I think it's fine as a source within the sphere of Magic: The Gathering and/or related games. It is also the page of a business which sells cards, though, so when it's used, the potential for a conflict of interest in its writing should be considered. NorthBySouthBaranof (talk) 03:24, 26 August 2016 (UTC)
I need an opinion on a Russian-language source which is proposed for deployment. I reverted it [[3]] but this is purely provisional based on community consensus. The I.P. is in communication via my talk page and has left me the source link, [here]. Comments appreciated. Simon. Irondome (talk) 18:35, 28 August 2016 (UTC)
RIA Novosti is a large news agency, generally acceptable as a source for Russian topics. The one you reverted, vpk.name,[4] sounds a bit propagandish but does quote military personnel extensively, so I think it has some credibility, provided it is attributed properly (just like we would take with a grain of salt claims of strike capability from any military in the world). — JFGtalk17:18, 29 August 2016 (UTC)
@Irondome: Hi, Simon. RIA and Sputnik (which replace ITAR-TASS and English language RIA), etc. have been discussed many, many times over both here and the NPOVN since 2013. See this discussion on the Battle of Ilovaisk as an example. There have been protracted discussions (and I do mean months and months and months of heated discussion) with the conclusion that state run agencies are reliable for reporting on official statements, but for nothing else without intext attribution on the understanding that it is a biased source. Even in such instances, any content derived from such sources needs to be evaluated as to whether it is being introduced to serve as WP:GEVAL. The second source used is "ВПК" (VPK) and is a WP:SPS. In this instance, the RIA source is an infographic (basically, the specs for the particular missile). I edit a lot of the Russian military and militia articles and don't have a problem with these. They're basically specs being published on behalf of the RF by RIA. Essentially, it's no different than publishing specs for US, Australian, or any other government's accumulation of militia. You're not going to know anything other than what they want publicised unless there are leaks, and leaks are a different kettle of fish. Yeesh! Apologies for the weird bag of mixed metaphors! --Iryna Harpy (talk) 05:32, 31 August 2016 (UTC)
The Score isnt 'user generated' as we generally use it (wikipedia, facebook, youtube etc). Its used often because in some areas *any* source is better than none and The Score has fairly extensive details. Some of its contributers would probably pass for being knowledgeable subject matter experts (I think at least one is an ex pro-gamer, and it has 'staff' writers). I wouldnt use it where any other better source was available, unfortunately there rarely is. The other side of course is that the info it is used to source is not contentious at all. I would rather a poor source than no source. I would say that it is no indication of notability of anyone it covers, but that its info is likely accurate. Only in death does duty end (talk) 08:52, 30 August 2016 (UTC)
Well, what the terms of use say is that the publisher doesn't take any responsibility for the content, so there's no editorial control and no fact checking. In that sense, it's user generated content. I'd agree that the source is no indication of notability, but I don't see why we would assume that the information is accurate?—S MarshallT/C11:46, 30 August 2016 (UTC)
I took a look, a lot of the stuff its reporting are things that are available elsewhere, like social media, games forums etc. So from a (admittedly not comprehensive) look it appears the information is verifiably true. Personally I would use a self-published source for something like 'Player X has left team Y' as Player X will undountedly tweet/stream about leaving Team Y in short order. But wikipedia strongly discourages primary sources, even though in some circumstances its perfectly fine. Either way, it is certainly not useful for a deletion discussion. Only in death does duty end (talk) 11:55, 30 August 2016 (UTC)
Every single online reliable source with comment sections has a terms of use like that, it's a disclaimer that user-submitted content (i.e. comments on articles) are not completely screened. The terms of use has no bearing on the editorial policy of the publication. You can see similar sections at the Toronto Star under "User Conduct, Indemnification and Licence Granted", The New York Timeshas two sections dealing with this, CBC under s. 3 and s. 5, which all tell the user to assume responsibility for their submitted content. Those terms of use do not mean that the TorStar, NYT, or CBC are user generated and unreliable. TheScore Esports has a writers page, where one writer, "Daniel Rosen" is listed as its news editor, which makes it clear that there is in fact editorial control. If we base our understanding of what constitute reliable source publications on what their terms of use say about who is responsible for user-submitted comments on their content, we wouldn't be able to use any online sources. ---- Patar knight - chat/contributions17:58, 31 August 2016 (UTC)
4. Discussion. A couple of editors over at Ethereum have been repeatedly asserting that these sites CoinDesk, CoinTelegraph, etc cannot be used as WP:RS on these articles asserting compliance is required with WP:FRIND, and thus repeatedly deleting content. See a current discussion here relating at Talk:Ethereum#Coin_desk. Thus I have created this RS noticeboard discussion as well as a Fringe Wikipedia:Fringe_theories/Noticeboard#Ethereum discussion. These editors refer to CoinDesk, CoinTelegraph, Bitcoin Magazine and others as blogs and unreliable news sources or they refer to them as primary sources (see this edit) https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ethereum&oldid=736535460. I wanted to get some input from the larger community so we can maybe reach a consensus on it, and make editing of the affected pages easier (as we will then understand if I can use these sources or not).
No in my opinion. Using promotional advert sites is just a gateway to the crypto currency world. They are primary promotional. It would be like using Kitco [6] to source our gold articles. Kitco is only a buying and selling information site that promotes the buying of gold as do these coin sites. Stick with actual news worthy sources not promo rah rah sites. Earl King Jr. (talk) 04:08, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
Strong support for the use of CoinDesk as an independent reliable source on the date of Ethereum launch. Reasons:
CoinDesk is a news source with editorial board and independent policies in place.
There are citations of CoinDesk news in other reputable and independent sources.
In contrast to suggestions at Talk:Ethereum#Coin_desk, the date of Ethereum launch is not a fringe theory, it is an undisputed fact.
Huh? It is an industry promotional site of how to buy cryptocurrency [7] So a combination of that and a bunch of press releases that are worthless for sourcing and blog articles with a bunch of people that support Ether and Bitcoin. Earl King Jr. (talk) 06:59, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
As a public person that writes on this subject on the internet and is a part of the CryptoCoin world I would think that perspective is needed. Your comparing the two sources is ludicrous. A main feature of CoinDesk is worthless non notable press release things and a How To Buy Guide which is very detailed. Very different from the article you conjured to make but not make your point. Earl King Jr. (talk) 07:17, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
Earl King Jr., actually, I did not need to "conjure" anything. There are many more independent reliable sources that inform their readers how bitcoins can be acquired. If anything is conjured, then it is not me who does it. Ladislav Mecir (talk) 07:24, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
Moreover, the presence or absence of the information how to acquire bitcoins has, in my opinion, no relevance to examine the sourcing of the Ethereum launch date. Ladislav Mecir (talk) 07:28, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
Hey all, I'm having some ongoing problems at both Kabali (film) and List of highest-grossing Indian films. Breifly, Indian films are very popular in India, but they're also very prone to promoters bloating box office financials, and Wikipedia often gets caught in the middle of these promotional campaigns. List of highest-grossing Indian films was fully protected because a bunch of editors, including auto-confirmed ones who had suddenly come out of retirement, kept changing the box office values to reflect the box office figures a producer, (a primary source) was reporting a few days after the Tamil-language film Kabali was released. The producer claimed the film had grossed 3.2 billion (320 "crore") rupees. No amount of discussion on the talk page was making a difference. Same at Kabali (film), although to a lesser degree.
With that wave of disruption mostly over, a new disruption arose after Financial Express, which is generally considered a reliable source, made claims that the film has grossed 650 crore and higher. However International Business Times, which is also generally considered reliable, has outright called these high estimates "fake", noting that they include income unrelated to the film's box office take. IBT places the more reasonable estimates at 309-350 crore (3.09-3.5 billion rupees) as has First Post, which has said, "More conservative estimates put Kabali’s collections at around Rs 300 crores from worldwide ticket sales." This is obviously less than the 320 crore that the producer was reporting a few days into the film's run.
