4444 [6] [7] [8] User:Insomesia [9] [10] [11]
Answer: further scrutiny. In some cases I get the editors blocked, and the articles deleted at COIN. I see it as personal preference (and on the merits of the case) for new articles whether to WP:BOGOF#Internalise bias by deleting/userifying or WP:BOGOF#Subsidise bias by fixing. I consider both views good faith. WP:COI does tell editors with a COI best to leave creation to editors without a COI.
(an aside about when it's helpful to scrutinise the editor and not solely their edits) Yesterday I got two hoaxes deleted Attenborough Island, Blackwater Islands, where the articles were poor leading me to the creator's history (User:AquaPigg) of creating OR/bogus articles, so their edits needed further scrutiny, including reading and invalidating every one of the sources and articles and seeing if there's a connection with the source creation and the WP article. It's time-consuming. Some editors game the system, and what we need there is more scrutiny. That hoaxer removed the maintenance tag [12] and that removal went unnoticed.) Widefox; talk 14:12, 25 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

yes the change to "any other editor may remove this tag" is an invitation for conflicted editors to get themselves in trouble. Not really wise..."and unconflicted editor or the like would be more helpful. Jytdog (talk)
Good point. I've fixed that.
I'm really not too worried about the history of the /doc page. Firstly, WP:Nobody reads the directions; secondly, any of us could easily have reverted them (and did, in some cases). As an example of that, I've just removed the language about "Use this to warn the readers". Just like "any editor" didn't quite line up with the WP:COI guideline (and so needed to be fixed), an encouragement to use this tag to warn readers conflicted with the WP:NDA guideline (and so also needed to be fixed). WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:45, 25 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Good work WhatamIdoing. Although I don't agree with this edit [13] "request help from other editors" instead of "may be biased". It was better before per fundamentals of COI and maintenance template, rather than more like WP:HELPDESK. "may be biased" can be qualified by saying it needs further scrutiny to clear the "may" (e.g. POV, promo, overuse of primaries etc). Nobody reads the template doc(s) is a truism, both this and {{Autobiography}} hasn't had proper scrutiny and they both currently need COI tags themselves!
I suggest we're missing an essay to counter WP:CRY (often there's a matching pair of essays) or jump straight to guidance page. Widefox; talk 21:37, 25 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The purpose of all maintenance templates, including this one, is to request help from other editors. When you encounter a problem, your options are, in practice:
  1. fixing it yourself;
  2. asking other editors to help you fix it (includes tagging the article and leaving a note on the article's talk page, a relevant WikiProject's talk page, a noticeboard, etc.)
  3. doing nothing. WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:48, 25 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, that's taken as read (what applies to all templates need not be repeated in this). The more we talk about what applies to all tags, the less we talk about the specifics for this tag. I don't agree we water down this tag towards being a generic help tag. We should avoid a COI homeopathy version of {{Requires attention}}. Widefox; talk 21:19, 26 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
That's really not a good change; and indeed is totally unncessary. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:53, 27 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
If Paid Paul has a significant COI on an article, and he removes the "might be biased because COI (which risks unconscious bias)" tag from it, the result is likely to be avoidable drama. Therefore, I think it is advisable that people with a COI not remove that tag. Do you actually think that they should remove that tag, based upon their own COI-affected judgment that there is no bias? WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:10, 27 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Andy Mabbett I don't agree with your undo of this here [14]. Do you have more reasoning than "not good" and "unnecessary" when there's several supporters above. There's several arguments above which you haven't addressed, and I ask you to reconsider (including ToU part) and self-revert. Even if you don't agree, let's agree here first and at least cover the ToU which must be covered. Widefox; talk 19:56, 27 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Our BLP policy allows people with a CoI to remove BLP violations from the articles about them. If someone fails to meet the - quite basic - requirement that: if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article, then it should be moved, ASAP. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 21:13, 27 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The convoluted argument is now getting yet more convoluted; it has also gotten no traction here, not with regard to the earlier bit that the tag can be a BLP violation, nor what you are saying now, about it being OK for the article subject to remove the COI tag under the COI exceptions for addressing vandalism or BLP violations. Jytdog (talk) 21:32, 27 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
COI tag is not used exclusively for BLPs, so that argument does not even generally apply to this tag. Additionally, the concept that somehow COI is a BLP violation is a non-sequitur needs reasoning (as the case has not been made for a causal connection). Widefox; talk 00:03, 28 January 2018 (UTC) reworded Widefox; talk 00:18, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
You could use a COI tag in a way that would not be consistent with the idea of BLP, since many readers will probably interpret it as "Joe Film paid someone to make this articles sound more favorable about him".
Andy, would you be willing to compromise on saying something like "Under normal circumstances, people with a COI", maybe with a link to a short list of the usual exceptions? WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:11, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The problem with wording like "anybody can remove this tag, except editors with a COI" is that it's an open invitation to edit war over the tag, because the tagger will revert its removal and claim that the editor who removed it has a COI. Anybody can claim another editor has a COI to bolster their position in a dispute, and as far as I can tell there are no consequences for such bad faith assumptions. The point is that the defect in the tagging – the lack of discussion – is independent of the editor who removes the tag because of that defect; removing it is the correct action, if we want to enforce the principle that all cleanup tags require talk-page discussion. As we already agree, conflicted editors ought not to be editing the article as far as possible, so we don't need another change to wording just to make that point. If you really feel that that it's important to include a reminder in the wording, then you should consider the wording "without a proven conflict of interest", which ought to cover the caution for conflicted editors without creating another bludgeon for drive-by taggers to use. If taggers want the tag to stay, then they must do at least the minimum work of starting a talk-page discussion, not simply edit-war tags back in. --RexxS (talk) 11:41, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"the concept that somehow COI is a BLP violation is a non-sequitur" Indeed. But since no one has claimed that "COI is a BLP violation", it's also a straw man. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:58, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Andy: that's not making progress: you need to be clear just what you think the straw man is. @Widefox: if you read carefully, you'll see that Andy wasn't claiming that COI was a BLP violation. He was making the comparison with BLP violations, which are to be removed regardless of who the removing editor is - even if they are the subject of the violation. By analogy he argues that a defective COI tag could be removed by anybody, even the allegedly conflicted editor. It's ok to disagree with the analogy, but he wants you to explain why it's ok for the subject of a BLP violation to remove the faulty content, but the analogous case with COI should not apply in the same way. Does that make more sense to you now? --RexxS (talk) 19:04, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Er, yes Doug, that's why I quoted the statement which is a straw man. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 23:58, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you User:WhatamIdoing and RexxS for trying to reason it more. Andy I've struck my shorthand "non-sequitur" wording, replacing it with "needs reasoning as the case has not been made for a causal connection". If it's an analogy per RexxS that could be why, if placing a COI tag causes a BLP violation then that's serious and we need to detail that. Even then, we shouldn't let that tail wag the dog as BLPs are only a subset of articles for the tag (if Andy was referring to BLPs). We all agree BLP trumps COI, as does OUTING. The causal link with OUTING is clear. (aside about OUTING: even then, for instance {{autobiography}}, I've pointed out below that the current doc is logically flawed about OUTING as the wording of the tag (rather than its name) includes editors who are not the subject, so using that tag cannot specifically OUT any account as the subject.)
While I agree with the concern voiced by WhatamIdoing that some readers/editors may interpret it, we're assuming and the tag isn't specific about who (what/where/when/why) but WP:COIEDIT does touch on real world consequences for COI editors others may add information that would otherwise remain little known. ... The media has several times drawn attention to companies that engage in COI editing on Wikipedia (see Conflict-of-interest editing on Wikipedia), which has led to embarrassment for the organization concerned. so let's not blame the messenger, but if we can separate bad-faith usage (elsewhere) that would help. Would the doc linking to that consensus WP:COIEDIT be enough?
"We all agree BLP trumps COI" Not so - elsewhere on this page, it is asserted (quite wrongly, of course) that "The BLP policy isn't relevant to article cleanup". Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:30, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
User talk:Jytdog do you agree that BLP trumps COI?
Andy it's the circumstance(s) when BLP trumps COI that would be useful to know. Widefox; talk 15:25, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Jytdog: (failed ping above) Widefox; talk 23:08, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Well, Jytdog has had plenty of chance to respond to this, and hasn't, so I think it reasonable to assume he stands by his "BLP policy isn't relevant to article cleanup" claim. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 21:46, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence. That's for both no reply from Jytdog, but more importantly the relevance of it - I've yet to see any firm argument made for a circumstance when BLP must trump COI. Widefox; talk 04:25, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
RexxS is right that we want to avoid creating an upper hand in disputes. I think that's more than a potential for misuse argument, as undisclosed COI editors may contest there too. The tag needs to balance the tradeoff with much of our guidelines and spirit, specifically ad hominem/OWN and BITE, and arguably the current right privilege of COI editors to edit. They all need guarding, but why have we so much doc on when not to use, and so little on when to use. There's a balance/weight issue, with too much emphasis on worst case/bad faith/editor dispute usage, rather than correct usage with ducks.
TLDR How about a compromise by just directing editors with a COI to follow WP:COIEDIT, does this wording work for everyone? If you do not start this discussion, then any editor without a conflict of interest is justified in removing the tag without warning, and those with a COI should follow WP:COIEDIT and are strongly discouraged from editing affected articles directly. I would personally consider any tagger that adds {{connected}} to the talk has done the logical minimum for the tag, but will leave that for now.Widefox; talk 00:18, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
No thank you. Since the clause in question only applies when the required talk page discussion has not been started, no limit to who may remove such an inappropriately placed tag is necessary. The way to prevent involved editors from removing the tag is for the person placing it to open a talk page discussion. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:30, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Andy I agree, for inappropriate tagging. These are two separate concerns, so rather that attempting to resolve them now, would it be acceptable for all if we just list them separately? i.e. 1. drive-by tagging 2. WP:COIEDIT/WP:ToU for 1. wording taken from {{POV}} Drive-by tagging is strongly discouraged. The editor who adds the tag should discuss concerns on the talk page, where possible pointing to specific issues that are actionable within the content policies. In the absence of such a discussion, or where it remains unclear what issue has been caused by an editor with a COI, the tag may be removed by any editor.
Editors with a COI should follow WP:COIEDIT.
Widefox; talk 15:13, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"I agree, for inappropriate tagging." Excellent. Tagging (with this template) is inappropriate if it fails to meet the requirement that: if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. The current wording handles this adequately. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 18:34, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Andy I was aiming to reach a compromise to move forward, so are you happy with this new wording or not? Widefox; talk 23:08, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Not, as should be abundantly clear from my previous comments. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:46, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
If would help if you reason your argument about the current proposal, or propose an alternative per consensus building. Widefox; talk 15:10, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I have already said "Since the clause in question only applies when the required talk page discussion has not been started, no limit to who may remove such an inappropriately placed tag is necessary." Why are you now asking me to draft such a limit? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 22:16, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Andy The clause in question isn't changed Andy, so I'm not. WP:COIEDIT applies here whether we link it or not. As COIEDIT doesn't stop editors with a COI from removing templates with that clause, there is absolutely no change to this clause, and no new limit. This is possibly more clear in the version at the bottom of this page, which attempts to include Jytdog's concerns. Widefox; talk 14:04, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Andy, you keep saying that this only applies if a single objective circumstance is true, but that's just not true. It may be that this part of this particular sentence only mentions the one circumstance, but the ===When to remove=== section lists three separate circumstances that warrant removal. IMO we need to look at the big picture. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:31, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The current wording is "if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning.". The disputed edit would change that to "if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor without a conflict of interest is justified in removing the tag without warning.". Neither has three separate circumstances. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:46, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The current wording has been corrupted by COI editors so less weight should be put on it (see above). The proposed wording has an additional one Andy. Agree with the sentiment of WhatamIdoing. Doc, WP:COIEDIT and WP:ToU is the order of trumping - they apply to all edits. Both say that COI editors may edit articles. The proposed wording just states what already applies here, with wording from POV, and COIEDIT. It's a start. I agree with WhatamIdoing that it won't be the end. Widefox; talk 15:10, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"convoluted"? "no traction"? I'm still not clear what part of the entirely unambiguous if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article you're not understanding. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:58, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
User:RexxS, I'd be happy with your qualification about a "proven" COI.
Andy, I think that whether or not a discussion has been started is objective. However, the sentence in question currently gives three situations that warrant removal:
  1. the problem is resolved,
  2. the problem is not explained on the article's talk page, and/or
  3. no current attempts to resolve the problem can be found.
I agree with you that #2 is reasonably objective. But I think that a COI-affected editor should avoid the subjective #1 entirely (perhaps with an exception for cases in which all of that COI-affected editor's edits have been reverted), and should act with caution and patience around #3.
Another approach would be to say that "any editor" can do this, but to follow it with links to COIEDIT and/or a warning that COI-affected editors should expect drama if their opponents notice them removing it (not in those words, of course). WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:00, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
WhatamIdoing I fundamentally disagree with the need to invoke any new wording like "proven" when the consensus is already at WP:COIEDIT and we can use that - did you see my compromise above (TLDR)? It already has * you should not act as a reviewer of affected article(s) at AfC, new pages patrol or elsewhere; Widefox; talk 09:22, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
And there's the nub of the argument. Without any safeguard for innocent editors, a tagger won't worry about nuances on linked pages; they will just insist on their right to revert the tag's removal because they claim the editor has a COI. Not acceptable. --RexxS (talk) 13:43, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Widefox, the "just follow COIEDIT" approach is too simplistic. There are two possible situations here: (1) I correctly identify Paul Paid as having a COI, and (2) I incorrectly guess that Frank Fan has a COI, when he doesn't. In situation #1, Paul Paid should certainly follow COIEDIT. But in situation #2, Frank Fan should not – and then what am I supposed to do, when Frank Fan removes the inappropriate tag? Run to ANI and create a lot of drama because Fan didn't follow a guideline that didn't apply to him? (Remember that I'm invincibly convinced that Fan has a COI, because I believe that nobody without a COI would write anything positive about anything or anyone.)
If we set the rule as involving something like a "proven" COI, then I'm less likely to take my mere guesses about either of these editors to ANI. Instead, I'm likely to try other mechanisms available to me (such as: a {{POV}} tag, cleaning up the article myself, starting an RFC on the article content, maybe a trip to COIN, maybe other options in the dispute resolutions system). If my personal guess is law, though (at least until enough people show up to outvote me), then I could end up edit warring over the tag with a falsely accused editor. And if we say, "Yeah, but the rule is 'just follow COIEDIT'", then that's a perfectly fine rule, but the entire source of the problem is that Fan doesn't have a COI at all, but I am wrongly insisting that he does. And with new editors, in particular, we unfortunately can't assume that they can make any sense at all out of the talk page system, so a failure to discuss the accusation is not actually proof that the person has a COI.
IMO we want to be saying two somewhat different things in the /doc page: to the tagging editor, remember that you might be wrong; and to the accused editor, if the other guy's correct, then you need to learn and follow some specific rules (including, but not limited to, those about disclosing your status as a paid editor, if applicable), and if he's not, you might want to figure out if the article fully complies with WP:NPOV. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:38, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
WhatamIdoing I agree it's too simplistic. It's an attempt to band-aid this for now by restating the current consensus, and defer resolving the competing issues with proper essay/guideline later once the heat that triggered this has dissipated. Widefox; talk 01:02, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
RexxS "proven" is a strong word and a high bar in an anonymous environment. Even a self-disclosed COI is not "proven", which would set a bar at uncontentious. Widefox; talk 13:39, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Widefox: yes "proven" is a strong word, but necessary if we are to avoid misuse that would cause problems for innocent editors. Of course a self-disclosed COI is proven – a self-disclosure is surely the commonest piece of evidence. I can't believe you are suggesting that somebody who discloses a COI would then remove a tag, claiming their COI was "not proven". That simply would not happen. --RexxS (talk) 17:29, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Well Doug...such ludicrous wikilawyering is common at COIN yes! For example in the last month, a now blocked editor claimed they're not editing with a COI. As in, present tense, as in literally as they write that sentence. For years that one also claimed disclosure wasn't needed on non article space, so they drafted without disclosure and got other editors to move them. There wasn't even a loophole to exploit there, and they did it for years despite it being pointed out. If we know there's a gap between "proven" and "disclosed" and "disclosed" is just as good, best to use that. Widefox; talk 20:42, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
WhatamIdoing There's more than just two possible situations. There's a whole cast of characters in the middle... Hello Socking Sam, (sock)Farmer Fred, SPA Sue, undisclosed-PAID Paige, undisclosed-COI Colin, (the COI editor acknowledges they have a connection but claims they only edit neutrally) In-denial Imogen, (refusing to disclose by wikilawyering e.g. WP:PAIDTALK...) Didn't-inhale Dylan, Talker Tim, (claims that it's industry standard to manage all their clients pages [15]) Standardpractice Stan, Undisclosed Ursula, Upwork Uri, PR Pat, MEATy Matt, DUCKy Derek, with the spotlight on Drive-by Dan. Widefox; talk 13:39, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Break 2

