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Revision as of 11:28, 3 January 2015 editРаціональне анархіст (talk | contribs)2,829 edits PORNBIO too arbitrary and too permissive← Previous edit Latest revision as of 22:28, 13 January 2025 edit undoMathglot (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers, Template editors87,163 edits top: Simplify redirect hatnote. 
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| title2 = Writing Women Back Into History | title2 = Writing Women Back into History
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== Some practical advice ==
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I don't know where this fits in, but it's excellent advice for a Jewish writer on writing biography — both online and off. The expression "maran" means ''our ]'':
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*<small>{{cite-web|url=http://communitym.com/article.asp?article_id=103276|title=But are the stories really true?|publisher=Community Magazine|author=Yehuda Azoulay}}</small>
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Merged into this guideline:
==Advice on notability==
I am currently working on the ] article and am in the process of rewriting the notable residents list. One of the "notable" residents listed on there is ], but I am not sure whether he is notable enough; certainly, there is coverage in the media, but compared to some of the other residents I have found, I am not sure both about his inclusion on the page and, more importantly, about the notability of the subject himself. Rather than take it straight to AfD, I thought it might be better to discuss it first. I would be keen to see what other editors think. Thanks, --] (]) 15:28, 2 December 2014 (UTC).
:No opinion on whether he merits an article, but ''if'' he does and if he has verifiably been a resident of Sleaford, then he belongs in the list of its notable residents and shouldn't be removed unless his article is deleted. ''']''' ('']'') 16:16, 2 December 2014 (UTC)
::Thanks, that was my intention - it was more that, when looking over those mentioned, I checked his article and wasn't sure about whether it met notability criteria. Regards, --] (]) 16:29, 2 December 2014 (UTC).


* ] and archives ], ], ] (Apr. 2006 – Oct 2007)
== Fleshing out proposal ==
}}


{{TOC limit}}
See {{Diff|Misplaced Pages:Village pump (idea lab)|636850396|636843679|1}} ] (] '''·''' ]) 05:34, 6 December 2014 (UTC)


== Proposal: expand the "Politicians and judges" header to "Politicians, judges, and government officials" ==
== PORNBIO Hall of Fame criteria ==
{{archivetop|Consensus is clearly to leave well alone. This is undoubtedly the least objectionable part of PORNBIO and fully consistent with other guidelines. ] <sup>'']''</sup> 09:33, 29 December 2014 (UTC)}}
I hope I'm posting this in the correct place. Anyways, ] (2) says, '''"is a member of an industry Hall of Fame such as the AVN Hall of Fame, XRCO Hall of Fame or equivalent."''' This criteria is unreasonable and overbroad. The AVN Hall of Fame is not selective. Often, the AVN will induct people whose contributions to porn has been minimal. Look at the list of AVN Hall of Famers: https://en.wikipedia.org/List_of_members_of_the_AVN_Hall_of_Fame They began inducting members in 1995, yet they already have over 200 inductees (so at least 10 per year average). By comparison, the MLB Hall of Fame has been active since the 1940s, and only 240 players have been inducted. If you keep this requirement in ], then we will soon have a Wiki page for many no-name pornstars, given the induction rate per year. Right now, some Wiki pages (], ], ]) survive solely on this terrible Hall of Fame exception.] (]) 19:51, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
:Two of the three you've linked also list them as having won AVN awards, not merely being in its Hall of Fame, and one of those was also the lead in an apparently notable mainstream feature film, so they obviously don't "survive solely" on that criteria. The third is a county of England. ''']''' ('']'') 21:38, 13 December 2014 (UTC)


I propose to expand the ''header'' on this page for "Politicians and judges" to encompass "government officials" who hold an ''appointed'' statewide office equivalent to one that would qualify for deeming an ''elected'' official notable. It seems fairly straightforward to me that if one state has an elected cabinet official with broad authority over a significant aspect of people's lives, like a secretary of agriculture, a secretary of education, or a chairman of a statewide power commission, and their neighboring state has the same officials being appointed by the governor and approved by the legislature rather than being appointed, then there should be no difference in treatment for purposes of encyclopedic notability. While I expect that some editors will just assume that appointed officials in government count just as much as "politicians" as elected officials, others would not, and I think we should make their inclusion clear.
::The AVN Hall of Fame was created long before 1995. If you take another look at the list, you'll notice several members don't have an induction year specified. Those are members who were inducted prior to 1995. Since the internet probably did not exist yet at the time those members were inducted, we have some difficulty finding online sources which specify the year they were inducted in. I've only been able to find one AVN Hall of Fame induction prior to 1995 which specifies the year; . The AVN Awards were created in 1984 and have been inducting members into it's Hall of Fame since at least 1986, perhaps even a little sooner than that. Pornography has been legal in the United States since around the late 60's or early 70's; that's over 40 years. In the 40+ years that the porn industry has been around, only 200 people out of the who have worked in porn have been inducted into the AVN Hall of Fame. That isn't a lot and being in that elite group of people is certainly evidence of notability. ] (]) 21:50, 13 December 2014 (UTC)


