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== RfC: Notability and British Rail stations ==
== Troublesome loophole ==


<!-- ] 17:01, 15 October 2024 (UTC) -->{{User:ClueBot III/DoNotArchiveUntil|1729011668}}
In the lead, there is this troublesome sentence:
Should all British National rail stations be presumed notable as an exception to ]? —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 16:42, 10 September 2024 (UTC)


This is a follow-up to ], to which the main argument was that we have an article for every National Rail train station, so they should not be deleted for consistency. A previous discussion that may be useful is ]
''''If an article currently does not cite reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject, that does not necessarily mean the topic is not notable.''''


Main outcomes include:
True, a poorly written stub can still be notable. But ultimately, the notability must come from secondary sources. So, if those cannot be shown, then the topic / article cannot be shown to be notable except by original research. I don't advocate deleting stub / poorly written articles. I do advocate deleting topics that are not and cannot be sourced.
#All British National rail stations are inherently notable, and establish this as a ] and an exception to ]
#British National rail stations do not have inherent notability, and must be evaluated individually under ] or any other subject-specific notability guidelines.
—'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 16:42, 10 September 2024 (UTC)


:A related topic: This problem also seems pervasive in the train stations of other countries, like ]. Regarding the discussion regarding the British train stations, should '''1,''' the many of the train stations in ] that don't meet ] face deletion? A much simpler option would be to '''2,''' change notability requirements for train stations. ] (]) 09:01, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
I advocate removing the sentence as it requires the community to prove a negative which is an impossible standard. Either the topic / article states why it is notable through reference to secondary sources or it doesn't: if it doesn't, then it is ''de facto'' not notable. Cheers! ] (]) 17:57, 21 March 2008 (UTC)
::If you can't find sources for an article about a railway station after looking for sources (including in books in the local language, which is where the majority of sources are going to be) then it should be merged to the next higher level article (usually the article about the line or system it's on). ] (]) 10:12, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
:::There may be sources that exist in these articles, like for ], there's a reference to https://herald.dawn.com/news/1398873 , but such a source didn't show anything useful beyond the fact that the railway station exists (by the way, it doesn't seem to meet ]). And such sources certainly don't adhere to ]. However, plenty of the railway stations only have sources of such levels, so should I merge them all? If I were to merge them, should I first put up AfDs or simply carry it out (which I'm certain will be offensive to many editors)? ] (]) 12:19, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
::::Firstly this discussion is about railway stations in Great Britain, so a railway station in Pakistan is off-topic. Secondly, did you read what I wrote about sources that are offline and/or not in English. Thirdly, you cannot do research for one station and then apply the results to a whole set of stations. ] (]) 13:06, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::Sorry, then I will resort discussions of the topic to ]. I just wanted to mark that the problem resides beyond British and Pakistani train stations though (like ), so I seek a standardized solution to all the alike problems. ] (]) 13:21, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::May be it does not exist. I am pretty well familiar with Russian and Dutch networks. I am sure I can find multiple reliable sources for every Dutch railway station. I am also sure many Russian stations are not notable on their own and are best organised in lists (which I am already planning to do). ] (]) 13:39, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:::I agree with Thryduulf, but I add: Ask for help. {{xt|If you can't find sources for an article about a railway station after looking for sources (including in books in the local language, which is where the majority of sources are going to be) then}} – the problem might be with "you can't find them" rather than "no reliable sources have ever been published". This is an area that Misplaced Pages does best when people work together, rather than one person thinking their result is definitive. ] (]) 05:16, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
:This RfC is in the wrong place. It should be at ]. ] (]) 00:04, 5 October 2024 (UTC)


:The statement is not a loophole, but rather an important clarification. There is a difference between "cannot be sourced" and "is not presently sourced", and we should not make judgements about the notability of a topic based on the present state of an article. While it is impossibly to prove non-notability and the burden of proof should and does rest with those who seek to retain the article, showing that coverage exists is enough to prove notability; the added step of adding sources to the article, while desirable, is not needed to prove notability. ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 18:21, 21 March 2008 (UTC)


::First let me say I do not recognize this guideline due to rotten wording. Setting that aside, Wassupwestcoast said "But ultimately, the notability must come from secondary sources." No, that's wrong. If reliable independent secondary sources provide significant coverage of a topic, that is conclusive proof that the topic is notable, but the reverse does not follow. It is possible to prove a topic is notable through coverage by primary sources if they are used appropriately; the ] guideline allows articles based only on primary sources in some instances. --] (]) 19:08, 21 March 2008 (UTC)


:::Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, I am not sure how this can be denied. An article can be deleted at AfD if the subject is notable, but no reliable secondary sources can be found, so this is not really a loophole. ] 19:18, 21 March 2008 (UTC)


=== Survey re Notability and British Rail stations ===
::::I don't believe Until's statement. --] (]) 19:27, 21 March 2008 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''', no "inherent" notability for anything. Either there is a substantial quantity of reliable and independent source material available about something, or there isn't. There are certain things (as some examples, national leaders or chemical elements) where there ''in practice'' will always be such material about each one, but that's not "inherent" notability either, it just so happens that each member of such a set is ''actually'' notable. We do not need any more "inherently notable" permastubs. If each station is actually notable, that's fine, and if some are not, then that's also fine; they can be covered in a list or the like instead of in a separate "article" that's really just a few factoids. ] <small><sup>]</sup></small> 16:46, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:{{replyto|Seraphimblade}} Which permastubs are you thinking of? --] &#x1f339; (]) 21:10, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::GEOLAND is probably the worst offender there (though sports gave it a run for the money before it got reined in). But really ''any'' time there's been any kind of "inherent notability" arrangement, someone scrapes a database, and the result is a ton of permastubs. ] <small><sup>]</sup></small> 22:07, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::I wasn't asking about geoland or sports, and nor is this RfC. This RfC is specifically about British Rail stations, and that is what I am asking about. Which articles about '''British Rail stations''' are permastubs? --] &#x1f339; (]) 22:25, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::Your attitude is rather unnecessary, given that ''my'' comment was about inherent notability in general, and you did not specify "British Rail" in your question, so I answered about places where concepts of "inherent notability" have led to that problem. I do not have, nor need, specific examples to be in opposition to what the RfC is asking. ] <small><sup>]</sup></small>
*:::::If your comment is not relevant to British railway stations then it's not relevant to this discussion and should be ignored. ] (]) 23:21, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::It is. The RfC question is "Should British railway stations be considered inherently notable?". The comment I made was entirely relevant to that&mdash;specifically that no, they should not. I do not see how that would be anything but a directly relevant answer to the exact question being asked. ] <small><sup>]</sup></small> 08:33, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::{{tpq|GEOLAND is probably the worst offender there (though sports gave it a run for the money before it got reined in).}} is not relevant to British railway stations. And you still haven't answered Redrose's question. ] (]) 17:14, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''No'''. Things aren't special just because they're British, notwithstanding the large group of editors that seems to think everything that exists in Britain is notable. ] (]/]) 16:47, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 1''' - to my knowledge we have here a complete set of 2,597 stations and this provides consistency to the reader and makes information easier to add (I've improved many station articles that previously had poor sourcing). Opening the floodgates to AfDs for each of these individually is not a good use of editor time, will provide a less consistent experience for readers, and will discourage the addition of new sources information (eg accessibility improvements, changes to service levels, platform extensions). ] (]) 16:48, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:{{tq|Opening the floodgates to AfDs for each of these individually is not a good use of editor time}} Let's delete all of them and recreate articles on only the notable ones (which probably amounts to a very low percentage of those 2,597 stations; I'd be surprised if 50 of them met GNG.)
*:{{tq|discourage the addition of new sources information (eg accessibility improvements, changes to service levels, platform extensions).}} Misplaced Pages is ] a travel guide, railroad amenities database, or service map. ] (]/]) 16:55, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::There's easily more than fifty stations that meet ]. In fact probably the vast majority would do based on books, newspapers etc.
*::on your second point, we do list service improvements (or reductions) and changes to platforms, bridges etc. this info is regularly available with good sources. This doesn't make us a travel guide. ] (]) 16:58, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::Are so many of these articles poorly sourced that it would open the floodgates? ] (]) 17:19, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::It's not often that I agree (partially) with Garuda3, but I have to concur that {{tq|There's easily more than fifty stations that meet WP:GNG.}} You could easily find more than 50 just in Greater London considering its extensive rail network and the Tube, and I say this as an American. Many if not most stations are notable. The issue I have personally is when editors say they're automatically notable just by virtue of existing and that Misplaced Pages policies don't apply. If anything, I'd be thrilled to have more train station articles on Misplaced Pages so long as they are referenced properly and meet GNG.
*:::There's no conspiracy afoot to bring thousands of articles to AfD. What is true is that there are edge cases. Stations that were open for a few years. Proposed but never built stations. Stations mostly lost to history. Former stations on the site of or near a current station where the best choice from an editorial perspective is to include the former and current station within the same article. And quite frankly the occasional station that just plain does not meet GNG. Prescribing that all train stations are automatically entitled to an article is foolish and should not be done. I don't care if that's how it was in 2004, it's 2024 now. ] (]) 21:01, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::At least 250 British stations are ]s, and if you read ] a few paragraphs before the one on train stations, you will find the statement ''Artificial geographical features that are officially assigned the status of cultural heritage or national heritage, or of any other protected status on a national level and for which verifiable information beyond simple statistics is available, are presumed to be notable''. So that is 250 stations that meet the criteria without any further argument, and that is 10% of the total. Incidentally, there are 400,000 listed buildings in England alone, and according to policy every one of them is automatically notable (although most don't actually have articles). That rather puts a discussion about 2,500 stations into perspective. -- ] (]) 15:20, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::{{tq|So that is 250 stations that meet the criteria without any further argument, and that is 10% of the total. Incidentally, there are 400,000 listed buildings in England alone, and according to policy every one of them is automatically notable.}} Per the introductory paragraphs of NGEO, the section titled "Sources" on that page, and the section you're citing, adequate sourcing beyond the mere listing of a building is required to establish notability. Being listed alone, without more, does not warrant an article. ] (]/]) 16:18, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose / 2''' There's nothing inherently different about British train station from train stations in other countries, so there's no reason they shouldn't be subject to the consensus of the prior RFC. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 16:51, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:To clarify this RFC appears to be asking for British train stations alone to be exemptes from ], but train stations are train stations. Nothing about ''British'' train stations makes them different from the train stations found in other countries. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 16:53, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::Well, I'm not asking for it (quite the opposite - I created this as a reaction to ]). I saw that was the main argument against deletion and wanted to see if it is valid and I figured an RfC was the best way to do that. Just wanted to clear that up. —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 17:08, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::The only seemingly valid argument in that AfD is the one saying the article passes GNG (I haven't checked the article to see if that's correct), the others appear to be based on the ideas already rejected by the prior RFC. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 22:07, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::@] if you firced me to AfD a British station I'd probably pick a boring south London suburban station like those so I don't blame you. But even then I'd be surprised if nobody found enough decent sources. Stations specifically aren't really my thing but I'm aware of the volume of material on the UK rail network. ] &#124; ] 21:13, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:Reading others comments I'll add I also don't expect any articles to go to AfD over this, there are endless reliable sources for British railways. Editors just need to show those sources. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 13:39, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''' no topic has inherent notability. It can likely be said there is good reason that all British rail stations have GNG notability due to the history of British rail and rail fans in the UK, but that simply means that when such articles are created they should show sourcing that trends towards the GNG. But this should NOT (ETA this key work) be taken as allowance to create a lot of stubs on stations with the expectation they can be shown note later. ] (]) 17:11, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:I could argue that ] shouldn't have an article because of its low usage. However, it has been one of the quietest stations in Britain, and by looking at that article, its been reported by BBC, Guardian and Telegraph so it likely meets GNG (at least 3 reliable sources can be a safe bet). ] (]) 17:28, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''' ] is effectively just a listing of ]. An absolute joke. No attempt to establish notability of the subject, just a complete rejection of our community-endorsed ]. An RfC ] that train stations, in whatever country, are not notable simply because they exist or existed. Unfortunately AfD suffers from minimal participation and ] issues where a handful of participants prevent the overall consensus prevailing. A similar phenomenon has been observed with the false assertion that ] #1 exempts recipients of many British honours from secondary source requirements, rather than providing a refutable likelihood. This seems a very British problem. Participants at the AfD repeatedly asserted that because it's a ''British'' railway station it must be notable. What about German, Brazilian, Chinese, or Indian railway stations? Any railway station without ] should be taken to AfD, if those sources cannot be located. ] (]) 17:14, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:As the one who started the previous RfC, I really wish this one wasn't necessary. But a certain group of editors have decided that community consensus doesn't apply to them. Without context, an RfC so narrowly focused as the current one seems silly. But editor behavior has required it. I'd rather this than ANI, at least. I don't want to single out British editors, but I haven't seen any other group of editors otherwise in good standing so willing to flout policy, guidelines, and community consensus around notability. ] (]) 21:06, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''' As proposer of the RfC I don't see how British train stations should be presumed notable per AusLondonder. —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 17:22, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2 despite it's problematic wording''' There no such thing as "inherent notability" in Misplaced Pages so let's assume that they meant "presumed notability", and rail stations don't and shouldn't have it.<b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 17:26, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:Here's an example of a thoroughly discussed one: ]. A common argument is "we created a bunch of these in a walled garden, and so now we need to be consistent with what's in the walled garden. They end up with nothing but an "it exists" statement with the address and a train schedule. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 17:32, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::{{replyto|North8000}} This RfC is specifically about British Rail stations. Xingke Avenue station isn't British. --] &#x1f339; (]) 21:14, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::I gave it as an example of a thorough example discussion about train stations.<b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 15:13, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::That AfD is a perfect example as to why the original RfC was necessary, and by extension this one. Only one person supporting a keep actually tried to identify sources. If someone else had found another GNG qualifying source, that AfD might have closed differently, and I would be just fine with that. ] (]) 22:31, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:I got the term "inherent notability" from ], and inherent in this case should mean the same as "presumed" —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 17:33, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''', {{ec}}while railway stations can be helpful to readers, I think its safe to say that it should fall under GNG. Just like why we don't have an article on YouTubers with over 1 million subs. with 9.4m subs is a good reason why something is popular, doesn't always deserve an article. It has been deleted not ], but ]. However, we do have an article on ] with 335k subs, a railfan youtuber as he's been reported by the BBC multiple times. ] (]) 17:42, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
* '''Option 2''', with the caveat that I suspect every UK station meets the GNG anyway, given the volume of writing in English on UK railway topics. In that sense this RfC strikes me as a no-op; Option 2 reaffirms that status quo. I disagree emphatically with Voorts' suggestion that only fifty stations in the UK are notable and am curious what they're basing that on. ] ] 17:50, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:I doubt all nearly 3000 of the stations are notable. Also "writing on UK railway topics" broadly does not establish notability for each and every individual station. The main thing this RfC should establish is that arguments at AfD asserting all British railway stations are automatically notable without providing sources must be ignored and in fact be considered disruptive. ] (]) 17:55, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:I said {{tq|I'd be surprised if 50 of them met GNG}}, not that only 50 of them actually meet GNG. I'm basing that on the fact that most railway stations in the world are small and not architecturally or culturally significant, and that most of what's written about individual railway stations are basic information like their schedules. ] (]/]) 18:08, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::I agree. I'd guess 1% fully meet GNG and maybe 10% are "close enough" when given some leniency because they have a bit of a geographic component. The latter are when they have substantial sourcing with more depth of coverage. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 20:12, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::@] A topic meets the GNG or it doesn't. You're saying that articles on 2,700 railway stations in the UK do not meet the GNG. I'm assured by my colleague below that no one's contemplating a purge. Please explain what you envision the future of these articles to be. ] ] 23:06, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::IMO nobody would would work on a mass purge. Maybe a few AFD's on current articles. The main thing is that it would reinforce/clarify that new articles are subject to that standard. Sincerely, <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 00:19, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::If editors wish to take particularly poorly sourced individual articles to AfD, I'd support that but it's something that should happen over time, not heaps at once to overwhelm AfD or editors. ] (]) 08:49, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::Well... they really shouldn't. See ]. Notability doesn't depend on the number of sources ] in the article. It depends on the number of sources ] in the real world. If you see poorly sourced individual articles on a subject that is likely to be notable (e.g., listed historical buildings or railway stations), then you could find and add sources yourself, or you could add a request like {{tl|more sources}} to encourage other editors to do that work, but you shouldn't take it to AFD, because ]. ] (]) 23:01, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 1''' per the arguments of ]. Anyone salivating at the prospect of deleting lots of stations are likely to be disappointed, as the sheer volume of printed material on the British railway system is such that even minor stations will have mentions in multiple books/almanacs etc. So I doubt this will get very far, but it is certainly a big and pointless waste of editor time and energy. ] (]) 20:16, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:{{tq|such that even minor station will have mentions in multiple books/almanacs etc.}} "Mentions" are generally not significant coverage, per ]: "Significant coverage is more than a trivial mention". Being listed in a book or almanac, or even multiple books or almanacs, doesn't make a train station notable. ] (]/]) 20:19, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:(ec)Generally these end up with dealing with handling new articles rather that mass deletions, much less "salivating". But the question and criteria is ''in-depth'' coverage by a published independent source, not mentions. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 20:22, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*::I have books which give at least a page or more of information regarding station's histories, architecture, layout etc. Given that most stations are 100+ years old, that's generally quite a lot of history. ] (]) 20:33, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::If a station has 1-2 pages of material in a source, that is something to invoke to establish GNG (or "close enough") compliance. That's not what I've seen at the bulk of these articles.<b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 00:15, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::Sources are required to exist, not be present in every article right now. ] (]) 00:23, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Moot'''. Whether the stations are inherently notable or not is not a relevant question, because they are all actually notable. Only some stations have easily googleable in-depth coverage online, probably circa most have in-depth coverage online when you spend time looking in detail but I have yet to see any evidence that any currently open National Rail station in Great Britain has no significant coverage when people take the time to actually look for offline sources rather than just assume that because the first two pages on Google are filled with results aimed at rail passengers that represents the sum-total of information out there. ] (]) 20:47, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*:Of all the comments here, this one from @] resonates the most with me. If you think that a British rail station has ever been created, even in some tiny town, without the nearest newspaper taking note of it – probably repeatedly, and probably the neighboring towns' papers, too, either to rejoice in the existence of a nearby service or to bemoan the fate that sent all that commercial bounty to another town – you've not been paying attention. Yes, it sometimes requires time and effort to find older sources. Yes, the article might need an editor whose source-finding skills (or perseverance) are a bit above average. But notability isn't restricted to "subjects for which Prof Google provides obvious sources". It's for sources that require knowing about railway magazines and newspapers archives and local history books, too. ] (]) 05:07, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::That's fine, in that case the station will pass GNG. That's all people are asking for. But articles without sources frankly shouldn't be created. The ] to add sources when creating articles. ] (]) 08:45, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::{{replyto|AusLondonder}} Are there any articles about British Rail stations that are without sources? If so, who has been creating them? If it's a newbie who has never created an article at all, and this is their first attempt, let's help them out. If it's somebody with years of evidence who is ]ting out new unsourced articles, why are we not talking to them directly? --] &#x1f339; (]) 17:43, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::Isn't the issue here that most od these articles were created two decades ago when sourcing/notability requirements were much looser, and now that some editors are bringing good faith AfD noms, the responses are "keep it must be notable" instead of actually providing those sources that are claimed to exist? ] (]/]) 17:48, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::Probably not. ] contains 9,745 articles (subcat depth of 3), and it has only 18 articles in ]. I haven't checked the numbers for a while, but I believe that one unref'd article out of every ~550 is a lower rate of unref'd articles than average. ] (]) 23:08, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''' Full disclosure, I was the one who started the last train station notability RfC in 2022. I am dismayed to see people basically ignoring the consensus from that RfC. To those who claim "so much has been written about these stations that they're all notable!", I say it should be very easy to show significant coverage in a few sources and show GNG is met for a given station if this is true. People cried that all the train stations would be purged last time, and that has not happened. Hardly anyone was calling for that, and I certainly wasn't then and I am not calling for that now. It would not happen after this RfC either. Many, if not most active train stations are notable ''because they clear GNG on their own merits'', not just because they are train stations. That is not a get out of jail free card to write stubs with 1 non-independent reference and then claim nobody can ever challenge said stubs on notability grounds. ] (]) 20:53, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2'''. This is far too specific and local of a category to have its own special notability cutout. They may well all be individually notable but that should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis through our regular notability guidelines rather than by fiat. —] (]) 23:32, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
*Moot, per Thryduulf. I can see why someone would think a tiny rural halt or boring suburban station wouldn't be notable (as in the subject of in-depth coverage in reliable sources, not to be confused with "I personally don't think this is important") but there is a huge volume of literature on the UK railway network, including full-length books on rural branch lines. Openings and closures are extensively documented in the local press and the railway magazines. Of course, many of them are over 150 years old so that coverage may not be easily found online, but most public buildings or infrastructure of that age will be notable. I dislike the concept of inherent or presumed notability but if we had 2,500 AfDs I can't imagine many of them resulting in deletion. ] &#124; ] 09:18, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:Nobody's asking to have 2,500 AfDs. They're just asking that people not make spurious arguments during those AfD discussions. ] (]/]) 11:56, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::There's no need to make spurious arguments. The stations will almost all, if not all, be notable if anyone does the necessary research. ] &#124; ] 13:07, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::This RfC was sparked by an AfD where many of the !votes were effectively "keep, every British train station is notable", notwithstanding the broader 2022 RfC that found no train station is inherently notable. ] (]/]) 13:30, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::Every British railway station is notable. Not because they are inherently notable, but because so much has been written about them that in-depth sourcing is available for every single one if you take the time to look beyond page 2 of google. ] (]) 17:09, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::See my latest comment in the discussion section below. ] (]/]) 17:45, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''' There is nothing specially encyclopaedic about British (or any other) railway stations, though in the UK they are so well covered by both historical and current news, and such an extensive literature has grown up around them, that it is hard to find one without decent coverage. We just need to go and find it, not create stubs and hope. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 11:25, 11 September 2024 (UTC)</small>
*:It's a bit of a moot point, as all the articles already exist. ] (]) 12:29, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''' being British (and I should know) does not confer automatic notability, they should be subject to our policies like every other station. ] (]) 11:31, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''' there is no such thing as inherent notability. As for this being moot, maybe. But, the trick will be finding this more than passing coverage rather than vapidly stating that it much exist somewhere. --] <sup>]</sup> 12:43, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2.''' I do not believe in the notion that they are inherently notable. Hypothetically if 200 stations exist, and 199 of them are notable and have coverage, and 1 does not have coverage at all and is not notable, it is not made notable by virtue of every other station being notable. Honestly, the idea that British stations '''''in particular''''' would be the exception to a rule feels a bit Anglocentric. Is every train station in Japan notable? Is every train station in China notable? India? Around the world? The argument presented is that a newspaper somewhere at some point surely mentioned it, and that much is also the case for most trainstations around the world and, yet, there is no exception being carved out for them. Inclusion in the encyclopedia required verifiability, and notability is established by verifiable sources. If such sources exist, they should be found and cited in the article, otherwise, it should not exist simply because "all the others do". --<b>]</b> 19:10, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:How in any way does deleting one station article in a set of 200 benefit readers? It's going to cause confusion as to why one article isn't there and make it harder for people to find the information they're looking for. ] (]) 22:54, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::{{tq|How in any way does deleting one station article in a set of 200 benefit readers? It's going to cause confusion as to why one article isn't there}}
*::Because if there are no verifiable sources, it does not go in the encyclopedia. Per ] {{tq|All material in Misplaced Pages mainspace, including everything in articles, lists, and captions, must be verifiable.}} Per ] {{tq|The burden to demonstrate verifiability lies with the editor who adds or restores material}} and per ] {{tq|Information on Misplaced Pages must be verifiable; if no reliable, independent sources can be found on a topic, then it should not have a separate article}}.
*::Likewise ] {{tq|No subject is automatically or inherently notable merely because it exists}}. As ] says, the Encyclopedia will never be finished, ergo, missing one station out of 200 is of no real harm. ''Carving out an exception for '''one specific country''' is wholly unnecessary''. <b>]</b> 02:27, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::It's possible for a subject to have "verifiable sources" and still "not meet the ]". ] (]) 04:16, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::Yes, and in that case,'' it still doesn't belong in the encyclopedia'' even if all 199 other stations do. <b>]</b> 05:25, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::I believe you will find that ] and ] have different ideas about whether verifiable information belongs "in the encyclopedia". ] (]) 06:26, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::Frankly, I do not understand what you are even arguing. If a subject fails ], it usually doesn't have verifiable sources. None of what you are posting, or linking, contradicts what I have said. Material with no verifiable sources automatically fails ] and does not go in the encyclopedia. GNG quite literally says {{tq|A topic is presumed to be suitable for a stand-alone article or list '''''when it has received <u>significant coverage in reliable sources</u> that are independent of the subject'''''.}}
*::::::Per ] {{tq|Misplaced Pages articles should be based on reliable, published sources, making sure that all majority and significant minority views that have appeared in those sources are covered (see Misplaced Pages:Neutral point of view). '''<u>If no reliable sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it</u>'''.}}
*::::::&&
*::::::{{tq|The policy on sourcing is Misplaced Pages:Verifiability, which requires inline citations for any material challenged or likely to be challenged, and for all quotations. The verifiability policy is strictly applied to all material in the mainspace—articles, lists, and sections of articles—without exception, and in particular to biographies of living persons, which states:}}
*::::::Emphasis my own.
*::::::Reliable sources are how we establish verifiability. If there are no verifiable sources the article ipso facto fails notability and does not belong in the encyclopedia. Saying if there are no verifiable sources the article does not go in the encyclopedia is not the same anything that is verifiable does.
*::::::If a source does not have any verifiable sources, it is not notable. At no point did I say anything with a verifiable source goes in the encyclopedia. <b>]</b> 00:10, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::Hello, @],
*:::::::Sorry for my confusing reply. I would have explained in more detail if I'd noticed earlier that your account is only six weeks old. We get used to talking in confusing ] jargon and forget that there are helpful new people trying to make sense of it.
*:::::::You are correct that everything must be ]. Verifiable means that at least one source has been ] in the real world (←absolute requirement, all content, with zero exceptions), and that this source is considered "reliable" ]. It is the best practice (but ''not'' technically a requirement, except for ]) ] at least one reliable source that ] the specific statement.
*:::::::It's possible to have a source that is reliable for a given statement, but which does not confer notability. For example, {{tl|Cite tweet}} is used for verifiability purposes in 41,000 articles, but it is not the kind of source that the ] accepts. Similarly, we use {{tl|cite press release}} in 73,000 articles (and more ] are cited without using the template), but a press release never counts towards notability.
*:::::::For example: if the sentence is "Mayor Ma announced that she is retiring", then you could cite that to a social media post or press release from Mayor Ma herself. Those sources would be ''reliable''. But the mayor talking about herself does not make her ''notable'' (←no ] about her).
*:::::::When you have sources that verify the content but do not confer notability, then it is sometimes best to put the content in a related article about a notable subject. For example, if we decide that Mayor Ma is not notable, then perhaps we would put the verifiable information in an article about the {{fake link|Mayors of Smallville}} or in {{fake link|Smallville#Mayors}}. That approach keeps in the information "in the encyclopedia" without creating an article on a non-notable subject. ] (]) 04:32, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::::Understood! Thank you! <b>]</b> 04:37, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::Your answer doesn't address how it benefits readers. We're talking about a completed set here so you're not preventing any new articles being created. What is the benefit to readers of deleting one article in a completed set? I can name some drawbacks:
*:::::*Inconsistency - there may be confusion as the casual reader expects to find a page (through Misplaced Pages or through Google) but there isn't one there
*:::::*Wasted editor time arguing about deletion and then having to restore the article should we decide we actually do want an article on the subject
*:::::*The article won't appear in ] making it harder to discover for people who use that feature
*:::::] (]) 08:10, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::This isn't about deleting any article, though, and is grossly offtopic. This is about whether or not the British National Rail should get special privileges. Nothing is innately notable. ]. There is no requirement to have {{tq|a complete set}} of anything if it is not notable. Notability is the basic requirement for inclusion. If it is inherently notable on the basis that a source exists somewhere, then find the source. An article doesn't get to exist just because other articles of a similar nature exist. There is nothing inherently special about '''''British railway stations''''' that necessitates carving out an exception specifically for them. It borders on ] to infer that the British National Rail system is somehow exceptional compared to every other rail system, so much so that it is above the rules which everything else is held to. You are arguing about how does it help the user, and I am telling you that according to policy having unverified information hurts the encyclopedia. <b>]</b> 00:01, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::There is no unverified information here - National Rail has information on all stations. Train Operating Companies will have information on the stations they serve. We have photos of every station. It's not exceptional because it's British, its exceptional because all articles ''already exist''. The reason why this RfC was setup in the first place was because an article was nominated for deletion and the result was keep - it's clear this is about wanting to delete articles. ] (]) 09:24, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::::@] I think you're confusing notability (which tries to be an objective standard) with importance (which is subjective). This group of objects is notable in the sense that (almost?) all are the subject of significant coverage in reliable, independent sources. I would imagine most stations in most other countries are probably notable as well because transport infrastructure tends to be well written about. ] &#124; ] 12:51, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2'''. I will never accept the notion of inherent notability in any topic area and will oppose that concept whenever it comes up. And the notion that only ''British'' train stations are inherently notable as opposed to train stations in France or Germany or Spain or any other country is utterly bizarre. The English Misplaced Pages is the English language encyclopedia of the entire world, not the encyclopedia of the English speaking world. ] (]) 23:28, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:British railway stations being inherently notable would not imply anything about railway stations in any other part of the world. ] (]) 08:54, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::It would imply that Misplaced Pages is Anglo-centric and makes special exceptions for British culture. ] (]/]) 11:44, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::Why on earth do you get that impression? X being inherently notable implies nothing about whether things that are not X are or are not inherently notable. It's a simple statement of provable fact that all British railway stations are notable based on the coverage in independent reliable sources. I would be surprised if the same were not true of some other country's stations too (I don't know enough about the literature regarding railways in other countries to be sure, but remember one would need to look at e.g. French language sources to determine this for France.). ] (]) 11:50, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::There is a big difference in principle between "we have checked all examples of X and they all happen to meet our general notability standards" and "we are going to declare that all X are automatically notable and are not subject to our general notability standards", even when the outcome (that all X are notable) does not differ. —] (]) 13:18, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::There should though be some way of communicating {{tpq|we have checked all examples of X and they all happen to meet our general notability standards}} to editors such that they don't waste their and others time nominating them for deletion. Whether you call that "inherent notability" or something else, the effect is the same. ] (]) 20:35, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::One way to communicate that would be to make sure that all those articles actually cite as references all of those in-depth sources that surely exist. Nominators are supposed to follow ] and find those references themselves but we all know they often don't. —] (]) 11:45, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::Obviously all the articles citing the sources is ideal, but Misplaced Pages is a work in progress and there are far more stations than editors with access to those sources so even if everybody dropped everything else and worked full time on improving only articles about current National Rail stations it would take some time get it to that state (and articles about other notable subjects will be deleted in the meanwhile as these editors would not be defending them at AfD). ] (]) 12:26, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::: Create an SNG that says that. Also, ''has'' someone checked every single British rail station for notability? At least one good faith AfD nominator couldn't find sources during their BEFORE search, given the AfD that lead to this RfC, and others claiming that most British railroad stations are notable here have admitted during this discussion that there are at least a some British rail stations that lack notability. Finally, {{tq|we have checked all examples of X}} is in the eye of the beholder: there would have to be some sort of consensus, rather than a LOCALCON amongst editors who focus on Britain/railroads, that the sources that have been found do in fact establish notability. That does not exist right now. ] (]/]) 20:42, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::An AfD nominator not finding sources during a BEFORE search is not evidence of a lack of sources, especially given the comments about how insubstantial the check is required to be (as much as something robustly asserted to be option can be said to be required). ] (]) 20:50, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::{{tq|An AfD nominator not finding sources during a BEFORE search is not evidence of a lack of sources}} I am not saying that and I agree with that point. If you want people to have to do a SUPER-BEFORE search before bringing an AfD for a British railroad station, establish a consensus for that. Otherwise, once the BEFORE search is done, the burden shifts to the keep !voters to establish notability. As I have noted in other parts of this discussion, that means they need to say more than "every British railroad station is notable"; they need to actually provide some citations to SIGCOV in reliable sources. ] (]/]) 20:56, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::::The problem with WP:BEFORE is this: you can't prove a negative. If somebody says "there are no sources for this claim", you don't know whether it actually means "I have spent several days checking various websites, books, magazines etc. and cannot find a single published source that supports the claim" or "I can't be bothered looking properly so instead I'll ''say'' that there are no sources, even if perhaps there really are". Also, when they say "there are no sources for this claim", this will be defeated by the first person to find a reliable source which ''does'' support the claim. Negatives can't be proved, only disproved. --] &#x1f339; (]) 19:40, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::::That's how the AfD system works. We presume that the nominator has done a good faith BEFORE search, and if nobody comes forward with a valid argument to keep or sources demonstrating notability, we delete the article or enact some other ATD. ] (]/]) 19:54, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::::::Also how the AfD system works: If you get a reputation for nominating articles about notable subjects for which sources are easily found, then we can ] you. It takes a lot to reach this point, but it is possible. ] (]) 05:21, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2''', which in effect means that option 1 covers 99%+ of all railway stations in the British Isles, even the ] and those that ]. ] (]) 07:36, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
* Obviously '''Option 2''', but this is moot - the level of literature that exists on British railway infrastructure and stations means that there will always be sources easily passing GNG for any station. As an example, my local station has only five trains a day, is used by <10 people a day on average, is pretty much in the middle of nowhere and yet its article has eight good sources, including five books. ] 19:46, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:Who's publishing these books? Rail enthusiast organizations? The railroad itself? Academic presses? Did the books go through rigorous editorial processes or are they yarns spun by local historians? ] (]/]) 20:44, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::Taking a random small station, ], as an example there are no sources by enthusiasts, local historians, or any of the companies that have operated trains there. The two books sources were written by a respected author and subject matter expert published by a respected publishing house. Of the other sources, several are from ], several from news sources including BBC News and a local news website (whose standing I don't know), one source by the current tennant of the station buildings is used to verify the current use of the station buildings and one from ] (semi-independent of the operator) is being used only to verify the current service level and pattern. ] (]) 21:08, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::Thank you. I hope you can see why it's kind of frustrating when these discussions rely on claims about how all these sources about British rail stations exist, but only provide those sources when they're asked to. The burden is not on everyone else to become familiar with British railroad stations and the books about them. If the keep !votes in the AfD that sparked this RfC had provided sources in the first place instead of relying on "keep, this thing is notable because all of them are notable", then we wouldn't be here having this discussion. ] (]/]) 21:12, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::The problem is that, while ''some'' (and perhaps even ''most'') small stations have plenty of sources to establish notability (I don’t think anyone was arguing that this doesn’t happen), we can not say that they ''all'' have similar sources.
*::::The question is “what to do about those that DON’T have proper sourcing?” ] (]) 21:51, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::''If'' there are any stations that don't have proper sourcing (and given that despite being repeatedly asked to, nobody has yet provided an example of a current National Rail station that fits this criteria) then we should do for every other non-notable member of a notable set of which at least a significant proportion of members are notable (something that unquestionably applies here): merge and redirect to the the most appropriate higher-level article (for railway stations that is usually the line or system they're a part of). The only exception to this would be if we couldn't verify the existence of the station, but even the first page of google hits will verify the existence of a current National Rail station, and '''' means that the existence of very nearly every station that existed prior to 1995 can be trivially verified. ] (]) 23:08, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::If by "proper sourcing" Blueboar means something closer to "little blue clicky numbers already in the article", rather than e.g., "reliable sources in the library", and if I couldn't find sources myself, then I think for higher-income countries, I'd probably ask at ] before starting an AFD.
*::::::That said, I once picked a long-defunct railroad station off a map somewhere in the middle of the US and had sources in hand within minutes. In my experience, it is not that hard to find sources, especially if your search strategy is more sophisticated than "Go to www.google.com and see what's on the first page". ] (]) 04:10, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::{{replyto|Voorts}} {{tq|but only provide those sources when they're asked to}} - I have hundreds (not kidding) of books concerning the railways of Great Britain, but I really don't have time to go through every single one of our articles about British Rail stations, and add sources. I don't want to do a half-arsed job, so one by one is the best you can hope for. Name a station, and I'll work on it. But don't pretend that because I've not added sources at a different station's article that automatically means that I don't have the sources. --] &#x1f339; (]) 07:53, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::I'm talking about the context of an AfD discussion. I'm not asking you or anyone else to go fix every article right now. If an article is nominated at AfD, you should pull out your books and provide RSes to substantiate your keep !vote so that other editors can take a look at the sources and see if they agree that those sources meet GNG. We operate on consensus, not promises of "I have sources, they provide SIGCOV, but I don't have time to share them or even name them right now". ] (]/]) 17:12, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::If you're going to !vote keep, your ] is to provide evidence of SIGCOV in RSes. ] (]/]) 17:14, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::{{replyto|Voorts}} Also, re {{tq|If the keep !votes in the AfD that sparked this RfC had provided sources in the first place instead of relying on "keep, this thing is notable because all of them are notable"}} - does this mean that my making {{diff|Riddlesdown railway station|1244063018|1243766573|these edits}} ''after'' {{diff|Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Riddlesdown railway station|prev|1244053471|my !vote}} renders my !vote invalid? --] &#x1f339; (]) 15:09, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::::Yes. You could have made the edits first and given a policy based rationale for keeping instead of making several arguments listed at arguments to avoid. ] (]/]) 17:09, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::::I disagree.
*::::::I sometimes list sources in the AFD discussion; there is a poorer chance of those sources getting added to the article than I could wish. Other times, I add them to the article but don't name them in the AFD. There is no reason to think that one approach demonstrates notability better than the other, and it's just silly to say that the order of the edits, especially when the edits are made within an hour of each other, makes any difference at all.
*::::::The fact is that there are subjects for which notability is widely understood to be demonstrable. You do not need to show up at ] with a new list of sources. Anyone familiar with the subject area knows what the outcome will be. ] (]) 05:26, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 2'''—absolutely, undeniably obviously. ] (]) 10:25, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
*:Why is it "undeniably obviously"? Given that there are good faith arguments given above for option 1, it clearly isn't either undeniable or obvious to everyone. ] (]) 10:28, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
:'''Option 1''' per Garuda and G-13114. ] (]) 02:03, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
:'''Option 2'''. We have no evidence that 95%+ of these stations are likely to meet GNG. Bare assertions that they ''do'', based on the assumption that they would have garnered local press, are not evidence, they are personal opinions. The status quo -- achieved recently, via very wide consensus -- is to require GNG be met, so the onus is entirely on anyone wishing to change it to demonstrate the change is warranted. ] (]) 23:02, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
:'''Option 2'''. They do not have inherent notability but can be included in a list of stations as suggested by several other editors. ] (]) 20:15, 20 September 2024 (UTC)
:'''Option 2'''. Per the general rule of no inherent notability and taking WP:BURDEN seriously is the foundation on which content policies can even begin to function. ] (]) 13:48, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
*I don't much agree with the current notability guidelines, but if there was consensus about it, then... ok (I don't know how much time needs to pass before you can try to change the existing consensus). But British National rail stations are not inherently notable simply because they are British. Regarding consistency for a reader, all content about non-notable stations should be merged into one general article about the line/route.--] (]) 23:38, 23 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Comment'''. I'm not sure we need a specific note to the effect, but in fact they're all notable. Vast amounts have been written about the British railway network, covering every single passenger station. They all clearly meet ]. This is in no way "it's British so it's notable", but "it meets GNG so it's notable". There's no reason whatsoever for any British passenger station to be brought to AfD. -- ] (]) 10:45, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
* '''Oppose''' (as a railfan who used to sing ''The SLow Train'' from memory). Notability is established by the number of reliable sources directly about the subject. There is no such thing as "inherent notability", because Misplaced Pages is not a directory. ''']''' <small>(] - ])</small> 21:32, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
*All open mainline British railway stations are going to be notable and we shouldn’t be pretending they are not. A subject specific notability guide is useful in this case because a lot of the sources exist only in dead tree form so hammering a search engine of your choice will miss a lot. For anyone wanting to question this go check out the local history section of any British library. Its actually rather frustrating since you can be having a hard time finding wider local history but the railway stuff is extremely well covered. The articles all already exist (ok a handful of new stations open every year but that's minor) so its not a question of new page patrol but avoiding a bunch of pointless AFDs.] (]) 06:40, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
*:New station openings these days make national news, cf. ]. ] &#124; ] 14:43, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
* ''De jure'' the answer may be Option 2, but ''de facto'' (as others have noted) it is going to be '''Option 1'''. <br />It's also interesting to me to look at the article that was sent to AfD that precipitated this discussion. Here's the state of it when it was nominated: . It seems to me that, even in that state, there is a lot of information on that article that is useful to our readers: where the station is on the map, a view of the location, which Travelcard zone it is in, which line it is on, when it opened, which train operating company runs it at the moment, how much it has been used over the last 5 years, etc, etc. It seems to me that the best way to present this information is as a self-standing article, rather than having to lose some of it, and/or jam it into an omnibus article as one topic amongst many. And the same is going to be true for any station on the UK network. I think I can understand the frustration of some who might wish the article had had more references, and who might wish to motivate others to try to find them, or to dig out more information about the station, both its history and any other information about its current nature / activity / status. But the reality is that if articles like this get sent to AfD they are not going to be deleted. And they should not be. ] (]) 19:30, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
* '''Option 2''' Topics aren't inherently notable. They need sources to avoid misinformation and bias. I might grant that many of these do have sources, somewhere. But certainly not all. And there is a ] to provide sources if something is contested. I don't want this to be a call for mass deletion, but nor is it a pass for endless stubs and unsourced material. It is still important to document best practices, and hopefully editors can work collaboratively in this topic area. (e.g.: consider alternatives like merging, redirecting, re-organizing, giving ample time for improvement with reasonable timelines...) ] (]) 14:08, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*:{{tpq| I might grant that many of these do have sources, somewhere. But certainly not all.}} so why has nobody been able to find a single instance of such a station not having sources, despite many attempts by many people over several years? ] (]) 14:13, 20 November 2024 (UTC)