This talk page comment of mine is a bit of an obnoxious read in response to an IP user's demand for a detailed explanation, but I think it clearly explains the various issues. If anyone is willing to comment at either that discussion, or at Talk:Kabali (film), or at both, that would be appreciated. Or just to add these pages to their watchlists to help address some of the questions would be helpful too. Thanks! Cyphoidbomb (talk) 02:42, 5 August 2016 (UTC)
Hi, the 309-350 crore figure is currently outdated and we now have multiple sources pointing the Domestic collection as "Rs 211 Crore" and International Collection at "Rs 259 Crore", which brings the world wide theater collections at atleast 470 Crores. . Yes, Tamil Nadu government has a cap on ticket sales at Rs 120 per ticket hence the domestic is lesser than the international. Indiatimes, The Financial Express, BoxOfficeCollection-India, Galaxy Reporter and Bollywood Box Office Collection. So i think we can move on from Rs 350 Crore to Rs 470 Crore until a more updated figure is available. Thanks. --Pearll's SunTALK03:45, 8 August 2016 (UTC)
pearll's sun - And I don't think we can, since the values that were put out by Financial Express drew skepticism by Firstpost and IBT. They didn't just question the values, they criticized the lack of research behind the values. If other members of the media are criticizing a publication for not doing research, why would you assume that the rest of their report would be factual? When you can find values from established reliable sources that do not originate from Financial Express, then perhaps we can move ahead. But for days now you've been citing the same problematic references, or (as above) citing publications that are referring to these problematic references. As for your inclusion of galaxyreporter and boxofficecollection.in, no dice on those as far as sourcing goes. I'm not even going to look at them. I know from past experiences that these are faceless blogs, which fails WP:UGC. You seem to be a real hurry to update the box office data using the most questionable sources out there, and that is problematic. I've explained several times at Talk:List of highest-grossing Indian films that we have no deadline, but you seem to keep conveniently ignoring it. You also seem to have ignored my points that Indian cinema articles are prone to corrupt inflations. If you were interested in academic integrity, now would be the time to demonstrate that, rather than deciding of your own accord that now's the time to fluff up the disputed box office values. I'm perfectly fine with the compromise of removing the box office data for Kabali entirely from that article and from Kabali (film) until multiple sources report independently of Financial Express what the gross values are, but somehow I strongly doubt you're interested in a compromise. As noted, the only thing we know for sure is that the film has crossed 350 crore. We do not know for sure if the 470 crore estimates are close to what the rest of the film analysts think. I'm proposing caution and circumspection with time determining what value should be used, you're proposing we rush to publish what one periodical thinks, apparently with no regard for whether or not we'd be republishing bullshit marketing hype. Yours is not the sound position. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 04:28, 8 August 2016 (UTC)
Cyphoidbomb. Perfect, Why publish a wrong figure or publish a disputed/inflated one? Removing the box office data entirely from the article claiming it to be "disputed" sounds like the best way to keep off false figures from the article. Also when we check google, it seems to reflect wiki and shows a wrong value. But on the "Highest Grossing Indian Films", can we say its around 350 - 470 Crore or 350 - 650 Crore and call it disputed?. Let's not fix a value by ourselves. Thanks. --Pearll's SunTALK04:37, 8 August 2016 (UTC)
I would remove the gross from List of highest-grossing Indian films and from the Infobox at Kabali, with the latter maybe pointing to a relevant section in the article that discusses the disparity, maybe with "Disputed, see Box office". An option for the former article might be to present the gross in the form of a range as I previously did, and as you suggested above, but to flag it as disputed with {{disputed inline}}, linking to a relevant discussion on the talk page (see template instructions). I don't have time to do this now, so if you want to handle both, I'll trust your judgement. Whatever you do, you might want to link to this discussion in your edit summary. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 06:01, 8 August 2016 (UTC)
I'm a bit biased but when real reliable sources say that the 600 and above range is complete rubbish and anonymous blogs are cited as the exact kind of thing that the reliable sources consider quoting the rubbish, using the anonymous blogs as evidence for a mid-level claim. I'd rather keep a week-old citation and then we can figure out whether or not than a poorly sourced recent one. As noted, our policy is that badly sourced information is worse than no information at all and being conservative is better than claiming things like "this moves from the 14th highest Indian film gross of all time to 6th" and possibly retracting that entire claim. This is no small claim. Just to make sure it's clear, a number that is literally tens of millions of dollars more as we are moving from 350 crore (about $52.6 million) to 470 crore ($70.6 million). A difference of 120 crore which is equivalent to $18 million or basically what the third US box office results were in their entirety this weekend. I know one huge problem is that the Indian film task force has not really analyzed these websites (in part because a new one seems to pop up every few months) and we tend to take the "accept it unless evidence is to the contrary" approach instead of WP:BURDEN the reverse. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 08:05, 8 August 2016 (UTC)
Ricky81682, thanks for your comments. IBT's latest from 9 August 2016 is casting some shade on some of the broken record claims. They also wrote: ""Kabali" has collected more than Rs. 300 crore at the global box office in 17 days and its current pace shows it will not be able to surpass the Rs. 500 crore mark in its life time." It's somewhat noteworthy that the milestone they mention is 300 crore, not 400 crore. Though I have no evidence to support it, the Financial Express pieces read more like press releases than articles. Knowing that the Kabali producer was claiming 320 crore gross a few days into release, which was not supported by independent sources, it would not surprise me if his people had flooded Financial Express with a puff piece and they reprinted it without fact-checking, which is kinda what IBT suggested when they mocked the unnamed publication for printing claims of up to 675 crore. Needless to say, other sources hungrily reprinted the nonsensical claims without any effort of fact-checking, because hey, it brings in clicks. In the discussion above with pearll's sun I recommended presenting the data in the form of a range. It's one way to go and I would typically endorse that for minor disputes, but I really don't know how much Financial Express can be trusted on this. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 19:28, 9 August 2016 (UTC)
Cyphoidbomb Yes, IBT says it has collected over 200 Crores in India. But again we need to see which are the most trustable sources. For me all the popular Indian news media are a trustable source and IBT is new one as only post Kabali reports i learned about this news agency.
Now which one to choose? I too second in Ricky81682 comment that "badly sourced information is worse than no information at all". Do we have any option (an e.g. from any article) to place a value such as "350 Cr to 700 Cr" with a tag "Disputed"? or simply remove the value and place "Disputed - See Box Office report within article"? --Pearll's SunTALK14:15, 11 August 2016 (UTC)
IBT is not a "new" source. It's been around for years and is widely considered reliable by the Indian cinema task force at Wikipedia. Per your points:
The India Times reference you keep bringing up cites Financial Times as the source of the info. That's not an independent confirmation, so it doesn't count as an additional source. It is not constructive to keep bringing it up as though it were a unique source reporting its unique findings.
There's also no indication that Filmibeat is considered a reliable source by the WP:ICTF. On the contrary, the community appears to dislike Filmibeat/Oneindia as a reference.
The Indiatoday source you bring up cites the producer as the source of the financials. We don't use primary sources for controversial data. Obviously the producer has a financial interest in inflating the box office claims. I don't know exactly what point you're trying to make about the ticket scalping, but why would it matter if we're going to discount what the producer claims anyway?
Yes, we are aware of the Financial Express claim.
There's no indication that Boxofficecollection.in is anything more than a blog, or that it is in any way considered a reliable source by WP:ICTF. Useless for our purposes.
Yes, we are aware of IBT's adherence to a value <400 crore. Does it occur to you that this is because IBT doesn't believe the film crossed 400 crore? Like here where they mention crossing 300 crore, but not 400 crore?
Your suggestion that we list the top-end estimate at 700 crore is ludicrous. You couldn't possibly believe that 700 crore is a reasonable top end, since not even the poorest of the sources you've provided has claimed that Kabali grossed 700 crore at the box office. I genuinely don't understand your reluctance to wait a couple of weeks until the chaos subsides. It is not inaccurate to say definitively that the film crossed 350 crore. What is inaccurate is to say definitively that the film crossed 400 and 500 crore. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 18:56, 11 August 2016 (UTC)
700 Crore is just a figure and can mean anything the sources claim it to be. So instead of focusing on the "700" i think we should see if we can either place two figures and call them disputed or remove the outdated 350 Crore claim by IBT (unless wiki clearly specifies IBT to be only reliable source).
If IBT is widely considered reliable, does all other popular news including "Financial Times" and "India Times" considered un-reliable?
Is IBT the only reliable resource of wiki?
For me IBT and other sources such as "Financial Times", "NDTV", "India Times" and other popular press media seems same unless wiki specifies a list of most reliable sources.
I'm now so glad that google has finally removed the 350 Crore figure from its search sourced from wiki and placed "5.7 billion INR (570 Crores... no idea if this is right or wrong yet they seem to have an updated figure)". Hope wiki too finds an acceptable solution for such issues.
Cyphoidbomb Also i want to know why we have to keep waiting (its also a waste of time which drains valuable efforts which can beneficial to other wiki articles) for some estimate to surface when we have an option to either place two figures and call them disputed or remove the entire figure from the box office zone and point to "Box office" section within the article. Even if we never have a sharp value even after two weeks or two months, this arrangement should suffice as calling the box office collection "Disputed" forever can work as we at wiki aren't in the job of placing our own assessments (if done can easily go one sided) when such a huge difference is being projected.
Also i wish to reiterate Ricky81682 lines here "Our policy is that badly sourced information is worse than no information at all" and i thing we are exactly doing what we dont want to "publish a badly sourced and outdated info". Thanks. --Pearll's SunTALK01:13, 18 August 2016 (UTC)
Please stop asking me about India Times, it's getting irritating. I explained it very clearly the last time, and I've probably explained this to you three times already in various ways at different discussions: If a site simply reprints what another site says, that's not an independent verification. That's just a reprint. If fifty reliable newspapers reprint a producer's quote that the film made ₹NNN crore, does the fifty reprints mean that we have fifty unique sources that endorse the information? No, it means we have one source that made a claim, the producer, and fifty sources that blindly reprinted the claim. Please meditate on this response, because it'll be the last time I give it.
No.
Okay, and?
Okay, and? Google's business is Google's business.
The articles have remained relatively stable for the last week or so, so I'm not sure what grand waste of time you're complaining about, especially when I'm the one who has invested the most time dealing with the fallout. If the disruptions continue in the next few days, that would be a very odd coincidence. If we remove all mention of Kabali's gross from either the List of highest-grossing Indian films or Kabali (film), I think there will be a greater disruption than there has been already. So if you're concerned about wasting editors' time, it seems that maintaining the status quo has been the best approach. Adding the range in this case seems like it would just serve to promote the film. As I have previously said, we know that the film made ₹350 crore. It is not inaccurate to say that it has grossed that much. When reliable sources decide to sack up and start publishing their own analyses of the gross, then we can increase the figure. And since I wind up saying the same over and over to you anyway, I'll say it again: we know that the film made ₹350 crore. It is not inaccurate to say that it has grossed that much. When reliable sources decide to sack up and start publishing their own analyses of the gross, then we can increase the figure. Not sure why that's a sticking point for you. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 07:49, 18 August 2016 (UTC)
I still say go with the reliable source. The two sources that actually acknowledges the complete BS being posted and giving a mid-range number I'll trust 100X over someone just parroting the big giant number that hasn't been repeated. We've been at this for over a week and other than a scattershot of anonymous blogs or sources citing nothing or perhaps citing those blogs, we have a stable number that says this is the 12th highest grossing Indian film ever as opposed to sources that would put this in the top 5 or even 2nd highest film ever which would have a hell of a lot more press if people believed that. I'm more curious why we cite BoxOfficeIndia so much when Kabali isn't listed (or it may just be Hindi-related). I'd rather wait until the year end and see what the actual end results are than care about weekly box office guesses. -- — Preceding unsigned comment added by Ricky81682 (talk • contribs) 08:27, 18 August 2016 (UTC)
Ricky81682, thanks for clarifying your position. BOI isn't always a great choice because in my experience it seems they lose interest in tracking box office figures sometimes. Occasionally their values will go static while other sources' figures are unfolding. I don't know, maybe they're actually good and they know when the income starts to dry up, so they stop updating the gross because it's not worth the effort. Whereas the other sources are just repeating what the producers are saying. Who knows. But there are other issues to, like that their URLs sometimes become dead links over time, which requires us to dig up archives. Also, they don't publish dates in their box office breakdowns, so you never know exactly when that figure was relevant. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 07:55, 19 August 2016 (UTC)
Cyphoidbomb Ignoring the BOI issue, the problem here is that the entire encyclopedia is supposed to have a single consistent WP:NPOV. For us to report a 700 crore box office result puts Kabali at literally the second highest grossing Indian film of all time and thus we should adjust the wording at Baahubali: The Beginning as no longer second and Sultan and Dhoom 3 and on and on based on what I assume are going to be actually consistent statements that match these rankings. Otherwise, to put it in US-Canadian non-inflation film rankings, it would be like arguing about whether we should rank Shrek 2 above Avatar when sources explicitly state that the producers of Shrek 2 are giving out completely nonsensical figures rather than wait more than a week to get consistently stable figures. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 08:34, 19 August 2016 (UTC)
Ricky81682 I found this DNA article from 27 July 2016 it predates the other sources, I think, but it speaks very loudly to the questions that have been raised, and while they're talking specifically about box office inflations made early on, it indicates very clearly that there was an active campaign to inflate figures to lure people to see what they consider to be a sub-standard film.
