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Mechinima

There needs to be something set out for Mechinimas. They arn't webcomics, and as there seem to be an increasing number of them being made, there needs to be a set of criteria for notability. Possibilities-

Dr. B 00:47, 5 January 2006 (UTC)

See, this is the kind of pointless miniaturization that we were trying to avoid. Now look at what we've started. Nifboy 15:49, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
I've put together a suggested guideline for adding articles on machinima productions. Part of my reasoning is that I've seen numerous cases of people — especially those inspired by Red vs Blue — making articles on extremely minor productions, often yet to be released, very often their own productions. Sometimes they even make articles on their production groups that haven't even released anything yet. MisterHand summed things up well in one deletion discussion, saying "Gosh, how would it be if we had an article for every short made using The Movies?".--Drat (Talk) 13:39, 7 March 2006 (UTC)

Move this sideways and onwards

I'm going to try and change tack to try and generate something more akin, I'll admit, to my own personal preferences on what notability guidelines should be attempting to define. I'll ask that people bear in mind that an encyclopedia is a written compendium of knowledge, and that Wikipedia is not paper. Let's try and expand this guideline to cover all webcontent, and so save having to revisit this argument again and again.

First up, I'll explain my motives. What I would hope we are all seeking is the prevention of the abuse of Wikipedia through spamming. These guidelines should not be an opportunity for editors to push their own view on what should and should not be included. There should be no writing of these guidelines to include or exclude any specific subject. The goal of these guidelines is rather to outline and expand upon the notion that Wikipedia is not a web directory, i.e. not a site that specializes in linking to other web sites and categorizing those links. It should also note and expand upon the fact that we do not appreciate advertising, given Wikipedia articles are not advertisements.

Taking all that on board, I've attempted a rewrite, which I hope can be discussed here rather than simply reverted. The main thrust of the rewrite is to place policies at the heart of the page, and to remove specificity. If a webcomic or a blog has won an award, that is citable, referential and verifiable. If a website or a podcast has received coverage in a publication, that is again citable, referential and verifiable. Obviously regurgitation of press releases does not amount to press coverage, so care must be taken to make note that the coverage is of an acceptable quality.

We should also note that the use of the site itself as a source comes under the caveat, from Wikipedia:Reliable sources We may not use primary sources whose information has not been made available by a credible publication. Therefore, we cannot base an article on any webcontent using only the site upon which that webcontent is displayed. Anyway, please have a read, and discuss below. I have sourced this rewrite most heavily from Wikipedia:Notability (companies and corporations). Hiding talk 11:56, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

Discussion of rewrite

Wow. Just wow. Although this in some ways amounts to just chucking out tons of what we'd worked really hard to get agreement on... I can't complain. If nothing else this is a much better base to build on, and I'd strongly support anyone who reverted anything other tha nminor changes that had not been fully discussed here first. Now for my one complaint. We have as an example something whose supporting material would fail this very guideline, I believe: Many people independent of Checkerboard Nightmare have published their own reviews of the strip.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]. brenneman(t)(c) 12:23, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

Yes, I thought that would come up. Take a look at Wikipedia:Notability (companies and corporations), specifically footnote 2. Many people independent of the Mavalli Tiffin Rooms have published their own accounts of eating there. If you look at the article, it concerns something, which, in its field, is probably of equal worth to Checkerboard Nightmare. That's why I chose it as an example. I would suggest that Checkerboard Nightmare requires a drastic rewrite, but I think the reviews of the strip allow for an article to be written that can be sourced and verified, so that it does not amount to original research. The sources linked to here, I argue, match almost precisely the level of sources cited in Mavalli Tiffin Rooms#References. Remember, the poicies we're leaning on here are WP:V, WP:NPOV and WP:NOR. Jimbo has stated that verifiability is the key to inclusion. But I've already rambled on too long. Hiding talk 12:32, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
Site Google GoogleNews
http://www.sequentialtart.com [6]
http://www.enterthedream.net [7] [8]
http://www.comicsworthreading.com [9] [10]
http://doyourowndamnedcheerleading.blogspot.com [11] [12]

We are allowing something to "bootstrap" off of non-notable sites. This will allow any Joe Blog's blog that is mentioned in any other group of blogs to get in recursivly. - brenneman(t)(c) 12:36, 6 January 2006 (UTC)