Did a quick count (it did say it was a poll) after 10 weeks. (Rounding) 14% said Option 1, 79% said option #2 (not inherently/presumed notable) and 7% said "moot" without choosing one of the others. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 15:31, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:::So you think the absence of evidence is evidence of absence? ] 19:28, 21 March 2008 (UTC)


=== Discussion re Notability and British Rail stations===
::::::I don't believe "an article can be deleted at AfD if the subject is notable, but no reliabel secondary sources can be found". No such reason is listed at ]. It does refer to this guideline, but this guideline doesn't say that either. --] (]) 19:33, 21 March 2008 (UTC)
Is it worthwhile pinging participants of the prior RFC? -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 16:54, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
:Probably not. I would advertise this at TCENT and VPP. ] (]/]) 16:55, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
::I've advertised this at VPP, I think TCENT is unnecessary since it's not that big of a policy change. —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 20:29, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
I only have a moment before I have to log off, but before I prepare a more considered response in the next few days could I ask please what sort of sources would be considered {{xt|reliable sources '''that are independent of the subject'''}} (my emphasis) in this context? Or, to turn it round, what sort of sources would not be considered sufficiently independent? I am thinking particularly of book sources, not online sources. <span style="font-family: Helvetica;">]]</span> 17:51, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
:Same as any other case, really&mdash;was the source (in this case the book) written and published ''independently'' of the rail operator? If someone who studies mass transit or the like, but is unaffiliated with the railway operator and was not directed in what they were doing by them, writes a book, that's an independent source. Similarly if, for instance, someone unaffiliated with the railway writes a book about the history of an area, and mentions the importance of the train station in context of that, then that would be independent. If the railway writes or publishes a book, or commissions someone to do so, that is not independent. ] <small><sup>]</sup></small> 18:07, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
:There's quite extensive scholarship around trains pretty much everywhere, but the British in particular love writing about them. You can find reliable secondary sources on almost anything regarding trains in the U.K. These are books often written by enthusiasts, but if there are the things we normally look for like editorial control and independence they are absolutely usable sources. There are also many periodicals which can be used as sources. I'm American so I can't really name any in particular, but there are sources out there for most train stations. What we can't use are things like timetables or self-published fan sites. Directory or database listings seldom mean anything for GNG. There are directories of every station to ever exist in the U.K., but if all they have is an opening and closing date and where the station was located, that doesn't help notability at all. ] (]) 21:11, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
:{{replyto|Hassocks5489}} Can you point to any articles about British Rail stations that are based ''purely'' on non-independent sources? If you can't, can you suggest any where the majority of the content is from non-independent sources? --] &#x1f339; (]) 21:26, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
::I haven't looked in detail at any station articles since this discussion started, as I have been away from home; I just wanted to seek clarification over what "independent" means in relation to this particular topic, and ]'s comment confirmed that what I thought was correct. I didn't want to start listing books that have substantial coverage (or using them to edit station articles) only to find that they were not considered independent. <span style="font-family: Helvetica;">]]</span> 08:17, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
I'm one of those old school Misplaced Pages editors who cannot believe that these discussions are being held. Having created some of those articles right at the start of my Misplaced Pages 'career' I watched as the format editors created alongside me was adopted for all 2,000+ stations here and overseas.
To now consider that all that work is to be expunged is deeply depressing. This is not what Misplaced Pages was supposed to be about. ] <sub>]</sub><sup>]</sup> 18:59, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
:Notability guidelines were way looser back then, and for better or for worse, the community has tightened them up. ] (]/]) 20:17, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
::In most (but not all) cases, significantly for the worse. ] (]) 20:56, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
:::Complete agreement. We worked to make an encyclopedia. Now apparently it's just a greatest hits. Disappointed. ] <sub>]</sub><sup>]</sup> 22:18, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
::::An encyclopaedia is not for original writing. For our own credibility as a source what we publish simply must be verified by reliable sources. ] (]) 08:51, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::{{replyto|Doktorbuk}} "all that work is to be expunged is deeply depressing" - are you suggesting that all or most of the railway station articles that exist in Britain currently do not demonstrate meeting GNG and even with a search for sources won't meet GNG? ] (]) 08:54, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::I'm saying that I can see where the wind is blowing. Misplaced Pages is no longer about being encyclopedic, it's clearly about mass deletion of work which doesn't fit very narrow, very exclusive "notability" guidelines. Having articles showing each and every UK railway station is what this place used to promote, including building projects and cooperation. Now it's about pressing delete. I'm too tired and depressed to fight against the new era of this website. Of course we should keep every single UK railway station article, they're a long standing central core of an encyclopedia. But if that makes me an outdated dinosaur, I'm too old to battle against consensus. ] <sub>]</sub><sup>]</sup> 11:51, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::We used to have articles on each individual Pokemon species too, but we've since tighten our belt to avoid looking like a pop culture catalog. Instead, we want to make sure we serve a broad readership, making sure that we have standalone articles based on significant coverage where possible, and using lists where that cant be done (as would be the case for rail stations). At the same time, UK rail history has been discussed in numerous sources, so that there is a strong likelihood every station could have a standalone page, there just needs to be enough evidence to show that trend towards meeting the GNG for these. If they can't be shown, they can be moved into a list, and we'd still cover them too. ] (]) 12:02, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Drawing parallels between UK railway stations and Pokémon is ridiculous. ] <sub>]</sub><sup>]</sup> 12:19, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Not really, both are areas where there are dedicated people extremely well versed in the area and likely have caraloged lots of information gleamed from primary sources that they could write guides on every single one, but where in many cases there is a lack of significant coverage in secondary sources to show us why one specific instance has drawn attention from reliable sources. We allow those article with such coverage to remain and collaose the rest to lists with future potential to expand if more sour ING can be found, using soft redirects to preserve the original articles.<span id="Masem:1726067494690:Wikipedia_talkFTTCLNNotability" class="FTTCmt"> —&nbsp;] (]) 15:11, 11 September 2024 (UTC)</span>
::::::: I'm sorry that you feel defeated here, but the requirement that there be at least two or three secondary, independent and reliable sources that significantly cover a topic is not {{tq|narrow}} or {{tq|very exclusive}}. ] (]/]) 11:54, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::{{replyto|Doktorbuk}} Should we have articles for ''every'' train station in Japan, Germany, India and China? That's around 30,000 articles. I'd argue no country is exempt from GNG, we should have articles only for stations in any country demonstrated to meet GNG. ] (]) 12:58, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::I don't know enough about the literature about stations in those countries, but every topic that meets the GNG should have an article. If that means we have an article about every railway station in those countries then that's a good thing. ] (]) 17:12, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::While we have to keep in mind things like ], I'm generally in agreement with Thryduulf here. I can't speak as to if the sourcing is there for those stations, but personally I have no opposition to train station articles so long as they meet GNG. For example, we are better off as an encyclopedia by having ] as an article than if we did not. It would be pretty weird for someone with my username to want to delete all the train stations. ] (]) 23:39, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::@] as I say, I feel deflated and beaten by discussions like this, so really you can do what you will at this point. I created these articles, worked with editors to promote the articles, and now you've come along to delete them all. I'm one man. Just one editor. I've no power. I've no strength. I've no fight. You've won. Delete, delete, delete, you're the victor, I used to matter and I used to count. Misplaced Pages isn't for creators anymore, you're in charge now. ] <sub>]</sub><sup>]</sup> 18:20, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::{{tq|Misplaced Pages isn't for creators anymore}} I find it rather insulting (as do others in this discussion, I am sure) to be painted as someone who only cares about deleting things just because I don't think British train stations (or any others for that matter) should be exempt from our notability policies. I have spent easily ] of my time creating and expanding articles. AusLondonder has . It is simply unfair to label anyone who disagrees with you as an evil deletionist who doesn't care about building an encyclopedia. Being a ] about Misplaced Pages doesn't achieve anything. If you choose to stop creating articles or editing altogether, that's your choice, but nobody is kicking you out. I certainly don't think you giving up will help the encyclopedia. And for the record, only one editor here is calling for mass deletions of train station articles, and I commented in opposition to them. ] (]) 23:33, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*'''Comment''': If any stations were not able to be shown to meet GNG, then merging to (eg) line or locality article should be used over deletion (though sending to AFD rather than locally agreed merge would almost certainly be necessary). That said, if there is actually universal SIGCOV, it would likely be helpful for there to be more than one work listed at ] (and possibly a brief comment of how detailed coverage for stations is). <span style="font-size: 80%;color:blue"><sup>~</sup>]<sup>~]~</sup></span> 00:55, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
**I am happy to make a start on this as soon as I get home tonight. Based on the discussion above about what counts as independent, which confirms what I thought, I can say that for every station in southeast England at least, I can name at least 5 books which qualify as independent sources and which feature substantial coverage of the station (without just regurgitating the same information.) <span style="font-family: Helvetica;">]]</span> 08:17, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:I also agree that the ] exists, and that it applies to encyclopedic content that doesn't qualify for a separate article. Content like this should generally be ].
*:I add that even if a given station is shown to meet GNG, editors can always follow the notability ] model and agree to merge it up to a larger topic just because they think that will be best in some way. I believe this is the typical approach to a ] (=a place that isn't a proper station, but trains stop there upon request). ] (]) 05:14, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::In practise there aren't any request stops in the UK that don't have proper platforms at least. ] (]) 08:38, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::{{replyto|Garuda3}} There aren't any more, but way back 100 years or so, the Great Western Railway (and possibly other railways) were fitting retractable steps (see ]) to some of their ] so that they could pick up/set down at level crossings. Such services didn't stop simply anywhere, but only at those points explicity named in the timetable, and only on request. --] &#x1f339; (]) 17:34, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::Good clarification, and it's odd bits of info like that that bring me back to Misplaced Pages. It's the deletion discussions that push me away. ] (]) 22:53, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
* '''Question''' Can anyone show me an example of the British station that's claimed to be ''non-''notable ? Before we theorise on how best to hunt them down, do these ]s really exist? ] (]) 12:53, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:This should be in the discussion section below. ] (]/]) 13:32, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:It's right at the top of the RfC. ] is a station I believe is not notable. I checked the and and only found passing mentions, notices of greater renovations on the rest of the network, adverts, anecdots etc. Not really SIGCOV. I'm planning to nominate it for deletion later, and same with ] for similar reasons. —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 17:41, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::* The one that went to AfD and closed as Keep? ''That's'' the one that's the exemplar for non-notability of stations? ] (]) 17:49, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::*:{{ping|Andy Dingley}} I closed it myself as keep as I saw people weren't listening. Per AusLondonder, the AfD just recited arguments not to use in deletion discussions. Then I started this RfC. I plan to start another one later. —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 17:53, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::*::I don't think that's a good idea. ] (]) 23:12, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::Why - what benefit is there to having a handful of stations missing in what is otherwise a complete set? It creates an inconsistent state for readers and wastes editor time should someone want/need to recreate those station articles in the future. ] (]) 22:56, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:::'Missing' stations belong in articles about the line (if the line itself is notable), optionally with a redirect from the station name. There is no requirement for every subject covered by WP to have its own article. <span class="nowrap">]&nbsp;<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></span> 08:15, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*::::That's all well and good but often there's several historical rail companies plus an article about the modern line plus a town or village article it could be merged to. And you haven't considered how deleting one station article actually benefits the reader. ] (]) 09:08, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:: You should have checked for sources on Riddlesdown Station before you nominated it and after closing the AfD as Keep because you didn't like the thrust of the discussion re-nominating it shortly after could be seen as disruptive in my view, ] (]) 18:42, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::{{ping|Atlantic306}} Per above, I did try to check sources. If everyone is saying "keep" there's no point letting the discussion drag on. But of course new information will occur in this RfC that might invalidate previous arguments, and therefore we may re-nominate it. Unrelated sidenote, but if you could avoid sentences this would improve your clarity in the future. —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 18:49, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::::Thanks for the grammar link. Where is the guideline that suggests the nominator can close an AfD in order to renominate it later when it has been given more publicity ? ] (]) 19:00, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::As long as no other editor has advanced a delete or redirect rationale, an editor may withdraw their AfD nomination and close it as ]. ] (]/]) 19:15, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::: Agree, it's the re-nominating shortly after that is problematic in my view ] (]) 19:21, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Such re-nominations tend to result in people digging in their heels, and more people piling on with accusations that the nom has ] problems. ] (]) 23:16, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::{{ping|WhatamIdoing}} to be honest I withdraw my idea to renominate the article given the sourcing by Redrose64. I do think it is helpful to have this RfC though to avoid future arguments like those present in the initial AfD. —'''Matrix(!)''' <nowiki>{</nowiki>''] - ] - ]''<nowiki>}</nowiki> 17:32, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
*If all this sourcing exists, then we do not need a special exception as they will pass anyway. ] (]) 17:11, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*:Agree. Some editors have made claims like "I have a dozen books on British railroada that give each station at least 2 pages of coverage" (these books must be at least 10k pages, since presumably they cover other things), but nobody has provided a cite to a single book in this discussion as far as I can see. ] (]/]) 17:42, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
*::Very few books will cover every railway station. Consider: there are presently a little over 2,500 railway stations in Great Britain. If one book were to devote one page to each individual station, that book (if printed on 80 gsm paper) would be about five inches thick. It would be much thicker if it also included the thousands of stations that were once open but are now closed. Rather, there are books about railway companies, or railway lines, that often describe the individual stations. There's a prolific series from that has now passed 600 books, and Riddlesdown, the original trigger for this, is given coverahe in their book along with 17 other stations or locations. --] &#x1f339; (]) 17:59, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::* Quick count on my shelves is that I have , i.e. those that will be specifically listing stations. Maybe two bookshelves of them. There are also books like Butt that are specifically directories of stations.
::: One point to remember is that there are very few really ''small'' British stations. Those that were are termed 'halts' rather than stations, and practice here (AFAIR) has always been that stations were assumed notable but that halts would have to demonstrate it individually (plenty of halts have been notable for some specific reason). ] (]) 19:34, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
::While I have voted against the idea that British Railways are inherently notable, it is worth noting that there are verifiable sources that mention the station subject of the AfD. <b>]</b> 20:03, 11 September 2024 (UTC)


About the RFC: "The question" as shown on the RFC pages is IMO okay, but the expanded version underneath turns it into a ] by introducing the concept of ]. It also provides a ].
::: It says "Article information that cannot possibly be attributed to reliable sources", sounds like a match to me. ] 19:39, 21 March 2008 (UTC)


Editors are asked originally whether a specific small subset of articles should be exempt from the relevant SNG. Then this gets expanded and twisted, so that the options are not "Yes, exempt from the relevant SNG" versus "No, not exempt from the relevant SNG", but instead are "Inherently notable <u>and</u> exempt from the <u>G</u>NG" versus "Not inherently notable <u>and</u> must conform to the <u>G</u>NG". There is no space for "Nothing is inherently notable, but it's the <u>S</u>NG (which names three separate methods of qualifying, only one of which is the <u>G</u>NG) that applies", which I suspect is the actual majority POV in the community, much less for "Nothing is inherently notable, but there's no practical difference between inherent notability and the way I understand the GNG (which, for example, actually says that 'multiple sources are generally expected', rather than 'multiple sources are always required', even if editors like ] sometimes claim the GNG has a 'requirement that there be at least two or three')".
::::Apparently you have fallen for the widespread misconception that primary sources are unreliable. This is false. --] (]) 20:03, 21 March 2008 (UTC)


I don't think this is a serious enough problem to re-write it, but anyone who tries to write a closing summary is going to have a more complicated task than was necessary. Editors can help the future closer by being as clear as possible about what they think, and avoiding overreliance on voting-type statements. ] (]) 06:46, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::Perhaps not so apparent, primary sources are fine for some data, but they are not a basis for an article. It is through my experience in both debating and closing AfD's that I assure you we do delete articles for the reason of not having secondary reliable sources, even if the subject is itself notable. ] 20:57, 21 March 2008 (UTC)


:::At the moment, the issue is not what type of sourcing is needed to prove notability, but rather whether the article needs to cite sources in order for the topic to be considered notable. ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 19:31, 21 March 2008 (UTC) :Huh? NTRAINSTATION itself uses the phrase inherently notable, says train stations are not that, and says they need to meet a relevant SNG or the GNG. Option 2 says the same thing. ] (]/]) 11:38, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
::You're right, Option 2 says that – but the editors discussing this don't. ] (]) 17:54, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::People aren't bound to the exact text of an RfC option. A good closer will read what people are actually saying rather than closing the discuss as "25 bolded option 2s means those people support exactly waht option 2 says". People often agree to a proposition with caveats or proposed amendments, even in the best designed RfCs. ] (]/]) 18:31, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:I also think my understanding of the GNG is pretty generally accepted, but I respect that others have different readings of it and occasionally I'm willing to IAR on that point; categorically exempting British railway stations is not one of those occasions. ] (]/]) 11:49, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:We want to avoid saying "all X are inherently notable" as that will drive editors to create mass stubs as well as lead other editors to look for ways to identifies adjacent topics to type X as inherently notable too. It's fine if the practical effect of saying "inherent notability" and and SNG that presumes notability is the same, that all topics in X get articles, but at lease with the basis in an SNG, then we have less problems should the presumption fail and AFD is used. It's very hard to AFD a poor article if it falls under a claim of "inhereted notability" ] (]) 13:43, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
::{{tpq|It's very hard to AFD a poor article if it falls under a claim of "inhereted notability"}} "poor articles" shouldn't be taken to AfD, they should be improved, but "inherited notability" and "inherent notability" are two very different things. ] (]) 13:47, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::I meant for AFD that if one did a proper BEFORE search and failed to find further sourcing for a stub created on basis of "inherent notability", it would still be difficult to have editors agree to delete or merge that at AFD. (and yes I did mean to stick to inherent notability in my statement above. We don't do inherited notability either but that's for different reasons) ] (]) 14:05, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
::Personally, I think that nothing – not chemical elements, not US presidents, not even ] – is ''inherently'' notable, but I also think that editors sometimes use that language to say "Look, we've been through this before: anyone who does a thorough search will be able to find the sources, so if you haven't found them, that is more likely to indicate that your search skills are poor than to prove that the sources don't exist in the real world. Stop wasting our time with these AFDs, because they're not going to result in deletion". That can be a valuable thing for an AFD nom to hear, even if it's unpleasant and even if (IMO the more important failing) it could result in a story could around that some things qualify for articles merely because they exist. ] (]) 17:59, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::Yes, that is how it operates, but sometimes those people are wrong and it's straight up not true that the thing people are claiming is inherently notable is in fact notable at all. Indeed, in this discussion, even the most railroad stations are notable crowd has admitted some of them are just not notable. A BEFORE search is not required to be extemeley in depth; we don't require editors to go to the local library or village archives and pour through microfiche. Telling good faith AfD noms that they're wrong and that X thing ''must'' be notable without providing evidence to substantiate that claim is basically gaslighting them. ] (]/]) 18:28, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
::::Nobody in this discussion is arguing that all railway stations are individually notable, just that every currently-open National Rail station in Great Britain has sufficient coverage in reliable sources that they are all notable (a very significantly lesser claim than your strawman). However, I've never seen an AfD for any subject that verifiably is or was a railway station located on a line or system that has an article result in deletion - every single one I am aware of has ended as "keep", "merge" or "redirect" and the same is true for most articles about future railway stations (certainly nothing where construction has started has been deleted). ] (]) 20:43, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::I"m not strawmanning; I thought it was implied that we were talking about British railroad stations, not global ones, given the topic of this RfC. {{tq|However, I've never seen an AfD for any subject that verifiably is or was a railway station located on a line or system that has an article result in deletion - every single one I am aware of has ended as "keep", "merge" or "redirect" and the same is true for most articles about future railway stations (certainly nothing where construction has started has been deleted).}} That's fine, but I think it's beside the point, which is that editors think it sufficient to say "Keep, all railroad stations in Britain meet GNG" when there is no consensus that that is an adequate rationale in an AfD discussion for railroads in general; it appears that this RfC will now establish that such a carveout does not exist for British railroad stations. There's no harm in requiring editors to actually provide sources when a good faith AfD nomination is brought, instead of !votes that are effectively "trust me bro, I know of the existence of 15 books on railroad stations in Britain". ] (]/]) 20:51, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::With 15 NPP'ers doing 90% of the reviews, and 10,000 article backlog, why would it be "valuable" to hear a complaint that somebody thinks that they didn't do an extensive enough wp:before? Doubly so when the person making the complaint hasn't looked for or found any GNG sources, which is usually the case. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 18:40, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
::::I often think that we need a ] guideline to compliment ] - when an under-sourced article has survived an AFD (based on the fact that sources actually DO exist) it should be incumbent upon those who vote “Keep” to improve the article and actually ''add'' the relevant sources. ] (]) 12:24, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::Why only those who vote “Keep”? Surely the others are at least as concerned that the article is undersourced. ] (]) 12:41, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::I've thought it through and am of two minds on wp:before. I think that it should still exist, but that w need to make it the norm that the main part of building a new article is finding and including suitable sources, and a norm for those advocating "keep" is to find '''''and include''''' them. Two reasons why wp:before is needed is that there are extreme deletionists out there, and the norm is that GNG-dependent articles don't meet the strictest interpretation of GNG, thus being vulnerable to extreme deletionists. But for NPP it causes problems in many ways, including people beating up overloaded NPP'ers instead of finding the sources that they claim exist. And for most of those, GNG sources don't exist, their "coverage exists" (note the omission of "GNG" before "coverage" ) claim is referring to non-GNG coverage. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 13:13, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::I am looking at this from the other side: You do a lousy BEFORE search (or skip it, because it's not actually required). You've spent 30 seconds on this.
:::::::I present you with a list of sources on the proverbial silver platter. It probably took me 15 to 60 minutes. Having already spent my time on a task I'm not interested in, and which I did only because your sloppy work set a seven-day timer was ticking, why shouldn't you have to go back to the article and add the sources?
:::::::Think of it as a form of penance for having done a lousy BEFORE search. It might even discourage people from trying to use AFD as a form of clean up. We've all seen the occasional editor who thinks that "Speedy keep, according to the four sources I've just added to this article" is a win. He spent 30 seconds on an AFD nom statement and has a shiny new set of refs in the article, bringing it up to his personal standard without having to do any of the actual work himself. What could be better or easier? ] (]) 05:35, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::+1. —] (]) 06:15, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::<small>(On a related note: Thank you, David, for the multiple hours you've spent helping me assess notability for NPROF and other subjects.)</small> ] (]) 17:50, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::I don't understand your post at all. Could you explain, including who/what roles the hypothetical people are? <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 18:04, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Would a story help?
:::::::::Spamhunter Sally has found another uncited (or under-cited) article about an organization. As you know, ] sets a higher than average bar. As you also know, some editors dedicate themselves to protecting the wiki from
:::::::::The org that Sal has in their sights this time is a large organization in a non-English speaking country, so it's difficult to find relevant search results, especially if your search strategy is to put the English transliteration of the name into your favorite web search engine, without quotes, with English-only filters enabled, so you get a lot of irrelevant hits. The AFD rationale says says "Nobody has cited this article for five years! I did a BEFORE search and didn't find any sources. We should delete it."
:::::::::Alice says "Here are three sources in Arabic about this org". Bob says "Here is a good source in French about this org, and I've nicely formatted the citation for you". Chris says "I'm finding lots of sources when I search on the non-English local name". David says "It's mentioned in a report by the UK government". The article is kept.
:::::::::What's next? The options are:
:::::::::* The article remains uncited (or under-cited).
:::::::::* The closer adds the citations to the article.
:::::::::* The nom adds the citations to the article
:::::::::* One of the AFD participants adds the citations to the article.
:::::::::What's your choice? Note that I'm deliberately leaving out "Someone who didn't edit the AFD page noticed that there were sources listed there that are not in the article", as that's unrealistic. ] (]) 21:00, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::{{Ping|WhatamIdoing}} Thanks for the response. There are so many unspecified or non-typical things in that that I'm hesitant to respond. But maybe I'll add a few assumptions and respond. Let's assume that by "undercited" you mean does not have the included sources to satisfy ncorp-GNG on a GNG-dependent article. (which would be the only basis for AFD'ing that article.) And let's assume that since you used the word "organization" instead of company, that it is a not a for-profit organization. And the respondents at AFD operated based on ], they say that it was a highly enclyclopedic topic, that it was real-world-notable, recognized that the unusually stringent standards of Ncorp are intended for for-profit corporations and not for the case at hand, and allowed a more lenient interpretation of ncorp GNG and decided "keep". In that case my answer is that all is settled; the article can exists as-is. (Like any article, it can be improved ) <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 21:35, 20 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::(The particular AFD I had in mind was one of the largest ] in the world, and I think it was technically a government agency.)
:::::::::::You would leave the article un-/under-cited. I would also be content with that outcome (though, obviously, it's best if someone does that extra step). However, I saw complaints about an AFD not too many weeks ago whose rationale basically consisted of an editor complaining that the sources identified in the previous AFD had not been added to the article, so it was time to delete it, so some people apparently don't agree with us. ] (]) 00:50, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Per WP:BURDEN, wouldn’t it be the responsibility of those editors who want to keep the article to add the relevant sources. ] (]) 13:05, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::No. ] says {{tq|The burden to demonstrate verifiability lies with the editor who adds or restores material.}} This says nothing about sharing the responsibility with people who are discussing the article content, let alone those who are discussing whether the article should be deleted or kept. --] &#x1f339; (]) 14:09, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::Verifiability is required for all content: the reliable source ''must'' already exist, and the burden of identifying the reliable source is on the keeper or adder. ] (]) 14:15, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::Exactly. Assuming the nominator has done a reasonable BEFORE search for sources, an AFD can be considered a challenge to the article’s Verifiability (specifically, the Verifiability of any statements as to why the topic is notable). Thus BURDEN applies. It is the responsibility of the editors who wish to retain the article to supply sources. ] (]) 14:25, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::Right, but unfortunately the BEFORE is often turned into a catch-22: ''You must do before, so we can smugly tell you, you don't know what you are doing.'' ] (]) 14:33, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::^ This. The fact is that not everyone has the knowledge or skills necessary to do a decent BEFORE search. A search that seems reasonable to the nom won't necessarily seem reasonable to someone who knows about the subject area. Sometimes it's hard. The nom of ] made a 100% genuine effort to find sources. I don't fault him one bit. He just didn't happen to have the specialist knowledge necessary to find reliable sources amid all the recipes. ] now names 22 sources and has a couple hundred words about its history. An ordinary BEFORE search doesn't help you find that. Noms do sometimes need help (that's why we're a collaborative project, right?), and we are not always kind to noms who need help.
:::::::::::::::That said, some noms have unusual ideas about what constitutes a reliable source. A couple of years ago, I saw a TBAN proposal for a frequent nom who appeared to have a personal belief that if a source contains a single sentence about anything in the long list at ], then the entire rest of the source is invalidated. You could have a thousand-word source about the some detail of a market-roiling corporate merger, and he'd reject that source as merely "routine coverage". So you could have someone do a good BEFORE search but do an idiosyncratic review of the sources they've found and come to a different conclusion. I find this far more irritating than the person who looked through 10 screenfuls of basic web search results before concluding that he couldn't find any sources. ] (]) 18:35, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Remember that we are judging sources that have been identified and written down, which can include sources on a talk page as well as sources at an AFD; ultimately they should be included as in line citations (and even accepting as bare url ones), but a proper BEFORE review will consider these other locations in addition to what can be found off site and in print.
:::::::Of course if an edit claims they have a copy of a difficult-to-obtain source, there should be some onus on them to include that since they positively identified themselves as having access to it. We can't require that but can urge that. ] (]) 20:14, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::If a difficult-to-access source is identified but not turned into an inline citation by someone who knows what it says (and therefore which sentences in the article it can actually support), someone else might be able to list the source in ==Further reading==. ] (]) 21:05, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Sources in foreign languages that are difficult to interpret may become the soil for hoaxes, see ]. ] (]) 02:24, 19 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::] covers both difficult-to-access sources and sources in foreign languages. --] &#x1f339; (]) 06:30, 19 September 2024 (UTC)


=== Book list ===
::::If we delete articles for merely not having RSs we shouldnt be. We delete articles because they can be shown not to be sourceable , not merely currently unsourced. Someone has to have made a good faith search for sources and failed to find them. The usual situation leading to appropriate deletion for lack of sourcing is that someone responsible tries to find sources, finds the best they can, puts them forward, and they are considered inadequate. That's how you do show absence--you look by appropriate means in appropriate places, and fail to find--it doesnt ''prove'' absence, but the failure of a proper search considering all the possibilities does show it pretty well, if the article is such that the search would have found it. eg. absence of google hits is significant for a claimed internet meme, absence of book reviews for a work of fiction, absence of newspaper articles about a politician. ''']''' (]) 22:16, 21 March 2008 (UTC)
Belatedly, as promised above, I have started compiling a list of sources at ], focused specifically on the extent of coverage of railway stations. More to come throughout the day. Editors who have books in their own collections are welcome to add details. It may also be worth writing up some "test cases": picking some stations, going through each book and identifying exactly how much is written about them. <span style="font-family: Helvetica;">]]</span> 08:48, 12 September 2024 (UTC)


:There should be a central repository of editors with libraries they are willing to share. Sort it by categories and it would be an invaluable benefit to the improvement of articles. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 16:27, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::I agree DGG but the problem is that we have some powerful ] in play. An article should not be deleted solely on issue of notability for lack of reliable sources but an article is not allowed to exist without verifiability, and verifiability requires reliable sources. If the absolute ] for notability is secondary/tertiary sources then every other word of that guideline is absolutely meaningless ]. Why bother having the WP:N policy at all?!? I am somewhat tempted to take WP:N to AfD on grounds of redundancy with WP:V and see what fun that creates. :)
::I have a vague recollection that there is/used to be something like this. I can't remember what it is/was called though and a quick search hasn't found what I'm thinking of unfortunately. ] (]) 16:33, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::What is interesting to note however is the following tiny bit of text burried inside WP:N... <blockquote>'''Verifiable facts and content not supported by multiple independent sources may be appropriate for inclusion within another article.'''</blockquote> The way I read this is that a non-notable subject may be a section within a notable article. Of course then you again get to deal with the circular logic problems but it seems that you might be able to use only reliable ''primary'' sources in such a section to satisfy verifiability. Could this be the reason for needing WP:N -- to differentiate between criteria for stand-alone articles versus sub-articles? ] (]) 08:20, 22 March 2008 (UTC)
:::] ] (]/]) 16:49, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
::::I knew about Resource Exchange but not ], which is exactly what I was suggesting. Something that could use more advertising. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 17:07, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::That's helpful too. I didn't know about that one. ] (]/]) 17:52, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
:Might I suggest that someone whip up a simple Wikiproject-level talk page template which can be added to all British rail pages with those book sources, and then use some automated tool to add that template to the talk pages of all existing British rail station pages (eg all those in ]), such that 1) those sources become available to all such pages so they can be used for improvement, and 2) helps to address any BEFORE concerns, since those are likely sources that can be used and become appropriately identified within the article's talk page. --] (]) 16:14, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
:'''Option 2''', the fact they’re British is completely irrelevant to policy, this looks like ]. ] (]) 19:35, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
::@] may I respectfully suggest that you read what other people have written in this RfC instead of arguing against a strawman? I don't see anybody arguing for British exceptionalism. I do see people making well-reasoned arguments (backed up by an ]) that all British stations already satisfy the GNG, and I've yet to see anybody point to a station they believe isn't notable so that interested editors can add sources. All of which leads me to believe that this discussion is a waste of bandwith. ] &#124; ] 19:54, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
:::This RfC is about whether they are "inherently notable" or whether they should remain subject to the same standards as other articles. If no one can find a station that doesn’t meet the criteria then there’s something to be said for option 1, but I find that hard to believe. If this is to stop lazy AfDs then I could support it, but it still looks exceptionalist lol ] (]) 21:00, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
::::You are not the first person to say that it's hard to believe every station is actually notable, but nobody has actually managed to find a station that isn't - despite ''many'' requests, almost nobody actually even ''tries'', they just presume that the subject matter experts must be wrong (perhaps because they're biased). I doubt that the British railway network is unique in being so highly covered in reliable sources, it's just that there are enough people editing the English Misplaced Pages who know about and have access to the sources about the British network. ] (]) 21:16, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::Quite. I would imagine most French and German stations are notable (though much of the source material won't be in English of course), they were early adopters of railways and built extensive networks. Maybe Spain and Portugal. A lot of stations on railways built for the British Empire and possibly other European empires will be notable. Railways in North America tended to be built more cheaply at first (partly because of the vast distances of course, compared to one small island) and were more ephemeral but I would still imagine any passenger station with a regular service would satisfy the GNG. There's a plethora of material on railways in general and stations in particular, and I doubt that's a uniquely British phenomenon. ] &#124; ] 21:34, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::I hope the closer focuses on the quality of arguments made. ] (]) 21:43, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
=== Tram stops, too? ===
It looks like we also have an endless collection of British tram stops, for example ]. Yes, that's right. A place a tram stops. Not even a building. ] (]) 00:36, 3 October 2024 (UTC)