Given that these opinions come from a few different analysts, they comprise more voices articulating that the bloated figures shouldn't be blindly swallowed. If the campaigners are desperate at the start of a marketing blitz, they're surely desperate at the end of their marketing blitz. This is allegedly the second highest-grossing Indian film of all time, but none of the major news sources have said anything of substance about this film in the last two weeks. That's also telling. It's the biggest movie that the media forgot. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 07:59, 20 August 2016 (UTC)
It is so surprising that none of the trade analyst (more voices or north voices??) who have commented are from the Tamil industry and its also sounds childish for a well known print media to publish a comment from a distributor who will obviously promote the direct hindi movies that he distributes and not some dubbed tamil movie that he may not have any idea. This distributor says at the 1st week " For Kabali the reviews are bad so there may be a drop this week." while the actual picture sings a totally different song that too at the end of its 3rd week. The film is said to have made huge profits from both the South India and from the Overseas so unless we hear from both these locations. If we keep on considering and lauding articles that rubbishes Tamil movies which it actually has no idea (clearly evident when it calls a blockbuster movie "Kabali" as "very bad, amateurishly-made film" and more funnier as a "sub-standard film"), then we might have to consider the following for Mohenjo Daro which is claimed to be below average and Rustom which too as an average grosser and Sultan which completely went missing from Chennai theaters after Kabali was released. And this "IBT" which wiki considers as "Most Reliable" collects all its reports about kabali from some overseas based blog and a twitter account and has no info on its own nor does any research. Hope we start considering some genuine news articles than those who publishes and promotes false reports and personalized articles for some particular peoples interest. Again i wish to quote that "lets not fix and publish a particular figure and instead claim the quoted figure as disputed". Thanks (Magizhchi). --Pearll's SunTALK11:02, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
You keep citing WP:OR, but I'm guessing you haven't read it. A source exists for 350 crore, thus it is not original research. We know it made at least 350 crore. That is a fact, not original research. If I said "Kabali is based on the American comic book series Spider-Man", that would be original research, because no reference exists for that. (It's also a lie.) If you're going to criticize IBT and their sources, that's perfectly reasonable, but who are Financial Express's sources for the data? The producers? Sure sounds like it. It doesn't strike you as bizarre that a film is alleged to have grossed so much money that it allegedly has become the #2 highest-grossing Indian film of all time, yet no reliable source other than Financial Express has published this? That's not strange to you? It's not odd that The Hindu or Hindustani Times or Deccan Chronicle or Mumbai Mirror or even Forbes, which occasionally weighs in on noteworthy Indian cinema accomplishments, hasn't said anything about this? Not even a "Wow, Kabali did way better than we thought" comment? By the way, it's certainly possible for someone to anticipate a drop across all of India, but still see an increase in Chennai. Not sure what you're trying to argue, but an increase occurring at X doesn't mean an increase occurred at A, B, Y and Z. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 20:40, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
Please post the source that says it made exactly 350 crore.
Yes, definitely when the someone happens to be a distributor then he would not only anticipate but also might pray for a drop for a movie that he doesn't distribute. A movie review would be fair only if written by a person with no Conflict-of-interest and with proper knowledge on the subject. Here all the reviewers on the subject has either COIor has absolutely no knowledge on the subject (being a tamil guy myself cannot be the right person to review nor comment on a direct Hindi movie).
This over 350 cant be taken exactly as 350 so it would be better to call it disputed.
And i seriously dont care it if it made 250/350/550 or even a 1000, but i just wish wiki to have a perfect value or place a disputed tag so people who access and consider wiki as perfect source of details gets the right message.
At no point did I say that it made exactly 350 crore. I have never said that. Re-read my statements. I have said repeatedly that it has made at least 350 crore, and that is the only figure we are sure that the film made.
No idea what your point is. How do you feel about the analyst mentioned in the Financial Express article you keep waving around? What's his/her name again? I couldn't find it. What are their qualifications? Do they have any conflicts of interest, like being in the back pocket of the Kabali producers? If you're going to question the analysts, perhaps you should question the ones in the Financial Express article too. If you can find their names.
You're really hanging your hat on that Financial Express article. Though it's certainly benefited from the clickbait headline, it actually does express skepticism. "Aside from S Thanu who went the whole hog about the Kabali numbers, no other figure or filmmaker has stepped forward with a statement that puts the data in perspective." "Whole hog" is criticism toward Thanu for exaggerating the figures, and they seem to be lamenting the lack of corroboration from anyone other than him. (Not that we would trust corroborated data that comes from a primary source, but the fact that they haven't heard anything is questionable. They further express doubt in their subtle phrasing, "if we follow one particular analyst" to arrive at a certain figure for the international gross. "If we follow one particular analyst" doesn't sound like a confident report to me. You might as well say, "if this guy is to be believed". They further say "what is increasingly being feared is that the movie has quit working as much as was indicated in the wake of the movie just being released." This is another way of saying that the film is slowing down, which the other reports said. And the coup de grace, "We have already indicated the film may well have crossed the Rs 600 crore, but that is yet to be substantiated as data is still incomplete. Till the final word on this exercise is said there is going to a big question mark hanging on the whole isue." [sic] So, are you just swallowing the numbers, or are you reading the subtext?
?
?
Repeating: I never said "exactly". You keep repeating your preference for it to be labeled as disputed. You don't have to keep repeating yourself. When you repeat yourself, it forces me to repeat myself. I don't agree with you at present, because I still think we should wait. Based on all the doubt, even by Financial Express, marking it as disputed would give credence to the high values.
We will never have a perfect value for an Indian cinema article, because all the values are estimates, and corruption is rampant. Maybe you aren't familiar enough with Indian film article editing as I am, but every time there is a new film, the exaggerations begin.
This is the Reliable Sources Noticeboard. Instead of discussing whether or not Financial Express's data should be published blindly, this discussion has become a seemingly endless debate between me preferring to wait until the data solidifies, Ricky seeming to prefer that we wait as well (if I am interpreting him correctly) and you wanting to include a range of data and mark it as disputed. We appear to be going nowhere with this, but I certainly don't want to take up any more screen space here. That's not what this noticeboard is for. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 04:43, 26 August 2016 (UTC)
Problem is everywhere, if we keep finding more and more problems then we may have to edit every single Indian film article matching the data filed with the IT dept. I just wanted to have an useful discussion (yes, a discussion alone to reach a consensus as i dont believe in pushing my opinions on others) on why cant the word "Disputed" be used when multiple varying values are suggested. So far all i can see is people wanting to keep a fixed value as per their choice (yes, it had made atleast 350 crore, and also atleast 250 crore and definitely atleast crossed a 50 crore). For me calling a dispute as "disputed" sounds like a proper solution and for some others delaying/waiting sounds like a better solutions. Another Ten rounds? I'm seeing a way different wiki from what i remember. Over and Out. Thanks (Magizhchi). --Pearll's SunTALK13:25, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
Citing a CD Error Using the CD
So it was pointed out to me that some copies of the Permanent Record: Al in the Box contain an error, and the first part of the song "Hooked on Polkas" is cut slightly. However, I can't seem to find a third-party source to back this claim up, and in the words of the editor who pointed it out to me, "It's sort of an ontological quandary." Would it be OK to cite the album/song itself as a source for this error? I can't seem to think of another way around this, but it does seem like a noticeable fact worth mentioning (not the mention the fact that the article already has a small section detailing track listing and pressing errors).--Gen. Quon(Talk)18:38, 31 August 2016 (UTC)
No, I don't think so. It is a quandary.One of the purposes of refs is so the reader can check the fact for herself. Typical allowable refs would thus be attainable with reasonable effort -- by going to a library, for instance (or: going online; obtaining a copy of a book other than through a library; or any other reasonable, traditional way of verifying information. "Getting a copy of the CD and listening to it" might not fall under this rubric. If it did, we could ref the list of tracks on an album, not to AllMusic or whatever, but to "just listen to the CD", which I'm pretty sure we don't do. It is frustrating I agree.
Also -- I think that one of the reasons we don't much like primary sources is "if not one human person has seen fit to take notice of this in a third-party source, is it really important enough to include in the article?" and this factoid may fit under that rubric. Herostratus (talk) 21:10, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
Snopes' Field Guide to Fake News Sites and Hoax Purveyors
Weak sources for basic facts about Pakistani pop singer Momina Mustehsan
So this young woman has a whole crush of fans. She has apparently moved back and forth between Pakistan and US There are no great sources for content about:
her birthdate: September 5th (not year; no source for that)
completed A Level from Lahore Grammar School in Lahore
Went to college at Stony Brook University in New York for Biomedical Engineering, along with a minor in business
There are two weak sources for the information above. They are both interviews published in blogs. Falls somewhere between WP:BLPSPS and WP:SELFPUB...
Unreliable for a BLP. A primary source (the subject directly herself, eg a verified twitter account with a post going 'its my birthday today!') would be ok (but not ideal) for basic uncontroversial info, but these are interviews in non-reliable sources. Without a reputation for fact-checking etc we cannot say those interviews are an accurate reflection. Only in death does duty end (talk) 11:46, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
I am with both of you and I actually took these sources and that info out of the article. It is just that people keep showing up to add this stuff back in (usually unsourced) and it is a pain in the butt to keep deleting it... and it's best if it is not just me saying the sources are not OK. But more feedback would be good. Jytdog (talk) 11:59, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
Looking for input on using Redbull.com as a source for a BLP. This [9] appears to be mostly a fluff piece on the energy drink's website. I can't see where they have a reputation for reliability in bio's or editorial oversight. Opinions? Niteshift36 (talk) 23:12, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
The difference, aside from it not being an interview, is that is also has an author listed. I have difficulty with the drink site being a reliable source for much besides their own activities. Niteshift36 (talk) 19:21, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
Youtube video used as a source in the lead section of the Blockchain (database) article.
Hi, this source, actually a Youtube video recording a spoken presentation, is used as the source in the Blockchain (database)article to confirm the definition/explanation of the blockchain notion, more specifically, to confirm this content:
According to the related Youtube information, this is a record of a speech presented by Joseph Lubin, and I do not have any information about his reliability and reputation as an author.
According to the same information, the video was published by a "DEVCON1" publisher, and I am having doubts about the reputation of the publisher, since it is, probably, the first occassion when this publisher disseminated something.
In the presentation, there is a substantial part advertising the activities of a ConsenSys organization, and the author is presented as an employee of ConsenSys. That is why I doubt the presentation is neutral.
Finally, the structure of the blockchain is not discussed thoroughly enough for me to be able to agree that the presentation confirms the given content. Ladislav Mecir (talk) 23:49, 23 August 2016 (UTC)
"YouTube videos" are not inherently reliable or unreliable as sources, any more than "books" or "TV programmes". It depends on (1) what the video is and (2) what the claim for which it is being cited is. YouTube's original business model, and their name, have no sway on whether this or that video that is linked to is an objectively reliable source, because in practice most of the time a YouTube video is cited by an experienced Wikipedian and someone else says that "YouTube is not a reliable source" and the discussion winds up here, the source itself (a video lecture, more often than not) is not self-published or dubious at all.
Typically, recordings of spoken lectures by reputable authorities are reliable sources in general, with the only potential issues being copyright (as sometimes videos that were ripped from DVDs or the like are uploaded to YouTube without permission) and whether the presentation was actually delivered by a reputable authority. The former is probably not a concern, as the YouTube channel appears to be the official Ethereum account and the presentation appears to have been given at an Ethereum conference.