Perhaps we could make an exception for BLP. Something like: "This tag may be removed by editors who do not have a conflict of interest at the article in question after the problem is resolved ... On biographies of living persons, any editor (whether conflicted or not) may remove the tag, unless there is an active discussion about the COI issues on the talk page or consensus that the tag should remain."

RexxS, is there an additional technical solution? For example, could these tags be dated on BLPs so that a bot would remove them after (say) three months? Then anyone wanting to retain it would have to restore it, reset the clock and re-start the discussion? SarahSV (talk) 14:05, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Slimvirgin, we get a lot of editing on BLP articles that demonstrates apparent COI. Tagging the article with a COI tag if the person doesn't respond to an inquiry about their connection with the subject, is, for me at least, a gentle next step in order to get the person's attention. Making it "OK" for them to remove the tag just provides a pathway for people to escalate the problematic behavior. I do not agree with the stretching of BLP in various ways, that is being made here. Jytdog (talk) 14:42, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
If you want to avoid that "pathway", then all you have to do is abide by the requirement in the template's documentation: if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. Under what circumstances do you envisage that that would not be possible? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 15:13, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
This bit of discussion is about whether "anyone" should be able to remove the tag - the content you removed here, here, and here. Jytdog (talk) 15:53, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I think you will find it is also about your claim of "a pathway for people to escalate the problematic behavior". I wonder whether you might now answer my question: "Under what circumstances do you envisage that that would not be possible for a person placing the tag to abide by the requirement in the template's documentation: if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article"? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 18:28, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
RexxS does the proposed wording (above) at "Andy I agree, for inappropriate tagging" work for you? I don't care if we link to WP:COIEDIT or include parts/all, whatever is more agreeable - it's swings and roundabouts. In practice, editors with a COI often remove maintenance tags - normal consensus applies which is the ultimate, overriding gold-plated protection. Widefox; talk 23:08, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Andy, you keep missing the bigger picture. Removing the tag is not just about a failure to start a discussion. If that were true, then the tag would be required to remain forever, so long as a discussion was started at some point. We need to address all the circumstances in which the tag can and should be removed: when the problem has been resolved, when the concern was misplaced, when nobody's interested in solving the problem – and, yes, when nobody can figure out what the problem is, because the editor didn't explain it on the talk page, too, but not just that one circumstance.
SarahSV, your bot idea is technically feasible. It could, in fact, be done with any POV-related tag, on the grounds that few discussions remain active past 30 days (much less 90), and the requirement is an active effort to discuss or otherwise solve the problem (not just having left a single comment at some point in the past). However, I tend to doubt that we'd get consensus to run a mindless bot for this. Editors usually want good judgment involved in these decisions. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:40, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Agree with WhatamIdoing. The letter (and spirit) of the doc here is still trumped by the bigger picture and tempered by the letter and spirit of WP:COI that already applies here, despite being missing from the doc. When I created what I considered an important article VisualEditor, I compromised on some minor wording suggested by WhatamIdoing who had a COI. I only mention it now as I'm sure I could have handled it better - we should be able to overcome these minor internal things without losing sight of the bigger picture. We all have valid points, but now's the time to see action from all sides to attempt a compromise and move on, please. Widefox; talk 00:39, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
No, I am not "missing the bigger picture". please do not attempt to dismiss my disagreeing with you as a failure to understand. The disputed edit is entirely about what happens when there is a failure to start a discussion. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:50, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Sarah: Yes a bot could remove old tags if there were agreement on an expiry date. Have you looked at Category:Wikipedia articles with possible conflicts of interest, though? There are tags going back to 2007 and the backlog has grown from 8,314 in 2014 to 12,239 today. The tag just doesn't attract enough editors to do the cleanup, and that's another pressing reason not to liberalise its use even further. I mean what is the point of trying to make it easier to keep tags on articles when they don't get cleaned up anyway most of the time? If we insisted on "no discussion = no tag", by my estimation we could remove 80% of that backlog in one go. --RexxS (talk) 17:42, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@RexxS, WhatamIdoing, and Pigsonthewing: I think Andy has a point about long-term tags on BLPs being an arguable BLP violation. For example, Susan Muaddi Darraj, the Arab-American writer, has been tagged since October 2011. And yes, there are backlogs because it really isn't fair to expect unpaid volunteers to do this work. That's one of the big problems with COI/paid editing: if we object, we're expected to clean up, thereby (often) producing a better page for COI/paid editors for free. (There are possible solutions to this, but they've always been poo-pooed.) In my view, having a robot remove tags from the BLPs after a certain period would at least reduce the problem. SarahSV (talk) 18:17, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, Sarah, I'm understanding better what's concerning you. The last thing I want is for paid editors to produce any old load of poorly-written, barely-notable hagiography, in the firm expectation that an unpaid volunteer will come along and fix it all for them. That's not on. I'm wondering if the answer when COI editing has created identifiable concerns is to note the concern on talk and then move it into draft space? Perhaps we need yet another template saying "This article contains COI problems, noted on the talk page, and should not be restored to article space until they are fixed." Of course, that would put an increased burden on AfC, and the article could languish there for months – but maybe it's better than having it languish in mainspace when real issues have been identified. I guess anything like that ought to be tested at Village Pump. What do you think? --RexxS (talk) 18:43, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
RexxS, I think that's a good idea. An argument against it is that it simply moves the problem, and it will leave good-faith BLP subjects asking what we expect of them. But it's almost always faster to show than tell, so again it puts the onus on volunteers to fix it or spend time explaining. What we really need are one of two things: (a) a way for volunteers to earn money fixing these articles (I have made suggestions about this in the past, all rejected immediately) or (b) for the WMF to start making clear to the public that we're not Facebook and not everyone can have a page. Until then we're stuck with this problem. I do think your idea is worth a try. SarahSV (talk) 19:27, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Sarah I wholeheartedly agree something should be done long-term, involving changing the incentives. To try to understand the BLP concern, would it be mitigated if a bot converted stale COI tags on BLPs that have no discussion to {{Requires attention}} or a similar tag? Agree with RexxS and James about taking articles out of article space, which is a way of internalizing the externality in WP:BOGOF. Widefox; talk 21:00, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Related tags