:All of the people arguing above that of course all British transportation infrastructure has enormous amounts of book-length secondary-source coverage are welcome to supply proper sourcing for this article. Currently it has only primary sources. —] (]) 00:45, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::Two key things to remember: notability is a concept applied at the ''topic'' level, while verification is applied at the ''article'' level. A topic may consist of one main article and a handful of spinouts; as long as notability is demonstrated in the main article and with the caveat that the spinouts are written as spinouts, then notability's concept is upheld; this I see as an extension of "notability does not limit article content". Verification means that we obviously need sources in each individual article, even if that means we are resorting to primary sources in the spinouts. Verification is non-negotiable as a WP pillar. N and V are two very different beasts, even though they share many concepts alike; at worst, one can argue that N helps to support the verification goal of WP by requiring sources for any topic that is covered.
::Indeed. No doubt a book about tram stops would have been an incredible bestseller. ] (]) 00:48, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::The other aspect is that people need to remember that notability is ''a'' inclusion guideline for WP, but it is not ''the'' inclusion guideline for WP (though used more than 99% of the time to determine what should be included). Unfortunately, we don't list out what other inclusion guidelines we have, but that's part of what the statement that started this section implies. And again, with notability being a guideline , there are implied exceptions to it as well.
:@] ] - some infrastructure is not notable, but railway stations do have lots of secondary sourcing. Tram stops are more complicated than railway stations - some are notable, some aren't and they need to be assessed individually (2 minutes on google is not sufficient). Most (but not all) tram stops in Manchester were converted from railway stations and thus (unsurprisingly to anyone who has actually read and understood the discussion above, rather than just assumed it must about British exceptionalism) have sufficient coverage to demonstrate notability (remember notability is not temporary). Whether this new-build tram stop is notable I don't know (I haven't looked), but comments such as {{tpq|No doubt a book about tram stops would have been an incredible bestseller.}} are neither collegiate nor helpful. Tram stops can be little more than signs on a post (e.g. many of the first generation ones in Blackpool) or they can be more significant infrastructure projects than some stations (e.g. the former Station Street stop in Nottingham). ] (]) 00:55, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::What unfortunately I think has happened is that many newer editors see WP:N as being part of WP's deletion policy, which it strictly is not true; it is a possible reason for deletion, but as a guideline, there's ways around it, and non-notable content does not always have to be deleted as there are usually ways to incorporate some aspects of it within a larger, notable topic (with ] kept in mind). It's a mindset issue, and one we need to ween editors off of. --] 12:32, 22 March 2008 (UTC)
:: Yeah, what Thryduulf said. Until the expansion of the Manchester Metrolink, the vast majority of stops were former heavy rail stations that were converted and will therefore have a significant amount of literature in the same way as current stations (], for example, was opened in 1849). The new-build stuff is of course different and will of course need citing from newer sources. I've looked at a few of them and the sourcing seems pretty routine, but I'm sure it can probably be improved as well as few people appear to have actually edited a lot of them since their original creation. I'd be more concerned about entire new-build systems, for example Croydon Tramlink, for which ] seems to be a typical article - the sourcing there is ... not great. ] 20:51, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::: Would it not still be better to have a single article covering the tram stops in a particular city, with individual stops to be split out into separate articles ''iff'' the content on them becomes large enough and well-cited enough to merit separate treatment? ] ] 21:19, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::::In many cases, probably yes. However I wouldn't use Manchester as the example for that approach, nor would I recommend merging without discussion (redirecting without any attempt at merging is likely to lead to drama, nominating for deletion is about the worst thing you could do for the cause given there is a strong consensus that verified existence is sufficient for at least a redirect). ] (]) 21:25, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::Yeah tram stops are hit and miss. There are books on the Manchester Metrolink so I wouldn't be shocked if most of those stations but some of the new-built Croydon ones might well not be. My general preference would be for one bigger article over dozens of cookie-cutter small articles but certainly some will have enough coverage to write a more substantial article ] &#124; ] 22:37, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::Thryduulf: If attempted prods and ] redirects on badly-sourced content such as ] have led only to reversion to their badly-sourced state, with no improvement, what alternative is there but a full AfD? Any attempt on the article page to discuss redirect/merge is unlikely to receive a less-obstructionist response. —] (]) 21:30, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::{{tpq|Any attempt on the article page to discuss redirect/merge is unlikely to receive a less-obstructionist response}} {{fake citation needed}} but discussions on talk pages and especially WikiProject pages are exactly the right venue when approached with a constructive attitude, willingness to listen and no time limit. ] (]) 22:15, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Your linking Wikibullying in the first word of your first response to me in this section does not convince me that "a constructive attitude, willingness to listen" is to be found in your responses in this venue, which you describe as "exactly the right venue". And the repeated attacks against every single process for cleaning up this mess, including your characterization of discussion here as bullying, the immediate and unhelpful reversions of the PROD and BLAR at Baguley, and the bizarre claim at ] that individual tram stops are somehow exempt from AfD, are convincing me that there is no approach to this mess that will not be attacked as the wrong approach. —] (]) 23:29, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::This is getting ridiculous. When alleging people are not listening it is better not to, in the very same comment no less, provide evidence that you are not listening to what people are saying. Nobody in that discussion is claiming that individual tram stops are exempt from AfD, they are explaining (as has been done in multiple other discussions, including here) why discussing them as a set makes more sense. ] (]) 23:44, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::A "keep" claiming that "notability of these stops should be discussed as a set, not by individual AfDs" is somehow different from claiming that individual tram stops are somehow exempt from AfD?? Ok, if you say so. —] (]) 00:04, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
::::I guess for most cases this is the desired format, with a few tram stops from the list having their own articles. There is of course some semantics involved (what we call a tram), but I currently can not imagine a tram system in which all stops are notable on their own and have information beyond the opening date, infrastructure, and the lines. ] (]) 13:30, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::Is it really a problem if an article about a piece of transit infrastructure "only" has information on what it is, when it was used, and how it relates to other pieces of transit infrastructure? I'm not sure what else would be wanted in an article. ] (]) 00:16, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::I would say history (beyond a simple opening date) and architecture of the infrastructure (name of the architect, style, similarities etc, not just having one island platform period). Ideally of course also mentions in popular culture but we do not have that for most stations or tram stops. ] (]) 04:31, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::It sounds like you would rather not have articles about transit infrastructure unless there's something unusual or interesting about them. What if there really isn't any interesting history, the architecture is boring, the architect is an unknown government employee, and the style is just like all the others?
:::::::It might be convenient if all notable locations could host some suitably dramatic moment (a photogenic protest over its construction, say), and it would be desirable if they featured some bit of public art, but I'm not sure that "being an interesting subject" is something that the GNG cares about. ] (]) 01:19, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
:::It's weird how we keep being told there's such a tremendous amount of literature available about individual stations and now some tram stops but it's not present at the articles (] is an example) and the literature is never really presented for review? ] (]) 21:20, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::::It's not at all weird when you realise that Misplaced Pages is a work in progress and most of these articles were written many years before the current fad for insisting that everything meet much higher standards right now or else it must be deleted. ] is an odd example to use, given that the article has existed since 2006 and includes a book source. Do consider that the time spent on endless discussions like this one where the same answers are given to the same people (who are rarely ]) time and again, is time not spent improving the articles you are complaining about. ] (]) 21:32, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::I didn't start the discussion. Notability is not a fad, it's an integral part of how we operate and I'm surprised you dismiss notability requirements so flippantly. ] (]) 21:34, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::The fad is not notability, but insisting that articles must demonstrate notability by presence of sources in the article ''now'' contrasts with the ] philosophy that served Misplaced Pages well for the first 15 or so years. ] (]) 22:25, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::I have to question whether NEXIST has actually served Misplaced Pages ''well'' for those 15 years. ] (]) 22:44, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Given that it enabled Misplaced Pages to grow from nothing to the world's largest encyclopaedia I think it's indisputable. ] (]) 22:48, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::If we were starting again, I'd insist that all articles contain at least one third-party source that verifies the subject's existence but we can't apply today's standards retroactively to 15- or 20-year-ood articles. So I support efforts like ] to compile sources and improve crap articles. ] &#124; ] 22:55, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::How can we claim one way or the other that the same thing ''wouldn't'' have occurred if we'd required sources from the start? Either the editor adding content is basing it off a source they have in-hand, and thus could add the barest of citations (or even a description of a citation) somewhere, or they're basing it off memory and their contribution is as verifiable as a forum post. ] (]) 23:32, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::You're conflating multiple different things here. Just because someone writes something without direct reference to a source does not mean it is unverifiable, let alone that it is incorrect. ] (]) 00:20, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::I didn't say it was unverifiable. I said it was ''as verifiable'' as a forum post. It could be accurate content for which others would have to do the work to find sourcing, or it could be a hazy misremembered synthesis whose origin is the editor's brain rather than any published work. Providing a source lets us compare it to the editor's summary; if the added content is not supported then we can conclude that it is at least not verifiable to the purported source, and sometimes that's all we need to determine it's not verifiable at all (e.g. it's an obvious misinterpretation). Without a source, we don't know whether the content is verifiable or even falsifiable. ] (]) 16:48, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Well mostly because Misplaced Pages didn't really worry about sourcing until 2004 or so by which point it had made its initial climb in the alexa ranks and Nupedia was dead and buried.] (]) 15:50, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
:Nope. The only stop on the blackpool tram network with an article is the railway station. See ].] (]) 16:35, 4 October 2024 (UTC)


So somebody is saying that there's no need to establish notability (via specific sources) for GNG-dependent articles at inception of an article? That would certainly change Misplaced Pages. Get ready for an upload of a few billion resumes/CV and business advertisements. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 12:56, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:], I added that to the lead to clarify an important point. Many editors look at the current state of the article to determine notability. Up until December 7, 2007, the article had no citations. Does that mean the human skeleton is not notable? No, it doesn't. It means the article needs improvement. The article still has no citations to this day. Does that mean that skeletons are not notable? No, it doesn't. It means the article has no citations. Citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject is '''one way''' of '''suggesting''' notability, but I certainly don't think it's the '''only way'''. --] (]) 05:35, 24 March 2008 (UTC)


:The only articles that are ''required'' to have a source are BLPs. Subjects need to be notable, but they are not required to demonstrate that by means of including sources unless and until notability is challenged. If that were not the case then there would be a speedy deletion criterion for articles that don't include sources (A7 and A9 require articles about certain subjects to claim notability, not demonstrate it). ] (]) 13:13, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
== Notability is not inherited ==
:::Again, I'm finding your arguments quite troubling. This is particularly concerning: {{tq|Just because someone writes something without direct reference to a source does not mean it is unverifiable, let alone that it is incorrect.}} Without sources, we have absolutely no way to verify that we're not publishing misinformation or hoaxes. I remember being at school in the early 2000s and teachers would always say "don't visit Misplaced Pages, it's all made up and written by anyone." We've come a long way in addressing the credibility issue but attitudes like yours are completely at odds with what the community expects regarding notability. "{{tq|The only articles that are ''required'' to have a source are BLPs}}" - this is completely contrary to the spirit of ] and importantly also ]: "In the English Misplaced Pages, verifiability means people using the encyclopedia can check that the information comes from a reliable source. Its content is determined by previously published information rather than editors' beliefs, opinions, experiences, or previously unpublished ideas or information. Even if you are sure something is true, it must have been previously published in a reliable source before you can add it." Again, this is the absolute, complete opposite of what you have written above: {{tq|Just because someone writes something without direct reference to a source does not mean it is unverifiable, let alone that it is incorrect.}} I have challenged the notability of ] and you have responded "{{tq|doing this randomly to one stop in isolation would look ridiculous}}". So we can't challenge notability of tram stops as a whole because some "might be" notable but we also can't challenge notability of tram stops individually because that's "ridiculous"? ] (]) 15:18, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
::::Yet again you are confusing "verifiable" with "verified" and conflating "unverified" with "incorrect". Until you learn the difference it's pointless continuing to discuss any of those things with you. As for Church Street tram stop, you are ignoring that there are multiple levels between an individual tram stop and all tram stops, in the context of that edit summary I was referring to systematically discussing stops on Croydon Tramlink (I could have been clearer about that), but even if you think picking stops at random is a good idea (and if you do, please explain why) then deletion is not the appropriate response to a tram-stop (or indeed railway station) that is not individually notable. The correct response is to merge the content to a broader article and redirect the title to there. There have been probably hundreds of AfDs about stations and tram stops over the years, and the only times I'm aware that they have ended in delete are (a) when it could not be verified they exist(ed) (including articles about speculative proposals), or (b) when there was no article to merge the content to. ] (]) 15:56, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::I had a very quick look and the best I could find on Church Street is a few mentions in . One of those mentions talks about a turnback loop for use when there are problems in Croydon town centre so there might be enough for a couple of paragraphs. I'm happy to be proven wrong but my gut feeling is that most of the Croydon tram stops probably don't meet the GNG. The best way to proceed is probably to start a discussion on a wikiproject talk page to see if anyone knows of sources that have been overlooked and if not I'd support merging and redirecting them. ] &#124; ] 18:29, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
::::@], this seems to be a fairly common point of confusion these days, so maybe it bears explaining. We have a policy at ] that says this about BLPs:
::::* {{xt|If the biography remains unsourced after seven days, the biography may be deleted.}}
::::There is no similar statement for any other subject. If you want to write an unsourced article on ], then by policy you are free to do so. We have tried a couple of times recently to introduce such a requirement, and they've failed. (Links to the most recent RFCs are in the middle of ], if you'd like to read them and try again.)
::::WP:V requires that it be ''possible to'' cite everything. WP:V does not require that everything ''be cited''. WP:V requires inline citations for four specified kinds of material (e.g., direct quotations), but anything that doesn't fall into those four categories is not required to have a citation ever – even though everything must be verifiable. The gap here is that WP:V requires that {{xt|people using the encyclopedia can check that the information comes from a reliable source}}, but it does not require that this be possible {{!xt|without going to a library, using a search engine, or otherwise finding a reliable source all by themselves}}.
::::Similarly, ] says "there must be ], objective evidence that the subject has received significant attention from independent sources", but it does not say that this objective evidence must be cited in the article. The evidence just has to ''exist'', (quoting from NOR) {{xt|By "exist", the community means that the reliable source must have been published and still exist—somewhere in the world, in any language, whether or not it is reachable online—even if no source is currently named in the article.}} Editors at AFD are not required to believe hand-wavy assertions that sources exist, but they're also not prohibited from either making or accepting such assertions. Nobody who grew up in the Western world actually needs a source to tell them that Christmas candy is a thing, and no policy requires them to pretend that they have no prior knowledge (quite the opposite, in fact).
::::] and ] may be useful. ] (]) 00:34, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::I think you're taking a very 2008 view of Misplaced Pages. The community has become much less tolerant of unsourced content. We've also moved on from the days of inherent notability of topics as diverse as radio stations, schools, and train stations. All those topics were effectively presumed inherently notable prior to RfCs which attracted major, community-wide participation. "{{tq|WP:V requires inline citations for four specified kinds of material (e.g., direct quotations), but anything that doesn't fall into those four categories is not required to have a citation ever}}" one of those four situations is "material whose verifiability has been challenged" - that's exactly what multiple editors are doing. Let's go back to the most basic of Misplaced Pages policies here - GNG. "A topic is presumed to be suitable for a stand-alone article or list when it has received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject." ], part of GNG states: "We require "significant coverage" in reliable sources so that we can actually write a whole article, rather than half a paragraph or a definition of that topic. If only a few sentences could be written and supported by sources about the subject, that subject does not qualify for a separate page, but should instead be merged into an article about a larger topic or relevant list." - highly relevant to individual tram stops and many train stations. ] (]) 06:41, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::I'm taking a very "2024 view" when I say that we have repeatedly tried and failed – including twice just this year, in ] and ] – to get any sentence into any policy that says unsourced articles are not okay.
::::::Hopefully the ideas that our written policies and guidelines should accurately reflect the real rules and that we should not operate with unnecessary reliance on ] has not been relegated to the territory ]. But if "write down the real rules" is a "2008 view" and the shiny new modern approach is to refuse to disclose important rules and then complain that people didn't magically know that they needed to comply with the secret rules, then I will admit that I prefer the old approach. It's more honest, for one thing.
::::::Declaring that you think an article is not ] is not the same as "challenging the verifiability of the material". A subject can be non-notable even when the material in the article is 100% verifiable. Or even if it is 100% cited. A verifiability ] usually looks like {{tl|fact}}, and does not usually look like an AFD page. ] (]) 01:12, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::You're really mischaracterising those discussions. For example the March discussion was only about new articles and had editors opposing because the NPP and draftify process already work well for new articles and many others opposing because they did not support a grandfather clause for existing articles/only applying the policy to articles created after April. Relatively few argued that unsourced articles are acceptable going forward. ] (]) 06:43, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' So we've been told repeatedly above with regards to tram stops that "{{tq|some are notable, some aren't and they need to be assessed individually}}" which was endorsed by several editors. As a result, I began ] about a raised piece of concrete tram stop. Now I'm told "There was clear consensus....notability of these stops should be discussed as a set." So at a combined AfD if a couple of tram stop out of a set of 30 tram stops is notable, they'll all be kept. But individual non-notable stops also cannot be taken to AfD. This is a ] absolutely refusing to accept Misplaced Pages policy and broader community consensus. ] (]) 16:51, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
*:That local consensus makes as much sense as holding an AFD for a chemist with no recorded accomplishments and finding that people are arguing that if some chemists rate articles, all chemists rate articles. ] (]) 17:50, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
*::Yet again I find myself misquoted, my words distorted and responded to in a way that makes me wonder whether any attempt was even made to consider what other people are saying. The comparison to chemists is a fallacious absurdity. What has actually been said is that where there is a tightly defined, finite set (such as tram stops on Croydon Tramlink) where the members are interlinked (e.g. by sequential navboxes) it makes sense to discus the set as a set. It is also the case that where some members of such a set are notable, that all members are plausible search terms. Before responding further, please educate yourself on the difference between an article and a redirect. ] (]) 18:25, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
*:::I was neither quoting nor responding to you. And I'm not willing to accept that the desire to make navboxes comprehensive in their categories, which is not policy, trumps the notability rule, which is. ] (]) 19:26, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
*::::Yet again you have completely failed to understand the difference between an article and a redirect. ] (]) 20:17, 4 October 2024 (UTC)


] is often cited in AFDs, and seems to have good consensus support. I propose that we add a condensed form to this article.


Can we please read ]. ] (]) 13:30, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
<blockquote>Notability of one or more members of some group or class of subjects may or may not apply to other possible members of that group. Notability of a parent entity or topic (of a parent-child "tree") does not ''always'' imply the notability of the subordinate topics. Similarly, parent notability should be established independently; notability is not inherited "up", from notable subordinate to parent, either. This is not to say that subordinate topics cannot be mentioned in the encyclopedia whatsoever. Subordinate topics which meet the relevant notability guidelines are themselves notable, and some notabilty guidelines, for example ] and ], ''do'' allow for inherited notability in exceptional circumstances.</blockquote>


Thoughts? ] (]) 15:55, 28 March 2008 (UTC) :I think this is a reasonable discussion here, even though it might have started with wp:point. ] (]) 13:33, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:Coming to this late, but I really think everyone can agree that an article having more reliable sources is a better thing. Misplaced Pages's quality has gone up over the years through the hard work of many volunteer editors. I'm well aware of and do not dispute the fact that British railways have been the subject of extensive coverage in literature. This is a good thing and allows us to write better articles, and British editors have contributed, and continue to contribute, plenty of recognized quality articles covering trains. However, that doesn't mean every single tram stop in the U.K. has been the subject of significant coverage. There are certainly plenty of examples of tram stops that are notable, be it solely for being tram stops or for those with a previous history of heavy rail use. At the same time, many are little more than the equivalent of a bus shelter and have not been covered extensively.
:Inheritability in ] is hardly in "exceptional circumstances", and the "cannot be mentioned in the encyclopedia" sentence needs further clarification/development.<font color="404040">]</font> 18:26, 28 March 2008 (UTC)


:What I think many editors object to is the argument that tram stops are ''automatically notable'' instead of being analyzed on a case by case basis. I'm of the belief that essentially any full sized railroad (not a scale model) that has ever operated in the United States is notable, but I would oppose making this a formal rule. Instead, I find sources to prove notability beyond a reasonable doubt, and it's not an issue. It is not unreasonable to ask for at least one source showing some level of coverage beyond basic details such as opening date and service frequency. ], to name an example local to me, is clearly notable because its history, including its design and operations, has been extensively discussed in reliable sources. I am sure the same can be said for many British stations, and if such an article were to go to AfD it should be fairly simple to provide a handful of sources showing a GNG pass. But I cannot support an extremely broad carve-out saying stations are automatically notable just for existing. We should be guided by the presence of lack thereof of significant coverage. Sometimes that means a tram station or a request stop is better covered within a broader article. ] (]) 21:07, 9 October 2024 (UTC)
* Percy, while I agree with the general idea, I'd prefer to formulate it more in plain English. Perhaps something like this:


===This was thoroughly discussed in 2022===
<blockquote>Notability does not directly limit article content. Some topics, however, are so large in scope and coverage that the article is split into several articles on sub-topics. In this case, the notability guideline applies to every sub-topic separately; coverage in independent sources is required for every sub-topic. Notability is, in this sense, not "inherited" from a main topic.</blockquote>


This was thoroughly discussed in 2022 ( ] ) and it was decided (and essentially a wp:snow close) that train stations are not inherently wp:notable. Sincerely, <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 22:28, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:That avoids references to ] and ], it seems more clear to me. --] (]) 21:58, 28 March 2008 (UTC)


:I'm still not seeing anyone arguing that they are (although this thread has been dormant for a month and a half). Just that most or all of them meet the GNG (at least on some countries' networks) but that you might not know it from the first page of Google. ] &#124; ] 22:35, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
OK - I don't think we need to repeat WP:NNC, and we should include the not-inherited-up bit; how about:
::I'd probably summarize this discussion this way:
::* Almost everyone agrees that no subject is ''inherently'' notable. However, almost all the editors who actually know anything about British National rail stations also agree that all British National rail stations qualify under the GNG. The bottom line is that there is no special rule for British National rail stations, and – like atomic elements, US presidents, Shakespeare's plays, and other subjects that attract a lot of attention from the world at large – all of them are notable.
::] (]) 22:41, 26 November 2024 (UTC)


== Notability and youngest people ==
<blockquote>Some topics, however, are so large in scope and coverage that they are split into several articles on sub-topics. In this case, the notability guideline applies to every sub-topic separately; coverage in independent sources is required for every sub-topic. Notability is, in this sense, not "inherited" from a main topic. Similarly, if a notable topic is a sub-topic of a wider parent topic, that does not imply that the parent topic is notable. Notability is not inherited "upwards" or "downwards".</blockquote>


I have a concern for notability for ]. Should all children and young people (who are criminals) can be presumed notable per ] and ], unless if uses ] guideline. Even that violates ] and ] policy. ] (]) 00:48, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:Better? ] (]) 09:43, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:I think there is an argument to be made that the list does not have adequate ] and that the extensive lack of BLP citations requires deletion, but I think that it would likely be kept at AfD. ] (]/]) 01:18, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:: For me it seems fine. --] (]) 10:26, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
::@], welcome to Misplaced Pages. When we say "notable", we mean "qualifies for a separate, stand-alone article". Nobody in the ] is "presumed notable"; if we did presume them notable, we'd be saying "Not only should all of these people's names be listed in the ], but there should additionally be a separate article about each and every one of them." Merely putting someone in a list doesn't mean that they're notable (presumed or otherwise).
::: Cool. Skomorokh? Anyone else? ] (]) 10:27, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
::Also, many of the perpetrators are unnamed and/or dead, so including them cannot violate any BLP policies.
::I'd suggest that the first thing to do with that list is to remove all the teenagers. More than 500 American minors – mostly teens – killed someone last year. That's 10 a week; it's "newsworthy" but it's not unusual. Teenagers have served in armies throughout history, and therefore killed people throughout history; again, it may be deplorable but it's not unusual. Compare ], which has a cutoff of age 14, and see ] for information about a list which we eventually deleted. An admin could check, but I think that list had a cutoff around age 10 or so.
::I think that some clarity around selection criteria would help, but my main suggestion would be to make sure that it's focused on "youngest" (which is going to mean blanking most of it), and that editors decide whether the standard is ] (which includes "accidents" like dropping a loaded gun) or if it's an actual ] (which requires wanting the person to end up dead, which in turn requires the killer to be old enough to understand what death is). ] (]) 06:10, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:::In the ], to describe males for notable cases of ]. For cases of ], only one is notable, and for ], but several are notable. But for previous deletion, these articles cannot be made compliant with ], ]/], ], and ].
:::Also in the ], it does meet criteria with ]. ] (]) 08:53, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
::::I don't think that the ] is describing notable cases of 'starting to produce sperm'. It's describing mostly royalty who got married at a very young age. ] used to have a similar list () but is now focused on ] instead.
::::I think that a ] can fully comply with every policy. I understand that ], but it's a valid subject for a list (because, e.g., reliable sources write about what to do with very young children who have killed someone); it is not turning Misplaced Pages articles into news stories (maybe go read the links you're posting?); the killer's name is not the name of some "loosely involved, otherwise low-profile person" and they are very much "directly involved in an article's topic"; and a list of killers by age is a narrowly curated collection of information instead of "an indiscriminate collection of information". ] (]) 21:36, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:Update: The ] recently survived a round at AFD (not nominated by anyone in this discussion). There is now a discussion at] that would benefit from advice from more editors. ] (]) 03:57, 9 December 2024 (UTC)


== Requiring a neutral source ==
As an aside, what would people say to using ] and ] as shortcuts? ] (]) 10:34, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


, we have a footnote with an unusual requirement:
:I know Percy is trying to help WP, but I do have to note that at the same time he is proposing this, he is also arguing that we should not allow for non-notable spinouts on WP:FICT (an aspect strengthed by this issue), a point that, while I agree on principle is true, but that in the current editing environment, would be very detrimental to spell out currently '''and''' within a guideline.
::Detrimental in what sense? If the consensus is that notability is not inherited, then the guidelines should follow that. ] is already quoted in hundreds of deletion debates, so including it here just makes that consensus agreement clear. ] (]) 13:18, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:I have to disagree with this also on the fact that this goes against both WP:SS and the statement "notability does not limit article content". Spinout articles should meet all other guidelines and policies for WP articles (sourced, maybe from primary only, NOR, NPOV, etc.) but the fact that the text is contained either in the main body or a separate article, as long as that text is written as if it were included in the main article, makes little difference per these two guidelines, and having to demonstrate notability in the spinout can be seen as redundant. (Mind you, having a spinout demonstrate notability on its own certainly cannot hurt, it just cannot be a requirement). This does mean that spinouts have to be written to a specific level of detail (not very much, that is) as to retain this notation of being part of the main article. I also don't believe that there is any inherited notability that exists here nor inherent notability that the spinout must have; remember that notability is '''a''' inclusion guideline, but its not the only one. --] 13:09, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
::Spinout articles have spinout topics; nowhere but in a disputed section of WP:FICT does it say that spinout articles are the "contents" of their parent articles. WP:NNC doesn't excuse spinouts from notability. ] (]) 13:14, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


{{xt|In the absence of multiple sources, it must be possible to verify that the source reflects a neutral point of view, is credible and provides sufficient detail for a comprehensive article.}}
I don't think this is appropriate as a general rule, because it's not either true or false in all circumstances, nor is there community consensus that it is a rule one way or the other. Furthermore, with subtopics or members of indisputably notable subjects, the question is not whether the particular element of the notable parent topic is itself notable. It's a question of what level of detail is appropriate for covering that parent topic, and how substantial that element is as a stand-alone topic. A matter for merger discussions rather than deletion. ] (]) 15:27, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


This is unusual because ] and ] say that non-neutral sources are not required at all. But I have been thinking about this a little further: If there's (really) only reliable source, then how do you "verify that the source reflects a neutral point of view"? I don't think that's possible, or perhaps it's better to say that it's not a pointful type of evaluation. "Neutral" is defined in ] as whatever point of view is put forward by the balance of reliable sources, so if only one reliable source exists, then that source's POV is the neutral one – automatically and by definition.
This should be self-evident. If an article doesn't have independent notabilty, it should be deleted, regardless of anything else. NOTINHERITED is merely an example of spurious Keep arguments in AfDs in 99.9% of cases. <b>]</b> 18:37, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:If it's related to an indisputably notable parent topic, but not substantial enough to merit an independent article, wouldn't the proper solution in many cases be to merge and redirect? Editorial decisions really have to be made case-by-case; it's really futile (and harmful) to try and ossify them into abstract, binding rules. ] (]) 20:21, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:: The proposed addition does not forbid to merge articles. It just says that the non-notable articles should not exist. There may be several options to remove them if necessary. --] (]) 20:46, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


I therefore think that we should take these words out. If this is meant to refer to a situation in which only one RS has been identified, then it's pointless; if this is meant to refer to a situation in which multiple RS are known to exist in the real world, but only one is being cited, then it's inconsistent with our content policies. Either way, it's not appropriate. ] (]) 00:42, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:Wow, this is dead wrong. "''Coverage in independent sources is required for every sub-topic.''" People will immediately start applying that to article sections, since they are "subtopics" even more than subarticles are. This is just dead wrong.--] (]) 05:43, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
:: They can be pointed to ] if they do. Do you think we should repeat WP:NNC in the paragraph? Perhaps we should add "This applies only to articles; Sections of articles ]." ] (]) 10:42, 1 April 2008 (UTC) :I'm not sure that's accurate either. We expect all sources to be factual. But we don't expect sources to be neutral. The encyclopedia is neutral, but we often include biased opinions, with attribution. I am not sure why it needs to be addressed here, at our Notability guideline. ] (]) 16:05, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:Let's say SPLC or ADL put out an article detailing a hate group, and is the only significant source that goes in significant coverage in the group. Now, both these groups generally write reliably but with a clear bias and tone against hate groups, and both groups in the past are known to aggressive categorize groups this way that don't align with other RSes in some isolated cases. I would be vary wary of being able to write a NPOV compliant article with that as the single source due to that view. Hence why that footnote is necessary.<span id="Masem:1732206035689:Wikipedia_talkFTTCLNNotability" class="FTTCmt"> —&nbsp;] (]) 16:20, 21 November 2024 (UTC)</span>
:::No, because it's the very concept that's wrong; if there is verifiable information on a notable topic, then it shouldn't matter if that information is in the "main" article or a subarticle. If any modifications to WP:N are needed, it should be to reflect that, not to intensify the misalignment of WP:N and ] (which is already causing great problems for the encyclopedia).--] (]) 21:25, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
:::: The topic of the subarticle is the subtopic, not the topic of the parent article. If there isn't enough coverage of the subtopic, then it's inappropriate to create an independent article on it - and in fact the section which is being spun out is almost certainly too long, so WP:SS is the wrong solution to the problem of size; the section should be shortened rather than spun out. ] (]) 08:26, 2 April 2008 (UTC) ::The sentence says "it must be possible to verify". ''How'' does one verify whether a source reflects a neutral point of view? Don't tell me that you think it's important. Tell me the practical, step-by-step actions I can take to determine whether an article in a newspaper, or a book on a library shelf, reflects a neutral point of view when there are no other sources to compare its contents against. ] (]) 16:47, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Is it an ], for a starter, if not, Does it have a clear ], those are two ways. ] (]) 16:49, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::This creates an arbitrary constraint on the level of detail Misplaced Pages can provide. By the terms you propose, information drawn from primary sources cannot be placed in spinout articles, and if it cannot be fit in a single article, it must be deleted. But this is arbitrary. It is totally disconnected from the following question: "How do we make Misplaced Pages the best it can possibly be?"
:::::: On the contrary. We make Misplaced Pages the best it can be by ]. ] places a constraint on the level of detail Misplaced Pages can provide, and WP:N should reflect that policy. ] (]) 09:14, 2 April 2008 (UTC) ::::I was under the impression that the GNG doesn't accept self-published sources at all, so I assumed that was a given. I'm not sure why you linked to ], which is about "people who contribute to the English-language Misplaced Pages". Perhaps you meant a different page? ] (]) 16:53, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::It does not stop people trying it on. ] (]) 16:57, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::If you cannot come up with rules that are readily seen as helping us toward that exact goal, you should find something other to do than try to write policy. Policy on Misplaced Pages is ''always'' undesirable (and rejected) if not carefully evaluated as to what its benefit to the encyclopedia is.--] (]) 09:05, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:::This is where being a responsible WP editor comes into play, we have to look at bigger pictures and historical aspects of the sources. We know SPLC and ADL are generally good but we also know they have specific advocacy roles behind what they do. We also know that in a few cases their rush to classify groups as Haye groups have been met with concern not just from said group but by other media and advocacy groups. So that tells me that while both groups may be reliable, in absence if any other sources that show agreement, they should be immediately taken as the "neutral" view.
:::::: The relevant policy - WP:IINFO - is already in place. I am proposing that the notability guidelines should reflect that policy, as consensus has interpreted it. ] (]) 09:14, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:::In contrast, if a BBC or NYTimes piece was the only source for a topic, these are not considered publishers with any clear bias and thus there would be less concern about using that for notability.
:::This is part of what a research's job needs to include, being aware of the larger picture around topics and how those topics are covered. ] (]) 17:30, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::::Are you suggesting that editors determine whether the content is neutral, not on what the NPOV policy says (which is that content is neutral if it fairly reflects the views of all reliable sources), but instead on the reputation of the publisher? That would mean that any book published by ] is going to be okay, because they publish a wide variety of POVs in the course of a year; any book published by a small press that specializes in a POV is not.
::::I would expect editors to do some ] on the author as well, if they personally dislike the content. ] (]) 17:38, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:Yes it has to be neutral as we all think we are important. ] (]) 16:22, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::<small>That sounds like it needs <sarcasm> tags.</small> ] (]) 16:48, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::NO, it is saying that at least two policies tell us a source has to be neutral, I.E. not have a possible bias. ] (]) 16:50, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::::Which two policies do you refer to? ] (]) 16:53, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::<small>That sounds like it needs <sarcasm> tags.</small>, and with that I am out of here with a firm no. ] (]) 16:57, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::AFAICT, we have one policy at ] ("WP:ALLOWEDBIAS") that says sources do not have to be neutral ("However, biased sources are not inherently disallowed based on bias alone..."), one guideline at ] ("WP:RSBIAS") that says sources do not have not be neutral ("reliable sources are not required to be neutral, unbiased, or objective. Sometimes non-neutral sources are the best possible sources..."), and no policies or guidelines – except this disputed footnote – that say sources have to be neutral.
::::::AFAICT we also have no policies or guidelines that say the definition of neutral is "not have a possible bias".
::::::If I've overlooked something, I would be grateful for a link proving me wrong. With the information I have, however, I am forced to conclude that your statements are incorrect. ] (]) 17:30, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::It cones down a lot to how we state what NPOV us, it is not "all sides must be presented equally", but that we should present the most prevailing views in proportion to the number of sources behind those views, with exceptions made for fringe and pseudoscience topics. If you only have one source, it is near impossible to know where the neutral POV point of balance is unless you are certain the source itself is mostly free of bias. ] (]) 17:35, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::If neutrality is measured "in proportion to the number of sources", and there is only one source, then the view in that source ''is'' neutral.
::::::::What you seem to be saying is something like this:
::::::::If we have a dozen reliable sources, and 100% of them present one view, then I'll keep my own personal POV out of it. Whatever 100% of sources say is 'neutral'.
::::::::But if there's only one reliable source, and 100% of the one source present one view, then now is the time for all good editors to come to the aid of neutrality by injecting their personal POVs into deciding whether whatever 100% of reliable sources say is 'neutral'.
::::::::That doesn't align with the NPOV policy, and "compare the source against my own POV" – which, I remind you, this sentence says you ''must'' do – is an extremely bad way of "verifying" that the source is actually neutral. ] (]) 17:58, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Leaving aside the anti-values idea that we must decide whether a source is neutral based on our personal perception – because we're always going to have editors who believe that SPLC engages in ] against white men – rather than by what the NPOV policy says (which is about whether the source matches others, which means that a source that has a very bad or very biased reputation could still be fully neutral for our purposes), I think this kind of misses the point.
:::::::::Imagine that the source is hopelessly biased. Imagine that the source is "Why I Think This Company Owes Me a Billion Dollars" or "This Politician is a Pointy-Haired Poopy-Head".
:::::::::But imagine, too, that you can write a purely factual article from it, by skipping over the bits about "I suffered irreparable damage when their maliciously defective product exploded on my kitchen table" and focusing instead on the bits like "Third-party testing from ] determined that at a temperature of -40°C, the blue-green widget emits light with a wavelength around 550 nm" or "Here is a complete transcript of Paul Politician's speech that night, with notes in the margin highlighting the classical rhetorical devices he uses, including alliteration and rhyming schemes".
:::::::::Why would you reject a source from which it's easy to write a purely factual article? ] (]) 18:14, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Part of how NPOV is approached is the basis that the views taken by reliable sources generally align in distribution by the views of all, the latter which is impossible to quantify. We are using what RS say a sample points of the larger take on a topic. With multiple RSes, we can be pretty confident that there aggregate views likely represent the same proportion of views on the topic held by all, even with biases in sources. The more sources, the better this assumption. But with only one source, that is not an assurance that view is capturing the broader unpublished view on the topic, unless we know that source generally remains unbiased.
:::::::::No we can never know what the broad views on a topic can possibly be, but having multiple RSes is what gets us there. With only one, it's really difficult to make that claim. ] (]) 18:25, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::So you argue that with a sufficiently small number of sources, it's better to rely on editors' personal POVs to determine neutrality than to reply on sources. ] (]) 18:41, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::I expect editors to use the skills as researchers, setting aside any POV they may have, as to evaluate sources, as we expect in all situations. ] (]) 19:10, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::Surely notability should be supported by more than one single source - regardless of the neutrality issue. ] (]) 20:19, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::That depends in part on whether we're talking about ''demonstrating'' notability or just ''being'' notable. We theoretically don't require demonstrating notability at all, so one might cite a source that is wholly inadequate from the GNG perspective (which is where this footnote resides) even if others are available.
:::::::::::::The usual story for having one source is that for some historical subjects, the ] might be the only source that is presently known to editors. Due to what we know about that book's inclusion criteria, it has generally been accepted as evidence that we should be able to find primary sources (e.g., 19th-century newspaper articles). ] (]) 20:28, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::Surely notability, Misplaced Pages-notability, requires more than a single source. Absolutely. Where an article is acceptable with only a single source, it will be an inherently encyclopedic topic not subject to the WP:N guideline. WP:N should not pretend to cover all articles. ] (]) 07:52, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::I would approve of telling editors to "evaluate sources", but the footnote doesn't say that. The footnote ''says'' that they must ] that the source has the right POV. Do you actually think it should say that? ] (]) 22:06, 21 November 2024 (UTC)


I think that if taken in the context of it being in the GNG section of the Notability guideline, and with the realistic understanding that the ''recognition'' shown by a suitable source when they decide to provide in-depth coverage of the topic matters, then it makes more sense.....the recognition is meaningless if the source is not independent. Sincerely, <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 20:45, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
* The original statement above: '''"] is often cited in AFDs"''' is misleading at best. Yes, it is ''cited'' often, but it is not often a ''successful'' or persuasive argument. Furthermore it is officially suggested as an argument that should be '''avoided''' in AfD debates due to the futility of its use. Individuals reading this discussion should also read the twin sister of this discussion started at the Village Pump here. Low Sea 07:19, 2 April 2008 (UTC) <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
** On the contrary, it ''is'' often a successful argument in AFDs. ] (]) 08:26, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
***For it to become policy, it has to be more than "often successful in AfDs"; there has to be consensus for it as policy. There are lots of bogus outcomes to be found in AfDs (both for and against deletion) which would not make a good basis for policy. AfD does not follow the standards of ] that are supposed to be applied everywhere on Misplaced Pages, and should definitely not be regarded as any kind of incubator for policy.--] (]) 08:41, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
**** Since notability is mostly only considered in AFDs, surely that's where we should be looking to see what consensus on notability is? ] (]) 08:45, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
*****No. We should be evaluating rules according to whether they are a good idea, not according to pseudo-legal motions some people attempt to use during AfDs.--] (]) 10:23, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
****** OK - so is ] a good idea in your opinion? ] (]) 10:26, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
******* I think WP:IINFO (and ] in general) is a great policy. It gives clear exclusionary rules without using arbitrary concepts like notability. I would support expanding this as much as possible (via consensus of course) if it would help eliminate the whole WP:N guideline. ] (]) 16:27, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
******* IINFO is good, up to a point. I think it's self-evident that "Misplaced Pages is not an indiscriminate collection of information" -- it's basically a platitude. It causes problems because that broad statement, lacking context (and the present expression of IINFO ''does'' lack all context) can used to try to justify deleting anything from Misplaced Pages. Any time someone has an attitude of "this is crap", they cry ] when what they're really thinking is ]. <br />Now, I ''do'' support each of the specific five items listed at WP:IINFO. However, it's pretty arbitrary to have characterized those five items as "indiscriminate information". IINFO is really more of a "Miscellaneous" section with an ambitious heading. If one takes the open-ended stance that "All indiscriminate information should be removed from Misplaced Pages", then such a statement has no place in policy. If one can't articulate the underlying principle of what types of information are "indiscriminate" and why they're bad, then it's a rule disconnected from the concept of "How do we make Misplaced Pages the best it can possibly be?" As I've said before, such rules are detriment to Misplaced Pages. <br />As you said above, "We make Misplaced Pages the best it can be by choosing the information we include with care"; for exactly the same reason, we must choose the information we ''exclude'' with care. I see what you're presently proposing -- making WP:N even more arbitrarily restrictive, when it already has substantial flaws in this regard -- as lacking that crucial, incisive, carefulness.--] (]) 01:20, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
******** I think I see your POV, but I disagree. It's not at all "self-evident" that WP isn't indiscriminate, even if we limit ourselves to just the five cases IINFO supplies. Not all content that fails WP:IINFO has been read and understood, let alone removed. ] (]) 10:52, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
*"Inherited notability" is a very bad idea. It leads to the worst sort of cruft imaginable, especially in fiction. It is neither necessary or desirable to cover every tiny detail of a fictional work, and then declare the whole mess immune to notability due to "inherited notability" or ] is detrimental to the encyclopedia. Applying "inherited notability" in fictional articles breeds scene by scene plot summaries, original research, and inappropriately long descriptions of the tiniest detail of certain works (in other words, ]). I see nothing wrong with demanding secondary sources on every article on Misplaced Pages. --] 00:36, 5 April 2008 (UTC)


:I would agree with that, but it doesn't say "independent". It says that it has to be verifiably neutral. We apparently don't intend for the neutrality to be verified (since we suggest no mechanism for doing that), and IMO we shouldn't be demanding neutrality (because it conflicts with ]).
== Proposed addition ==
:Note that this is an actual ''must'' statement, being strongly defended by Masem, who ] that "we generally only use such absolutes like "you do not" or "must not" in those policies with some legal ramifications". I don't think it's possible to comply with it. The sentence, as written, says you must be able to ''verify'' that the contents are neutral. So far, the best Masem's come up with is that editors should express their best editorial judgment about about whether the publisher is neutral. That's not the same thing. ] (]) 20:57, 21 November 2024 (UTC)

::You are right. I added "independent" because I think that it was the type of neutrality intended in this context. Sort of like the decision to create the in-depth coverage of the topic was neutral rather than saying that the content must be neutral. (so it's not a publicity release or something written by their record label) I wasn't arguing to keep the exact same wording, just trying to see the intent of it. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 21:20, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
I propose the following addition (in italics):
:::I imagine that, if it wasn't added to game a specific dispute, the intent was probably something like "If you're going to ], then you need to be using a really trustworthy basket". The problem is that what they wrote is remarkably different from that. The actual rule says:
:If a topic has received significant ''and sustained'' coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject, it is presumed to be notable.
:::* Editors must evaluate the source based on its POV (="the source reflects a neutral point of view"). Only a source with the Right™ POV is acceptable. I can't think of a single other instance in which a policy or guideline tell editors to determine the suitability of a source by seeing whether it has the Right™ POV, but maybe there's something in ] along those lines.