The latter is muddier, though: I have no subject knowledge in this area, so I cannot tell you whether Lubin is a reputable expert in the field, or whether Ethereum having invited him to give a presentation gives him any authority as a source of information on Blockchain. Your suspicion about 'a "DEVCON1" publisher' seems a bit like an overreaction -- did you watch the video? "devcon one" is obviously just the first Ethereum Developer Conference: whether "a DEVCON1 publisher" is reliable depends 100% on whether Ethereum is reliable.
The fact that the speaker spent some time shilling for his company is irrelevant: the vast majority of the YouTube-viewable public lectures by Bart Ehrman were delivered to commemorate the publication of Ehrman's latest book, their content is derived from Ehrman's books, and Ehrman frequently tells listeners that if they want a fuller picture they should buy his book -- this does not mean Ehrman is not a reliable source.
I would say you should explain why you think the claim in question is dubious -- do you have a (possibly) better source that appears to contradict it, or does your own intuition tell you that the claim is questionable based loosely on some other source? If all you want to do is replace the current source with a different one, without altering the content of our article, then that is what you should do, and then we can have a discussion of which source is better.
"Typically, recordings of spoken lectures by reputable authorities are reliable sources" - and where exactly is a proof that Mr. Lubin is a reliable authority?
"did you watch the video?" - yes I did, and found out that the main content of the lecture is advertisement of ConsenSys activities. As mentioned above, I did not find much (reliable or not) information on the structure of the blockchain, which is what the lecture is supposed to confirm.
"do you have a (possibly) better source that appears to contradict it" - I think that the claim is WP:OR, and that it is, most likely, contradicted even by the video in question, although I am unable to tell for sure. Ladislav Mecir (talk) 07:16, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
and where exactly is a proof that Mr. Lubin is a reliable authority? Woah. Holy hostility, Batman! You have the editorial authority to question the reliability of the source, and if you have another source that appears to contradict the claims, or indicate that the claim somehow constitutes an advertisement for the company that employs the author of the source, then you can remove it, and the burden to convince the community is on anyone who wants to re-add it. I was merely addressing your apparent assumption that a "YouTube video" is an inherently unreliable source. I have seen material cited to Yale and University of North Carolina professors, as well as generally reliable news agencies, removed because some ignorant Wikipedia editors believed that "YouTube videos are not reliable sources". Anyway, per OID's comment below the burden is now on you to find another source that contradicts Lubin for basic factual information.
I did not find much (reliable or not) information on the structure of the blockchain, which is what the lecture is supposed to confirm I have not watched the presentation from start to finish, and I don't intend to, so I cannot verify or falsify your claim, but if you believe the source does not verify the claim being made in the article, then you can tag it or just remove it, but you'd need to be careful that you have fully checked the entire presentation to make sure that it doesn't verify the content.
I think that the claim is WP:OR, and that it is, most likely, contradicted even by the video in question, although I am unable to tell for sure So ... you want the rest of us to watch the video to tell you whether the material in the article is verified by the content of the video? That's not what RSN is for, and that was not hinted at in your initial post. You should first try to verify or falsify the content yourself, and if you are still unsure take it to WP:NORN.
That would be this Joseph Lubin who probably does know what he is talking about regarding blockchains. I would not have an issue with him for basic factual information regarding blockchains, but obviously anything that may be disputed should not be sourced to him, due to his commercial involvement. He is not an independant academic, he has a vested interest in blockchains. Only in death does duty end (talk) 07:45, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
My main problem with the video is that it presents commercial activities, not the structure of blockchains. That is why I think that it should not be used as a source in this specific case. Ladislav Mecir (talk) 12:35, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
Thats not really a concern unless the commercial aspects impact or could lead to doubt on the reliability of the information provided. Example, you would not generally query the reliability of the chairman of a commercial bank for explaining how bank accounts work, but you would look a lot more closely at claims he made regarding the suitability/performance of them. Only in death does duty end (talk) 12:53, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
(edit conflict) @Ladislav Mecir: I thought your main problem with it was that it didn't verify the claims attributed to it in the article - did you change your mind again? If you think that a source that "presents commercial activities" should "not be used as a source at all", then you should probably re-familiarize yourself with WP:CONTEXTMATTERS: we should not function as an advertising mouthpiece for Mr. Lubin, but citing a lecture that he intended to serve a partly, or even mainly, commercial purpose for an innocuous factual statement is in theory perfectly acceptable.
The problem here is that you are being very slippery with what your actual problem is. Did you watch the video and see nothing that verified the material attributed to it in the article? Then per WP:V the commercial nature of the source is completely irrelevant. Or did you watch the video, find that it does verify the material, but your intuition tells you that the material is still wrong and the source is misleading for commercial purposes? If this is the case, then the burden is on you to find another source that contradicts the material in the article. Either way, the commercial nature of the rest of the source apart from the bit relevant to what is in the Wikipedia article is not something that can be discussed on RSN.
Regarding the original statement (which I dont think is in the article currently) it looks to be a description of what people who are implementing 'blockchain 2.0' are doing. See Ethereum. IMO its an accurate description but there should be better sources out there. Last time I was looking at Ethereum however, a lot of the material was either commcercial or presentation based for factual stuff, with brief glossed-over references (absent useful detail) in reliable sources. Only in death does duty end (talk) 13:01, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
Hijiri88 wrote: "...the commercial nature of the rest of the source apart from the bit relevant to what is in the Wikipedia article is not something that can be discussed on RSN" - I did see the commercial presentation, but I, actually, did not see the bit you mention, relevant to the above article content, just a part that actually contradicts it. Ladislav Mecir (talk) 13:35, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
@Ladislav Mecir: Kindly drop the hostility. I did not "mention" any "bit". I said that you were giving contradictory statements regarding your view of the matter, either that you thought the video did verify the content but was an untrustworthy source and the content didn't sit well with you or that you thought the video didn't verify the content, and that in the former case the only way the commercial nature of the video would be relevant would be if you could locate a better source that contradicted the content in the article. However, now you are presenting a third possibility, that the video contradicts the article content. If you are right, then the material should not be in the article, as the source says something else and not what is being attributed to it. Can you tell me where in the video (preferably minute:second format) is the point that actually contradicts the article content? Hijiri 88 (聖やや) 13:54, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
"Kindly drop the hostility." - why do you think that the sentence "I did not see the bit you mention" is hostile? You mentioned "the bit relevant to what is in the Wikipedia article" (citing your own words) and I was uncertain where it was. I find it possible that I overlooked something in the sea of commercial announcements, and I hoped that you may help me with that by telling me where in the video it is. As to the part that actually contradicts the article content - I would not use the video to confirm an opposite claim than present in the Blockchain (database) either, since, as far as I observe, it is not intended to communicate informations on blockchain structure. Ladislav Mecir (talk) 04:16, 25 August 2016 (UTC)
I'm sorry, but if you are not willing to cite a source that contradicts the article content, then it is really unclear what you want from us. this noticeboard is not designed to slam this or that source because it is "commercial" or "a YouTube video". Allwe can do is say whether a source is adequate for a particular statement in this or that Wikipedia article, and the reason you say you are suspicious is that the source appears to contradict the claim attributed to it, but you don't seem to be willing to tellus where in the source is this bit that contradicts the claim attributed to it. Hijiri 88 (聖やや) 07:26, 25 August 2016 (UTC)
"you don't seem to be willing to tellus where in the source is this bit that contradicts the claim attributed to it" - I do not think it is needed at all. I think that it suffices to determine whether the video is appropriate to confirm the claim attributed to it or not. I did watch the video, and my opinion is that it is not appropriate for the purpose. Do you express an opposite opinion, and based on what reason? Ladislav Mecir (talk) 17:34, 25 August 2016 (UTC)
It is needed, for any source. If your opinion is that it is not appropriate, you need to say what exactly makes you feel it is not appropriate. As Hijari and I have pointed out, merely being a youtube video does not make it unreliable for some claims. If you think the info sourced to the video has been misrepresented or is incorrect (Video says A when actually the video says B), you need to say where. 'The video is wrong' is not a strong argument. As far as I can see the actual statement at issue is not contentious in any manner. Only in death does duty end (talk) 12:57, 26 August 2016 (UTC)
Hi, I'm N2e, the editor who has originally added that YouTube source of the conference talk recording to the article you three have been discussing over the past week. I did not know this discussion was going on.
Thanks to Hijiri 88 and Only in death does duty end for clarifying the circumstances under which a YouTube source might be perfectly fine. Those comport with my understanding; an understanding I had previously communicated to Ladislav on that Talk page.
Several days ago, I had said to Ladislav on that Talk page that I would get find a more specific source within two days. I did, when about 24 hours ago I added a time stamp to the specific part of the video that supports the challenged statement. That is here: Talk:Blockchain_(database)#Article_lede:_question_of_sourcing Some questions on Ladislav's part remained, and I answered those in the past hour, in that same section. That discussion is moving along rather cordially.
Unfortunately, in another section on that Talk page, Ladislav moved to personal attack on me this morning (I know, not a subject for this noticeboard). But it does leave me wondering, as you two above, whether something else is going on here. Cheers. N2e (talk) 12:20, 27 August 2016 (UTC)
@N2e: I have not looked at the talk page (the subject doesn't frankly interest me all that much), but given Ladislav's rather slippery way of acting in my above discussion with them, I can certainly imagine that your description of the situation is accurate. All of this is well outside the scope of RSN. All I can say is that if the situation persists you should seek dispute resolution. Persistent problems with user behaviour, which this appears to be, generally are referred to WP:ANI, not this noticeboard or NORN. Hijiri 88 (聖やや) 14:33, 27 August 2016 (UTC)
Hi, I finally succeeded to get an information, what, in the video, is supposed to confirm the claim attributed to it. According to N2e, it is this part:
Since:
the claim purportedly supported by this citation is about the structure of the blockchain in general, while the specific citation discusses only Ethereum, the claim is not confirmed in general
the claim is about the structure of the blockchain, while the citation is about the consensus in Ethereum, not discussing the structure of the blockchain at all.
You are incorrect, you subject video of a conference presentation does support what was originally challenged there: that blockchains might now (in 2016) also contain results of executables rather than merely transactions. And your issue about the "structure of the blockchain in general" (the new issue, the one you switched to as an issue only recently) is addressed by a citation I added at the end of that sentence yesterday.