The issue goes wider than just this single template; I've just found {{Undisclosed paid}}:

which appears on 673 articles, many of which (like Ruhama Avraham (where it has been in place for over four months); Bert Hölldobler; Simon Rex (five months); Terry Nelson (political consultant); Vince Ratti) are BLPs; and on none of those I've randomly checked (including all the given example) has a talk page discussion offering any evidence to support its use been opened. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 18:55, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Oh so an editor who regularly takes money to edit WP and edit wars on behalf of commercial paid editors, is now campaigning to thwart our efforts to manage COI. This is going to get interesting indeed. Jytdog (talk) 19:04, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I have already asked you, more than once in recent days, to cease your ad hominem attacks. But if your "efforts to manage COI" mean dropping negative commentary on articles about living people, and leaving it there for several months, with no attempt to explain or justify - much less substantiate - that negative commentary, then yes, I do intend to "thwart" such abuse, as we have a foundation-mandated policy prohibiting it. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 19:15, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I am describing your behavior. You are the one campaigning to help corruption proliferate and go unreviewed. Tags get removed when content gets checked and fixed. If independent editors have no urgent interest in doing that, then the tags linger. There are tags that have been on articles for years and years. Jytdog (talk) 20:31, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
So you not only respond with another ad hominem attack, but also one that is blatantly dishonest. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 20:35, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Yes we have a significant problem with undisclosed paid editors. We also have 1,000s of blocked accounts and 10,000s of deleted articles as a results of efforts by PR firms to fill Wikipedia full of advertising for their client. Last time I checked we do not allow advertisements and we are working to create an indepedent knowledge source. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 02:01, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

I'm saddened that, as not just an admin, but also a WMF board member, you have not commented on the egregious ad hominem attacks in this section. You also fail to address the issue I raised, namely that of unsubstantiated allegations on BLP articles. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 07:10, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Note that nothing in that template's documentation actually requires starting a discussion; what is requested is placing template {{Connected contributor (paid)}} on the talk page, with a link verifying the insinuated connection. In my spot sample of ten-ish instances, that had been done about half the time (I overlooked it in my one use of the template so far, fixing which made me notice this discussion). --Elmidae (talk · contribs) 12:29, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

So, only half of those you found do not even comply with the template's meagre requirements; and the other half do, but still leave the allegation unsubstantiated on the BLP's talk page with just a vague link to something that may or may not explain it. Does that satisfy the requirements of our BLP policy? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:15, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The BLP policy isn't relevant to article cleanup. Also discussion about use of a tag is usually brought up at the tag's actual talk page, which is here: Template talk:Undisclosed paid.
Yes there should be a tag or discussion at the Talk page. That is what people should do. There is always more cleanup to do, including cleaning up after people starting to cleanup. Why are you not helping fix that by adding those tags or discussions, since you do seem to care about this a lot? (Please don't run around just stripping the tags; people generally put them on for good reason, and with a little good faith effort it is not at all hard to figure out) I will put some time into that this week.
And all of that (tagging and justifying tags) is preliminary to doing the real work of carefully reviewing the content. So much work to do, always. Jytdog (talk) 15:58, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Generally (and not specific to any editor/edits) agree with James and Elmidae, when placing a COI tag, putting a Connected template on the talk is surely the logical minimum a volunteer should do. Of course, this is the disclosure that the paid editor or editor with a COI has failed to do, which is the the burden we should be incentivising here, very different to any other tag as it's about the editor not the edit. I agree with the sentiment that a volunteer doing more would be helpful, possibly more workable, so that should be strongly encouraged. Widefox; talk 16:57, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"The BLP policy isn't relevant to article cleanup." The BLP policy is, strangely enough, relevant to BLPs. If article cleanup impacts BLPs, then it unequivocally falls within the purview of the BLP policy. Anyone who thinks the BLP policy "isn't relevant" to what they do on Wikipedia has no business touching BLPs. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 18:05, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Another option

Another option would be to hide the entire article until the issues have been dealt with like we do for copyright infringement. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 18:46, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Yes James, that's the sort of commonsense conclusion I came to out of despair of the scale of the problem. It puts the burden back on COIs to disclose and bear the edit costs of fixing their own stuff, per WP:BOGOF to prevent tragedy of the commons. I'm very unhappy about asking volunteers to run the gauntlet of COI currently, and WP:DEADLINE detailing content issues. Wrong way, go back! Either editors have a solution to the problem, or they're happy with how COI has been subverted above, and pervasive in scale. Widefox; talk 19:16, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Another option would be to simple move all these articles back to draft space when detected. But that would only be useful for those exclusively edited by undisclosed paid editors. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 19:33, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yup. Has anyone noticed how the no man's land of editors addressing COI has become not just subverted above, but a minefield without a map? e.g. {{Autobiography}} actually says Do not use this tag when doing so would reveal the identity of a pseudonymous Wikipedia user. Violating the privacy of users by revealing their real names or other personal information can result in an indefinite block.. Do we use "COI" tag instead, it doesn't say. Widefox; talk 19:42, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes I would use the "COI" tag instead. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 19:46, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
 Done Map around that mine added [16]. Widefox; talk 20:05, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Still, the actual text of the template does not refer exclusively to the subject being the editor with a COI This article is an autobiography or has been extensively edited by the subject or by someone connected to the subject (emphasis own). So that is actually as specific as a COI tag! So how could using it ever reveal the subject's account any more than using the COI tag?! It's illogical. The wording in the doc is a hidden mine. OUTING yes, but autobiography vs COI tag no - the presumption is against the editor just for using the tag. I think I see a pattern. Hmm, let's check the edit history... User:KDS4444 (indef banned) edited it in [17] , so again...COI has been corrupted. Shocking - the pattern not the instance. We are using COI guidance subverted by editors with a COI! Widefox; talk 22:13, 22 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Hum good point. Aggressive clean up may be required. Some poople with a COI are trying to change the rules to their personal financial benefit :-( Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 03:07, 24 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, aggressive cleanup is not only required – little weight should be put on an old, corrupted consensus – there's no return to status quo ante.
This template is as simple as we want it to be - use this template to mark articles that need further scrutiny. The minimum of directing other editors to which articles, and which edits via editors on the talk. It really is that simple. Widefox; talk 01:05, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Absolutely not. If you want a template to mark articles that need further scrutiny, then create one. This is not that template: it's a cleanup template and used to mark articles that are in need of cleanup. I'm disappointed that experienced editors such as yourselves should confuse "scrutiny" with "cleanup". They are simply not the same thing. --RexxS (talk) 17:50, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes RexxS "It really is that simple" is just for the editor aspect - necessary but, as you say, not sufficient. My comment should be understood together with my other comments (e.g. 2. is how it's used currently risk), including thinking aloud (for discussing expanding the doc, not discussing changing usage). I think it was an attempt to highlight the editor aspect of the scope. Do you agree it's a tip-of-the-iceberg cleanup that requires further scrutiny? Edits and editors are within scope of this tag, and it should not be used without both aspects, agree? The "cleanup" also can't be separated from the additional "scrutiny" required? Else the other content issue tags would be sufficient and this redundant. If it were exclusively about content or editor it wouldn't be worded as it is, or used as it is. In practice, just highlighting which editors have COIs saves time by focussing scrutiny, (that's my experience, which is why my personal take is that's the theoretical minimum we should demand when placing the tag, but the practical minimum we should ask for is a serious content issue to safeguard drive-by). Any cleanup involves additional scrutiny review where additional content issues are likely to be uncovered and should not be done by a conflicted editor. We can't fully embrace/ignore/isolate 1. editor -> 2. "may" in COI -> 3. edits. A content cleanup tip-of-the-iceberg tag. We need better doc for this first, before anything new. Quite often, after scrutiny at COIN etc, the articles are deleted as failing notability, promotion, and editors blocked sock, meat, block evasion. Both is right. Widefox; talk 18:57, 6 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Of course the cleanup and scrutiny can be separated. That's obvious to anyone who's done this work. Checking whether an article that's been edited by a recognised paid editor has issues is one job. It may turn up problems or it might not. That's the scrutiny. Do you see that much? If there are no problems, we don't need any tags, agreed? If there are problems, then the person who has invested time in identifying the problems can either fix them (if they have time) or leave a message on the talk page itemising the problems for others to fix. Fixing the identified problems is the cleanup; I hope you can see that. The cleanup may require multiple editors and possibly considerable time, so we use a cleanup tag, not as a warning to readers, nor as a notice that the article has been scrutinised, but as an invitation to other editors to come and help with the cleanup. That's it, the whole story, nothing missing. Scrutiny is one thing; cleanup another. There is a category of cleanup templates that includes this one, and they all share the same requirement: no discussion = no tag. This cleanup tag has a defined purpose and we have it for a reason; you should not be trying to change it into something else. --RexxS (talk) 19:39, 6 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
YMMV maybe we have different experiences - I've done this work - a quick search gives me >30 24 COIN archive hits. I just don't agree with you that I could have always followed such a strict scrutiny->cleanup order on all cases as there may be steps where I don't have all the info upfront. Often iterative rather than two step waterfall model. I've worked on many that haven't disclosed upfront Doug, some going to COIN, then SPI, ANI etc. for sock / meat discovery, sockfarms, dragging disclosures, wikilaywering. Yes I've floated many perspectives here, with the purpose of fixing and improving documentation after noticing corruption by COIs which is how I arrived here (not related to any editor or article). I don't consider that my proposed wording compromise a) or b) below changes the purpose at all, we can agree to differ. Widefox; talk 13:00, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I get 24 hits in the COIN archives when I search for your name, and more when I search for mine. Being someone who "does this work" doesn't give either of us license to impose our views on the entire community. Any editor could be affected by the rules we set for using this template, so every editor's view is worth considering. We need rules that work for everyone, not rules that make life simple for COIN regulars and hard for other editors (e.g., falsely accused editors and editors who want to clean up alleged COI messes but can't figure out what the problem is).
That said, I think that it's better to talk about the content of the page than about the contributor who put it there. Yes, some of the people who edited the docs for this template were later discovered to have some problems. That is also true for the COI guideline itself, and pretty much every significant policy. But "he's a bad person" is not the same thing as "that change didn't (more or less) represent consensus at that time". I happened to have seen most of those changes when they were made, and they didn't strike me as unusual. (I did revert most of the changes by the guy who thought that the point of the template was to warn readers, but I reverted them because it seemed inconsistent with our other guidelines and previous discussions, not because I thought he was a bad person. The fact that he was indeffed for edit warring and disruption three months later is irrelevant.) WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:34, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
WhatamIdoing My YMMV point was solely in reply to RexxS's That's obvious to anyone who's done this work, which I see as an argument from authority, so not helpful. I recall reading 34 but you rightly correct me (struck), thanks. Full disclosure: Widefox: 24 + 1 non-archived, WhatamIdoing: 26, RexxS: 2 . I agree with you, and RexxS's input is vital, as CLUE rather than LOCALCONSENSUS "done this work" matters. The wider input here is why I changed my position on clause 2./3. from a new restriction on COIs to keeping as is. I'm not sure if RexxS has recognised that my position has changed. It's in black and white at "b)" and somewhat "a)" (his/someone else's suggestion which is more restrictive than my position changed to, ironically). Widefox; talk 15:14, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