:::* Editors must ''verify'' that the source's POV is the right one. Usually when we talk about verifying something, we're talking about finding other sources (e.g., a book review that says the book is a good one). So instead of saying "Well, I personally think that advocacy group isn't neutral", to which the next editor may reply "Well, I personally think that they're extremely neutral, so there!", the wording of this footnote says we're supposed to be finding sources that say they're neutral or not.
Here's my reasoning: We live in a world where memes propagate and spread at the speed of light. A tree falls in an Oregon forest and environmentalists in Atlanta are aware of the fact. It is no longer enough to simply say that "significant" coverage defines notability, since news sources are all so interconnected.
:::* But this sets us up for the fundamental logic problem:

:::*# NPOV defines 'neutral' as whatever the sources say.
Notability, though, is marked by not only the ''depth'' of the coverage (which is indicated in our guideline by the word "significant"), and not only by the ''width'' of the coverage (indicated by "multiple"), but also by the ''length'' of the coverage.
:::*# The context of this sentence stipulates that there are no other sources.

:::* So either you can have only one source, or you can have a source that verifies that the contents of the first source are neutral, but you cannot actually have a situation in which there is only one source and you are able to verify that the contents of that lone source are neutral. If you can actually 'verify' the neutrality of the contents (as opposed to, e.g., 'opine about it' or 'express my indisputably excellent editorial judgment about it'), then you no longer have a single source.
In other words, "flash in the pan" is not notable, no matter how many news sources reword a statement and print it.
:::So IMO it's wrong as written (because IMO it should follow the ] policy), and it's also self-disproving as written. The latter point could be solved by re-writing, but the first step is admitting that we have a problem.

:::I'd suggest this as a way of solving problem problems:
Thoughts? -- <span style="background: #EECCFF;">] <small>(] / ])</small></span> 18:24, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
{{difftext|In the absence of multiple sources, it must be possible to verify that the source reflects a neutral point of view, is credible and provides sufficient detail for a comprehensive article.|In the absence of multiple sources, the source should be credible and provide sufficient detail for a comprehensive article.

}}
:Why? You have simply offered an interpretation of media coverage, not an argument as to why longevity of coverage is important to notability. As it stands, I disagree with your proposal as being needlessly exclusionary. <font color="404040">]</font> 18:28, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
:::That would remove all the problems (e.g., saying that we '''must''' ] that the POV is the right one) and still let editors argue that various advocacy groups aren't sufficiently "credible". ] (]) 22:04, 21 November 2024 (UTC)

::::The issue with "must" is fine to fix but I think that's it's still that we want editors to be aware that using a nominally reliable but biased source as the only evidence that can be found to support notability is questionable, but to add on from what you said above, if such a source is used to stick to facts and avoid subjective content in that work's voice. ] (]) 22:42, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::Sorry? My reason for longevity being important to notability is stated above - but let me try to restate. One of the definitions for "]" is "memorable":
::::I think this sentence should be eliminated. GNG does not require that a source be secondary, so this could result in articles that are based entirely on a detailed primary source story in a magazine that receives no follow-up coverage. ] (]/]) 01:29, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Worthy of notice; remarkable; memorable; noted or distinguished.
::Things that are remarked upon once, even by a crowd of people, are not memorable ''unless'' they remark upon it again after some time has passed. So mere coverage in the newspaper(s) at one point in time does not necessitate notability. Coverage over a period of time, or re-covering an event, indicates something is "memorable", and therefore notable. -- <span style="background: #EECCFF;">] <small>(] / ])</small></span> 18:35, 28 March 2008 (UTC) :::::Or, for example, it would allow for the creation of an article about an obscure historical concept covered in only a single secondary source. In order to be compliant with ], editors would have to phrase the entire article as "According to Jane Smith, '''XYZ''' is a concept. In her book, ''XYZ: A Concept'', Jane Smith wrote&nbsp;.... Smith said&nbsp;.... She also said&nbsp;...." ] (]/]) 01:35, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::I'm not sure what you hope to achieve. The sentence is about a neutral+credible+detailed. It doesn't say anything about primary or secondary sources. Removing it should have no effect at all on primary/secondary sources. ] (]) 02:33, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

:::::::Yes, my point was GNG in general says only that secondary sources are preferred, but not required. Thus, this sentence could (and likely will) be interpreted by editors to allow an article to be written based on a single primary source so long as it is "credible" and "detailed". The problem is that it's impossible to write a neutral article that way and it's OR. ] (]/]) 13:56, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I also disagree, on the basis of the principle that ]. In my opinion, ] and the second paragraph of ] adequately address the notability (or lack thereof) of "flash in the pan" news stories. ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 18:41, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
::::::::@], could you explain that last bit more? If you write something based upon a reliable source, then it's not OR. If you write something based upon a single reliable source, it's literally impossible for it to be SYNTH. For example:

::::::::* Reliable primary source says: "Alice Expert is an expert at expertness. She graduated from Big U. with a degree in expertise and now serves as the president of the Important Academic Society."
:::I agree with SatyrTN. While notability is not temporary, at the same time temporary attention does not imply notability (for an encyclopedia). The newspapers are full of stories that will be forgotten next week, and not suited for collecting knowledge relevant in the long term. --] (]) 22:04, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
::::::::* Misplaced Pages stub says: "'''Alice Expert''' is the president of the {{fakelink|Important Academic Society}}.{{dummy ref}}"

::::::::* Amount of material that violates NOR: Zero.
:Oppose addition. "sustained" is not necessary. ''If a topic has received significant coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject'' is plenty enough to be presumed to be notable. --] (]) 06:20, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
::::::::* Best guess at neutrality: It's fine (though I'd have my doubts if I tried to write something 50x this size).
:: No. Because that then presumes notability for anything that appears in multiple news reports. See ]. <b>]</b> 18:39, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
::::::::I've no particular objection to removing the sentence entirely, but I think it's possible to write a ''short'' stub on most subjects from one or two really weak sources and still not violate any core content policies. ] (]) 17:29, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

:::::::::People and scholars have different notability guidelines. NBIO makes clear multiple secondary sources are required, and NPROF relaxes the rules. So the example of the business person you provided probably wouldn't meet NBIO if only a single source exists, and the example of the head of the academic society probably meets NPROF.
:Also opposed. "Sustained" is not only unnecessary, it's undefinable. Anyone could argue that coverage for any period of time is either sustained, or not. It also implies that things could become non-notable after some period of time. "Significant", although also somewhat vague, is more on target, because it speaks to whether we have enough material to write about the subject. That is what really matters. People mistakenly think notability is a judgement about the subject itself, but it it really a judgement about what has been published about the subject. ] (]) 10:01, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::To return to the example of a concept, which can only be notable under GNG, writing an article based on a single secondary source, where no other secondary sources exist, would not be neutral because it's impossible to get a second point of view. I think it would also encourage OR; some editors might be tempted to analyze the primary source documents used by the secondary source to analyze the concepts. ] (]/]) 18:21, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

::::::::::I'm not sure that a second point of view is necessary, if the article is sufficiently short. Consider:
::I guess that's what I'm trying to point out is missing. We say "significant" and everyone takes that to mean "number". But since news organizations are so intertwined, and since information is so readily available on the internet, and since paper is no-longer a limiting factor, it's quite easy for a story to get published (often re-written somewhat) in a dozen different publications before lunch. And then be forgotten about by dinner. But it still meets our notability guidelines because of the number of sources. So however we word it, there's something missing in our definition and/or the most common interpretation of our definition. -- <span style="background: #EECCFF;">] <small>(] / ])</small></span> 14:57, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::* Reliable primary source: "Bob Business is the founder of Big Business, Inc., which is known around the world for the quality of their blue-green widgets. Starting the business on his birthday in 1974 with money he had saved up from washing cars, he built the business from the ground up, learning as he went. Now he is the head of a company that employs hundreds of people..."

::::::::::* Misplaced Pages article: "Bob Business founded {{fake link|Big Business, Inc.}} in 1974.{{dummy ref}}
== Are siblings notable enough for inclusion on an article? ==
::::::::::What neutrality concerns could an editor reasonably have about this? Are we realistically going to find a "second point of view" about this sentence?

::::::::::I'm not sure that we'd want to have such an article, but I suggest to you that the reason to avoid this is "we don't want it" and not because "This apparently neutral sentence, which match the contents of the cited source very closely, still somehow violates the NOR and NPOV policies, even though there isn't a single sentence in those policies that it doesn't comply with". ] (]) 21:26, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Should Misplaced Pages articles about celebrities, etc. mention siblings, or no? I'm wondering as some articles mention certain celebrities having sisters/brothers while others don't mention about them. --] (]) 20:37, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
::{{outdent|8}} As I noted, people are different from things covered by GNG. In your example, Bob Business shouldn't have an article because if we truly only have one reliable primary source, the subject is not notable under NBASIC; this footnote and GNG wouldn't come into play. The proposed footnote text indicates to editors that it's okay to have an article based on one source so long as the source is credible and provides sufficient detail. I think the hypothetical I've provided indicates why that's not a good idea. I also agree with what @] said below. ] (]/]) 21:54, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:Notability only pertains to article ''topics'', not ''content''. If the content is relevant to the subject, it should be included, ] and ] permitting. Regards, <font color="404040">]</font> 20:43, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
:::What I'm trying to understand is why, instead of saying just "That's not probably notable" (which I'd agree with, assuming the cited source were the only one in the world ), you were earlier saying that it would violate NOR and NPOV. ] (]) 22:10, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:Misplaced Pages articles about celebrities, etc. should mention siblings, etc, only if independent ] about the celebrity have previously mentioned siblings. --] (]) 06:15, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
::::That example would not violate NPOV or NOR. I think the example I gave of the concept would, since it would be based entirely on one scholar's historical research and perspective. The article would violate NPOV because it would be based on a single point of view: it would have to be written as "X scholar said Y about concept C" ad nauseam. I think to be more precise about NOR, it wouldn't necessarily violate that policy, but I think some editors would view it as license to dig into the primary sources that X used and provide their own OR version of what C is or means. ] (]/]) 22:13, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

:Who says the only way neutrality can be assessed is via IRS sources with SIGCOV? If multiple HQRS have passing mentions of the topic that characterize it as "bad", but we have one biased SIGCOV source that characterizes it as "good", I don't think it would be NPOV to base the article on the SIGCOV source. In such a case, no matter how detailed the SIGCOV, we just shouldn't have an article on the topic due to it not being possible to write both comprehensively and reflect a neutral POV. The topic can be covered in another article where more context is available and there is no need to be comprehensive. ] (]) 02:53, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
== Get rid of it ==
::<small>(Though if you change your mind on not having articles that are difficult to write neutrally, ] of endlessly disputed articles that never would be missed. A handful in ARBPIA, rather more in GENSEX, at least two about autism...)</small> ] (]) 03:11, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

:::Your proposed change looks fine. There is no need for the source to represent a neutral point view. ] ] 04:13, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
It's a ridiculous policy meant to keep people from making articles about their brothers and classmates, but come up with something addressing that issue that isn't a cop-out. The criteria for notability are too subjective, and frankly notability would limit the encyclopedia to about 1000 articles, under any reasonable interpretation of notability. The only reason I came by the notability page is because I had visited maybe the third or fourth article in a month where there was a debate about the "notability" of the article in question. Nevertheless, the articles in question provided valuable information to me. So let's leave the calls for what is notable to the person USING wikipedia and actually looking for the information. One man's notable is another man's junk. ] (]) 18:37, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
:BadlyDrawnJeff. {{tq| It is generally preferable to have multiple sources, however, one substantial source can demonstrate notability. In this case extreme care should be given to verify that the source reflects a neutral point of view and is credible.}}

:He was prone to arguing too many lines in parallel, and ina big tentative edit he slipped these dubious words into a footnote where no one but a wikilawyer looks.
== Loosen the rule ==
:I reckon “reflects a neutral point of view” was a reasonable stringent phrase intending to be stronger than “independent”, maybe “substantially independent” but trying to avoid repeating words. Strongly independent? It doesn’t quite flow right.

:I dislike that the change further opens the crack for the GNG to be met by a single source. I think these words allow for an exception that would be allowed already, and that it is better to delete the note, which nobody but wikilawyers read anyway. ] (]) 07:45, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I believe that if Misplaced Pages wants all of their articles to be published in such publications as Newsweek, or Time, than they should get rid of most of there now 10 million+ articles. Some pages are about published topics, and are in newsletters or press releases, but aren’t on the NBC Nightly News, or on CNN. Everyone isn’t that privileged. I disagree with what some admins have told me about what is a "reliable" source. I think that a school's newsletter or a local newspaper article is a reliable source.--] (]) 03:44, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
::“provide sufficient detail for a comprehensive article” is an invitation to accept non-notable topics. “Sufficient detail” is tautological. It is not useful guideance. ] (]) 07:58, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

:What we accept as ] will vary depending on the type of subject, the type of statement, etc. The issue of ''reliability'' is separate from that of ''notability'' though. In the case of the quiz bowl team article that you're arguing against the deletion of, the problem isn't that the person saying it should be deleted doesn't believe the sources on the page are accurate, it's that he doesn't think they prove the team is particularly significant.
:However, in your case, I think I can be a slight help to you, if only on a technicality: that speedy deletion template is only for cases where the article does not attempt to assert notability. Your page does, it's just a very weak claim. --] <small>]</small> 03:58, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

Another thing i have to say about this all is why does it have to be significant. I could see it needing to be significant if you were trying to fit the articles into a 1000 page book, but your not. wikipedia has nearly unlimited capacity, and if not, server storage is cheap. who is judging how significant the article it. to a lot of people, academic team is their life. I'm having this problem a lot with wikipedia, and quite frankly, I'm insulted because i don't think that my article needs to be significant to everyone. I understand that things need to be reasonable, but the articles I'm dealing with are not wickedly long, or illagly obtained, or anything else, except that some admin deemed it "not significant" to their standards. I'm not finding fault with you, just the system--] (]) 04:07, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

* The limit is not in server space, it's in maintainability. --] (]) 10:27, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


== The Key Difference Please == == RFC: School Notability Criteria ==
Can someone '''''briefly''''' (20 words or less) explain to me in what the '''''key''''' difference is between WP:N and WP:V. I have tried and the answer I am coming up with is just plain silly so I must be crazy. I would really like to see as many people provide their own ''independent'' interpretations. ] (]) 15:29, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


I believe it's important to revisit the notability standards for schools on Misplaced Pages. There are numerous school articles, many of which are mere stubs that resemble directory listings rather than encyclopedia entries. This raises questions about whether the current notability guidelines effectively ensure that only genuinely notable schools are included. I suggest we discuss potential improvements or clarifications to these guidelines to maintain the quality and relevance of Misplaced Pages's content. ] (]) 16:21, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:Material that cannot be verified should not appear in Misplaced Pages because it is likely to be false. Topics that are not notable should not appear in Misplaced Pages because they create clutter and divert attention from worthwhile topics. --] (]) 17:41, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:: ''"Topics that are not notable should not appear in Misplaced Pages because they create clutter and divert attention from worthwhile topics. "'' How do they do that, according to you? --] (]) 20:33, 31 March 2008 (UTC) :The guideline is that they need to meet GNG or NCORP. See ]. Some editors are of the view that all secondary schools and above are notable, and will express that view at AfD, resulting in articles being kept. ] (]/]) 16:24, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
::] ''used'' to imply all secondary schools were kept, but that has since been changed, and editors that !vote without acknowledging the change to meet GNG or NCORP need to be reminded of that. ] (]) 17:49, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I could never understand why "or NCORP" needed to be specified. Surely any topic that meets it meets the general notability guideline anyway? It doesn't do any harm by being there, but it's just redundant. ] (]) 18:35, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
::::NCORP is slightly stronger in that it limits potentially promotional sources, which might exist for for-profit schools.<span id="Masem:1732543980966:Wikipedia_talkFTTCLNNotability" class="FTTCmt"> —&nbsp;] (]) 14:13, 25 November 2024 (UTC)</span>
:::::That's precisely my point. If NCORP is stronger then there is no need to specify it. "Meets ]" is exactly the same as "meets ] or ] or both". Of course for-profit schools are different, but they only account for a small proportion of child education world-wide. ] (]) 20:32, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::NCORP would not apply to public schools, only to for profit ones. Public schools have been GNG otherwise.<span id="Masem:1732567869644:Wikipedia_talkFTTCLNNotability" class="FTTCmt"> —&nbsp;] (]) 20:51, 25 November 2024 (UTC)</span>
:::::::Agree. (I went a bit further than that below) <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 23:06, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Public/private (leaving aside the British English definition of a "public school") is very different from not-for-profit/for-profit. Nearly all private schools, apart from adult training institutes, are not for profit. ] (]) 21:30, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::There's absolutely nothing we can do to compel editors to vote in accordance with relevant policies and guidelines. The only thing we ''can'' do is direct closers to close in accordance with them. ] 22:35, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::What we need is for those who close AfD discussions to take absolutely zero notice of any arguments ignoring the clear notability requirements. I agree with the initial post that there are far too many very poor quality directory listings and perma stubs about schools. ] (]) 14:08, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
::::Agreed, though unfortunately when the same editors who try to obstruct all efforts to tighten guidelines are also among the ones most active at DRV it gets a lot harder to enforce these standards. ] (]) 00:04, 26 November 2024 (UTC)


I try to go by the middle of the road community interpretation. First, NCORP can structurally taken in two ways. One is as conditions for using the SNG "way in". The other would be toughening the requirements for applying GNG / the GNG "way in". IMO the community applies a slightly more lenient interpretation for schools and not-for profit organizations than it does for for-profit businesses. And if it is about a single significant facility, additional consideration is given for NGEO possibilities. IMO the middle of the road interpretation for a school (that is not mostly a for-profit business) is to have some near-GNG sources (something more than just factoids and sports team results) and some real content resultant from them. I know that until we acknowledge how wp:notability actually works this does not fit neatly into any flowchart / binary decisions of the guidelines, and also would have a hard time tidying this up. But IMO until then this has been the middle-of-the-road of how the community treats it. Also, in deciding that there is no SNG "easy way in" the community decided that it does not want huge amounts of stubs created based on an SNG / merely for being a school. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 15:56, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
::I don't think that clutter is the main issue; in my opinion, it is the fact that ]. ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 20:37, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:I find myself questioning the premise that we truly ''need'' to {{xt|effectively ensure that only genuinely notable schools are included}}.
::: How does the rule on notability ensure that wikipedia is an encyclopedia? Does this include excluding otherwise useful information? --] (]) 20:44, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:@], I wonder if you've ever read the ]. It says, fairly early on, that {{xt|As a rule, the more accepted knowledge contains, the better.}} Your comment makes me think that your POV is "the less knowledge, the better", which is the opposite of our long-standing policy.
::::It is a proxy measure for whether a topic is "worthy of notice"; in some ways, I consider the notability guidelines to be parallel to (but not derived from) ]. As for your second quetsion: no, ]. ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 20:48, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:With that in mind, I'd like you to explore the idea that our actual, policy-based goal is to "include" as much factual information about as many schools as we can. That needn't always look like a completely separate article for every school, but it also doesn't look like setting up a high bar, in which only "genuinely notable" schools are included and all the others – ordinary-notable schools? borderline-notable schools? merge-worthy non-notable ones? – are excluded.
::::: "notability guidelines do not directly limit article content" is very very odd. It basically states that by simply reorganizing information, you can have it included or excluded from the encyclopedia. Or, in other words, that the way the information is organized is more important than the actual content. Heh, what a thing to admit. ^^;; --] (]) 21:11, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:Thinking about this in ] terms, if "genuine notability" looks like a long article with lots of sources, you've already made a mistake. The median article has four refs in it. NB: "four refs", not "four WP:INDY WP:SECONDARY WP:SIRS refs with WP:SIGCOV". Just four of any kind, including non-independent primary sources and sources that don't mention the subject. The median article also has 13 sentences. If you're looking at a school article that's anywhere near that median, I suggest to you that it's not making Misplaced Pages "worse", and you should probably leave it alone. ] (]) 23:19, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::It's not the fault of the guideline that deletion is too often used as an alternative to merging. :) The principal purpose of ] is to provide guidance as to whether a topic should be covered in its own article; if the answer is "no", then the information should be merged elsewhere or, if a suitable target does not exist, deleted. ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 23:01, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
::A long standing problem of how some editors envision WP and notability is a notable topic ''must'' have a standalone article, whereas WP:N says that's only a necessary condition for a standalone. School articles, particularly public, govt-backed ones, nearly always can be associated with a geographic place like a city, town, township, or county (or equivalent), and that makes an ideal place to discuss the school system at that level, including individual schools, if the standalone article can only be backed by a few sources and have maybe two or three Para of prose, using redirects as necessary. WP has no aversion to talking about schools, just that need for the sepearate article is often not needed ( and this applies to a lot more topic areas than just schools)<span id="Masem:1732580060967:Wikipedia_talkFTTCLNNotability" class="FTTCmt"> —&nbsp;] (]) 00:14, 26 November 2024 (UTC)</span>
::Were you trying to leave the most condescending possible reply? @] raises the valid and obvious point that we have a lot of contentless school stubs that likely don't meet our guidelines, and your response is to recommend they "follow editing policy" because they "seem" to believe "the less knowledge, the better", imply their goal isn't policy-based, bring up utterly irrelevant statistics about the abysmal median sourcing on pages in general, and then suggest they just leave crappy stubs alone if they have any kind of sourcing at all. ] (]) 00:26, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::I think this misunderstands 1keyhole point, at no point do they discuss removing information. This is about when a stand alone article should exist, information about the school could still be included in other articles. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 00:27, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I think if you looked at (voted to delete 92% of the time; articles actually deleted only 34% of the time, which is well below average) and , e.g., their comments in ] or ] or ], you might have a different perception. It sounds like they're looking for a subjective sense of importance ("Why is this particular school notable?", newsworthy events don't "augment the significance of these institutions", wanting editors to explain why schools "merit" articles). ] (]) 02:49, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::::I see lots of editors making invalid arguments in those AfDs, I'm guessing that's why they posted here. If you believe they have a behavioural issue then I suggest this isn't the correct place to make accusations. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 11:08, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::I am making no accusations of behavioral problems. I am instead using information that is easily found but not on this page (unlike some of the editors who replied to me?) to form an opinion about what the OP is thinking. ] (]) 18:42, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::The OP raised a discussion point, personal opinions about the OP don't add anything to it. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 19:38, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::I believe ] states, "However, Misplaced Pages is not a directory of everything in the universe that exists or has existed." This is why there aren't 700 separate entries for each individual London bus route—though I'm sure many bus enthusiasts would appreciate having that many articles dedicated to London buses. ] (]) 20:54, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::However, there are 700+ redirects to ]. This is what we do when we discover an article on a real but basically unsuitable subject: bus routes get redirected to the transit system, schools get redirected to the city/school district, music videos get redirected to the band, and so forth.
:::The targeted article gets just enough information that future editors can see that the redirect isn't silly vandalism: "Bus Route 12" gets put in the list, the city gets an ==Education== section that says there are schools "such as _____", the band's article gets a line that says "They released their 'Stupid Banana Art' music video in 2024", and so forth. This is quick, easy, simple, and doesn't require AFD or the deletion button at all. ] (]) 21:38, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::::It does sometimes require AfD. As has been noted in this discussion, some editors continue to flout SCHOOLOUTCOMES and insist on keeping an article, even where a merge and redirect should be uncontroversial. ] (]/]) 21:48, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::In theory, merges ''never'' require AfD, even if they're contested. ] is the proper venue for that. ] (]) 23:39, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::Fair point. I use PM when appropriate, but I think most people don't even know it exists and just resort to AfD instead. I think they should just be folded into one another at this point. ] (]/]) 23:46, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Comment'''. Honestly it has gotten so much better at AFD since the RFC overturned ] in 2017. It was ridiculous before then. Pre-2017 if a school was brought to AFD it was closed almost immediately as keep no matter how bad the sourcing was. There are still a lot of bad school articles as a leftover of the old days, but when they are brought to AFD they are either improved with more referencing or they are deleted. It's been a long time since I have personally seen a school pass an AFD without solid referencing being produced. My impression is schools aren't getting free passes anymore. Obviously I haven't looked at every deletion discussion involving schools. Best.] (]) 02:45, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::I'm an active NPP'er and would agree. But IMO the biggest change has been to reduce the mass production of these articles (rather than a shift of what happens at AFD.) IMO the defacto standard is to have sources that sort of 3/4 meet a stringent interpretation of GNG. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 19:24, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I hear you, but focusing on article creation is a losing strategy. We are fundamentally an encyclopedia anyone can edit and that isn’t going to change. With that comes the creation of many poorly thought through articles, which is one reason AFD is such an active place. One could argue for stricter article creation processes but these have always failed when brought to an RFC for the barriers they place both on experienced content creators and in discouraging new editors. Not to mention the already large backload at ] review. I don’t think the current system is perfect, but I also don’t see any obvious improvements that are likely to gain traction in a community wide discussion. Best.] (]) 19:40, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::::I agree 100% that the current system regarding schools is working pretty good. I think you misunderstood my point. If the criteria are reasonably good, that has effects everywhere....AFD, NPP, AFC, and whether or not editors are creating lots of articles that don't meet the (newish) criteria.<b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 20:29, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::I've been looking at ] for the last two weeks. The biggest problem I'm seeing is AFD noms of high schools outside the core English-speaking countries (US/UK/CA/AU/NZ). Several voters have given a rationale of the school being nothing special. An unfortunate number of them amount to the nom putting the transliterated name into Google News (probably with English-only settings) and not finding much ...under a name that isn't used in reality. If we're lucky, someone will come by to search in the local language, but mostly that doesn't happen. ] (]) 03:53, 9 December 2024 (UTC)


== Changes to WP:NMOTORSPORTS ==
:Many editors think that notability can be explained in terms of verifiability. Notability comes from sources- if lots of relevant sources are writing about a thing, we ''can'' have an article about it with some hope of decent quality. The best reason not to attempt to have articles on things where there are no sources is that we have no way of ensuring quality. Along the lines of the above argument, one could further argue that having and keeping non-notable articles attracts editors who aren't here to work on an encyclopedia. ] ] 20:36, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:: So you basically express notability in terms of verifiability? --] (]) 20:44, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


'''INTRODUCTION:''' Hello, I would like to bring up the current state of the SNG ] and how it should be changed. My original idea for the changes can be viewed ], at the WikiProject talk page; however, it did not receive much traffic and I wish to create a more formal post regarding my proposal.
:::It's simple, it's useful, there's no good way to argue with it that I've ever seen. Uncle G said it best I think: ]. ] ] 20:48, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


'''BACKGROUND:''' I'll try to summarize the situation as best as possible since most editors are not aware of this niche editing area: Within recent months, there has been a growing number of editors, pages, and work overall done to motorsports single series (], ], ], and ], herein referred to as feeder series). This includes myself, as this is the main area where I edit. To my interpretation, WP:NMOTORSPORTS was intended as a rough guide on who ''may'' have significant coverage, and not as a ''definitive list'' to determine who is and who is not notable in the motorsports world. However, the guideline has been misinterpreted as the latter, and WP:NMOTORSPORTS is '''frequently''' cited at AfCs and AfDs as a definitive criteria in addition to GNG. This makes thing especially frustrating for feeder series drivers' articles, since there is no specific criteria, and the current criteria is out of date. There are plenty of examples of this, but one that caught my eye specifically is ] (although not a feeder series article), which shows how editors frequently misinterpret the policy (not shaming any editors, but that's what ends up happening).
:::: If you can express notability in terms of verifiability ''all of the time'', that has interesting consequences. Is that in fact the case? --] (]) 21:11, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
::::: No, it's stronger than that. Reliable sources do not suffice; they need to be ''significant'' and ''independent of the subject''.--] (]) 21:19, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


'''PROPOSAL:'''
:::::I was writing that I suspect it probably can be. Then again, I don't count things as being verifiable if the sources aren't significant and independent. Or, perhaps, to put a fine point on it: an insignificant mention in a source may be enough to verify that a thing ''exists''... but we need to verify much more than that to have any hope of a real article. ] ] 21:26, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


<u>AMEND:</u>
:Verification is a measure of truthfulness. Notability is a measure of relevance. (14 words, ha!) --] 21:40, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
:: Cut it down to 11 and you can give ] a run for its money. O:-) --] (]) 13:01, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
:::"Verification is a measure of truthfulness; Notability, relevance." how about 8? Though seriously, this also matches in line with the two dimensions that sources can be considered: first, second, third-party sources are (mostly) to verification as primary, secondary, and tertiary are to notability. --] 13:10, 1 April 2008 (UTC)


"A top-level feeder series to Formula One or MotoGP, such as the ] or the ] World Championship" to "A top-level feeder series to Formula One or MotoGP, such as the ], ], ] or the ] World Championship"
===break 1===
:'''NOTE:'''' ''I put the break in here just before the most recent comment (below) because '''erachima's''' point really is separate from the various explanations provided above. I am responding below. -- Low Sea''


<u>SINGLE SEATER CRTIERIA:</u>
"Key difference"? Wait, what? Verifiability and notability have no significant relationship in the first place. There is a small correlation between them in that things about which there is no verifiable information cannot be significant, but that's not really related to the principle of either rule. The notability guidelines are here because, even after limiting ourselves to knowledge that is in some way or another encyclopedic (e.g. not advertisements, directory entries, etc.), we still cannot have an infinitely broad focus or we could get nothing done. By defining only certain things as notable, we can work more effectively and better serve our readers (which is the main reason we're here, of course). They help support other things as well, such keeping out spam and nonsense, but those aren't the primary reason. --] <small>]</small> 21:57, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


"10. Meet the following criteria for the the respective single seater series:"
* I keep seeing the requested difference explained in terms of ''WHY'' but not ''WHAT''. Since I have provided ample time for replies here is my observation:
#WP:V mandates that each article must have at least ''one'' verifiable source per WP:RS.
#WP:N mandates that each article must have at least ''two'' verifiable sources per WP:RS.
If you cut through all the sludge that is about the sum total difference between the two other than WHY they exist. Please correct me if I am wrong (as mentioned earlier, I may be crazy). Low Sea 08:28, 2 April 2008 (UTC)


* Completion of one full season ''or'' a race winner in a ] series
**Verifiability requires reliable sources to support individual claims. Notability requires that enough substantive references exist to support a complete article. (20 words on the nose! *chuckle*) ] (]) 18:01, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
*** I know I am sounding like a semantics wordsmith right now but please bear with me, I really am trying to get a grip on this thing (if that is possible). Above you use two phrases: "reliable sources" and "substantive references". What exactly is the difference between these two phrases? I searched all of WP for the latter and found just 27 hits, all of which were either used only in talk pages or in nomination pages. I could not find the phrase defined anywhere. I also would like to see if I can restate my question to make what I am asking for more clear. See break 2 below. ] (]) 18:13, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


* Completion of one full season ''or'' a race winner in ]/]
===break 2===
I am trying to identify the difference in the ''mechanics'' of these two policies - the "how it works" if you will... Motivation and reasoning for using policies are fine but the actual mechanics used to say "complies" versus "does not comply" should be independent of these.


* Podium finish in the ] (single seater)
A good example of mechanics is the WP:RS primary/secondary/tertiary source definitions. Reguardless of ''why'' you might use one of these three types of sources, the difference between them is consistent and able to be identified with ease.


* Champion or vice champion in a ] series"
So, can anyone define the difference between ''how'' WP:V is proved and ''how'' WP:N is proved '''''without''''' refering to ''why'' the references are needed? As far as I can tell the ''mechanical'' difference between these two policies (as written) is nothing more than one of how many WP:RS are referenced. ] (]) 18:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


'''IMPACT:''' If the above changes were implemented, there would be a lot more continuity regarding who might and who might not qualify for an article. Obviously GNG takes precedence, but there is currently a lot of confusion regarding the gap in the guideline. It would also help out to delete/decline less notable drivers who might not deserve an article yet.
== Notability Guideline PROPOSALS are being used like real guidelines! ==


'''IMPLEMENTATION/CONCLUSION:''' I'm not sure exactly how this can be implemented, as I am still new to Misplaced Pages guidelines and am not very good at writing proposals (if you couldn't tell). I think what I have outlined in the proposal section would be a massive improvement, and would help benefit the feeder series editing community. I would be more than happy to answer or respond to any questions or concerns, as I am aware this is a very niche topic. Thank you for reading! :)
Hi.