This has been discussed in rather great detail on the article Talk page, where just like on this page, you have been slippery in changing what your asking for as time goes on and your issues are sequentially addressed
I will leave it to the good folks who frequent this page to tell you whether this page (RSN) is the appropriate place to address your issue, or if it is the article Talk page. But we could very much use additional eyes on that Talk page, so anyone please feel free to drop in over there at Talk:Blockchain (database). Cheers. N2e (talk) 12:06, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
To sum up, you, N2e state that you edited the claim yesterday, and, because of your edit, I was wrong when filing up this notice 9 days ago. More importantly, you still use the above mentioned source to "confirm" your claim about the structure of blockchains in general. I already summed up that the source does not confirm the claim, having a different subject and purpose. Ladislav Mecir (talk) 12:19, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
No, that's not it. When you filed this action on this RSN a couple of weeks ago, you were arguing that the source, being a YouTube video, could not be a reliable source. You were not correct, as two non-involved editors informed you, above. And they each noted you were changing your argument as the facts went against you.
Only long after that point, when your no-YouTube-as-a source argument failed, did you switch your argument on that article talk page to be one of the very basic structure of the blockchain (data --> blocks; block ---> chained together == "blockchain") become your argument; a statement that is nearly "sky is blue true" in that article and subject area. (Incidentally for other readers: Ladislav had been heavily editing that article for over a year when I first encountered that article 5 or 6 months ago; not sure it rings true that he only wanted sources to support that very basic structure of the blockchain...). However, once Ladislav made that argument on the article Talk page, I quickly added another different source to support that, as there are hundreds for such a straightforward point. The YouTube source in question was always and only used, since it was added some 5 months ago or so, to support just one aspect of newer blockchain databases: that, in addition to storing transaction data that they have stored since blockchains were a new thing in 2009, they could now (in some blockchains, after c. 2015) also store programs, and the results of particular program executables. That is the only thing the YouTube source was ever used to support, and the only issue as articulated by any editor on that Talk page until just the past week or so.
So, no, me adding a source to support your recently-challenged (almost sky is blue true) simple statement about blockcahin structure, has nothing whatsoever to do with the YouTube source, which supports (and always has) only the newer/changed part of that statement after c. March of this year. So the argument of your "12:19, 1 September 2016 (UTC)" post above is not persuasive. N2e (talk) 16:18, 3 September 2016 (UTC)
I have noticed one or two edit wars going on at the Wat Phra Dhammakaya page over this so I think it would be a good idea to start a discussion over this in order to settle this dispute once and for all.
The issue in question that I would like to bring up is whether or not Dr. Mano Laohavanich would be considered a reliable source on Wat Phra Dhammakaya and its relevant pages or not. He is Buddhist scholar and university professor who was a former monk of Wat Phra Dhammakaya so certain sites such as the Bangkok Post like to cite him and his claims have been used on Dhammakaya related pages on wikipedia also. However some editors object to putting him as a source on Dhammakaya for various reasons, in particular WP:BIASED and WP:QUESTIONABLE. For the experienced Wikipedians here, what are your thoughts on this?
From what I can see, I do not see him as a reliable source as Dr. Laohavanich has stated himself that he left Wat Phra Dhammakaya due to conflicts with the abbot. This would make him bias and not objective. This would normally be fine in regards to WP:BIASED under certain conditions. For instance, I remember a previous version of the Wat Phra Dhammakaya page cite another Dhammakaya critic, Sulak Sivaraksa, saying he stated that the temple promoted greed by teaching that donations are a way to make merit. But it would not be acceptable to take Sulak's comment and say "Dhammakaya promotes greed by teaching that donations are a way to make merit", for obvious reasons. But the issue is that many of Dr. Laohavanich's statements are spoken as if factual, for instance he has stated the temple has a secret passage way[10] and I have seen editors use such statements to contribute to the page as if they were factual.
I would also like to state that I believe Dr. Laohavanich is not reliable on Dhammakaya not just because of bias but also because of a verifiable history of making questionable claims about Wat Phra Dhammakaya. For instance, Dr. Laohavanich has made unsubstantiated claims that Wat Phra Dhammakaya was stockpiling contraband.[11][12] I have also noticed a few inaccuracies in his statements, for example he had stated that Wat Phra Dhammakaya has two Cetiyas/Stupas, but according to the Dhammakaya website they only have one. The other "similar" structure in which Laohavanich called another Cetiya was the Memorial Hall of Phramonkolthepmuni. [13] So he seems to have less actual knowledge of the real temple layout than even what is available online to the public via the Wat Phra Dhammakaya website.
Finally, if Laohavanich is indeed deemed an unreliable source, would this constitute removing the link to one of his writings on the "Further Readings" section of Wat Phra Dhammakaya? [14] The writing in question is "The Esoteric Teachings of Wat Phra Dhammakaya".[15] It seems to make equally questionable claims about the temple as some of his other statements and I also noticed that Laohavanich doesn't provide references for most of his claims in the paper. So there is nothing out there that supports a lot of his claims other than himself saying so. Many of the references he uses only cover very specific statements and he even puts himself as a reference, I think possibly to pad his references to make the paper appear more scholarly. On the other hand Laohavanich's paper was published by the Journal of Buddhist Ethics which is a reasonably reliable journal so I am not sure if Laohavanich himself being deemed unreliable would still constitute removing this link. In my opinion yes because it is not likely to display reliable and accurate content to readers even if put in the further reading section due to the author's history of making questionable and unsupported claims about Wat Phra Dhammakaya. Can some experienced wikipedians weigh in on this issue as well as the points about citing Laohavanich in the Dhammakaya pages? Wikiman5676 (talk) 00:34, 4 September 2016 (UTC)
Is this a reliable source? Pwolit iets seems to think so. I disagree, but I would appreciate neutral opinions on the matter. This is what he intends to support with it:
In my view, that's also unencyclopedic: we don't usually report local pricing (and how big is a barrel?), and the fact that sweets may be used as a coffee sweetener is hardly worth mentioning.
Blogs generally aren't reliable sources for this kind of information. Speaking with my entomologist hat on, buckwheat honey is one of the more common monofloral honeys, so it probably does warrant mention in the honey article and that monofloral honeys do tend to have higher prices (more work to produce, etc.). I would not go into exact prices on any type of honey though as those are subject to change across time and location where sources would be outdated quickly, especially on an annual basis.
On sweeteners, etc. that's really more of a general honey use, so I overall agree with your take. I get the feeling we'd be fishing for blog-like sources to find a monofloral honey namedropped for a specific use. This all seems to suggest to me that this article is better redirected to Honey#Floral_source to focus more on what specific sources are used and general descriptions of taste. That might help give some pointed direction instead of scouring for sources like this. Kingofaces43 (talk) 16:15, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
Is there any reason the types of honey cannot be merged into a list article with a paragraph on each? This and Clover Honey for example are never going to be more than small overly-padded-with-useless-info stubs. The sourcing is not gread because there is not much to say on the subject. Monofloral honey already says most of what needs to be said on the subject. Only in death does duty end (talk) 16:19, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
I didn't think to check monofloral honey. I'd just redirect to that article instead with the approach you mentioned since I can't think of an instance where a single type of honey wouldn't be in a notability grey zone making individual articles tenuous at best. Kingofaces43 (talk) 16:36, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
This looks largely resolved (in terms of whether the above is an RS), but just to add something that it doesn't look like has been mentioned yet: as far as I can tell, anyone interested in the subject can sign up for a blog like the one linked. In other words, it's not even the Ontario Agriculture blog (presuming there is one), but similar to the various reader blogs hosted by e.g. Huffington Post... or a FaceBook post. — Rhododendritestalk \\ 15:28, 4 September 2016 (UTC)
Content Usage from WIKIA to Wikipedia
I want to confirm here that is it permissible to use the content of Wikia in Wikipedia? since Wikia allows us to use, modified or share contents unless they remains copyleft where they are being used under same rules, and Wikipedia's contents are copyrighted. So tell me if i want to use material from Wikia, will i be able to use on Wikipedia or not? I am not going to use it as reference or source, but what i need is contents of it, since it is written exactly the same way we use to write here, the tone, the style of writing and what i actually need is summary of a series. Since plot descriptions are typically not sourced; usually editors watch the film / read the book and then write the plot descriptions. So the specific question is that Should i copy the summary plot and used it here, in new wikipedia article with same title, lead section and other. Because if i want to write myself, i wouldn't be able to change much except for wording, because whatever i need is same just different platforms for same subject.
Source: The contents i need is here, it just one page on Wikia, i will be needing all the episodic summaries: [16]
Article: The Article has not been created yet but it will have the same title as it is mentioned in above source like, "Chapter 40 (House of Cards)"
Plot summaries are implicitly sourced to the original story and are thus frequently not cited - not even in featured or good articles. They must strictly follow the original story without any re-interpretations as otherwise they are original research. Two other pieces of advice would be to a) check that the Wikia summary isn't copied from another website, possibly a non-free one, and b) to clearly mark the copied summary so that it doesn't look plagiarized. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk, contributions) 08:10, 4 September 2016 (UTC)
I did search on Google the first sentence of Plot, but couldn't find it any where in any reviews of media publications and i have already read it and it is not an original search and is written in an Wikipedia Tone Style in user's own description and follows the original story, second if were to copy where should i provide attribution of "copied" here while creating in Edit Summary or Talk page? and what does "marking the copied summary" means? Nauriya (Rendezvous) 14:35, 4 September 2016 (UTC)
I've been looking at this site for a while. I file it under "conspiracist bollocks" but some people make a valid point that its authors are notable activists. As a sole source for an article, or as a source for notability? No way. Guy (Help!) 12:05, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
Absolutely not reliable - it's a conspiracy theory site, and an obvious one at that. I suppose you could use it to document the opinion of a specific writer, but that would have to be attributed and the site would have to be clearly identified as a conspiracy site. That would reflect poorly on the writer and it would follow that the opinion has next-to-no weight though, so really, why bother? Fyddlestix (talk) 14:04, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
Definitely not reliable - conspiracy-theory website. Perhaps citable in the very narrow context of a notable conspiracy theorist's biography for his/her beliefs. Neutralitytalk14:54, 2 September 2016 (UTC)
I was asked to weigh in on a discussion at Talk:Anime Matsuri about some edit warring over sources. Long story short, one editor wants to use both social media (Facebook) and AnimeCons to back up convention attendance for two years. Another believes that this is unnecessary as AnimeCons alone would be sufficient and that the Facebook link is redundant. There has been some limited talk about this, but a bit more input from others would be good since there's a bit of a pushback here.
Offhand my thought is that AnimeCons is enough by itself since the site is trusted, the content on the page was provided by the convention itself, and as was said on the article talk page, social media links tend to disappear quite easily for various reasons. Tokyogirl79 (。◕‿◕。)03:26, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
As with ChannelFireball, I think SCG's articles are reliable sources within the context of MtG, but they should be used with caution given the potential for a conflict of interest given that SCG's business is selling MtG cards. NorthBySouthBaranof (talk) 06:24, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Anca Verma Wikipedia page
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
I expanded Anca Verma article on Wikipedia with reliable citation with the text below:
'In 2016 the Romanian press and TV credited Verma as the richest Romanian in the world with a fortune of over 3 billion Euros, based on Forbes magazine survey.[10][11] [12].'
