Revision as of 11:58, 5 January 2022 editTayi Arajakate (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers17,082 edits →Metro news description: ReplyTag: Reply← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 20:21, 8 January 2025 edit undoLowercase sigmabot III (talk | contribs)Bots, Template editors2,302,381 editsm Archiving 1 discussion(s) to Misplaced Pages talk:Reliable sources/Perennial sources/Archive 11) (bot | ||
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To discuss the reliability of a source, please start or join a discussion on the ''']''' (''']'''). Discussions on the noticeboard will be added to this list. This talk page is for discussing the maintenance of the list itself, and arguments posted here will not be taken into consideration. | To discuss the reliability of a source, please start or join a discussion on the ''']''' (''']'''). Discussions on the noticeboard will be added to this list. This talk page is for discussing the maintenance of the list itself, and arguments posted here will not be taken into consideration. | ||
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{{WikiProject Reliability}} | {{WikiProject Reliability}} | ||
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| title = Misplaced Pages Bans Right Wing Site Breitbart as a Source for Facts | | title = Misplaced Pages Bans Right Wing Site Breitbart as a Source for Facts | ||
| org = '']'' | | org = '']'' | ||
| accessdate = 8 September 2019 | |||
| author2 = Omer Benjakob | | author2 = Omer Benjakob | ||
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| url2 = https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premium-why-wikipedia-is-much-more-effective-than-facebook-at-fighting-fake-news-1.8378622 | | url2 = https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premium-why-wikipedia-is-much-more-effective-than-facebook-at-fighting-fake-news-1.8378622 | ||
| date2 = 9 January 2020 | | date2 = 9 January 2020 | ||
| accessdate2 = 10 January 2020 | |||
| author3 = Oliver Darcy | | author3 = Oliver Darcy | ||
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| url3 = https://edition.cnn.com/2020/07/24/media/wikipedia-fox-news-reliable-sources/index.html | | url3 = https://edition.cnn.com/2020/07/24/media/wikipedia-fox-news-reliable-sources/index.html | ||
| date3 = 24 July 2020 | | date3 = 24 July 2020 | ||
| accessdate3 = 24 July 2020 | |||
| author4 = Palmer Haasch | | author4 = Palmer Haasch | ||
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| url4 = https://www.insider.com/wikipedia-fox-news-source-editors-verify-politics-science-claims-2020-7 | | url4 = https://www.insider.com/wikipedia-fox-news-source-editors-verify-politics-science-claims-2020-7 | ||
| date4 = 24 July 2020 | | date4 = 24 July 2020 | ||
| accessdate4 = 24 July 2020 | |||
| author5 = Noam Cohen | | author5 = Noam Cohen | ||
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| url5 = https://www.wired.com/story/why-wikipedia-decided-to-stop-calling-fox-a-reliable-source/ | | url5 = https://www.wired.com/story/why-wikipedia-decided-to-stop-calling-fox-a-reliable-source/ | ||
| date5 = 10 August 2020 | | date5 = 10 August 2020 | ||
| accessdate5 = 12 August 2020 | |||
| author6 = |
| author6 = Heather Kelly | ||
| |
| date6 = 15 January 2021 | ||
| url6 = https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/01/15/wikipedia-20-year-anniversary/ | |||
| org6 = '']'' | |||
| title6 = On its 20th birthday, Misplaced Pages might be the safest place online | |||
| url6 = https://slate.com/technology/2021/07/wikipedia-daily-mail-generally-unreliable.html | |||
| |
| org6 = '']'' | ||
| quote6 = And when it comes to those sources, there is of course a Misplaced Pages that lists sources and rates them according to how reliable they are. | |||
| accessdate6 = 27 September 2021 | |||
| author7 = Stephen Harrison | |||
| title7 = Misplaced Pages’s War on the Daily Mail | |||
| org7 = '']'' | |||
| url7 = https://slate.com/technology/2021/07/wikipedia-daily-mail-generally-unreliable.html | |||
| date7 = 1 July 2021 | |||
| author8 = Stephen Harrison | |||
| title8 = How the Russian Invasion of Ukraine Is Playing Out on English, Ukrainian, and Russian Misplaced Pages | |||
| org8 = '']'' | |||
| url8 = https://slate.com/technology/2022/03/wikipedia-russian-invasion-of-ukraine-edits-kyiv-kiev.html | |||
| date8 = 1 March 2022 | |||
| author9 = Maggie Harrison Dupré | |||
| title9 = Misplaced Pages No Longer Considers CNET a "Generally Reliable" Source After AI Scandal | |||
| org9 = ''Futurism'' | |||
| url9 = https://futurism.com/wikipedia-cnet-unreliable-ai | |||
| date9 = 29 February 2024 | |||
| author10 = Benj Edwards | |||
| title10 = AI-generated articles prompt Misplaced Pages to downgrade CNET's reliability rating | |||
| org10 = '']'' | |||
| url10 = https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2024/02/wikipedia-downgrades-cnets-reliability-rating-after-ai-generated-articles | |||
| date10 = 29 February 2024 | |||
| author11 = Christopher Harper | |||
| title11 = AI-generated content and other unfavorable practices have put longtime staple CNET on Misplaced Pages's blacklisted sources | |||
| org11 = '']'' | |||
| url11 = https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intelligence/ai-generated-content-and-other-unfavorable-practices-have-put-longtime-staple-cnet-on-wikipedias-blacklisted-sources | |||
| date11 = 2 March 2024 | |||
| author12 = Elia-Shalev, Asaf | |||
| title12 = ADL faces Misplaced Pages ban over reliability concerns on Israel, antisemitism | |||
| org12 = ] | |||
| url12 = https://www.jta.org/2024/06/18/united-states/adl-faces-wikipedia-ban-over-reliability-concerns-on-israel-antisemitism | |||
| date12 = 18 June 2024 | |||
| author13 = | |||
| title13 = Misplaced Pages declares ADL 'unreliable' on Israel-Palestine conflict, antisemitism | |||
| org13 = ] | |||
| url13 = https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/artc-wikipedia-declares-adl-unreliable-on-israel-palestine-conflict-antisemitism | |||
| date13 = 19 June 2024 | |||
| author14 = Aaron Bandler | |||
| title14 = Misplaced Pages Editors Label ADL Only Reliable for Antisemitism When “Israel and Zionism Are Not Concerned” | |||
| org14 = ] | |||
| url14 = https://jewishjournal.com/news/united-states/372532/wikipedia-editors-label-adl-only-reliable-for-antisemitism-when-israel-and-zionism-are-not-concerned/ | |||
| date14 = 21 June 2024 | |||
| author15 = Ben Brasch | |||
| title15 = Misplaced Pages defends editors deeming Anti-Defamation League 'unreliable' on Gaza | |||
| org15 = ] | |||
| url15 = https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2024/06/26/wikipedia-adl-jew-zionism-israel/ | |||
| date15 = 26 June 2024 | |||
| author16 = Aaron Bandler | |||
| title16 = Misplaced Pages’s Fundamental Sourcing Problem | |||
| org16 = ] | |||
| url16 = https://jewishjournal.com/commentary/opinion/374801/wikipedias-fundamental-sourcing-problem/ | |||
| date16 = 11 September 2024 | |||
}} | }} | ||
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== Sticky header user interface community input == | |||
== Evaluating sources == | |||
<!-- ] 16:01, 4 December 2024 (UTC) -->{{User:ClueBot III/DoNotArchiveUntil|1733328075}} | |||
There has been an initiative to change the interface so that the gray header at the top of the ] "follows around" as you scroll down. See: {{t|sticky header}}. '''Which of the choices below (A-E) do you prefer?''' What other ideas do you have? | |||
Editors should reconsider how they evaluate sources. We know what RS say about the following points, and we have articles, based on RS, which debunk these lies. | |||
Any source that repeatedly sows doubt about these facts: | |||
# that Russia interfered in the election, | |||
# that their goal was to put Trump in power, and | |||
# that Trump and his campaign lied about and cooperated with that interference, or | |||
or makes claims: | |||
# that Trump won the 2020 election and | |||
# that it was stolen from him by Biden, | |||
# that climate change isn't serious, | |||
# that vaccines are unsafe, | |||
# that Trump is truthful in any sense, | |||
is not a RS. Those sources are the ones that should be removed and deprecated. We all know which sources do that, and that those sources are often defended here at Misplaced Pages. The Washington Post and the New York Times are not such sources. -- ] (]) 02:02, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
== Media Matters for America == | |||
] currently says that "{{tq|There is no consensus on the reliability of Media Matters for America. As a biased or opinionated source, their statements should be attributed.}}" I agree with the second sentence, but not the first. The on this matter showed most !votes as "generally reliable" and "additional considerations apply", but I don't see anyone saying its "unreliable". But "no consensus" sounds ambiguous and could mean "some editors think it is reliable, while other editors think its unreliable". ''']''' <sub>]</sub> 08:19, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
: Good points. The wording should be changed to: | |||
:: {{tq|There is consensus that Media Matters for America is generally reliable. As a biased or opinionated source, their statements should be attributed.}} | |||
: The should be linked. -- ] (]) 21:44, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:: The last RfC explicitly reaffirmed the "No consensus" status. I don't think we should second-guess the closer here. ]<sub>]</sub> 21:51, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::That's not quite what the closer said (they said "the current reliability status of Media Matters for America is generally reaffirmed"). But its clear even from the closer's statement that the two predominant choices were "reliable" and "uncertain", not "reliable" and "unreliable".''']''' <sub>]</sub> 22:00, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::: The "current reliability status" before the December 2019 RfC "No consensus." The closer wrote that it was reaffirmed. ]<sub>]</sub> 22:07, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::::Maybe what they meant by "current reliability status" was the color, and I agree that the color was reaffirmed by the RfC. Your interpretation of the closer's first sentence appears to contradict the closer's second sentence. If the closer truly meant that consensus is split between reliable and unreliable (I don't think they meant that), then that RfC should be re-closed, as I don't see a single !vote that considered MMfA unreliable during the RfC.''']''' <sub>]</sub> 22:17, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::::::No, the closer didn't mean that consensus was split between reliable and unreliable. The closer meant that consensus was split between "reliable" and "uncertain" but "a lot of the arguments in general default to "uncertain."" By "uncertain," I am quite confident that was simply the closer's shorthand for a ] source, which is defined as a {{tq|No consensus, unclear, or additional considerations apply: The source is marginally reliable (i.e. neither generally reliable nor generally unreliable), and may be usable depending on context. Editors may not have been able to agree on whether the source is appropriate, or may have agreed that it is only reliable in certain circumstances. It may be necessary to evaluate each use of the source on a case-by-case basis while accounting for specific factors unique to the source in question.}} This makes sense since a great deal of editors !voted "additional considerations apply." Even many of the editors who !voted generally reliable stated that the source should be used on a "case-by-case basis" or is "context dependent." These types of qualifiers are more in line with a marginal source than a generally reliable source, and the closer accurately reflected this in their closing. ] (]) 22:46, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Yes, I agree. But I feel this is not accurately reflected in the simplistic sentence "There is no consensus on the reliability of Media Matters for America" and it should be worded differently.''']''' <sub>]</sub> 23:13, 2 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Okay. We can write something to the degree of: {{tq|There is consensus that Media Matters is marginally reliable and that its articles should be evaluated for reliability on a case-by-case basis. As a partisan advocacy group, their statements should be be attributed.}} But I'm open to other suggestions. ] (]) 01:36, 3 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::::::::: That sounds pretty good. -- ] (]) 02:31, 3 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::I think its an improvement over the current wording, so I'd support replacing it.''']''' <sub>]</sub> 02:43, 3 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
*Last RFC was almost exactly two years ago. If there's any uncertainty, we could always just hold another RFC now. --] (]) 02:25, 3 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
: Agreed. Why are we splitting hairs here what the closer may have meant two years ago when it's possible to hold a new RfC at the RSN. ]<sub>]</sub> 11:56, 3 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
*As the proposal by {{u|Dr.Swag Lord, Ph.d}} was supported by {{u|Valjean}} and myself and opposed by none, I the text.''']''' <sub>]</sub> 16:31, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
** That's an improvement. Consensus has changed for the better. -- ] (]) 17:07, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
*Far too partisan for my liking, I oppose the proposal. ] (]) 20:57, 11 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
*:The question was never what any of us think about MMfA (also please read ]) but how to best interpret consensus.''']''' <sub>]</sub> 01:39, 12 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
*:What consensus? The consensus of whatever random half-dozen editors happen to be on this page over a very short but unspecified period of time? Misplaced Pages shouldn't simply be replicating the failed bipolarized US media model, it should be attempting to rise above it. What possible justification is there for using describing clearly politically partisan sources as RS when there are so much better on offer? ] (]) 03:43, 12 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
*I agree with the proposed rewrite but better to strike out {{tq|and that its articles should be evaluated for reliability on a case-by-case basis.}} We wikilink to marginally reliable. ] (]) 06:44, 12 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:"We wikilink to marginally reliable." - Ever cross your mind to ask yourself "Why?" ] (]) 07:42, 12 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
== ''Jacobin'' (magazine) == | |||
In about '']'', I am not sure that "ditors achieved a ''strong consensus'' that ''Jacobin'' is no better than marginally reliable. , and in general did not seem to account for '''Option 1''' and/or '''Option 1/2''' comments when stating that "there is ''strong consensus'' that ''Jacobin'' is no better than marginally reliable" — e.g. it appears to be there was no clear or strong consensus on whether it was '''1''' or '''2''', with a minority supporting '''3'''. The rest of the closure and ''yellow'' rating, however, was fine; the current {{RSP|Jacobin}} also appears to be too wordy and could be improved. ] (]) 08:21, 6 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
Pinging {{u|Hemiauchenia}} and {{u|Tayi Arajakate}}, since they worked on entries, but anyone's thought would be helpful — is it just me? ] (]) 08:15, 7 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:{{u|Davide King}}, I would rather not touch that entry since I had made a comment in the discussion itself but yeah, looking at the discussion, I think you might be correct that the entry does not reflect it. The wording in the entry is directly copied from the close summary though, so a ] at ] and a reclose/amendment would be needed if you want to modify it. <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 01:33, 8 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