I would likewise be inclined to amend the second line under that section to cover "Major local political figures <u>and government officials</u> who have received significant press coverage", again to make clear that appointed officeholders who some might not consider "politicians" are not thereby excluded from coverage. ] ] 02:10, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
::: To Postdlf, Scene-related / Ensemble awards don't count (Pat Myne), male-only awards attract less attention and are less impressive because the amount of men in porn is so limited (Nick Manning), and the Devon I'm referring to is: https://en.wikipedia.org/Devon_(pornographic_actress). NightGales is not a recognizable award, so the overbroad AVN Hall of Fame is her sole claim to a Wiki page. Also consider ], ], ], and ]. None of these deserve a Wiki page, but the ill-advised Hall of Fame rule grants them one.] (]) 21:53, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
* '''Support''' both changes. They are both consistent with the rationale behind NPOL, which per the footnote is ensuring the complete documentation of statewide government officials. Appointed vs. elected is an arbitrary distinction regarding that purpose. ] (]/]) 02:14, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
*...pointy question by a SPA account, just an attempt to backup ], part of an anti-pornography crusade which include several retaliatory disruptive AfDs (, , ) and a bunch of indiscriminate, on-30-second-intervals improper and edit-summary-free notability tags (, , , ). Though I usually hope for the best, unless things change, it looks to me like we'll likely be seeing this individual very soon at AN/I for disruptive actions. ] 22:04, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
*'''Support''': This never made sense to me. The difference between appointed government officials and elected government officials is not relevant in our context. The guideline should not arbitrarily exclude one or the other. <span style=white-space:nowrap;>] <span style="background-color:#e6e6fa;padding:2px 5px;border-radius:5px;font-family:Arial black">]</span></span> 02:19, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' Elected officials at the statewide or provincial level get far more scrutiny and far more attention from reliable sources than appointed officials do. And in the end, what really counts is whether the official has received the amount of significant coverage in reliable, independent sources that is required to write a policy compliant article. As an example, consider two most populous US states, California and Texas. The elected agriculture commissioner of Texas gets far more attention than the appointed secretary of agriculture in California. I have lived in California for 52 years and could not name a single one of the California officials. But I can easily remember the name of a Texas agricultural commissioner who served over 30 years ago. ] (]) 02:30, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
:* Does "gets far more attention" equate to "is more important for encyclopedic purposes"? I would hope that it would not be. I would note by comparison that we include ''all'' federal judges, even though ''none'' of them are elected. ] ] 03:05, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' As redundant. The government officials who fall under ] as cabinet ministers are political officers, even when those positions are filled by civil servants (e.g. even though ] is a civil servant, he fills the political office of prime minister). Non-cabinet positions (which are almost exclusively filled by civil servants) do not fall under NPOL. ] (]) 02:43, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
** Confusion arises from the fact that many people would consider "political officers" and "politicians" as two different things, the politician being the person kissing babies and gladhanding for votes. ] ] 03:03, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Support''' - Agree with Voorts and CFA. I do not see the relevance of being appointed or elected when it is a high position in the government. --] (]) 04:39, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' I do agree that there can be some confusion in the difference between an elected and appointed official, especially across governmental entities, but the general assumption is that elected officials will receive significant coverage in reliable sources. There is not the same expectation for civil appointees, and this would become especially true for ''acting'' or ''temporary'' appointees to these positions. Bottom line, I do not think the presumption of notability exists for civil servants, but nothing stops a stand-alone article of any individual if significant, independent, reliable sources exist. (And this proposal also would raise a question of which government officials would be ''major''). --] (]) 04:49, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' as worded; "government officials" is too broad and covers many people who would absolutely fall under ], and for whom a brief but broad burst of coverage related to one event would not be sufficient to establish notability per ]. Someone working for the post office or a tax collector for the IRS, for instance, should not have a lower bar for notability than any random citizen. You say "statewide office" but the actual proposal you're making for the text would apply to the local dogcatcher; if you mean for this to be limited to high-level statewide government officials like the secretary of education then it would have to say so explicitly. (And I don't think just "statewide" is enough; the secretary of education is a statewide official, sure, but so is everyone working directly under them. Their assistants and interns shouldn't fall under this category, surely.) --] (]) 05:14, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''': not convinced it'd be beneficial to make what's already an exceptionally broad SNG even broader. The presumption that political figures will meet the GNG gets weaker and weaker the further we get from the "elected politician" heartland of NPOL, and affording notability to large groups of people who don't meet the GNG almost always runs into the problems discussed at ], which applies to "all articles, not solely articles justified under the general notability criteria". ] (]) 06:16, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
** {{re|Enos733|Aquillion|Extraordinary Writ}} I am sympathetic to the concern that this opens the door to the local dogcatcher having an article, which is not my intent. I am not trying to broaden the the SNG so much as to make it clear that actual statewide agency/commission heads should be deemed equally notable based on their significant positions of actual power over substantial areas irrespective of whether they are elected or appointed to that position. I would have no problem with language excluding "acting" or "temporary" appointees, and/or limiting this to statewide offices, and exclusively to the individuals in the topmost position in their agencies. My concern is most directly that "Politicians" brings to mind people who campaign for elected office, and not necessarily political appointees who do not campaign. ] ] 03:56, 15 August 2024 (UTC)
**:Beyond the sourcing concerns, I fear this is a US-centric approach that has limited applicability across US states and nation-states. The response here is to limit to "topmost position in their agencies," but there are many more agencies than we know about (] has 11 state agencies that start with the letter ""). If we limit it to cabinet-level positions, we still would run into the problem that is purported to be the issue - that editors are confused about which agencies are covered by NPOL across jurisdictions.
**:Fundamentally, I do not think editors get confused. I have seen very few discussions at AfD that indicate a flood of marginally-notable agency directors. Nearly all stand-alone articles are evaluated through the context of ], including civil servants. While this proposal is described as not intending to broaden the definition of who is notable, I believe it broadens the SNG quite a bit. - ] (]) 05:57, 16 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Support'''. Seems obvious to me. There's nothing sacred about being elected. It doesn't make one more notable. In addition, the current wording favours the United States, where far more officials are elected than they are elsewhere. It is true that in general we have considered appointed officials in equivalent positions to be notable, but it needs to be more explicit as they still get nominated for deletion and some editors at AfD do state that ] doesn't cover them simply because they aren't elected. -- ] (]) 08:35, 15 August 2024 (UTC)
*:*Agree and '''Support'''; ''Comment'' (without weighing in on the sanctity of election itself): if this modification is accepted, then the second sentence of the first bullet point should also read {{tq|This also applies to people who have been elected '''or appointed''' to such offices}}, etc. -- ] (]) 09:06, 15 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Support''', as whether or not an official's position requires campaigning shouldn't be the determinative factor here, although I do think there may be more to be worked out on wording, as BD2412 alluded to. ] (]) 23:06, 15 August 2024 (UTC)
*:The question is not about campaigning ''per se'', but the amount of reliable, independent sourcing that elected officials (and candidates) receive. In the course of becoming a candidate (in a system with candidate-centric elections), there is a certain level of coverage in local press in the context of the election. And service in a legislature, or in an executive office, entails frequent stories about actions the individual takes (sponsoring of legislation, votes, speeches) that are covered in reliable sources. The same cannot always be said about an appointed official (even to a cabinet-level agency).
*:Sticking with my earlier example of Indiana, a member of the cabinet is the appointed . The position does not currently have a stand-alone page. The incumbent of that position is . I can only find one newspaper article that quotes the incumbent and no articles that would actually cover the subject in-depth.
*:Looking at comparable positions, (elected v appointed), compare the coverage of the auditor of Oregon, Kip Memmott, versus the auditor of Washington, ]. Both auditors took office in 2017, but the coverage is quite different. - ] (]) 06:22, 16 August 2024 (UTC)
*:: {{re|Enos733}} Perhaps some language reflecting the relative notability of the office would help, if taken with an appropriate grain of salt. I was inspired to come here by recent experience working on an article for a specific state commission that is ridiculously powerful, with the chair of that commission clearly being more notable in terms of influence over people's lives than a typical elected member of the legislature of the state. ] ] 16:03, 16 August 2024 (UTC)
*:::I generally believe that our community's system of notability is quite fuzzy and the more we try to precisely define what subjects are notable, the less likely we are to have a simple, clear statement that is easy for editors to understand. Our system works, as the intro to GNG says, {{tq| determining notability does not necessarily depend on things such as fame, importance, or popularity}}. The basis for a stand alone article is coverage, and SNGs help editors understand when "sourcing likely exists". Nothing in NPOL or GNG now prevents stand alone articles from being created (either about the individual, or a governmental agency). - ] (]) 16:27, 16 August 2024 (UTC)
*:::: I am not disagreeing here, but there are undoubtedly some unelected statewide public offices for which reporting about the officeholder is as likely as for the typical state-level legislative officeholder, and some term broader than "politician" is needed to acknowledge that. ] ] 04:42, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' Not every government official is automatically notable, even with press coverage. For example, the local dog warden. <span style="border:1px solid green; padding:0 2px">]&nbsp;]</span> 11:01, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
**Nobody is saying minor officials like that should be considered to be notable, as is fairly obvious. The proposal is simply to change the wording to reflect that appointed officials are as notable as elected officials in equivalent positions. A dog warden clearly wouldn't be notable even if they were elected. -- ] (]) 14:38, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
***The wording makes it possible. ] is enough, no need to lower the threshold. <span style="border:1px solid green; padding:0 2px">]&nbsp;]</span> 16:10, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
*:This argument is such a strawman that it borders on nonsense. ''No one'' in this discussion thinks the {{tqq|local dog warden}} should receive presumptive notability (in fact, this is countered in the guideline with {{tqq|Just being an elected local official does not guarantee notability}}) and this proposed adjustment does not change that. ] (]) 05:30, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''', no reason to presume that these are notable a priori. Those that really are can have an article, there is nothing here that ''excludes'' them if they meet GNG: all this addition can do is include the ones that don't meet the GNG, and I see no reason to do so. ] (]) 15:04, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
*''Comment'': The broader question, in my view, comes back to: what is the purpose of ]s? Is it to clarify that some subjects should be covered in this encyclopaedia regardless of GNG (i.e., providing alternate pathways to N along the lines of ]), or is it something else? -- ] (]) 07:44, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' From my personal experience, I've observed that many government officials seek to enhance their PR and image by creating a Misplaced Pages BLP. However, many of them struggle to meet the GNG. I believe that including a clause stating that government officials fall under the NPOL could lead to an influx of BLPs for appointed officials who may not actually be WP:N, opening a new set of challenges. --— ] (] I ]) 10:53, 1 November 2024 (UTC).
*'''Oppose''' as instruction creep. Such persons need to pass GNG. ] (]) 22:00, 28 December 2024 (UTC).


== ] ==
* Mathematics! https://en.wikipedia.org/List_of_members_of_the_AVN_Hall_of_Fame The AVN inducted 71 people before 1995. If you assume they began inducting in 1986, that's around 10-11 per year. Here are the number of inductees per year: 1995 (11), 1996 (8), 1997 (14), 1998 (16), 1999 (9), 2001 (13), 2002 (11), 2003 (14), 2004 (12), 2005 (12), 2006 (13), 2007 (12), 2008 (11), 2009 (11), 2010 (9), 2011 (14), 2012 (13), 2013 (13), 2014 (12). Therefore, the AVN typically inducts over 10 people every year. By 2024, it will have 400 members, based on these statistics. The AVN Hall of Fame, quite unlike the MLB Hall of Fame, is not selective; thus, the AVN Hall of Fame has no credibility worth considering in ] ] (]) 22:16, 13 December 2014 (UTC)
*I would echo much of what has been written above in response to this thread that was started by a relatively new & at least mildy disruptive Misplaced Pages user. In addition:
::] was inducted into ''both'' the '']'' & ] Halls of Fame & won at least one other, likely non-trivial ], and he's also been a ]
::] is also a director and has one won at least one other, likely non-trivial XRCO Award
::] has appeared in at least one major blockbuster adult film ('']'') and has also apparently had many mainstream media appearances
::] is a director & has won at least one other, non-trivial ], and he has apparently had at least several mainstream media appearances
::] & ] are also a directors
:Directors can be evaluated under the ] inclusion standard as well. The remaining articles from above need responsible expansion, not deletion through some further unfair tightening of the PORNBIO standard.
:"male-only awards attract less attention and are less impressive"...in your own opinion that is. The major AVN Award categories (including their Hall of Fame) are quite simply the gold standard in the adult film industry. ] (]) 04:13, 14 December 2014 (UTC)
:The claim that the AVN Hall of Fame isn't selective because it inducts more people than the baseball Hall of Fame is nonsense. 10 people per year is pretty selective. As a point of comparison, about 8 people receive Nobel Prizes every year. ] (]) 04:26, 14 December 2014 (UTC)
::Excellent point, {{U|Pburka}}. I think about 21 ]s are awarded each year, sometimes more. Winners are notable. The whole point of revising the PORNBIO guideline a year or so ago was to make it more difficult to judge porn stars as notable, and easier to delete articles about non-notable porn performers. Though I almost never edit porn related articles, my perception is that the revision was successful and is working. Why rock the boat now? ] ] 06:39, 14 December 2014 (UTC)
:::I agree as well, don't forget that the porn business is a business with many actresses/actors, which rapidly come and go, and which as a business has over the years kept expanding. Each year more and more girls try to become the next major porn star. In all fairness, given that demographic, an average of ten inductees per year isn't much. This standard/criteria should be kept in PORNBIO. -- ], 29 December 2014, 10:24
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Is the leader of a breakaway region notable? ] (]) 04:15, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
== PORNBIO Criteria #3 ==
:I think that whether they pass ] depends on the breakaway region. In the case of ] most people with an interest in international affairs have heard of it, and even if you do not follow Russia in recognizing it as an independent country it qualifies as a state/province. As far as ] is concerned that is probably moot as she seems to pass the ], with coverage from the Transnistrian, Moldovan and Russian press. ] (]) 08:34, 16 September 2024 (UTC)


== NPOL Q ==
The text currently says "Has been featured multiple times in notable mainstream media." but this has often been taken to argue that even the most fleeting appearance in non-porn is an automatic pass. I'm not sure if the problem is the wording or the way that its being interpreted. For the sake of clarity can we agree what we mean by this text? There are two key words that seem to be open to question:
:''Featured'' - am I right that the meaning should be something similar to '' to include someone or something as an important part: The movie features James Dean as a disaffected teenager.'' . To me this should me someone who the film revolves around. Perhaps someone who has headline billing or is used as a selling point for the film? Is this right?
:''Notable'' - Presumably this is the wikipedia interpretation that means has been discussed in detail by two separate independent reliable secondary sources. Per ]? or ]? Correct?
I'd be very grateful for thoughts comments on this so that we can reach a consensus that avoids arguments about the interpretation of this section in future. ] <sup>'']''</sup> 16:49, 29 December 2014 (UTC)