Take your point, although I will defend the use of sequential tart as a source, it's been updated monthly since 1998. I would argue that the ST review and the comixpedia one are notable enough to allow the leaning on lesser sources, which are verifiable and citable. The thrust of the guidelines is that sources cited aren't trivial. I'm not disputing that Checkerboard Nightmare is, in my opinion, a bad article, but I am disputing the argument that no good article can be written on the strip. However, if you can provide a better example to use there, I'm open to debate. Hiding talk 12:48, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

Yeah. I'm obviously not that happy with the re-vamp. I'd suggest re-adding Keenspot, as we got a consensus on that after a long discussion. The bigger issue, however, is that I think it seems almost as if you're trying to sweep the old discussion under the carpet and hide it by archiving the old talk material and not summing it up at the same time as you implement a sweeping change. I don't think you're actually doing that, I really actually believe on more than assumption you're doing it in good faith, but it does give the impression there's not been too much discussion on it. Or something. Do you see what I mean? (Also, you've entitled the Archive "Archive 01", ignoring the 3 previous archives. I think that's a bit confusing. And I edited the archive for your typo of "ending 4th of Januray 2005") J•A•K 12:42, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

I think that Keenspot would still fly, just that it's not mentioned specifically.
Additionally, I while I agree that the links in the article for MTR aren't that impressive, look at what you get when you google it: [13], including (on page three) Saveur magazine names its 'Top 100' food items a heavy duty mention on the world's #2 website. These are several orders of magnitude apart, mate. We need a different example. - brenneman(t)(c) 12:49, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
Fair play, anyone have any suggestions. I confess I only chose Checkerboard because it was mentioned on the talk page quite a lot. Hiding talk 13:02, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for catching the tipo. I've never summarised an archive in all the time I've been here, to be honest, perhaps too many months archiving the various village pumps knocked that out of me, although I can't recall a specific policy that mentions they have to be summarised. I archived because the page was too long. See WP:ARCHIVE, and feel free to copy and paste any discussion from the archives back here that you still have interest in discussing. I ignored the previous archives since they don't archive this actual page, the archive I pulled is the first archive of this page, but some piping work can fix that.
Hah, I just went to sort the archive links out, and they aren't even archives, they're just links to older versions of the page. Give me a few hours before I sort that, eh? Hiding talk 13:05, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
As to your point regarding Keenspot, that can certainly be introduced as an example at note 8. Hiding talk 12:57, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
Hiding, this page was renamed on the 6th of December, as mentioned in the archive. It should be put with the others. Aaron, is there any chance you could do this, as you are more experienced than I? J•A•K 13:03, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
Now if I wasn't in such a good mood, I'd be insulted by that. I'm well aware of when this page was renamed, but I only happen to have the one pair of hands. Hiding talk 13:06, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
  • Sorry Hiding. For some reason I thought you weren't still here. And the reason I'm mentioning the name change is that that is the reason the archives are of a different page. J•A•K 13:16, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

(I have no idea if this is even still relevent.)

We'd mostly been summarising here because the discussions were both long and contentiuos and there was never a clean break. You might have been a tad agressive.
This is so firmly grounded in policy that I find it hard to argue with, although I concur strongly with J•A•K about the appearance. I'd like note five to be changed to explicitly state that sources should also meet Wikipedia standards, and then we would not need to mention Keenspot outright, because it (I think) would qualify on its own. - brenneman(t)(c) 13:08, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

(Too many edit conflict... I'm not even going to read whatever just came up for twenty minutes!)

  • Yeah, I'd like to make it doubly clear that I wasn't accusing Hiding of anything. Just commenting that redoing the article and archiving the talk simultaneously seems a bit over-zealous in trying to move past the old. I don't exactly know what I'm saying, let me just say that I'm sure you've got nothing but the purest of motives, Hiding. J•A•K 13:16, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
Well, I've tidied up the mess of the archive links. Like I say, if people wish to add back discussion they don't feel has played out, they are entirely welcome to do so.
Aaron, can you specify what you mean by I'd like note five to be changed to explicitly state that sources should also meet Wikipedia standards. There are no standards, per se, although we could link to Wikipedia:Reliable sources, the closest we have. There isn't really consensus on what a reliable source is beyond the provisions in that page. Primary sources are out, beyond that we have to evaluate them and judge them on their merits. I'd agrr that the bloke on the street's blog isn't likely to be reputable as a source for much, but it can be useful in judging impact when looking at a vast quantity of such sources. Hiding talk 13:26, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
  • I'm going to try and keep this brief:

I applaud Hiding's work. This sort of change has been bubbling up on this talk page for a while, now. (See this comment and this comment by Geogre last year for example.) I was planning on pushing for this sort of change myself. I'm pleased that it has happened, and I'm additionally pleased that the resulting discussion has not really been about the basic criteria themselves, but mainly about what good examples of the criteria in action should be given in the footnotes. Uncle G 05:35, 17 January 2006 (UTC)

Where is the link with verifiability?

I am new to Wikipedia, and would like to understand the issue here. Is the purpose of this guideline or policy to determine when we can create an article about a given web site? If this is the case, what is the connection with verifiability? I ask the question because a link to this issue was added in Wikipedia talk:verifiability

The connection with verifiability is that if we do introduce such guidelines, how far do they push us away from having verifiability as the sole criterion for inclusion, per Jimbo's comments at Wikipedia talk:Fame and importance#No. The intention of the link is to invite the broadest number of people possible to comment on this page, thus building a strong consensus and allowing opinion outside of those who regularly discuss the issue. Hiding talk 16:45, 8 January 2006 (UTC)

Audience size

I would recommend adding some sort of guideline that links audience size to notability, as is done with magazines and other publications. For example, if a podcast is regularly getting 1,000 downloads a week for several weeks, I would probably qualify that as notable, even if it didn't meet the other criteria. And if a website is clearly getting tens of thousands of visitors on a regular basis, that would count. Though there should probably be some sort of exclusion for the occasional slashdotting, which could bring in 20,000 visitors over the space of 24 hours on a curiosity basis, but I wouldn't count that site as "notable" unless they had substantial sustained interest. Elonka 20:36, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

Nifboy makes a good point, and I'll add to that the response to this argument that I gave when it was argued that WP:CORP should have inclusion guidelines based upon number of employees or annual turnover: Wikipedia is not a directory. A notability criterion that says that "all podcasts with an audience of N or more are notable" produces a directory of podcasts with audiences of N or more, even if there is nothing actually to say about the podcast apart from its audience figure. It doesn't produce an encyclopaedia.

These guidelines, in contrast, work from the principle that notability is determined by the world at large, that the best way to measure notability is to see whether the world at large has already deemed something to be notable, and the best barometer of that is to see whether other people, independent of the subject in question, have expended the time and the effort to create and to publish something non-trivial of their own about it. In other words: If there's more available about a podcast or a web site from independent sources than simple directory-entry information (e.g. for web sites, the sort of information that one can glean from whois), it satisfies the primary notability criterion. Uncle G 05:15, 17 January 2006 (UTC)

Web content vs. webspecific content.

Currently, the article makes reference to both webcontent and web-specific content. Is there supposed to be a distinction: I can think of some things that would come under the heading of web content by virtue of being webcomics, but which aren't web-specific. Does that come under this? J•A•K 08:21, 7 January 2006 (UTC)

Could you cite examples as to what you mean? I asked about this before I re-wrote the page and was informed that webcomics were still thought of as webcomics, regardless of what happened to them after they originated. You ypurself said "if it started (or gained notability) while being published on the web, it's thought of as a webcomic". However, note 1 addresses some of these aspects: Content which has been packaged into material form, such as onto cd, dvd or book form, but which is still only available for sale via the internet, still falls under these guidelines. If such packaging of the product is available for sale in brick and mortar retailers, then it should be considered a product, for which see Wikipedia:Notability (companies and corporations), does that help answer the question? If you can give some specific examples I'd have a better understanding and could answer your question better. Hiding talk 15:33, 8 January 2006 (UTC)

An excellent start

I think this is excellent start; I'm a little afraid it may not adequately cover sites that are important precisely as research resources. I think most of these can be covered as part of the article on the associated institutions, but I suspect that there are some serious ones that may simply be websites.