Since I was pinged on my talk: the close is meant to convey that there is a strong consensus that it is not better than Option 2 (I.E. the arguments against it being an Option 1 news publisher were quite strong and were more than enough to achieve a clear consensus against that designation) and that there are particular additional considerations to apply to ''Jacobin'' (I.E. in-text attribution and some issues expressed regarding contentious BLP claims). If people would like to challenge a 3-month old RfC close on AN, I technically cannot stop you but also I think the fact that none of the many RfC participants did so sooner indicates that the closure was proper. — ] (]) 17:27, 10 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:Agreed, I see no reason to change it. <span style="font-family:Palatino">]</span> <sup>]</sup> 06:07, 11 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:Not sure that makes sense, going by headcount at least, there were 19 participants whose position can be described as endorsing "not better than Option 2" (13 for Option 2 and 6 for Option 3) and 18 participants whose position can be described as endorsing "not worse than Option 2" (13 for Option 1 and 5 for Option 1/2). There were policy based arguments on both ends. The close is quite verbose so it's possible no one paid attention to its specifics, at least that's the case with me. There is also only one person among the 37 who said anything about BLPs (i.e, Crossroads). <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 10:25, 11 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::I agree. So many words and little makes sense. ] (]) 12:22, 11 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::{{tq|he arguments against it being an Option 1 news publisher were quite strong and were more than enough to achieve a clear consensus against that designation}}, that looks more like your personal opinion or view that an admin may not agree with, if they closed it themselves; as noted by {{u|Tayi Arajakate}}, ''both sides'' gave strong arguments (in particular Aquillion, and the fact, as was noted by Tayi Arajakate, that {{tq|There is still a lack of examples of any factual inaccuracies in its coverage. This was pointed out in the last two discussions as well.}} It is as if it is deemed too biased to be reliable, even though no strong evidence has been presented to support this fact, and the mere fact it is more opinion rather than straight news already means we cannot always use it, as noted by The Four Deuces — it does not mean it is not reliable or cannot be reliable, or that it is unreliable on facts) and it is very close, much closer than your own closure implied (I also noticed only now that Tayi Arajakate is correct that it was only a single user out of the 37th who mentioned BLPs, so the closure gave way too much weight to one side than was warranted, and was closer than it is assumed), which is why I asked that an admin review it and re-close it with a better summary and entry here. I think an admin close review is warranted. ] (]) 19:09, 11 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::As for {{tq|challeng a 3-month old RfC close on AN, ... I think the fact that none of the many RfC participants did so sooner indicates that the closure was proper.}} I missed it (or else I would have participated too) and I saw it only those days, and I thought that it was worth a review. I do not think that other users ignoring it means they are fine with it (they are free to comment here or someone other than me may ping them if they disagree), and the mere fact it was closed by a non-admin, and at least two other users have agreed with my concerns and about verbosity, of which I know what I am talking about since I am guilty of this and I try to improve, while two users who disagree are the closure themselves and a user who voted for '''Option 3''' — I see no reason not to look further and get a better summary of consensus, or lack thereof. | |||
::] (]) 19:21, 11 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::{{tq|I also noticed only now that Tayi Arajakate is correct that it was only a single user out of the 37th who mentioned BLPs}} - exactly. What a mess. ] (]) 20:13, 11 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::::Jlevi, Jr8825, and WMrapids (who gave a better summary entry that takes in consideration both sides) gave very good policy-based, summaries, and well-addressed counter-arguments — again, policy-wise and even numerically, this was much closer than was assumed ... ] (]) 10:11, 12 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::::Given that the closer has not responded further to these concerns and the ] was archived with no endorsements, I'm going to go ahead and remove it from the list. <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 10:59, 23 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::::::I've reverted that removal. If you're going to open up a close challenge on AN, please follow the giant notice on top of the page and actually leave me a talk page message when opening a discussion. — ] (]) 16:14, 26 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I didn't open the close review and the notice is for discussions on editors not reviews. Unlike reports on conduct, it isn't a requirement to specifically notify closers of a review on their talk page, though they usually are aware. See for instance, the ] at AN or for the matter, most other reviews in the archives where the closers were not specifically notified and it did not cause any issue. | |||
:::::::Similarly, you were notified on your talk page about this discussion where the recommendation was a close review, you then went on to comment about the close review and you were active at AN when the close review was open. It seems like you were aware as well. Instead of reaching for technicalities, perhaps you could try responding to the actual concerns being brought up. The more I look at it, the more it looks like a supervote and the lack of response does not help. <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 18:43, 26 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
* Note, I've unarchived the discussion at WP:AN seeking wider community input. See {{slink|Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard#Close review of the latest RfC about Jacobin's reliability}}. <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 16:58, 29 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
== Legacy.com == | |||
Any objection to adding ] to the list? This site hosts the generally family-written obituaries (without regard to newsworthiness or noteworthiness). It's been previously discussed ] and ], and the consensus is that it really should not be cited for much more than death dates. | |||
We generally do a good job of scrubbing articles where it's used (currently, discounting for non-article space, it's , but new articles, especially biographies of borderline notables, citing it continue to crop up; it is a textbook perennial source. A recent example is ]. | |||
I propose to add it with the notation "''legacy.com is discouraged as a source and should be cited, if at all, only for the date of death of the subject.''"; with pointers to the two discussions linked above. | |||
Any objections? ] (]) 17:55, 7 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:I take back the point of how well we scrub articles: when you include the "www." prefix, uses. ] (]) 18:09, 7 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
== The bias of the liberal media == | |||
{{archive top|Closing this again because the purpose of this talkpage is not to soapbox about the liberal media being "biased" without any actionable request. Anymore of this nonsense Barecode and I am taking you to ]. ] (]) 17:29, 9 December 2021 (UTC)}} | |||
I posted this before and my edit was by {{u|Hemiauchenia}} claiming it's a soap opera. Their (they seem to see liberal bias everywhere). | |||
I'm not sure how many Misplaced Pages editors noticed, but many people in the general public already noticed that there is a strong bias in the liberal media. I think that pretty much everyone agrees that there are two types of media outlets in USA: | |||
* Conservative publications who support former president ] and are critical to the current president ] - like Fox News, New York Post, Daily Caller, Daily Wire and probably Wall Street Journal, Business Insider, The Hill, Washington Times, Washington Examiner and maybe a few others. | |||
* Pretty much the rest of the media, which Fox News names simply "the media" (which includes big media - Facebook and Twitter) who are very hard on Donald Trump and very much defend Joe Biden. | |||
Both sides are visibly biased against the other camp. My question is this: Is there any place to discuss the liberal media bias? I do not believe that this topic should be avoided. Because the criticism against Biden largely doesn't exist in the liberal media. And when Fox News or New York Post are publishing a story targeting Biden, the liberal media pretends that the topic simply doesn't exist - disinformation by omission . And then Misplaced Pages editors will have to ignore a story because what the liberal media doesn't want to see, doesn't exist. For example the Hunter Biden Libyan assets story . I think both sides are biased. However it's impossible not to see the liberal bias, and, in my view, the liberal bias exists here at Misplaced Pages too, with editors trying to avoid including information that can potentially make Biden, the Democratic party and their supporters look bad. If the liberal media bias exists then it's very likely it will be reflected here at Misplaced Pages too. Even more so if the majority of the Misplaced Pages editors have liberal views. And Misplaced Pages should be aware of that, instead of pretending this issue doesn't exist. | |||
On a larger scale, the liberal bias is connected to the ] and visible in other sense making institutions: Social networks, Hollywood studios, Universities plus the Silicon Valley - and of course the Democrat Party. I'm not sure if neutral media outlets that make comments on politics exist. There are various sources who comment on the liberal media bias. Le Monde diplomatique talks at length about the liberal hysteria surrounding Trump (which outlives his presidency) and the media war against Trump. Other sources talk about a liberal hysteria about Trump . There is a huge number of instances that prove the liberal media bias. The sustained disinformation campaign against Kyle Rittenhouse, the CNN lies about Joe Rogan the media (CNN, WaPo, others) lies about Nick Sandman , the liberal media insisting on the Trump-Russia conspiracy theory, CNN instructing viewers to see "peaceful protests" where rioters burn buildings including a police station and then (Don Lemon) suggesting violence is normal because the country started with violence , Washington Post instructing readers: , LA Times telling readers to stop consuming so much in order to solve supply chains problems (as opposed to cricticize the Biden administration for this situation), the media complaining about vulgar taunts against Biden but having no problem with vulgar taunts against Trump. The media complaining about Trump being authoritarian and the same Media Supports Calling Parents "Domestic Terrorists" . The media being angry because of the "xenophobic" Trump travel ban related to COVID but having no problem with Biden travel ban. Journalists and White House press secretary singing happy birthday to each other - which shows the huge love of the press for Biden administration (and also looks a bit dystopian). When Biden's approval ratings sink, instead of pointing at what the president is doing wrong, CNN defends Biden and discovers that the ratings are going down because of the memes - which "make USA a more difficult country to govern". Twitter and Facebook cancelled Rittenhouse, Twitter admits they were wrong and Facebook refuses to acknowledge they were wrong and blame the fact checkers. Liberal media ignoring the Waukesha massacre claiming what looks like a terrorist attack to be "caused by a SUV" and there are many such examples which some ridicule in memes like The Babylon Bee. | |||
There is a recent video made by NYT titled - which focuses on the hypocrisy of the liberals but it focuses on the liberal politicians. Since they are part of the liberal media, it's very unrealistic to expect them to make another video about the hypocrisy of the liberal media too. However, you can't suspect the politicians to be hypocrites and in the same time to believe that the very media who supports them are not hypocrites. So I think this topic should be discussed instead of being avoided because it is very much about the credibility and reliability of the vast majority of the press. -- ] (]) 02:52, 5 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:tl;dr. This isn't a forum for generalized complaining. If you have an issue with a specific source, you're welcome to open a specific thread about it on the Noticeboard. No, "you're all biased Marxist liberals who hate America" is not actionable. ] (]) 14:32, 8 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:: {{u|NorthBySouthBaranof}} I don't believe this has anything to do with being marxists or with hating America. You can't add an allegation about Hunter Biden simply because the liberal media pretends that issue does not exist. The source points to the fact that the liberal media ignores it. Then you Google "liberal bias" and you find an article in Le Monde diplomatique that confirms there is a significant bias in the liberal media. Then you find more indications there is a liberal bias. If the liberal bias is a reality, then Misplaced Pages should be aware of that. I tried to find a way to bring this into discussion. Maybe ] is a better place for such an issue? I don't know. This is real-life situation: you can't mention a specific information in a Misplaced Pages article because the liberal sources pretend that thing didn't exist. And the sources mentioning that information are considered to be unreliable - ]. The liberal media is not perfect, therefore if they pretend an issue doesn't exist, it doesn't actually mean that it actually does not exist. Misplaced Pages should not pretend that things do not exist simply because the liberal media pretends those things do not exist. ] (]) 07:31, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::Of course, {{u|Barecode}}, there is bias in the liberal media, just as there is bias in the far left media, the moderate media, the conservative media and the far right media. What matters most is whether or not the source in question is ]. Few editors would contest the reliability of a straight news story in the ''Wall Street Journal'' even though its editorial stance is conservative to right. So, Misplaced Pages editors, after intensive conversation that anyone is free to participate in, decide together whether various sources are reliable or not. Many left sources have been judged unreliable by consensus of editors. These debates are based on well-defined criteria, and if solid evidence is produced that a given source is actually reliable, then that previous conclusion will be changed. We like evidence here rather thab unsupported assertions. ] (]) 07:49, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::: {{u|Cullen328}} - You don't need any evidence to mention an allegation/accusation/innuendo. E.g. ]. The question is if a specific allegation has due weight to deserve to be mentioned in an article. And what should Misplaced Pages do when the liberal media is completely silent about an allegation. When that happens, the liberal media silence does not prove the issue should be ignored at Misplaced Pages. They don't have a monopoly on truth nor a monopoly on what is relevant. This is not an allegation about a town mayor, printed in a local paper. It is an accusation presented by one of the top TV outlets, about the president's son. The size of that publication and the high profile of the accused person indicate that such an accusation should be mentioned. Using only the reliability of the source in order to ignore such an allegation is simply not enough in order to decide the due weight. -- ] (]) 08:33, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::::You are going on and on and on about the biased liberal media and saying nothing about the biased conservative media which is strong evidence of your own bias. What matters is reliability not bias. A reliable conservative source is perfectly acceptable. An unreliable liberal source is unacceptable. So, if reliable conservative sources are discussing your laundry list of concerns, then use those sources to build content. ] (]) 17:30, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