Do leaders of the ] qualify under NPOL (it seems their head of government is the sole entry at ] missing an article)? What about leaders of disputed countries, such as the ] or ]? ] (]) 01:42, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
::The word "featuring" should not be interpreted too strict in this case. Featuring in this case isn't the equivalent of "star billing" but merely as appearing.
:: As to the word "notable", it's not the amount of sources but the quality that should be determining. Keeping on insisting on multiple sources, may mean that an entire category becomes redundant because for various things regarding porn, you'd be hard-pressed to find multiple sources. In certain cases one - independent and qualitative - source could be enough to grant notability. The question/focus should thus not be on the number of sources, but rather on what exact is "notable mainstream media"? For me these are the regular independent media sources, namely television- and newspapers and their accompanying websites. In that ] should indeed apply. -- ], 29 December 2014, 18:02 CET
:::Thanks very much for your comment. I think I'm in agreement with the second part but I'm not entirely at ease with the first. The trouble is that both featured and/or appeared are such nebulous phrases and are easily distorted. Does an uncredited non-speaking cameo count for example? That's appearing in by plain language and shouldn't be something that counts towards a GNG pass for a BLP. Likewise, Equity in the UK expects a speaking part for a credit in the film but that can be just one line. Featured at least implies some significance. I'll see whether the archives offer any further insight. ] <sup>'']''</sup> 17:14, 29 December 2014 (UTC)
::::"Featured" definitely seems to be more substantial than "appeared". The latter would, I guess, be verifiable if credited ("second passerby", "fourth soldier"), but I can't see how that would make anyone notable, pornbio or not. And I don't see why for any subject we would need to drop the GNG requirement of multiple sources. Remember, subject-specific guidelines do not exist to circumvent GNG, but serve as a shortcut to indicate GNG is most probably met (for example, if somebody got a Nobel Prize, we can safely assume that multiple sources exist). --] (]) 17:31, 29 December 2014 (UTC)
*Relevant previous discussions: bit difficult to link as comments often fall within wider discussion of the subject so I'm going to quote/paraphrase and link so you can see the context for yourselves:-
**
**
**
**
**
*] <sup>'']''</sup> 17:51, 29 December 2014 (UTC)


:I would say yes, since the spirit of NPOL is that we should have an article for the leaders and national level legislators of all nations and national subdivisions. ] (]/]) 01:55, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
* We certainly shouldn't have a guideline which says that porn actors are notable if they have any two appearances in non-porn media, no matter how minor. For non-porn actors the standard is a "significant role" (]), and something similar should be imposed here. Naturally any such claim should have a reliable source to back it up, as should any other claim to notability. ''''']''''' 18:20, 29 December 2014 (UTC)
*I have the impression that the key factor here is how inclusive we want to be in this particular category. As Hut's comment indicates, once we decide that we can adjust the criteria to suit our intentions. There's obviously a difference of opinion on the basic question. I am reluctant to say that going by what I personally think important/unimportant should be the standard, and so I think should be anyone else on either side of the issue . Sometimes the best way to deal with this here is to compromise. ''']''' (]) 18:33, 29 December 2014 (UTC)


== NACTOR, significant roles ==
There is no problem with the guideline and it should remain the way it is. If you want, we can clarify what being "featured multiple times in notable mainstream media" means. I think that in order for an appearance to qualify as "featured" it has to be major and significant. For example, ] appears throughout most of the music video for ]. Gina Lynn appears in the video from the start until 1:45 and at 2:10-3:05. She obviously has a major role in that video, so this qualifies as featured. Now, ] appears in Eminem's ] at 0:23-0:26, 0:30-0:32, 0:36-0:39, and 0:56-0:58. Four appearances lasting no more than 2-3 seconds each, a total of only 10 seconds in the entire music video, does NOT count as being featured. This mainstream appearance is still worthy of mention in Jameson's WP article, but just doesn't contribute to her notability. Another example of an appearance that DOES qualify as featured is a porn star having their life documented on ] (]). ] (]) 21:35, 29 December 2014 (UTC)
*To myself, the third part of the current PORNBIO inclusion criteria has always seemed very similiar, in a very, very general way, to our GNG inclusion criteria, and I don't think at all that the third part of PORNBIO just refers to so-called mainstream films. It refers, IMHO, to ''any'' kind of ] that is considered to be ]. Again, IMHO, "featured" means that (whatever the specific type of media in question was) the subject (of a Misplaced Pages article) had a prominent role in that particular media appearance (], ], newspaper article, ], ], etc.). ] is a pretty simple term to define here...you can't wander very far through Misplaced Pages's myriad of guidelines without running into that term. As for "multiple", well...that simply means more than one, and I believe that we've been extensively over that point the last time that PORNBIO was modified (tightened). In the absence of any past, clear reference to why the third part of the PORNBIO inclusion criteria currently exists the way that it does, it seems to be, again IMHO, there to simply indicate how far a particular person has "crossed-over" (kind of like in ]) into what most in society would refer to as the "mainstream". If one wanted to replace the word "featured" with "significant" in the PORNBIO standard, then I wouldn't necessarily have a problem with that (since they basically mean the same thing to me)...but we're not at all just talking about film appearances here. Also, it's important to remember that ] is a sub-heading under ], which, to me, means that they already basically go together.
:"Does an uncredited non-speaking cameo count for example?" IMO, no, it doesn't. ] (]) 04:37, 30 December 2014 (UTC)
*Remove the clause completely. If a porn actor is to be considered notable on the basis of appearances in non-porn media, then any criteria relating to those kinds of appearances will be the same as for anybody else (other actors, musicians, etc.) – in other words, that person's case then simply becomes one of ] and will be evaluated on that basis. It makes no sense to have an extra set of criteria (presumably less tight than "normal" WP:ENT) regarding WP:ENT-type activities of people who also happen to be porn actors. ] ] 15:26, 30 December 2014 (UTC)
::The "Has been featured multiple times in notable mainstream media" criteria in PORNBIO is actually pretty strict. I haven't seen anyone with 1. minor roles in notable mainstream media, 2. major roles, but in non-notable mainstream media, or 3. (obviously) minor roles in non-notable mainstream media, being kept at AfD. We require not just one, but multiple significant roles in notable mainstream media in order to meet this criteria. This is a guideline that very few porn stars pass and anyone who does is certainly notable. ] (]) 15:51, 30 December 2014 (UTC)
:::It would be good if you could cite some examples so we can see how this looks in practice. ] <sup>'']''</sup> 18:05, 30 December 2014 (UTC)
::::], ], ], and ]. Their minor mainstream work was rejected as evidence of notability at AfD and did not save their articles from deletion. This criteria in PORNBIO is strict enough as it is. ] (]) 18:52, 30 December 2014 (UTC)
:::::thanks,that was really helpful. 3 of the 4 examples had #3 misused . Do we have any examples of where it has saved an article from deletion? ] <sup>'']''</sup> 22:01, 30 December 2014 (UTC)
::The PORNBIO inclusion criteria isn't "less tight" than our other biographical inclusion standards...it's (especially more recently) ''more'' tight...precisely because the general overall feeling on Misplaced Pages in more recent years is that Misplaced Pages apparently has "too many" pornography-related articles. I would caution again (as I did the last time that the PORNBIO standards were changed) that defaulting back to ENT for these types of articles will eventually lead us down a path to evaluating whether or not adult film performers have "a large fan base or a significant 'cult' following", which is a path that really no one should be willing to go down, since it's pretty much a path to nowhere. ] (]) 00:12, 31 December 2014 (UTC)


I have seen some discussion on this but nothing I can find that is helpful to the question I am about to ask. In recent AfD discussions, I have seen keep votes based on "significant roles." It was also the topic of an ANI discussion which I think could have been avoided if there was clarification. So, are actors considered inherently notable if they have had significant roles in notable films? Or, is that only an indication, and significant coverage must still show notability? The disagreement is coming from the wording "such a person '''may '''(my emphasis) be considered notable." ] (]) 03:45, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
*My inclination is to remove it. We don't confer notability on academics if they've been featured in two non-academic works. Why is the notability of a porn actor dependent on (or otherwise impacted by) the amount of non-porn stuff they've done? Why is it even relevant? Seems like either a bone thrown to porn article creators to enable a back door to notability (no pun intended) or a bizarre "rescue from porn is inevitable" clause. The notability of an academic is based on citations/h-index or recognised work. The notability of an author is based on significant work. The notability of an actor is based on ''"significant roles in multiple notable films"''. All special criteria can be dispensed with in favour of ]. I'm not really sure why we have a special category for porn actors. In what ways is ] not sufficient? I imagine the suggestion is that all that straight-to-video porn might be significant to the industry but it will never be notable, right? I really can't see how its any different to any other d-grade actor who has only appeared in "made for the Syfy Channel" material. ''']<sup>]</sup>''' 13:07, 1 January 2015 (UTC)
::"I imagine the suggestion is that all that straight-to-video porn might be significant to the industry but it will never be notable, right?" I don't think that anyone has ever argued that any ] (whether released online, on video, laserdisc, etc.) would ever qualify under the current PORNBIO #3 criteria. Again, we basically have "a special category for porn actors" in order to restrict the number of pornography-related biographies on Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 05:19, 2 January 2015 (UTC)
:::The question I have is who benefits from this standard? What is the point of having something contentious like this if there is noone who gets to keep an article as a result? I'd like to see some evidence that this standard is making a difference. I can't actually recall anyone benefiting in my many year at DRV and AFD but I do have a memory like swiss cheese. Can anyone help with this? ] <sup>'']''</sup> 11:38, 2 January 2015 (UTC)
::::Apparently ], looking back at the discussion history. ] (]) 12:04, 2 January 2015 (UTC)