The citations alongwith text above were links from Romanian newspapers and TV sites below. After posting, my edits were reverted by Jytdog (Undid revision 738137705 by Mainstreamwikipedia (talk) no thanks; you will need to go to RSN and get OK for those sources there before adding)
What is wrong with my expansion to the above article, please advise. It would have been simpler for Jytdog to have used google translator to translate these newsarticles instead of reverting my revision.
Now that I am here at RSN, please validate these articles and undo the last revision of Jytdog. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mainstreamwikipedia (talk • contribs) 04:19, 7 September 2016 (UTC (UTC)
as this is a WP:BLP article and these are extraordinary claims, i thought it wise to have the community check on these sources and the content based on them. Jytdog (talk) 04:27, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Jytdog, Are you telling me that Forbes and half a dozen Romanian press and TV channels are making EXTRAORDINARY CLAIMS? If this be the case, please delete all the other articles on Wikipedia that are cited with articles about subjects' networth and their financial standing. Please apply your mind and read each and every article before reverting these articles. Just like you, I am also a contributor to Wikipedia and not some vandal. You have already received an EDIT WAR NOTICE from another Wikipedian on your talk page for reverting his/her edits aggressively. Be fair, we are here to improve the quality and credibility of articles and not here for any personal gains! I have gone through your talk page and have seen that you have this habit of being unfair and reverting edits / revisions of contributors quite a bit which would lead you to being blocked from editing. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mainstreamwikipedia (talk • contribs) 04:36, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Yes as I mentioned on my Talk page this article has been subject to all kinds of bad editing, both pro and con. One strange thing here is that all three Romanian articles mention that Forbes defined her wealth, but if you search for forbes anca verma you don't find where Forbes did that; same thing at Forbes' own site. Weird. Jytdog (talk) 06:13, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
While researching for this article/subject expansion, I also tried to find Forbes newsarticle but could not find it. However, I came across several TV interviews and newsarticles that talk about Forbes. One explanation could be that sometimes international magazines like Forbes or Vogue or Time are printed in local languages and uploaded on the net the same way. The search engines dont pickup keywords when googling in English. I had the same problem for two other articles when I was researching for Ravi Ruia and Vijay Mallya which I would be editing next. The articles about them were in Hindi and search engines were not picking up the news updates. During my research on subject Anca Verma (formerly Anca Neacsu) I viewed TV interviews of the subject with Romanian TV channel Kanal D and had these translated by a fellow professor in the University who specializes in Slavic languages. In the interview the host of the show is congratulating the subject Anca Verma on her being credited as the richest Romanian in the world. The link to the interview is herebelow:
I also searched other newsarticles on Kanal-D website about the subject, who too wrote the same.
Perhaps it is better to expand the article of subject Anca Verma with the following text:
"In 2016 the Romanian press and TV credited Verma as the richest Romanian in the world with a fortune of over 3 billion Euros."
We should delete reference to Forbes and just quote the Romanian press and cite the three newsarticles far above, as well as the videograb of the TV interview with the subject in question. Or we could leave Romanian press crediting it to Forbes and annotate it with "citation needed" remark.
Since you and I are working jointly on this article now and I had seen your contributions and page protection of this article, I would be happy to let you do the needful and compose expansion the way you feel like. Should I have any suggestions I shall write to you on talk page or over here.
I also invite you to provide inputs and suggestions to the other two pages, I would be editing later tonight after my classes with the students. These would be edits in Ravi Ruia and Vijay Mallya both notable personalities in India. We should work as a creative team rather than being on the opposite sides of the same spectrum of Wikipedia.
(edit conflict) So I went hunting in Forbes. They don't keep the old Billionaires lists around (they are already on 2016, and the claim is about the Forbes list in 2015). I did find this Forbes video listing their youngest billionaires for 2015, who range from 31 to 26. She should have been in there and isn't.
we have an article List of Romanians by net worth and interestingly in these difs an editor User:Authorincharge added Anca to that list; that editor was blocked in May. The OP here was the last editor to edit that article, in these diffs from late July of this year; which make no sense. As I mentioned the Forbes Billionaire list is always current (so it is now 2016) and they don't archive the old list and you cannot internet archive the old list, so I don't know where those figures came from for 2015 - the Forbes list is the only source provided.
I updated the article in these diffs. Forbes has profiles on its billionaires that you can archive so I was able to provide data for 2015 and 2016 for two guys that were there before Authorincharge added Anca. I found no record - no profile - for Anca Verma at Forbes. I also found this ref from last March saying that only those two guys are on the list. No Anca.
So I am thinking this is part of the pro-Anca campaign and those refs above are bogus. Maybe there is some other explanation though. Jytdog (talk) 07:24, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Mainstreamwikipedia those sources do not appear reliable; she does not appear to have been on the Forbes list in 2015 and as you noted those refs all say that. These sources don't seem to fact check, and that is our #1 requirement for reliable sources. But let's wait to see what others will say. That is what this board is for. Jytdog (talk) 07:27, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
If the Romanian sources were very specific that this claim comes from Forbes, and no such source can be located, that's reason to suspect it's entirely false. It wouldn't be the first time an otherwise reliable source (I'm just assuming here that the publications you linked are reliable, for the benefit of the doubt) made a mistake, and we are always free to dispense with policy and use common sense instead. Now that said, I did look very hard for information on this. Forbes maintains a list of every billionaire they can verify according to their methods, and neither Verma nor her husband are listed. Nor are they listed in the separate list of Indian billionaires. However, this list does not include individuals if it's suspected their income came from crime, which may be the case here. Forbes occasionally publishes articles on rich criminals, especially billionaire criminals, but they do not seem to maintain a systematic list against which Verma may be checked, nor could I find any article they wrote about the Vermas. You could always just ignore me and I won't complain, or I suppose you could email the news sources that reported this and ask them where they got their info. Someguy1221 (talk) 07:32, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Hello Jytdog: I called and spoke to one of the editors of the publication in Romania today at 12pm UTC. She said that they complied the list of richest Romanians based on their Romanian tax filings, declared assets as well as stock holdings and its valuation and according to the filings the declared assets onshore and offshore Romania of the subject Anca are in excess of Euro 3 billion as per filings, and thus it was published in the press. When I asked them about the article in Forbes, the editor mentioned that she had in their archives hardcopy of a Forbes magazine from 2010/2011 wherein there was an article which feature Anca and her husband as the SuperRich of Romania as she was living outside the country and probably the richest offshore Romanian citizen and in 2010/2011 the article in Forbes 'estimated' her wealth at Euros 2 billion since her tax filings were in India and not Romania back then. This year when she filed her taxes in Romania and declared assets there, then it became a newsitem in July 2016. According to the editor, the articles they have published in July have not stated that subject Anca is in the rich list of 2016 or 2015, rather they have quoted Forbes article of the past and have stated that as of July 2016 according to the assets held, subject Anca has surpassed the wealth of Ion Tiriac and the other guy in Romania.
After talking to the editor and understanding her journalistic view, I am of the view that Anca may not have been on the Forbes list in the past, but there was certainly an article published in Romanian Forbest in 2010/2011 as told to me by the editor and her net worth was 'estimated' at 2 billion and now with the recent filings in tax dept she has declared her actual wealth assets at Euros 3 billion. This is what created sensation and became big news in Romania.
Therefore, we should give benefit of doubt to these people and not call them 'criminals' or refer to the news as 'bogus' as my journalistic ethics do not allow me to interpret any good or bad news that way. We have to be very careful before passing judgments as journalists or editors of Wikipedia. One more thing, I specifically asked the lady editor if subject: Anca was mentioned in any criminal list published by Forbes. She said "no" because the story published in Romanian Forbes was about lifestyles of Rich and Famous Romanians and back then according to my research on the net and this editor lady, the romanian subject Anca did not get arrested by the cops in India or any other country. So if no case, no crime according to me.
In regards subject Anca's husband Abhishek, I did my research and he was on the youngest billionaires list in November 1997 issue of India Today.
The husband Verma is also being prosecuted for tax evasion and corruption for several billion dollar defence deals and according to the CBI and tax department, they are trying to unearth billions of dollars of unrecovered/undeclared assets in benami (fictitious names) as well as offshore holdings of his.
Thus, Newspapers and TV of Romania ran the stories on subject Anca based on her tax filings and asset holdings and referred to Forbes article published on the lifestyles of rich and famous Romanians 5-6 years back.
Conclusion: Like all other third world countries politicians and their siblings, this subject may have massive undeclared wealth and all the efforts of Governments to prove their case against her failed in their efforts due to lack of evidence as per my research and perhaps we should discuss how to phrase the same. Suggestions welcome.