'''UPDATE: RfC posted on the NSPORTS talk page '''
I've seen the use of Notability guideline '''''proposals''''' as though they were accepted guidelines, with
] (]) 22:13, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
articles tagged as suspicious for not meeting sets of these ''proposed'' criteria. I disagree with this.
:The way to fix the problem you've identified is not to expand the list, but to add something like "meeting these criteria does not establish notability and you need to provide significant coverage in reliable sources to actually show that this topic is notable if notability is challenged." ] (]/]) 22:16, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Proposals are just that, proposals, and I do not think they shold be granted the weight and authority of real
::That would be a possible solution to add, I agree, however;
guidelines unless and until they become that. That's why they're called proposals, after all! ] (]) 00:38, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
::I'm not sure exactly when the guideline was written, but given the fact it says GP2 Series, it is likely before 2016. This section of Misplaced Pages would not of existed 8 years ago, as the program as a whole has expanded within the last decade. I feel that the guideline should be expanded to reflect on the real life changes to the program, especially considering how many articles there are relating to it. ] (]) 22:21, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::but it's been happening too much and edit wars are happening as a result of people strictly following the notability list ] (]) 22:21, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:If you want to change this guideline, you should make a ] at ] (i.e., on the talk page of the guideline that would be affected).
:Depending on which problem you're most concerned about, changing "such as" to "including, but not limited to" might provide a level of clarity, as would a statement that says "The actual rule is to follow the GNG. The following list is only a best guess at which levels of achievement are most likely to have GNG-level coverage. If the person is at this level but not GNG, then they're still not notable, and if they're below this level but have GNG-level coverage, then they're notable anyway." ] (]) 22:36, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::I was advised to post this here, so should I just link this topic on NSPORTS, or copy my argument and establish an RfC? If I do need to do an RfC, do I need to change my argument, as a brief skimming of the page shows that my post is probably a bit too long. I have never done anything like this before, and I've been editing for <2 months, so I'm quite unfamiliar with these processes.
::As for the second paragraph, I agree, that could also be implemented to prevent the misuse of the guideline. As per my comment above to voorts, I think both should be done, if possible. ] (]) 23:00, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::@], if you decide to pursue this, then you're going to need some help. Editors at ] are happy to help you write a sensible question for an RFC, but before you can do that, you'll need to be able to explain what your goal is. The RFC should happen at the notability guideline that you want to change. Before you can start the RFC, you need to figure out what you want to change and how to explain/propose that change for people who don't know anything about sports. Those discussions can happen anywhere. ] (]) 03:46, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Thank you for the reply. I posted an RfC about a week ago ] on the NSPORTS talk page. That is my fault, I forgot to add an update to my original post. I'll do that shortly. ] (]) 16:12, 9 December 2024 (UTC)


== Circular definitions ==
:Point them to ].--] (]) 05:13, 2 April 2008 (UTC)


Consider this line in this guideline: {{xt|"For articles on subjects that are ''clearly'' not notable, then deletion is usually the most appropriate response..."}}
:: Which is a '']'' essay. All project namespace pages are descriptive of common practice, or are supposed to be anyway. If your arguments are well summarized by any such page, simply link to it. <small>''(this is why I keep repeating that the policy/guideline/essay distinction is so useless in the first place, "proposals" doubly so)''</small>. If others also agree with that page, they shall link to it as well, and you get a fluid kind of consensus thing going. --] (]) 11:03, 2 April 2008 (UTC) <small>''In short: "Notability Guideline PROPOSALS are being used like real guidelines!" O RLY? OMG. Well GOOD for them! ;-)"''</small>


It only makes sense if you already know what our wikijargon says. What's a notable article? The kind we don't delete. What kind of articles do we not delete? The notable ones. How do you know if they're notable? They don't get deleted. This is not really helpful.
:::You rewrote the essay (to the point where it's nearly the same as ]). If you think it's still stupid, you need to rewrite it further. <small>So what if we do develop this Solaranite bomb? We'd be even a stronger nation than now.</small>--] (]) 00:34, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


I think we should re-word some of these statements to say instead that {{xt|"For articles on subjects that ''clearly'' do not qualify for a separate article, then deletion is usually the most appropriate response..."}}
==Biographicon: crowd-sourcing non-notables==


What do you think? ] (]) 06:15, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
: .
:Just delete the whole paragraph. It's redundant of the first paragraph in that section. ] (]/]) 17:19, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
:"notability" and "having a separate article" are not equivalent concepts. There are other places that notability can be used beyond just whether to have a separate article such as with lists. It also conflicts with the concept in ] that not all notable topics need a separate article. ] (]) 17:46, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
::The first line of the guideline says: "On Misplaced Pages, '''notability''' is a test used by editors to decide whether a given topic warrants its own article."
::I conclude there that "Notability" is equivalent to "warrants (aka 'qualifies for') a separate article". Do you disagree? ] (]) 20:51, 14 December 2024 (UTC)


== Primary ==
There should be a pleasant, courteous, automatic way to tell users who create non-notable biographies that there are other appropriate forums for their work. Misplaced Pages is not the only game in town. ] (]) 04:10, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
{{Moved discussion to |1=Misplaced Pages talk:No original research#Primary |2=Wrong venue.}}
Not sure where I should place this discussion, but I hope I'm at the right place. It is often said that interviews are "primary" sources, meaning they are not reliable per ]. However, most of the times we get personal information (birth dates, birth place and backstory) and upcoming release dates for movies and music from interviews (late-night shows and so on) and they always turn out to be accurate. I think {{background colour|yellow|if the interview was published by a reliable source then it's most definitely reliable}}, because if another publication quotes that interview, no one would say it's not reliable. Not sure if I make much sense, but any objections? '''<span style="color:Purple">dxneo</span>''' (]) 19:23, 26 December 2024 (UTC)


:You posted this in the talk page for ]. I agree that sources can be reliable while not being independent or secondary. However, our general notability guideline requires that sources be reliable, in-depth, independent, ''and'' secondary. For a biographical article, most information in interviews of the subject is generally not independent: it comes directly from the subject. Therefore, while it may be reliable, and may be acceptable as a reference for claims in an article, this type of sourcing does not contribute to notability, the topic of relevance for this discussion page. —] (]) 19:35, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
:We generally tell people that when we're in the middle of deleting their non-notable biographies on AfD. Or if it's a speedy, after the fact. --] <small>]</small> 04:18, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:The suitable place to discuss this is the talk page of the article that contains the passage you're referring to. ] is part of ], so you should inquire about this at ]. ] (]) 21:42, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
::I moved it. '''<span style="color:Purple">dxneo</span>''' (]) 23:12, 26 December 2024 (UTC)


== WP:GNG ==
== New Topic - TitleZ.com data as a measure of notability ? ==


The is a discussion of whether to add to the ] section at ]. ] (]) 14:01, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
I am sure the topic of book sales volumes has been raised before in some context but I just found this website who identify themselves as a small firm doing independent research on book sales volumes using the amazon.com database. Would this be considered a secondary (tertiary?) source for book sales volumes and if so would these numbers be acceptable for providing notability on (A) books, and (B) authors ?? ] (]) 22:53, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:In my first draft of ] I had two related criteria: 1) The book is by a bestselling author. 2) The book has sold more than 100,000 copies. We went through various iterations. A version about a month later contained: 1) The book is a major work by a bestselling or at least notable author. 2) The book is fiction and has verifiably sold more than 500,000 copies. 3) The book is nonfiction and has verifiably sold more than 250,000 copies. It's hard to recreate nor would you appreciate the sprawling and contentious discussions that resulted in the guideline we have today but we ultimately found that for a variety of reasons, book sales numbers were not a good basis for establishing notability. To summarize poorly, some of the salient points hit upon were: books vary vastly in audience depending on where they're from (geographically) and what they're used for, such that making a positive criteria of over a certain number of sales to establish notability, which to some will imply (incorrectly) ''lack of notability'' if a book doesn't meet the arbitrary threshold, would do more harm than good.<br /><p>To give an example, academic books often have small printing runs, but come to be published through very different processes than mainstream books and may be used only or chiefly by universities so the numbers will be small, or they may be on an esoteric subject but be the leading authority on that subject, yet have a tiny publication footprint. Or a book that is read all over a tiny country, but nowhere else, will pale next to a book read all over a larger country.<br /><p>Then, of course, there was wrangling over the arbitrary benchmark number of sales to use, for the very reason that choosing a number was to some extent necessarily arbitrary. It kept getting lowered for the exceptions to the rules to the point where it became ineffective. You must have a too high number, not a too low, because we are attempting to establish ''notability'' criteria, not ''lack of notability'' criteria. Then it was raised that there are certain types of books that can sell huge numbers but may still not be notable (the example were certain types of cookbooks or manuals for particular types of machinery if memory serves), and with very low numbers we were at a point it was so tepid it was useless.<br /><p>Anyway, there was much more and you are welcome to torture yourself ] (don't forget to start with the archives and see you in about ten hours), but the long and the short of it was: it was too hard to use effectively because of the variability of books; it was arbitrary and so on. After it was removed, from all of the research that came out we actually included a note for a long time: "<code>There is no present agreement on how high or low a book must fall on Amazon's sale's rank listing (in the "product details" section for a book's listing) in order to provide evidence of its notability, ''vel non''.</code>" We eventually removed this too. I think similar problems may crop up for authors.--] (]) 02:53, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
:: Thanks Fuhghettaboutit. I appreciate the ] version of the history on this issue. Saved me a lot of reading (10 hours hmmm?) and even more ''digesting'' of that (ahem)discussion. Sigh ... back to the drawing board. I am trying to establish notability on a very well published (all works combined probably total over 500,000 sales) author and lecturer (self-help and spiritual guidance genre) from the 1950-1980 era but so far no luck. Guess I just don't know where to look. Any suggestions? ] (]) 05:27, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
:::Sure. Give us the name. Much harder to give targeted advice in the hypothetical. In any event, the touchstone is always reliable sources dicsussing the person. I might be able to help there, again with the specifics.--] (]) 12:18, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
::::Book reviews in periodicals are your best bet for authors and their books. Unfortunately, I haven't figured out a good way to search periodicals en masse.--] (]) 20:12, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


== GNG and secondary sources ==
:::: Doh! Of course! ... The author I am trying to establish notability for is the late Dr. ] and to a lesser extent also the late Dr. ]. Now what I am about to say is ''certainly'' WP:OR so it doesn't help my search but I raise it here to add a small degree of perspective (ie: these men had real followings in their day)...
::::* When I was a boy in the 70's my dad (an interfaith minister) studied with both Dr. Murphy and with Dr. Hornaday. Each of these men started a new church, each had a weekly congregation of well over 1,000 people, and each a daily morning radio broadcasts throughout the Los Angeles area. As a kid I was "dragged" to these Sunday services and personally saw the standing room only congregations many times. Both buildings (the ] and ] respectively) are still in Los Angeles and actively in use. Dr. Murphy's church faded (his sermons were basically inspirational lectures and he had no assistant in place to take over) when he retired and moved away in 1976. Dr. Hornaday's church is still going strong. I am quite certain the impact of these men through their writings and ministries left lasting "memorable" impact on tens of thousands of people. Also, from personal inquiry with ] ministers I am advised that the writings of these men is part of their '''''required''''' seminary reading.
:::: Any help you can provide is appreciated. -- ] (]) 22:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
:::::Given names please!--] (]) 22:20, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
:I don't think you'll be able to show it for WH, world Cat lists him as William H D Hornday, but almost no libraries have his books. For JM, there are a few hundred more holdings total of his books in several languages, & I think you could show notability. The sources for book reviews are Book Review Digest and Brook Review Index, and any large library will have them available--they do not necessarily cover works on New Thought very well. ''']''' (]) 23:57, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
:: I appreciate the sources and will look into them as time permits. Too bad there isn't an online version of those references tomes. :)
::On the subject of WH, the lack of provable notability is troubling. Consider the following: According to many ''primary'' aka ''questionable'' (by WP standards) sources WH was a man who led the ''first'' R.Sc. church in the country, had a personal congregation that was estimated to be over 7,000 people ''plus'' his daily radio audience, served for many decades in the capacity of eclesiastical leader for the early R.Sc. community, wrote numerous books that have wide sales (and loyal ownership, ie: they are seldom sold/donated by owners) ''within'' R.Sc. circles and who is considered absolutely mandatory reading for R.Sc. ministerial candidates. Based on all of this it appears that WH altered the lives of the tens of thousands of people who eventually came to join the R.Sc. church movement he created. Common sense tells you he ought to be notable for many things yet because pretty much all sources are from "inside" R.SC. publications he cannot meet WP:N criteria. I am somewhat new to WP but I am certain I can find many similar subjects (certain popular ''fads'' come to mind). Are there no common sense processes for notability exceptions? -- ] (]) 08:17, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
:::I ran a Google book search for Joseph Murphy and immediately found some references. For example is good fodder for added some cited material from a secondary source (consider using {{tlx|Cite book}} with the <nowiki> <ref></ref></nowiki> function). For Hornaday, here's a few ; ; . My quick look with results shows that there must be many more sources to mine. I'm certain the Los Angeles Times and other newspapers in the area must have written about both these men many times during their era. The fact that you might have to dig to find sources is the nature of the beast. We are an encyclopedia, a tertiary source, and our material must be written from already published sources. On the LA Times front, I just went to their website and searched their archives which only go back online to 1985 (but for images), and immediately found articles on or mentioning Hornaday—one called "Despite Unresolved Split, Religious Science Convention Goes On"; another called "Religious Science" and here's one really worth looking into: "Rev. William Hornaday; Religious Science Leader" (). You would need to pay to access the full articles online. This means to me that if you go physically to a library with LA Times on file from the 50s and 60s in microfilm or in some other form, you'll find scads. In short, the system works fine. If someone was as influential as you say, then sources will exist, and lo and behold, here they do. But those wishing to include material and topics have the mandate of verifying information on the subject. No one ever said it wasn't work to write a proper encyclopedia article.--] (]) 11:46, 4 April 2008 (UTC)


The GNG text says {{tq|"'''Sources'''" should be ], as those provide the most objective evidence of notability.}} Why doesn't this include tertiary sources? I'd think that significant coverage in a tertiary source is also "objective evidence of notability." Also, "secondary sources" links to WP:PSTS, which says "Secondary or tertiary sources are needed to establish the topic's notability...," so there's an inconsistency. ] (]) 15:17, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Even the Religious Science publications should count as reliable sources about Religious Science itself, especially if treated as primary sources. They might not be good for establishing notability, but they are fine as a general source of information.--] (]) 19:37, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
:Tertiary sources can be used carefully. With notability we are looking for more than just simple facts but some type of transformation if information about a topic as to why it is considered worthy of note. Reference works (tertiary) often include everything under the sun when they act more as a primary work (like sports almanacs) , which may it may not include that type of transformative thoughts. So using a tertiary source as a source for notability should be used with a high degree of caution to make sure that it is providing the type of significant coverage we want to see.<span id="Masem:1735832217498:Wikipedia_talkFTTCLNNotability" class="FTTCmt"> —&nbsp;] (]) 15:36, 2 January 2025 (UTC)</span>
:What Masem said. Just adding a bit, "caution" includes consideration of the nature of the source and content including the transformative content. IMO for 98% of tertiary sources it falls short for GNG use and for the most of the other 2% (i.e. they have an article in the Encyclopedia Britannica) there are probably plenty of secondary GNG sources without needing to look at tertiary ones. Sincerely, <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 16:49, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:I disagree that tertiary sources are evidence of notability. In worst cases, they can be short and unreliable. Even in better cases, you don't get much more than a dictionary definition, which isn't enough for a separate article on ''our'' Encyclopedia. Tertiary sources might verify a fact or two, but without more, it probably belongs on a larger article. (In exceptional cases, anything with substantial coverage in a quality tertiary source will have similar coverage in secondary sources anyway.) ] (]) 18:02, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::Depends on the tertiary source. The keys to sourcing notability are depth of coverage and independence from the subject/topic. If a tertiary source has these two keys, I don’t see what the problem is. ] (]) 19:37, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::So I'm wondering if the GNG text should be altered a bit, saying something like "Sources should ''generally'' be secondary sources, as those provide the most objective evidence of notability, ''but a tertiary source may be used if it includes transformative content and meets the other requirements of this section''." The section already notes that all sources establishing notability must provide significant coverage, and be independent and reliable. ] (]) 20:25, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::I don't see the point of "if it includes transformative content". We might worry about that for a primary source, but why would that be a worry for tertiary sources? —] (]) 05:29, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::I was trying to incorporate Masem's and North8000's concerns. I'm not wedded to any particular wording. What would you suggest? ] (]) 13:40, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::I suggest we stick with secondary sources. ] (]) 16:48, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::Why?
:::::::The main concerns you voiced earlier would already lead the tertiary source to be excluded (e..g, "they can be short and unreliable" doesn't meet the RS standard, "you don't get much more than a dictionary definition" doesn't meet the significant coverage standard). As for your other case, "anything with substantial coverage in a quality tertiary source will have similar coverage in secondary sources anyway," so what? If an editor uses two secondary sources and a tertiary source that all meet the requirements, and the editor has access to the tertiary source and not to a third secondary source, why would you insist that they chase down a third secondary source? ] (]) 17:36, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::::How about {{tq|Tertiary sources may also be used if they provide significant coverage}}? ] (]) 19:27, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::There's already a distinct section addressing the need for significant coverage. As I think about this more, given that any source has to meet the other requirements of the GNG section (e.g., reliability, independence, significant coverage), I might say "Sources should generally be secondary sources, as those provide the most objective evidence of notability, though a tertiary source may be used" or perhaps just switch to the language at PSTS: "Secondary or tertiary sources are needed to establish the topic's notability and avoid novel interpretations of primary sources." ] (]) 19:47, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::Let's take a work like a Who's Who compilation (ignoring the fact these usually are pay-to-include) which likely would be considered tertiary as a reference work. Most will include biographical details about a person, but they will all be surface-level details, reiterating the basics about the person's life, but likely will not get into reasons why that person is more worthy-of-note of any other person. All that type of information is non-transformative and while it could be taken as significant coverage, it remains a far weaker sources to rest notability compared to a secondary source that, via transformation of the basic facts, of why that person would be worthy-of-note.
:::::Basically, there are a lot of topics that have detailed information that can be found in tertiary sources, but the type of information is straight facts and would be considered a primary source if published by itself. The transformation aspect of secondary sources, which some tertiary sources have, is what helps us ascertain notability. ] (]) 13:51, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::Again, I don't see the point of making this point, here. You could equally well argue against secondary sources, claiming correctly that many secondary sources just name-drop the subject of a BLP as the source of a quote about whatever else they're really talking about. It would be true. It would not be valid or relevant as an argument about why we should use tertiary sources instead. So why do you think it was important to make a point that some tertiary sources are not in-depth, as part of a discussion focused on how some people think we should avoid all tertiary sources in favor of secondary sources? How is it any more valid or relevant than the point that some secondary sources are not in-depth? —] (]) 17:42, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::At the risk of sounding overly blunt, all of this seems entirely beside the point. Superficiality would be a reason to exclude a ''secondary'' source from counting towards notability, too. (So would being pay-to-include.) In other words, you're comparing a hypothetical bad tertiary source against a hypothetical good secondary source. That's not a reason to dismiss all tertiary sources. If my print copy of the ''Encyclopaedia Britannica'' that I've had since I was a child has an article about something, then the default expectation should be that Misplaced Pages has an article about it too. Indeed, I'd consider "''Britannica'' has an article on this" as an all-but knockdown keep argument at AfD. (I say "all-but" because for organizational reasons we might go for a merge instead. Writing is complicated.) {{pb}} Really, this whole debate seems to be a symptom of taking a distinction that we basically made up &mdash; or at the very least, one that we use in an idiosyncratic way, while pretending it is much more clear-cut than it really is &mdash; and treating it so seriously that we give ourselves a headache. {{pb}} OK, time for me to check out of the bikeshed. ] (]) 19:33, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::If the material provided by a source is short, unreliable, merely a dictionary definition, only verifying a fact or two, etc., then it's not going to count much towards notability, even if it's "secondary" instead of "tertiary". In other words, a good tertiary source has to meet the same qualifications as a good secondary source. ] (]) 05:33, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

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RfC: Notability and British Rail stations

Should all British National rail stations be presumed notable as an exception to WP:NTRAINSTATION? —Matrix(!) {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 16:42, 10 September 2024 (UTC)

This is a follow-up to Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Riddlesdown railway station, to which the main argument was that we have an article for every National Rail train station, so they should not be deleted for consistency. A previous discussion that may be useful is the original discussion that led to NTRAINSTATION

Main outcomes include:

  1. All British National rail stations are inherently notable, and establish this as a subject-specific notability guideline and an exception to WP:NTRAINSTATION
  2. British National rail stations do not have inherent notability, and must be evaluated individually under GNG or any other subject-specific notability guidelines.

Matrix(!) {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 16:42, 10 September 2024 (UTC)

A related topic: This problem also seems pervasive in the train stations of other countries, like List of railway stations in Pakistan. Regarding the discussion regarding the British train stations, should 1, the many of the train stations in List of railway stations that don't meet WP:NTRAINSTATION face deletion? A much simpler option would be to 2, change notability requirements for train stations. Pygos (talk) 09:01, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
If you can't find sources for an article about a railway station after looking for sources (including in books in the local language, which is where the majority of sources are going to be) then it should be merged to the next higher level article (usually the article about the line or system it's on). Thryduulf (talk) 10:12, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
There may be sources that exist in these articles, like for Khost railway station, there's a reference to https://herald.dawn.com/news/1398873 , but such a source didn't show anything useful beyond the fact that the railway station exists (by the way, it doesn't seem to meet WP:SECONDARY). And such sources certainly don't adhere to WP:NTRAINSTATION. However, plenty of the railway stations only have sources of such levels, so should I merge them all? If I were to merge them, should I first put up AfDs or simply carry it out (which I'm certain will be offensive to many editors)? Pygos (talk) 12:19, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
Firstly this discussion is about railway stations in Great Britain, so a railway station in Pakistan is off-topic. Secondly, did you read what I wrote about sources that are offline and/or not in English. Thirdly, you cannot do research for one station and then apply the results to a whole set of stations. Thryduulf (talk) 13:06, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
Sorry, then I will resort discussions of the topic to Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject Stations. I just wanted to mark that the problem resides beyond British and Pakistani train stations though (like ), so I seek a standardized solution to all the alike problems. Pygos (talk) 13:21, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
May be it does not exist. I am pretty well familiar with Russian and Dutch networks. I am sure I can find multiple reliable sources for every Dutch railway station. I am also sure many Russian stations are not notable on their own and are best organised in lists (which I am already planning to do). Ymblanter (talk) 13:39, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
I agree with Thryduulf, but I add: Ask for help. If you can't find sources for an article about a railway station after looking for sources (including in books in the local language, which is where the majority of sources are going to be) then – the problem might be with "you can't find them" rather than "no reliable sources have ever been published". This is an area that Misplaced Pages does best when people work together, rather than one person thinking their result is definitive. WhatamIdoing (talk) 05:16, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
This RfC is in the wrong place. It should be at Misplaced Pages talk:Notability (geographic features). SmokeyJoe (talk) 00:04, 5 October 2024 (UTC)