:Noone is "inherently notable" on Misplaced Pages. All our guidelines, including ] and ], talk about a "presumption" of notability. This wording has been discussed (and explained) to the death (try searching presumed or presumption in the archives). There is not a perfect formula suitable for each and every case. The key point of NACTOR is that it requires reliable secondary coverage to backup the claim of "significant roles" (which could be some reviews, a profile on ''New York Times'', a monograph and so on). Then, depending on the amount of coverage, its significance, the importance of the films/TV or stage works, the number/significance of the roles, plus other factors, a deletion discussion could result in different outcomes. ] 08:20, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
== PORNBIO too arbitrary and too permissive ==
::{{ping|Cavarrone}}, "Noone is "inherently notable" on Misplaced Pages" - BINGO! That is my take as well. The arguments I see are that since an actor has held significant roles, they are notable under NACTOR, but I do not see those votes supporting a statement about the significant coverage. My take is that they still must meet BASIC in where there is significant coverage about the roles, not just mentions or verification that they played the parts. NACTOR guides us with the "significant role" wording to let those know that significant coverage likely exists, but does not guarantee that it does. Is that inline with what you are saying as well?--] (]) 20:02, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I mean, are there a lot of cases where a person has significant roles in movies but doesn't have anything written about her? Considering that ] only requires like a couple sentences in a couple places, not a high bar. (Also, "] is inherently notable", not sure about that). ] (]) 04:24, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
::::There are cases. I am not sure how to define "a lot." Looking for clarification on the times when there is only verification of roles and not significant coverage of the actor. There are a number of deletion discussion "keep" votes as of late that are claiming the person notable based on verifying the person had notable roles, despite there being no significant coverage. This is happening mainly in the non-US film industry. --] (]) 23:19, 17 November 2024 (UTC)


== Presumed in additional criteria ==
In #1: ''"...well-known and significant industry award..."''


NPOL/NJUDGE has {{tq|The following are presumed to be notable:}} and likewise SPORTSPERSON has {{tq|A sportsperson is presumed to be notable if...}} This wording differs from the other categories, and also seems to directly contradict the head of the additional criteria section, which says {{tq|meeting one or more does not guarantee that a subject should be included}}. Now SPORTSPERSONs are indeed almost certainly going to have plenty written about them if they meet those additional criteria, but what makes them notable is the sources, and not what we say here. Where the wording falls down is on judges. The US elects judges, but that is unusual. Oftentimes judges in a country are unremarkable at any level until they do something that gets them noticed. And then, once again, it is the sources that demonstrate notability, not the position (even though the position will often be the reason for the sources). The problem we have is that people are making one line stubs of the kind of "x is a judge in the y high court" with no secondary sources, and these are all but undeletable because people interpret this guideline that says they are presumed notable to mean the page should be kept. We have BLPs that cannot be written, because tehre are no secondary sources, but they cannot be deleted.{{pb}}'''Proposal 1''' I propose we change the wording from "presumed to be notable" to "likely to be notable".{{pb}}'''Proposal 2''' I propose we remove judges from the guideline congruent with the way we have no guideline for ambassadors. The current guideline is US-centric in treating judges like elected officials. {{pb}}I note that proposal 2 may require an RfC but I hope proposal 1 is sufficiently non controversial that an RfC could be avoided. We will see. Thanks for your input. ] (]) 09:30, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
This is insufficient. Editors will argue all day long on the AfDs what is "well-known" or "significant". Let's have some restrictive definitions. And, how many award-generating bodies are going to be included?


:Proposal 1 is not sufficiently non-controversial. I will comment more later. ] (]/]) 12:54, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
In #2: ''"...or is a member of an industry Hall of Fame..."''
:*'''Oppose''' the first as an unnecessary and undesirable change to a fundamental policy that's been hashed out repeatedly, and the second, as it would produce undesirable gaps in coverage and the proposal is US-centric, even if unintentionally. The US judges that this standard applies to generally have SIGCOV (and as a side-note, are largely not elected). Judiciaries and their judges are one of the largest gaps in WP's coverage of the historical record, I assume largely due to their generally boring nature. Still, as far as I'm aware, most countries' top courts and their judges receive significant coverage at least in the local press. OP is welcome to try to illustrate a real problem here, but just because only a handful of Wikipedians have bothered to write about the ] and its judges does not mean that local journalists have not covered them, and the relative inaccessibility of sources should not be fodder for mass deletions where significant coverage can reasonably be presumed to exist. ] (]) 17:24, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:*:It's not just journalists. It's legal scholars and these people are probably covered in histories and national biographies. ] (]/]) 18:02, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:*First, a general note on ]. The presumption of notability is, generally speaking, rebuttable. That is, if there are sources, one can rebut that they're reliable, independent, provide ], etc. On the other hand, the community has basically decided that some topics are inherently notable (despite many editors claiming that that concept doesn't exist) such that the presumption of notability is irrebutable. For example, certain ] are inherently notable. Likewise, the community has decided that state/province/national-level elected officials and judges (elected or otherwise) are inherently notable. I think it's fine that we've decided certain topics are notable. In particular, having a page for every politician at a certain level ensures at least the possibility of complete coverage of those people on Misplaced Pages, which is particularly important in the current political climate where governments are becoming more repressive. Sunlight is the best disinfectant. ] (]/]) 22:31, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:*:I disagree that it is a good thing that any BLP is considered inherently notable, because BLPs must have secondary sourcing, and some of these BLPs cannot have secondary sourcing because these "inherently notable" people are not actually notable at all, in that there are no secondary sources that anyone has found. But, if you are saying that the use of the word here is intentional, because these are considered inherently notable, then some other wording is required, because currently the guideline contradicts itself and its interpretation is dependent on who shows up at AfD. ] (]) 07:40, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:*::If people are interpreting NPOL to mean anything that these articles should be kept, that's a problem with AfD closers not understanding the guideline and not appropriately discounting !votes that are against consensus. ] (]/]) 14:29, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:*:::It is not just at the close. Discussions gather momentum. If they are predicated on a misunderstanding, then let's look at the cause of the misunderstanding and tweak the guideline wording as appropriate. ] (]) 17:45, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:Whether the guideline includes "presumed" or "likely" we will get editors reading it as "not" and demanding that someone should prove ]-notability with online sources immediately. As far as proposal 2 goes, I think what ''is'' US-centric is including judges in the same sub-guideline as politicians. In much (probably most) of the world they are supposed to be apolitical. ] (]) 19:03, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::I believe only 9 of the 170-odd current US courts that the guideline applies to are technically partisan, and even though many have effectively been politicized, that was far less true for the vast majority of the history that the guideline covers. Most nations' supreme courts are appointed by political leaders or parliaments, and I'm not really sure what maintaining an apolitical appearance has to do with notability. Plenty of political offices and parliaments are at least technically nonpartisan. ] (]) 19:39, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I wasn't aware of that - I'm more familiar with the British system, where most judges are conservative with a small "c", but any declaration of a party affiliation is a definite no-no. Your post makes me even more convinced that judges should not be treated as if they were politicians, but should have a separate section. ] (]) 21:24, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Why does it matter if they're politically affiliated or not? Judges and elected officials are powerful government figures and we should cover them on Misplaced Pages. ] (]/]) 22:33, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::We should cover any notable topic, and that will often include judges. But judges are appointed in a manner perhaps more akin to ambassadors than politicians. We don't presume notability of ambassadors. There is an incongruity here. ] (]) 18:32, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::I don't believe that, in most of the world, the process for appointing judges is at all akin to appointing ambassadors ''or'' politicians. For example, there is no way that the UK government could have got away with appointing the recently named UK ambassador to the US as a judge. That is why I believe that judges should be considered separately from politicians ''and'' ambassadors. ] (]) 17:19, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:Can you explain the conflict you're seeing between presumed notable and does not guarantee in this context? IMO there isn't a conflict, presumed is not guaranteed. ] (]) 21:40, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::Sure. I absolutely agree that this is how it is meant to be interpreted, but I think we have overloaded the word "presumed" here. The page in a nutshell has {{tqb|A person is presumed to be notable if they have received significant coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject.}} That is, if GNG is met. But here "presume" means more than not guaranteed. Any article that meets GNG and is not excluded under ] {{tq|is presumed to merit an article}} per ], and is thus kept. That is not what the additional criteria section is telling us. It tells us {{tqb|People are likely to be notable if they meet any of the following standards.}} Likely is not a presumption of notability (as quoted above), it is something less than that. What the word "likely" means is one of those frustratingly domain specific terms, but generally it's a probability >50%. It is something that will happen more often than it doesn't. Here, it is a refutable expectation that sources can be found, but it does not guarantee that the page is notable. Yet for these two paragraphs, we have fallen back to "presumed". It just seems to be the wrong choice of word here. ] (]) 22:15, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::"and is thus kept" isn't accurate, at that point it can still be merged, redirected, or deleted. ] (]) 22:49, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::I do not recall any AfD discussion in which something was demonstrated to meet GNG, not excluded under WP:NOT, and was still redirected or deleted. Rarely merges happen, yes, per ], but that is still keeping the information. {{tq|Is presumed to merit an article}} is generally accepted as the inclusion standard. ] (]) 23:20, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::: You've can't recall it but it does happen, most commonly for living people which are deemed to not be public figures (especially under ]). ] (]) 23:54, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Do you have an example? ] (]) 07:38, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Sure, from my own experience I can offer ]. ] (]) 17:51, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Thanks for that. I don't think that discussion shows we ever would delete something that meets GNG, for a couple of reasons.
::::::::# Although the closer did not discuss the issue of GNG, I note that your position was that GNG was met, but others disagreed. Relist comments from Liz show that she was not convinced a case had been made that this met GNG and it was heading towards no consensus at that point. Further arguments were made after the relist that this did not meet GNG, so it is certainly not the case that the consensus was that this meets GNG.
::::::::# Although closed as redirect, this appears to have been a recognition that you had already merged the content two days earlier (and the possibility of further merging was raised in the close comments). The point being that the prevailing consensus retained the information, but not on a page of its own, per PAGEDECIDE.
::::::::Which, tbh, is not surprising. ] is clear that if the ''consensus'' is that GNG is met, and the page is not excluded under WP:NOT, the subject is presumed to merit an article. Time and again this is the bar used to retain articles. This is different from the additional criteria section, which is only talking about likelihoods. And thus our use of "presumed" with two different meanings is confusing. ] (]) 18:25, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Its literally no different... And there are thousands of similar cases, which you can find if you are interested. Your proposal remains without merit, have a nice day. ] (]) 20:50, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Yeah, there's definitely a practical distinction between the "presumed" used for GNG vs for the other guidance, and it would make sense to textually distinguish them. ] (]) 03:05, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
*I don't think we should presume judges are notable and I don't see the point of the sports change, but if you want to get either of these proposals up you're going to need to separate them as they are two completely different proposals. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 16:53, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
*:Thanks. Proposal 2 would only be about the judges. ] (]) 21:31, 28 December 2024 (UTC)