Examples of the kind of thing I'm talking about are Ethnologue ([23]), a first-rate resource on populations speaking various languages and on how languages are related to one another; IDESCATT ([24]), a first rate statistical resource for Catalonia; or HistoryLink ([25]), a large collection of excellently researched, well-cited articles about Seattle and environs, whose contributors include several most prominent archivists of the regions history. -- Jmabel | Talk 08:47, 7 January 2006 (UTC)

Note creep?

The "Notes" are now longer than the guideline. Just an observation. - brenneman(t)(c) 22:07, 8 January 2006 (UTC)

I think it's not too bad as it stands, they serve to clarify any points of contention, and two of the notes are for the preamble, so they're almost the same length if you discount them. Did you have anything in mind behind the observation? It's funny really, because if you look at a lot of our policy, most of the ancillary pages are quite obviously notes that have spun off, Wikipedia:Reliable sources could almost certainly have started life as a note at Wikipedia:Verifiability. Hiding talk 22:25, 8 January 2006 (UTC)

Proof of notability

I like the new version of this guideline because:

  1. it is based on a simple principle (independent review)
  2. it does not use Alexa or Google rank any longer

I however would like to make the following change: after the criteria, saying something like:

The article itself must provide proof of meeting these criteria via a Reference or External link section or via inlined links.

This is somewhat implied in WP:V, but I think it would be useful to report it here. Any objection? - Liberatore(T) 13:35, 13 January 2006 (UTC)

Something like this seems worthwhile to me. Note that part of the preamble to the WP:MUSIC guideline reads, "Also, please keep in mind that the article in question must actually document that the criterion is true. It is not enough to make vague claims in the article or rant about a band's importance on a talk page or AfD page -- the article itself must document notability." Although I'd suggest avoiding the judgemental term "rant."-- Dragonfiend 07:54, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

I have made this change. The "Reference" section allows giving a proof of notability that is not available on the Web (for example, a paper-only article on a newspaper). - Liberatore(T) 12:10, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

Removed a link

I've removed comic from under examples that was added by its author. I'm making no judgements about the actual facts in question, except to say that two examples seems plenty and that it just looks bad. If its appropiate, let someone else add it in. - brenneman(t)(c) 03:13, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

Although, to be fair, the author in question also added Bob and George as an example; I took that out because it was unsourced (which kinda goes against the purpose of the guidelines). Nifboy 03:19, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

Comparisons section relevant and necessary?

Is the comparisons section relevant? I've seen people use google hits in debates on topics which aren't web specific, for example Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Rastko Perišić, Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Berom, Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/Akin Sawyerr, Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Humanauts, Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Backwash (musical group) and Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Lords of the rhymes. I would suggest the material is moved to Wikipedia:Notability. Hiding talk 20:41, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

  • A guideline would be useful - or rather a set of guidelines since there are some "web things" that get quite large numbers of Google hits without actually being notable, through ad sites etc. - Just zis  Guy, you know? [T]/[C] AfD? 21:32, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
I've just run across Wikipedia:List of ways to verify notability of articles which could do with some work and a rename, (to avoid listing every reference works or libraries in the world), but it may be the best place to work up such online verifiability tests.
  • This does seem out of place, but more than that, how is it to be used? No matter what caveats we put, it's going to be mis-used to draw a line in the sand. - brenneman(t)(c) 11:57, 17 January 2006 (UTC)

Alexa rankings

I was surprised to see the latest version of these guidelines fails to mention Alexa Internet rankings anymore. Whilst I disagree with their usage as the sole indicator of notability, they do provide a very good guide as to the most popular websites. Surely no-one would be disputing the fact that any of Alexa's top 500 visited websites were of sufficient notability for inclusion? Maybe the service could at least gain a mention on this page, or an inclusion in the comparisons table, since it is a genuinely good means of contrasting websites. Finally, I do wonder how many articles we have about websites which would no-longer meet these revised guidelines... UkPaolo/talk 15:55, 24 January 2006 (UTC)

Forums

Before the rewrite, the old version of this guideline explicitly stated for forums something like: "A forum of over 5,000 members that has had an impact outside of its community". This line needs to be put back in somewhere, there are MANY forum articles that were AfD'd (and eventually deleted) specifically for failing to meet this requirement. Spend any amount of time on RC Patrol and you'd see that a lot of forumcruft is created, most often by newish Wikipedians unaware of this guideline. Zunaid 07:58, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