{{unindent}} "but many people in the general public already noticed that there is a strong bias in the liberal media". In the wise words of Dara O'Briain "" And so it goes for most of the so-called accusation of 'liberal bias'. Most of those complaining about liberal bias wouldn't know a reliable source if it bit them in the face. And since Colbert's remark in 2006, the conservative political landscape has gone off the deep end, making reality even more 'liberal'. But that's only due to liberals not full on embracing conspiracy theories and 'alternative facts'.  <span style="font-variant:small-caps; whitespace:nowrap;">] {] · ] · ] · ]}</span> 08:41, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
: {{u|Headbomb}} - Fact: Zombies did not say lies. The liberal media said many lies. The Sandman case was even confirmed in court. Same with Rittenhouse. Zombies did not create a hysteria and a massive campaign of lies about Trump-Russia conspiracy theory. If you don't like Republicans that's irrelevant. Side notice: I don't like them either. But Misplaced Pages is not supposed to be the place where any criticism against liberal media can be dismissed with "those pesky Republicans are nuts anyways". This is not the place to play identity politics so please stop doing that. This is not about Republican views. The views of the Republican nuts are irrelevant. Suggesting all Republicans are nuts is playing identity politics. This is about something even Le Monde diplomatique noticed: The liberal hysteria and a media war against Trump, which outlives Trump. I was talking about the flat out lies of the media and you try to derail the conversation about fringe conspiracy theories. But anyways, your point is that liberal media is not biased, am I correct? | |||
: I would add to my previous message that such decisions of the liberal media to stay completely silent on such allegations against USA president's son had consequences: resignation of high profile journalists: Glenn Greenwald and Bari Weiss. That's another reason why the liberal media silence can not be used as an excuse for Misplaced Pages silence. ] (]) 11:18, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
The header is now 2 lines tall. What Timeshifter is now proposing (scroll down ) is a narrow one-line sticky header with a link from the "Status" column head back to the ]. And a link from the "Sources" column head back to the ]. Notes explain this just above the table. He states this allows new users of the table to quickly return to the table TOC, or to quickly find the meaning of the legend icons. There are also improved notes above the table. | |||
There is a gowning FakeVerse out there. We should keep out of WP media that do not separate facts from opinion or fiction. ]] 11:41, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
An issue in ]: When you use the ], or if you follow ("jump to") an anchored link within the table such as ], the top line of the note in the row you jump to would be covered by the narrow sticky header. 2 lines are covered by the 2-line header. ] have not found a way to fix this. Timeshifter does not believe this is a serious problem. Others do. One solution (see E below) is to add a line's worth of blank padding at the top of each row. | |||
How has this massive temper tantrum about "the liberal media" been allowed o stay on the talk page? It has nothing to do with the Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 12:50, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
*: No sticky header, same style (2-line) header as before. | |||
:Yup, this should have been just removed again for ] but too many people responded to it already so meh.. <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 14:22, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
*: Full size (2-line) header with sticky enabled. | |||
* C: Narrow (1-line) header without sticky enabled. | |||
*: Narrow header with sticky header that follows you around. This has been improved. Please check again. | |||
*E: Same as D, but with padding at the top of each row. | |||
] (]) 15:04, 30 October 2024 (UTC). Edited per ] by ] (]) 11:46, 3 November 2024 (UTC). | |||
:Another shortcut (for '''Forbes.com contributors''') with the improved narrow-header version of the sticky table: | |||
:https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources/Perennial_sources&oldid=1260153539#Forbes.com_contributors | |||
:The benefits of having the sticky header far outweigh the small inconvenience for the relatively few people using Vector 2010 of having to '''scroll up a tiny bit to see one line of missing text at the top of the notes column.''' They can see everything else in the Forbes.com row. | |||
:By the way, your history is off. The {{t|sticky header}} was up without complaints for over 2 months (since Aug 21, 2024) after I changed from {{t|sticky table start}} and did my final tweak. See '''. ''' | |||
:Recently, there were changes by the template editor that messed up the colors, but those have been fixed. | |||
:--] (]) 15:38, 30 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
::"This template is used on approximately 4,400 pages" sums up the use of the sticky banner. How does it look on mobile? Why reinvent the wheel here when the people shifting through the table know what the columns represent. Also, it's a Misplaced Pages namespace, not an article. Do whatever you want, I guess. – ] (]) 17:11, 30 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
* A, C, D, B in decreasing order of preference, unless something can be done to prevent the overlapping of the header and the cell content (which might be fixable with a bit of cell padding at the top of the cells, at the cost of making the entire page visually longer; there might also be a JS way to fix this, by forcing a slight scroll-up after page load if a #Section link is in the URL). The overlap interfering with utility for everyone is not surpassed by the sticky header provding some utility to a minority of new editors at the page who aren't sure what the columns are. Especially given that it's pretty obvious what they are, and nearly no one needs most of them anyway, only Source and Summary. If the sticky header were imposed, then use the more concise version; the bigger one isn't actually any more helpful as a sticky. But if sticky is not imposed, maybe keep the more explanatory version, which provides a hint of organizational/thematic clarity as a top-of-table header that appears once. If not sticky, also put the header at the bottom of the table, so someone who doesn't remember what the columns are but is nearer bottom of page can scroll there to find out instead of all the way back to the top. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 19:06, 30 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Cell padding at the top of each row would work. | |||
::A JS and/or CSS solution would be better. Any ideas how? That's beyond my level of skill. | |||
::I set up (and immediately reverted) a sticky narrow header with the '''"Sources" column head''' linking to the '''Sources heading.''' The '''"Status" column head''' links to the '''Legend heading.''' I substituted that version link for '''"D"''' above. Click it to see the changes. | |||
::This makes the sticky header much more useful. It allows one to instantly go to the legend section. New people are going to be confused by the legend symbols, and will want a rapid way to get back to that section. Especially important in Vector 2010 where the TOC doesn't follow you around. | |||
::The Sources column head link takes one instantly back to the horizontal table of contents from anywhere in the table without tedious scrolling. So one can choose another letter. | |||
::A header at the bottom of a long table is not as useful as a sticky header. It takes a long time to scroll from the middle of this long table to the bottom of the table. | |||
::I added a couple notes just above the table. See sticky narrow header with notes '''.''' | |||
::--] (]) 14:26, 31 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::It still causes the first line to be missing. ] (]) 03:39, 3 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*'''A''' if editors want the benefit of a sticky header, they should enable that preference in the gadgets section of their preferences page. On this particular page, the benefit <small>(if any)</small>, is minimal at best. When I use RSP, I know what source I am searching for and am basically looking for the color of the source and the discussion. I also use ctrl+f to quickly find what I am looking for sometimes. I was pleased when it was changed back to the status-quo.]] 14:41, 2 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Non-logged-in editors don't have that gadgets option. | |||
::So you have the meaning of the legend icons memorized? Good for you. But non-regular users of this page do not. The "status" column head link takes them to the Legend section. That link is handy because the sticky header follows the reader as they scroll down the table. Is it not useful to users who don't have the legend icon meanings memorized? --] (]) 12:08, 3 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*'''A''' all the way. It simply works. ] (]) 03:40, 3 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*'''D, E, C''' in decreasing order of preference. Benefits, especially for new or infrequent readers of this page, outweigh the tiny problem of one line of notes being covered in secondary skins. People know how to scroll up to see it. Vector 2022, the default skin, does not have the problem. --] (]) 11:53, 3 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*'''A'''. The narrow benefit does not outweigh the narrow detriment of the scrolling issue, and the narrowed header is simply awful: the new "title" of the table is completely incomprehensible (until explained that it's supposed to be a stand-in for the bigger column headers, which, I'm sorry, what‽ Nobody who doesn't already understand the table will understand that.), and I find the appropriation of columns as navigation links incredibly weird and against how wikilinks usually behave (This point would be solved by turning them into, idk, tiny arrows that are linked instead of the header name, but you still have my other point.).<br>Regarding Timeshifter's response to Isaid, I asked a family member of mine what each column meant without giving him the row headers. He identified every column except the year-last-discussed correctly (though he only identified the uses column after hovering over a link). The status icons tell you what they mean when you hover over them; heck, clicking on them already takes you to the appropriate paragraph under the legend section. ] (]) 02:33, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks {{u|Aaron Liu}} for running the tests. So your family member who was new to the table could not identify what 2 of the 6 columns were about when looking at the table somewhere below the column headers. So the family member had no benefit of seeing the column header. For example, someone following a link like this: ]. I added {{t|tooltip}} to the column heads just now. See '''.''' Maybe someday when the {{t|sticky header}} template is made to work correctly with the old Misplaced Pages skins (like Vector 2010), it can be added back. And we could use 2 header rows then for better clarity. And the sticky header will be of more use to someone like your family member now that {{t|tooltip}} info has been added to the 2 confusing columns. The header, being sticky, will be right there to help out. | |||
::By the way, the current header has an internal link in the column head (the "legend" link). I didn't add that. I see internal links regularly in Misplaced Pages articles and tables. | |||
::I made some improvements to the one-line sticky header example. I expanded and clarified the table caption. I also added some notes above the table. See '''''' of the table section. It's even more improved here: | |||
<templatestyles src="Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Perennial sources/styles.css"/> | |||
'''''Note.''' Click ''']''' column head to come back here. Click ''']''' column head to go to the ] section above. Click on any status column icon to go to its explanation above.'' | |||
{{sticky header}} | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable perennial-sources sticky-header" | |||
|+ Perennial sources. Current status. Discussion links (with latest by year). Uses in Misplaced Pages articles. | |||
|- | |||
! scope="col" | ] | |||
! scope="col" | ] | |||
! scope="col" class="unsortable" | {{tooltip|List|List of linked discussions}} | |||
! scope="col" | {{tooltip|Last|Year last discussed}} | |||
! scope="col" class="unsortable" | Summary | |||
! scope="col" class="unsortable" | {{tooltip|Use|Uses in Misplaced Pages articles}} | |||
|- class="s-gr" id="ABC News" | |||
| ] | |||
| {{WP:RSPSTATUS|gr}} | |||
| {{rsnl|318|ABC News and FiveThirtyEight|1}} {{rsnl|346|Some reliable sources|2}} | |||
| {{WP:RSPLAST|2021}} | |||
| There is consensus that ABC News, the news division of the ], is generally reliable. It is not to be confused with ].<!-- Disambiguation on purpose per WP:INTDAB --> | |||
| {{WP:RSPUSES|abcnews.com|abcnews.go.com}} | |||
|} | |||
--] (]) 05:49, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:I didn't find the "(legend)" link much offbeat because it clearly describes where it targets with its simple appearance. Meanwhile, linking "Sources" and "Status" this way runs against the paradigm/pattern of links going where their contents suggest. Same thing with the misappropriation of the table's name.<br>Also, just to clarify, my family member realized what the "use" column meant after he hovered over one of its links to see where it goes. I'd also suggest you use your sandbox instead of the RSP page to generate revisions to link to. ] (]) 15:42, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I tried a sandbox, but many of the links are on the URL blacklist. So that did not work. The "Sources" and "Status" links do go to where their contents suggest. I am sure your family member would have no problem figuring it out. Plus they are explained in a note at the top of the table. The table name is not misappropriated at all. In fact, it is good practice to move info out of the column headers and into the table caption. In order to make column headers less tall. Especially with sticky tables. Helps especially on cell phones. Look it up on the table help pages. And in the sticky header template docs. --] (]) 16:07, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::What I did with my sandbox while ] is transclude parts of the RSP list. That worked pretty well as far as I can tell.<br>"Status" linked suggests going to a page that documents what statuses are, and I can perhaps accept that one; however, "Sources" linked suggests going to a page that documents what sources are. Like I said, using those links in a situation where you link to Misplaced Pages articles is quite confusing.{{tqb|Look it up on the table help pages. And in the sticky header template docs.}}Well, you only added that ] and ] yourself this year. I see no evidence that the community at large accepts or understands such usage of the table caption, nor that it is accessible to screenreaders. ] (]) 16:19, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Table captions are required for ]. It's a MOS guideline too: ]. For many years now. Many people ignore the requirement. Many are clueless about the need or the requirement. Blind people want more detail in captions, not less. Putting more stuff in table captions is mentioned (for various reasons) in multiple table help pages. One of your links is actually an edit by the other main sticky table editor. | |||
::::It takes only one use of the "Sources" link to figure out what is going on. People are creatures of habit. --] (]) 17:29, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::Sorry for misinterpreting the first diff link I posted. But 1. I was asking how screenreaders would interpret a table header in a table caption 2. I disagree with your interpretation of @]'s edit as "describe all the separate parts of the parent table headers". Even if it were correct, this kind of table caption is useless because it does not describe which table headers are associated with which parts of the caption. According to Headers which references its linked ArticleTitles, table captions should describe the table, not the table headers. ] (]) 18:23, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