Survey re Notability and British Rail stations

  • Oppose, no "inherent" notability for anything. Either there is a substantial quantity of reliable and independent source material available about something, or there isn't. There are certain things (as some examples, national leaders or chemical elements) where there in practice will always be such material about each one, but that's not "inherent" notability either, it just so happens that each member of such a set is actually notable. We do not need any more "inherently notable" permastubs. If each station is actually notable, that's fine, and if some are not, then that's also fine; they can be covered in a list or the like instead of in a separate "article" that's really just a few factoids. Seraphimblade 16:46, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    @Seraphimblade: Which permastubs are you thinking of? --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 21:10, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    GEOLAND is probably the worst offender there (though sports gave it a run for the money before it got reined in). But really any time there's been any kind of "inherent notability" arrangement, someone scrapes a database, and the result is a ton of permastubs. Seraphimblade 22:07, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    I wasn't asking about geoland or sports, and nor is this RfC. This RfC is specifically about British Rail stations, and that is what I am asking about. Which articles about British Rail stations are permastubs? --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 22:25, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    Your attitude is rather unnecessary, given that my comment was about inherent notability in general, and you did not specify "British Rail" in your question, so I answered about places where concepts of "inherent notability" have led to that problem. I do not have, nor need, specific examples to be in opposition to what the RfC is asking. Seraphimblade
    If your comment is not relevant to British railway stations then it's not relevant to this discussion and should be ignored. Thryduulf (talk) 23:21, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    It is. The RfC question is "Should British railway stations be considered inherently notable?". The comment I made was entirely relevant to that—specifically that no, they should not. I do not see how that would be anything but a directly relevant answer to the exact question being asked. Seraphimblade 08:33, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    GEOLAND is probably the worst offender there (though sports gave it a run for the money before it got reined in). is not relevant to British railway stations. And you still haven't answered Redrose's question. Thryduulf (talk) 17:14, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • No. Things aren't special just because they're British, notwithstanding the large group of editors that seems to think everything that exists in Britain is notable. voorts (talk/contributions) 16:47, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 1 - to my knowledge we have here a complete set of 2,597 stations and this provides consistency to the reader and makes information easier to add (I've improved many station articles that previously had poor sourcing). Opening the floodgates to AfDs for each of these individually is not a good use of editor time, will provide a less consistent experience for readers, and will discourage the addition of new sources information (eg accessibility improvements, changes to service levels, platform extensions). Garuda3 (talk) 16:48, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    Opening the floodgates to AfDs for each of these individually is not a good use of editor time Let's delete all of them and recreate articles on only the notable ones (which probably amounts to a very low percentage of those 2,597 stations; I'd be surprised if 50 of them met GNG.)
    discourage the addition of new sources information (eg accessibility improvements, changes to service levels, platform extensions). Misplaced Pages is not a travel guide, railroad amenities database, or service map. voorts (talk/contributions) 16:55, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    There's easily more than fifty stations that meet WP:GNG. In fact probably the vast majority would do based on books, newspapers etc.
    on your second point, we do list service improvements (or reductions) and changes to platforms, bridges etc. this info is regularly available with good sources. This doesn't make us a travel guide. Garuda3 (talk) 16:58, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    Are so many of these articles poorly sourced that it would open the floodgates? AusLondonder (talk) 17:19, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    It's not often that I agree (partially) with Garuda3, but I have to concur that There's easily more than fifty stations that meet WP:GNG. You could easily find more than 50 just in Greater London considering its extensive rail network and the Tube, and I say this as an American. Many if not most stations are notable. The issue I have personally is when editors say they're automatically notable just by virtue of existing and that Misplaced Pages policies don't apply. If anything, I'd be thrilled to have more train station articles on Misplaced Pages so long as they are referenced properly and meet GNG.
    There's no conspiracy afoot to bring thousands of articles to AfD. What is true is that there are edge cases. Stations that were open for a few years. Proposed but never built stations. Stations mostly lost to history. Former stations on the site of or near a current station where the best choice from an editorial perspective is to include the former and current station within the same article. And quite frankly the occasional station that just plain does not meet GNG. Prescribing that all train stations are automatically entitled to an article is foolish and should not be done. I don't care if that's how it was in 2004, it's 2024 now. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 21:01, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    At least 250 British stations are listed buildings, and if you read WP:NGEO a few paragraphs before the one on train stations, you will find the statement Artificial geographical features that are officially assigned the status of cultural heritage or national heritage, or of any other protected status on a national level and for which verifiable information beyond simple statistics is available, are presumed to be notable. So that is 250 stations that meet the criteria without any further argument, and that is 10% of the total. Incidentally, there are 400,000 listed buildings in England alone, and according to policy every one of them is automatically notable (although most don't actually have articles). That rather puts a discussion about 2,500 stations into perspective. -- chris_j_wood (talk) 15:20, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    So that is 250 stations that meet the criteria without any further argument, and that is 10% of the total. Incidentally, there are 400,000 listed buildings in England alone, and according to policy every one of them is automatically notable. Per the introductory paragraphs of NGEO, the section titled "Sources" on that page, and the section you're citing, adequate sourcing beyond the mere listing of a building is required to establish notability. Being listed alone, without more, does not warrant an article. voorts (talk/contributions) 16:18, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose / 2 There's nothing inherently different about British train station from train stations in other countries, so there's no reason they shouldn't be subject to the consensus of the prior RFC. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 16:51, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    To clarify this RFC appears to be asking for British train stations alone to be exemptes from WP:NTRAINSTATION, but train stations are train stations. Nothing about British train stations makes them different from the train stations found in other countries. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 16:53, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    Well, I'm not asking for it (quite the opposite - I created this as a reaction to Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Riddlesdown railway station). I saw that was the main argument against deletion and wanted to see if it is valid and I figured an RfC was the best way to do that. Just wanted to clear that up. —Matrix(!) {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 17:08, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    The only seemingly valid argument in that AfD is the one saying the article passes GNG (I haven't checked the article to see if that's correct), the others appear to be based on the ideas already rejected by the prior RFC. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 22:07, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    @Matrix if you firced me to AfD a British station I'd probably pick a boring south London suburban station like those so I don't blame you. But even then I'd be surprised if nobody found enough decent sources. Stations specifically aren't really my thing but I'm aware of the volume of material on the UK rail network. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 21:13, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    Reading others comments I'll add I also don't expect any articles to go to AfD over this, there are endless reliable sources for British railways. Editors just need to show those sources. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 13:39, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 no topic has inherent notability. It can likely be said there is good reason that all British rail stations have GNG notability due to the history of British rail and rail fans in the UK, but that simply means that when such articles are created they should show sourcing that trends towards the GNG. But this should NOT (ETA this key work) be taken as allowance to create a lot of stubs on stations with the expectation they can be shown note later. Masem (t) 17:11, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    I could argue that Shippea Hill shouldn't have an article because of its low usage. However, it has been one of the quietest stations in Britain, and by looking at that article, its been reported by BBC, Guardian and Telegraph so it likely meets GNG (at least 3 reliable sources can be a safe bet). JuniperChill (talk) 17:28, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 This AfD is effectively just a listing of arguments to avoid at deletion discussions. An absolute joke. No attempt to establish notability of the subject, just a complete rejection of our community-endorsed notability guideline for train stations. An RfC explicitly determined that train stations, in whatever country, are not notable simply because they exist or existed. Unfortunately AfD suffers from minimal participation and local consensus issues where a handful of participants prevent the overall consensus prevailing. A similar phenomenon has been observed with the false assertion that WP:ANYBIO #1 exempts recipients of many British honours from secondary source requirements, rather than providing a refutable likelihood. This seems a very British problem. Participants at the AfD repeatedly asserted that because it's a British railway station it must be notable. What about German, Brazilian, Chinese, or Indian railway stations? Any railway station without significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject should be taken to AfD, if those sources cannot be located. AusLondonder (talk) 17:14, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    As the one who started the previous RfC, I really wish this one wasn't necessary. But a certain group of editors have decided that community consensus doesn't apply to them. Without context, an RfC so narrowly focused as the current one seems silly. But editor behavior has required it. I'd rather this than ANI, at least. I don't want to single out British editors, but I haven't seen any other group of editors otherwise in good standing so willing to flout policy, guidelines, and community consensus around notability. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 21:06, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 As proposer of the RfC I don't see how British train stations should be presumed notable per AusLondonder. —Matrix(!) {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 17:22, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 despite it's problematic wording There no such thing as "inherent notability" in Misplaced Pages so let's assume that they meant "presumed notability", and rail stations don't and shouldn't have it.North8000 (talk) 17:26, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    Here's an example of a thoroughly discussed one: Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Xingke Avenue station. A common argument is "we created a bunch of these in a walled garden, and so now we need to be consistent with what's in the walled garden. They end up with nothing but an "it exists" statement with the address and a train schedule. North8000 (talk) 17:32, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    @North8000: This RfC is specifically about British Rail stations. Xingke Avenue station isn't British. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 21:14, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    I gave it as an example of a thorough example discussion about train stations.North8000 (talk) 15:13, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    That AfD is a perfect example as to why the original RfC was necessary, and by extension this one. Only one person supporting a keep actually tried to identify sources. If someone else had found another GNG qualifying source, that AfD might have closed differently, and I would be just fine with that. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 22:31, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    I got the term "inherent notability" from this RfC, and inherent in this case should mean the same as "presumed" —Matrix(!) {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 17:33, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2, (edit conflict)while railway stations can be helpful to readers, I think its safe to say that it should fall under GNG. Just like why we don't have an article on YouTubers with over 1 million subs. Mumbo Jumbo with 9.4m subs is a good reason why something is popular, doesn't always deserve an article. It has been deleted not once, but twice. However, we do have an article on Geoff Marshall with 335k subs, a railfan youtuber as he's been reported by the BBC multiple times. JuniperChill (talk) 17:42, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2, with the caveat that I suspect every UK station meets the GNG anyway, given the volume of writing in English on UK railway topics. In that sense this RfC strikes me as a no-op; Option 2 reaffirms that status quo. I disagree emphatically with Voorts' suggestion that only fifty stations in the UK are notable and am curious what they're basing that on. Mackensen (talk) 17:50, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    I doubt all nearly 3000 of the stations are notable. Also "writing on UK railway topics" broadly does not establish notability for each and every individual station. The main thing this RfC should establish is that arguments at AfD asserting all British railway stations are automatically notable without providing sources must be ignored and in fact be considered disruptive. AusLondonder (talk) 17:55, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    I said I'd be surprised if 50 of them met GNG, not that only 50 of them actually meet GNG. I'm basing that on the fact that most railway stations in the world are small and not architecturally or culturally significant, and that most of what's written about individual railway stations are basic information like their schedules. voorts (talk/contributions) 18:08, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    I agree. I'd guess 1% fully meet GNG and maybe 10% are "close enough" when given some leniency because they have a bit of a geographic component. The latter are when they have substantial sourcing with more depth of coverage. North8000 (talk) 20:12, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    @North8000 A topic meets the GNG or it doesn't. You're saying that articles on 2,700 railway stations in the UK do not meet the GNG. I'm assured by my colleague below that no one's contemplating a purge. Please explain what you envision the future of these articles to be. Mackensen (talk) 23:06, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    IMO nobody would would work on a mass purge. Maybe a few AFD's on current articles. The main thing is that it would reinforce/clarify that new articles are subject to that standard. Sincerely, North8000 (talk) 00:19, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    If editors wish to take particularly poorly sourced individual articles to AfD, I'd support that but it's something that should happen over time, not heaps at once to overwhelm AfD or editors. AusLondonder (talk) 08:49, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    Well... they really shouldn't. See WP:NEXIST. Notability doesn't depend on the number of sources WP:Glossary#cited in the article. It depends on the number of sources Misplaced Pages:Published in the real world. If you see poorly sourced individual articles on a subject that is likely to be notable (e.g., listed historical buildings or railway stations), then you could find and add sources yourself, or you could add a request like {{more sources}} to encourage other editors to do that work, but you shouldn't take it to AFD, because Misplaced Pages:Deletion is not cleanup. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:01, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 1 per the arguments of Garuda3. Anyone salivating at the prospect of deleting lots of stations are likely to be disappointed, as the sheer volume of printed material on the British railway system is such that even minor stations will have mentions in multiple books/almanacs etc. So I doubt this will get very far, but it is certainly a big and pointless waste of editor time and energy. G-13114 (talk) 20:16, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    such that even minor station will have mentions in multiple books/almanacs etc. "Mentions" are generally not significant coverage, per WP:SIGCOV: "Significant coverage is more than a trivial mention". Being listed in a book or almanac, or even multiple books or almanacs, doesn't make a train station notable. voorts (talk/contributions) 20:19, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    (ec)Generally these end up with dealing with handling new articles rather that mass deletions, much less "salivating". But the question and criteria is in-depth coverage by a published independent source, not mentions. North8000 (talk) 20:22, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    I have books which give at least a page or more of information regarding station's histories, architecture, layout etc. Given that most stations are 100+ years old, that's generally quite a lot of history. G-13114 (talk) 20:33, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    If a station has 1-2 pages of material in a source, that is something to invoke to establish GNG (or "close enough") compliance. That's not what I've seen at the bulk of these articles.North8000 (talk) 00:15, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    Sources are required to exist, not be present in every article right now. Thryduulf (talk) 00:23, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Moot. Whether the stations are inherently notable or not is not a relevant question, because they are all actually notable. Only some stations have easily googleable in-depth coverage online, probably circa most have in-depth coverage online when you spend time looking in detail but I have yet to see any evidence that any currently open National Rail station in Great Britain has no significant coverage when people take the time to actually look for offline sources rather than just assume that because the first two pages on Google are filled with results aimed at rail passengers that represents the sum-total of information out there. Thryduulf (talk) 20:47, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    Of all the comments here, this one from @Thryduulf resonates the most with me. If you think that a British rail station has ever been created, even in some tiny town, without the nearest newspaper taking note of it – probably repeatedly, and probably the neighboring towns' papers, too, either to rejoice in the existence of a nearby service or to bemoan the fate that sent all that commercial bounty to another town – you've not been paying attention. Yes, it sometimes requires time and effort to find older sources. Yes, the article might need an editor whose source-finding skills (or perseverance) are a bit above average. But notability isn't restricted to "subjects for which Prof Google provides obvious sources". It's for sources that require knowing about railway magazines and newspapers archives and local history books, too. WhatamIdoing (talk) 05:07, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    That's fine, in that case the station will pass GNG. That's all people are asking for. But articles without sources frankly shouldn't be created. The burden lies with the creator to add sources when creating articles. AusLondonder (talk) 08:45, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    @AusLondonder: Are there any articles about British Rail stations that are without sources? If so, who has been creating them? If it's a newbie who has never created an article at all, and this is their first attempt, let's help them out. If it's somebody with years of evidence who is WP:MEATBOTting out new unsourced articles, why are we not talking to them directly? --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 17:43, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    Isn't the issue here that most od these articles were created two decades ago when sourcing/notability requirements were much looser, and now that some editors are bringing good faith AfD noms, the responses are "keep it must be notable" instead of actually providing those sources that are claimed to exist? voorts (talk/contributions) 17:48, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    Probably not. Category:Railway stations in Great Britain contains 9,745 articles (subcat depth of 3), and it has only 18 articles in Category:Articles lacking sources. I haven't checked the numbers for a while, but I believe that one unref'd article out of every ~550 is a lower rate of unref'd articles than average. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:08, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 Full disclosure, I was the one who started the last train station notability RfC in 2022. I am dismayed to see people basically ignoring the consensus from that RfC. To those who claim "so much has been written about these stations that they're all notable!", I say it should be very easy to show significant coverage in a few sources and show GNG is met for a given station if this is true. People cried that all the train stations would be purged last time, and that has not happened. Hardly anyone was calling for that, and I certainly wasn't then and I am not calling for that now. It would not happen after this RfC either. Many, if not most active train stations are notable because they clear GNG on their own merits, not just because they are train stations. That is not a get out of jail free card to write stubs with 1 non-independent reference and then claim nobody can ever challenge said stubs on notability grounds. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 20:53, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2. This is far too specific and local of a category to have its own special notability cutout. They may well all be individually notable but that should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis through our regular notability guidelines rather than by fiat. —David Eppstein (talk) 23:32, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Moot, per Thryduulf. I can see why someone would think a tiny rural halt or boring suburban station wouldn't be notable (as in the subject of in-depth coverage in reliable sources, not to be confused with "I personally don't think this is important") but there is a huge volume of literature on the UK railway network, including full-length books on rural branch lines. Openings and closures are extensively documented in the local press and the railway magazines. Of course, many of them are over 150 years old so that coverage may not be easily found online, but most public buildings or infrastructure of that age will be notable. I dislike the concept of inherent or presumed notability but if we had 2,500 AfDs I can't imagine many of them resulting in deletion. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 09:18, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    Nobody's asking to have 2,500 AfDs. They're just asking that people not make spurious arguments during those AfD discussions. voorts (talk/contributions) 11:56, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    There's no need to make spurious arguments. The stations will almost all, if not all, be notable if anyone does the necessary research. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 13:07, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    This RfC was sparked by an AfD where many of the !votes were effectively "keep, every British train station is notable", notwithstanding the broader 2022 RfC that found no train station is inherently notable. voorts (talk/contributions) 13:30, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    Every British railway station is notable. Not because they are inherently notable, but because so much has been written about them that in-depth sourcing is available for every single one if you take the time to look beyond page 2 of google. Thryduulf (talk) 17:09, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    See my latest comment in the discussion section below. voorts (talk/contributions) 17:45, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 There is nothing specially encyclopaedic about British (or any other) railway stations, though in the UK they are so well covered by both historical and current news, and such an extensive literature has grown up around them, that it is hard to find one without decent coverage. We just need to go and find it, not create stubs and hope. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Verbarson (talkcontribs) 11:25, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    It's a bit of a moot point, as all the articles already exist. Garuda3 (talk) 12:29, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 being British (and I should know) does not confer automatic notability, they should be subject to our policies like every other station. Slatersteven (talk) 11:31, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 there is no such thing as inherent notability. As for this being moot, maybe. But, the trick will be finding this more than passing coverage rather than vapidly stating that it much exist somewhere. --Guerillero 12:43, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2. I do not believe in the notion that they are inherently notable. Hypothetically if 200 stations exist, and 199 of them are notable and have coverage, and 1 does not have coverage at all and is not notable, it is not made notable by virtue of every other station being notable. Honestly, the idea that British stations in particular would be the exception to a rule feels a bit Anglocentric. Is every train station in Japan notable? Is every train station in China notable? India? Around the world? The argument presented is that a newspaper somewhere at some point surely mentioned it, and that much is also the case for most trainstations around the world and, yet, there is no exception being carved out for them. Inclusion in the encyclopedia required verifiability, and notability is established by verifiable sources. If such sources exist, they should be found and cited in the article, otherwise, it should not exist simply because "all the others do". --Brocade River Poems (She/They) 19:10, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    How in any way does deleting one station article in a set of 200 benefit readers? It's going to cause confusion as to why one article isn't there and make it harder for people to find the information they're looking for. Garuda3 (talk) 22:54, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    How in any way does deleting one station article in a set of 200 benefit readers? It's going to cause confusion as to why one article isn't there
    Because if there are no verifiable sources, it does not go in the encyclopedia. Per WP:Verifiability All material in Misplaced Pages mainspace, including everything in articles, lists, and captions, must be verifiable. Per WP:BURDEN The burden to demonstrate verifiability lies with the editor who adds or restores material and per WP:N Information on Misplaced Pages must be verifiable; if no reliable, independent sources can be found on a topic, then it should not have a separate article.
    Likewise WP:NRV No subject is automatically or inherently notable merely because it exists. As WP:NOTDONE says, the Encyclopedia will never be finished, ergo, missing one station out of 200 is of no real harm. Carving out an exception for one specific country is wholly unnecessary. Brocade River Poems (She/They) 02:27, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    It's possible for a subject to have "verifiable sources" and still "not meet the WP:GNG". WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:16, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    Yes, and in that case, it still doesn't belong in the encyclopedia even if all 199 other stations do. Brocade River Poems (She/They) 05:25, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    I believe you will find that WP:FAILN and WP:EP have different ideas about whether verifiable information belongs "in the encyclopedia". WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:26, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    Frankly, I do not understand what you are even arguing. If a subject fails WP:GNG, it usually doesn't have verifiable sources. None of what you are posting, or linking, contradicts what I have said. Material with no verifiable sources automatically fails WP:GNG and does not go in the encyclopedia. GNG quite literally says A topic is presumed to be suitable for a stand-alone article or list when it has received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject.
    Per WP:RS Misplaced Pages articles should be based on reliable, published sources, making sure that all majority and significant minority views that have appeared in those sources are covered (see Misplaced Pages:Neutral point of view). If no reliable sources can be found on a topic, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it.
    &&
    The policy on sourcing is Misplaced Pages:Verifiability, which requires inline citations for any material challenged or likely to be challenged, and for all quotations. The verifiability policy is strictly applied to all material in the mainspace—articles, lists, and sections of articles—without exception, and in particular to biographies of living persons, which states:
    Emphasis my own.
    Reliable sources are how we establish verifiability. If there are no verifiable sources the article ipso facto fails notability and does not belong in the encyclopedia. Saying if there are no verifiable sources the article does not go in the encyclopedia is not the same anything that is verifiable does.
    If a source does not have any verifiable sources, it is not notable. At no point did I say anything with a verifiable source goes in the encyclopedia. Brocade River Poems (She/They) 00:10, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    Hello, @BrocadeRiverPoems,
    Sorry for my confusing reply. I would have explained in more detail if I'd noticed earlier that your account is only six weeks old. We get used to talking in confusing WP:UPPERCASE jargon and forget that there are helpful new people trying to make sense of it.
    You are correct that everything must be WP:Glossary#verifiable. Verifiable means that at least one source has been WP:Published in the real world (←absolute requirement, all content, with zero exceptions), and that this source is considered "reliable" for the specific statement. It is the best practice (but not technically a requirement, except for four common and important types of content) to cite at least one reliable source that WP:Directly supports the specific statement.
    It's possible to have a source that is reliable for a given statement, but which does not confer notability. For example, {{Cite tweet}} is used for verifiability purposes in 41,000 articles, but it is not the kind of source that the WP:GNG accepts. Similarly, we use {{cite press release}} in 73,000 articles (and more press releases are cited without using the template), but a press release never counts towards notability.
    For example: if the sentence is "Mayor Ma announced that she is retiring", then you could cite that to a social media post or press release from Mayor Ma herself. Those sources would be reliable. But the mayor talking about herself does not make her notable (←no Misplaced Pages:Separate, stand-alone article about her).
    When you have sources that verify the content but do not confer notability, then it is sometimes best to put the content in a related article about a notable subject. For example, if we decide that Mayor Ma is not notable, then perhaps we would put the verifiable information in an article about the Mayors of Smallville or in Smallville#Mayors. That approach keeps in the information "in the encyclopedia" without creating an article on a non-notable subject. WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:32, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    Understood! Thank you! Brocade River Poems (She/They) 04:37, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    Your answer doesn't address how it benefits readers. We're talking about a completed set here so you're not preventing any new articles being created. What is the benefit to readers of deleting one article in a completed set? I can name some drawbacks:
    • Inconsistency - there may be confusion as the casual reader expects to find a page (through Misplaced Pages or through Google) but there isn't one there
    • Wasted editor time arguing about deletion and then having to restore the article should we decide we actually do want an article on the subject
    • The article won't appear in Special:Nearby making it harder to discover for people who use that feature
    Garuda3 (talk) 08:10, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    This isn't about deleting any article, though, and is grossly offtopic. This is about whether or not the British National Rail should get special privileges. Nothing is innately notable. WP:NOTEVERYTHING. There is no requirement to have a complete set of anything if it is not notable. Notability is the basic requirement for inclusion. If it is inherently notable on the basis that a source exists somewhere, then find the source. An article doesn't get to exist just because other articles of a similar nature exist. There is nothing inherently special about British railway stations that necessitates carving out an exception specifically for them. It borders on WP:NATIONALIST to infer that the British National Rail system is somehow exceptional compared to every other rail system, so much so that it is above the rules which everything else is held to. You are arguing about how does it help the user, and I am telling you that according to policy having unverified information hurts the encyclopedia. Brocade River Poems (She/They) 00:01, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    There is no unverified information here - National Rail has information on all stations. Train Operating Companies will have information on the stations they serve. We have photos of every station. It's not exceptional because it's British, its exceptional because all articles already exist. The reason why this RfC was setup in the first place was because an article was nominated for deletion and the result was keep - it's clear this is about wanting to delete articles. Garuda3 (talk) 09:24, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    @BrocadeRiverPoems I think you're confusing notability (which tries to be an objective standard) with importance (which is subjective). This group of objects is notable in the sense that (almost?) all are the subject of significant coverage in reliable, independent sources. I would imagine most stations in most other countries are probably notable as well because transport infrastructure tends to be well written about. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 12:51, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2. I will never accept the notion of inherent notability in any topic area and will oppose that concept whenever it comes up. And the notion that only British train stations are inherently notable as opposed to train stations in France or Germany or Spain or any other country is utterly bizarre. The English Misplaced Pages is the English language encyclopedia of the entire world, not the encyclopedia of the English speaking world. Cullen328 (talk) 23:28, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    British railway stations being inherently notable would not imply anything about railway stations in any other part of the world. Thryduulf (talk) 08:54, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    It would imply that Misplaced Pages is Anglo-centric and makes special exceptions for British culture. voorts (talk/contributions) 11:44, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    Why on earth do you get that impression? X being inherently notable implies nothing about whether things that are not X are or are not inherently notable. It's a simple statement of provable fact that all British railway stations are notable based on the coverage in independent reliable sources. I would be surprised if the same were not true of some other country's stations too (I don't know enough about the literature regarding railways in other countries to be sure, but remember one would need to look at e.g. French language sources to determine this for France.). Thryduulf (talk) 11:50, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    There is a big difference in principle between "we have checked all examples of X and they all happen to meet our general notability standards" and "we are going to declare that all X are automatically notable and are not subject to our general notability standards", even when the outcome (that all X are notable) does not differ. —David Eppstein (talk) 13:18, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    There should though be some way of communicating we have checked all examples of X and they all happen to meet our general notability standards to editors such that they don't waste their and others time nominating them for deletion. Whether you call that "inherent notability" or something else, the effect is the same. Thryduulf (talk) 20:35, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    One way to communicate that would be to make sure that all those articles actually cite as references all of those in-depth sources that surely exist. Nominators are supposed to follow WP:BEFORE and find those references themselves but we all know they often don't. —David Eppstein (talk) 11:45, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    Obviously all the articles citing the sources is ideal, but Misplaced Pages is a work in progress and there are far more stations than editors with access to those sources so even if everybody dropped everything else and worked full time on improving only articles about current National Rail stations it would take some time get it to that state (and articles about other notable subjects will be deleted in the meanwhile as these editors would not be defending them at AfD). Thryduulf (talk) 12:26, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    Create an SNG that says that. Also, has someone checked every single British rail station for notability? At least one good faith AfD nominator couldn't find sources during their BEFORE search, given the AfD that lead to this RfC, and others claiming that most British railroad stations are notable here have admitted during this discussion that there are at least a some British rail stations that lack notability. Finally, we have checked all examples of X is in the eye of the beholder: there would have to be some sort of consensus, rather than a LOCALCON amongst editors who focus on Britain/railroads, that the sources that have been found do in fact establish notability. That does not exist right now. voorts (talk/contributions) 20:42, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    An AfD nominator not finding sources during a BEFORE search is not evidence of a lack of sources, especially given the comments about how insubstantial the check is required to be (as much as something robustly asserted to be option can be said to be required). Thryduulf (talk) 20:50, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    An AfD nominator not finding sources during a BEFORE search is not evidence of a lack of sources I am not saying that and I agree with that point. If you want people to have to do a SUPER-BEFORE search before bringing an AfD for a British railroad station, establish a consensus for that. Otherwise, once the BEFORE search is done, the burden shifts to the keep !voters to establish notability. As I have noted in other parts of this discussion, that means they need to say more than "every British railroad station is notable"; they need to actually provide some citations to SIGCOV in reliable sources. voorts (talk/contributions) 20:56, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    The problem with WP:BEFORE is this: you can't prove a negative. If somebody says "there are no sources for this claim", you don't know whether it actually means "I have spent several days checking various websites, books, magazines etc. and cannot find a single published source that supports the claim" or "I can't be bothered looking properly so instead I'll say that there are no sources, even if perhaps there really are". Also, when they say "there are no sources for this claim", this will be defeated by the first person to find a reliable source which does support the claim. Negatives can't be proved, only disproved. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 19:40, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    That's how the AfD system works. We presume that the nominator has done a good faith BEFORE search, and if nobody comes forward with a valid argument to keep or sources demonstrating notability, we delete the article or enact some other ATD. voorts (talk/contributions) 19:54, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    Also how the AfD system works: If you get a reputation for nominating articles about notable subjects for which sources are easily found, then we can WP:TBAN you. It takes a lot to reach this point, but it is possible. WhatamIdoing (talk) 05:21, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2, which in effect means that option 1 covers 99%+ of all railway stations in the British Isles, even the smallest and those that never opened. Mjroots (talk) 07:36, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Obviously Option 2, but this is moot - the level of literature that exists on British railway infrastructure and stations means that there will always be sources easily passing GNG for any station. As an example, my local station has only five trains a day, is used by <10 people a day on average, is pretty much in the middle of nowhere and yet its article has eight good sources, including five books. Black Kite (talk) 19:46, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    Who's publishing these books? Rail enthusiast organizations? The railroad itself? Academic presses? Did the books go through rigorous editorial processes or are they yarns spun by local historians? voorts (talk/contributions) 20:44, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    Taking a random small station, Brading railway station, as an example there are no sources by enthusiasts, local historians, or any of the companies that have operated trains there. The two books sources were written by a respected author and subject matter expert published by a respected publishing house. Of the other sources, several are from Historic England, several from news sources including BBC News and a local news website (whose standing I don't know), one source by the current tennant of the station buildings is used to verify the current use of the station buildings and one from National Rail (semi-independent of the operator) is being used only to verify the current service level and pattern. Thryduulf (talk) 21:08, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    Thank you. I hope you can see why it's kind of frustrating when these discussions rely on claims about how all these sources about British rail stations exist, but only provide those sources when they're asked to. The burden is not on everyone else to become familiar with British railroad stations and the books about them. If the keep !votes in the AfD that sparked this RfC had provided sources in the first place instead of relying on "keep, this thing is notable because all of them are notable", then we wouldn't be here having this discussion. voorts (talk/contributions) 21:12, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    The problem is that, while some (and perhaps even most) small stations have plenty of sources to establish notability (I don’t think anyone was arguing that this doesn’t happen), we can not say that they all have similar sources.
    The question is “what to do about those that DON’T have proper sourcing?” Blueboar (talk) 21:51, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    If there are any stations that don't have proper sourcing (and given that despite being repeatedly asked to, nobody has yet provided an example of a current National Rail station that fits this criteria) then we should do for every other non-notable member of a notable set of which at least a significant proportion of members are notable (something that unquestionably applies here): merge and redirect to the the most appropriate higher-level article (for railway stations that is usually the line or system they're a part of). The only exception to this would be if we couldn't verify the existence of the station, but even the first page of google hits will verify the existence of a current National Rail station, and The Directory of Railway Stations means that the existence of very nearly every station that existed prior to 1995 can be trivially verified. Thryduulf (talk) 23:08, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
    If by "proper sourcing" Blueboar means something closer to "little blue clicky numbers already in the article", rather than e.g., "reliable sources in the library", and if I couldn't find sources myself, then I think for higher-income countries, I'd probably ask at Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Trains before starting an AFD.
    That said, I once picked a long-defunct railroad station off a map somewhere in the middle of the US and had sources in hand within minutes. In my experience, it is not that hard to find sources, especially if your search strategy is more sophisticated than "Go to www.google.com and see what's on the first page". WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:10, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    @Voorts: but only provide those sources when they're asked to - I have hundreds (not kidding) of books concerning the railways of Great Britain, but I really don't have time to go through every single one of our articles about British Rail stations, and add sources. I don't want to do a half-arsed job, so one by one is the best you can hope for. Name a station, and I'll work on it. But don't pretend that because I've not added sources at a different station's article that automatically means that I don't have the sources. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 07:53, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    I'm talking about the context of an AfD discussion. I'm not asking you or anyone else to go fix every article right now. If an article is nominated at AfD, you should pull out your books and provide RSes to substantiate your keep !vote so that other editors can take a look at the sources and see if they agree that those sources meet GNG. We operate on consensus, not promises of "I have sources, they provide SIGCOV, but I don't have time to share them or even name them right now". voorts (talk/contributions) 17:12, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    If you're going to !vote keep, your burden is to provide evidence of SIGCOV in RSes. voorts (talk/contributions) 17:14, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    @Voorts: Also, re If the keep !votes in the AfD that sparked this RfC had provided sources in the first place instead of relying on "keep, this thing is notable because all of them are notable" - does this mean that my making these edits after my !vote renders my !vote invalid? --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 15:09, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    Yes. You could have made the edits first and given a policy based rationale for keeping instead of making several arguments listed at arguments to avoid. voorts (talk/contributions) 17:09, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
    I disagree.
    I sometimes list sources in the AFD discussion; there is a poorer chance of those sources getting added to the article than I could wish. Other times, I add them to the article but don't name them in the AFD. There is no reason to think that one approach demonstrates notability better than the other, and it's just silly to say that the order of the edits, especially when the edits are made within an hour of each other, makes any difference at all.
    The fact is that there are subjects for which notability is widely understood to be demonstrable. You do not need to show up at Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Earth with a new list of sources. Anyone familiar with the subject area knows what the outcome will be. WhatamIdoing (talk) 05:26, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2—absolutely, undeniably obviously. ~~ AirshipJungleman29 (talk) 10:25, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
    Why is it "undeniably obviously"? Given that there are good faith arguments given above for option 1, it clearly isn't either undeniable or obvious to everyone. Thryduulf (talk) 10:28, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
Option 1 per Garuda and G-13114. Cremastra (talk) 02:03, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
Option 2. We have no evidence that 95%+ of these stations are likely to meet GNG. Bare assertions that they do, based on the assumption that they would have garnered local press, are not evidence, they are personal opinions. The status quo -- achieved recently, via very wide consensus -- is to require GNG be met, so the onus is entirely on anyone wishing to change it to demonstrate the change is warranted. JoelleJay (talk) 23:02, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
Option 2. They do not have inherent notability but can be included in a list of stations as suggested by several other editors. CurryCity (talk) 20:15, 20 September 2024 (UTC)
Option 2. Per the general rule of no inherent notability and taking WP:BURDEN seriously is the foundation on which content policies can even begin to function. Alanscottwalker (talk) 13:48, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
  • I don't much agree with the current notability guidelines, but if there was consensus about it, then... ok (I don't know how much time needs to pass before you can try to change the existing consensus). But British National rail stations are not inherently notable simply because they are British. Regarding consistency for a reader, all content about non-notable stations should be merged into one general article about the line/route.--Oloddin (talk) 23:38, 23 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Comment. I'm not sure we need a specific note to the effect, but in fact they're all notable. Vast amounts have been written about the British railway network, covering every single passenger station. They all clearly meet WP:GNG. This is in no way "it's British so it's notable", but "it meets GNG so it's notable". There's no reason whatsoever for any British passenger station to be brought to AfD. -- Necrothesp (talk) 10:45, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose (as a railfan who used to sing The SLow Train from memory). Notability is established by the number of reliable sources directly about the subject. There is no such thing as "inherent notability", because Misplaced Pages is not a directory. Guy (help! - typo?) 21:32, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
  • All open mainline British railway stations are going to be notable and we shouldn’t be pretending they are not. A subject specific notability guide is useful in this case because a lot of the sources exist only in dead tree form so hammering a search engine of your choice will miss a lot. For anyone wanting to question this go check out the local history section of any British library. Its actually rather frustrating since you can be having a hard time finding wider local history but the railway stuff is extremely well covered. The articles all already exist (ok a handful of new stations open every year but that's minor) so its not a question of new page patrol but avoiding a bunch of pointless AFDs.©Geni (talk) 06:40, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
    New station openings these days make national news, cf. Ashley Down railway station. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 14:43, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
  • De jure the answer may be Option 2, but de facto (as others have noted) it is going to be Option 1.
    It's also interesting to me to look at the article that was sent to AfD that precipitated this discussion. Here's the state of it when it was nominated: . It seems to me that, even in that state, there is a lot of information on that article that is useful to our readers: where the station is on the map, a view of the location, which Travelcard zone it is in, which line it is on, when it opened, which train operating company runs it at the moment, how much it has been used over the last 5 years, etc, etc. It seems to me that the best way to present this information is as a self-standing article, rather than having to lose some of it, and/or jam it into an omnibus article as one topic amongst many. And the same is going to be true for any station on the UK network. I think I can understand the frustration of some who might wish the article had had more references, and who might wish to motivate others to try to find them, or to dig out more information about the station, both its history and any other information about its current nature / activity / status. But the reality is that if articles like this get sent to AfD they are not going to be deleted. And they should not be. Jheald (talk) 19:30, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 2 Topics aren't inherently notable. They need sources to avoid misinformation and bias. I might grant that many of these do have sources, somewhere. But certainly not all. And there is a WP:BURDEN to provide sources if something is contested. I don't want this to be a call for mass deletion, but nor is it a pass for endless stubs and unsourced material. It is still important to document best practices, and hopefully editors can work collaboratively in this topic area. (e.g.: consider alternatives like merging, redirecting, re-organizing, giving ample time for improvement with reasonable timelines...) Shooterwalker (talk) 14:08, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
    I might grant that many of these do have sources, somewhere. But certainly not all. so why has nobody been able to find a single instance of such a station not having sources, despite many attempts by many people over several years? Thryduulf (talk) 14:13, 20 November 2024 (UTC)

Did a quick count (it did say it was a poll) after 10 weeks. (Rounding) 14% said Option 1, 79% said option #2 (not inherently/presumed notable) and 7% said "moot" without choosing one of the others. North8000 (talk) 15:31, 20 November 2024 (UTC)

Discussion re Notability and British Rail stations

Is it worthwhile pinging participants of the prior RFC? -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 16:54, 10 September 2024 (UTC)

Probably not. I would advertise this at TCENT and VPP. voorts (talk/contributions) 16:55, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
I've advertised this at VPP, I think TCENT is unnecessary since it's not that big of a policy change. —Matrix(!) {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 20:29, 10 September 2024 (UTC)

I only have a moment before I have to log off, but before I prepare a more considered response in the next few days could I ask please what sort of sources would be considered reliable sources that are independent of the subject (my emphasis) in this context? Or, to turn it round, what sort of sources would not be considered sufficiently independent? I am thinking particularly of book sources, not online sources. Hassocks5489 (Floreat Hova!) 17:51, 10 September 2024 (UTC)

Same as any other case, really—was the source (in this case the book) written and published independently of the rail operator? If someone who studies mass transit or the like, but is unaffiliated with the railway operator and was not directed in what they were doing by them, writes a book, that's an independent source. Similarly if, for instance, someone unaffiliated with the railway writes a book about the history of an area, and mentions the importance of the train station in context of that, then that would be independent. If the railway writes or publishes a book, or commissions someone to do so, that is not independent. Seraphimblade 18:07, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
There's quite extensive scholarship around trains pretty much everywhere, but the British in particular love writing about them. You can find reliable secondary sources on almost anything regarding trains in the U.K. These are books often written by enthusiasts, but if there are the things we normally look for like editorial control and independence they are absolutely usable sources. There are also many periodicals which can be used as sources. I'm American so I can't really name any in particular, but there are sources out there for most train stations. What we can't use are things like timetables or self-published fan sites. Directory or database listings seldom mean anything for GNG. There are directories of every station to ever exist in the U.K., but if all they have is an opening and closing date and where the station was located, that doesn't help notability at all. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 21:11, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
@Hassocks5489: Can you point to any articles about British Rail stations that are based purely on non-independent sources? If you can't, can you suggest any where the majority of the content is from non-independent sources? --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 21:26, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
I haven't looked in detail at any station articles since this discussion started, as I have been away from home; I just wanted to seek clarification over what "independent" means in relation to this particular topic, and Seraphimblade's comment confirmed that what I thought was correct. I didn't want to start listing books that have substantial coverage (or using them to edit station articles) only to find that they were not considered independent. Hassocks5489 (Floreat Hova!) 08:17, 11 September 2024 (UTC)

I'm one of those old school Misplaced Pages editors who cannot believe that these discussions are being held. Having created some of those articles right at the start of my Misplaced Pages 'career' I watched as the format editors created alongside me was adopted for all 2,000+ stations here and overseas. To now consider that all that work is to be expunged is deeply depressing. This is not what Misplaced Pages was supposed to be about. doktorb words 18:59, 10 September 2024 (UTC)

Notability guidelines were way looser back then, and for better or for worse, the community has tightened them up. voorts (talk/contributions) 20:17, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
In most (but not all) cases, significantly for the worse. Thryduulf (talk) 20:56, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
Complete agreement. We worked to make an encyclopedia. Now apparently it's just a greatest hits. Disappointed. doktorb words 22:18, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
An encyclopaedia is not for original writing. For our own credibility as a source what we publish simply must be verified by reliable sources. AusLondonder (talk) 08:51, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
@Doktorbuk: "all that work is to be expunged is deeply depressing" - are you suggesting that all or most of the railway station articles that exist in Britain currently do not demonstrate meeting GNG and even with a search for sources won't meet GNG? AusLondonder (talk) 08:54, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
I'm saying that I can see where the wind is blowing. Misplaced Pages is no longer about being encyclopedic, it's clearly about mass deletion of work which doesn't fit very narrow, very exclusive "notability" guidelines. Having articles showing each and every UK railway station is what this place used to promote, including building projects and cooperation. Now it's about pressing delete. I'm too tired and depressed to fight against the new era of this website. Of course we should keep every single UK railway station article, they're a long standing central core of an encyclopedia. But if that makes me an outdated dinosaur, I'm too old to battle against consensus. doktorb words 11:51, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
We used to have articles on each individual Pokemon species too, but we've since tighten our belt to avoid looking like a pop culture catalog. Instead, we want to make sure we serve a broad readership, making sure that we have standalone articles based on significant coverage where possible, and using lists where that cant be done (as would be the case for rail stations). At the same time, UK rail history has been discussed in numerous sources, so that there is a strong likelihood every station could have a standalone page, there just needs to be enough evidence to show that trend towards meeting the GNG for these. If they can't be shown, they can be moved into a list, and we'd still cover them too. Masem (t) 12:02, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
Drawing parallels between UK railway stations and Pokémon is ridiculous. doktorb words 12:19, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
Not really, both are areas where there are dedicated people extremely well versed in the area and likely have caraloged lots of information gleamed from primary sources that they could write guides on every single one, but where in many cases there is a lack of significant coverage in secondary sources to show us why one specific instance has drawn attention from reliable sources. We allow those article with such coverage to remain and collaose the rest to lists with future potential to expand if more sour ING can be found, using soft redirects to preserve the original articles. — Masem (t) 15:11, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
I'm sorry that you feel defeated here, but the requirement that there be at least two or three secondary, independent and reliable sources that significantly cover a topic is not narrow or very exclusive. voorts (talk/contributions) 11:54, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
@Doktorbuk: Should we have articles for every train station in Japan, Germany, India and China? That's around 30,000 articles. I'd argue no country is exempt from GNG, we should have articles only for stations in any country demonstrated to meet GNG. AusLondonder (talk) 12:58, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
I don't know enough about the literature about stations in those countries, but every topic that meets the GNG should have an article. If that means we have an article about every railway station in those countries then that's a good thing. Thryduulf (talk) 17:12, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
While we have to keep in mind things like WP:NOPAGE, I'm generally in agreement with Thryduulf here. I can't speak as to if the sourcing is there for those stations, but personally I have no opposition to train station articles so long as they meet GNG. For example, we are better off as an encyclopedia by having Beijing railway station as an article than if we did not. It would be pretty weird for someone with my username to want to delete all the train stations. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 23:39, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
@AusLondonder as I say, I feel deflated and beaten by discussions like this, so really you can do what you will at this point. I created these articles, worked with editors to promote the articles, and now you've come along to delete them all. I'm one man. Just one editor. I've no power. I've no strength. I've no fight. You've won. Delete, delete, delete, you're the victor, I used to matter and I used to count. Misplaced Pages isn't for creators anymore, you're in charge now. doktorb words 18:20, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
Misplaced Pages isn't for creators anymore I find it rather insulting (as do others in this discussion, I am sure) to be painted as someone who only cares about deleting things just because I don't think British train stations (or any others for that matter) should be exempt from our notability policies. I have spent easily hundreds of hours of my time creating and expanding articles. AusLondonder has created several hundred articles. It is simply unfair to label anyone who disagrees with you as an evil deletionist who doesn't care about building an encyclopedia. Being a doomer about Misplaced Pages doesn't achieve anything. If you choose to stop creating articles or editing altogether, that's your choice, but nobody is kicking you out. I certainly don't think you giving up will help the encyclopedia. And for the record, only one editor here is calling for mass deletions of train station articles, and I commented in opposition to them. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 23:33, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
You should have checked for sources on Riddlesdown Station before you nominated it and after closing the AfD as Keep because you didn't like the thrust of the discussion re-nominating it shortly after could be seen as disruptive in my view, Atlantic306 (talk) 18:42, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
@Atlantic306: Per above, I did try to check sources. If everyone is saying "keep" there's no point letting the discussion drag on. But of course new information will occur in this RfC that might invalidate previous arguments, and therefore we may re-nominate it. Unrelated sidenote, but if you could avoid run on sentences this would improve your clarity in the future. —Matrix(!) {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 18:49, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for the grammar link. Where is the guideline that suggests the nominator can close an AfD in order to renominate it later when it has been given more publicity ? Atlantic306 (talk) 19:00, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
As long as no other editor has advanced a delete or redirect rationale, an editor may withdraw their AfD nomination and close it as speedy keep. voorts (talk/contributions) 19:15, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
Agree, it's the re-nominating shortly after that is problematic in my view Atlantic306 (talk) 19:21, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
Such re-nominations tend to result in people digging in their heels, and more people piling on with accusations that the nom has WP:IDHT problems. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:16, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
@WhatamIdoing: to be honest I withdraw my idea to renominate the article given the sourcing by Redrose64. I do think it is helpful to have this RfC though to avoid future arguments like those present in the initial AfD. —Matrix(!) {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 17:32, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
  • If all this sourcing exists, then we do not need a special exception as they will pass anyway. Slatersteven (talk) 17:11, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    Agree. Some editors have made claims like "I have a dozen books on British railroada that give each station at least 2 pages of coverage" (these books must be at least 10k pages, since presumably they cover other things), but nobody has provided a cite to a single book in this discussion as far as I can see. voorts (talk/contributions) 17:42, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    Very few books will cover every railway station. Consider: there are presently a little over 2,500 railway stations in Great Britain. If one book were to devote one page to each individual station, that book (if printed on 80 gsm paper) would be about five inches thick. It would be much thicker if it also included the thousands of stations that were once open but are now closed. Rather, there are books about railway companies, or railway lines, that often describe the individual stations. There's a prolific series from Middleton Press that has now passed 600 books, and Riddlesdown, the original trigger for this, is given coverahe in their book Country Railway Routes: Croydon to East Grinstead - including Woodside to Selsdon along with 17 other stations or locations. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 17:59, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
  • Quick count on my shelves is that I have 80 books tagged as 'railway line histories', i.e. those that will be specifically listing stations. Maybe two bookshelves of them. There are also books like Butt that are specifically directories of stations.
One point to remember is that there are very few really small British stations. Those that were are termed 'halts' rather than stations, and practice here (AFAIR) has always been that stations were assumed notable but that halts would have to demonstrate it individually (plenty of halts have been notable for some specific reason). Andy Dingley (talk) 19:34, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
While I have voted against the idea that British Railways are inherently notable, it is worth noting that there are verifiable sources that mention the station subject of the AfD. Brocade River Poems (She/They) 20:03, 11 September 2024 (UTC)

About the RFC: "The question" as shown on the RFC pages is IMO okay, but the expanded version underneath turns it into a Double-barreled question by introducing the concept of Misplaced Pages:Inherent notability. It also provides a False dilemma.

Editors are asked originally whether a specific small subset of articles should be exempt from the relevant SNG. Then this gets expanded and twisted, so that the options are not "Yes, exempt from the relevant SNG" versus "No, not exempt from the relevant SNG", but instead are "Inherently notable and exempt from the GNG" versus "Not inherently notable and must conform to the GNG". There is no space for "Nothing is inherently notable, but it's the SNG (which names three separate methods of qualifying, only one of which is the GNG) that applies", which I suspect is the actual majority POV in the community, much less for "Nothing is inherently notable, but there's no practical difference between inherent notability and the way I understand the GNG (which, for example, actually says that 'multiple sources are generally expected', rather than 'multiple sources are always required', even if editors like voorts sometimes claim the GNG has a 'requirement that there be at least two or three')".

