Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2022-03-27/From the Signpost team
How The Signpost is documenting the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
The Signpost's commitment to inform, entertain and publish to the Wikimedia movement becomes even more critical in times of crisis. The ongoing invasion of Ukraine has already caused unimaginable pain and suffering and impacted millions. Yet in times of upheaval, from pandemics to political turmoil to natural disasters, Wikimedians come together in the service of our collective mission. People are coming to the Wikimedia projects to learn facts, and Wikimedians around the world are collaborating to share their knowledge. Contributors are helping however they can, from documenting the crisis in over 100 languages, to ensuring that coverage of Ukraine and Russia-related articles is thorough, to assisting other users who need support.
The Signpost team stands in solidarity with the communities–those directly affected in the conflicts and all others who work to protect access to free knowledge. We are also working to document and unearth as much as we can about the war and those affected, publishing reports on disinformation, spotlighting the voices of those impacted, and much more. Please share any suggestions or tips at Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/Newsroom/Suggestions or by emailing the editor-in-chief privately. Submissions can be posted at Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/Newsroom/Submissions. We thank the community for their suggestions to this date.
Discuss this story
NPOV dispute
... WHAT?
Ever heard of WP:NPOV?
I think it is very likely that the overwhelming majority of Wikipedia editors do indeed support Ukraine. But NPOV is a core policy, and our job as neutral editors is to report accurately what the reliable secondary sources say, not to cheerlead for one side. Taking sides in an armed conflict undermines our core mission, and this partisan piece should be promptly retracted.
And before anyone tries accusing me of being a Putin-apologist or similar, let me absolutely clear that I personally regard all invasions as criminals acts, including the current invasion of Ukraine. But as a Wikipedia editor, I set my views aside. My objection here is simply that Wikipedia is not the place to to take stands for or against what we regard as great wrongs.
I am horrified that those who create the Signpost have so flagrantly trampled over one of our core policies. Wikipedia is not a soapbox. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 21:00, 27 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Please, let's try to be as neutral as possible when writing encyclopedia article. Without of course making a false equivalence for distinctly minority view. But also let Signpostewrs, and all other Wikipedians express their opinions on these pages. Smallbones(smalltalk) 21:35, 27 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
This violation of Wikipedia's neutrality will give a boat-load of ammunition to detractors who claim that Wikipedia editors have a liberal agenda. Damage control time. Erase this article.Smallchief (talk) 22:08, 27 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
A reminder that WP:NPOV applies to articles in the mainspace. Not editorials, essays, project space, community newspaper, the Wikimedia movement in general, etc... Headbomb {t · c · p · b} 16:59, 28 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
People who want to complain that Wikipedia has a "liberal bias" will do so regardless of what we say. We get accused all the time of failing to be "neutral" because we refuse to take a middle position between facts and nonsense. Oh, look, it's an unrelated link to our biography of Larry Sanger. XOR'easter (talk) 17:30, 28 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Placing absolute neutralism at one of the worst modern man-made militaristic catastrophies means siding with the aggressors. 1233 ( T / C) 07:20, 5 April 2022 (UTC)[reply]
The disclaimer
Thanks to @EpicPupper: for adding[2] a disclaimer to the top of the article, and for pinging me in the process.
The disclaimer is a indication of good intent, but only a tiny sign. And overall, I think it a major mistake.
Yes, it gives the rest of the community some theoretical deniability, which is welcome. However, that sort of disclaimer has at best a legalistic effect, being something that might sway the outcome if the matter even ended up in legal proceedings. But I see no possibility of any legal proceedings from any direction (and I hope that's how it is), so that effect is irrelevant.
The impact of a news article or op-ed is not measured in legal terms. Its impact is in how it is perceived publicly, by whatever audience sees it or hears about it. Those perceptions are not formed is the same way as the precise weighing of legal assessments and court judgements. Public perceptions are rough-and ready, often hasty and incomplete, and often driven by first impressions. These judgement are often more emotional than rational.
In the court of public opinion, you don't get to cross-examine the public or demand re-readings or argue over nuance or the small print of disclaimers. I worked for decades in political communication, and repeatedly saw how messaging rarely had any impact beyond the simple outline. That fact was used very powerfully by GW Bush's aide Karl Rove, whose dictum "If you're explaining you're losing" was the basis of a powerful political strategy of repeatedly forcing the opponent to explain, thereby making them repeatedly lose.
So it is in this case. Once you gotta explain the message's origin in the way that has been done here, you are losing. You are effectively conceding the point that the message is problematic, and hoping that the small print will rescue you ... but the small print has little impact.
The big picture is the simple one: an article hosted on en.wp's servers, with an en.wp URL, takes an unambiguously partisan stance on a major political issue, and has an unambiguously partisan headline. The rest is weaselly detail which most people will ignore.