{{outdent|::::::}} I am not following some of what you are saying. On your user page I notice that English is not your native language. The table caption in the example above describes what is in the table: "Perennial sources. Current status. Discussion links (with latest by year). Uses in Misplaced Pages articles." --] (]) 18:56, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:I know that's what it's supposed to describe. I don't see how anyone is supposed to realize that "Uses in Misplaced Pages articles", the fourth phrase in the caption, is supposed to be a description for the sixth column at first glance. Why do we even need to add those to the caption, whose usual use mandated by ArticleTitles is to describe the entire table and not just duplicate descriptions of column headers that can be accessibly, semantically, and straightforwardly-interpretedly added with {{tl|tooltip}}? Is there any consensus besides just you to use captions to describe table headers? ] (]) 20:20, 29 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I was pinged. Too much to read, but there seems to be some questions around table caption and screen readers. See : {{tq|A caption functions like a heading for a table. Most screen readers announce the content of captions. Captions help users to find a table and understand what it’s about and decide if they want to read it. If the user uses “Tables Mode”, captions are the primary mechanism to identify tables.}} Also further down: {{tq|The caption should be a short heading for the table content.}} A caption of "Perennial sources" or "List of perennial sources" should sufficiently describe the table. If there is another list, then differentiate them further in the caption (ex. Allowed list ... vs. Disallowed list ...). If they opt to read the table's content, then the column and/or row headers will help describe the data further. ] (]) 00:17, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Thanks @]. The question is about the table caption as posted ]. ] (]) 00:54, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::{{u|Aaron Liu}}. "Uses in Misplaced Pages articles" in the caption tells a reader that is in the table. A caption does not tell readers where something is in the table. It just tells them it is in the table. It is in this table caption also because mobile users can't hover and read the {{t|tooltip}} note for "Uses" in the column headers. Same is true for "Discussion links (with latest by year)" in the caption. Mobile users can't read the {{t|tooltip}} note for "Last". I added those {{t|tooltip}} notes because your family member couldn't immediately identify those 2 columns when he/she was placed in them away from the headers. With the sticky header the family member is never away from the header. | |||
::::The info could have been put in the notes above the table. But it is better in the caption because then it also helps people using screen readers. Serves a dual purpose: Describes the table better, and helps people using screen readers. Then the screen reader users have more info to decide whether to investigate the table further or not. --] (]) 06:30, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::The caption is not just for describing parts or columns that are in the table; it's for describing the entire table as a whole. The answer to mobile devices not being able to view tooltips is to , not misuse the table's : Who wouldn't be confused if their screenreader, asked to describe a table, gives them a seemingly random jumble of phrases? This absolutely does not help. Screenreaders are better served with the tooltips so that screenreaders know that information belongs to a specific column, not the entire table. ] (]) 20:18, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
{{outdent|::::::}} You need to take the tooltip on mobile problem to Phabricator. They are probably already working on it. They could probably use your help. | |||
As to table captions you are one of the few people I have heard from who has complained about a table caption being too informative. --] (]) 00:06, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:: {{u|Cinadon36}} - You mean the media like CNN should be kept out of Misplaced Pages? Because CNN did spread a lot of lies. | |||
:As it's specific to enwiki wikitext, it's something I should prototype in the tm:tooltip/sandbox in the near future, not report to the WMF-wide phab.{{pb}}You have yet to demonstrate that anyone besides you likes table captions "being too informative" in this manner. ] (]) 03:59, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:: {{u|ValarianB}} - The term "massive temper tantrum" sounds quite insulting. Thanks for being so gracious. This is one of the reasons why the Republicans wouldn't even bother to argue with the liberals. Anyways, I was talking about the liberal media, which is a reliable source for Misplaced Pages. I also mentioned a real life situation where the Misplaced Pages edits are affected by this situations. How is that "nothing to do with the Misplaced Pages" ? | |||
::It's not too informative. | |||
:: {{u|Tayi Arajakate}} - You mean Misplaced Pages should pretend that group bias doesn't exist? This topic is about the bias of a group of (reliable) sources. ] (]) 14:29, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::I see: ] and ] and ]. And more in the "See also" sections of those MediaWiki pages. | |||
::Phabricator . And '''.''' | |||
::--] (]) 05:53, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I was using your own words. Please demonstrate that another extended-confirmed editor agrees with your style of captions.<br>You’ll notice that none of the Phabricator “mobile tooltip” search results deal with what we’re talking about, thus proving my point. And those extensions have nothing to do with the HTML tags we’re talking about. ] (]) 16:17, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::There are many table captions as long as the one in the above example. | |||
::::I don't claim to have any knowledge about getting tooltips to work on mobile. I just linked to places that might be useful. You might contact some of the people involved in other aspects of tooltips in order to work together on mobile tooltips of whatever flavor you all decide to try. --] (]) 17:02, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::It was never the length I was objecting to. It’s the usage of it to describe column headers instead of the entire table. ] (]) 17:30, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
{{outdent|::::::}} Well, I am glad you are not objecting to the length of the table caption. And as I said, the more detailed table caption serves multiple purposes: It allows for less-tall headers which is important for sticky headers in cell phones. It describes what is in the table. The info in the columns is part of the table. It helps those on mobile who can't read tooltips to have some inkling of what is covered by the column heads. It helps ] users to see more clearly what the table covers without having to dig down into the table. Which they greatly appreciate. Especially when the screen reader is in table mode, which allows them to skip from table caption to table caption. See: | |||
*'''.''' | |||
There are multiple methods listed there, but as far as I have seen, only table captions are used on Misplaced Pages. "Approach 1" in the article looks interesting now that you have said that you do not object to longer captions. It is basically an expanded caption. I have no objection to it. I have been working here lately: ]. Here is a possibility: | |||
---- | |||
---- | |||
<templatestyles src="Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Perennial sources/styles.css"/> | |||
'''''Note.''' Click ''']''' column head to come back here. Click ''']''' column head to go to the ] section above. Click on any status column icon to go to its explanation above.'' | |||
{{sticky header}} | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable perennial-sources sticky-header" | |||
|+ Perennial sources. Current ] status. Links to discussions.<br> | |||
The "List" column links to discussions. "Last" is last year discussed. "Use" shows use in articles. | |||
|- | |||
! scope="col" | ] | |||
! scope="col" | ] | |||
! scope="col" class="unsortable" | {{tooltip|List|List of linked discussions}} | |||
! scope="col" | {{tooltip|Last|Year last discussed}} | |||
! scope="col" class="unsortable" | Summary | |||
! scope="col" class="unsortable" | {{tooltip|Use|Uses in Misplaced Pages articles}} | |||
|- class="s-gr" id="ABC News" | |||
| ] | |||
| {{WP:RSPSTATUS|gr}} | |||
| {{rsnl|318|ABC News and FiveThirtyEight|1}} {{rsnl|346|Some reliable sources|2}} | |||
| {{WP:RSPLAST|2021}} | |||
| There is consensus that ABC News, the news division of the ], is generally reliable. It is not to be confused with ].<!-- Disambiguation on purpose per WP:INTDAB --> | |||
| {{WP:RSPUSES|abcnews.com|abcnews.go.com}} | |||
|} | |||
--] (]) 09:01, 2 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:I’m not going to respond further if you don’t show that there is consensus for table captions like this. (And the summary example you linked is inside a longer summary element, not the caption element. I said the problem I had with the caption was far more fundamental than length, not that I don’t object to length per MOS:Caption.) ] (]) 13:18, 2 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::See '''].''' Its summary info is out of date though, and is '''obsolete in HTML5.''' That may be why I can't remember ever seeing it used: | |||
::<pre>{| summary="Summary text here."</pre> | |||
::The w3.org WAI summary example I '''''' is part of the caption element. From '''"Approach 1"''': | |||
::"The <caption> element acts as a heading of the table and provides the summary that describes the composition of the table as well. If implemented this way, the summary is available to visual users as well." | |||
::I have occasionally seen tables with captions extending to 2 lines. | |||
::There is no rule against it. And it appears that w3.org ''']''' (WAI) endorses it for some tables. So that is '''consensus outside Misplaced Pages.''' And '''Misplaced Pages tries to meet accessibility standards.''' WAI is the main accessibility organization. --] (]) 14:24, 2 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Where does WAI endorse non-summary captions that only describe a table header, or separated by periods?{{pb}}Also, I think the |summary= parameter is a MediaWiki issue that should be fixed in MediaWiki to be HTML5-compliant, not by modifying wikitext. ] (]) 01:19, 3 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
{{outdent|::::}} Mediawiki doesn't decide HTML5 standards. <code>summary=</code> is part of HTLM4, not HTML5. | |||
And as I have repeated several times, the single-line caption I provided describes the content of the table: "Perennial sources. Current status. Discussion links (with latest by year). Uses in Misplaced Pages articles." | |||
:::{{re|Barecode}} if that is the conclusion of multiple RS (that CNN is unreliable), then we should let it out. But I feel it is just your opinion. ]] 14:38, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::: {{u|Cinadon36}} - What kind of RS? You mean the other liberal media outlets who repeated the same lies? Because Fox or NYP or others like them are not considered reliable sources. And even if they would be considered reliable, it would not be the best source, since they are enemies. Or maybe some publications from Mexico or Nigeria or China or Japan? Hard to believe they would even bother. No liberal publication would attack another liberal publication: "By attacking one of us I risk to support Trump". Le Monde diplomatique bothered, but not with CNN - with the liberal media as a whole. At this moment, challenging CNN's reliability means supporting Trump for pretty much everyone. Even for Misplaced Pages editors. And are you sure the Fox News Misplaced Pages un-reliability was the count of the conclusions of multiple RS and not a Fox News RFC? ] (]) 15:10, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
The multi-line expanded caption is a method I did not know about before: "Approach 1" in here: | |||
{{u|Jayron32}} - I provided a real life example: allegations about ] - Libyan assets unfreezing can not be added to the article simply because the liberal media decided to completely ignore the topic. Not only that, the liberal media is outcasting their own journalists when they try to publish such stories (Glenn Greenwald, Bari Weiss). I suggested such things have due weight, and the proposal is obvious: such things should be considered to have due weight, even when the liberal media ignores them. | |||
*'''.''' | |||
There are many table captions on Misplaced Pages with periods within the caption. --] (]) 17:28, 4 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
My claims were far from unsubstantiated, I gave a lot of real life facts and sources. | |||
:Tables in Wikitext are part of Wikitext, not HTML. The parser chooses how to render the Wikitext into HTML, and there is ]. There’s no reason why the summary parameter can’t be rendered into HTML5.{{pb}}I have also repeatedly told you that I object to this caption because I object to captions that only describe column headers instead of the entire table as a whole, and you have repeatedly failed to demonstrate that there is consensus for this. ] (]) 21:04, 4 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::''']''' is going nowhere. '''<code><summary> </summary></code>''' is not part of HTML5 as concerns tables. It is not mentioned here: | |||
::'''.''' | |||
::The '''single-line caption''' here describes what is in the table. It does not describe the column headers specifically. | |||
::On the other hand, the '''2-line caption in the above example''' (as recommended by the WAI link in Approach 1) explicitly describes some of the column headers. | |||
::I edit a lot of tables. It is common in captions to provide, in addition to the general table description, some more specific details. Such as: "'''Rate is per 100,000 of all ages.'''" That is very specific to the rate columns. This is done to prevent bloated headers. It is common. | |||
::You can repeat your preference forever, but it doesn't change the facts about existing table captions. --] (]) 22:53, 4 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Thanks, I was indeed confused about HTML5. My point still stands though that the Wikitext parser can find ways to make the output HTML5-compliant.{{pb}}Everything after the first full stop describes individual columns (' headers). If you want a two-line caption, make a two-line caption with the smaller text in prose, and I might be fine with the caption.{{pb}}The onus is on you to demonstrate that there is consensus for your preference. ] (]) 22:51, 13 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I can't find the "Rate..." example you mentioned, could you link it? I think it would be better served with a footnote or a parenthetical within the header. ] (]) 22:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
* '''D/B/E''': If there were 10-20 entries having static headers would have made sense. But with so many entries, a static header is difficult to follow because it requires several hundred lines of scrolling. I have used RSP shortcuts to revert bad edits, or make arguments at move discussions, in both cases I expect majority of such visitors to not know beforehand what the header contents are. Which means that a visitor would need to scroll all the way to the top, look at what the header contents are, and then come back to understand what exactly the numbers, icons and colours mean. It is unnecessary inconvenience when we now have the ability to show sticky headers. Most regulars to this page and those with this talk page in their watchlists might not need the headers because they are already well-aware of what these columns are for, but it overlooks others' inconvenience. As someone who is not a regular to this page, I found it very convenient and that is the reason behind me adding sticky headers to the table (now reverted) unaware that there is already a discussion going on here. Thanks! <span class="nowrap">—''']'''</span> <sup class="nowrap">(] • {]•]})</sup> 19:17, 6 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
==FoxNews== | |||
And are you sure this is a time sink? Nobody has any obligation to read or to answer such a topic. ] (]) 15:57, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