COI disclosure required here

I've added to the top that disclosure is required here for editors with a COI (it specifically states PAID), and that this is the wrong venue for specific articles/editors, which is COIN. It's just verbatim from Wikipedia talk:Conflict of interest and already applied here. Widefox; talk 21:40, 26 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

RfC - on template removal guidance

Should the instructions for Template:COI include the following underlined language?

Like the other neutrality-related tags, if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor without a conflict of interest is justified in removing the tag without warning. Be careful not to violate the policy against WP:OUTING users who have not publicly self-disclosed their identities on the English Wikipedia.

-- Jytdog (talk) 00:29, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

!votes

  • of course Jytdog (talk) 00:29, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • WP:NOTVOTE. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:00, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support -- seems like a no-brainer. The guidance already suggests that COI editors should not edit the article directly. Removing the tag would be editing the article directly. COI editors could propose on the Talk page that the tag should be removed, as per the current process. Am I missing something? --K.e.coffman (talk) 21:47, 3 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
    • @K.e.coffman: Yes, you're missing the bit where the tagger unilaterally decides that anybody who removes a defective tag has a COI and edit-wars to put it back citing the proposed guidance as justification. If the purpose of the change to the guidance were only to prevent editors who have a genuine COI from removing the tag, then it would be easy to get consensus. But its real purpose is to prevent tags being removed even when the tagger has failed to initiate any talk page discussion, a condition that is required for any cleanup tag. --RexxS (talk) 02:12, 4 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
      • RexxS you are pushing the edge case into the center. The center case is the conflicted editor. Which is why this is a no-brainer.Jytdog (talk) 03:03, 4 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
        • Jytdog. That is not the edge case. It is the whole purpose of this proposed change. There are already safeguards in the COI policy to prevent an editor with a proven conflict of interest from removing these tags. But you're asking to change the documentation to justify restoring tags when there is nothing more than an accusation of COI by the tagger. That is what triggered this entire debate, and that is why your proposed wording is completely unacceptable. --RexxS (talk) 16:52, 4 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
          • Your statement about why the change was proposed is incorrect, and completely so. Jytdog (talk) 17:15, 4 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
            • Your assertion is false. Do you want me to post the diffs of what triggered this proposal? --RexxS (talk) 01:13, 6 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
              • The centre case (but not the edge case) is changed by a) and b) on the table but RexxS we still need movement from both sides for consensus on those or a similar compromise. Widefox; talk 04:00, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
                • This is a !vote on a RfC which a proposing a change to the stable wording - wording that currently is compliant with the general wording used for all cleanup tags. The onus is on those wanting to change the wording to find something that might gain consensus before pushing ahead with voting on wording that suits their purposes alone. That is no way to look for consensus. The wording proposed is unacceptable because of the disproportionate power it gives to a drive-by tagger who makes no attempt to discuss the reasons for adding the tag. You'll never get consensus for that. And before you start calling this an "edge case", I suggest you survey the existing usage of this tag: 12,000+ articles have the tag, and some of those for more than 10 years. A sample of articles with the tag showed me that there was a lack of discussion in more than half the cases. This is no edge case - it's right slap-bang centre in the (mis-)use of the tag. There's no way that the community is going to accept measures that make it harder for a reasonable editor to remove an incorrectly placed tag. --RexxS (talk) 13:55, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
                  • I think I've made my !vote clear, and proposed wording clear but no, there's no consensus behind it yet, why? The old documentation has been inappropriately corrupted by proven undisclosed COIs, so I wouldn't myself agree with the sentiment of "stable wording" - it's been corrupted! Also, COIEDIT and PAID are not at all reflected there, despite being binding practically and legally respectively. I was just using the labels above "edge" or "centre" - swap them for all I care - my label of choice would be clause "1." and "2." in my proposed text borrowed from POV, as they can be separated. As b) is straight from {{POV}} - article cleanup, there must be some weight to fix the corruption by being based on the POV doc which has clauses 1. 2. 3. . Sounds reasonable as they're so similar. I'd like to see progress fixing the corrupted status quo ante. I don't agree this template or editors are to blame for the amount of tagging, which I presume is good faith. There's a systemic bias. It has to be said, half our readers are on mobile and don't even see the tags. Widefox; talk 17:29, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
                    • There's nothing inappropriate or corrupt about the wording as it currently stands. The guidance "if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article" reflects the same language used for guidance at the generic cleanup template page Wikipedia:Template messages/Cleanup: Tags must be accompanied by a comment on the article's talk page explaining the problem and beginning a discussion on how to fix it. As far as I am aware, that was added by WhatamIdoing, and I really don't think you should be using pejorative terms like that in these circumstances. Considering it's very similar wording to other similar templates such as {{POV}}, "When to remove ... (2) It is not clear what the neutrality issue is, and no satisfactory explanation has been given. (3) In the absence of any discussion, or if the discussion has become dormant., I would consider that pretty much stable, unless you're proposing we change the wording on multiple cleanup templates. It's worth noting that none of documentation in the other cleanup templates contain language even vaguely similar to what has been proposed here. --RexxS (talk) 20:26, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support Yup seems perfectly reasonable. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 03:29, 5 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment:(Remove vote pending reword. Wording of RfC is basic misunderstanding of delineation between clean up and COI.)(Littleolive oil (talk) 22:28, 8 February 2018 (UTC))[reply]
I made this point in another place in another discussion (maybe as an edit summary) but want to reiterate. This tag allows any editor an implied and perhaps explicit accusation of COI with out evidence, and allows for control of articles by editors making the accusations because they then can revert at will with a COI accusation as an excuse. I am reluctant to even vote here since a vote suggests there is some truth to the debate. The underlined content hides (hopefully not deliberate) a permission for content and editor control which is not stated in the RfC so editors may not realize what they are actually voting for.(Littleolive oil (talk) 16:16, 5 February 2018 (UTC))[reply]
There is no "reword" coming, Littleolive oil. The RfC is what it is. Jytdog (talk) 22:31, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment The editor upper-hand concern has been voiced by several editors as a practical concern when an accusation of COI is disputed (both false positive, and true positive). With the current wording, this RfC doesn't address that concern. There's two proposals: a) changing "COI" to "disclosed COI" or "proven COI" or b) separating clause 1. and 2. completely to allow anyone to remove if there's no discussion but not for accused COIs if there is discussion - the wording is at "Does this work for you?" [18] Widefox; talk 20:42, 6 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support (conditional on adding upper-hand prevention - which can be added afterwards to prevent no consensus now) agree with Littleolive oil and others above. Either a) or b) or similar wording should be added, and only then I can support this. Saying that, it is still a support and editors with a COI must not act as a reviewer already, so this issue is already there but as a one-off issue rather than ongoing potential problem. Widefox; talk 20:42, 6 February 2018 (UTC) modified to clarify that this RfC is OK for best practice, and protection against bad practice can be added later. The tail shouldn't wag the dog, and it can be added after. Widefox; talk 22:31, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
    • This is not about accusations of COI. We do not have the purview to willy nilly accuse people. This about tagging an article for a lack of neutrality, "if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning." I think we are complicating an issue. If a COI is suspected then we have a place to deal with that. If an article lacks neutrality we tag and deal with the issues and we can do so with out accusations. COI is a subset of neutrality it may or may not exist, and that is something we have to do the leg work to prove. But we cannot dash around Wikipedia in an accusatory mode. There's a name for that but I won't use it here.(Littleolive oil (talk) 21:56, 6 February 2018 (UTC))[reply]
The tag says cleanup ... content policies, particularly neutral point of view which doesn't logically follow as a "subset of neutrality", no. I am keen to not incentivise unfounded accusations/disputes though. But, unlike POV, WP:COI does already differentiate between COI editors and not. COI can't review, PAID must disclose or not edit period, + many "should"s. Does a) or b) work? a) is uncontested so no disputes. Not sure I completely follow. (Rather than a subset of neutrality, I think of it more a conflict between WP:HERE and WP:NOTHERE, a systemic bias). If this tag is placed, it should have a specified content issue on the talk. COIs are already advised to edit request. Widefox; talk 03:45, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • I suggested COI could be a subset of neutrality. I apologize for not being clearer. There is an attempt to add COI to a tag that is meant to be a notice of non-neutrality. COI in that tagged article may or may not be present but we cannot simply tag an article with COI on a whim. COI must be provable. Further, a lack of neutrality in an article is a content issue and that content issue can be the result of any of many mistakes. COI is an editor behaviour label and refers to editors and their behaviour and not to content (although the content may be a result of a COI). Do you see that the tag we have is meant to ask for a clean up of non-neutral content and in that process we could discover the problems we find are the result of a COI but we cannot simply add what amounts to accusations against editors in a clean up tag. We have a place to determine unacknowledged COI - a clean up tag for content is not that place. It is critical that we keep content guides and behavioral guides separate, if we do not we risk a Wild West scenario-shoot first and ask questions later. A collaborative community depends on the separation of the work and the workers in that the workers must be treated fairly and with respect or collaboration on content fails and control by a few remains. To sumammrize: The label we have is a label to deal with content. COI accusations refer to people. We cannot simply add to clean up tags what amounts to potentially unfounded accusations of editors. We have other places for that.(Littleolive oil (talk) 16:09, 7 February 2018 (UTC))[reply]
I repeat, is a) or b) OK with you? Widefox; talk 17:03, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see a clear a or b; its not clear to me within this discussion what that is. But let me reiterate which should answer the question. I am OK, only, at this point with leaving the tag as is with no changes. Its is a clean up tag, I know there are articles where COI is a problem this tag is not the way to fix it.(Littleolive oil (talk) 19:59, 7 February 2018 (UTC))[reply]
  • Support Editors with COI are, by definition, incapable of making the judgement of whether the article they have a COI in meets the standard for its removal. A COI editor who has so poorly managed their COI as to justify a COI tag should not be editing the article page at all. An article that is controversial enough, or a subject that is unscrupulous enough, to draw the attention of multiple COI editors also is not a place where COI editors should be doing anything on the article page, especially removing the a tag that draws readers' and editors' attention to the existing COI issue. This seems a no brainer and serves to highlight the plain fact that we have not yet properly dealt with COI on Wikipedia. Jbh Talk 16:26, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Hardly. A COI editor who is editing using 'best practices' will not be editing the article at all. A COI editor who is editing with even a minimum of good faith will completely back off editing the article when good faith concerns about their COI is brought up. There is never a time that a good faith COI editor is justified in removing a COI tag on their own. Let me repeat that - There is never a time that a good faith COI editor is justified in removing a COI tag on their own If they think a tag has been placed improperly take the matter to the talk page or to COIN. If they believe the placement was malicious then take the matter to ANI. Since we are talking about GLAMs here, that is even more true for them - they should know better, that is why we have traditionally given them a carve-out in PAID etc. Jbh Talk 17:45, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I !vote best practice too - it is where the spirit of COI is, and where this debate should be, but wasn't yet - where COI editors should be making edit suggestions per WP:COIEDIT / WP:COI. Something completely missing from the doc until it is fixed and those getting in the way of fixing it have to explain themselves. RexxS says it best about it needing protection from bad practice, but both can be done per a) or b) if needed now or later. Widefox; talk 22:16, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Jbh, what if the conflicted editor is self-reverting every contribution of his/her own? If there are zero contributions by an editor with a COI on the page, mightn't it be reasonable for that editor to take the now-irrelevant tag out at the same time? I agree that a good-faith editor wouldn't normally want to remove such a tag (or even edit the page at all, thus reducing the risk of the tag being accurately applied), but I think that never might be a bit too strong.
What if the major contributor actually doesn't have a COI of any kind? If I falsely accuse you of having a COI with the Battle of France, do you still think you shouldn't be able to remove the tag (and maybe ping a few friends to see about having my head examined while you're at it)? (It's good to have you back.) WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:57, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
you are bringing up very strange edge cases, which can be handled with discussion. Jytdog (talk) 00:06, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • @WhatamIdoing: In the first case you mentioned - they leave it. The only way I can imagine the it being OK to remove the tag in the case you propose is if the COI editor made only a single series of contiguous edits followed by the COI Notice so they could revert back to a previous version without impacting other editors work. Any other way and the removal, how it was removed and the state they leave the article in could easily be as problematic, or more so, than the initial COI edits. It is not just the content a COI editor adds which can be problematic, it is their editorial judgement in general which is compromised.