BTW, I am tired of this subject and the research I have put in the whole day today! I have other articles to edit and expand. So better get going and divert my attention towards other subjects as well. You are invited to peruse Ravi Ruia and Vijay Mallya articles tomorrow as I would be working on them. Suggestions welcome. If you have a difference of opinion, please feel free to discuss on the talk page and I will make suitable amends or offer explanations/clarifications, if any. thank you. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mainstreamwikipedia (talk • contribs) 12:55, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
User:Mainstreamwikipedia Would you please clarify exactly what content and sourcing you are now proposing with regard to the wealth of Anca Verma? If you don't want to propose any at this time, please say so. Thanks Jytdog (talk) 17:20, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
User:Jytdog hello I am at a family dinner. I will reply to the above tomorrow as difficult to type on small keyboard of my iPhone thanks. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mainstreamwikipedia (talk • contribs) 17:33, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
It's a bit strange to me that a website called "Morning News USA" is registered in Australia [17], owned by a company itself registered in Australia [18]. Looking through their articles, it seems that this site doesn't do any independent reporting. Everything is just rehashed from other websites (though they helpfully link to them, at least). For some of their articles, especially on US politics, they are citing some rather ridiculous sources. So my recommendation would be to never cite them, ever. If something this site carries seems worth reporting, simply link to wherever they got it from instead. Someguy1221 (talk) 19:59, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Why would you cite the morningnews at all then? Cite the publication that actually did the research - Morningnews doesn't add anything of value. So lets say you find an interesting article on Morningnews that itself cites CBSnews. Just cite CBSnews. Someguy1221 (talk) 20:47, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Seconded; if a better source exists, use it. Also, the next time you post here, please include the text and the specific citation you wish to use. If, for example, you want to cite that website to say that the score of a particular football (soccer) game was 4-2, that's the sort of non-contentious thing I referred to above. But if you want to cite it to claim that Donald Trump has been caught taking campaign contributions from Russia, I think we're gonna need a bigger boat. MjolnirPantsTell me all about it.22:01, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
The filing of lawsuits is not noteworthy. They may come to something or not. There is BLP here as well per WP:BLPCRIME. Those sources are not even close to strong enough to add content. Jytdog (talk) 01:29, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
I think these sort of websites are not reliable sources. Like probably hundreds of similar sites (many of which do seem to be registered in Australia and most of which use names that imply they are based in other countries), it just reproduces content derived from (or directly taken from) real media sources, or takes feeds delivered from other media outlets, or reproduces verbatim the press releases from state media outlets, in order to drive its page count up to gain revenue from the advertising placed on its pages. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 14:23, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
Reliability of Snopes articles that cite links to legal documents
This Snopes article contains a copy of a rape lawsuit against Donald Trump. Is a Snopes article reliable if it cites links to legal documents like this one and cite both of these sources? 173.67.106.134 (talk) 00:59, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
This is a duplicate of what was posted on the article talk. I pointed out that WP:RSN could be used if three elements were presented: the article where an edit is planned; the proposed edit; and the source. This noticeboard does not deal in hypothetical edits that might be made to a hypothetical article (see the edit notice displayed when editing this section). Regarding the issue of whether a Wikipedia noticeboard or article should be used to amplify the problems of political candidates, the answer is no. Johnuniq (talk) 01:34, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
There can be no final determination without considering publisher, author, claim, and text. That doesn't mean a source can't be evaluated on its own, for example on whether it exerts editorial control. Judging by archives, opinion on Snopes is mixed - no blanket consensus. Typically, citing sources does not make an unreliable source reliable, as those sources might be used incorrectly. Citations could hypothetically make the difference between between whether or not a reliable source is reliable enough for WP:REDFLAG claims, but I don't know whether many sources actually teeter on the edge like that. Without a claim and text, we can't tell if this is such a case. Rhoark (talk) 22:08, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
Two student-written university publications
I would like to use two sources, both student-written university publications:
what neutrality said, but if the content is something about taylor swift or the resurgence of disco, there must be better sources... Jytdog (talk) 06:19, 9 September 2016 (UTC)
Source on the Pleistocene lakes of Bolivia (resurrected from archive)
I have a question about the reliability of http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?pid=S1414-753X2015000100011&script=sci_arttext&tlng=en for a limnographical claim, a paper that involves the lakes of Bolivia and Peru. I came across this paper when scraping Google Scholar for sources to use in my draft User:Jo-Jo Eumerus/Lake Tauca, about a prehistorical lake there. The paper saysPaleolimnological studies from around the southern lake segment, Wiñaymarka (a Putina/Aymara word meaning "place of eternity") indicate that in the time of the earliest human settlements in the area the lake level was much higher-- about five meters above current levels, and that the Altiplano had a sea covering perhaps ten times the area of Lake Titicaca. This primal, late-glacial sea, Lake Tauca (43000 km2), covered what is now Lake Titicaca, Lake Poöpó, Uru-uru and the various remaining salt lakes on the high plain which is not a claim I have seen before - in the sources I've read so far - a minority mind you - it has been claimed that Lake Tauca was separate from Lake Titicaca but encompassed the salt lake, Lake Poopo, the salt flats and probably Uru Uru Lake as well. If Tauca was indeed 10 times the size of Titicaca it could conceivably encompassed Titicaca as well given the geography - but Titicaca is larger than 8000 km2, thus "ten times the area" would be over 80000 km2, not anywhere close to 43000 km2 claimed (which may be too small to encompass Titicaca as well, moreover). In other words, I wonder whether that source is reliable enough for information on the size of the lakes. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk, contributions) 20:55, 1 September 2016 (UTC)
Rescuing this from the archive. I've found a lot of disagreement between various more pertinent sources thus the sandbox now cites several different sizes. The next question would be whether http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.280/full is a reliable source for the claim thatMataro (...) constituted the largest recorded expansion of Lake Titicaca, overlapping much of the Altiplano and the corresponding map. Concern being that while the Mataro lake cycle is not much discussed (probably little research exists) such a size is a strong claim, especially given that some sources in the sandbox (the ones associated with Titicaca's lake level decreases) imply that a higher sill between the Titicaca and Altiplano basins may have confined such a lake to the Titicaca basin. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk, contributions) 11:11, 10 September 2016 (UTC)
Luisa Piccarreta
I have some questions about the reliability of the following sources used in the above article:
EWTN - looking at the homepage, it seems to be actively prosletising (e.g. mentions of missions and donations on the home page), which makes me wonder if it can be WP:RS.
Divine Will looks straightforwardly promotional of Luisa Picaretta as someone to be venerated, and makes no attempt at being a WP:RSa
luisapicarreta.co seems to be openly lobbying (e.g. "Contact your bishop").
bookofheaven.org.uk fails to load for me, however the URL resembles the name of Bookofheaven, who has been blocked for using the account for purposes of promotion.
Digging around I found out that this "Rebel Magazine" is not even the Rebel Magazine we have an article on ([21]), but instead some obscure Arizona Christian publication. A publication so non-notable that it doesn't even have an article on Wikipedia, and so poorly managed that none of their websites ([22][23]) are even functional (though they do have a facebook page [24]. Therefore this source should not be considered as reliable on any article, including Shaun_King_(activist) (which by the way is the only article trying to use it as a source). -75.140.253.89 (talk) 03:16, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Sources without proper websites or Wikipedia pages are not necessarily unreliable. The website may not be functioning now, but it was in August 2014, when the archive snapshot was created. Is there anything to suggest this Rebel Magazine lacks editorial oversight or has a poor reputation for fact-checking? clpo13(talk)03:24, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Assuming that it's really theirs, the twitter that they briefly reached out from really lacks professionality: [26]. Other than that I am not really sure how to demonstrate a lack of editorial oversight, only the opposite. I guess I'll read around about the process? -75.140.253.89 (talk) 04:01, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Well, you could demonstrate a lack of editorial oversight or reputation for poor fact-checking by finding evidence that the source in question has a broadly-held reputation for, and documented history of, publishing misstatements, fabrications, politically-motivated smears and outright lies about people. Sort of like, say, Breitbart does. NorthBySouthBaranof (talk) 06:17, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Sources are not usually presumed reliable until proven otherwise. Having no reputation is often considered nearly as bad as having a bad reputation. Rhoark (talk) 22:18, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
That's what I had thought until I was met with such resistance. I'm glad to finally hear some reinforcement of my assumption. So if anyone would like to show evidence of Rebel issuing corrections, that would easily establish reliability. -75.140.253.89 (talk) 19:19, 10 September 2016 (UTC)
Encyclopedic dictionary of Azerbaijan toponyms. In two volumes. Volume I. Baku: "East-West". 2007.ISBN978-9952-34-155-3
So called "material" from this obvious non-WP:RS "source" is being spammed on many (low-profile) articles by User:Freedom Wolfs. His mass "citing" of this material seemed highly suspicious from day 1. "According" to the "book", everyone in these towns/villages/etc. is only occupied with "husbandry", "gardening", and "animal keeping" (not even joking!), and whole etymology sections of millenia old place names are suddenly Turkified by said user while citing this so-called book.
I did some research myself and in fact, I couldn't find literally anything about it. In fact, it seemed to be as if the whole book didn't even exist. I subsequently raised by concerns @Doug Weller:, who agreed with me that its definetely non-RS, but advised/asked me to bring it here to make it official, and for the record as well. Pinging Tiptoethrutheminefield, MarshallBagramyan, and Yerevantsi, as they shared the exact same doubts about this so called "encyclopedia" as me and Doug did. - LouisAragon (talk) 00:01, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
See my previous dialogues with Doug as well about this.[27]-[28]. This is going to be quite a hell of a rv spree btw, as he literally "spammed" (sorry, but I believe thats the only termination appropriate here) on so many articles. - LouisAragon (talk) 00:01, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
The book exists and the rarity of the book is irrelevant to its reliability. I can understand the frustration of being unable to check material added from a source you don't have access to, but those are not grounds for excluding the material. What you need to do is check out the editor/author and publisher to see if they are well-respected or not. I see that Näsimi adına Dilçilik İnstitutu (something like Nasimi Institute of Linguistics) is listed as a corporate author, which is some sort of academic institute. Did you ask the person citing the book to explain what it is? Incidentally all the small villages in a region tend to be rather the same, so it proves nothing if their one-line descriptions are much the same too. Zerotalk01:32, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
This is going to be a complicated issue because it involves a knowledge of what is truth and what is lies, and why the lies are produced. Would Zero have talked the same way about 1940s institutional academic Nazi-produced publications detailing the origins of the German nation and its place in the world and the Jewish "problem"? Probably not, since the status and context of such publications is well known, making their use as acceptable sources unlikely. Unfortunately, in this particular case a specialized knowledge is required - and to be quite honest I question that the procedural methods of Wikipedia can easily stop such propaganda publications on obscure and little written-about subjects being used to generate Wikipedia content. The solution might be to firstly provide sources indicating the propaganda nature of Azeri-produced and Turkish-produced material dealing with Armenian history, and in particular the Turkification/Azerification issue, This would indicate that that they are almost all grounded in an ideology of state-cultivated and state-required race-hatred, and that they all should be excluded unless third-party impartial sources have cited them as usable sources. And, secondly, to provide a number of examples where the toponym explanations found within this particular source are clearly ludicrous, or are clearly false. For this, I think that as well as trying to find sources that give correct toponym explanations, since such sources are going to be hard to find, we should also use whatever expertise we can find amongst Wikipedia editors, have them comment on the quality of the toponym explanations, in order to come to a conclusion based on probability that the source is either acceptable or unacceptable. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 02:28, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
I suggest inviting editors [29] who might have some specialist knowledge of linguistics to this discussion, such as Florian Blaschke and TaivoLinguist, to give their opinions on the credibility of the place-name explanations found it the source, and whether the methodology revealed by these explanations is comparable to that found in acceptable sources in the field. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 02:40, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
When people invoke offensive Nazi analogies to support their arguments, I take the rest of what they say with a grain of salt. I have no personal knowledge of the subject area and don't intend to get involved in the details of it. I'll just repeat that "reliable until proven otherwise" is Wikipedia's attitude towards works published/edited by the highest academic institution in the country of publication. If you want to eliminate it, you need to provide more than assertions based on your own beliefs. Find negative reviews or something. Listing this discussion on relevant noticeboards is good and inviting people who know the field is also good provided you invite people who might disagree with you as well those you think will agree. Zerotalk03:02, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
You are just revealing your ignorance of the subject, despite your proclaimed "research". You actually cited the fact that the publication comes from an academic institution in Azerbaijan as a reason for accepting its reliability. Anyone who knows the contemporary politics of this region (which could be gained by doing just a cursory amount of online research) would know that this origin will indicate the exact opposite, that its production via an academic institution in Azerbaijan will mean it will be highly unlikely to be acceptable for its reliability. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 13:28, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
The attitude of Wikipedia towards sources is what I was referring to when I said this is "going to be a complicated issue". From its outset, Wikipedia set itself as being averse to the use of experts. In fact it is often written (off-Wikipedia) that being an expert on a subject guarantees that you will to be banned. This is why almost no academics edit Wikipedia. An actual functional Reliable Sources noticeboard would have set groups of editors who are established experts in certain fields and who would be consulted to give their expert opinion on sources to be used for Wikipedia content. Bet we don't have that or anything close to that - we have everyone able to contribute their penny's worth of opinion, all set against a background of Wikipedia's distain of experts and a very loose criteria for deciding on which sources should be allowed. There is simply not an easy way to get propaganda sources excluded if they deal with obscure subjects that credible sources have neglected. It is what Wikipedia is. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 13:50, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
See the two posts I've now made further down this thread. I realize the post I made above is a bit of essay writing, and, now that I see the WP:USEBYOTHERS guidance that another editor posted, I think maybe an overly negative one.Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 17:19, 9 September 2016 (UTC)
Zero also misunderstands my suggestion for inviting linguistic experts. It is nothing to do with inviting people who will agree or disagree with a pov, nor anything to do with getting people who might be experts in this particular region. It is to get people who might know what an academically sound publication in the field of toponym research should look like. A comparison of the methodology of the toponym "analysis" presented in this book against similar works that are widely accepted as academically sound might be a way to decide on its credibility and thus its suitability as a source. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 14:09, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
Can I point to WP:USEBYOTHERS which reads in part "How accepted, high-quality reliable sources use a given source provides evidence, positive or negative, for its reliability and reputation. The more widespread and consistent this use is, the stronger the evidence." It's a very useful guide for sources such as this one (which I'll also note is a tertiary source which we generally try to avoid). The fact that few libraries or universities seem to hold copies of it also argues against using it. Also, reliability is not the default position. You need to show that a source meets our criteria. I don't think this one does. And as I can't read the original and know that the editor involved doesn't understand our copyright policy regarding images, I wonder if there is any copyvio involved, although that's a separate issue. Doug Wellertalk19:41, 8 September 2016 (UTC)
The rarity of this book in the libraries that subscribe to WorldCat (mostly libraries in the West) is no doubt largely down to the fact that it is written in a language that few users of those libraries understand. Libraries generally do not buy books that will never do more than gather dust. WP:SOURCEACCESS says that rarity does not eliminate a source. (Answering Tiptoe:) Unsupported claims like "the fact of its production via an academic institution in Azerbaijan will mean it will be highly unlikely to be acceptable for its reliability" without any evidence whatever looks just like a statement of personal prejudice and is not acceptable here. Provide an assessment from an expert to support your views or keep them to yourself. Zerotalk00:03, 9 September 2016 (UTC)
4) I was unable to find out much about the publisher, Şärq-Qärb other than, a smattering of university libraries have one or two books from it; they seem to publish academic stuff;
5) I wasn't able to learn anything about the author, Rübabä Äliyeva (5 google hits...) so just more obscureness; so
6) we have really no basis to judge the reliability or otherwise of the publisher or the author.