Considering the outcome of the recent election(s), and the previous polling reports, is it encyclopaedic to consider Fox News "not reliable" while other similar outlets like NBC and ABC are considered reliable? Seems quite suspicious how in the ] the sites used to report results consistently under-polled the winner of the election, while the one site who did the same thing less, is considered unreliable to be used there. ] (]) 14:53, 16 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:If you have sources that contain additional information that needs to be added to the Hunter Biden article, please go to ] and make your case there. "The news ignores this true story because they have a bias" is an unsubstantiated claim, unless you have, you know, actual reliable sources that substantiate it. Even if you do, ''don't put them here''. Instead, go to ] and make your case for changes you want to make to ''that'' article using reliable sources that contain the omissions. --]] 16:04, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:A single instance of them being right isn't going to swing against their general unreliability. Even a broken clock is correct twice per day... ] (]) 00:04, 18 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:: {{u|Jayron32}} - Please do not misquote people because that is kind of insulting. I never suggested "The news ignores this true story". I suggested "The news ignores this allegation". I am not a political hack so I'm not interested in using Misplaced Pages to promote my views. I want to present the encyclopedic facts (which include allegations, hoaxes and conspiracy theories) in a neutral manner. It's not me playing with deciding what is the truth, but I already noticed a lot of editors who are doing that. I already made my case at ] and of course, the item was rejected because no reliable sources mention it. Therefore I went one level up. So I arrived here. My proposal was very clear: {{tq|liberal media silence can not be used as an excuse for Misplaced Pages silence}}. If this issue is boring or irritating for you or you think it's a time sink then you can simply skip this and concentrate on more productive endeavors - and let others talk about it. | |||
::How about the Trump-ABC defamation suit that resulted in ABC paying 15 million to the Trump Presidential Library due to their constant, repeated false statements about him? How can ''they'' still be considered reliable? ] (]) 23:13, 15 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:: For the record, lets notice that you jumped into a discussion without really bothering to try to understand what is it about and then you quickly found it to be a time sink and then you closed it declaring (against the evidence) that it is based on 'unsubstantiated' claims - to use a compatible terminology. ] (]) 16:29, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::Settlements are not legal precedence. And here, we know that this was basically over the issue of saying Trump was convicted of rape, when the court judge and under NY state law, he could only be convicted of sexual misconduct, even though the presiding judge said it was rape in their final opinion. That George S. pushed that point multiple points, he wasn't "wrong" or deliberately lying, compared to how Fox presented its topics. ] (]) 23:20, 15 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Allegations, hoaxes, and conspiracy theories are only worth mentioning if reliable sources are mentioning them. This discussion is growing wearisome. When you throw around phrases like "liberal media silence", it belies your attitudes you claim to not hold. Look, I'm re-opening the discussion because you really seem to want even more people to tell you that you're wrong. I'm not that kind of sadist myself, so I don't understand your desire to expose yourself to more abuse, but you do you. Don't bother me again with this issue, someone else can spend time dispossessing you of your delusions. Vaya con dios. --]] 16:36, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::Single issues have little impact on whether a source is considered reliable, as sources are only ever considered ']' (as even the best source can be wrong at times). For a source to be considered unreliable would require a long term lack of fact checking or accuracy. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 00:19, 16 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Amendments needed to the transclusion splitting plan == | |||
:::: {{u|Jayron32}} - Thanks. "Abuse" sounds a bit stretched. In line with the mindset of the people who are professionals in weaponizing offense taking. I don't feel any abuse against me, I'm not a professional outrage person. It's impossible not to see the automatic reflex of the people on topics that touch politics. "This guy is criticizin CNN - so he must be pro-Trump. He must be a Republican who believes in all kind of fringe theories. Very likely, he is an alt right, white supremacist. If he happens to be black, that's even worse - he is also a traitor. He must be delusional anyways. We can't agree with him because that means we help Trump to score points." And above all "Trump is the biggest threat, he must be attacked and defeated at all costs" - which makes people act disingenuous, finding all kind of excuses and make their reactions look even comical and hilarious. This fear against Trump makes people become tribal and therefore they alienate the other side, burning bridges instead of building them. This is not an essay, but just an observation about how fear and tribalism tends to drive the debates even at Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 17:09, 9 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
{{archive bottom}} | |||
I was implementing ] when I ran into a few issues: | |||
== Softpedia == | |||
# Transcluding the final eighth of the sources overruns the ], and even just the first 7/8 plus what's already transcluded on RSP ovverruns the limit. | |||
#*i.e. the list of sources is too large to be trasncluded onto RSP. | |||
# The page's edit notice needs to be adapted and displayed on the subpages. | |||
Problem #1 may be solved by moving the list of sources onto a separate page and substituting the last two sections there. (As shown in ], only substituting the last section is not enough.) Problem #2 may be solved by making the source list its own series of subpages by e.g. moving everything else under ]. Alternatively, Problem #1 may be solved by bumping $wgMaxArticleSize (the max post-expand include size), but that may be refused for security reasons. What do we think? ] (]) 23:24, 28 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
Softpedia is currently listed as 'No consensus... Softpedia is considered reliable for its software and product reviews.' The linked discussions do not show consensus for the view that the site's software reviews are reliable, and numerous deletion discussions in the software category have raised the issue that softpedia reviews almost always contain download links, so should not be considered independent coverage.] (]) 16:16, 14 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:{{smalldiv|1=Pinging: {{csl||]|]|]|]|]|]|]|]|embedded=y}}. We really should've seen this coming as the limit was also evident at ]. ] (]) 20:00, 30 November 2024 (UTC)}} | |||
::Sorry, I don't have an informed opinion. ] (]) 04:17, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:Since it is useful to sort, what if you cut the table in ''half horizontally'' and linked to the other piece? That would be a large change though. <span style="font-family:monospace;background:blue;padding:.2rem;color:white">]<]>()</span> 20:19, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::My experience news that this wouldn't help the post expand limit, but I'm not very knowledgeable in such technicalities and so thought I must be wrong. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 23:12, 30 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I think it definitely would help but would render the table quite inaccessible/clumsy. I’ve recently been researching maybe substituting all iconless discussion links. ] (]) 01:21, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:idea: | |||
:] | |||
:{{WP:RSPSTATUS|gu}} | |||
:{{rsnl|281|RfC: Deprecation of fake news / disinformation sites.|2019|rfc=y}} {{sbll|January 2020|State sponsored fake news|2020}} {{rsnl|315|112.ua|rfc=y|2020}} | |||
{{rsnl|281|news-front.info|1}} | |||
:] ] | |||
:{{WP:RSPLAST|2020|stale=n}} | |||
:112 Ukraine was deprecated following a 2019 RfC, which showed overwhelming consensus for the deprecation of a slew of sources associated with Russian disinformation in Ukraine. It was pointed out later in a 2020 RfC that 112 Ukraine had not been explicitly discussed in that first discussion prior to its blacklisting request. Further discussion established a rough consensus that the source is generally unreliable, but did not form a consensus for deprecation or blacklisting. The prior blacklisting was reversed as out of process. 112 Ukraine closed in 2021. | |||
:{{WP:RSPUSES|112.ua|112.international}} | |||
:] on this row with the tables stuff removed: | |||
:{{u|Dialectric}}, it might be a better idea to start a RSN discussion on it particularly if you have specific pages that you are concerned about. The listed discussions includes a compilation of viewpoints (see {{slink|Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject Video_games/Sources/Archive 5#Softpedia}}) across discussions in ] and ] which does demonstrate a consensus for that view, but it is a decade old. The only discussion since then has involved one person commenting on it, who endorsed the above compilation. That said, the entry doesn't meet ] anyways, so I've removed it from the list; it seems to have been added in the earlier days of the list when the criteria didn't even exist. <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 21:15, 24 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:<syntaxhighlight lang="wikitext">] | |||
:data-sort-value=2|] | |||
:] ] ] ] ] ] | |||
:] | |||
:<br />] ] | |||
:data-sort-value=2020| | |||
:2020 | |||
:112 Ukraine was deprecated following a 2019 RfC, which showed overwhelming consensus for the deprecation of a slew of sources associated with Russian disinformation in Ukraine. It was pointed out later in a 2020 RfC that 112 Ukraine had not been explicitly discussed in that first discussion prior to its blacklisting request. Further discussion established a rough consensus that the source is generally unreliable, but did not form a consensus for deprecation or blacklisting. The prior blacklisting was reversed as out of process. 112 Ukraine closed in 2021. | |||
:] ] ]<br>] ] ]</syntaxhighlight> | |||
:We could nominate some wikitext on ], or we could do what Aaron suggested <span style="font-family:monospace;background:blue;padding:.2rem;color:white">]<]>()</span> 11:53, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::“Wikitext for deletion”? ] (]) 16:10, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::The Wikitext for deletion part is a joke. I just mean that this can help expose what parts could be trimmed <span style="font-family:monospace;background:blue;padding:.2rem;color:white">]<]>()</span> 16:45, 1 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
], 16 December 2024.]] | |||
* I am getting "page unresponsive" issues too often. Granted my laptop is not getting any healtheier, but neither is this project page. I also rarely get this problem on other articles, other than those equally oversized. As a point of context here, without wanting to ], I am currently one of the top 5 editors of this page and ] issues has become a predominant reason for my to avoid making updates. The sooner these issues are resolved the better. ] (]) 20:31, 16 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
=== Mostly done === | |||
== Request for comment on citing Patheos == | |||
{{partly done|Mostly done}}: After a bunch of substituting the RSNL template I trimmed, transclusion split implemented, taking up only 1634531 bytes out of the 2097152-byte post-expand include size−limit. | |||
{{anchor|rfc_84C5D90}} | |||
{{mdt|Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Noticeboard#Request for comment on citing Patheos|2=<span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 13:07, 28 December 2021 (UTC)}} | |||
:{{u|RoyLeban}}, please read the notice at the top which states: {{xt|"To discuss the reliability of a source, please start or join a discussion on the ] (]). Discussions on the noticeboard will be added to this list. This talk page is for discussing the maintenance of the list itself, and arguments posted here will not be taken into consideration."}} <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 13:11, 28 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
As mentioned above, now we just have to figure out the group notices. ] (]) 00:23, 17 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== ] vs ] == | |||
:Here's my tentative plan: | |||
:# We turn ] into a group editnotice for all the subpages of Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Perennial sources. | |||
:#* This may or may not still display on the templates (see their tentative parentpage specified in the next step). I hope it doesn't, so we'll ask the template editor responding to the editnotice request about this and request that they move/open a move request on the next step <em>after</em> completing this step. | |||
:# We move the non-number subpages (which are all templates) (except ]) under ]. | |||
: ] (]) 00:47, 17 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
@] Lol, I should've tested that. As you can see at the start of this section, I actually did try that at first, but I skipped over it after it exceeded the transclusion character-count limit and broke all the citations (and the 8th part itself). Looks like it works now after I made a bunch of changes to and substituted the RSNLink template and replaced "Misplaced Pages:" with "WP:". Thanks! ] (]) 02:34, 20 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
I raised this issue at the ongoing RFC about deprecated sources ], but I just want to note the definition of deprecated provided on this page is different than the definition given on the information page ]. ] 17:43, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:That's the change I was curious about. Why is it ] doesn't use <code>{{rsnl|</code> template but the other subpages still do? Anyway the change is a vast improvement editing wise, it's a smooth as it gets now. Congrats to those involved. ] (]) 10:36, 21 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== TMZ == | |||
::As I've said in my updates to RSPI, all bare RSN links (i.e. no RfC, not active) were substituted. PS7 uses RSNL in all the places the other subpages do. ] (]) 14:55, 21 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Ok understood, thanks for explaining. ] (]) 17:03, 21 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Imported YouTube videos == | |||
After a brief "scare" that TMZ may have falsely reported on ]'s death (though they were proven true within an hour from other RSes), might I suggest that the wording for TMZ be added to to say that TMZ should not be used as the only source (or primary source when other sources point back to it) related to celebrity's death? We have a statement on controversial BLP claims and I would think death would be covered in that, but it should be clear that TMZ should be avoided very much as the only source in this type of case. --] (]) 19:38, 31 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
{{ping|Graywalls}} Greetings! Regarding ]...it sounds like I have failed to dispel the confusion. I'm trying to explain when ] does not apply to videos imported from YouTube, and it's when the user-generated content is ''not'' being used as a reliable source, but merely as a repackaging of a reliable source. For example, imagine someone made a 3D animation of how hurricane winds circulate and uploaded it to Misplaced Pages to illustrate the article ]. This is perfectly fine, and in fact encouraged and celebrated, as long as they cite a reliable source (for example, a series of diagrams published by NOAA) for the data used to create the animation. It is just as acceptable for the same video to be uploaded to YouTube under a suitable Creative Commons license, then re-uploaded onto Misplaced Pages, and added to the same article. What is not acceptable is to take videos from YouTube that cite no sources and treat them as accurate additions to articles without verification. It's also not acceptable for an editor to make an animation citing no sources and add that to an article by direct upload to Misplaced Pages, though we are a bit behind on our fact-checking. -- ] (]) 07:22, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:This may have been a unique situation, where for at least the last 5 years, maybe 10, it has been a twitter meme that when "Betty White" trends, everyone rushed to make sure she was still alive. ] (]) 13:10, 4 January 2022 (UTC) | |||