    We have IAR to give a bit of slack to never so it can be used to prevent labyrinthine rules from growing to deal with infinite what-ifs. 'Never' locks down the 99.999% of what-ifs with a clear, concise rule that can not be wiki-lawyered at a drama board and IAR gives the safety valve for edge cases like that.

    For your second hypothetical - why should I bother removing the tag? I can 'ping a few friends' to have your head examined without removing the tag . But in all seriousness, someone placing a COI tag on something I wrote would first make me take a look at that content and see if I had some bias I had missed then go ask someone to review it. I would probably go to COIN to address why they think I have a COI assuming it was not an obviously bad faith claim, in which case its off for WP:POPCORN. (I once had a COI editor claim I was a CIA officer or some such who was out to get the subject of 'their' article because I had this template on my user page. I laughed for hours.)

    (Thanks! Good to be back!) Jbh Talk 03:10, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

  • Oppose Such tags should not be placed without discussion as this is a serious accusation with BLP implications. We should have a bot removing all such malformed tags as there's far too many of them cluttering up our pages and they tend to linger for years otherwise. Andrew D. (talk) 15:46, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose A cleanup tag's purpose is to attract editors to the article to fix problems that have been identified. Tags should never be used merely on suspicion, and must be accompanied by an identification of the problems on the talk page for the benefit of whoever comes along to try to fix them. Tags without a discussion should be removed as a matter of routine. This proposal is nothing more than an attempt by Jytdog to give himself a justification for restoring tags without talk page discussion by the pretext of accusing whoever removes the tag of having a COI. Unacceptable behaviour. --RexxS (talk) 18:10, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

rfc discussion

Don't you think it would have been appropriate to have more than half a day's discussion (on a weekend, no less) about that reversion, before starting an RFC? We might have been able to reach a resolution in the discussion above, and jumping straight into an RFC feels unduly aggressive. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:57, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

You do not understand the background of the disagreement. We are at impasse here and getting wider input will be useful. Jytdog (talk) 02:32, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Who decides whether the COI in the wording exists or not? How does the wording avoid the situation where editor A makes an edit; B decides that A has a COI and tags the article without starting discussion; A removes the tag because of the lack of discussion; B reverts, citing this wording as justification. B's opinion on A's possible COI becomes their own justification for enforcing a tag that has been improperly applied. Not a tenable process. Even if the third and fourth parties are different editors from the first two. I'm not inclined to support guidance where a tagger has a free hand to apply tags on suspicion alone, and to revert their misapplication of the tag on the basis of their suspicions alone. --RexxS (talk) 20:00, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

All WP policies and guidelines are written at a high level and details need to be worked out in specific situations. Many times the COI is very obvious (e.g paid editor has the task); in the unclear cases it can be discussed and worked through at COIN if necessary. Jytdog (talk) 20:13, 28 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with WhatamIdoing, I've proposed a compromise above ("TLDR"). I'm hoping that as it just uses the wording of WP:COIEDIT that we can all agree to it or similar? (I saw this section after replying above) Widefox; talk 00:43, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
RexxS normal maintenance tag/editing rules apply (which includes COI editors should follow WP:COIEDIT). If we detail correct usage better, then misuse would be in contrast to that. This should be as sticky as other maintenance tags i.e. stickier than a PROD tag, but not stuck and deadlined like an AfD tag. Widefox; talk 00:56, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
As you will. I restate - we are at an impasse and I do not see it being resolved through discussion among the parties participating here. The discussion in the page above, is an impossible-to-follow, disorganized mess, that is going no where. Jytdog (talk) 15:51, 29 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not having trouble following the discussion above, and I think we are getting somewhere. We seem to be understanding each other a little better now than we were a week ago, and that's progress. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:07, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
There is precisely zero progress. I do understand that you are happy with your own arguments but those opposing the language above have not moved an inch. Jytdog (talk) 01:08, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Jytdog The discussion above is a mess, but I can follow it. Is the proposed wording acceptable, for now? Widefox; talk 15:33, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
What proposed wording? Jytdog (talk) 15:37, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Under "TLDR", revised at "Andy I agree, for inappropriate tagging". Widefox; talk 15:40, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
So you propose allowing people with a COI to remove the tag. This is not OK. Jytdog (talk) 15:59, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Sure, bear with me...WP:COIEDIT allows conflicted editors to edit articles. It doesn't allow reviewer... AfC, new pages patrol or elsewhere. I don't think a maintenance tag would be covered under "reviewer...elsewhere" so per current consensus it's allowed IMHO. If we can at least get the current consensus to be agreed on and put in the doc, it's a good start. That will take both sides here to compromise. You agree that edit warring over false positive COI editors the tag is a strong point? The competing protections here need evaluating, which is impractical in the current discussion above. Widefox; talk 16:27, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
No it is not OK under the COI guideline for a conflicted editor to remove tags. In fact many times paid editors are paid to come here to take tags off. Think about that. They don't care if the article is OK or not. They just want the tag off. here is a paid editor marketing his service, doing that, and here is another. The Mister Wiki arbom case -- the task there, was removing tags. The article where Andy and I started this clash -- a paid editor was paid to get tags removed and fix two other things and asked Andy to do that for him.
What all of that is about, is subverting community review processes so that a client has a nice pretty clean PR piece. So really. No. Jytdog (talk) 19:48, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
No, Jytdog. What all that was about is your failure, and that of another editor, to comply with the template's quite clearly laid out conditions for use. Since you keep overlooking (or ignoring) them, I'll remind you that they say (highlighting in original; emboldening mine): "if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning." Neither you nor the other editor started such a discussion, and so - as you were informed at the time - the tag was removed. If you didn't want the tag removed, then all you had to do was start that discussion. Why did you not? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 21:56, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"So you propose allowing people with a COI to remove the tag." No, Jytdog, they're already allowed to remove the tag if, and only if the person who left it failed to abide by the requirement in the template's documentation: if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. It is you who proposes to change that, and you have failed to make a cogent case for doing so. I have also asked you above, and will do so again now: Under what circumstances do you envisage that that would not be possible for a person placing the tag to met that requirement? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 21:46, 30 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Andy point well made, can you refrain from repeating it temporarily so I can try to progress with Jytdog's legitimate concern which isn't addressed by it, thanks.