:I question the premise about judges: is anyone actually creating articles about judges with only primary sources: that is, sourced only to the judges themselves? I find that hard to believe. ] (]) 17:55, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
The inclusion of Hall of Fame criteria essentially permits the industry to retcon everybody into notability to game the system over here at Misplaced Pages; for example, (XRCO demonstrated commendable restraint in inducting only 9 last year) - are we to believe that the straight-to-video sex industry is generating 37 notable people every year with this ''one'' criteria?
::Well here's one: ]. Only took a couple of minutes looking. It is not alone. Caveat: I make no warranty that there are ''no'' secondary sources available. It is entirely possible this person clearly meets GNG - I have not researched that. However, the article is only created with primary sources. Nevertheless your definition of what a primary source is is not quite right. Primary sources are ''not'' sourced only to the judge themself. For instance, we have the official website of the high court as a source and two government press communiques. Those are all primary sources. The reporting of the communique in the Economic Times is also a primary source, although this is not always recognised. See ]. In any case, there is not really significant coverage in any of them. To say something about the subject you need secondary sources that discuss the subject, and don't just name them as an appointment to the role. ] (]) 18:24, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Well, this really depends on whether we are using "secondary" in its conventional sense, or to mean "adding independent analysis". If used in the second sense: sure, this is an example of a biography without secondary sourcing, but such biographical articles are commonplace. To the best of my knowledge, such articles are generally found to pass WP:N so long as independent, reliable sources exist - as appears to be the case here. ] (]) 19:12, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
::::We are using "secondary" per ] and in its usual meaning in historiography. An article such as this one, ''if no other sources are available'', would not be found to pass ]. That is because none of those sources meet ]. To pass the first arm of WP:N the article must pass GNG. ] (]) 19:23, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::I think I disagree with this statement in at least two respects: (1) I don't think the {{tq|usual meaning in historiography}} requires analysis, at least not as a core requirement, and (2) I believe that many biographies that do not include "GNG sources" (sources each of which satisfies all elements of ]) are nevertheless found to meet ]. In fact, I don't believe this latter statement to be especially controversial. ] (]) 00:05, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Analysis is your word. I pointed you to ] which says they contain {{tq|''analysis, evaluation, interpretation, or synthesis'' of the facts, evidence, concepts, and ideas taken from primary sources.}} So no, not analysis alone. As to biographies having no secondary sources: that should never happen. ] says {{tq| Articles should document in a non-partisan manner what reliable secondary sources have published about the subjects}} and in ] there is very clear guidance on avoiding primary sources. And people get this wrong a lot. In an encyclopaedic article, we are writing a tertiary source. We are not writing histories (for which primary sources are our bread and butter, and the job of the historian is to create the synthesis of sources). We are writing the encyclopaedic coverage based on the synthesis of others. So if we are keeping BLP pages that only have primary sources, we are doing it wrong. We are wrong because we are creating a ] of our own, and we are doing it wrong because ] says {{tq|Sources should be secondary sources}}. Which begs the question: can you provide an example of a biography that is kept at AfD despite only having primary sources, and where the argument is that it meets ] and is not sidestepped by a presumption in a relevant SNG? ] (]) 09:21, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::To answer your question: the current discussion is about {{tq|a presumption in a relevant SNG}}, so I'm not seeing the relevance of your request. (I am confident that I have seen biographies kept with independent sourcing that has not been shown to feature {{tq|analysis, evaluation, interpretation, or synthesis of the facts, evidence, concepts, and ideas taken from primary sources}} - but I'm also not convinced that is relevant to this discussion...) ] (]) 10:56, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Clearly the relevance was to {{tq|I believe that many biographies that do not include "GNG sources" (sources each of which satisfies all elements of WP:SIGCOV) are nevertheless found to meet WP:N.}} How can something meet WP:N without GNG sources? If you are saying that a consensus has been reached that a page meets WP:N based only on primary sources, and without SIGCOV (which is a second matter), I would be interested in seeing the example. If you are actually saying that people are bypassing WP:N by applying the presumptions of independent SNGs - well yes, that is on topic. ] (]) 12:40, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Rather than extend this digression by presenting edge cases, I will point to the multitude of ] AfDs, from which articles are routinely kept without any evidence of {{tq|analysis, evaluation, interpretation, or synthesis}} about the subject of the article. ] (]) 12:44, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Yes, but that is not because they meet ], but because people interpret a presumption of notability under the independent SNG as being a reason to keep the article, regardless of whether GNG (the first arm of WP:N) is met or not. That is the situation you are describing. ] (]) 14:59, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::::But ] specifies that ''either'' GNG ''or'' an SNG must be met, doesn't it? So WP:N ''is'' met in those cases. You asked above, {{tq|How can something meet WP:N without GNG sources?}} - I didn't see any specification of an {{tq|arm}}. ] (]) 15:36, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::::::::No, WP:N says {{tqb|A topic is presumed to merit an article if:{{pb}}1. It meets either the general notability guideline (GNG) below, or the criteria outlined in a subject-specific notability guideline (SNG); and{{pb}}2. It is not excluded under the What Misplaced Pages is not policy.}}
::::::::::::And about SNG's it says" {{tq|In some topic areas, subject-specific notability guidelines (SNGs) have been written to help clarify when a standalone article can or should be written.}} It does not say such articles meet WP:N. ] (]) 16:01, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::::::I'm afraid that I am having difficulty parsing this reply. My understanding of WP:N, attained over many years of discussion at Notability Talk pages, is that "meeting WP:N" means meeting the presumption that you just quoted. The passage you have also quoted about SNGs doesn't change the meaning of the intitial presumption listed at WP:N, which is esseentially "either GNG or an SNG + not NOT = presumption to merit an article".
:::::::::::::Indeed, the rest of the section that follows the sentence you quoted about SNGs - a section that was added as a result of a well-participated RfC, and which I helped draft - goes into greater detail about the guidance various SNGs may offer. What it certainly does ''not'' do, is distinguish between notability as presumed under most SNGs and the presumption of notability under WP:N. Rather, the SNG presumption in general is explicitly a path to meeting WP:N, parallel to the path under the GNG. ] (]) 16:28, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::::::::::The distinction is that subject notability guidelines, inasmuch as they are a path to notability for a subject, are independent of the path described in WP:N, which is specifically that GNG must be met. ] (]) 16:35, 3 January 2025 (UTC)


===SPORTSPERSON===
At least with the "significant" awards (whatever they are), you know you're only getting a few per year.--] (]) 21:25, 2 January 2015 (UTC)
A bit of a tangent, but I see the wording at ] has come up again. The real guideline is at ], and SPORTSPERSON is supposed to just be a summary—but the phrasing is slightly different, and this can lead to more confusion than clarity. ], I suggested replacing SPORTSPERSON with a neutral pointer along the lines of "Guidance on the notability of sportspersons can be found at ]"; this seemed to be well received, but the discussion petered out without a resolution. Would anyone object if I just made that change? ] (]) 23:39, 27 December 2024 (UTC)


:It does say the main article is NSPORT, so doesn't seem that difficult to understand. I'd be more inclined to simply redirect WP:SPORTSPERSON to NSPORT, as this is the most relevant target. But that is probably a discussion for RfD rather than here. It doesn't make sense to have a shortcut to a summary of an article, when the target is the main article, similar to ]. ] (]) 14:12, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:Just leave it alone and give it a rest, will you. You seem intent to be an anti-porn crusader. You've been listing such AFD's all day, some which clearly pass WP:PORNBIO, and even a 2nd nom of an AFD which was closed only two days ago. Whereas you apparently find WP:PORNBIO to be too permissive, methinks it's '''too strict''' and would plead to loosen up this criteria, especially #1. -- ], 2 January 2015, 22:53.
::I've been doing lots of things "all day". But let's not talk about me; I'm not the subject. --] (]) 22:08, 2 January 2015 (UTC) :I agree that that would be better wording, and also that SPORTSPERSON should redirect to the actual NSPORT guideline. ] (]) 03:02, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:::No but your behaviour is a bit questionable. You seem hell bent on reopening various discussions which already have been discussed “ad nauseam” and around which there is a consensus. For instance firstly the Hall of Fame point has already been discussed in full not more than five days ago. See the discussion above. I simply can’t believe you didn’t notice that. Why reopening that discussion at this point, when merely a couple of days ago there was a clear consensus to leave it be? Secondly #1 of WP:PORNBIO is clear enough in that it pertains to individual awards and in my humble opinion is even too strict by excluding scene-related and ensemble categories but I abide by that consensus. As to defining what a significant award is as to the name of awards: AVN and XRCO are a given, but I wouldn’t pin it solely on only those two. That might be to americentric. We don’t discard the BAFTA’s or the Cesars either just because the Oscars are the most well-known movie awards. I would thus plead to leave #1-2 just as they are. – ], 2 January 2015, 23:32.
:::: This is ] behavior, attempting to edit policy to suit one's own cause. You've constantly been nominating articles for deletion, and when the !keep votes cite PORNBIO as a policy or guideline, you're attempting to change that so they can't use it anymore. ] (]) 00:25, 3 January 2015 (UTC)
::::: This is a talk page; I'm talking on it. I have made ''no'' attempt to "edit policy" (edit PORNBIO) as you claim.--] (]) 11:27, 3 January 2015 (UTC)

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Proposal: expand the "Politicians and judges" header to "Politicians, judges, and government officials"

I propose to expand the header on this page for "Politicians and judges" to encompass "government officials" who hold an appointed statewide office equivalent to one that would qualify for deeming an elected official notable. It seems fairly straightforward to me that if one state has an elected cabinet official with broad authority over a significant aspect of people's lives, like a secretary of agriculture, a secretary of education, or a chairman of a statewide power commission, and their neighboring state has the same officials being appointed by the governor and approved by the legislature rather than being appointed, then there should be no difference in treatment for purposes of encyclopedic notability. While I expect that some editors will just assume that appointed officials in government count just as much as "politicians" as elected officials, others would not, and I think we should make their inclusion clear.