:I don't see why this note is necessary. UGC also applies even if hosted on Commons, since they also need to cite sources. ] (]) 21:14, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::{{re|Aaron Liu|Beland|Graywalls}} '''It's a subtle point.''' Any bozo can upload a freely-licensed Youtube video based on reliable data from a reliable source. But that video would not qualify as being from a reliable source for Misplaced Pages purposes due to the bozo intermediary. Now let's say another bozo, say me, uploads that video to the Commons. Since the video is based on reliable data from a reliable source, then it qualifies for the Commons. Assuming it is something within '''].''' | |||
::In addition to a clarified, and possibly shorter, note, these 2 links could be added to ''']:''' | |||
::''']''' | |||
::''']''' | |||
::--] (]) 23:02, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::lol, I made my reply below before I saw this. What do you think of it? Do you know of any rules I could link? ] (]) 23:03, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:The use cases have come up in at least one RFC, where a reading of a contemporaneous public domain and verifiable source text was held to be "unreliable" as per this policy, despite the fact that the reading was being used for '''illustrative purposes'''. The same case could be used for a music performance, or an extract of a play, or poetry, etc. as well as the examples @] makes. However, these are not "unreliable" as they are '''performances''' or renderings of verifiable source material, and '''not''' being used for citation purposes. Some clarification of the difference between YT as a citation vehicle, and YT as a source of illustrative content, would help avoid future similar situations. ] ] 22:41, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::How about something like {{tq|All videos uploaded, regardless of source, are treated the same way as images and other media.}} in a new paragraph? ] (]) 23:02, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:For mine, the necessary condition {{tq|the user-generated content is not being used as a reliable source}} makes the usage off-topic for this page; which deals solely with the reliability of sources as references for article content. I do, however, see that the first sentence of the YouTube entry, {{tq|Most videos on YouTube are anonymous, self-published, and unverifiable, and ''should not be used at all''.}} (emphasis added), is easily read as prohibiting a broader range of uses. Suggest that this be modified to refer only to use as a (reliable) source; e.g. {{tq|... should not be used as a reference}} or similar. The page would then be silent on the question of ''illustrative'' content. ] <sup>]</sup> 23:31, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Sounds very reasonable. I've implemented this. ] (]) 23:52, 18 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:YouTube is available to everyone and it's widely used by those including official media outlets. So, unless they're official news coverage that happens to use YouTube and it's hosted on their OFFICIAL page, YouTube should be evaluated the same as blogs and home pages. | |||
:YouTube channels containing news clippings, or advertisement clippings from channels other than should not be found anywhere within Misplaced Pages on the ground of ]. ] (]) 04:57, 19 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
{{outdent|:::}} | |||
I linked to illustrative, non-referential use. Here is current summary section: | |||
<div style="border:1px solid; padding:5px;"> | |||
Most videos on YouTube are anonymous, ], and unverifiable, and should not be used as a reference. Content uploaded from a verified official account, such as that of a news organization, may be treated as originating from the uploader and therefore inheriting their level of reliability. However, many YouTube videos from unofficial accounts are copyright violations and should not be linked from Misplaced Pages, according to ]. See also ] and ]. For illustrative, non-referential use see ]. | |||
</div> | |||
--] (]) 00:51, 19 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:That's certainly an improvement over the previous text; thanks for the condensation! -- ] (]) 03:37, 19 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Metro news description == | |||
:While not yet convinced on the need to mention illustrative use on this particular page, I am fairly certain that Commons:Category:YouTube is not the best target for that link. @], could you check and confirm that another page was not the intended target? A Commons policy or guideline page perhaps? ] <sup>]</sup> 06:28, 19 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Perhaps link to ] where there is a line on this, and with an expanded version under consideration, draft 0.3 ]. The explanation IMO needs to be on one or the other MOS page; it may make a bit more sense here for reasons of brevity and clarity. ] ] 09:30, 19 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I've already changed the link to ]. Someone else also added ]. ] (]) 12:25, 19 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Generalised section on advertorials in certain markets == | |||
Needs rewording, updating in the list metro.news was merged into metro.co.uk ages ago. Maybe the '''(accessible via metro.news domain)''' should be removed from the description now? Regards. ] (]) 10:44, 4 January 2022 (UTC) | |||
Rather than having NEWSORGINDIA and now NEWSORGNIGERIA wouldn't in make more sense to have one section about concerns regadding promotional editorials? The different markets could still explained in that section. These aren't the only two markets where this happens, and it's only likely to become more common. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 22:44, 23 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:I have removed it and added an updated line instead. <span style="background-color:#B2BEB5;padding:2px 12px 2px 12px;font-size:10px">] <sub>]</sub></span> 11:58, 5 January 2022 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 20:21, 8 January 2025
Discuss sources on the reliable sources noticeboard To discuss the reliability of a source, please start or join a discussion on the reliable sources noticeboard (WP:RSN). Discussions on the noticeboard will be added to this list. This talk page is for discussing the maintenance of the list itself, and arguments posted here will not be taken into consideration. |
This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the Reliable sources/Perennial sources page. |
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This project page does not require a rating on Misplaced Pages's content assessment scale. It is of interest to multiple WikiProjects. | ||||||||||||||||||
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This page has archives. Sections older than 28 days may be automatically archived by Lowercase sigmabot III when more than 3 sections are present. |
Sticky header user interface community input
There has been an initiative to change the interface so that the gray header at the top of the table "follows around" as you scroll down. See: {{sticky header}}. Which of the choices below (A-E) do you prefer? What other ideas do you have?
The header is now 2 lines tall. What Timeshifter is now proposing (scroll down this example) is a narrow one-line sticky header with a link from the "Status" column head back to the "Legend" section of the article. And a link from the "Sources" column head back to the "Sources" section of the article. Notes explain this just above the table. He states this allows new users of the table to quickly return to the table TOC, or to quickly find the meaning of the legend icons. There are also improved notes above the table.
An issue in any skin other than the default Vector 2022: When you use the horizontal table TOC, or if you follow ("jump to") an anchored link within the table such as WP:FORBESCON, the top line of the note in the row you jump to would be covered by the narrow sticky header. 2 lines are covered by the 2-line header. Template discussions have not found a way to fix this. Timeshifter does not believe this is a serious problem. Others do. One solution (see E below) is to add a line's worth of blank padding at the top of each row.
- A: No sticky header, same style (2-line) header as before.
- B: Full size (2-line) header with sticky enabled.
- C: Narrow (1-line) header without sticky enabled.
- D: Narrow header with sticky header that follows you around. This has been improved. Please check again.
- E: Same as D, but with padding at the top of each row.
Graywalls (talk) 15:04, 30 October 2024 (UTC). Edited per WP:RFCNEUTRAL by Timeshifter (talk) 11:46, 3 November 2024 (UTC).
- Another shortcut (for Forbes.com contributors) with the improved narrow-header version of the sticky table:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources/Perennial_sources&oldid=1260153539#Forbes.com_contributors
- The benefits of having the sticky header far outweigh the small inconvenience for the relatively few people using Vector 2010 of having to scroll up a tiny bit to see one line of missing text at the top of the notes column. They can see everything else in the Forbes.com row.
- By the way, your history is off. The {{sticky header}} was up without complaints for over 2 months (since Aug 21, 2024) after I changed from {{sticky table start}} and did my final tweak. See Aug 21, 2024 version.
- Recently, there were changes by the template editor that messed up the colors, but those have been fixed.
- --Timeshifter (talk) 15:38, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
- "This template is used on approximately 4,400 pages" sums up the use of the sticky banner. How does it look on mobile? Why reinvent the wheel here when the people shifting through the table know what the columns represent. Also, it's a Misplaced Pages namespace, not an article. Do whatever you want, I guess. – The Grid (talk) 17:11, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
- A, C, D, B in decreasing order of preference, unless something can be done to prevent the overlapping of the header and the cell content (which might be fixable with a bit of cell padding at the top of the cells, at the cost of making the entire page visually longer; there might also be a JS way to fix this, by forcing a slight scroll-up after page load if a #Section link is in the URL). The overlap interfering with utility for everyone is not surpassed by the sticky header provding some utility to a minority of new editors at the page who aren't sure what the columns are. Especially given that it's pretty obvious what they are, and nearly no one needs most of them anyway, only Source and Summary. If the sticky header were imposed, then use the more concise version; the bigger one isn't actually any more helpful as a sticky. But if sticky is not imposed, maybe keep the more explanatory version, which provides a hint of organizational/thematic clarity as a top-of-table header that appears once. If not sticky, also put the header at the bottom of the table, so someone who doesn't remember what the columns are but is nearer bottom of page can scroll there to find out instead of all the way back to the top. — SMcCandlish ☏ ¢ 😼 19:06, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
- Cell padding at the top of each row would work.
- A JS and/or CSS solution would be better. Any ideas how? That's beyond my level of skill.
- I set up (and immediately reverted) a sticky narrow header with the "Sources" column head linking to the Sources heading. The "Status" column head links to the Legend heading. I substituted that version link for "D" above. Click it to see the changes.
- This makes the sticky header much more useful. It allows one to instantly go to the legend section. New people are going to be confused by the legend symbols, and will want a rapid way to get back to that section. Especially important in Vector 2010 where the TOC doesn't follow you around.
- The Sources column head link takes one instantly back to the horizontal table of contents from anywhere in the table without tedious scrolling. So one can choose another letter.
- A header at the bottom of a long table is not as useful as a sticky header. It takes a long time to scroll from the middle of this long table to the bottom of the table.
- I added a couple notes just above the table. See sticky narrow header with notes here.
- --Timeshifter (talk) 14:26, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
- It still causes the first line to be missing. Graywalls (talk) 03:39, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
- A if editors want the benefit of a sticky header, they should enable that preference in the gadgets section of their preferences page. On this particular page, the benefit (if any), is minimal at best. When I use RSP, I know what source I am searching for and am basically looking for the color of the source and the discussion. I also use ctrl+f to quickly find what I am looking for sometimes. I was pleased when it was changed back to the status-quo. Isaidnoway (talk) 14:41, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
- Non-logged-in editors don't have that gadgets option.
- So you have the meaning of the legend icons memorized? Good for you. But non-regular users of this page do not. The "status" column head link takes them to the Legend section. That link is handy because the sticky header follows the reader as they scroll down the table. Is it not useful to users who don't have the legend icon meanings memorized? --Timeshifter (talk) 12:08, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
- A all the way. It simply works. Graywalls (talk) 03:40, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
- D, E, C in decreasing order of preference. Benefits, especially for new or infrequent readers of this page, outweigh the tiny problem of one line of notes being covered in secondary skins. People know how to scroll up to see it. Vector 2022, the default skin, does not have the problem. --Timeshifter (talk) 11:53, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
- A. The narrow benefit does not outweigh the narrow detriment of the scrolling issue, and the narrowed header is simply awful: the new "title" of the table is completely incomprehensible (until explained that it's supposed to be a stand-in for the bigger column headers, which, I'm sorry, what‽ Nobody who doesn't already understand the table will understand that.), and I find the appropriation of columns as navigation links incredibly weird and against how wikilinks usually behave (This point would be solved by turning them into, idk, tiny arrows that are linked instead of the header name, but you still have my other point.).
Regarding Timeshifter's response to Isaid, I asked a family member of mine what each column meant without giving him the row headers. He identified every column except the year-last-discussed correctly (though he only identified the uses column after hovering over a link). The status icons tell you what they mean when you hover over them; heck, clicking on them already takes you to the appropriate paragraph under the legend section. Aaron Liu (talk) 02:33, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks Aaron Liu for running the tests. So your family member who was new to the table could not identify what 2 of the 6 columns were about when looking at the table somewhere below the column headers. So the family member had no benefit of seeing the column header. For example, someone following a link like this: WP:FORBESCON. I added {{tooltip}} to the column heads just now. See diff. Maybe someday when the {{sticky header}} template is made to work correctly with the old Misplaced Pages skins (like Vector 2010), it can be added back. And we could use 2 header rows then for better clarity. And the sticky header will be of more use to someone like your family member now that {{tooltip}} info has been added to the 2 confusing columns. The header, being sticky, will be right there to help out.
- By the way, the current header has an internal link in the column head (the "legend" link). I didn't add that. I see internal links regularly in Misplaced Pages articles and tables.
- I made some improvements to the one-line sticky header example. I expanded and clarified the table caption. I also added some notes above the table. See this version of the table section. It's even more improved here:
Note. Click Sources column head to come back here. Click Status column head to go to the Legend section above. Click on any status column icon to go to its explanation above.