I don't think this is a serious enough problem to re-write it, but anyone who tries to write a closing summary is going to have a more complicated task than was necessary. Editors can help the future closer by being as clear as possible about what they think, and avoiding overreliance on voting-type statements. WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:46, 12 September 2024 (UTC)

Huh? NTRAINSTATION itself uses the phrase inherently notable, says train stations are not that, and says they need to meet a relevant SNG or the GNG. Option 2 says the same thing. voorts (talk/contributions) 11:38, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
You're right, Option 2 says that – but the editors discussing this don't. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:54, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
People aren't bound to the exact text of an RfC option. A good closer will read what people are actually saying rather than closing the discuss as "25 bolded option 2s means those people support exactly waht option 2 says". People often agree to a proposition with caveats or proposed amendments, even in the best designed RfCs. voorts (talk/contributions) 18:31, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
I also think my understanding of the GNG is pretty generally accepted, but I respect that others have different readings of it and occasionally I'm willing to IAR on that point; categorically exempting British railway stations is not one of those occasions. voorts (talk/contributions) 11:49, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
We want to avoid saying "all X are inherently notable" as that will drive editors to create mass stubs as well as lead other editors to look for ways to identifies adjacent topics to type X as inherently notable too. It's fine if the practical effect of saying "inherent notability" and and SNG that presumes notability is the same, that all topics in X get articles, but at lease with the basis in an SNG, then we have less problems should the presumption fail and AFD is used. It's very hard to AFD a poor article if it falls under a claim of "inhereted notability" Masem (t) 13:43, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
It's very hard to AFD a poor article if it falls under a claim of "inhereted notability" "poor articles" shouldn't be taken to AfD, they should be improved, but "inherited notability" and "inherent notability" are two very different things. Thryduulf (talk) 13:47, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
I meant for AFD that if one did a proper BEFORE search and failed to find further sourcing for a stub created on basis of "inherent notability", it would still be difficult to have editors agree to delete or merge that at AFD. (and yes I did mean to stick to inherent notability in my statement above. We don't do inherited notability either but that's for different reasons) Masem (t) 14:05, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
Personally, I think that nothing – not chemical elements, not US presidents, not even Encyclopedia – is inherently notable, but I also think that editors sometimes use that language to say "Look, we've been through this before: anyone who does a thorough search will be able to find the sources, so if you haven't found them, that is more likely to indicate that your search skills are poor than to prove that the sources don't exist in the real world. Stop wasting our time with these AFDs, because they're not going to result in deletion". That can be a valuable thing for an AFD nom to hear, even if it's unpleasant and even if (IMO the more important failing) it could result in a story could around that some things qualify for articles merely because they exist. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:59, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
Yes, that is how it operates, but sometimes those people are wrong and it's straight up not true that the thing people are claiming is inherently notable is in fact notable at all. Indeed, in this discussion, even the most railroad stations are notable crowd has admitted some of them are just not notable. A BEFORE search is not required to be extemeley in depth; we don't require editors to go to the local library or village archives and pour through microfiche. Telling good faith AfD noms that they're wrong and that X thing must be notable without providing evidence to substantiate that claim is basically gaslighting them. voorts (talk/contributions) 18:28, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
Nobody in this discussion is arguing that all railway stations are individually notable, just that every currently-open National Rail station in Great Britain has sufficient coverage in reliable sources that they are all notable (a very significantly lesser claim than your strawman). However, I've never seen an AfD for any subject that verifiably is or was a railway station located on a line or system that has an article result in deletion - every single one I am aware of has ended as "keep", "merge" or "redirect" and the same is true for most articles about future railway stations (certainly nothing where construction has started has been deleted). Thryduulf (talk) 20:43, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
I"m not strawmanning; I thought it was implied that we were talking about British railroad stations, not global ones, given the topic of this RfC. However, I've never seen an AfD for any subject that verifiably is or was a railway station located on a line or system that has an article result in deletion - every single one I am aware of has ended as "keep", "merge" or "redirect" and the same is true for most articles about future railway stations (certainly nothing where construction has started has been deleted). That's fine, but I think it's beside the point, which is that editors think it sufficient to say "Keep, all railroad stations in Britain meet GNG" when there is no consensus that that is an adequate rationale in an AfD discussion for railroads in general; it appears that this RfC will now establish that such a carveout does not exist for British railroad stations. There's no harm in requiring editors to actually provide sources when a good faith AfD nomination is brought, instead of !votes that are effectively "trust me bro, I know of the existence of 15 books on railroad stations in Britain". voorts (talk/contributions) 20:51, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
With 15 NPP'ers doing 90% of the reviews, and 10,000 article backlog, why would it be "valuable" to hear a complaint that somebody thinks that they didn't do an extensive enough wp:before? Doubly so when the person making the complaint hasn't looked for or found any GNG sources, which is usually the case. North8000 (talk) 18:40, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
I often think that we need a WP:AFTER guideline to compliment WP:BEFORE - when an under-sourced article has survived an AFD (based on the fact that sources actually DO exist) it should be incumbent upon those who vote “Keep” to improve the article and actually add the relevant sources. Blueboar (talk) 12:24, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
Why only those who vote “Keep”? Surely the others are at least as concerned that the article is undersourced. Phil Bridger (talk) 12:41, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
I've thought it through and am of two minds on wp:before. I think that it should still exist, but that w need to make it the norm that the main part of building a new article is finding and including suitable sources, and a norm for those advocating "keep" is to find and include them. Two reasons why wp:before is needed is that there are extreme deletionists out there, and the norm is that GNG-dependent articles don't meet the strictest interpretation of GNG, thus being vulnerable to extreme deletionists. But for NPP it causes problems in many ways, including people beating up overloaded NPP'ers instead of finding the sources that they claim exist. And for most of those, GNG sources don't exist, their "coverage exists" (note the omission of "GNG" before "coverage" ) claim is referring to non-GNG coverage. North8000 (talk) 13:13, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
I am looking at this from the other side: You do a lousy BEFORE search (or skip it, because it's not actually required). You've spent 30 seconds on this.
I present you with a list of sources on the proverbial silver platter. It probably took me 15 to 60 minutes. Having already spent my time on a task I'm not interested in, and which I did only because your sloppy work set a seven-day timer was ticking, why shouldn't you have to go back to the article and add the sources?
Think of it as a form of penance for having done a lousy BEFORE search. It might even discourage people from trying to use AFD as a form of clean up. We've all seen the occasional editor who thinks that "Speedy keep, according to the four sources I've just added to this article" is a win. He spent 30 seconds on an AFD nom statement and has a shiny new set of refs in the article, bringing it up to his personal standard without having to do any of the actual work himself. What could be better or easier? WhatamIdoing (talk) 05:35, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
+1. —David Eppstein (talk) 06:15, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
(On a related note: Thank you, David, for the multiple hours you've spent helping me assess notability for NPROF and other subjects.) WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:50, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
I don't understand your post at all. Could you explain, including who/what roles the hypothetical people are? North8000 (talk) 18:04, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
Would a story help?
Spamhunter Sally has found another uncited (or under-cited) article about an organization. As you know, Misplaced Pages:Notability (organizations and companies) sets a higher than average bar. As you also know, some editors dedicate themselves to protecting the wiki from
The org that Sal has in their sights this time is a large organization in a non-English speaking country, so it's difficult to find relevant search results, especially if your search strategy is to put the English transliteration of the name into your favorite web search engine, without quotes, with English-only filters enabled, so you get a lot of irrelevant hits. The AFD rationale says says "Nobody has cited this article for five years! I did a BEFORE search and didn't find any sources. We should delete it."
Alice says "Here are three sources in Arabic about this org". Bob says "Here is a good source in French about this org, and I've nicely formatted the citation for you". Chris says "I'm finding lots of sources when I search on the non-English local name". David says "It's mentioned in a report by the UK government". The article is kept.
What's next? The options are:
  • The article remains uncited (or under-cited).
  • The closer adds the citations to the article.
  • The nom adds the citations to the article
  • One of the AFD participants adds the citations to the article.
What's your choice? Note that I'm deliberately leaving out "Someone who didn't edit the AFD page noticed that there were sources listed there that are not in the article", as that's unrealistic. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:00, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
@WhatamIdoing: Thanks for the response. There are so many unspecified or non-typical things in that that I'm hesitant to respond. But maybe I'll add a few assumptions and respond. Let's assume that by "undercited" you mean does not have the included sources to satisfy ncorp-GNG on a GNG-dependent article. (which would be the only basis for AFD'ing that article.) And let's assume that since you used the word "organization" instead of company, that it is a not a for-profit organization. And the respondents at AFD operated based on Misplaced Pages:How Misplaced Pages notability works, they say that it was a highly enclyclopedic topic, that it was real-world-notable, recognized that the unusually stringent standards of Ncorp are intended for for-profit corporations and not for the case at hand, and allowed a more lenient interpretation of ncorp GNG and decided "keep". In that case my answer is that all is settled; the article can exists as-is. (Like any article, it can be improved ) North8000 (talk) 21:35, 20 September 2024 (UTC)
(The particular AFD I had in mind was one of the largest research hospitals in the world, and I think it was technically a government agency.)
You would leave the article un-/under-cited. I would also be content with that outcome (though, obviously, it's best if someone does that extra step). However, I saw complaints about an AFD not too many weeks ago whose rationale basically consisted of an editor complaining that the sources identified in the previous AFD had not been added to the article, so it was time to delete it, so some people apparently don't agree with us. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:50, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
Per WP:BURDEN, wouldn’t it be the responsibility of those editors who want to keep the article to add the relevant sources. Blueboar (talk) 13:05, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
No. WP:BURDEN says The burden to demonstrate verifiability lies with the editor who adds or restores material. This says nothing about sharing the responsibility with people who are discussing the article content, let alone those who are discussing whether the article should be deleted or kept. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 14:09, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
Verifiability is required for all content: the reliable source must already exist, and the burden of identifying the reliable source is on the keeper or adder. Alanscottwalker (talk) 14:15, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
Exactly. Assuming the nominator has done a reasonable BEFORE search for sources, an AFD can be considered a challenge to the article’s Verifiability (specifically, the Verifiability of any statements as to why the topic is notable). Thus BURDEN applies. It is the responsibility of the editors who wish to retain the article to supply sources. Blueboar (talk) 14:25, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
Right, but unfortunately the BEFORE is often turned into a catch-22: You must do before, so we can smugly tell you, you don't know what you are doing. Alanscottwalker (talk) 14:33, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
^ This. The fact is that not everyone has the knowledge or skills necessary to do a decent BEFORE search. A search that seems reasonable to the nom won't necessarily seem reasonable to someone who knows about the subject area. Sometimes it's hard. The nom of Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/White cake made a 100% genuine effort to find sources. I don't fault him one bit. He just didn't happen to have the specialist knowledge necessary to find reliable sources amid all the recipes. White cake now names 22 sources and has a couple hundred words about its history. An ordinary BEFORE search doesn't help you find that. Noms do sometimes need help (that's why we're a collaborative project, right?), and we are not always kind to noms who need help.
That said, some noms have unusual ideas about what constitutes a reliable source. A couple of years ago, I saw a TBAN proposal for a frequent nom who appeared to have a personal belief that if a source contains a single sentence about anything in the long list at Misplaced Pages:Notability (organizations and companies)#Examples of trivial coverage, then the entire rest of the source is invalidated. You could have a thousand-word source about the some detail of a market-roiling corporate merger, and he'd reject that source as merely "routine coverage". So you could have someone do a good BEFORE search but do an idiosyncratic review of the sources they've found and come to a different conclusion. I find this far more irritating than the person who looked through 10 screenfuls of basic web search results before concluding that he couldn't find any sources. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:35, 21 September 2024 (UTC)
Remember that we are judging sources that have been identified and written down, which can include sources on a talk page as well as sources at an AFD; ultimately they should be included as in line citations (and even accepting as bare url ones), but a proper BEFORE review will consider these other locations in addition to what can be found off site and in print.
Of course if an edit claims they have a copy of a difficult-to-obtain source, there should be some onus on them to include that since they positively identified themselves as having access to it. We can't require that but can urge that. Masem (t) 20:14, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
If a difficult-to-access source is identified but not turned into an inline citation by someone who knows what it says (and therefore which sentences in the article it can actually support), someone else might be able to list the source in ==Further reading==. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:05, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
Sources in foreign languages that are difficult to interpret may become the soil for hoaxes, see Zhemao hoaxes. Pygos (talk) 02:24, 19 September 2024 (UTC)
WP:V#Accessibility covers both difficult-to-access sources and sources in foreign languages. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 06:30, 19 September 2024 (UTC)

Book list

Belatedly, as promised above, I have started compiling a list of sources at Misplaced Pages:WikiProject UK Railways/Sources#Railway stations, focused specifically on the extent of coverage of railway stations. More to come throughout the day. Editors who have books in their own collections are welcome to add details. It may also be worth writing up some "test cases": picking some stations, going through each book and identifying exactly how much is written about them. Hassocks5489 (Floreat Hova!) 08:48, 12 September 2024 (UTC)

There should be a central repository of editors with libraries they are willing to share. Sort it by categories and it would be an invaluable benefit to the improvement of articles. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 16:27, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
I have a vague recollection that there is/used to be something like this. I can't remember what it is/was called though and a quick search hasn't found what I'm thinking of unfortunately. Thryduulf (talk) 16:33, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
WP:RX voorts (talk/contributions) 16:49, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
I knew about Resource Exchange but not WP:SHARED, which is exactly what I was suggesting. Something that could use more advertising. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 17:07, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
That's helpful too. I didn't know about that one. voorts (talk/contributions) 17:52, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
Might I suggest that someone whip up a simple Wikiproject-level talk page template which can be added to all British rail pages with those book sources, and then use some automated tool to add that template to the talk pages of all existing British rail station pages (eg all those in Category:Railway stations in Great Britain), such that 1) those sources become available to all such pages so they can be used for improvement, and 2) helps to address any BEFORE concerns, since those are likely sources that can be used and become appropriately identified within the article's talk page. --Masem (t) 16:14, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
Option 2, the fact they’re British is completely irrelevant to policy, this looks like exceptionalism. Kowal2701 (talk) 19:35, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
@Kowal2701 may I respectfully suggest that you read what other people have written in this RfC instead of arguing against a strawman? I don't see anybody arguing for British exceptionalism. I do see people making well-reasoned arguments (backed up by an ever-growing list of sources) that all British stations already satisfy the GNG, and I've yet to see anybody point to a station they believe isn't notable so that interested editors can add sources. All of which leads me to believe that this discussion is a waste of bandwith. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 19:54, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
This RfC is about whether they are "inherently notable" or whether they should remain subject to the same standards as other articles. If no one can find a station that doesn’t meet the criteria then there’s something to be said for option 1, but I find that hard to believe. If this is to stop lazy AfDs then I could support it, but it still looks exceptionalist lol Kowal2701 (talk) 21:00, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
You are not the first person to say that it's hard to believe every station is actually notable, but nobody has actually managed to find a station that isn't - despite many requests, almost nobody actually even tries, they just presume that the subject matter experts must be wrong (perhaps because they're biased). I doubt that the British railway network is unique in being so highly covered in reliable sources, it's just that there are enough people editing the English Misplaced Pages who know about and have access to the sources about the British network. Thryduulf (talk) 21:16, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
Quite. I would imagine most French and German stations are notable (though much of the source material won't be in English of course), they were early adopters of railways and built extensive networks. Maybe Spain and Portugal. A lot of stations on railways built for the British Empire and possibly other European empires will be notable. Railways in North America tended to be built more cheaply at first (partly because of the vast distances of course, compared to one small island) and were more ephemeral but I would still imagine any passenger station with a regular service would satisfy the GNG. There's a plethora of material on railways in general and stations in particular, and I doubt that's a uniquely British phenomenon. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 21:34, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
I hope the closer focuses on the quality of arguments made. Kowal2701 (talk) 21:43, 2 October 2024 (UTC)

Tram stops, too?

It looks like we also have an endless collection of British tram stops, for example Baguley tram stop. Yes, that's right. A place a tram stops. Not even a building. AusLondonder (talk) 00:36, 3 October 2024 (UTC)

All of the people arguing above that of course all British transportation infrastructure has enormous amounts of book-length secondary-source coverage are welcome to supply proper sourcing for this article. Currently it has only primary sources. —David Eppstein (talk) 00:45, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
Indeed. No doubt a book about tram stops would have been an incredible bestseller. AusLondonder (talk) 00:48, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
@David Eppstein nobody is arguing that - some infrastructure is not notable, but railway stations do have lots of secondary sourcing. Tram stops are more complicated than railway stations - some are notable, some aren't and they need to be assessed individually (2 minutes on google is not sufficient). Most (but not all) tram stops in Manchester were converted from railway stations and thus (unsurprisingly to anyone who has actually read and understood the discussion above, rather than just assumed it must about British exceptionalism) have sufficient coverage to demonstrate notability (remember notability is not temporary). Whether this new-build tram stop is notable I don't know (I haven't looked), but comments such as No doubt a book about tram stops would have been an incredible bestseller. are neither collegiate nor helpful. Tram stops can be little more than signs on a post (e.g. many of the first generation ones in Blackpool) or they can be more significant infrastructure projects than some stations (e.g. the former Station Street stop in Nottingham). Thryduulf (talk) 00:55, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
Yeah, what Thryduulf said. Until the expansion of the Manchester Metrolink, the vast majority of stops were former heavy rail stations that were converted and will therefore have a significant amount of literature in the same way as current stations (Timperley tram stop, for example, was opened in 1849). The new-build stuff is of course different and will of course need citing from newer sources. I've looked at a few of them and the sourcing seems pretty routine, but I'm sure it can probably be improved as well as few people appear to have actually edited a lot of them since their original creation. I'd be more concerned about entire new-build systems, for example Croydon Tramlink, for which Therapia Lane tram stop seems to be a typical article - the sourcing there is ... not great. Black Kite (talk) 20:51, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
Would it not still be better to have a single article covering the tram stops in a particular city, with individual stops to be split out into separate articles iff the content on them becomes large enough and well-cited enough to merit separate treatment? BD2412 T 21:19, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
In many cases, probably yes. However I wouldn't use Manchester as the example for that approach, nor would I recommend merging without discussion (redirecting without any attempt at merging is likely to lead to drama, nominating for deletion is about the worst thing you could do for the cause given there is a strong consensus that verified existence is sufficient for at least a redirect). Thryduulf (talk) 21:25, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
Yeah tram stops are hit and miss. There are books on the Manchester Metrolink so I wouldn't be shocked if most of those stations but some of the new-built Croydon ones might well not be. My general preference would be for one bigger article over dozens of cookie-cutter small articles but certainly some will have enough coverage to write a more substantial article HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 22:37, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
Thryduulf: If attempted prods and WP:BLAR redirects on badly-sourced content such as Baguley tram stop have led only to reversion to their badly-sourced state, with no improvement, what alternative is there but a full AfD? Any attempt on the article page to discuss redirect/merge is unlikely to receive a less-obstructionist response. —David Eppstein (talk) 21:30, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
Any attempt on the article page to discuss redirect/merge is unlikely to receive a less-obstructionist response but discussions on talk pages and especially WikiProject pages are exactly the right venue when approached with a constructive attitude, willingness to listen and no time limit. Thryduulf (talk) 22:15, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
Your linking Wikibullying in the first word of your first response to me in this section does not convince me that "a constructive attitude, willingness to listen" is to be found in your responses in this venue, which you describe as "exactly the right venue". And the repeated attacks against every single process for cleaning up this mess, including your characterization of discussion here as bullying, the immediate and unhelpful reversions of the PROD and BLAR at Baguley, and the bizarre claim at Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/George Street tram stop that individual tram stops are somehow exempt from AfD, are convincing me that there is no approach to this mess that will not be attacked as the wrong approach. —David Eppstein (talk) 23:29, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
This is getting ridiculous. When alleging people are not listening it is better not to, in the very same comment no less, provide evidence that you are not listening to what people are saying. Nobody in that discussion is claiming that individual tram stops are exempt from AfD, they are explaining (as has been done in multiple other discussions, including here) why discussing them as a set makes more sense. Thryduulf (talk) 23:44, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
A "keep" claiming that "notability of these stops should be discussed as a set, not by individual AfDs" is somehow different from claiming that individual tram stops are somehow exempt from AfD?? Ok, if you say so. —David Eppstein (talk) 00:04, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
I guess for most cases this is the desired format, with a few tram stops from the list having their own articles. There is of course some semantics involved (what we call a tram), but I currently can not imagine a tram system in which all stops are notable on their own and have information beyond the opening date, infrastructure, and the lines. Ymblanter (talk) 13:30, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
Is it really a problem if an article about a piece of transit infrastructure "only" has information on what it is, when it was used, and how it relates to other pieces of transit infrastructure? I'm not sure what else would be wanted in an article. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:16, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
I would say history (beyond a simple opening date) and architecture of the infrastructure (name of the architect, style, similarities etc, not just having one island platform period). Ideally of course also mentions in popular culture but we do not have that for most stations or tram stops. Ymblanter (talk) 04:31, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
It sounds like you would rather not have articles about transit infrastructure unless there's something unusual or interesting about them. What if there really isn't any interesting history, the architecture is boring, the architect is an unknown government employee, and the style is just like all the others?
It might be convenient if all notable locations could host some suitably dramatic moment (a photogenic protest over its construction, say), and it would be desirable if they featured some bit of public art, but I'm not sure that "being an interesting subject" is something that the GNG cares about. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:19, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
It's weird how we keep being told there's such a tremendous amount of literature available about individual stations and now some tram stops but it's not present at the articles (Timperley tram stop is an example) and the literature is never really presented for review? AusLondonder (talk) 21:20, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
It's not at all weird when you realise that Misplaced Pages is a work in progress and most of these articles were written many years before the current fad for insisting that everything meet much higher standards right now or else it must be deleted. Timperley tram stop is an odd example to use, given that the article has existed since 2006 and includes a book source. Do consider that the time spent on endless discussions like this one where the same answers are given to the same people (who are rarely satisfied) time and again, is time not spent improving the articles you are complaining about. Thryduulf (talk) 21:32, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
I didn't start the discussion. Notability is not a fad, it's an integral part of how we operate and I'm surprised you dismiss notability requirements so flippantly. AusLondonder (talk) 21:34, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
The fad is not notability, but insisting that articles must demonstrate notability by presence of sources in the article now contrasts with the WP:NEXIST philosophy that served Misplaced Pages well for the first 15 or so years. Thryduulf (talk) 22:25, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
I have to question whether NEXIST has actually served Misplaced Pages well for those 15 years. Blueboar (talk) 22:44, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
Given that it enabled Misplaced Pages to grow from nothing to the world's largest encyclopaedia I think it's indisputable. Thryduulf (talk) 22:48, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
If we were starting again, I'd insist that all articles contain at least one third-party source that verifies the subject's existence but we can't apply today's standards retroactively to 15- or 20-year-ood articles. So I support efforts like WP:UKT/S to compile sources and improve crap articles. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 22:55, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
How can we claim one way or the other that the same thing wouldn't have occurred if we'd required sources from the start? Either the editor adding content is basing it off a source they have in-hand, and thus could add the barest of citations (or even a description of a citation) somewhere, or they're basing it off memory and their contribution is as verifiable as a forum post. JoelleJay (talk) 23:32, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
You're conflating multiple different things here. Just because someone writes something without direct reference to a source does not mean it is unverifiable, let alone that it is incorrect. Thryduulf (talk) 00:20, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
I didn't say it was unverifiable. I said it was as verifiable as a forum post. It could be accurate content for which others would have to do the work to find sourcing, or it could be a hazy misremembered synthesis whose origin is the editor's brain rather than any published work. Providing a source lets us compare it to the editor's summary; if the added content is not supported then we can conclude that it is at least not verifiable to the purported source, and sometimes that's all we need to determine it's not verifiable at all (e.g. it's an obvious misinterpretation). Without a source, we don't know whether the content is verifiable or even falsifiable. JoelleJay (talk) 16:48, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
Well mostly because Misplaced Pages didn't really worry about sourcing until 2004 or so by which point it had made its initial climb in the alexa ranks and Nupedia was dead and buried.©Geni (talk) 15:50, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
Nope. The only stop on the blackpool tram network with an article is the railway station. See List of Blackpool Tramway tram stops.©Geni (talk) 16:35, 4 October 2024 (UTC)

So somebody is saying that there's no need to establish notability (via specific sources) for GNG-dependent articles at inception of an article? That would certainly change Misplaced Pages. Get ready for an upload of a few billion resumes/CV and business advertisements. North8000 (talk) 12:56, 4 October 2024 (UTC)

The only articles that are required to have a source are BLPs. Subjects need to be notable, but they are not required to demonstrate that by means of including sources unless and until notability is challenged. If that were not the case then there would be a speedy deletion criterion for articles that don't include sources (A7 and A9 require articles about certain subjects to claim notability, not demonstrate it). Thryduulf (talk) 13:13, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
Again, I'm finding your arguments quite troubling. This is particularly concerning: Just because someone writes something without direct reference to a source does not mean it is unverifiable, let alone that it is incorrect. Without sources, we have absolutely no way to verify that we're not publishing misinformation or hoaxes. I remember being at school in the early 2000s and teachers would always say "don't visit Misplaced Pages, it's all made up and written by anyone." We've come a long way in addressing the credibility issue but attitudes like yours are completely at odds with what the community expects regarding notability. "The only articles that are required to have a source are BLPs" - this is completely contrary to the spirit of WP:N and importantly also WP:V: "In the English Misplaced Pages, verifiability means people using the encyclopedia can check that the information comes from a reliable source. Its content is determined by previously published information rather than editors' beliefs, opinions, experiences, or previously unpublished ideas or information. Even if you are sure something is true, it must have been previously published in a reliable source before you can add it." Again, this is the absolute, complete opposite of what you have written above: Just because someone writes something without direct reference to a source does not mean it is unverifiable, let alone that it is incorrect. I have challenged the notability of Church Street tram stop and you have responded "doing this randomly to one stop in isolation would look ridiculous". So we can't challenge notability of tram stops as a whole because some "might be" notable but we also can't challenge notability of tram stops individually because that's "ridiculous"? AusLondonder (talk) 15:18, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
Yet again you are confusing "verifiable" with "verified" and conflating "unverified" with "incorrect". Until you learn the difference it's pointless continuing to discuss any of those things with you. As for Church Street tram stop, you are ignoring that there are multiple levels between an individual tram stop and all tram stops, in the context of that edit summary I was referring to systematically discussing stops on Croydon Tramlink (I could have been clearer about that), but even if you think picking stops at random is a good idea (and if you do, please explain why) then deletion is not the appropriate response to a tram-stop (or indeed railway station) that is not individually notable. The correct response is to merge the content to a broader article and redirect the title to there. There have been probably hundreds of AfDs about stations and tram stops over the years, and the only times I'm aware that they have ended in delete are (a) when it could not be verified they exist(ed) (including articles about speculative proposals), or (b) when there was no article to merge the content to. Thryduulf (talk) 15:56, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
I had a very quick look and the best I could find on Church Street is a few mentions in Croydon Tramlink: A Definitive History. One of those mentions talks about a turnback loop for use when there are problems in Croydon town centre so there might be enough for a couple of paragraphs. I'm happy to be proven wrong but my gut feeling is that most of the Croydon tram stops probably don't meet the GNG. The best way to proceed is probably to start a discussion on a wikiproject talk page to see if anyone knows of sources that have been overlooked and if not I'd support merging and redirecting them. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 18:29, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
@AusLondonder, this seems to be a fairly common point of confusion these days, so maybe it bears explaining. We have a policy at Misplaced Pages:Proposed deletion of biographies of living people that says this about BLPs:
  • If the biography remains unsourced after seven days, the biography may be deleted.
There is no similar statement for any other subject. If you want to write an unsourced article on Christmas candy, then by policy you are free to do so. We have tried a couple of times recently to introduce such a requirement, and they've failed. (Links to the most recent RFCs are in the middle of Misplaced Pages talk:Verifiability/FAQ, if you'd like to read them and try again.)
WP:V requires that it be possible to cite everything. WP:V does not require that everything be cited. WP:V requires inline citations for four specified kinds of material (e.g., direct quotations), but anything that doesn't fall into those four categories is not required to have a citation ever – even though everything must be verifiable. The gap here is that WP:V requires that people using the encyclopedia can check that the information comes from a reliable source, but it does not require that this be possible without going to a library, using a search engine, or otherwise finding a reliable source all by themselves.
Similarly, WP:NRVE says "there must be verifiable, objective evidence that the subject has received significant attention from independent sources", but it does not say that this objective evidence must be cited in the article. The evidence just has to exist, (quoting from NOR) By "exist", the community means that the reliable source must have been published and still exist—somewhere in the world, in any language, whether or not it is reachable online—even if no source is currently named in the article. Editors at AFD are not required to believe hand-wavy assertions that sources exist, but they're also not prohibited from either making or accepting such assertions. Nobody who grew up in the Western world actually needs a source to tell them that Christmas candy is a thing, and no policy requires them to pretend that they have no prior knowledge (quite the opposite, in fact).
WP:Glossary#verifiable and WP:Glossary#uncited may be useful. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:34, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
I think you're taking a very 2008 view of Misplaced Pages. The community has become much less tolerant of unsourced content. We've also moved on from the days of inherent notability of topics as diverse as radio stations, schools, and train stations. All those topics were effectively presumed inherently notable prior to RfCs which attracted major, community-wide participation. "WP:V requires inline citations for four specified kinds of material (e.g., direct quotations), but anything that doesn't fall into those four categories is not required to have a citation ever" one of those four situations is "material whose verifiability has been challenged" - that's exactly what multiple editors are doing. Let's go back to the most basic of Misplaced Pages policies here - GNG. "A topic is presumed to be suitable for a stand-alone article or list when it has received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject." WP:WHYN, part of GNG states: "We require "significant coverage" in reliable sources so that we can actually write a whole article, rather than half a paragraph or a definition of that topic. If only a few sentences could be written and supported by sources about the subject, that subject does not qualify for a separate page, but should instead be merged into an article about a larger topic or relevant list." - highly relevant to individual tram stops and many train stations. AusLondonder (talk) 06:41, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
I'm taking a very "2024 view" when I say that we have repeatedly tried and failed – including twice just this year, in January 2024 and March 2024 – to get any sentence into any policy that says unsourced articles are not okay.
Hopefully the ideas that our written policies and guidelines should accurately reflect the real rules and that we should not operate with unnecessary reliance on unwritten rules has not been relegated to the territory Misplaced Pages:Old-fashioned Wikipedian values. But if "write down the real rules" is a "2008 view" and the shiny new modern approach is to refuse to disclose important rules and then complain that people didn't magically know that they needed to comply with the secret rules, then I will admit that I prefer the old approach. It's more honest, for one thing.
Declaring that you think an article is not WP:Notable is not the same as "challenging the verifiability of the material". A subject can be non-notable even when the material in the article is 100% verifiable. Or even if it is 100% cited. A verifiability WP:CHALLENGE usually looks like {{fact}}, and does not usually look like an AFD page. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:12, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
You're really mischaracterising those discussions. For example the March discussion was only about new articles and had editors opposing because the NPP and draftify process already work well for new articles and many others opposing because they did not support a grandfather clause for existing articles/only applying the policy to articles created after April. Relatively few argued that unsourced articles are acceptable going forward. AusLondonder (talk) 06:43, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
  • Comment So we've been told repeatedly above with regards to tram stops that "some are notable, some aren't and they need to be assessed individually" which was endorsed by several editors. As a result, I began Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/George Street tram stop about a raised piece of concrete tram stop. Now I'm told "There was clear consensus....notability of these stops should be discussed as a set." So at a combined AfD if a couple of tram stop out of a set of 30 tram stops is notable, they'll all be kept. But individual non-notable stops also cannot be taken to AfD. This is a WP:LOCALCONSENSUS absolutely refusing to accept Misplaced Pages policy and broader community consensus. AusLondonder (talk) 16:51, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
    That local consensus makes as much sense as holding an AFD for a chemist with no recorded accomplishments and finding that people are arguing that if some chemists rate articles, all chemists rate articles. Largoplazo (talk) 17:50, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
    Yet again I find myself misquoted, my words distorted and responded to in a way that makes me wonder whether any attempt was even made to consider what other people are saying. The comparison to chemists is a fallacious absurdity. What has actually been said is that where there is a tightly defined, finite set (such as tram stops on Croydon Tramlink) where the members are interlinked (e.g. by sequential navboxes) it makes sense to discus the set as a set. It is also the case that where some members of such a set are notable, that all members are plausible search terms. Before responding further, please educate yourself on the difference between an article and a redirect. Thryduulf (talk) 18:25, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
    I was neither quoting nor responding to you. And I'm not willing to accept that the desire to make navboxes comprehensive in their categories, which is not policy, trumps the notability rule, which is. Largoplazo (talk) 19:26, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
    Yet again you have completely failed to understand the difference between an article and a redirect. Thryduulf (talk) 20:17, 4 October 2024 (UTC)


Can we please read wp:point. Slatersteven (talk) 13:30, 4 October 2024 (UTC)

I think this is a reasonable discussion here, even though it might have started with wp:point. Ymblanter (talk) 13:33, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
Coming to this late, but I really think everyone can agree that an article having more reliable sources is a better thing. Misplaced Pages's quality has gone up over the years through the hard work of many volunteer editors. I'm well aware of and do not dispute the fact that British railways have been the subject of extensive coverage in literature. This is a good thing and allows us to write better articles, and British editors have contributed, and continue to contribute, plenty of recognized quality articles covering trains. However, that doesn't mean every single tram stop in the U.K. has been the subject of significant coverage. There are certainly plenty of examples of tram stops that are notable, be it solely for being tram stops or for those with a previous history of heavy rail use. At the same time, many are little more than the equivalent of a bus shelter and have not been covered extensively.
What I think many editors object to is the argument that tram stops are automatically notable instead of being analyzed on a case by case basis. I'm of the belief that essentially any full sized railroad (not a scale model) that has ever operated in the United States is notable, but I would oppose making this a formal rule. Instead, I find sources to prove notability beyond a reasonable doubt, and it's not an issue. It is not unreasonable to ask for at least one source showing some level of coverage beyond basic details such as opening date and service frequency. New Haven Union Station, to name an example local to me, is clearly notable because its history, including its design and operations, has been extensively discussed in reliable sources. I am sure the same can be said for many British stations, and if such an article were to go to AfD it should be fairly simple to provide a handful of sources showing a GNG pass. But I cannot support an extremely broad carve-out saying stations are automatically notable just for existing. We should be guided by the presence of lack thereof of significant coverage. Sometimes that means a tram station or a request stop is better covered within a broader article. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 21:07, 9 October 2024 (UTC)

This was thoroughly discussed in 2022

This was thoroughly discussed in 2022 ( ] ) and it was decided (and essentially a wp:snow close) that train stations are not inherently wp:notable. Sincerely, North8000 (talk) 22:28, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

I'm still not seeing anyone arguing that they are (although this thread has been dormant for a month and a half). Just that most or all of them meet the GNG (at least on some countries' networks) but that you might not know it from the first page of Google. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 22:35, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I'd probably summarize this discussion this way:
  • Almost everyone agrees that no subject is inherently notable. However, almost all the editors who actually know anything about British National rail stations also agree that all British National rail stations qualify under the GNG. The bottom line is that there is no special rule for British National rail stations, and – like atomic elements, US presidents, Shakespeare's plays, and other subjects that attract a lot of attention from the world at large – all of them are notable.
WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:41, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

Notability and youngest people

I have a concern for notability for List of youngest killers. Should all children and young people (who are criminals) can be presumed notable per WP:NPEOPLE and WP:NLIST, unless if uses WP:WTAF guideline. Even that violates WP:BLPLIST and WP:MINORS policy. Absolutiva (talk) 00:48, 20 November 2024 (UTC)

I think there is an argument to be made that the list does not have adequate selection criteria and that the extensive lack of BLP citations requires deletion, but I think that it would likely be kept at AfD. voorts (talk/contributions) 01:18, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
@Absolutiva, welcome to Misplaced Pages. When we say "notable", we mean "qualifies for a separate, stand-alone article". Nobody in the List of youngest killers is "presumed notable"; if we did presume them notable, we'd be saying "Not only should all of these people's names be listed in the List of youngest killers, but there should additionally be a separate article about each and every one of them." Merely putting someone in a list doesn't mean that they're notable (presumed or otherwise).
Also, many of the perpetrators are unnamed and/or dead, so including them cannot violate any BLP policies.
I'd suggest that the first thing to do with that list is to remove all the teenagers. More than 500 American minors – mostly teens – killed someone last year. That's 10 a week; it's "newsworthy" but it's not unusual. Teenagers have served in armies throughout history, and therefore killed people throughout history; again, it may be deplorable but it's not unusual. Compare List of youngest fathers, which has a cutoff of age 14, and see Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/List of youngest birth mothers for information about a list which we eventually deleted. An admin could check, but I think that list had a cutoff around age 10 or so.
I think that some clarity around selection criteria would help, but my main suggestion would be to make sure that it's focused on "youngest" (which is going to mean blanking most of it), and that editors decide whether the standard is homicide (which includes "accidents" like dropping a loaded gun) or if it's an actual murder conviction (which requires wanting the person to end up dead, which in turn requires the killer to be old enough to understand what death is). WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:10, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
In the list of youngest fathers, to describe males for notable cases of spermarche. For cases of precocious puberty, only one is notable, and for teenage pregnancy, but several are notable. But for previous deletion, these articles cannot be made compliant with WP:NLIST, WP:NOTNEWS/WP:NOTNP, WP:BLPNAME, and WP:INDISCRIMINATE.
Also in the list of youngest killers, it does meet criteria with WP:EXEMPT1E. Absolutiva (talk) 08:53, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
I don't think that the List of youngest fathers is describing notable cases of 'starting to produce sperm'. It's describing mostly royalty who got married at a very young age. Teenage pregnancy used to have a similar list (example) but is now focused on modern celebrities instead.
I think that a List of youngest killers can fully comply with every policy. I understand that WP:YOUDONTLIKEIT, but it's a valid subject for a list (because, e.g., reliable sources write about what to do with very young children who have killed someone); it is not turning Misplaced Pages articles into news stories (maybe go read the links you're posting?); the killer's name is not the name of some "loosely involved, otherwise low-profile person" and they are very much "directly involved in an article's topic"; and a list of killers by age is a narrowly curated collection of information instead of "an indiscriminate collection of information". WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:36, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
Update: The List of youngest killers recently survived a round at AFD (not nominated by anyone in this discussion). There is now a discussion atTalk:List of youngest killers#List-selection criteria that would benefit from advice from more editors. WhatamIdoing (talk) 03:57, 9 December 2024 (UTC)

Requiring a neutral source

At the moment, we have a footnote with an unusual requirement:

In the absence of multiple sources, it must be possible to verify that the source reflects a neutral point of view, is credible and provides sufficient detail for a comprehensive article.

This is unusual because WP:ALLOWEDBIAS and WP:BIASED say that non-neutral sources are not required at all. But I have been thinking about this a little further: If there's (really) only reliable source, then how do you "verify that the source reflects a neutral point of view"? I don't think that's possible, or perhaps it's better to say that it's not a pointful type of evaluation. "Neutral" is defined in WP:NPOV as whatever point of view is put forward by the balance of reliable sources, so if only one reliable source exists, then that source's POV is the neutral one – automatically and by definition.