I would likewise be inclined to amend the second line under that section to cover "Major local political figures and government officials who have received significant press coverage", again to make clear that appointed officeholders who some might not consider "politicians" are not thereby excluded from coverage. BD2412 T 02:10, 14 August 2024 (UTC)

  • Support both changes. They are both consistent with the rationale behind NPOL, which per the footnote is ensuring the complete documentation of statewide government officials. Appointed vs. elected is an arbitrary distinction regarding that purpose. voorts (talk/contributions) 02:14, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Support: This never made sense to me. The difference between appointed government officials and elected government officials is not relevant in our context. The guideline should not arbitrarily exclude one or the other. C F A 💬 02:19, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose Elected officials at the statewide or provincial level get far more scrutiny and far more attention from reliable sources than appointed officials do. And in the end, what really counts is whether the official has received the amount of significant coverage in reliable, independent sources that is required to write a policy compliant article. As an example, consider two most populous US states, California and Texas. The elected agriculture commissioner of Texas gets far more attention than the appointed secretary of agriculture in California. I have lived in California for 52 years and could not name a single one of the California officials. But I can easily remember the name of a Texas agricultural commissioner who served over 30 years ago. Cullen328 (talk) 02:30, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Does "gets far more attention" equate to "is more important for encyclopedic purposes"? I would hope that it would not be. I would note by comparison that we include all federal judges, even though none of them are elected. BD2412 T 03:05, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose As redundant. The government officials who fall under WP:NPOL as cabinet ministers are political officers, even when those positions are filled by civil servants (e.g. even though Dick Schoof is a civil servant, he fills the political office of prime minister). Non-cabinet positions (which are almost exclusively filled by civil servants) do not fall under NPOL. Curbon7 (talk) 02:43, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
    • Confusion arises from the fact that many people would consider "political officers" and "politicians" as two different things, the politician being the person kissing babies and gladhanding for votes. BD2412 T 03:03, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Support - Agree with Voorts and CFA. I do not see the relevance of being appointed or elected when it is a high position in the government. --CNMall41 (talk) 04:39, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose I do agree that there can be some confusion in the difference between an elected and appointed official, especially across governmental entities, but the general assumption is that elected officials will receive significant coverage in reliable sources. There is not the same expectation for civil appointees, and this would become especially true for acting or temporary appointees to these positions. Bottom line, I do not think the presumption of notability exists for civil servants, but nothing stops a stand-alone article of any individual if significant, independent, reliable sources exist. (And this proposal also would raise a question of which government officials would be major). --Enos733 (talk) 04:49, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose as worded; "government officials" is too broad and covers many people who would absolutely fall under WP:LOWPROFILE, and for whom a brief but broad burst of coverage related to one event would not be sufficient to establish notability per WP:BLP1E. Someone working for the post office or a tax collector for the IRS, for instance, should not have a lower bar for notability than any random citizen. You say "statewide office" but the actual proposal you're making for the text would apply to the local dogcatcher; if you mean for this to be limited to high-level statewide government officials like the secretary of education then it would have to say so explicitly. (And I don't think just "statewide" is enough; the secretary of education is a statewide official, sure, but so is everyone working directly under them. Their assistants and interns shouldn't fall under this category, surely.) --Aquillion (talk) 05:14, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose: not convinced it'd be beneficial to make what's already an exceptionally broad SNG even broader. The presumption that political figures will meet the GNG gets weaker and weaker the further we get from the "elected politician" heartland of NPOL, and affording notability to large groups of people who don't meet the GNG almost always runs into the problems discussed at WP:WHYN, which applies to "all articles, not solely articles justified under the general notability criteria". Extraordinary Writ (talk) 06:16, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
    • @Enos733, Aquillion, and Extraordinary Writ: I am sympathetic to the concern that this opens the door to the local dogcatcher having an article, which is not my intent. I am not trying to broaden the the SNG so much as to make it clear that actual statewide agency/commission heads should be deemed equally notable based on their significant positions of actual power over substantial areas irrespective of whether they are elected or appointed to that position. I would have no problem with language excluding "acting" or "temporary" appointees, and/or limiting this to statewide offices, and exclusively to the individuals in the topmost position in their agencies. My concern is most directly that "Politicians" brings to mind people who campaign for elected office, and not necessarily political appointees who do not campaign. BD2412 T 03:56, 15 August 2024 (UTC)
      Beyond the sourcing concerns, I fear this is a US-centric approach that has limited applicability across US states and nation-states. The response here is to limit to "topmost position in their agencies," but there are many more agencies than we know about (Indiana has 11 state agencies that start with the letter "A"). If we limit it to cabinet-level positions, we still would run into the problem that is purported to be the issue - that editors are confused about which agencies are covered by NPOL across jurisdictions.
      Fundamentally, I do not think editors get confused. I have seen very few discussions at AfD that indicate a flood of marginally-notable agency directors. Nearly all stand-alone articles are evaluated through the context of WP:GNG, including civil servants. While this proposal is described as not intending to broaden the definition of who is notable, I believe it broadens the SNG quite a bit. - Enos733 (talk) 05:57, 16 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Support. Seems obvious to me. There's nothing sacred about being elected. It doesn't make one more notable. In addition, the current wording favours the United States, where far more officials are elected than they are elsewhere. It is true that in general we have considered appointed officials in equivalent positions to be notable, but it needs to be more explicit as they still get nominated for deletion and some editors at AfD do state that WP:POLITICIAN doesn't cover them simply because they aren't elected. -- Necrothesp (talk) 08:35, 15 August 2024 (UTC)
    • Agree and Support; Comment (without weighing in on the sanctity of election itself): if this modification is accepted, then the second sentence of the first bullet point should also read This also applies to people who have been elected or appointed to such offices, etc. -- Cl3phact0 (talk) 09:06, 15 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Support, as whether or not an official's position requires campaigning shouldn't be the determinative factor here, although I do think there may be more to be worked out on wording, as BD2412 alluded to. Star Garnet (talk) 23:06, 15 August 2024 (UTC)
    The question is not about campaigning per se, but the amount of reliable, independent sourcing that elected officials (and candidates) receive. In the course of becoming a candidate (in a system with candidate-centric elections), there is a certain level of coverage in local press in the context of the election. And service in a legislature, or in an executive office, entails frequent stories about actions the individual takes (sponsoring of legislation, votes, speeches) that are covered in reliable sources. The same cannot always be said about an appointed official (even to a cabinet-level agency).
    Sticking with my earlier example of Indiana, a member of the cabinet is the appointed Indiana State Examiner. The position does not currently have a stand-alone page. The incumbent of that position is Paul Joyce. I can only find one newspaper article that quotes the incumbent and no articles that would actually cover the subject in-depth.
    Looking at comparable positions, (elected v appointed), compare the coverage of the auditor of Oregon, Kip Memmott, versus the auditor of Washington, Pat McCarthy. Both auditors took office in 2017, but the coverage is quite different. - Enos733 (talk) 06:22, 16 August 2024 (UTC)
    @Enos733: Perhaps some language reflecting the relative notability of the office would help, if taken with an appropriate grain of salt. I was inspired to come here by recent experience working on an article for a specific state commission that is ridiculously powerful, with the chair of that commission clearly being more notable in terms of influence over people's lives than a typical elected member of the legislature of the state. BD2412 T 16:03, 16 August 2024 (UTC)
    I generally believe that our community's system of notability is quite fuzzy and the more we try to precisely define what subjects are notable, the less likely we are to have a simple, clear statement that is easy for editors to understand. Our system works, as the intro to GNG says, determining notability does not necessarily depend on things such as fame, importance, or popularity. The basis for a stand alone article is coverage, and SNGs help editors understand when "sourcing likely exists". Nothing in NPOL or GNG now prevents stand alone articles from being created (either about the individual, or a governmental agency). - Enos733 (talk) 16:27, 16 August 2024 (UTC)
    I am not disagreeing here, but there are undoubtedly some unelected statewide public offices for which reporting about the officeholder is as likely as for the typical state-level legislative officeholder, and some term broader than "politician" is needed to acknowledge that. BD2412 T 04:42, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose Not every government official is automatically notable, even with press coverage. For example, the local dog warden. The Banner talk 11:01, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
    • Nobody is saying minor officials like that should be considered to be notable, as is fairly obvious. The proposal is simply to change the wording to reflect that appointed officials are as notable as elected officials in equivalent positions. A dog warden clearly wouldn't be notable even if they were elected. -- Necrothesp (talk) 14:38, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
    This argument is such a strawman that it borders on nonsense. No one in this discussion thinks the local dog warden should receive presumptive notability (in fact, this is countered in the guideline with Just being an elected local official does not guarantee notability) and this proposed adjustment does not change that. Curbon7 (talk) 05:30, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose, no reason to presume that these are notable a priori. Those that really are can have an article, there is nothing here that excludes them if they meet GNG: all this addition can do is include the ones that don't meet the GNG, and I see no reason to do so. Fram (talk) 15:04, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Comment: The broader question, in my view, comes back to: what is the purpose of WP:SNGs? Is it to clarify that some subjects should be covered in this encyclopaedia regardless of GNG (i.e., providing alternate pathways to N along the lines of WP:UCS), or is it something else? -- Cl3phact0 (talk) 07:44, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose From my personal experience, I've observed that many government officials seek to enhance their PR and image by creating a Misplaced Pages BLP. However, many of them struggle to meet the GNG. I believe that including a clause stating that government officials fall under the NPOL could lead to an influx of BLPs for appointed officials who may not actually be WP:N, opening a new set of challenges. --— Saqib (talk I contribs) 10:53, 1 November 2024 (UTC).
  • Oppose as instruction creep. Such persons need to pass GNG. Xxanthippe (talk) 22:00, 28 December 2024 (UTC).