Sources | Status | List | Last | Summary | Use |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ABC News (United States) | 1 2 |
2021 |
There is consensus that ABC News, the news division of the American Broadcasting Company, is generally reliable. It is not to be confused with other publications of the same name. | 1 2 |
--Timeshifter (talk) 05:49, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- I didn't find the "(legend)" link much offbeat because it clearly describes where it targets with its simple appearance. Meanwhile, linking "Sources" and "Status" this way runs against the paradigm/pattern of links going where their contents suggest. Same thing with the misappropriation of the table's name.
Also, just to clarify, my family member realized what the "use" column meant after he hovered over one of its links to see where it goes. I'd also suggest you use your sandbox instead of the RSP page to generate revisions to link to. Aaron Liu (talk) 15:42, 29 November 2024 (UTC)- I tried a sandbox, but many of the links are on the URL blacklist. So that did not work. The "Sources" and "Status" links do go to where their contents suggest. I am sure your family member would have no problem figuring it out. Plus they are explained in a note at the top of the table. The table name is not misappropriated at all. In fact, it is good practice to move info out of the column headers and into the table caption. In order to make column headers less tall. Especially with sticky tables. Helps especially on cell phones. Look it up on the table help pages. And in the sticky header template docs. --Timeshifter (talk) 16:07, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- What I did with my sandbox while experimenting with implementing the tranclusion plan is transclude parts of the RSP list. That worked pretty well as far as I can tell.
"Status" linked suggests going to a page that documents what statuses are, and I can perhaps accept that one; however, "Sources" linked suggests going to a page that documents what sources are. Like I said, using those links in a situation where you link to Misplaced Pages articles is quite confusing.
Well, you only added that to TM:Sticky header/doc in March and to Help:Table in September yourself this year. I see no evidence that the community at large accepts or understands such usage of the table caption, nor that it is accessible to screenreaders. Aaron Liu (talk) 16:19, 29 November 2024 (UTC)Look it up on the table help pages. And in the sticky header template docs.
- Table captions are required for screen readers. It's a MOS guideline too: WP:HEADERS. For many years now. Many people ignore the requirement. Many are clueless about the need or the requirement. Blind people want more detail in captions, not less. Putting more stuff in table captions is mentioned (for various reasons) in multiple table help pages. One of your links is actually an edit by the other main sticky table editor.
- It takes only one use of the "Sources" link to figure out what is going on. People are creatures of habit. --Timeshifter (talk) 17:29, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- Sorry for misinterpreting the first diff link I posted. But 1. I was asking how screenreaders would interpret a table header in a table caption 2. I disagree with your interpretation of @Jroberson108's edit as "describe all the separate parts of the parent table headers". Even if it were correct, this kind of table caption is useless because it does not describe which table headers are associated with which parts of the caption. According to Headers which references its linked ArticleTitles, table captions should describe the table, not the table headers. Aaron Liu (talk) 18:23, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- What I did with my sandbox while experimenting with implementing the tranclusion plan is transclude parts of the RSP list. That worked pretty well as far as I can tell.
- I tried a sandbox, but many of the links are on the URL blacklist. So that did not work. The "Sources" and "Status" links do go to where their contents suggest. I am sure your family member would have no problem figuring it out. Plus they are explained in a note at the top of the table. The table name is not misappropriated at all. In fact, it is good practice to move info out of the column headers and into the table caption. In order to make column headers less tall. Especially with sticky tables. Helps especially on cell phones. Look it up on the table help pages. And in the sticky header template docs. --Timeshifter (talk) 16:07, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
I am not following some of what you are saying. On your user page I notice that English is not your native language. The table caption in the example above describes what is in the table: "Perennial sources. Current status. Discussion links (with latest by year). Uses in Misplaced Pages articles." --Timeshifter (talk) 18:56, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- I know that's what it's supposed to describe. I don't see how anyone is supposed to realize that "Uses in Misplaced Pages articles", the fourth phrase in the caption, is supposed to be a description for the sixth column at first glance. Why do we even need to add those to the caption, whose usual use mandated by ArticleTitles is to describe the entire table and not just duplicate descriptions of column headers that can be accessibly, semantically, and straightforwardly-interpretedly added with {{tooltip}}? Is there any consensus besides just you to use captions to describe table headers? Aaron Liu (talk) 20:20, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
- I was pinged. Too much to read, but there seems to be some questions around table caption and screen readers. See w3.org:
A caption functions like a heading for a table. Most screen readers announce the content of captions. Captions help users to find a table and understand what it’s about and decide if they want to read it. If the user uses “Tables Mode”, captions are the primary mechanism to identify tables.
Also further down:The caption should be a short heading for the table content.
A caption of "Perennial sources" or "List of perennial sources" should sufficiently describe the table. If there is another list, then differentiate them further in the caption (ex. Allowed list ... vs. Disallowed list ...). If they opt to read the table's content, then the column and/or row headers will help describe the data further. Jroberson108 (talk) 00:17, 30 November 2024 (UTC)- Thanks @Jroberson108. The question is about the table caption as posted here. Aaron Liu (talk) 00:54, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- Aaron Liu. "Uses in Misplaced Pages articles" in the caption tells a reader that is in the table. A caption does not tell readers where something is in the table. It just tells them it is in the table. It is in this table caption also because mobile users can't hover and read the {{tooltip}} note for "Uses" in the column headers. Same is true for "Discussion links (with latest by year)" in the caption. Mobile users can't read the {{tooltip}} note for "Last". I added those {{tooltip}} notes because your family member couldn't immediately identify those 2 columns when he/she was placed in them away from the headers. With the sticky header the family member is never away from the header.
- The info could have been put in the notes above the table. But it is better in the caption because then it also helps people using screen readers. Serves a dual purpose: Describes the table better, and helps people using screen readers. Then the screen reader users have more info to decide whether to investigate the table further or not. --Timeshifter (talk) 06:30, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- The caption is not just for describing parts or columns that are in the table; it's for describing the entire table as a whole. The answer to mobile devices not being able to view tooltips is to start engineering tooltips to display on mobile, not misuse the table's accessible description: Who wouldn't be confused if their screenreader, asked to describe a table, gives them a seemingly random jumble of phrases? This absolutely does not help. Screenreaders are better served with the tooltips so that screenreaders know that information belongs to a specific column, not the entire table. Aaron Liu (talk) 20:18, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks @Jroberson108. The question is about the table caption as posted here. Aaron Liu (talk) 00:54, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- I was pinged. Too much to read, but there seems to be some questions around table caption and screen readers. See w3.org:
You need to take the tooltip on mobile problem to Phabricator. They are probably already working on it. They could probably use your help.
As to table captions you are one of the few people I have heard from who has complained about a table caption being too informative. --Timeshifter (talk) 00:06, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- As it's specific to enwiki wikitext, it's something I should prototype in the tm:tooltip/sandbox in the near future, not report to the WMF-wide phab.You have yet to demonstrate that anyone besides you likes table captions "being too informative" in this manner. Aaron Liu (talk) 03:59, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- It's not too informative.
- I see: Template:Tooltip and mw:Extension:SimpleTooltip and mw:Extension:RegularTooltips. And more in the "See also" sections of those MediaWiki pages.
- Phabricator search for "tooltip". And "mobile tooltip".
- --Timeshifter (talk) 05:53, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I was using your own words. Please demonstrate that another extended-confirmed editor agrees with your style of captions.
You’ll notice that none of the Phabricator “mobile tooltip” search results deal with what we’re talking about, thus proving my point. And those extensions have nothing to do with the HTML tags we’re talking about. Aaron Liu (talk) 16:17, 1 December 2024 (UTC)- There are many table captions as long as the one in the above example.
- I don't claim to have any knowledge about getting tooltips to work on mobile. I just linked to places that might be useful. You might contact some of the people involved in other aspects of tooltips in order to work together on mobile tooltips of whatever flavor you all decide to try. --Timeshifter (talk) 17:02, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- It was never the length I was objecting to. It’s the usage of it to describe column headers instead of the entire table. Aaron Liu (talk) 17:30, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I was using your own words. Please demonstrate that another extended-confirmed editor agrees with your style of captions.
Well, I am glad you are not objecting to the length of the table caption. And as I said, the more detailed table caption serves multiple purposes: It allows for less-tall headers which is important for sticky headers in cell phones. It describes what is in the table. The info in the columns is part of the table. It helps those on mobile who can't read tooltips to have some inkling of what is covered by the column heads. It helps screen reader users to see more clearly what the table covers without having to dig down into the table. Which they greatly appreciate. Especially when the screen reader is in table mode, which allows them to skip from table caption to table caption. See:
There are multiple methods listed there, but as far as I have seen, only table captions are used on Misplaced Pages. "Approach 1" in the article looks interesting now that you have said that you do not object to longer captions. It is basically an expanded caption. I have no objection to it. I have been working here lately: User:Timeshifter/Sandbox279. Here is a possibility:
Note. Click Sources column head to come back here. Click Status column head to go to the Legend section above. Click on any status column icon to go to its explanation above.
Sources | Status | List | Last | Summary | Use |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ABC News (United States) | 1 2 |
2021 |
There is consensus that ABC News, the news division of the American Broadcasting Company, is generally reliable. It is not to be confused with other publications of the same name. | 1 2 |
--Timeshifter (talk) 09:01, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
- I’m not going to respond further if you don’t show that there is consensus for table captions like this. (And the summary example you linked is inside a longer summary element, not the caption element. I said the problem I had with the caption was far more fundamental than length, not that I don’t object to length per MOS:Caption.) Aaron Liu (talk) 13:18, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
- See Help:Table#Captions and summaries. Its summary info is out of date though, and is obsolete in HTML5. That may be why I can't remember ever seeing it used:
{| summary="Summary text here."
- The w3.org WAI summary example I linked is part of the caption element. From "Approach 1":
- "The element acts as a heading of the table and provides the summary that describes the composition of the table as well. If implemented this way, the summary is available to visual users as well."
- I have occasionally seen tables with captions extending to 2 lines.
- There is no rule against it. And it appears that w3.org Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) endorses it for some tables. So that is consensus outside Misplaced Pages. And Misplaced Pages tries to meet accessibility standards. WAI is the main accessibility organization. --Timeshifter (talk) 14:24, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
- Where does WAI endorse non-summary captions that only describe a table header, or separated by periods?Also, I think the |summary= parameter is a MediaWiki issue that should be fixed in MediaWiki to be HTML5-compliant, not by modifying wikitext. Aaron Liu (talk) 01:19, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
Mediawiki doesn't decide HTML5 standards. summary=
is part of HTLM4, not HTML5.
And as I have repeated several times, the single-line caption I provided describes the content of the table: "Perennial sources. Current status. Discussion links (with latest by year). Uses in Misplaced Pages articles."
The multi-line expanded caption is a method I did not know about before: "Approach 1" in here:
There are many table captions on Misplaced Pages with periods within the caption. --Timeshifter (talk) 17:28, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Tables in Wikitext are part of Wikitext, not HTML. The parser chooses how to render the Wikitext into HTML, and there is discussion about making it render the summary element instead. There’s no reason why the summary parameter can’t be rendered into HTML5.I have also repeatedly told you that I object to this caption because I object to captions that only describe column headers instead of the entire table as a whole, and you have repeatedly failed to demonstrate that there is consensus for this. Aaron Liu (talk) 21:04, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- phab:T43917 is going nowhere.
<summary> </summary>
is not part of HTML5 as concerns tables. It is not mentioned here: - Caption & Summary, in Tables Tutorial. Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI).
- The single-line caption here describes what is in the table. It does not describe the column headers specifically.
- On the other hand, the 2-line caption in the above example (as recommended by the WAI link in Approach 1) explicitly describes some of the column headers.
- I edit a lot of tables. It is common in captions to provide, in addition to the general table description, some more specific details. Such as: "Rate is per 100,000 of all ages." That is very specific to the rate columns. This is done to prevent bloated headers. It is common.
- You can repeat your preference forever, but it doesn't change the facts about existing table captions. --Timeshifter (talk) 22:53, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks, I was indeed confused about HTML5. My point still stands though that the Wikitext parser can find ways to make the output HTML5-compliant.Everything after the first full stop describes individual columns (' headers). If you want a two-line caption, make a two-line caption with the smaller text in prose, and I might be fine with the caption.The onus is on you to demonstrate that there is consensus for your preference. Aaron Liu (talk) 22:51, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- I can't find the "Rate..." example you mentioned, could you link it? I think it would be better served with a footnote or a parenthetical within the header. Aaron Liu (talk) 22:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
- phab:T43917 is going nowhere.