Jytdog I agree with the spirit of that argument yes, is No it is not OK under the COI guideline for a conflicted editor to remove tags what you consider the COI guideline currently states either in spirit or letter? Can you point out where, or examples of it? I agree if it's classed as requiring a "review". I could understand that the COI tag is essentially requesting a review, which is required so the issues can be further detailed and addressed. As conflicted editors cannot currently review per COIEDIT, they would be able to request a review on the talk (and I'm refraining from saying WP:PR). Does this work for you?
Drive-by tagging is strongly discouraged. The editor who adds the tag should discuss concerns on the talk page, where possible pointing to specific issues that are actionable within the content policies. In the absence of such a discussion, or where it remains unclear what content issue has been caused by a conflicted editor, the tag may be removed by any editor. Editors with a conflict of interest should follow WP:COIEDIT, where they "should not act as a reviewer of affected article(s)".
When to remove
This template is not meant to be a permanent resident on any article. You may remove this template whenever any one of the following is true:

  1. There is consensus amongst reviewers on the talkpage or the COI Noticeboard that the issue has been resolved.
  2. It is not clear what the content issue is, and no satisfactory explanation has been given.
  3. In the absence of any discussion, or if the discussion has become dormant.

An editor with a COI may propose changes on talk pages (by using the {{request edit}} template), or by posting a note at the COI noticeboard, so that they can be peer reviewed; Widefox; talk 09:56, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Jytdog, I see this issue has been discussed Help_talk:Maintenance_template_removal/Archive_1#Note in the help WP:WNTRMT and changed here 17 May 2017‎ and contested by an editor with a COI [19] You should not remove maintenance templates if any of the following apply: ...
  1. You have been paid to edit the article or have some other conflict of interest.

Can we agree that help can and should follow the consensus here? Widefox; talk 13:21, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

You wrote a lot there. It still contains the language that " the tag may be removed by any editor". This is still not OK, as I already explained. Jytdog (talk) 16:43, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree that you have explained it. If an editor has an accepted conflict of interest, then other guidelines will still prevent them from removing a defective tag. Your wording invites a drive-by tagger to restore their removed tag by claiming without any evidence whatsoever that the editor removing the tag has a COI. Until you address that very real concern, you won't get consensus to change the wording from its present state. --RexxS (talk) 17:54, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Jytdog 90% from {{POV}} 9% from COIEDIT + the only new thing being removing a correct one takes "reviewers", which editors with a COI should not do. You need to reason it more as it tries to cover your concern that a conflicted editor can not remove a correctly placed one. Clause 2. needs to be anyone so that there's no upper hand / edit warring to remove an incorrectly placed one. Clause 1. does not allow any editor to remove the tag - only non COI editors can remove a correctly placed one via consensus (talk or COIN). That consensus discussion allows normal scrutiny/weighting of the participants to determine if they have a COI. ie SPAs, socks, ducks. wording does not allow an editor with a COI to remove the tag if a content issue is placed on the talk. It does allow any editor to remove it if not.
RexxS no - a drive-by tagger that doesn't satisfy 2. cannot put it back on. Consensus at 1. can also remove it to protect against unfounded accusations. Widefox; talk 19:41, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Rexxs yes I know this talk page is a mess. See here.
Widefox the language that WAID suggested, has only been objected to by people who operate in the territory of COI and who should be much more ginger than they are being here. I have started an RfC to try to get wider input; the parties talking here are not going to reach agreement. Jytdog (talk) 21:01, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"has only been objected to by people who operate in the territory of COI and who should be much more ginger than they are being here" You don't get to make such a smear, nor to dismiss others' genuine concerns, so lightly - if you have evidence of malfeasance, post it on the relevant noticeboards. Otherwise, cease your ad hominem attacks. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 21:43, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
You should not view having a COI as a "smear"; that is your deal, not mine. Jytdog (talk) 21:48, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I suggest we collapse as offtopic per the warning at top To discuss conflict of interest problems with specific editors and articles, please go to
Wikipedia:Conflict of interest/Noticeboard
Widefox; talk 21:53, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. I'd rather see Jytdog strike his comment, by way of acknowledging that it is inappropriate. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 21:57, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
...which, oddly, he has yet to do. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:04, 2 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
[ec] I do not "view having a COI as a smear"; so please don't attempt to deflect, especially with a straw man. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 21:55, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Working for pay in Wikipedia or having a COI is not a bad thing; what can be difficult and sometimes even harmful is how people in those structural situations conduct themselves. Jytdog (talk) 22:08, 31 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Jytdog, do you think that an average editor with a COI is capable, in practice, of correctly figuring out whether or not a discussion about the COI issue has been posted to the talk page?

I'm wondering whether a practical compromise would look like explicitly allowing editors who (allegedly or actually) have a COI to remove unexplained tags, and also explicitly disallowing editors who (actually) have a COI to remove it under any other circumstance. Could you live with that?

It'd still leave us with the problem of the occasional editors who insist that they (magically?) know that all the Frank Fans are paid editors instead of fanboys, but perhaps this would represent an improvement over the previous state. WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:42, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

With regard to trying to forge a compromise here, we have way too small a sample here and this small group is very divided. Hence the RfC. Let's see what we learn from a wider sample (should we get it). Jytdog (talk) 14:17, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Jytdog 100% agree with WhatamIdoing, e.g. compromise a) or b) would at least be progress, rather than risking no change especially as currently editors with a COI (not undisclosed PAID) are allowed to edit, remove tags and do stuff apart from review. At least Doug is favourable to "proven" or similar. Widefox; talk 20:15, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I appreciate your efforts to compromise but in my view it is just WP:CONLIMITED and given the background this is unwise. We very much need wider community input here. We are in no hurry. fwiw i wish you would simply give a clean !vote on the actual proposal. Jytdog (talk) 20:20, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I've tweaked my Support so this is unconditional now, the condition is now that adding protection from bad practice can be done afterwards, which shouldn't have to delay this. Widefox; talk 23:56, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I think that having a small group is what makes compromise and proposal development possible, and that if we come up with something this group can live with, we're far more likely to get agreement from the rest of the community. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:00, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
That would be true if the small group were representative of the community. I do not believe it is. Jytdog (talk) 00:04, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Agree with WhatamIdoing, but forced to concede that Jytdog was right that an RfC was needed as bogged down. The RfC overshoots COI/COIEDIT, but can be swung back a bit afterwards for the edge case(s). The small group didn't get out of the truck to push it out the bog. Once moving again, a small group can get back in. Widefox; talk 02:42, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The main issue I see with allowing COI editors to remove unexplained tags is that 'unexplained' then becomes a point of litigation. Can a tag with a detailed edit summary pointing out a real problem be removed because there is no talk page comment explaining it? How much detail must/should be left in an explanation? If the explanation is poor, overly general or vague is the tag 'explained' or 'unexplained'? What about issues of outing? Last I checked, many months ago, there was a huge debate about claims of COI vs WP:OUTING - those are not waters which not many outside of a few at COIN want to, or even can, navigate. They are certainly beyond what can be expected of some random New Page Reviewer.

I strongly believe that, in the cases of COI and PAID, it is the conflicted editors who we are writing the rules to manage. They are the ones most likely to push the boundaries of the rules so those boundaries must be unambiguous. It is always possible, in specific cases, for consensus to loosen restrictions or fail to enforce nonsensical outcomes which may arise from simple rules. It is not possible to do the opposite. Just look at how a hypothetical ANI may go:

  • NPPgirl - COIdude removed this COI template he should not have done that.
  • COIdude - I can remove unexplained tags and...
  • NPPgirl - I did explain [diff]
  • COIdude - That is not an explanation! You need to say x,y,z
  • NPPgirl - That is not what the rules say.
  • COIdued - Explain means - dictionary def ...
  • Rinse and repeat ad nauseum
versus
  • NPPgirl - COIdude removed this COI template he should not have done that.
  • COIdude - ummmm....
  • <close>
and
  • NPPgirl - COIdude removed this COI template he should not have done that.
  • RationalGuy - Hey NPPgirl, he only made one edit and removed it along with the tag. Are you sure you are not a sock of MissMartinet?
  • <close>
While these are caricatures and noting ever goes smoothly. There is a clear advantage to the encyclopedia to have rules/instructions which unquestionably prevent 'bad' behavior while allowing the flexibility inherent in Wikipedia culture to mitigate bad or grossly unfair outcomes as opposed to rules/instructions which, due to ambiguity, lead to drama and time wasting both from reasonable misreading by someone who does not have the same cultural/linguistic package assumed by the writers and from bad actors who use that ambiguity to push their COI/PAID POV through willful misinterpretation, loopholes and plain gamesmanship.

Bluntly - Wikipedia can afford to loose any given COI/PAID editor who may get frustrated by strict COI/PAID rules. It is regrettable and we should be sensitive to the burden we put on them but the losses, even in aggregate, are survivable. What is not sustainable is the exhaustion, frustration and, ultimately, loss of the long term, experienced, editors who must deal with COI/PAID and the continuous POV pushing of the thousands of editors who are here expressly to push their POV and who are willing to, repeatedly, use any ambiguities in our rules/guidelines/policies to do so. Often with the express purpose of exhausting those who try to deal with them and/or the exploitation of the good faith of volunteer Wikipedia editors.

Damn, I wrote more than I intended and much bears on more general subjects than COI tags but, well, sunk costs... so I'll hit post anyway :) Jbh Talk 04:44, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Messy discussion

  1. diff by SlimVirgin adding two paragraphs
  2. diff WAID sticks a comment between those two paragraphs (WAID had just said they are having no problem following the discussion... hm)
  3. diff series, discussion in response to #2 breaks SlimVirgin's 2 paragraphs yet further apart
  4. SlimVirgin creates 2 subsection breaks
  5. Slimvirgin re-unifies her comment from #1 so it fits in chron order as the page flows down...
  6. Pigsonthewing moves comment #1 to some non-chron location
  7. Slimvirgin puts her comment back in chron order
  8. Pigsonthewing again moves it out of chron order
  9. I put it back to its place in chron order.

human, all too human, messiness. Jytdog (talk) 20:42, 1 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

  • and Slimvirgin just moved it so it next to what follows it (as opposed to what preceded it). OK then. Jytdog (talk) 21:11, 1 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
    • so this is a dispute over the location of breaks and bits of broken-up comments on the talk page of a maintenance template, in a sprawling discussion about conditions for removing said template. Jytdog (talk) 22:05, 1 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Had SV not already kindly fixed the mess you made, I would have reverted your edit number 9. You can find a guide to basic talk page formatting at MOS:LISTGAP. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:02, 2 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

The diffs above are quite clear as to how this specific mess got made. But thanks for the diff of the misrepresentation.Jytdog (talk) 17:10, 2 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Your diff number 9 was provided by you, and shows an edit made by you. It was that mess on which - taking your post as an invitation to comment - I commented. Your allegation of "misrepresentation" is yet another false one. Perhaps, instead of making such allegations, you could give your attention to the questions put to you above, which you have yet to answer, for example [20] [21]? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:18, 2 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
diff. Jytdog (talk) 17:25, 2 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
With regard to the two questions you link to there, I do realize the discussion is sprawling and messy. For example this section is about the order of comments on this page and the little edit war over them. I'll respond to the questions below. Jytdog (talk) 17:40, 2 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"I'll respond to the questions below." You didn't. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 00:42, 3 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
See below.Jytdog (talk) 03:09, 4 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Two issues

There are two issues here:

  1. should there be an explanation of the tag on the talk page
  2. who can remove the tag

We are going around in circles with these being treated like they are one issue. They aren't.