7) ~maybe~ some highly respected editor (known by their deeds here) will come along and bless the publisher and author or provide some source that allows us to judge. But in the absence of that...
here is where i end up
A) generally the ugliest disputes in WP happen in super hot topics where there is also a lack of high quality sources that everyone agrees are authoritative and has reasonable access to.
B) injecting a source like this into such a topic is basically a trump card for the one who has the source, as few to no other editors will have access to it even to assess it, much less get consensus that the content generated from it is really verified (which is always what we care about - we ask - "is this specific content supported by this specific source?")
C so this is a place where IAR comes in, and we should exclude this source. I am making no judgements on whether it is reliable or not. It is really about whether it is possible to reach solid CONSENSUS that content generated from it is truly supported by it.
While "non-English language" is not a killer argument against a source, Azerbaijani is sufficiently obscure that the circle of Wikipedians who can use the source productively or merely assess its reliability is expected to be very small. I've cited academic publications in German before, which I thought was defensible because it is an important language in academia (especially historical linguistics), so there is a reasonable expectation that I'm not the only editor who will be able to access and read the source. French, Russian, Spanish and Italian are widely understood by academics, too (depending on the field), as they are widely studied as second or foreign languages. Azerbaijani is definitely not such a language. So I think both the difficulty of library access and the language are very weighty points, in addition to the others you bring up, Jytdog. --Florian Blaschke (talk) 10:34, 9 September 2016 (UTC)
For an understanding of the contemporary Azerbaijani political landscape in which this source exists and from which it was created, see "The Invention of History: Azerbaijan, Armenia, and The Showcasing of Imagination" by Rouben Galichian, 2009. I'm mentioning it because there is link to a pdf version of it I found using google. I'm not going to reproduce the link here because it is probably an unofficial pirated copy of the book, but you can easily find it. The book details Azerbaijan's 1990s and onwards destruction of everything culturally or historically Armenian that existed on its territory and the "Azerification" of the territory's history. The situation in Nakhchivan is detailed on pages 84-100, (the editor who has been using the Encyclopedic dictionary of Azerbaijan Toponyms source has restricted its usage to content on articles about places in Nakhchivan)Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 16:01, 9 September 2016 (UTC)
The extremely partisan nature of the source is revealed in its exclusion of all mention of non-"Turkic" origins of place names in Nakhchivan. All of the territory of Nakhchivan was historically part of Armenia, and all of its population was originally Armenian. So, while 1000 years can make a big difference, it is not credible that not even a single present-day settlement name in Nakhchivan has an Armenian origin or root. This fact alone indicates its propaganda nature: it follows the state ideology of Azerbaijan regarding Nakhchivan's history. This ideology was also expressed in the response to the destruction of the medieval Julfa cemetery: "Armenians have never lived in Nakhichivan, which has been Azerbaijani land from time immemorial" [30]. For an example of the source's exclusion of alternative (i.e. non-Turkic) interpretations of place-names see the "Etymology" content on Aşağı Əylis. As well as (in my eyes, anyway) being such a convoluted and contrived explanation as to be barely credible, it excludes mention that the oldest known form of the placename is "Argulik" (see the related Yuxarı Əylis article), and that an alternative explanation of the placename is that it means "Rich in Gardens", derived from the Armenian word "aygi", meaning "garden", or from "argilis", from the Armenian word meaning something "forbidden" or "inaccessible". This is on page 33 and 34 of this source [31]. There is also an additional folk etymology explanation given in this source. This source is an English translation of a work by an Iranian-Armenian academic who was actually born in Agulis, but note its author is nothing like as absolutist as the Azeri source because he recognizes that these sort of toponym explanations can almost never be substantiated at a scientific level. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 15:35, 9 September 2016 (UTC)
"From time immemorial". Heh. I call these kinds of ridiculous claims, usually by ultra-nationalists and easily refuted with basic knowledge of history, "Anglo-Saxon cavemen". --Florian Blaschke (talk) 21:26, 10 September 2016 (UTC)
After reading through the comments, a lot of important arguments/reasons have already been said. Thanks much for the constructive responses. Doug, Jytdog and Tiptoethrutheminefield basically summed up everything that rules it out as a legit source. With all due respect regarding Zero0000, I genuinely appreciate it that he, as an admin and an assistant on this noticeboard, took the effort and time in order to help us deal with this matter, and was in fact the first one to reply here. However, as already mentioned by/hinted on by others here, I genuinely think that he lacks the needed knowledge and reading on the area (Armenia/Iran/Azerbaijan/Turkey), which without a doubt is needed in order to be able to present a proper conclusion, stance, and verdict regarding this matter. Once again, with all due respect. - LouisAragon (talk) 01:50, 11 September 2016 (UTC)
There is a pretty well-sourced subsection on Wiki as well regarding state-funded Azerbaijani attempts to falsify Armenian history, for readers to get a basic grasp of how rampant these Azerbaijani attempts have been in the past years.[32] Keep in mind however that these attemps aren't just limited towards Armenia, but also towards Iran (though literally no one takes those seriously). Azerbaijans main "beef" is for now, after all, mainly directed towards Armenia. - LouisAragon (talk) 01:50, 11 September 2016 (UTC)
Please provide context: what article? what proposed text? what source (reference)? No reference is reliable for all things. Johnuniq (talk) 04:01, 11 September 2016 (UTC)
The Mail & Guardian is a mainstream national weekly newspaper, take a look at our article, it seems to be well regarded. However, as Johnuniq has said, each individual reference must be evaluated on its specific merits, so please give us more details. Roger (Dodger67) (talk) 11:25, 11 September 2016 (UTC)
Birth date of John Penn ("the American")
Our article John Penn ("the American") currently gives his date of birth as February 29, 1700 (which necessarily is in the Julian calendar, since the Gregorian calendar does not have such a date). The source is Norris Stanley Barratt(1913), specifically a caption to a photo. I have viewed the Google Books scan and verified the statement.
Another source cited in the article for the date of death is Howard Malcolm Jenkins ed. (1903). I have viewed that source in Google Books too, and find that on page 374 it gives the birth date as "Jan. 29, 1699-1700". The dual year indicates the Julian calendar combined with the convention in England, Wales, and the American colonies that the year began in March. So the full meaning of the notation is the year 1699 of you follow the calendar in force at the time, which started the year in March, or 1700 if you follow the modern convention of the year beginning in January.
The source I have the most confidence in is four images obtained from Ancestry.com. The citation for the collection is
The collection has both text extracts, as well as images of the hand-written originals. The four images I found all state the birth date as month 11, day 28, year 1699/1700. The Quakers didn't use the pagan month names, numbering the months instead. There are other entries that follow the same convention, of indicating a double year for dates the eleventh month if the year was before 1752, the year the British adopted the Gregorian calendar. This must be interpreted as the eleventh month of 1699, counting March as the first month, that is, what a modern writer would call January 1700.
My inclination is to regard the Quaker meeting records as the most reliable of these sources, and revise the birth date in the article accordingly, but to create a footnote describing the conflicting values in the other two sources. I seek others' opinions on this. Jc3s5h (talk) 15:56, 12 September 2016 (UTC)
heritage-india.com
Is heritage-india.com (a commercial book site) a reliable source? I found a newly created page Ranadeep Bhattacharyya and Judhajit Bagchi which cited a number of sources from this website so I want to check if we can accept it as reliable or not before going for a cleanup also the article says Ranadeep also regularly writes on heritage and culture for Heritage India Magazine and same with Judhajit Bagchi, isn't it pointing to WP:RSSELF. Thank you – GSS (talk) 08:54, 10 September 2016 (UTC)
Having 11 citations to support the innocuous "Ranadeep also regularly writes on heritage and culture for Heritage India Magazine & the award winning Maharashtra Unlimited magazine" appears excessive and actually indicates possible OR. But "Award winning" is editorializing and peacock because there is nothing to suggest it is "award winning" due to the actions of the subject of the article. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 16:32, 12 September 2016 (UTC)
The website just mentions one obscure award it got, so it would be too much to say "award wining" even for an article (if one existed) about the magazine. It (the Heritage India magazine) seems to be a genuine magazine based on the contents within them, though it is curious there are no circulation figures, or advertising department. Tiptoethrutheminefield (talk) 19:10, 12 September 2016 (UTC)