- D/B/E: If there were 10-20 entries having static headers would have made sense. But with so many entries, a static header is difficult to follow because it requires several hundred lines of scrolling. I have used RSP shortcuts to revert bad edits, or make arguments at move discussions, in both cases I expect majority of such visitors to not know beforehand what the header contents are. Which means that a visitor would need to scroll all the way to the top, look at what the header contents are, and then come back to understand what exactly the numbers, icons and colours mean. It is unnecessary inconvenience when we now have the ability to show sticky headers. Most regulars to this page and those with this talk page in their watchlists might not need the headers because they are already well-aware of what these columns are for, but it overlooks others' inconvenience. As someone who is not a regular to this page, I found it very convenient and that is the reason behind me adding sticky headers to the table (now reverted) unaware that there is already a discussion going on here. Thanks! —CX Zoom 19:17, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
FoxNews
Considering the outcome of the recent election(s), and the previous polling reports, is it encyclopaedic to consider Fox News "not reliable" while other similar outlets like NBC and ABC are considered reliable? Seems quite suspicious how in the 2024 United States presidential election the sites used to report results consistently under-polled the winner of the election, while the one site who did the same thing less, is considered unreliable to be used there. 81.196.30.197 (talk) 14:53, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
- A single instance of them being right isn't going to swing against their general unreliability. Even a broken clock is correct twice per day... Captainllama (talk) 00:04, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
- How about the Trump-ABC defamation suit that resulted in ABC paying 15 million to the Trump Presidential Library due to their constant, repeated false statements about him? How can they still be considered reliable? 2603:7080:81F0:8F0:0:0:0:10D1 (talk) 23:13, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
- Settlements are not legal precedence. And here, we know that this was basically over the issue of saying Trump was convicted of rape, when the court judge and under NY state law, he could only be convicted of sexual misconduct, even though the presiding judge said it was rape in their final opinion. That George S. pushed that point multiple points, he wasn't "wrong" or deliberately lying, compared to how Fox presented its topics. Masem (t) 23:20, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
- Single issues have little impact on whether a source is considered reliable, as sources are only ever considered 'generally reliable' (as even the best source can be wrong at times). For a source to be considered unreliable would require a long term lack of fact checking or accuracy. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 00:19, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
- How about the Trump-ABC defamation suit that resulted in ABC paying 15 million to the Trump Presidential Library due to their constant, repeated false statements about him? How can they still be considered reliable? 2603:7080:81F0:8F0:0:0:0:10D1 (talk) 23:13, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
Amendments needed to the transclusion splitting plan
I was implementing Misplaced Pages talk:Reliable sources/Perennial sources/Archive 10#Tranclusion split partition scheme when I ran into a few issues:
- Transcluding the final eighth of the sources overruns the mw:Manual:Template limits#Post-expand include size, and even just the first 7/8 plus what's already transcluded on RSP ovverruns the limit.
- i.e. the list of sources is too large to be trasncluded onto RSP.
- The page's edit notice needs to be adapted and displayed on the subpages.
Problem #1 may be solved by moving the list of sources onto a separate page and substituting the last two sections there. (As shown in User:Aaron Liu/sandbox, only substituting the last section is not enough.) Problem #2 may be solved by making the source list its own series of subpages by e.g. moving everything else under WP:Reliable sources/Perennial. Alternatively, Problem #1 may be solved by bumping $wgMaxArticleSize (the max post-expand include size), but that may be refused for security reasons. What do we think? Aaron Liu (talk) 23:24, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
- Pinging:
- Remsense
- Ivanvector
- CommunityNotesContributor
- Mfko
- ActivelyDisinterested
- Gråbergs Gråa Sång
- Daniel Quinlan
- Apenguinlover
- Sorry, I don't have an informed opinion. Gråbergs Gråa Sång (talk) 04:17, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- Since it is useful to sort, what if you cut the table in half horizontally and linked to the other piece? That would be a large change though. Apenguinlover<talk>() 20:19, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- My experience news that this wouldn't help the post expand limit, but I'm not very knowledgeable in such technicalities and so thought I must be wrong. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 23:12, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- I think it definitely would help but would render the table quite inaccessible/clumsy. I’ve recently been researching maybe substituting all iconless discussion links. Aaron Liu (talk) 01:21, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- My experience news that this wouldn't help the post expand limit, but I'm not very knowledgeable in such technicalities and so thought I must be wrong. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 23:12, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
- idea:
- 112 Ukraine
- data-sort-value=2|
- 2019 2020 2020
2020
- 112 Ukraine was deprecated following a 2019 RfC, which showed overwhelming consensus for the deprecation of a slew of sources associated with Russian disinformation in Ukraine. It was pointed out later in a 2020 RfC that 112 Ukraine had not been explicitly discussed in that first discussion prior to its blacklisting request. Further discussion established a rough consensus that the source is generally unreliable, but did not form a consensus for deprecation or blacklisting. The prior blacklisting was reversed as out of process. 112 Ukraine closed in 2021.
- 1
2
- Special:ExpandTemplates on this row with the tables stuff removed:
] :data-sort-value=2|] :] ] ] ] ] ] :] :<br />] ] :data-sort-value=2020| :2020 :112 Ukraine was deprecated following a 2019 RfC, which showed overwhelming consensus for the deprecation of a slew of sources associated with Russian disinformation in Ukraine. It was pointed out later in a 2020 RfC that 112 Ukraine had not been explicitly discussed in that first discussion prior to its blacklisting request. Further discussion established a rough consensus that the source is generally unreliable, but did not form a consensus for deprecation or blacklisting. The prior blacklisting was reversed as out of process. 112 Ukraine closed in 2021. :] ] ]<br>] ] ]
- We could nominate some wikitext on WikitextForDeletion, or we could do what Aaron suggested Apenguinlover<talk>() 11:53, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- “Wikitext for deletion”? Aaron Liu (talk) 16:10, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- The Wikitext for deletion part is a joke. I just mean that this can help expose what parts could be trimmed Apenguinlover<talk>() 16:45, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- “Wikitext for deletion”? Aaron Liu (talk) 16:10, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
- I am getting "page unresponsive" issues too often. Granted my laptop is not getting any healtheier, but neither is this project page. I also rarely get this problem on other articles, other than those equally oversized. As a point of context here, without wanting to toot my own horn, I am currently one of the top 5 editors of this page and WP:ARTICLESIZE issues has become a predominant reason for my to avoid making updates. The sooner these issues are resolved the better. CNC (talk) 20:31, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
Mostly done
Mostly done: After a bunch of substituting the RSNL template I trimmed, transclusion split implemented, taking up only 1634531 bytes out of the 2097152-byte post-expand include size−limit.
As mentioned above, now we just have to figure out the group notices. Aaron Liu (talk) 00:23, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
- Here's my tentative plan:
- We turn tm:Editnotices/Page/Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Perennial sources into a group editnotice for all the subpages of Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Perennial sources.
- This may or may not still display on the templates (see their tentative parentpage specified in the next step). I hope it doesn't, so we'll ask the template editor responding to the editnotice request about this and request that they move/open a move request on the next step after completing this step.
- We move the non-number subpages (which are all templates) (except /Header) under Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Perennial sources templates.
- We turn tm:Editnotices/Page/Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Perennial sources into a group editnotice for all the subpages of Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources/Perennial sources.
- Aaron Liu (talk) 00:47, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
@ToThAc Lol, I should've tested that. As you can see at the start of this section, I actually did try that at first, but I skipped over it after it exceeded the transclusion character-count limit and broke all the citations (and the 8th part itself). Looks like it works now after I made a bunch of changes to and substituted the RSNLink template and replaced "Misplaced Pages:" with "WP:". Thanks! Aaron Liu (talk) 02:34, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
- That's the change I was curious about. Why is it PS7 doesn't use
{{rsnl|
template but the other subpages still do? Anyway the change is a vast improvement editing wise, it's a smooth as it gets now. Congrats to those involved. CNC (talk) 10:36, 21 December 2024 (UTC)- As I've said in my updates to RSPI, all bare RSN links (i.e. no RfC, not active) were substituted. PS7 uses RSNL in all the places the other subpages do. Aaron Liu (talk) 14:55, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
- Ok understood, thanks for explaining. CNC (talk) 17:03, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
- As I've said in my updates to RSPI, all bare RSN links (i.e. no RfC, not active) were substituted. PS7 uses RSNL in all the places the other subpages do. Aaron Liu (talk) 14:55, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
Imported YouTube videos
@Graywalls: Greetings! Regarding this revert...it sounds like I have failed to dispel the confusion. I'm trying to explain when WP:UGC does not apply to videos imported from YouTube, and it's when the user-generated content is not being used as a reliable source, but merely as a repackaging of a reliable source. For example, imagine someone made a 3D animation of how hurricane winds circulate and uploaded it to Misplaced Pages to illustrate the article hurricane. This is perfectly fine, and in fact encouraged and celebrated, as long as they cite a reliable source (for example, a series of diagrams published by NOAA) for the data used to create the animation. It is just as acceptable for the same video to be uploaded to YouTube under a suitable Creative Commons license, then re-uploaded onto Misplaced Pages, and added to the same article. What is not acceptable is to take videos from YouTube that cite no sources and treat them as accurate additions to articles without verification. It's also not acceptable for an editor to make an animation citing no sources and add that to an article by direct upload to Misplaced Pages, though we are a bit behind on our fact-checking. -- Beland (talk) 07:22, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- I don't see why this note is necessary. UGC also applies even if hosted on Commons, since they also need to cite sources. Aaron Liu (talk) 21:14, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- @Aaron Liu, Beland, and Graywalls: It's a subtle point. Any bozo can upload a freely-licensed Youtube video based on reliable data from a reliable source. But that video would not qualify as being from a reliable source for Misplaced Pages purposes due to the bozo intermediary. Now let's say another bozo, say me, uploads that video to the Commons. Since the video is based on reliable data from a reliable source, then it qualifies for the Commons. Assuming it is something within Commons:Com:Project scope.
- In addition to a clarified, and possibly shorter, note, these 2 links could be added to Misplaced Pages:RSPYOUTUBE:
- Commons:Category:YouTube
- Commons:Com:YouTube files
- --Timeshifter (talk) 23:02, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- lol, I made my reply below before I saw this. What do you think of it? Do you know of any rules I could link? Aaron Liu (talk) 23:03, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- The use cases have come up in at least one RFC, where a reading of a contemporaneous public domain and verifiable source text was held to be "unreliable" as per this policy, despite the fact that the reading was being used for illustrative purposes. The same case could be used for a music performance, or an extract of a play, or poetry, etc. as well as the examples @Beland makes. However, these are not "unreliable" as they are performances or renderings of verifiable source material, and not being used for citation purposes. Some clarification of the difference between YT as a citation vehicle, and YT as a source of illustrative content, would help avoid future similar situations. Jim Killock (talk) 22:41, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- How about something like
All videos uploaded, regardless of source, are treated the same way as images and other media.
in a new paragraph? Aaron Liu (talk) 23:02, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- How about something like
- For mine, the necessary condition
the user-generated content is not being used as a reliable source
makes the usage off-topic for this page; which deals solely with the reliability of sources as references for article content. I do, however, see that the first sentence of the YouTube entry,Most videos on YouTube are anonymous, self-published, and unverifiable, and should not be used at all.
(emphasis added), is easily read as prohibiting a broader range of uses. Suggest that this be modified to refer only to use as a (reliable) source; e.g.... should not be used as a reference
or similar. The page would then be silent on the question of illustrative content. Rotary Engine 23:31, 18 December 2024 (UTC)- Sounds very reasonable. I've implemented this. Aaron Liu (talk) 23:52, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
- YouTube is available to everyone and it's widely used by those including official media outlets. So, unless they're official news coverage that happens to use YouTube and it's hosted on their OFFICIAL page, YouTube should be evaluated the same as blogs and home pages.
- YouTube channels containing news clippings, or advertisement clippings from channels other than should not be found anywhere within Misplaced Pages on the ground of WP:COPYVIOEL. Graywalls (talk) 04:57, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
I linked to illustrative, non-referential use. Here is current summary section:
Most videos on YouTube are anonymous, self-published, and unverifiable, and should not be used as a reference. Content uploaded from a verified official account, such as that of a news organization, may be treated as originating from the uploader and therefore inheriting their level of reliability. However, many YouTube videos from unofficial accounts are copyright violations and should not be linked from Misplaced Pages, according to WP:COPYLINK. See also WP:YOUTUBE and WP:VIDEOLINK. For illustrative, non-referential use see Commons:Category:YouTube.
--Timeshifter (talk) 00:51, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
- That's certainly an improvement over the previous text; thanks for the condensation! -- Beland (talk) 03:37, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
- While not yet convinced on the need to mention illustrative use on this particular page, I am fairly certain that Commons:Category:YouTube is not the best target for that link. @Timeshifter, could you check and confirm that another page was not the intended target? A Commons policy or guideline page perhaps? Rotary Engine 06:28, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
- Perhaps link to Mos:Images#Audio visual content where there is a line on this, and with an expanded version under consideration, draft 0.3 here. The explanation IMO needs to be on one or the other MOS page; it may make a bit more sense here for reasons of brevity and clarity. Jim Killock (talk) 09:30, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
- I've already changed the link to c:Commons:YouTube files. Someone else also added Misplaced Pages:Image use policy. Aaron Liu (talk) 12:25, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
Generalised section on advertorials in certain markets
Rather than having NEWSORGINDIA and now NEWSORGNIGERIA wouldn't in make more sense to have one section about concerns regadding promotional editorials? The different markets could still explained in that section. These aren't the only two markets where this happens, and it's only likely to become more common. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 22:44, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
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