Failings on Bloggers

I am a member of the mainly inactive Wikipedia:WikiProject Blogging, and I believe the current WP:WEB fails bloggers. An accurate way to measure a blog's popularity isn't through Google or Alexa - but Technorati. I suggest in any rewrite of WP:WEB, you allow all of the Top 100/200/500 blogs have an article. ComputerJoe 18:57, 5 February 2006 (UTC)

You'll notice the current criteria don't mention Alexa at all, and Google is only there for comparison purposes, and isn't part of any actual criteria (I'm not quite sure what it's doing up there). Nifboy 19:18, 5 February 2006 (UTC)

Not policy

I have removed the tag on this page and replaced it with not policy - these guidelines are completely erroneous, and reflect the hijacking of this notability discussion by people with a very poor understanding of several Wikipedia policies, most notably no original research. The result of these guidelines is to render hundreds of long-standing articles including at least one featured article unfit for inclusion. When your policy manipulation has reached a point of such obvious error, you have stopped creating policy. I invite any of the people involved in this debacle to take up the initiative in restoring this page to something resembling sanity. --Phil Sandifer 00:06, 22 February 2006 (UTC)

Following the maxim of "be bold, revert, discuss" we're now at stage three since I've replaced the tag. The place to make this argument is on this page, things don't simply become un-policy because someone says so. If there is compelling narrative as to why this shouldn't be policy, it will sway reasonable and open minded individuals, and a consensus will be reached that this is not, in fact, a suitable guideline.
brenneman{T}{L} 00:53, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
The issue is not whether this is a suitable guideline. It is whether this guideline reflects any semblance of reality. It does not. The issue of suitability is wholly secondary to the fact that, simply put, you cannot alter deletion policy such that featured articles are suddenly deletion candidates. --Phil Sandifer 00:56, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
Dare I ask which one? --Nifboy 02:31, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
Memory Alpha. --Phil Sandifer 02:33, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
O RLY? A "Site of the week" from SciFi.com doesn't count? --Nifboy 03:04, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
I can't see how you can possibly construe that, Snowspinner. Care to point out which clauses exclude Memory Alpha or Wookiepedia? --maru (talk) contribs 03:06, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
Since they're inclusion guidelines, the more relevent question is which ones include it. Phil Sandifer 03:07, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
In general: This guideline has been the subject of long and careful work by a wide variety of editors. It's been listed on the village pump, on centralised discussion, and been the subject of arbitration. It's been spammed on talk pages, almost certainly ran hot on e-mail back channels, and I'll be suprised if it hasn't appeared on Eric Burns' blog. The fact that there exists a vociferous minority who appear unable to compromise becomes diminshingly important as it becomes clear that this guideline is accepted.
More specifically: There is extensive commentary on my talk page regarding memory alpha. It's already subject to thoughtful discussion. The argument that since there exists at least one counterexample, the entire guideline must therefor be scrapped? That is thin indeed. This page begins with "This page gives some rough guidelines..." and goes on from there. Is the contention that there does not exist even one decent article that fails WP:MUSIC, for example?
brenneman{T}{L} 03:09, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
You hold up WP:MUSIC as though I like it. Phil Sandifer 03:15, 22 February 2006 (UTC)

Explanation of Tony Sidaway's use of the term "some Wikipedia editors"

It's pretty evident that the items listed here are not very complete, and equally obvious that not all editors subscribe to this proposed guideline, so I'm using the phrasing "This page gives some rough guidelines which some Wikipedia editors use to decide if any form of web specific-content, being either the content of a website or the specific website itself should have an article on Wikipedia." This also takes into account the rather controversial nature of the "notability" concept in itself. There are writers who seem to be capable producong perfectly good articles without any consideration of whether their subject is "notable". Strongly inclusive wording here is therefore unjustifiable, for there is much division. --Tony Sidaway 03:33, 22 February 2006 (UTC)