Tatiana Turanskaya

Is the leader of a breakaway region notable? Bearian (talk) 04:15, 16 September 2024 (UTC)

I think that whether they pass WP:NPOL depends on the breakaway region. In the case of Transnistria most people with an interest in international affairs have heard of it, and even if you do not follow Russia in recognizing it as an independent country it qualifies as a state/province. As far as Tatiana Turanskaya is concerned that is probably moot as she seems to pass the WP:GNG, with coverage from the Transnistrian, Moldovan and Russian press. Phil Bridger (talk) 08:34, 16 September 2024 (UTC)

NPOL Q

Do leaders of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta qualify under NPOL (it seems their head of government is the sole entry at List of current heads of state and government missing an article)? What about leaders of disputed countries, such as the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic or Transnistria? BeanieFan11 (talk) 01:42, 14 October 2024 (UTC)

I would say yes, since the spirit of NPOL is that we should have an article for the leaders and national level legislators of all nations and national subdivisions. voorts (talk/contributions) 01:55, 14 October 2024 (UTC)

NACTOR, significant roles

I have seen some discussion on this but nothing I can find that is helpful to the question I am about to ask. In recent AfD discussions, I have seen keep votes based on "significant roles." It was also the topic of an ANI discussion which I think could have been avoided if there was clarification. So, are actors considered inherently notable if they have had significant roles in notable films? Or, is that only an indication, and significant coverage must still show notability? The disagreement is coming from the wording "such a person may (my emphasis) be considered notable." CNMall41 (talk) 03:45, 4 November 2024 (UTC)

Noone is "inherently notable" on Misplaced Pages. All our guidelines, including WP:BASIC and WP:GNG, talk about a "presumption" of notability. This wording has been discussed (and explained) to the death (try searching presumed or presumption in the archives). There is not a perfect formula suitable for each and every case. The key point of NACTOR is that it requires reliable secondary coverage to backup the claim of "significant roles" (which could be some reviews, a profile on New York Times, a monograph and so on). Then, depending on the amount of coverage, its significance, the importance of the films/TV or stage works, the number/significance of the roles, plus other factors, a deletion discussion could result in different outcomes. Cavarrone 08:20, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
@Cavarrone:, "Noone is "inherently notable" on Misplaced Pages" - BINGO! That is my take as well. The arguments I see are that since an actor has held significant roles, they are notable under NACTOR, but I do not see those votes supporting a statement about the significant coverage. My take is that they still must meet BASIC in where there is significant coverage about the roles, not just mentions or verification that they played the parts. NACTOR guides us with the "significant role" wording to let those know that significant coverage likely exists, but does not guarantee that it does. Is that inline with what you are saying as well?--CNMall41 (talk) 20:02, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
I mean, are there a lot of cases where a person has significant roles in movies but doesn't have anything written about her? Considering that WP:GNG only requires like a couple sentences in a couple places, not a high bar. (Also, "Noone is inherently notable", not sure about that). Herostratus (talk) 04:24, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
There are cases. I am not sure how to define "a lot." Looking for clarification on the times when there is only verification of roles and not significant coverage of the actor. There are a number of deletion discussion "keep" votes as of late that are claiming the person notable based on verifying the person had notable roles, despite there being no significant coverage. This is happening mainly in the non-US film industry. --CNMall41 (talk) 23:19, 17 November 2024 (UTC)

Presumed in additional criteria

NPOL/NJUDGE has The following are presumed to be notable: and likewise SPORTSPERSON has A sportsperson is presumed to be notable if... This wording differs from the other categories, and also seems to directly contradict the head of the additional criteria section, which says meeting one or more does not guarantee that a subject should be included. Now SPORTSPERSONs are indeed almost certainly going to have plenty written about them if they meet those additional criteria, but what makes them notable is the sources, and not what we say here. Where the wording falls down is on judges. The US elects judges, but that is unusual. Oftentimes judges in a country are unremarkable at any level until they do something that gets them noticed. And then, once again, it is the sources that demonstrate notability, not the position (even though the position will often be the reason for the sources). The problem we have is that people are making one line stubs of the kind of "x is a judge in the y high court" with no secondary sources, and these are all but undeletable because people interpret this guideline that says they are presumed notable to mean the page should be kept. We have BLPs that cannot be written, because tehre are no secondary sources, but they cannot be deleted.

Proposal 1 I propose we change the wording from "presumed to be notable" to "likely to be notable".

Proposal 2 I propose we remove judges from the guideline congruent with the way we have no guideline for ambassadors. The current guideline is US-centric in treating judges like elected officials.

I note that proposal 2 may require an RfC but I hope proposal 1 is sufficiently non controversial that an RfC could be avoided. We will see. Thanks for your input. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 09:30, 27 December 2024 (UTC)

Proposal 1 is not sufficiently non-controversial. I will comment more later. voorts (talk/contributions) 12:54, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose the first as an unnecessary and undesirable change to a fundamental policy that's been hashed out repeatedly, and the second, as it would produce undesirable gaps in coverage and the proposal is US-centric, even if unintentionally. The US judges that this standard applies to generally have SIGCOV (and as a side-note, are largely not elected). Judiciaries and their judges are one of the largest gaps in WP's coverage of the historical record, I assume largely due to their generally boring nature. Still, as far as I'm aware, most countries' top courts and their judges receive significant coverage at least in the local press. OP is welcome to try to illustrate a real problem here, but just because only a handful of Wikipedians have bothered to write about the judiciary of Solomon Islands and its judges does not mean that local journalists have not covered them, and the relative inaccessibility of sources should not be fodder for mass deletions where significant coverage can reasonably be presumed to exist. Star Garnet (talk) 17:24, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
    It's not just journalists. It's legal scholars and these people are probably covered in histories and national biographies. voorts (talk/contributions) 18:02, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
  • First, a general note on presumption. The presumption of notability is, generally speaking, rebuttable. That is, if there are sources, one can rebut that they're reliable, independent, provide significant coverage, etc. On the other hand, the community has basically decided that some topics are inherently notable (despite many editors claiming that that concept doesn't exist) such that the presumption of notability is irrebutable. For example, certain species are inherently notable. Likewise, the community has decided that state/province/national-level elected officials and judges (elected or otherwise) are inherently notable. I think it's fine that we've decided certain topics are notable. In particular, having a page for every politician at a certain level ensures at least the possibility of complete coverage of those people on Misplaced Pages, which is particularly important in the current political climate where governments are becoming more repressive. Sunlight is the best disinfectant. voorts (talk/contributions) 22:31, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
    I disagree that it is a good thing that any BLP is considered inherently notable, because BLPs must have secondary sourcing, and some of these BLPs cannot have secondary sourcing because these "inherently notable" people are not actually notable at all, in that there are no secondary sources that anyone has found. But, if you are saying that the use of the word here is intentional, because these are considered inherently notable, then some other wording is required, because currently the guideline contradicts itself and its interpretation is dependent on who shows up at AfD. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 07:40, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
    If people are interpreting NPOL to mean anything that these articles should be kept, that's a problem with AfD closers not understanding the guideline and not appropriately discounting !votes that are against consensus. voorts (talk/contributions) 14:29, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
    It is not just at the close. Discussions gather momentum. If they are predicated on a misunderstanding, then let's look at the cause of the misunderstanding and tweak the guideline wording as appropriate. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 17:45, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Whether the guideline includes "presumed" or "likely" we will get editors reading it as "not" and demanding that someone should prove GNG-notability with online sources immediately. As far as proposal 2 goes, I think what is US-centric is including judges in the same sub-guideline as politicians. In much (probably most) of the world they are supposed to be apolitical. Phil Bridger (talk) 19:03, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
I believe only 9 of the 170-odd current US courts that the guideline applies to are technically partisan, and even though many have effectively been politicized, that was far less true for the vast majority of the history that the guideline covers. Most nations' supreme courts are appointed by political leaders or parliaments, and I'm not really sure what maintaining an apolitical appearance has to do with notability. Plenty of political offices and parliaments are at least technically nonpartisan. Star Garnet (talk) 19:39, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
I wasn't aware of that - I'm more familiar with the British system, where most judges are conservative with a small "c", but any declaration of a party affiliation is a definite no-no. Your post makes me even more convinced that judges should not be treated as if they were politicians, but should have a separate section. Phil Bridger (talk) 21:24, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
Why does it matter if they're politically affiliated or not? Judges and elected officials are powerful government figures and we should cover them on Misplaced Pages. voorts (talk/contributions) 22:33, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
We should cover any notable topic, and that will often include judges. But judges are appointed in a manner perhaps more akin to ambassadors than politicians. We don't presume notability of ambassadors. There is an incongruity here. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 18:32, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
I don't believe that, in most of the world, the process for appointing judges is at all akin to appointing ambassadors or politicians. For example, there is no way that the UK government could have got away with appointing the recently named UK ambassador to the US as a judge. That is why I believe that judges should be considered separately from politicians and ambassadors. Phil Bridger (talk) 17:19, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Can you explain the conflict you're seeing between presumed notable and does not guarantee in this context? IMO there isn't a conflict, presumed is not guaranteed. Horse Eye's Back (talk) 21:40, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
Sure. I absolutely agree that this is how it is meant to be interpreted, but I think we have overloaded the word "presumed" here. The page in a nutshell has

A person is presumed to be notable if they have received significant coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject.