I spoke to #1 here back on the 22nd. Just pulling that out of the mess above, as it appears that Andy at least didn't see it or forgot per this). There is no dispute about this as far as I can see.

The dispute is about #2, and that is what the RfC is for. Jytdog (talk) 17:44, 2 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

More misrepresentation: I replied to your post of the 22nd (in which you remarkably claimed "The BLP policy isn't relevant to article cleanup.") here. As to "who can remove the tag"; the template's documentation is quite clear: if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning - that's any editor, without qualification. Your wish to change that condition - for which you have made no cogent case, and certainly demonstrated no consensus - notwithstanding. And I ask you again: Under what circumstances do you envisage that that would not be possible for the person placing the tag to start a talk page discussion to explain what is non-neutral about the article? And why did you not start such a discussion when you were recently edit-warring to restore the tag on an article where I had removed it on the basis that there was no such discussion? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 00:41, 3 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I understand that you disagree; there is no need to keep repeating yourself. Jytdog (talk) 01:13, 3 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I repeated my questions because you wrote above "I'll respond to the questions below", yet you failed to do so. Just as you have again failed to do so in your latest post. Will you answer them now? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 20:44, 3 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I know you don't like the answer. I have answered. Jytdog (talk) 03:13, 4 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Simply dumping your thoughts below a question does not constitute an answer to it. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 15:19, 4 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Background and related

Since user:RexxS said he was thinking about adding the background I thought I would go ahead and do that myself.

This started at Martin Saidler: (bolded dates are article edits). Timeline:

  • 23 April 2017, COIN thread about Lingveno's direct editing
  • 27 July 2017 COIN thread about paid sockfarm that worked on Saidler and related articles, and many others. Saidler article created by socks then deleted in cleanup. (first paid editor)


Note, edits to the template instructions:

  • 19:12, 19 January 2018 diff Doc James makes change with edit note "trimmed details added by paid editor" (those details were added here by KDS444)
  • 21:25, 19 January 2018 revert by Pigsonthewing "Not appropriate for you to change this while you're involved in a dispute about the template's application"
  • 21:31, 19 January 2018 revert by Doc James " It was not appropriate for a paid editor to add these details to this template"
  • 19:51, 22 January 2018 diff series by Doc James with more changes
  • 16:43, 25 January 2018 dif by WhatamIdoing following talk page discussion, includes change from "any editor may remove" to "any editor without a COI may remove"
  • 21:31, 25 January 2018 revert by Pigsonthewing so that it is back to "any editor may remove"
  • 21:33, 26 January 2018 COI restriction restored by Widefox so it reads "any editor without a COI may remove"
  • 17:52, 27 January 2018 COI restriction removed by Pigsonthewing
  • 18:22, 27 January 2018 tweak to something else by SlimVirgin
  • 20:15, 27 January 2018 COI restriction restored by Jytdog
  • 21:12, 27 January 2018 removed by Pigsonthewing
  • 21:17, 27 January 2018 restored by Jytdog
  • 00:21, 28 January 2018 removed by Littleolive oil
  • 00:29, 28 January 2018 RfC launched by Jytdog on the COI restriction that has been edit warred over.

Note, other discussions:

Note:

  • Feb 6 - 7 campaign by Pigsonthewing, stripping COI tags from ~40 pages with edit notes quoting template instructions: "if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning".

- Jytdog (talk)

I suggest we collapse this section as offtopic per the warning at top To discuss conflict of interest problems with specific editors and articles, please go to
Wikipedia:Conflict of interest/Noticeboard
Widefox; talk 17:32, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
This was directly responsive to RexxS's note above, here. Jytdog (talk) 18:31, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) I suggest we don't. It's a good example of the problems caused by misapplication of the template, and I thank Jytdog for taking the time to publish the diffs. Unfortunately, the spin he has put the sequence of events obscures the problem:
18 September: Doc James applied the tag. He did not start a discussion on the talk page. That contravenes the guidance for all cleanup tags which requires discussion to be started on the article talk page. "If you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning."
3 January: Doc James replies to Pplc: "The issue is that these articles are written by someone (a group of people) for pay. This is Wikipedia, we do not really allow "ads". We are supposed to be independent. These articles are not and thus they are tagged. They have also not disclosed all the account that they have paid... So not exactly coming clean. If they did not wanted tagged articles they should not have bought them. They are simple contributing to our sock puppet problem." That is a legitimate complaint and response to Pplc. But it does not start a discussion explaining what is non-neutral about the article. Jytdog characterises that as "explains the tag". No it doesn't. It's a cleanup tag asking other editors to clean up identified problems of non-neutrality.
18 January: Andy posts on the talk page: "I'm going to remove the tag, for no other reason than that it does not meet the criteria for its addition, as laid out clearly at Template:COI#When to use". That's absolutely correct. There no discussion explaining what is non-neutral about the article. No uninvolved editor coming to that talk page would have the faintest idea about whatever non-neutral content had caused Doc James to add the tag four months earlier.
18 January: Andy removes the tag, acting within the bounds of the guidance "If you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning."
18 January: Doc James restores the tag and finally starts a usable discussion by mentioning text that is unreferenced.
18 January: The discussion degenerates with this accusation: "Hiring someone to come and get the tag removed is not how things work." An unacceptable slur on the editor who quite properly removed the tag. Followed by Andy being accused of acting "on behalf of a COI" by Calton. Disgraceful bad faith. There was a ridiculous amount of edit-warring over the tag - it's only good fortune that an uninvolved admin did not come along and block both sides.
19 January: I asked the question "Can someone explain to me just what the non-neutral passages are in the article text? and I'll volunteer to clean them up myself, if nobody else is going to." SmartSE kindly did the scrutiny and started listing problems, for which I'm very grateful.
Here's the nub of the problem. If we let editors add drive-by cleanup tags on mere suspicion without any attempt to identify what the non-neutral text is, then we run the risk of wasting uninvolved editors' time searching for problems that may or may not actually be there. That's why we have the current guidance that I won't bother to quote again.
If we let editors restore a properly removed tag by simply claiming that the editor who removed it must also have a COI, or even was acting "on behalf of a COI", then we're causing exactly the problems itemised immediately above. Jytdog's solution is change the guidance to allow the tag-restorer a veto over any tag-remover, simply by the accusation that the tag-remover had a COI. In that case, there will be nothing to stop the drive-by tagging, because nobody will be able to remove these cleanup tags without having defend themselves from unsupported charges of COI. That's not how to use cleanup tags. If you change the wording to Jytdog's preference, you scrap the meaning of "cleanup" and substitute just a "badge of shame". That does nothing to improve the article and the misuse will ensure that we'll never find anybody to do any cleanup, which is why we already have 12,000 articles in a backlog dating back to 2007. --RexxS (talk) 18:40, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Stripping the tag on behalf of the paid editor based on a technicality (discussion about the tag was ongoing when Pigsonthewing started edit warring to remove it), and doing nothing to actually fix the article, is horrible. Jytdog (talk) 19:02, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yet another bad-faith accusation. You need to stop these attacks. Andy specifically stated "I'm going to remove the tag, for no other reason than that it does not meet the criteria for its addition, as laid out clearly at Template:COI#When to use". Here we have an experienced editor who quite properly decides that the tag should not have been placed based on the guidance for the tag. You are ignoring the very real possibility that he could have been simply upholding the principle that these cleanup tags have to be used properly, otherwise they become worthless. Well I'd have removed the tag myself for exactly that reason, so now go ahead and accuse me of a COI, I dare you. You should be ashamed of yourself treating other editors like that. --RexxS (talk) 19:49, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Andy's removal of tags without fixing the issues in question is simple disruptive. The concerns for in articles are obvious. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 08:57, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Well, the template's documentation says (and for some reason you keep ignoring this, which is why I repeat it here): if you place this tag, you should promptly start a discussion on the article's talk page to explain what is non-neutral about the article. If you do not start this discussion, then any editor is justified in removing the tag without warning. Feel free to point out and cases where I removed the tag, despite there being a post meeting that requirement on the talk page, and I'll accept that it was disruptive, and revert myself. Otherwise, your continued disregard of this point is what is disruptive; and given that many of the articles from which I removed it are BLPs, that's a shocking disregard of the BLP policy - and WMF's own stance on BLPs - from a member of the WMF board. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 11:47, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
And I'll add this: we need to use cleanup templates properly. Removing ones that don't meet the guidance - as this one didn't when Andy first removed it; all your talk of "on-going discussion" is complete bollocks, and you know it - doesn't improve that article, but it's necessary to set limits on the misuse of cleanup tags if we are ever to get rid of the 12,000 article backlog, and actually start improving articles instead of just marking them. --RexxS (talk) 19:55, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
This is not a productive discussion. I do not understand where you are coming from. As you are aware I have asked to speak with you in the hope that I can come to understand. As it is, we are just butting heads. Jytdog (talk) 20:10, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Understand this then: I am completely opposed to all editing for hire, and I have no wish to see paid editors prosper - even the "legitimate" ones. However, much as I'd like to make wiki-life for paid editors as uncomfortable as I can, the ends do not justify the means. As I see it, your zeal to curtail the activities of a paid editor has led you to think the worst of some other editors when you should be assuming good faith. I can't support you in trying to change sensible documentation just to give yourself an advantage in the sort of arguments that occurred at Martin Saidler. There has to be a balance between keeping on top of paid editing and ensuring that cleanup tags don't get splattered across articles any more forlornly than they are now, and I don't think you're seeing that. That's why we're butting heads. --RexxS (talk) 20:42, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I am not sure what you mean about "zeal to curtail the activities of a paid editor". You make this sound like it is about Pplc specifically. It isn't. Many clients pay to have tags removed. The goal is removing the tag - an aesthetic thing - not dealing with the problematic content. The Saidler article was a dead center example of that. The Salvidrim case was another. COIN is full of examples. It is common as dirt. All of that is about making articles appear to be just fine and in the process, removing the flags that draw cleanup.
And in case you meant that I don't want paid editors to be part of the community, that is not accurate. They are part of the community and some of them provide great content. I want that they follow the COI guideline and PAID policy, which means they should disclose and put conflicted content through review prior to its being published. Content that gets directly added to WP by conflicted editors (who are ignorant or who are acting in bad faith) needs to be subsequently reviewed. This is what article tags are for.
I have said that I do not understand where you are coming from. I have assumptions but I am trying hard to keep them out of this. Please do not make assumptions about me. I have asked to talk; if you don't want to that is fine, but please keep in mind that we are not understanding each other. Jytdog (talk) 20:46, 7 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Jytdog's choice of diffs is not only - as Doug has already shown - plastered with misleading commentary, but it is highly selective.