Frankly, I really don't care one way or another, and don't see what the big deal is. Nifboy 03:40, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
If we're going to use a qualifier, is should be an accurate one, so I've changed it to "most". This guideline has been done to death, and is linked to Hanoi and back. I think that unless we're going to decide that "rough consensus" doesn't include the case where one or two people disagree, we've got rough consensus here. We've had discussions, votes, arbitrations, more discussion, ad nauseam. This not only reflects Wikipedia's non-negotiable precept of verifiability, almost everyone accepts it. Look at the history of the main page: lots editors working together and moving forwards, very very few (almost one!) editor objecting. Enough already.
brenneman{T}{L} 03:54, 22 February 2006 (UTC)

An interesting AfD

Neglected Mario Characters (a rather pitiful sprite comic whose only claim to fame is being the first) is up for AfD. I think it's an interesting case, and so I'm linking to it here. Nifboy 04:34, 24 February 2006 (UTC)

Failings on Early Web History

Please note that we are trying to brainstorm some rational notability criteria for websites which existed in the early web era (circa 1991-1997) at WikiProject Early Web History. The current criteria are a decent filter when considering the 100 million sites on the Web today, but are too fine when considering the historical relevance of one amongst perhaps only several thousand early web pages. KWH 06:46, 25 February 2006 (UTC)

Actually, I'd have thought that the current guidelines were more friendly to older material than the various suggested interations. Nothing currently about google or alexa, which discriminate against the older stuff. My off-the-cuff response would be that the history of the web is a hot topic in print and online sources like Wired, so there should really be no issue. Can we have an example of something that might be thought "important" in the history of the web but that would fail these guidelines? (Great idea for a project by the way!)
brenneman{T}{L} 11:23, 25 February 2006 (UTC)

Distribution means what

ComoAnda and guideline #3

There is some disagreement between me and another editor about how the web site ComoAnda applies to guideline #3. The discussion can be found on my talk page. I would like to get an outside opinion on this. --Cymsdale 23:37, 2 March 2006 (UTC)

Hmmm. According to that criterion, every single project on SourceForge is de facto notable. Just zis Guy you know? 20:11, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
Isn't it trivial to get a project on SF, though? Nifboy 20:12, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
I think that's the point. --Cymsdale 20:34, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
As I said in the AfD discussion, I think it turns on what a reasonable definition of "distribute" is. No reasonable person would hold every project on SF to be notable, even though SF "distributes" them... Last I checked the article originator seemed to "get it"... ++Lar: t/c 20:38, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
Would it help if we changed the word to "endorse"? It seems the guideline is really looking for a kind of affirmation that the content is good; Free hosts don't do that, but if somebody like the New York Times publishes an article, that's also an endorsement of sorts, on top of being a "mere" publication. Nifboy 21:06, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
I think footnote seven is good enough to catch tyhis, although we might need to expand the examples to add serch engine results as being trivial distribution. I thought that was a no-brainer, personally, but I never considered search results to be content. I suppose since they can generate income they probably are content, but they are certainly non-trivial. Hiding talk 21:13, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
Per this and the iTunes sitch below, I'd certainly support beefing up either the footnote or guideline, whichever makes more sense, to address this loophole. ++Lar: t/c 02:19, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
Hmmm. I don't really see it as a loophole. AFD is probably the best place to discuss contentious issues like the one below. The guidelines, to my mind, shouldn't be able to cover every eventuality. I don't think there should be wikilawyering over the guidelines, but that each case should be discussed individually, using the guidelines as a reference but not a rulebook. Hiding talk 13:34, 7 March 2006 (UTC)

iTunes Music Store

If a podcast is available via the iTunes Music Store, is it being distributed by iTMS? I.e., can anybody get their podcast on iTMS, or is there enough vetting done that a podcast available there would be considered notable for Wikipedia purposes? —C.Fred (talk) 02:25, 6 March 2006 (UTC)