That is, if GNG is met. But here "presume" means more than not guaranteed. Any article that meets GNG and is not excluded under WP:NOT is presumed to merit an article per WP:N, and is thus kept. That is not what the additional criteria section is telling us. It tells us

People are likely to be notable if they meet any of the following standards.

Likely is not a presumption of notability (as quoted above), it is something less than that. What the word "likely" means is one of those frustratingly domain specific terms, but generally it's a probability >50%. It is something that will happen more often than it doesn't. Here, it is a refutable expectation that sources can be found, but it does not guarantee that the page is notable. Yet for these two paragraphs, we have fallen back to "presumed". It just seems to be the wrong choice of word here. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 22:15, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
"and is thus kept" isn't accurate, at that point it can still be merged, redirected, or deleted. Horse Eye's Back (talk) 22:49, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
I do not recall any AfD discussion in which something was demonstrated to meet GNG, not excluded under WP:NOT, and was still redirected or deleted. Rarely merges happen, yes, per WP:PAGEDECIDE, but that is still keeping the information. Is presumed to merit an article is generally accepted as the inclusion standard. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 23:20, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
You've can't recall it but it does happen, most commonly for living people which are deemed to not be public figures (especially under WP:BLP1E). Horse Eye's Back (talk) 23:54, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
Do you have an example? Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 07:38, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Sure, from my own experience I can offer Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Bruno Wang. Horse Eye's Back (talk) 17:51, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for that. I don't think that discussion shows we ever would delete something that meets GNG, for a couple of reasons.
  1. Although the closer did not discuss the issue of GNG, I note that your position was that GNG was met, but others disagreed. Relist comments from Liz show that she was not convinced a case had been made that this met GNG and it was heading towards no consensus at that point. Further arguments were made after the relist that this did not meet GNG, so it is certainly not the case that the consensus was that this meets GNG.
  2. Although closed as redirect, this appears to have been a recognition that you had already merged the content two days earlier (and the possibility of further merging was raised in the close comments). The point being that the prevailing consensus retained the information, but not on a page of its own, per PAGEDECIDE.
Which, tbh, is not surprising. WP:N is clear that if the consensus is that GNG is met, and the page is not excluded under WP:NOT, the subject is presumed to merit an article. Time and again this is the bar used to retain articles. This is different from the additional criteria section, which is only talking about likelihoods. And thus our use of "presumed" with two different meanings is confusing. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 18:25, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Its literally no different... And there are thousands of similar cases, which you can find if you are interested. Your proposal remains without merit, have a nice day. Horse Eye's Back (talk) 20:50, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Yeah, there's definitely a practical distinction between the "presumed" used for GNG vs for the other guidance, and it would make sense to textually distinguish them. JoelleJay (talk) 03:05, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
I question the premise about judges: is anyone actually creating articles about judges with only primary sources: that is, sourced only to the judges themselves? I find that hard to believe. Newimpartial (talk) 17:55, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Well here's one: A. Badharudeen. Only took a couple of minutes looking. It is not alone. Caveat: I make no warranty that there are no secondary sources available. It is entirely possible this person clearly meets GNG - I have not researched that. However, the article is only created with primary sources. Nevertheless your definition of what a primary source is is not quite right. Primary sources are not sourced only to the judge themself. For instance, we have the official website of the high court as a source and two government press communiques. Those are all primary sources. The reporting of the communique in the Economic Times is also a primary source, although this is not always recognised. See WP:PRIMARYNEWS. In any case, there is not really significant coverage in any of them. To say something about the subject you need secondary sources that discuss the subject, and don't just name them as an appointment to the role. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 18:24, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Well, this really depends on whether we are using "secondary" in its conventional sense, or to mean "adding independent analysis". If used in the second sense: sure, this is an example of a biography without secondary sourcing, but such biographical articles are commonplace. To the best of my knowledge, such articles are generally found to pass WP:N so long as independent, reliable sources exist - as appears to be the case here. Newimpartial (talk) 19:12, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
We are using "secondary" per WP:SECONDARY and in its usual meaning in historiography. An article such as this one, if no other sources are available, would not be found to pass WP:N. That is because none of those sources meet WP:GNG. To pass the first arm of WP:N the article must pass GNG. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 19:23, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
I think I disagree with this statement in at least two respects: (1) I don't think the usual meaning in historiography requires analysis, at least not as a core requirement, and (2) I believe that many biographies that do not include "GNG sources" (sources each of which satisfies all elements of WP:SIGCOV) are nevertheless found to meet WP:N. In fact, I don't believe this latter statement to be especially controversial. Newimpartial (talk) 00:05, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
Analysis is your word. I pointed you to WP:SECONDARY which says they contain analysis, evaluation, interpretation, or synthesis of the facts, evidence, concepts, and ideas taken from primary sources. So no, not analysis alone. As to biographies having no secondary sources: that should never happen. WP:BLP says Articles should document in a non-partisan manner what reliable secondary sources have published about the subjects and in WP:BLPPRIMARY there is very clear guidance on avoiding primary sources. And people get this wrong a lot. In an encyclopaedic article, we are writing a tertiary source. We are not writing histories (for which primary sources are our bread and butter, and the job of the historian is to create the synthesis of sources). We are writing the encyclopaedic coverage based on the synthesis of others. So if we are keeping BLP pages that only have primary sources, we are doing it wrong. We are wrong because we are creating a synthesis of our own, and we are doing it wrong because WP:GNG says Sources should be secondary sources. Which begs the question: can you provide an example of a biography that is kept at AfD despite only having primary sources, and where the argument is that it meets WP:N and is not sidestepped by a presumption in a relevant SNG? Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 09:21, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
To answer your question: the current discussion is about a presumption in a relevant SNG, so I'm not seeing the relevance of your request. (I am confident that I have seen biographies kept with independent sourcing that has not been shown to feature analysis, evaluation, interpretation, or synthesis of the facts, evidence, concepts, and ideas taken from primary sources - but I'm also not convinced that is relevant to this discussion...) Newimpartial (talk) 10:56, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
Clearly the relevance was to I believe that many biographies that do not include "GNG sources" (sources each of which satisfies all elements of WP:SIGCOV) are nevertheless found to meet WP:N. How can something meet WP:N without GNG sources? If you are saying that a consensus has been reached that a page meets WP:N based only on primary sources, and without SIGCOV (which is a second matter), I would be interested in seeing the example. If you are actually saying that people are bypassing WP:N by applying the presumptions of independent SNGs - well yes, that is on topic. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 12:40, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
Rather than extend this digression by presenting edge cases, I will point to the multitude of WP:PROF AfDs, from which articles are routinely kept without any evidence of analysis, evaluation, interpretation, or synthesis about the subject of the article. Newimpartial (talk) 12:44, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
Yes, but that is not because they meet WP:N, but because people interpret a presumption of notability under the independent SNG as being a reason to keep the article, regardless of whether GNG (the first arm of WP:N) is met or not. That is the situation you are describing. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 14:59, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
But WP:N specifies that either GNG or an SNG must be met, doesn't it? So WP:N is met in those cases. You asked above, How can something meet WP:N without GNG sources? - I didn't see any specification of an arm. Newimpartial (talk) 15:36, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
No, WP:N says

A topic is presumed to merit an article if:

1. It meets either the general notability guideline (GNG) below, or the criteria outlined in a subject-specific notability guideline (SNG); and

2. It is not excluded under the What Misplaced Pages is not policy.

And about SNG's it says" In some topic areas, subject-specific notability guidelines (SNGs) have been written to help clarify when a standalone article can or should be written. It does not say such articles meet WP:N. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 16:01, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I'm afraid that I am having difficulty parsing this reply. My understanding of WP:N, attained over many years of discussion at Notability Talk pages, is that "meeting WP:N" means meeting the presumption that you just quoted. The passage you have also quoted about SNGs doesn't change the meaning of the intitial presumption listed at WP:N, which is esseentially "either GNG or an SNG + not NOT = presumption to merit an article".
Indeed, the rest of the section that follows the sentence you quoted about SNGs - a section that was added as a result of a well-participated RfC, and which I helped draft - goes into greater detail about the guidance various SNGs may offer. What it certainly does not do, is distinguish between notability as presumed under most SNGs and the presumption of notability under WP:N. Rather, the SNG presumption in general is explicitly a path to meeting WP:N, parallel to the path under the GNG. Newimpartial (talk) 16:28, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
The distinction is that subject notability guidelines, inasmuch as they are a path to notability for a subject, are independent of the path described in WP:N, which is specifically that GNG must be met. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 16:35, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

SPORTSPERSON

A bit of a tangent, but I see the wording at WP:SPORTSPERSON has come up again. The real guideline is at WP:NSPORT, and SPORTSPERSON is supposed to just be a summary—but the phrasing is slightly different, and this can lead to more confusion than clarity. When this last came up, I suggested replacing SPORTSPERSON with a neutral pointer along the lines of "Guidance on the notability of sportspersons can be found at Misplaced Pages:Notability (sports)"; this seemed to be well received, but the discussion petered out without a resolution. Would anyone object if I just made that change? Extraordinary Writ (talk) 23:39, 27 December 2024 (UTC)

It does say the main article is NSPORT, so doesn't seem that difficult to understand. I'd be more inclined to simply redirect WP:SPORTSPERSON to NSPORT, as this is the most relevant target. But that is probably a discussion for RfD rather than here. It doesn't make sense to have a shortcut to a summary of an article, when the target is the main article, similar to WP:ATHLETE. CNC (talk) 14:12, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
I agree that that would be better wording, and also that SPORTSPERSON should redirect to the actual NSPORT guideline. JoelleJay (talk) 03:02, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
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