For example, he includes "1:21 same day EWN case filed by Doc James (diff of filing)", but fails utterly to mention that I was not censured as a result of that report, because WP3RR explicitly includes an exemption for BLP violations, and the edits reported were me removing an unepxplained tag added to a a BLP article by Doc James and restored there by Jytdog; in fact the article had to be protected to prevent it from being readded by them a further time. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 12:12, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

@Pigsonthewing: Please correct me if I'm wrong, but where is the evidence that the Saidler article was protected due to BLP? It was edit warring plain and simple and you were lucky not be blocked. SmartSE (talk) 13:01, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The aticle's protection log is public, as is the 3RR report. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 13:34, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed they are and neither of them mention BLP. SmartSE (talk) 13:38, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I was not censured as a result of that report, because WP3RR explicitly includes an exemption for BLP violations Do you have any evidence that you weren't blocked because of the exemption for BLP? Galobtter (pingó mió) 13:15, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
My block log is public; as is the 3RR report, and WP:3RR. The latter states quite clearly Exemptions... Removing violations of the biographies of living persons (BLP) policy that contain... unsourced... contentious material. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 13:34, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Let me try that again. Do you have any evidence that you weren't blocked specifically because of the BLP exemption? As SmartSE says above "Indeed they are and neither of them mention BLP." Galobtter (pingó mió) 13:43, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I've repeatedly asked above for the argument to be made for how a COI tag creates a BLP violation, with a variety of responses but nothing firm, I'm concerned this acts as WP:CRYBLP to chill debate here. I am not talking about 3RR as that is offtopic on this talk per the header, but on topic - this template talk which is dominated by self-justifications over this incident which is best handled elsewhere. Widefox; talk 14:28, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Repeatedly? Where, please? I am not aware of you having done so. That said, you can see above that User:SlimVirgin acknowledged, in her post of 18:17, 30 January, that: "I think Andy has a point about long-term tags on BLPs being an arguable BLP violation. For example...", while User:WhatamIdoing noted at 00:11, 28 January "You could use a COI tag in a way that would not be consistent with the idea of BLP, since many readers will probably interpret it as "Joe Film paid someone to make this articles sound more favorable about him".". It is certainly not me who is trying to "chill debate". [fix ping] Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:42, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
First challenged by me the concept that somehow COI is a BLP violation is a non-sequitur [22] reworded the concept that somehow COI is a BLP violation is a non-sequitur needs reasoning [23], Andy that's not making progress: you need to be clear just what you think the straw man is. ... Andy wasn't claiming that COI was a BLP violation. He was making the comparison with BLP violations... -RexxS [24], Thank you WhatamIdoing and RexxS for trying to reason it more. Andy I've struck my shorthand "non-sequitur" wording, replacing it with "needs reasoning as the case has not been made for a causal connection". If it's an analogy per RexxS that could be why, if placing a COI tag causes a BLP violation then that's serious and we need to detail that [25] it's the circumstance(s) when BLP trumps COI that would be useful to know [26] I've yet to see any firm argument made for a circumstance when BLP must trump COI. [27] To try to understand the BLP concern, would it be mitigated if...? [28]. That's me, others have questioned it here, and I've seen CRYBLP on a different talk page about this [29]. Widefox; talk 18:22, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Putting a tag "Undisclosed paid" on a biography at a minimum carries the strong implication that someone was violating the terms of use of Wikimedia for an article, and I can see people seeing an insinuation that the BLP subject was that person because who else would pay for a biography?
Otherwise, I think the main issue is that a "There is something wrong with the editor(s) of this article!" maintenance tag is not really actionable/fixable and will be perceived as an attack on editors. Perhaps it'd be better to use the "ad", "unbalanced", "pov" or similar tags when such issues exist (which is fairly common with COI and UPE editing) and no tag (except maybe for a talkpage banner or a hidden cat) when there aren't such issues. We can still deal with UPEs and spammers the usual ways. JoJo Eumerus mobile (talk) 23:18, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
First this is the Template:COI talk page, not Template:UPE.
Second, people's companies, publishers, and agents pursue biographies; it is not always the person. (for example, Draft:Peder Holk Nielsen is being worked on by the communications people from Novozymes now) But sometimes it is, for sure.
The COI tag just says "A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject." the template:autobiography is the far bolder one, and I don't think i have ever applied that one, exactly because it makes a much stronger claim that the subject themself edited it. Jytdog (talk) 23:28, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Hum. I was thinking that the issue that prompted this discussion is about both templates and thus that this considderation would apply to either. JoJo Eumerus mobile (talk) 23:43, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I am not sure I dealt with the heart of what you had to say. First what really does matter, is content. Issues of COI are generally raised first because of bad content, and following that, bad behavior in trying to force-in or keep the bad content. In my own work (which is generally small scale, editor by editor and article by article) I rarely use it, as things are unfolding in real time and I talk with the editor, draw out the disclosure, and educate them about COI management, then turn and fix the article, never having tagged it. Sometimes I put the tag on if I get called away, or a person is unresponsive... but then I try to circle back and clean up the article. You can look at Twist Bioscience if you want to see what I mean.
But as soon as you are confronted with some wider-spread problem - like a sockfarm - there isn't time for this kind of approach. That is how a lot of the tags get put on. I have been dealing with this on articles about faculty of the Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell and Feinstein Institute for Medical Research which have been beset by persistent, obviously conflicted socking...very likely from PR people associated with the school, and i have not had time to go clean all those up. So a bunch of their faculty have lingering COI tags. (there is regular editing to be done too, for petes sake).
the oldest COI-tagged, uncleaned up article is Emmy van Deurzen which has been tagged for 11 years. 11 years! Why is that? Well look at the article and its history - no independent sources and even after several rounds of clean up there is still unsourced stuff. And how did it come to be that way? Well look at the edit stats.
  • 1 Andrsor 48 edits, 150 bytes added
  • 2 Astarkind 16 edits, 9,103 bytes added
  • 3 Andersdraeby 13 edits, 1,250 bytes added
  • 4 Emmyzen 13 edits, 7,217 bytes added (also article creator).
Two people, it appears. Maybe three. The creator being the subject or someone impersonating her. The other person a SPA.
And no volunteer has devoted time to make that into a real WP article that summarizes what independent sources say about the person. So the tag has lingered.
And that's the thing. This remains a volunteer project. We don't have paid staff to take care of all these issues nor any way to prevent them happening. So it is just a slog to clean these up, and much of that work is not joyful or fun, but just ... work. The page is there, the subject is notable, but the content is just the crappy product of conflicted editing. So tags linger til somebody devotes their time to cleaning it up. Paying mind to unsourced content, being mindful that negative stuff has been left out, and that some aspect or another is probably over-represented. You basically have to redo the whole thing like you were writing a new article from scratch. (which is what i did at Martin Saidler).
And for whatever reason, no independent volunteer has cared enough about van Deurzen to go over that article. So the tag has lingered.
Is that a BLP violation?
I struggle with that. The tag is ... apt. And it will remain apt, until somebody cleans the thing up, and can honestly say that the article is the product of careful, unconflicted editing.
I guess that is all i have to say for now. Probably too much and not sure if i answered. Jytdog (talk) 03:35, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
You will notice that the talk page of Emmy van Deurzen includes a discussion setting out "what is non-neutral about the article"; the claim in the tag is therefore not, in effect, "unsourced contentious material". You still haven't told us why you were unable or unwilling to start such a discussion at Martin Saidler, when you restored the (unsourced contentious material in the) tag there. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 15:51, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
If it helps, I'm sure you can read JoJo's comment as "Putting a tag "major contributor... close connection with its subject... may require cleanup... particularly neutral point of view" on a biography at a minimum carries the strong implication that someone was violating the terms of use of Wikimedia for an article, and I can see people seeing an insinuation that the BLP subject was that person because who else would do that to a biography?". Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 15:46, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
People say you have a heart of gold. You are not displaying that with this taunting. Your legalistic surface reading is also missing the spirit of things, and quite completely. Jytdog (talk) 16:04, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
How on earth is adding a note to a talk page in any way equivalent to a reliable source suitable for a BLP? We can only very rarely "prove" a COI and doing so would normally fall foul of OUTING. This whole BLP thing is just a distraction from the topic at hand as shown by the comments by OTRS agents below. Further, BLP concerns information about living people, and the addition of a template does not make any statement about the BLP directly. Of far more concern are the numerous BLP issues that COI editors introduce to articles, namely unverifiable content. SmartSE (talk) 17:05, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"comments by OTRS agents below" show no such thing. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:48, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

OTRS data

note, i made this a separate section Jytdog (talk) 19:20, 8 February 2018 (UTC) [reply]

Outta sheer curiosity, do we receive a number of complaints by BLP subjects about COI or Paid contributor tags on articles? Summoning Sphilbrick, seeing as they have often reported issues identified by OTRS to the village pumps. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk, contributions) 16:03, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

thanks that is an interesting question. data is useful. Jytdog (talk) 17:12, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
It's a fair question. I'd like to find a better way of getting a decent answer.
Anecdotally, I can say I see such requests occasionally but not all that common. However, that's an acceptable answer. I don't ever recall seeing a complaint about a paid editor tag, but keep in mind at this time I'm talking about tickets I looked at personally and I only look at a subset of tickets.
I believe I've seen people concerned about the COI tag but what I remember is similar, although not exactly the same thing, is a complaint about a tag saying that this article is primarily written by a single editor, or this article may have been edited by someone close to the subject. I hate those requests because I have trouble thinking of good answer other than wait a few years until a number of other editors have weighed in and we can reach a point where the tag can justifiably be removed. That's not much of an answer.
I tried a more formal way to answer your question. I did a search on all tickets sent into info-EN in the last week containing "COI". Unfortunately, while I got a handful, in every case it was because the response included a link to our COI advice. Not a single one included a question from the customer about COI. A week's worth of tickets isn't enough to address conclusions, but I was just testing, and now I see I have to figure out how to do research on just the customer text not the response text. At the moment I don't know to do that.--S Philbrick(Talk) 19:11, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Remarkably few, from my past experience as an OTRS agent, and those normally fomr people who had a blatant COI. Guy (Help!) 22:55, 8 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Very very few.~ Winged BladesGodric 08:05, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]