My instinct would say that a podcast should not receive notability simply for being distributed through the iTMS service. However, guideline #3 does seem to imply this by its wording. I think some more clarity needs to be brought to this guideline, it's much too vague as it stands now. --Cymsdale 02:30, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
I think we'd have to look at what being distributed by iTMS means before we categorically state whether it denotes notability or not. If distribution by iTMS is trivial, then it's caught by footnote seven. So we just need to get a consensus on whether iTMS distribution is trivial. Anyone know the mechanics of how distribution by iTMS is gained. What podcasts are we talking about here? Hiding talk 21:37, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
The podcast in question at the moment is Radio Askew. As far as I can tell, there is some vetting of podcasts done by iTMS; it's not a parallel with having, say, a Geocities URL. The problem is, Apple's help is vague about how much review is done, though it implies consideration of whether explicit language tags are appropriate. —C.Fred (talk) 02:13, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
reading this The iTunes Music Store podcast directory will only contain references to the RSS feeds available on a podcaster’s website. A podcaster must be running web-server software in order to host their podcast. When a user subscribes to a podcast through the iTunes Music Store, iTunes accesses the podcaster’s RSS feed and downloads the enclosed audio files directly from the podcaster’s website., from the [iTunes podcast FAQ, it reads to me that the podcasts aren't distributed by iTunes. I guess it hinges on your definition of distribution. However, I'd be inclined to vote keep on the podcast in question at afd, it seems a notable podcast given the guests, endorsement and output. But I'm an inclusionist, YMMV. Best thing to do would be to list it at AFD if you don't think it merits an article. These guidelines aren't rules for deletion. Hiding talk 13:42, 7 March 2006 (UTC)

Guideline for internet memes

As shown time and time again, the guideline here is sorely lacking in dealing with internet memes in particular (although I think the new changes are really horrible across the board, but that's a separate discussion). With this said, I have been trying to get input regarding creating a guideline for internet memes only, which is being discussed on and off at User:Badlydrawnjeff/Meme. I'm hoping people will throw in their two cents. --badlydrawnjeff (WP:MEME?) 14:47, 7 March 2006 (UTC)

I was coming here to say the same thing, but for that that there is no other place for a "meme" guideline than here. - brenneman{T}{L} 02:36, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
How do you figure? Serious question, because I don't really see how it can be properly encompassed here, especially given the recent changes. --badlydrawnjeff (WP:MEME?) 02:56, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
I'd like to see some examples of how "the guideline here is sorely lacking in dealing with internet memes." Like maybe take a look at a dozen or so memes and see whether they meet this guideline. Are there some notable internet memes that it is believed may not meet this guideline? -- Dragonfiend 03:25, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
I'd say LUEshi, Prime Number Shitting Bear, The Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny and, while I hate to open that can of worms at the moment, Brian Peppers are excellent immediate examples. Of the four, only Brian Peppers has a shot in hell of ever reaching the absurd standards of the guideline here, while the idea that many of these memes are notable isn't really in doubt. The problem is that this is a passable guideline for actual websites, which are a dime a dozen, but don't do well for internet-only content like internet memes. Even most notable blogs wouldn't have reached these standards before the 2004 US elections, and it still fails otherwise notable blogs, I'd imagine, given the overly strict standards applied.
Let's put it another way - it's a relative consensus within the community via the AfD process that internet memes can be notable. The problem is that there's no consistent standard to apply to them, and there's a rather lazy use of crossover memes like All Your Base and the Star Wars Kid as some sort of basement for notability, which would do a disservice to other absolutely notable memes like Badger Badger Badger. If we're going to have internet memes on Wikipedia - and we should - we should be working toward a unique consensus guideline for them as they are a unique body of work. Of course, with no general standard, a consensus that they should be here, and the closest available guideline (being WP:WEB) not doing it justice, we end up spamming AfD with the same AfD twice a month. A good, solid guideline to deal specifically with this sort of medium would do us good. --badlydrawnjeff (WP:MEME?) 03:39, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

Existing guideline

OK, let's look at whether these memes meet the current WP:WEB guidelines -- Dragonfiend 04:54, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

Metrics

(Reset indent)

brenneman{T}{L} 05:18, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

Theme Search Hits Unique Ratio Current Web satisfied?
"All your base are belong to us" [26] 473,000 799 1.7 Y
"Star Wars Kid" [27] 275,000 781 2.8 Y
"Badger Badger Badger" [28] 92,300 765 8.3 Y
"LUEshi" [29] 25,400 710 28.0 ?