I therefore think that we should take these words out. If this is meant to refer to a situation in which only one RS has been identified, then it's pointless; if this is meant to refer to a situation in which multiple RS are known to exist in the real world, but only one is being cited, then it's inconsistent with our content policies. Either way, it's not appropriate. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:42, 21 November 2024 (UTC)

I'm not sure that's accurate either. We expect all sources to be factual. But we don't expect sources to be neutral. The encyclopedia is neutral, but we often include biased opinions, with attribution. I am not sure why it needs to be addressed here, at our Notability guideline. Shooterwalker (talk) 16:05, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Let's say SPLC or ADL put out an article detailing a hate group, and is the only significant source that goes in significant coverage in the group. Now, both these groups generally write reliably but with a clear bias and tone against hate groups, and both groups in the past are known to aggressive categorize groups this way that don't align with other RSes in some isolated cases. I would be vary wary of being able to write a NPOV compliant article with that as the single source due to that view. Hence why that footnote is necessary. — Masem (t) 16:20, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
The sentence says "it must be possible to verify". How does one verify whether a source reflects a neutral point of view? Don't tell me that you think it's important. Tell me the practical, step-by-step actions I can take to determine whether an article in a newspaper, or a book on a library shelf, reflects a neutral point of view when there are no other sources to compare its contents against. WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:47, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Is it an wp:sps, for a starter, if not, Does it have a clear wp:cir, those are two ways. Slatersteven (talk) 16:49, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
I was under the impression that the GNG doesn't accept self-published sources at all, so I assumed that was a given. I'm not sure why you linked to Misplaced Pages:Competence is required, which is about "people who contribute to the English-language Misplaced Pages". Perhaps you meant a different page? WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:53, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
It does not stop people trying it on. Slatersteven (talk) 16:57, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
This is where being a responsible WP editor comes into play, we have to look at bigger pictures and historical aspects of the sources. We know SPLC and ADL are generally good but we also know they have specific advocacy roles behind what they do. We also know that in a few cases their rush to classify groups as Haye groups have been met with concern not just from said group but by other media and advocacy groups. So that tells me that while both groups may be reliable, in absence if any other sources that show agreement, they should be immediately taken as the "neutral" view.
In contrast, if a BBC or NYTimes piece was the only source for a topic, these are not considered publishers with any clear bias and thus there would be less concern about using that for notability.
This is part of what a research's job needs to include, being aware of the larger picture around topics and how those topics are covered. Masem (t) 17:30, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Are you suggesting that editors determine whether the content is neutral, not on what the NPOV policy says (which is that content is neutral if it fairly reflects the views of all reliable sources), but instead on the reputation of the publisher? That would mean that any book published by HarperCollins is going to be okay, because they publish a wide variety of POVs in the course of a year; any book published by a small press that specializes in a POV is not.
I would expect editors to do some Opposition research on the author as well, if they personally dislike the content. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:38, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Yes it has to be neutral as we all think we are important. Slatersteven (talk) 16:22, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
That sounds like it needs <sarcasm> tags. WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:48, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
NO, it is saying that at least two policies tell us a source has to be neutral, I.E. not have a possible bias. Slatersteven (talk) 16:50, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Which two policies do you refer to? WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:53, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
That sounds like it needs <sarcasm> tags., and with that I am out of here with a firm no. Slatersteven (talk) 16:57, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
AFAICT, we have one policy at Misplaced Pages:Neutral point of view#Bias in sources ("WP:ALLOWEDBIAS") that says sources do not have to be neutral ("However, biased sources are not inherently disallowed based on bias alone..."), one guideline at Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources#Biased or opinionated sources ("WP:RSBIAS") that says sources do not have not be neutral ("reliable sources are not required to be neutral, unbiased, or objective. Sometimes non-neutral sources are the best possible sources..."), and no policies or guidelines – except this disputed footnote – that say sources have to be neutral.
AFAICT we also have no policies or guidelines that say the definition of neutral is "not have a possible bias".
If I've overlooked something, I would be grateful for a link proving me wrong. With the information I have, however, I am forced to conclude that your statements are incorrect. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:30, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
It cones down a lot to how we state what NPOV us, it is not "all sides must be presented equally", but that we should present the most prevailing views in proportion to the number of sources behind those views, with exceptions made for fringe and pseudoscience topics. If you only have one source, it is near impossible to know where the neutral POV point of balance is unless you are certain the source itself is mostly free of bias. Masem (t) 17:35, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
If neutrality is measured "in proportion to the number of sources", and there is only one source, then the view in that source is neutral.
What you seem to be saying is something like this:
If we have a dozen reliable sources, and 100% of them present one view, then I'll keep my own personal POV out of it. Whatever 100% of sources say is 'neutral'.
But if there's only one reliable source, and 100% of the one source present one view, then now is the time for all good editors to come to the aid of neutrality by injecting their personal POVs into deciding whether whatever 100% of reliable sources say is 'neutral'.
That doesn't align with the NPOV policy, and "compare the source against my own POV" – which, I remind you, this sentence says you must do – is an extremely bad way of "verifying" that the source is actually neutral. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:58, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Leaving aside the anti-values idea that we must decide whether a source is neutral based on our personal perception – because we're always going to have editors who believe that SPLC engages in reverse discrimination against white men – rather than by what the NPOV policy says (which is about whether the source matches others, which means that a source that has a very bad or very biased reputation could still be fully neutral for our purposes), I think this kind of misses the point.
Imagine that the source is hopelessly biased. Imagine that the source is "Why I Think This Company Owes Me a Billion Dollars" or "This Politician is a Pointy-Haired Poopy-Head".
But imagine, too, that you can write a purely factual article from it, by skipping over the bits about "I suffered irreparable damage when their maliciously defective product exploded on my kitchen table" and focusing instead on the bits like "Third-party testing from Underwriters' Laboratories determined that at a temperature of -40°C, the blue-green widget emits light with a wavelength around 550 nm" or "Here is a complete transcript of Paul Politician's speech that night, with notes in the margin highlighting the classical rhetorical devices he uses, including alliteration and rhyming schemes".
Why would you reject a source from which it's easy to write a purely factual article? WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:14, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Part of how NPOV is approached is the basis that the views taken by reliable sources generally align in distribution by the views of all, the latter which is impossible to quantify. We are using what RS say a sample points of the larger take on a topic. With multiple RSes, we can be pretty confident that there aggregate views likely represent the same proportion of views on the topic held by all, even with biases in sources. The more sources, the better this assumption. But with only one source, that is not an assurance that view is capturing the broader unpublished view on the topic, unless we know that source generally remains unbiased.
No we can never know what the broad views on a topic can possibly be, but having multiple RSes is what gets us there. With only one, it's really difficult to make that claim. Masem (t) 18:25, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
So you argue that with a sufficiently small number of sources, it's better to rely on editors' personal POVs to determine neutrality than to reply on sources. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:41, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
I expect editors to use the skills as researchers, setting aside any POV they may have, as to evaluate sources, as we expect in all situations. Masem (t) 19:10, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Surely notability should be supported by more than one single source - regardless of the neutrality issue. Blueboar (talk) 20:19, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
That depends in part on whether we're talking about demonstrating notability or just being notable. We theoretically don't require demonstrating notability at all, so one might cite a source that is wholly inadequate from the GNG perspective (which is where this footnote resides) even if others are available.
The usual story for having one source is that for some historical subjects, the Dictionary of National Biography might be the only source that is presently known to editors. Due to what we know about that book's inclusion criteria, it has generally been accepted as evidence that we should be able to find primary sources (e.g., 19th-century newspaper articles). WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:28, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Surely notability, Misplaced Pages-notability, requires more than a single source. Absolutely. Where an article is acceptable with only a single source, it will be an inherently encyclopedic topic not subject to the WP:N guideline. WP:N should not pretend to cover all articles. SmokeyJoe (talk) 07:52, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I would approve of telling editors to "evaluate sources", but the footnote doesn't say that. The footnote says that they must WP:Verify that the source has the right POV. Do you actually think it should say that? WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:06, 21 November 2024 (UTC)

I think that if taken in the context of it being in the GNG section of the Notability guideline, and with the realistic understanding that the recognition shown by a suitable source when they decide to provide in-depth coverage of the topic matters, then it makes more sense.....the recognition is meaningless if the source is not independent. Sincerely, North8000 (talk) 20:45, 21 November 2024 (UTC)

I would agree with that, but it doesn't say "independent". It says that it has to be verifiably neutral. We apparently don't intend for the neutrality to be verified (since we suggest no mechanism for doing that), and IMO we shouldn't be demanding neutrality (because it conflicts with WP:NPOV).
Note that this is an actual must statement, being strongly defended by Masem, who told us a couple of months ago that "we generally only use such absolutes like "you do not" or "must not" in those policies with some legal ramifications". I don't think it's possible to comply with it. The sentence, as written, says you must be able to verify that the contents are neutral. So far, the best Masem's come up with is that editors should express their best editorial judgment about about whether the publisher is neutral. That's not the same thing. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:57, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
You are right. I added "independent" because I think that it was the type of neutrality intended in this context. Sort of like the decision to create the in-depth coverage of the topic was neutral rather than saying that the content must be neutral. (so it's not a publicity release or something written by their record label) I wasn't arguing to keep the exact same wording, just trying to see the intent of it. North8000 (talk) 21:20, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
I imagine that, if it wasn't added to game a specific dispute, the intent was probably something like "If you're going to put all your eggs in one basket, then you need to be using a really trustworthy basket". The problem is that what they wrote is remarkably different from that. The actual rule says:
  • Editors must evaluate the source based on its POV (="the source reflects a neutral point of view"). Only a source with the Right™ POV is acceptable. I can't think of a single other instance in which a policy or guideline tell editors to determine the suitability of a source by seeing whether it has the Right™ POV, but maybe there's something in WP:FRINGE along those lines.
  • Editors must verify that the source's POV is the right one. Usually when we talk about verifying something, we're talking about finding other sources (e.g., a book review that says the book is a good one). So instead of saying "Well, I personally think that advocacy group isn't neutral", to which the next editor may reply "Well, I personally think that they're extremely neutral, so there!", the wording of this footnote says we're supposed to be finding sources that say they're neutral or not.
  • But this sets us up for the fundamental logic problem:
    1. NPOV defines 'neutral' as whatever the sources say.
    2. The context of this sentence stipulates that there are no other sources.
  • So either you can have only one source, or you can have a source that verifies that the contents of the first source are neutral, but you cannot actually have a situation in which there is only one source and you are able to verify that the contents of that lone source are neutral. If you can actually 'verify' the neutrality of the contents (as opposed to, e.g., 'opine about it' or 'express my indisputably excellent editorial judgment about it'), then you no longer have a single source.
So IMO it's wrong as written (because IMO it should follow the WP:ALLOWEDBIAS policy), and it's also self-disproving as written. The latter point could be solved by re-writing, but the first step is admitting that we have a problem.
I'd suggest this as a way of solving problem problems:
In the absence of multiple sources, it must be possible to verify that the source reflects a neutral point of view, is credible and provides sufficient detail for a comprehensive article.+In the absence of multiple sources, the source should be credible and provide sufficient detail for a comprehensive article.
That would remove all the problems (e.g., saying that we must WP:Verify that the POV is the right one) and still let editors argue that various advocacy groups aren't sufficiently "credible". WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:04, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
The issue with "must" is fine to fix but I think that's it's still that we want editors to be aware that using a nominally reliable but biased source as the only evidence that can be found to support notability is questionable, but to add on from what you said above, if such a source is used to stick to facts and avoid subjective content in that work's voice. Masem (t) 22:42, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
I think this sentence should be eliminated. GNG does not require that a source be secondary, so this could result in articles that are based entirely on a detailed primary source story in a magazine that receives no follow-up coverage. voorts (talk/contributions) 01:29, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Or, for example, it would allow for the creation of an article about an obscure historical concept covered in only a single secondary source. In order to be compliant with WP:NPOV, editors would have to phrase the entire article as "According to Jane Smith, XYZ is a concept. In her book, XYZ: A Concept, Jane Smith wrote .... Smith said .... She also said ...." voorts (talk/contributions) 01:35, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I'm not sure what you hope to achieve. The sentence is about a neutral+credible+detailed. It doesn't say anything about primary or secondary sources. Removing it should have no effect at all on primary/secondary sources. WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:33, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Yes, my point was GNG in general says only that secondary sources are preferred, but not required. Thus, this sentence could (and likely will) be interpreted by editors to allow an article to be written based on a single primary source so long as it is "credible" and "detailed". The problem is that it's impossible to write a neutral article that way and it's OR. voorts (talk/contributions) 13:56, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
@Voorts, could you explain that last bit more? If you write something based upon a reliable source, then it's not OR. If you write something based upon a single reliable source, it's literally impossible for it to be SYNTH. For example:
  • Reliable primary source says: "Alice Expert is an expert at expertness. She graduated from Big U. with a degree in expertise and now serves as the president of the Important Academic Society."
  • Misplaced Pages stub says: "Alice Expert is the president of the Important Academic Society."
  • Amount of material that violates NOR: Zero.
  • Best guess at neutrality: It's fine (though I'd have my doubts if I tried to write something 50x this size).
I've no particular objection to removing the sentence entirely, but I think it's possible to write a short stub on most subjects from one or two really weak sources and still not violate any core content policies. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:29, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
People and scholars have different notability guidelines. NBIO makes clear multiple secondary sources are required, and NPROF relaxes the rules. So the example of the business person you provided probably wouldn't meet NBIO if only a single source exists, and the example of the head of the academic society probably meets NPROF.
To return to the example of a concept, which can only be notable under GNG, writing an article based on a single secondary source, where no other secondary sources exist, would not be neutral because it's impossible to get a second point of view. I think it would also encourage OR; some editors might be tempted to analyze the primary source documents used by the secondary source to analyze the concepts. voorts (talk/contributions) 18:21, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I'm not sure that a second point of view is necessary, if the article is sufficiently short. Consider:
  • Reliable primary source: "Bob Business is the founder of Big Business, Inc., which is known around the world for the quality of their blue-green widgets. Starting the business on his birthday in 1974 with money he had saved up from washing cars, he built the business from the ground up, learning as he went. Now he is the head of a company that employs hundreds of people..."
  • Misplaced Pages article: "Bob Business founded Big Business, Inc. in 1974.
What neutrality concerns could an editor reasonably have about this? Are we realistically going to find a "second point of view" about this sentence?
I'm not sure that we'd want to have such an article, but I suggest to you that the reason to avoid this is "we don't want it" and not because "This apparently neutral sentence, which match the contents of the cited source very closely, still somehow violates the NOR and NPOV policies, even though there isn't a single sentence in those policies that it doesn't comply with". WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:26, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
As I noted, people are different from things covered by GNG. In your example, Bob Business shouldn't have an article because if we truly only have one reliable primary source, the subject is not notable under NBASIC; this footnote and GNG wouldn't come into play. The proposed footnote text indicates to editors that it's okay to have an article based on one source so long as the source is credible and provides sufficient detail. I think the hypothetical I've provided indicates why that's not a good idea. I also agree with what @SmokeyJoe said below. voorts (talk/contributions) 21:54, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
What I'm trying to understand is why, instead of saying just "That's not probably notable" (which I'd agree with, assuming the cited source were the only one in the world ), you were earlier saying that it would violate NOR and NPOV. WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:10, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
That example would not violate NPOV or NOR. I think the example I gave of the concept would, since it would be based entirely on one scholar's historical research and perspective. The article would violate NPOV because it would be based on a single point of view: it would have to be written as "X scholar said Y about concept C" ad nauseam. I think to be more precise about NOR, it wouldn't necessarily violate that policy, but I think some editors would view it as license to dig into the primary sources that X used and provide their own OR version of what C is or means. voorts (talk/contributions) 22:13, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Who says the only way neutrality can be assessed is via IRS sources with SIGCOV? If multiple HQRS have passing mentions of the topic that characterize it as "bad", but we have one biased SIGCOV source that characterizes it as "good", I don't think it would be NPOV to base the article on the SIGCOV source. In such a case, no matter how detailed the SIGCOV, we just shouldn't have an article on the topic due to it not being possible to write both comprehensively and reflect a neutral POV. The topic can be covered in another article where more context is available and there is no need to be comprehensive. JoelleJay (talk) 02:53, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
(Though if you change your mind on not having articles that are difficult to write neutrally, I've Got a Little List of endlessly disputed articles that never would be missed. A handful in ARBPIA, rather more in GENSEX, at least two about autism...) WhatamIdoing (talk) 03:11, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Your proposed change looks fine. There is no need for the source to represent a neutral point view. Hawkeye7 (discuss) 04:13, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
BadlyDrawnJeff. It is generally preferable to have multiple sources, however, one substantial source can demonstrate notability. In this case extreme care should be given to verify that the source reflects a neutral point of view and is credible.
He was prone to arguing too many lines in parallel, and ina big tentative edit he slipped these dubious words into a footnote where no one but a wikilawyer looks.
I reckon “reflects a neutral point of view” was a reasonable stringent phrase intending to be stronger than “independent”, maybe “substantially independent” but trying to avoid repeating words. Strongly independent? It doesn’t quite flow right.
I dislike that the change further opens the crack for the GNG to be met by a single source. I think these words allow for an exception that would be allowed already, and that it is better to delete the note, which nobody but wikilawyers read anyway. SmokeyJoe (talk) 07:45, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
“provide sufficient detail for a comprehensive article” is an invitation to accept non-notable topics. “Sufficient detail” is tautological. It is not useful guideance. SmokeyJoe (talk) 07:58, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

RFC: School Notability Criteria

I believe it's important to revisit the notability standards for schools on Misplaced Pages. There are numerous school articles, many of which are mere stubs that resemble directory listings rather than encyclopedia entries. This raises questions about whether the current notability guidelines effectively ensure that only genuinely notable schools are included. I suggest we discuss potential improvements or clarifications to these guidelines to maintain the quality and relevance of Misplaced Pages's content. 1keyhole (talk) 16:21, 24 November 2024 (UTC)

The guideline is that they need to meet GNG or NCORP. See WP:NSCHOOLS. Some editors are of the view that all secondary schools and above are notable, and will express that view at AfD, resulting in articles being kept. voorts (talk/contributions) 16:24, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
WP:SCHOOLOUTCOMES used to imply all secondary schools were kept, but that has since been changed, and editors that !vote without acknowledging the change to meet GNG or NCORP need to be reminded of that. Masem (t) 17:49, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
I could never understand why "or NCORP" needed to be specified. Surely any topic that meets it meets the general notability guideline anyway? It doesn't do any harm by being there, but it's just redundant. Phil Bridger (talk) 18:35, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
NCORP is slightly stronger in that it limits potentially promotional sources, which might exist for for-profit schools. — Masem (t) 14:13, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
That's precisely my point. If NCORP is stronger then there is no need to specify it. "Meets WP:GNG" is exactly the same as "meets WP:GNG or WP:NCORP or both". Of course for-profit schools are different, but they only account for a small proportion of child education world-wide. Phil Bridger (talk) 20:32, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
NCORP would not apply to public schools, only to for profit ones. Public schools have been GNG otherwise. — Masem (t) 20:51, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
Agree. (I went a bit further than that below) North8000 (talk) 23:06, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
Public/private (leaving aside the British English definition of a "public school") is very different from not-for-profit/for-profit. Nearly all private schools, apart from adult training institutes, are not for profit. Phil Bridger (talk) 21:30, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
There's absolutely nothing we can do to compel editors to vote in accordance with relevant policies and guidelines. The only thing we can do is direct closers to close in accordance with them. Ravenswing 22:35, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
What we need is for those who close AfD discussions to take absolutely zero notice of any arguments ignoring the clear notability requirements. I agree with the initial post that there are far too many very poor quality directory listings and perma stubs about schools. AusLondonder (talk) 14:08, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
Agreed, though unfortunately when the same editors who try to obstruct all efforts to tighten guidelines are also among the ones most active at DRV it gets a lot harder to enforce these standards. JoelleJay (talk) 00:04, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

I try to go by the middle of the road community interpretation. First, NCORP can structurally taken in two ways. One is as conditions for using the SNG "way in". The other would be toughening the requirements for applying GNG / the GNG "way in". IMO the community applies a slightly more lenient interpretation for schools and not-for profit organizations than it does for for-profit businesses. And if it is about a single significant facility, additional consideration is given for NGEO possibilities. IMO the middle of the road interpretation for a school (that is not mostly a for-profit business) is to have some near-GNG sources (something more than just factoids and sports team results) and some real content resultant from them. I know that until we acknowledge how wp:notability actually works this does not fit neatly into any flowchart / binary decisions of the guidelines, and also would have a hard time tidying this up. But IMO until then this has been the middle-of-the-road of how the community treats it. Also, in deciding that there is no SNG "easy way in" the community decided that it does not want huge amounts of stubs created based on an SNG / merely for being a school. North8000 (talk) 15:56, 25 November 2024 (UTC)

I find myself questioning the premise that we truly need to effectively ensure that only genuinely notable schools are included.
@1keyhole, I wonder if you've ever read the Misplaced Pages:Editing policy. It says, fairly early on, that As a rule, the more accepted knowledge contains, the better. Your comment makes me think that your POV is "the less knowledge, the better", which is the opposite of our long-standing policy.
With that in mind, I'd like you to explore the idea that our actual, policy-based goal is to "include" as much factual information about as many schools as we can. That needn't always look like a completely separate article for every school, but it also doesn't look like setting up a high bar, in which only "genuinely notable" schools are included and all the others – ordinary-notable schools? borderline-notable schools? merge-worthy non-notable ones? – are excluded.
Thinking about this in WP:WHYN terms, if "genuine notability" looks like a long article with lots of sources, you've already made a mistake. The median article has four refs in it. NB: "four refs", not "four WP:INDY WP:SECONDARY WP:SIRS refs with WP:SIGCOV". Just four of any kind, including non-independent primary sources and sources that don't mention the subject. The median article also has 13 sentences. If you're looking at a school article that's anywhere near that median, I suggest to you that it's not making Misplaced Pages "worse", and you should probably leave it alone. WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:19, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
A long standing problem of how some editors envision WP and notability is a notable topic must have a standalone article, whereas WP:N says that's only a necessary condition for a standalone. School articles, particularly public, govt-backed ones, nearly always can be associated with a geographic place like a city, town, township, or county (or equivalent), and that makes an ideal place to discuss the school system at that level, including individual schools, if the standalone article can only be backed by a few sources and have maybe two or three Para of prose, using redirects as necessary. WP has no aversion to talking about schools, just that need for the sepearate article is often not needed ( and this applies to a lot more topic areas than just schools) — Masem (t) 00:14, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Were you trying to leave the most condescending possible reply? @1keyhole raises the valid and obvious point that we have a lot of contentless school stubs that likely don't meet our guidelines, and your response is to recommend they "follow editing policy" because they "seem" to believe "the less knowledge, the better", imply their goal isn't policy-based, bring up utterly irrelevant statistics about the abysmal median sourcing on pages in general, and then suggest they just leave crappy stubs alone if they have any kind of sourcing at all. JoelleJay (talk) 00:26, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I think this misunderstands 1keyhole point, at no point do they discuss removing information. This is about when a stand alone article should exist, information about the school could still be included in other articles. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 00:27, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I think if you looked at AFDstats (voted to delete 92% of the time; articles actually deleted only 34% of the time, which is well below average) and their contribs, e.g., their comments in Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/McAdam High School or Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Simon Kenton High School or Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Jewel and Esk College, you might have a different perception. It sounds like they're looking for a subjective sense of importance ("Why is this particular school notable?", newsworthy events don't "augment the significance of these institutions", wanting editors to explain why schools "merit" articles). WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:49, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I see lots of editors making invalid arguments in those AfDs, I'm guessing that's why they posted here. If you believe they have a behavioural issue then I suggest this isn't the correct place to make accusations. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 11:08, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I am making no accusations of behavioral problems. I am instead using information that is easily found but not on this page (unlike some of the editors who replied to me?) to form an opinion about what the OP is thinking. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:42, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
The OP raised a discussion point, personal opinions about the OP don't add anything to it. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 19:38, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I believe WP:NOT states, "However, Misplaced Pages is not a directory of everything in the universe that exists or has existed." This is why there aren't 700 separate entries for each individual London bus route—though I'm sure many bus enthusiasts would appreciate having that many articles dedicated to London buses. 1keyhole (talk) 20:54, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
However, there are 700+ redirects to List of bus routes in London. This is what we do when we discover an article on a real but basically unsuitable subject: bus routes get redirected to the transit system, schools get redirected to the city/school district, music videos get redirected to the band, and so forth.
The targeted article gets just enough information that future editors can see that the redirect isn't silly vandalism: "Bus Route 12" gets put in the list, the city gets an ==Education== section that says there are schools "such as _____", the band's article gets a line that says "They released their 'Stupid Banana Art' music video in 2024", and so forth. This is quick, easy, simple, and doesn't require AFD or the deletion button at all. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:38, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
It does sometimes require AfD. As has been noted in this discussion, some editors continue to flout SCHOOLOUTCOMES and insist on keeping an article, even where a merge and redirect should be uncontroversial. voorts (talk/contributions) 21:48, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
In theory, merges never require AfD, even if they're contested. Proposed mergers is the proper venue for that. jlwoodwa (talk) 23:39, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
Fair point. I use PM when appropriate, but I think most people don't even know it exists and just resort to AfD instead. I think they should just be folded into one another at this point. voorts (talk/contributions) 23:46, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Comment. Honestly it has gotten so much better at AFD since the RFC overturned WP:SCHOOLOUTCOMES in 2017. It was ridiculous before then. Pre-2017 if a school was brought to AFD it was closed almost immediately as keep no matter how bad the sourcing was. There are still a lot of bad school articles as a leftover of the old days, but when they are brought to AFD they are either improved with more referencing or they are deleted. It's been a long time since I have personally seen a school pass an AFD without solid referencing being produced. My impression is schools aren't getting free passes anymore. Obviously I haven't looked at every deletion discussion involving schools. Best.4meter4 (talk) 02:45, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I'm an active NPP'er and would agree. But IMO the biggest change has been to reduce the mass production of these articles (rather than a shift of what happens at AFD.) IMO the defacto standard is to have sources that sort of 3/4 meet a stringent interpretation of GNG. North8000 (talk) 19:24, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I hear you, but focusing on article creation is a losing strategy. We are fundamentally an encyclopedia anyone can edit and that isn’t going to change. With that comes the creation of many poorly thought through articles, which is one reason AFD is such an active place. One could argue for stricter article creation processes but these have always failed when brought to an RFC for the barriers they place both on experienced content creators and in discouraging new editors. Not to mention the already large backload at WP:AFC review. I don’t think the current system is perfect, but I also don’t see any obvious improvements that are likely to gain traction in a community wide discussion. Best.4meter4 (talk) 19:40, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I agree 100% that the current system regarding schools is working pretty good. I think you misunderstood my point. If the criteria are reasonably good, that has effects everywhere....AFD, NPP, AFC, and whether or not editors are creating lots of articles that don't meet the (newish) criteria.North8000 (talk) 20:29, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I've been looking at Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Deletion sorting/Schools for the last two weeks. The biggest problem I'm seeing is AFD noms of high schools outside the core English-speaking countries (US/UK/CA/AU/NZ). Several voters have given a rationale of the school being nothing special. An unfortunate number of them amount to the nom putting the transliterated name into Google News (probably with English-only settings) and not finding much ...under a name that isn't used in reality. If we're lucky, someone will come by to search in the local language, but mostly that doesn't happen. WhatamIdoing (talk) 03:53, 9 December 2024 (UTC)

Changes to WP:NMOTORSPORTS

INTRODUCTION: Hello, I would like to bring up the current state of the SNG WP:NMOTORSPORTS and how it should be changed. My original idea for the changes can be viewed here, at the WikiProject talk page; however, it did not receive much traffic and I wish to create a more formal post regarding my proposal.

BACKGROUND: I'll try to summarize the situation as best as possible since most editors are not aware of this niche editing area: Within recent months, there has been a growing number of editors, pages, and work overall done to motorsports single series (FIA Formula 2, FIA Formula 3, Formula Regional, and Formula 4, herein referred to as feeder series). This includes myself, as this is the main area where I edit. To my interpretation, WP:NMOTORSPORTS was intended as a rough guide on who may have significant coverage, and not as a definitive list to determine who is and who is not notable in the motorsports world. However, the guideline has been misinterpreted as the latter, and WP:NMOTORSPORTS is frequently cited at AfCs and AfDs as a definitive criteria in addition to GNG. This makes thing especially frustrating for feeder series drivers' articles, since there is no specific criteria, and the current criteria is out of date. There are plenty of examples of this, but one that caught my eye specifically is Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Vittorio Zoboli (although not a feeder series article), which shows how editors frequently misinterpret the policy (not shaming any editors, but that's what ends up happening).

PROPOSAL:

AMEND:

"A top-level feeder series to Formula One or MotoGP, such as the GP2 Series or the Moto2 World Championship" to "A top-level feeder series to Formula One or MotoGP, such as the FIA Formula Two, FIA Formula 3, Indy NXT or the Moto2 World Championship"

SINGLE SEATER CRTIERIA:

"10. Meet the following criteria for the the respective single seater series:"

  • Champion or vice champion in a Formula 4 series"

IMPACT: If the above changes were implemented, there would be a lot more continuity regarding who might and who might not qualify for an article. Obviously GNG takes precedence, but there is currently a lot of confusion regarding the gap in the guideline. It would also help out to delete/decline less notable drivers who might not deserve an article yet.

IMPLEMENTATION/CONCLUSION: I'm not sure exactly how this can be implemented, as I am still new to Misplaced Pages guidelines and am not very good at writing proposals (if you couldn't tell). I think what I have outlined in the proposal section would be a massive improvement, and would help benefit the feeder series editing community. I would be more than happy to answer or respond to any questions or concerns, as I am aware this is a very niche topic. Thank you for reading! :)

UPDATE: RfC posted on the NSPORTS talk page GalacticVelocity08 (talk) 22:13, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

The way to fix the problem you've identified is not to expand the list, but to add something like "meeting these criteria does not establish notability and you need to provide significant coverage in reliable sources to actually show that this topic is notable if notability is challenged." voorts (talk/contributions) 22:16, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
That would be a possible solution to add, I agree, however;
I'm not sure exactly when the guideline was written, but given the fact it says GP2 Series, it is likely before 2016. This section of Misplaced Pages would not of existed 8 years ago, as the program as a whole has expanded within the last decade. I feel that the guideline should be expanded to reflect on the real life changes to the program, especially considering how many articles there are relating to it. GalacticVelocity08 (talk) 22:21, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
but it's been happening too much and edit wars are happening as a result of people strictly following the notability list Motorsportfan100 (talk) 22:21, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
If you want to change this guideline, you should make a WP:PROPOSAL at Misplaced Pages talk:Notability (sports) (i.e., on the talk page of the guideline that would be affected).
Depending on which problem you're most concerned about, changing "such as" to "including, but not limited to" might provide a level of clarity, as would a statement that says "The actual rule is to follow the GNG. The following list is only a best guess at which levels of achievement are most likely to have GNG-level coverage. If the person is at this level but not GNG, then they're still not notable, and if they're below this level but have GNG-level coverage, then they're notable anyway." WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:36, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I was advised to post this here, so should I just link this topic on NSPORTS, or copy my argument and establish an RfC? If I do need to do an RfC, do I need to change my argument, as a brief skimming of the page shows that my post is probably a bit too long. I have never done anything like this before, and I've been editing for <2 months, so I'm quite unfamiliar with these processes.
As for the second paragraph, I agree, that could also be implemented to prevent the misuse of the guideline. As per my comment above to voorts, I think both should be done, if possible. GalacticVelocity08 (talk) 23:00, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
@GalacticVelocity08, if you decide to pursue this, then you're going to need some help. Editors at WT:RFC are happy to help you write a sensible question for an RFC, but before you can do that, you'll need to be able to explain what your goal is. The RFC should happen at the notability guideline that you want to change. Before you can start the RFC, you need to figure out what you want to change and how to explain/propose that change for people who don't know anything about sports. Those discussions can happen anywhere. WhatamIdoing (talk) 03:46, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
Thank you for the reply. I posted an RfC about a week ago here on the NSPORTS talk page. That is my fault, I forgot to add an update to my original post. I'll do that shortly. GalacticVelocity08 (talk) 16:12, 9 December 2024 (UTC)

Circular definitions

Consider this line in this guideline: "For articles on subjects that are clearly not notable, then deletion is usually the most appropriate response..."

It only makes sense if you already know what our wikijargon says. What's a notable article? The kind we don't delete. What kind of articles do we not delete? The notable ones. How do you know if they're notable? They don't get deleted. This is not really helpful.

I think we should re-word some of these statements to say instead that "For articles on subjects that clearly do not qualify for a separate article, then deletion is usually the most appropriate response..."

What do you think? WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:15, 14 December 2024 (UTC)

Just delete the whole paragraph. It's redundant of the first paragraph in that section. voorts (talk/contributions) 17:19, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
"notability" and "having a separate article" are not equivalent concepts. There are other places that notability can be used beyond just whether to have a separate article such as with lists. It also conflicts with the concept in WP:NOPAGE that not all notable topics need a separate article. Masem (t) 17:46, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
The first line of the guideline says: "On Misplaced Pages, notability is a test used by editors to decide whether a given topic warrants its own article."
I conclude there that "Notability" is equivalent to "warrants (aka 'qualifies for') a separate article". Do you disagree? WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:51, 14 December 2024 (UTC)

Primary

Moved to Misplaced Pages talk:No original research § Primary – Wrong venue.

Not sure where I should place this discussion, but I hope I'm at the right place. It is often said that interviews are "primary" sources, meaning they are not reliable per WP:PRIMARY. However, most of the times we get personal information (birth dates, birth place and backstory) and upcoming release dates for movies and music from interviews (late-night shows and so on) and they always turn out to be accurate. I think if the interview was published by a reliable source then it's most definitely reliable, because if another publication quotes that interview, no one would say it's not reliable. Not sure if I make much sense, but any objections? dxneo (talk) 19:23, 26 December 2024 (UTC)

You posted this in the talk page for Misplaced Pages:Notability. I agree that sources can be reliable while not being independent or secondary. However, our general notability guideline requires that sources be reliable, in-depth, independent, and secondary. For a biographical article, most information in interviews of the subject is generally not independent: it comes directly from the subject. Therefore, while it may be reliable, and may be acceptable as a reference for claims in an article, this type of sourcing does not contribute to notability, the topic of relevance for this discussion page. —David Eppstein (talk) 19:35, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
The suitable place to discuss this is the talk page of the article that contains the passage you're referring to. WP:PRIMARY is part of Misplaced Pages:No original research, so you should inquire about this at Misplaced Pages talk:No original research. Largoplazo (talk) 21:42, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
I moved it. dxneo (talk) 23:12, 26 December 2024 (UTC)

WP:GNG

The is a discussion of whether to add to the WP:GNG section at Misplaced Pages talk:Notability (organizations and companies)#Proposal: Move WP:SIRS from this page to a subheading under WP:GNG. Phil Bridger (talk) 14:01, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

GNG and secondary sources

The GNG text says "Sources" should be secondary sources, as those provide the most objective evidence of notability. Why doesn't this include tertiary sources? I'd think that significant coverage in a tertiary source is also "objective evidence of notability." Also, "secondary sources" links to WP:PSTS, which says "Secondary or tertiary sources are needed to establish the topic's notability...," so there's an inconsistency. FactOrOpinion (talk) 15:17, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

Tertiary sources can be used carefully. With notability we are looking for more than just simple facts but some type of transformation if information about a topic as to why it is considered worthy of note. Reference works (tertiary) often include everything under the sun when they act more as a primary work (like sports almanacs) , which may it may not include that type of transformative thoughts. So using a tertiary source as a source for notability should be used with a high degree of caution to make sure that it is providing the type of significant coverage we want to see. — Masem (t) 15:36, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
What Masem said. Just adding a bit, "caution" includes consideration of the nature of the source and content including the transformative content. IMO for 98% of tertiary sources it falls short for GNG use and for the most of the other 2% (i.e. they have an article in the Encyclopedia Britannica) there are probably plenty of secondary GNG sources without needing to look at tertiary ones. Sincerely, North8000 (talk) 16:49, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
I disagree that tertiary sources are evidence of notability. In worst cases, they can be short and unreliable. Even in better cases, you don't get much more than a dictionary definition, which isn't enough for a separate article on our Encyclopedia. Tertiary sources might verify a fact or two, but without more, it probably belongs on a larger article. (In exceptional cases, anything with substantial coverage in a quality tertiary source will have similar coverage in secondary sources anyway.) Shooterwalker (talk) 18:02, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
Depends on the tertiary source. The keys to sourcing notability are depth of coverage and independence from the subject/topic. If a tertiary source has these two keys, I don’t see what the problem is. Blueboar (talk) 19:37, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
So I'm wondering if the GNG text should be altered a bit, saying something like "Sources should generally be secondary sources, as those provide the most objective evidence of notability, but a tertiary source may be used if it includes transformative content and meets the other requirements of this section." The section already notes that all sources establishing notability must provide significant coverage, and be independent and reliable. FactOrOpinion (talk) 20:25, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
I don't see the point of "if it includes transformative content". We might worry about that for a primary source, but why would that be a worry for tertiary sources? —David Eppstein (talk) 05:29, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I was trying to incorporate Masem's and North8000's concerns. I'm not wedded to any particular wording. What would you suggest? FactOrOpinion (talk) 13:40, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I suggest we stick with secondary sources. Shooterwalker (talk) 16:48, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Why?
The main concerns you voiced earlier would already lead the tertiary source to be excluded (e..g, "they can be short and unreliable" doesn't meet the RS standard, "you don't get much more than a dictionary definition" doesn't meet the significant coverage standard). As for your other case, "anything with substantial coverage in a quality tertiary source will have similar coverage in secondary sources anyway," so what? If an editor uses two secondary sources and a tertiary source that all meet the requirements, and the editor has access to the tertiary source and not to a third secondary source, why would you insist that they chase down a third secondary source? FactOrOpinion (talk) 17:36, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
How about Tertiary sources may also be used if they provide significant coverage? XOR'easter (talk) 19:27, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
There's already a distinct section addressing the need for significant coverage. As I think about this more, given that any source has to meet the other requirements of the GNG section (e.g., reliability, independence, significant coverage), I might say "Sources should generally be secondary sources, as those provide the most objective evidence of notability, though a tertiary source may be used" or perhaps just switch to the language at PSTS: "Secondary or tertiary sources are needed to establish the topic's notability and avoid novel interpretations of primary sources." FactOrOpinion (talk) 19:47, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Let's take a work like a Who's Who compilation (ignoring the fact these usually are pay-to-include) which likely would be considered tertiary as a reference work. Most will include biographical details about a person, but they will all be surface-level details, reiterating the basics about the person's life, but likely will not get into reasons why that person is more worthy-of-note of any other person. All that type of information is non-transformative and while it could be taken as significant coverage, it remains a far weaker sources to rest notability compared to a secondary source that, via transformation of the basic facts, of why that person would be worthy-of-note.
Basically, there are a lot of topics that have detailed information that can be found in tertiary sources, but the type of information is straight facts and would be considered a primary source if published by itself. The transformation aspect of secondary sources, which some tertiary sources have, is what helps us ascertain notability. Masem (t) 13:51, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Again, I don't see the point of making this point, here. You could equally well argue against secondary sources, claiming correctly that many secondary sources just name-drop the subject of a BLP as the source of a quote about whatever else they're really talking about. It would be true. It would not be valid or relevant as an argument about why we should use tertiary sources instead. So why do you think it was important to make a point that some tertiary sources are not in-depth, as part of a discussion focused on how some people think we should avoid all tertiary sources in favor of secondary sources? How is it any more valid or relevant than the point that some secondary sources are not in-depth? —David Eppstein (talk) 17:42, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
At the risk of sounding overly blunt, all of this seems entirely beside the point. Superficiality would be a reason to exclude a secondary source from counting towards notability, too. (So would being pay-to-include.) In other words, you're comparing a hypothetical bad tertiary source against a hypothetical good secondary source. That's not a reason to dismiss all tertiary sources. If my print copy of the Encyclopaedia Britannica that I've had since I was a child has an article about something, then the default expectation should be that Misplaced Pages has an article about it too. Indeed, I'd consider "Britannica has an article on this" as an all-but knockdown keep argument at AfD. (I say "all-but" because for organizational reasons we might go for a merge instead. Writing is complicated.) Really, this whole debate seems to be a symptom of taking a distinction that we basically made up — or at the very least, one that we use in an idiosyncratic way, while pretending it is much more clear-cut than it really is — and treating it so seriously that we give ourselves a headache. OK, time for me to check out of the bikeshed. XOR'easter (talk) 19:33, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
If the material provided by a source is short, unreliable, merely a dictionary definition, only verifying a fact or two, etc., then it's not going to count much towards notability, even if it's "secondary" instead of "tertiary". In other words, a good tertiary source has to meet the same qualifications as a good secondary source. XOR'easter (talk) 05:33, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
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