Any campaigner or political operator opposed to Wikipedia will now be rubbing their hands with glee at how The Signpost has dug itself deeper into the mire, and handed a gift to its enemies. It would be very very simple to ruthlessly exploit this naive disclaimer as another tool to attack Wikipedia.
But I am not an opponent. I am a long-serving Wikipedian with huge devotion to this project, and I hate seeing Wikipedia weakened in this way.
The old rule is "when you're in a hole, stop digging". This disclaimer is just digging deeper into the hole. The remedy remains very simple: retract the op-ed, and replace it with a simple apology for taking a political stance which is way beyond the legitimate remit of a community newsletter. BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 19:39, 28 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you
Thanks and congratulations to @EpicPupper and the rest of the Signpost team for retracting the original partisan editorial and replacing it (in this edit[3]) with a neutral piece.
The new editorial is excellent. It is scrupulously neutral, expressing support for all those who have been adversely impacted by the war. It emphasises how we as Wikipedians continue to play a positive role by continuing what we have done for 21 years: providing free, impartial information for all. And it is both eloquent and concise.
There are many places on the internet and elsewhere where people can express their views on issues. Wikipedia is different: it is a project to provide impartial info to help others form their views, hopefully better-informed as a result of our work. Our greatest strengths in doing so are our transparency (we source everything, and keep our discussions public) and our commitment to neutrality. The revised editorial with its preceding explanation exemplifies both those core values.
Thank you to the editorial team collectively for responding to criticism, and rectifying an error. And again, I want to give special thanks to EpicPupper, whose grace under pressure has been an exemplary display of openness, civility, courtesy and integrity. BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 20:26, 29 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia should be neutral. Signpost does not have to be. I am disappointed with the name change, which IMHO puts the wrong values forward. Which goes to show, you can't make everyone happy, no matter what you do. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 09:47, 30 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I’m not sure whether I’m more ashamed of the Signpost for giving in to such an obvious WP:1AM bad-faith badgering campaign or BHG for engaging in it.Dronebogus (talk) 16:31, 30 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]Retraction
This retraction is horrible. The Signpost should not cave in to extreme neutralists. We should stand with Ukraine. This was not a violation of your "commitment to neutral coverage of the Wikimedia movement", but this retraction certainly is. Headbomb {t · c · p · b} 11:22, 1 April 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you
While some may disagree, I firmly believe that the retraction was for the best. Not only did you recognize that you made a mistake, but you openly admitted it and worked to fix it. These acts show that you are not afraid to do what's right, and they also show a level of competence beyond that of the average editor.
What's happening in Ukraine is criminal, but the Russians need to know what is going on, and that's not happening with Putin's media feeding them lies. When the largest newsletter on Wikipedia picks a side in the war, it gives the Russian government another excuse to block Wikipedia. Thank you for doing your part to prevent the last reliable source from being stripped from the Russian people. - ZLEA T\C 13:26, 1 April 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I will also say that it is not Wikipedia's place to take sides. I'm assuming that with WP:NPOV is absolute in the article space. Wikipedia doesn't call the Holocaust a crime against humanity because it is morally right, but rather because reliable sources say it was. Wikipedia is WP:IMPARTIAL, therefore it doesn't have a moral obligation to support one side over another, no matter how righteous it may be. - ZLEA T\C 23:52, 2 April 2022 (UTC)[reply]
you are talking about the article space, since that was what I was talking about when I said . Therefore, I will remind you thatIt's the retraction that's not neutral
Throughout this sprawling debate, there has been one good point by BHG and the others objecting to this piece: the headline was confusing and kind of out of place. The current headline is better. The only other major difference between the current version and the original is a couple notes from the editors. One note hedges a bit -- fine, but unnecessary given the title change. The other, the retraction, repeats a line of argumentation that actually does give the impression of violating NPOV: that .
We do not remain "neutral in conflicts." We remain neutral by summarizing what reliable sources say about conflicts. That's what neutrality is on Wikipedia. Neutrality isn't reducing reality into a one-size-fits-all A-versus-B dynamic so we can stake out some hypothetical middle ground. When one country, in an act of aggression, invades another under false pretenses, we describe it as such. Our neutrality is plainly visible in the way our articles about the invasion summarize reliable sources on the topic. It's for this reason that the loudly repeated accusations of "partisanship" stand out to me: either we've contrived some false balance/both sides scenario or...
NPOV doesn't apply to projectspace, but what we say about neutrality in projectspace matters (it's where the policy lives, after all). The original version, though I think changing the headline for the best, absolutely did not violate NPOV. The retraction, however, makes an incorrect statement about neutrality. ...At least insofar as the "we" can be understood in multiple ways, as with the initial piece. Adding: Even if the "we" does regard the Signpost team, does the Signpost really "remain neutral in conflicts"? That seems like a big claim about "conflicts" that's probably just intended as short-term appeasement rather than an editorial position. — Rhododendrites talk \\ 03:28, 2 April 2022 (UTC)[reply]