Just use the existing guidelines

I really don't see what the problem is. If the articles use reliable sources to build the information, then they meet guideline 1. It's that simple. At the moment LUEshi cites no sources, so that needs to be addressed. Hiding talk 10:20, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

The problems involve what works as a "reliable source" for an internet meme, and the issues of notability for web-only content that is unlikely to get "traditional" media coverage. --badlydrawnjeff (WP:MEME?) 14:30, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
Well, that's not really a problem that these guidlines or any notability guidlines should seek to determine. The reliability of sources is an issue upon which, in a certain respect, you have to make your own judgement on. If you don't feel the sources are reliable enough to support the information that has been added, dicuss that on the article talk page in the first instance, and then at Wikipedia:Reliable sources. If you're concerned that the article in its entirety is not supported by reliable sources, I'd add a template:sources, again discuss the issue on the article talk page, and if none are forthcoming within a week or so, then consider listing the article at WP:AFD, citing your reason as being that the article cannot be sourced in reliable sources. WP:AFD is ultimately the only forum which can generate an article specific consensus upon an articles inclusion or deletion. I'd note that Dragonfiend managed to find "traditional" media coverage for many memes, so it might not be as unlikely as you say. However, all that said, a rule of thumb you might consider could be that if the sources in question meet the guidelines outlined in these guidelines, then they can be thought of as reliable sources. It's something to consider. Hiding talk 16:20, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
But this guideline is designed to take that into account. You seem to misunderstand me - I don't want to see internet memes go by the wayside, I want to see them stick around, and WP:WEB is not doing the greatest job in reflecting the general consensus, nor is it designed to do so. --badlydrawnjeff (WP:MEME?) 16:29, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
Actually the guideline is designed to move the debate from is this notable to is this a reliable source on which to build an article. In this instance it appears to have worked. As I suggest, consider the sourcing of the articles in question, consider whether they are verifiable, are of a neutral point of view and that they do not constitute original research. These guidelines are not meant to tweaked to allow for any particular article on a given topic or topic group to exist or be deleted. Each article should be taken on its merits; the guidelines merely offer guidance on what to consider. And again, since Dragonfiend found traditional media sources I'm not entirely sure there is a problem here. I confess I am baffled as to what consensus you are describing above. Does there exist a consensus that all internet memes are worthy of an article? Hiding talk 22:56, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
I hate to use the moronic "it exists" argument, but the existence of memes are reliable, just as, say, the existence of you or I. The question is how to judge whether such things are notable. I'm certainly not, and some internet memes are, but some are not. Traditional, non-internet media do not always do it justice - it certainly doesn't for Peppers or LUEshi, and a lot of people would scoff at the source for the Prime Number Shitting Bear (those were the three examples of internet memes that I was providing), but they're still notable, like Star Wars Kid, Badger Badger, etc. And I'm not saying all internet memes are notable and worthy, but that some are, and the current guidelines fail to properly address that. It's not an all-or-nothing proposition, many memes I've voted keep on during AfD wouldn't meet the guidelines I'd like to see. --badlydrawnjeff (WP:MEME?) 23:37, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

The criteria are absolute bullshit. All they do is present things which need decent recognition from getting the recognition they deserve. I added a comic that I personally enjoy but do not write as I feel it deserved to be on the webcomic list. Why do other webcomics get to be here but not my favourite one? This is absurd. Things that are already exposed don't need more exposure and already have plenty of information available on them, so there's no reason why thigns like this shouldn't take equal preference. I realise this is to prevent over-flooding on articles, but most people won't bother to write a Wiki article on their comic, at least not a very big one that takes up any space or bandwidth. I fail to see what the issue is.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Adventures_of_Epicenter

--User:Kittie Rose

Wikipedia is not and should not be a place where anything gains recognition: It is a repository of things that have already been recognized. Nifboy 22:10, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
And, moreover, Wikipedia articles should represent verifiable scholarship about the thing being discussed. The issue of verifiability is not whether a meme (or website) exists, but whether there is anything significant, reliable, independent and verifiable that has been said about it. If a meme has been observed 100 times, but has been the subject of peer-reviewed articles, it is valid for inclusion, and there is something to say about it. If a second meme has been observed 1,000,000 times, but no one with any credentials has said anything about it, I see no way to write an NPOV article of interest without committing original research. Robert A.West (Talk) 04:27, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

Policy

Perhaps this should be labelled as a clarification of existing policy (WP:V) as it applies to website articles, since that is basically what it now is. While WP:WEB isn't technically policy, it might as well be, since WP:V is. --W.marsh 03:27, 13 March 2006 (UTC)